- Lerita (Spain)
Lleida, city, capital of Lleida provincia (province) in the comunidad autónoma (autonomous community) of Catalonia, northeastern Spain. It lies on the Segre River near its confluence with the Cinca and Ebro rivers. Of Iberian origin, the town then called Ilerda was taken in 49 bc from Pompey
- Lerma River (river, Mexico)
Lerma River, river in west-central Mexico. It rises on the Mesa Central 15 miles (24 km) southeast of Toluca and flows northwestward through the state of México, forming the short border between the states of Querétaro and Michoacán before meandering generally west-northwestward through Guanajuato.
- Lerma, Duke de (Spanish statesman)
Francisco Gómez de Sandoval y Rojas, duke de Lerma was a Spanish statesman who died a cardinal, having been the first of the validos—strong men or favourites—through whom the Habsburg kings were to govern Spain until the end of the 17th century. The son of the 4th marqués de Denia, Lerma was
- Lerma, Francisco Gómez de Sandoval y Rojas, duque de (Spanish statesman)
Francisco Gómez de Sandoval y Rojas, duke de Lerma was a Spanish statesman who died a cardinal, having been the first of the validos—strong men or favourites—through whom the Habsburg kings were to govern Spain until the end of the 17th century. The son of the 4th marqués de Denia, Lerma was
- Lermontov, Mikhail (Russian writer)
Mikhail Lermontov was the leading Russian Romantic poet and author of the novel Geroy nashego vremeni (1840; A Hero of Our Time), which was to have a profound influence on later Russian writers. Lermontov was the son of Yury Petrovich Lermontov, a retired army captain, and Mariya Mikhaylovna, née
- Lermontov, Mikhail Yuryevich (Russian writer)
Mikhail Lermontov was the leading Russian Romantic poet and author of the novel Geroy nashego vremeni (1840; A Hero of Our Time), which was to have a profound influence on later Russian writers. Lermontov was the son of Yury Petrovich Lermontov, a retired army captain, and Mariya Mikhaylovna, née
- Lerna (settlement, Greece)
Aegean civilizations: The Early Bronze Age (c. 3000–2200): Lerna and other settlements on the mainland were eventually surrounded by massive walls with projecting towers, and neighbouring islands like Aigina or Syros in the Cyclades also had towered walls with trap gates. Houses with several rooms were being constructed in most parts of the…
- Lernean Hydra, the (Greek mythology)
Hydra, in Greek legend, the offspring of Typhon and Echidna (according to the early Greek poet Hesiod’s Theogony), a gigantic water-snake-like monster with nine heads (the number varies), one of which was immortal. The monster’s haunt was the marshes of Lerna, near Árgos, from which he periodically
- Lerner index (economics)
Lerner index, in economics, a measure of the market power of a firm. Formalized by the Russian-British economist Abba P. Lerner in 1934, the Lerner index is expressed in the following formula: Lerner index = P - MCP where P represents the price of the good set by the firm and MC represents the
- Lerner, Abba P. (Russian economist)
Abba P. Lerner was a Russian-born economist whose contributions included theoretical works on inflation, unemployment, and international trade. Lerner’s family immigrated to England when he was three. By age 16 he had begun a succession of jobs (as a machinist, commercial printer, and teacher,
- Lerner, Abba Ptachya (Russian economist)
Abba P. Lerner was a Russian-born economist whose contributions included theoretical works on inflation, unemployment, and international trade. Lerner’s family immigrated to England when he was three. By age 16 he had begun a succession of jobs (as a machinist, commercial printer, and teacher,
- Lerner, Al (American businessman)
Cleveland Browns: …until 1999, when local businessman Al Lerner purchased an expansion team that assumed the Browns’ name, uniforms, and history.
- Lerner, Alan Jay (American screenwriter and songwriter)
Alan Jay Lerner was an American librettist and lyricist who collaborated with composer Frederick Loewe on the hit Broadway musicals Brigadoon (1947), Paint Your Wagon (1951), My Fair Lady (1956), and Camelot (1960) and the film Gigi (1958). Lerner, whose parents were prosperous retailers (Lerner
- Lerner, Max (American educator and author)
Max Lerner was an American educator, author, and syndicated columnist who was an influential spokesman for liberal political and economic views. Lerner’s article on liberalism appeared in the 14th edition of the Encyclopædia Britannica (see the Britannica Classic: liberalism). Lerner immigrated to
- Lerner, Maxwell Alan (American educator and author)
Max Lerner was an American educator, author, and syndicated columnist who was an influential spokesman for liberal political and economic views. Lerner’s article on liberalism appeared in the 14th edition of the Encyclopædia Britannica (see the Britannica Classic: liberalism). Lerner immigrated to
- Lerner, Mikhail (American educator and author)
Max Lerner was an American educator, author, and syndicated columnist who was an influential spokesman for liberal political and economic views. Lerner’s article on liberalism appeared in the 14th edition of the Encyclopædia Britannica (see the Britannica Classic: liberalism). Lerner immigrated to
- Lerner, Samuel (Russian social activist)
Tillie Olsen: Early life and influences: …of Ida Goldberg and Sam Lerner, who had been members of the Bund, a largely Jewish and socialist self-defense league founded in 1897 that sought to end injustice and the brutal pogroms of tsarist Russia. Both lived in what is today Minsk voblasts (province), Belarus, and each played a part…
- Lerner, Sandy (American businesswoman and philanthropist)
Cisco Systems: …Systems were Leonard Bosack and Sandra Lerner, a married couple (later divorced) who had met while students at Stanford University. After graduating in 1981, they worked at the school, directing the computer facilities of two different departments. Bosack found a way to link their respective computer networks using technology that…
- Lerner, Tillie (American author)
Tillie Olsen was an American writer and social activist known for her powerful fiction about the inner lives of the working poor, women, and minorities. Her interest in long-neglected women authors inspired the development of academic programs in women’s studies, especially at the university level
- Lernet-Holenia, Alexander (Austrian writer)
Alexander Lernet-Holenia was a prolific and popular dramatist, poet, and novelist, many of whose works exhibit nostalgia for pre-World War I Austrian aristocracy. In particular, his novel Die Standarte (1934), by depicting military unrest in Serbia in 1918, illustrates the loss of authority in the
- Léros (island, Greece)
Léros, island and dímos (municipality), South Aegean (Modern Greek: Nótio Aigaío) periféreia (region), southeastern Greece. Léros is one of the Dodecanese (Dodekánisa) islands in the Aegean Sea, east of the Cyclades (Kykládes) and off the southwest coast of Turkey. It is surrounded by numerous
- Leroux, Etienne (South African writer)
South African literature: In Afrikaans: …the Sestigers were the novelists Etienne Leroux and André P. Brink and the poet Breyten Breytenbach. In a series of thematically linked novels published in the 1960s, Leroux explored the dilemma of modern Afrikaners in search of a myth, the inexhaustible fantasy and satire of his work making it unique…
- Leroux, Gaston (French writer)
Gaston Leroux was a French novelist, best known for his Le Fantôme de l’opéra (1910; The Phantom of the Opera), which later became famous in various film and stage renditions. After leaving school, Leroux worked as a clerk in a law office and, in his free time, began writing essays and short
- Leroux, Pierre (French philosopher)
Pierre Leroux was a French pantheistic philosopher, economist, pacifist, government official, and champion of socialism through various reviews and newspapers that he helped found. In 1824, with Paul-François Dubois, Leroux established Le Globe, and seven years later he made it the organ of the
- LeRoy, Julien-David (French architect)
François-Joseph Bélanger: …Nollet and studied architecture under J.-D. Leroy. He visited England at least once, and the sketchbook that survives is a rare record of the view by a French architect of late 18th-century England.
- Leroy, Louis (French critic)
art criticism: The avant-garde problem: … (1872), which inspired French critic Louis Leroy to give the Impressionist movement its name. In a sense, Impressionism carried sketchiness to a “sensational” extreme, suggesting that the most daring artists had unconditionally surrendered to the liberal spirit of the 1848 revolutions, in effect legitimating them aesthetically. The spirit of the…
- LeRoy, Mervyn (American director and producer)
Mervyn LeRoy was an American motion-picture director whose wide variety of films included dramas, romances, epics, comedies, and musicals. He also produced films, including the classic The Wizard of Oz (1939). (Read Martin Scorsese’s Britannica essay on film preservation.) After the LeRoy family
- Lerroux, Alejandro (prime minister of Spain)
Alejandro Lerroux was the leader of the Spanish Radical Party who headed four governments during the period of centre-right rule (1933–35) in the Second Republic (1931–39). The son of a sergeant major, Lerroux practiced as a lawyer and worked as a journalist in Barcelona before becoming leader of
- Lerwa lerwa (bird)
partridge: The snow partridge (Lerwa lerwa) of high mountains of south-central Asia resembles a ptarmigan in appearance and habits.
- Lerwick (Shetland Islands, Scotland, United Kingdom)
Lerwick, chief town of Scotland’s Shetland Islands, an archipelago lying 130 miles (210 km) north of the Scottish mainland. Lerwick is the most northerly town in Britain. It is situated on a fine natural harbour on Bressay Sound on the eastern coast of the island of Mainland. Lerwick originated as
- Les Baux (France)
Les Baux-de-Provence, village, Bouches-du-Rhône département, Provence–Alpes–Côte d’Azur région, southeastern France, on a spur of the Alpilles Hills rising abruptly from the valley floor, northeast of Arles. On this rocky hill, about 1,000 yards (900 metres) long and 220 yards (200 metres) wide, is
- Les Baux-de-Provence (France)
Les Baux-de-Provence, village, Bouches-du-Rhône département, Provence–Alpes–Côte d’Azur région, southeastern France, on a spur of the Alpilles Hills rising abruptly from the valley floor, northeast of Arles. On this rocky hill, about 1,000 yards (900 metres) long and 220 yards (200 metres) wide, is
- Les Cayes (Haiti)
Les Cayes, town, southwestern Haiti, on the southern Caribbean shore of the southern peninsula. Founded in 1786, it was plagued by disease and pirates during colonial times. In 1815 the South American liberator Simón Bolívar visited the port to accept Haitian arms and a contingent of troops to aid
- Les Combarelles (cave, Dordogne, France)
Les Combarelles, long, narrow cave near Les Eyzies in Dordogne, France, famous for its prehistoric engravings. The cave’s hundreds of sometimes superimposed engravings, dating to the mid-Magdalenian Period of Paleolithic art (about 14,000 years ago), were discovered in 1901. Most of the images
- Les Fontinettes (France)
canals and inland waterways: Boat lifts: …1888 lifts were constructed at Les Fontinettes, France, for 300-ton vessels and at La Louvière, Belgium, for 400-ton vessels. Similar hydraulic lift locks were constructed at Kirkfield and Peterborough in Ontario, Canada; the latter, completed in 1904, has a lift of nearly 20 metres (65 feet). Float lifts were constructed…
- Les Landes (region, France)
Landes, forest region bordering the Bay of Biscay in the Aquitaine Basin of southwestern France, extending northward to the Garonne Estuary and southward to the Adour River. With an area of 5,400 square miles (14,000 square km), Landes occupies three-quarters of the Landes département, half of
- Les Minquiers (islands, Channel Islands, English Channel)
Channel Islands: …and the Ecrehous rocks and Les Minquiers are Jersey’s. The last two were the source of long-standing dispute between England and France until 1953, when the International Court of Justice confirmed British sovereignty. In the late 20th century the dispute revived, as sovereignty of these islands determines allocation of rights…
- Les Mots et les choses (work by Foucault)
continental philosophy: Foucault: Foucault began The Order of Things by memorably citing an ancient Chinese scheme of classification, which Jorge Luis Borges (1899–1986) had used in his essay “The Analytical Language of John Wilkins” (1941):
- Les Nourritures terrestres (work by Gide)
André Gide: Symbolist period: …poem Les Nourritures terrestres (1897; Fruits of the Earth) reflects Gide’s personal liberation from the fear of sin and his acceptance of the need to follow his own impulses. But after he returned to France, Gide’s relief at having shed the shackles of convention evaporated in what he called the…
- Les Paul Standard guitar (musical instrument)
electric guitar: …on any acoustic amplification, the solid-body electric guitar could make much smoother, more sonically isolated tones. The technology for pickups—the nodes attached to the steel strings that transferred electric currents to amplifiers—also advanced quickly about the same time. Most electric guitars had begun to use smaller magnetic single- or double-coil…
- Les Possédés (play by Camus)
Albert Camus: Camus’s literary career: …nonne; 1956) and Fyodor Dostoyevsky’s The Possessed (Les Possédés; 1959).
- Les Rêveries du promeneur solitaire (work by Rousseau)
Jean-Jacques Rousseau: The last decade: …Rêveries du promeneur solitaire (1782; Reveries of the Solitary Walker), one of the most moving of his books, in which the intense passion of his earlier writings gives way to a gentle lyricism and serenity. And indeed, Rousseau does seem to have recovered his peace of mind in his last…
- Les Rites de Passage (work by Gennep)
Arnold van Gennep: …Les Rites de Passage (1909; The Rites of Passage), in which he systematically compared those ceremonies that celebrate an individual’s transition from one status to another within a given society. He found a tripartite sequence in ritual observance: separation, transition, and incorporation. Gennep offered interpretations of the significance of these…
- Lesage, Alain-René (French author)
Alain-René Lesage was a prolific French satirical dramatist and author of the classic picaresque novel Gil Blas, which was influential in making the picaresque form a European literary fashion. Although he was orphaned at age 14 and was always quite poor, Lesage was well educated at a Jesuit
- Lesage, Jean (Canadian statesman)
Jean Lesage was a Canadian public official who was premier of Quebec during the period of reform in the early 1960s. Lesage received a law degree in 1934 from Laval University, Quebec, and in 1939–44 served as a crown attorney. In 1945 he was elected to the federal House of Commons—to serve as
- Lesatima, Mount (mountain, Kenya)
East African mountains: Physiography: …which the highest peak is Mount Lesatima (Satima), reaching a height of 13,120 feet, and the Mau Escarpment rise steeply from the eastern portion of the Eastern (Great) Rift Valley. To the west, beyond the Uasin Gishu Plateau, Mount Elgon emerges gently from a level of about 6,200 feet; but…
- Lesbia (Roman courtesan)
Clodia was a profligate Roman beauty and sister of the demagogue Publius Clodius. She was married in 63 bc to Quintus Metellus Celer and was suspected of responsibility for his death in 59 bc. She was mistress to the poet Catullus, who wrote of her as Lesbia, and was the most important influence in
- Lesbian Body, The (work by Wittig)
French literature: Feminist writers: Le Corps lesbien (1973; The Lesbian Body), a violent, sadomasochistic, and lyrical text of prose fiction, is a unique attempt to evoke in its own language the body of female desire.
- lesbian feminism (sociology)
lesbian feminism, a subset of feminism that emerged in the mid-to-late 20th century at the convergence of the women’s movement, the gay rights movement, and the sexual revolution. Lesbian feminists consider same-sex relationships legitimate and use their lesbian identity as a basis for community
- lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer community (sociology)
lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer community (LGBTQ community), in any country, region, city, or other locality, a group of persons who identify as lesbian, gay (in the narrow sense of being a male who is sexually or romantically attracted to other males), bisexual, transgender, or
- lesbianism (human behavior)
lesbianism, the tendency and orientation of a human female to be emotionally and usually sexually attracted to other females, or the state of being so attracted. As it was first used in the late 16th century, the word Lesbian was the capitalized adjectival term referring to the Greek island of
- Lésbos (island, Greece)
Lésbos, largest island after Crete (Modern Greek: Kríti) and Euboea (Évvoia) in the Aegean Sea. It constitutes a dímos (municipality) and a perifereiakí enótita (regional unit) in the North Aegean (Vóreio Aigaío) periféreia (region), eastern Greece. Mytilene (Mitilíni) is the chief town of the
- Lesbos (island, Greece)
Lésbos, largest island after Crete (Modern Greek: Kríti) and Euboea (Évvoia) in the Aegean Sea. It constitutes a dímos (municipality) and a perifereiakí enótita (regional unit) in the North Aegean (Vóreio Aigaío) periféreia (region), eastern Greece. Mytilene (Mitilíni) is the chief town of the
- Lescarbot, Marc (French author)
Canadian literature: The French regime, 1535–1763: …in New France belongs to Marc Lescarbot, whose pageant Le Théâtre de Neptune en la Nouvelle-France (The Theatre of Neptune in New France) was presented at Port-Royal in 1606. On his return to France, he published in 1609 Histoire de la Nouvelle-France (History of New France) and Les Muses de…
- Lescaze, William (American architect)
William Lescaze was a Swiss-born American architect best known for conceiving, in conjunction with George Howe, the Philadelphia Savings Fund Society Building, or PSFS (1931–32), which effectively introduced the International style of architecture into the United States. It is considered one of the
- Lesch-Nyhan syndrome (pathology)
Lesch-Nyhan syndrome, hereditary metabolic disorder affecting the central nervous system and characterized by incoordination, mental retardation, aggressive behaviour, and compulsive biting. The cause of the syndrome is a defective organic catalyst or enzyme,
- Leschenaultia (plant genus)
Goodeniaceae: …shrubs in the Australian genus Leschenaultia sometimes are grown as mild-climate garden shrubs. They have violet, blue, red, or yellow flowers.
- Leschetizky, Theodor (Polish pianist)
Theodor Leschetizky was a Polish pianist and teacher who, with Franz Liszt, was the most influential teacher of piano of his time. Leschetizky studied under Carl Czerny in Vienna and thus was linked indirectly with the playing of Czerny’s teacher, Ludwig van Beethoven. In 1852 he went to St.
- Lesclaircissement de la langue francoise (dictionary by Palgrave)
dictionary: From Classical times to 1604: …(or Jehan) Palsgrave in 1530, Lesclaircissement de la langue francoise (“Elucidation of the French Tongue”). Palsgrave was a tutor of French in London, and a letter has survived showing that he arranged with his printer that no copy should be sold without his permission,
- Lescot, Pierre (French architect)
Pierre Lescot was one of the great French architects of the mid-16th century who contributed a decorative style that provided the foundation for the classical tradition of French architecture. In his youth Lescot, who came from a wealthy family of lawyers, studied mathematics, architecture, and
- Lesdiguières, François de Bonne, duc de (French constable)
François de Bonne, duke de Lesdiguières was the constable of France and a Protestant leader who late in life abjured the faith. Lesdiguières had begun to study law at Paris when he joined the Huguenot troops in Dauphiné and distinguished himself in mountain warfare. In 1575 he became the
- Lese (people)
Ituri Forest: The Pygmies: …with the Sudanic-speaking Mamvu and Lese (Walese). The Mbuti live with the Bila (Babila) in the centre of the forest.
- Lesh, Phil (American musician)
Grateful Dead: …8, 1973, San Francisco), bassist Phil Lesh (b. March 15, 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,…
- Leshan (China)
Leshan Giant Buddha: …made of red sandstone in Leshan, Sichuan province, China.
- Leshan Giant Buddha (statue, China)
Leshan Giant Buddha, the biggest stone Buddha statue in the world at 233 feet (71 m) high. It is carved into a cliff face made of red sandstone in Leshan, Sichuan province, China. The Buddha is situated at the confluence of the Min, Qingyi, and Dadu rivers, where numerous shipping accidents had
- leshy (Slavic mythology)
leshy, in Slavic mythology, the forest spirit. The leshy is a sportive spirit who enjoys playing tricks on people, though when angered he can be treacherous. He is seldom seen, but his voice can be heard in the forest laughing, whistling, or singing. When the leshy is spotted, he can be easily
- lesiba (musical instrument)
African music: Musical bows: …rattle stick, and the Sotho lesiba (like the gora of the Khoekhoe) is sounded by exhaling and inhaling across a piece of quill connecting the string to the stave. Bows with more than one string are rare, but the tingle apho of the Kara people in southern Ethiopia has three.
- Lesina (island, Croatia)
Hvar, island in the Adriatic Sea, part of Croatia. At 116 square miles (300 square km) in area and 43 miles (69 km) in length, it is the longest island in the Adriatic. A rocky island, it reaches 2,054 feet (626 m) in elevation at Mount Sveti Nikola and is separated from the island of Brač by a
- lesion (pathology)
lesion, in physiology, a structural or biochemical change in an organ or tissue produced by disease processes or a wound. The alteration may be associated with particular symptoms of a disease, as when a gastric ulcer produces stomach pain, or it may take place without producing symptoms, as in the
- Leskien, August (German linguist)
August Leskien was a German linguist noted for wide-ranging contributions to comparative Indo-European linguistics, particularly for his still authoritative work on the Baltic and Slavic groups. He significantly contributed to the development of the idea that “phonetic laws have no exceptions,”
- Leskiw, Greg (Canadian musician)
the Guess Who: December 14, 1997, Winnipeg), and Greg Leskiw (b. August 5, 1947).
- Leskov, Nikolay Semyonovich (Russian writer)
Nikolay Semyonovich Leskov was a novelist and short-story writer who has been described as the greatest of Russian storytellers. As a child Leskov was taken to different monasteries by his grandmother, and he used those early memories of Russian monastic life with good effect in his most famous
- Lesley J. McNair, Fort (fort, Washington, District of Columbia, United States)
Washington, D.C.: Southwest: …1794 (today it is called Fort Lesley J. McNair). It is one of the oldest forts in the country; it has served as the headquarters of the U.S. Army Washington Military District since 1966 and has been the main campus of National Defense University since 1977.
- Lesley University (university, Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States)
Cambridge: …(1879; now integrated with Harvard), Lesley University (1909), and the Episcopal Divinity School (1867). The headquarters of the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory, formerly in Washington, D.C., was moved to Cambridge in 1955; it is now part of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics.
- Lesley, John (Scottish bishop)
John Leslie was a Scottish Roman Catholic bishop and historian and an adviser of Mary Stuart, queen of Scots. He was involved in plots to overthrow the Protestant government of Queen Elizabeth I and to place Mary on the throne of England. The illegitimate son of a parson at Kingussie,
- Leslie’s Weekly (American magazine)
history of publishing: Illustrated magazines: …main early illustrated magazines were Leslie’s Weekly (1855–1922) and Harper’s Weekly (1857). Soon after its founding, Leslie’s had a circulation of 100,000, which doubled or trebled whenever there was something sensational to portray. During the Civil War, of which it gave a good pictorial record, it had as many as…
- Leslie, David (English general)
Battle of Dunbar: … defeated the Scottish army under David Leslie, thereby opening Scotland to 10 years of English occupation and rule.
- Leslie, Frank (British-American illustrator and journalist)
Frank Leslie was a British-U.S. illustrator and journalist. The Illustrated London News published his early sketches. He moved to the U.S. in 1848. There he founded numerous newspapers and journals, including the New York Journal (1854), Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper (1855)—having changed
- Leslie, John (Scottish bishop)
John Leslie was a Scottish Roman Catholic bishop and historian and an adviser of Mary Stuart, queen of Scots. He was involved in plots to overthrow the Protestant government of Queen Elizabeth I and to place Mary on the throne of England. The illegitimate son of a parson at Kingussie,
- Leslie, Lisa (American basketball player)
Los Angeles Sparks: …roster was highlighted by centre Lisa Leslie, who had starred on the 1996 gold-medal-winning U.S. women’s Olympic basketball team. Leslie was the leading scorer for the Sparks during the team’s first eight seasons. In 2001 the Sparks topped the league with a 28–4 regular-season record and advanced to the finals,…
- Leslie, Sir John (Scottish physicist and mathematician)
Sir John Leslie was a Scottish physicist and mathematician who first created artificial ice. In 1802 Leslie’s explanation of capillary action was the first that is consistent with present-day theory. Two years later he published An Experimental Inquiry into the Nature and Propagation of Heat. In
- Leśmian, Bolesław (Polish poet)
Bolesław Leśmian was a lyric poet who was among the first to adapt Symbolism and Expressionism to Polish verse. Born into a Jewish family, Leśmian was educated in Kiev, Ukraine, where he studied law. He spent several years in France. During most of his later life he functioned as a minor public
- Lesnaya, Battle of (Russian history)
Peter I: The Northern War (1700–21): …and in the battles of Lesnaya (1708) and of Poltava (1709). At Poltava, where Charles XII of Sweden suffered a catastrophic defeat, the plan of operations was Peter’s own: it was his idea to transform the battlefield by works of his military engineers—the redoubts erected in the path of the…
- Lesne, Michael (French artist)
printmaking: France: Michael Lesne, a French portraitist whose influence was considerable, worked for a time in the Rubens workshop, later returning to France. Claude Mellan, another major influence, was trained in Rome. Technical virtuosity dominated his prints; for example, the modelling of a face with one continuous…
- Leśniewski, Stanisław (Polish logician and mathematician)
Stanisław Leśniewski was a Polish logician and mathematician who was a co-founder and leading representative of the Warsaw school of logic. Leśniewski was the son of one of the civil engineers chiefly responsible for the construction and supervision of the trans-Siberian railroad. After preliminary
- Lesosibirsk (Russia)
Lesosibirsk, city, Krasnoyarsk kray (territory), Russia. The city extends for 19 miles (30 km) along the Yenisey River. It is a wood-processing centre and an important Yenisey River port. Lesosibirsk was formed in 1975 from two merged towns—Maklakovo and Novomaklakovo. The city is linked by
- Lesotho
Lesotho, landlocked country in Southern Africa. A scenic land of tall mountains and narrow valleys, Lesotho owes a long history of political autonomy to the mountains that surround it and protect it from encroachment. Since the Neolithic Period, the mountain kingdom was the domain of
- Lesotho Congress of Democrats (political party, Lesotho)
Lesotho: Political crisis: …formed his own party, the Lesotho Congress for Democracy (LCD). The LCD overwhelmingly won the general elections of May 1998, and, upon Mokhehle’s resignation, Pakalitha Mosisili became prime minister. Although claims of voting fraud were raised, the election was declared free and fair by many international observers. Opposition parties protesting…
- Lesotho Highlands (region, South Africa)
Orange River: Physiography: …dissected plateau formed by the Lesotho Highlands that extends from the Drakensberg escarpment in the east to the Maloti (Maluti) Mountains in the west. The main source of the Orange River is officially recognized as the Sinqu (Senqu) River, which rises near the plateau’s eastern edge. The Seati (Khubedu) headwater…
- Lesotho Highlands Water Project (water project, Lesotho)
Lesotho: The Lesotho Highlands Water Project: Of primary importance to the country is the Lesotho Highlands Water Project (LHWP), a large-scale water-transfer plan involving Lesotho and South Africa. Although similar plans had been discussed since the 1930s, the LHWP first took shape in the late 1980s and…
- Lesotho National Party (political party, Lesotho)
flag of Lesotho: …flag of his own ruling Basotho National Party, which had four equal horizontal stripes from top to bottom of blue, white, red, and green. Other parties objected, and instead the national flag displayed green, red, and blue vertically with a white silhouette version of a typical Sotho straw hat.
- Lesotho, flag of
national flag consisting of three unequal horizontal stripes of blue, white, and green with a black emblem in the centre. The flag has a width-to-length ratio of 2 to 3.The British protectorate of Basutoland was established in 1868 to preserve the mountain kingdom of Basotho from being absorbed by
- Lesotho, history of
Lesotho: History: This discussion focuses on Lesotho since the mid-19th century. For a more-detailed treatment of earlier periods and of the country in its regional context, see Southern Africa.
- Lesotho, Kingdom of
Lesotho, landlocked country in Southern Africa. A scenic land of tall mountains and narrow valleys, Lesotho owes a long history of political autonomy to the mountains that surround it and protect it from encroachment. Since the Neolithic Period, the mountain kingdom was the domain of
- Lesotho, National University of (university, Roma, Lesotho)
Lesotho: Education: …education is provided by the National University of Lesotho (1945) and Lesotho Agricultural College (1955), and there are also vocational and educational training centres in the country. Lesotho has one of the highest literacy rates in Africa (about four-fifths of the population).
- Lesothosaurus (dinosaur)
dinosaur: Ornithischia: Basal Jurassic forms include Lesothosaurus and other fabrosaurids, small animals that are the best-known basal ornithischians. They have the ornithischian features mentioned above but few specializations beyond these. Otherwise, the two main ornithischian lineages are the Cerapoda and Thyreophora.
- Lespedeza (plant)
lespedeza, (genus Lespedeza), genus of about 40 species of plants in the pea family (Fabaceae). All lespedezas are adapted to warm humid climates and are native to North America, tropical and East Asia, and Australia. A number of species are useful as forage and green manure crops, and some are
- lespedeza (plant)
lespedeza, (genus Lespedeza), genus of about 40 species of plants in the pea family (Fabaceae). All lespedezas are adapted to warm humid climates and are native to North America, tropical and East Asia, and Australia. A number of species are useful as forage and green manure crops, and some are
- Lespedeza bicolor (plant)
lespedeza: …lespedeza species, such as the bicolour lespedeza (L. bicolor), are grown as ornamentals.
- Lespedeza cuneata (plant)
lespedeza: Sericea lespedeza (Lespedeza cuneata) is widely used in American agriculture as a pasture crop. Because of its great root system, its dense growth canopy, and its ability to grow on badly eroded soils, the sericea lespedeza is also extremely useful in soil conservation. Some shrublike…