- Huang-ti (Chinese mythological emperor)
Huangdi, third of ancient China’s mythological emperors, a culture hero and patron saint of Daoism. Huangdi is reputed to have been born about 2704 bc and to have begun his rule as emperor in 2697. His legendary reign is credited with the introduction of wooden houses, carts, boats, the bow and
- Huangdi (Chinese mythological emperor)
Huangdi, third of ancient China’s mythological emperors, a culture hero and patron saint of Daoism. Huangdi is reputed to have been born about 2704 bc and to have begun his rule as emperor in 2697. His legendary reign is credited with the introduction of wooden houses, carts, boats, the bow and
- Huangdi jiuzhang suanfa xicao (work by Jia Xian)
Jia Xian: …of the first are extant, Huangdi jiuzhang suanfa xicao (“Detailed Sketches to the Yellow Emperor’s Nine Chapters on Mathematical Methods”) and Suanfa xiaoguji (“Collection of Mathematical Methods According to the Ancients”). Of the mathematical problems contained in the first book, about two-thirds are thought to have been incorporated in Yang…
- Huangdi neijing (Chinese medical text)
Daoism: Daoist contributions to Chinese science: …earliest surviving medical book, the Huangdineijing, or “The Yellow Emperor’s Esoteric Classic” (3rd century bce?), presents itself as the teachings of a legendary Celestial Master addressed to the Yellow Emperor.
- Huanglan (Chinese encyclopaedia)
encyclopaedia: China: …first known Chinese encyclopaedia, the Huanglan (“Imperial Anthology”), was prepared by order of the emperor about ad 220. No part of this work has survived. Part of the Bianzhu (“Stringed Pearls of Literature”), prepared about 600, is still extant. About 620 the Yiwen leiju (“Anthology of Art and Literature”) was…
- Huanglong Mountains (mountains, China)
Shaanxi: Relief and drainage: …axis forms the Baiyu and Huanglong ranges, which constitute the watershed between the Luo River system and the northern part of the province—the latter draining directly into the Huang He. On the eastern border of the basin the Huang He flows from north to south through a narrow, gorgelike trough.…
- Huanglujai (Daoist rite)
Daoism: The Lingbao scriptures and liturgies: …that of his ancestors; the Huanglujai (“Retreat of the Yellow Register”) was directed toward the salvation of the dead. Jinlujai (“Retreat of the Golden Register”), on the other hand, was intended to promote auspicious influences on the living. The Tutanjai (“Mud and Soot Retreat, or Retreat of Misery”) was a…
- Huangong (ruler of Qi)
Qi: …semi-legendary prince Duke Huan (Qi Huangong) and his famous adviser Guan Zhong, a uniform tax system was instituted, a central army was created, and state monopolies of salt and iron production were formed. At the same time, a centralized bureaucracy based on talent rather than hereditary rank began to…
- Huangpu River (river, China)
Shanghai: City layout: …of Wusong River) and the Huangpu River (a tributary of the Yangtze), which flow through the city, are severely polluted from industrial discharges, domestic sewage, and ships’ wastes; nonetheless, the Huangpu is Shanghai’s main water source. Environmental protection and urban cleanliness are enhanced by industrial and solid waste resource-recovery operations…
- Huangpu, Treaty of (Sino-French relations)
unequal treaty: …the United States and the Treaty of Whampoa with France (both 1844). Each additional treaty expanded upon the rights of extraterritoriality, and, as a result, the foreigners obtained an independent legal, judicial, police, and taxation system within the treaty ports.
- Huangshan (China)
Huangshan, city, southern Anhui sheng (province), China. The city was established and named for the famous scenic Mount Huang (Huang Shan). According to Chinese legend, Huangdi (the “Yellow Emperor”), the third of the mythical emperors of ancient China, went to the mountain (then called Mount Yi)
- Huangshi (China)
Huangshi, city, southeastern Hubei sheng (province), China. It is situated on the south bank of the Yangtze River (Chang Jiang) about 60 miles (100 km) southeast of Wuhan, the provincial capital. The nucleus of the present city was a small market town called Shihuiyao; Huangshi was the name of the
- Huangtu Gaoyuan (plateau, China)
Loess Plateau, highland area in north-central China, covering much of Shanxi, northern Henan, Shaanxi, and eastern Gansu provinces and the middle part of the Huang He (Yellow River) basin. Averaging about 4,000 feet (1,200 metres) in elevation and covering some 154,000 square miles (400,000 square
- Huangyu quanlantu (Chinese atlas)
Kangxi: Administration of the empire: …starting in 1708, the atlas Huangyu quanlantu was completed in 1717. The famous Nouvel Atlas de la Chine, de la Tartarie chinoise et du Thibet (“New Atlas of China, of Chinese Tartary, and of Tibet”) of Jean-Baptiste Bourguignon d’Anville is a French version of this original. European painting also fascinated…
- huangzhong (Chinese music)
Chinese music: Tonal system and its theoretical rationalization: …produces a basic pitch called yellow bell (huangzhong). This concept is of special interest because it is the world’s oldest information on a tonal system concerned with very specific pitches as well as the intervals between them. The precise number of vibrations per second that created the yellow bell pitch…
- Huanshaji (work by Liang Chenyu)
Liang Chenyu: Liang complied by writing the Huanshaji (“Washing the Silken Gauze”), a kunqu drama that initiated the type of theatre that was to dominate the Chinese stage until the end of the 18th century. The plot, concerning the feud between the states of Wu and Yue, is unimportant; rather, the drama…
- Huánuco (Peru)
Huánuco, city, central Peru. It is located on the bank of the Huallaga River in a cool, dry intermontane basin. In 1539 the Spaniard Gómez Alvarado founded the town of León de Los Caballeros de Huánuco (“Lion of the Gentlemen of Huánuco”) on the site of the Inca regional centre now known as Huánuco
- Huanuco cocaine (plant)
coca, (Erythroxylum coca), tropical shrub, of the family Erythroxylaceae, the leaves of which are the source of the drug cocaine. The plant, cultivated in Africa, northern South America, Southeast Asia, and Taiwan, grows about 2.4 metres (8 feet) tall. The branches are straight, and the lively
- Huanzhang (Chinese warlord)
Feng Yuxiang was a Chinese warlord, known as the Christian General, who dominated parts of North China from 1918 to 1930. A soldier at the age of 11, Feng was largely self-educated. He rose through the ranks, gathering under his command a highly disciplined body of troops. He urged his men to
- Huarás (Peru)
Huaraz, city, central Peru, on the Quilca River at its junction with the Santa River. It lies at 10,011 feet (3,052 m) above sea level in the scenic Callejón de Huaylas, against a backdrop of the snowcapped peaks of the Cordillera Blanca. Founded upon remains of a pre-Columbian civilization, it is
- Huaraz (Peru)
Huaraz, city, central Peru, on the Quilca River at its junction with the Santa River. It lies at 10,011 feet (3,052 m) above sea level in the scenic Callejón de Huaylas, against a backdrop of the snowcapped peaks of the Cordillera Blanca. Founded upon remains of a pre-Columbian civilization, it is
- Huari (archaeological site and Andean civilization, Peru)
Huari, archaeological site located in the central highland region of present-day Peru that gives its name to an Andean civilization of the central and northern highlands of the Middle Horizon (c. ad 600–1000). Huari is closely linked in its art style to the monuments of the great site of Tiwanaku,
- Huarochirí, Cordillera (mountains, Peru)
Andes Mountains: Physiography of the Central Andes: …it is bounded by the Cordillera Huarochirí, on the west slope of which the Rímac River rises in a cluster of lakes fed by glaciers and descends rapidly to the ocean (15,700 feet in 60 miles). Ticlio Pass, at an altitude of some 15,800 feet, is used by a railway.…
- Huarpe (people)
Huarpe, extinct Indian people of South America who inhabited an area bounded on the west by the Andes and on the east by the Pampas, in the present-day province of Mendoza, Argentina. They engaged in hunting and gathering to supplement their marginal agriculture. Huarpe settlements were usually
- Huáscar (ship)
Talcahuano: …Talcahuano harbour is moored the Huáscar, the Peruvian ironclad captured by Chile in 1879, during the War of the Pacific. Talcahuano is linked by both road and railroad to Concepción. In 2010 an earthquake and a resulting tsunami severely damaged the city. Pop. (2002) 161,692; (2017) municipality, 151,749.
- Huascar (Inca chieftain)
Huascar was an Inca chieftain, legitimate heir to the Inca empire, who lost his inheritance and his life in rivalry with his younger half brother Atahuallpa, who in turn was defeated and executed by the Spanish conquerors under Francisco Pizarro. Huascar succeeded his father in 1525 but was given
- Huascarán, Mount (mountain, Peru)
Mount Huascarán, mountain peak of the Andes of west-central Peru. The snowcapped peak rises to 22,205 feet (6,768 meters) above sea level in the Cordillera Blanca, east of the Peruvian town of Yungay. It is the highest mountain in Peru and is a favorite of mountaineers and tourists. In 1962 a thaw
- Huashanshuixu (essay by Zong Bing)
Chinese painting: Three Kingdoms (220–280) and Six Dynasties (220–589): …of the early 5th century, Huashanshuixu (“Preface on Landscape Painting,” China’s first essay on the topic), attributed to Zong Bing. Zong suggests that if well-painted—that is, if both visually accurate and aesthetically compelling—a landscape painting can truly substitute for real nature, for, even though miniaturized, it can attract vital energy…
- Huasipungo (work by Jorge Icaza)
Ecuador: The arts of Ecuador: Jorge Icaza’s indigenist novel Huasipungo (1934), which depicts the plight of Andean Indigenous people in a feudal society, also received international attention. Many novelists have come from the coast, including those of the so-called Guayaquil group, who explored life among the region’s montuvio population (people of mixed Indigenous, African,…
- Huasipungo: The Villagers (work by Jorge Icaza)
Ecuador: The arts of Ecuador: Jorge Icaza’s indigenist novel Huasipungo (1934), which depicts the plight of Andean Indigenous people in a feudal society, also received international attention. Many novelists have come from the coast, including those of the so-called Guayaquil group, who explored life among the region’s montuvio population (people of mixed Indigenous, African,…
- Huastec (people)
Huastec, Mayan Indians of Veracruz and San Luís Potosí states in east-central Mexico. The Huastec are independent both culturally and geographically from other Mayan peoples. They are farmers, corn (maize) being the staple crop. Coffee and henequen are also grown, as well as a variety of fruits and
- Huastec language
Mesoamerican Indian languages: The classification and status of Mesoamerican languages: …family of languages is: Huastecan Yucatecan-Core Mayan
- Huating (ancient site, China)
China: 4th and 3rd millennia bce: …east China the Liulin and Huating sites in northern Jiangsu (first half of 4th millennium) represent regional cultures that derived in large part from that of Qingliangang. Upper strata also show strong affinities with contemporary Dawenkou sites in southern Shandong, northern Anhui, and northern Jiangsu. Dawenkou culture (mid-5th to at…
- Huautla Plateau (plateau, Mexico)
cave: Geomorphic characteristics of solution caves: …group of caves on the Huautla Plateau in Mexico. The greatest relief from the highest known entrance of the Sistema Huautla to the lowest point of exploration is 1,252 metres in a cave measuring 33.8 kilometres long.
- Huave (people)
Huave, Mesoamerican Indian peasants of the Pacific coast of the Isthmus of Tehuantepec. The exact relationship of the Huave language to other Mesoamerican languages is a matter of scholarly dispute. Fishing and agriculture are the main subsistence activities, but the Huave also depend on markets in
- Huave language
Huave language, a language isolate (i.e., a language with no known relatives) on the Pacific coast in the Mexican state of Oaxaca. It is spoken in four main towns—San Francisco del Mar, San Dionisio del Mar, San Mateo del Mar, and Santa María del Mar—with a total of about 18,000 speakers. Attempts
- Huavi (people)
Huave, Mesoamerican Indian peasants of the Pacific coast of the Isthmus of Tehuantepec. The exact relationship of the Huave language to other Mesoamerican languages is a matter of scholarly dispute. Fishing and agriculture are the main subsistence activities, but the Huave also depend on markets in
- Huawei (Chinese company)
Canada: Diplomatic dispute with China: …executive for Chinese telecommunications giant Huawei, in response to an extradition request from the United States. China immediately protested the arrest of Meng in Vancouver on U.S. charges that Huawei had committed fraud related to the iconic company’s alleged dealings with Iran in violation of U.S.-imposed sanctions. A second charge…
- Huaxinghui (Chinese revolutionary group)
Huang Xing: Huang Xing founded the Huaxinghui (“Society for the Revival of China”), a revolutionary group dedicated to the overthrow of the Qing government. After several abortive attempts at revolution, Huang was forced to flee to Japan. In 1905 the revolutionary leader Sun Yat-sen organized the Tongmenghui (“Alliance Society”) as a…
- Huayan (Buddhist sect)
Kegon, Buddhist philosophical tradition introduced into Japan from China during the Nara period (710–784). Although the Kegon school can no longer be considered an active faith teaching a separate doctrine, it continues to administer the famous Tōdai Temple monastery at Nara. The name Kegon is a
- Huayan jing (Buddhist text)
Avatamsaka-sutra, voluminous Mahayana Buddhist text that some consider the most sublime revelation of the Buddha’s teachings. Scholars value the text for its revelations about the evolution of thought from early Buddhism to fully developed Mahayana. The sutra speaks of the deeds of the Buddha and
- Huayan Temple (ancient temple, China)
Chinese architecture: The Song (960–1279), Liao (907–1125), and Jin (1115–1234) dynasties: …hall and library of the Huayan Temple in the Liao capital at Datong (Shanxi), which was accorded the right to house images of the Liao emperors, installed in 1062. The library, perhaps the most intricate and perfectly preserved example of the architecture of the period, was completed in 1038.
- Huayang Mountains (mountains, China)
Anhui: Drainage: …low line of hills (Huayang Mountains) that extends northeast from the Dabie range to Hongze Lake marks the divide between the Huai and Yangtze river basins. The Yangtze plain is studded with lakes that, in time of flood, join the river and increase its width in places to 5…
- Huaylas Valley (valley, Peru)
Huaylas Valley, valley along the upper Santa River in Ancash department, west-central Peru. Overlooking the valley to the west is the snowless Cordillera Negra, with peaks rising to 17,000 feet (5,200 m); and to the east is the spectacular, snowcapped Cordillera Blanca, containing many of Peru’s
- Huaylas, Callejón de (valley, Peru)
Huaylas Valley, valley along the upper Santa River in Ancash department, west-central Peru. Overlooking the valley to the west is the snowless Cordillera Negra, with peaks rising to 17,000 feet (5,200 m); and to the east is the spectacular, snowcapped Cordillera Blanca, containing many of Peru’s
- Huayllaca (people)
pre-Columbian civilizations: The beginnings of external expansion: …mother, Mama Mikay, was a Huayllaca (Wayllaqa) woman who had been promised to the leader of another group called the Ayarmaca (’Ayarmaka). When the promise was broken and Mama Mikay married Inca Roca, the Ayarmaca went to war with the Huayllaca and were defeating them. As a peace offering, the…
- Huayna Capac (emperor of Incas)
pre-Columbian civilizations: Huayna Capac: Topa Inca Yupanqui’s unexpected death in about 1493 precipitated a struggle for the succession. It appears that Topa Inca Yupanqui had originally favoured the succession of Huayna Capac (Wayna Qhapaq), the youngest son of his principal wife and sister. Shortly before his death,…
- huayño (dance)
huayño, couple dance of the Quechua and Aymara Indians and of many mestizos (people of Spanish-Indian descent) of Peru, Bolivia, and Ecuador. It antedates the Spanish conquest and was possibly an Inca funeral dance; today it is purely festive. A circle of dancing couples surrounds the musicians,
- huayno (dance)
huayño, couple dance of the Quechua and Aymara Indians and of many mestizos (people of Spanish-Indian descent) of Peru, Bolivia, and Ecuador. It antedates the Spanish conquest and was possibly an Inca funeral dance; today it is purely festive. A circle of dancing couples surrounds the musicians,
- Huayu Lu (essay by Shitao)
Shitao: …theoretical writings, such as the Huayu Lu (“Comments on Painting”); he speaks of “a style of no style” and the importance of “the single stroke.”
- Hub (American musician)
the Roots: … (Malik Abdul Basit) and bassist Hub (Leonard Hubbard), they began making a name for themselves in clubs in Philadelphia and New York City.
- Hub (American athlete)
Carl Hubbell was an American professional baseball (left-handed) pitcher who popularized the screwball pitch. In this pitch the ball, which is thrown with the same arm motion as a fastball, has reverse spin against the natural curve and, when thrown by a left-hander, breaks sharply down and away
- hub conspiracy (law)
conspiracy: Also, in a “hub conspiracy,” a single person, or “hub,” such as a “fence” for stolen goods, makes separate illegal transactions with persons who have no knowledge of the others involved. The scope of United States federal conspiracy law was expanded even further by the Racketeer Influence and…
- hub-and-spoke network (air travel)
airport: Passenger requirements: By using a “hub-and-spoke” network, airlines are able to increase the load factors on aircraft and to provide more frequent departures for passengers—at the cost, however, of inconvenient interchange at the hub.
- Hubali (India)
Hubballi-Dharwad: Hubballi (Hubli), or Pubballi (“Old Village”), developed around the 11th-century stone temple of Aharanishankar. Notable buildings include the Mahadi Mosque, the Bhavani Shankar Temple, and the city hall. Hubballi is a trading centre with cotton mills, ginning and pressing factories, and a large newspaper industry.…
- Hubay, Jenö (Hungarian educator and musician)
Jenö Hubay was a Hungarian violinist, teacher, and composer, noted especially for his teaching. He studied as a child with his father, a professor of violin at the Budapest Conservatory, and gave his first concert at the age of 11. After studying with Joseph Joachim in Berlin from 1871 to 1876 he
- ḥubb ʿudhrī (Arabic poetry)
Islamic arts: The new style: …a classic theme, that of ḥubb ʿudhrī (“ʿUdhrah love”)—the lover would rather die than achieve union with his beloved—was expounded by the Ẓāhirī theologian Ibn Dāʾūd (died 910) in his poetic anthology Kitāb al-zahrah (The Book of the Flower). This theme was central to the ghazal poetry of the following…
- Hubba (Viking leader)
Ragnar Lothbrok: Inwaer (Ivar the Boneless), and Hubba (Ubbe)—who, according to the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle and other medieval sources, led a Viking invasion of East Anglia in 865. They may have sought to avenge Ragnar’s death, which may or may not have been murder, or they may have been claiming land to which…
- Hubballi (India)
Hubballi-Dharwad: Hubballi (Hubli), or Pubballi (“Old Village”), developed around the 11th-century stone temple of Aharanishankar. Notable buildings include the Mahadi Mosque, the Bhavani Shankar Temple, and the city hall. Hubballi is a trading centre with cotton mills, ginning and pressing factories, and a large newspaper industry.…
- Hubballi-Dharwad (India)
Hubballi-Dharwad, city, western Karnataka state, southwestern India. It is situated in an upland region east of the Western Ghats. Hubballi (Hubli), or Pubballi (“Old Village”), developed around the 11th-century stone temple of Aharanishankar. Notable buildings include the Mahadi Mosque, the
- Hubbard Brook Experimental Forest (forest, New Hampshire, United States)
acid rain: History: …North America is from the Hubbard Brook Experimental Forest in New Hampshire, U.S., where H+ concentration in precipitation declined by about 86 percent from the mid-1960s through 2016. Similar trends were also reflected in data collected at measuring stations located across the eastern United States, which reported a decrease of…
- Hubbard, Cal (American baseball umpire and football player)
Cal Hubbard was an American collegiate and professional gridiron football player and American League (AL) baseball umpire. He is the only person elected to the collegiate and professional football Halls of Fame (1962, 1963) as well as the Baseball Hall of Fame (1976). Hubbard was an admirer of
- Hubbard, Elbert (American writer)
Elbert Hubbard was an American editor, publisher, and author of the moralistic essay “A Message to Garcia.” A freelance newspaperman and head of sales and advertising for a manufacturing company, Hubbard retired in 1892 and founded his Roycroft Press in 1893 at East Aurora, N.Y., on the model of
- Hubbard, Elbert Green (American writer)
Elbert Hubbard was an American editor, publisher, and author of the moralistic essay “A Message to Garcia.” A freelance newspaperman and head of sales and advertising for a manufacturing company, Hubbard retired in 1892 and founded his Roycroft Press in 1893 at East Aurora, N.Y., on the model of
- Hubbard, L. Ron (American writer)
L. Ron Hubbard was an American novelist and founder of the Church of Scientology. Hubbard grew up in Helena, Montana, and studied at George Washington University in Washington, D.C. In the 1930s and ’40s he published short stories and novels in a variety of genres, including horror and science
- Hubbard, Lafayette Ronald (American writer)
L. Ron Hubbard was an American novelist and founder of the Church of Scientology. Hubbard grew up in Helena, Montana, and studied at George Washington University in Washington, D.C. In the 1930s and ’40s he published short stories and novels in a variety of genres, including horror and science
- Hubbard, Leonard (American musician)
the Roots: … (Malik Abdul Basit) and bassist Hub (Leonard Hubbard), they began making a name for themselves in clubs in Philadelphia and New York City.
- Hubbard, Robert Calvin (American baseball umpire and football player)
Cal Hubbard was an American collegiate and professional gridiron football player and American League (AL) baseball umpire. He is the only person elected to the collegiate and professional football Halls of Fame (1962, 1963) as well as the Baseball Hall of Fame (1976). Hubbard was an admirer of
- Hubbell, Carl (American athlete)
Carl Hubbell was an American professional baseball (left-handed) pitcher who popularized the screwball pitch. In this pitch the ball, which is thrown with the same arm motion as a fastball, has reverse spin against the natural curve and, when thrown by a left-hander, breaks sharply down and away
- Hubbell, Carl Owen (American athlete)
Carl Hubbell was an American professional baseball (left-handed) pitcher who popularized the screwball pitch. In this pitch the ball, which is thrown with the same arm motion as a fastball, has reverse spin against the natural curve and, when thrown by a left-hander, breaks sharply down and away
- Hubbert, Marion King (American geophysicist)
Marion King Hubbert was an American geophysicist and geologist known for his theory of the migration of fluids in subsurface rock strata. He became an authority on the migration and entrapment of petroleum and the social implications of world mineral-resource exploitation. Hubbert was educated at
- hubbing airport
airport: Passenger requirements: …passengers are referred to as hubbing airports. At a hub, aircraft arrive in waves, and passengers transfer between aircraft during the periods when these waves are on the ground. By using a “hub-and-spoke” network, airlines are able to increase the load factors on aircraft and to provide more frequent departures…
- Hubble Atlas of Galaxies, The (work by Sandage)
galaxy: Principal schemes of classification: In The Hubble Atlas of Galaxies (1961), the American astronomer Allan R. Sandage drew on Hubble’s notes and his own research on galaxy morphology to revise the Hubble classification scheme. Some of the features of this revised scheme are subject to argument because of the findings…
- Hubble constant (astronomy)
Hubble constant, in cosmology, constant of proportionality in the relation between the velocities of remote galaxies and their distances. It expresses the rate at which the universe is expanding. It is denoted by the symbol H0, where the subscript denotes that the value is measured at the present
- Hubble Deep Field (astronomy)
Hubble Space Telescope: The Hubble Deep Field, a photograph of about 1,500 galaxies, revealed galactic evolution over nearly the entire history of the universe. Within the solar system, the HST was also used to discover Hydra and Nix, two moons of the dwarf planet Pluto.
- Hubble expansion (astronomy)
redshift: …basis for what is called Hubble’s law, which correlates the recessional velocity of a galaxy with its distance from Earth. That is to say, the greater the redshift manifested by light emanating from such an object, the greater the distance of the object and the larger its recessional velocity (see…
- Hubble law (astronomy)
redshift: …basis for what is called Hubble’s law, which correlates the recessional velocity of a galaxy with its distance from Earth. That is to say, the greater the redshift manifested by light emanating from such an object, the greater the distance of the object and the larger its recessional velocity (see…
- Hubble Space Telescope (astronomy)
Hubble Space Telescope (HST), the first sophisticated optical observatory placed into orbit around Earth. Earth’s atmosphere obscures ground-based astronomers’ view of celestial objects by absorbing or distorting light rays from them. A telescope stationed in outer space is entirely above the
- Hubble time (astronomy)
physical science: Astronomy: …and later increased the “Hubble age” of the universe to more than 10 billion years.
- Hubble’s law (astronomy)
redshift: …basis for what is called Hubble’s law, which correlates the recessional velocity of a galaxy with its distance from Earth. That is to say, the greater the redshift manifested by light emanating from such an object, the greater the distance of the object and the larger its recessional velocity (see…
- Hubble, Edwin (American astronomer)
Edwin Hubble was an American astronomer who played a crucial role in establishing the field of extragalactic astronomy and is generally regarded as the leading observational cosmologist of the 20th century. Hubble was the son of John Powell Hubble, a businessman who worked in the insurance
- Hubble, Edwin Powell (American astronomer)
Edwin Hubble was an American astronomer who played a crucial role in establishing the field of extragalactic astronomy and is generally regarded as the leading observational cosmologist of the 20th century. Hubble was the son of John Powell Hubble, a businessman who worked in the insurance
- hubble-bubble (smoking pipe)
hookah, apparatus used to heat and vaporize tobacco for inhalation. The word hookah is derived from the Hindustani huqqa and the Arabic huqqah, meaning “vase” or “vessel.” The practice of smoking tobacco from a hookah likely originated in India or the Middle East. Today it is used worldwide and is
- Hubble-Sandage variable (astronomy)
galaxy: The distance to the Andromeda Nebula: …of high-luminosity stars now called Hubble-Sandage variables, which are found in many giant galaxies. Eighty-five novae, all behaving very much like those in the Milky Way Galaxy, were also analyzed. Hubble estimated that the true occurrence rate of novae in M31 must be about 30 per year, a figure that…
- Hubei (province, China)
Hubei, sheng (province) lying in the heart of China and forming a part of the middle basin of the Yangtze River (Chang Jiang). Until the reign of the great Kangxi emperor (1661–1722) of the Qing dynasty (1644–1911/12), Hubei and its southern neighbour Hunan formed a single province, Huguang. They
- Hubel, David Hunter (American biologist)
David Hunter Hubel was a Canadian American neurobiologist, corecipient with Torsten Nils Wiesel and Roger Wolcott Sperry of the 1981 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine. All three scientists were honoured for their investigations of brain function, with Hubel and Wiesel sharing half of the award
- Hubenov, Huben (Turkish weight lifter)
Halil Mutlu is a Turkish weight lifter and world record-holder who won three consecutive Olympic gold medals (1996, 2000, and 2004). Though standing a diminutive 1.5 metres (4 feet 11 inches) and weighing 56 kg (123 pounds), the “Little Dynamo” had loomed large over the weight-lifting stage and in
- Huber, Eugen (Swiss jurist)
Eugen Huber was a Swiss jurist and author of the Swiss civil code of 1912. In 1880 Huber became a professor of Swiss civil and federal law and legal history at Basel, and later (1888) he became a professor of German civil and state law at Halle. In 1892 he was commissioned to develop a Swiss civil
- Huber, Robert (German biochemist)
Robert Huber is a German biochemist who, along with Johann Deisenhofer and Hartmut Michel, received the Nobel Prize for Chemistry in 1988 for their determination of the structure of a protein complex that is essential to photosynthesis in bacteria. Huber received his doctorate from the Munich
- Huber, Wolf (Austrian artist)
Wolf Huber was an Austrian painter, draftsman, and printmaker who was one of the principal artists associated with the Danube school of landscape painting. After 1509 Huber’s career was centred in Passau, Ger., where he was court painter to the prince-bishop. Among his important paintings was the
- Huberman, Barbara Jane (American computer scientist)
Barbara Liskov is an American computer scientist who won the 2008 A.M. Turing Award, the highest honour in computer science, for her “pioneering work in the design of computer programming languages.” After she earned a bachelor’s degree in mathematics in 1961 from the University of California,
- Hubert (Christian saint)
Liège: Hubert transferred his see there in 721.
- Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome (stadium, Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States)
construction: Postwar developments in long-span construction: …in Pontiac, Michigan, and the Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome (1982) in Minneapolis. Air-supported structures are perhaps the most cost-effective type of structure for very long spans.
- Hubert Walter (archbishop of Canterbury)
Hubert Walter was an archbishop of Canterbury, papal legate, justiciar of King Richard I of England, and chancellor of King John of England. Hubert was an administrator whose position in church and state was unmatched until the time of Cardinal Wolsey in the 16th century. Employed in the household
- Hubert, Henri (French sociologist)
ritual: Sacrificial: …sacrifice, by the French sociologists Henri Hubert and Marcel Mauss, who differentiated between sacrifice and rituals of oblation, offering, and consecration. This does not mean that sacrificial rituals do not at times have elements of consecration, offering, or oblation but these are not the distinctive characteristics of sacrificial ritual. Its…
- Hubertusburg, Peace of (Europe [1763])
Peace of Hubertusburg, (1763) treaty between Prussia and Austria ending the Seven Years’ War in Germany. Signed five days after the Treaty of Paris, it guaranteed that Frederick II the Great maintained his possession of Silesia and confirmed Prussia’s stature as a major European
- Hubertusburg, Treaty of (Europe [1763])
Peace of Hubertusburg, (1763) treaty between Prussia and Austria ending the Seven Years’ War in Germany. Signed five days after the Treaty of Paris, it guaranteed that Frederick II the Great maintained his possession of Silesia and confirmed Prussia’s stature as a major European
- Hubie Halloween (film by Brill [2020])
Adam Sandler: In 2020 Sandler starred in Hubie Halloween, about a man trying to save the October holiday. He later was praised for his portrayal of a basketball scout in the sports drama Hustle (2022).
- Hubley, Georgia (American musician)
Yo La Tengo: ), drummer Georgia Hubley (b. February 25, 1960, New York), and bassist (from 1992) James McNew (b. July 6, 1969, Baltimore, Maryland).
- Hubley, John (American animator)
animation: Animation in Europe: John Hubley, an animator who worked for Disney studios on Snow White, Pinocchio, and Fantasia, left the Disney organization in 1941 and joined the independent animation company United Productions of America in 1945. Working in a radically simplified style, without the depth effects and shading…