- mos majorum (Roman law)
ancient Rome: The program and career of Tiberius Sempronius Gracchus: …of what was regarded as mos majorum (constitutional custom). Fearing prosecution once his term in office was over, he now began to canvass for a second tribunate—another unprecedented act, bound to reinforce fears of tyranny. The elections took place in an atmosphere of violence, with nearly all his tribunician colleagues…
- Mosa River (river, Europe)
Meuse River, river, rising at Pouilly on the Langres Plateau in France and flowing generally northward for 590 miles (950 km) through Belgium and the Netherlands to the North Sea. In the French part, the river has cut a steep-sided, sometimes deep valley between Saint-Mihiel and Verdun, and beyond
- Mosad (Israeli intelligence agency)
Mossad, (Hebrew: “Central Institute for Intelligence and Special Operations”), one of the three major intelligence organizations of Israel, along with Aman (military intelligence) and Shin Bet (internal security). The Mossad is concerned with foreign intelligence gathering, intelligence analysis,
- Mosad Szold (American organization)
Henrietta Szold: …was renamed Mosad Szold (The Szold Foundation). Szold died in Jerusalem, in the Hadassah-Hebrew University Hospital she had helped make possible.
- Mosaddegh, Mohammad (premier of Iran)
Mohammad Mosaddegh was an Iranian political leader who nationalized the huge British oil holdings in Iran and, as premier in 1951–53, almost succeeded in deposing the shah. The son of an Iranian public official, Mosaddegh grew up as a member of Iran’s ruling elite. He received a Doctor of Law
- Mosaddeq, Mohammad (premier of Iran)
Mohammad Mosaddegh was an Iranian political leader who nationalized the huge British oil holdings in Iran and, as premier in 1951–53, almost succeeded in deposing the shah. The son of an Iranian public official, Mosaddegh grew up as a member of Iran’s ruling elite. He received a Doctor of Law
- Mosafer (film by Kiarostami [1974])
Abbas Kiarostami: His first feature, Mosāfer (1974; The Traveler), about a rebellious village boy determined to go to Tehrān and watch a football (soccer) match, is an indelible portrait of a troubled adolescent. In the 1980s Kiarostami’s documentaries Avalihā (1984; First Graders) and Mashq-e shab (1989; Homework) offered further insight…
- Mosāferīd Dynasty (Iranian dynasty)
Mosāferīd Dynasty, (ad c. 916–1090), Iranian dynasty that ruled in northwestern Iran. The founder of the dynasty was Moḥammad ebn Mosāfer (ruled c. 916–941), military commander of the strategic mountain fortresses of Ṭārom and Samīrān in Daylam, in northwestern Iran. With the increasing weakness of
- Mosaic (computer program)
Marc Andreessen: …in creating the Web browser Mosaic and who cofounded Netscape Communications Corporation.
- mosaic (art)
mosaic, in art, decoration of a surface with designs made up of closely set, usually variously coloured, small pieces of material such as stone, mineral, glass, tile, or shell. Unlike inlay, in which the pieces to be applied are set into a surface that has been hollowed out to receive the design,
- mosaic (plant disease)
mosaic, plant disease caused by various strains of several hundred viruses. A number of economically important crops are susceptible to mosaic infections, including tobacco, cassava, beet, cucumber, and alfalfa. Tulip mosaic virus “breaks” tulip and lily flowers, causing attractive and colourful
- Mosaic Communications Corp. (American company)
Netscape Communications Corp. , American developer of Internet software with headquarters in Mountain View, California. The company was founded in April 1994 as Mosaic Communications Corp. by James H. Clark and Marc Andreessen. Clark had previously founded and been chairman of Silicon Graphics,
- Mosaic covenant (Old Testament)
Sinai covenant, conditional agreement between God and the people of Israel that takes place at Mount Sinai. Building on the covenant made with Abraham, which first established a relationship between God and Abraham’s descendents, the basic agreement of the Sinai covenant is God’s affirmation of the
- mosaic Down syndrome (pathology)
Down syndrome: Types of Down syndrome: In mosaic Down syndrome, a rare form of the disorder, only some of an individual’s cells contain a third copy of the chromosome. Because there are some cells that retain the normal 46 chromosomes, certain aspects of the disorder, such as intellectual disability, are not as…
- mosaic evolution
mosaic evolution, the occurrence, within a given population of organisms, of different rates of evolutionary change in various body structures and functions. An example can be seen in the patterns of development of the different elephant species. The Indian elephant underwent rapid early molar
- mosaic glass (decorative arts)
mosaic glass, glassware made by fusing together pieces of diversely coloured glass. The earliest known glassware—vases produced in Egypt about the 15th century bc—is of this type. The Egyptian vases were formed by wrapping rods of different coloured glass softened by heating around a core of sand
- Mosaic Law (sacred text)
Torah, in Judaism, in the broadest sense, the substance of divine revelation to Israel, the Jewish people: God’s revealed teaching or guidance for humankind. The meaning of “Torah” is often restricted to signify the first five books of the Hebrew Bible (Old Testament), also called the Law (or the
- mosaic pavement
tessellated pavement, interior or exterior floor covering composed of stone tesserae (Latin: “dice”), cubes, or other regular shapes closely fitted together in simple or complex designs with a durable and waterproof cement, mortar, clay, or grout. Deriving from Greek pebble mosaic (q.v.) pavings of
- Mosaic Quartet (work by Cowell)
Henry Cowell: Cowell’s Mosaic Quartet (1935) was an experiment with musical form; the performers are given blocks of music to arrange in any desired order. With the Russian engineer Leon Theremin, Cowell built the Rhythmicon, an electronic instrument that could produce 16 different simultaneous rhythms, and he composed…
- Mosaic quilt (American soft furnishing)
quilting: The golden age of American quilts: …a popular choice, especially the Mosaic, a forerunner of the 20th century’s Grandmother’s Flower Garden, and the crazy quilt.
- mosaic rhyme (literature)
mosaic rhyme, a type of multiple rhyme in which a single multisyllabic word is made to rhyme with two or more words, as in the end rhymes of the following two lines from W.S. Gilbert’s song “The Modern
- mosaicism (genetic disorder)
chromosomal disorder: …occur, a condition known as mosaicism. In either case, abnormalities of development occur because of the unusual genetic signals transmitted by the chromosomes. Some one of these chromosome imbalances occurs in 0.5 percent of all births.
- Mosan school (visual arts)
Mosan school, regional style of Romanesque manuscript illumination, metalwork, and enamelwork that flourished in the 11th and 12th centuries and was centred in the Meuse River valley, especially at Liège and the Benedictine monastery of Stavelot. Two of the most important artists associated with
- Mosander, Carl Gustaf (Swedish chemist)
Carl Gustaf Mosander was a Swedish chemist whose work revealed the existence of numerous rare-earth elements with closely similar chemical properties. In 1826 Mosander was placed in charge of the chemical laboratory of the Caroline Medical Institute, Stockholm, and in 1832 became professor of
- mosasaur (fossil aquatic lizard)
mosasaur, (family Mosasauridae), extinct group of aquatic lizards that attained a high degree of adaptation to the marine environment and were distributed worldwide during the Cretaceous Period (145.5 million to 66 million years ago). The mosasaurs competed with other marine reptiles—the
- Mosasauridae (fossil aquatic lizard)
mosasaur, (family Mosasauridae), extinct group of aquatic lizards that attained a high degree of adaptation to the marine environment and were distributed worldwide during the Cretaceous Period (145.5 million to 66 million years ago). The mosasaurs competed with other marine reptiles—the
- Mosby, John Singleton (Confederate military officer and statesman)
John Singleton Mosby was a Confederate ranger whose guerrilla band frequently attacked and disrupted Union supply lines in Virginia and Maryland during the American Civil War. Reared near Charlottesville, Va., Mosby entered the University of Virginia in 1849 and graduated in 1852. While there he
- mosca cieca (game)
blindman’s buff, children’s game played as early as 2,000 years ago in Greece. The game is variously known in Europe: Italy, mosca cieca (“blind fly”); Germany, Blindekuh (“blind cow”); Sweden, blindbock (“blind buck”); Spain, gallina ciega (“blind hen”); and France, colin-maillard (named for a
- Mosca, Gaetano (Italian jurist and philosopher)
Gaetano Mosca was an Italian jurist and political theorist who, by applying a historical method to political ideas and institutions, elaborated the concept of a ruling minority (classe politica) present in all societies. His theory seemed to have its greatest influence on apologists for fascism who
- moschatel family (plant family)
Dipsacales: Adoxaceae: Adoxaceae—the elderberry, or moschatel, family— has five genera and 200 species. The three smallest genera (Adoxa, Sinadoxa, and Tetradoxa) are exclusively herbaceous, while the larger genera (Viburnum and Sambucus) are both woody and herbaceous. These latter genera are found mostly in the north temperate…
- Moscheles, Ignaz (Czech pianist)
Ignaz Moscheles was a Czech pianist, one of the outstanding virtuosos of his era. Moscheles studied at the Prague Conservatory and later at Vienna under Johann Georg Albrechtsberger and Antonio Salieri. In 1814, commissioned by Artaria & Co., publishers, he made the first piano arrangement of
- Moscherosch, Johann Michael (German satirist)
Johann Michael Moscherosch was a German Lutheran satirist whose bitterly brilliant but partisan writings graphically describe life in a Germany ravaged by the Thirty Years’ War (1618–48). His satires, which at times are tedious, also show an overwhelming moral zeal added to a sense of mission.
- Moschidae (mammal family)
deer: …in a separate family (Moschidae), while mouse deer are actually primitive ruminants of the family Tragulidae. With these exclusions, Cervidae becomes the deer family, a consistent, natural grouping of species.
- Moschiola (mammal genus)
chevrotain: …classified into the genera Hyemoschus, Moschiola, and Tragulus.
- Moschiola meminna (mammal)
chevrotain: …Indian chevrotains in the species Moschiola meminna, others divide the group into three species (M. meminna, M. indica, and M. kathygre).
- Moschopoulos, Manuel (Byzantine grammarian)
Manuel Moschopoulos was a Byzantine grammarian and critic during the reign (1282–1328) of Andronicus II Palaeologus. Little is known of Moschopoulos’ life except what can be gathered from his correspondence and a reference in a letter of one Maximus Planudes, who describes him as his pupil. He was
- Moschops (fossil therapsid genus)
Moschops, extinct genus of mammal-like reptiles (Therapsida) found as fossils in rocks of Permian age (299 million to 251 million years ago) in southern Africa. Moschops is representative of a group that became adapted to a diet of plant food; it was about 2.6 m (8 feet) long. The body was massive;
- Moschus (Greek poet and grammarian)
Moschus was a Greek pastoral poet and grammarian whose only surviving works are three short extracts from his Bucolica, a longer piece translated as Love the Runaway, and an epigram on Eros, or love, personified as a plowman. The short epic poem Europa is perhaps correctly attributed to him, the
- Moschus moschiferus (mammal)
musk deer, (Moschus moschiferus), small compact deer, family Moschidae (order Artiodactyla). A solitary shy animal, the musk deer lives in mountainous regions from Siberia to the Himalayas. It has large ears, a very short tail, no antlers, and, unlike all other deer, a gall bladder. The musk deer
- Moschus, John (Byzantine monk)
John Moschus was a Byzantine monk and writer whose work Pratum spirituale (“The Spiritual Meadow”), describing monastic spiritual experiences throughout the Middle East, became a popular example of ascetic literature during the medieval period and was a model for similar works. Moschus began his
- Mościcki, Ignacy (Polish statesman)
Ignacy Mościcki was a Polish statesman, scholar, and scientist, who, as president of the Polish republic, was a supporter of the dictatorship of Józef Piłsudski. Mościcki was educated as a chemist. He joined the Polish Socialist Party in the early 1890s and was involved in an attempt on the life of
- Moscone, George (American politician)
Harvey Milk: …Milk and the city’s mayor, George Moscone, were shot and killed in City Hall by Dan White, a conservative former city supervisor. At White’s murder trial, his attorneys successfully argued that his judgment had been impaired by a prolonged period of clinical depression, one symptom of which was the former…
- Mosconi, William Joseph (American billiards player)
Willie Mosconi was an American pocket billiards player who was men’s world champion 15 times between 1941 and 1957. His gentlemanly appearance and demeanor helped to establish pocket billiards as a reputable pastime. The son of a billiards parlour owner, Mosconi showed a precocious talent for the
- Mosconi, Willie (American billiards player)
Willie Mosconi was an American pocket billiards player who was men’s world champion 15 times between 1941 and 1957. His gentlemanly appearance and demeanor helped to establish pocket billiards as a reputable pastime. The son of a billiards parlour owner, Mosconi showed a precocious talent for the
- Moscoso de Gruber, Mireya Elisa (president of Panama)
Mireya Moscoso is a Panamanian politician, who was Panama’s first woman president (1999–2004). Moscoso was born to a poor family in a rural town. After graduating from high school, she worked as a secretary and in the early 1960s met Arnulfo Arias, a former president of Panama. She began working on
- Moscoso, Luis de (Spanish explorer)
Hernando de Soto: Exploration of southern North America: Luis de Moscoso, whom de Soto had named his successor, led the expedition’s remnants (half the original party) down the Mississippi on rafts, and they reached Mexico in 1543.
- Moscoso, Mireya (president of Panama)
Mireya Moscoso is a Panamanian politician, who was Panama’s first woman president (1999–2004). Moscoso was born to a poor family in a rural town. After graduating from high school, she worked as a secretary and in the early 1960s met Arnulfo Arias, a former president of Panama. She began working on
- Moscovian Stage (geology and stratigraphy)
Moscovian Stage, second of four internationally defined stages of the Pennsylvanian Subsystem of the Carboniferous System, encompassing all rocks deposited during the Moscovian Age (315.2 million to 307 million years ago). The name is taken from exposures in the Moscow Basin, Russia. There the
- moscovium (chemical element)
livermorium (Lv), artificially produced transuranium element of atomic number 116. In 2000 scientists at the Joint Institute for Nuclear Research in Dubna, Russia, and the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in Livermore, California, announced the production of atoms of livermorium when
- moscovium (chemical element)
moscovium (Mc), artificially produced transuranium element of atomic number 115. In 2010 scientists at the Joint Institute for Nuclear Research in Dubna, Russia, and at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in Berkeley, California, U.S., announced the production of four atoms of moscovium when
- Moscovsky Akademichesky Khudozhestvenny Teatr (theater, Moscow, Russia)
Moscow Art Theatre, outstanding Russian theatre of theatrical naturalism founded in 1898 by two teachers of dramatic art, Konstantin Stanislavsky and Vladimir Nemirovich-Danchenko. Its purpose was to establish a theatre of new art forms, with a fresh approach to its function. Sharing similar
- Moscovsky Khudozhestvenny Teatr (theater, Moscow, Russia)
Moscow Art Theatre, outstanding Russian theatre of theatrical naturalism founded in 1898 by two teachers of dramatic art, Konstantin Stanislavsky and Vladimir Nemirovich-Danchenko. Its purpose was to establish a theatre of new art forms, with a fresh approach to its function. Sharing similar
- Moscow (work by Plievier)
Theodor Plievier: …was completed by Moskau (1952; Moscow) and Berlin (1954).
- Moscow (Idaho, United States)
Moscow, city, seat (1888) of Latah county, northwestern Idaho, U.S. The city is situated on Paradise Creek, in the Palouse country just north of Lewiston, near the Washington border. The area was settled in 1871 and developed as a stagecoach station. Local farmers called the area Hog Heaven. The
- Moscow (national capital, Russia)
Moscow, city, capital of Russia, located in the far western part of the country. Since it was first mentioned in the chronicles of 1147, Moscow has played a vital role in Russian history. It became the capital of Muscovy (the Grand Principality of Moscow) in the late 13th century; hence, the people
- Moscow (oblast, Russia)
Moscow, oblast (region), western Russia. The oblast surrounds and includes the city of Moscow, the capital of Russia. Moscow oblast was formed in 1929. The main feature of its relief is the Klin-Dmitrov Ridge, which stretches roughly east-west across the oblast, north of Moscow city. The ridge, a
- Moscow 1980 Olympic Games
Moscow 1980 Olympic Games, athletic festival held in Moscow that took place July 19–August 3, 1980. The Moscow Games were the 19th occurrence of the modern Olympic Games. The Soviet Union’s invasion of Afghanistan in December 1979 led to the largest boycott in the history of the Olympic movement.
- Moscow Armistice (Finnish history)
Finland: Cooperation with Germany: …who began negotiations for an armistice. This was signed on September 19, 1944, on condition that Finland recognize the Treaty of Moscow of 1940 and that all foreign (German) forces be evacuated. A pledge was given, moreover, to cede Petsamo; to lease an area near Porkkala, southwest of Helsinki, for…
- Moscow Art Academic Theatre (theater, Moscow, Russia)
Moscow Art Theatre, outstanding Russian theatre of theatrical naturalism founded in 1898 by two teachers of dramatic art, Konstantin Stanislavsky and Vladimir Nemirovich-Danchenko. Its purpose was to establish a theatre of new art forms, with a fresh approach to its function. Sharing similar
- Moscow Art Theatre (theater, Moscow, Russia)
Moscow Art Theatre, outstanding Russian theatre of theatrical naturalism founded in 1898 by two teachers of dramatic art, Konstantin Stanislavsky and Vladimir Nemirovich-Danchenko. Its purpose was to establish a theatre of new art forms, with a fresh approach to its function. Sharing similar
- Moscow Canal (canal, Russia)
Moscow Canal, ship waterway linking Moscow to the Volga River at Ivankovo, north of Moscow. Built between 1932 and 1937, the canal replaced the canalized Moskva River, which can take only small craft, as the main water access to Moscow. The water journey to the important industrial centre of Nizhny
- Moscow Conferences (international relations)
World War II: Allied policy and strategy: Octagon (Quebec II) and Moscow, 1944: …the Allies was held in Moscow October 9–20, 1944, between Churchill and Stalin, with U.S. ambassador W. Averell Harriman also present at most of their talks. Disagreement persisted over Poland. Stalin, however, consented readily to Churchill’s provisional suggestion for zones of influence in southeastern Europe: the U.S.S.R. should be preponderant…
- Moscow Declaration (World War II)
Dumbarton Oaks Conference: …out paragraph 4 of the Moscow Declaration of 1943, which recognized the need for a postwar international organization to succeed the League of Nations. The Dumbarton Oaks proposals (Proposals for the Establishment of a General International Organization) did not furnish a complete blueprint for the United Nations. They failed to…
- Moscow Does Not Believe in Tears (film by Menshov [1980])
- 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
- Moscow Linguistic Circle (literary critic)
Formalism: …by Viktor Shklovsky; and the Moscow Linguistic Circle, founded in 1915. Other members of the groups included Osip Brik, Boris Eikhenbaum, Yury Tynianov, and Boris Tomashevsky.
- Moscow M. V. Lomonosov State University (university, Moscow, Russia)
Moscow State University, state-controlled institution of higher learning at Moscow, the oldest surviving, largest, and most prestigious university in Russia. It was founded in 1755 by the linguist M.V. Lomonosov and was modeled after German universities, its original faculty being predominantly
- Moscow Metro (subway system, Moscow, Russia)
Moscow Metro, subway system serving the city of Moscow and several neighbouring towns within Moscow oblast. The Moscow Metro system consists of a series of 14 radial lines running like spokes from the central hub to the outskirts of the city, plus the Number 5 (Koltseveya), which runs around the
- Moscow on the Hudson (film by Mazursky [1984])
Paul Mazursky: Films of the 1980s: More popular was Moscow on the Hudson (1984), with Robin Williams well cast as a saxophone-playing homesick Soviet defector who tries to adjust to life in New York City. As with most of Mazursky’s work, this bittersweet comedy’s best moments seem to happen on the periphery of the…
- Moscow Peak (mountain, Central Asia)
Pamirs: Physiography: …the Peter I Range, with Moscow (Moskva) Peak (22,260 feet [6,785 metres]); the Darvaz Range, with Arnavad Peak (19,957 feet [6,083 metres]); and the Vanch and Yazgulem ranges, with Revolution (Revolyutsii) Peak (22,880 feet [6,974 metres]). The ranges are separated by deep ravines. To the east of the Yazgulem Range,…
- Moscow Private Opera (Russian opera company)
Savva Mamontov: In 1885 Mamontov founded the Moscow Private Opera, which initially produced operas by both Italian and Russian composers but quickly shifted focus to promote the work of Russia’s leading composers, among them Modest Mussorgsky, Nikolay Rimsky-Korsakov, Pyotr Tchaikovsky, and Aleksandr Dargomyzhsky. With that extraordinary music, stage sets designed by Abramtsevo’s…
- Moscow Protocol (Czechoslovak history)
Czechoslovak history: The Prague Spring of 1968: …invalid, as required by the Moscow Protocol; hard-liners were thus able to occupy positions of power. Czechoslovakia was proclaimed a federal republic, with two autonomous units—the Czech Lands (Bohemia and Moravia) forming the Czech Socialist Republic and Slovakia the Slovak Socialist Republic, respectively—each with national parliaments and governments. A federal…
- Moscow Realistic Theatre (theater, Moscow, Russia)
theatre: The great directors: …work as director of the Moscow Realistic Theatre was innovative in the manner in which he planned the shape and relationship of both stage and audience for each individual production. His centre-stage production of Gorky’s Mother had subordinate stages and a walkway behind the audience. He experimented with stages in…
- Moscow River (river, Russia)
Moskva River, river flowing through Moscow oblast (province) and part of Smolensk oblast, in western Russia. It is a left-bank tributary of the Oka River in the Volga basin. Rising in the Smolensk-Moscow Upland, the river flows 312 mi (502 km) in a southeasterly direction and drains an area of
- Moscow school (art)
Moscow school, major school of late medieval Russian icon and mural painting that flourished in Moscow from about 1400 to the end of the 16th century, succeeding the Novgorod school as the dominant Russian school of painting and eventually developing the stylistic basis for a national art. Moscow
- Moscow State Circus (circus, Moscow, Russia)
circus: Clowns: …through his tours with the Moscow Circus. Wearing a minimum of makeup in the tradition of European Auguste clowns, he appeared in the ring with little to set him apart from the others except a slightly unconventional wardrobe. Like other great comedians of the world, his mere appearance brought anticipatory…
- Moscow State Conference (Russian history [1917])
Russian Provisional Government: The Moscow State Conference: To reinforce his authority with the support of some sort of representative body, Kerensky convened a State Conference in Moscow. Meeting August 12–15 (August 25–28), it was composed of members of the Duma as well as representatives of soviets, local government authorities,…
- Moscow State University (university, Moscow, Russia)
Moscow State University, state-controlled institution of higher learning at Moscow, the oldest surviving, largest, and most prestigious university in Russia. It was founded in 1755 by the linguist M.V. Lomonosov and was modeled after German universities, its original faculty being predominantly
- Moscow theater hostage crisis of 2002 (hostage situation, Moscow, Russia)
Moscow theater hostage crisis of 2002, hostage taking by Chechen militants at the Dubrovka Theater in Moscow, Russia, that lasted from October 23 to October 26, 2002. It ended when Russian Spetsnaz (special forces) troops of the anti-terrorist Alfa command filled the theater with a gas. At least
- Moscow Treaty (United States-Russia [2002])
arms control: Recent efforts: …the two countries signed the Strategic Offensive Reductions Treaty, which committed each side to reducing its store of strategic nuclear warheads. Russia subsequently announced that it would no longer be bound by the START II agreement, which its parliament had ratified in 2000.
- Moscow Zoo (zoo, Moscow, Russia)
Moscow Zoo, largest zoo in Russia, exhibiting an outstanding collection of northern animals and many exotic species. Founded by a public society in 1864, the zoo later was privately owned. In 1919 it was declared the property of Soviet Russia and in 1923 was put under the Moscow City Soviet
- Moscow, Battle of (World War II)
Battle of Moscow, battle fought between Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union from September 30, 1941 to January 7, 1942, during World War II. It was the climax of Nazi Germany’s Operation Barbarossa, and it ended the Germans’ intention to capture Moscow, which ultimately doomed the Third Reich. The
- Moscow, Grand Principality of (medieval principality, Russia)
Grand Principality of Moscow, medieval principality that, under the leadership of a branch of the Rurik dynasty, was transformed from a small settlement in the Rostov-Suzdal principality into the dominant political unit in northeastern Russia. Muscovy became a distinct principality during the
- Moscow, Treaty of (Russo-Turkish history [1921])
Treaty of Moscow, (March 16, 1921), pact concluded at Moscow between the nationalist government of Turkey and the Soviet Union that fixed Turkey’s northeastern frontier and established friendly relations between the two nations. With the advent of the Russian Revolution (October 1917), Russia
- Moscow, Treaty of (Russo-Finnish history [1940])
Finland: The Winter War: By the Treaty of Moscow of March 12, 1940, Finland surrendered a large area of southeastern Finland, including the city of Viipuri (renamed Vyborg), and leased the peninsula of Hanko to the Soviet Union for 30 years.
- Moscow-Petushki (work by Yerofeyev)
Russia: The 20th century: …Yerofeyev, whose grotesque latter-day picaresque Moscow-Petushki—published in a clandestine (samizdat) edition in 1968—is a minor classic.
- Moscow–Volga Canal (canal, Russia)
Moscow Canal, ship waterway linking Moscow to the Volga River at Ivankovo, north of Moscow. Built between 1932 and 1937, the canal replaced the canalized Moskva River, which can take only small craft, as the main water access to Moscow. The water journey to the important industrial centre of Nizhny
- Mosebach, Martin (German author)
Martin Mosebach is a German novelist and essayist whose social commentary is informed by his Roman Catholic faith. Mosebach embarked in the early 1980s on a career as a freelance writer in his hometown of Frankfurt am Main, having studied law both there and in Bonn. He mirrored his own homecoming
- Mosel River (river, Europe)
Moselle River, river, a west-bank tributary of the Rhine River, flowing for 339 miles (545 km) across northeastern France and western Germany. Rising on the forested slopes of the Vosges massif, the river meanders past Épinal, Pont-Saint-Vincent, Toul, Frouard, Metz, and Thionville before leaving
- Moseley Braun, Carol (United States senator)
Carol Moseley Braun was a Democratic senator from Illinois (1993–99), who in 1992 became the first African American woman elected to the U.S. Senate. Carol Moseley attended the University of Illinois at Chicago (B.A., 1969) and received a law degree from the University of Chicago (1972). She
- Moseley’s law (physics)
Henry Moseley: Known as Moseley’s law, this fundamental discovery concerning atomic numbers was a milestone in advancing the knowledge of the atom. In 1914 Moseley published a paper in which he concluded that the atomic number is the number of positive charges in the atomic nucleus. He also stated…
- Moseley, Carol (United States senator)
Carol Moseley Braun was a Democratic senator from Illinois (1993–99), who in 1992 became the first African American woman elected to the U.S. Senate. Carol Moseley attended the University of Illinois at Chicago (B.A., 1969) and received a law degree from the University of Chicago (1972). She
- Moseley, Henry (British physicist)
Henry Moseley was an English physicist who experimentally demonstrated that the major properties of an element are determined by the atomic number, not by the atomic weight, and firmly established the relationship between atomic number and the charge of the atomic nucleus. Educated at Trinity
- Moseley, Henry Gwyn Jeffreys (British physicist)
Henry Moseley was an English physicist who experimentally demonstrated that the major properties of an element are determined by the atomic number, not by the atomic weight, and firmly established the relationship between atomic number and the charge of the atomic nucleus. Educated at Trinity
- Moselle (department, France)
Lorraine: Meuse, Meurthe-et-Moselle, and Moselle.
- Moselle Franconian (language)
Germany: Languages of Germany: Moselle Franconian extends from Luxembourg through the Moselle valley districts and across the Rhine into the Westerwald. Ripuarian Franconian begins roughly near Aachen, at the Dutch-Belgian border, and spreads across the Rhine between Düsseldorf and Bonn into the Sauerland.
- Moselle River (river, Europe)
Moselle River, river, a west-bank tributary of the Rhine River, flowing for 339 miles (545 km) across northeastern France and western Germany. Rising on the forested slopes of the Vosges massif, the river meanders past Épinal, Pont-Saint-Vincent, Toul, Frouard, Metz, and Thionville before leaving
- Mosén Millán (work by Sender)
Spanish literature: The novel: Requiem for a Spanish Peasant). After more than three decades in exile, Sender returned to Spain to a hero’s welcome from younger compatriots. The diplomat, legal scholar, and critic Francisco Ayala showed a youthful vanguardism early in his career; in later short stories (the collections…
- Moser, Edvard I. (Norwegian neuroscientist)
Edvard I. Moser is a Norwegian neuroscientist best known for his role in the discovery of grid cells in the brain and the identification of their function in generating spatial coordinates used by animals to navigate their environment. Moser’s research had important implications for scientists’
- Möser, Justus (German writer)
Justus Möser was a German political essayist and poet who was a forerunner of the Sturm und Drang (“Storm and Stress”) movement. Trained in jurisprudence at the Universities of Jena and Göttingen, Möser was named state’s attorney at Osnabrück (1747), a prince-bishopric, and from 1764 he was very