- kraton (architecture)
Southeast Asian arts: Central Javanese period: 7th–13th century: …chieftains who lived in their kratons (fortified villages) seemed to have derived great inspiration, prestige, and practical assistance from the skills and ideas imported from India. In Sumatra there was the important but so far enigmatic Indianized kingdom of Shrivijaya, which, from its strategic position on the Strait of Malacca,…
- Kraus, Karl (Austrian writer)
Karl Kraus was an Austrian journalist, critic, playwright, and poet who has been compared with Juvenal and Jonathan Swift for his satiric vision and command of language. In German literature, he ranks as an outstanding writer of the World War I era, but, because his work is almost untranslatably
- Kraus-Boelté, Maria (German-American educator)
Maria Kraus-Boelté was a German American educator, one of the early exponents of kindergarten, who trained many teachers for that specialization. Maria Boelté was of a prominent family and was privately educated. As a young woman she became interested in the work of Friedrich Froebel in the
- Krause end bulb (anatomy)
human sensory reception: Nerve function: …Pacinian corpuscles, Meissner’s corpuscles, and Krause end bulbs.
- Krause, Karl Christian Friedrich (German philosopher)
Karl Christian Friedrich Krause was a German philosopher who attracted a considerable following, especially in Spain, where his disciples, known as krausistas, greatly influenced the direction of Spanish education in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Krause’s system of philosophy, which he
- Krause, Peter (American actor)
Six Feet Under: …prodigal eldest son, Nate (Peter Krause), home from Seattle. Grudgingly, Nate becomes a partner in the business and takes his place in the family, which includes his brother, David (Michael C. Hall), who hides his homosexuality from most of the world; his eccentric mother, Ruth (Frances Conroy); and his…
- krausen (industrial process)
beer: Maturation and packaging: …of actively fermenting wort (called krausen) generates carbon dioxide, which is vented and purges the green beer of undesirable volatile compounds. Continued yeast activity also removes strong flavouring compounds such as diacetyl. Allowing pressure to build up in the sealed vessel then increases the level of carbonation, giving the beer…
- Kraushaar-Pielach, Silke (German luger)
Tatjana Hüfner: …and teammates Sylke Otto and Silke Kraushaar-Pielach swept the women’s singles bracket, with Otto taking the gold medal, Kraushaar-Pielach the silver, and Hüfner the bronze.
- Krauss, Alison (American musician)
Alison Krauss is an American bluegrass fiddler and singer who—alone and in collaboration with her band, Union Station—performed folk, gospel, country, pop, and rock songs in the unamplified bluegrass style and played a major role in the early 21st-century revival of interest in bluegrass music.
- Krauss, Lawrence (theoretical physicist)
Star Trek and Our Nuclear World: …humanity possessed the tools for its own annihilation.
- Krauss, Leo (American art dealer)
Leo Castelli was an art dealer of Hungarian and Italian descent whose promotion of American painters helped contemporary American art gain acceptance in Europe. Castelli was brought up in an affluent Jewish family in Trieste. During World War I the family moved to Vienna. After the war they moved
- Krauss, Rosalind (American art critic and historian)
Rosalind Krauss is an American art critic and historian of 20th-century art who first came to prominence when she accused the art critic Clement Greenberg of mishandling the estate of sculptor David Smith. Krauss first became interested in 20th-century art criticism as an undergraduate at Wellesley
- Krausz, Ferenc (Hungarian-born Austrian physicist)
Ferenc Krausz is a Hungarian-born Austrian physicist who was awarded the 2023 Nobel Prize in Physics for his experiments with attosecond pulses of light. He shared the prize with French physicists Pierre Agostini and Anne L’Huillier. An attosecond is 10−18 second, or one billionth of a billionth of
- Krausz, Leo (American art dealer)
Leo Castelli was an art dealer of Hungarian and Italian descent whose promotion of American painters helped contemporary American art gain acceptance in Europe. Castelli was brought up in an affluent Jewish family in Trieste. During World War I the family moved to Vienna. After the war they moved
- Krautrock (popular music)
Kraftwerk: The movement, dubbed “Krautrock” by British journalists, also included such innovative bands as Can, Faust, and Neu!, but Kraftwerk became the best known.
- Krâvanh Mountains (mountains, Cambodia)
Krâvanh Mountains, range of high hills in southwestern Cambodia that is situated on a southeast-northwest axis and continues westward into the highland area around Chanthaburi, Thailand. The Krâvanh Mountains extend (some discontinuously) for about 100 miles (160 km) southeast and east to the
- Kravchuk, Leonid (president of Ukraine)
Leonid Kravchuk was the president of Ukraine from 1991 to 1994. For 30 years a Communist Party functionary, he converted to nationalist politics after the collapse of the Soviet regime. He was the first democratically elected president of Ukraine. In 1958 Kravchuk graduated from the Kiev T.H.
- Kravchuk, Leonid Makarovych (president of Ukraine)
Leonid Kravchuk was the president of Ukraine from 1991 to 1994. For 30 years a Communist Party functionary, he converted to nationalist politics after the collapse of the Soviet regime. He was the first democratically elected president of Ukraine. In 1958 Kravchuk graduated from the Kiev T.H.
- Kravitz, Lenny (American musician)
Lenny Kravitz is an American musician known for his unique blend of rock, psychedelia, soul, funk, and hip-hop. From 1999 to 2002 Kravitz won four consecutive Grammy Awards for best male rock vocal performance—the most wins ever in the category. He is also known for his appearances in several films
- Kravitz, Leonard Albert (American musician)
Lenny Kravitz is an American musician known for his unique blend of rock, psychedelia, soul, funk, and hip-hop. From 1999 to 2002 Kravitz won four consecutive Grammy Awards for best male rock vocal performance—the most wins ever in the category. He is also known for his appearances in several films
- Kravitz, Zoë (American actress)
Zoë Kravitz is an American actress known for portraying multifaceted, quietly powerful women in a variety of roles, most notably Catwoman in The Batman (2022). Kravitz is the daughter of Lisa Bonet, an actress best known for playing Denise Huxtable on the TV series The Cosby Show (1984–92), and
- Kravitz, Zoë Isabella (American actress)
Zoë Kravitz is an American actress known for portraying multifaceted, quietly powerful women in a variety of roles, most notably Catwoman in The Batman (2022). Kravitz is the daughter of Lisa Bonet, an actress best known for playing Denise Huxtable on the TV series The Cosby Show (1984–92), and
- Krazy Glue (adhesive)
cyanoacrylate: …names as Super Glue and Krazy Glue, bond almost instantly to a variety of surfaces, including metal, plastic, and glass. Because they adhere strongly to skin, they are also employed by surgeons for closing incisions and by morticians for sealing eyes and lips.
- Krazy Kat (work by Herriman)
comic strip: The United States: upon slapstick, but George Herriman’s Krazy Kat (1911–44) placed the slapstick in a tender world of poetry, at once surreal and humorous. Drawn with the greatest of graphic economy, it presented the absurd interrelationships of a tiny cast of characters (basically three), using the thinnest imaginable plot line. Krazy Kat…
- Krazy Kat: A Jazz Pantomime (ballet by Carpenter)
John Alden Carpenter: … (1917) and into his ballets Krazy Kat: A Jazz Pantomime (1922) and Skyscrapers (1926). The last was later made into a symphonic piece, and Krazy Kat was based on the George Herriman comic strip of the same name. Carpenter’s humorous orchestral suite Adventures in a Perambulator (1914) also won considerable…
- Kréa, Henri (Algerian-French author)
Henri Kréa was an Algerian-born poet, dramatist, and novelist whose works deal with alienation and identity, nature, heroism, and moral and social change in Algeria. Like the hero of his first and only novel, Djamal (1961), Kréa had a French father and an Algerian mother. He attended secondary
- Krebs cycle (biochemistry)
tricarboxylic acid cycle, the second stage of cellular respiration, the three-stage process by which living cells break down organic fuel molecules in the presence of oxygen to harvest the energy they need to grow and divide. This metabolic process occurs in most plants, animals, fungi, and many
- Krebs, Edwin Gerhard (American biochemist)
Edwin Gerhard Krebs was an American biochemist, winner with Edmond H. Fischer of the 1992 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine. They discovered reversible protein phosphorylation, a biochemical process that regulates the activities of proteins in cells and thus governs countless processes that
- Krebs, Johann Ludwig (German composer)
Johann Ludwig Krebs was a German organist and composer noted for his organ music. Krebs studied under his father and was later a favourite pupil of the composer Johann Sebastian Bach at Leipzig. He was organist at Zwickau, Zeitz, and Altenburg. His organ music is composed in the forms used by Bach
- Krebs, Konrad (German architect)
Western architecture: Germany: 1532–44) at Torgau by Konrad Krebs, which is completely medieval in design but has occasional fragments of Classical ornament applied to the surface. The rear portion of the Residence (c. 1537–43) at Landshut is exceptional in that its architecture and decoration are fully Italianate, but this is explained by…
- Krebs, Nicholas (German cardinal)
map: Maps of the discoveries: Cardinal Nicholas Krebs drew the first modern map of Germany, engraved in 1491. Martin Waldseemüller of St. Dié prepared an edition with more than 20 modern maps in 1513. Maps showing new discoveries and information were at last transcending the classical treatises of Ptolemy.
- Krebs, Sir Hans Adolf (German-British biochemist)
Sir Hans Adolf Krebs was a German-born British biochemist who received (with Fritz Lipmann) the 1953 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine for the discovery in living organisms of the series of chemical reactions known as the tricarboxylic acid cycle (also called the citric acid cycle, or Krebs
- Krebs-Henseleit cycle (biochemistry)
Sir Hans Adolf Krebs: …reactions (now known as the urea cycle) by which ammonia is converted to urea in mammalian tissue; the urea, far less toxic than ammonia, is subsequently excreted in the urine of most mammals. This cycle also serves as a major source of the amino acid arginine.
- Kreda (people)
Chad: Ethnic groups: …sedentary and coexist with Daza, Kreda, and Arab nomads. The Hadjeray (of the Guera Massif) and Abou Telfân are composed of refugee populations who, living on their mountainous terrain, have resisted various invasions. On the plains surrounding the Hadjeray are the Bulala, Kuka, and the Midogo, who are sedentary peoples.…
- Kreditanstalt (bank, Vienna, Austria)
history of Europe: The impact of the slump: …first among them the great Kreditanstalt of Vienna, which collapsed in May 1931. The Bank of England, at that time, was losing gold at the rate of £2.5 million a day. Everywhere, industrial production fell: by 40 percent in Germany, 14 percent in Britain, and 29 percent in France.
- Kreditanstalt für Wiederaufbau (German bank)
Germany: Public and cooperative institutions: The state-owned Kreditanstalt für Wiederaufbau (“Development Loan Corporation”) channels public aid to developing countries.
- KREEP (rock)
KREEP, a suite of lunar lavas, relatively enriched in certain elements, that were identified in the analysis of rock samples that Apollo astronauts brought back from the Moon. The elements include potassium (chemical symbol K), rare-earth elements, and phosphorus (P), from which the acronym KREEP
- Krefeld (Germany)
Krefeld, city and port, North Rhine–Westphalia Land (state), western Germany. The medieval city centre of Krefeld is situated 6 miles (10 km) west of the Rhine River. The city stretches in an east-west direction, with Uerdingen, a second city centre, lying along the Rhine itself and containing a
- Kreidekreis, Der (play by Klabund)
Klabund: …renderings include Der Kreidekreis (1924; The Circle of Chalk), a drama that inspired the German playwright Bertolt Brecht to write his play Der kaukasische Kreidekreis (The Caucasian Chalk Circle).
- Kreiner, Kathy (Canadian skier)
Rosi Mittermaier: …came in second to Canadian Kathy Kreiner, who was faster by only one-eighth of a second.
- Kreis (German government)
Kreis, (German: “Circle”), any of the several imperial circles (administrative districts) of the Holy Roman Empire from the early 16th century until its dissolution in 1806, a period in which the empire became an increasingly looser federation of principalities. The Kreise were the Burgundian,
- Kreise (German government)
Kreis, (German: “Circle”), any of the several imperial circles (administrative districts) of the Holy Roman Empire from the early 16th century until its dissolution in 1806, a period in which the empire became an increasingly looser federation of principalities. The Kreise were the Burgundian,
- Kreisky, Bruno (chancellor of Austria)
Bruno Kreisky was the leader of the Social Democratic Party of Austria and chancellor of Austria (1970–83). Kreisky joined the Social Democratic Party in 1926; he was active in the party until it was outlawed in 1934. In 1935 he was arrested for political reasons and imprisoned for 18 months. He
- Kreislauf des Lebens (work by Moleschott)
Jacob Moleschott: His most important work, Kreislauf des Lebens (1852; “The Circuit of Life”), added considerable impetus to 19th-century materialism by demanding “scientific answers to scientific questions.”
- Kreisler, Fritz (American violinist)
Fritz Kreisler was an Austrian-born violinist who was a “secret” composer of short violin pieces. At age seven Kreisler entered the Vienna Conservatory, and from 1885 to 1887 he studied composition and violin at the Paris Conservatory. After a successful concert tour of the United States (1888–89),
- Kreisleriana (work by Schumann)
program music: …connection between movements of his Kreisleriana, yet his music differs from Weber’s not so much in its lack of programmatic intent as in its lack of written program. The lines are blurred more thoroughly in the music of Franz Liszt, possibly the best-known composer of program music, whose specifically programmatic…
- Kremasta Dam (dam, Greece)
Achelous River: …at Kastraki; the other, at Kremasta, is the highest (490 feet [150 metres]) earth-fill dam in Europe. At the mouth of the river, where it is less than 2 feet deep, a number of small islands, the Ekhinádhes, have been enveloped by the silt. The name Aspropótamos (White River) is…
- Kremenchug (Ukraine)
Kremenchuk, city, central Ukraine. The city lies along the Dnieper River where it is crossed by the Kharkiv-Kirovohrad railway. Founded in 1571 as a fortress, Kremenchuk acquired city status in 1765. In the 20th century the city and the Kryukiv district across the river developed important
- Kremenchuk (Ukraine)
Kremenchuk, city, central Ukraine. The city lies along the Dnieper River where it is crossed by the Kharkiv-Kirovohrad railway. Founded in 1571 as a fortress, Kremenchuk acquired city status in 1765. In the 20th century the city and the Kryukiv district across the river developed important
- Kremenchuk Reservoir (reservoir, Ukraine)
Ukraine: Drainage: …on the Dnieper upstream from Kremenchuk. The Kakhovka, Dnieper, Dniprodzerzhynsk, Kaniv, and Kyiv reservoirs make up the rest of the Dnieper cascade. Smaller reservoirs are located on the Dniester and Southern Buh rivers and on tributaries of the Donets River. Small reservoirs for water supply also are found near Kryvyy…
- Kremer Prize (flight)
Paul Beattie MacCready: …course required to win the Kremer Prize of £50,000 ($95,000), clearing a 10-foot- (3-metre-) high start-and-finish line while making a figure-eight flight around two pylons set half a mile apart. The total distance flown was 1.15 miles (1.85 km) in 6 min 27.05 s, at a top speed of 11…
- Kremer, Ethel (American artist)
Ethel Schwabacher was an American artist associated with the Abstract Expressionist movement. Though not as well-known as her male peers or as Lee Krasner, Elaine DeKooning, or Helen Frankenthaler, her work is found in major museum collections throughout the United States, and exhibitions in the
- Kremer, Gerard de (Flemish cartographer)
Gerardus Mercator was a Flemish cartographer whose most important innovation was a map, embodying what was later known as the Mercator projection, on which parallels and meridians are rendered as straight lines spaced so as to produce at any point an accurate ratio of latitude to longitude. He also
- Kremer, Gidon (Latvian musician)
Martha Argerich: …music, notably with Latvian violinist Gidon Kremer, with whom she produced a number of award-winning recordings. Other musicians with whom she performed and recorded include pianists Alexandre Rabinovitch and Nelson Freire and cellists Mstislav Rostropovich and Mischa Maisky.
- Kremer, Michael (American economist)
Michael Kremer is an American economist who, with Abhijit Banerjee and Esther Duflo, was awarded the 2019 Nobel Prize for Economics (the Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel) for helping to develop an innovative experimental approach to alleviating global poverty.
- Kremer, Michael Robert (American economist)
Michael Kremer is an American economist who, with Abhijit Banerjee and Esther Duflo, was awarded the 2019 Nobel Prize for Economics (the Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel) for helping to develop an innovative experimental approach to alleviating global poverty.
- kreml (Russian fortress)
kremlin, central fortress in medieval Russian cities, usually located at a strategic point along a river and separated from the surrounding parts of the city by a wooden—later a stone or brick—wall with ramparts, a moat, towers, and battlements. Several capitals of principalities (e.g., Moscow,
- kremlin (Russian fortress)
kremlin, central fortress in medieval Russian cities, usually located at a strategic point along a river and separated from the surrounding parts of the city by a wooden—later a stone or brick—wall with ramparts, a moat, towers, and battlements. Several capitals of principalities (e.g., Moscow,
- Kremlin, the (building complex, Moscow, Russia)
the Kremlin, group of buildings in the center of Moscow that serves as the official seat of the government of Russia. A centuries-old fortress with striking red brick architecture, it is one of the most recognizable government complexes in the world. Though kremlin means “citadel,” and though about
- kremnik (Russian fortress)
kremlin, central fortress in medieval Russian cities, usually located at a strategic point along a river and separated from the surrounding parts of the city by a wooden—later a stone or brick—wall with ramparts, a moat, towers, and battlements. Several capitals of principalities (e.g., Moscow,
- Krems (Austria)
Krems, city, northeastern Austria, at the confluence of the Danube (Donau) and Krems rivers, northwest of Vienna. Mentioned in 995 as an imperial fortress, it was chartered in the 12th century, when it had a mint. Of its medieval fortifications, the Steiner Gate, the Pulverturm (Powder Tower), and
- Krems an der Donau (Austria)
Krems, city, northeastern Austria, at the confluence of the Danube (Donau) and Krems rivers, northwest of Vienna. Mentioned in 995 as an imperial fortress, it was chartered in the 12th century, when it had a mint. Of its medieval fortifications, the Steiner Gate, the Pulverturm (Powder Tower), and
- Kremsier (Czech Republic)
Kroměříž, city, south-central Czech Republic, on the Morava River, northeast of Brno. The city dates from 1110, after which it was acquired by the bishops of Olomouc. It is best known historically because the Austrian constituent assembly used it as a refuge during the Vienna revolt (1848–49). In
- Kremsier assembly (Austrian political history)
Felix, prince zu Schwarzenberg: The Kremsier assembly had drawn up a constitution that would have granted Austria’s many nationalities far-reaching autonomy. The constitution sponsored by Schwarzenberg and introduced by decree on March 4, 1849, however, transformed the Habsburg empire into a unitary, centralized, absolutist state, with extensive imperial powers and…
- Kremsier constitution (Austrian history)
Felix, prince zu Schwarzenberg: …Austrian constitutional convention assembled at Kremsier. The Kremsier assembly had drawn up a constitution that would have granted Austria’s many nationalities far-reaching autonomy. The constitution sponsored by Schwarzenberg and introduced by decree on March 4, 1849, however, transformed the Habsburg empire into a unitary, centralized, absolutist state, with extensive imperial…
- kremt (season)
Ethiopia: Climate: …the long rainy season (kremt) in June, July, and August. The coldest temperatures generally occur in December or January (bega) and the hottest in March, April, or May (belg). However, in many localities July has the coldest temperatures because of the moderating influence of rainfall.
- Krenek, Ernst (American composer)
Ernst Krenek was an Austrian-American composer, one of the prominent exponents of the serial technique of musical composition. Krenek studied in Vienna and Berlin and was musical assistant at the German opera houses of Kassel (1925–27) and Wiesbaden (1927–28). In 1938 he immigrated to the United
- krennerite (mineral)
krennerite, a gold mineral that usually occurs in veins formed at low temperatures, as at Kalgoorlie, Australia, and Cripple Creek, Colo., U.S. A gold telluride (AuTe2), it forms orthorhombic crystals. Two chemically similar minerals, calaverite and sylvanite, form monoclinic crystals; they are
- Krenz, Egon (German politician)
Germany: The reunification of Germany: …him with another hard-line communist, Egon Krenz. Under Krenz the Politburo sought to eliminate the embarrassment occasioned by the flow of refugees to the West through Hungary, Czechoslovakia, and Poland. On the evening of November 9, Günter Schabowski, a communist functionary, mistakenly announced at a televised news conference that the…
- krepis (architecture)
Aegean civilizations: The Shaft Grave Period on the mainland (c. 1600–1450): …a peripheral stone ring, or krepis. Some tholoi were built on the surface of the land, but most were built in a deep pit excavated into the slope of a hillside. The stones that were overlapped in rings to form the vault in the corbeled system were laid with a…
- Kreps, Juanita Morris (American economist)
Juanita Morris Kreps was an American economist and public official, best remembered as the first woman to serve as U.S. secretary of commerce. Juanita Morris graduated from Berea College (B.A., 1942) and then studied economics at Duke University (M.A., 1944; Ph.D., 1948). She married Clifton H.
- kresek (botany)
rice bacterial blight: …wilt, a syndrome known as kresek. Infected seedlings usually are killed by bacterial blight within two to three weeks of being infected; adult plants may survive, though rice yield and quality are diminished.
- Kresge Auditorium (building, Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States)
Eero Saarinen: Life: …Saarinen began to design the Kresge Auditorium and chapel of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, choosing the basic forms of an eighth of a sphere for the auditorium and a cylinder for the chapel. The partial sphere is a “handkerchief ” dome resting on three points. The auditorium is arranged…
- Kresge Co. (American company)
Kmart, American retail chain with a history of marketing general merchandise primarily through discount and variety stores. It is a subsidiary of Sears Holdings Corporation. The company was founded by Sebastian S. Kresge, a traveling hardware salesman, and John G. McCrory, owner of eight general
- Kresge, S.S. (American businessman)
S.S. Kresge was an American merchant who established a chain of nearly 1,000 variety and discount stores throughout the United States. Kresge worked as a traveling salesman before going into business with one of his customers, John G. McCrory, the owner of several department and five-and-ten-cent
- Kresge, Sebastian Spering (American businessman)
S.S. Kresge was an American merchant who established a chain of nearly 1,000 variety and discount stores throughout the United States. Kresge worked as a traveling salesman before going into business with one of his customers, John G. McCrory, the owner of several department and five-and-ten-cent
- Kresilas (Greek sculptor)
Cresilas was a sculptor whose portrait of the Athenian statesman Pericles generated a type of noble, idealized portraiture. Cresilas was a contemporary of Phidias and one of the sculptors in a competition at Ephesus about 440 bce. His entry, a figure of a wounded Amazon, is ascribed to him from its
- Kreskin (American mentalist)
mind reading: …Houdini, Joseph Dunninger, and the Amazing Kreskin.
- Kress Foundation
S.H. Kress: In 1929 he established the Kress Foundation, endowing it with 40 percent of the company’s voting stock. The foundation donated works from his collection to art galleries in states in which he owned stores. In 1939 Kress gave the newly established National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C., 375 paintings…
- Kress, S.H. (American businessman)
S.H. Kress was an American merchant and art collector who used the wealth from his chain of five-and-ten-cent stores to donate artwork to more than 40 U.S. museums. With money saved from his teaching salary, Kress purchased a stationery store in Nanticoke, Pa., in 1887. With the profits, he bought
- Kress, Samuel Henry (American businessman)
S.H. Kress was an American merchant and art collector who used the wealth from his chain of five-and-ten-cent stores to donate artwork to more than 40 U.S. museums. With money saved from his teaching salary, Kress purchased a stationery store in Nanticoke, Pa., in 1887. With the profits, he bought
- Krestyanye (film by Ermler)
Fridrikh Markovich Ermler: …regained, his memory; Krestyanye (1935; Peasants), also a classic, a grand-scale film on collectivization that mirrors peasant folkways with warmth and sympathy; Veliky grazhdanin (Part 1, 1937, Part 2, 1939; The Great Citizen), dealing with interparty conflicts; and Veliky perelom (1946; The Great Turning Point), extolling Stalin’s leadership of the…
- Krete (island, Greece)
Crete, island in the eastern Mediterranean Sea that is one of 13 administrative regions (periféreies) of Greece. Crete is the fifth largest island in the Mediterranean and the largest of the islands forming part of modern Greece. It is relatively long and narrow, stretching for 160 miles (260 km)
- Kretschmer, Ernst (German psychiatrist)
Ernst Kretschmer was a German psychiatrist who attempted to correlate body build and physical constitution with personality characteristics and mental illness. Kretschmer studied both philosophy and medicine at the University of Tübingen, remaining there as an assistant in the neurologic clinic
- Kretschmer, Paul (German linguist)
Paul Kretschmer was a linguist who studied the earliest history and interrelations of the Indo-European languages and showed how they were influenced by non-Indo-European languages, such as Etruscan. A work on Greek vase inscriptions (1894) revealed how nonlinguistic materials could be exploited
- Kretschmer, Paul Wilhelm (German linguist)
Paul Kretschmer was a linguist who studied the earliest history and interrelations of the Indo-European languages and showed how they were influenced by non-Indo-European languages, such as Etruscan. A work on Greek vase inscriptions (1894) revealed how nonlinguistic materials could be exploited
- Kretzer, Max (German writer)
Max Kretzer was a German Expressionist writer who excelled in describing working conditions of the Berlin industrial proletariat in the 1880s and 1890s. The son of a prosperous innkeeper whose business failed, Kretzer went to work in a factory at the age of 13, educated himself, and began to write
- Kreuger, Ivar (Swedish financier)
Ivar Kreuger was a Swedish financier, known as “the match king,” who attempted to gain a worldwide monopoly over the production of matches. After practicing as a civil engineer in the U.S. and in South Africa, Kreuger returned to Sweden in 1907 and founded a match company. During World War I the
- Kreussen stoneware
Kreussen stoneware, German salt-glazed stoneware produced at Kreussen, in Bavaria, from the late 16th century until c. 1730–32. Squat tankards with pewter lids, four- or six-sided flasks (Schraubflaschen), and pear- or globular-shaped jugs were primarily produced; the best of these date from the
- Kreutzberg, Harald (German dancer)
Harald Kreutzberg was a German modern dancer and choreographer best known for solos that combined dance with mime. Trained at the Dresden Ballet School, Kreutzberg also studied modern dance with Mary Wigman and Rudolf Laban. Beginning in 1927, he appeared in plays directed by Max Reinhardt, and in
- Kreutzberger Blumenfeld, Mario Luis (Chilean television personality)
Don Francisco is a Chilean television personality who hosted the popular variety show Sábado Gigante (“Giant Saturday”), one of the longest-running programs in television history. Kreutzberger was born to German-Jewish parents who arrived in Latin America just prior to World War II. His mother, a
- Kreutzer Sonata (work by Beethoven)
Ludwig van Beethoven: Approaching deafness: … or the andante of the Kreutzer Sonata can be seen emerging from trivial and characterless beginnings into their final forms. It seems, too, that Beethoven worked on more than one composition at a time and that he was rarely in a hurry to finish anything that he had on hand.…
- Kreutzer Sonata, The (work by Tolstoy)
Leo Tolstoy: Conversion and religious beliefs: …afterword to Kreytserova sonata [1891; The Kreutzer Sonata], a dark novella about a man who murders his wife) total abstinence as an ideal. His wife, already concerned about their strained relations, objected. In defending his most-extreme ideas, Tolstoy compared Christianity to a lamp that is not stationary but is carried…
- Kreutzer, Rodolphe (French composer)
Rodolphe Kreutzer was a composer and violinist, one of the founders of the French school of violin playing, and one of the foremost improvisers and conductors of his day. Kreutzer was a pupil of the influential composer and conductor Anton Stamitz and in 1795 became professor of the violin at the
- Kreutzmann, Bill (American musician)
Grateful Dead: …1940, Berkeley, California), and drummer Bill Kreutzmann (also called Bill Sommers; b. May 7, 1946, Palo Alto, California). Later members included drummer Mickey Hart (b. September 11, 1943, Long Island, New York, U.S.), keyboard player Tom Constanten (b. March 19, 1944, Longbranch, New Jersey, U.S.), keyboard player Keith Godchaux (b.…
- Kreutzwald, F. Reinhold (Estonian physician, folklorist, and poet)
F. Reinhold Kreutzwald was a physician, folklorist, and poet who compiled the Estonian national epic poem Kalevipoeg (1857–61, “The Son of Kalev”). A graduate of Tartu University, Kreutzwald was municipal health officer in Voru for more than 40 years. In 1838 F.R. Faehlmann organized the Estonian
- Kreutzwald, Friedrich Reinhold (Estonian physician, folklorist, and poet)
F. Reinhold Kreutzwald was a physician, folklorist, and poet who compiled the Estonian national epic poem Kalevipoeg (1857–61, “The Son of Kalev”). A graduate of Tartu University, Kreutzwald was municipal health officer in Voru for more than 40 years. In 1838 F.R. Faehlmann organized the Estonian
- Kreuz- und Querzüge des Ritters A bis Z (work by Hippel)
Theodor Gottlieb von Hippel: His second novel, Kreuz- und Querzüge des Ritters A bis Z (1793–94; “The Knight’s Crisscrossing Journeys from A to Z”), portrays the prejudice and pride of the nobility in the misadventures and ultimate reconciliation with society of a quixotic hero. Hippel’s two essays Über die Ehe (1774; “On…
- Kreuzberg (hill, Berlin, Germany)
Berlin: The city site: …is the peak of the Kreuzberg, a hill that rises 218 feet (66 metres) above sea level.
- Kreuzer, Lloyd (American physicist)
gravity: Gravitational fields and the theory of general relativity: …experiment by the American physicist Lloyd Kreuzer established to within 1 part in 20,000 that different materials produce gravitational fields with a strength the same as that of gravitational fields acting upon them. In this experiment a sphere of solid material was moved through a liquid of identical weight density.…