- Far East
East Asia, region of Asia consisting of Japan, North and South Korea, China, Mongolia, and Taiwan. An old term for the region is the Far East, a name that arose among Europeans, who considered this region in the continent to their east to be “far” from Europe in terms of traveling time. East Asia
- Far Eastern Economic Review (magazine)
Far Eastern Economic Review, former weekly newsmagazine covering general, political, and business and financial news of East and Southeast Asia. It was published in Hong Kong, where it was established in 1946. The magazine carried feature articles on the major developments in the region and on
- Far Eastern Republic (historical state, Russia)
Far Eastern Republic, nominally independent state formed by Soviet Russia in eastern Siberia in 1920 and absorbed into the Soviet Union in 1922. At the time of the Far Eastern Republic’s creation, the Bolsheviks controlled Siberia west of Lake Baikal, while Japan held much of the Pacific coast,
- Far from Heaven (film by Haynes [2002])
Todd Haynes: Far from Heaven, I’m Not There, and Mildred Pierce: In Far from Heaven (2002), Haynes re-created the style of a Douglas Sirk melodrama to tell the tale of a seemingly perfect married couple in 1950s suburbia whose relationship troubles surface when the wife (Moore) discovers that her husband (Dennis Quaid) has been having homosexual urges.…
- Far From Home (album by Traffic)
Traffic: …name in 1994 to record Far From Home. The pair also staged a successful concert tour. Traffic was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2004.
- Far from the Madding Crowd (film by Schlesinger [1967])
John Schlesinger: British films: Far from the Madding Crowd (1967), based on Thomas Hardy’s epic novel of the same name, was Schlesinger’s big-budget payoff for the success of Darling. It was made for MGM’s British division and cast Christie as the beleaguered heroine and Bates, Peter Finch, and Terence…
- Far from the Madding Crowd (novel by Hardy)
Far from the Madding Crowd, novel by Thomas Hardy, published serially and anonymously in 1874 in The Cornhill Magazine and published in book form under Hardy’s name the same year. It was his first popular success. The plot centres on Bathsheba Everdene, a farm owner, and her three suitors, Gabriel
- Far from the Madding Crowd (film by Vinterberg [2015])
Carey Mulligan: …movies were the period dramas Far from the Madding Crowd and Suffragette. She later acted in the acclaimed drama Mudbound (2017), about racism in World War II-era Mississippi.
- Far Horizons, The (film by Maté [1955])
Rudolph Maté: …Barbara Stanwyck and Glenn Ford; The Far Horizons (1955), with Fred MacMurray and Charlton Heston as a rather unconvincing Meriwether Lewis and William Clark, respectively; and the tearjerker Miracle in the Rain (1956), with Jane Wyman as a lonely secretary who falls in love with a soldier (Van Johnson
- Far Rockaway of the Heart, A (poetry by Ferlinghetti)
Lawrence Ferlinghetti: A Far Rockaway of the Heart, a sequel to A Coney Island of the Mind, appeared in 1997. Two years later he published What Is Poetry?, a book of prose poetry, which was followed by the collection How to Paint Sunlight (2001) and Americus: Part…
- far side of the Moon (astronomy)
Moon: Large-scale features: …about the appearance of the Moon’s unseen side. The mystery began to be dispelled with the flight of the Soviet space probe Luna 3 in 1959, which returned the first photographs of the far side. In contrast to the near side, the surface displayed in the Luna 3 images consisted…
- Far Side, The (comic strip by Larson)
Gary Larson: …for his single-panel comic series The Far Side, which is renowned for its scientific content and bizarre humour. Larson produced The Far Side for 15 years, from January 1980 until January 1995.
- Far Tortuga (novel by Matthiessen)
Peter Matthiessen: Far Tortuga (1975) concerns the events leading up to the death of the crew of a turtle-fishing boat in the Caribbean. A trilogy, composed of Killing Mister Watson (1990), Lost Man’s River (1997), and Bone by Bone (1999), fictionalizes the life of a murderous planter…
- Far Traveler (Old English literature)
Widsith, Old English poem, probably from the 7th century, that is preserved in the Exeter Book, a 10th-century collection of Old English poetry. “Widsith” is an idealized self-portrait of a scop (minstrel) of the Germanic heroic age who wandered widely and was welcomed in many mead halls, where he
- Far Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explorer (United States satellite observatory)
Far Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explorer (FUSE), U.S. satellite observatory that observed the universe in far-ultraviolet light (wavelengths between 90.5 and 119.5 nanometres). FUSE was launched on June 24, 1999. One of its main aims was the study of hydrogen-deuterium (H-D) ratios in intergalactic
- Far West (region, United States)
the West, region, western U.S., mostly west of the Great Plains and including, by federal government definition, Alaska, Arizona, California, Hawaii, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, Washington, and Wyoming. Virtually every part of the United States except the Eastern Seaboard has
- Far, Verden, Farvel (song by Kingo)
Thomas Kingo: …songs, the best-known are “Far, Verden, Farvel” (“Fare, World, Farewell”) and “Sorrig og Glæde de vandre til Hobe” (“Sorrow and Joy They Wander Together”). He is remembered today mainly for what is popularly known as Kingo’s hymnbook, a collection that appeared in 1699 and contained 86 of his own…
- far-infrared spectroscopy (physics)
spectroscopy: Infrared spectroscopy: …mid-infrared (400–4,000 cm−1), and the far infrared (10–400 cm−1). With the development of Fourier-transform spectrometers, this distinction of areas has blurred and the more sophisticated instruments can cover from 10 to 25,000 cm−1 by an interchange of source, beam splitter, detector, and sample cell.
- far-sightedness (visual disorder)
hyperopia, refractive error or abnormality in which the cornea and lens of the eye focus the image of the visual field at an imaginary point behind the retina (the light-sensitive layer of tissue lining the back and sides of the eye). The retina thus receives an unfocused image of near objects,
- Far-Worshiping Commander, A (work by Ibuse Masuji)
Ibuse Masuji: …office, and Yōhai taichō (1950; A Far-Worshiping Commander), an antimilitary satire, were especially well received. Ibuse received the Order of Culture for the novel Kuroi ame (1966; Black Rain), which deals with the terrible effects of the bombing of Hiroshima during World War II.
- Fara Filiorum Petri (Italy)
Christianity: Christian practice in the modern world: …his feast, the people of Fara Filiorum Petri, a town in the Abruzzi region of Italy, ignite enormous bonfires on the night of January 16. Each of the 12 outlying hamlets brings into the main town’s square a bundle (farchia) of long poles. Set on end, the bundles are lashed…
- Fārābī, al- (Muslim philosopher)
al-Fārābī was a Muslim philosopher, one of the preeminent thinkers of medieval Islam. He was regarded in the medieval Islamic world as the greatest philosophical authority after Aristotle. Very little is known of al-Fārābī’s life, and his ethnic origin is a matter of dispute. He eventually moved
- Fārābī, Muḥammad ibn Muḥammad ibn Ṭarkhān ibn Awzalagh al- (Muslim philosopher)
al-Fārābī was a Muslim philosopher, one of the preeminent thinkers of medieval Islam. He was regarded in the medieval Islamic world as the greatest philosophical authority after Aristotle. Very little is known of al-Fārābī’s life, and his ethnic origin is a matter of dispute. He eventually moved
- Fārābī, Muḥammad ibn Muḥammad ibn Ṭarkhān ibn Uzalagh al- (Muslim philosopher)
al-Fārābī was a Muslim philosopher, one of the preeminent thinkers of medieval Islam. He was regarded in the medieval Islamic world as the greatest philosophical authority after Aristotle. Very little is known of al-Fārābī’s life, and his ethnic origin is a matter of dispute. He eventually moved
- Farabundo Martí National Liberation Front (political party, El Salvador)
Farabundo Martí National Liberation Front (FMLN), insurgent group that became a legal political party of El Salvador at the end of the country’s civil war in 1992. By the end of that decade, the FMLN had become one of the country’s prominent political parties. On October 10, 1980, the FMLN was
- Farabundo Martí, Augustín (Salvadoran revolutionary)
El Salvador: Military dictatorships: …1932 that was organized by Augustín Farabundo Martí, head of the recently formed Salvadoran Communist Party. Hernández Martínez easily suppressed the rebellion and authorized the summary execution of at least 10,000 suspected participants. The uprising and its brutal repression, which is referred to as la matanza (“the slaughter”), were momentous…
- farad (unit of measurement)
farad, unit of electrical capacitance (ability to hold an electric charge), in the metre–kilogram–second system of physical units, named in honour of the English scientist Michael Faraday. The capacitance of a capacitor is one farad when one coulomb of electricity changes the potential between the
- faraday (unit of electricity)
faraday, unit of electricity, used in the study of electrochemical reactions and equal to the amount of electric charge that liberates one gram equivalent of any ion from an electrolytic solution. It was named in honour of the 19th-century English scientist Michael Faraday and equals 9.648533289 ×
- faraday constant (unit of electricity)
faraday, unit of electricity, used in the study of electrochemical reactions and equal to the amount of electric charge that liberates one gram equivalent of any ion from an electrolytic solution. It was named in honour of the 19th-century English scientist Michael Faraday and equals 9.648533289 ×
- Faraday cup (science)
mass spectrometry: Faraday cup: The direct measurement of ion currents collected by a shielded electrode, called a Faraday cup, became possible in the 1930s with the introduction of electrometer tubes capable of measuring currents below a nanoampere, although sensitive galvanometers had been used for larger currents. The…
- Faraday effect (physics)
Faraday effect, in physics, the rotation of the plane of polarization (plane of vibration) of a light beam by a magnetic field. Michael Faraday, an English scientist, first observed the effect in 1845 when studying the influence of a magnetic field on plane-polarized light waves. (Light waves
- Faraday generator (device)
magnetohydrodynamic power generator: Principles of operation: In a Faraday generator, as shown in part A of the figure, the electrode walls are segmented and insulated from each other to support the axial electric field and the electric power is taken out in a series of loads. In the alternate configuration known as a…
- Faraday rotation (physics)
Faraday effect, in physics, the rotation of the plane of polarization (plane of vibration) of a light beam by a magnetic field. Michael Faraday, an English scientist, first observed the effect in 1845 when studying the influence of a magnetic field on plane-polarized light waves. (Light waves
- Faraday shutter (photography)
technology of photography: High-speed shutters: A magneto-optical shutter (Faraday shutter) consists of a glass cylinder placed inside a magnetic coil between two crossed polarizing filters; so long as the filters remain crossed, virtually no light can pass through. A brief current pulse through the coil generates a magnetic field that rotates…
- Faraday’s law of induction (physics)
Faraday’s law of induction, in physics, a quantitative relationship expressing that a changing magnetic field induces a voltage in a circuit, developed on the basis of experimental observations made in 1831 by the English scientist Michael Faraday. The phenomenon called electromagnetic induction
- Faraday’s law of magnetic induction (physics)
Faraday’s law of induction, in physics, a quantitative relationship expressing that a changing magnetic field induces a voltage in a circuit, developed on the basis of experimental observations made in 1831 by the English scientist Michael Faraday. The phenomenon called electromagnetic induction
- Faraday’s laws of electrolysis (chemistry)
Faraday’s laws of electrolysis, in chemistry, two quantitative laws used to express magnitudes of electrolytic effects, first described by the English scientist Michael Faraday in 1833. The laws state that (1) the amount of chemical change produced by current at an electrode-electrolyte boundary is
- Faraday, Michael (British physicist and chemist)
Michael Faraday was an English physicist and chemist whose many experiments contributed greatly to the understanding of electromagnetism. Faraday, who became one of the greatest scientists of the 19th century, began his career as a chemist. He wrote a manual of practical chemistry that reveals his
- Faradofay (Madagascar)
Tôlan̈aro, town, southeastern tip of Madagascar. It was settled temporarily between 1504 and 1528 by shipwrecked Portuguese sailors. The French built a fort there in 1643, and Étienne de Flacourt wrote his descriptive Histoire de la Grande Isle de Madagascar there in 1661. A port on the Indian
- Farāfīr, Al- (play by Idrīs)
Arabic literature: Modern Arabic drama: …whose celebrated play Al-Farāfīr (1964; The Farfoors, or The Flipflap) combined elements of traditional comic forms of dramatic presentation with such Brechtian effects as the presence of an “author” as a stage character and the use of theatre-in-the-round staging. Alfred Faraj took a somewhat different course, invoking tales and incidents…
- Farage, Nigel (British politician)
Nigel Farage is a British politician who served as a member of the European Parliament from 1999 to 2020. He led the populist libertarian United Kingdom Independence Party (UKIP) from 2006 to 2009 and again from 2010 to 2016. In 2019 he launched the Brexit Party. Farage was born into a prosperous
- Farage, Nigel Paul (British politician)
Nigel Farage is a British politician who served as a member of the European Parliament from 1999 to 2020. He led the populist libertarian United Kingdom Independence Party (UKIP) from 2006 to 2009 and again from 2010 to 2016. In 2019 he launched the Brexit Party. Farage was born into a prosperous
- Faragher v. City of Boca Raton (law case)
Faragher v. City of Boca Raton, case in which the U.S. Supreme Court on June 26, 1998, ruled (7–2) that—under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964—an employer may be liable for supervisory employees whose sexual harassment of subordinates results in “a hostile work environment amounting to job
- Farago, Ladislas (Hungarian-born writer and popular historian)
Ladislas Farago was a Hungarian-born writer and popular historian who produced an impressive array of war and espionage books about World War II. Farago’s output included Burn After Reading (1961), The Broken Seal (1967), The Game of the Foxes (1972), and The Tenth Fleet and Strictly from Hungary
- Farāh (Afghanistan)
Farāh, town, southwestern Afghanistan, on the Farāh River. Usually identified with the ancient town of Phrada, it was once a centre of agriculture and commerce until destroyed by the Mongols in 1221; it later revived but was sacked in 1837 by the Persians. The building of the Kandahār-Herāt road
- Farāh River (river, Afghanistan)
Farāh River, river in western Afghanistan, rising on the southern slopes of the Band-e Bāyan Range, flowing southwest past the town of Farāh, and emptying into the Helmand (Sīstān) swamps on the Iranian border after a course of 350 miles (560 km). The river fluctuates greatly with the seasons,
- Farah, Mo (British athlete)
Mo Farah is a Somalian-born British distance runner who won gold medals in both the 5,000-metre and 10,000-metre races at both the 2012 London Olympics and the 2016 Rio de Janeiro Olympics. According to initial accounts of his childhood, he and his twin brother, Hassan Farah, were born in
- Farah, Nuruddin (Somalian writer)
Nuruddin Farah is a Somali writer who is known for his rich imagination and refreshing and often fortuitous use of his adopted language, English. He is widely considered the most significant Somali writer in any European language. The son of a merchant and the well-known Somali poet Aleeli Faduma,
- Farah, Sir Mohamed Muktar Jama (British athlete)
Mo Farah is a Somalian-born British distance runner who won gold medals in both the 5,000-metre and 10,000-metre races at both the 2012 London Olympics and the 2016 Rio de Janeiro Olympics. According to initial accounts of his childhood, he and his twin brother, Hassan Farah, were born in
- Farahnaz Pahlavi Dam (dam, Iran)
dam: Concrete buttress and multiple-arch dams: …in the construction of the Farahnaz Pahlavi Dam in Iran. Built for the Tehrān Regional Water Board in 1967, this dam has a maximum height of 107 metres (351 feet) and a crest length of nearly 360 metres (1,181 feet).
- farai (musical instrument)
African music: Trumpets: …long metal kakaki and wooden farai, both end-blown, fulfill this role in combination with drums. In East and central Africa, the instruments are often made from gourds, wood, hide, horn, or a combination of these materials. In the historic kingdom of Buganda (now part of Uganda), trumpet sets were part…
- Faraj (Mamlūk ruler of Egypt)
Faraj was the 26th Mamlūk ruler of Egypt and Syria; his reign was marked by a loss of internal control of the Mamlūk kingdom, whose rulers were descendants of slaves. Faraj was the victim of forces—including foreign invasion and domestic feuds—that he did not create and could not control. Faraj’s
- faraj baʿd al-shiddah, al- (Arabic literature genre)
Arabic literature: Varieties of adab: compilations, anthologies, and manuals: …is an example of the al-faraj baʿd al-shiddah (“escape from hardship”) genre, which involves sequences of anecdotes in which people find release from difficult situations, often at the very last minute and as a result of the generosity of others. A still later work by al-Qalqashandī, the 15th-century Ṣubḥ al-aʿshā…
- Faraj, Alfred (Egyptian dramatist and writer)
Arabic literature: Modern Arabic drama: Alfred Faraj took a somewhat different course, invoking tales and incidents from history and folklore (and especially from The Thousand and One Nights) in order to illustrate contemporary political and social realities. Faraj chose to follow al-Ḥakīm in selecting as his language medium a more…
- Faraj, Muhammad Abd al-Salam (Egyptian Islamist)
Egyptian Islamic Jihad: …1970s under the leadership of Muhammad Abd al-Salam Faraj. His treatise Al-Farīḍah al-ghāʾibah (1981; The Neglected Duty), which urged Muslims to use violence for the purpose of creating an Islamic state, became the group’s ideological platform. On October 6, 1981, EIJ members disguised as soldiers assassinated Egyptian Pres. Anwar Sadat,…
- Farakka Barrage (dam, India)
Ganges River: Navigation: The Farakka Barrage at the head of the delta, just inside Indian territory in West Bengal, began diverting Ganges waters south into India in 1976. The Indian government argued that hydrological changes had diverted Ganges water from the port of Kolkata over the preceding century and…
- Farallon Capital Management (American company)
Tom Steyer: …and philanthropist who founded (1986) Farallon Capital Management and later became a noted environmental activist.
- Farallon slab (tectonic plate)
New Madrid earthquakes of 1811–12: Possible causes of the New Madrid earthquakes: …that the remains of the Farallon slab, a small tectonic plate that subducted beneath the western part of the North American Plate some 70 million years ago, may be indirectly responsible for the faulting, as well as the seismicity, in the NMSZ. He noted that these remnants lie directly beneath…
- Faranah (Guinea)
Faranah, town, central Guinea, western Africa. The town is located on the Niger River and was founded in the 1890s as a French outpost in the campaign against Samory Touré, the Malinke warrior-leader. It is connected by road with Dabola and Kissidougou and is a trading centre for rice, cattle, and
- farandole (dance)
farandole, lively and popular chain dance—an ancient dance style in which dancers form a chain, usually by linking hands with two others—of Provence (France) and Catalonia (Spain). The dancers, following the steps introduced by the chain leader, wind through the streets to the accompaniment of
- Farazdaq, al- (Islamic poet)
al-Farazdaq was an Arab poet famous for his satires in a period when poetry was an important political instrument. With his rival Jarīr, he represents the transitional period between Bedouin traditional culture and the new Muslim society that was being forged. Living in Basra, al-Farazdaq (“The
- Farāʿīn, Tall al- (ancient city, Egypt)
Wadjet: …form of the ancient Egyptian Per Wadjit (Coptic Pouto, “House of Wadjit”), the name of the capital of the 6th Lower Egyptian nome (province), present-day Tall al-Farāʿīn, of which the goddess was the local deity.
- Farb Family Portrait (painting by Flack)
Audrey Flack: …significant painting from this period, Farb Family Portrait (1969–70), was the result of a new working technique. Starting with a slide of the family portrait, Flack projected the image onto the canvas to use as her guide for painting. This method relieved her of having to make preliminary drawings. She…
- Farbenfabriken Bayer Aktiengesellschaft (German company)
Bayer, German chemical and pharmaceutical company founded in 1863 by Friedrich Bayer (1825–80), who was a chemical salesman, and Johann Friedrich Weskott (1821–76), who owned a dye company. Company headquarters, originally in Barmen (now Wuppertal), have been in Leverkusen, north of Cologne, since
- Farbenfabriken vormals Friedr. Bayer & Co. (German company)
Bayer, German chemical and pharmaceutical company founded in 1863 by Friedrich Bayer (1825–80), who was a chemical salesman, and Johann Friedrich Weskott (1821–76), who owned a dye company. Company headquarters, originally in Barmen (now Wuppertal), have been in Leverkusen, north of Cologne, since
- Farbenfabriken vormals Friedrich Bayer & Co. (German company)
Bayer, German chemical and pharmaceutical company founded in 1863 by Friedrich Bayer (1825–80), who was a chemical salesman, and Johann Friedrich Weskott (1821–76), who owned a dye company. Company headquarters, originally in Barmen (now Wuppertal), have been in Leverkusen, north of Cologne, since
- Farber, Cecilia Böhl von (Spanish writer)
Fernán Caballero was a Spanish writer whose novels and stories depict the language, customs, and folklore of rural Andalusia. Her father was Johann Niklaus Böhl von Faber, a German businessman who converted to Roman Catholicism and became a well-known critic of Spanish literature. He moved the
- Farber, Marvin (American philosopher)
phenomenology: In the United States: …Research founded by Husserl’s student Marvin Farber, who was also the author of The Foundation of Phenomenology (1943). Later, however, a noticeable change took place, chiefly because of the work of two scholars at the New School for Social Research in New York City: Alfred Schutz, an Austrian-born sociologist and…
- Farbewerke Hoechst Aktiengesellschaft (German company)
Hoechst Aktiengesellschaft, former German chemical concern founded in 1863 in the Höchst quarter of Frankfurt am Main. Originally a producer of dyestuffs, it had become, by the late 20th century, one of the world’s largest producers of pharmaceuticals. In 1999 it merged with French pharmaceutical
- FARC (Colombian militant group)
FARC, Marxist guerrilla organization in Colombia. Formed in 1964 as the military wing of the Colombian Communist Party (Partido Comunista de Colombia; PCC), the FARC is the largest of Colombia’s rebel groups, estimated to possess some 10,000 armed soldiers and thousands of supporters, largely drawn
- farce (drama)
farce, a comic dramatic piece that uses highly improbable situations, stereotyped characters, extravagant exaggeration, and violent horseplay. The term also refers to the class or form of drama made up of such compositions. Farce is generally regarded as intellectually and aesthetically inferior to
- Farce de maistre Pierre Pathelin, La (French literature)
French literature: Secular drama: 1465; Master Peter Patelan, a Fifteenth-Century French Farce), a tale of trickery involving a sly lawyer, a dull-witted draper, and a crafty shepherd.
- farcy (disease)
glanders, infectious disease of primarily horses, but also mules and donkeys, that is caused by the bacterium Burkholderia mallei. Humans may become infected secondarily, such as through contact with diseased animals or by inoculation while handling diseased tissues and making laboratory cultures
- Fard, Wallace D. (American religious leader)
Wallace D. Fard was the Mecca-born founder of the Nation of Islam (sometimes called Black Muslim) movement in the United States. Fard immigrated to the United States sometime before 1930. In that year, he established in Detroit the Temple of Islām as well as the University of Islām, which was the
- Färdvägen (novel by Enquist)
Per Olov Enquist: … (1961; “The Crystal Eye”) and Färdvägen (1963; “The Route Travelled”), reflect his aesthetic interest in the form of the novel and the influence of the French new novel. As the political climate of the 1960s changed, Enquist moved from a liberal viewpoint to a socialist position. He began to take…
- fare (transport charge)
mass transit: Revenues: …costs are paid from passenger fares and, in most developed countries, public subsidies. The most common way to collect passenger fares is by cash payment on the vehicle (for bus and light rail systems without closed stations) or upon entry to the station (for systems requiring entry through closed stations).…
- fare collection
mass transit: Revenues: The most common way to collect passenger fares is by cash payment on the vehicle (for bus and light rail systems without closed stations) or upon entry to the station (for systems requiring entry through closed stations). Normally, the driver collects fares, although some intensively used bus and light rail…
- Fare, World, Farewell (song by Kingo)
Thomas Kingo: …songs, the best-known are “Far, Verden, Farvel” (“Fare, World, Farewell”) and “Sorrig og Glæde de vandre til Hobe” (“Sorrow and Joy They Wander Together”). He is remembered today mainly for what is popularly known as Kingo’s hymnbook, a collection that appeared in 1699 and contained 86 of his own…
- Fareham (district, England, United Kingdom)
Fareham: borough (district), administrative and historic county of Hampshire, southern England. It is located at the head of a creek opening into the northwestern corner of Portsmouth Harbour. The district embraces the market town of Fareham and several outlying historic localities. These include Portchester, which was…
- Fareham (Hampshire, England, United Kingdom)
Fareham, town and borough (district), administrative and historic county of Hampshire, southern England. It is located at the head of a creek opening into the northwestern corner of Portsmouth Harbour. The district embraces the market town of Fareham and several outlying historic localities. These
- Fareham, Louise-Renée de Kéroualle, Countess of (French noble)
Louise-Renée de Kéroualle, duchess of Portsmouth was a French mistress of Charles II of Great Britain. She was the least popular with his subjects but the ablest politician. The daughter of a Breton nobleman, Guillaume de Penancoet, Sieur de Kéroualle, she entered the household of Henrietta Anne,
- Farel, Guillaume (French religious leader)
Guillaume Farel was a reformer and preacher primarily responsible for introducing the Reformation to French-speaking Switzerland, where his efforts led to John Calvin’s establishment of the Reformed church in Geneva. As a student at the University of Paris, Farel was the pupil and friend of the
- Farès, Nabile (Algerian writer)
Nabile Farès was a Kabylian novelist and poet known for his abstruse, poetic, and dreamlike style. Rebellion against the established religious traditions and the newly formed conventions of Algeria since independence was central to his work. In his first novel, Yahia, pas de chance (1970; “Yahia,
- Farewell Address (speech by Washington)
George Washington: Retirement: …to his country in the Farewell Address (see original text) of September 19, 1796, written largely by Hamilton but remolded by Washington and expressing his ideas. Retiring in March 1797 to Mount Vernon, he devoted himself for the last two and a half years of his life to his family,…
- Farewell My Concubine (film by Chen [1993])
Chen Kaige: Farewell My Concubine follows the lives of two Peking opera actors, Cheng Dieyi (played by Leslie Cheung) and Duan Xiaolou (Fengyi Zhang), from their youth and rigorous training in the 1920s to the years after the traumatic Cultural Revolution. Starring the much-loved actress Gong Li…
- Farewell Pilgrimage (Islamic history)
Muhammad: Biography according to the Islamic tradition: …Mecca in 632, the so-called Farewell Pilgrimage, the precedent for all future Muslim pilgrimages. He dies in June 632 in Medina. Since no arrangement for his succession has been made, his death provokes a major dispute over the future leadership of the community he has founded.
- Farewell Summer (novel by Bradbury)
Ray Bradbury: Later work and awards: His final novel, Farewell Summer (2006), was a sequel to Dandelion Wine. He adapted 59 of his short stories for the television series The Ray Bradbury Theatre (1985–92).
- Farewell Symphony, The (novel by White)
Edmund White: …the publication of the novel The Farewell Symphony in 1997, he completed an autobiographical trilogy that includes A Boy’s Own Story (1982) and The Beautiful Room Is Empty (1988). The Married Man (2000) draws upon White’s own romantic experience in its tale of an older HIV-positive furniture expert and his…
- Farewell to Arms, A (film by Vidor [1957])
Charles Vidor: Later films: …1957 adaptation of Ernest Hemingway’s A Farewell to Arms, starring Rock Hudson and Jennifer Jones. Vidor replaced the original director, John Huston, who had left the production over disagreements with producer David O. Selznick. Vidor died during the filming of Song Without End (1960), a drama about composer Franz Liszt
- Farewell to Arms, A (novel by Hemingway)
A Farewell to Arms, third novel by Ernest Hemingway, published in 1929. Its depiction of the existential disillusionment of the “Lost Generation” echoes his early short stories and his first major novel, The Sun Also Rises (1926). A Farewell to Arms is particularly notable for its autobiographical
- Farewell to Arms, A (film by Borzage [1932])
Frank Borzage: Freelancing after Fox: …adaptation of Ernest Hemingway’s novel A Farewell to Arms, in which an American volunteer (Gary Cooper) is wounded while serving as an ambulance driver for the Italian army in World War I, an English nurse (Helen Hayes) restores him to health, and they fall wildly in love. Secrets (1933) was…
- Farewell to Matyora (novel by Rasputin)
Russian literature: Thaws and freezes: …novel Proshchaniye s Matyoroy (1976; Farewell to Matyora) about a village faced with destruction to make room for a hydroelectric plant. The novel’s regret for the past and suspicion of the new dramatically marks the difference between village prose and the Socialist-Realist collective farm novel. Yury Trifonov wrote about what…
- Farewell to Sandino (painting by Morales)
Latin American art: Trends, c. 1970–present: His painting Farewell to Sandino (1985), for example, commemorates the 1930s precursors of the revolution; the figures are composed as a sacra conversazione (“sacred conversation of the saints”), and their faces are de-emphasized by blurring and shading. His lush tropical forests, pressing in upon the viewer, recall…
- Farewell, My Lovely (film by Dmytryk [1944])
Murder, My Sweet, American film noir, released in 1944, that was notable as the screen debut of author Raymond Chandler’s hard-boiled, world-weary detective Philip Marlowe. It was based on Chandler’s 1940 novel Farewell, My Lovely. (Read Martin Scorsese’s Britannica essay on film preservation.) The
- Farewell, My Lovely (novel by Chandler)
Murder, My Sweet: …based on Chandler’s 1940 novel Farewell, My Lovely.
- Farewell, My Lovely (film by Richards [1975])
Robert Mitchum: …1940s detective Philip Marlowe in Farewell, My Lovely (1975). More important, his shadowy star image paved the way for the gritty antiheroes that became popular in the films of the 1950s and ’60s.
- Farewell, The (film by Wang [2019])
Awkwafina: The Farewell: …a dramatic starring role in The Farewell, a poignant story of a family’s debate over whether to tell its matriarch that she is dying. Awkwafina received positive reviews for her portrayal of Billi, the conflicted granddaughter, and won a Golden Globe award for best actress in a musical or comedy…
- farfel (food)
pasta: Farfels are ground, granulated, or shredded. The wide variety of special shapes includes farfalloni (“large butterflies”), lancette (“little spears”), fusilli (“spindles”), and riccioline (“little curls”).
- Farfoors, The (play by Idrīs)
Arabic literature: Modern Arabic drama: …whose celebrated play Al-Farāfīr (1964; The Farfoors, or The Flipflap) combined elements of traditional comic forms of dramatic presentation with such Brechtian effects as the presence of an “author” as a stage character and the use of theatre-in-the-round staging. Alfred Faraj took a somewhat different course, invoking tales and incidents…
- Farge, John La (American painter)
John La Farge was an American painter, muralist, and stained-glass designer. After graduating from St. Mary’s College in Maryland, La Farge studied law, but in 1856 he went to Europe to study art. He worked independently, studying briefly in Paris with Thomas Couture and coming under the influence