- Haganah (Zionist military organization)
Haganah, (Hebrew: “Defense”), Zionist military organization representing the majority of the Jews in Palestine from 1920 to 1948. Organized to combat the revolts of Palestinian Arabs against the Jewish settlement of Palestine, it early came under the influence of the Histadrut (“General Federation
- Hagano (German mythology)
Hagen, mythological Germanic hero who plays a variety of roles in a number of northern European legends. In the Nibelungenlied, he appears as a vassal of the Burgundian king Gunther and is a grizzled warrior, loyal and wary. He plays a principal role in the epic as the slayer of Siegfried, who
- Hagar (biblical figure)
Hagar, in the Old Testament (Gen. 16:1–16; 21:8–21), Abraham’s concubine and the mother of his son Ishmael. Purchased in Egypt, she served as a maid to Abraham’s childless wife, Sarah, who gave her to Abraham to conceive an heir. When Hagar became pregnant, her meek manner changed to arrogance;
- Hagar, Sammy (American musician and singer)
Heavy Metal: Music: …Companion”), Stevie Nicks (“Blue Lamp”), Sammy Hagar (“Heavy Metal”), and the Eagles guitarist Don Felder (“Heavy Metal [Takin’ a Ride]” and “All of You”), among others. Much of the music was licensed for the film and soundtrack album but not for other media, resulting in legal issues that prevented the…
- Hagatna (Guam)
Hagåtña, town, capital of the unincorporated U.S. territory of Guam, northern Pacific Ocean. It is situated on the west coast of the island, on a beach surrounding Hagåtña Bay at the mouth of the small Hagåtña River. The name of the town was formally changed from Agana to its Chamorro-language form
- Hagåtña (Guam)
Hagåtña, town, capital of the unincorporated U.S. territory of Guam, northern Pacific Ocean. It is situated on the west coast of the island, on a beach surrounding Hagåtña Bay at the mouth of the small Hagåtña River. The name of the town was formally changed from Agana to its Chamorro-language form
- Hagedashia hagedash (bird)
ibis: The hadada ibis, or hadada (Hagedashia hagedash), of Africa, is a greenish ibis known for its loud call.
- Hagedorn, Friedrich von (German poet)
Friedrich von Hagedorn was a poet who introduced a new lightness and grace into German poetry and was highly esteemed by his contemporaries. Hagedorn’s father was the Danish ambassador in Hamburg, and the young Hagedorn in 1729 became an unpaid private secretary to the Danish ambassador in London.
- Hageladas (Greek sculptor)
Ageladas was a Greek sculptor said to have been the teacher of Myron, Phidias, and Polyclitus. This tradition testifies to his wide fame but is historically
- Hageman, Harriet (American politician)
Liz Cheney: Congresswoman from Wyoming (2017–23): She was soundly defeated by Harriet Hageman, a candidate who fully embraced Trump’s false election claims and had the support of the former president as well as the Republican Party leadership. As Cheney conceded the election that night, she condemned the election denialism movement in the Republican Party and reaffirmed…
- Hageman, Richard (Dutch-American musician and composer)
Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra: …presented a concert conducted by Richard Hageman. From 1927 through 1930, the PSO was led by Elias Breeskin, concertmaster and later conductor, and by such guest conductors as Eugene Goossens and Walter Damrosch. Permanent conductor Antonio Modarelli (1930–37) was succeeded by Otto Klemperer (1937–38), who reorganized the
- Hagen (Germany)
Hagen, city, North Rhine–Westphalia Land (state), western Germany. It lies south of Dortmund, at the confluence of the Ennepe and Volme rivers just south of the Ruhr. Hagen is situated on the eastern edge of the industrial Ruhr district and is bordered to the south by the Sauerland, a mountainous
- Hagen (German mythology)
Hagen, mythological Germanic hero who plays a variety of roles in a number of northern European legends. In the Nibelungenlied, he appears as a vassal of the Burgundian king Gunther and is a grizzled warrior, loyal and wary. He plays a principal role in the epic as the slayer of Siegfried, who
- Hagen Range (mountains, Papua New Guinea)
Mount Hagen: …12,579-foot (3,834-metre) peak in the Hagen Range of the central highlands, 15 miles (24 km) northwest. It is believed that the mountain, an extinct volcano, once stood 6,000 feet (1,800 metres) higher but was reduced by an ancient cataclysmic eruption.
- Hagen’s clouds (astronomy)
Johann Georg Hagen: …interstellar matter sometimes known as Hagen’s clouds.
- Hagen, Carl (American physicist)
Peter Higgs: …American physicists Gerald Guralnik and Carl Hagen and British physicist Tom Kibble. However, neither group mentioned the possibility of a massive boson.)
- Hagen, Gotthilf Heinrich Ludwig (German engineer)
Jean-Louis-Marie Poiseuille: Discovered independently by Gotthilf Hagen, a German hydraulic engineer, this relation is also known as the Hagen-Poiseuille equation.
- Hagen, Jean (American actress)
Asphalt Jungle, The: Cast:
- Hagen, Johann Georg (Austrian astronomer)
Johann Georg Hagen was a Jesuit priest and astronomer who is noted for his discovery and study of dark clouds of tenuous, interstellar matter sometimes known as Hagen’s clouds. Hagen served as director of the Georgetown College Observatory, Washington, D.C., from 1888 to 1906, when Pope Pius X
- Hagen, Uta (German-born American actor and teacher)
Uta Hagen was a German-born American actor and teacher who thrilled theatre audiences with her talent and versatility and also became a widely respected acting teacher and writer. She counted three Tony Awards among her numerous honours, one of them for her creation of the role of the acid-tongued
- Hagen, Uta Thyra (German-born American actor and teacher)
Uta Hagen was a German-born American actor and teacher who thrilled theatre audiences with her talent and versatility and also became a widely respected acting teacher and writer. She counted three Tony Awards among her numerous honours, one of them for her creation of the role of the acid-tongued
- Hagen, Walter (American golfer)
Walter Hagen was an American professional golfer, one of the most colourful sports personages of his time, who is credited with doing more than any other golfer to raise the social standing of his profession. He was exceptionally self-confident. He dressed stylishly, lived extravagantly, played
- Hagen, Walter Charles (American golfer)
Walter Hagen was an American professional golfer, one of the most colourful sports personages of his time, who is credited with doing more than any other golfer to raise the social standing of his profession. He was exceptionally self-confident. He dressed stylishly, lived extravagantly, played
- Hagen-Poiseuille equation (physics)
Jean-Louis-Marie Poiseuille: …is also known as the Hagen-Poiseuille equation.
- Hagenauer, Friedrich (German artist)
medal: Germany and Austria: Friedrich Hagenauer, active in Munich and in Augsburg (1527–32), produced more than 230 medals. In Nürnberg, Matthes Gebel (active 1525–54) and his follower Joachim Deschler (active 1540–69) were the principal medalists. Ludwig Neufahrer worked mainly in Nürnberg and the Austrian Habsburg domains, employed by Ferdinand…
- Hagenbeck Zoo (zoo, Hamburg, Germany)
Hagenbeck Zoo, zoological park in Hamburg, Ger., which pioneered the use of moated, barless, open-air enclosures that resemble the animals’ natural habitats. The zoo was founded in 1907 by Carl Hagenbeck, who originated the type of wild-animal acts characteristic of modern circus performances.
- Hagenbeck, Carl (German animal trainer and dealer)
Carl Hagenbeck was an internationally known German animal dealer and trainer who controlled animals by befriending them, emphasizing for spectators their intelligence and tractability over their ferocity. He also created the prototype for open-air zoos. Hagenbeck’s father was a fishmonger who had
- Hager’s Town (Maryland, United States)
Hagerstown, city, seat (1776) of Washington county, north-central Maryland, U.S. It lies in the Cumberland Valley between the Blue Ridge and Allegheny mountains, 71 miles (114 km) northwest of Baltimore. In 1762 the town was laid out by the German immigrant Jonathan Hager and named Elizabeth Town
- Háger, Constantin (Belgian teacher)
Charlotte Brontë: Life: …them to the notice of Constantin Héger, a fine teacher and a man of unusual perception. After a brief trip home upon the death of her aunt, Charlotte returned to Brussels as a pupil-teacher. She stayed there during 1843 but was lonely and depressed. Her friends had left Brussels, and…
- Hagerman Fossil Beds National Monument (paleontological area, Idaho, United States)
Hagerman Fossil Beds National Monument, paleontological site in southern Idaho, U.S. It is located on the west bank of the Snake River, just west of Hagerman and about 100 miles (160 km) southeast of Boise. The monument, with an area of about 7 square miles (18 square km), was established in 1988.
- Hagerstown (Maryland, United States)
Hagerstown, city, seat (1776) of Washington county, north-central Maryland, U.S. It lies in the Cumberland Valley between the Blue Ridge and Allegheny mountains, 71 miles (114 km) northwest of Baltimore. In 1762 the town was laid out by the German immigrant Jonathan Hager and named Elizabeth Town
- Hägerstrand, Torsten (Swedish geographer)
geography: Human geography as locational analysis: …the work of Swedish geographer Torsten Hägerstrand was seminal. He added spatial components to sociological and economic models of the diffusion of information. According to Hägerstrand, the main centres of innovation tend to be the largest cities, from which new ideas and practices spread down the urban hierarchies and across…
- Hägerström, Axel (Swedish philosopher)
Axel Hägerström was a Swedish philosopher who founded the Uppsala school of philosophy, which espoused phenomenological and conceptual analysis and rejected metaphysical suppositions and subjectivism. Raised in a religious home, Hägerström commenced studies in theology (1886) but received his
- Hägerström, Axel Anders Theodor (Swedish philosopher)
Axel Hägerström was a Swedish philosopher who founded the Uppsala school of philosophy, which espoused phenomenological and conceptual analysis and rejected metaphysical suppositions and subjectivism. Raised in a religious home, Hägerström commenced studies in theology (1886) but received his
- Hagerup, Gesine (Norwegian musician)
Edvard Grieg: His mother, Gesine Hagerup, who belonged to a well-established Norwegian family, studied music at Hamburg. From the age of six Grieg received piano lessons from her, and in 1858, at the recommendation of the violin virtuoso Ole Bull, he entered the Leipzig Conservatory, where he was influenced…
- Hagerup, Inger (Norwegian poet)
20th-century Norwegian literature: After World War II: Inger Hagerup and Marie Takvam are both best known for stylistically traditional love poems; Hagerup is also known for her poems written for children.
- hagfish (agnathan vertebrate)
hagfish, any of about 70 species of marine vertebrates placed with the lampreys in the superclass Agnatha. Although most classifications place all hagfishes in the family Myxinidae, they are sometimes divided into two families: Myxinidae, represented in every ocean, and Eptatretidae, represented
- Hägg, Gunder (Swedish athlete)
Gunder Hägg was a Swedish middle-distance runner who broke a total of 15 world records during his career. He set 10 of them within a three-month period in 1942. Hägg, the son of a lumberjack, gained attention as a runner in 1938, when he was second in the 3,000-metre steeplechase in the Swedish
- Haggada (non-legal literature)
Haggada, in Judaism, those parts of rabbinical, or Talmudic, literature that do not deal directly with the laws incumbent upon Jews in the conduct of their daily life. The contents of Haggada can be broken down into several classes: (1) interpretations and expositions of Biblical stories and
- Haggadah (biblical Exodus)
Haggadah, in Judaism, the special book containing the story of the biblical Exodus as it must be retold at the beginning of the seder dinner on Passover (Pesaḥ). The book’s commentaries on the story of the Exodus provide a religious philosophy of Jewish history, and the book supplies answers to the
- Haggadah (non-legal literature)
Haggada, in Judaism, those parts of rabbinical, or Talmudic, literature that do not deal directly with the laws incumbent upon Jews in the conduct of their daily life. The contents of Haggada can be broken down into several classes: (1) interpretations and expositions of Biblical stories and
- Haggadah (biblical Exodus)
Haggadah, in Judaism, the special book containing the story of the biblical Exodus as it must be retold at the beginning of the seder dinner on Passover (Pesaḥ). The book’s commentaries on the story of the Exodus provide a religious philosophy of Jewish history, and the book supplies answers to the
- Haggadot (non-legal literature)
Haggada, in Judaism, those parts of rabbinical, or Talmudic, literature that do not deal directly with the laws incumbent upon Jews in the conduct of their daily life. The contents of Haggada can be broken down into several classes: (1) interpretations and expositions of Biblical stories and
- Haggadoth (non-legal literature)
Haggada, in Judaism, those parts of rabbinical, or Talmudic, literature that do not deal directly with the laws incumbent upon Jews in the conduct of their daily life. The contents of Haggada can be broken down into several classes: (1) interpretations and expositions of Biblical stories and
- Haggai (Hebrew author)
Book of Zechariah: A contemporary of the prophet Haggai in the early years of the Persian period, Zechariah shared Haggai’s concern that the Temple of Jerusalem be rebuilt. Unlike Haggai, however, Zechariah thought that the rebuilding of the Temple was the necessary prelude to the eschatological age, the arrival of which was imminent.…
- Haggai, The Book of (biblical literature)
The Book of Haggai, the 10th of 12 Old Testament books that bear the names of the Minor Prophets. Haggai (fl. 6th century bc) helped mobilize the Jewish community for the rebuilding of the Temple of Jerusalem (516 bc) after the Babylonian Exile and prophesied the glorious future of the messianic
- haggard (falcon)
falconry: Terms and equipment: …adult plumage is termed a haggard. The female peregrine falcon is properly called a falcon, and the male—which, in common with most species of raptors, is smaller than the female—is known as a tiercel. Indoor housing for hawks is called a mews. The falconer’s equipment is known as items of…
- Haggard, Merle (American musician)
Merle Haggard was an American singer, guitarist, and songwriter, one of the most popular country music performers of the late 20th century, with nearly 40 number one country hits between the late 1960s and the mid-1980s. Haggard’s parents moved from the Oklahoma Dust Bowl to the Bakersfield area of
- Haggard, Merle Ronald (American musician)
Merle Haggard was an American singer, guitarist, and songwriter, one of the most popular country music performers of the late 20th century, with nearly 40 number one country hits between the late 1960s and the mid-1980s. Haggard’s parents moved from the Oklahoma Dust Bowl to the Bakersfield area of
- Haggard, Sir H. Rider (British author)
Sir H. Rider Haggard was an English novelist best known for his romantic adventure King Solomon’s Mines (1885). The son of a barrister, Haggard was educated at Ipswich grammar school and by private tutors. In 1875, at age 19, he went to southern Africa as secretary to the governor of Natal, Sir
- Haggard, Sir Henry Rider (British author)
Sir H. Rider Haggard was an English novelist best known for his romantic adventure King Solomon’s Mines (1885). The son of a barrister, Haggard was educated at Ipswich grammar school and by private tutors. In 1875, at age 19, he went to southern Africa as secretary to the governor of Natal, Sir
- Haggerty, Patrick (American businessman)
Texas Instruments Incorporated: Founding and World War II research: The navy assigned Lieutenant Patrick Haggerty to monitor and manage GSI’s contract, and at war’s end he accepted a position as head of GSI’s new laboratory and manufacturing division. Defense technology was the key to dominance in the early electronics industry; companies that could adapt wartime technologies to peacetime…
- haggis (food)
haggis, the national dish of Scotland, a type of pudding composed of the liver, heart, and lungs of a sheep (or other animal), minced and mixed with beef or mutton suet and oatmeal and seasoned with onion, cayenne pepper, and other spices. The mixture is packed into a sheep’s stomach and boiled.
- Haggis, Paul (Canadian writer, producer, and director)
Crash: …was written and directed by Paul Haggis and that won the Academy Award for best picture in what was widely thought to be an upset over critical and popular favourite Brokeback Mountain. Set in Los Angeles, Crash is a series of confrontations and collisions between a broad cross section of…
- Hägglund, Joel Emmanuel (American songwriter and labor organizer)
Joe Hill was a Swedish-born American songwriter and organizer for the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW); his execution for an alleged robbery-murder made him a martyr and folk hero in the radical American labour movement. Born into a conservative Lutheran family, all of whom were amateur
- Hagi (Japan)
Hagi, city, northern Yamaguchi ken (prefecture), western Honshu, Japan. It lies in the delta of the Abu River, facing Senzaki Bay of the Sea of Japan (East Sea). Hagi was founded as a castle town in 1600 and prospered as the capital of both Suō and Nagato provinces (now Yamaguchi prefecture).
- Hagia Sofia (cathedral, Istanbul, Turkey)
Hagia Sophia, an important Byzantine structure in Istanbul and one of the world’s great monuments. It was built as a Christian church in the 6th century ce (532–537) under the direction of the Byzantine emperor Justinian I. In subsequent centuries it became a mosque, a museum, and a mosque again.
- Hagia Sophia (cathedral, Istanbul, Turkey)
Hagia Sophia, an important Byzantine structure in Istanbul and one of the world’s great monuments. It was built as a Christian church in the 6th century ce (532–537) under the direction of the Byzantine emperor Justinian I. In subsequent centuries it became a mosque, a museum, and a mosque again.
- Hagia Triada (archaeological site, Greece)
Greek religion: Religious art and iconography: On a well-known sarcophagus from Ayías Triádhos in Crete, for example, a priestess dressed in a skin skirt assists at a sacrifice, flanked by wreathed axes on which squat birds. The significance of the scene has been much discussed. The birds have been regarded as epiphanies of deities, giving sacral…
- Hagiographa (biblical literature)
Ketuvim, the third division of the Hebrew Bible, or Old Testament. Divided into four sections, the Ketuvim include: poetical books (Psalms, Proverbs, and Job), the Megillot, or Scrolls (Song of Solomon, Ruth, Lamentations of Jeremiah, Ecclesiastes, and Esther), prophecy (Daniel), and history (Ezra,
- hagiography (religious study and literature)
hagiography, the body of literature describing the lives and veneration of the Christian saints. The literature of hagiography embraces acts of the martyrs (i.e., accounts of their trials and deaths); biographies of saintly monks, bishops, princes, or virgins; and accounts of miracles connected
- hagiology (religious study and literature)
hagiography, the body of literature describing the lives and veneration of the Christian saints. The literature of hagiography embraces acts of the martyrs (i.e., accounts of their trials and deaths); biographies of saintly monks, bishops, princes, or virgins; and accounts of miracles connected
- Hagios Elias (mountain, Greece)
Taïyetos Mountains: The range’s highest peak is Hagios Elias (Saint Elijah); at its summit is a chapel dedicated to the prophet, where an annual festival in his honour is held every August. In the region the chief economic activities are lumbering, especially of fir, black pine, chestnut, oak, and beech; and livestock…
- hagioscope (architecture)
hagioscope, in architecture, any opening, usually oblique, cut through a wall or a pier in the chancel of a church to enable the congregation—in transepts or chapels, from which the altar would not otherwise be visible—to witness the elevation of the host (the eucharistic bread) during mass.
- Hagiwara Sakutarō (Japanese poet)
Hagiwara Sakutarō was a poet who is considered the father of free verse in Japanese. The son of a prosperous physician, Hagiwara enjoyed a sheltered and indulged childhood. At age 15 he discovered literature and began writing classical verse, which he submitted to literary magazines. He refused to
- Hagler, Marvelous Marvin (American boxer)
Marvin Hagler was an American boxer, a durable middleweight champion, who was one of the greatest fighters of the 1970s and ’80s. (Read Gene Tunney’s 1929 Britannica essay on boxing.) Hagler began his boxing career in Brockton, Massachusetts, winning 57 amateur fights and the 1973 Amateur Athletic
- Hagler, Marvin (American boxer)
Marvin Hagler was an American boxer, a durable middleweight champion, who was one of the greatest fighters of the 1970s and ’80s. (Read Gene Tunney’s 1929 Britannica essay on boxing.) Hagler began his boxing career in Brockton, Massachusetts, winning 57 amateur fights and the 1973 Amateur Athletic
- Hagler, Marvin Nathaniel (American boxer)
Marvin Hagler was an American boxer, a durable middleweight champion, who was one of the greatest fighters of the 1970s and ’80s. (Read Gene Tunney’s 1929 Britannica essay on boxing.) Hagler began his boxing career in Brockton, Massachusetts, winning 57 amateur fights and the 1973 Amateur Athletic
- Hagley Museum and Library (museum and library, Wilmington, Delaware, United States)
Delaware: Cultural life: The Hagley Museum and Library portrays the development of American manufacturing through preservation of the early mills and other structures of the DuPont company, as well as by indoor exhibits. Other notable museums include the Delaware Museum of Natural History, in Greenville, as well as the…
- Hagman, Larry (American actor)
Dallas: (Larry Hagman, previously best known for his comedic role on I Dream of Jeannie [1965–70]); and J.R.’s long-suffering alcoholic wife, Sue Ellen (Linda Gray). As the ruthless, devious oil tycoon that audiences loved to hate, Hagman redefined the soap opera villain-protagonist. The show borrowed a…
- Hagman, Larry Martin (American actor)
Dallas: (Larry Hagman, previously best known for his comedic role on I Dream of Jeannie [1965–70]); and J.R.’s long-suffering alcoholic wife, Sue Ellen (Linda Gray). As the ruthless, devious oil tycoon that audiences loved to hate, Hagman redefined the soap opera villain-protagonist. The show borrowed a…
- Hagopian, Hagop (terrorist)
Armenian Secret Army for the Liberation of Armenia: …was founded in 1975 by Hagop Hagopian, a Lebanese-born Armenian who had become involved with Palestinian resistance groups in the early 1970s. Some sources claim that Hagopian was a member of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) and that the PFLP helped fund the Armenian group. Like…
- Hague Agreement (Netherlands-Indonesia [1949])
Hague Agreement, treaty ratified on Nov. 2, 1949, between the Netherlands and the Republic of Indonesia, that attempted to bring to an end the Dutch-Indonesian conflict that followed the proclamation of Indonesian independence in 1945. After prolonged disagreement over its provisions, the treaty
- Hague Alliance (European history)
history of Europe: The triumph of the Catholics, 1619–29: …forfeited lands and titles (the Hague Alliance, December 9, 1624). Its leader was Christian IV of Denmark (1588–1648), one of the richest rulers in Christendom, who saw a chance to extend his influence in northern Germany under cover of defending “the Protestant cause.” He invaded the empire in June 1625.
- Hague Conference on Private International Law (international agreement)
conflict of laws: Historical development: …of the influence of the Hague Conference on Private International Law, however, the reference is now more commonly to the law of a person’s “habitual residence” (as it is in the law of jurisdiction).
- Hague Convention (international treaties [1899, 1907])
Hague Convention, any of a series of international treaties that issued from international conferences held at The Hague in the Netherlands in 1899 and 1907. The first conference was convened at the invitation of Count Mikhail Nikolayevich Muravyov, the minister of foreign affairs of Tsar Nicholas
- Hague Convention on the Service Abroad of Judicial and Extrajudicial Documents in Civil or Commercial Matters (international agreement)
conflict of laws: Notification of parties: …effective multilateral mechanism is the Hague Convention on the Service Abroad of Judicial and Extrajudicial Documents in Civil or Commercial Matters, to which some 50 countries, including the United States, China, Russia, and all the EU states, are party. It provides for a “Central Authority” in each member state that…
- Hague Convention, The (1970, air law)
air law: Hijacking: …began in 1968, the 1970 Hague Convention for the Suppression of Unlawful Seizure of Aircraft was concluded in an effort to prevent hijackers from finding immunity in any of the contracting states.
- Hague Peace Conferences (international treaties [1899, 1907])
Hague Convention, any of a series of international treaties that issued from international conferences held at The Hague in the Netherlands in 1899 and 1907. The first conference was convened at the invitation of Count Mikhail Nikolayevich Muravyov, the minister of foreign affairs of Tsar Nicholas
- Hague Rules (maritime law)
Hague Rules, in maritime law, international code defining the rights and liabilities of a carrier. Introduced at the International Law Association meeting in Brussels in 1921, they were adopted first as clauses in bills of lading and after 1923 as the Brussels Convention on Limitation of
- Hague Rules of Aerial Warfare (1923)
neutrality: Under the Hague Rules of Air Warfare, 1923 (which never became legally binding), neutrals have the right to defend their air space from passage of belligerent aircraft. The emergence of ballistic missiles and space satellites as tools of warfare, however, has raised questions regarding the extent of…
- Hague school (art)
Hague school, Dutch painters who worked in The Hague between 1860 and 1900, producing renderings of local landscapes and the daily activities of local fisherman and farmers in the style of Realism. In this they extended the traditional focus on genre of the 17th-century Dutch masters with the fresh
- Hague, Frank (American politician)
New Jersey: Constitutional framework: …notorious of those bosses was Frank Hague, who ruled Jersey City and Hudson county from 1917 to 1947. For three decades Hague dominated the Democratic Party and heavily influenced the Republicans. His philosophy of government was best summed up in his famous reply to those who told him an order…
- Hague, The (national seat of government, Netherlands)
The Hague, seat of government of the Netherlands. It is situated on a coastal plain, with the city centre just inland from the North Sea. The Hague is the administrative capital of the country and the home of the court and government, though Amsterdam is the official capital. The city’s name
- Hague, Treaty of The (European history)
Bengt Gabrielsson, Count Oxenstierna: …Holy Roman emperor in the Treaty of The Hague (1681), he reversed Sweden’s long-standing policy of alliance with France.
- Hague, William Jefferson, Baron Hague of Richmond (British politician)
William Jefferson Hague, Baron Hague of Richmond , Baron Hague of Richmond is a British politician who served as leader of the Conservative Party (1997–2001) and as foreign secretary under Prime Minister David Cameron (2010–14). Hague was born into a family that ran a small soft-drink business. He
- Haguenau (France)
Haguenau, town, Bas-Rhin département, Grand Est région, northeastern France. It lies along the Moder River just south of the Forest of Haguenau, north of Strasbourg. The town developed in the 12th century around a castle on an island in the river and was a favourite residence of the Holy Roman
- Hahn, Archie (American athlete)
Archie Hahn was an American runner who won gold medals in three sprint events at the 1904 Olympic Games in St. Louis, Missouri. Hahn studied law at the University of Michigan, where he excelled in track competition, winning the 1903 Amateur Athletic Union title. At the 1904 Olympics, Hahn won gold
- Hahn, Charles Archibald (American athlete)
Archie Hahn was an American runner who won gold medals in three sprint events at the 1904 Olympic Games in St. Louis, Missouri. Hahn studied law at the University of Michigan, where he excelled in track competition, winning the 1903 Amateur Athletic Union title. At the 1904 Olympics, Hahn won gold
- Hahn, Hans (German mathematician)
logical positivism: In 1922 Hans Hahn, one of the leaders of the Vienna Circle, laid before his students at the University of Vienna the Logisch-philosophische Abhandlung (1921; Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus, 1922) of Ludwig Wittgenstein. This work introduced a new general theory of meaning—derived in part from the logical inquiries of…
- Hahn, Helena Petrovna (Russian spiritualist)
Helena Blavatsky was a Russian spiritualist, author, and cofounder of the Theosophical Society to promote theosophy, a pantheistic philosophical-religious system. At the age of 17, Helena Hahn married Nikifor V. Blavatsky, a Russian military officer and provincial vice-governor, but they separated
- Hahn, Hilary (American musician)
Hilary Hahn is an American violinist who is regarded as one of the finest solo violinists of her generation. She sought to make classical music more accessible to a younger audience. Hahn began taking Suzuki-method violin lessons at the Peabody Conservatory, in Baltimore, Maryland, shortly before
- Hahn, James (American politician)
Antonio Villaraigosa: …the incumbent mayor, fellow Democrat James Hahn, but he lost to Hahn in the general election. He was, however, elected to the city council in 2003, representing Los Angeles’s 14th District. In that role he turned his attention to the resolution of a transit strike and to protecting arts funding.…
- Hahn, Otto (German chemist)
Otto Hahn was a German chemist who, with the radiochemist Fritz Strassmann, is credited with the discovery of nuclear fission. He was awarded the Nobel Prize for Chemistry in 1944 and shared the Enrico Fermi Award in 1966 with Strassmann and Lise Meitner. Hahn was the son of a glazier. Although his
- Hahn, Reynaldo (French composer)
Reynaldo Hahn was a Venezuelan-born French composer, remembered chiefly for his art songs. Hahn went to Paris as a child and later studied at the Conservatoire under Jules Massenet. He was music critic of Le Figaro from 1934 and in 1945 became director of the Paris Opéra. His operettas, which were
- Hahn-Hahn, Ida, Countess von (German writer)
Ida, countess von Hahn-Hahn was a German author of poetry, travel books, and novels that, though written in an artificial, aristocratic style, often show acute psychological insight. Daughter of the theatrical producer Count Karl Friedrich von Hahn, she acquired her hyphenated dual name by marrying
- Hahnemann, Christian Friedrich Samuel (German physician)
Samuel Hahnemann was a German physician, founder of the system of therapeutics known as homeopathy. Hahnemann studied medicine at Leipzig and Vienna, taking the degree of M.D. at Erlangen in 1779. After practicing in various places, he settled in Dresden in 1784 and then moved to Leipzig in 1789.
- Hahnemann, Samuel (German physician)
Samuel Hahnemann was a German physician, founder of the system of therapeutics known as homeopathy. Hahnemann studied medicine at Leipzig and Vienna, taking the degree of M.D. at Erlangen in 1779. After practicing in various places, he settled in Dresden in 1784 and then moved to Leipzig in 1789.
- hahnium (chemical element)
dubnium (Db), an artificially produced radioactive transuranium element in Group Vb of the periodic table, atomic number 105. The discovery of dubnium (element 105), like that of rutherfordium (element 104), has been a matter of dispute between Soviet and American scientists. The Soviets may have
- Hai (Jewish scholar)
Hai ben Sherira was the last outstanding Babylonian gaon, or head, of a great Talmudic academy, remembered for the range and profundity of the exceptionally large number of responsa (authoritative answers to questions concerning interpretation of Jewish law) he wrote. Though the office of gaon was