- Notre Dame Mountains (mountains, Canada)
Notre Dame Mountains, mountain range in eastern Quebec province, Canada. The mountains are a continuation of the Green Mountains of Vermont, U.S., and an outcrop of the northern Appalachians. Named by Samuel de Champlain, the French explorer, they extend for about 500 miles (800 km) in a
- Notre Dame, Cathedral of (cathedral, Tournai, Belgium)
Tournai: Tournai’s Cathedral of Notre Dame is a cruciform 11th–12th-century basilica, one of the finest in Europe, with five massive towers, a Gothic choir, and 13th-century reliquary shrines; it was designated a UNESCO World Heritage site in 2000. The city contains other notable medieval churches. Among other…
- Notre Dame, Church of (church, Kortrijk, Belgium)
Kortrijk: The Church of Notre Dame (Onze Lieve Vrouwkerk; 1191–1211), with the attached chapel of the counts of Flanders (1374), contains Anthony Van Dyck’s “Elevation of the Cross” (1631) and a 14th-century statue of St. Catherine. Other historic landmarks in Kortrijk include the Broelbrug (bridge; c. 1400),…
- Notre Dame, University of (university, Notre Dame, Indiana, United States)
University of Notre Dame, private institution of higher learning in Notre Dame (adjacent to South Bend), Indiana, U.S. It is affiliated with the Roman Catholic Church. Formerly a men’s university, it became coeducational in 1972. Comprising colleges of arts and letters, science, engineering, and
- Notre musique (film by Godard [2004])
Jean-Luc Godard: Later work and awards of Jean-Luc Godard: Later movies included Notre musique (2004; “Our Music”), a meditation on war; the experimental collage Film socialisme (2010; Film Socialism); and Adieu au langage (2014; Goodbye to Language), a fragmented narrative about a man, a woman, and a dog, filmed in 3-D. Le Livre d’image (2018; The Image…
- Nôtre, André Le (French landscape architect)
André Le Nôtre was one of the greatest French landscape architects, his masterpiece being the gardens of Versailles. Le Nôtre grew up in an atmosphere of technical expertise. His father, Jean Le Nôtre, was the master gardener of King Louis XIII at the Tuileries. At the studio of painter François
- Notre-Dame (church, Le Raincy, France)
hall church: …is Auguste Perret’s church of Notre-Dame (1922–23), at Le Raincy, Fr., one of the first buildings and the first church to display the expressive structural possibilities of reinforced concrete.
- Notre-Dame at Reims, Cathedral of (cathedral, Reims, France)
Reims Cathedral, cathedral located in the city of Reims, France, on the Vesle River east-northeast of Paris. Reims was the site of 25 coronations of the kings of France, from Louis VIII in 1223 to Charles X in 1825, including the crowning of Charles VII in 1429 in the presence of Joan of Arc. The
- Notre-Dame Cathedral (cathedral, Paris, France)
Notre-Dame de Paris, cathedral church in Paris. It is the most famous of the Gothic cathedrals of the Middle Ages and is distinguished for its size, antiquity, and architectural interest. Notre-Dame lies at the eastern end of the Île de la Cité and was built on the ruins of two earlier churches,
- Notre-Dame d’Amiens (cathedral, Amiens, France)
Amiens Cathedral, Gothic cathedral located in the historic city of Amiens, France, in the Somme River valley north of Paris. It is the largest of the three great Gothic cathedrals built in France during the 13th century, and it remains the largest in France. It has an exterior length of 476 feet
- Notre-Dame de Chartres (cathedral, Chartres, France)
Chartres Cathedral, Gothic cathedral located in the town of Chartres, northwestern France. Generally ranked as one of the three chief examples of Gothic French architecture (along with Amiens Cathedral and Reims Cathedral), it is noted not only for its architectural innovations but also for its
- Notre-Dame de l’Espérance, Basilica of (basilica, Charleville-Mézières, France)
Charleville-Mézières: The Basilica of Notre-Dame de l’Espérance has a Gothic choir and nave, but the bell tower dates from the Renaissance.
- Notre-Dame de Paris (cathedral, Paris, France)
Notre-Dame de Paris, cathedral church in Paris. It is the most famous of the Gothic cathedrals of the Middle Ages and is distinguished for its size, antiquity, and architectural interest. Notre-Dame lies at the eastern end of the Île de la Cité and was built on the ruins of two earlier churches,
- Notre-Dame de Paris (novel by Hugo)
The Hunchback of Notre Dame, historical novel by Victor Hugo, originally published in French in 1831 as Notre-Dame de Paris (“Our Lady of Paris”). The Hunchback of Notre Dame is set in Paris during the 15th century. The story centres on Quasimodo, the deformed bell ringer of Notre-Dame Cathedral,
- Notre-Dame of Amiens, Cathedral of (cathedral, Amiens, France)
Amiens Cathedral, Gothic cathedral located in the historic city of Amiens, France, in the Somme River valley north of Paris. It is the largest of the three great Gothic cathedrals built in France during the 13th century, and it remains the largest in France. It has an exterior length of 476 feet
- Notre-Dame school (music)
Notre-Dame school, during the late 12th and early 13th centuries, an important group of composers and singers working under the patronage of the great Cathedral of Notre-Dame in Paris. The Notre-Dame school is important to the history of music because it produced the earliest repertory of
- Notre-Dame, Cathedral of (cathedral, Le Puy, France)
Le Puy-en-Velay: …Town, stands the 11th–12th-century Romanesque cathedral of Notre-Dame, which shows Byzantine influence in its octagonal cupolas and decoration. The adjacent cloister is mainly Romanesque but has Carolingian capitals. On the outskirts of the town a volcanic needle some 260 feet (80 metres) high is crowned by a 10th–11th-century church, Saint-Michel-d’Aiguilhe,…
- Notre-Dame, Cathedral of (cathedral, Lausanne, Switzerland)
Lausanne: …buildings include the early Gothic Cathedral of Notre-Dame, consecrated in 1275 by Pope Gregory X in the presence of the Holy Roman emperor Rudolf I of Habsburg; the Saint-François Church, erected during the same period but partly rebuilt in the late 14th century; and the city hall (rebuilt 1674). The…
- Notre-Dame, cathedral of (cathedral, Reims, France)
Reims Cathedral, cathedral located in the city of Reims, France, on the Vesle River east-northeast of Paris. Reims was the site of 25 coronations of the kings of France, from Louis VIII in 1223 to Charles X in 1825, including the crowning of Charles VII in 1429 in the presence of Joan of Arc. The
- Notre-Dame, Cathedral of (cathedral, Strasbourg, France)
Strasbourg: The contemporary city: Strasbourg’s 11th–15th-century Cathedral of Notre-Dame, damaged in 1870 and again in World War II, has been carefully restored. Built of red Vosges sandstone, it is a harmonious edifice despite the variety of its architectural styles. It has an asymmetrical facade (mainly 13th century) with fine sculptured portals…
- Notre-Dame, Cathedral of (cathedral, Coutances, France)
Coutances: …town is dominated by the Cathedral of Notre-Dame, built on the site of a church consecrated about 1090. The present structure is mainly 13th-century Gothic, with slender turrets massed around conspicuous towers. In the interior there are fine rose windows with the stained glass of the 14th century. One of…
- Notre-Dame, Cathedral of (cathedral, Noyon, France)
Noyon: Its Cathedral of Notre-Dame is a fine transitional late 12th-century Romanesque-Gothic edifice. The fifth church to be built on the site, it was restored after heavy damage in World War I. The Hôtel de Ville (town hall) and old ecclesiastical buildings were also ruined in the…
- Notre-Dame, Church of (church, Senlis, France)
Senlis: The cathedral of Notre-Dame, with its elegant 13th-century 256-foot (78-metre) spire, constitutes one of the finest surviving examples of Île-de-France Gothic, despite some Renaissance additions. The cathedral was begun in 1155 but not completed until the 16th century. Senlis also has other medieval churches, Renaissance-era houses, and a…
- Notre-Dame, Church of (church, Dole, France)
Dole: The Gothic-style Church of Notre-Dame dates from the 16th century. Dole’s industries include food processing, clothing manufacture, and electronics, while, in the surrounding area, sanitary porcelain and chemicals manufacturing (at Solvay) are important. The town is also a commercial and administrative centre that benefits from high-speed train…
- Notre-Dame-de-Chelles (abbey, Chelles, France)
Chelles: …of the 7th-century abbey of Notre-Dame-de-Chelles (founded by Bathilde, widow of Clovis II, and destroyed during the French Revolution). Prehistoric remains found nearby in the 19th century were designated Chellean and gave rise to the archaeological classification Chellean/Acheulian. The town has food-processing industries. Pop. (1999) 45,399; (2014 est.) 53,708.
- Notre-Dame-de-la-Couture, Church of (church, Le Mans, France)
Le Mans: The Church of Notre-Dame-de-la-Couture (10th–13th century) possesses a Gothic facade with remarkable 13th-century sculptures. The Church of Sainte-Jeanne-d’Arc, which was founded by Henry II of England (reigned 1154–89), is also of interest. The picturesque old town has a number of Renaissance and 17th-century houses.
- Notre-Dame-de-la-Daurade (church, Toulouse, France)
Western architecture: France: …tiles—as was the church of Notre-Dame-de-la-Daurade in Toulouse, which probably dates from the end of the 6th century and was demolished only as late as 1761.
- Notre-Dame-de-la-Garde (building, Marseille, France)
Marseille: The city layout: …Old Port stands the celebrated Notre-Dame-de-la-Garde, a sanctuary honored from the 8th century. Its present structure was built in 1853–64; its steeple, crowned by a 30-foot (nine-meter) gilded statue of the Virgin, rises 150 feet over the hillside.
- Notre-Dame-des-Ermites (Switzerland)
Einsiedeln, town, Schwyz canton, northeast-central Switzerland. It is located on the right bank of Alp Stream, northeast of Schwyz city. It developed around the Benedictine abbey, founded in 934. The abbey became a principality of the Holy Roman Empire in 1274 and belonged to Schwyz after 1386. Its
- Notre-Dame-des-Pauvres, Church of (church, Issy-les-Moulineaux, France)
stained glass: 20th century: …sculptor Léon Zack for the Church of Notre-Dame-des-Pauvres (1955) in Issy-les-Moulineaux, remarkable for its daring sequence of colour harmonies and delicate lead line motifs reminiscent of the art of Paul Klee. The stained-glass windows of Georges Braque, Jacques Villon, Georges Rouault, Marc Chagall, and Alfred Manessier are also noteworthy if…
- Notre-Dame-du-Haut, Church of (church, Ronchamp, France)
Le Corbusier: The second period: …of the two, the chapel Notre-Dame duHaut at Ronchamp (1950–55), sacrifices Le Corbusier’s famous principles of apparent functionalism; the wall has been built to a double thickness for visual effect and the roof, which appears to be suspended, actually rests on a forest of supports. More brutal and austere is…
- Notre-Dame-en-Vaux (church, Châlons-sur-Marne, France)
Châlons-en-Champagne: The collegiate church of Notre-Dame-en-Vaux (12th century) is a mixture of Gothic and Romanesque styles and has stained-glass windows dating from 1525 and 1526, a Gothic choir, and a carillon of 56 bells. Stained-glass windows are also a feature of the churches of Saint-Alpin and Saint-Jean-Baptiste. Near the town…
- Notre-Dame-la-Grande (church, Poitiers, France)
Poitiers: Notre-Dame-la-Grande church is a good example of Romanesque architecture, with a remarkable 12th-century facade containing a profusion of fine sculptures. The Saint-Pierre cathedral (12th–16th century), built largely in the local Gothic style known as Angevin (after the counts of Anjou and their descendants), has a…
- Notredame, Michel de (French astrologer)
Nostradamus was a French astrologer and physician, the most widely read seer of the Renaissance. Nostradamus began his medical practice in Agen sometime in the 1530s, despite not only never having taken a medical degree but also apparently having been expelled from medical school. In 1544 he moved
- Notropis cornutus (fish)
minnow: promelas) and the common shiner (Notropis cornutus), a blue and silver minnow up to 20 cm long. The golden shiner, or American roach (Notemigonus cryseleucas), a larger, greenish and golden minnow attaining a length of 30 cm and a weight of 0.7 kg (1.5 pounds), is both edible…
- Nott Memorial (building, Schenectady, New York, United States)
Union College: …opened in the 1830s, and Nott Memorial, a 16-sided Gothic Revival building that was designed by Edward T. Potter in 1858 and completed in 1875. Enrollment is approximately 2,000.
- Nott, Jonathan (British conductor)
Orchestre de la Suisse Romande: Jonathan Nott came to the podium as music and artistic director in 2017.
- Nottage, Lynn (American playwright)
African American literature: Drama and poetry: James Ijames, Katori Hall, Lynn Nottage, Jackie Sibblies Drury, Suzan-Lori Parks, and Michael R. Jackson all won Pulitzer Prizes for drama in the 21st century, offering plays that address themes such as Black identity and kinship, masculinity, sexuality, prejudice, war, and the illusion of the American Dream. In poetry,
- Nottawasaga Bay (bay, Ontario, Canada)
Nottawasaga Bay, large inlet of Georgian Bay (and Lake Huron) indenting Grey and Simcoe counties in southeastern Ontario, Canada, and fed by the Nottawasaga, Bighead, Beaver, and Pretty rivers. The bay’s entrance lies between Cape Rich (west) and Christian Island (east). Many apple orchards are
- Nottaway River (river, Canada)
Nottaway River, river in western Quebec province, Canada. The river drains Lake Matagami at 765 feet (233 m) above sea level, flows northwestward for 140 miles (225 km), and empties into Rupert Bay at the south end of James Bay. Its chief headstreams, the Bell, Chibougamau, and Waswanipi, all flow
- notte di San Lorenzo, La (film by Taviani brothers [1982])
Taviani brothers: …notte di San Lorenzo (1982; The Night of the Shooting Stars), a mother recounts for her child her wartime memories of a night during which her village struggled to stay alive. Their later films, which were not as successful commercially, included Il sole anche di notte (1990; The Sun Also…
- Notte, Gherardo della (Dutch painter)
Gerrit van Honthorst was a Dutch painter, a leading member of the Utrecht school influenced by the Italian painter Caravaggio. Like his slightly older contemporary Hendrik Terbrugghen, Honthorst first studied under Abraham Bloemaert in Utrecht. About 1610 he moved to Italy, where he had leading
- Nottely River (river, United States)
Nottely River, river rising in the Blue Ridge Mountains in Union County, northern Georgia, U.S., and flowing 40 mi (64 km) north, to empty into the Hiwasee Reservoir near Murphy, in Cherokee County, N.C. Nottely Dam (completed 1942), a Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) installation impounding a
- notti di Cabiria, Le (film by Fellini [1957])
Federico Fellini: Major works: …Le notti di Cabiria (1957; Nights of Cabiria), developing the minor character she played in Lo sceicco bianco, a good-natured Roman prostitute who is optimistic even when humiliated and is swindled by the man she expects to marry. One of Fellini’s most likeable films, it won an Oscar for best…
- Notting Hill (film by Michell [1999])
Hugh Grant: …returned to romantic comedy with Notting Hill (1999), in which he starred as a bookstore owner who falls in love with a movie star (played by Julia Roberts).
- Notting Hill Carnival (street festival, London, England)
Claudia Jones: Founding of the West Indian Gazette and the Notting Hill Carnival: …celebration later expanded into the Notting Hill Carnival, which continued to draw some two million spectators annually in the early 21st century.
- Notting Hillbillies, the (musical group)
Mark Knopfler: …reunited with Phillips to form the Notting Hillbillies and collaborated with country musician Chet Atkins to create Neck and Neck (1990), a highly successful album that won three Grammy Awards. The following year Dire Straits reunited to release the group’s final album, On Every Street. In 1996 Knopfler released his…
- Nottingham (city and unitary authority, England, United Kingdom)
Nottingham, city and unitary authority, geographic and historic county of Nottinghamshire, England. The city lies along the River Trent. The original site, on a sandstone hill commanding a crossing of the Trent, was occupied by the Anglo-Saxons in the 6th century. Colonizing the area by river, they
- Nottingham Castle (castle, England, United Kingdom)
Nottingham: …town is now marked by Nottingham Castle on Standard Hill, so named because there, in 1642, Charles I raised his standard (flag) at the outbreak of the English Civil Wars. The present castle, after renovation by the corporation (1875–78), houses a museum and art gallery. The link between Nottingham and…
- Nottingham Forest FC (English football club)
Justin Fashanu: In 1981 he joined Nottingham Forest, becoming the first black footballer to be transferred for a fee of £1 million. He endured a miserable season with the team, scoring only three goals while being subjected to extreme verbal abuse from club manager Brian Clough. During that season Fashanu became…
- Nottingham lace
Scranton: …noted for its production of Nottingham lace.
- Nottingham reel (device)
fishing: Early history: …the day was called the Nottingham reel, based on the wooden lace bobbin devised in the lace-making town of that name. It was a wide-drum, free-spooling reel, ideal for allowing line and bait or lure to float downstream with the current and suitable for certain kinds of sea fishing. By…
- Nottingham Trent University (university, England, United Kingdom)
Nottingham: The Nottingham Trent University was established as a polytechnic in 1970 and gained university status in 1992. The city has two important theatres—Theatre Royal (1865) and the Playhouse (opened 1963). Literary figures associated with Nottingham include the poet Lord Byron and the novelist D.H. Lawrence.
- Nottingham’s Men (English theatrical company)
Admiral’s Men, a theatrical company in Elizabethan and Jacobean England. About 1576–79 they were known as Lord Howard’s Men, so called after their patron Charles Howard, 1st earl of Nottingham, 2nd Baron Howard of Effingham. In 1585, when Lord Howard became England’s lord high admiral, the company
- Nottingham, Charles Howard, 1st earl of (English admiral)
Charles Howard, 1st earl of Nottingham was an English lord high admiral who commanded England’s fleet against the Spanish Armada. Although he was not as talented a seaman as his subordinates Sir Francis Drake and John Hawkins, Howard’s able leadership contributed greatly to this important English
- Nottingham, Earl of (English noble)
Henry IV: …of the 1st duke of Norfolk, and Richard Scrope, archbishop of York, executed for conspiring with Northumberland to raise another rebellion. Although the worst of Henry’s political troubles were over, he then began to suffer from an affliction that his contemporaries believed to be leprosy—it may have been congenital syphilis.…
- Nottingham, Earl of (English noble [1366–1399])
Thomas Mowbray, 1st duke of Norfolk was an English lord whose quarrel with Henry of Bolingbroke, Duke of Hereford (later King Henry IV, reigned 1399–1413), was a critical episode in the events leading to the overthrow of King Richard II (reigned 1377–99) by Bolingbroke. The quarrel dominates the
- Nottingham, Heneage Finch, 1st earl of, Baron Finch of Daventry (English lord chancellor)
Heneage Finch, 1st earl of Nottingham was the lord chancellor of England (1675–82), called “the father of equity.” He was descended from an old family, many of whose members had attained to high legal eminence, and was the eldest son of Sir Heneage Finch, recorder of London. He was educated at
- Nottingham, Heneage Finch, 1st earl of, Baron Finch of Daventry (English lord chancellor)
Heneage Finch, 1st earl of Nottingham was the lord chancellor of England (1675–82), called “the father of equity.” He was descended from an old family, many of whose members had attained to high legal eminence, and was the eldest son of Sir Heneage Finch, recorder of London. He was educated at
- Nottingham, Sheriff of (fictional character)
Robin Hood: …most frequent enemy was the Sheriff of Nottingham, a local agent of the central government (though internal evidence from the early ballads makes it clear that the action took place chiefly in south Yorkshire, not in Nottinghamshire). Other enemies included wealthy ecclesiastical landowners. Robin treated women, the poor, and people…
- Nottingham, University of (university, England, United Kingdom)
Nottingham: It was incorporated as the University of Nottingham in 1948. The Nottingham Trent University was established as a polytechnic in 1970 and gained university status in 1992. The city has two important theatres—Theatre Royal (1865) and the Playhouse (opened 1963). Literary figures associated with Nottingham include the poet Lord Byron…
- Nottinghamshire (county, England, United Kingdom)
Nottinghamshire, administrative, geographic, and historic county of the East Midlands of England, bordered by the geographic counties of Leicestershire, Derbyshire, and Lincolnshire, and by the metropolitan county of South Yorkshire. The administrative, geographic, and historic counties cover
- Notturno (work by Maderna)
Bruno Maderna: The Notturno for tape (1956) and Sintaxis for four different, unspecified electronic timbres (tone colours) display his interest in new sonorities. His oboe concerto (1962) reveals a more conventional viewpoint, although even in this he made use of small-scale aleatory (chance and improvisatory) operations.
- notturno (music)
nocturne, (French: “Nocturnal”), in music, a composition inspired by, or evocative of, the night, and cultivated in the 19th century primarily as a character piece for piano. The form originated with the Irish composer John Field, who published the first set of nocturnes in 1814, and reached its
- Noturus (catfish)
madtom: …American catfishes of the genus Noturus, of the family Ictaluridae. They are sometimes classified in two genera, Noturus and Schilbeodes. Generally about 5–7.5 cm (2–3 inches) long, madtoms are the smallest ictalurids and are characterized by a long adipose fin that in some species joins the rounded tail fin.
- Noturus flavus (fish)
madtom: Species include the stonecat (N. flavus), a common, yellow-brown fish usually found under stones by day, and the tadpole madtom (N., or Schilbeodes, gyrinus), a tadpolelike catfish common in the eastern and central United States.
- Nouabalé-Ndoki National Park (national park, Congo (Brazzaville))
Republic of the Congo: Plant and animal life: …is protected; national parks include Nouabalé-Ndoki, in which dwell more than 300 species of bird and more than 1,000 plant and tree species, and Odzala-Kokoua, which is an important elephant and gorilla sanctuary.
- Nouâdhibou (Mauritania)
Nouâdhibou, town located in northwestern Mauritania, on Cape Nouâdhibou (Cape Blanco) peninsula facing a protective bay on the Atlantic coast. It has developed as a fishing centre, and fishing continues to be important; but, since 1964, with the completion of a special pier and a 419-mile (674-km)
- Nouah, Ramsey (Nigerian actor)
Nollywood: Digital era (2010s– ): New Nollywood after 2009: Today megastars such as Ramsey Nouah, Genevieve Nnaji, and Ade Otukoya influence popular culture and fashion across Africa. Many across the continent appreciate that the industry’s success enables African filmmakers to create high-quality movies for African audiences on their own terms, without catering to Western sensibilities. As Nigerian cinema…
- Nouakchott (national capital, Mauritania)
Nouakchott, city, capital of Mauritania, on a plateau near the West African Atlantic coast, about 270 miles (435 km) north-northeast of Dakar, Senegal. Originally a coastal village on the desert trail north from Dakar, it was developed after independence (1960) as the capital of the new nation.
- Nouakchott, University of (university, Nouakchott, Mauritania)
Mauritania: Education: The University of Nouakchott (1981) has faculties of letters and human sciences and of law and economics. Other advanced education is provided by a research institute for mining and industry, a centre for Islamic studies, and a training facility for administrative personnel in Nouakchott.
- Nouayme, Mikhāʾīl (Lebanese author)
Mikhāʾīl Naʿīmah was a Lebanese literary critic, playwright, essayist, and short-story writer who helped introduce modern realism into Arabic prose fiction. Naʿīmah was educated at schools in Lebanon, Palestine, Russia, and the United States. After graduating in law from Washington State University
- Nouba des femmes du mont Chenoua (film by Djebar)
Assia Djebar: Her movie Nouba des femmes du mont Chenoua, the story of an Algerian woman engineer returning to Algeria after a long Western exile, was released in 1978. Femmes d’Alger dans leur appartement (1980; Women of Algiers in Their Apartment) is a collection of novellas and short stories…
- noucentisme (art)
Eugenio d’Ors y Rovira: …1906, he coined the term noucentisme (“1900-ism”) to characterize Catalan culture of the 20th century. He believed that art should be “arbitrary,” or subjectivist, breaking with traditional norms. By extending this concept to the political movement of Catalan nationalism, he was able to characterize a whole program of political and…
- Noue, François de La (Huguenot leader)
François de La Noue was a Huguenot captain in the French Wars of Religion (1562–98), known for his exploits as a soldier and for his military and historical writings. La Noue became a Protestant in 1558 and soon began fighting for the Huguenot cause. Wounded at Fontenay (1570), he had one arm
- Nouel, Adolfo (president of Dominican Republic)
Dominican Republic: Caudillos of the Dominican Republic: …the accession of the archbishop Adolfo Nouel to the presidency in 1912 failed to stem the disorder, and within four months he too was forced to resign.
- Nouelou ancient ha devot, An (collection of carols)
Celtic literature: The three major periods of Breton literature: A collection of carols, An Nouelou ancient ha devot (“Ancient and Devout Songs”), appeared in 1650, and a book of metrical meditations in 1651. In general, Middle Breton literature lacked originality, and the indigenous culture of Brittany seems to have been entirely neglected by the educated classes, who introduced…
- nougat (confection)
nougat, aerated confection made by mixing nuts and sometimes fruit pieces in a sugar paste, the composition of which is varied to give either a chewy or brittle consistency. Nougat originated in Mediterranean countries, where honey, together with almonds or other nuts, was beaten into egg whites
- Nougayrède, Natalie (French journalist)
Natalie Nougayrède is a French journalist who served as executive editor and managing editor of the flagship French newspaper Le Monde from 2013 to 2014. She was the first woman to head Le Monde since its founding in 1944. After graduating (1988) from the Institut d’Études Politiques (Institute of
- Nougé, Paul (Belgian author)
Paul Nougé was a Belgian poet and intellectual theorist. He and René Magritte were the most important figures in the Brussels group of Belgian Surrealists. Nougé, who was a biochemist by profession, first developed a wider intellectual audience in 1924 as a coeditor (with Camille Goemans and Marcel
- Noughts and Crosses (game)
number game: Puzzles involving configurations: …for two players, such as ticktacktoe and its more sophisticated variations, one of which calls for each player to begin with three counters (3 black, 3 white); the first player places a counter in any cell, except the center cell, of a 3 × 3 diagram; the players then alternate…
- Nouméa (New Caledonia)
Nouméa, city, port, and capital of the French overseas country of New Caledonia, southwestern Pacific Ocean, in the southwestern corner of the main island of New Caledonia. It was founded in 1854 as Port-de-France. It is situated on an excellent deepwater harbour protected by Nou Island and a reef.
- Nouméa Accord (France-New Caledonia [1998])
New Caledonia: Government and society: Under the Nouméa Accord of 1998, New Caledonia has limited autonomy within the French legal system. It sends three representatives to the French parliament: two to the National Assembly and one to the Senate. The French president is the head of state. The heads of government are…
- noumenon (philosophy)
noumenon, in the philosophy of Immanuel Kant, the thing-in-itself (das Ding an sich) as opposed to what Kant called the phenomenon—the thing as it appears to an observer. Though the noumenal holds the contents of the intelligible world, Kant claimed that man’s speculative reason can only know
- noun (grammar)
Caucasian languages: Grammatical characteristics: …languages include an extremely simple noun system and a relatively complicated system of verb conjugation. There are no grammatical cases in Abkhaz and Abaza, and in the other languages only two principal cases occur: a direct case (nominative) and an oblique case, combining the functions of several cases—ergative, genitive, dative,…
- noun class (language)
Niger-Congo languages: Noun classes: The system of noun classes is probably the characteristic most widely found in Niger-Congo languages and best known to those interested in language phenomena. Though the extent to which the system operates varies greatly, it is nonetheless found in some form in languages…
- noun phrase (grammar)
linguistics: Chomsky’s grammar: …stands for Sentence, NP for Noun Phrase, VP for Verb Phrase, Det for Determiner, Aux for Auxiliary (verb), N for Noun, and V for Verb stem.
- nourishment
food, substance consisting essentially of protein, carbohydrate, fat, and other nutrients used in the body of an organism to sustain growth and vital processes and to furnish energy. The absorption and utilization of food by the body is fundamental to nutrition and is facilitated by digestion.
- Nourrit, Adolphe (French musician)
Adolphe Nourrit was a French dramatic tenor who created many new roles in French opera. His father, Louis Nourrit, was both a leading tenor at the Paris Opéra and a diamond merchant. Adolphe studied voice with Manuel García, a famous tenor of the time, and at 19 years of age he made his successful
- Nourrit, Louis (French musician)
Adolphe Nourrit: His father, Louis Nourrit, was both a leading tenor at the Paris Opéra and a diamond merchant. Adolphe studied voice with Manuel García, a famous tenor of the time, and at 19 years of age he made his successful debut at the Paris Opéra as Pylades in…
- Nourritures terrestres, Les (novel by Grove)
Canadian literature: Modern period, 1900–60: …of the Marsh (1925) and Fruits of the Earth (1933), depicting man’s struggle for mastery of himself and his land, are moving testaments to the courage of farmers. Painter Emily Carr wrote stories about her childhood and her visits to First Nations sites in British Columbia (Klee Wyck, 1941).
- Nourse, Edith (American public official)
Edith Nourse Rogers was an American public official, longtime U.S. congressional representative from Massachusetts, perhaps most remembered for her work with veterans affairs. Edith Nourse was educated at Rogers Hall School in Lowell, Massachusetts, and at Madame Julien’s School in Paris. In 1907
- Nourse, Edward (English surgeon)
Sir Percivall Pott: …later was an apprentice to Edward Nourse, a surgeon at St. Bartholomew’s Hospital in London. In preparing and dissecting cadavers for Nourse’s anatomy classes, Pott not only became educated in the basic principles of anatomy and medicine but also eventually perfected his surgical technique. In 1736, after seven years under…
- nous (Greek philosophy)
nous, in philosophy, the faculty of intellectual apprehension and of intuitive thought. Used in a narrower sense, it is distinguished from discursive thought and applies to the apprehension of eternal intelligible substances and first principles. It is sometimes identified with the highest or
- Nous quatre à Paris (painting by Hayden)
Palmer Hayden: …he painted his well-known watercolour Nous quatre à Paris (c. 1930), which features the artist playing cards with Woodruff and writers Countee Cullen and Eric Walrond, each of whom is depicted in profile with exaggerated facial features, making reference to indigenous African art.
- Nouveau Christianisme (work by Saint-Simon)
Henri de Saint-Simon: Life.: …and in his best-known work, Nouveau Christianisme (1825; “The New Christianity”), it takes the form of a religion. It was this development of Saint-Simon’s teaching that occasioned his final rupture with Comte. Before the publication of Nouveau Christianisme, Saint-Simon had not concerned himself with theology, but in this work, beginning…
- Nouveau Parti Démocratique (political party, Canada)
New Democratic Party (NDP), Canadian social democratic political party favouring a mixed public-private economy, broadened social benefits, and an internationalist foreign policy. The New Democratic Party (NDP) grew out of the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation (CCF), which was founded in 1933 as
- Nouveau Réalisme (art)
César: …at the forefront of the New Realism movement with his radical compressions (compacted automobiles, discarded metal, or rubbish), expansions (polyurethane foam sculptures), and fantastic representations of animals and insects.
- nouveau roman (literature)
New Novel, avant-garde novel of the mid-20th century that marked a radical departure from the conventions of the traditional novel in that it ignores such elements as plot, dialogue, linear narrative, and human interest. Starting from the premise that the potential of the traditional novel had been
- Nouveau Testament en français avec des réflexions morales (work by Quesnel)
Unigenitus: …Quesnel contained in the book Réflexions morales, was issued at the request of the French king, Louis XIV, who wished to suppress the Jansenist faction. Louis was able to secure initial acceptance of the bull, but some French bishops (led by Louis-Antoine de Noailles, cardinal-archbishop of Paris) rejected it, and…