- Kraken, The (work by Tennyson)
kraken: …Alfred, Lord Tennyson’s poem “The Kraken” (1871):
- Kraków (Poland)
Kraków, city and capital of Małopolskie województwo (province), southern Poland, lying on both sides of the upper Vistula River. One of the largest cities in Poland, it is known primarily for its grand historic architecture and cultural leadership; UNESCO designated its old town area a World
- Kraków, Academy of (university, Kraków, Poland)
Casimir III: Domestic achievements: …the Academy of Kraków (now Jagiellonian University) in 1364.
- Kraków, Republic of (historical state, Poland)
Republic of Cracow, tiny state that for the 31 years of its existence (1815–46) was the only remaining independent portion of Poland. Established by the Congress of Vienna at the conclusion of the Napoleonic Wars (1815), the free Republic of Cracow consisted of the ancient city of Cracow (Kraków)
- Krakowska, Rzeczpospolita (historical state, Poland)
Republic of Cracow, tiny state that for the 31 years of its existence (1815–46) was the only remaining independent portion of Poland. Established by the Congress of Vienna at the conclusion of the Napoleonic Wars (1815), the free Republic of Cracow consisted of the ancient city of Cracow (Kraków)
- Krákumál (poem)
Ragnar Lothbrok: The 12th-century Icelandic poem Krákumál provides a romanticized description of Ragnar’s death and links him in marriage with a daughter of Sigurd (Siegfried) and Brynhild (Brunhild), figures from the heroic literature of the ancient Teutons. The actions of Ragnar and his sons are also recounted in the Orkney Islands…
- Král’, Janko (Slovak author and revolutionary)
Janko Král’ was a Slovak poet, jurist, and revolutionary whose ballads, epics, and lyrics are among the most original products of Slavic Romanticism. His work also contributed to the popularization of the new Slovak literary language. Král’s participation in a Slovak uprising during the 1848
- Kralice Bible
biblical literature: Slavic versions: The Kralice Bible, regarded as the finest extant specimen of classical Czech, became the standard Protestant version.
- Kralitz Bible
biblical literature: Slavic versions: The Kralice Bible, regarded as the finest extant specimen of classical Czech, became the standard Protestant version.
- Kraljević, Marko (Serbian king)
Marko Kraljević was a Serbian king (1371–95) of a realm centred in what is now Macedonia and a hero in the literature and traditions of the South Slavic peoples. Marko Kraljević (“Mark, the King’s Son”) was a member of the Mrnjavčević family, which some sources suggest had Herzegovinian origins.
- Kraljevo (Serbia)
Kraljevo, city in south-central Serbia. It lies along the north bank of the Ibar River in a fertile agricultural region. The city’s heavy industry includes the manufacture of railway rolling stock, metal equipment, springs, wagons, ceramics, and firebrick. Cultural institutions include the National
- Kraljevstvo Slovena (work by Dukljanin)
Montenegro: The arts: …written work of Montenegrin literature, Kraljevstvo Slovena (1177–89; “The Kingdom of the Slavs”), by Pop (Father) Dukljanin of Bar. Thirty-eight years after Johannes Gutenberg’s invention (in 1494), the first state-owned printing press was established in Cetinje. In that year the Ostoih (“Book of Psalms”) was printed; it is believed to…
- Krall, Diana (Canadian musician and singer)
Diana Krall is a Canadian jazz musician who achieved crossover success with her sultry, unforced contralto voice and her elegant piano playing. As a child, Krall played classical piano, sang in a church choir, and learned to play and sing the Fats Waller songs in her father’s record collection. She
- Kramář, Karel (Czech statesman)
Austria: World War I: Karel Kramář, who had supported the Pan-Slav idea, was tried for high treason and found guilty on the basis of shaky evidence. German nationalism was riding high, but in fact the German Austrians had little influence left. In military matters they were practically reduced to…
- Kramarenko, Alec (American inventor)
spearfishing: In the mid-1930s, Alec Kramarenko patented an underwater gun in which the spear was propelled by a compressed spring. Shortly after, there appeared a spring-propulsion gun invented by a Frenchman, Maxime Forlot, and a popular spear gun designed by his compatriot Georges Beuchat that was propelled by a…
- Kramatorsk (Ukraine)
Kramatorsk, city, eastern Ukraine. It lies on the bank of the Kazenny Torets, which is a tributary of the north Donets River. The city developed from the end of the 19th century with the growth of its metallurgical industry, particularly the production of iron and steel. Kramatorsk eventually
- Kramden, Ralph (fictional character)
Jackie Gleason: …popular, the Brooklyn bus driver Ralph Kramden.
- Kramer (fictional character)
Michael Richards: …known for his portrayal of Cosmo Kramer on the critically acclaimed situation comedy Seinfeld (1989–98). In addition to Seinfeld, Richards has appeared in numerous television shows and films, including the late-night sketch comedy show Fridays (1980–82), the cult-classic comedy film UHF (1989), and the courtroom comedy Trial
- Kramer vs. Kramer (film by Benton [1979])
Kramer vs. Kramer, American dramatic film, released in 1979, that tells the wrenching story of a divorce and custody battle from the point of view of the adults. The movie, which starred Dustin Hoffman and Meryl Streep, won numerous awards, among them the Academy Award for best picture. Ted Kramer
- Kramer, Cosmo (fictional character)
Michael Richards: …known for his portrayal of Cosmo Kramer on the critically acclaimed situation comedy Seinfeld (1989–98). In addition to Seinfeld, Richards has appeared in numerous television shows and films, including the late-night sketch comedy show Fridays (1980–82), the cult-classic comedy film UHF (1989), and the courtroom comedy Trial
- Kramer, Dame Leonie Judith (Australian literary scholar)
Dame Leonie Judith Kramer was an Australian literary scholar and educator. Kramer studied at the University of Melbourne and at the University of Oxford and thereafter taught on Australian literature at various universities, serving as professor at the University of Sydney in 1968–89. She wrote
- Krämer, Ingrid (German diver)
Rome 1960 Olympic Games: Ingrid Krämer of Germany won both of the women’s diving events. The U.S. basketball team took its fifth consecutive gold medal; the squad, which starred Oscar Robertson, Jerry West, Jerry Lucas, and Walt Bellamy, was considered by many at the time to be the best…
- Kramer, Jack (American tennis player)
Jack Kramer was an American champion tennis player who became a successful promoter of professional tennis. Kramer was selected to represent the United States in the 1939 Davis Cup doubles against Australia. However, in spite of an excellent record in the United States, he was not considered a
- Kramer, Jane (American journalist)
The New Yorker: …West, Dorothy Parker, Alice Munro, Jane Kramer, Woody Allen, John McPhee, and Milan Kundera. Among its great cartoonists have been Charles Addams, Helen Hokinson, George Price, James Thurber (a writer as well), Roz Chast, Saul Steinberg, Gahan Wilson,
- Kramer, Joey (American musician)
Aerosmith: …Colorado Springs, Colorado), and drummer Joey Kramer (b. June 21, 1950, New York City).
- Kramer, John Albert (American tennis player)
Jack Kramer was an American champion tennis player who became a successful promoter of professional tennis. Kramer was selected to represent the United States in the 1939 Davis Cup doubles against Australia. However, in spite of an excellent record in the United States, he was not considered a
- Kramer, Josef (Nazi commander)
Josef Kramer was a German commander of the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp (1944–45), notorious for his cruelty. Joining the Nazi Party on Dec. 1, 1931, Kramer volunteered for the SS the following year. He served at various camps, including Auschwitz, Mauthausen, and Dachau, and commanded Birkenau
- Kramer, Larry (American writer)
Larry Kramer was an American playwright, screenwriter, and gay rights activist whose confrontational style of advocacy, while divisive, was credited by many with catalyzing the response to the HIV/AIDS crisis in the United States. Kramer—the second son of a lawyer and his wife, a Red Cross
- Kramer, Laurence David (American writer)
Larry Kramer was an American playwright, screenwriter, and gay rights activist whose confrontational style of advocacy, while divisive, was credited by many with catalyzing the response to the HIV/AIDS crisis in the United States. Kramer—the second son of a lawyer and his wife, a Red Cross
- Kramer, Stanley (American film producer and director)
Stanley Kramer was an American film producer and director who created unconventional, socially conscious works on a variety of issues not usually addressed in mainstream Hollywood fare. Kramer graduated from high school at age 15 and earned a bachelor’s degree in business administration from New
- Kramer, Stanley Earl (American film producer and director)
Stanley Kramer was an American film producer and director who created unconventional, socially conscious works on a variety of issues not usually addressed in mainstream Hollywood fare. Kramer graduated from high school at age 15 and earned a bachelor’s degree in business administration from New
- Kramer, Sven (Dutch skater)
Sven Kramer is a Dutch speed skater who excelled in long-distance events, most notably the 5,000 and 10,000 metres, and who won four speed-skating Olympic gold medals. Sven, the son of former Olympic speed skater Yep Kramer, was raised in the Dutch speed-skating town of Heerenveen; his younger
- Kramer, Wayne (American musician)
the MC5: …Royal Oak, Michigan), lead guitarist Wayne Kramer (original name Wayne Kambes; b. April 30, 1948, Detroit, Michigan—d. February 2, 2024, Los Angeles, California), rhythm guitarist Fred (“Sonic”) Smith (b. August 14, 1948, West Virginia—d. November 4, 1994, Detroit, Michigan), drummer Dennis Thompson (original name Dennis Tomich; b. September 7, 1948,…
- Krameriaceae (plant family)
Zygophyllales: Krameriaceae: Krameriaceae is composed of 1 genus (Krameria) and 18 species of hemiparasite annuals or small shrubs to herbs restricted to the New World from the southwestern United States to Chile. Leaves are alternate and almost always simple. Flowers are showy, irregular, and pealike. The…
- Kramers, Hendrik Anthony (Dutch physicist)
Hendrik Anthony Kramers was a Dutch physicist who, with Ralph de Laer Kronig, derived important equations relating the absorption to the dispersion of light. He also predicted (1924) the existence of the Raman effect, an inelastic scattering of light, and showed (1927) that the complex form of the
- Kramnik, Vladimir (Russian chess player)
Vladimir Kramnik is a Russian international chess grandmaster who defeated his countryman Garry Kasparov to win the Professional Chess Association world championship. The match was held in London from October 8 to November 2, 2000, with Kramnik winning 2 games, drawing 13, and losing none. (Read
- Kramp-Karrenbauer, Annegret (German politician)
Ursula von der Leyen: Road to the European Commission presidency: …eventually filled by Merkel protégé Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer. That von der Leyen, who had once been regarded as Merkel’s heir apparent, did not even present herself as a candidate was seen by some as evidence that the defense portfolio continued to be a poisoned chalice. With her domestic political career apparently…
- Krampus (legend)
Krampus, in central European popular legend, a half-goat, half-demon monster that punishes misbehaving children at Christmastime. He is the devilish companion of St. Nicholas. Krampus is believed to have originated in Germany, and his name derives from the German word Krampen, which means “claw.”
- Krampus (film by Dougherty [2015])
Toni Collette: …holidays in the horror comedy Krampus (2015). She appeared in several low-rated films throughout 2017, but her movies from 2018, which included the horror flick Hereditary and the feel-good drama Hearts Beat Loud, garnered more-favourable reviews.
- Kramskoy, Ivan Nikolayevich (Russian painter)
Russia: The 19th century: …Levitan, the expressive portraits of Ivan Kramskoy and Ilya Repin, and the socially oriented genre paintings of Vladimir Makovsky, Vasily Perov, and Repin arguably deserve an international reputation.
- Kramuon-Sa (Vietnam)
Rach Gia, port city, northern Ca Mau Peninsula, southwestern Vietnam. It lies at the head of Rach Gia Bay on the Gulf of Thailand, at the north bank of the Cai Lon estuary, 120 miles (195 km) southwest of Ho Chi Minh City (formerly Saigon). Formerly Cambodian territory, in 1715 the flat
- Krancke, Theodor (German naval officer)
Theodor Krancke was a German naval commander during World War II. Krancke joined the German navy in 1912 and served on a torpedo boat during World War I, rising to the rank of lieutenant. He remained in the navy after the war, commanding minesweepers and torpedo boats. He rose steadily through the
- Kranjska (region, Slovenia)
Carniola, western region of Slovenia, which in the 19th century was a centre of Slovenian nationalist and independence activities within the Austrian Empire and Austria-Hungary. It was part of the Roman province of Pannonia in ancient times and was occupied by the Slovenes in the 6th century ad.
- krankhaften Geschwülste, Die (work by Virchow)
Rudolf Virchow: Medical investigations: …work on that subject (Die krankhaften Geschwülste, 1863–67) was somewhat marred by his erroneous conception that malignancy results from a conversion (metaplasia) of connective tissue. His work on the role of animal parasites, especially trichina, in causing disease in humans was fundamental and led to his own public interest…
- Kranti (film by Kumar [1981])
Dilip Kumar: …comeback with Manoj Kumar’s film Kranti (1981; “Revolution”). Thereafter he played key roles in Subhash Ghai’s Vidhaata (1982), Karma (1986), and Saudagar (1991; “Merchant”). He was also noted for his performance in Ramesh Sippy’s Shakti (1982; “Strength”). Kumar’s last film was the family drama
- Krapf, Johann Ludwig (German explorer and missionary)
eastern Africa: Missionary activity: Johann Ludwig Krapf and Johannes Rebmann of the Church Missionary Society, who had worked inland from Mombasa and had, in the 1840s and ’50s, journeyed to the foothills of Mount Kenya and Kilimanjaro, were followed by a British Methodist mission. Roman Catholic missionaries reached Zanzibar…
- Krapina remains (fossil Neanderthal remains, Croatia)
Krapina remains, fossilized remains of at least 24 early Neanderthal adults and children, consisting of skulls, teeth, and other skeletal parts found in a rock shelter near the city of Krapina, northern Croatia, between 1899 and 1905. The remains date to about 130,000 years ago, and the skulls have
- Krapp’s Last Tape (play by Beckett)
Krapp’s Last Tape, one-act monodrama by Samuel Beckett, written in English, produced in 1958, and published in 1959. Krapp sits at a cluttered desk and listens to tape recordings he made decades earlier when he was in the prime of life, leaving only occasionally to imbibe liquor offstage. To Krapp,
- Krapp, Katherine (wife of Melanchthon)
Philipp Melanchthon: Luther and the Reformation: …he found time to court Katherine Krapp, whom he married in 1520 and who bore him four children—Anna, Philipp, Georg, and Magdalen.
- krar (musical instrument)
stringed instrument: Lyres: The smaller lyre, krar (the ancient Greek lyra), has a bowl-shaped resonator and is emphatically secular in its use and connotations; indeed, Ethiopian and Eritrean tradition casts it as the instrument of Satan. The construction of this six-stringed instrument illustrates the sort of change that is of wide…
- Kras (region, Europe)
Bosnia and Herzegovina: Relief: …south and southwest is the Karst, a region of arid limestone plateaus that contain caves, potholes, and underground drainage. The uplands there are often bare and denuded (the result of deforestation and thin soils), but, between the ridges, depressions known as poljes are covered with alluvial soil that is suitable…
- Kras Plateau (region, Europe)
Bosnia and Herzegovina: Relief: …south and southwest is the Karst, a region of arid limestone plateaus that contain caves, potholes, and underground drainage. The uplands there are often bare and denuded (the result of deforestation and thin soils), but, between the ridges, depressions known as poljes are covered with alluvial soil that is suitable…
- Krasicki, Ignacy (Polish poet)
Ignacy Krasicki was a major Polish poet, satirist, and prose writer of the Enlightenment. Born to an aristocratic but impoverished family, Krasicki was educated at the Warsaw Catholic Seminary and became bishop of Warmia (Ermeland) at age 32. He served as one of the closest cultural counselors to
- Krasinski, John (American actor and director)
John Krasinski is an American actor and director best known for playing paper salesman Jim Halpert in the NBC sitcom The Office (2005–13) and the title character in the Amazon Prime Video thriller series Tom Clancy’s Jack Ryan (2018– ). Krasinski was born in Newton, Massachusetts, to Mary Claire
- Krasinski, John Burke (American actor and director)
John Krasinski is an American actor and director best known for playing paper salesman Jim Halpert in the NBC sitcom The Office (2005–13) and the title character in the Amazon Prime Video thriller series Tom Clancy’s Jack Ryan (2018– ). Krasinski was born in Newton, Massachusetts, to Mary Claire
- Krasiński, Napoleon Stanislaw Adam Ludwik Zygmunt (Polish poet and dramatist)
Zygmunt Krasiński was a Polish Romantic poet and dramatist whose works dealt prophetically with the class conflict that would engender Russia’s October Revolution. The son of a leading aristocratic family, Krasiński studied law at Warsaw University before taking up studies in Geneva in 1829. He
- Krasiński, Zygmunt (Polish poet and dramatist)
Zygmunt Krasiński was a Polish Romantic poet and dramatist whose works dealt prophetically with the class conflict that would engender Russia’s October Revolution. The son of a leading aristocratic family, Krasiński studied law at Warsaw University before taking up studies in Geneva in 1829. He
- Krasko, Ivan (Slovak author)
Slovak literature: Another notable poet was Ivan Krasko (the pseudonym of Ján Botto), whose volumes of verse, Nox et solitudo (1909) and Verše (1912), were among the finest achievements of Slovak literature.
- Krasnaya Armiya (Soviet history)
Red Army, Soviet army created by the Communist government after the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917. The name Red Army was abandoned in 1946. The Russian imperial army and navy, together with other imperial institutions of tsarist Russia, disintegrated after the outbreak of the Russian Revolution of
- Krasnaya Ploshchad (square, Moscow, Russia)
Red Square, open square in Moscow adjoining the historic fortress and centre of government known as the Kremlin (Russian: Kreml). The Kremlin and Red Square were added to UNESCO’s World Heritage List in 1990. Dating from the late 15th century, just after the Kremlin walls were completed, Red Square
- Krasner, Lee (American painter)
Lee Krasner was an American painter recognized for her unique contribution to Abstract Expressionism. Krasner was the sixth of seven children of Jewish emigrants from Odessa, Russia (now Ukraine). When she was 13 she decided to become an artist and was admitted on her second application to
- Krasner, Lenore (American painter)
Lee Krasner was an American painter recognized for her unique contribution to Abstract Expressionism. Krasner was the sixth of seven children of Jewish emigrants from Odessa, Russia (now Ukraine). When she was 13 she decided to become an artist and was admitted on her second application to
- Krasnitsky, Vladimir (Russian priest)
Renovated Church: …priests, notably Aleksandr Vvedensky and Vladimir Krasnitsky, organized a Temporary Higher Church Administration, which rapidly evolved into a general movement aimed at deposing the patriarch and introducing radical church reforms. The Temporary Administration found support among some bishops, but it was particularly popular with the “white,” or married, clergy, who…
- Krasnoarmeysk (Ukraine)
Krasnoarmiysk, city, eastern Ukraine. It is an old coal-mining centre of the Donets Basin coalfield, and mining began there in 1884. Other industries have included railway servicing and the production of construction materials. It is the centre of a significant agricultural area. Pop. (2001)
- krasnoarmiich (Soviet soldier)
Red Army: …was subsequently called simply a ryadovoy (“ranker”). Discipline in the Soviet forces was always strict and punishments severe; during World War II, penal battalions were given suicidal tasks. In 1960, however, new regulations were introduced making discipline, and certainly punishments, less severe. Officers were to use more persuasion and were…
- Krasnoarmiysk (Ukraine)
Krasnoarmiysk, city, eastern Ukraine. It is an old coal-mining centre of the Donets Basin coalfield, and mining began there in 1884. Other industries have included railway servicing and the production of construction materials. It is the centre of a significant agricultural area. Pop. (2001)
- Krasnodar (Russia)
Krasnodar, city and administrative centre of Krasnodar kray (territory), southwestern Russia, lying along the Kuban River. Founded about 1793 as a Cossack guardpost on the Kuban frontier, it developed as a military town. In 1867, after the Caucasian wars, it became a city and centre of the fertile
- Krasnodar (kray, Russia)
Krasnodar, kray (territory), southwestern Russia, extending northward from the crest line of the Caucasus Mountains across the plains east of the Black Sea and the Sea of Azov as far as the Gulf of Taganrog. The plains, crossed by the Kuban and other rivers flowing to the Sea of Azov, form
- Krasnodon (Ukraine)
Krasnodon, coal-mining city, eastern Ukraine. It lies on the Great (Bilsha) Kam’yanka River. Krasnodon was established in 1914 and incorporated in 1938. Historically, it has been important for the mining of bituminous coal. A local museum commemorates the defense of the city during World War II by
- Krasnoe koleso (work by Solzhenitsyn)
Aleksandr Isayevich Solzhenitsyn: …part of a projected series, Krasnoe koleso (The Red Wheel); other volumes (or uzly [“knots”]) in the series were Oktyabr 1916 (“October 1916”), Mart 1917 (“March 1917”), and Aprel 1917 (“April 1917”).
- Krasnogorsk (Russia)
Krasnogorsk, city and centre of a rayon (sector), Moscow oblast (region), western Russia, a few miles west of Moscow. Situated in the Moscow greenbelt, it was known as Banki before its incorporation as a town in 1940. It now produces cameras and is important for building machinery and plasterwork.
- Krasnogvardeysk (Russia)
Gatchina, city, Leningrad oblast (province), northwestern Russia, lying about 28 miles (45 km) southwest of St. Petersburg. The first mention of Khotchino dates from 1499, when it was a possession of Novgorod. Later it belonged to Livonia and Sweden. After 1721 it was returned to Russia and in the
- Krasnoiarsk (Russia)
Krasnoyarsk, city and administrative centre of Krasnoyarsk kray (territory), south-central Siberia, Russia. The city stands on both banks of the Yenisey River where the river is crossed by the Trans-Siberian Railroad. One of the earliest Russian settlements in Siberia, it was founded as the fort of
- Krasnoiarsk (kray, Russia)
Krasnoyarsk, kray (territory), east-central Russia. It occupies an area of Central Siberia and extends from the Severnaya Zemlya archipelago in the Arctic Ocean to the Sayan Mountains in the south. In 2007 the autonomous okruga (districts) of Evenk and Taymyr (Dolgano-Nenets) were merged with
- Krasnojarsk (Russia)
Krasnoyarsk, city and administrative centre of Krasnoyarsk kray (territory), south-central Siberia, Russia. The city stands on both banks of the Yenisey River where the river is crossed by the Trans-Siberian Railroad. One of the earliest Russian settlements in Siberia, it was founded as the fort of
- Krasnojarsk (kray, Russia)
Krasnoyarsk, kray (territory), east-central Russia. It occupies an area of Central Siberia and extends from the Severnaya Zemlya archipelago in the Arctic Ocean to the Sayan Mountains in the south. In 2007 the autonomous okruga (districts) of Evenk and Taymyr (Dolgano-Nenets) were merged with
- Krasnokamsk (Russia)
Krasnokamsk, city, Perm kray (territory), western Russia. Krasnokamsk lies along the Kama River. Founded in 1929 as a settlement in connection with the development of a pulp and paper mill, it became a town in 1938 and is now a satellite of Perm city. Oil was discovered nearby in 1934, and a small
- Krasnoperekopsk (Ukraine)
Syvash: …the local chemical industries of Krasnoperekopsk, a city in northwestern Crimea.
- Krasnoturinsk (Russia)
Krasnoturinsk, town, Sverdlovsk oblast (region), western Russia. The town lies along the Turya River in the eastern foothills of the Northern Ural Mountains. Founded in 1758, it was called Turinskiye Rudniki (“Turinsky Mines”) until 1944, when it became the town of Krasnoturinsk. Now a centre of
- Krasnoturjinsk (Russia)
Krasnoturinsk, town, Sverdlovsk oblast (region), western Russia. The town lies along the Turya River in the eastern foothills of the Northern Ural Mountains. Founded in 1758, it was called Turinskiye Rudniki (“Turinsky Mines”) until 1944, when it became the town of Krasnoturinsk. Now a centre of
- Krasnoturyinsk (Russia)
Krasnoturinsk, town, Sverdlovsk oblast (region), western Russia. The town lies along the Turya River in the eastern foothills of the Northern Ural Mountains. Founded in 1758, it was called Turinskiye Rudniki (“Turinsky Mines”) until 1944, when it became the town of Krasnoturinsk. Now a centre of
- Krasnov, Pyotr Nikolayevich (Russian officer)
Pyotr Nikolayevich Krasnov was an imperial Russian army officer and a commander of anti-Bolshevik forces during the Russian Civil War. During World War II he helped organize anti-Soviet Cossack units for the Germans and urged the creation of a Cossack state under German protection. The son of a
- Krasnovodsk (Turkmenistan)
Turkmenbashi, port city, western Turkmenistan. The city was renamed in 1993 by Turkmenistan’s dictator-president, Saparmurad Niyazov, who patterned the new name after his own formal title of Turkmenbashi (“Head of the Turkmen”). The city lies on the eastern shore of the Caspian Sea, at the foot of
- Krasnoyarsk (Russia)
Krasnoyarsk, city and administrative centre of Krasnoyarsk kray (territory), south-central Siberia, Russia. The city stands on both banks of the Yenisey River where the river is crossed by the Trans-Siberian Railroad. One of the earliest Russian settlements in Siberia, it was founded as the fort of
- Krasnoyarsk (kray, Russia)
Krasnoyarsk, kray (territory), east-central Russia. It occupies an area of Central Siberia and extends from the Severnaya Zemlya archipelago in the Arctic Ocean to the Sayan Mountains in the south. In 2007 the autonomous okruga (districts) of Evenk and Taymyr (Dolgano-Nenets) were merged with
- Krasnoyarsk Reservoir (reservoir, Russia)
Yenisey River: Physiography: …and the long and narrow Krasnoyarsk Reservoir, contained on the east by northwestern spurs of the Eastern Sayan, begins. The reservoir stretches some 240 miles (390 km) downstream to Divnogorsk. Downstream from the reservoir and slightly above Krasnoyarsk, the river valley broadens, as does the bed. Rapids are common there,…
- Krasnoyarskoye Reservoir (reservoir, Russia)
Yenisey River: Physiography: …and the long and narrow Krasnoyarsk Reservoir, contained on the east by northwestern spurs of the Eastern Sayan, begins. The reservoir stretches some 240 miles (390 km) downstream to Divnogorsk. Downstream from the reservoir and slightly above Krasnoyarsk, the river valley broadens, as does the bed. Rapids are common there,…
- Krasnoye Selo (sector, Saint Petersburg, Russia)
Krasnoye Selo, rayon (sector), St. Petersburg, northwestern Russia. The name Krasnoye Selo, meaning “beautiful village,” has been in use since 1730, when it described three settlements located southwest of St. Petersburg. Krasnoye Selo was the site of one of the summer residences for the tsars and
- krasnozem (soil)
Africa: Red tropical soils and laterites: The majority of tropical soils have shades of colour varying from yellow and brown to red. The reddish colour reflects the presence of iron oxides that form as a result of chemical weathering. At one time all tropical red earths…
- Krasny Luch (Ukraine)
Krasnyy Luch, city, eastern Ukraine, on the southern slopes of the Donets Hills. Originally established as a mining site in the 1880s, it was incorporated as a city in 1926. Krasnyy Luch historically has been an important anthracite-mining centre of the Donets Basin coalfield. The city also has
- Krasny Yar (Russia)
Krasnoyarsk, city and administrative centre of Krasnoyarsk kray (territory), south-central Siberia, Russia. The city stands on both banks of the Yenisey River where the river is crossed by the Trans-Siberian Railroad. One of the earliest Russian settlements in Siberia, it was founded as the fort of
- Krasnyy Luch (Ukraine)
Krasnyy Luch, city, eastern Ukraine, on the southern slopes of the Donets Hills. Originally established as a mining site in the 1880s, it was incorporated as a city in 1926. Krasnyy Luch historically has been an important anthracite-mining centre of the Donets Basin coalfield. The city also has
- Krassner, Paul (American journalist)
Harvey Milk: …“Twinkie defense” by the satirist Paul Krassner while reporting on the trial for the San Francisco Bay Guardian. White’s conviction on the lesser charge of voluntary manslaughter sparked an uproar in the city that was subsequently termed the “White Night Riot.”
- Kraszewski, Józef Ignacy (Polish writer)
Józef Ignacy Kraszewski was a Polish novelist, poet, literary critic, dramatist, historian, and journalist who was the dominant prose writer of Poland’s Romantic period. Kraszewski attended the University of Wilno (now V. Kapsukas State University), was imprisoned in 1830 on a charge of conspiracy
- krater (wine vessel)
krater, ancient Greek vessel used for diluting wine with water. It usually stood on a tripod in the dining room, where wine was mixed. Kraters were made of metal or pottery and were often painted or elaborately ornamented. In Homer’s Iliad the prize offered by Achilles for the footrace at
- Krater, Die (German art group)
Rudolf Bauer: …Rebay and artist Otto Nebel, Die Krater (1920). The latter was formed out of the conviction that painting should be nonrepresentational and the visual expression of the artistic experience. In 1920 Bauer’s first works appeared in America by way of artist and collector Katherine Dreier, who introduced Americans to many…
- Kratie (Cambodia)
Krâchéh, town, northeastern Cambodia. Krâchéh is located on the eastern bank of the Mekong River, at the head of Mekong navigation. It has a port and is linked to Phnom Penh, the national capital, and to neighbouring areas by a national highway. There are slate quarries near the town, and the
- Kratochvilova, Jarmila (Czechoslovak athlete)
athletics: The sprints: Jarmila Kratochvilova (Czechoslovakia) won a rare double victory in the women’s 400- and 800-meter events at the 1983 World Championships.
- Kratochwila, Franz (Austrian chemist)
history of photography: Development of the daguerreotype: That same month another Viennese, Franz Kratochwila, freely published a chemical acceleration process in which the combined vapours of chlorine and bromine increased the sensitivity of the plate by five times.
- kratom (plant)
Gentianales: Rubiaceae: Kratom (Mitragyna speciosa) is used in traditional medicine and recreationally as a stimulant.