- Mathematical Theory of Relativity, The (work by Eddington)
Arthur Eddington: Early life: … (1920) and his great treatise The Mathematical Theory of Relativity (1923)—the latter considered by Einstein the finest presentation of the subject in any language—made Eddington a leader in the field of relativity physics. His own contribution was chiefly a brilliant modification of affine (non-Euclidean) geometry, leading to a geometry of…
- Mathematical Theory of the Motion of Fluids (work by Lamb)
Sir Horace Lamb: …was enlarged and transformed into Hydrodynamics (1895); the latter was for many years the standard work on hydrodynamics. His other publications include Infinitesimal Calculus (1897), Dynamical Theory of Sound (1910), Statics (1912), Dynamics (1914), and Higher Mechanics (1920). His many papers, principally on applied mathematics, detailed his researches on wave…
- mathematician (philosophical sect)
Pythagoreanism: Two Pythagorean sects: , the esoteric teachings) and mathēmatikoi (from mathēmatikos, “scientific”), may have occurred at that time. The acousmatics devoted themselves to the observance of rituals and rules and to the interpretation of the sayings of the master; the “mathematics” were concerned with the scientific aspects of Pythagoreanism. Philolaus, who was rather…
- Mathematician’s Apology, A (work by Hardy)
G.H. Hardy: A Mathematician’s Apology (1940), which gives a completely personal account of how mathematicians think, continues to be widely read. He was widely honoured for his work, being elected a fellow of the Royal Society (1910) and president of the London Mathematical Society (1926–28, 1939–41).
- mathematicism
mathematicism, the effort to employ the formal structure and rigorous method of mathematics as a model for the conduct of philosophy. Mathematicism is manifested in Western philosophy in at least three ways: (1) General mathematical methods of investigation can be used to establish consistency of
- Mathematico-Deductive Theory of Rote Learning (work by Hull)
Clark L. Hull: …theories were first presented in Mathematico-Deductive Theory of Rote Learning (1940), a collaboration with several coworkers, in which he expressed his findings through postulates stated in both mathematical and verbal forms. Hull believed that psychology had its own quantitative laws that could be stated in mathematical equations. He further developed…
- mathematics
mathematics, the science of structure, order, and relation that has evolved from elemental practices of counting, measuring, and describing the shapes of objects. It deals with logical reasoning and quantitative calculation, and its development has involved an increasing degree of idealization and
- Mathematics for Pleasure (work by Jacoby and Benson)
logic puzzle: The brakeman, the fireman, and the engineer: …Oswald Jacoby and William Benson’s Mathematics for Pleasure (1962).
- mathematics, East Asian
East Asian mathematics, the discipline of mathematics as it developed in China and Japan. When speaking of mathematics in East Asia, it is necessary to take into account China, Japan, Korea, and Vietnam as a whole. At a very early time in their histories, Japan, Korea, and Vietnam all adopted the
- mathematics, foundations of
foundations of mathematics, the study of the logical and philosophical basis of mathematics, including whether the axioms of a given system ensure its completeness and its consistency. Because mathematics has served as a model for rational inquiry in the West and is used extensively in the
- mathematics, Indian
Indian mathematics, the discipline of mathematics as it developed in the Indian subcontinent. The mathematics of classical Indian civilization is an intriguing blend of the familiar and the strange. For the modern individual, Indian decimal place-value numerals may seem familiar—and, in fact, they
- mathematics, philosophy of
philosophy of mathematics, branch of philosophy that is concerned with two major questions: one concerning the meanings of ordinary mathematical sentences and the other concerning the issue of whether abstract objects exist. The first is a straightforward question of interpretation: What is the
- Mathematics, Queen and Servant of Science (work by Bell)
Eric Temple Bell: …Men of Mathematics (1937) and Mathematics, Queen and Servant of Science (1951). He also wrote a history of Fermat’s last theorem, The Last Problem (1961). Although rather fanciful and not always historically accurate, these works, particularly Men of Mathematics, continue to attract a wide readership. Under the pen name of…
- mathematikoi (philosophical sect)
Pythagoreanism: Two Pythagorean sects: , the esoteric teachings) and mathēmatikoi (from mathēmatikos, “scientific”), may have occurred at that time. The acousmatics devoted themselves to the observance of rituals and rules and to the interpretation of the sayings of the master; the “mathematics” were concerned with the scientific aspects of Pythagoreanism. Philolaus, who was rather…
- Mather, Cotton (American religious leader)
Cotton Mather was an American Congregational minister and author, supporter of the old order of the ruling clergy, who became the most celebrated of all New England Puritans. He combined a mystical strain (he believed in the existence of witchcraft) with a modern scientific interest (he supported
- Mather, Increase (American minister)
Increase Mather was a Boston Congregational minister, author, and educator, who was a determining influence in the councils of New England during the crucial period when leadership passed into the hands of the first native-born generation. He was the son of Richard Mather, son-in-law of John
- Mather, John C. (American physicist)
John C. Mather is an American physicist, who was corecipient, with George F. Smoot, of the 2006 Nobel Prize for Physics for discoveries supporting the big-bang model. Mather studied physics at Swarthmore University (B.S., 1968) and the University of California at Berkeley (Ph.D., 1974). He later
- Mather, Richard (Puritan clergyman)
Richard Mather was an English-born American Congregational minister, father of Increase Mather and three other Puritan ministers. After joining the Great Migration of Puritans from England to New England (1635), he was elected “teacher” minister at Dorchester, Mass., and became locally celebrated
- Mather, Stephen (American businessman and conservationist)
National Park Service: Establishment of the NPS: In 1914 Stephen Mather, a wealthy businessman, wrote the secretary of the interior about the poor condition of parks he had visited that summer in the Sierra Nevada. The secretary suggested that Mather work to improve the system by joining the department in Washington, D.C. Two years…
- Matheran (resort town, India)
Matheran, hill station (resort town) in western Maharashtra state, west-central India. It is located at an elevation of about 2,625 feet (800 metres) on the western side of the Western Ghats range, about 28 miles (45 km) east of Mumbai (formerly Bombay). Matheran was first frequented in the
- Mathers, Marshall Bruce, III (American musician)
Eminem is an American rapper, record producer, and actor who is known as one of the most-controversial and best-selling artists of the early 21st century. Mathers had a turbulent childhood, marked by poverty and allegations of abuse. At age 14 he began rapping in clubs in Detroit, Michigan, and,
- Mathesis Universalis (work by Wallis)
John Wallis: In 1657 Wallis published the Mathesis Universalis (“Universal Mathematics”), on algebra, arithmetic, and geometry, in which he further developed notation. He invented and introduced the symbol ∞ for infinity. This symbol found use in treating a series of squares of indivisibles. His introduction of negative and fractional exponential notation was…
- Mathesius, Vilém (Czech linguist)
Vilém Mathesius was a Czech linguist and scholar of English language and literature. He was the founder (1926) and president of the Prague Linguistic Circle, famous for its influence on structural linguistics and for its phonological studies. Mathesius taught at Charles University in Prague,
- Mathew, Arnold Harris (bishop)
wandering bishop: Arnold Harris Mathew, a former Roman Catholic priest, was consecrated in 1908 in Utrecht, Netherlands, by Old Catholic bishops. His consecration was later described as having been obtained by misrepresentation, and he was repudiated by the Old Catholics. He tried unsuccessfully to create an Old…
- Mathew, Theobald (Irish priest)
Theobald Mathew was an Irish priest and orator known as the “Apostle of Temperance.” Ordained in 1813, Mathew entered the Capuchin order, of which he was made provincial in 1822. Concurrently, the earliest European temperance organizations were forming in Ireland, and in 1838 Mathew became
- Mathews, Anne Teresa (American religious leader)
Mother Bernardina Matthews was an American religious leader, the founder of the first monastery of a Roman Catholic order in the United States. Matthews grew up in a deeply religious home in a time when Roman Catholics laboured under legal disabilities and other discriminations in Maryland. In 1754
- Mathews, Charles (British actor)
Charles Mathews was a prominent English stage personality and theatre manager who, renowned for his genius at mimicry and for his wit, was among the leading comedians of his day. The son of a bookseller, Mathews was educated at Merchant Taylors School, Crosby, Lancashire. After acting in the
- Mathews, Charles James (English writer and comedian)
Charles James Mathews was an English writer of comic sketches and one of the best high comedians ever to appear on the English stage. Mathews was the son of the celebrated entertainer Charles Mathews and his wife, the actress Anne Jackson. Although he possessed much of his parents’ theatrical
- Mathews, Eddie (American baseball player)
Eddie Mathews was an American professional baseball third baseman who is the only person to have played for the Braves franchise in all three of the cities it has called home: Boston (1952), Milwaukee (1953–65), and Atlanta (1966). Mathews and teammate Hank Aaron provided the Braves with an
- Mathews, Edwin Lee (American baseball player)
Eddie Mathews was an American professional baseball third baseman who is the only person to have played for the Braves franchise in all three of the cities it has called home: Boston (1952), Milwaukee (1953–65), and Atlanta (1966). Mathews and teammate Hank Aaron provided the Braves with an
- Mathews, Elkin (British publisher)
typography: Mechanical composition: …those of John Lane and Elkin Mathews, who published Oscar Wilde and the periodical The Yellow Book; J.M. Dent, who commissioned Aubrey Beardsley to illustrate Malory and who used Kelmscott-inspired endpapers for his Everyman’s Library; Stone and Kimball of Chicago
- Mathews, Henry M. (American politician)
Great Railroad Strike of 1877: Henry M. Mathews dispatched the militia when police were unable to break up the supportive crowd that had gathered. When the militia then proved incapable of freeing the 600 or so trains stranded in Martinsburg (perhaps because many of the militiamen were themselves railroad workers…
- Mathews, Lucia Elizabeth (British actress and manager)
Madame Vestris was a British actress, opera singer, and manager who inaugurated tasteful and beautiful stage decor and set a standard in stage costumes. After a brief unsuccessful marriage to Auguste-Armand Vestris, a ballet dancer, Mme Vestris first appeared in Italian opera in 1815 and enjoyed
- Mathews, Lucia Elizabetta (British actress and manager)
Madame Vestris was a British actress, opera singer, and manager who inaugurated tasteful and beautiful stage decor and set a standard in stage costumes. After a brief unsuccessful marriage to Auguste-Armand Vestris, a ballet dancer, Mme Vestris first appeared in Italian opera in 1815 and enjoyed
- Mathews, Mother Bernardina (American religious leader)
Mother Bernardina Matthews was an American religious leader, the founder of the first monastery of a Roman Catholic order in the United States. Matthews grew up in a deeply religious home in a time when Roman Catholics laboured under legal disabilities and other discriminations in Maryland. In 1754
- Mathews, Shailer (American religious leader)
Shailer Mathews was a leader of the Social Gospel movement of the late 19th and early 20th centuries in the United States, which interpreted the Kingdom of God as requiring social as well as individual salvation. Educated at Colby College, Waterville, Maine; Newton Theological Institution, Newton,
- Mathewson, Christopher (American baseball player)
Christy Mathewson was an American professional baseball player, regarded as one of the greatest pitchers in the history of the game. Mathewson was one of the first “college men” to enter the major leagues, having played football and baseball at Bucknell University in Lewisburg, Pennsylvania. After
- Mathewson, Christy (American baseball player)
Christy Mathewson was an American professional baseball player, regarded as one of the greatest pitchers in the history of the game. Mathewson was one of the first “college men” to enter the major leagues, having played football and baseball at Bucknell University in Lewisburg, Pennsylvania. After
- Mathewson, Matty (American baseball player)
Christy Mathewson was an American professional baseball player, regarded as one of the greatest pitchers in the history of the game. Mathewson was one of the first “college men” to enter the major leagues, having played football and baseball at Bucknell University in Lewisburg, Pennsylvania. After
- Mathewson, William (American frontiersman)
Kansas: Statehood of Kansas: …heroes of that era was William Mathewson, known as the original “Buffalo Bill” (a nickname also used later to greater fame by William F. Cody), who hunted buffalo for starving settlers for an entire winter without pay, providing meat by the wagonload. The coming of the railroads in the late…
- Mathias, Bob (American athlete)
Bob Mathias was an American athlete, the youngest to win a gold medal in the decathlon in Olympic competition. After his victory in 1948 at age 17, he returned to win a second Olympic gold medal in 1952. Afflicted with anemia in boyhood, Mathias developed strength by engaging in sports, and he was
- Mathias, Robert Bruce (American athlete)
Bob Mathias was an American athlete, the youngest to win a gold medal in the decathlon in Olympic competition. After his victory in 1948 at age 17, he returned to win a second Olympic gold medal in 1952. Afflicted with anemia in boyhood, Mathias developed strength by engaging in sports, and he was
- Mathias, Tania (British politician)
Vince Cable: …seat to the Conservative candidate, Tania Mathias. In the June 2017 snap election, however, he was returned to Parliament, and in July he replaced Tim Farron as leader of the Liberal Democrats. Two years later, however, Cable stepped down as party leader and gave up his seat in Parliament.
- Mathiassen, Therkel (Danish archaeologist and ethnographer)
Therkel Mathiassen was a Danish archaeologist and ethnographer whose excavations during 1921–23 to the west and north of Hudson Bay revealed the existence of the Thule prehistoric Eskimo culture. His doctoral dissertation for the University of Copenhagen, Archaeology of the Central Eskimos (1927),
- Mathieu, Anna-Élisabeth de Noailles, Countess (French poet)
Anna de Noailles was a poet, a leading literary figure in France in the pre-World War I period. The daughter of a Romanian prince and granddaughter of a Turkish pasha, she adopted France and its language for her life and writings even before her marriage to a French count. Her friends included the
- Mathieu, Claude-Louis (French astronomer and mathematician)
Claude-Louis Mathieu was a French astronomer and mathematician who worked particularly on the determination of the distances of the stars. After a brief period as an engineer, Mathieu became an astronomer at the Observatoire de Paris and at the Bureau des Longitudes in 1817. He later served as
- Mathieu, Georges (French artist)
Happening: …and time-based art, as did Georges Mathieu’s theatrical demonstrations of painting, which he took to Japan.
- Mathieu, Noël (French author)
French literature: Postwar poetry: …poetry of René Char and Pierre Emmanuel (pseudonym of Noël Mathieu), the prose poems of Francis Ponge developed a materialist discourse that aimed to allow the object to “speak” for itself, foregrounding devices such as wordplay that emphasized the act of poetic perception and the role of writing in the…
- Matḥif al-Baladīyah al-Iskandarī (museum, Alexandria, Egypt)
Graeco Roman Museum, museum of Greek and Roman antiquities in Alexandria, Egypt, that was founded in 1892. It is housed in a Greek Revival-style building that opened in 1895 and that was expanded in subsequent decades. The museum contains material found in Alexandria itself; Ptolemaic and Roman
- Mathijs, Jan (Dutch religious reformer)
Anabaptist: …followers, such as the Dutchman Jan Mathijs (died 1534) and John of Leiden (Jan Beuckelson; died 1536), and many persecuted Anabaptists settled in Münster, Westphalia. Hofmann’s disciples were attracted to the city by dramatic changes that occurred there in the early 1530s. Under the influence of the reformer Bernhard Rothman,…
- Mathilde (daughter of Henry I of England, consort of the Holy Roman emperor Henry V)
Matilda was the consort of the Holy Roman emperor Henry V and afterward claimant to the English throne in the reign of King Stephen. She was the only daughter of Henry I of England by Queen Matilda and was sister of William the Aetheling, heir to the English and Norman thrones. Both her marriages
- Mathilde (queen consort of England)
Henry I: Reign: By his marriage with Matilda, a Scottish princess of the old Anglo-Saxon royal line, he established the foundations for peaceable relations with the Scots and support from the English. And he recalled St. Anselm, the scholarly archbishop of Canterbury whom his brother, William II, had banished.
- Mathilde (asteroid)
Near Earth Asteroid Rendezvous Shoemaker: …1,200 km (740 miles) of Mathilde, an asteroid in the main belt between Mars and Jupiter. Rendezvous with Eros was originally scheduled for January 1999, but a spacecraft problem delayed the rendezvous for more than a year until Feb. 14, 2000—Valentine’s Day, a date chosen because the asteroid was named…
- Mathilde de Flandre (queen consort of England)
Matilda Of Flanders was the queen consort of William I the Conqueror, whom she married c. 1053. During William’s absences in England, the duchy of Normandy was under her regency, with the aid of their son, Robert Curthose (see Robert II [Normandy]), except when he was in rebellion against his
- Mathilde, queen of Belgium (queen of Belgium)
Mathilde, queen of Belgium is the queen of Belgium, consort of Philippe, king of Belgium, and mother of Princess Elisabeth, the heir to the Belgian throne. Mathilde was the daughter of a judge and a countess, and she completed her education in Bastogne before attending the Institut de la Vierge
- Mathildine lands (Italian history)
Italy: Northern Italy: …able to hold onto the Mathildine lands in Tuscany for 15 years. He restored his position in Germany and recovered from the losses endured in Rome. In 1183 Frederick converted the truce of Venice into the Peace of Constance, in which he renounced the regalia claimed at Roncaglia but preserved…
- Mathilukal (film by Gopalakrishnan [1990])
Adoor Gopalakrishnan: The Walls is set in a British colonial prison in the 1940s and is about a political activist who falls in love with an unseen woman in a neighbouring prison after hearing her voice. Gopalakrishnan’s Kathapurushan (1995; “The Man of the Story”) examines the life…
- Mathis der Maler (opera by Hindemith)
Paul Hindemith: His greatest work, Mathis der Maler, an opera about the painter Matthias Grünewald and his struggles with society, caused a public imbroglio in Nazi Germany when Wilhelm Furtwängler conducted an orchestral version with the Berlin Philharmonic in 1934 and vigorously supported the opera in the press. The Nazi…
- Mathis, Buster (American boxer)
Joe Frazier: …in the Olympic trials to Buster Mathis in 1964 and made it to the Tokyo Olympic Games as a replacement boxer only when Mathis injured his hand. He won the gold medal in his weight division and then began his professional career in August 1965. A chunky man (5 feet…
- Mathis, John Royce (American singer)
Johnny Mathis is an American pop singer who has achieved wide and enduring popularity as an angelic-voiced crooner of romantic ballads. He is perhaps best known for his affecting rendition of the Erroll Garner composition “Misty” (1959). Mathis grew up in a large working-class family in San
- Mathis, Johnny (American singer)
Johnny Mathis is an American pop singer who has achieved wide and enduring popularity as an angelic-voiced crooner of romantic ballads. He is perhaps best known for his affecting rendition of the Erroll Garner composition “Misty” (1959). Mathis grew up in a large working-class family in San
- Mathis, June (American scriptwriter)
June Mathis was an American scriptwriter, who helped establish the primacy of the script in American silent films. June Hughes adopted her stepfather’s surname, Mathis. After a brief career as a stage actress and scriptwriting work on several films in 1917, Mathis was hired in 1918 by Metro (later
- mathnavi (literature)
mas̄navī, a series of distichs (couplets) in rhymed pairs (aa, bb, cc, and so on) that makes up a characteristic type of Persian verse, used chiefly for heroic, historical, and romantic epic poetry and didactic poetry. The form originated in the Middle Persian period (roughly from the 3rd century
- Mathnawi of Jalalu’ddin Rumi (work by Nicholson)
Reynold Alleyne Nicholson: …writings, culminating in his eight-volume Mathnawi of Jalalu’ddin Rumi (1925–40), eminently advanced the study of Muslim mystics. He combined exact scholarship with notable literary gifts; some of his versions of Arabic and Persian poetry entitle him to be considered a poet in his own right. His profound understanding of Islām…
- mathometer (testing device)
psychomotor learning: Devices and tasks: Also employed is the selective mathometer, a device on which the subject’s problem is to discover, with cues provided by a signal lamp, which of some 20 pushbuttons should be pressed in response to each of a series of distinctive images projected on a screen. While using a star discrimeter,…
- Mathsson, Bruno (Swedish designer)
furniture: Modern: …to designs by Alvar Aalto, Bruno Mathsson, and Charles and Ray Eames. Rapid technical developments, in conjunction with an ever-increasing interest in human-factors engineering, or ergonomics, suggest that completely new chair forms will probably be evolved in the future.
- Mathura (India)
Mathura, city, western Uttar Pradesh state, northern India. It lies in the Ganges-Yamuna Doab, on the Yamuna River about 25 miles (40 km) northwest of Agra. The site of Mathura was inhabited before the 1st century ce, when the city flourished under the Kushan dynasty. In the 2nd century the city
- Mathurā art (Buddhist art)
Mathurā art, style of Buddhist visual art that flourished in the trading and pilgrimage centre of Mathura, Uttar Pradesh, India, from the 2nd century bc to the 12th century ad; its most distinctive contributions were made during the Kushān and Gupta periods (1st–6th century ad). Images in the
- Mathurānātha Tarkavāgīśa (Indian philosopher)
Indian philosophy: The new school: 1550), Mathuranatha Tarkavagisha (flourished c. 1570), Jagadisha Tarkalankara (flourished c. 1625), and Gadadhara Bhattacharya (flourished c. 1650).
- Mathurins (religious order)
Trinitarian, a Roman Catholic order of men founded in France in 1198 by St. John of Matha to free Christian slaves from captivity under the Muslims in the Middle East, North Africa, and Spain. St. Felix of Valois has been traditionally considered as cofounder, but recent critics have questioned his
- Matías de Gálvez (Guatemala)
Santo Tomás de Castilla, port, northeastern Guatemala. It lies on Amatique Bay off the Gulf of Honduras and is administratively a part of Puerto Barrios. Santo Tomás was settled originally by Belgians in the 19th century; although the name was changed officially to Matías de Gálvez in 1958, the
- Matías, Juan (Mexican composer)
Native American music: Participation in art music: …Lienas of Mexico City and Juan Matías, who served as the chapelmaster at Oaxaca (now in Mexico) from about 1655 through 1667. The first published Native North American composer of European art music was Thomas Commuck, whose hymnal, as mentioned above, appeared in 1845. Native North American composers of the…
- Matiauda, Alfredo Stroessner (president of Paraguay)
Alfredo Stroessner was a military leader, who became president of Paraguay after leading an army coup in 1954. One of Latin America’s longest-serving rulers, he was overthrown in 1989. Stroessner, the son of a German immigrant, attended the Military College in Asunción and was commissioned in the
- matière de Bretagne
Arthurian legend, the body of stories and medieval romances, known as the matter of Britain, centring on the legendary king Arthur. Medieval writers, especially the French, variously treated stories of Arthur’s birth, the adventures of his knights, and the adulterous love between his knight Sir
- Matière et mémoire: Essai sur la relation du corps à l’esprit (work by Bergson)
Henri Bergson: Philosophical triumphs: …du corps à l’esprit (Matter and Memory).
- Matigari (novel by Ngugi)
Ngugi wa Thiong’o: Matigari ma Njiruungi (1986; Matigari) is a novel in the same vein.
- Matigari ma Njiruungi (novel by Ngugi)
Ngugi wa Thiong’o: Matigari ma Njiruungi (1986; Matigari) is a novel in the same vein.
- Matilda (work by Dahl)
Roald Dahl: …the Chocolate Factory (1964) and Matilda (1988), both of which were adapted into popular films.
- Matilda (daughter of Henry I of England, consort of the Holy Roman emperor Henry V)
Matilda was the consort of the Holy Roman emperor Henry V and afterward claimant to the English throne in the reign of King Stephen. She was the only daughter of Henry I of England by Queen Matilda and was sister of William the Aetheling, heir to the English and Norman thrones. Both her marriages
- Matilda (film by DeVito [1996])
Danny DeVito: Career: …such as the fantasy comedy Matilda (1996; also directed by DeVito), the Andy Kaufman biopic Man on the Moon (1999), and the coming-of-age film Garden State (2004).
- Matilda (queen consort of England)
Henry I: Reign: By his marriage with Matilda, a Scottish princess of the old Anglo-Saxon royal line, he established the foundations for peaceable relations with the Scots and support from the English. And he recalled St. Anselm, the scholarly archbishop of Canterbury whom his brother, William II, had banished.
- Matilda of Canossa (countess of Tuscany)
Matilda of Canossa was the countess of Tuscany remembered for her role in the conflict between the papacy and the Holy Roman emperor. The climax of this struggle, the confrontation of the emperor Henry IV and Pope Gregory VII in 1077, took place at Matilda’s castle of Canossa. The assassination in
- Matilda Of Flanders (queen consort of England)
Matilda Of Flanders was the queen consort of William I the Conqueror, whom she married c. 1053. During William’s absences in England, the duchy of Normandy was under her regency, with the aid of their son, Robert Curthose (see Robert II [Normandy]), except when he was in rebellion against his
- Matilda the Great Countess (countess of Tuscany)
Matilda of Canossa was the countess of Tuscany remembered for her role in the conflict between the papacy and the Holy Roman emperor. The climax of this struggle, the confrontation of the emperor Henry IV and Pope Gregory VII in 1077, took place at Matilda’s castle of Canossa. The assassination in
- Matilda the Musical (musical play by Minchin and Kelly)
Roald Dahl: …2022) and the stage (2010). Many of Dahl’s books have been illustrated by the award-winning illustrator Quentin Blake.
- Matilda the Musical (film by Warchus [2022])
Roald Dahl: …adapted for film (1996 and 2022) and the stage (2010). Many of Dahl’s books have been illustrated by the award-winning illustrator Quentin Blake.
- Matilda’s horned viper (snake)
viper: …vipers (genus Atheris), such as Matilda’s horned viper (A. matildae) of Tanzania, are slender, prehensile-tailed, and arboreal. Some species lay eggs; others produce live young.
- Matilde (Portuguese noble)
Portugal: The kingdom and the Reconquista: …through his marriage (1238) to Matilde, daughter of Raynald I, Comte (count) de Dammartin, was granted a papal commission (1245) to take over the government, and Sancho was ordered to be deposed by papal bull. When Afonso reached Lisbon (late 1245 or early 1246), he received the support of the…
- Matilde di Canossa (countess of Tuscany)
Matilda of Canossa was the countess of Tuscany remembered for her role in the conflict between the papacy and the Holy Roman emperor. The climax of this struggle, the confrontation of the emperor Henry IV and Pope Gregory VII in 1077, took place at Matilda’s castle of Canossa. The assassination in
- Matilde la Gran Contessa (countess of Tuscany)
Matilda of Canossa was the countess of Tuscany remembered for her role in the conflict between the papacy and the Holy Roman emperor. The climax of this struggle, the confrontation of the emperor Henry IV and Pope Gregory VII in 1077, took place at Matilda’s castle of Canossa. The assassination in
- Matilija poppy (plant)
poppy: Other poppies: …the poppy family include the Matilija poppy (Romneya coulteri), with 15-cm (6-inch) fragrant white flowers on a 2.4-metre- (7.9-foot-) tall perennial herbaceous plant native to southwestern North America; the plume poppies, members of the Asian genus Macleaya, grown for their interestingly lobed giant leaves and 2-metre- (6.6-foot-) tall flower spikes;…
- Matin, Le (French journal)
Georges Clemenceau: Early life: …he started a new paper, Le Matin (“Morning”), which was in turn seized by the authorities.
- Matinale de mon peuple (work by Sénac)
Jean Sénac: … (1957; “The Sun Under Arms”), Matinale de mon peuple (1961; “Matinal of My People”), and later collections.
- Matinee (film by Dante [1993])
William Castle: Legacy: The comedy Matinee (1993) paid tribute to the director, with John Goodman capturing Castle’s larger-than-life persona as a cigar-chomping film promoter who was half huckster, half savant. The movie was set in Florida during the Cuban missile crisis—Castle’s heyday and a fittingly scary time.
- mating (animal behavior)
animal behaviour: Sensory-motor mechanisms: …when these fish defend their mating territories in the springtime against intrusions from rival male sticklebacks. The males differ from all other objects and forms of life in their environment in a special way: they possess an intensely red throat and belly, which serve as signals to females and other…
- Mating Birds (novel by Nkosi)
Lewis Nkosi: His first novel, Mating Birds (1983), brought Nkosi to the attention of a wider audience for its subtle examination of an interracial affair.
- mating call
frog and toad: Breeding behaviour: In all cases, the mating call produced by the male attracts females to the breeding site. It has been observed in the field and in the laboratory that the females can discriminate between mating calls of their own species and those of other species. At a communal breeding site,…
- mating flight (zoology)
evolution: Kin selection and reciprocal altruism: …is to engage in the nuptial flight during which one of them fertilizes a new queen. Other eggs laid by queen bees are fertilized and develop into females, the large majority of which are workers. Some social insects, such as the stingless Meliponinae bees, with hundreds of species across the…
- Mating Game, The (film by Marshall [1959])
Debbie Reynolds: …and the Bachelor (1957); and The Mating Game (1959). Reynolds reached the height of her popularity in the late 1950s, during which time she was involved in a scandalous divorce from Fisher, who left her for actress Elizabeth Taylor.
- mating season (zoology)
fallow deer: The rutting buck waves its antlers conspicuously toward the female that it follows in courtship, and it vocalizes loudly with each dip of the antlers. The buck’s conspicuous Adam’s apple slides up and down the throat with each bark. Rutting bucks form small breeding territories on…