- Freeport Doctrine (United States history)
Freeport Doctrine, position stated by Democratic U.S. Senator Stephen A. Douglas that settlers in a U.S. territory could circumvent the U.S. Supreme Court’s Dred Scott decision—which held that neither states nor territories were empowered to make slavery illegal—simply by failing to provide for
- Freer Gallery of Art (museum, Washington, District of Columbia, United States)
Freer Gallery of Art, museum in Washington, D.C., endowed and built by the Detroit industrialist Charles Lang Freer to house the distinguished collection of Oriental art that he gave to the United States government in 1906. The Freer Gallery was administratively made a part of the Smithsonian
- Freer, Charles Lang (American industrialist and art collector)
biblical literature: Uncials: W, Codex Washingtonianus (or Freerianus), consists of the four Gospels in the so-called Western order (Matthew, John, Luke, and Mark, as Dea). It was acquired in Egypt by C.L. Freer, an American businessman and philanthropist (hence, the Freer-Gospels), in 1906 and is now in the Freer Gallery of Art…
- freeriding (sport)
snowboarding: Freeriding: Freeriding is defined by the use of natural terrain, and it tackles nature and natural challenges head-on. It eschews artificial obstacles such as rails and halfpipes that freestylers rely on, and it does not require remote regions associated with backcountry riding. It can take place…
- freerunning (discipline of movement)
parkour, the practice of traversing obstacles in a man-made or natural environment through the use of running, vaulting, jumping, climbing, rolling, and other movements in order to travel from one point to another in the quickest and most efficient way possible without the use of equipment. The
- Freeshooter, The (opera by Weber)
Der Freischütz, Romantic opera in three acts by Carl Maria von Weber that is widely considered one of the first German masterpieces in the world of opera. Its German libretto by Johann Friedrich Kind is based on a story by Johann August Apel and Friedrich Laun. The opera premiered in Berlin on June
- freesia (plant)
freesia, (genus Freesia), genus of about 20 species perennial plants of the iris family native to southern Africa. The plants are grown indoors in pots or in gardens in mild climates, and the cut flowers are important in the floral industry. Taxonomy Freesia plants have grassy foliage that arises
- Freesia (plant)
freesia, (genus Freesia), genus of about 20 species perennial plants of the iris family native to southern Africa. The plants are grown indoors in pots or in gardens in mild climates, and the cut flowers are important in the floral industry. Taxonomy Freesia plants have grassy foliage that arises
- Freesia armstrongii (plant)
freesia: Major species: …to yellow or white, and F. armstrongii, tinged rose-purple. Flowering grass (F. laxa) bears flowers in a range of colors and is grown as a garden ornamental.
- Freesia laxa (plant)
freesia: Major species: Flowering grass (F. laxa) bears flowers in a range of colors and is grown as a garden ornamental.
- Freesia refracta (plant)
freesia: Major species: …much used in hybridization are Freesia refracta, greenish yellow to yellow or white, and F. armstrongii, tinged rose-purple. Flowering grass (F. laxa) bears flowers in a range of colors and is grown as a garden ornamental.
- freestyle skating (sport)
figure skating: Freestyle: Freestyle combines intricate footwork, spirals (sustained one-foot glides on a single edge), spins, and jumps. Footwork includes step maneuvers that are performed the length of the ice or in a circle and done in sequences demonstrating agility, dexterity, and speed. The skater changes position…
- freestyle skiing (sport)
freestyle skiing, winter sport that combines skiing and acrobatics. The sport has experimented with a range of events, but there are two that have been constant through the course of the sport’s international competition: aerials and moguls. Somersaults and other tricks were exhibited before 1914
- freestyle snowboarding (sport)
snowboarding: Freestyle: Freestyle has its roots in skateboarding and in the 2010s was the most popular style of snowboarding. It is defined by the use of natural and artificial features such as rails, jumps, boxes, handrails, halfpipes, and other obstacles on which to perform aerial maneuvers…
- freestyle swimming (swimming)
Gertrude Ederle: …leading exponent of the eight-beat crawl (eight kicks for each full arm stroke) and between 1921 and 1925 held 29 national and world amateur swimming records. In 1922 she broke seven records in a single afternoon at Brighton Beach, New York. At the 1924 Olympic Games in Paris she was…
- freestyle wrestling (sport)
freestyle wrestling, one of three styles of wrestling used in international amateur competition (the others are Greco-Roman wrestling and sambo) under supervision of the Fédération Internationale de Lutte Amateur (International Amateur Wrestling Federation). It was derived from the English
- Freeth, George (American surfer)
surfing: History: …London and the Hawaiian surfers George Freeth and Duke Kahanamoku. After visiting Waikiki, London published several accounts of surfing in popular American magazines; in 1907 the American industrialist Henry Huntington hired Freeth, whom he billed as the “man who can walk on water,” to help promote his new railway line…
- Freetown (national capital, Sierra Leone)
Freetown, capital, chief port, and largest city of Sierra Leone, on the rocky Sierra Leone Peninsula, at the seaward tip of a range of wooded hills, which were named Serra Leôa (“Lion Mountains”) by the Portuguese navigator Pedro de Sintra when he explored the West African coast in 1462. By the
- freeware (software)
freeware, software that is typically proprietary and is offered at no cost to users. Its legal use is dictated by the license under which a piece of freeware is released. Common restrictions include prohibitions against modifying, copying, making derivative works from, reverse engineering, or
- Freeway (film by Bright [1996])
Kiefer Sutherland: …A Few Good Men (1992), Freeway (1996), and A Time to Kill (1996). He also performed with his mother onstage in The Glass Menagerie in 1996.
- freeway (road)
expressway, major arterial divided highway that features two or more traffic lanes in each direction, with opposing traffic separated by a median strip; elimination of grade crossings; controlled entries and exits; and advanced designs eliminating steep grades, sharp curves, and other hazards and
- Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan, The (album by Dylan)
Tom Wilson: Work at Columbia Records: for Bob Dylan’s second album, The Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan (1963), which would establish Dylan as an important folk musician and songwriter. Wilson next produced Dylan’s acclaimed The Times They Are a-Changin’ and Another Side of Bob Dylan (both 1964). Both of these albums featured Dylan performing his songs accompanied only…
- freeze tag (game)
tag: With freeze tag, the tagged person cannot move until someone from his team “unfreezes” him with a touch. In group tag the child touching a safe area (often known as home base) can hold onto another child, that child in turn does the same, and a…
- freeze-dehydration (industrial process)
history of technology: Food production: …technological innovation such as accelerated freeze-drying and irradiation as methods of preservation, as well as the increasing mechanization of farming throughout the world. The widespread use of new pesticides and herbicides in some cases reached the point of abuse, causing worldwide concern. Despite such problems, farming was transformed in response…
- freeze-drying (industrial process)
history of technology: Food production: …technological innovation such as accelerated freeze-drying and irradiation as methods of preservation, as well as the increasing mechanization of farming throughout the world. The widespread use of new pesticides and herbicides in some cases reached the point of abuse, causing worldwide concern. Despite such problems, farming was transformed in response…
- freeze-thaw cycle (meteorology)
glacial landform: Periglacial landforms: …glaciers, a zone of intense freeze-thaw activity produces periglacial features and landforms. This happens because of the unique behaviour of water as it changes from the liquid to the solid state. As water freezes, its volume increases about 9 percent. This is often combined with the process of differential ice…
- freezer burn (foodstuffs)
food preservation: Quality of frozen foods: …in surface dehydration (commonly called freezer burn). Frozen meats with freezer burn have the appearance of brown paper and quickly become rancid. Freezer burn can be minimized by the use of tightly wrapped packages and the elimination of fluctuating temperatures during storage.
- freezer trawler (ship)
commercial fishing: Freezer trawlers: On this type, constituting most large trawlers, the catch is preserved by freezing. On some vessels the catch is gutted and sorted before freezing, but processing is done mainly after the catch is landed.
- freezing (phase change)
materials science: Melting and solidifying: Molten metals cooled at rates as high as a million degrees per second tend to solidify into a relatively homogeneous microstructure, since there is insufficient time for crystalline grains to nucleate and grow. Such homogeneous materials tend to be stronger than the typical “grainy” metals. Rapid cooling…
- freezing (food preservation)
freezing, in food processing, method of preserving food by lowering the temperature to inhibit microorganism growth. The method has been used for centuries in cold regions, and a patent was issued in Britain as early as 1842 for freezing food by immersion in an ice and salt brine. It was not,
- freezing nucleus (meteorology)
freezing nucleus, any particle that, when present in a mass of supercooled water, will induce growth of an ice crystal about itself; most ice crystals in the atmosphere are thought to form on freezing nuclei. See condensation
- freezing point (chemistry and physics)
freezing point, temperature at which a liquid becomes a solid. As with the melting point, increased pressure usually raises the freezing point. The freezing point is lower than the melting point in the case of mixtures and for certain organic compounds such as fats. As a mixture freezes, the solid
- freezing rain (meteorology)
climate: Rain and freezing rain: …32 °F) and become supercooled, freezing rain occurs. The drops may freeze on impact with the ground to form a very slippery and dangerous “glazed” ice that is difficult to see because it is almost transparent.
- freezing-point depression (physics)
liquid: Decrease in freezing point: Another colligative property of solutions is the decrease in the freezing temperature of a solvent that is observed when a small amount of solute is dissolved in that solvent. By reasoning similar to that leading to equation (5), the freezing-point depression, ΔTf ,…
- Fregata ariel
frigate bird: The great and lesser frigate birds, F. minor and F. ariel, breed on islands worldwide.
- Fregata magnificens (animal)
frigate bird: …cm [45 inches]) is the magnificent frigate bird, Fregata magnificens, found on both coasts of America, the Caribbean Sea, and Cape Verde. The great and lesser frigate birds, F. minor and F. ariel, breed on islands worldwide.
- Fregata minor (animal)
frigate bird: The great and lesser frigate birds, F. minor and F. ariel, breed on islands worldwide.
- Fregatae (bird suborder)
pelecaniform: Annotated classification: Suborder Fregatae Family Fregatidae (frigate birds) Large (31–34 inches or 79–86 cm long), light bodied. Plumage blackish, juveniles and some adults with white underparts; juveniles with white heads, sometimes tinged orange. Wings very long, pointed; tail deeply forked. Sexes differ in size (female larger) and in…
- Fregatidae (bird)
frigate bird, any member of five species of large seabirds constituting the family Fregatidae (order Pelecaniformes or Suliformes). Frigate birds are about the size of a chicken and have extremely long, slender wings, the span of which may reach to about 2.3 metres (nearly 8 feet), and a long,
- fregatschip Johanna Maria, Het (work by Schendel)
Arthur van Schendel: …Het fregatschip Johanna Maria (1930; The Johanna Maria, 1935), the history of one of the vanishing sailing ships and its sailmaker, and his popular Een hollandsch drama (1935; The House in Haarlem, 1940). His Romanticism reasserted itself in his last works, among which De wereld een dansfeest (1938) and De…
- Frege’s comprehension scheme (logic)
foundations of mathematics: Set theoretic beginnings: …with the help of his comprehension scheme, which asserts that, for every ϕ (formula or statement), there should exist a set X such that, for all x, x ∊ X if and only if ϕ(x) is true. Moreover, by the axiom of extensionality, this set X is uniquely determined by…
- Frege, Friedrich Ludwig Gottlob (German mathematician and philosopher)
Gottlob Frege was a German mathematician and logician, who founded modern mathematical logic. Working on the borderline between philosophy and mathematics—viz., in the philosophy of mathematics and mathematical logic (in which no intellectual precedents existed)—Frege discovered, on his own, the
- Frege, Gottlob (German mathematician and philosopher)
Gottlob Frege was a German mathematician and logician, who founded modern mathematical logic. Working on the borderline between philosophy and mathematics—viz., in the philosophy of mathematics and mathematical logic (in which no intellectual precedents existed)—Frege discovered, on his own, the
- Fregosi, Jim (American baseball player)
Los Angeles Angels: …Angels traded six-time All-Star shortstop Jim Fregosi for future Hall of Fame pitcher Nolan Ryan, who went on to throw four of his record seven career no-hitters in an Angels uniform and contributed to the team’s first playoff berth in 1979 (on a team managed by Fregosi). The Angels made…
- Freguesia de Santo Antonio de Guaratinguetá (Brazil)
Guaratinguetá, city, eastern São Paulo estado (state), Brazil. It lies in the Mantiqueira Mountains at 1,785 feet (544 metres) above sea level at the confluence of the Guaratinguetá Stream and the Paraíba do Sul River, about 40 miles (65 km) from the Atlantic coast. Formerly called Freguesia de
- Freguesia de São Bento de Araraquara (Brazil)
Araraquara, city, in the highlands of central São Paulo estado (state), Brazil, lying at 2,119 feet (646 metres) above sea level on a tributary of the Jacaré-Guaçu River. Formerly known as Freguesia de São Bento de Araraquara, it was given town status in 1817 and was made the seat of a municipality
- Freguesia do Brejo Alegre (Brazil)
Araguari, city, western Minas Gerais estado (state), Brazil, lying on the Jordão River, a tributary of the Paranaíba River, at 3,051 feet (930 metres) above sea level. Formerly called Freguesia do Brejo Alegre, the settlement was made the seat of a municipality in 1882 and was elevated to city rank
- Frehley, Ace (American musician)
Kiss: Formation and first shows: …January 1973 they added guitarist Ace Frehley to the band. Soon after, Stanley came up with the name Kiss, and Frehley drew the band’s iconic logo, which styles the name as KISS with the “SS” resembling two lightning bolts (the logo was subsequently banned in Germany because of its resemblance…
- Frei Montalva, Eduardo (president of Chile)
Eduardo Frei was a Chilean politician and the first Christian Democratic president of Chile (1964–70). Frei graduated in law in 1933 from the Catholic University of Chile, where he had been president of the National Association of Catholic Students in 1932–33. He served as a delegate to the
- Frei Ruiz-Tagle, Eduardo (Chilean politician)
Ricardo Lagos: …works in the government of Eduardo Frei Ruiz-Tagle.
- Frei, Eduardo (president of Chile)
Eduardo Frei was a Chilean politician and the first Christian Democratic president of Chile (1964–70). Frei graduated in law in 1933 from the Catholic University of Chile, where he had been president of the National Association of Catholic Students in 1932–33. He served as a delegate to the
- Freiberg (Germany)
Freiberg, city, Saxony Land (state), eastern Germany. It lies on the Freiberger Mulde River, at the northeastern foot of the Ore Mountains (Erzgebirge), southwest of Dresden. It was an early influential silver-mining community (founded c. 1190 and chartered early in the 13th century) and the source
- Freiberg, David (American musician)
Jefferson Airplane: The band was started in the mid-1960s by former folk musicians; in
- Freiburg (Switzerland)
Fribourg, capital of Fribourg canton, Switzerland. It is located on a loop in the Sarine (Saane) River southwest of Bern. Founded in 1157 by Berthold IV, duke of Zähringen, to control a ford across the river, it passed to the sons of Rudolf of Habsburg in 1277. The Habsburgs abandoned it in 1452;
- Freiburg (canton, Switzerland)
Fribourg, canton, western Switzerland, bounded by Lake Neuchâtel and the cantons of Vaud on the west and south and Bern on the east, with enclaves within Vaud. It lies in an elevated plain (Swiss Plateau) and rises from flat land in the west through a hilly region up to the PreAlps in the south and
- Freiburg im Breisgau (Germany)
Freiburg im Breisgau, city, Baden-Württemberg Land (state), southwestern Germany. It is picturesquely situated on the western slopes of the Black Forest, where the Dreisam River flows into the Rhine valley. It was founded and chartered in 1120 by the dukes of Zähringen as a free market town (hence
- Freiburg, Albert Ludwig University of (university, Freiburg, Germany)
Albert Ludwig University of Freiburg, academically autonomous coeducational institution of higher learning at Freiburg im Breisgau, Ger., financially supported by the state of Baden-Württemberg. Founded in 1457 by Archduke Albrecht of Austria and confirmed by the Holy Roman emperor and the pope,
- Freiburg, Battle of (European history [1644])
Battle of Freiburg, (3, 5, and 9 August 1644). The struggle for the city of Freiburg in 1644 between French and Bavarian-imperial armies was one of the bloodiest and longest battles of the Thirty Years’ War. Although the French suffered heavier casualties, they forced a retreat and went on to gain
- Freidank (German poet)
Freidank was a German didactic poet whose work became regarded as a standard repository of moral precepts. Nothing about this poet is known with certainty. He probably was a wandering minstrel of burgher origin, born perhaps in Swabia. In his work he claims that he took part in the Crusade of
- Freie Bühne (theater, Berlin, Germany)
Freie Bühne, independent Berlin theatre founded in 1889 by 10 writers and critics and supervised by the writer-director Otto Brahm for the purpose of staging new, naturalistic plays. Like André Antoine’s Théâtre-Libre in Paris, Brahm’s company gave private performances to theatre subscribers only.
- Freie Demokratische Partei (political party, Germany)
Free Democratic Party (FDP), centrist German political party that advocates individualism, capitalism, and social reform. Although it has captured only a small percentage of the votes in national elections, its support has been pivotal for much of the post-World War II period in making or breaking
- Freie Deutsche Jugend (German organization)
Erich Honecker: …of the founders of the Free German Youth movement (Freie Deutsche Jugend, or FDJ) and was its chairman from 1946 to 1955.
- Freie Hansestadt Bremen (Germany)
Bremen, city and Land (state), northwestern Germany. An enclave within the state of Lower Saxony, the state of Bremen comprises the German cities of Bremen and Bremerhaven. Bremen, the capital, is situated on the Weser River some 43 miles (70 km) from the North Sea. It is one of the largest ports
- freie Reichsstadt (Holy Roman Empire)
imperial city, any of the cities and towns of the Holy Roman Empire that were subject only to the authority of the emperor, or German king, on whose demesne (personal estate) the earliest of them originated. The term freie Reichsstadt, or Free Imperial City, was sometimes used interchangeably with
- Freie Universität Berlin (university, Berlin, Germany)
Free University of Berlin, autonomous, state-financed German university. It was founded in West Berlin in 1948, after Berlin was divided, by a group of professors and students who broke away from East Berlin’s Friedrich Wilhelm (now Humboldt) University (founded 1809–10) to seek academic freedom.
- Freie Volksbühne (German theatrical organization)
Germany: Government and audience support: …the People’s Independent Theatre (Theater der Freien Volksbühne), dating from 1890 in Berlin. Going to the theatre or opera in Germany is nearly as affordable and as unremarkable as attending the cinema is elsewhere. The same is also true of concert music. Every major city has at least one…
- Freier Deutscher Gewerkschaftsbund (East German trade union federation)
Freier Deutscher Gewerkschaftsbund (FDGB), East German trade union federation. Controlled by the Socialist Unity Party, the FDGB was formed shortly after World War II with virtually compulsory membership. With the rapid reduction of private enterprise in the Soviet-occupied zone of Germany, the
- freight
ship: Cargo handling: A commercial ship is usually a link in a “trade route” between distant points. Goods flowing in the route must be transferred to and from the sea link; they must also be given care while aboard the ship, and in turn they must…
- freight car
freight car, railroad car designed to carry cargo. Early freight cars were made largely of wood. All-steel cars were introduced by about 1896 and within 30 years had almost completely replaced the wooden variety. Modern freight cars vary widely in shape and size, but virtually all of them evolved
- freight elevator
elevator: …elevators and for heavy duty freight elevators. The plunger pushes the platform from below by the action of pressurized oil in the cylinder. A high-speed electric pump develops the pressure needed to raise the elevator; the car is lowered by the action of electrically operated valves which release the oil…
- freight forwarder
carriage of goods: Freight or forwarding agents: Shippers frequently engage the services of freight or forwarding agents, namely, persons who undertake for a reward to have the goods carried and delivered at their destination. The services of these persons are ordinarily engaged when the carriage of the goods involves successive…
- freight rate
ship: Business aspects: A freight rate must be obtained so that all expenses are covered, with a remainder sufficient for the returns on investment. In analysis of the economic merit of a shipping project, this rate is often referred to as the required freight rate. Actual freight rates are…
- freight revenue insurance
insurance: Ocean marine insurance: Freight revenue may be insured in several different ways. If there is an obligation by the shipper to pay the carrier’s freight bill regardless of whether the goods are delivered, the value of the freight is declared a part of the value of the cargo…
- freight transportation (transportation of goods)
containerization: …a major element in ocean shipping, made possible by new ships specifically designed for container carrying. Large and fast, container ships carry containers above deck as well as below; and their cargoes are easily loaded and unloaded, making possible more frequent trips and minimum lost time in port. Port facilities…
- freightage
ship: Cargo handling: A commercial ship is usually a link in a “trade route” between distant points. Goods flowing in the route must be transferred to and from the sea link; they must also be given care while aboard the ship, and in turn they must…
- Freiheitliche Partei Österreichs (political party, Austria)
Austria: Political process: The populist Freedom Party of Austria (Freiheitliche Partei Österreichs; FPÖ), sometimes referred to as the Liberal Party, was founded in 1955 as a successor to the League of Independents. Initially drawing the bulk of its support from former National Socialists, the party’s fiercely right-wing views had been…
- Freiherr (German title)
baron: Germany: The German equivalent of baron, Freiherr, or “free lord” of the empire, originally implied a dynastic status, and many Freiherren held countships without taking the title of count (Graf). When the more important of them styled themselves counts, the Freiherren sank into an inferior class of nobility. The practice of…
- Freikorps (German paramilitary units)
Freikorps, any of several private paramilitary groups that first appeared in December 1918 in the wake of Germany’s defeat in World War I. Composed of ex-soldiers, unemployed youth, and other discontents and led by ex-officers and other former military personnel, they proliferated all over Germany
- Freilicher, Jane (American painter)
Alex Katz: …Fairfield Porter, Philip Pearlstein, and Jane Freilicher struggled against the prevailing artistic trend. Indeed, Katz at first rendered the figure in a painterly style, looking to the example of Abstract Expressionism. This manner of painting quickly gave way in the mid-1950s to a flatter, more reductive way of painting. He…
- Freiligrath, Ferdinand (German poet)
Ferdinand Freiligrath was one of the outstanding German political poets of the 19th century, whose verse gave poetic expression to radical sentiments. After working as an accountant in a bank in Amsterdam (1831–39), Freiligrath abandoned commerce for literature with the success of his first poems,
- Freiligrath, Hermann Ferdinand (German poet)
Ferdinand Freiligrath was one of the outstanding German political poets of the 19th century, whose verse gave poetic expression to radical sentiments. After working as an accountant in a bank in Amsterdam (1831–39), Freiligrath abandoned commerce for literature with the success of his first poems,
- Freire, Gilberto de Mello (Brazilian sociologist)
Gilberto Freyre was a Brazilian sociologist who is considered the 20th-century pioneer in the sociology of northeastern Brazil. Freyre received a B.A. from Baylor University, Waco, Texas, and his M.A. from Columbia University in 1923. In 1926 he organized the first northeastern regionalist congress
- Freire, Paulo (Brazilian educator)
Paulo Freire was a Brazilian educator. His ideas developed from his experience teaching Brazil’s peasants to read. His interactive methods, which encouraged students to question the teacher, often led to literacy in as little as 30 hours of instruction. In 1963 he was appointed director of the
- Freischütz, Der (opera by Weber)
Der Freischütz, Romantic opera in three acts by Carl Maria von Weber that is widely considered one of the first German masterpieces in the world of opera. Its German libretto by Johann Friedrich Kind is based on a story by Johann August Apel and Friedrich Laun. The opera premiered in Berlin on June
- Freising (Germany)
Freising, city, Bavaria Land (state), southern Germany. It lies along the Isar River, north-northeast of Munich. It was the site of a castle in the 8th century, and, after the missionary bishop Korbinian came there in 724 and St. Boniface established the bishopric in 739, it became the
- Freising Manuscripts (Slovenian history)
Slovenia: The Middle Ages: The Freising Manuscripts, a collection of confessions and sermons dating from about 1000 ce, are the earliest known document in what eventually became the Slovene language.
- Freisinnig-Demokratische Partei der Schweiz (political party, Switzerland)
FDP. The Liberals, centrist political party of Switzerland formed in 2009 by the merger of the Radical Democratic Party (German: Freisinnig-Demokratische Partei der Schweiz [FDP]) and the Liberal Party (German: Liberale Partei der Schweiz [LPS]). FDP. The Liberals assumed the role previously held
- Freistadt (Austria)
Freistadt, town, north-central Austria, near the Czech Republic frontier. First mentioned in 1241, it is an old fortified town on the ancient iron- and salt-trade route connecting the Danube River and Bohemia. The town is ringed with fortifications, double walls, moats, towers, and gates that are
- Fréjus (France)
Fréjus, town, Var département, Provence–Alpes–Côte d’Azur région, southeastern France. It lies south of the Estérel Massif, southwest of Cannes. The town is on the site of an ancient naval base founded by Julius Caesar about 50 bce and known originally as Forum Julii. Its Roman ruins include a late
- Fréjus Tunnel (railway tunnel, Europe)
Mount Cenis Tunnel, rail tunnel from Modane, France, to Bardonècchia, Italy, the first great Alpine tunnel to be completed. Opened in 1871, the tunnel runs 13.7 km (8.5 miles) under the Fréjus Pass. Mount Cenis was the first long-distance rock tunnel driven from two headings with no intervening
- Freleng, Friz (American animator)
Friz Freleng was an American animator of more than 300 cartoons, primarily for the Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies film series at Warner Bros. Freleng joined Warner Bros. studios as head animator in 1930, after having worked for Walt Disney and the United Film Ad Service. He became a full-time
- Freleng, I. (American animator)
Friz Freleng was an American animator of more than 300 cartoons, primarily for the Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies film series at Warner Bros. Freleng joined Warner Bros. studios as head animator in 1930, after having worked for Walt Disney and the United Film Ad Service. He became a full-time
- Freleng, Isadore (American animator)
Friz Freleng was an American animator of more than 300 cartoons, primarily for the Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies film series at Warner Bros. Freleng joined Warner Bros. studios as head animator in 1930, after having worked for Walt Disney and the United Film Ad Service. He became a full-time
- Frelimo (political party, Mozambique)
Frelimo, political and military movement that initiated Mozambican independence from Portugal and then formed the governing party of newly independent Mozambique in 1975. Frelimo was formed in neighbouring Tanzania in 1962 by exiled Mozambicans who were seeking to overthrow Portuguese colonial rule
- Frelinghuysen, Frederick Theodore (American politician)
Frederick Theodore Frelinghuysen was a lawyer and U.S. senator who as secretary of state obtained Pearl Harbor in Hawaii as a U.S. naval base. Frelinghuysen was born into a family that had long been prominent in politics. Left an orphan at the age of three, he was adopted by his uncle, Theodore
- Frelinghuysen, Theodore J. (American theologian)
United States: From a city on a hill to the Great Awakening: …in the middle colonies, where Theodore J. Frelinghuysen, a minister of the Dutch Reformed Church, began preaching in the 1720s. In New England in the early 1730s, men such as Jonathan Edwards, perhaps the most learned theologian of the 18th century, were responsible for a reawakening of religious fervour. By…
- Frelseren (novel by Nesbø)
Jo Nesbø: …killer in Frelseren (2005; “Saviour”; The Redeemer) and another serial killer in Snømannen (2007; The Snowman). Panserhjerte (2009; “Armoured Heart”; The Leopard) has Hole tracked down in Hong Kong and persuaded to reengage in police work. Gjenferd (2011; “Ghost”; Phantom) treats the drug scene in Oslo and examines Hole’s experience…
- Fremantle (Western Australia, Australia)
Fremantle, city and principal port of Western Australia. It lies on the Indian Ocean at the mouth of the Swan River, which forms an inner harbour. Now part of the Perth metropolitan area, Fremantle is one of Australia’s largest ports and an initial landfall for ships from Europe. The city was laid
- Fremde, Der (work by Schickele)
René Schickele: …and in his first novel, Der Fremde (1907; “The Stranger”). This conflict was powerfully dramatized in Hans im Schnakenloch (1916; “Hans in the Gnat Hole”), in which the protagonist, Hans, must choose between Germany and France in time of war; torn within himself, he seeks death in the French Army,…
- Frémiot, Jeanne-François, Barone de Chantal (Catholic nun)
Saint Jane Frances of Chantal ; canonized 1767; feast day August 21) was a French cofounder of the Visitation Order. In 1592 she married Baron de Chantal, who was killed in a hunting accident (1601), leaving her with four children. In 1604 she heard St. Francis de Sales preach the Lent at Dijon and