- Marcion of Pontus (Christian theologian)
Marcion of Pontus was a Christian heretic. Although Marcion is known only through reports and quotations from his orthodox opponents, especially Tertullian’s Adversus Marcionem (“Against Marcion”), the principal outlines of his teaching seem clear. His teaching made a radical distinction between
- Marcion of Sinope (Christian theologian)
Marcion of Pontus was a Christian heretic. Although Marcion is known only through reports and quotations from his orthodox opponents, especially Tertullian’s Adversus Marcionem (“Against Marcion”), the principal outlines of his teaching seem clear. His teaching made a radical distinction between
- Marcionite (Gnostic sect)
Marcionite, any member of a gnostic sect that flourished in the 2nd century ce. The name derives from Marcion of Pontus (an ancient district in northeastern Anatolia), who, sometime after his arrival in Rome, fell under the influence of Cerdo, a gnostic Christian, and went on to expand upon his
- Marcks, Gerhard (German artist)
Gerhard Marcks was a German sculptor, printmaker, and designer who helped to revive the art of sculpture in Germany during the first quarter of the 20th century. Marcks was educated in the atelier of the sculptor Richard Scheibe; there he often sculpted animals in terra-cotta. Marcks served in
- Marclay, Christian (Swiss American artist and composer)
Christian Marclay is a Swiss American visual artist and composer whose multidisciplinary work encompasses performance, sculpture, and video. Much of his art imaginatively explores the physical and cultural intersections between sound and image, often through the deconstruction and
- Marclay, Christian Ernest (Swiss American artist and composer)
Christian Marclay is a Swiss American visual artist and composer whose multidisciplinary work encompasses performance, sculpture, and video. Much of his art imaginatively explores the physical and cultural intersections between sound and image, often through the deconstruction and
- Marco Polo Bridge Incident (Asian history)
Marco Polo Bridge Incident, (July 7, 1937), conflict between Chinese and Japanese troops near the Marco Polo Bridge (Chinese: Lugouqiao) outside Beiping (now Beijing), which developed into the warfare between the two countries that was the prelude to the Pacific side of World War II. In 1931 Japan
- Marco Polo sheep (sheep)
argali: The Pamir argali is also known as the Marco Polo sheep; the Italian traveler Marco Polo, who crossed the Pamir highlands in the 13th century, was the first Westerner to describe the argali. Horns in Marco Polo sheep may reach up to 1.8 metres (6 feet)…
- Marcomani (people)
Marcomanni, German tribe that settled in the Main River valley soon after 100 bc; they were members of the Suebi group (see Suebi). To escape Roman aggression in 9 bc they migrated east to Bohemia, where under their king Maroboduus they built a powerful confederation of tribes. The kingdom broke up
- Marcomanni (people)
Marcomanni, German tribe that settled in the Main River valley soon after 100 bc; they were members of the Suebi group (see Suebi). To escape Roman aggression in 9 bc they migrated east to Bohemia, where under their king Maroboduus they built a powerful confederation of tribes. The kingdom broke up
- Marconi Wireless Telegraph Company of America (American company)
Guglielmo Marconi: Education and early radio work: (changed in 1900 to Marconi’s Wireless Telegraph Company, Ltd.). During the first years, the company’s efforts were devoted chiefly to showing the full possibilities of radiotelegraphy. A further step was taken in 1899 when a wireless station was established at South Foreland, England, for communicating with Wimereux in France,…
- Marconi’s Wireless Telegraph Company, Ltd. (American company)
Guglielmo Marconi: Education and early radio work: (changed in 1900 to Marconi’s Wireless Telegraph Company, Ltd.). During the first years, the company’s efforts were devoted chiefly to showing the full possibilities of radiotelegraphy. A further step was taken in 1899 when a wireless station was established at South Foreland, England, for communicating with Wimereux in France,…
- Marconi, Guglielmo (Italian physicist)
Guglielmo Marconi was an Italian physicist and inventor of a successful wireless telegraph, or radio (1896). In 1909 he received the Nobel Prize for Physics, which he shared with German physicist Ferdinand Braun. He later worked on the development of shortwave wireless communication, which
- Marcos, Bongbong (president of the Philippines)
Ferdinand Marcos, Jr. is a Filipino politician who has been president of the Philippines since 2022. Prior to becoming president, he served in government from the 1980s to the 2010s as senator, congressman, governor, and vice governor. Bongbong is the scion of a prominent political family in the
- Marcos, Ferdinand (ruler of Philippines)
Ferdinand Marcos was a Philippine lawyer and politician who, as head of state from 1965 to 1986, established an authoritarian regime in the Philippines that came under criticism for corruption and for its suppression of democratic processes. Marcos attended school in Manila and studied law in the
- Marcos, Ferdinand Edralin (ruler of Philippines)
Ferdinand Marcos was a Philippine lawyer and politician who, as head of state from 1965 to 1986, established an authoritarian regime in the Philippines that came under criticism for corruption and for its suppression of democratic processes. Marcos attended school in Manila and studied law in the
- Marcos, Ferdinand Romualdez, Jr. (president of the Philippines)
Ferdinand Marcos, Jr. is a Filipino politician who has been president of the Philippines since 2022. Prior to becoming president, he served in government from the 1980s to the 2010s as senator, congressman, governor, and vice governor. Bongbong is the scion of a prominent political family in the
- Marcos, Ferdinand, Jr. (president of the Philippines)
Ferdinand Marcos, Jr. is a Filipino politician who has been president of the Philippines since 2022. Prior to becoming president, he served in government from the 1980s to the 2010s as senator, congressman, governor, and vice governor. Bongbong is the scion of a prominent political family in the
- Marcos, Fray (Spanish explorer)
Marcos de Niza was a Franciscan friar who claimed to have sighted the legendary “Seven Golden Cities of Cibola” in what is now western New Mexico. Niza went to the Americas in 1531 and served in Peru, Guatemala, and Mexico. At Culiacán, Mex., he freed Indian slaves from regions to the north. Under
- Marcos, Imelda (Filipino public figure)
Imelda Marcos is a public figure in the Philippines who wielded great power during the 20-year rule of her husband, Pres. Ferdinand Marcos. The woman who would become known as the “Steel Butterfly” for her combination of fashion sense and political resolve was born Imelda Romuáldez. Her mother died
- Marcos, Imelda Romuáldez (Filipino public figure)
Imelda Marcos is a public figure in the Philippines who wielded great power during the 20-year rule of her husband, Pres. Ferdinand Marcos. The woman who would become known as the “Steel Butterfly” for her combination of fashion sense and political resolve was born Imelda Romuáldez. Her mother died
- Marcos, Subcomandante (Mexican leader)
Subcomandante Marcos is a Mexican professor who was the leader of the Zapatista National Liberation Army (Ejército Zapatista de Liberación Nacional; EZLN, also called the Zapatistas), which launched a rebellion in 1994 in the state of Chiapas and later functioned as a political movement defending
- Marcq-en-Baroeul (town, France)
Marcq-en-Baroeul, town, Nord département, Hauts-de-France région, northern France. It is a part of the Lille-Roubaix-Tourcoing urban complex. Its diversified manufactures include cotton textiles, metal products, chocolate, and yeast. Pop. (1999) 37,177; (2014 est.)
- Marcus (fictional character)
Captain Marvel: From Ms. Marvel to Captain Marvel and back: …and revealed that he was Marcus, the son of the Avengers’ time-traveling foe Immortus. He had engineered his own birth by kidnapping Danvers and raping her while she was under the influence of Immortus’s mind-control devices. In an inexplicable turn, Danvers quit the Avengers and agreed to accompany her “child”…
- Marcus Annius Verus (emperor of Rome)
Marcus Aurelius was a Roman emperor (161–180), best known for his Meditations on Stoic philosophy. Marcus Aurelius has symbolized for many generations in the West the Golden Age of the Roman Empire. When he was born, his paternal grandfather was already consul for the second time and prefect of
- Marcus Antonius (Roman triumvir)
Mark Antony was a Roman general under Julius Caesar and later triumvir (43–30 bce), who, with Cleopatra, queen of Egypt, was defeated by Octavian (the future emperor Augustus) in the last of the civil wars that destroyed the Roman Republic. He is one of the major figures of Classical antiquity.
- Marcus Antonius Gordianus (Roman emperor)
Gordian III was a Roman emperor from 238 to 244. After the deaths of the joint emperors Gordian I and Gordian II in 238, the Roman Senate proclaimed two elderly senators, Pupienus and Balbinus, joint emperors. However, the people and the Praetorian Guard in Rome distrusted the Senate’s nominees and
- Marcus Antonius Gordianus Sempronianus Romanus Africanus (Roman emperor)
Gordian I was a Roman emperor for three weeks in March to April 238. Gordian was an elderly senator with a taste for literature. The Greek writer Flavius Philostratus dedicated his Lives of the Sophists to him. Early in 238, when Gordian was proconsul in Africa, a group of wealthy young landowners
- Marcus Aurelius (emperor of Rome)
Marcus Aurelius was a Roman emperor (161–180), best known for his Meditations on Stoic philosophy. Marcus Aurelius has symbolized for many generations in the West the Golden Age of the Roman Empire. When he was born, his paternal grandfather was already consul for the second time and prefect of
- Marcus Aurelius (work by Renan)
Ernest Renan: Later writings of Ernest Renan: …Hadrian, but in Marc-Aurèle (1882; Marcus Aurelius, 1904), the study of Marcus Aurelius, again a self-portrait, it is dominated by the author’s preoccupation with death. Since 1876 Renan had been working on his memoirs, Souvenirs d’enfance et de jeunesse (1883; Recollections of My Youth, 1883), in which he reconstructs his…
- Marcus Aurelius Antoninus Caesar (Roman emperor)
Caracalla was a Roman emperor, ruling jointly with his father, Septimius Severus, from 198 to 211 and then alone from 211 until his assassination in 217. His principal achievements were his colossal baths in Rome and his edict of 212, giving Roman citizenship to all free inhabitants of the empire.
- Marcus Aurelius Carinus (Roman emperor)
Carinus was a Roman emperor from ad 283 to 285. With the title of Caesar, he was sent by his father, the emperor Carus, to the army of the Rhine in 282. On his father’s death in the summer of 283, Carinus became emperor in the West, his brother Numerian becoming emperor in the East. After a
- Marcus Aurelius Carus (Roman emperor)
Carus was a Roman emperor from 282 to 283. Carus was probably from either Gaul or Illyricum and had served as prefect of the guard to the emperor Probus (276–282), whom he succeeded. Like his predecessors, Carus adopted the name Marcus Aurelius as a part of his imperial title. After a brief Danube
- Marcus Aurelius Claudius Gothicus (Roman emperor)
Claudius II Gothicus was a Roman emperor in 268–270, whose major achievement was the decisive defeat of the Gothic invaders (hence the name Gothicus) of the Balkans in 269. Claudius was an army officer under the emperor Gallienus from 260 to 268—a period of devastation of much of the Roman Empire
- Marcus Aurelius Claudius Quintillus (Roman emperor)
Quintillus was a Roman emperor in ad 270, who died or was killed a few weeks after being proclaimed
- Marcus Aurelius Numerius Numerianus (Roman emperor)
Numerian was a Roman emperor from 283–284. He succeeded his father, Carus, in the summer of 283, in the midst of a war with the Sāsānians. Numerian was emperor in the East, and his brother, Carinus, ruled the West. Numerian led the army home but contracted a disabling eye disease. Late in 284,
- Marcus Aurelius Severus Alexander (Roman emperor)
Severus Alexander was a Roman emperor from ad 222 to 235, whose weak rule collapsed in the civil strife that engulfed the empire for the next 50 years. His maternal grandmother, Julia Maesa, was a sister-in-law of the emperor Septimius Severus (reigned 193–211). In 218 the legions in Syria
- Marcus Aurelius Severus Antoninus Augustus (Roman emperor)
Caracalla was a Roman emperor, ruling jointly with his father, Septimius Severus, from 198 to 211 and then alone from 211 until his assassination in 217. His principal achievements were his colossal baths in Rome and his edict of 212, giving Roman citizenship to all free inhabitants of the empire.
- Marcus Aurelius, Column of (monument, Rome, Italy)
Rome: Churches and palaces: The column of Marcus Aurelius, with reliefs showing his victory over Danubian tribes, was preserved from the assorted Christian looters of Rome because it was the property of a religious order. In the square around the column, the Piazza Colonna, are the Palazzo Chigi (1562), for…
- Marcus Baker, Mount (mountain, Alaska, United States)
Chugach Mountains: …11,000 feet (3,400 metres), with Mount Marcus Baker (13,176 feet [4,016 metres]) the highest. The southern slope of the mountains, which were named for an Eskimo tribe, lies within Chugach National Forest, and the eastern portion passes through Wrangell–St. Elias National Park and Preserve (the largest unit of the U.S.…
- Marcus Claudius Tacitus (Roman emperor)
Tacitus was a Roman emperor in 275–276. In the 40 years before Tacitus assumed power the empire was ruled by a succession of usurpers and emperors who had been career army officers. On the murder of the emperor Aurelian in 275, the army council invited the Senate to select a nobleman as head of
- Marcus Cocceius Nerva (Roman emperor)
Nerva was a Roman emperor from Sept. 18, 96, to January 98, the first of a succession of rulers traditionally known as the Five Good Emperors. A member of a distinguished senatorial family, Nerva was distantly related by marriage to the Julio-Claudian house and had been twice consul (71 ce and 90)
- Marcus Eremita (Christian theologian)
Mark The Hermit was a theological polemicist and author of works on Christian asceticism notable for their psychological insight and for their influence on later monastic history and literature. To some scholars, elements of his doctrine suggest aspects of 16th-century Reformation theology.
- Marcus Flavius Valerius Constantius (Roman emperor)
Constantius I was a Roman emperor and father of Constantine I the Great. As a member of a four-man ruling body (tetrarchy) created by the emperor Diocletian, Constantius held the title of caesar from 293 to 305 and caesar augustus in 305–306. Of Illyrian descent, Constantius had a distinguished
- Marcus Island (island, Japan)
Minamitori Island, coral atoll in the central Pacific Ocean 700 miles (1,125 km) southeast of Japan. It rises to 204 feet (62 metres) and has an area of 740 acres (300 hectares). Minamitori Island was discovered by the Japanese navigator Shinroku Mizutani (1868) and was annexed by Japan (1898).
- Marcus Julius Agrippa (king of Judaea)
Herod Agrippa I was the king of Judaea (41–44 ce), a clever diplomat who through his friendship with the Roman imperial family obtained the kingdom of his grandfather, Herod I the Great. He displayed great acumen in conciliating the Romans and Jews. After Agrippa’s father, Aristobulus IV, was
- Marcus Julius Cottius (Ligurian king)
Cottius was the king and then prefect of the Ligurian tribes living in the area now called the Cottian Alps, centred on Mount Cenis and the Montgenèvre Pass. Cottius was the son of King Donnus, who had initially opposed but eventually entered into friendly relations with Julius Caesar. After
- Marcus Julius Philippus (Roman emperor)
Philip was a Roman emperor from 244 to 249. A member of a distinguished equestrian family of Arab descent, Philip was praetorian prefect when the emperor Gordian III was killed in a mutiny (perhaps with Philip’s connivance). Philip became emperor and quickly concluded a peace ending a war with
- Marcus Lucretius Fronto, House of (house, Pompeii, Italy)
Pompeii: Description of the remains: The House of Marcus Lucretius Fronto is a small but elegant house of the Roman Imperial period. The tablinum (master’s office) is decorated in especially fine Third Pompeian, or Egyptianizing, style, usually dated from the early empire to the earthquake. The House of the Vettii is…
- Marcus Opellius Macrinus (Roman emperor)
Macrinus was a Roman emperor in 217 and 218, the first man to rule the empire without having achieved senatorial status. His skills as a lawyer helped him to rise rapidly in an equestrian career (a step below the senatorial career in status) until he became a praetorian prefect under the emperor
- Marcus Salvius Otho (Roman emperor)
Otho was a Roman emperor from January to April 69. Otho was born into a family that had held the consulship under Augustus. He married Poppaea Sabina, but when the emperor Nero took Poppaea for his mistress—she later became his wife—Otho was sent from Rome to govern Lusitania (58). For 10 years he
- Marcus Ulpius Traianus (Roman emperor)
Trajan was a Roman emperor (98–117 ce) who sought to extend the boundaries of the empire to the east (notably in Dacia, Arabia, Armenia, and Mesopotamia), undertook a vast building program, and enlarged social welfare. Marcus Ulpius Traianus was born in the Roman province of Baetica (the area
- Marcus Welby, M.D. (American television series)
Robert Young: …classics Father Knows Best and Marcus Welby, M.D.
- Marcus, Greil (American author, music journalist and cultural critic)
Harry Smith: Anthology of American Folk Music: Greil Marcus, who has written exhaustively about the collection, identifies ballads as a standard academic category made up of compositions with a beginning, a middle, and an ending; defines social music as recordings that “presuppose” a community or family; and describes “songs” as a category…
- Marcus, Harold Stanley (American businessman)
Stanley Marcus was an American retail-store executive whose publicity campaigns gave the Neiman Marcus stores a reputation for luxury and fashion. Stanley’s father, Herbert Marcus, and his uncle, Al Neiman, opened the first Neiman Marcus store in Dallas, Texas, in 1907. Their idea was to offer
- Marcus, Rudolph A. (Canadian-American chemist)
Rudolph A. Marcus is a Canadian-born American chemist, winner of the 1992 Nobel Prize for Chemistry for his work on the theory of electron-transfer reactions in chemical systems. The Marcus theory shed light on diverse and fundamental phenomena such as photosynthesis, cell metabolism, and simple
- Marcus, Saint (pope)
Saint Mark ; feast day October 7) was the pope from Jan. 18 (?) to Oct. 7, 336. He is credited with having given the bishops of Ostia the right to consecrate new popes. He may have been the founder of the present Church of San Marco, Rome, and also of another that is situated over the catacomb of
- Marcus, Siegfried (German inventor)
Siegfried Marcus was an inventor who built four of the world’s earliest gasoline-powered automobiles. Marcus became an apprentice machinist at the age of 12, and five years later he joined an engineering company building telegraph lines. Within three years he invented a telegraphic relay system and
- Marcus, Stanley (American businessman)
Stanley Marcus was an American retail-store executive whose publicity campaigns gave the Neiman Marcus stores a reputation for luxury and fashion. Stanley’s father, Herbert Marcus, and his uncle, Al Neiman, opened the first Neiman Marcus store in Dallas, Texas, in 1907. Their idea was to offer
- Marcuse, Herbert (American philosopher)
Herbert Marcuse was a German-born American political philosopher and prominent member of the Frankfurt School of critical social analysis. His Marxist and Freudian theories of 20th-century Western society were influential in the leftist student movements of the 1960s, especially after the 1968
- Marcy, Geoffrey (American astronomer)
Geoffrey Marcy is an American astronomer whose use of Doppler shifts to detect extrasolar planets led to the discovery of several hundred planetary bodies in multiple star systems. Marcy was raised in the suburbs of Los Angeles. When he was 14, his mother, an anthropologist, and his father, an
- Marcy, Geoffrey William (American astronomer)
Geoffrey Marcy is an American astronomer whose use of Doppler shifts to detect extrasolar planets led to the discovery of several hundred planetary bodies in multiple star systems. Marcy was raised in the suburbs of Los Angeles. When he was 14, his mother, an anthropologist, and his father, an
- Marcy, Mount (mountain, New York, United States)
Mount Marcy, peak in the Adirondack Mountains and the highest point in New York, U.S., reaching an elevation of 5,344 feet (1,629 metres) above sea level. It lies in west-central Essex county in the northeastern part of the state, about 12 miles (19 km) south-southeast of Lake Placid village. The
- Marcy, William L (American politician)
William L. Marcy was a U.S. politician, governor, and Cabinet member, remembered primarily for his remark: “To the victor belong the spoils of the enemy.” From 1823 to 1829 Marcy was comptroller of New York state and a leading member of the “Albany Regency,” a group of powerful Democrats. After
- Marcy, William Learned (American politician)
William L. Marcy was a U.S. politician, governor, and Cabinet member, remembered primarily for his remark: “To the victor belong the spoils of the enemy.” From 1823 to 1829 Marcy was comptroller of New York state and a leading member of the “Albany Regency,” a group of powerful Democrats. After
- Marczincsák, György Pál (Hungarian-born animator, director, and producer)
George Pal was a Hungarian-born animator, film director, and producer who was a leading figure in the science-fiction genre, especially noted for his work with special effects. He also created Puppetoons, a popular series of animated shorts. (Read Martin Scorsese’s Britannica essay on film
- Mardaïte (people)
Mardaïte, member of a Christian people of northern Syria, employed as soldiers by Byzantine emperors. The Mardaïtes inhabited the Amanus (Gāvur) Mountains, in the modern Turkish province of Hatay, the 7th-century borderland between Byzantine and Muslim territory. In the period 660–680, allied with
- Mardals Falls (waterfall, Norway)
Mardals Falls, waterfalls at the head of Eikesdalsvatnet (lake), east-southeast of Åndalsnes, Nor. The falls consisted of two cataracts in Mardøla district of Møre og Romsdal fylke (county), western Norway. The falls ranked among the highest in the world, with their total drop of 1,696 feet (517
- Mardalsfossen (waterfall, Norway)
Mardals Falls, waterfalls at the head of Eikesdalsvatnet (lake), east-southeast of Åndalsnes, Nor. The falls consisted of two cataracts in Mardøla district of Møre og Romsdal fylke (county), western Norway. The falls ranked among the highest in the world, with their total drop of 1,696 feet (517
- Mardan (Votyak hero)
Finno-Ugric religion: Divine heroes: Mardan of the Yelabuga Udmurt is viewed as the progenitor of 11 villages and the one who led the dwellers therein from the north to their present habitations. There is a sacrificial ceremony in his honour every year. Also, there are signs of the worship…
- Mardan (Pakistan)
Mardan, town and district in Peshawar division, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, Pakistan. The town, the district headquarters, lies just north of the Kalpāni River; it is connected by road and rail with Dargai (Malakand Pass), Nowshera, and Peshawar, 30 miles (50 km) south-southwest. A growing
- mardānah (housing arrangement)
Pakistan: Daily life and social customs: …have a men’s section (mardānah) at the front of the house, so that visitors do not disturb the women, who are secluded in the women’s section (zanānah) in the rear. Women’s subordinate status in Pakistan also is evident in the practice of “honour killings,” in which a woman may…
- Mardāvīz ebn Zeyār (Zeyārid ruler)
Zeyārid Dynasty: …founder of the dynasty was Mardāvīz ebn Zeyār (reigned 927–935), who took advantage of a rebellion in the Sāmānid army of Iran to seize power in northern Iran. He soon expanded his domains and captured the cities of Hamadān and Eṣfahān. Mardāvīz was murdered in 935, and Zeyārid power thereupon…
- Marden, Brice (American artist)
Brice Marden was an American artist whose spare and subtle paintings of the 1960s helped define minimalist painting. His seemingly more expressionist and active images of the 1980s and ’90s and beyond caused a renewed interest in his work. Marden attended Boston University (B.F.A., 1961) and Yale
- Marden, John Wesley (American chemist)
vanadium: …VCl2, and the American chemists John Wesley Marden and Malcolm N. Rich obtained it 99.7 percent pure in 1925 by reduction of vanadium pentoxide, V2O5, with calcium metal.
- Marder (armored vehicle)
armoured vehicle: Infantry fighting vehicles: The West German Marder and the Soviet BMP-1, which first appeared in the late 1960s, represented the most significant advances in IFVs since World War II. Both vehicles enabled mounted infantry effectively to engage even armoured opponents—a capability lacking in previous designs. The Marder weighs 29.2 tons, has…
- Mardersteig, Giovanni (Italian printer)
Giovanni Mardersteig was a printer and typographer who, as head of Officina Bodoni, created books exemplifying the highest standards in the art of printing. He studied law at the universities of Bonn, Vienna, Kiel, and finally Jena, where he received his degree. After graduation he taught school
- Mardersteig, Hans (Italian printer)
Giovanni Mardersteig was a printer and typographer who, as head of Officina Bodoni, created books exemplifying the highest standards in the art of printing. He studied law at the universities of Bonn, Vienna, Kiel, and finally Jena, where he received his degree. After graduation he taught school
- Mardi (novel by Melville)
Mardi, third novel by Herman Melville, originally published in two volumes as Mardi: And a Voyage Thither in 1849. Mardi is an uneven and disjointed transitional book that uses allegory to comment on contemporary ideas about nations, politics, institutions, literature, and religion. The book was a
- Mardi Gras (film by Goulding [1958])
Edmund Goulding: The 1950s: Goulding’s last film was Mardi Gras (1958), a musical starring Pat Boone. After suffering several years of declining health, Goulding died in 1959.
- Mardi Gras (carnival)
Mardi Gras, festive day celebrated in France on Shrove Tuesday (the Tuesday before Ash Wednesday), which marks the close of the pre-Lenten season. The French name Mardi Gras means Fat Tuesday, from the custom of using all the fats in the home before Lent in preparation for fasting and abstinence.
- Mardi Gras (album by Creedence Clearwater Revival)
Creedence Clearwater Revival: …demanded greater prominence, resulting in Mardi Gras (1972), which was dominated by their songs. Its critical and commercial failure led to the band’s demise later that year. Unlike many 1960s acts, Creedence never staged a reunion. Tom Fogerty pursued a solo career until his death. Cook and Clifford worked as…
- Mardi: And a Voyage Thither (novel by Melville)
Mardi, third novel by Herman Melville, originally published in two volumes as Mardi: And a Voyage Thither in 1849. Mardi is an uneven and disjointed transitional book that uses allegory to comment on contemporary ideas about nations, politics, institutions, literature, and religion. The book was a
- Mardīkh, Tall (ancient city, Syria)
Ebla, ancient city 33 miles (53 km) southwest of Aleppo in northwestern Syria. During the height of its power (c. 2600–2240 bce), Ebla dominated northern Syria, Lebanon, and parts of northern Mesopotamia (modern Iraq) and enjoyed trade and diplomatic relations with states as far away as Egypt,
- Mardikh, Tell (ancient city, Syria)
Ebla, ancient city 33 miles (53 km) southwest of Aleppo in northwestern Syria. During the height of its power (c. 2600–2240 bce), Ebla dominated northern Syria, Lebanon, and parts of northern Mesopotamia (modern Iraq) and enjoyed trade and diplomatic relations with states as far away as Egypt,
- Mardin (province, Turkey)
Mardin: Mardin province, bordered to the south by Syria, is an agricultural area chiefly producing wheat, barley, and sesame. Angora goats are raised for mohair, and there is a small cotton- and woollen-weaving industry. In addition to Turks, the province has large populations of Arabs and…
- Mardin (Turkey)
Mardin, city, capital of Mardin il (province), southeastern Turkey. It lies on the southern slopes of a broad highland that rises to an elevation of 3,450 feet (1,052 metres) and overlooks extensive limestone plateaus. The locality receives more rainfall than the lower plains and has hot summers
- Mardivirus (virus genus)
herpesvirus: … (the causative agent of chickenpox); Mardivirus, which contains Marek’s disease viruses types 1 and 2 of chickens and turkey herpesvirus; and Iltovirus, which contains gallid herpesvirus 1. The alphaherpesviruses are distinguished from viruses of the other subfamilies by their fast rate of replication.
- Mardöll (Norse mythology)
Freyja, (Old Norse: “Lady”), most renowned of the Norse goddesses, who was the sister and female counterpart of Freyr and was in charge of love, fertility, battle, and death. Her father was Njörd, the sea god. Pigs were sacred to her, and she rode a boar with golden bristles. A chariot drawn by
- Mardonius (Persian general)
Mardonius was an Achaemenid general, a nephew of King Darius I and married to Darius’ daughter Artazostra. In 492 bc he was sent to succeed the satrap (governor) Artaphernes in Ionia, with a special commission to attack Athens and Eretria. Contrary to the usual Achaemenid policy, he abolished the
- Marduk (Babylonian god)
Marduk, in Mesopotamian religion, the chief god of the city of Babylon and the national god of Babylonia; as such, he was eventually called simply Bel, or Lord. Originally, he seems to have been a god of thunderstorms. A poem, known as Enuma elish and dating from the reign of Nebuchadrezzar I
- Marduk-apal-iddina II (king of Babylonia)
Merodach-Baladan II was the king of Babylonia 721–710 and for nine months in 703, who maintained Babylonian independence in the face of Assyrian military supremacy for more than a decade. Commencing in 728 the king of Assyria also officially held the title of king of Babylonia. During that time
- Marduk-balassu-iqbi (king of Babylonia)
history of Mesopotamia: Shalmaneser III and Shamshi-Adad V of Assyria: …battles against the Babylonian kings Marduk-balassu-iqbi and Baba-aha-iddina (about 818–12) and pushed through to Chaldea. Babylonia remained independent, however.
- Marduk-bel-usati (king of Babylonia)
history of Mesopotamia: Shalmaneser III and Shamshi-Adad V of Assyria: His brother Marduk-bel-usati rebelled against him, and in 851 the king was forced to ask Shalmaneser for help. Shalmaneser was only too happy to oblige; when the usurper had been finally eliminated (850), Shalmaneser went to southern Babylonia, which at that time was almost completely dominated by…
- Marduk-kabit-ahheshu (king of Babylonia)
history of Mesopotamia: Babylonia under the 2nd dynasty of Isin: …which not much is known, Marduk-kabit-ahheshu (c. 1152–c. 1135) established what came to be known as the 2nd dynasty of Isin. His successors were often forced to continue the fighting. The most famous king of the dynasty was Nebuchadrezzar I (Nabu-kudurri-uṣur; c. 1119–c. 1098). He fought mainly against Elam, which…
- Marduk-nadin-ahhe (king of Babylonia)
history of Mesopotamia: Babylonia under the 2nd dynasty of Isin: …king, succeeded by his brother Marduk-nadin-ahhe (c. 1093–c. 1076). At first successful in his wars against Assyria, he later experienced heavy defeat. A famine of catastrophic proportions triggered an attack from Aramaean tribes, the ultimate blow. His successors made peace with Assyria, but the country suffered more and more from…
- Marduk-shapik-zeri (king of Babylonia)
chronology: Babylonian chronology before 747 bc: …reign of the Babylonian king Marduk-shapik-zeri. The Assyrian’s dates are probably correct to within one year. Thus, if Marduk-shapik-zeri is dated so that equal proportions of his reign fall before and after that of Ashared-apil-Ekur, a date is obtained for the former that should not be in error more than…
- Marduk-zakir-shumi I (king of Babylonia)
history of Mesopotamia: Shalmaneser III and Shamshi-Adad V of Assyria: In Babylonia, Marduk-zakir-shumi I ascended the throne about the year 855. His brother Marduk-bel-usati rebelled against him, and in 851 the king was forced to ask Shalmaneser for help. Shalmaneser was only too happy to oblige; when the usurper had been finally eliminated (850), Shalmaneser went to…
- mare (horse)
horse: Form and function: …employed as riding horses, while mares were kept for breeding purposes only. Geldings were used for work and as ladies’ riding horses. Recently, however, geldings generally have replaced stallions as riding horses. Young horses are known as foals; male foals are called colts and females fillies.
- mare (lunar feature)
mare, any flat, dark plain of lower elevation on the Moon. The term, which in Latin means “sea,” was erroneously applied to such features by telescopic observers of the 17th century. In actuality, maria are huge basins containing lava flows marked by craters, ridges, faults, and straight and