- Hall’s theorem (mathematics)
combinatorics: Systems of distinct representatives: …König is closely related to Hall’s theorem and can be easily deduced from it. Conversely, Hall’s theorem can be deduced from König’s: If the elements of rectangular matrix are 0s and 1s, the minimum number of lines that contain all of the 1s is equal to the maximum number of…
- Hall, Adelaide (American singer)
Adelaide Hall was an American-born jazz improviser whose wordless rhythm vocalizing ushered in what became known as scat singing. The daughter of a music teacher, Hall attended the Pratt Institute in New York City. In 1921 she made her professional debut as a chorus member in the benchmark revue
- Hall, Alexander (American director)
Alexander Hall was an American director whose wide-ranging films notably included Little Miss Marker (1934) and Here Comes Mr. Jordan (1941). Originally an actor, Hall began performing on stage at the age of four, and in 1914 he appeared in the first of several silent films. In the 1920s he worked
- Hall, Anthony Michael (American actor)
Brat Pack: Impact of the Brat Pack label: …regarded as Brat Pack members—namely, Anthony Michael Hall, Molly Ringwald, and Ally Sheedy—did not feature in the story, but the title stuck to them regardless. As a result, the friendships that had formed between some of the actors were damaged because quite a few of them did not want to…
- Hall, Anthony William, Baron Hall of Birkenhead (British media executive)
Tony Hall is a British theatre and television administrator who served as chief executive (2001–13) of the Royal Opera House (ROH) and later as director general (2013–20) of the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC). After graduating (1970) from Keble College, Oxford, Hall joined the BBC in 1973
- Hall, Arsenio (American entertainer)
Arsenio Hall is an American actor, comedian, and producer who has appeared in several television shows and movies but is best known for being a popular late-night talk-show host. He was the first African American to host his own late-night talk show. Hall was the only child of his mother, Annie,
- Hall, Asaph (American astronomer)
Asaph Hall was an American astronomer who discovered the two moons of Mars, Deimos and Phobos, in 1877 and calculated their orbits. Hall came from an impoverished family and was largely self-taught, though he did study briefly at Central College, McGrawville, N.Y., and at the University of
- Hall, Basil (British explorer)
Basil Hall was a British naval officer and traveler remembered for noteworthy accounts of his visits to the Orient, Latin America, and the United States. The son of geologist Sir James Hall, the younger Hall joined the navy in 1802. In 1815 he commanded the escort ship that accompanied William Pitt
- Hall, Ben (Australian bushranger)
Ben Hall was a notorious Australian bushranger (a bandit of the Outback) who led a gang that committed hundreds of robberies in New South Wales. His daring rebelliousness and his reputation as a “gentleman bushranger” who avoided bloodshed and showed courtesy to women gained him much popular
- Hall, Benjamin (Australian bushranger)
Ben Hall was a notorious Australian bushranger (a bandit of the Outback) who led a gang that committed hundreds of robberies in New South Wales. His daring rebelliousness and his reputation as a “gentleman bushranger” who avoided bloodshed and showed courtesy to women gained him much popular
- Hall, Carl Christian (Danish politician)
Carl Christian Hall was a Danish politician whose policies led Denmark into a disastrous war with Germany. Hall was educated in the law, and in 1848 he became a leader of the National Liberal Party. He served as minister of church, education, and culture in 1854–57. He supported his party’s old
- Hall, Charles Francis (American explorer)
Charles Francis Hall was an American explorer who made three Arctic expeditions. Hall spent his early life in Ohio, where he held such various jobs as those of blacksmith, journalist, stationer, and engraver, before taking an interest in exploration. In 1860 he landed alone from a whaleboat at
- Hall, Charles Martin (American chemist)
Charles Martin Hall was an American chemist who discovered the electrolytic method of producing aluminum, thus bringing the metal into wide commercial use. While a student at Oberlin (Ohio) College Hall became interested in producing aluminum inexpensively. He continued to use the college
- Hall, Chester Moor (British jurist and mathematician)
Chester Moor Hall was an English jurist and mathematician who invented the achromatic lens, which he utilized in building the first refracting telescope free from chromatic aberration (colour distortion). Convinced from study of the human eye that achromatic lenses were feasible, Hall experimented
- Hall, Diane (American actress and director)
Diane Keaton is an American film actress and director who achieved fame in quirky comic roles prior to gaining respect as a dramatic actress. Keaton studied acting at Santa Ana College in California and at the Neighborhood Playhouse in New York. She appeared in summer stock in the mid-1960s and in
- Hall, Donald (American poet, essayist and critic)
Donald Hall was an American poet, essayist, and critic, whose poetic style moved from studied formalism to greater emphasis on personal expression. Hall received bachelor’s degrees in literature from both Harvard (1951) and Oxford (1953) universities and at the latter received the Newdigate Prize
- Hall, Donald Andrew, Jr. (American poet, essayist and critic)
Donald Hall was an American poet, essayist, and critic, whose poetic style moved from studied formalism to greater emphasis on personal expression. Hall received bachelor’s degrees in literature from both Harvard (1951) and Oxford (1953) universities and at the latter received the Newdigate Prize
- Hall, Edward (English historian)
Edward Hall was an English historian whose chronicle was one of the chief sources of William Shakespeare’s history plays. Educated at Eton and at King’s College, Cambridge, Hall became common sergeant of London in 1533 and undersheriff in 1535. He was also a member of Parliament for Wenlock (1529)
- Hall, Edward (American anthropologist)
communication: Proxemics: …developed by an American anthropologist, Edward Hall. Proxemics involves the ways in which people in various cultures utilize both time and space as well as body positions and other factors for purposes of communication. Hall’s “silent language” of nonverbal communications consists of such culturally determined interactions as the physical distance…
- Hall, Edwin Herbert (American physicist)
Hall effect: physicist Edwin Herbert Hall. The electric field, or Hall field, is a result of the force that the magnetic field exerts on the moving positive or negative particles that constitute the electric current. Whether the current is a movement of positive particles, negative particles in the…
- Hall, Floris Adriaan van (Dutch statesman)
William II: …fortunate in his choice of F.A. van Hall as finance minister. Van Hall stabilized the public finances and, helped by profits from Dutch colonial ventures in the East Indies, achieved the country’s first surplus in 70 years in 1847.
- Hall, Frank H. (American educator)
Braille: …was invented in 1892 by Frank H. Hall, superintendent of the Illinois School for the Blind. A modified form of this device is still in use today, as are later, similar devices. One innovation for producing Braille is an electric embossing machine similar to an electric typewriter, and electronic computer…
- Hall, G. Stanley (American psychologist)
G. Stanley Hall was a psychologist who gave early impetus and direction to the development of psychology in the United States. Frequently regarded as the founder of child psychology and educational psychology, he also did much to direct into the psychological currents of his time the ideas of
- Hall, George (American hoaxer)
Cardiff Giant: …Giant, famous hoax perpetrated by George Hall (or Hull) of Binghamton, New York, U.S. A block of gypsum was quarried near Fort Dodge, Iowa, and shipped to Chicago, Illinois. There it was carved (1868) in the shape of a human figure and then buried on a farm near Cardiff, New…
- Hall, Granville Stanley (American psychologist)
G. Stanley Hall was a psychologist who gave early impetus and direction to the development of psychology in the United States. Frequently regarded as the founder of child psychology and educational psychology, he also did much to direct into the psychological currents of his time the ideas of
- Hall, Grayson (American actress)
The Night of the Iguana: …the group’s unofficial chaperone (Grayson Hall) attempts to have Shannon fired, prompting him to take the group to a seedy, remote hotel run by Maxine (Ava Gardner). While there, Shannon meets the virginal spinster Hannah (Deborah Kerr). Sexual tensions and the various characters’ personal struggles subsequently play out.
- Hall, Gus (American politician)
Gus Hall was an American political organizer who was the general secretary of the Communist Party of the United States of America (CPUSA; 1959–2000) and a four-time candidate for U.S. president (1972, 1976, 1980, 1984). Hall’s parents were members of the militant Industrial Workers of the World,
- Hall, Harvey Monroe (American botanist)
Frederic Edward Clements: Together with American botanist Harvey Monroe Hall, Clements wrote an influential introduction to this interdisciplinary area of research, The Phylogenetic Method in Taxonomy: The North American Species of Artemisia, Chrysothamnus, and Atriplex (1923). Unlike Hall, who was a Darwinian (a proponent of evolution by natural selection), Clements believed that…
- Hall, James (American geologist)
James Hall was an American geologist and paleontologist who was a major contributor to the geosynclinal theory of mountain building. According to this theory, sediment buildup in a shallow basin causes the basin to sink, thus forcing the neighbouring area to rise. His detailed studies established
- Hall, James (American author)
James Hall was an American author who was one of the earliest to write about the American frontier. Hall was a soldier in the War of 1812, a lawyer and circuit judge, a newspaper and magazine editor, state treasurer of Illinois (1827–31), a banker in Cincinnati, Ohio, and a writer of history and
- Hall, James N. (American author)
Mutiny on the Bounty: …novel by Charles Nordhoff and James Norman Hall, published in 1932. The vivid narrative is based on an actual mutiny, that against Capt. William Bligh of the HMS Bounty in 1789. Related by Roger Byam, a former midshipman and linguist aboard the vessel, the novel describes how Fletcher Christian and…
- Hall, James Norman (American author)
Mutiny on the Bounty: …novel by Charles Nordhoff and James Norman Hall, published in 1932. The vivid narrative is based on an actual mutiny, that against Capt. William Bligh of the HMS Bounty in 1789. Related by Roger Byam, a former midshipman and linguist aboard the vessel, the novel describes how Fletcher Christian and…
- Hall, Jeffrey C. (American geneticist)
Jeffrey C. Hall is an American geneticist known for his investigations of courtship behaviour and biological rhythms in the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster. His research into molecular mechanisms underlying biological rhythm in the fruit fly helped scientists gain new insight into circadian
- Hall, Jerry (American model and actress)
Mick Jagger: Artist collaborations and other work: …ex-wife American model and actress Jerry Hall. Jagger has been the subject of several books, including Mick Jagger: The Unauthorized Biography (2005) by British music journalist Alan Clayson, Mick Jagger (2012) by British author Philip Norman, and Mick: The Wild Life and Mad Genius of Jagger (2012) by American author…
- Hall, John (English educator)
John Hall was an educational reformer in Cromwellian England. Educated at St. John’s College, Cambridge, and Gray’s Inn, London, Hall became associated as a young man with the circle of reformers around Samuel Hartlib. He was also a friend of Thomas Hobbes. A versatile writer, he worked for the
- Hall, John L. (American physicist)
John L. Hall is an American physicist, who shared one-half of the 2005 Nobel Prize for Physics with Theodor W. Hänsch for their contributions to the development of laser spectroscopy, the use of lasers to determine the frequency (colour) of light emitted by atoms and molecules. (The other half of
- Hall, Joseph (English bishop, philosopher, and satirist)
Joseph Hall was an English bishop, moral philosopher, and satirist, remarkable for his literary versatility and innovations. Hall’s Virgidemiarum: Six Books (1597–1602; “A Harvest of Blows”) was the first English satire successfully modeled on Latin satire, and its couplets anticipated the satiric
- Hall, Joyce C. (American executive)
Joyce C. Hall was an American businessman, cofounder and chief executive (1910–66) of Hallmark Cards, Inc., the largest greeting-card manufacturer in the world. Using $3,500 that he had earned during high school, Hall established a wholesale greeting-card business in Kansas City, Missouri, in 1910.
- Hall, Joyce Clyde (American executive)
Joyce C. Hall was an American businessman, cofounder and chief executive (1910–66) of Hallmark Cards, Inc., the largest greeting-card manufacturer in the world. Using $3,500 that he had earned during high school, Hall established a wholesale greeting-card business in Kansas City, Missouri, in 1910.
- Hall, Katori (American playwright)
African American literature: Drama and poetry: James Ijames, Katori Hall, Lynn Nottage, Jackie Sibblies Drury, Suzan-Lori Parks, and Michael R. Jackson all won Pulitzer Prizes for drama in the 21st century, offering plays that address themes such as Black identity and kinship, masculinity, sexuality, prejudice, war, and the illusion of the
- Hall, Lars-Göran (Swedish athlete)
Lars-Göran Hall was a Swedish athlete who was the first person to win two individual Olympic gold medals in the modern pentathlon. Hall, a carpenter from Gothenburg, was also the first nonmilitary winner of the individual modern pentathlon. Hall was the world champion in the pentathlon in 1950 and
- Hall, Marshall (British physiologist)
Marshall Hall was an English physiologist who was the first to advance a scientific explanation of reflex action. While maintaining a highly successful private medical practice in London (1826–53), Hall conducted physiological research that gained him renown on the European continent and derision
- Hall, Michael C. (American actor)
Six Feet Under: …includes his brother, David (Michael C. Hall), who hides his homosexuality from most of the world; his eccentric mother, Ruth (Frances Conroy); and his troubled, artistic teenaged sister, Claire (Lauren Ambrose). Also pivotal to the story are Nate’s love interests: Lisa (Lili Taylor), his estranged girlfriend, who gives birth…
- Hall, Miss Dixie (American songwriter and entertainer)
Tom T. Hall: …in collaboration with his wife “Miss Dixie” Hall (originally Iris Lawrence); the couple continued to compose and publish songs into the second decade of the 21st century. Home Grown, an all-acoustic album of new material, was released in 1998. Meanwhile, Hall built and operated a recording studio at his home…
- Hall, Peter (English theatrical manager and director)
Peter Hall was an English theatrical manager and director who held notably successful tenures as director of the Royal Shakespeare Company and the National Theatre. Hall produced and acted in amateur productions at the University of Cambridge before receiving his M.A. degree there in 1953. He
- Hall, Radclyffe (British author)
Radclyffe Hall was an English writer whose novel The Well of Loneliness (1928) created a scandal and was banned for a time in Britain for its treatment of lesbianism. Hall was educated at King’s College, London, and then attended school in Germany. She began her literary career by writing verses,
- Hall, Rebecca (British actress)
Woody Allen: 2000 and beyond: …pair of tourists (Johansson and Rebecca Hall); Penélope Cruz’s splendid performance as his combustible ex-wife earned her an Academy Award as best supporting actress. The film became one of Allen’s biggest hits ever, grossing nearly $100 million worldwide.
- Hall, Richard (American record producer)
Muscle Shoals Studios: “Land of 1000 Dances”: Songwriter-engineer-turned-producer Rick Hall set up Fame Studios in Florence in 1961. He recruited his session musicians from a local group—Dan Penn and the Pallbearers—who played on the studio’s first hit, Arthur Alexander’s “You Better Move On.” Atlanta-based publisher Lowery Music provided regular work, and, after Jerry…
- Hall, Rob (New Zealand mountain climber)
Rob Hall was a New Zealand mountaineering guide and entrepreneur who made five ascents of Earth’s highest peak, Mount Everest. He and other members of an expedition he was leading died in a blizzard near the summit of the mountain in 1996. Hall grew up in modest circumstances on the South Island of
- Hall, Robert (British minister)
Robert Hall was an English Baptist minister, writer, social reformer, and an outstanding preacher. In 1790 Hall became pastor of a church at Cambridge, where he remained for 15 years and acquired a reputation for his fine, often outspoken sermons. He advocated freedom of the press, was influenced
- Hall, Robert A., Jr. (American scholar)
Kensington Stone: …style; a few scholars, notably Robert A. Hall, Jr., former professor at Cornell University, have argued for its probable authenticity. A 200-pound (90-kilogram) slab of graywacke inscribed with runes (medieval Germanic script), the stone is said to have been unearthed on a farm near Kensington, Minn., in 1898. The inscription,…
- Hall, Robert Edwin (New Zealand mountain climber)
Rob Hall was a New Zealand mountaineering guide and entrepreneur who made five ascents of Earth’s highest peak, Mount Everest. He and other members of an expedition he was leading died in a blizzard near the summit of the mountain in 1996. Hall grew up in modest circumstances on the South Island of
- Hall, Roger (New Zealand author)
New Zealand literature: Drama: Roger Hall wrote clever comedies and satires of New Zealand middle-class life—Middle Age Spread (published 1978), which was produced in London’s West End, and Glide Time (published 1977). O’Sullivan’s Shuriken (published 1985) used a riot by Japanese soldiers in a New Zealand prison camp to…
- Hall, Samuel (British engineer)
Samuel Hall was an English engineer and inventor of the surface condenser for steam boilers. The son of a cotton manufacturer, in 1817 Hall devised a method for removing loose fibres from lace by passing the fabric swiftly through a row of gas flames. His process was widely adopted and earned him a
- Hall, Sir Benjamin (British government official)
Big Ben: …some historians to stand for Sir Benjamin Hall, the commissioner of works.
- Hall, Sir James, 4th Baronet (British geologist)
Sir James Hall, 4th Baronet was a Scottish geologist and physicist who founded experimental geology by artificially producing various rock types in the laboratory. Hall succeeded to his father’s baronetcy in 1776 and thereafter studied at Christ’s College, Cambridge, and the University of
- Hall, Sir John (prime minister of New Zealand)
Sir John Hall was a farmer, public official, and politician who as prime minister of New Zealand (1879–82) skillfully formed and maintained a government in a period of change and instability. As a young civil servant in London, Hall decided to emigrate to New Zealand (1852). He bought land in
- Hall, Sir Peter Reginald Frederick (English theatrical manager and director)
Peter Hall was an English theatrical manager and director who held notably successful tenures as director of the Royal Shakespeare Company and the National Theatre. Hall produced and acted in amateur productions at the University of Cambridge before receiving his M.A. degree there in 1953. He
- Hall, Ted (American-born physicist and spy)
Theodore Hall was an American-born physicist and spy who during World War II worked on the Manhattan Project to build the first atomic bomb and also delivered details on its design to the Soviet Union. An extremely precocious youngster, Hall graduated from high school in Queens at the age of 14. He
- Hall, Theodore (American-born physicist and spy)
Theodore Hall was an American-born physicist and spy who during World War II worked on the Manhattan Project to build the first atomic bomb and also delivered details on its design to the Soviet Union. An extremely precocious youngster, Hall graduated from high school in Queens at the age of 14. He
- Hall, Thomas (American songwriter and entertainer)
Tom T. Hall was an American songwriter and entertainer, popularly known as the “Storyteller,” who expanded the stylistic and topical range of the country music idiom with plainspoken, highly literate, and often philosophical narratives. His songs were largely reflections of his own experiences,
- Hall, Tom T. (American songwriter and entertainer)
Tom T. Hall was an American songwriter and entertainer, popularly known as the “Storyteller,” who expanded the stylistic and topical range of the country music idiom with plainspoken, highly literate, and often philosophical narratives. His songs were largely reflections of his own experiences,
- Hall, Tony (British media executive)
Tony Hall is a British theatre and television administrator who served as chief executive (2001–13) of the Royal Opera House (ROH) and later as director general (2013–20) of the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC). After graduating (1970) from Keble College, Oxford, Hall joined the BBC in 1973
- Hall, Tracy (American scientist)
high-pressure phenomena: Large-volume apparatuses: …in 1954 by the scientist Tracy Hall of the General Electric Company for use in the company’s diamond-making program, incorporates features of both opposed-anvil and piston-cylinder designs. Two highly tapered pistonlike anvils compress a sample that is confined in a torus, much like a cylinder open at both ends. Hundreds…
- Hall-Héroult process (industrial process)
metallurgy: Electrolytic smelting: In the Hall-Héroult smelting process, a nearly pure aluminum oxide compound called alumina is dissolved at 950 °C (1,750 °F) in a molten electrolyte composed of aluminum, sodium, and fluorine; this is electrolyzed to give aluminum metal at the cathode and oxygen gas at the anode. The…
- Hall-Jones, Sir William (prime minister of New Zealand)
Sir William Hall-Jones was a politician and respected administrator who served for a short time as prime minister of New Zealand (1906) and who later was appointed High Commissioner for New Zealand in the United Kingdom. A carpenter by trade, Hall-Jones emigrated to New Zealand (1873) and,
- Halla, Mount (mountain, Cheju Island, South Korea)
Jeju Island: …symmetrically to the crest of Mount Halla (6,398 feet [1,950 meters]), which has a lake in its crater. The mountain and its surrounding area are a national park. Hundreds of crater-formed hills from which volcanic material once flowed, seaside precipices with waterfalls, and lava tunnels (or tubes) are international sightseeing…
- Halladat oder das rote Buche (work by Gleim)
Johann Wilhelm Ludwig Gleim: …a dull didactic poem entitled Halladat oder das rote Buch (1774), and collections of fables and romances. Of higher merit is his Preussische Kriegslieder von einem Grenadier (1758), inspired by the campaigns of Frederick II.
- Halladay, Daniel (American inventor)
windmill: …in the United States by Daniel Hallady in 1854, and its production in steel by Stuart Perry in 1883 led to worldwide adoption, for, although inefficient, it was cheap and reliable. The design consists of a number of small vanes set radially in a wheel. Governing is automatic: of yaw…
- Halladay, Doc (American baseball player)
Roy Halladay was an American professional baseball player who twice won the Cy Young Award (2003, 2010) as the best pitcher in first the American and then the National League and threw the second postseason no-hitter in the sport’s history in 2010. Halladay was drafted by the American League (AL)
- Halladay, Harry Roy (American baseball player)
Roy Halladay was an American professional baseball player who twice won the Cy Young Award (2003, 2010) as the best pitcher in first the American and then the National League and threw the second postseason no-hitter in the sport’s history in 2010. Halladay was drafted by the American League (AL)
- Halladay, Roy (American baseball player)
Roy Halladay was an American professional baseball player who twice won the Cy Young Award (2003, 2010) as the best pitcher in first the American and then the National League and threw the second postseason no-hitter in the sport’s history in 2010. Halladay was drafted by the American League (AL)
- Ḥallāj, al- (Islamic mystic)
al-Ḥallāj was a controversial writer and teacher of Islamic mysticism (Ṣūfism). Because he represented in his person and works the experiences, causes, and aspirations of many Muslims, arousing admiration in some and repression on the part of others, the drama of his life and death has been
- Hallam family (theatrical family)
Hallam family, family of Anglo-American actors and theatrical managers associated with the beginning of professional theatre in what is now the United States. Lewis Hallam (1714–56) was the founder of the family. With his wife, three children, and a company of 10, Hallam left his native England and
- Hallam, Arthur Henry (English author)
Arthur Henry Hallam was an English essayist and poet who died before his considerable talent developed; he is remembered principally as the friend of Alfred Tennyson commemorated in Tennyson’s elegy In Memoriam. Hallam was the son of the English historian Henry Hallam. He met Tennyson at Trinity
- Hallam, Lewis, the Younger (American actor)
Lewis Hallam the Younger was the son of Lewis Hallam and part of a family that pioneered professional theatre in the United States. After his father’s death, Hallam’s mother married the theatrical manager David Douglass, and the company worked in the U.S. with Hallam as the leading man. After
- Halland (county, Sweden)
Halland, län (county) of southern Sweden, coextensive with the traditional landskap (province) of Halland. It is a low undulating region of heaths and ridges that rise above gently sloping sandy beaches. The coastline is smooth with few anchorages. Four rivers—the Viskan, Ätran, Nissan, and Lagan,
- Hallandale (Florida, United States)
Hallandale Beach, city, Broward county, southeastern Florida, U.S. It lies along the Atlantic Ocean, about 15 miles (25 km) north of Miami and just south of Hollywood. Settled by Swedish farmers in the late 1890s, it was laid out in 1898 and named for Luther Halland, a trading-post operator. The
- Hallandale Beach (Florida, United States)
Hallandale Beach, city, Broward county, southeastern Florida, U.S. It lies along the Atlantic Ocean, about 15 miles (25 km) north of Miami and just south of Hollywood. Settled by Swedish farmers in the late 1890s, it was laid out in 1898 and named for Luther Halland, a trading-post operator. The
- Ḥallānīyah, Al- (island, Oman)
Khurīyā Murīyā: …they are Al-Ḥāsikīyah, Al-Sawdāʾ, Al-Ḥallānīyah, Qarzawīt, and Al-Qiblīyah. Al-Ḥallānīyah, the largest of the islands, is the only one inhabited. All of the islands’ inhabitants left in 1818 because of pirate raids; later the islands fell under the control of Arabs on the mainland and then of the sultan of…
- Hallaren, Mary Agnes (United States military officer)
Mary Agnes Hallaren was a U.S. military officer who held commands in the early Women’s Army Corps and who worked for the integration of women into the regular army. Hallaren was educated at the state teachers college in her native Lowell. In 1942 she entered the Officer Candidate School of the
- Halle (Germany)
Halle, city, Saxony-Anhalt Land (state), east-central Germany. It is situated on a sandy plain on the right bank of the Saale River, which there divides into several arms, 21 miles (34 km) north of Leipzig. The first evidence of occupation of Halle comes from artifacts of the Upper Paleolithic
- Halle an der Saale (Germany)
Halle, city, Saxony-Anhalt Land (state), east-central Germany. It is situated on a sandy plain on the right bank of the Saale River, which there divides into several arms, 21 miles (34 km) north of Leipzig. The first evidence of occupation of Halle comes from artifacts of the Upper Paleolithic
- Halle Culture (ancient European culture)
Halle: …developed—a distinctive feature of the Halle Culture. About 400 bc the Halle Culture came to an end, to be succeeded by the later Jasdorf Culture, which lasted until the Roman period.
- Hallé Orchestra (British orchestra)
Sir John Barbirolli: …included conductorships (1943–70) with the Hallé Orchestra in Manchester, Eng., where he gained international recognition as a conductor. A decade of deteriorating health did not prevent him from continuing guest conducting, recording, and worldwide touring with major orchestras. He was principal conductor for the Houston Symphony Orchestra (1961–67) and was…
- Halle, Adam de la (French poet)
Adam De La Halle was a poet, musician, and innovator of the earliest French secular theatre. Adam’s Jeu de la feuillée (“Play of the Greensward”) is a satirical fantasy based on his own life, written to amuse his friends in Arras upon his departure for Paris to pursue his studies. Le Congé (“The
- Halle, Carl (British pianist)
Sir Charles Hallé was a German-born British pianist and conductor, founder of the famed Hallé Orchestra. Hallé studied at Darmstadt and in Paris, where he became friendly with Frédéric Chopin, Franz Liszt, and Hector Berlioz. He gave chamber concerts in Paris, but during the Revolution of 1848 he
- Halle, Edward (English historian)
Edward Hall was an English historian whose chronicle was one of the chief sources of William Shakespeare’s history plays. Educated at Eton and at King’s College, Cambridge, Hall became common sergeant of London in 1533 and undersheriff in 1535. He was also a member of Parliament for Wenlock (1529)
- Halle, Morris (American linguist)
phonetics: Jakobson, Fant, and Halle features: …Roman Jakobson, Gunnar Fant, and Morris Halle concluded in 1951 that segmental phonemes could be characterized in terms of 12 distinctive features. All of the features were binary, in the sense that a phoneme either had, or did not have, the phonetic attributes of the feature. Thus phonemes could be…
- Hallé, Sir Charles (British pianist)
Sir Charles Hallé was a German-born British pianist and conductor, founder of the famed Hallé Orchestra. Hallé studied at Darmstadt and in Paris, where he became friendly with Frédéric Chopin, Franz Liszt, and Hector Berlioz. He gave chamber concerts in Paris, but during the Revolution of 1848 he
- Halle, University of (university, Halle, Germany)
Martin Luther University of Halle-Wittenberg, state-controlled coeducational institution of higher learning at Halle, Ger. The university was formed in 1817 through the merger of the University of Wittenberg and the University of Halle. Wittenberg was founded by the elector Frederick II of Saxony
- Halle-Wittenberg, Martin Luther University of (university, Halle, Germany)
Martin Luther University of Halle-Wittenberg, state-controlled coeducational institution of higher learning at Halle, Ger. The university was formed in 1817 through the merger of the University of Wittenberg and the University of Halle. Wittenberg was founded by the elector Frederick II of Saxony
- Halleck, Fitz-Greene (American poet)
Fitz-Greene Halleck was an American poet, a leading member of the Knickerbocker group, known for both his satirical and romantic verse. An employee in various New York City banks, including that of John Jacob Astor, Halleck wrote only as an avocation. In collaboration with Joseph Rodman Drake he
- Halleck, Henry W (United States general)
Henry W. Halleck was a Union officer during the American Civil War who, despite his administrative skill as general in chief (1862–64), failed to achieve an overall battle strategy for Union forces. A graduate of the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, N.Y. (1839), Halleck was commissioned in the
- Halleck, Henry Wager (United States general)
Henry W. Halleck was a Union officer during the American Civil War who, despite his administrative skill as general in chief (1862–64), failed to achieve an overall battle strategy for Union forces. A graduate of the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, N.Y. (1839), Halleck was commissioned in the
- hälleflinta (rock)
hälleflinta, (Swedish: “rock flint”), white, gray, yellow, greenish, or pink fine-grained rock that consists of quartz intimately mixed with feldspar. It is very finely crystalline, resembling the matrix of many silica-rich (acid) igneous rocks. Many examples are banded or striated; others contain
- Hallein (Austria)
Hallein, town, north-central Austria, on the Salzach River just south of Salzburg city. Founded in the 12th century and chartered in 1230, Hallein profited from the nearby Dürrnberg saltworks, in operation since the 13th century. Old landmarks include the Classical parish church (15th century), the
- Hallel (Judaism)
Hallel, (Hebrew: “Praise”), Jewish liturgical designation for Psalms 113–118 (“Egyptian Hallel”) as read in synagogues on festive occasions. In ancient times Jews recited these hymns on the three Pilgrim Festivals, when they offered their required sacrifices in the Temple of Jerusalem. The Psalms
- hallelujah (religious music)
hallelujah, Hebrew liturgical expression, usually rendered in English as “praise the Lord.” It appears in the Hebrew Bible (Old Testament) in several psalms, usually at the beginning or end of the psalm or in both places. In ancient Judaism it was probably chanted as an antiphon by the Levite
- Hallelujah (song by Cohen)
Leonard Cohen: …became Cohen’s best-known song, “Hallelujah.” Although it did not initially receive much attention, the single gained widespread popularity when covered by Jeff Buckley in 1994. The ballad was later performed or recorded by hundreds of artists and featured in soundtracks of TV shows and films.