- Hanno (Carthaginian ruler)
Hanno was a leader of the aristocratic pro-Roman faction at Carthage during the Second Punic War (218–201) between Rome and Carthage. In 241, Hanno was given command against the Carthaginian mercenaries who had raised a rebellion among the native North African peoples subject to Carthage.
- Hanno the Great (Carthaginian ruler)
Hanno was a leader of the aristocratic pro-Roman faction at Carthage during the Second Punic War (218–201) between Rome and Carthage. In 241, Hanno was given command against the Carthaginian mercenaries who had raised a rebellion among the native North African peoples subject to Carthage.
- Hanno, Saint (archbishop of Cologne)
Saint Anno ; canonized 1183; feast day December 4) was the archbishop of Cologne who was prominent in the political struggles of the Holy Roman Empire. Educated at Bamberg, Anno became confessor to the Holy Roman emperor Henry III, who appointed him archbishop in 1056. He was the leader of the
- Hannon, Ezra (American author)
Evan Hunter was a prolific American writer of best-selling fiction, of which more than 50 books are crime stories published under the pseudonym Ed McBain. Hunter graduated from Hunter College (1950) and held various short-term jobs, including playing piano in a jazz band and teaching in vocational
- Hannong, C. F. (French potter)
pottery: Faience, or tin-glazed ware: Hannong in 1709. The wares—painted in blue, in other faience colours, and in overglaze colours—were much copied elsewhere. Overglaze colours were introduced about 1740, their first recorded use in France. (For the first use in Europe, see below Germany and Austria.) Brilliant indianische Blumen (flower…
- Hannong, Joseph-Adam (French pottery manufacturer)
arcanist: …Paul-Antoine Hannong and his sons Joseph-Adam and Pierre-Antoine.
- Hannong, Paul-Antoine (French pottery manufacturer)
arcanist: …Jakob Ringler, Robert Dubois, and Paul-Antoine Hannong and his sons Joseph-Adam and Pierre-Antoine.
- Hannong, Pierre-Antoine (French pottery manufacturer)
arcanist: … and his sons Joseph-Adam and Pierre-Antoine.
- Hannover (administrative district, Germany)
Lower Saxony: Its capital is Hannover.
- Hannover (Germany)
Hannover, city, capital of Lower Saxony Land (state), northwestern Germany. It lies on the Leine River and the Mittelland Canal, where the spurs of the Harz Mountains meet the wide North German Plain. First mentioned in documents in 1100, Hannover was chartered in 1241 and joined the Hanseatic
- Hannover (historical state, Germany)
Hanover, former state of northwestern Germany, first an electorate (1692–1806) of the Holy Roman Empire, then a kingdom (1814–66), and finally a Prussian province (1866–1945). After World War II the state was administratively abolished; its former territory formed about 80 percent of the Land
- Hannover Principles
world’s fair: Later years: …of ideas known as the Hannover Principles, first promulgated in 1992 by the architectural firm of William McDonough in preparation for the exposition, argued that future expositions should focus on the realistic presentation of contemporary social and environmental problems and their possible solutions.
- Hano (village, Arizona, United States)
Pueblo Indians: …exception is the village of Hano, composed of Tewa refugees from the Rio Grande.
- Hanoi (national capital, Vietnam)
Hanoi, city, capital of Vietnam. The city is situated in northern Vietnam on the western bank of the Red River, about 85 miles (140 km) inland from the South China Sea. In addition to being the national capital, Hanoi is also a province-level municipality (thanh pho), administered by the central
- Hanoi Poison Plot (Vietnamese history)
De Tham: …other nationalists in an abortive attempt to kill French guests at a banquet. Thereafter he was a hunted man with a price on his head. He was finally assassinated by three Chinese who were among his followers.
- Hanoi, Towers of (puzzle)
Tower of Hanoi, puzzle involving three vertical pegs and a set of different sized disks with holes through their centres. The Tower of Hanoi is widely believed to have been invented in 1883 by the French mathematician Édouard Lucas, though his role in its invention has been disputed. Ever popular,
- hanok (architecture)
Seoul: Housing: Old-style wooden houses, or hanok, are still found in a few areas of the old city and adjacent to the remains of the city wall.
- Hanotaux, Albert-Auguste-Gabriel (French statesman and historian)
Gabriel Hanotaux was a statesman, diplomat, and historian who directed a major French colonial expansion in Africa and who championed a Franco-Russian alliance that proved important in the events leading to World War I. Trained as an archivist-historian, Hanotaux joined the faculty of the École des
- Hanotaux, Gabriel (French statesman and historian)
Gabriel Hanotaux was a statesman, diplomat, and historian who directed a major French colonial expansion in Africa and who championed a Franco-Russian alliance that proved important in the events leading to World War I. Trained as an archivist-historian, Hanotaux joined the faculty of the École des
- Hanover (Pennsylvania, United States)
Hanover, borough (town), York county, southern Pennsylvania, U.S. It lies in the Conewago Creek valley, 20 miles (32 km) southwest of York. Laid out in 1763 by Colonel Richard McAllister, it was incorporated as a borough in 1815 and named for Hanover, Germany. Earlier it had been known as
- Hanover (historical state, Germany)
Hanover, former state of northwestern Germany, first an electorate (1692–1806) of the Holy Roman Empire, then a kingdom (1814–66), and finally a Prussian province (1866–1945). After World War II the state was administratively abolished; its former territory formed about 80 percent of the Land
- Hanover (Virginia, United States)
Hanover, village, seat of Hanover county, east-central Virginia, U.S. It lies immediately east of Ashland, near the Pamunkey River, 15 miles (24 km) north of Richmond. Founded in 1720 and named for the elector of Hanover (afterward King George I of England), it is known for its association with
- Hanover (New Hampshire, United States)
Hanover, town (township), Grafton county, western New Hampshire, U.S. It lies along the Connecticut River and includes the communities of Hanover and Etna. It was settled in 1765 and named for Hanover, Connecticut, the home of many of its early settlers. Hanover is the seat of Dartmouth College
- Hanover (administrative district, Germany)
Lower Saxony: Its capital is Hannover.
- Hanover (Germany)
Hannover, city, capital of Lower Saxony Land (state), northwestern Germany. It lies on the Leine River and the Mittelland Canal, where the spurs of the Harz Mountains meet the wide North German Plain. First mentioned in documents in 1100, Hannover was chartered in 1241 and joined the Hanseatic
- Hanover Tavern (building, Hanover, Virginia, United States)
Hanover: The Hanover Tavern (c. 1723), operated by John Shelton, Henry’s father-in-law, has been restored and is now the home of the Barksdale Theatre.
- Hanover, house of (British royal house)
house of Hanover, British royal house of German origin, descended from George Louis, elector of Hanover, who succeeded to the British crown, as George I, in 1714. The dynasty provided six monarchs: George I (reigned 1714–27), George II (reigned 1727–60), George III (reigned 1760–1820), George IV
- Hanover, League of (European history [1725])
Charles Townshend, 2nd Viscount Townshend: …was the formation of the League of Hanover (1725), which brought England, France, and Prussia into an alliance against Austria and Spain. Nevertheless, in 1730 Townshend resigned because Walpole—by now the dominant minister—would not allow him to pursue an aggressive policy against Austria.
- Hanqing (Chinese warlord)
Zhang Xueliang was a Chinese warlord who, together with Yang Hucheng, in the Xi’an Incident (1936), compelled the Nationalist leader Chiang Kai-shek (Jiang Jieshi) to form a wartime alliance with the Chinese communists against Japan. Zhang Xueliang was the oldest son of the warlord Zhang Zuolin,
- hanren (Chinese social class)
Kublai Khan: Social and administrative policy: …third and fourth classes, the hanren, or northern Chinese, and the nanren, or southern Chinese—the latter group also referred to pejoratively as manzi (“barbarians”)—who lived in what had been Nan Song China. The expenses of state and the support of the privileged bore heavily on those two classes. Kublai’s continuing…
- Hanriot, François (French military commander)
François Hanriot was the commander in chief of the Paris national guard during the supremacy of the Jacobin Club radicals, led by Maximilien Robespierre, in the French Revolution. A partisan of the Revolution from the start, Hanriot showed great courage in the rising of August 10, 1792, after which
- Hans (king of Denmark, Norway, and Sweden)
John was the king of Denmark (1481–1513) and Norway (1483–1513) and king (as John II) of Sweden (1497–1501) who failed in his efforts to incorporate Sweden into a Danish-dominated Scandinavian union. He was more successful in fostering the commercial development of Danish burghers to challenge the
- Hans Adam II, prince of Liechtenstein (prince of Liechtenstein)
Hans Adam II, prince of Liechtenstein is a member of the ruling family of Liechtenstein who became prince (head of state) in 1989. Hans Adam, the eldest son of Prince Francis Joseph II, spent his early youth in the castle of Vaduz with his brothers and his sister but he and his siblings were not
- Hans Adam, Fürst von Liechtenstein (prince of Liechtenstein)
Hans Adam II, prince of Liechtenstein is a member of the ruling family of Liechtenstein who became prince (head of state) in 1989. Hans Adam, the eldest son of Prince Francis Joseph II, spent his early youth in the castle of Vaduz with his brothers and his sister but he and his siblings were not
- Hans Brinker (novel by Dodge)
Hans Brinker, novel for children by Mary Mapes Dodge, published in 1865. The story is set in the Netherlands and concerns the fortunes of the impoverished Brinker family. The good deeds of the Brinker children (Hans and Gretel) help to restore their father’s health and bring about their own good
- Hans Brinker: or, The Silver Skates (novel by Dodge)
Hans Brinker, novel for children by Mary Mapes Dodge, published in 1865. The story is set in the Netherlands and concerns the fortunes of the impoverished Brinker family. The good deeds of the Brinker children (Hans and Gretel) help to restore their father’s health and bring about their own good
- Hans Christian Andersen (film by Vidor [1952])
Charles Vidor: Later films: …then made the family musical Hans Christian Andersen (1952), with Danny Kaye in the title role. Thunder in the East (1952) was an adventure movie starring Alan Ladd as a gunrunner in India and Deborah Kerr as the blind daughter of a missionary. With Rhapsody (1954), Vidor returned to the…
- Hans Heiling (opera by Marschner)
Heinrich August Marschner: His most successful opera, Hans Heiling, was produced in Berlin in 1833; it remains in the operatic repertory in Germany. He produced five further operas, but none of them achieved the success of his earlier works. Stylistically, Marschner exhibits both the musical flavour and the interest in the supernatural…
- Hans Hofmann School of Fine Art (school, United States)
Hans Hofmann: …and later opened his own Hans Hofmann School of Fine Art, which soon became one of the most prestigious art schools in the country. By 1939 he was able to break away from the Expressionistic landscapes and still lifes he had painted in the early 1930s, and he developed a…
- Hans im Schnakenloch (work by Schickele)
René Schickele: …conflict was powerfully dramatized in Hans im Schnakenloch (1916; “Hans in the Gnat Hole”), in which the protagonist, Hans, must choose between Germany and France in time of war; torn within himself, he seeks death in the French Army, which he expects to be defeated. After having a considerable popular…
- Hans Nads, testamente (work by Bergman)
Hjalmar Fredrik Elgérus Bergman: His first popular novel Hans Nåds testamente (1910; “His Grace’s Will”) was set in Bergslagen, and portrayed the eccentric Baron Roger and his valet Vickberg in richly comic scenes. Beneath the humour, however, there are undertones of tragedy, as is characteristic, too, of his later works. A collection of…
- Hans of Iceland (novel by Hugo)
Victor Hugo: Early years (1802–30): …in an English translation as Hans of Iceland. The journalist Charles Nodier was enthusiastic about it and drew Hugo into the group of friends, all devotees of Romanticism, who met regularly at the Bibliothèque de L’Arsenal. While frequenting this literary circle, which was called the Cénacle, Hugo shared in launching…
- Hansa (German trading organization)
Hanseatic League, organization founded by north German towns and German merchant communities abroad to protect their mutual trading interests. The league dominated commercial activity in northern Europe from the 13th to the 15th century. (Hanse was a medieval German word for “guild,” or
- Hansa-Mühle extractor (industrial machine)
fat and oil processing: Extractors: …of the best, was the Bollman or Hansa-Mühle unit from Germany, in which solvent percolates through oilseed flakes contained in perforated baskets moving on an endless chain. After the extraction cycle is complete, the baskets of extracted flakes are dumped automatically and then refilled with fresh flakes to initiate another…
- Hansaku minato (film by Kinoshita Keisuke)
Kinoshita Keisuke: Hanasaku minato (1943; The Blossoming Port), his first independently directed film, was a major success. Three years later, Osone-ke no asa (1946; A Morning with the Osone Family) established his reputation as one of the most talented postwar directors. In two of his most popular films, Karumen kokyō…
- Hansard (British government report)
Hansard, the official report of the debates of both houses of the British Parliament. The name and publication format were subsequently adopted by other Commonwealth countries. It is so called after the Hansards, a family of printers who began working with Parliament in the late 18th century. The
- Hansard Society (British organization)
e-democracy: From community to politics: ’s Hansard Society conducted several experiments from the late 1990s, including a discussion on flood management, a pathbreaking forum on experiences of domestic violence involving more than 200 women in interactive discussion, and an online evidence and discussion forum on the 2002 draft Communications Bill. The…
- Hansard, Luke (British printer)
Hansard: …family was first established by Luke Hansard, who was born at Norwich on July 5, 1752. After an apprenticeship to a Norwich printer, Hansard became a compositor at the printing office of John Hughs, printer to the House of Commons, in Lincoln’s Inn Fields, London. In 1774 he was made…
- Hansard, Thomas Curson (British printer)
Hansard: The eldest son, Thomas Curson Hansard (1776-1833), after some years in his father’s office, took over another printing business in 1805 and in 1823 established the Paternoster Row press. He was the first printer, and later publisher, of the unofficial series of Parliamentary Debates inaugurated by William Cobbett…
- Hansberry, Lorraine (American playwright)
Lorraine Hansberry was an American playwright whose A Raisin in the Sun (1959) was the first drama by an African American woman to be produced on Broadway. Hansberry was interested in writing from an early age and while in high school was drawn especially to the theatre. She attended the University
- Hänsch, Theodor W. (German scientist)
Theodor W. Hänsch is a German physicist who shared one-half of the 2005 Nobel Prize for Physics with John L. Hall for their contributions to the development of laser spectroscopy, the use of lasers to determine the frequency (color) of light emitted by atoms and molecules. (The other half of the
- Hanse (German trading organization)
Hanseatic League, organization founded by north German towns and German merchant communities abroad to protect their mutual trading interests. The league dominated commercial activity in northern Europe from the 13th to the 15th century. (Hanse was a medieval German word for “guild,” or
- Hanseatic bowl (decorative arts)
metalwork: Europe from the Middle Ages: …the basins are known as Hanseatic bowls. They are round, some being more convex than others; and the inside is engraved with scenes from classical mythology, with themes from the Old and New Testaments and the legends of the saints, or with allegorical figures personifying the virtues and the vices,…
- Hanseatic League (German trading organization)
Hanseatic League, organization founded by north German towns and German merchant communities abroad to protect their mutual trading interests. The league dominated commercial activity in northern Europe from the 13th to the 15th century. (Hanse was a medieval German word for “guild,” or
- Hanseatic tankard (drinking vessel)
metalwork: Middle Ages: …to a group known as Hanseatic tankards. These tankards have a heavy-looking, potbellied body set on a shallow circular base and a slightly convex lid. They were used in the coastal regions of Germany—that is, along the North Sea and Baltic coasts—and also in the Low Countries and Scandinavia. These…
- Hänsel and Gretel (opera by Humperdinck)
Hänsel and Gretel, opera by the German composer Engelbert Humperdinck (with a German libretto by his sister, Adelheid Wette) that premiered in Weimar, Germany, on December 23, 1893. Humperdinck, who began his career as an assistant to Richard Wagner, used Wagner’s harmonic techniques, although with
- Hänsel and Gretel (fairy tale by Grimm brothers)
Grimm’s Fairy Tales: The best-known tales include “Hansel and Gretel,” “Snow White,” “Little Red Riding Hood,” “Sleeping Beauty,” “Tom Thumb,” “Rapunzel,” “The Golden Goose,” and “Rumpelstiltskin.” The universal appeal of these stories—whether they are considered as psychological archetypes or as fantasy narratives—inspired a myriad of print,
- Hänsel und Gretel (opera by Humperdinck)
Hänsel and Gretel, opera by the German composer Engelbert Humperdinck (with a German libretto by his sister, Adelheid Wette) that premiered in Weimar, Germany, on December 23, 1893. Humperdinck, who began his career as an assistant to Richard Wagner, used Wagner’s harmonic techniques, although with
- Hansen Cave (cave, Utah, United States)
Timpanogos Cave National Monument: …three separate chambers—Timpanogos, Middle, and Hansen caves—that have been connected by man-made tunnels. The caves are noted for their pink and white, crystal-filigreed walls and their tinted, delicate helictite formations; stalactites, stalagmites, flowstones, and underground pools are also found in the cave. One of the stalactites (the Great Heart of…
- Hansen disease (infectious disease)
leprosy, chronic infectious disease that affects the skin, the peripheral nerves (nerves outside the brain and spinal cord), and the mucous membranes of the nose, throat, and eyes. It is caused by the leprosy bacillus, Mycobacterium leprae. Destruction of the peripheral nerves by the bacillus leads
- Hansen’s disease (infectious disease)
leprosy, chronic infectious disease that affects the skin, the peripheral nerves (nerves outside the brain and spinal cord), and the mucous membranes of the nose, throat, and eyes. It is caused by the leprosy bacillus, Mycobacterium leprae. Destruction of the peripheral nerves by the bacillus leads
- Hansen, Al (American artist)
Happening: Kaprow, Dick Higgins, and Al Hansen—all students at John Cage’s composition class at the New School for Social Research in New York City—performed Happenings and were associated with Fluxus, as were other artists, such as Wolf Vostell and Carolee Schneemann.
- Hansen, Alvin Harvey (American economist)
Alvin Harvey Hansen was an American economist noted for his strong and influential advocacy of the theories of John Maynard Keynes. Hansen was educated at Yankton College (B.A., 1910) and at the University of Wisconsin (Ph.D., 1918), where he studied under economists Richard T. Ely and John R.
- Hansen, Armauer (Norwegian physician)
leprosy: Transmission: In 1873, however, G.H. Armauer Hansen, a physician working in a leprosy hospital in Bergen, Norway, discovered the leprosy bacillus in a sample of tissue from one of his patients. Hansen was able to identify the organism under the microscope because its propensity to collect iron caused it…
- Hansen, Barry (American disc jockey)
Dr. Demento is an American radio broadcaster, record collector, and musicologist whose cult-favorite radio program, the Dr. Demento Show, aired from 1971 to 2010 and revitalized the appreciation of novelty music. Since 2010, the Dr. Demento Show has been produced as a weekly online-only program.
- Hansen, Beck David (American singer-songwriter)
Beck is an American singer-songwriter who brought Bob Dylan’s embodiment of the hipster folk minstrel into the age of hip-hop and sampling. Beck had art in his genes: his family included a mother (Bibbe Hansen) with ties to Andy Warhol’s Factory, a musician father (David Campbell) who would go on
- Hansen, Christian Frederik (Danish architect)
Western architecture: Scandinavia and Finland: The Danish architect Christian Frederik Hansen, a pupil of Harsdorff, turned the medieval and Baroque city of Copenhagen into a Neoclassical capital. He built the town hall, court house, and prison (1803–16) and the church of Our Lady (1810–29), with its Boullée-inspired interior. Schinkel’s example in Berlin was…
- Hansen, Emil (German artist)
Emil Nolde was a German Expressionist painter, printmaker, and watercolourist known for his violent religious works and his foreboding landscapes. Born of a peasant family, the youthful Nolde made his living as a wood-carver. He was able to study art formally only when some of his early works were
- Hansen, Emile Christian (Danish botanist)
Emile Christian Hansen was a Danish botanist who revolutionized the brewing industry by his discovery of a new method of cultivating pure strains of yeast. Hansen, who began his working life as a journeyman house painter, received a Ph.D. in 1877 from the University of Copenhagen. Two years later
- Hansen, Gerhard Henrik Armauer (Norwegian physician)
leprosy: Transmission: In 1873, however, G.H. Armauer Hansen, a physician working in a leprosy hospital in Bergen, Norway, discovered the leprosy bacillus in a sample of tissue from one of his patients. Hansen was able to identify the organism under the microscope because its propensity to collect iron caused it…
- Hansen, H.C. (prime minister of Denmark)
H.C. Hansen was a politician and statesman who, as foreign minister and prime minister, led Denmark to a prominent position in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) and guided the stabilization of Denmark’s post-World War II economy. Hansen became secretary of the Social Democratic Party’s
- Hansen, Hans Christian (Danish architect)
Western architecture: Scandinavia and Greece: …its most fitting civic expression: Hans Christian Hansen, a friend of Bindesbøll, excavated and restored the ancient Greek monuments on the Acropolis and built the University (1839–50). This crisp Ionic building eventually formed a group with the National Library and the Academy of Science, which were added from designs by…
- Hansen, Hans Christian Svane (prime minister of Denmark)
H.C. Hansen was a politician and statesman who, as foreign minister and prime minister, led Denmark to a prominent position in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) and guided the stabilization of Denmark’s post-World War II economy. Hansen became secretary of the Social Democratic Party’s
- Hansen, Jens Andersen (Danish politician and journalist)
Jens Andersen Hansen was a journalist and politician, a leading 19th-century champion of Denmark’s peasantry. A self-educated shoemaker, Hansen became coeditor, with Rasmus Sørensen, of the peasant newspaper Almuevennen (“Friend of the Peasantry”) in 1842; he was sole editor from 1843 to 1856. A
- Hansen, Joseph (American author)
Joseph Hansen was an American writer, author of a series of crime novels featuring the homosexual insurance investigator and detective Dave Brandstetter. Hansen, who also wrote under the pseudonyms Rose Brock and James Colton, began his career as an editor, novelist, and journalist in the 1960s. He
- Hansen, Lars Peter (American economist)
Lars Peter Hansen is an American economist who, with Eugene F. Fama and Robert J. Shiller, was awarded the 2013 Nobel Prize for Economics. Hansen’s work had a significant impact across a wide range of fields within economics, including econometrics, macroeconomics, labour economics, and finance.
- Hansen, Martin Alfred (Danish author)
Martin Alfred Hansen was one of the most widely read Danish authors of his day. Hansen first was a farm worker and then became a teacher in the 1930s. From two early novels of social consciousness, Nu opgiver han (1935; “Now He Gives Up”) and Kolonien (1937; “The Colony”), he went on to write a
- Hansen, Martin Jens Alfred (Danish author)
Martin Alfred Hansen was one of the most widely read Danish authors of his day. Hansen first was a farm worker and then became a teacher in the 1930s. From two early novels of social consciousness, Nu opgiver han (1935; “Now He Gives Up”) and Kolonien (1937; “The Colony”), he went on to write a
- Hansen, Peter Andreas (German astronomer)
Peter Andreas Hansen was a Danish-born German astronomer whose most important work was the improvement of the theories and tables of the orbits of the principal bodies in the solar system. Hansen became director of the Seeberg Observatory, near Gotha, in 1825, and in 1857 a new observatory was
- Hansen, William Webster (American physicist)
William Webster Hansen was an American physicist who contributed to the development of radar and is regarded as the founder of microwave technology. After earning a Ph.D. at Stanford University in 1933, Hansen began teaching there the next year. His early pioneering work in 1937 on microwave
- Hanseong (national capital, South Korea)
Seoul, city and capital of South Korea (the Republic of Korea). It is located on the Han River (Han-gang) in the northwestern part of the country, with the city center some 37 miles (60 km) inland from the Yellow Sea (west). Seoul is the cultural, economic, and political center of South Korea.
- Hansestadt Lübeck (Germany)
Lübeck, city and major seaport, Schleswig-Holstein Land (state), northern Germany. It is located on the Trave and Wakenitz rivers, about 9 miles (14 km) from the Baltic Sea. In the Middle Ages it was one of the main commercial centres of northern Europe and the chief city of the Hanseatic League
- Hanshin Industrial Zone (industrial area, Japan)
Ōsaka-Kōbe metropolitan area: …is called by geographers the Hanshin Industrial Zone; as a result of the expansion of the urban area along the Inland Sea and northeast toward the city of Kyōto, the region is now included in the larger Keihanshin Industrial Zone. Neither of these zones is a political entity, but the…
- Hanshin Tigers (Japanese baseball team)
Central League: …consists of the Chūnichi Dragons, Hanshin Tigers, Hiroshima Tōyō Carp, Tokyo Yakult Swallows, Yokohama BayStars, and Yomiuri (Tokyo) Giants. The regular playing season culminates in the Japan Series, a seven-game series between the respective champion teams of the Pacific and Central leagues.
- Hanshin-Awaji Daishinsai (Japan)
Kōbe earthquake of 1995, (Jan. 17, 1995) large-scale earthquake in the Ōsaka-Kōbe (Hanshin) metropolitan area of western Japan that was among the strongest, deadliest, and costliest to ever strike that country. The earthquake hit at 5:46 am on Tuesday, Jan. 17, 1995, in the southern part of Hyōgo
- Hanshu (Chinese historical work)
Ban Biao: …to have begun the famous Han shu (“Book of Han”), considered the Confucian historiographic model on which all later dynastic histories were patterned.
- Hansi (India)
Hansi, town, west-central Haryana state, northwestern India. It is situated between Hisar city (northwest) and Delhi (southeast) and is connected with both by road and rail. Hansi is an ancient town and was probably a Kushan stronghold in the 1st and 2nd centuries ce. It was captured in 1192 by
- Hanska, Éveline (Polish countess)
Honoré de Balzac: Early career: …1832 Balzac became friendly with Éveline Hanska, a Polish countess who was married to an elderly Ukrainian landowner. She, like many other women, had written to Balzac expressing admiration of his writings. They met twice in Switzerland in 1833—the second time in Geneva, where they became lovers—and again in Vienna…
- Hanslick, Eduard (Austrian music critic)
Eduard Hanslick was a celebrated Austrian music critic and a prolific author of works on music and concert life. Hanslick studied philosophy and law in Prague, received his doctorate from the University of Vienna in 1849, and taught there from 1856, becoming a regular professor in 1870. He was
- hansom cab (carriage)
hansom cab, low, two-wheeled, closed carriage patented in 1834, whose distinctive feature was the elevated driver’s seat in the rear. It was entered from the front through a folding door and had one seat above the axle with room for two passengers. The driver spoke to the passengers through a
- Hanson, Curtis (American director, producer, writer, and actor)
- Hanson, Duane (American sculptor)
Duane Hanson was an American figurative sculptor whose lifelike figures made of cast fibreglass and polyester resin and dressed in everyday clothes often fooled the public into believing that they were viewing real people. Because of its faithfulness to reality, Hanson’s work is often categorized
- Hanson, Duane Elwood (American sculptor)
Duane Hanson was an American figurative sculptor whose lifelike figures made of cast fibreglass and polyester resin and dressed in everyday clothes often fooled the public into believing that they were viewing real people. Because of its faithfulness to reality, Hanson’s work is often categorized
- Hanson, Harriet Jane (American author and leader)
Harriet Jane Hanson Robinson was a writer and woman suffrage leader in the United States. Robinson was a mill operative for the Tremont Corporation at Lowell, Mass., beginning at the age of 10 as a bobbin doffer, and she later wrote poems and prose for the Lowell Offering, the mill operatives’
- Hanson, Howard (American composer)
Howard Hanson was a composer, conductor, and teacher who promoted contemporary American music and was, in his own compositions, a principal representative of the Romantic tradition. After studying in New York, Hanson taught in San Jose, Calif., and spent three years in Italy (1921–24) as winner of
- Hanson, John (United States statesman)
John Hanson was an American Revolutionary leader and president under the U.S. Articles of Confederation. A member of the Maryland Assembly (1757–79), he represented Maryland in the Continental Congress (1780–82). On Nov. 5, 1781, he was elected by the Continental Congress “President of the United
- Hanson, Pauline Lee (Australian politician)
Pauline Lee Hanson is an Australian politician, known for her controversial views on race and immigration, who cofounded (1997) the One Nation party and served as its leader (1997–2002; 2014– ). Hanson was the mother of four when her second marriage ended in the late 1980s. She settled in Ipswich,
- Hanson, Timothy (American farmer)
timothy: …is named after American farmer Timothy Hanson, who promoted its use outside New England and among British farmers in the early 1700s.
- Hansŏng (national capital, South Korea)
Seoul, city and capital of South Korea (the Republic of Korea). It is located on the Han River (Han-gang) in the northwestern part of the country, with the city center some 37 miles (60 km) inland from the Yellow Sea (west). Seoul is the cultural, economic, and political center of South Korea.
- Hanssen, Robert (American law enforcement agent and spy)
Robert Hanssen was an agent of the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) who was one of the Soviet Union’s and Russia’s most valuable double agents and the most damaging spy ever to penetrate the FBI. Hanssen was the son of a police officer. He received a bachelor’s degree from Knox College in