- Gone with the Wind (novel by Mitchell)
Gone with the Wind, novel by Margaret Mitchell, published in 1936. It won a Pulitzer Prize in 1937. Gone with the Wind is a sweeping romantic story about the American Civil War from the point of view of the Confederacy. In particular it is the story of Scarlett O’Hara, a headstrong Southern belle
- Gone, an Historical Romance of a Civil War as It Occurred Between the Dusky Thighs of One Negress and Her Heart (work by Walker)
Kara Walker: The piece was titled Gone, an Historical Romance of a Civil War as It Occurred Between the Dusky Thighs of One Negress and Her Heart. That work and subsequent others, such as a series of watercolours titled Negress Notes (Brown Follies) (1996–97), caused a stir. Some African American artists,…
- Goneril (fictional character)
Goneril, fictional character, one of Lear’s two treacherous daughters in William Shakespeare’s tragedy King Lear (written
- gonfalonier (medieval Italian official)
gonfalonier, (“standard bearer”), a title of high civic magistrates in the medieval Italian city-states. In Florence the gonfaloniers of the companies (gonfalonieri di compagnia) originated during the 1250s as commanders of the people’s militia. In the 1280s a new office called the gonfalonier of
- gonfaloniere (medieval Italian official)
gonfalonier, (“standard bearer”), a title of high civic magistrates in the medieval Italian city-states. In Florence the gonfaloniers of the companies (gonfalonieri di compagnia) originated during the 1250s as commanders of the people’s militia. In the 1280s a new office called the gonfalonier of
- gonfaloniere di compagnia (medieval Italian official)
gonfalonier: … the gonfaloniers of the companies (gonfalonieri di compagnia) originated during the 1250s as commanders of the people’s militia. In the 1280s a new office called the gonfalonier of justice (gonfaloniere di giustizia) was instituted to protect the interests of the people against the dominant magnate class. The holder of this…
- gonfaloniere di giustizia (medieval Italian official)
gonfalonier: …the gonfalonier of justice (gonfaloniere di giustizia) was instituted to protect the interests of the people against the dominant magnate class. The holder of this office subsequently became the most prominent member of the Signoria (supreme executive council of Florence) and formal head of the civil administration. In other…
- gong (musical instrument)
gong, a circular metal platelike percussion instrument, usually having a turned-down rim. In most forms it is struck in the centre with a felt- or leather-covered beater, producing a sound of either definite or indefinite pitch. Its vibrations issue from the centre, in contrast to bells, which
- gong (Chinese art)
Chinese architecture: The Zhou dynasty (1046–256 bce): …depictions of curved arms (gong) attached near the top of the columns, parallel to the building wall, extending outward and up to help support the beam; however, the block and arms were not yet combined to create traditional Chinese brackets (dougong) or to achieve extension forward from the wall.…
- gong (bronze vessel)
gong, type of Chinese bronze vessel used to serve wine, it was characterized by an unusually fine harmony between shape and decoration. It was produced during the Shang (c. 1600–1046 bc) and early Zhou (1046–256 bc) dynasties. The gong looked much like a sauce server, with a large spout extending
- gong chime (musical instrument)
percussion instrument: Idiophones: …gongs are united to form gong chimes. The Chinese upright yunluo is a Buddhist and Confucian ritual chime and was formerly also played at court. The horizontal gong chimes of Indonesia (called bonang in Java) are outstanding components of Southeast Asian orchestras and have been known since the 10th or…
- Gong Ding’an (Chinese author)
Gong Zizhen was a reform-minded Chinese writer and poet whose works both foreshadowed and influenced the modernization movements of the late Qing dynasty. Born into an eminent family of scholars and officials, Gong passed the state examinations and succeeded to a series of metropolitan posts in the
- Gong Li (Chinese actress)
Gong Li is a popular Chinese actress, widely associated with movies by Chinese director Zhang Yimou but perhaps best known to a broad Western audience for her role as a 1930s Japanese geisha in the film Memoirs of a Geisha (2005). Gong was the youngest of five children in a family of academics. In
- Gong Lum v. Rice (law case)
Gong Lum v. Rice, case in which the U.S. Supreme Court on November 21, 1927, ruled (9–0) that a Mississippi school board had not violated the Fourteenth Amendment’s equal protection clause when it classified a student of Chinese descent as “colored” and barred her from attending a white high
- Gong Qinwang (Chinese official)
Gong Qinwang was a leading official in the closing years of the Qing dynasty (1644–1911/12), who tried to repair a weakened government and to effect a rapprochement with the West. A brother of the Xianfeng emperor (reigned 1850–61), Prince Gong was assigned to make peace with the British and French
- Gong River (river, China)
Gan River: Another stream, the Gong River, rises in the Jiulian Mountains in the far south of Jiangxi. These two streams flow together near the city of Ganzhou, and from there the Gan flows north through Jiangxi province into Lake Poyang and thence into the Yangtze. The river’s valley provided…
- Gong Seren (Chinese author)
Gong Zizhen was a reform-minded Chinese writer and poet whose works both foreshadowed and influenced the modernization movements of the late Qing dynasty. Born into an eminent family of scholars and officials, Gong passed the state examinations and succeeded to a series of metropolitan posts in the
- Gong Show, The (American television program)
Chuck Barris: …of the comic talent show The Gong Show, which originally aired from 1976 to 1978.
- Gong Xian (Chinese painter)
Gong Xian was the most important artist of the group known as the Eight Masters of Nanjing. He spent most of his life in Nanjing and was regarded by his contemporaries as aloof and eccentric. Short, broad vertical strokes characterize Gong’s paintings, which, like those of Ni Zan in the Yuan
- Gong Zizhen (Chinese author)
Gong Zizhen was a reform-minded Chinese writer and poet whose works both foreshadowed and influenced the modernization movements of the late Qing dynasty. Born into an eminent family of scholars and officials, Gong passed the state examinations and succeeded to a series of metropolitan posts in the
- Gong’an school (Chinese literary school)
Chinese literature: Classical literature: It came from the Gong’an school, named for the birthplace of the three Yuan brothers, of whom the middle one—Yuan Hongdao—was the best known. The Gong’an school challenged all of the prevailing literary trends, advocating that literature should change with each age and that any attempt at erasing the…
- Gong, Prince (Chinese official)
Gong Qinwang was a leading official in the closing years of the Qing dynasty (1644–1911/12), who tried to repair a weakened government and to effect a rapprochement with the West. A brother of the Xianfeng emperor (reigned 1850–61), Prince Gong was assigned to make peace with the British and French
- Gong-ma (Tibetan title)
Phag-mo-gru family: …him assumed the title of Gong-ma, restored the Tibetan ethos as the ruling ideology, and divided the nation into districts governed by centrally appointed officials. During the next 100 years in which the Phag-mo-gru was dominant, a semblance of central authority was reestablished in the country. In the mid-15th century,…
- Gonga-Gimojan languages
Omotic languages: …Dizi, Nayi, and Sheko) and Gonga-Gimojan. The latter comprises Gonga (with Kaficho, Shakacho, Boro, and possibly Anfillo), Yemsa (Janjero), and Gimira-Ometo. Bench is the main variety of Gimira, and the Ometo cluster is represented by languages such as Woylatta, Gamo, Gofa, Basketto, Male, and Chara, plus several minority groups of…
- Gongadze, Georgy (Ukrainian journalist)
Leonid Kuchma: …murder of the dissident journalist Georgy Gongadze and revealed his approval of the sale of a radar system to Iraq in violation of a United Nations Security Council resolution. Cleared by the Constitutional Court to seek a third term as president in 2004, Kuchma instead backed the candidacy of Prime…
- gongbi (Chinese painting)
gongbi, in Chinese painting, meticulous brush technique that delimits details very precisely and without independent or expressive variation. It is often highly coloured and usually depicts figural or narrative subjects. The term gongbi is also used to refer to paintings that are generally more
- gongche (musical notation)
Chinese music: Other vocal and instrumental genres: …of the last dynasties is gongche, which uses characters to indicate the various pitches. Although the gongche system is still widely used, mainland sources generally prefer the number system, which is based on the 19th-century French chevé system (which used numerals 1–7 for the notes of the scale). Unlike other…
- Gongdi (emperor of Sui dynasty)
China: Foreign affairs under Yangdi: A Sui prince, Gongdi, was enthroned as “emperor” in 617, while Yangdi was designated “retired emperor.” In the summer of 618, after Yangdi’s death, Li Yuan (known by his temple name, Gaozu) deposed his puppet prince and proclaimed himself emperor of a new dynasty, the Tang, which was…
- gongfu (martial art)
kung fu, a martial art, both a form of exercise with a spiritual dimension stemming from concentration and self-discipline and a primarily unarmed mode of personal combat often equated with karate or tae kwon do. The term kung fu can also signify careful preparation for the performance of any
- Gongga Shan (mountain, China)
Mount Gongga, highest peak of the Daxue Mountains, west-central Sichuan province, southern China. It rises to 24,790 feet (7,556 metres) with a snow line at about 18,000 feet (5,500 metres). Its terrain features a complex of glaciers, grasslands, and alpine
- Gongga, Mount (mountain, China)
Mount Gongga, highest peak of the Daxue Mountains, west-central Sichuan province, southern China. It rises to 24,790 feet (7,556 metres) with a snow line at about 18,000 feet (5,500 metres). Its terrain features a complex of glaciers, grasslands, and alpine
- gonghang (Chinese guild)
cohong, the guild of Chinese merchants authorized by the central government to trade with Western merchants at Guangzhou (Canton) prior to the first Opium War (1839–42). Such firms often were called “foreign-trade firms” (yanghang) and the merchants who directed them “hong merchants” (hangshang).
- Gongjinhui (Chinese political organization)
China: Sun Yat-sen and the United League: …the league became divided: the Progressive Society (Gongjinhui), a parallel to the league, was born in Tokyo in 1907; a branch of this new society was soon opened at Wuhan with the ambiguous slogan “Equalization of human right.” The next year, Zhang Binglin tried to revive the Restoration Society.
- Gongola River (river, Nigeria)
Gongola River, principal tributary of the Benue River, northeastern Nigeria. It rises in several branches (including the Lere and Maijuju rivers) on the eastern slopes of the Jos Plateau and cascades (with several scenic waterfalls) onto the plains of the Gongola Basin, where it follows a
- Góngora y Argote, Luis de (Spanish poet)
Luis de Góngora was one of the most influential Spanish poets of his era. His Baroque, convoluted style, known as Gongorism (gongorismo), was so exaggerated by less gifted imitators that his reputation suffered after his death until it underwent a revaluation in the 20th century. The son of a
- Góngora, Antonio Caballero y (Colombian archbishop)
Colombia: Viceroyalty of New Granada: Archbishop Caballero y Góngora as viceroy (1782–88) made education one of his main interests. He modernized the program of studies in the schools, opened a school of mines, and initiated the botanical expedition under the able guidance of naturalist José Celestino Mutis. The new institute trained…
- Góngora, Don Luis de (Spanish poet)
Luis de Góngora was one of the most influential Spanish poets of his era. His Baroque, convoluted style, known as Gongorism (gongorismo), was so exaggerated by less gifted imitators that his reputation suffered after his death until it underwent a revaluation in the 20th century. The son of a
- Góngora, Luis de (Spanish poet)
Luis de Góngora was one of the most influential Spanish poets of his era. His Baroque, convoluted style, known as Gongorism (gongorismo), was so exaggerated by less gifted imitators that his reputation suffered after his death until it underwent a revaluation in the 20th century. The son of a
- Gongorism (Spanish literary style)
Marinism: …European movements like it were Gongorism in Spain, préciosité in France, and metaphysical poetry in England, notably in the work of George Herbert, Richard Crashaw, and Andrew Marvell. A revival of interest in the Baroque generally after World War II led to both a resurgence in interest and a reassessment…
- gongorismo (Spanish literary style)
Marinism: …European movements like it were Gongorism in Spain, préciosité in France, and metaphysical poetry in England, notably in the work of George Herbert, Richard Crashaw, and Andrew Marvell. A revival of interest in the Baroque generally after World War II led to both a resurgence in interest and a reassessment…
- Gongsun Hong (Chinese scholar)
Gongsun Hong was a scholar who helped establish Confucianism as the official doctrine of the Chinese state. According to tradition, Gongsun Hong was a poor swineherd who did not begin the study of the Confucian Classics until he was 40 years old. In 140 bc he placed first among scholars examined by
- Gongsun Long (Chinese philosopher)
Gongsun Long was one of the best known representatives of the Dialecticians, a Chinese philosophical school of the 3rd and 4th centuries bce whose adherents were concerned with analyzing the true meaning of words. The school had little influence after its own time until the modern period and
- Gongsun Yang (Chinese statesman)
Shang Yang was a Chinese statesman and thinker whose successful reorganization of the state of Qin paved the way for the eventual unification of the Chinese empire by the Qin dynasty (221–207 bce). Shang Yang believed that the integrity of a state could be maintained only with power and that power
- Gongsunlongzi (work by Gongsun Long)
Gongsun Long: The Gongsunlongzi (“Master Gongsun Long”) is one of only a few independent works of ancient Chinese literature dealing with logic that has been at least partially preserved. Only 6 of its original 14 chapters survive.
- gongsuo (Chinese history)
China: Social organization: …engaged in a trade, the gongsuo (guild), emerged in China’s cities. Huiguan frequently became subunits of gongsuo, and both groups participated in the informal governance of cities.
- Gongylonema neoplasticum (worm)
Johannes Fibiger: …a worm now known as Gongylonema neoplasticum. The worms had infected cockroaches eaten by the rats.
- Gongyue (China)
Kuldja, city, western Uygur Autonomous Region of Xinjiang, China. It is the chief city, agricultural market, and commercial centre of the Ili River valley, which is a principal route from the Xinjiang region into Central Asia. The valley is far wetter than any other part of Xinjiang and has rich
- goniatite (fossil cephalopod)
Devonian Period: Invertebrates: …Emsian Age) the evolution of goniatite ammonites, as well as other ammonites, allows detailed zonal subdivisions to be established until the end of the Cretaceous Period. Devonian goniatites have been found on all continents except Antarctica.
- Goniatitidae (fossil cephalopod)
Devonian Period: Invertebrates: …Emsian Age) the evolution of goniatite ammonites, as well as other ammonites, allows detailed zonal subdivisions to be established until the end of the Cretaceous Period. Devonian goniatites have been found on all continents except Antarctica.
- Gonick, Larry (cartoonist)
comic strip: The fact-based comic: historical, didactic, political, narrative: …the specialty of the award-winning Larry Gonick and the Mexican cartoonist Rius (Eduardo del Río). These are at once elementary introductions and sophisticated presentations of sometimes difficult material (Gonick, for instance, has produced “cartoon guides” to physics, genetics, and computer science); they mix line drawings and explanations with asides, political…
- Gonikaputra (Hindu author, mystic, and philosopher)
Patanjali was the author or one of the authors of two great Hindu classics: the first, Yoga-sutras, a categorization of Yogic thought arranged in four volumes with the titles “Psychic Power,” “Practice of Yoga,” “Samadhi” (state of profound contemplation of the Absolute), and “Kaivalya”
- gonin-gumi (Japanese history)
Japan: The establishment of the system: …country were required to form gonin-gumi (“five-household groups”), or neighborhood associations, to foster joint responsibility for tax payment, to prevent offenses against the laws of their overlords, to provide one another with mutual assistance, and to keep a general watch on one another. Economic controls over peasants were further strengthened.…
- goniometer (measurement instrument)
goniometer, instrument for measuring angles, particularly used in the study of crystals. Nicolaus Steno in 1669 determined the interfacial angles of quartz crystals by cutting sections perpendicular to the edges, the plane angles of the sections being the angles between the faces which were
- goniometric sight (firearms)
artillery: Azimuth and range: …the adoption of the “goniometric,” or “panoramic,” sight, which could be revolved in any direction and which was graduated in degrees relative to the axis of the gun bore. The gun’s position and that of the target were marked on a map, and the azimuth (the number of degrees…
- Gonionemus (hydrozoan genus)
Gonionemus, genus of small marine hydrozoans (order Limnomedusae, phylum Cnidaria). The conspicuous jellyfish stage of Gonionemus species is bell-shaped and measures about 15 mm (0.6 inch) or more in diameter. From the centre of the bell hangs the manubrium, a tubular structure that contains the
- Gonionemus vertens (hydrozoan)
Gonionemus: Stings from the species Gonionemus vertens are unusually venomous, and dense shoals of such jellyfish in warm seas pose a danger to swimmers. A sting from G. vertens causes a burning sensation in the skin, which is accompanied by rapid blistering and local edema, followed in turn by general…
- Goniophora (fossil clam genus)
Goniophora, extinct genus of clams found in Silurian to Devonian rocks (the Silurian Period began 444 million years ago and lasted about 28 million years; it was followed by the Devonian, which lasted some 57 million years). Goniophora is characterized by a distinctive shell that is sharply
- Gonja (people)
Guang, a people of northern Ghana who speak a variety of Kwa languages of the Niger-Congo language family. They are descendants of a trading nation (usually called Gonja) founded in the 16th century, and they now constitute a chiefdom in the Northern region of Ghana, in the area above the
- Gonja, kingdom of (historical kingdom, Africa)
Dagomba: …the conquests of the Guang (Gonja) in the mid-17th century. At the end of that century the Dagomba were subjugated by the Asante, who forced them to pay an annual tribute of slaves; this tribute was paid until 1874, when the Asante were defeated by British forces.
- gonnardite (mineral)
natrolite: mesolite, scolecite, thomsonite, and gonnardite; all have similar modes of occurrence, molecular structures, and physical properties, even though they have different crystal symmetries: mesolite and scolecite crystallize in the monoclinic system (three unequal axes with one inclined to the plane of the other two), whereas natrolite, thomsonite, and gonnardite…
- gonne (weapon)
onager, in weaponry, ancient Roman torsion-powered weapon, similar to a catapult. It consisted of a single vertical beam thrust through a thick horizontal skein of twisted cords. The skein was twisted tight by geared winches, and the beam was then pulled down to a horizontal position, further
- Gonne, Maud (Irish patriot)
Maud Gonne was an Irish patriot, actress, and feminist. She was one of the founders of Sinn Féin (“We Ourselves”), and an early member of the theatre movement started by her longtime suitor, W.B. Yeats. The daughter of an Irish army officer and his English wife, Gonne made her debut in St.
- Gonō River (river, Japan)
Chūgoku Range: …by the gorge of the Gōno River in the west. The Gōno River has been bordered by an important highway since ancient times. The Kammuri Mountains to the west of the gorge are sometimes considered to be an independent unit. Only a few peaks of the Chūgoku Range exceed 3,300…
- gonococcal conjunctivitis (eye disorder)
conjunctivitis: Gonococcal conjunctivitis, invasion of the conjunctiva by gonorrhea organisms, was once common among newborn infants, who became infected during delivery. This infection can cause blindness if not treated promptly. It is prevented by routine application of antimicrobials to each eye of an infant after delivery.…
- gonococcus (bacteria species)
endocarditis: >Gonococcus bacteria or by fungi. This form of endocarditis develops rapidly, with fever, malaise, and other signs of systemic infection coupled with abnormal cardiac function and even acute heart failure. Subacute endocarditis is caused by less-virulent strains of Streptococcus and is more slowly progressive.
- gonoduct (anatomy)
animal reproductive system: Tracts: …a pair of tubes (gonoducts) extending from anterior, funnel-like openings (ostia) to the cloaca, except as noted below. The gonoducts are specialized along their length for secretion of substances added to the eggs; for transport, storage, nutrition, and expulsion of eggs or the products of conception; and, in species…
- gonophore (zoology)
reproductive behaviour: Coelenterates: …a colony, reproductive individuals called gonophores develop into free-swimming organisms (medusae) that reproduce sexually. Fertilization can be either external or internal; if external, the eggs are shed directly into the water. Internal fertilization results in larvae that swim out of the parent and soon settle on a surface, where they…
- Gonophysema gullmarensis (crustacean)
crustacean: Reproduction and life cycles: In Gonophysema gullmarensis the male is found in a small pouch in the female genital tract. In many of the more advanced decapods, such as crabs and lobsters, however, the males are larger than the females and may have much larger pincers. Another example of sexual…
- gonopod (zoology)
reproductive behaviour: Crustaceans: … have secondary genital appendages called gonopods, by which they transfer the spermatophore directly to the genital opening of the female. One millipede actually uses a “tool” in sperm transfer; the male rounds a fecal pellet, places a drop of sperm on it, and, using its legs, passes the pellet back…
- gonopodium (zoology)
reproductive behaviour: Crustaceans: … have secondary genital appendages called gonopods, by which they transfer the spermatophore directly to the genital opening of the female. One millipede actually uses a “tool” in sperm transfer; the male rounds a fecal pellet, places a drop of sperm on it, and, using its legs, passes the pellet back…
- Gonorhynchus gonorhynchus (fish)
sandfish: Sandfishes, or beaked salmon, of the species Gonorhynchus gonorhynchus (family Gonorhynchidae) live in shallow to deep Indo-Pacific waters and can burrow rapidly in sand. They are slender fishes up to 37.5 cm (15 inches) long and have pointed snouts; the mouth, preceded by a whiskerlike barbel, is…
- gonorrhea (pathology)
gonorrhea, sexually transmitted disease characterized principally by inflammation of the mucous membranes of the genital tract and urethra. It is caused by the gonococcus, Neisseria gonorrhoeae—a bacterium with a predilection for the type of mucous membranes found in the genitourinary tract and
- Gonorynchiformes (fish order)
fish: Annotated classification: Anotophysi Order Gonorynchiformes (milkfish, beaked sandfishes, snake mudheads, and relatives) Toothless; with epibranchial organs and a characteristic caudal skeleton. The anterior ribs and vertebrae show affinities with the superorder Ostariophysi, and the group may belong with the ostariophysans rather than with the Protacanthopterygii. Length about 10–150 cm…
- Gonostomatidae (fish)
bristlemouth, (family Gonostomatidae), any of the approximately 33 species of oceanic fishes (order Stomiiformes), occurring in tropical regions of the major oceans and characterized by luminescent organs on the undersides of their bodies. They inhabit moderate depths and are often referred to as
- gonozooid (anatomy)
moss animal: Reproduction: …brood chambers, which are called gonozooids. During development, a young embryo squeezes off groups of cells that form secondary embryos; these in turn may form tertiary embryos. In this way, many larvae can develop in a single brood chamber.
- Gonsalvus Hispanus (Franciscan friar)
Blessed John Duns Scotus: Years at the University of Paris of Blessed John Duns Scotus: …John Duns Scotus and Master Gonsalvus Hispanus. The penalty was exile from France within three days. Boniface countered with a bull of August 15 suspending the university’s right to give degrees in theology or canon and civil law. As a result of his harassment and imprisonment by the king’s minister,…
- Gontcharova, Natalya (Russian artist)
Natalya Goncharova was an innovative Russian painter, sculptor, and stage designer who was a founder, with Mikhail Larionov, of Rayonism (c. 1910) and was a designer for the Ballets Russes. In the 21st-century art market, Goncharova’s paintings brought some of the highest prices for works by women
- Gonthier de Biran, Marie-François-Pierre (French statesman and philosopher)
Marie-François-Pierre Maine de Biran was a French statesman, empiricist philosopher, and prolific writer who stressed the inner life of man, against the prevalent emphasis on external sense experience, as a prerequisite for understanding the human self. Born with the surname Gonthier de Biran, he
- Gontran (king of Burgundy)
Guntram was a Merovingian king of Burgundy who strove to maintain a balance of power among his warring relations. Guntram received the kingdom of Orleans, including Burgundy in the quadripartite division of the lands of his father, Chlotar I, which took place on the king’s death in 561, and added
- Gonville and Caius Hall (building, Cambridge, England, United Kingdom)
quadrangle: …best-known quadrangles is that of Gonville and Caius, Cambridge (begun 1565), built by John Caius partly to display the new Renaissance architecture he had seen while journeying in Italy. He created an allegorical “progress” in the quadrangle: one passed in succession through the Gate of Humility, the Gate of Virtue,…
- Gonville, Edmund (British priest)
Edmund Gonville was a parish priest who founded Gonville Hall (1349), since 1557 Gonville and Caius College, at the University of Cambridge. He was the son of William de Gonvile and the brother of Sir Nicholas Gonvile. He served as rector of Thelnetham in Suffolk (1320–26), of Rushford (1326–42),
- Gonyaulax (dinoflagellate genus)
Gonyaulax, genus of dinoflagellate algae (family Gonyaulacaceae) that inhabit marine, fresh, or brackish water. Several planktonic species are toxic and are sometimes abundant enough to colour water and cause the phenomenon called red tide, which may kill fish and other animals. Humans may be
- Gonyaulax catenella (dinoflagellate)
Gonyaulax: …have ingested large quantities of Gonyaulax catenella.
- Gonyaulax tamarensis (dinoflagellate)
poison: Protistan poisons: …coast of North America and G. tamarensis along the eastern coast of North America. Intoxications from these organisms are known as paralytic shellfish poisoning. The symptoms, which begin with a tingling or burning sensation, then numbness of the lips, gums, tongue, and face, gradually spread. Gastrointestinal upset may be present.…
- Gonyostomum semen (algae)
algae: The algal cell: Gonyostomum semen, a freshwater member of the class Raphidophyceae, has numerous mucocysts, which, when such cells are collected in a plankton net, discharge and render the net and its contents somewhat gummy.
- Gonystylus (plant genus)
Malvales: Neuradaceae, Thymelaeaceae, and Sphaerosepalaceae: …genera in the group include: Gonystylus (20 species), which grows in Indo-Malesia (see Malesian subkingdom) and the western Pacific; and Tepuianthus (7 species), which is found in the Guiana Highlands and is perhaps the only member of the family to have true petals.
- Gonzaga College (university, Spokane, Washington, United States)
Gonzaga University, private, coeducational institution of higher learning in Spokane, Washington, U.S. It is affiliated with the Jesuit order of the Roman Catholic church. The university includes the College of Arts and Sciences and schools of business administration, education, engineering,
- Gonzaga Cycle (painting by Tintoretto)
Tintoretto: Career: …the eight scenes of the Gonzaga Cycle, with vivid scenes of battles, painted between 1579 and 1580, and the many paintings for the halls of the Scrutinio and of the Maggior Consiglio in the Doges’ Palace, which the Republic wanted to adorn with new canvases after the fire of 1577.…
- Gonzaga Dynasty (Italian dynasty)
Gonzaga Dynasty, Italian dynasty whose heads ruled Mantua from 1328 to 1707 and also Montferrat, with the stronghold of Casale, from 1536 to 1707. Their origins are uncertain, but by the 12th century the Corradi family of Gonzaga were established as members of the feudal gentry owning estates near
- Gonzaga University (university, Spokane, Washington, United States)
Gonzaga University, private, coeducational institution of higher learning in Spokane, Washington, U.S. It is affiliated with the Jesuit order of the Roman Catholic church. The university includes the College of Arts and Sciences and schools of business administration, education, engineering,
- Gonzaga, Federigo II (duke of Mantua)
Gonzaga Dynasty: …was succeeded by his son Federigo II (d. 1540), captain general of the papal forces. After the Peace of Cambrai (1529) Federigo II’s ally and protector, the emperor Charles V, raised his title to that of duke of Mantua in 1530. It was during Federigo II’s reign that the court…
- Gonzaga, Francesco (Italian cardinal)
Poliziano: …a new patron in Cardinal Francesco Gonzaga. It was for a court occasion that he wrote in Mantua Orfeo (1480; “Orpheus”), a short dramatic composition in the vernacular, based on the myth of Orpheus and Eurydice and inspired by the same humanist ideal of beauty that pervades his Stanze. Orfeo…
- Gonzaga, Giovan Francesco I (duke of Mantua)
Gonzaga Dynasty: …in succession, and then Giovan Francesco I (sometimes referred to as Francesco I; d. 1407), who, although at one time allied with the treacherous Gian Galeazzo Visconti, incurred the latter’s enmity and all but lost his estates and his life in consequence; eventually he joined the Florentines and Bolognese, enemies…
- Gonzaga, Giovan Francesco II (duke of Mantua)
humanism: The 15th century: …he accepted the invitation of Gianfrancesco Gonzaga, marquis of Mantua, to become tutor to the ruling family. At this post Vittorino spent the remaining 22 years of his life. His school, held in a delightful palace that he renamed “La Giocosa,” had as its students not only the Gonzaga children…
- Gonzaga, Giovan Francesco III (duke of Mantua)
art market: The 15th century: …by Isabella d’Este, wife of Francesco Gonzaga III, at the ducal palace in Mantua (see also House of Este; Gonzaga dynasty). Decorated with paintings by Andrea Mantegna and other court artists, d’Este’s studiolo was designed to show off her remarkable collection of jewelry, antique cameos, and
- Gonzaga, Ludovico (marquess of Mantua)
Andrea Mantegna: Years as court painter in Mantua: …the marchese di Montova (Mantua), Ludovico Gonzaga, in 1459, he was forced to submit to limitations on his freedom of travel and acceptance of commissions from other patrons. Despite such restrictions, Mantegna journeyed to Florence and Pisa in 1466–67, where he renewed contact with works of art by Donatello, Fra…
- Gonzaga, Luigi I (ruler of Mantua)
Gonzaga Dynasty: …with the 14th century, when Luigi I (also called Ludovico; 1267–1360), after fierce struggles, supplanted his brother-in-law Rinaldo (nicknamed Passerino) Bonacolsi as lord of Mantua in August 1328, with the title of captain general and afterward of vicar-general of the empire, adding the designation of count of Mirandola and Concordia.…
- Gonzaga, Luiz (Brazilian musician)
Gilberto Gil: …of the celebrated Northeastern performer Luiz Gonzaga, whose style of music (called baião) reflected the rhythms of the zabumba drum played in Pernambuco and Bahia states. When Gil was 18 years old and studying business administration at the Federal University of Bahia, in Salvador, he and others formed a music…
- Gonzaga, Tomás Antônio (Portuguese poet)
Tomás Antônio Gonzaga was a poet whose popularity in Portugal up to the 20th century was second only to that of Luís de Camões. Gonzaga completed his law studies at the University of Coimbra (1768) and in 1782 was appointed a judge in Vila Rica, Brazil. There he fell in love with Marília, who was
- Gonzales v. Carhart (law case)
Roe v. Wade: In Gonzales v. Carhart (2007), the Court upheld the federal Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act (2003), which prohibited a rarely used abortion procedure known as intact dilation and evacuation. In Whole Woman’s Health v. Hellerstedt (2016), the Court invoked its decision in Casey to strike down two…