- Gordon, Mary (American author)
Mary Gordon is an American writer whose novels and short fiction deal with growing up as a Roman Catholic and with the nature of goodness and piety as expressed within that tradition. Raised in an observant Catholic family (her father was a convert from Judaism), Gordon attended Barnard College,
- Gordon, Mary Catherine (American author)
Mary Gordon is an American writer whose novels and short fiction deal with growing up as a Roman Catholic and with the nature of goodness and piety as expressed within that tradition. Raised in an observant Catholic family (her father was a convert from Judaism), Gordon attended Barnard College,
- Gordon, Michael (American director)
Michael Gordon was an American film director whose career was bisected by the eight years he spent in exile from Hollywood after he was blacklisted for having run afoul of the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC). Gordon attended Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Maryland, and then
- Gordon, Patrick (Scottish mercenary)
Patrick Gordon was a Scottish soldier of fortune who became a general in the Russian army and a close friend of Peter I the Great of Russia (reigned 1682–1725). Having left Scotland, which was torn by religious and political strife, Gordon went to Danzig (now Gdańsk) in Poland and studied at the
- Gordon, Richard F., Jr. (American astronaut)
Richard F. Gordon, Jr. was an American astronaut who accompanied Charles Conrad on the September 1966 flight of Gemini 11. They docked with an Agena target on the first orbit and were propelled together to a record altitude of 850 miles (about 1,370 km). During a 45-minute space walk, Gordon joined
- Gordon, Richard Francis, Jr. (American astronaut)
Richard F. Gordon, Jr. was an American astronaut who accompanied Charles Conrad on the September 1966 flight of Gemini 11. They docked with an Agena target on the first orbit and were propelled together to a record altitude of 850 miles (about 1,370 km). During a 45-minute space walk, Gordon joined
- Gordon, Robert Jacob (Dutch explorer)
Orange River: Study and exploration: …the Afrikaner explorer Hendrik Hop; Robert Jacob Gordon, a Dutch officer; William Paterson, an English traveler; and the French explorer François Le Vaillant. They explored the river from its middle course to its mouth, and Gordon named it in honour of the Dutch house of Orange. Mission stations were established…
- Gordon, Ruth (American writer and actress)
Ruth Gordon was an American writer and actress who achieved award-winning acclaim in both pursuits. Much of her writing was done in collaboration with her second husband, Garson Kanin. After high school Gordon studied at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts in New York City. She had a role as an
- Gordon, Sir Arthur (British colonial official)
Pacific Islands: Patterns of colonial administration: Arthur Gordon set up a system of native administration that incorporated the chiefs; the island was divided into provinces and districts that, on the information available to Gordon, represented the old divisions of Fiji, and over each he tried to select the chief to take…
- Gordon, Thomas (English writer)
Commonwealthmen: …such as John Trenchard and Thomas Gordon, who coauthored Cato’s Letters, a widely reprinted set of essays named after the Roman aristocrat who opposed Julius Caesar’s rule. The most-notable Commonwealthmen later in the century included radical philosophers such as Richard Price and Joseph Priestley, the political reformer James Burgh, and…
- Gordon, Walter Lockhart (Canadian finance minister)
Walter Lockhart Gordon was a Canadian businessman, political leader, and finance minister who contributed greatly to the government planning of Canada’s economic development. Gordon studied chartered accountancy, became a partner in a Toronto firm, and then became president of a company of
- Gordon, William (Scottish Jacobite)
William Gordon, 6th Viscount Kenmure was a Scottish Jacobite who was miscast as a leader in the rebellion of 1715 on behalf of James Edward, the Old Pretender, against King George I. His father, Alexander Gordon, 5th Viscount Kenmure (d. 1698), had fought for King William III against the forces of
- Gordon-Levitt, Joseph (American actor)
Rian Johnson: Starring Joseph Gordon-Levitt as a high-school student investigating the death of his former girlfriend, it won generally positive reviews. Johnson next wrote and directed The Brothers Bloom (2008), a more-mainstream caper movie and romantic comedy that starred Mark Ruffalo, Adrien Brody, and Rachel Weisz.
- Gordon-Walker of Leyton, Patrick Chrestien Gordon Walker, Baron (British politician)
Patrick Chrestien Gordon Walker was a British politician who was foreign secretary (1964–65) in Harold Wilson’s Labour government. Gordon Walker was elected to Parliament in 1945 for Smethwick and two years later appointed undersecretary of state for Commonwealth relations. His skillful handling of
- gordonia (tree)
gordonia, any of some 70 species in the genus Gordonia of the tea family (Theaceae). The genus is native to North America and East Asia and includes the loblolly bay and other trees with yellow-centred, white, camellia-like blooms. The loblolly bay, or tan bay (G. lasianthus), native to
- Gordonia alatamaha (plant)
franklinia, (Franklinia, or Gordonia, alatamaha), small tree of the tea family (Theaceae), native to the southeastern United States. It was first identified in 1765 by the botanist John Bartram along the Altamaha River near Fort Barrington, Georgia, and named in honour of Benjamin Franklin. The
- Gordonia axillaris (tree)
gordonia: …evergreen species from South China, G. axillaris, has stalkless blossoms 10 cm (4 inches) wide that flower in winter on evergreen trees, which sometimes are up to 7 metres (22.5 feet) tall. The franklinia tree, which was once included in Gordonia, is now called Franklinia alatamaha.
- Gordonia lasianthus (tree)
gordonia: …East Asia and includes the loblolly bay and other trees with yellow-centred, white, camellia-like blooms. The loblolly bay, or tan bay (G. lasianthus), native to southeastern North America, reaches about 19 metres (60 feet). It has ascending branches, an oval form, evergreen leaves, and long-stalked, fragrant flowers in late summer.…
- Gordonstoun School (school, Scotland, United Kingdom)
Elgin: The internationally famous Gordonstoun School, an independent boarding school founded in 1934 by the German educator Kurt Hahn, lies 6 miles (10 km) to the north. Elgin is the historic county town (seat) and administrative centre of Moray. Pop. (2001) 21,160; (2011) 23,130.
- Gordonsville (Mississippi, United States)
Hattiesburg, city, seat (1908) of Forrest county, southeastern Mississippi, U.S., on the Leaf and Bouie rivers, 70 miles (113 km) north of Gulfport. The city, in a longleaf-pine forest area, was founded in 1882 by Captain William H. Hardy, lumberman and engineer, who named it for his wife (it was
- Gordonsville (Virginia, United States)
Second Battle of Bull Run: The Northern Virginia Campaign: …to concentrate his command at Gordonsville, Virginia, a city that served as the terminus of the Virginia Central Railroad. This railroad was a vital lifeline to the Shenandoah Valley, the so-called breadbasket of the Confederacy. However, Jackson’s corps, freshly arrived from the Virginia Peninsula, occupied Gordonsville, and Pope fell back…
- Gordy, Berry (American businessman and musician)
Berry Gordy is an American businessman, founder of the Motown Record Corporation (1959), which became the most successful Black-owned music company in the United States. Through Motown, he developed the majority of the great rhythm-and-blues (R&B) performers of the 1960s and ’70s, including Diana
- Gordyene (ancient kingdom, Asia)
history of Mesopotamia: The Parthian period: …where Tigranes’ capital was located; Gordyene and Zabdicene (near modern Çölemerik in eastern Turkey), located to the east of Sophene; and Osroene, with its capital Edessa (modern Urfa, Turkey), which lay inside the Roman sphere of influence. Rule over so many small kingdoms gave Mithradates II the title “King of…
- gore (balloon component)
balloon flight: Envelope design: …be assembled with many vertical gores (fabric sections, or panels) or fewer horizontal gores. The gore material can be cut straight (with the fabric’s natural grain) or on the bias (diagonal to the fabric’s natural grain). If straight gores are used, excess material can be gathered to create a fluted…
- Gore bill (United States [1991])
Leonard Kleinrock: …report, and in 1991 the High Performance Computing Act (also known as the Gore bill) was passed. Federal funding was made available for high-speed networks, dramatically upgrading the country’s computing infrastructure.
- Gore Browne, Thomas (New Zealand politician)
New Zealand: Ethnic conflict: Gore Browne was guided in native policy by the head of the Native Land Purchase Department, Donald (later Sir Donald) McLean, who, responsive to settler demands, increased pressure on potential sellers. Grey’s caution and his recognition that a chief could veto sales proposed by any…
- Gore ot uma (work by Griboyedov)
Aleksandr Sergeyevich Griboyedov: …comedy Gore ot uma (Wit Works Woe) is one of the finest in Russian literature.
- Gore, Al (vice president of United States)
Al Gore is an American politician and environmental activist who served as the 45th vice president of the United States (1993–2001) in the Democratic administration of President Bill Clinton. In the 2000 presidential election, one of the most controversial elections in American history, Gore won
- Gore, Albert A. (United States senator)
United States presidential election of 1956: Democratic nomination: Albert A. Gore of Tennessee, Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey of Minnesota, and Mayor John F. Wagner of New York City. Kefauver finished on top in the first ballot but without enough delegates to win outright. In the second ballot, Kennedy finished first but also without…
- Gore, Albert Arnold, Jr. (vice president of United States)
Al Gore is an American politician and environmental activist who served as the 45th vice president of the United States (1993–2001) in the Democratic administration of President Bill Clinton. In the 2000 presidential election, one of the most controversial elections in American history, Gore won
- Gore, Charles (British clergyman)
Charles Gore was an English theologian, Anglican bishop, and an exponent of the liberal tendency within the Anglo-Catholic movement. He demonstrated a willingness to accept historical criticism of the Bible. Ordained in 1878, Gore served in a variety of college positions before 1894, when he began
- Gore, Spencer (British artist)
London Group: Gilman, Walter Sickert, and Spencer Gore. These artists, along with their allies Charles Ginner and Lucien Pissarro, advocated depicting the urban and working classes, and they favoured the light palette and high-keyed colour of the Impressionists and Post-Impressionists.
- Gore-Booth, Constance (Anglo-Irish countess and political activist)
Constance Markievicz was an Anglo-Irish countess and political activist who was the first woman elected to the British Parliament (1918), though she refused to take her seat. She was also the only woman to serve in the first Dáil Éireann (Irish Assembly), in which she acted as minister of labour
- Gorecht (ancient region, Netherlands)
Groningen: …districts then known as the Gorecht, to the bishops of Utrecht by the emperor Henry III. Originally an agricultural settlement, it developed into an important commercial centre on the Aa River, providing ships for the Crusades in the 12th century and joining the Hanseatic League c. 1282. By the 14th…
- Górecki, Henryk (Polish composer)
Henryk Górecki was a Polish composer in the Western classical tradition whose sombre Symphony No. 3 (1976) enjoyed extraordinary international popularity in the late 20th century. Górecki studied at the Music Academy of Katowice, Pol. The works of Anton Webern, Olivier Messiaen, and Karlheinz
- Górecki, Henryk Mikołaj (Polish composer)
Henryk Górecki was a Polish composer in the Western classical tradition whose sombre Symphony No. 3 (1976) enjoyed extraordinary international popularity in the late 20th century. Górecki studied at the Music Academy of Katowice, Pol. The works of Anton Webern, Olivier Messiaen, and Karlheinz
- Gorée Island (island, Senegal)
Gorée Island, small island just south of Cape Verde Peninsula, Senegal, that was the site of one of the earliest European settlements in Western Africa and long served as an outpost for slave and other trading. It is a rather barren volcanic rock of only 88 acres (36 hectares) that commands the
- Goreed, Joseph (American singer and actor)
Joe Williams was an American singer known for his mastery of jazz, blues, and ballads and for his association with Count Basie in the 1950s. Williams moved from Georgia to Chicago at the age of three. As a youth he sang with a gospel group. In 1937 he joined clarinetist Jimmie Noone’s band, which
- Gorelic (Germany)
Görlitz, city, Saxony Land (state), extreme eastern Germany. It lies along the Neisse River, opposite the Polish town of Zgorzelec (which before 1945 was part of Görlitz), east of Dresden. It originated as the Slav settlement of Gorelić (first mentioned in 1071) and was chartered in 1303, when it
- Göreme National Park (national park, Turkey)
Cappadocia: …of Derinkuyu and Kaymaklı and Göreme National Park, where there are a large number of rock-cut churches and dwellings. In 1985 Göreme National Park and other rock sites in the area were designated a UNESCO World Heritage site.
- Goremykin, Ivan Logginovich (Russian official)
Ivan Logginovich Goremykin was a Russian official and government minister whom many view as a symbol of the unresponsiveness of the tsarist regime to the social unrest preceding the Russian Revolution. Goremykin spent most of his life as a government bureaucrat, attaining successively more
- Goren, Charles H. (American bridge player)
Charles H. Goren was an American contract bridge authority whose innovative system of point-count bidding and repeated successes in tournaments made him one of the world’s most famous and influential players. Goren studied law at McGill University in Montreal (LL.M., 1923) and practiced law in
- Goren, Charles Henry (American bridge player)
Charles H. Goren was an American contract bridge authority whose innovative system of point-count bidding and repeated successes in tournaments made him one of the world’s most famous and influential players. Goren studied law at McGill University in Montreal (LL.M., 1923) and practiced law in
- Gorenko, Anna Andreyevna (Russian poet)
Anna Akhmatova was a Russian poet recognized at her death as the greatest woman poet in Russian literature. Akhmatova began writing verse at age 11 and at 21 joined a group of St. Petersburg poets, the Acmeists, whose leader, Nikolay Gumilyov, she married in 1910. They soon traveled to Paris,
- Gorenstein, Daniel (American mathematician)
algebra: New challenges and perspectives: …1983 by the American mathematician Daniel Gorenstein, following the contributions of hundreds of individuals over thousands of pages. Although this classification seems comprehensive, it is anything but clear-cut and systematic, since simple groups appear in all kinds of situations and under many guises. Thus, there seems to be no single…
- Goretski, Maksin (Belarusian writer)
Belarus: Literature: …prose writers Zmitrok Byadulya and Maksim Haretski. Many of these writers had been contributors to the influential Belarusian newspaper Nasha Niva (“Our Field”), published in Vilnius during the period 1906–16. Of crucial importance for an understanding of the Belarusian cultural predicament in the face of war and revolution are Kupala’s…
- Gorevan carpet
Heriz carpet: …light, rather bright colour schemes; Gorevan, in darker colours; Bakshāyesh; and Mehrabān. Heriz carpets are symmetrically knotted on a cotton foundation. From time to time there has been experimentation in the production of silk rugs—again influenced by the Tabrīz rug trade—in rather crude designs and bold colours. Heriz carpets as…
- Gorey, Edward (American writer and illustrator)
Edward Gorey was an American writer, illustrator, and designer, noted for his arch humour and gothic sensibility. Gorey drew a pen-and-ink world of beady-eyed, blank-faced individuals whose dignified Edwardian demeanour is undercut by silly and often macabre events. His nonsense rhymes recall those
- Gorey, Edward St. John (American writer and illustrator)
Edward Gorey was an American writer, illustrator, and designer, noted for his arch humour and gothic sensibility. Gorey drew a pen-and-ink world of beady-eyed, blank-faced individuals whose dignified Edwardian demeanour is undercut by silly and often macabre events. His nonsense rhymes recall those
- Gorgān (Iran)
Gorgān, city, capital of Golestān province, north-central Iran. It is situated along a small tributary of the Qareh River, 23 miles (37 km) from the Caspian Sea. The city, in existence since Achaemenian times, long suffered from inroads of the Turkmen tribes who occupied the plain north of the
- Gorgas Hospital (hospital, Ancón, Panama)
Ancón: It was noted for the Gorgas Hospital for tropical diseases, named for Col. William Crawford Gorgas (U.S. Army surgeon who eradicated yellow fever from what was then the Canal Zone); the hospital closed and became a clinic. Ancón is also the site of the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute (established 1923),…
- Gorgas, Josiah (American military officer)
Josiah Gorgas was an army officer who directed the production of armaments for the Confederacy during the American Civil War. Born and raised in poverty, Gorgas had to put work before education as a youth. He won an appointment to West Point, however, and graduated sixth in his class in 1841. For
- Gorgas, William Crawford (United States Army surgeon)
William Crawford Gorgas was a U.S. Army surgeon who contributed greatly to the building of the Panama Canal by introducing mosquito control to prevent yellow fever and malaria. After receiving his medical degree (1879) from the Bellevue Hospital Medical College, New York City, Gorgas joined the
- gorge (landform)
river: Formation of canyons and gorges: The most spectacular valley forms are canyons and gorges that result from accelerated entrenchment prompted by recent tectonic activity, especially vertical uplift. Canyons and gorges are still in the initial phase of valley development. They range in size from narrow slits in resistant bedrock…
- gorge (fishing)
fishing: Early history: …predecessor of the fishhook: a gorge—that is, a piece of wood, bone, or stone 1 inch (2.5 cm) or so in length, pointed at both ends and secured off-centre to the line. The gorge was covered with some kind of bait. When a fish swallowed the gorge, a pull on…
- Gorge Mountains (mountains, China)
Wu Mountains, mountain range on the border between Hubei province and Chongqing municipality, central China. These mountains are often referred to by Western writers as the Gorge Mountains, because the Yangtze River (Chang Jiang) cuts its way through the area from the Sichuan Basin into the central
- Gorge Tract (river, South Africa)
Orange River: Physiography: …sea, is sometimes called the Gorge Tract. Where the rock surface is soft, the river valley is generally open. Where the river traverses harder igneous rock, however, it is confined between almost vertical cliffs more than 1,000 feet high in places. Some of the Orange’s most rugged passages are found…
- Gorgeana (Maine, United States)
York, town, York county, southwestern Maine, U.S., situated at the mouth of the York River on the Atlantic Ocean, 43 miles (69 km) southwest of Portland. York includes the communities of York Village, Cape Neddick, York Beach, and York Harbor. Settled in 1624 on a site called Agamenticus by Captain
- gorgeous bush-shrike (bird)
shrike: …gorgeous, or four-coloured, bush-shrike (Telophorus quadricolor) is green above and golden below, with black-bordered red throat. Some authors equate the genus Chlorophoneus with Telophorus.
- Gorgeous Hussy, The (film by Brown [1936])
Clarence Brown: The 1930s: He had less success with The Gorgeous Hussy (1936), which starred Crawford as Peggy Eaton, the daughter of a tavern keeper whose friendship with Pres. Andrew Jackson (Lionel Barrymore) becomes a source of controversy. Brown was more comfortable with the material provided in Conquest (1937), a long but lavish historical…
- Gorges, Sir Ferdinando (British colonist)
Sir Ferdinando Gorges was a British proprietary founder of Maine, who promoted, though unsuccessfully, the colonization of New England along aristocratic lines. After a colourful military career in his early manhood, during which he was knighted (1591), Gorges’ life after 1605 was dominated by
- gorget (animal communication)
hummingbird: …most typical badge is the gorget, a bib of iridescent feathers the colour of which depends on the viewing angle. Other specializations include crests; abbreviated or thickened shafts of wing feathers; spatulate, wiry, or flaglike tail feathers; and “pantaloons,” tufts of puffy feathers on the thighs (usually white).
- Görgey, Artúr (Hungarian army officer)
Artúr Görgey was a Hungarian army officer famous for his role in the Revolution of 1848–49. Görgey served as a youth in the Austrian army but left it to study chemistry. Later, when Hungarian patriots raised a national army in 1848, he joined it and soon won a reputation for valour and leadership.
- Gorgias (work by Plato)
Plato: Early dialogues of Plato: The more elaborate Gorgias considers, while its Sophist namesake is at Athens, whether orators command a genuine art or merely have a knack of flattery. Socrates holds that the arts of the legislator and the judge address the health of the soul, which orators counterfeit by taking the…
- Gorgias of Leontini (Greek Sophist)
Gorgias of Leontini was a Greek Sophist and rhetorician who made important contributions to rhetorical theory and practice. In a lost work, he argued for the nonexistence, unknowability, or uncommunicability of Being. Plato treats him, in the dialogue Gorgias, as a rhetorician
- Gorgīn Khan (Persian official)
Afghanistan: Overthrow of foreign rule: …led a successful rising against Gorgīn Khan, the Persian governor of Kandahār.
- Gorgon (Greek mythology)
Gorgon, monster figure in Greek mythology. Homer spoke of a single Gorgon—a monster of the underworld. The later Greek poet Hesiod increased the number of Gorgons to three—Stheno (the Mighty), Euryale (the Far Springer), and Medusa (the Queen)—and made them the daughters of the sea god Phorcys and
- Gorgonacea (invertebrate order)
cnidarian: Annotated classification: Order Gorgonacea Sea fans and sea whips. Colonies commonly arborescent with axial skeleton of gorgonin and/or calcareous spicules. Polyps rarely dimorphic. Tropical and subtropical. Order Alcyonacea Soft corals. Small to massive colonial forms. Lower parts of polyps fused into a fleshy mass; oral ends protrude. Internal…
- Gorgonia (invertebrate)
sea fan, (genus Gorgonia), any member of a genus of invertebrate marine animals of the suborder Holaxonia (class Anthozoa, phylum Cnidaria). It is a variety of coral composed of numerous polyps—cylindrical sessile (attached) forms—that grow together in a flat fanlike pattern. Each polyp in the
- gorgonian (invertebrate order)
cnidarian: Annotated classification: Order Gorgonacea Sea fans and sea whips. Colonies commonly arborescent with axial skeleton of gorgonin and/or calcareous spicules. Polyps rarely dimorphic. Tropical and subtropical. Order Alcyonacea Soft corals. Small to massive colonial forms. Lower parts of polyps fused into a fleshy mass; oral ends protrude. Internal…
- gorgonin (biochemistry)
sea fan: …a flexible, horny scleroprotein called gorgonin, supports all branches of the colony, and the living tissues form a layer over its entire surface. The tissues are often coloured in hues of red, yellow, or orange. The polyps spread out their tentacles to form a plankton-catching net. In most cases the…
- Gorgonzola (Italy)
Gorgonzola, town, Lombardy regione, northern Italy, northeast of Milan. The town is famous for the making of Gorgonzola cheese, which is soft when freshly made; after being drained twice, it is then oven dried for 20 days and pierced with copper needles to promote the internal formation of the
- Gorgonzola (cheese)
Gorgonzola: …famous for the making of Gorgonzola cheese, which is soft when freshly made; after being drained twice, it is then oven dried for 20 days and pierced with copper needles to promote the internal formation of the characteristic greenish blue mold (Penicillium roqueforti). This cheese is also made in other…
- Gorgosaurus (dinosaur genus)
Albertosaurus, (genus Albertosaurus), large carnivorous dinosaurs of the Late Cretaceous Period (99.6 million to 65.5 million years ago) found as fossils in North America and eastern Asia. Albertosaurs are an early subgroup of tyrannosaurs, which appear to have evolved from them. In structure and
- Gorham (Illinois, United States)
Tri-State Tornado of 1925: …virtually destroyed the towns of Gorham, De Soto, and Murphysboro, among others. Murphysboro was the hardest-hit area in the tornado’s path, with 234 fatalities. After killing more than 600 people in Illinois, the tornado crossed the Wabash River into Indiana, where it demolished the towns of Griffin, Owensville, and Princeton
- Gorham’s Cave (anthropological and archaeological site, Gibraltar)
Gibraltar remains: Forbes’ Quarry, Devil’s Tower, Gorham’s Cave, and Vanguard Cave. The first locality yielded the second Neanderthal fossil ever discovered, the skull of an older adult female; though found in 1848, it was not announced to science until 1865. In 1926 the second site yielded a Paleolithic tool assemblage and…
- Gorham, George (English clergyman)
Henry Phillpotts: Gorham because of his Calvinistic view of Baptism gave rise to one of the most publicized ecclesiastical lawsuits in the 19th century and agitated High Church feeling against Parliament’s intervention in religious questions. He actively supported Tory politics, opposing social reform and religious toleration.
- Gorhoffedd (poem by Gwalchmai)
Gwalchmai ap Meilyr: …Maredudd and a “boasting poem,” Gorhoffedd, celebrating his prowess in war and with women. The son of Meilyr Brydydd, the earliest of the court poets, Gwalchmai had at least two sons who were also bards, Einion and Meilyr.
- Gori (Georgia)
Gori, city, administrative centre of Gori rayon (sector), eastern Georgia, on the Kura River. Gori is one of the oldest cities in Georgia, founded in the 7th century ce as Tontio. Before the Russian Revolution of 1917, it was a small administrative and market centre. Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin
- Gorica (Italy)
Gorizia, town, Friuli–Venezia Giulia regione, northeastern Italy, on the Isonzo River north of Trieste. From the 11th century Gorizia was the seat of the independent county of Gorizia until it passed to Austria in 1500. A noted cultural centre under Austrian rule, it was the capital of the Habsburg
- Göriceli Koƈu Mustafa Bey (Ottoman statesman)
Koƈu Bey was a Turkish minister and reformer, a notable early observer of the Ottoman decline. Originally from Albania, Koƈu Bey was sent to Constantinople, where he was educated in the Imperial Palace. He later entered the service of a number of Ottoman sultans, finding particular favour with
- gorilla (primate)
gorilla, (genus Gorilla), genus of primates containing the largest of the apes. The gorilla is one of the closest living relatives to humans; both groups last shared a common ancestor about 10 million years ago. Only the chimpanzee and the bonobo are closer. Gorillas live only in tropical forests
- Gorilla (primate)
gorilla, (genus Gorilla), genus of primates containing the largest of the apes. The gorilla is one of the closest living relatives to humans; both groups last shared a common ancestor about 10 million years ago. Only the chimpanzee and the bonobo are closer. Gorillas live only in tropical forests
- Gorilla beringei (primate)
gorilla: The eastern gorilla (G. beringei) is also made up of two subspecies: the eastern lowland, or Grauer’s, gorilla (G. beringei graueri), of the lowland rainforests of the eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo (Kinshasa), and the mountain gorilla (G. beringei beringei), found in the montane rainforests…
- Gorilla beringei beringei (primate)
endangered species: Human beings and endangered species: In addition, the mountain gorilla (G. beringei beringei), a close relative of the Eastern Lowland gorilla, is also at risk of extinction. However, authorities cite poaching, disease, and crossfire between warring political groups in the vicinity of Virunga National Park as the primary sources of its population decline.
- Gorilla beringei graueri (primate)
endangered species: Human beings and endangered species: …threatened Eastern Lowland gorilla (Gorilla beringei graueri). Mining has increased gorilla mortality by reducing the animal’s food resources and leading many people displaced by the mining to kill gorillas for their meat. In addition, the mountain gorilla (G. beringei beringei), a close relative of the Eastern Lowland gorilla, is…
- Gorilla gorilla (primate)
gorilla: The western gorilla (Gorilla gorilla) is made up of two subspecies: the western lowland gorilla (G. gorilla gorilla), which inhabits the lowland rainforests from Cameroon to the Congo River, and the Cross River gorilla (G. gorilla diehli), which inhabits a small forested region along the Cross…
- Gorilla gorilla diehli (primate)
gorilla: …the Congo River, and the Cross River gorilla (G. gorilla diehli), which inhabits a small forested region along the Cross River separating Nigeria from Cameroon. The eastern gorilla (G. beringei) is also made up of two subspecies: the eastern lowland, or Grauer’s, gorilla (G. beringei graueri), of the lowland rainforests…
- Gorilla gorilla gorilla (primate)
primate: Distribution and abundance: The estimated number of western lowland gorillas (G. gorilla gorilla), a species thought to be critically endangered, increased when a population of more than 100,000 was discovered in 2008 in the swamps of the Lac Télé Community Reserve in the Republic of the Congo.
- Gorilla, My Love (short stories by Bambara)
Toni Cade Bambara: She published the short-story collections Gorilla, My Love (1972) and The Sea Birds Are Still Alive (1977), as well as the novels The Salt Eaters (1980) and If Blessing Comes (1987). She edited and contributed to The Black Woman: An Anthology (1970) and to Tales and Stories for Black Folks…
- Gorillas in the Mist (film by Apted [1988])
Sigourney Weaver: Stardom: Alien, Ghostbusters, and Working Girl: In the biopic Gorillas in the Mist (1988), Weaver portrayed American zoologist Dian Fossey and earned another Oscar nomination for best actress.
- Gorillas in the Mist (book by Fossey)
Dian Fossey: While teaching, Fossey also completed Gorillas in the Mist (1983; film 1988). Back in Rwanda, Fossey resumed her campaign against poachers, taking increasingly drastic measures to protect the Virunga gorillas. On December 26, 1985, she was discovered murdered near her campsite. Though no assailant was ever identified, it is widely…
- Gorillaz (British musical group)
De La Soul: …Soul and the virtual group Gorillaz shared the Grammy Award for best pop collaboration with vocals for the song “Feel Good Inc.” De La Soul subsequently issued several mixtapes before releasing the Kickstarter-funded And the Anonymous Nobody (2016), a solidly creative if low-key album featuring such guests as Damon Albarn,…
- Gorillini (mammal tribe)
ape: …distinct tribes are gorillas (tribe Gorillini) and chimpanzees (tribe Panini). All nonhuman apes have been classified as endangered species.
- Gorin no sho (work by Miyamoto Musashi)
Miyamoto Musashi: …on strategy—Gorin no sho (The Book of Five Rings), which dealt with the martial experience both individually and militarily—on his deathbed. Following its first English translation in 1974, the book was seriously studied by executives in the West in order to better understand Japanese management techniques and strategies.
- Göring, Hermann (German minister)
Hermann Göring was a leader of the Nazi Party and one of the primary architects of the Nazi police state in Germany. He was condemned to hang as a war criminal by the International Military Tribunal at Nürnberg in 1946 but took poison instead and died the night his execution was ordered. Göring was
- Gorion, Micah Joseph bin (Russian author)
Micah Joseph Berdichevsky was an author of works in Hebrew, German, and Yiddish. His impassioned writings, perhaps more than those of any other Jewish author, bear poignant witness to the “rent in the heart” of 19th-century Jews torn between tradition and assimilation. He was also the author of
- Goriot, Père (fictional character)
Père Goriot, fictional character, the protagonist of Honoré de Balzac’s novel Le Père Goriot
- Goris (Armenia)
Armenia: Settlement patterns: Alexandropol (Gyumri), Kamo, and Goris—accounted for about one-tenth of the total population. Two-thirds of the population are now urbanized.
- Gorizia (Italy)
Gorizia, town, Friuli–Venezia Giulia regione, northeastern Italy, on the Isonzo River north of Trieste. From the 11th century Gorizia was the seat of the independent county of Gorizia until it passed to Austria in 1500. A noted cultural centre under Austrian rule, it was the capital of the Habsburg