- Jacksonville (Arkansas, United States)
Jacksonville, city, Pulaski county, central Arkansas, U.S., 15 miles (24 km) northeast of Little Rock. The locality was settled before the American Civil War but did not develop until the 1860s, when a local resident, Nicholas Jackson, offered land for a Cairo and Fulton (now Union Pacific)
- Jacksonville (Oregon, United States)
Jacksonville, city, Jackson county, southwestern Oregon, U.S. It lies along Jackson Creek, just west of Medford, in the foothills of the Siskiyou Mountains. It began in 1851–52 as a mining camp with placer gold discoveries along the creek (named for a prospector). By the 1920s mining activities had
- Jacksonville (North Carolina, United States)
Jacksonville, city, seat (1755) of Onslow county, southeastern North Carolina, U.S. It lies along the New River at the head of its estuary, about 50 miles (80 km) northeast of Wilmington. Originally settled as Wantland’s Ferry (c. 1757), its name was changed to Onslow Courthouse and then
- Jacksonville (Illinois, United States)
Jacksonville, city, seat (1825) of Morgan county, west-central Illinois, U.S. It lies about 35 miles (55 km) west of Springfield. Laid out in 1825 as the county seat by Johnston Shelton, the county surveyor, and named in honour of U.S. President Andrew Jackson (some have also said that the city’s
- Jacksonville (Florida, United States)
Jacksonville, city, seat (1822) of Duval county, northeastern Florida, U.S., the centre of Florida’s “First Coast” region. It lies along the St. Johns River near its mouth on the Atlantic Ocean, about 25 miles (40 km) south of the Georgia border. Jacksonville consolidated (1968) with most of Duval
- Jacksonville Jaguars (American football team)
Jacksonville Jaguars, American professional gridiron football team based in Jacksonville, Florida, that plays in the American Football Conference (AFC) of the National Football League (NFL). The Jaguars began play in 1995 as an expansion team alongside the Carolina Panthers of the National Football
- Jacksonville University (Jacksonville, Florida, United States)
Jacksonville: …include Edward Waters College (1866), Jacksonville University (1934), Florida Community College at Jacksonville (1966), University of North Florida (1965), Jones College (1918), and the Health Science Center of the University of Florida. Inc. 1832. Pop. (2010) 821,784; Jacksonville Metro Area, 1,345,596; (2020) 949,611; Jacksonville Metro Area, 1,605,848.
- jackstones (game)
jacks, game of great antiquity and worldwide distribution, now played with stones, bones, seeds, filled cloth bags, or metal or plastic counters (the jacks), with or without a ball. The name derives from “chackstones”—stones to be tossed. The knuckle, wrist, or ankle bones (astragals) of goats,
- jackstraws (game)
pick-up-sticks, game of skill, played by both children and adults, with thin wooden sticks or with straws or matches. In the early 18th century sticks were made of ivory or bone; later they were made of wood or plastic. To begin the game, 20 to 50 sticks are bunched in one hand and set vertically
- Jacmel (Haiti)
Jacmel, town and port, on the southern coast of Haiti, 24 miles (39 km) southwest of Port-au-Prince across the Tiburon Peninsula. Situated on a hillside overlooking palm-fringed Jacmel Bay, the town flourished under the French as a port for transshipment of sugar, coffee, and cotton. It continues
- Jaco (island, East Timor)
East Timor: …islands of Atauro (Kambing) and Jaco, and the enclave of Ambeno, including the town of Pante Makasar, on the northwestern coast of Timor. Dili is the capital and largest city.
- Jacob (Hebrew patriarch)
Jacob, Hebrew patriarch who was the grandson of Abraham, the son of Isaac and Rebekah, and the traditional ancestor of the people of Israel. Stories about Jacob in the Bible begin at Genesis 25:19. According to the Hebrew Bible (Old Testament), Jacob was the younger twin brother of Esau, who was
- Jacob (Congo)
Nkayi, town (commune), southwestern Congo. It lies west of the capital, Brazzaville, and northeast of the port of Pointe-Noire, on the Brazzaville–Pointe-Noire railway; its airport has scheduled flights to both cities. Nkayi is the major sugar-producing centre in the Niari River valley agricultural
- Jacob (duke of Courland)
Baltic states: The early modern age: Duke Jacob (1642–82) actively fostered trade and industry and created a navy. He acquired two colonies: Tobago in the West Indies and a settlement in Gambia on the west coast of Africa.
- Jacob ben Asher (Spanish scholar)
Jacob ben Asher was a Jewish scholar whose codification of Jewish law was considered standard until the publication in 1565 of the Shulḥan ʿarukh (“The Well-Laid Table”) by Joseph Karo. Little of certainty is known about Jacob’s life. In 1303 he immigrated to Spain with his brothers and father, the
- Jacob ben Hayim ibn Adonijah (editor)
biblical literature: Printed editions: The second edition, edited by Jacob ben Hayyim ibn Adonijah and issued by Bomberg in four volumes (Venice, 1524/25), became the prototype of future Hebrew Bibles down to the 20th century. It contained a vast text-critical apparatus of Masoretic notes never since equalled in any edition. Unfortunately, Ben Hayyim had…
- Jacob ben Isaac Ashkenazi (Polish writer)
Yiddish literature: Old Yiddish literature: Tsenerene) by Jacob ben Isaac Ashkenazi. The text is a loose paraphrase of the biblical passages that are read in the synagogue: the Five Books of Moses, the supplementary readings (haftarot), and the five scrolls (megillot). First published about 1600, Tsenerene incorporated a wide selection of commentaries…
- Jacob ben Zebi (Danish rabbi)
Jacob Israel Emden was a rabbi and Talmudic scholar primarily known for his lengthy quarrel with Rabbi Jonathan Eybeschütz (q.v.), an antagonism that sundered European Jewry. Emden was thoroughly trained as a scholar of the Talmud, the rabbinical compendium of law, lore, and commentary. Emden
- Jacob Isaac of Przysucha (Polish Ḥasidic leader)
Jacob Isaac ben Asher Przysucha was a Jewish Ḥasidic leader who sought to turn Polish Ḥasidism away from its reliance on miracle workers. He advocated a new approach that combined study of the Torah with ardent prayer. Przysucha was the descendant of a rabbinic family. He became learned in the
- Jacob Joseph ben Tzevi ha-Kohen Katz of Polonnoye (Polish rabbi)
Jacob Joseph Of Polonnoye was a rabbi and preacher, the first theoretician and literary propagandist of Jewish Ḥasidism. Jacob Joseph was a rabbi in the large Jewish community at Shargorod, in Podolia; after he came under the influence of the Baʿal Shem Ṭov, the founder of Ḥasidism, he was expelled
- Jacob Joseph Of Polonnoye (Polish rabbi)
Jacob Joseph Of Polonnoye was a rabbi and preacher, the first theoretician and literary propagandist of Jewish Ḥasidism. Jacob Joseph was a rabbi in the large Jewish community at Shargorod, in Podolia; after he came under the influence of the Baʿal Shem Ṭov, the founder of Ḥasidism, he was expelled
- Jacob of Edessa (Syrian theologian)
Jacob of Edessa was a distinguished Christian theologian, historian, philosopher, exegete, and grammarian, who became bishop of Edessa (c. 684). His strict episcopal discipline giving offense to the patriarch Athanasius II of Antioch, he retired and devoted himself to study and teaching. He is
- Jacob of Sarug (Syrian writer)
Jacob Of Serugh was a Syriac writer described for his learning and holiness as “the flute of the Holy Spirit and the harp of the believing church.” Like his father, Jacob was ordained a priest, and by 503 he was episcopal visitor of Haura in Serugh. In 519 he was made bishop of Baṭnan in Serugh. By
- Jacob Of Serugh (Syrian writer)
Jacob Of Serugh was a Syriac writer described for his learning and holiness as “the flute of the Holy Spirit and the harp of the believing church.” Like his father, Jacob was ordained a priest, and by 503 he was episcopal visitor of Haura in Serugh. In 519 he was made bishop of Baṭnan in Serugh. By
- Jacob of Voragine (archbishop of Genoa)
Jacobus De Voragine was the archbishop of Genoa, a chronicler, and the author of the Golden Legend. Jacobus became a Dominican in 1244. After gaining a reputation throughout northern Italy as a preacher and theologian, he was provincial of Lombardy (1267–78 and 1281–86) and archbishop of the
- Jacob Wrestling with the Angel (painting by Paul Gauguin)
Vision of the Sermon, an oil-on-canvas painting created by French artist Paul Gauguin in 1888 during the year he worked closely with the younger artist Émile Bernard in Pont-Aven in the Brittany region of France. The painting is an example of the new decorative style Gauguin developed during this
- Jacob’s coat (plant)
copperleaf: Major species: …is also widely known as Jacob’s coat and as match-me-if-you-can. The copperleaf is native to Polynesia. It reaches about 3 metres (10 feet) in height, though one variety attains a height of about 6 metres (20 feet).
- Jacob’s Dream (work by Dupré)
Marcel Dupré: …Le Songe de Jacob (Jacob’s Dream) performed at 15. An organist at Saint-Sulpice and Notre-Dame, Paris, he gave (1920) a series of 10 recitals in which he played from memory the complete organ works of J.S. Bach. He toured as a virtuoso (U.S. debut, 1921), frequently improvising fugues and…
- Jacob’s ladder (plant)
Jacob’s ladder, any of about 25 species of the genus Polemonium of the family Polemoniaceae, native to temperate areas in North and South America and Eurasia. Many are valued as garden flowers and wildflowers. They have loose, spikelike clusters of drooping blue, violet, or white, funnel-shaped,
- Jacob’s Ladder (film by Lyne [1990])
Macaulay Culkin: Early life and work: … (1989), Uncle Buck (1989), and Jacob’s Ladder (1990).
- Jacob’s ladder family (plant family)
Polemoniaceae, the phlox family of plants, comprising about 18 genera and some 385 species of flowering plants in the order Ericales. Members of the family are mostly in North America but also found in temperate parts of western South America and Eurasia. They include many popular garden
- Jacob’s Pillow Dance Festival
Ted Shawn: In 1933 he founded Jacob’s Pillow Dance Festival near Lee, Massachusetts, as a summer residence and theatre for his dancers. After the group’s dissolution, Shawn developed Jacob’s Pillow into an internationally important dance centre. Although his own choreography was generally nonballetic, he believed that dance as a whole is…
- Jacob’s Room (novel by Woolf)
Jacob’s Room, novel by Virginia Woolf, published in 1922. Experimental in form, it centres on the character of Jacob Flanders, a lonely young man unable to synthesize his love of Classical culture with the chaotic reality of contemporary society, notably the turbulence of World War I. The novel is
- Jacob’s staff (plant)
ocotillo, (Fouquieria splendens), flowering spiny shrub (family Fouquieriaceae) characteristic of rocky deserts from western Texas to southern California and southward into Mexico. Near the plant’s base, the stem divides into several slender, erect, wide-spreading, intensely spiny branches, usually
- Jacob’s Well (Ohio, United States)
Marion, city, seat (1824) of Marion county, north central Ohio, U.S., approximately 45 miles (70 km) north of Columbus. Laid out about 1820, it was first called Jacob’s Well (for Jacob Foos, who dug for water there). Renamed in 1822 for Gen. Francis Marion of American Revolutionary War fame, it was
- Jacob, Caresse (French poet and publisher)
Harry Crosby: …1927 he and his wife, Caresse Crosby, née Jacob (1892–1970), began to publish their own poetry under the imprint Editions Narcisse, later the Black Sun Press. The following year they started printing books by other writers, such as Archibald MacLeish, D.H. Lawrence, and James Joyce, for which the press is…
- Jacob, François (French biologist)
François Jacob was a French biologist who, together with André Lwoff and Jacques Monod, was awarded the 1965 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine for discoveries concerning regulatory activities in bacteria. Jacob received an M.D. degree (1947) and a doctorate in science (1954) from the
- Jacob, Georges (French furniture maker)
Georges Jacob was the founder of a long line of French furniture makers. He was among the first cabinetmakers in France to use mahogany extensively and excelled at carved wood furniture, particularly chairs. Born of a Burgundian peasant family, Jacob moved to Paris at 16 and is believed to have
- Jacob, John (English general)
Jacobābād: …village of Khānghar by General John Jacob, the district’s first deputy commissioner. Jacob, who laid out the modern city, is commemorated by monuments, and even his horse has been memorialized by a mud pyramid. The city was incorporated as a municipality in 1875. It is noted for its consistently high…
- Jacob, Max (French poet)
Max Jacob was a French poet who played a decisive role in the new directions of modern poetry during the early part of the 20th century. His writing was the product of a complex amalgam of Jewish, Breton, Parisian, and Roman Catholic elements. Jacob departed his native Brittany in 1894 to go to
- Jacob, Max (German puppeteer)
puppetry: Styles of puppet theatre: Important also was Max Jacob, who developed the traditional folk repertoire of the German Kasperltheater, between the 1920s and ’50s, into something more suited to modern ideas of what befits children’s entertainment. Almost all contemporary puppeteers have created programs for audiences of children.
- Jacob, Suzanne (Canadian author)
Canadian literature: Contemporary trends: Suzanne Jacob has excelled in poetry with La Part de feu (1997; “The Fire’s Share”) and in fiction with the novel Laura Laur (1983). Although poetry no longer enjoys the influence it once did as a vehicle for the expression of collective identity, events such…
- Jacoba Of Bavaria (duchess of Bavaria)
Jacoba Of Bavaria was the duchess of Bavaria, countess of Holland, Zeeland, and Hainaut. Her forced cession of sovereignty in the three counties to Philip the Good, duke of Burgundy, in 1428, consolidated Burgundian dominion in the Low Countries. Jacoba, the only daughter and heiress of William,
- Jacoba van Beieren (duchess of Bavaria)
Jacoba Of Bavaria was the duchess of Bavaria, countess of Holland, Zeeland, and Hainaut. Her forced cession of sovereignty in the three counties to Philip the Good, duke of Burgundy, in 1428, consolidated Burgundian dominion in the Low Countries. Jacoba, the only daughter and heiress of William,
- Jacobābād (Pakistan)
Jacobābād, city, Sindh province, Pakistan. The city lies at a junction of the Pakistan Western Railway and main roads through Sindh. It was founded in 1847 on the site of the village of Khānghar by General John Jacob, the district’s first deputy commissioner. Jacob, who laid out the modern city, is
- Jacobean age (visual and literary arts)
Jacobean age, (from Latin Jacobus, “James”), period of visual and literary arts during the reign of James I of England (1603–25). The distinctions between the early Jacobean and the preceding Elizabethan styles are subtle ones, often merely a question of degree, for although the dynasty changed,
- Jacobean literature (English literature)
Jacobean literature, body of works written during the reign of James I of England (1603–25). The successor to Elizabethan literature, Jacobean literature was often dark in mood, questioning the stability of the social order; some of William Shakespeare’s greatest tragedies may date from the
- Jacobean tragedy (drama)
revenge tragedy, drama in which the dominant motive is revenge for a real or imagined injury; it was a favourite form of English tragedy in the Elizabethan and Jacobean eras and found its highest expression in William Shakespeare’s Hamlet. The revenge drama derived originally from the Roman
- Jacobellis v. Ohio (law case)
obscenity: Developments in the 20th century: Potter Stewart’s concurring opinion in Jacobellis v. Ohio (1964), which dealt with the alleged obscenity of a motion picture: he wrote that, though he could not define obscenity, “I know it when I see it.” In a 1966 ruling on John Cleland’s novel Fanny Hill (1748–49), the court declared that,…
- Jacobellis, Lindsey (American snowboarder)
Lindsey Jacobellis is an American snowboarder who is one of the world’s top competitors in the alpine event known as snowboard cross. In that event multiple riders race simultaneously down a course that includes jumps, banked turns, and other features. At the 2022 Winter Olympic Games in Beijing,
- Jacobi, Abraham (European physician)
Abraham Jacobi was a German-born physician who established the first clinic for diseases of children in the United States (1860) and is considered the founder of American pediatrics. Because he took part in the German revolutionary movement (1848), Jacobi was imprisoned in Berlin and Cologne during
- Jacobi, Carl (German mathematician)
Carl Jacobi was a German mathematician who, with Niels Henrik Abel of Norway, founded the theory of elliptic functions. Jacobi was first tutored by an uncle, and, by the end of his first year at the Gymnasium (1816–17), he was ready to enter the University of Berlin. Because the university would
- Jacobi, Carl Gustav Jacob (German mathematician)
Carl Jacobi was a German mathematician who, with Niels Henrik Abel of Norway, founded the theory of elliptic functions. Jacobi was first tutored by an uncle, and, by the end of his first year at the Gymnasium (1816–17), he was ready to enter the University of Berlin. Because the university would
- Jacobi, Derek (British actor)
Derek Jacobi is an English actor whose shy, self-effacing private demeanour belied his forceful, commanding stage presence. Born into a nontheatrical family—his father was a London department store manager, his mother a secretary—Jacobi first developed a taste for performing while attending the
- Jacobi, Friedrich Heinrich (German philosopher)
Friedrich Heinrich Jacobi was a German philosopher, major exponent of the philosophy of feeling (Gefühlsphilosophie) and a prominent critic of rationalism, especially as espoused by Benedict de Spinoza. Succeeding his father as head of a sugar factory in 1764, Jacobi joined the governing council of
- Jacobi, Lotte (American photographer)
Lotte Jacobi was a German-American photographer noted for her portraits of famous figures. Born into a family of photographers (her great-grandfather began as a professional daguerreotypist in 1840), Jacobi studied art history and literature at the Academy of Posen (1912–16) and attended the
- Jacobi, Lotte Johanna Alexandra (American photographer)
Lotte Jacobi was a German-American photographer noted for her portraits of famous figures. Born into a family of photographers (her great-grandfather began as a professional daguerreotypist in 1840), Jacobi studied art history and literature at the Academy of Posen (1912–16) and attended the
- Jacobi, Mary Putnam (American physician)
Mary Putnam Jacobi was an American physician, writer, educator, and suffragist who is considered to have been the foremost woman doctor of her era. Mary Putnam was the daughter of George Palmer Putnam, founder of the publishing firm of G.P. Putnam’s Sons, and was an elder sister of Herbert Putnam,
- Jacobi, Sir Derek (British actor)
Derek Jacobi is an English actor whose shy, self-effacing private demeanour belied his forceful, commanding stage presence. Born into a nontheatrical family—his father was a London department store manager, his mother a secretary—Jacobi first developed a taste for performing while attending the
- Jacobin Club (French political history)
Jacobin Club, the most famous political group of the French Revolution, which became identified with extreme egalitarianism and violence and which led the Revolutionary government from mid-1793 to mid-1794. The Jacobins originated as the Club Breton at Versailles, where the deputies from Brittany
- Jacobin Constitution (French history)
France: The Reign of Terror: In a referendum this Jacobin constitution of 1793 was approved virtually without dissent by about two million voters. Because of the emergency, however, the Convention placed the new constitution on the shelf in October and declared that “the provisional government of France is revolutionary until the peace.” There would…
- Jacobins (French political history)
Jacobin Club, the most famous political group of the French Revolution, which became identified with extreme egalitarianism and violence and which led the Revolutionary government from mid-1793 to mid-1794. The Jacobins originated as the Club Breton at Versailles, where the deputies from Brittany
- Jacobins, Amis de la Liberté et de l’Égalité, Société des (French political history)
Jacobin Club, the most famous political group of the French Revolution, which became identified with extreme egalitarianism and violence and which led the Revolutionary government from mid-1793 to mid-1794. The Jacobins originated as the Club Breton at Versailles, where the deputies from Brittany
- Jacobins, Club des (French political history)
Jacobin Club, the most famous political group of the French Revolution, which became identified with extreme egalitarianism and violence and which led the Revolutionary government from mid-1793 to mid-1794. The Jacobins originated as the Club Breton at Versailles, where the deputies from Brittany
- Jacobins, Friends of Liberty and Equality, Society of the (French political history)
Jacobin Club, the most famous political group of the French Revolution, which became identified with extreme egalitarianism and violence and which led the Revolutionary government from mid-1793 to mid-1794. The Jacobins originated as the Club Breton at Versailles, where the deputies from Brittany
- Jacobite (Syriac script)
calligraphy: Spread of Aramaic to the Middle East and Asia: … and developed into two varieties, Jacobite and Melchite. Vigorous in pen graphics, Serta writing shows that, unlike the early Aramaic and Hebrew scripts, characters are fastened to a bottom horizontal. Modern typefaces used to print Syriac, which has survived as a language, have the same characteristic. Eastern Syriac script was…
- Jacobite (British history)
Jacobite, in British history, a supporter of the exiled Stuart king James II (Latin: Jacobus) and his descendants after the Glorious Revolution. The political importance of the Jacobite movement extended from 1688 until at least the 1750s. The Jacobites, especially under William III and Queen Anne,
- Jacobite’s Journal, The (work by Fielding)
Henry Fielding: Maturity.: …edited another one-man weekly called The Jacobite’s Journal, the title reflecting its ironical approach to current affairs. Its propaganda value was deemed so great that the government purchased 2,000 copies of each issue for free distribution among the inns and alehouses of the kingdom.
- Jacobs Field (baseball field, Cleveland, Ohio, United States)
Cleveland: The contemporary city: …venues that opened in 1994: Jacobs Field, which is built in the style of early 20th-century ballparks, for the Cleveland Guardians professional baseball team; and Gund Arena, home of the Cavaliers professional basketball team. Playhouse Square Center, southeast of downtown, contains several historic theatres and is home to the Great…
- Jacobs House (building, Westmorland, Wisconsin, United States)
Frank Lloyd Wright: The 1920s and ’30s: , the Jacobs house (1937) in Westmorland, Wisconsin, near Madison, and the Winckler-Goetsch house (1939) at Okemos, Michigan.
- Jacobs three-bladed windmill
turbine: Horizontal axis machines: The Jacobs three-bladed windmill, used widely between 1930 and 1960, could deliver about one kilowatt of power at a wind speed of 6.25 metres per second, a typical average wind velocity in the United States about 18 metres above ground.
- Jacobs, Aletta (Dutch physician)
contraception: Aletta Jacobs of the Netherlands.
- Jacobs, Carrie Minetta (American composer)
Carrie Jacobs Bond was a composer-author of sentimental art songs that attained great popularity. Bond as a child learned to play the piano. During her second marriage she began to write songs, and in December 1894 two of them, “Is My Dolly Dead?” and “Mother’s Cradle Song,” were published in
- Jacobs, Dolly (circus performer)
circus: Acts of skill: …the trapeze in 1937; and Dolly Jacobs, who began her career in 1976, performing on the Roman rings for the Ringling brothers and Big Apple circuses, and who was the daughter of famous Auguste clown Lou Jacobs.
- Jacobs, Dorothy (American activist)
Dorothy Jacobs Bellanca was a Latvian-born American labour leader, remembered for her zealous union activism in the garment industry. Dorothy Jacobs immigrated with her family to the United States from Latvia in 1900. They settled in Baltimore, Maryland. At age 13 Jacobs left school and went to
- Jacobs, Harriet (American abolitionist and author)
Harriet Jacobs was an American abolitionist and autobiographer who crafted her own experiences into Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl, Written by Herself (1861), an eloquent and uncompromising slave narrative. Jacobs, who was born into enslavement, was taught to read at an early age. She was
- Jacobs, Harriet A. (American abolitionist and author)
Harriet Jacobs was an American abolitionist and autobiographer who crafted her own experiences into Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl, Written by Herself (1861), an eloquent and uncompromising slave narrative. Jacobs, who was born into enslavement, was taught to read at an early age. She was
- Jacobs, Harriet Ann (American abolitionist and author)
Harriet Jacobs was an American abolitionist and autobiographer who crafted her own experiences into Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl, Written by Herself (1861), an eloquent and uncompromising slave narrative. Jacobs, who was born into enslavement, was taught to read at an early age. She was
- Jacobs, Helen Hull (American athlete)
Helen Hull Jacobs was an American tennis player and writer who, in the 1920s and ’30s, became known for her persistence and her on-court rivalry with Helen Wills (Moody). Jacobs was the national junior tennis champion in 1924–25 and attended the University of California, Berkeley, from 1926 to
- Jacobs, Hirsch (American racehorse trainer)
Hirsch Jacobs was a U.S. trainer and breeder of Thoroughbred racehorses, the foremost trainer in the United States from 1933 until 1944. In 43 years as a trainer, Jacobs established a world record of winning horses in 3,569 races. In 1965 he won more money than any other U.S. breeder, and, in all,
- Jacobs, Jane (Canadian writer)
Jane Jacobs was an American-born Canadian urbanologist noted for her clear and original observations on urban life and its problems. After graduating from high school, Butzner worked at the Scranton Tribune. She moved to New York City in 1934, where she held several different jobs while writing
- Jacobs, Jill Tracy (American first lady)
Jill Biden is an American first lady (2021– ), wife of Joe Biden, the 46th president of the United States. Jill Jacobs was born in New Jersey but mostly grew up in Willow Grove, Pennsylvania, a suburb of Philadelphia, where her father was vice president of a savings and loan institution. She began
- Jacobs, Joseph (English scholar)
Joseph Jacobs was an Australian-born English folklore scholar, one of the most popular 19th-century adapters of children’s fairy tales. He was also a historian of pre-expulsion English Jewry (The Jews of Angevin England, 1893), a historian of Jewish culture (Studies in Jewish Statistics, 1891), and
- Jacobs, Lawrence R. (scholar)
public opinion: Public opinion and government: …however, by public opinion scholars Lawrence R. Jacobs and Robert Y. Shapiro, who argued in Politicians Don’t Pander: Political Manipulation and the Loss of Democratic Responsiveness (2000) that politicians do not actually do this. They found instead that by the early 1970s the accusation of pandering was being used deliberately…
- Jacobs, Marc (American fashion designer)
Marc Jacobs is an American fashion designer renowned for his sartorial interpretations of trends in popular culture, perhaps most notably his “grunge” collection, which was credited with launching the grunge look of the 1990s. Jacobs was raised with his brother and sister in New York City, where
- Jacobs, Marion Walter (American musician)
Little Walter was an American blues singer and harmonica virtuoso who was one of the most influential harmonica improvisers of the late 20th century. Raised on a Louisiana farm, Little Walter began playing harmonica in childhood, and by the time he was 12 he was playing for a living on New Orleans
- Jacobs, Patricia A. (Scottish geneticist)
Klinefelter syndrome: …in 1959 by British researcher Patricia A. Jacobs and her colleagues.
- Jacobs, W.W. (English writer)
W.W. Jacobs was an English short-story writer best known for his classic horror story “The Monkey’s Paw.” Jacobs’s early home was a house on a River Thames wharf, where his father was manager. His first volume, Many Cargoes (1896), had an immediate success and was followed by two others, The
- Jacobs, William Wymark (English writer)
W.W. Jacobs was an English short-story writer best known for his classic horror story “The Monkey’s Paw.” Jacobs’s early home was a house on a River Thames wharf, where his father was manager. His first volume, Many Cargoes (1896), had an immediate success and was followed by two others, The
- Jacobsen, Arne (Danish architect)
Arne Jacobsen was a Danish architect and designer of many important buildings in an austere modern style. He is known internationally for his industrial design, particularly for his three-legged stacking chair (1952) and his “egg” chair (1959), the back and seat of which were formed of
- Jacobsen, Erik (Danish pharmacologist)
alcoholism: Physiological therapies: …alcoholism, initiated in 1948 by Erik Jacobsen of Denmark, uses disulfiram (tetraethylthiuram disulfide, known by the trade name Antabuse). Normally, as alcohol is converted to acetaldehyde, the latter is rapidly converted, in turn, to harmless metabolites. However, in the presence of disulfiram—itself harmless—the metabolism of acetaldehyde is blocked. The resulting…
- Jacobsen, Hans Jakob (Faroese writer)
Hedin Brú was a Faroese writer who helped to establish Faroese as a literary language. At the age of 14 Brú worked as a fisherman. He spent much of the 1920s studying agriculture in Denmark, and from 1928 he was an agricultural adviser to the Faroese government. His first two novels, Longbrá (1930;
- Jacobsen, Jens Peter (Danish author)
Jens Peter Jacobsen was a Danish novelist and poet who inaugurated the Naturalist mode of fiction in Denmark and was himself its most famous representative. The son of a Jutland merchant, Jacobsen was a student of the natural sciences. He became a follower of Charles Darwin and translated into
- Jacobsen, Jørgen-Frantz (Scandinavian author)
Faroese literature: Development during the 20th century: Of these authors, two novelists, Jørgen-Frantz Jacobsen and William Heinesen, wrote in Danish and made important contributions to modern Danish prose fiction, Jacobsen with his novel Barbara (1939), a portrait of a capricious woman, and Heinesen with his masterpiece De fortabte spillemænd (1950; The Lost Musicians). Here, as in the…
- Jacobsen, Josephine (American poet)
Josephine Jacobsen was a Canadian-born American poet and short-story writer. Soon after her birth, Jacobsen moved with her family from Canada to the United States. She began writing poetry as a child, and her first poem was published when she was 11 years old. Jacobsen was educated by tutors and at
- Jacobsen, Josephine Winder (American poet)
Josephine Jacobsen was a Canadian-born American poet and short-story writer. Soon after her birth, Jacobsen moved with her family from Canada to the United States. She began writing poetry as a child, and her first poem was published when she was 11 years old. Jacobsen was educated by tutors and at
- jacobsite (mineral)
jacobsite, manganese iron oxide mineral, a member of the magnetite (q.v.) series of
- Jacobson’s organ (anatomy)
Jacobson’s organ, an organ of chemoreception that is part of the olfactory system of amphibians, reptiles, and mammals, although it does not occur in all tetrapod groups. It is a patch of sensory cells within the main nasal chamber that detects heavy moisture-borne odour particles. Airborne odours,
- Jacobson, Dan (South African-born novelist and short-story writer)
Dan Jacobson was a South African-born novelist and short-story writer who wrote with both humour and pathos of the troubled land of his birth and of his eastern European Jewish heritage, though in his later work he explored more-historical and biblical subjects. After graduating from the University
- Jacobson, Israel (German religious reformer)
Judaism: Religious reform movements: …by the pioneer German reformer Israel Jacobson (1768–1828) introduced organ and choir music, allowed men and women to sit together during worship, delivered the sermon in German instead of Hebrew, and omitted liturgical references to a personal messiah and the restoration of Israel. A more radical temple established in Hamburg…