- Jellyby, Mrs. (fictional character)
Mrs. Jellyby, satiric character in the novel Bleak House (1852–53) by Charles Dickens, one of his memorable caricatures. Matronly Mrs. Jellyby is a philanthropist who devotes her time and energy to setting up a mission in Africa while ignoring the needy in her own family and
- jellyfish (marine invertebrate)
jellyfish, any planktonic marine member of the class Scyphozoa (phylum Cnidaria), a group of invertebrate animals composed of about 200 described species, or of the class Cubozoa (approximately 20 species). The term is also frequently applied to certain other cnidarians (such as members of the
- Jellyfish Eyes (film by Murakami [2013])
Takashi Murakami: …film, Mememe no kurage (Jellyfish Eyes), in Japan. His work was frequently exhibited internationally, including at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago, and at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (both in 2017). Murakami also continued to collaborate with high-profile names. He notably did the cover illustration for Kanye…
- Jelnik (Polish knight)
Jelenia Góra: …in the 11th century by Jelnik, a knight who built the castle Nowy Dwór. The surrounding settlement was known as Jelenia Góra. The town reached its economic zenith, mainly because of its weaving industry, in the 15th and 16th centuries but was devastated by the Thirty Years’ War (1618–48) and,…
- Jelutong Press (Malaysian company)
Sayyid Shaykh bin Ahmad al-Hadi: …(1919), Sayyid Shaykh founded the Jelutong Press in Penang in 1927. For the next 14 years, until the Japanese invasion, Jelutong published a stream of books, journals, and other publications broadly reformist in general tendency but encompassing modern literature of all kinds, from popular journalism to the first Malay novels.…
- Jem (Ottoman prince)
Bayezid II: …father in 1481, his brother Cem contested the succession. Bayezid, supported by a strong faction of court officials at Constantinople, succeeded in taking the throne. Cem eventually sought refuge with the Knights of Saint John at Rhodes and remained a captive until his death in 1495.
- JEM (Sudanese rebel group)
Janjaweed: …most prominent rebel groups, the Justice and Equality Movement (JEM) and the Sudan Liberation Army (SLA), mounted a joint raid on the Sudanese air base at Al-Fāshir in April 2003, destroying aircraft and capturing dozens of prisoners. The Al-Fāshir raid was a psychological blow to the government in Khartoum, and…
- Jem (novel by Pohl)
Frederik Pohl: …Nebula Award for best novel; Jem (1980), the first and only novel to capture a National Book Award for science fiction (hardcover), bestowed only in 1980; Chernobyl (1987); and All the Lives He Led (2011). The trilogy composed of The Other End of Time (1996), The Siege of Eternity (1997),…
- Jem, El (Tunisia)
Thysdrus, ancient Roman city south of Hadrumetum (modern Sousse) in what is now Tunisia. Although it was originally a native community influenced by Carthaginian civilization, Thysdrus probably received Julius Caesar’s veterans as settlers in 45 bce. Thysdrus did not become a municipium (settlement
- Jemaa (Nigeria)
Jemaa, town, Kaduna state, central Nigeria, near the Darroro Hills and on a road from Jos to Jagindi. A 2,000-year-old terra-cotta head discovered at Jemaa in 1944 proved to be vital to an understanding of the Nok culture, a civilization that probably flourished in the area between 900 bce and 200
- Jemaah Islamiyah (Islamic militant organization)
2002 Bali Bombings: …task forces—identified the terrorist organization Jemaah Islamiyah (an Islamic group) as responsible for the bombings. Suspected of having carried out several other terrorist attacks in the past, Jemaah Islamiyah was also linked by the Indonesian government to al-Qaeda, the international terrorist network founded by Osama bin Laden.
- Jemappes (Belgium)
Borinage: …metallurgy (in the town of Jemappes) and glassmaking (at Boussu). The city and workshops of Grand Hornu constitute a remarkable reconstruction (begun c. 1820) of an ancient mine and its attendant industrial complex.
- Jember (Indonesia)
Jember, city, East Java (Jawa Timur) propinsi (or provinsi; province), southeastern Java, Indonesia. It is located at the foot of Mount Argopuro, about 95 miles (150 km) southeast of Surabaya, the provincial capital. Roads and railway link it with Banyuwangi to the east, Probolinggo to the
- Jemez Spring (novel by Anaya)
Rudolfo Anaya: … (1996), Shaman Winter (1999), and Jemez Spring (2005).
- Jemgum, Battle of (Dutch history)
Louis of Nassau: …beaten by Alba’s forces at Jemgum on the Ems (July 21). After fighting alongside his brother William of Orange in another disastrous campaign in the south, he retreated to France, where he established excellent relations with the Huguenot leader Gaspard de Coligny and, through him, with the French king Charles…
- Jemisin, N.K. (American author)
N.K. Jemisin is an American author of science-fiction and fantasy short stories and novels. She often explores issues such as racism, cultural conflict, and family relationships in her work. In 2016, Jemisin became the first Black writer to win a Hugo Award for best novel, for The Fifth Season
- Jemisin, Nora Keita (American author)
N.K. Jemisin is an American author of science-fiction and fantasy short stories and novels. She often explores issues such as racism, cultural conflict, and family relationships in her work. In 2016, Jemisin became the first Black writer to win a Hugo Award for best novel, for The Fifth Season
- Jemison, Mae (American physician and astronaut)
Mae Jemison is an American physician and the first African American woman to become an astronaut. In 1992, she spent more than a week orbiting Earth in the space shuttle Endeavour. Jemison moved with her family to Chicago at the age of three. There she was introduced to science by her uncle and
- Jemison, Mae Carol (American physician and astronaut)
Mae Jemison is an American physician and the first African American woman to become an astronaut. In 1992, she spent more than a week orbiting Earth in the space shuttle Endeavour. Jemison moved with her family to Chicago at the age of three. There she was introduced to science by her uncle and
- Jemison, Mary (American frontierswoman)
Mary Jemison was a captive of Native American Indians, whose published life story became one of the most popular in the 19th-century genre of captivity stories. Jemison grew up on a farm near the site of present-day Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. On April 5, 1758, a raiding party of French soldiers and
- Jemtegaard, Genevieve (American law enforcement officer)
Melvin Calvin: In 1942 Calvin married Genevieve Jemtegaard, with later Nobel chemistry laureate Glenn T. Seaborg as best man. The married couple collaborated on an interdisciplinary project to investigate the chemical factors in the Rh blood group system. Genevieve was a juvenile probation officer, but, according to Calvin’s autobiography, “she spent…
- jen (Chinese philosophy)
ren, the foundational virtue of Confucianism. It characterizes the bearing and behaviour that a paradigmatic human being exhibits in order to promote a flourishing human community. The concept of ren reflects presuppositions that are characteristic of Confucian philosophical anthropology
- jen sheng (herb)
ginseng, (genus Panax), genus of 12 species of medicinal herbs of the family Araliaceae. The root of Asian ginseng (Panax ginseng), native to Manchuria and Korea, has long been used as a drug and is made into a stimulating tea in China, Korea, and Japan. American ginseng (P. quinquefolius), native
- Jen, Gish (American author)
American literature: Multicultural writing: …important Asian American writers included Gish Jen, whose Typical American (1991) dealt with immigrant striving and frustration; the Korean American Chang-rae Lee, who focused on family life, political awakening, and generational differences in Native Speaker (1995) and A Gesture Life (1999); and Ha Jin, whose Waiting (1999; National Book Award),…
- Jen-min Jih-pao (Chinese newspaper)
Renmin Ribao, daily newspaper published in Beijing as the official organ of the Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party. The paper was established in 1948, toward the end of China’s civil war, and has been based in Beijing since 1949. Renmin Ribao carries serious politically oriented
- jen-min kung-she (Chinese agriculture)
commune, type of large rural organization introduced in China in 1958. Communes began as amalgamations of collective farms; but, in contrast to the collectives, which had been engaged exclusively in agricultural activities, the communes were to become multipurpose organizations for the direction of
- Jen-tsung (emperor of Song dynasty)
Renzong was the temple name (miaohao) of the fourth emperor (reigned 1022–63) of the Song dynasty (960–1279) of China, one of the most able and humane rulers in Chinese history. Under him, the Song government is generally believed to have come closer than ever before to reaching the Confucian ideal
- Jen-tsung (emperor of Yuan dynasty)
Buyantu, (reigned 1311–20), Mongol emperor of the Yuan dynasty (1206–1368) of China, who was a patron of literature. He distributed offices more equitably between Chinese and Mongols than had his predecessors, and during his reign commercial ties with Europe
- Jena (Germany)
Jena, city, Thuringia Land (state), east-central Germany. It lies on the Saale River, east of Weimar. First mentioned in the 9th century as Jani, it was chartered in 1230 and belonged to the margraves of Meissen from the mid-14th century. The house of Wettin, which held the margraviate and (after
- Jena Bridge (bridge, Paris, France)
Paris: Around the Eiffel Tower: …of the slope the five-arched Jena Bridge (Pont d’Iéna) leads across the river. It was built for Napoleon I in 1813 to commemorate his victory at the Battle of Jena in 1806.
- Jena glass
Jena glass, fine-quality glass with improved resistance to heat and shock, suited for chemical ware. It was developed for thermometers and measuring vessels, optical ware, and scientific and industrial uses. Jena glass was first produced by the German glass chemist Otto Schott, who, with Ernst Abbe
- Jena Romanticism (German literature)
Jena Romanticism, a first phase of Romanticism in German literature, centred in Jena from about 1798 to 1804. The group was led by the versatile writer Ludwig Tieck. Two members of the group, the brothers August Wilhelm and Friedrich von Schlegel, who laid down the theoretical basis for Romanticism
- Jena, Battle of (European history)
Battle of Jena, (Oct. 14, 1806), military engagement of the Napoleonic Wars, fought between 122,000 French troops and 114,000 Prussians and Saxons, at Jena and Auerstädt, in Saxony (modern Germany). In the battle, Napoleon smashed the outdated Prussian army inherited from Frederick II the Great,
- Jena, Friedrich Schiller University of (university, Jena, Germany)
Jena: The city’s Friedrich-Schiller University was founded by the elector John Frederick the Magnanimous in 1548 as an academy and was raised to university status in 1577. It flourished under the duke Charles Augustus, patron of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, from 1787 to 1806, when the philosophers Johann…
- Jena, University of (university, Jena, Germany)
Jena: The city’s Friedrich-Schiller University was founded by the elector John Frederick the Magnanimous in 1548 as an academy and was raised to university status in 1577. It flourished under the duke Charles Augustus, patron of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, from 1787 to 1806, when the philosophers Johann…
- Jena-Auerstädt, Battle of (European history)
Battle of Jena, (Oct. 14, 1806), military engagement of the Napoleonic Wars, fought between 122,000 French troops and 114,000 Prussians and Saxons, at Jena and Auerstädt, in Saxony (modern Germany). In the battle, Napoleon smashed the outdated Prussian army inherited from Frederick II the Great,
- Jenaer Glas
Jena glass, fine-quality glass with improved resistance to heat and shock, suited for chemical ware. It was developed for thermometers and measuring vessels, optical ware, and scientific and industrial uses. Jena glass was first produced by the German glass chemist Otto Schott, who, with Ernst Abbe
- Jenaer Romantik (German literature)
Jena Romanticism, a first phase of Romanticism in German literature, centred in Jena from about 1798 to 1804. The group was led by the versatile writer Ludwig Tieck. Two members of the group, the brothers August Wilhelm and Friedrich von Schlegel, who laid down the theoretical basis for Romanticism
- Jenakijevo (Ukraine)
Yenakiyeve, city, eastern Ukraine. It lies along the Krynka River. A pig-iron concern began there in 1858 but lasted only eight years; not until the first coal mines opened in the locality in 1883 did industrialization begin. A metallurgical factory established in 1895–97 was later reconstructed.
- Jenatsch, Georg (Swiss political leader)
Georg Jenatsch was a Swiss political and military leader of the Grisons (now Graubünden, the most easterly of Swiss cantons) during the complex struggles of the Thirty Years’ War. The son of the Protestant vicar of Samaden, Jenatsch became vicar of Scharans in 1617. Ambition and thirst for action
- Jenatzy, Camille (French inventor)
automobile: Early electric automobiles: …hour was an electric (Camille Jenatzy’s La Jamais Contente, 1899). An electric, also Jenatzy’s, had been the easy winner in 1898 of a French hill-climb contest to assay the three forms of power.
- Jenckes, Joseph (British-American inventor)
Joseph Jenks was a British American inventor. A skilled ironworker, Jenks emigrated to America in 1642 to help establish one of the first American ironworks at Saugus in Massachusetts. In 1646 he was granted the first patent in America for making a new type of sawmill and machines for making
- Jencks v. United States (law case)
William Brennan: …of the confession; and in Jencks v. United States (1957), in which Brennan gave the court’s opinion, establishing a defendant’s right to examine the reports of government witnesses. In his dissents in Ker v. California and Lopez v. United States (both 1963), Brennan argued for the right to privacy as…
- Jendouba (Tunisia)
Jendouba, town, northwestern Tunisia, about 95 miles (150 km) west of Tunis. It lies along the middle Wadi Majardah (Medjerda). The town was developed on the railway from Tunis to Algeria during the French protectorate (1881–1955) and still serves as an important crossroads and administrative
- jenever (alcoholic beverage)
gin: Netherlands gins, known as Hollands, geneva, genever, or Schiedam, for a distilling centre near Rotterdam, are made from a mash containing barley malt, fermented to make beer. The beer is distilled, producing spirits called malt wine, with 50–55 percent alcohol content by volume. This product is distilled again with…
- Jenghiz Khan (Mongol ruler)
Genghis Khan was a Mongolian warrior-ruler, one of the most famous conquerors of history, who consolidated tribes into a unified Mongolia and then extended his empire across Asia to the Adriatic Sea. Genghis Khan was a warrior and ruler of genius who, starting from obscure and insignificant
- Jengish Chokusu (mountain, Asia)
Victory Peak, mountain in the eastern Kakshaal (Kokshaal-Tau) Range of the Tien Shan, on the frontier of Kyrgyzstan and China. It was first identified in 1943 as the tallest peak (24,406 feet [7,439 metres]) in the Tien Shan range and the second highest peak in what was then the Soviet Union; it is
- Jenin (town, West Bank)
Jenin, town in the West Bank. Originally administered as part of the British mandate of Palestine (1920–48), Jenin was in the area annexed by Jordan in 1950 following the first of the Arab-Israeli wars (1948–49). After the Six-Day War of 1967, it was part of the West Bank territory under Israeli
- Jenkin, Fleeming (British engineer)
Fleeming Jenkin was a British engineer noted for his work in establishing units of electrical measurement. Jenkin earned an M.A. from the University of Genoa in 1851 and worked for the next 10 years with engineering firms engaged in the design and manufacture of submarine telegraph cables and
- Jenkin, Henry Charles Fleeming (British engineer)
Fleeming Jenkin was a British engineer noted for his work in establishing units of electrical measurement. Jenkin earned an M.A. from the University of Genoa in 1851 and worked for the next 10 years with engineering firms engaged in the design and manufacture of submarine telegraph cables and
- Jenkins of Hillhead, Baron (British politician)
Roy Jenkins was a British politician, a strong supporter of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization and the European Community. Formerly a Labourite, he was the first leader of the Social Democratic Party (1982–83) and later was leader of the Social and Liberal Democratic Peers (1988–98). Educated
- Jenkins’ Ear, War of (European history)
War of Jenkins’ Ear, war between Great Britain and Spain that began in October 1739 and eventually merged into the War of the Austrian Succession (1740–48). It was precipitated by an incident that took place in 1738 when Captain Robert Jenkins appeared before a committee of the House of Commons and
- Jenkins, Barry (American director)
Barry Jenkins is an American director, writer, and producer who is known for creating lyrical, empathetic films that centre on Black characters. Jenkins grew up in the economically distressed Liberty City neighbourhood of Miami. His father was absent from his life, and his mother struggled with
- Jenkins, Butch (American actor)
Fred Zinnemann: Films of the late 1930s and 1940s: …comedic vehicles for child star Butch Jenkins. Zinnemann’s next project, The Search (1948), was considerably more prestigious. The first film shot in Germany following the conclusion of World War II, it was the moving story of an American soldier (played by Montgomery Clift, in his second film) stationed in Berlin…
- Jenkins, Charles Francis (American inventor)
television: Mechanical systems: Britain (see the photograph) and Charles Francis Jenkins in the United States to build the world’s first successful televisions. The question of priority depends on one’s definition of television. In 1922 Jenkins sent a still picture by radio waves, but the first true television success, the transmission of a live…
- Jenkins, David (American figure skater)
David Jenkins is an American figure skater who won a gold medal at the 1960 Winter Olympic Games in Squaw Valley, Calif. (Read Scott Hamilton’s Britannica entry on figure skating.) Jenkins and his brother Hayes Alan were a dominating force in American competitive figure skating for much of the
- Jenkins, Fergie (Canadian-American athlete)
Fergie Jenkins is a Canadian-born professional baseball player, one of the premier pitchers in the game in the late 1960s and early ’70s. A hard-throwing right-hander, he won at least 20 games in each of six consecutive seasons (1967–72) while playing for the Chicago Cubs. In 1971, in recognition
- Jenkins, Ferguson Arthur (Canadian-American athlete)
Fergie Jenkins is a Canadian-born professional baseball player, one of the premier pitchers in the game in the late 1960s and early ’70s. A hard-throwing right-hander, he won at least 20 games in each of six consecutive seasons (1967–72) while playing for the Chicago Cubs. In 1971, in recognition
- Jenkins, Florence Foster (American singer)
Florence Foster Jenkins was an American amateur soprano, music lover, philanthropist, and socialite who gained fame for her notoriously off-pitch voice. She became a word-of-mouth sensation in the 1940s through her self-funded performances in New York City. Jenkins was born into a wealthy and
- Jenkins, Gordon (American arranger and composer)
Frank Sinatra: The Capitol years: … (1959), and with the arranger-composer Gordon Jenkins, whose lush string arrangements heightened the melancholy atmosphere of Where Are You? (1957) and No One Cares (1959).
- Jenkins, Harold Lloyd (American singer)
Conway Twitty was an American singer who started as a successful songwriter and rockabilly performer but later became an even bigger country music star, using his rich, tremulous baritone to specialize in country ballads. Twitty was drawn to music as a child but initially envisioned a career as a
- Jenkins, Hayes Alan (American figure skater)
Hayes Alan Jenkins is an American figure skater who won a gold medal at the 1956 Winter Games in Cortina d’Ampezzo, Italy. (Read Scott Hamilton’s Britannica entry on figure skating.) Jenkins was known for his precision and strength in the compulsory figures as well as his fluid artistic expression.
- Jenkins, John (English composer)
John Jenkins was a composer, lutenist, and string player, most eminent composer in his era of music for chamber ensembles. He was a musician to Charles I and Charles II and served patrons from the nobility and gentry, notably Sir Hamon L’Estrange and Lord North, whose son refers to Jenkins in his
- Jenkins, Katherine (Welsh mezzo-soprano)
Katherine Jenkins is a Welsh mezzo-soprano with strong mainstream appeal. A highly versatile singer, Jenkins excels not only with opera and hymns but also with Welsh folk music, show tunes, and pop songs. In 2020, Classic FM, one of the United Kingdom’s Independent National Radio stations, named
- Jenkins, Kris (American football player)
Carolina Panthers: …Steve Smith and defensive tackle Kris Jenkins in 2001, and in 2002 they chose defensive end Julius Peppers with the draft’s second overall selection. In addition, the Panthers signed quarterback Jake Delhomme before the 2003 season, and the team’s revamped core led Carolina to an 11–5 record and a divisional…
- Jenkins, Mary Elizabeth (American businesswoman)
Mary Surratt was an American boardinghouse operator, who, with three others, was convicted of conspiracy to assassinate President Abraham Lincoln. At age 17 Mary Jenkins married John Harrison Surratt, a land owner. Following a fire that destroyed their home, the couple in 1852 opened a tavern that
- Jenkins, Patty (American director)
history of film: United States: …a master of action pictures, Jenkins staked out a claim on superhero movies. She made her debut with Monster (2003), about serial killer Aileen Wuornos, but her best-known films were Wonder Woman (2017) and Wonder Woman 1984 (2020), both starring Gal Gadot. Coppola, the daughter of Francis Ford Coppola, made…
- Jenkins, Richard (American actor)
Six Feet Under: …family patriarch, Nathaniel Fisher (Richard Jenkins), which brings his prodigal eldest son, Nate (Peter Krause), home from Seattle. Grudgingly, Nate becomes a partner in the business and takes his place in the family, which includes his brother, David (Michael C. Hall), who hides his homosexuality from most of the…
- Jenkins, Richard Walter, Jr. (Welsh actor)
Richard Burton was a Welsh stage and motion-picture actor noted for his portrayals of highly intelligent and articulate men who were world-weary, cynical, or self-destructive. Jenkins was the 12th of 13 children born to a Welsh coal miner. He studied acting under Philip Burton, a schoolteacher who
- Jenkins, Roy (British politician)
Roy Jenkins was a British politician, a strong supporter of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization and the European Community. Formerly a Labourite, he was the first leader of the Social Democratic Party (1982–83) and later was leader of the Social and Liberal Democratic Peers (1988–98). Educated
- Jenkins, Roy Harris (British politician)
Roy Jenkins was a British politician, a strong supporter of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization and the European Community. Formerly a Labourite, he was the first leader of the Social Democratic Party (1982–83) and later was leader of the Social and Liberal Democratic Peers (1988–98). Educated
- Jenkins, Roy, Baron Jenkins of Hillhead (British politician)
Roy Jenkins was a British politician, a strong supporter of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization and the European Community. Formerly a Labourite, he was the first leader of the Social Democratic Party (1982–83) and later was leader of the Social and Liberal Democratic Peers (1988–98). Educated
- Jenkinson, Anthony (English explorer)
European exploration: The northern passages: …and 1560, another English voyager, Anthony Jenkinson, following up this opening, traveled from the White Sea to Moscow, then to the Caspian, and so on to Bukhara, thus reaching the old east–west trade routes by a new way. Soon, attempts to find a passage to Cathay were replaced by efforts…
- Jenkinson, Charles (British politician)
Charles Jenkinson, 1st earl of Liverpool was a politician who held numerous offices in the British government under King George III and was the object of widespread suspicion as well as deference because of his reputed clandestine influence at court. It was believed that he in some way controlled
- Jenkinson, Robert Banks (prime minister of United Kingdom)
Robert Banks Jenkinson, 2nd earl of Liverpool was a British prime minister from June 8, 1812, to Feb. 17, 1827, who, despite his long tenure of office, was overshadowed by the greater political imaginativeness of his colleagues, George Canning and Viscount Castlereagh (afterward 2nd Marquess of
- Jenks, Amelia (American social reformer)
Amelia Bloomer was an American reformer who campaigned for temperance and women’s rights. Amelia Jenks was educated in a local school and for several years thereafter taught school and was a private tutor. In 1840 she married Dexter C. Bloomer, a Quaker newspaper editor of Seneca county, through
- Jenks, Joseph (British-American inventor)
Joseph Jenks was a British American inventor. A skilled ironworker, Jenks emigrated to America in 1642 to help establish one of the first American ironworks at Saugus in Massachusetts. In 1646 he was granted the first patent in America for making a new type of sawmill and machines for making
- Jenne (Mali)
Djenné, ancient trading city and center of Muslim scholarship, southern Mali. It is situated on the Bani River and on floodlands between the Bani and Niger rivers, 220 miles (354 km) southwest of Timbuktu. The city, which sits on hillocks (small hills) known as toguère, becomes an island during the
- Jenner, Caitlyn (American athlete)
Caitlyn Jenner is an American decathlete who won a gold medal at the 1976 Olympic Games in Montreal with a then record score of 8,618 points and in 2015 became by far the most prominent athlete to publicly come out as transgender. Bruce Jenner began an athletic career at Newton (Connecticut) High
- Jenner, Edward (English surgeon)
Edward Jenner was an English surgeon and discoverer of a vaccine for smallpox. Jenner was born at a time when the patterns of British medical practice and education were undergoing gradual change. Slowly the division between the Oxford- or Cambridge-trained physicians and the apothecaries or
- Jenner, Kendall (American fashion model)
Kim Kardashian: …and they had two children, Kendall and Kylie. In 1998 Kim graduated from high school and subsequently became an assistant to socialite Paris Hilton. During that time she married (2000) music producer Damon Thomas; the couple divorced in 2004. Two years later Kim, along with Kourtney and Khloé, opened DASH,…
- Jenner, Kris (American media personality)
Kim Kardashian: …murder trial, and her mother, Kris, later served as her manager; after the couple divorced in 1989, Kris married (1991–2014) Olympic gold medalist Bruce (later Caitlyn) Jenner, and they had two children, Kendall and Kylie. In 1998 Kim graduated from high school and subsequently became an assistant to socialite Paris…
- Jenner, Kylie (American television personality and entrepreneur)
Kylie Jenner is an American television personality and entrepreneur known for her appearances in reality shows chronicling the lives of her and her family, including Keeping Up with the Kardashians (2007–21), Life of Kylie (2017), and The Kardashians (2022– ). She is also known for her multiple
- Jenner, Kylie Kristen (American television personality and entrepreneur)
Kylie Jenner is an American television personality and entrepreneur known for her appearances in reality shows chronicling the lives of her and her family, including Keeping Up with the Kardashians (2007–21), Life of Kylie (2017), and The Kardashians (2022– ). She is also known for her multiple
- Jenner, Sir William, 1st Baronet (British physician)
Sir William Jenner, 1st Baronet was a physician and anatomist best known for his clinico-pathologic distinction between typhus and typhoid fevers, although he was preceded in this work by others. His paper on the subject was published in 1849. Jenner taught at the University of London and served as
- Jenner, William Bruce (American athlete)
Caitlyn Jenner is an American decathlete who won a gold medal at the 1976 Olympic Games in Montreal with a then record score of 8,618 points and in 2015 became by far the most prominent athlete to publicly come out as transgender. Bruce Jenner began an athletic career at Newton (Connecticut) High
- Jenney, William Le Baron (American engineer and architect)
William Le Baron Jenney was an American civil engineer and architect whose technical innovations were of primary importance in the development of the skyscraper. Jenney designed the Home Insurance Company Building, Chicago (1884–85; enlarged 1891; demolished 1931), generally considered to be the
- Jennicam (webcam)
webcamming: History of webcamming: …with Jennifer Ringley, whose “Jennicam” made her one of the first internet celebrities. Jennifer began using a webcam from her Dickinson College dorm room as a social experiment of sorts. The device took a static image of her room every 15 minutes, allowing viewers a look at her quotidian…
- Jennie Gerhardt (novel by Dreiser)
Jennie Gerhardt, novel by Theodore Dreiser, published in 1911. It exemplifies the naturalism of which Dreiser was a proponent, telling the unhappy story of a working-class woman who accepts all the adversity life visits on her and becomes the mistress of two wealthy and powerful men in order to
- Jennifer Hudson Show, The (American television talk-show)
Jennifer Hudson: …hosting the daytime talk show The Jennifer Hudson Show.
- Jennifer’s Body (film by Kusama [2009])
Megan Fox: …zombie in the black comedy Jennifer’s Body (2009), and in Jonah Hex (2010) she portrayed a prostitute with a heart of gold. In 2014 she appeared as the intrepid and ambitious broadcast journalist April O’Neil in the live-action big-screen reboot Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles; she reprised the role two years…
- Jennings, Elizabeth (English poet)
Elizabeth Jennings was an English poet whose works relate intensely personal matters in a plainspoken, traditional, and objective style. Her verse frequently reflects her devout Roman Catholicism and her love of Italy. Jennings was educated at Oxford High School and St. Anne’s College, Oxford. Her
- Jennings, Elizabeth Joan (English poet)
Elizabeth Jennings was an English poet whose works relate intensely personal matters in a plainspoken, traditional, and objective style. Her verse frequently reflects her devout Roman Catholicism and her love of Italy. Jennings was educated at Oxford High School and St. Anne’s College, Oxford. Her
- Jennings, Ernest (American country music singer)
Tennessee Ernie Ford was a U.S. country music singer. He studied music in Cincinnati. After World War II he worked in radio in the Los Angeles area and soon signed a recording contract with Capitol. His “Mule Train” and “Shot Gun Boogie” made him famous by 1951. He became a staple on the Grand Ole
- Jennings, Herbert Spencer (American zoologist)
Herbert Spencer Jennings was a U.S. zoologist, one of the first scientists to study the behaviour of individual microorganisms and to experiment with genetic variations in single-celled organisms. Jennings graduated from Harvard University (1896). He wrote his doctoral thesis on the morphogenesis
- Jennings, Kenneth Wayne III (American game-show host)
This BYU graduate and software engineer won a record 74 consecutive Jeopardy! matches before going on to become one of the game show’s hosts in 2021. Who is Ken Jennings? Or more precisely, Kenneth Wayne Jennings III, born May 23, 1974, in Edmonds, Washington. Jennings is the oldest of four
- Jennings, Peter (Canadian-American journalist)
Peter Jennings was a Canadian-born American television journalist whose easygoing and detached manner, calm delivery, and knowledgeable air earned his audience’s respect and trust and, from the mid-1980s to the mid-1990s, took ABC’s World News Tonight to the top of the ratings. One of the big three
- Jennings, Peter Charles (Canadian-American journalist)
Peter Jennings was a Canadian-born American television journalist whose easygoing and detached manner, calm delivery, and knowledgeable air earned his audience’s respect and trust and, from the mid-1980s to the mid-1990s, took ABC’s World News Tonight to the top of the ratings. One of the big three
- Jennings, Sarah, Duchess of Marlborough (English duchess)
Sarah Jennings, Duchess of Marlborough was the wife of the renowned general John Churchill, 1st Duke of Marlborough. Her close friendship with Queen Anne bolstered her husband’s career and served to aid the Whig cause. As a child, Sarah Jennings formed a friendship with the Princess Anne (the
- Jennings, Waylon (American musician)
Willie Nelson: …back to Texas and, with Waylon Jennings, spearheaded the country music movement known as outlaw music. Beginning with the narrative album Red Headed Stranger (1975), which featured the hit song “Blue Eyes Crying in the Rain,” he became one of the most popular performers in country music as a whole.…