- Klemperer, Otto (German conductor)
Otto Klemperer was one of the outstanding German conductors of his time. Klemperer studied in Frankfurt and Berlin and on the recommendation of Gustav Mahler was made conductor of the German National Theatre at Prague in 1907. Between 1910 and 1927 he conducted opera at Hamburg, Barmen, Strassburg,
- Klenovsky, Paul (British musician)
Sir Henry J. Wood was a conductor, the principal figure in the popularization of orchestral music in England in his time. Originally an organist, Wood studied composition at the Royal Academy of Music, London, from 1886. In 1889 he toured as a conductor with the Arthur Rousbey Opera Company and
- Klenze, Franz Leopold Karl von (German architect)
Leo von Klenze was a German architect who was one of the most important figures associated with Neoclassicism in Germany. After having studied public building finance in Berlin with David Gilly, Klenze moved to Munich in 1813; he went to Paris in 1814, where he met Ludwig, then crown prince of
- Klenze, Leo von (German architect)
Leo von Klenze was a German architect who was one of the most important figures associated with Neoclassicism in Germany. After having studied public building finance in Berlin with David Gilly, Klenze moved to Munich in 1813; he went to Paris in 1814, where he met Ludwig, then crown prince of
- Kleophrades Painter (Greek artist)
Kleophrades Painter was an Attic vase painter, among the finest of the late Archaic period. He was the son of the Amasis Potter and probably a student of the vase painter Euthymides. The Kleophrades Painter was the decorator of vessels made by the Kleophrades Potter. About 150 vessels and fragments
- klepht (Greek militia)
armatole: …armatoles and were known as klephts (from the Greek kleptes, “brigand”). These klephts might sometimes be recognized by the Turkish authorities as armatoles, while the armatoles who were out of favour continued as klephts. The two terms came to be used indiscriminately. Both armatoles and klephts played important roles in…
- Klephtic ballad (Greek literature)
Klephtic ballad, any of the songs and poems extolling the adventures of the Klephts, Greek nationalists living as outlaws in the mountains during the period of Ottoman rule over Greece, which reached from 1453 until 1832, when Greece formally became independent. Containing some of the most
- kleptocracy
kleptocracy, in politics, a form of government by individuals who primarily seek personal gain at the expense of those they govern. Kleptocracy is a major problem both in individual countries and internationally, as kleptocratic countries tend to adopt broadly destructive policies and to subvert
- kleptocrat
kleptocracy, in politics, a form of government by individuals who primarily seek personal gain at the expense of those they govern. Kleptocracy is a major problem both in individual countries and internationally, as kleptocratic countries tend to adopt broadly destructive policies and to subvert
- kleptomania (mental disorder)
kleptomania, recurrent compulsion to steal without regard to the value or use of the objects stolen. Although widely known and sometimes used as an attempted legal defense by arrested thieves, genuine kleptomania is a fairly rare mental disorder. A kleptomaniac may hide, give away, or secretly
- kleptoparasitism (zoology)
sweat bee: Life cycle and nesting: …nests; instead, they engage in kleptoparasitism, meaning they enter the nests of other species, eat their eggs, and then lay their own eggs in that provisioned nest, effectively stealing the resources collected by the other species.
- Klerk, F. W. de (president of South Africa)
F.W. de Klerk was a politician who as president of South Africa (1989–94) brought the apartheid system of racial segregation to an end and negotiated a transition to majority rule in his country. He and Nelson Mandela jointly received the 1993 Nobel Prize for Peace for their collaboration in
- Klerk, Michel de (Dutch architect)
Michel de Klerk was an architect and leader of the school of Amsterdam, which stressed individualism, fantasy, and picturesqueness in its architectural design. De Klerk worked as a draftsman, then studied in Scandinavia, later returning to Amsterdam. His Hille Building (1911) is considered the
- Klerksdorp (South Africa)
Klerksdorp, town and principal centre of the Klerksdorp-area goldfields, North-West province, South Africa. It lies approximately 80 miles (130 km) southwest of Johannesburg. The “old town,” which was founded in 1837 on the Schoonspruit River near its confluence with the Vaal River, was the first
- kleśa (Buddhism)
āsrāva, in Buddhist philosophy, the illusion that ceaselessly flows out from internal organs (i.e., five sense organs and the mind). To the unenlightened, every existence becomes the object of illusion or is inevitably accompanied by illusion. Such an existence is called sāsrava. Even if one leads
- Klesl, Melchior (Austrian cardinal)
Melchior Klesl was an Austrian statesman, bishop of Vienna and later a cardinal, who tried to promote religious toleration during the Counter-Reformation in Austria. Converted from Protestantism by the Jesuits, he became an outstanding preacher and served as bishop of Vienna from the 1590s. Klesl
- Klesper, Ernst (German chemist)
chromatography: Subsequent developments: The German chemist Ernst Klesper and his colleagues working at Johns Hopkins University were the first to report separation of the porphyrins with dense gases in 1962. Carbon dioxide at 400 atmospheres is a typical supercritical-fluid mobile phase. (One atmosphere equals 760 millimetres, or 29.92 inches, of mercury;…
- Kletzki, Paul (Polish conductor and composer)
Orchestre de la Suisse Romande: Other music directors included Paul Kletzki (1967–70), Wolfgang Sawallisch (1970–80), Horst Stein (1980–85), Armin Jordan (1985–97), Fabio Luisi (1997–2002), Pinchas Steinberg (2002–05), Marek Janowski (2005–12), and Neeme Järvi (2012–15).
- Kleutgen, Joseph (German theologian)
Scholasticism: Enduring features: …which was a German Jesuit, Joseph Kleutgen, who published a voluminous scholarly apology of patristic and Scholastic theology and philosophy and was also responsible for the outline of the papal encyclical Aeterni Patris of Leo XIII (1879), which explicitly proclaimed the “instauration of Christian philosophy according to St. Thomas.” The…
- Kleve (Germany)
Kleve, city, North Rhine–Westphalia Land (state), western Germany. It lies northwest of Düsseldorf, less than 5 miles (8 km) south of the Dutch border. It is connected with the Rhine River by a canal. The seat of the counts of Cleves from the 11th century, it was chartered in 1242. The county
- kleyne mentshele, Dos (work by Mendele)
Yiddish literature: The classic writers: The Parasite). Abramovitsh wrote his most important works while residing in Berdychev (now Berdychiv), Zhitomir (now Zhytomyr), and Odessa (all now in Ukraine). He was influenced by the Haskala during the 1850s and began his literary career writing in Hebrew. At that time, however, the…
- klezmer music
klezmer music, genre of music derived from and built upon eastern European music in the Jewish tradition. The common usage of the term developed about 1980; historically, a klezmer (plural: klezmorim or klezmers) was a male professional instrumental musician, usually Jewish, who played in a band
- Klič, Karl (Bohemian artist and printer)
Karl Klič was a Czech graphic artist and printer who in 1878 invented the most precise and (despite its slowness) commercially successful method of photogravure printing. Later he was associated with the English printer Samuel Fawcett, and in 1895 he established the first rotogravure firm, the
- Klick, Frankie (American boxer)
Kid Chocolate: …the seventh round by American Frankie Klick. Meanwhile, Chocolate lost a title shot against the world lightweight (135 pounds) champion, American Tony Canzoneri, on Nov. 24, 1933, when he was knocked out in the second round. Although Chocolate was recognized in New York as the “world” featherweight champion following his…
- Klieg light
motion-picture technology: Light sources: …arc instruments, such as the Klieg light (made by Kliegl Brothers and used for stage shows) were adapted for motion pictures. After the industry converted to sound in 1927, however, the sputtering created by carbon arcs caused them to be replaced by incandescent lighting. Fresnel-lens spotlights then became the standard.…
- Klietsch, Karl (Bohemian artist and printer)
Karl Klič was a Czech graphic artist and printer who in 1878 invented the most precise and (despite its slowness) commercially successful method of photogravure printing. Later he was associated with the English printer Samuel Fawcett, and in 1895 he established the first rotogravure firm, the
- KLIF (American radio station)
Gordon McLendon and KLIF: Gordon McLendon, the Texas broadcaster who is credited (along with Todd Storz and Bill Stewart) with the creation of Top 40 radio, owned KLIF in Dallas, Texas. In 1953 he switched from live music and magazine-style programming to records and disc jockeys. By then an…
- Klima der bodennahen Luftschicht, Das (work by Geiger)
Rudolf Oskar Robert Williams Geiger: …Klima der bodennahen Luftschicht (1927; The Climate near the Ground), a comprehensive survey of microclimatological observations and of the effects of microclimate on plants, animals, and humans. This book remains a valuable basic reference source in the study of climate.
- Klíma, Ivan (Czech author)
Ivan Klíma is a Czech author whose fiction and plays were long banned by his country’s communist rulers. Klíma spent three boyhood years in a Nazi concentration camp during World War II, an experience he recorded in his first published writing in 1945. His first book, Mezi třemi hranicemi (1960;
- Kliment Ohridski (university, Sofia, Bulgaria)
Sofia: …of Agricultural Sciences, and the University of Sofia (1888), the oldest establishment of higher learning in Bulgaria. The city also contains the Cyril and Methodius National Library, the Ivan Vazov National Theatre and Opera House, an astronomical observatory, and a number of museums. In addition to the restored St. George,…
- Kliment Ohridsky University of Sofia (university, Sofia, Bulgaria)
Sofia: …of Agricultural Sciences, and the University of Sofia (1888), the oldest establishment of higher learning in Bulgaria. The city also contains the Cyril and Methodius National Library, the Ivan Vazov National Theatre and Opera House, an astronomical observatory, and a number of museums. In addition to the restored St. George,…
- Klimm, William Joseph (American baseball umpire)
Bill Klem was an American professional baseball umpire of the National League who is considered by many the greatest umpire of all time. Klem is credited with the introduction of hand and arm signals to indicate calls of pitched balls and strikes and foul and fair batted balls. He was also famous
- Klimowski, Andrzej (Polish artist)
graphic novel: The graphic novel grows up: Andrzej Klimowski’s The Depository (1994) and The Secret (2002), for example, seem close to 21st-century versions of the woodcut novels of Masereel and Ward, and his Horace Dorlan (2007) sits somewhere between those woodcut novels, Franz Kafka’s novels and stories, and Paul Auster’s New York…
- Klimt, Gustav (Austrian painter)
Gustav Klimt was an Austrian painter, founder of the school of painting known as the Vienna Sezession. After studying at the Vienna School of Decorative Arts, Klimt in 1883 opened an independent studio specializing in the execution of mural paintings. His early work had a classical style that was
- Klimt, Gustav (Austrian director)
Gustav Ucicky was an Austrian film director known for historical and nationalistic German films done during Adolf Hitler’s rise to power. Ucicky began his career as a cameraman with director Michael Curtiz. He moved to Germany in 1928 and became involved in the state-subsidized studio UFA. His
- Klimuk, Pyotr (Soviet cosmonaut)
Pyotr Klimuk is a Soviet cosmonaut who flew three times in space and was head of the Yury Gagarin Cosmonaut Training Centre near Moscow. Klimuk became a cosmonaut trainee in 1965, at age 23. Between 1967 and 1969 he trained for a flight around the Moon that was eventually canceled. He flew his
- Klin (Russia)
Klin, city, Moscow oblast (region), western Russia. First documented in 1234, it was for long a fort between the principalities of Moscow and Tver. In the 18th century, after a period of unimportance, Klin became a transport centre on the Moscow–St. Petersburg road. In Soviet times the city became
- Klin-Dmitrov Ridge (ridge, Russia)
Moscow: …of its relief is the Klin-Dmitrov Ridge, which stretches roughly east-west across the oblast, north of Moscow city. The ridge, a line of terminal moraines, reaches a height of 1,000 feet (300 metres) with a steep northern slope to the boulder clay plain of the upper Volga River. South of…
- Kline, Franz (American artist)
Franz Kline was an American artist who was one of the leading painters of the post-World War II Abstract Expressionist movement. Kline studied at Boston University (1931–35) and at the Heatherley School of Art, London (1937–38), settling in New York City in the latter year. He was originally a
- Kline, Kevin (American actor)
Kevin Kline is an American actor who was a well-rounded and respected stage actor before beginning a film career. He is known both for his low-key intensity in dramatic roles and as a master of physical comedy. Kline studied piano as a child and began acting while he was in high school. He attended
- Kline, Kevin Delaney (American actor)
Kevin Kline is an American actor who was a well-rounded and respected stage actor before beginning a film career. He is known both for his low-key intensity in dramatic roles and as a master of physical comedy. Kline studied piano as a child and began acting while he was in high school. He attended
- Klineberg, Otto (psychologist)
race: Race and intelligence: …was the revelation by psychologist Otto Klineberg in the 1930s that Blacks in four northern states did better on average than whites in the four southern states where expenditures on education were lowest. Klineberg’s analysis pointed to a direct correlation between income and social class and performance on IQ tests.…
- Klinefelter syndrome (chromosomal disorder)
Klinefelter syndrome, disorder of the human sex chromosomes that occurs in males. Klinefelter syndrome is one of the most frequent chromosomal disorders in males, occurring in approximately 1 in every 500 to 1,000 males. It results from an unequal sharing of sex chromosomes very soon after
- Klinefelter’s syndrome (chromosomal disorder)
Klinefelter syndrome, disorder of the human sex chromosomes that occurs in males. Klinefelter syndrome is one of the most frequent chromosomal disorders in males, occurring in approximately 1 in every 500 to 1,000 males. It results from an unequal sharing of sex chromosomes very soon after
- Klinefelter, Harry (American physician)
Klinefelter syndrome: Klinefelter syndrome is named for Harry Klinefelter, an American physician who in 1942 described a set of symptoms that characterized the condition. The syndrome was first identified with a specific chromosomal abnormality in 1959 by British researcher Patricia A. Jacobs and her colleagues.
- Kling, Florence Mabel (American first lady)
Florence Harding was an American first lady (1921–23), the wife of Warren G. Harding, 29th president of the United States. Energetic, strong-willed, and popular, she was an important influence on her husband’s business and political careers. Daughter of Amos and Louisa Bouton Kling, Florence Kling
- Klingberg, Göte (Swedish historian)
children’s literature: Sweden: The historian Göte Klingberg traced some kind of religious-instructive reading for children back to 1600. There is a record, though the manuscripts have vanished, of children’s plays produced at the country manors during the 1700s and into the following century. The tradition of children’s theatre has always…
- Klinger, Friedrich Maximilian von (German writer)
Friedrich Maximilian von Klinger was a dramatist and novelist, a representative of the German literary revolt against rationalism in favour of emotionalism known as the Sturm und Drang movement. Indeed, it took its name from his play Der Wirrwarr, oder Sturm und Drang (1776; “Confusion, or Storm
- Klinger, Max (German artist)
Max Klinger was a German painter, sculptor, and engraver, whose art of symbol, fantasy, and dreamlike situations belonged to the growing late 19th-century awareness of the subtleties of the mind. Klinger’s visionary art has been linked with that of Arnold Böcklin; the expression of his vivid,
- Klinghoffer, Josh (American musician)
- klinokinesis (zoology)
stereotyped response: Reflex-like activities: …of the whole animal (klinokinesis), the speed of frequency depending on the intensity of stimulation. Examples of orthokinesis are seen in lampreys, which are more active in high intensities of light, and in cockroaches, which are more active in low intensities; flatworms and many kinds of fly larvae, among…
- klinotaxis (zoology)
stereotyped response: Taxes: Klinotaxis is the achievement of orientation by alternate lateral movements of part or all of a body; there appears to occur a comparison of intensities of stimulation between one position and another and a “choice” between them. Klinotaxis is shown by animals with a single…
- Klínovec, Mount (mountain, Czech Republic)
Ore Mountains: The highest summits, Klínovec (4,081 feet [1,244 metres]) on the Czech side and Fichtel Mountain (3,983 feet [1,214 metres]) on the German side, are in the centre of the range. Loučná (3,136 feet [956 metres]) is at the northeastern end and Špičák (3,658 feet [1,115 metres]) at the…
- Klinsmann, Jürgen (German football player and coach)
Jürgen Klinsmann is a German football (soccer) player and coach who helped West Germany win the 1990 World Cup and was twice named his country’s Footballer of the Year. A prolific goal scorer as a young boy, Klinsmann joined the youth side of the lower-division Stuttgarter Kickers club at age 14
- Klint, Kaare (Danish architect)
Kaare Klint was a Danish architect and celebrated furniture designer who originated the highly influential modern Scandinavian style, which notably enlarged the vocabulary of progressive design. He was also a leading exponent of ergonomics, an aspect of technology that applies biological and
- Klint, P. V. Jensen (Danish architect)
Kaare Klint: Jensen Klint, considered Denmark’s leading early 20th-century architect, Kaare worked first as an architect but later as a furniture designer. He founded (1924) the Danish Academy of Art, in which he became the first professor of the furniture department. Unlike his French and German contemporaries, his…
- klip dagga (plant)
Lamiaceae: Major genera and species: …of the African genus Leonotis, klip dagga, or lion’s ear (L. nepetifolia), is naturalized throughout the tropics; it has red-orange globe clusters of profuse flowers at the top of the 1- to 2-metre plants. See also Coleus; Mentha; Monarda.
- klippe (geology)
nappe: …this is known as a klippe, or thrust outlier. Mythen Peak in the Alps in a typical example of a klippe.
- klippen (geology)
nappe: …this is known as a klippe, or thrust outlier. Mythen Peak in the Alps in a typical example of a klippe.
- Klipschorn (electroacoustic device)
electromechanical transducer: Electromagnetic speakers: The Klipschorn, named for its inventor, the American engineer Paul W. Klipsch, uses the walls in the corner of a room as part of the flared horn.
- klipspringer (mammal)
klipspringer, (Oreotragus oreotragus), rock-climbing antelope, resident in mountains of eastern and southern Africa. Its Kiswahili name “goat of the rocks” is apt, although it more closely resembles Eurasian goat antelopes such as the chamois and is radically different from other dwarf antelopes of
- Klipspruit (township, South Africa)
Johannesburg: Racist enactments: …centre were forcibly relocated to Klipspruit, 10 miles southwest of town. As had happened in earlier removals in Cape Town and Port Elizabeth, the move was preceded by a plague scare and accomplished in the name of “sanitation,” though it is difficult to see how the interests of sanitation were…
- klismos (Greek chair)
klismos, light, elegant chair developed by the ancient Greeks. Perfected by the 5th century bc and popular throughout the 4th century bc, the klismos had four curving, splayed legs and curved back rails with a narrow concave backrest between them. Often illustrated on Greek pottery, the design was
- Klitschko, Vitali (Ukrainian boxer and politician)
Vitali Klitschko is a Ukrainian boxer and politician whose colossal size—6 feet 7 inches (2 metres) tall and over 240 pounds (109 kg)—helped propel him to great boxing success, including the World Boxing Council (WBC) world heavyweight title. He later served as mayor of Kyiv. (Read Gene Tunney’s
- Klitschko, Wladimir (Ukrainian boxer)
Wladimir Klitschko is a Ukrainian boxer whose success in the heavyweight division—in part because of his prodigious size (6 feet 6 inches [1.98 metres] tall and over 240 pounds [109 kg])—included International Boxing Federation (IBF), International Boxing Organization (IBO), World Boxing
- Klitzing, Klaus von (German physicist)
Klaus von Klitzing is a German physicist who was awarded the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1985 for his discovery that under appropriate conditions the resistance offered by an electrical conductor is quantized; that is, it varies by discrete steps rather than smoothly and continuously. At the end of
- Kliuchevskaya Sopka (volcano, Russia)
Klyuchevskaya Volcano, active volcano on the Kamchatka Peninsula, far eastern Russia. It is one of the highest active volcanoes in the world, rising to a height of 15,584 feet (4,750 meters), the highest point on the peninsula. The volcano consists of a truncated cone with a central crater, with
- Kliuchevsky, Vasily Osipovich (Russian historian)
Vasily Osipovich Klyuchevsky was a Russian historian whose sociological approach to the study of Russia’s past and lively writing and lecturing style made him one of the foremost scholars of his time. The son of a poor village priest, Klyuchevsky attended a seminary school before transferring to
- KLM (Dutch airline)
KLM, Dutch airline founded on Oct. 7, 1919, and flying its first scheduled service, between Amsterdam and London, on May 17, 1920. Until its merger with Air France in 2004, it was the world’s oldest continuously operating airline. Headquarters are at Amstelveen, Neth. KLM was founded by a group of
- klob (card game)
klaberjass, two-player trick-taking card game, of Dutch origin but especially popular in Hungary (as klob) and in Jewish communities throughout the world. From it derives belote, the French national card game. Klaberjass is played with a 32-card pack. In nontrump suits the trick-taking power of
- Klobuchar, Amy (United States senator)
Amy Klobuchar is an American politician who was elected as a Democrat to the U.S. Senate in 2006 and began representing Minnesota the following year. She was the first woman to be elected to serve the state in that body. Klobuchar grew up in a suburb of Minneapolis–St. Paul, Minnesota. Her father
- Klobuchar, Amy Jean (United States senator)
Amy Klobuchar is an American politician who was elected as a Democrat to the U.S. Senate in 2006 and began representing Minnesota the following year. She was the first woman to be elected to serve the state in that body. Klobuchar grew up in a suburb of Minneapolis–St. Paul, Minnesota. Her father
- Klochkova, Yana (Ukrainian athlete)
Yana Klochkova is a Ukrainian swimmer who in 2004 became the first woman to win consecutive pairs of Olympic gold medals in the same events—the 200-metre and 400-metre individual medleys. Known as the “Medley Queen,” she lost only one medley race in international competition between 2000 and 2004.
- Kłodzko (Poland)
Kłodzko, city, Dolnośląskie województwo (province), southwestern Poland, in the Sudety (Sudeten) mountains on both sides of the Nysa Kłodzka River. A Polish frontier settlement existed there from the 6th to the 10th century; a fortress was then built to protect the town from Bohemian forces.
- kloketen (initiation rite)
Ona: …Ona celebrated male initiation rites, klóketen; secrets were revealed by the older men to the younger, and women were excluded from them. The rites were based on a myth that told how the men had overturned a previous regime dominated by women. They believed in a supreme being, who sent…
- Klokotnitsa, Battle of (Byzantine history)
despotate of Epirus: …Theodore in 1230 at the Battle of Klokotnitsa (now in Bulgaria).
- Klokotrizam (literary group)
Serbian literature: The Klokotrizam group experimented with literary form in an apparent attempt to defy the canons and aesthetic norms of art. The 1970s and ’80s were also marked by the appearance of prominent women writers Milica Mičić-Dimovska, Hana Dalipi, and Biljana Jovanović, as well as by the…
- klompen (Dutch footwear)
sabot: …single piece of wood (called klompen by the Dutch), and the other is a heavy leather shoe with a wooden sole.
- klondike (card game)
solitaire: …software package, is known as klondike in the United States and (mistakenly) canfield in Britain. Canfield was the name of a Saratoga saloon owner who in the 1890s would sell players a deck of cards for $50 and pay them $5 for each card they managed to play off in…
- Klondike Annie (film by Walsh [1936])
Raoul Walsh: Films of the 1930s: ” Klondike Annie (1936) was much more of a typical Walsh film; a kept woman (Mae West) kills her keeper and escapes on a tramp steamer bound for gold-rush Alaska, and she then employs her wiles on the ship’s captain (McLaglen). The mystery-comedy Big Brown Eyes…
- Klondike Beach (Florida, United States)
Cape Canaveral: Klondike Beach, in the middle, is accessible only by foot, horseback, or bicycle. Playalinda Beach and other southern areas can be reached by road from Titusville but are occasionally closed for space launch activity. The park has many shell middens and mounds left by the…
- Klondike gold rush (Canadian history)
Klondike gold rush, Canadian gold rush of the late 1890s. Gold was discovered on Aug. 17, 1896, near the confluence of the Klondike and Yukon rivers in western Yukon territory. By 1897 up to 30,000 prospectors had arrived in the newly created towns of Skagway and Dyea, jumping-off points to the
- Klondike River (river, Yukon, Canada)
Klondike River, tributary of the Yukon River, in western Yukon, Canada. With its major tributary, the North Klondike, it rises in the Ogilvie Mountains and flows westward for 100 miles (160 km) to join the Yukon at Dawson, the river’s historic settlement. The Klondike became famous in 1896 with the
- Klong River (river, Thailand)
Khwae Noi River: …Noi River, tributary of the Mae Klong River, flowing wholly in western Thailand. It rises near Three Pagodas Pass (Phra Chedi Sam Ong) on the mountainous Myanmar-Thailand border and runs southeast, parallel to the border, to its confluence near Kanchanaburi town with the Mae Klong, which itself empties into the…
- Klong-chen rab-’byams-pa (Tibetan Buddhist)
Buddhism: Rnying-ma-pa: …thinkers of the Rnying-ma-pa tradition, Klong-chen rab-’byams-pa (1308–64), is the author of the Klong-chen-mdzod-bdun (Tibetan: “Seven Treasures of Klong-chen”). In modern times Mi-’pham of Khams (1846–1914) wrote important Vajrayana commentaries on the canonical texts.
- Klonk (Czech Republic)
Silurian Period: Silurian-Devonian boundary: …in a cliff section near Klonk in the Czech Republic. Thus, the Silurian-Devonian boundary is anchored to the first occurrence of specific index fossils. The Klonk section acts as a kind of standard reference section with which other stratigraphic sections, potentially involving the Silurian-Devonian boundary beds, may be compared. This…
- Klonopin (drug)
clonazepam, drug used to treat panic disorder and certain seizure disorders. Clonazepam is classified as a benzodiazepine, a group of therapeutic agents characterized by their ability to depress activity in the central nervous system (CNS), resulting in calming, sedative effects. Common trade names
- Klonowic, Sebastian (Polish poet)
Sebastian Klonowic was a Polish poet whose work in Latin and Polish is valuable chiefly as cultural history. A burgher, Klonowic settled first in Lwów (now Lviv, Ukraine) and later in Lublin, where he became mayor and a municipal juror. In the Latin poem “Roxolania” (written 1584) he gave the first
- Klonowic, Sebastian Fabian (Polish poet)
Sebastian Klonowic was a Polish poet whose work in Latin and Polish is valuable chiefly as cultural history. A burgher, Klonowic settled first in Lwów (now Lviv, Ukraine) and later in Lublin, where he became mayor and a municipal juror. In the Latin poem “Roxolania” (written 1584) he gave the first
- Klook (American musician)
Kenny Clarke was an American drummer who was a major exponent of the modern jazz movement of the 1940s. Clarke’s music studies in high school embraced vibraphone, piano, trombone, and theory, but it was as a drummer that he began his professional career in 1930. His experience included engagements
- Kloos, Willem (Dutch author)
Willem Kloos was a Dutch poet and critic who was the driving intellectual force of the 1880 Dutch literary revival and cofounder and mainstay of its periodical, De nieuwe gids (“The New Guide”). A ruthless critic of the rhetorical, passionless nature of traditional Dutch writing, Kloos continually
- Kloos, Willem Johan Theodoor (Dutch author)
Willem Kloos was a Dutch poet and critic who was the driving intellectual force of the 1880 Dutch literary revival and cofounder and mainstay of its periodical, De nieuwe gids (“The New Guide”). A ruthless critic of the rhetorical, passionless nature of traditional Dutch writing, Kloos continually
- Klop (work by Mayakovsky)
Vladimir Mayakovsky: …satirical plays: Klop (performed 1929; The Bedbug), lampooning the type of philistine that emerged with the New Economic Policy in the Soviet Union, and Banya (performed in Leningrad on Jan. 30, 1930; The Bathhouse), a satire of bureaucratic stupidity and opportunism under Joseph Stalin.
- Klopstock, Friedrich Gottlieb (German poet)
Friedrich Gottlieb Klopstock was a German epic and lyric poet whose subjective vision marked a break with the rationalism that had dominated German literature in the early 18th century. Klopstock was educated at Schulpforta, a prestigious Protestant boarding school, where he read John Milton’s
- Klose, Miroslav (German football player)
Bayern Munich: goalkeeper Oliver Kahn, and striker Miroslav Klose.
- Kloss’s gibbon (primate)
gibbon: Kloss’s gibbon (H. klossii), from the Mentawai Islands west of Sumatra, is completely black throughout its life. The sexes look alike in the silvery gibbon (H. moloch) of Java and in the white-bearded (H. albibarbis) and Müller’s (H. muelleri) gibbons, both from different parts of…
- Klossowski, Balthazar (French painter)
Balthus was a reclusive French painter who, in the midst of 20th-century avant-gardism, explored the traditional categories of European painting: the landscape, the still life, the subject painting, and the portrait. He is best known for his controversial depictions of adolescent girls. Balthus was
- Klossowsky, Balthasar (French painter)
Balthus was a reclusive French painter who, in the midst of 20th-century avant-gardism, explored the traditional categories of European painting: the landscape, the still life, the subject painting, and the portrait. He is best known for his controversial depictions of adolescent girls. Balthus was
- Klosterman, John (German artist)
John Closterman was a portrait painter who painted in Paris, England, and at the Spanish court. Closterman was the son of an artist, who taught him the elements of painting. In 1679 he went to Paris, where he studied under the Rococo painter Jean-Francois de Troy. In 1681 he moved to England, where
- Klosterneuburg (Austria)
Klosterneuburg, town, northeastern Austria. It lies on the west bank of the Danube River at the foot of the Leopoldsberg (1,394 feet [425 metres]) and at the north edge of the Vienna Woods (Wienerwald), just northwest of Vienna. It was originally the site of a Roman fortress (Asturis). Later, a