- Hernandez, Keith Barlow (American baseball player)
Keith Hernandez is an American professional baseball player who earned 11 consecutive Gold Glove awards (1978–88) during his 17 seasons in Major League Baseball. He played on two World Series championship teams (1982, 1986) and appeared in five All-Star Games (1979, 1980, 1984, 1986, 1987).
- Hernandez, Lauren Zoe (American gymnast)
Laurie Hernandez is an American gymnast who participated in the 2016 Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro. Hernandez and her teammates Simone Biles, Gabby Douglas, Aly Raisman, and Madison Kocian, dubbed the “Final Five,” won the women’s artistic gymnastics team gold medal. Hernandez also captured an
- Hernandez, Laurie (American gymnast)
Laurie Hernandez is an American gymnast who participated in the 2016 Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro. Hernandez and her teammates Simone Biles, Gabby Douglas, Aly Raisman, and Madison Kocian, dubbed the “Final Five,” won the women’s artistic gymnastics team gold medal. Hernandez also captured an
- Hernandez, Livan (Cuban-born baseball player)
Miami Marlins: …by the play of pitcher Livan Hernandez, outfielder Gary Sheffield, second baseman Luis Castillo, and catcher Charles Johnson, Florida defeated the San Francisco Giants and the Atlanta Braves in the NL playoffs to earn a berth in the World Series in the team’s fifth year of existence. The Marlins then…
- Hernández, Miguel (Spanish author)
Miguel Hernández was a Spanish poet and dramatist who combined traditional lyric forms with 20th-century subjectivity. A goatherd in his youth, Hernández joined the Spanish Communist Party in 1936 and fought in the Civil War (1936–39). Condemned to death by the Nationalists after the war, his
- Hernández, Orlando (Cuban baseball player)
Orlando Hernández is a Cuban baseball pitcher who amassed a won-lost record of 129–47, the best winning percentage in the history of the Cuban League. After defecting from Cuba in 1997, he pitched in the major leagues, where he gained a reputation as a “big game” pitcher, posting a 9–3 record and a
- Hernandez, Peter Gene (American singer-songwriter and producer)
Bruno Mars is an American singer and songwriter who is known for both his catchy pop music—which often features upbeat lyrics, blends different genres, and has a retro quality—and his energetic live performances. He was the son of Pete (“Dr. Doo-Wop”) Hernandez, a Latin percussionist of Puerto
- Hernández, Rodolfo (Colombian politician)
Gustavo Petro: The 2022 Colombian presidential election: Populist millionaire Rodolfo Hernández finished second with 28 percent. Because neither candidate had reached the 50 percent level needed to preclude a runoff, a rematch was set for June. Petro stood to be the first leftist ever elected as Colombia’s president. That two distinctly nontraditional candidates were…
- Hernandia (plant genus)
Laurales: Distribution and abundance: The largest genus, Hernandia (22 species), is distributed in Central and South America, the West Indies, West Africa, Indo-Malaysia (a region comprising India, South China, and Southeast Asia), and the Pacific Islands. Atherospermataceae includes 6 or 7 genera and 16 species, which are native to Australia, New Guinea,…
- Hernandiaceae (plant family)
Laurales: Other families: Hernandiaceae shares a number of features with Lauraceae, including alternate leaves (which are sometimes lobed or palmately compound) and a single carpel per flower. Members of the family also have inaperturate pollen and develop stamens with valvular dehiscence and nectariferous appendages. Hernandiaceae differ in having…
- Hernani (play by Hugo)
Hernani, poetic tragedy in five acts by French author Victor Hugo, first performed and published in 1830. Because it renounced the unities of time and place, Hernani was in the vanguard of the new, more naturalistic Romantic drama. The story is set in 16th-century Spain and extols the Romantic hero
- Herndon v. Lowry (law case)
Owen Josephus Roberts: …famous decision that he wrote, Herndon v. Lowry (1937), Roberts set aside the conviction of an African American communist organizer convicted under a law that provided no clear standard of guilt. In the area of economic and commerce law, Roberts’s opinion in Nebbia v. New York (1934) upheld the price-setting…
- Herndon, Ellen Lewis (wife of Chester Arthur)
Ellen Arthur was the wife of Chester A. Arthur, 21st president of the United States. She never served as first lady because she died of pneumonia before her husband assumed office. The president’s sister, Mary Arthur McElroy, acted as White House hostess. Ellen Lewis Herndon was the daughter of
- Herndon, William H. (American lawyer)
Abraham Lincoln: Prairie lawyer: …and finally, from 1844, of William H. Herndon. Nearly 10 years younger than Lincoln, Herndon was more widely read, more emotional at the bar, and generally more extreme in his views. Yet this partnership seems to have been as nearly perfect as such human arrangements ever are. Lincoln and Herndon…
- Herndon, William Lewis (American explorer)
Amazon River: Early European exploration: , William Lewis Herndon published the report that he and Lardner Gibbon—both lieutenants in the U.S. Navy—had made to Congress under the title of Exploration of the Valley of the Amazon.
- Herne (Germany)
Herne, city, North Rhine–Westphalia Land (state), western Germany. It lies at the junction of the Rhine-Herne and the Dortmund-Ems canals, about 10 miles (16 km) west of Dortmund, in the industrial Ruhr district. Known as Haranni in the 10th century, it remained a small village until the discovery
- Herne Bay (England, United Kingdom)
Herne Bay, town, Canterbury city (local authority), on the north (Thames estuary) coast of the administrative and historic county of Kent, southeastern England. The town grew rapidly after the railway linked it with London in 1833. Reculver, 3 miles (5 km) east, is the site of the Roman station
- Herne The Hunter (English folklore)
Herne The Hunter, phantom hunter who haunts Windsor Great Park, impersonated by Falstaff in Shakespeare’s The Merry Wives of Windsor. Though Herne may have been an actual keeper of the forest, he is probably a local manifestation of the Wild Huntsman myth known throughout the world. The usual story
- Herne’s Egg, The (play by Yeats)
William Butler Yeats: …his last plays, he completed The Herne’s Egg, his most raucous work, in 1938. Yeats’s last two verse collections, New Poems and Last Poems and Two Plays, appeared in 1938 and 1939 respectively. In these books many of his previous themes are gathered up and rehandled, with an immense technical…
- Herne, James A. (American author)
James A. Herne was an American playwright who helped bridge the gap between 19th-century melodrama and the 20th-century drama of ideas. After several years as a traveling actor, Herne scored an impressive success with his first play, Hearts of Oak (1879), written with the young David Belasco.
- hernia (medical condition)
hernia, protrusion of an organ or tissue from its normal cavity. The protrusion may extend outside the body or between cavities within the body, as when loops of intestine escape from the abdominal cavity into the chest through a defect in the diaphragm, the muscular partition between the two
- herniated disk
herniated disk, displacement of part of the rubbery centre, or nucleus, of a cartilaginous disk from between the vertebrae so that it presses against the spinal cord. Pain occurs in the arms if the protrusion occurs at the level of the neck (between the fifth and sixth or sixth and seventh cervical
- Hernici (people)
Hernici, ancient people of Italy, whose territory was in Latium between the Fucine Lake (modern Fucino) and the Trerus (modern Sacco) River, bounded by the Volsci on the south and by the Aequi and the Marsi on the north. In 486 bc they were still strong enough to conclude a treaty with the Romans
- Herning (Denmark)
Herning, city, west central Jutland, Denmark. Large-scale reclamation of surrounding heaths stimulated its growth from a rural village in the 1870s to a commercial city. A road and rail junction, its manufactures include textiles and machinery. Local lignite deposits were worked extensively during
- hero (literary and cultural figure)
hero, in literature, broadly, the main character in a literary work; the term is also used in a specialized sense for any figure celebrated in the ancient legends of a people or in such early heroic epics as Gilgamesh, the Iliad, Beowulf, or La Chanson de Roland. These legendary heroes belong to a
- Hero (fictional character)
Much Ado About Nothing: …between the conventional Claudio and Hero, who have the usual expectations of each other, and Beatrice and Benedick, who are highly skeptical of romance and courtship and, seemingly, each other. Claudio is deceived by the jealous Don John into believing that Hero is prepared to abandon him for Claudio’s friend…
- Hero (film by Zhang Yimou [2002])
Zhang Yimou: Yingxiong (2002; Hero) was nominated for an Oscar for best foreign-language film, and it became the highest-grossing film in China. His subsequent action films included Shimian mai fu (2004; House of Flying Daggers) and Man cheng jin dai huangjinjia (2006; Curse of the Golden Flower). Zhang shifted…
- Hero (Greek mathematician)
Heron of Alexandria was a Greek geometer and inventor whose writings preserved for posterity a knowledge of the mathematics and engineering of Babylonia, ancient Egypt, and the Greco-Roman world. Heron’s most important geometric work, Metrica, was lost until 1896. It is a compendium, in three
- Hero Ain’t Nothin’ but a Sandwich, A (film by Nelson [1978])
Ralph Nelson: …Tyson and Paul Winfield, in A Hero Ain’t Nothin’ but a Sandwich (1978), an adaptation of Alice Childress’s novel about a troubled teen in Los Angeles. His last two films were made-for-television productions: Christmas Lilies of the Field, with Billy Dee Williams in the Poitier role, and You Can’t Go…
- Hero Ain’t Nothin’ but a Sandwich, A (novel by Childress)
A Hero Ain’t Nothin’ but a Sandwich, novel for young adults by Alice Childress, published in 1973. The work is presented in 23 short narratives and tells the story of an arrogant black teenager whose fragmented domestic life and addiction to heroin lead him into
- Hero and Leander (Greek mythology)
Hero and Leander, two lovers celebrated in Greek legend. Hero, virgin priestess of Aphrodite at Sestos, was seen at a festival by Leander of Abydos; they fell in love, and he swam the Hellespont at night to visit her, guided by a light from her tower. One stormy night the light was extinguished,
- Hero and Leander (work by Marlowe)
Christopher Marlowe: Works. of Christopher Marlowe: …nondramatic work includes the poem Hero and Leander. This work was incomplete at his death and was extended by George Chapman: the joint work of the two poets was published in 1598.
- Hero of Alexandria (Greek mathematician)
Heron of Alexandria was a Greek geometer and inventor whose writings preserved for posterity a knowledge of the mathematics and engineering of Babylonia, ancient Egypt, and the Greco-Roman world. Heron’s most important geometric work, Metrica, was lost until 1896. It is a compendium, in three
- Hero of Currie Road, The (work by Paton)
Alan Paton: The Hero of Currie Road (2008) collected his short fiction. The Alan Paton Centre & Struggle Archives at the University of KwaZulu-Natal houses his papers as well as a major collection of apartheid-related manuscripts.
- Hero of Our Time, A (work by Pratolini)
Vasco Pratolini: …A Hero of Today, or, A Hero of Our Time) attacks fascism.
- Hero of Our Time, A (novel by Lermontov)
A Hero of Our Time, novel by Mikhail Lermontov, published in Russian in 1840 as Geroy nashego vremeni. Its psychologically probing portrait of a disillusioned 19th-century aristocrat and its use of a nonchronological and fragmented narrative structure influenced Fyodor Dostoyevsky, Leo Tolstoy, and
- Hero of Today, A (work by Pratolini)
Vasco Pratolini: …A Hero of Today, or, A Hero of Our Time) attacks fascism.
- Hero of Upper Canada (British soldier and administrator)
Sir Isaac Brock was a British soldier and administrator in Canada, popularly known as the “Hero of Upper Canada” during the War of 1812 against the United States. Brock entered the British army as an ensign in 1785. He was made lieutenant colonel of the 49th Regiment in 1797, and in 1802 he was
- hero sandwich (food)
hoagie, submarine sandwich containing Italian meats, cheeses, and other fillings and condiments. The name likely comes from the Philadelphia area where, during World War I, Italian immigrants who worked at the Hog Island shipyard began making sandwiches; they were originally called “hoggies” before
- Hero with a Thousand Faces, The (work by Campbell)
Joseph Campbell: Works: …of Zimmer, Campbell was writing The Hero with a Thousand Faces (1949), which remains his best-known work. In an approach that contrasted with that of subsequent books, Campbell tied the meaning of myth to its plot and claimed to have deciphered the common plot of all hero myths. He understood…
- hero worship
miracle: Holy persons: …to distinguish between saints and hero gods, because great people of renowned virtue can be deified and venerated and even receive officially approved state cults. Miracles occur as a matter of course at their tombs and relics. In certain Islamic traditions as well as in Christian belief, the occurrence of…
- Hero’s Life, A (work by Strauss)
Richard Strauss: Life: …Quixote and Ein Heldenleben (A Hero’s Life). In 1904 he and Pauline, who was the foremost exponent of his songs, toured the United States, where in New York City he conducted the first performance of his Symphonia Domestica (Domestic Symphony). The following year, in Dresden, he enjoyed his first…
- Hero, A (film by Farhadi [2021])
Asghar Farhadi: …his next film, Ghahreman (2021; A Hero), a businessman on a two-day leave from debtors’ prison attempts to secure an early release, but his plan goes awry; Farhadi also penned the drama.
- Herod (king of Judaea)
Herod was the Roman-appointed king of Judaea (37–4 bce), who built many fortresses, aqueducts, theatres, and other public buildings and generally raised the prosperity of his land but who was the centre of political and family intrigues in his later years. The New Testament portrays him as a
- Herod Agrippa I (king of Judaea)
Herod Agrippa I was the king of Judaea (41–44 ce), a clever diplomat who through his friendship with the Roman imperial family obtained the kingdom of his grandfather, Herod I the Great. He displayed great acumen in conciliating the Romans and Jews. After Agrippa’s father, Aristobulus IV, was
- Herod Agrippa II (king of Chalcis)
Herod Agrippa II was the king of Chalcis in southern Lebanon from 50 ce and tetrarch of Batanaea and Trachonitis in south Syria from 53 ce, who unsuccessfully mediated with the rebels in the First Jewish Revolt (66–70 ce). He was a great-grandson of Herod I the Great. Agrippa II was raised and
- Herod Antipas (ruler of Galilee)
Herod Antipas was the son of Herod I the Great who became tetrarch (ruler of a minor principality in the Roman Empire) of Galilee, in northern Palestine, and Peraea, east of the Jordan River and Dead Sea, and ruled throughout Jesus of Nazareth’s ministry. In the Gospel According to Luke (13:32),
- Herod Archelaus (king of Judaea)
Herod Archelaus was the son and principal heir of Herod I the Great as king of Judaea, deposed by Rome because of his unpopularity with the Jews. Named in his father’s will as ruler of the largest part of the Judaean kingdom—Judaea proper, Idumaea, and Samaria—Archelaus went to Rome (4 bc) to
- Herod Philip (king of Judaea)
Philip was the son of Herod I the Great and Cleopatra of Jerusalem (not to be confused with another Herod Philip, son of Herod I the Great by Mariamne II). He ruled ably as tetrarch over the former northeastern quarter of his father’s kingdom of Judaea. When the Roman emperor Augustus adjusted
- Herod the Great (king of Judaea)
Herod was the Roman-appointed king of Judaea (37–4 bce), who built many fortresses, aqueducts, theatres, and other public buildings and generally raised the prosperity of his land but who was the centre of political and family intrigues in his later years. The New Testament portrays him as a
- Herod’s Gate (gate, Jerusalem)
Jerusalem: Architecture: …wall: the New, Damascus, and Herod’s gates to the north, the St. Stephen’s (or Lion’s) Gate to the east, the Dung and Zion gates to the south, and the Jaffa Gate to the west. An eighth gate, the Golden Gate, to the east, remains sealed, however, for it is through…
- Herodas (Greek poet)
Herodas was a Greek poet, probably of the Aegean island of Cos, author of mimes—short dramatic scenes in verse of a world of low life similar to that portrayed in the New Comedy. His work was discovered in a papyrus in 1890 and is the largest collection of the genre. It is written in rough iambic
- Herodes Atticus (Greek orator and author)
Herodes Atticus was the most celebrated of the orators and writers of the Second Sophistic, a movement that revitalized the teaching and practice of rhetoric in Greece in the 2nd century ce. Herodes was born into an immensely wealthy Athenian family that had received Roman citizenship during the
- Herodes Magnus (king of Judaea)
Herod was the Roman-appointed king of Judaea (37–4 bce), who built many fortresses, aqueducts, theatres, and other public buildings and generally raised the prosperity of his land but who was the centre of political and family intrigues in his later years. The New Testament portrays him as a
- Herodes, Lucius Vibullius Hipparchus Tiberius Claudius Atticus (Greek orator and author)
Herodes Atticus was the most celebrated of the orators and writers of the Second Sophistic, a movement that revitalized the teaching and practice of rhetoric in Greece in the 2nd century ce. Herodes was born into an immensely wealthy Athenian family that had received Roman citizenship during the
- Hérodiade (poem by Mallarmé)
Stéphane Mallarmé: …in 1864 and 1865, respectively, Hérodiade (“Herodias”) and L’Après-midi d’un faune (“The Afternoon of a Faun”), the latter being the work that inspired Claude Debussy to compose his celebrated Prélude a quarter of a century later.
- Herodian (Jewish history)
Herodian, one of a party of influential Jewish supporters of the Herodian dynasty (c. 55 bc–c. ad 93), which ruled in all or parts of Palestine and neighbouring areas. Noted in the New Testament as opponents of Jesus, they probably were not a political party or a religious sect. They probably
- Herodian (Greek grammarian)
Herodian was a Greek grammarian of Alexandria who is important primarily for his work on Greek accents. A son of the grammarian Apollonius Dyscolus, Herodian settled in Rome under the emperor Marcus Aurelius, to whom he dedicated a treatise on accentuation and quantity entitled Katholikē prosōdia
- Herodian dynasty (Judaean history)
biblical literature: Rule by the Herods: The Herods who followed were under the control of Rome. Herod the Great, son of Antipater of Idumaea, was made king of Judaea, having sided with Rome, and he ruled with Roman favour (37–4 bce). Though he was a good statesman…
- Herodianus, Aelius (Greek grammarian)
Herodian was a Greek grammarian of Alexandria who is important primarily for his work on Greek accents. A son of the grammarian Apollonius Dyscolus, Herodian settled in Rome under the emperor Marcus Aurelius, to whom he dedicated a treatise on accentuation and quantity entitled Katholikē prosōdia
- Herodias (queen of Galilee)
Herodias was the wife of Herod Antipas, who was tetrarch (ruler of a minor principality in the Roman Empire) of Galilee, in northern Palestine, and Peraea, east of the Jordan River and the Dead Sea. She conspired to arrange the execution of John the Baptist. Her marriage to Herod Antipas (himself
- Herodotus (Greek historian)
Herodotus was the Greek author of the first great narrative history produced in the ancient world, the History of the Greco-Persian Wars. Scholars believe that Herodotus was born at Halicarnassus, a Greek city in southwest Asia Minor that was then under Persian rule. The precise dates of his birth
- Herodotus (work by Kokoschka)
Oskar Kokoschka: World War II and after: …are perhaps best characterized by Herodotus (1960–63), a luminously painted picture of the Greek historian as he is inspired by visions of historical figures that appear above his head; it is Kokoschka’s tribute to the importance of memory. His late style is calmer and brighter than that of his early…
- Heroes (album by Bowie)
David Bowie: …Low and its sequels, “Heroes” (1977) and Lodger (1979), would prove to be Bowie’s most influential and lasting, serving as a blueprint for a later generation of techno-rock. In the short run, they marked the end of his significant mass audience impact, though not his sales—thanks mostly to Rodgers.
- Heroes of Olympus (book series by Riordan)
Rick Riordan: …explore mythology, Riordan wrote the Heroes of Olympus series. Although it features a new set of main characters, individuals from the Percy Jackson series occasionally make appearances. The five books in the series were The Lost Hero (2010), The Son of Neptune (2011), The Mark of Athena (2012), The House…
- Heroes of Telemark, The (film by Mann [1965])
Anthony Mann: The 1960s: epics: The Heroes of Telemark (1965) had large-scale World War II action, with Douglas and Richard Harris as resistance fighters battling Norway’s Nazi occupiers. Mann started the Cold War spy thriller A Dandy in Aspic (1968) but died in the midst of production, and it was…
- Heroes of the Frontier (novel by Eggers)
Dave Eggers: …diagnose contemporary societal ills, and Heroes of the Frontier (2016), which chronicles a recently divorced dentist’s efforts to heal from the effects of a series of misfortunes by taking her children on a road trip to Alaska. His nonfiction work The Monk of Mokha (2018) is about an aspiring coffee…
- Heroes, Book of (German literature)
Das Heldenbuch, collection of German metrical romances of the 13th century. The individual poems deal with heroic themes of the struggles and conquests of the Germanic tribes during the great migrations. The poems of the Heldenbuch belong to two cycles. One group deals with the Ostrogothic sagas of
- Heroes, Songs of (German literature)
Heldenlieder, body of short, poignant poetic songs celebrating dramatic, and usually tragic, episodes in the lives of the Germanic heroes. Other themes concerned pagan religious ritual, battle songs, and laments for the dead. The heroic lay originated c. 375–500, during the period of the great
- Héroët, Antoine (French poet)
Antoine Héroët was a Renaissance court poet whose works are representative of the amalgam of Platonism and Christian humanism that produced the modern concept of Platonic love. A member of the court surrounding Margaret of Angoulême, sister of Francis I and later queen of Navarre, Héroët is chiefly
- Heroic (symphony by Beethoven)
Eroica Symphony, symphony by Ludwig van Beethoven, known as the Eroica Symphony for its supposed heroic nature. The work premiered in Vienna on April 7, 1805, and was grander and more dramatic than customary for symphonies at the time. It was Beethoven’s largest solely instrumental work. It has
- heroic abandon school (Chinese literature)
Su Shi: …as the founder of the haofang (“heroic abandon”) school of writing. The optimism Su demonstrated in his private and political life can be seen also in his poems, many of which vividly describe his own experiences.
- heroic age (literature)
heroic poetry: …to a dimly defined “heroic age” when a generation of superior beings performed extraordinary feats of skill and courage. The heroic age varies in different native literatures. The epics of Homer created in the 8th century bc centre on a war with Troy that may have occurred about 1200…
- heroic couplet (poetry)
heroic couplet, a couplet of rhyming iambic pentameters often forming a distinct rhetorical as well as metrical unit. The origin of the form in English poetry is unknown, but Geoffrey Chaucer in the 14th century was the first to make extensive use of it. The heroic couplet became the principal
- heroic drama (drama)
heroic play, a type of play prevalent in Restoration England during the 1660s and 1670s. Modeled after French Neoclassical tragedy, the heroic play was written in rhyming pentameter couplets. Such plays presented characters of almost superhuman stature, and their predominant themes were exalted
- heroic era (Antarctic history)
Antarctica: The heroic era of exploration: During the first two decades of the 20th century, commonly called the “heroic era” of Antarctic exploration, great advances were made in not only geographic but also scientific knowledge of the continent. At the turn of the century, expeditions scrambled to…
- Heroic Frenzies, The (work by Bruno)
Giordano Bruno: Works: …De gli eroici furori (1585; The Heroic Frenzies), Bruno, making use of Neoplatonic imagery, treats the attainment of union with the infinite One by the human soul and exhorts man to the conquest of virtue and truth.
- heroic line (prosody)
heroic verse, the verse form in which the heroic poetry of a particular language is, or according to critical opinion should be, composed. In classical poetry this was dactylic hexameter, in French the alexandrine, in Italian the hendecasyllabic line, and in English iambic
- heroic metre (prosody)
heroic verse, the verse form in which the heroic poetry of a particular language is, or according to critical opinion should be, composed. In classical poetry this was dactylic hexameter, in French the alexandrine, in Italian the hendecasyllabic line, and in English iambic
- heroic play (drama)
heroic play, a type of play prevalent in Restoration England during the 1660s and 1670s. Modeled after French Neoclassical tragedy, the heroic play was written in rhyming pentameter couplets. Such plays presented characters of almost superhuman stature, and their predominant themes were exalted
- heroic poetry
heroic poetry, narrative verse that is elevated in mood and uses a dignified, dramatic, and formal style to describe the deeds of aristocratic warriors and rulers. It is usually composed without the aid of writing and is chanted or recited to the accompaniment of a stringed instrument. It is
- Heroic Polonaise (solo piano piece by Chopin)
Heroic Polonaise, solo piano piece by Polish French composer Frédéric Chopin, known and nicknamed for its forthright “heroic” character, cast rhythmically as a polonaise—a Polish court dance in waltz time. The piece was probably begun in 1842 and was published the following year. Since its
- heroic prose
heroic prose, narrative prose tales that are the counterpart of heroic poetry in subject, outlook, and dramatic style. Whether composed orally or written down, the stories are meant to be recited, and they employ many of the formulaic expressions of oral tradition. A remarkable body of this prose
- heroic quatrain (poetry)
heroic stanza, in poetry, a rhymed quatrain in heroic verse with rhyme scheme abab. The form was used by William Shakespeare and John Dryden, among others, and was also called an elegiac stanza after the publication in the mid-18th century of Thomas Gray’s poem “An Elegy Written in a Country Church
- heroic saga (Scandinavian literature)
fornaldarsǫgur, class of Icelandic sagas dealing with the ancient myths and hero legends of Germania, with the adventures of Vikings, or with other exotic adventures in foreign lands. These stories take place on the European continent before the settlement of Iceland. Though the existing
- heroic stanza (poetry)
heroic stanza, in poetry, a rhymed quatrain in heroic verse with rhyme scheme abab. The form was used by William Shakespeare and John Dryden, among others, and was also called an elegiac stanza after the publication in the mid-18th century of Thomas Gray’s poem “An Elegy Written in a Country Church
- heroic tragedy (drama)
heroic play, a type of play prevalent in Restoration England during the 1660s and 1670s. Modeled after French Neoclassical tragedy, the heroic play was written in rhyming pentameter couplets. Such plays presented characters of almost superhuman stature, and their predominant themes were exalted
- heroic verse (prosody)
heroic verse, the verse form in which the heroic poetry of a particular language is, or according to critical opinion should be, composed. In classical poetry this was dactylic hexameter, in French the alexandrine, in Italian the hendecasyllabic line, and in English iambic
- Heroica Matamoros (Tamaulipas state, Mexico)
Matamoros, city, northern Tamaulipas estado (state), northeastern Mexico. It is situated on the southern bank of the Rio Grande (Río Bravo del Norte), 28 miles (45 km) from the Gulf of Mexico and across from Brownsville, Texas. Matamoros, founded in 1824, was the scene of bitter fighting in the
- Heroica Nogales (Mexico)
Nogales, city and port of entry, north-central Sonora estado (state), northern Mexico, contiguous with the U.S. city of Nogales, Santa Cruz county, Arizona. It is an important transportation hub and warehouse centre, especially for agricultural products from the irrigated farmlands of Sonora and
- Heroica Zitácuaro (city, Mexico)
Zitácuaro, city, northeastern Michoacán estado (state), west-central Mexico, near the border of México state. It is on the western slopes of the Zitácuaro Mountains, at 6,549 feet (1,996 metres) above sea level. Zitácuaro was the scene of 19th-century battles, both in the wars for independence from
- Heroides (work by Ovid)
Ovid: Life: …Epistolae Heroidum, or Heroides (Epistles of the Heroines), the Medicamina faciei (“Cosmetics”; Eng. trans. The Art of Beauty), the Ars amatoria (The Art of Love), and the Remedia amoris (Remedies for Love), all reflecting the brilliant, sophisticated, pleasure-seeking society in which he moved. The common theme of those early…
- Heroin (song by Reed)
the Velvet Underground: …had written songs, such as “Heroin” and “Venus in Furs,” that reflected his interest in the graphic, narrative realism of novelists Raymond Chandler and Hubert Selby, Jr. With guitarist Morrison (a Syracuse classmate of Reed’s) and percussionist MacLise, Reed on guitar and vocals and Cale on piano, viola, and bass…
- heroin (drug)
heroin, highly addictive morphine derivative that makes up a large portion of the illicit traffic in narcotics. Heroin is made by treating morphine with acetic anhydride; the resulting substance is four to eight times as potent as morphine. (Morphine is an alkaloid found in opium, which is the
- heroin chic (fashion)
Gisele Bündchen: …controversial look known as “heroin chic”—an extremely thin physique paired with pale skin, dark undereye circles, and often disheveled hair and clothing. In the same year, she was named Model of the Year, an honour jointly awarded by Vogue and the American cable-television network VH1.
- Herold, Christian Friedrich (German painter)
pottery: Porcelain: …ports were mostly executed by C.F. Herold (cousin to the Obermaler) and J.G. Heintze. Perhaps the most important early wares are the chinoiseries, which appear in great variety. The first work of the kind, much of it painted by the Hausmaler Bartholomäus Seuter, is in gold silhouette followed by polychrome…
- Herold, David (American Lincoln assassination conspirator)
John Wilkes Booth: …with another of the conspirators, David Herold, Booth fled through Maryland, stopping to have his leg treated by Samuel A. Mudd, a Maryland doctor who would later be convicted of conspiracy. A massive manhunt ensued, fueled by a $100,000 reward. Booth and Herold hid for days in a thicket of…
- Hérold, Ferdinand (French composer)
Ferdinand Hérold was a French composer of early romantic operas who stands midway between D.-F.-E. Auber and Jacques Offenbach in the development of the opéra comique. Hérold studied under C.-S. Catel and E.-N. Méhul and won the Prix de Rome in 1812. He was court pianist in Naples, where he
- Hérold, Louis-Joseph-Ferdinand (French composer)
Ferdinand Hérold was a French composer of early romantic operas who stands midway between D.-F.-E. Auber and Jacques Offenbach in the development of the opéra comique. Hérold studied under C.-S. Catel and E.-N. Méhul and won the Prix de Rome in 1812. He was court pianist in Naples, where he
- heron (bird)
heron, any of about 60 species of long-legged wading birds, classified in the family Ardeidae (order Ciconiiformes) and generally including several species usually called egrets. The Ardeidae also include the bitterns (subfamily Botaurinae). Herons are widely distributed over the world but are most