- Martini, Simone (Italian painter)
Simone Martini was an important exponent of Gothic painting who did more than any other artist to spread the influence of Sienese painting. Simone was very possibly a pupil of Duccio di Buoninsegna, from whom he probably inherited his love of harmonious, pure colours and most of his early figure
- Martini, Vincenzo, lo Spagnuolo il Valenziano (Spanish composer)
Vicente Martín y Soler was a Spanish opera composer known primarily for his melodious Italian comic operas and his work with acclaimed librettist Lorenzo Da Ponte in the late 18th century. Martín y Soler was initiated early into the music profession in his Spanish homeland, beginning as a singer in
- Martini-Henry breechloader (firearm)
small arm: The bolt action: …the British went to new Martini-Henry breechloaders of .45-inch calibre. In these rifles, pushing down a lever attached to the trigger guard lowered the entire breechblock, exposing the chamber, and raised the breechblock back to firing position when it was pulled back. Russia adopted two new 10-mm breechloaders, the Model…
- Martinic, Jaroslav (governor of Bohemia)
Defenestration of Prague: …imperial regents, William Slavata and Jaroslav Martinic, were tried and found guilty of violating the Letter of Majesty and, with their secretary, Fabricius, were thrown from the windows of the council room of Hradčany (Prague Castle) on May 23, 1618. Although inflicting no serious injury on the victims, that act,…
- Martinique (overseas department, France)
Martinique, island and overseas territorial collectivity of France, in the eastern Caribbean Sea. It is included in the Lesser Antilles island chain. Its nearest neighbours are the island republics of Dominica, 22 miles (35 km) to the northwest, and Saint Lucia, 16 miles (26 km) to the south.
- Martinique lancehead (snake)
fer-de-lance: …to the Martinique lancehead (Bothrops lanceolatus) found on the island of the same name in the West Indies. Several authoritative sources, however, frequently apply the name to the terciopelo (B. asper) and the common lancehead (B. atrox) of South America. The name fer-de-lance has also been used collectively to…
- Martinique, Département de la (overseas department, France)
Martinique, island and overseas territorial collectivity of France, in the eastern Caribbean Sea. It is included in the Lesser Antilles island chain. Its nearest neighbours are the island republics of Dominica, 22 miles (35 km) to the northwest, and Saint Lucia, 16 miles (26 km) to the south.
- Martinism (Christian mysticism)
illuminati: Later illuminati: … was given to the French Martinists, founded in 1754 by Martinez Pasqualis and propagated by Louis-Claude de Saint-Martin. By 1790 Martinism had been spread to Russia by Johann Georg Schwarz and Nikolay Novikov. Both strains of “illuminated” Martinism included elements of Kabbalism and
- Martino il Giovane (king of Sicily)
Martin I was a prince of Aragon, king of Sicily (1392–1409), and skilled soldier, who had to subdue a popular revolt to maintain his reign on the island. The son of Martin the Humanist of Aragon, Martin married Queen Mary of Sicily in November 1391. He was crowned at Palermo in May 1392, without
- Martino, Francesco Maurizio di (Italian artist)
Francesco di Giorgio was an early Italian Renaissance painter, sculptor, architect, and designer. Remarkably versatile, a kind of Renaissance homo universale, Francesco combined the bold investigation of the humanist scholars with the conservative lyricism of the Sienese school. His early works
- Martins de Bulhões, Fernando (Portuguese friar)
St. Anthony of Padua ; canonized 1232; feast day June 13) was a Franciscan friar and a dedicated patron of the poor. Portugal and the city of Padua, Italy, claim him as their patron saint, and he is invoked for the return of lost property. He is also the patron saint of sailors, fisherfolk,
- Martins Ferry (Ohio, United States)
Martins Ferry, city, Belmont county, eastern Ohio, U.S. It lies along the Ohio River (there bridged to Wheeling, W.Va.), about 60 miles (100 km) west of Pittsburgh, Pa. Squatters in the 1770s and ’80s formed settlements (Hoglin’s, or Mercer’s, Town and Norristown) on the site. In 1795 Absalom
- Martins, Peter (Danish dancer)
Peter Martins is a Danish dancer and choreographer, known principally for his work with the New York City Ballet. Martins began his dance training at the Royal Danish Ballet School in 1953, became a corps de ballet member in 1965, and was made a soloist two years later. George Balanchine, artistic
- Martinsburg (West Virginia, United States)
Martinsburg, city, seat (1772) of Berkeley county, eastern panhandle of West Virginia, U.S. It lies 16 miles (26 km) southwest of Hagerstown, Maryland. Settled in 1732, it was laid out by Adam Stephen, later a general in the American Revolution, and was named for Colonel Thomas B. Martin, a nephew
- Martinsen, Bente (Norwegian skier)
Bente Skari is a Norwegian cross-country skier who won numerous World Cup titles and who dominated international events in the late 1990s and early 2000s. Skari was the daughter of former Olympic ski medalist and International Ski Federation executive Odd Martinsen. Although she skied during the
- Martinsen, Odd (Norwegian skier)
Bente Skari: …and International Ski Federation executive Odd Martinsen. Although she skied during the 1992 season, she was not an immediate hit on the World Cup circuit. She moved up during the 1994 Olympic season and won her first World Cup race in December 1997, but it was not until 1998, when…
- Martinson, Harry (Swedish author)
Harry Martinson was a Swedish novelist and poet who was the first self-taught, working-class writer to be elected to the Swedish Academy (1949). With Eyvind Johnson he was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1974. Martinson spent his childhood in a series of foster homes and his youth and
- Martinson, Harry Edmund (Swedish author)
Harry Martinson was a Swedish novelist and poet who was the first self-taught, working-class writer to be elected to the Swedish Academy (1949). With Eyvind Johnson he was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1974. Martinson spent his childhood in a series of foster homes and his youth and
- Martinson, Moa (Swedish author)
Moa Martinson was a Swedish novelist who was among the first to write about the agricultural labourer, the landless worker of the Swedish countryside known as statare. The first half of her life was filled with poverty and misery, yet she retained an ability to write about the life of the workers
- Martinsville (Ohio, United States)
Martins Ferry, city, Belmont county, eastern Ohio, U.S. It lies along the Ohio River (there bridged to Wheeling, W.Va.), about 60 miles (100 km) west of Pittsburgh, Pa. Squatters in the 1770s and ’80s formed settlements (Hoglin’s, or Mercer’s, Town and Norristown) on the site. In 1795 Absalom
- Martinsville (Virginia, United States)
Martinsville, city, seat (1793) of Henry county (though administratively independent of it), southern Virginia, U.S., in the eastern foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains. Established in 1793, when the county courthouse was located there, it was known as Henry County Courthouse until the name was
- Martinů, Bohuslav (Czech composer)
Bohuslav Martinů was a modern Czech composer whose works exhibit a distinctive blend of French and Czech influences. Martinů studied violin from age six, attended and was expelled from the Prague Conservatory, and in 1913 joined the Prague Philharmonic Orchestra. After the success of his ballet
- Martinus Gosia (Italian jurist)
Martinus Gosia was a jurist, one of the “four doctors” of the Bologna Law School, and an important successor of Irnerius, although probably not his pupil. Martinus, who advocated a more liberal interpretation of the law than did his Bolognese contemporary Bulgarus, gave considerable weight to
- Martinuzzi, György (Hungarian cardinal)
György Martinuzzi was a Hungarian statesman and later cardinal who worked to restore and maintain the national unity of Hungary. Born of a Croatian father and a mother of the patrician Venetian family of Martinuzzi, György became a Paulist friar at the age of 28 after a brief military career. A
- Martita, I Remember You (novella by Cisneros)
Sandra Cisneros: …she was an aspiring author, Martita, I Remember You (2021) follows twentysomething Corina, who leaves her Mexican family in Chicago to pursue her literary dreams in Paris, where she befriends other expatriates. In 2022 she published Woman Without Shame: Poems, her first collection of poetry in nearly three decades. When…
- Martius, Karl Friedrich Philipp von (German botanist)
Karl Friedrich Philipp von Martius was a German botanist best known for his work on Brazilian flora. Martius studied medicine at Erlangen University and was an élève of the Royal Bavarian Academy (1814–17). On April 2, 1817, Martius left from Trieste with an Austrian expedition to Brazil. In
- martlet (bird)
martin, any of several swallows belonging to the family Hirundinidae (order Passeriformes). In America the name refers to the purple martin (Progne subis) and its four tropical relatives—at 20 cm (8 inches) long, the largest American swallows. The sand martin, or bank swallow (Riparia riparia), a
- Marto, Francisco (Portuguese child)
Fátima: …dos Santos and her cousins Francisco and Jacinta Marto, reportedly saw a woman who identified herself as the Lady of the Rosary. On October 13, a crowd (generally estimated at about 70,000) gathered at Fátima witnessed a “miraculous solar phenomenon” immediately after the lady had appeared to the children. After…
- Marto, Jacinta (Portuguese child)
Fátima: … and her cousins Francisco and Jacinta Marto, reportedly saw a woman who identified herself as the Lady of the Rosary. On October 13, a crowd (generally estimated at about 70,000) gathered at Fátima witnessed a “miraculous solar phenomenon” immediately after the lady had appeared to the children. After initial opposition,…
- Marton, Andrew (American film director)
The Longest Day: Production notes and credits:
- Martorana, Church of the (church, Palermo, Italy)
Roger II: Enthronement as king of Sicily: …to authenticity—the mosaic in the Church of the Martorana at Palermo—he is depicted in Byzantine robes being symbolically crowned by Christ.
- Martorell, Juan (Spanish architect)
Western architecture: Spain and Portugal: …of the 19th century, when Juan Martorell and a group of his disciples in Catalonia took up the idea of evolving a national style based on medieval precedent. The source of their inspiration was the work of Viollet-le-Duc. But it was not until Antoni Gaudí, the most idiosyncratic of all…
- Martos (Spain)
Martos, town, Jaén provincia (province), in the comunidad autónoma (autonomous community) of Andalusia, southern Spain, southwest of Jaén city, on a western peak of the Sierra Jabalcuz. Identified with the Roman Colonia Augusta Gemella, Martos was taken from the Moors by Ferdinand III in 1225 and
- Martos, Ivan Petrovich (Russian sculptor)
Neoclassical art: Russia: Ivan Petrovich Martos studied under Mengs, Thorvaldsen, and Batoni in Rome and became a director of the St. Petersburg Academy. His best works are tombs. Mikhail Kozlovsky contributed to the decoration of the throne room at Pavlovsk.
- Martov, Julius (Russian revolutionary)
L. Martov was the leader of the Mensheviks, the non-Leninist wing of the Russian Social Democratic Workers’ Party. Martov served his revolutionary apprenticeship in Vilna as a member of the Bund, a Jewish Socialist group. In 1895 he and Vladimir Ilich Lenin formed the St. Petersburg Union of
- Martov, L. (Russian revolutionary)
L. Martov was the leader of the Mensheviks, the non-Leninist wing of the Russian Social Democratic Workers’ Party. Martov served his revolutionary apprenticeship in Vilna as a member of the Bund, a Jewish Socialist group. In 1895 he and Vladimir Ilich Lenin formed the St. Petersburg Union of
- Martu (people)
Amorite, member of an ancient Semitic-speaking people who dominated the history of Mesopotamia, Syria, and Palestine from about 2000 to about 1600 bc. In the oldest cuneiform sources (c. 2400–c. 2000 bc), the Amorites were equated with the West, though their true place of origin was most likely
- Martwa Vistula (river, Poland)
Vistula River: Physiography: …the Leniwka (now called the Martwa Wisła), which followed the true Vistula channel to the Gulf of Gdańsk. Improvements, the ultimate aim of which was to control the Vistula’s outlet to the sea and make the entire delta region economically productive, were initiated at the end of the 19th century:…
- Martwa Wisła (river, Poland)
Vistula River: Physiography: …the Leniwka (now called the Martwa Wisła), which followed the true Vistula channel to the Gulf of Gdańsk. Improvements, the ultimate aim of which was to control the Vistula’s outlet to the sea and make the entire delta region economically productive, were initiated at the end of the 19th century:…
- Marty (film by Mann [1955])
Ernest Borgnine: …starred in the romantic drama Marty, an adaptation of a television drama written by Paddy Chayefsky. For his against-type performance as a lonesome, kindhearted butcher, Borgnine received numerous accolades, including the Academy Award for best actor.
- Marty (work by Chayefsky)
Paddy Chayefsky: His greatest success was Marty (1953), about the awakening of love between two plain people, a butcher and a schoolteacher. The film version in 1955 won four Academy Awards, including one for Chayefsky’s screenplay, and the Palme d’Or at the Cannes film festival. Two of his other television plays…
- Marty, Martin E. (American historian of religion)
Martin E. Marty is an American historian of religion best known as the author of numerous works that examined trends in religion in their broader historical and cultural contexts. Marty studied at Concordia Seminary in St. Louis, Missouri, receiving a B.A. in theology and church history (1949) and
- Marty, Martin Emil (American historian of religion)
Martin E. Marty is an American historian of religion best known as the author of numerous works that examined trends in religion in their broader historical and cultural contexts. Marty studied at Concordia Seminary in St. Louis, Missouri, receiving a B.A. in theology and church history (1949) and
- Martyn, Edward (Irish dramatist)
Edward Martyn was an Irish dramatist who with William Butler Yeats and Lady Gregory formed the Irish Literary Theatre (1899), which was part of the nationalist revival of interest in Ireland’s Gaelic literary history. Martyn’s admiration of the craftsmanship and intellectualism of Ibsen caused him
- Martyn, John (English botanist)
John Martyn was a botanist and author known for his translations of Virgil. During the 1720s, Martyn worked as an apothecary, introducing the plants valerian and black currants and the use of peppermint water into pharmaceutical practice. He also lectured on botany, in which he was largely
- Martyn, Thomas J. C. (American publisher)
Newsweek: Newsweek was founded by Thomas J.C. Martyn, a former foreign-news editor of Time, as News-Week. It borrowed the general format of Time (founded 1923), as did Raymond Moley’s Today magazine, with which News-Week merged in 1937, removing the hyphen from its name. The early Newsweek offered a survey of…
- Martyniaceae (botany)
unicorn plant, any North American herb of the family Martyniaceae of the flowering plant order Lamiales, and particularly Proboseidea louisianica. There are nine species of unicorn plants, most having large purple or creamy white flowers. The unicorn plant is often grown for its novel fruits, which
- martyr (religion)
martyr, one who voluntarily suffers death rather than deny their religion by words or deeds; such action is afforded special, institutionalized recognition in most major religions of the world. The term may also refer to anyone who sacrifices their life or something of great value for the sake of
- Martyr’s Monument (monument, Baghdad, Iraq)
Baghdad: Architecture and monuments: The Martyr’s Monument, a 150-foot (50-metre) split dome built in 1983, commemorates the casualties of the Iran-Iraq War (1980–90). The Victory Arches (1988), which consist of two enormous sets of crossed swords nearly 150 feet (50 metres) high and mounted on bases in the form of…
- Martyr, Justin (Christian apologist)
St. Justin Martyr ; feast day June 1) was one of the most important of the Greek philosopher-Apologists in the early Christian church. His writings represent one of the first positive encounters of Christian revelation with Greek philosophy and laid the basis for a theology of history. A pagan
- Martyrdom of Isaiah, The (pseudepigraphal work)
Ascension of Isaiah, pseudepigraphal work surviving intact only in a 5th–7th-century-ad Ethiopic edition. Fragments exist in Greek, Coptic, Latin, and Old Slavonic. Three separate works comprise the total book, the final version by a Christian editor, which appeared in the 2nd century ad. The first
- Martyrdom of Polycarp (patristic literature)
Martyrdom of Polycarp, early Christian letter that describes the death by burning of St. Polycarp, bishop of Smyrna in Asia Minor. It was sent to the church in Philomelium, Asia Minor, from the church in Smyrna (modern İzmir, Turkey). The work is the oldest authentic account of an early Christian
- Martyrdom of Saint Christopher, The (fresco by Mantegna)
Andrea Mantegna: Formative years in Padua: …Chapel except The Assumption and The Martyrdom of St. Christopher were destroyed by a bomb during World War II.
- Martyrdom of Saint Lawrence (painting by Titian)
Titian: Religious paintings: The Martyrdom of St. Lawrence marks a further step in new compositional directions that culminate in Baroque form in the following century. St. Lawrence upon his gridiron is placed obliquely in space, and the steps reverse the direction to the right. Although dramatic power invests the…
- Martyrdom of Saint Mark, The (painting by Bellini)
Giovanni Bellini: …idea of their design from The Martyrdom of St. Mark in the Scuola di San Marco in Venice, finished and signed by one of Giovanni’s assistants, and of their execution from Giovanni’s completion of Gentile’s St. Mark Preaching in Alexandria after his brother’s death in Venice in 1507.
- Martyrdom of Saint Mark, The (painting by Angelico)
Fra Angelico: San Domenico period: …Adoration of the Magi and The Martyrdom of St. Mark, which are lucid and compact in their narrative and have a strictly defined perspective, a technique that is even more effective in the small painting depicting the naming of John the Baptist.
- Martyrdom of Saint Matthew, The (painting by Caravaggio)
Caravaggio: The Contarelli Chapel and other church commissions of Caravaggio: Matthew and The Martyrdom of St. Matthew. Caravaggio used his by-now-established method, setting both episodes in the present day and painting directly from live models posed in mise-en-scènes of his own devising. He set the subject of Christ calling Matthew, the tax gatherer, in a dingy modern…
- Martyrdom of Saint Maurice (painting by El Greco)
El Greco: Middle years: …1578–79) and second of the Martyrdom of St. Maurice (1580–82). The latter painting did not meet with the approval of the king, who promptly ordered another work of the same subject to replace it. Thus ended the great artist’s connection with the Spanish court. The king may have been troubled…
- Martyrdom of Saint Paul, The (painting by Tintoretto)
Tintoretto: Career: …of the Cross and in The Martyrdom of St. Paul (1556), the figures stand out dramatically on a space suffused with a vaporous, unreal light. In two enormous canvases, one depicting the Jews worshipping the golden calf while Moses on Mount Sinai receives the tables of the Law and the…
- Martyrdom of Saint-Symphorien (work by Ingres)
Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres: Maturity: …1834, when Ingres exhibited the Martyrdom of Saint-Symphorien at the Salon. Rumored beforehand to be his definitive masterpiece, this monumental religious canvas was violently attacked by critics on the political and cultural left, while being no less vehemently defended by Ingres’s allies on the right. Deeply wounded by the lack…
- Martyrdom of St. Andrew (painting by Bourdon)
Sébastien Bourdon: …Hôtel de Grammont and the “Martyrdom of St. Andrew” for the chapter of the Church of Saint-André in Chartres. In 1648 Bourdon was one of the founders of the French Royal Academy, in which he became professor and rector and led an impressive series of public lectures on current issues…
- Martyrdom of St. Erasmus, The (work by Poussin)
Nicolas Poussin: Beginnings: …in securing the commission for The Martyrdom of St. Erasmus, an altarpiece for St. Peter’s. Poussin’s altarpiece did not meet with critical acclaim, however, and it effectively helped to end his career as a public painter in Rome. Deciding to concentrate instead on easel pictures of increasing subtlety and refinement,…
- Martyrdom of St. Sebastian, The (painting by Foppa)
Vincenzo Foppa: …of his best-known fresco, “The Martyrdom of St. Sebastian” (1485).
- Martyrdom of St. Stephen (painting by Fontana)
Lavinia Fontana: …painted her largest work, the Martyrdom of St. Stephen, an altarpiece for San Paolo Fuori le Mura in Rome, a basilica that was destroyed in the fire of 1823. Her Visit of the Queen of Sheba to Solomon is her most ambitious surviving narrative work. She was elected a member…
- martyriai (music)
Byzantine chant: …were shown by signs called martyriai, abbreviations of well-known melodies that provided an initial intonation.
- Martyrs Memorial Free Presbyterian Church of Ulster (church, Belfast, Northern Ireland, United Kingdom)
Ian Paisley: In 1969 he founded the Martyrs Memorial Free Presbyterian Church in Belfast, Northern Ireland. From 1961 to 1991 membership in his churches increased 10-fold, though the 1991 census indicated that they attracted less than 1 percent of Northern Ireland’s population. Paisley’s strength lay in his ability to combine the language…
- Martyrs of Granada (painting by Pacheco)
Francisco Pacheco: …of Santa Isabel and the Martyrs of Granada are highly imitative and rigid works, monumental but unimpressive. Although Velázquez became Pacheco’s son-in-law, he was uninfluenced by his father-in-law’s art.
- Maru (work by Head)
African literature: English: Maru (1971), a novel by Bessie Head, tells a story about the liberation of the San people from ethnic and racial oppression and about the liberation of the Tswana people of Dilepe from their prejudices and hatreds. It is a story of a flawed world…
- Marua (Cameroon)
Maroua, town located in northern Cameroon. It is situated in the foothills of the Mandara Mountains, along the Kaliao River. An important marketing centre, it lies at the intersection of roads from Mokolo (northwest), Bogo (northeast), and Garoua (southwest). The town’s agricultural exports are
- Marugame (Japan)
Marugame, city, northwestern Kagawa ken (prefecture), northeastern Shikoku, Japan. It lies at the centre of an alluvial plain on the coast of the Inland Sea. Marugame was founded as a castle town in 1597. It flourished from the Edo (Tokugawa) period (1603–1867) to the early Meiji period (1868–1912)
- marujada (dance)
Latin American dance: Ritual contexts: …of Moors and Christians (la danza de Moros y Cristianos), which was performed at major religious festivals in medieval Spain. The dance was based on an older form of religious street theatre, autos sacramentales (“mystery plays”), portrayals of the competition of forces of good and evil. In the 8th…
- maruko (Japanese art)
fundamiji: …of gold or silver (maruko) are usually used for fundamiji. Maruko can be produced by lightly grinding gold or silver flakes between two filelike steel surfaces. A sieve is used to separate the fine grains from the coarse. During the Heian period (794–1185), uneven grains of gold produced by…
- marula (plant)
veld: Plant life: …characteristic trees are acacia and marula, the latter bearing an intoxicating plumlike fruit. The open ground is dominated by red grass. In the lower areas, such as the Sabi and Limpopo river valleys, tufted finger grasses, euphorbias, and other succulents replace red grass; the acacias increase in number; and the…
- Marulić, Marko (Croatian writer)
Marko Marulić was a Croatian moral philosopher and poet whose vernacular verse marked the beginnings of a distinctive Croatian literature. The scion of a noble family, Marulić studied classical languages and literature and philosophy at Padua [Italy] before returning to his native Split and a life
- Marumi kumquat (fruit)
kumquat: The round, or Marumi, kumquat is F. japonica; it is indigenous to Japan and has orangelike fruits that are about 2.5 cm in diameter. The egg-shaped Meiwa kumquat (F. crassifolia), in which both the pulp and the rind of the fruit are sweet, is widely grown…
- Marunouchi (district, Tokyo, Japan)
Tokyo-Yokohama Metropolitan Area: Centre and satellites: Marunouchi, inside the outer castle moat (now filled in), is the entrepreneurial hub of the city and of Japan; it is where the prefectural offices were until 1991. Farther east, immediately beyond the avenue built on the filled-in moat, there has been a shift. Nihonbashi,…
- Marusthali (region, India)
Marusthali, sand-dune-covered eastern portion of the Great Indian (Thar) Desert in western Rajasthan state, northwestern India. It extends over about 24,000 square miles (62,000 square km), north of the Luni River. Marusthali was populated beginning in the 5th century ce and became part of the
- Mārūt (Islamic mythology)
Hārūt and Mārūt, in Islāmic mythology, two angels who unwittingly became masters of evil. A group of angels, after observing the sins being committed on earth, began to ridicule man’s weakness. God declared that they would act no better under the same circumstances and proposed that some angels be
- Marut, Ret (author)
B. Traven was a novelist noted as a writer of adventure stories and as a chronicler of rural life in Mexico. A recluse, Traven refused personal data to publishers; hence many theories have arisen as to his parentage, his nationality, and his general identity. Most of his books were originally
- Maruts (Hindu deities)
Rudra: …of the storm gods, the Rudras, sometimes called Maruts.
- Maruyama Masataka (Japanese painter)
Japanese art: Painting: …formed under the genius of Maruyama Ōkyo might be summarily described as lyrical realism. Yet his penchant for nature studies, whether of flora and fauna or human anatomy, and his subtle incorporation of perspective and shading techniques learned from Western examples perhaps better qualify him to be noted as the…
- Maruyama Ōkyo (Japanese painter)
Japanese art: Painting: …formed under the genius of Maruyama Ōkyo might be summarily described as lyrical realism. Yet his penchant for nature studies, whether of flora and fauna or human anatomy, and his subtle incorporation of perspective and shading techniques learned from Western examples perhaps better qualify him to be noted as the…
- Maruyama school (Japanese art)
Shijō school, Japanese school of naturalistic painting that was founded in the late 18th century by Maruyama Masataka (Ōkyo) and was made popular by his pupils, among them Matsumura Gekkei, called Goshun, from whose residence on Fourth Street (Shijō), in Kyōto, the movement took its name. Among the
- Maruyama-Shijō school (Japanese art)
Shijō school, Japanese school of naturalistic painting that was founded in the late 18th century by Maruyama Masataka (Ōkyo) and was made popular by his pupils, among them Matsumura Gekkei, called Goshun, from whose residence on Fourth Street (Shijō), in Kyōto, the movement took its name. Among the
- MaRV (military technology)
rocket and missile system: Maneuverable warheads: Maneuvering warheads, or MaRVs, were first integrated into the U.S. Pershing II IRBMs deployed in Europe from 1984 until they were dismantled under the terms of the INF Treaty. The warhead of the Pershing II contained a radar area guidance (Radag) system that compared the…
- MARV (infectious agent)
Marburgvirus: …viruses, Ravn virus (RAVV) and Marburg virus (MARV). In humans, marburgviruses are responsible for Marburg virus disease (MVD), a zoonotic disease that is characterized by high fever, malaise, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, skin rash, and hemorrhage (bleeding). MVD case fatality rates have been as high as 80
- Marvel Comics (American company)
Marvel Comics, American media and entertainment company that was widely regarded as one of the “big two” publishers in the comic industry. Its parent company, Marvel Entertainment, is a wholly owned subsidiary of the Disney Company. Its headquarters are in New York City. The precursor to Marvel
- Marvel Entertainment (American company)
Disney Company: Continuing expansion: ABC, Pixar, Marvel Entertainment, and Lucasfilm: 4 billion, and it acquired Marvel Entertainment, a company best known as a comic book publisher, for $4 billion in 2009. Marvel, which had just begun to accelerate its film-development schedule at the time of the purchase, produced a string of superhero blockbusters that took place in a shared world…
- Marvel Team-Up (comic book)
Spider-Man: Origins and development in the comics: …title dedicated to this idea, Marvel Team-Up, which began in March 1972 and ran for 150 issues. The debut issue teamed Spider-Man with the Human Torch, and the series eventually paired him with nearly every high-profile character in the Marvel universe (the series was replaced by the Web of Spider-Man…
- Marvel, Carl Shipp (American chemist)
Carl Shipp Marvel was an American chemist whose early research was in classic organic chemistry but who is best known for his contributions to polymer chemistry. After receiving bachelor’s and master’s degrees in chemistry (both in 1915) from Illinois Wesleyan University in Bloomington, Marvel
- Marvel, Ik (American writer)
Donald Grant Mitchell was an American farmer and writer known for nostalgic, sentimental books on American life, especially Reveries of a Bachelor (1850). Mitchell graduated from Yale in 1841 and then returned home to farm his ancestral land. In 1844 he was appointed clerk to the U.S. consul at
- marvel-of-peru (plant)
four-o’clock, (Mirabilis jalapa) ornamental perennial plant, of the family Nyctaginaceae, native to tropical America. Four-o’clock is a quick-growing species up to one metre (three feet) tall, with oval leaves on short leafstalks. The stems are swollen at the joints. The plant is called
- Marvelettes, the (American singing group)
the Marvelettes, American girl group formed in 1961 whose principal members were Gladys Horton (b. May 30, 1945, Gainesville, Florida, U.S.—d. January 26, 2011, Sherman Oaks, California), Wanda Young (b. August 9, 1943, Detroit, Michigan, U.S.—d. December 15, 2021, Garden City), Georgeanna Tillman
- Marvell, Andrew (English poet)
Andrew Marvell was an English poet whose political reputation overshadowed that of his poetry until the 20th century. He is now considered to be one of the best Metaphysical poets. Marvell was educated at Hull grammar school and Trinity College, Cambridge, taking a B.A. in 1639. His father’s death
- Marvelman (comic-book character)
Marvelman, British comic strip superhero created by Mick Anglo in 1954. The character is regarded by many to be the first British superhero. In post-World War II Britain, comics were booming. Publisher Len Miller was doing well reprinting the adventures of American hero Captain Marvel—until 1954,
- Marvelous Journey, The (work by Graça Aranha)
José Pereira da Graça Aranha: …the year before his death, A viagem maravilhosa (1929; “The Marvelous Journey”). His aesthetic views were further publicized in his essays A estética da vida (1925; “The Aesthetics of Life”) and O espírito moderno (1925; “The Modern Spirit”).
- Marvelous Mrs. Maisel, The (American television series)
Jason Alexander: Career: …playwright, in the comedy-drama series The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel.
- Marvels, the (American singing group)
the Marvelettes, American girl group formed in 1961 whose principal members were Gladys Horton (b. May 30, 1945, Gainesville, Florida, U.S.—d. January 26, 2011, Sherman Oaks, California), Wanda Young (b. August 9, 1943, Detroit, Michigan, U.S.—d. December 15, 2021, Garden City), Georgeanna Tillman
- Marville, Charles (French photographer)
history of photography: Landscape and architectural documentation: …74 cm), Henri Le Secq, Charles Marville, and Charles Nègre produced remarkable calotypes of the cathedrals of Notre-Dame (Paris), Chartres, and Amiens, as well as other structures that were being restored after centuries of neglect. An establishment was set up in Lille, France, by Blanquart-Evrard
- Marville, Jean de (sculptor)
Claus Sluter: In 1389 he succeeded Jean de Marville as chief sculptor to the duke, and in that year he began carving the portal sculptures, which had been planned as early as 1386. He replaced the portal’s damaged central canopy and by 1391 had completed the statues of the Virgin and…