- Caseros, Battle of (Argentina [1852])
Juan Manuel de Rosas: …Urquiza, overthrew Rosas at the Battle of Caseros (Feb. 3, 1852). Rosas was forced to flee to England, where he spent the last years of his life as a farmer. First buried in Southampton, his body was repatriated in 1989 and now rests in Recoleta Cemetery in Buenos Aires.
- Caserta (Italy)
Caserta, city, Campania regione, southern Italy, north of Naples. The old town (Caserta Vecchia), founded by the Lombards in the 8th century, lies on hills 3 miles (5 km) north-northeast of the modern city, which was a village known as Torre belonging to the Caetani family of Sermoneta until the
- Cases, Emmanuel-Augustin-Dieu-donné-Joseph, Count de Las (French historian)
Emmanuel, count de las Cases was a French historian best known as the recorder of Napoleon’s last conversations on St. Helena. The publication of these conversations contributed greatly to the Napoleonic legend in Europe. An officer of the royal navy, Las Cases in 1790 emigrated from France to
- casework (method)
social service: Modern evolution: The origins of modern social casework can be traced to the appointment of the first medical almoners in Britain in the 1880s, a practice quickly adopted in North American and most western European countries. The almoners originally performed three main functions: ascertaining the financial eligibility and resources of patients faced…
- Casey at the Bat (poem by Thayer)
baseball: A national pastime: “Casey at the Bat” and “Take Me Out to the Ballgame” remain among the best-known poems and songs, respectively, among Americans. Novelists and filmmakers frequently have turned to baseball motifs. After the mid-20th century, at the very time baseball at the grassroots level had begun…
- Casey Jones (ballad)
ballad: Disaster: …fixed, but “The Titanic,” “Casey Jones,” “The Wreck on the C & O,” and “The Johnstown Flood” are all circumstantially based on actual events.
- Casey, Bob, Jr. (United States senator)
Bob Casey, Jr. is an American politician who was elected as a Democrat to the U.S. Senate in 2006 and began representing Pennsylvania in that body the following year. Casey was the eldest son of Bob Casey, Sr., a conservative Democrat who served as governor of Pennsylvania (1987–95). After
- Casey, John (Irish dramatist)
Sean O’Casey was an Irish playwright renowned for realistic dramas of the Dublin slums in war and revolution, in which tragedy and comedy are juxtaposed in a way new to the theatre of his time. O’Casey was born into a lower middle-class Irish Protestant family. His father died when John was six,
- Casey, Peter (Irish entrepreneur and politician)
Michael D. Higgins: …in the 2011 presidential contest), Peter Casey, and Gavin Duffy—all of whom had been panelists on the reality television show Dragons’ Den, on which aspiring enterprisers pitched their business plans to a group of capitalist moguls.
- Casey, Richard Gardiner (Australian politician)
Australia: International affairs: …between 1951 and 1960 was Richard Gardiner Casey. He was unique among Australians in his experience of traditional diplomacy, yet he was ready and able to come to terms with the new Asia. As Indonesia became an ever more populous, and sometimes assertive, nation, there was wariness in Australia, but…
- Casey, Robert P. (American politician)
James Carville: …achieving his first success with Robert P. Casey’s victory in the 1986 Pennsylvania gubernatorial race. Subsequent successes followed in the 1987 reelection bid of New Jersey Sen. Frank Lautenberg, the 1990 Georgia gubernatorial campaign of Zell Miller, and the 1991 landslide victory of Harris Wofford (who overcame a 40-point deficit…
- Casey, Robert Patrick, Jr. (United States senator)
Bob Casey, Jr. is an American politician who was elected as a Democrat to the U.S. Senate in 2006 and began representing Pennsylvania in that body the following year. Casey was the eldest son of Bob Casey, Sr., a conservative Democrat who served as governor of Pennsylvania (1987–95). After
- Casey, William J. (United States government official)
William J. Casey was a powerful and controversial director of the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) from 1981 to 1987 during the Ronald Reagan administration. Casey graduated from Fordham University (B.S., 1934), studied at the Catholic University of America, Washington, D.C., and took a law
- Casey, William Joseph (United States government official)
William J. Casey was a powerful and controversial director of the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) from 1981 to 1987 during the Ronald Reagan administration. Casey graduated from Fordham University (B.S., 1934), studied at the Catholic University of America, Washington, D.C., and took a law
- Casgrain, Abbé Henri-Raymond (French-Canadian author)
Canadian literature: The literary movement of 1860: Their spokesman, Henri-Raymond Casgrain, promoted a messianic view of the spiritual mission of French Canadians in North America, now that postrevolutionary France had fallen into what he perceived to be godlessness and materialism. Only a few French Romantic writers were admired and imitated. Philippe Aubert de Gaspé’s…
- cash (money)
cash, in commercial use, coins and bank notes, as distinguished from promissory notes, drafts, and other forms of obligations payable. Cash is legal tender and is by law acceptable in payment of all debts. Individuals and commercial establishments usually distinguish between cash on hand, meaning
- cash budget (economics)
business finance: The cash budget: One of the principal methods of forecasting the financial needs of a business is the cash budget, which predicts the combined effects of planned operations on the firm’s cash flow. A positive net cash flow means that the firm will have surplus funds…
- cash crop (agriculture)
Asia: Cash crops: Asia is noted for several plantation cash crops, of which the most important are tea, rubber, palm oil, coconuts, and sugarcane. Jute, a commercial fibre, though it has decreased in significance, remains a major export crop of Bangladesh. Cotton is important to the…
- cash flow (accounting)
cash flow, Financial and accounting concept. Cash flow results from three major groups of activities: operating activities, investing activities, and financing activities. A cash-flow statement differs from an income statement in reflecting actual cash on hand rather than money owed (accounts
- cash flow, statement of (accounting)
accounting: The statement of cash flows: Companies also prepare a third financial statement, the statement of cash flows. Cash flows result from three major aspects of the business: (1) operating activities, (2) investing activities, and (3) financing activities. These three categories are illustrated in Table 3.
- cash forecast (economics)
business finance: The cash budget: One of the principal methods of forecasting the financial needs of a business is the cash budget, which predicts the combined effects of planned operations on the firm’s cash flow. A positive net cash flow means that the firm will have surplus funds…
- cash limited program (finance)
government budget: Cash and unified budgets: …is now performed on a cash basis, and many programs are “cash limited,” whatever the level of inflation. This procedure, to which the United Kingdom moved in 1976, is justified on the grounds that such treatment helps to control inflationary pressures and exerts stricter control than, for example, planning in…
- cash market (economics)
commodity trade: Primary commodity markets: …technically as trade in “actuals”), or it may be conducted by means of futures contracts. A futures contract is an agreement to deliver or receive a certain quantity of a commodity at an agreed price at some stated time in the future. Trade in actuals has declined considerably and…
- Cash Money Records (American record label)
Lil Wayne: …disagreements between Lil Wayne and Cash Money Records. The dispute was exacerbated by the appearance in 2015 of the mixtape Sorry 4 the Wait 2. Lil Wayne then joined the music-streaming service TIDAL, through which he released the mixtape Free Weezy Album. It was not until 2018, after the artist…
- cash on delivery (business)
cash on delivery (C.O.D.), a common business term indicating that goods must be paid for at the time of delivery. The payment is usually due in cash but may be made by check if acceptable to the seller. The transfer agent very often used is the postal service, but it is common for consumer and
- cash register
cash register, business machine that usually has a money drawer and is designed to record sales transactions. The typical cash register of the mid-20th century—through a system of keys, levers, and gears often electrically driven—indicated the amount of a transaction at the top of the register,
- cash reserve (finance)
government economic policy: Monetary policy: …monetary policy, that of the cash reserve requirements (and, in some countries, certain types of government securities) for commercial banks, provides that banks must maintain money balances (in the form of deposits in the central bank) at a certain proportion of their liabilities. This means that the banks cannot expand…
- Cash, John R. (American musician)
Johnny Cash was an American singer and songwriter whose work broadened the scope of country and western music. Cash was exposed from childhood to the music of the rural South—hymns, folk ballads, and songs of work and lament—but he learned to play guitar and began writing songs during military
- Cash, Johnny (American musician)
Johnny Cash was an American singer and songwriter whose work broadened the scope of country and western music. Cash was exposed from childhood to the music of the rural South—hymns, folk ballads, and songs of work and lament—but he learned to play guitar and began writing songs during military
- Cash, June Carter (American singer and actress)
June Carter Cash was an American singer, songwriter, and actress, who was a leading figure in country music, especially noted for her work with the Carter Family and Johnny Cash. Carter was introduced to country music, specifically Appalachian folk songs, at a very young age. Her mother, Maybelle
- Cash, Norm (American baseball player)
Detroit Tigers: …along with Kaline and sluggers Norm Cash and Willie Horton, won 103 games and ran away with the AL pennant before beating the Cardinals in the World Series.
- Cash, Rosanne (American singer-songwriter)
Rosanne Cash is an American singer-songwriter who was noted for her clear ringing voice and for often deeply personal songs that blended country music with other genres, notably pop and rock. Cash, the oldest daughter of Johnny Cash and his first wife, Vivian Liberto Cash, grew up in California.
- Cash, Valerie June Carter (American singer and actress)
June Carter Cash was an American singer, songwriter, and actress, who was a leading figure in country music, especially noted for her work with the Carter Family and Johnny Cash. Carter was introduced to country music, specifically Appalachian folk songs, at a very young age. Her mother, Maybelle
- Cash, W.J. (American author, editor, and journalist)
W.J. Cash was an American author, editor, and journalist, best known for his single book, The Mind of the South (1941), a classic analysis of white Southern temperament and culture. The son of Carolina Piedmont Baptists, Cash graduated in 1922 from Wake Forest College (North Carolina), attended a
- Cash, Wilbur Joseph (American author, editor, and journalist)
W.J. Cash was an American author, editor, and journalist, best known for his single book, The Mind of the South (1941), a classic analysis of white Southern temperament and culture. The son of Carolina Piedmont Baptists, Cash graduated in 1922 from Wake Forest College (North Carolina), attended a
- cash-and-carry wholesaler (business)
marketing: Limited-service wholesalers: Cash-and-carry wholesalers usually handle a limited line of fast-moving merchandise, selling to smaller retailers on a cash-only basis and not delivering goods. Truck wholesalers or jobbers sell and deliver directly from their vehicles, often for cash. They carry a limited line of semiperishables such as…
- cash-for-questions scandal (British history)
Mohamed al-Fayed: …by his involvement in the “cash-for-questions” scandal that arose in 1994 after Fayed named ministers who had accepted money from him in return for tabling parliamentary questions on his behalf. After the disclosures were made, two junior ministers resigned and a new committee was established to monitor standards at Westminster.…
- cash-gate (government scandal, Malawi)
Joyce Banda: …scandal, which was dubbed “cash-gate” and allegedly involved senior-level government officials. Some members of Banda’s cabinet were allegedly involved, and on October 10 Banda dissolved her entire cabinet to ensure that the officials under suspicion did not interfere with the investigation. A preliminary report on the scandal indicated that…
- Cashel (Ireland)
Cashel, town and urban district, County Tipperary, southern Ireland, about 30 miles (50 km) east-southeast of Limerick. The town’s landscape is dominated by the 358-foot (109-metre) Rock of Cashel, a limestone outcrop on the summit of which is a group of ruins that includes remains of the town’s
- Cashel, Rock of (outcrop, Ireland)
Devilsbit Mountain: …piece now known as the Rock of Cashel, whose dimensions are roughly the same as those of the gap. The basic rock is sandstone, much modified by glacial action.
- cashew (plant)
cashew, (Anacardium occidentale), evergreen shrub or tree of the sumac family (Anacardiaceae), cultivated for its characteristically curved edible seeds, which are commonly called cashew “nuts” though they are not true nuts. The domesticated cashew tree is native to the New World but commercially
- cashew apple (plant)
cashew: …swollen stem (hypocarp), called the cashew apple. The cashew apple, which is an accessory fruit (e.g., not a true fruit), is about three times as large as the true fruit and is reddish or yellow. The true fruit has two walls, or shells. The outer shell is smooth, thin, and…
- cashew family (plant family)
Anacardiaceae, the sumac family of flowering plants (order Sapindales), with about 80 genera and about 870 species of evergreen or deciduous trees, shrubs, and woody vines. Most members of Anacardiaceae are native to tropical and subtropical areas of the world. A few species occur in temperate
- cashier’s check (banking)
check: A cashier’s check is issued by a bank against itself and is signed by the cashier or some other bank officer. It has unquestioned acceptability as exchange. A certified check is a depositor’s check that has been guaranteed by the bank upon which it is drawn…
- cashmere (animal fibre)
cashmere, animal-hair fibre forming the downy undercoat of the Kashmir goat and belonging to the group of textile fibres called specialty hair fibres. Although the word cashmere is sometimes incorrectly applied to extremely soft wools, only the product of the Kashmir goat is true cashmere. The
- cashmere goat (breed of goat)
cashmere goat, a breed of domestic goat valued for its soft wool, used for the manufacture of cashmere shawls. It varies in build and colour but the most highly esteemed has large ears, slender limbs, curved spreading horns not spirally twisted, and a long, straight, silky white coat. Beneath the
- cashmere shawl (garment)
kashmir shawl, type of woolen shawl woven in Kashmir. According to tradition, the founder of the industry was Zayn-ul-ʿĀbidīn, a 15th-century ruler of Kashmir who introduced weavers from Turkistan. Although woolen shawls were mentioned in writings of the 3rd century bc and the 11th century ad, it
- cashmere wool (animal fibre)
cashmere, animal-hair fibre forming the downy undercoat of the Kashmir goat and belonging to the group of textile fibres called specialty hair fibres. Although the word cashmere is sometimes incorrectly applied to extremely soft wools, only the product of the Kashmir goat is true cashmere. The
- cashoo (plant extract)
Sir Humphry Davy: Early life: …study of tanning: he found catechu, the extract of a tropical plant, as effective as and cheaper than the usual oak extracts, and his published account was long used as a tanner’s guide. In 1803 he was admitted a fellow of the Royal Society and an honorary member of the…
- Cashtana (Shaka ruler)
India: Central Asian rulers: …during the reigns of Nahapana, Cashtana, and Rudradaman—in the first two centuries ce. Rudradaman’s fame is recorded in a lengthy Sanskrit inscription at Junagadh, dating to 150 ce.
- Casilinum (Italy)
Capua, town and episcopal see, Campania region, southern Italy, on the Volturno River and the ancient Appian Way, north of Naples. Casilinum was a strategic road junction and was contended for by the Carthaginian general Hannibal and the Romans from 216 to 211 bc, during the Second Punic War; it
- Casimir effect (physics)
Casimir effect, effect arising from the quantum theory of electromagnetic radiation in which the energy present in empty space might produce a tiny force between two objects. The effect was first postulated in 1948 by Dutch physicist Hendrik Casimir. In acoustics the vibration of a violin string
- Casimir I (duke of Poland)
Casimir I was the duke of Poland who reannexed the formerly Polish provinces of Silesia, Mazovia, and Pomerania (all now in Poland), which had been lost during his father’s reign, and restored the Polish central government. Only surviving son of Duke Mieszko II and Richeza (Ryksa) of Palatine
- Casimir II (duke of Poland)
Casimir II was the duke of Kraków and of Sandomierz from 1177 to 1194. A member of the Piast dynasty, he drove his brother Mieszko III from the throne and spent much of his reign fighting him. Mieszko actually regained power briefly in 1190–91, retaking Kraków. Casimir became Poland’s most powerful
- Casimir III (king of Poland)
Casimir III was the king of Poland from 1333 to 1370, called “the Great” because he was deemed a peaceful ruler, a “peasant king,” and a skillful diplomat. Through astute diplomacy he annexed lands from western Russia and eastern Germany. Within his realm he unified the government, codified its
- Casimir IV (king of Poland)
Casimir IV was the grand duke of Lithuania (1440–92) and king of Poland (1447–92), who, by patient but tenacious policy, sought to preserve the political union between Poland and Lithuania and to recover the lost lands of old Poland. The great triumph of his reign was the final subjugation of the
- Casimir Jagiellonian (king of Poland)
Casimir IV was the grand duke of Lithuania (1440–92) and king of Poland (1447–92), who, by patient but tenacious policy, sought to preserve the political union between Poland and Lithuania and to recover the lost lands of old Poland. The great triumph of his reign was the final subjugation of the
- Casimir the Great (king of Poland)
Casimir III was the king of Poland from 1333 to 1370, called “the Great” because he was deemed a peaceful ruler, a “peasant king,” and a skillful diplomat. Through astute diplomacy he annexed lands from western Russia and eastern Germany. Within his realm he unified the government, codified its
- Casimir the Just (duke of Poland)
Casimir II was the duke of Kraków and of Sandomierz from 1177 to 1194. A member of the Piast dynasty, he drove his brother Mieszko III from the throne and spent much of his reign fighting him. Mieszko actually regained power briefly in 1190–91, retaking Kraków. Casimir became Poland’s most powerful
- Casimir the Monk (duke of Poland)
Casimir I was the duke of Poland who reannexed the formerly Polish provinces of Silesia, Mazovia, and Pomerania (all now in Poland), which had been lost during his father’s reign, and restored the Polish central government. Only surviving son of Duke Mieszko II and Richeza (Ryksa) of Palatine
- Casimir the Restorer (duke of Poland)
Casimir I was the duke of Poland who reannexed the formerly Polish provinces of Silesia, Mazovia, and Pomerania (all now in Poland), which had been lost during his father’s reign, and restored the Polish central government. Only surviving son of Duke Mieszko II and Richeza (Ryksa) of Palatine
- Casimir, Hendrik (Dutch physicist)
Casimir effect: …in 1948 by Dutch physicist Hendrik Casimir.
- Casimir-Lifshitz effect (physics)
Casimir effect, effect arising from the quantum theory of electromagnetic radiation in which the energy present in empty space might produce a tiny force between two objects. The effect was first postulated in 1948 by Dutch physicist Hendrik Casimir. In acoustics the vibration of a violin string
- Casimir-Périer, Jean (president of France)
Jean Casimir-Périer was a French politician and wealthy businessman who served brief and undistinguished terms as a premier and as the fifth president of the Third Republic. The son of a former minister of the interior, he served as a captain during the Franco-German War (1870–71). In 1876 he was
- Casimir-Périer, Jean-Paul-Pierre (president of France)
Jean Casimir-Périer was a French politician and wealthy businessman who served brief and undistinguished terms as a premier and as the fifth president of the Third Republic. The son of a former minister of the interior, he served as a captain during the Franco-German War (1870–71). In 1876 he was
- casimiroa (plant)
sapote: White sapote, or casimiroa (Casimiroa edulis), ranges from Mexico to Costa Rica and is in the Rutaceae family.
- Casimiroa edulis (plant)
sapote: White sapote, or casimiroa (Casimiroa edulis), ranges from Mexico to Costa Rica and is in the Rutaceae family.
- Casina (play by Plautus)
comedy: Old and New Comedy in ancient Greece: …him by his wife (Plautus’s Casina); and on an overstern father whose son turns out worse than the product of an indulgent parent (in the Adelphi of Terence). But the satiric quality of these plays is bland by comparison with the trenchant ridicule of Old Comedy. The emphasis in New…
- casing (excavation)
petroleum production: Casing: Modern wells are not drilled to their total depth in a continuous process. Drilling may be stopped for logging and testing (see below Formation evaluation), and it may also be stopped to run (insert) casing and cement it to the outer circumference of the…
- casing (sausage)
sausage: Casings may be the internal organs of meat animals, paraffin-treated fabric bags, or modern synthetic casings of plastic or reconstituted collagen (insoluble animal protein). Skinless sausages are produced by stuffing the ingredients into cellulose casing, then immersing the sausage in hot followed by cold water,…
- casing nail
nail: A casing nail is similar to a finishing nail but has a slightly thicker shaft and a cone-shaped head. Nails smaller than one inch long are called wire nails if they have a head and brads if they have a very small head or none at…
- casino (gambling house)
casino, originally, a public hall for music and dancing; by the second half of the 19th century, a collection of gaming or gambling rooms. The classic example of a casino, and for long the world’s best known, is that at Monte-Carlo, which opened in 1863. The casino has long been a major source of
- Casino (film by Scorsese [1995])
Saul Bass: (1990), Cape Fear (1991), and Casino (1995).
- casino (dance)
Latin American dance: Cuba: Casino was faster in pace and was characterized by multiple turning figures. It is clearly related to New York salsa, though sources vary on which dance was a response to the other. Casino rueda developed from casino and placed couples in a circle; typically, the…
- casino (card game)
casino, card game for two to four players, best played with two. A 52-card deck is used. When two play, the dealer deals two cards facedown to the opponent, two cards faceup to the table, and two more facedown to himself and then repeats the process so that all have four cards. No further cards are
- Casino de Monte-Carlo (casino and entertainment complex, Monaco)
Casino de Monte-Carlo, casino and entertainment complex that was built in 1878 in Monte-Carlo, Monaco, by Charles III, Prince of Monaco. Designed by Charles Garnier, architect of the Paris Opéra, the building is lavishly and ornately decorated in the opulent Belle Époque style and stands in formal
- Casino of Pius IV (villa, Vatican City)
Pirro Ligorio: Ligorio also built the Casino of Pope Pius IV (Casina di Pio IV) in the Vatican Gardens (1558–62) and the Rotunda with Baldassare Peruzzi (1481–1536). He decorated his works with profuse stucco ornament; the Casino is a good example of his decoration. Ligorio also published a work on Roman…
- Casino Royale (novel by Fleming)
Casino Royale, novel by British writer Ian Fleming, published in 1953 and the first of his 12 blockbuster novels about James Bond, the suave and supercompetent British spy. Packed with violent action, hairbreadth escapes, international espionage, clever spy gadgets, intrigue, and gorgeous women,
- Casino Royale (film by Campbell [2006])
James Bond: …with a new adaptation of Casino Royale (2006), the character’s history was formally restarted, establishing him definitively as a post-Cold War hero born in 1968. Beginning in the 1990s films, in response to changing social attitudes, Bond’s chauvinism was softened. The Broccoli family continues to hold the production rights on…
- Casino Royale (film [1967])
Casino Royale, British-American spy film, released in 1967, that is a parody of Ian Fleming’s first James Bond novel (1953). Plagued by a chaotic production, the movie is notable for being largely incoherent. Bond (played by David Niven) is living in opulence after his retirement from MI6. However,
- casino rueda (dance)
Latin American dance: Cuba: Casino rueda developed from casino and placed couples in a circle; typically, the dance’s choreographies moved the women counterclockwise and the men clockwise as they switched partners.
- Casino, Place du (gambling house, Monte-Carlo, Monaco)
Monaco: …of Monte-Carlo revolves around the Place du Casino. The casino was built in 1861, and in 1967 its operations were taken over by the principality. Banking and finance and real estate are other important components of the diverse services sector.
- Casinum (Italy)
Cassino, town, Lazio (Latium) regione, central Italy. Cassino lies along the Rapido River at the foot of Monte (mount) Cassino, 87 miles (140 km) southeast of Rome. It originated as Casinum, a town of the ancient Volsci people on a site adjacent to the modern town, on the lower slopes of the
- Casinyets, the (American singing group)
the Marvelettes, American girl group formed in 1961 whose principal members were Gladys Horton (b. May 30, 1945, Gainesville, Florida, U.S.—d. January 26, 2011, Sherman Oaks, California), Wanda Young (b. August 9, 1943, Detroit, Michigan, U.S.—d. December 15, 2021, Garden City), Georgeanna Tillman
- Casio CZ-101 (music synthesizer)
electronic instrument: Digital synthesizers: …early digital synthesizer was the Casio CZ-101, a battery-powered four-voice keyboard instrument using simple algorithms that were modeled after the capabilities of analog synthesizers. The CZ-101 was introduced in 1984 at a price approximately one-quarter that of the DX-7 and achieved widespread popularity.
- Casiquiare (river, Venezuela)
Casiquiare, navigable waterway in southern Venezuela. It branches off from the Orinoco River downstream from La Esmeralda and meanders generally southwestward for approximately 140 miles (225 km), joining the Guainía River to form the Negro River, a major affluent of the Amazon, across from
- Cask of Amontillado, The (short story by Poe)
The Cask of Amontillado, short story by Edgar Allan Poe, first published in Godey’s Lady’s Book in November 1846. The narrator of this tale of horror is the aristocrat Montresor, who, having endured, as he claims, a thousand injuries at the hand of the connoisseur Fortunato, is finally driven by
- Cask, The (work by Crofts)
detective story: …introduced in Freeman Wills Crofts’s The Cask (1920); Hercule Poirot, in Agatha Christie’s The Mysterious Affair at Styles (1920), and Miss Marple, in Murder at the Vicarage (1930); Lord Peter Wimsey, in Dorothy L. Sayers’ Whose Body? (1923); Philo Vance, in S.S. Van Dine
- Casket Letters (English history)
Casket Letters, the eight letters and a series of irregular sonnets asserted by James Douglas, 4th Earl of Morton, to have been found by his servants in a silver casket in the possession of a retainer of James Hepburn, 4th Earl of Bothwell, on June 20, 1567, six days after the surrender of Mary,
- Čáslavská, Věra (Czech gymnast)
Věra Čáslavská was a Czech gymnast who won a total of 34 medals, including 22 gold medals, at the Olympic Games and at world and European championships in the 1950s and ’60s. Her career was curtailed after she expressed support for greater freedom in her homeland. Čáslavská began her athletic
- Casle (Germany)
Kassel, city, Hessen Land (state), central Germany. It lies along the Fulda River, which is a navigable tributary of the Weser River, 90 miles (145 km) northeast of Frankfurt am Main. First mentioned in 913 as Chassala (Chassela), the town derived its name, usually spelled Casle in the late
- Caslon (typeface)
William Caslon: …later came to be called Caslon. The success of Caslon’s new typefaces in England was almost instantaneous, and, as a result, he received loans and sufficient trade to enable him to set up a complete typefoundry. From 1720 to 1780, few books were printed in England that did not use…
- Caslon, William (English printer)
William Caslon was an English typefounder who, between 1720 and 1726, designed the typeface that bears his name. His work helped to modernize the book, making it a separate creation rather than a printed imitation of the old hand-produced book. Caslon began his career as an apprentice to an
- Casmerodius alba (bird)
egret: The great white egret, Egretta (sometimes Casmerodius) alba, of both hemispheres, is about 90 cm (35 inches) long and bears plumes only on the back. The American populations of this bird are sometimes called American, or common, egrets.
- Casmilus (ancient deity)
Cabeiri: … and his son and attendant Cadmilus, or Casmilus, and a less-important female pair, Axierus and Axiocersa. These were variously identified by the Greeks with deities of their own pantheon. The cult included worship of the power of fertility, rites of purification, and initiation.
- Casnewydd (Wales, United Kingdom)
Newport, town, industrial seaport, and county borough, historic county of Monmouthshire (Sir Fynwy), Wales. The town is located at the mouth of the River Usk where it enters the River Severn estuary. A medieval borough with a castle (now in ruins) dating from about 1126, the town of Newport enjoyed
- caso clinico, Un (work by Buzzati)
Dino Buzzati: …stories), the most important is Un caso clinico (performed and published 1953; “A Clinical Case”), a modern Kafkaesque horror story in which medical specialists and machinery destroy a perfectly healthy man. Buzzati’s other plays include Il mantello (performed 1960; “The Overcoat”), a supernatural drama in which a soldier who has…
- caso Sabato, El (work by Sabato)
Ernesto Sábato: The essay “El caso Sábato” (1956; “The Sábato Case”) is a plea for reconciliation of Peronist and anti-Peronist forces.
- Caso y Andrade, Alfonso (Mexican anthropologist)
Alfonso Caso y Andrade was a Mexican archaeologist and government official who explored the early Oaxacan cultures and is best remembered for his excavation of Tomb Seven at Monte Albán, the earliest-known North American necropolis. Caso y Andrade studied at the University of Mexico and
- Caspar Hauser (work by Wassermann)
Jakob Wassermann: He established his reputation with Caspar Hauser (1908), the fact-based story of a strange boy, apparently unfamiliar with the ordinary world, who was found in Nürnberg in 1828 and whose identity and subsequent murder or suicide remained a mystery. Wassermann uses the story to castigate bourgeois numbness of heart and…