- Je tu il elle (film by Akerman [1974])
Chantal Akerman: …made her first narrative feature, Je tu il elle (1974), in which she plays a young woman who has affairs with a truck driver and her ex-girlfriend.
- Je vous salue, Marie (film by Godard [1985])
Jean-Luc Godard: Later work and awards of Jean-Luc Godard: …Je vous salue, Marie (1985; Hail Mary)—that served as personal statements on femininity, nature, and Christianity.
- Jealous Wife, The (work by Colman the Elder)
George Colman the Elder: His next play, The Jealous Wife (1761), an adaptation of Henry Fielding’s novel Tom Jones, was one of the best comedies of the age and held its place in the stock theatrical repertoire for nearly a century. Colman collaborated with Garrick on The Clandestine Marriage (1766), a play…
- Jealousy (novel by Robbe-Grillet)
novel: Antinovel: …writers like Alain Robbe-Grillet in Jealousy (1957), Nathalie Sarraute in Tropisms (1939) and The Planetarium (1959), and Michel Butor in Passing Time (1957) and Degrees (1960) wish mainly to remove the pathetic fallacy from fiction, in which the universe, which is indifferent to man, is made
- Jealousy and Medicine (work by Choromański)
Michał Choromański: …novel Zazdrość i medycyna (1933; Jealousy and Medicine), a clinical study of the relationship between medicine and sex, was an instant success. At the outbreak of World War II he fled Poland and lived in South America and Canada, respectively, before returning to Poland in 1957. His later fiction includes…
- Jean (grand duke of Luxembourg)
Luxembourg: Independent Luxembourg: Prince Jean, Charlotte’s son, was installed as lieutenant-représentant of Charlotte in 1961, and he inherited the throne in 1964 upon his mother’s abdication.
- Jean (king of Navarre)
Albret Family: Alain’s son, Jean (d. 1516), became king of Navarre through his marriage with Catherine de Foix in 1484. In 1550 the lands of Albret were made a duchy. Jeanne d’Albret (1528–72), Jean’s granddaughter, married Antoine de Bourbon and left her titles to her son, Henry III of…
- Jean Barois (work by Martin du Gard)
Roger Martin du Gard: …Gard first attracted attention with Jean Barois (1913), which traced the development of an intellectual torn between the Roman Catholic faith of his childhood and the scientific materialism of his maturity; it also described the full impact of the Dreyfus affair on French minds. He is best known for the…
- Jean Bernard (cave, France)
Jean Bernard, the world’s deepest known cave, located in the Alps near the town of Samoëns, Haute-Savoie département, Rhône-Alpes région, southeastern France. The highest of the limestone cave’s eight entrances is located above Samoëns at an elevation of 7,428 feet (2,264 m). The original entrance
- Jean de Brienne (Byzantine emperor)
John was a count of Brienne who became the titular king of Jerusalem (1210–25) and Latin emperor of Constantinople (1231–37). A penniless younger son of the French count Erard II of Brienne and Agnes of Montbéliard, John passed most of his life as a minor noble until befriended by King Philip II
- Jean de Dinteville and Georges de Selve (painting by Holbein the Younger)
The Ambassadors, oil painting on oak panel created in 1533 by German artist Hans Holbein the Younger. One of the most staggeringly impressive portraits in Renaissance art, this famous painting is full of hidden meanings and fascinating contradictions. The meticulous realism of Holbein’s immaculate
- Jean de Jandun (French philosopher)
John Of Jandun was the foremost 14th-century interpreter of Averroës’ rendering of Aristotle. After study at the University of Paris, John became master of arts at the Collège de Navarre in Paris, where he lectured on Aristotle. He associated with Marsilius of Padua, writer of the Defensor Pacis,
- Jean de Matha (Roman Catholic saint)
Saint John of Matha ; feast day February 8) was a cofounder of the Order of the Most Holy Trinity for the Redemption of Captives, commonly called Trinitarians, or Mathurins, a Roman Catholic mendicant order originally dedicated to freeing Christian slaves from captivity under the Muslims. John
- Jean de Méricour (French philosopher)
John Of Mirecourt was a French Cistercian monk, philosopher, and theologian whose skepticism about certitude in human knowledge and whose limitation of the use of reason in theological statements established him as a leading exponent of medieval Christian nominalism (the doctrine that universals
- Jean de Meun (French poet)
Jean de Meun was a French poet famous for his continuation of the Roman de la rose, an allegorical poem in the courtly love tradition begun by Guillaume de Lorris about 1225. Jean de Meun’s original name was Clopinel, or Chopinel, but he became known by the name of his birthplace. He probably owned
- Jean de Meung (French poet)
Jean de Meun was a French poet famous for his continuation of the Roman de la rose, an allegorical poem in the courtly love tradition begun by Guillaume de Lorris about 1225. Jean de Meun’s original name was Clopinel, or Chopinel, but he became known by the name of his birthplace. He probably owned
- Jean de Montfort (duke of Brittany [died 1345])
John (IV) was a claimant to the duchy of Brittany upon the death of his childless half brother, John III. He was the only surviving son of Arthur II. At first, John of Montfort had recognized John III’s designation of Charles of Blois (nephew of King Philip VI of France) as the successor; but then
- Jean de Paris (French theologian)
John of Paris was a Dominican monk, philosopher, and theologian who advanced important ideas concerning papal authority and the separation of church and state and who held controversial views on the nature of the Eucharist. A lecturer at the University of Paris and the author of several works
- Jean de Paris (French artist)
Jean Perréal was a painter, architect, and sculptor, and the most important portrait painter in France at the beginning of the 16th century. Perréal was a court painter to the Bourbons and later worked for Charles VIII, Louis XII, and Francis I of France. He traveled to Italy several times between
- Jean du Coeur de Jésus (Roman Catholic priest)
Léon-Gustave Dehon was a French Roman Catholic priest who founded the Congregation of the Priests of the Sacred Heart of Jesus, a congregation of priests and brothers dedicated to spreading the apostolate of the Sacred Heart. Educated at the Sorbonne, Dehon was ordained priest in 1868 at Rome.
- Jean Hennuyer évêque de Lisieux (play by Mercier)
Louis-Sébastien Mercier: …about the French religious wars, Jean Hennuyer évêque de Lisieux (1772; “Jean Hennuyer, Bishop of Lisieux”) and La Destruction de la ligue (1782; “The Destruction of the League”), which were so anticlerical and antimonarchical that they were not performed until after the French Revolution. Mercier also wrote a work of…
- Jean II (French duke)
Charles I, 5th duke de Bourbon: …he turned about and became—with Jean II, duke of Alençon—the leader of the short-lived Praguerie (1440), a revolt of nobles nominally led by the Dauphin (the future Louis XI). The nobles were cornered in the territory of Bourbon and made peace, given generous terms.
- Jean Le Bel (French historian)
Jean Le Bel was the forerunner of the great medieval Flemish chroniclers and one of the first to abandon Latin for French. A soldier and the constant companion of Jean, Count de Beaumont, with whom he went to England and Scotland in 1327, Le Bel wrote his Vrayes Chroniques (“True Chronicles”),
- Jean le Bon (king of France)
John II was the king of France from 1350 to 1364. Captured by the English at the Battle of Poitiers on Sept. 19, 1356, he was forced to sign the disastrous treaties of 1360 during the first phase of the Hundred Years’ War (1337–1453) between France and England. After becoming king on Aug. 22, 1350,
- Jean le Bon (duke of Brittany)
John III was the duke of Brittany (from 1312), son of Arthur II. His death without heirs resulted in the War of the Breton Succession, pitting two indirect heirs, John of Montfort and Charles of Blois. Despite three marriages—to Isabella of Valois, Isabella of Castile, and Joan of Savoy—he was left
- Jean le Conquérant (duke of Brittany [1340–1399])
John IV (or V) was the duke of Brittany from 1365, whose support for English interests during the Hundred Years’ War (1337–1453) nearly cost him the forfeit of his duchy to the French crown. The instability of his reign is attributable not only to his alliances with England but also to his
- Jean le Posthume (king of France)
John I was the king of France, the posthumous son of Louis X of France by his second consort, Clémence of Hungary. He died just a few days after his birth but is nevertheless reckoned among the kings of France. His uncle, who succeeded him as Philip V, has been accused of having caused his death,
- Jean le Roux (duke of Brittany)
John I was the duke of Brittany (from 1237), son of Peter I. Like his father, he sought to limit the temporal power of the clergy; consequently he was excommunicated, upon which he journeyed to Rome to win absolution. Subsequently, he and his wife, Blanche of Champagne, traveled with St. Louis on
- Jean le Sage (duke of Brittany [1389-1442])
John V (or VI) was the duke of Brittany from 1399, whose clever reversals in the Hundred Years’ War and in French domestic conflicts served to strengthen his duchy. John was on good terms with Philip the Bold, duke of Burgundy, who was his guardian. He began to favour the Armagnac faction in the
- Jean le Sourd (French theologian)
John of Paris was a Dominican monk, philosopher, and theologian who advanced important ideas concerning papal authority and the separation of church and state and who held controversial views on the nature of the Eucharist. A lecturer at the University of Paris and the author of several works
- Jean le Vaillant (duke of Brittany [1340–1399])
John IV (or V) was the duke of Brittany from 1365, whose support for English interests during the Hundred Years’ War (1337–1453) nearly cost him the forfeit of his duchy to the French crown. The instability of his reign is attributable not only to his alliances with England but also to his
- Jean Paul (German author)
Jean Paul was a German novelist and humorist whose works were immensely popular in the first 20 years of the 19th century. His pen name, Jean Paul, reflected his admiration for the French writer Jean-Jacques Rousseau. Jean Paul’s writing bridged the shift in literature from the formal ideals of
- Jean sans Peur (duke of Burgundy)
John was the second duke of Burgundy (1404–19) of the Valois line, who played a major role in French affairs in the early 15th century. The son of Philip the Bold, duke of Burgundy, and Margaret of Flanders, John was born in the ducal castle at Rouvres, where he spent the greater part of his
- Jean sans Terre (king of England)
John was the king of England from 1199 to 1216. In a war with the French king Philip II, he lost Normandy and almost all his other possessions in France. In England, after a revolt of the barons, he was forced to seal the Magna Carta (1215). John was the youngest son of Henry II and Eleanor of
- Jean Santeuil (novel by Proust)
Marcel Proust: Life and works: …1895 to 1899 he wrote Jean Santeuil, an autobiographical novel that, though unfinished and ill-constructed, showed awakening genius and foreshadowed À la recherche. A gradual disengagement from social life coincided with growing ill health and with his active involvement in the Dreyfus affair of 1897–99, when French politics and society…
- Jean, Michaëlle (Canadian government official)
Michaëlle Jean is a Canadian journalist and documentarian who was Canada’s 27th governor-general (2005–10) and the first person of African heritage to hold that post. She later became the first woman to serve as secretary-general of the Organisation Internationale de la Francophonie (2015–19).
- Jean, Nel Ust Wyclef (Haitian rapper, producer, and philanthropist)
Wyclef Jean is a Haitian rapper, producer, and philanthropist whose dynamic, politically inflected rhymes and keen ear for hooks established him as a significant force in popular music. Born in a suburb of Port-au-Prince, Jean was raised by relatives after his parents immigrated to the United
- Jean, Nel Ust Wycliffe (Haitian rapper, producer, and philanthropist)
Wyclef Jean is a Haitian rapper, producer, and philanthropist whose dynamic, politically inflected rhymes and keen ear for hooks established him as a significant force in popular music. Born in a suburb of Port-au-Prince, Jean was raised by relatives after his parents immigrated to the United
- Jean, Wyclef (Haitian rapper, producer, and philanthropist)
Wyclef Jean is a Haitian rapper, producer, and philanthropist whose dynamic, politically inflected rhymes and keen ear for hooks established him as a significant force in popular music. Born in a suburb of Port-au-Prince, Jean was raised by relatives after his parents immigrated to the United
- Jean-Christophe (novel by Rolland)
Jean-Christophe, multivolume novel by Romain Rolland, published in French in 10 volumes in the journal Cahiers de la Quinzaine from 1904 to 1912. It was published in book form in three volumes: Jean-Christophe (1905–06; Jean-Christophe: Dawn, Morning, Youth, Revolt), which comprises the original
- Jeanes, Allene (American chemist)
xanthan gum: Historical development: …1960s by American carbohydrate chemist Allene R. Jeanes and her research team at the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA). Jeanes and her colleagues discovered the substance while searching for a microbial gum that could be used in food and industrial products but that—unlike other plant gums at the time—could be…
- Jeanette (work by Matisse)
Western sculpture: Avant-garde sculpture (1909–20): Matisse’s head of Jeanette (1910–11) also partakes of a personal reproportioning that gives a new vitality to the less mobile areas of the face. Likewise influenced by the Cubists’ manipulation of their subject matter, Alexander Archipenko in his Woman Combing Her Hair (1915) rendered the body by means…
- Jeanmaire, Renée (French dancer)
Roland Petit: …Leslie Caron, and Renée (“Zizi”) Jeanmaire, whom he married in 1954.
- Jeanmaire, Zizi (French dancer)
Roland Petit: …Leslie Caron, and Renée (“Zizi”) Jeanmaire, whom he married in 1954.
- Jeanne d’Arc (work by Péguy)
Charles Péguy: …wrote his first version of Jeanne d’Arc (1897), a dramatic trilogy that formed a declaration and affirmation of his religious and socialist principles. Péguy was then caught up in the Dreyfus affair; he threw himself unreservedly into the battle to establish Dreyfus’ innocence and helped to bring many of his…
- Jeanne d’Arc, Sainte (French heroine)
St. Joan of Arc ; canonized May 16, 1920; feast day May 30; French national holiday, second Sunday in May) was a national heroine of France, a peasant girl who, believing that she was acting under divine guidance, led the French army in a momentous victory at Orléans that repulsed an English
- Jeanne de Navarre (queen of France)
Joan I was the queen of Navarre (as Joan I, from 1274), queen consort of Philip IV (the Fair) of France (from 1285), and mother of three French kings—Louis X, Philip V, and Charles IV. Joan was the sole daughter and heir of Henry I, king of Navarre, her brother Theobald (Thibaut) having died at an
- Jeanne de Navarre (queen of England)
Joan of Navarre was the wife of Henry IV of England and the daughter of Charles the Bad, king of Navarre. In 1386 Joan was married to John IV (or V), duke of Brittany; they had eight children. John died in 1399, and Joan was regent for her son John V (or VI) until 1401. During his banishment
- Jeanne Dielman, 23 quai du Commerce, 1080 Bruxelles (film by Akerman [1975])
Chantal Akerman: …work is the avant-garde classic Jeanne Dielman, 23 quai du Commerce, 1080 Bruxelles (1975).
- Jeannel, René (French biologist)
René Jeannel was a French biologist best remembered for his work on the subterranean coleopterans of the family Anisotomidae. His exploration of the caves of the Pyrenees and Carpathian mountains yielded many species of these small, shiny, round fungus beetles that were hitherto unknown. His
- Jeanneret, Charles-Édouard (Swiss architect)
Le Corbusier was an internationally influential Swiss architect and city planner, whose designs combine the functionalism of the modern movement with a bold sculptural expressionism. He belonged to the first generation of the so-called International school of architecture and was their most able
- Jeanneret, Pierre (French architect)
Charlotte Perriand: Collaborations with Le Corbusier: …construction, and actual design with Pierre Jeanneret. In the 21st century the pieces are still sold by the Italian furniture company Cassina, which credits all three as the designers. Perriand’s influence in the atelier extended beyond furniture and execution of the prototypes. In 1929 she was instrumental in designing the…
- Jeannette (ship)
George Washington De Long: …July 1879, he took the Jeannette through the Bering Strait and headed for Wrangel Island, off the northeast coast of Siberia. At the time, many believed that Wrangel was a large landmass stretching far to the north, and De Long hoped to sail as far as possible along its coast…
- Jeannette (Pennsylvania, United States)
Jeannette, city, Westmoreland county, southwestern Pennsylvania, U.S., in the foothills of the Allegheny Mountains. Built on six hills, it developed after the Pennsylvania Railroad came through in 1852 providing an outlet for local farm produce. The discovery of natural gas in the vicinity prompted
- Jeannin, Pierre (French statesman)
Pierre Jeannin was a statesman who served as one of King Henry IV’s most influential advisers in the years after the French civil wars (ended 1598). A pupil of the humanist legal scholar Jacques Cujas at Bourges, Jeannin became an advocate in the Parlement (high court) of Burgundy in 1569 and its
- Jeannot (French actor)
Jean Marais was a French actor who was a protégé and longtime partner of French writer-director Jean Cocteau. Marais was one of the most popular leading men in French films during the 1940s and ’50s. Marais was first attracted to the stage in high school but was turned down by the Paris
- Jeanrenaud, Cécile (wife of Mendelssohn)
Felix Mendelssohn: Marriage and maturity of Felix Mendelssohn: …year at Frankfurt he met Cécile Jeanrenaud, the daughter of a French Protestant clergyman. Though she was 10 years younger than himself, that is to say, no more than 16, they became engaged and were married on March 28, 1837. His sister Fanny, the member of his family who remained…
- jeans (clothing)
jeans, trousers originally designed in the United States by Levi Strauss in the mid-19th century as durable work clothes, with the seams and other points of stress reinforced with small copper rivets. They were eventually adopted by workingmen throughout the United States and then worldwide. Jeans
- Jeans, Sir James (British physicist and mathematician)
Sir James Jeans was an English physicist and mathematician who was the first to propose that matter is continuously created throughout the universe. He made other innovations in astronomical theory but is perhaps best known as a writer of popular books about astronomy. Jeans taught at the
- Jeans, Sir James Hopwood (British physicist and mathematician)
Sir James Jeans was an English physicist and mathematician who was the first to propose that matter is continuously created throughout the universe. He made other innovations in astronomical theory but is perhaps best known as a writer of popular books about astronomy. Jeans taught at the
- Jebali, Hamadi (prime minister of Tunisia)
Tunisia: Transition: Marzouki then appointed Hamadi Jebali, a member of Ennahda, to the post of prime minister.
- Jebavý, Václav Ignác (Czech poet)
Otakar Březina was a poet who had a considerable influence on the development of 20th-century Czech poetry. Březina spent most of his life as a schoolmaster in Moravia. Although isolated from public life, he was well informed about the national and international literary movements that influenced
- Jebb, John (British religious and social reformer)
John Jebb was a British political, religious, and social reformer who championed humanitarian and constitutional causes far in advance of his time. Educated at Trinity College, Dublin, and Peterhouse, Cambridge, he was ordained in 1763 and thereafter lectured on mathematics at Cambridge. His
- Jebba (Nigeria)
Jebba, town, Kwara state, western Nigeria. It lies on the south bank and at the natural head of navigation of the Niger River, 550 miles (885 km) from the sea. It is populated by the predominantly Muslim Nupe people, whose kingdom, refounded by Tsoede, flourished in the region in the early 16th
- Jebba Dam (dam, Nigeria)
Niger Dams Project: …and hydroelectric power plant at Jebba, 64 miles (103 km) from the Kainji Dam, were completed in 1984, and the dam at Shiroro Gorge on the Kaduna River, west of Bida in Niger state, began operations in 1990.
- Jebeil (ancient city, Lebanon)
Byblos, ancient seaport, the site of which is located on the coast of the Mediterranean Sea about 20 miles (30 km) north of the modern city of Beirut, Lebanon. It is one of the oldest continuously inhabited towns in the world. The name Byblos is Greek; papyrus received its early Greek name (byblos,
- Jebel Akhdar War (Middle Eastern history)
Jebel Akhdar War, a series of conflicts during the mid- and late 1950s between residents of the interior of Oman, supported by Saudi Arabia and Egypt, and the sultan of Muscat and Oman, who was aided by Britain. The rebels sought independence and control of the interior lands and any oil to be
- Jebel Ali (Dubai, United Arab Emirates)
Dubai: Economy of Dubai: The Jebel Ali free-trade zone was established in the 1980s to attract industrial investment; activities based there include aluminum smelting, car manufacturing, and cement production.
- Jebel Irhoud remains (fossils)
Homo sapiens: Bodily structure: sapiens—that is, those from Jebel Irhoud, Morocco, dated to approximately 315 kya—as the remains of early modern humans, because they have a primitive appearance reminiscent of a highly evolved version of H. heidelbergensis. Instead, they are considered “protomodern” and may be more representative of individuals at the root of…
- Jebel Kafzeh (anthropological and archaeological site, Israel)
Qafzeh, paleoanthropological site south of Nazareth, Israel, where some of the oldest remains of modern humans in Asia have been found. More than 25 fossil skeletons dating to about 90,000 years ago have been recovered. The site is a rock shelter first excavated in the early 1930s; excavation
- Jebel Qafzeh remains (hominin fossils)
Homo sapiens: Bodily structure: One of the best-preserved early fossils that bears all the anatomic hallmarks of H. sapiens is a skull dated to about 92 kya from the Israeli site of Jebel Qafzeh. This part of the Middle East, called the Levant, is often regarded as a biogeographic extension of Africa, so…
- Jebel Tidirhine (mountain, Morocco)
Atlas Mountains: Physiography: …points, reaching 8,058 feet at Mount Tidirhine. East of the gap formed by the Moulouya River the Algerian ranges begin, among which the rugged bastion of the Ouarsenis Massif (which reaches a height of 6,512 feet), the Great Kabylie, which reaches 7,572 feet at the peak of Lalla Khedidja, and…
- Jebel, Bahr el- (river, South Sudan)
Baḥr al-Jabal, that section of the Nile River between Nimule near the Uganda border and Malakal in South Sudan. Below Nimule the river flows northward over the Fula Rapids, past Juba (the head of navigation), and through Al-Sudd, the enormous papyrus-choked swamp where half its water is lost. It
- Jebeleanu, Eugen (Romanian author)
Romanian literature: After World War II: …revealed a vigorous optimism, and Eugen Jebeleanu, who spent much of the 1930s as a left-wing journalist, produced increasingly abstracted poetry. Also among those who came to the fore during and after World War II were Maria Banuş, who expressed the struggle for peace in her poetry, Miron Paraschivescu, a…
- Jebero language
South American Indian languages: Grammatical characteristics: Other languages like Jebero express fundamentally modal categories. Very common are affixes indicating movement, chiefly toward and away from the speaker, and location (e.g., in Quechumaran, Záparo, Itonama), and in some stocks like Arawakan and Panoan there are many suffixes in the verb with very concrete adverbial meaning,…
- Jeboda, Femi (Nigerian author)
African literature: Yoruba: Femi Jeboda wrote Olowolaiyemo (1964), a realistic novel having to do with life in a Yoruba city. Adebayo Faleti’s works, such as the short novel Ogun awitele (1965; “A War Foreseen”) and the narrative poem Eda ko l’aropin (1956; “Don’t Underrate”), display fantasy roots. Faleti…
- Jebusite (people)
David: Kingship: He next conquered the Jebusite (Canaanite) stronghold of Jerusalem, which he made the capital of the new united kingdom. He selected this city as his new capital because it was a neutral site and neither the northerners nor the southerners would be adverse to the selection. From the very…
- Jechać du Lwona (poetry by Zagajewski)
Adam Zagajewski: …more volumes of poetry, including Jechać du Lwowa (1985; “Traveling to Lwów”), Ziemia ognista (1994; “The Fiery Land”), and Anteny (2005; “Antenna”). And he received acclaim as an essayist with such collections as Drugi oddech (1978; “Second Wind”), Solidarność i samtoność (1986; Solidarity and Solitude), Dwa
- Jedburgh (Scotland, United Kingdom)
Jedburgh, royal burgh (town), Scottish Borders council area, historic county of Roxburghshire, southeastern Scotland. It is situated on Jed Water, a tributary of the River Teviot, within 10 miles (16 km) of the English border. In the 9th century a church was built on the site of the present abbey.
- Jedburgh Castle (castle, Scotland, United Kingdom)
Jedburgh: Jedburgh Castle stood above the river at the southern end of the burgh. Also erected by David I, it was one of five fortresses ceded to England in 1174. It occasionally served as a royal residence but was so often captured by the English that…
- Jedburgh project (World War II)
Aaron Bank: …selected to participate in the Jedburgh project, an Allied program that brought together American, Belgian, British, Dutch, and French special forces personnel to conduct small unit operations in occupied Europe. In July 1944 he dropped into occupied France as commander of a three-man Jedburgh team, along with a French officer…
- Jeddah (Saudi Arabia)
Jeddah, city and major port in central Hejaz region, western Saudi Arabia. It lies along the Red Sea west of Mecca. The principal importance of Jeddah in history is that it constituted the port of Mecca and was thus the site where the majority of Muslim pilgrims landed while journeying to the holy
- Jeddah, Treaty of (United Kingdom-Saudi Arabia [1927])
Jeddah: In the 1927 Treaty of Jeddah the British recognized Saudi sovereignty over the Hejaz and Najd regions. Jeddah eventually was incorporated into Saudi Arabia. In 1947 the city walls were demolished, and rapid expansion followed. The city takes its name (which means “ancestress” or “grandmother”) from the location…
- Jeddart justice (law)
Jedburgh: The proverbial “Jeddart justice,” according to which a man was hanged first and tried afterward, seems to have been a hasty generalization from the solitary summary execution of a gang of rogues. Located along the main road leading from the English border to Edinburgh, the town is…
- Jedermann (play by Hofmannsthal)
Max Reinhardt: Career in full flower: …the Salzburg Festival, staging Hofmannsthal’s Jedermann (Everyman) in the city’s cathedral square in 1920. With Reinhardt’s support the Salzburg Festival became an annual event, bringing about a new interest in the dramas of the Middle Ages from which Jedermann was adapted.
- Jedi Knights (fictional characters)
George Lucas: Star Wars: Skywalker, his mentor the wise Jedi Knight Obi-Wan Kenobi (Sir Alec Guinness), and the opportunistic smuggler Han Solo (Ford) are tasked with saving Princess Leia (Carrie Fisher) from captivity on the Death Star, a massive space station commanded by the menacing Darth Vader, whose deep, mechanically augmented voice (contributed by…
- Jednota (religion)
Czechoslovak Hussite Church: Its forerunner was the Jednota (Union of the Catholic Czechoslovak Clergy), founded in 1890 to promote such reforms as use of the vernacular in the liturgy and voluntary clerical celibacy. The new church, formed when these demands were rejected by the Vatican in 1919, adopted a rationalistic doctrine and…
- Jeenbekov, Sooronbai (prime minister of Kyrgyzstan)
Kyrgyzstan: Presidencies of Almazbek Atambayev and Sooronbai Jeenbekov: …for a second term, and Sooronbai Jeenbekov, an ally and onetime prime minister of Atambayev, was elected president in October 2017. After a midwinter power plant outage in Bishkek caused public outrage, Jeenbekov fell out with Atambayev and his associates. Jeenbekov began replacing many of Atambayev’s appointees, and the parliament…
- jeep (vehicle)
jeep, outstanding light vehicle of World War II. It was developed by the U.S. Army Quartermaster Corps and was an important item in lend-lease shipments to the Soviet Union and other allies. The jeep weighed 1 14 tons, was powered by a four-cylinder engine, and was classed as a quarter-ton truck in
- jeer (ship part)
rigging: …is subdivided into the lifts, jeers, and halyards (haulyards), by which the sails are raised and lowered, and the tacks and sheets, which hold down the lower corners of the sails. The history of the development of rigging over the centuries is obscure, but the combination of square and fore-and-aft…
- Jeevanjee, A. M. (Indian merchant)
The Standard: …weekly, the African Standard, by A.M. Jeevanjee, an Indian merchant. Jeevanjee hired an English editor-reporter, W.H. Tiller, to oversee the newspaper’s operations. In 1910 the paper became a daily, changed its name to the East African Standard, and moved to Nairobi, which was then fast developing as a commercial centre.…
- Jeeves (fictional character)
Bertie Wooster: Wooster is the employer of Jeeves, a valet who is the ultimate “gentleman’s gentleman.” They first appeared together in the story “Extricating Young Gussie” in 1915. Wooster is rescued from innumerable complicated situations by the resourceful and innately superior Jeeves.
- Jeeves and Wooster (British television show [1990–1993)
Stephen Fry: …starred in the television series Jeeves and Wooster, with Laurie playing the wealthy but somewhat bumbling Bertie Wooster and Fry playing the resourceful valet, Reginald Jeeves, who always managed to extricate Wooster from unusual predicaments. In 2003 Fry hosted the television game show QI (“Quite Interesting”), which for some 10…
- Jeff, Who Lives at Home (film by Jay and Mark Duplass [2011])
Susan Sarandon: …Sleeps (2010), and the comedy Jeff, Who Lives at Home (2011).
- Jeffara (plain, Africa)
al-Jifārah, coastal plain of northern Africa, on the Mediterranean coast of extreme northwestern Libya and of southeastern Tunisia. Roughly semicircular, it extends from Qābis (Gabes), Tunisia, to about 12 miles (20 km) east of Tripoli, Libya. Its maximum inland extent is approximately 80 miles
- Jefferies, John Richard (British naturalist and author)
Richard Jefferies was an English naturalist, novelist, and essayist whose best work combines fictional invention with expert observation of the natural world. The son of a yeoman farmer, Jefferies in 1866 became a reporter on the North Wilts Herald. In 1872 he became famous for a 4,000-word letter
- Jefferies, Richard (British naturalist and author)
Richard Jefferies was an English naturalist, novelist, and essayist whose best work combines fictional invention with expert observation of the natural world. The son of a yeoman farmer, Jefferies in 1866 became a reporter on the North Wilts Herald. In 1872 he became famous for a 4,000-word letter
- Jeffers, John Robinson (American poet)
Robinson Jeffers was one of the most controversial U.S. poets of the 20th century, for whom all things except his pantheistically conceived God are transient, and human life is viewed as a frantic, often contemptible struggle within a net of passions. Educated in English literature, medicine, and
- Jeffers, Robinson (American poet)
Robinson Jeffers was one of the most controversial U.S. poets of the 20th century, for whom all things except his pantheistically conceived God are transient, and human life is viewed as a frantic, often contemptible struggle within a net of passions. Educated in English literature, medicine, and
- Jefferson (county, New York, United States)
Jefferson, county, northern New York state, U.S., mostly comprising a lowland region bounded by Lake Ontario to the west and Ontario, Canada, to the northwest, the St. Lawrence River constituting the boundary. It is linked by bridge to Ontario and features several bay inlets, notably Chaumont,