- Nouveau traité de diplomatique (work by Tassin and Toustain)
diplomatics: Post-Renaissance scholarship: …Charles-François Toustain published their six-volume Nouveau traité de diplomatique (1750–65; “New Treatise on Diplomatic”), a work that surpassed Mabillon’s only in its greater wealth of material. Another important event in the history of the science of diplomatics was the founding of the École des Chartes (an institute for the training…
- Nouveau Traité de toute l’architecture (work by Cordemoy)
Western architecture: France: In the Nouveau Traité de toute l’architecture (1714; “New Treatise on All Architecture”) Cordemoy proposed that a new, honest, and economical architecture might be arrived at by abstracting the principles of Gothic construction and applying them in a perfectly regular Classical way. There was no question of…
- Nouveau, Germain (French poet)
Arthur Rimbaud: Major works of Arthur Rimbaud: …London in the company of Germain Nouveau, a fellow poet. There they copied out some of the Illuminations. Rimbaud returned home for Christmas and spent his time there studying mathematics and languages. His last encounter with Verlaine, early in 1875, ended in a violent quarrel, but it was at this…
- Nouveau-Québec (administrative region, Quebec, Canada)
Nord-du-Québec, administrative region constituting the northern half of Quebec province, Canada. The name Nouveau-Québec (“New Quebec”) once was used synonymously with Ungava for that part of the Labrador-Ungava peninsula between Hudson Bay and the Labrador Sea, north of the Eastmain and Churchill
- Nouveau-Québec Crater (crater, Quebec, Canada)
Ungava-Quebec Crater, geologically young crater, produced by an impact event involving a meteorite, located in the northwestern part of the Ungava Peninsula, northern Quebec province, Canada. First recognized as an impact structure in 1950, the crater is 3.4 km (2.1 miles) in diameter and has a rim
- Nouveaux Dialogues des morts (work by Fontenelle)
Bernard Le Bovier, sieur de Fontenelle: …contributed to this, but the Nouveaux Dialogues des morts (1683, “New Dialogues of the Dead”; 2nd part, 1684) enjoyed a greater success and is more interesting to a modern reader. The Dialogues, conversations modelled on the dialogues of Lucian, between such figures as Socrates and Montaigne, Seneca and Scarron, served…
- Nouveaux essais de critique et d’histoire (work by Taine)
Hippolyte Taine: Attack on eclecticism: …his second volume of essays, Nouveaux essais de critique et d’histoire (1865; “New Essays of Criticism and History”), including his perceptive articles on Racine, Balzac, and Stendhal (whose psychological acuity he was one of the first to admire). In 1868 he married Mlle Denuelle, the daughter of a well-known architect…
- Nouveaux essais sur l’entendement humain (work by Leibniz)
empiricism: Modern philosophy: …l’entendement humain (1704, published 1765; New Essays Concerning Human Understanding), arguing that ideas can be virtually innate in a less trivial sense than Locke allowed. Interpreting Locke’s notion of reflection as reasoning rather than as introspection, Leibniz supposed that Locke was more of a rationalist than he really was.
- Nouveaux Messieurs, Les (film by Feyder [1928])
Jacques Feyder: …returned to France to do Les Nouveaux Messieurs (1928; “The New Gentlemen”), a picture banned by the French government for its lightly satiric treatment of the French Parliament. Feyder spent the next five years in Hollywood, where his pictures included The Kiss (1929), an important silent film starring Greta Garbo;…
- Nouveaux Philosophes (French group)
Bernard-Henri Lévy: …that became known as the New Philosophers (Nouveaux Philosophes). They launched a severe critique of the Marxism and socialism that had dominated French intellectual life since World War II and to which Lévy himself had previously subscribed. His principal contribution to that movement was La Barbarie à visage humain (1977;…
- nouveaux romancier (French literature)
French literature: Toward the nouveau roman: …on the group dubbed the nouveaux romanciers, or new novelists: Alain Robbe-Grillet, Claude Simon, Nathalie Sarraute, Michel Butor, and Robert Pinget. Marguerite Duras
- Nouveaux voyages de Mr. le Baron de Lahontan dans l’Amérique septentrionale (work by La Hontan)
Louis-Armand de Lom d’Arce, baron de Lahontan: (New Voyages to North-America), considered the best 17th-century work on New France. The New Voyages also contained a series of dialogues describing the philosophy of the primitive way of life that influenced a subsequent growth of primitivism in France and England, as reflected in the…
- Nouvel Atlas de la Chine, de la Tartarie chinoise et du Tibet (atlas by Anville)
Kangxi: Administration of the empire: The famous Nouvel Atlas de la Chine, de la Tartarie chinoise et du Thibet (“New Atlas of China, of Chinese Tartary, and of Tibet”) of Jean-Baptiste Bourguignon d’Anville is a French version of this original. European painting also fascinated Kangxi. Gio Ghirardini, an Italian layman brought by…
- Nouvel, Jean (French architect)
Jean Nouvel is a French architect who designed his buildings to “create a visual landscape” that fit their context—sometimes by making them contrast with the surrounding area. For his boldly experimental designs, which defy a general characterization, he was awarded the 2008 Pritzker Architecture
- nouvelle AI (computer science)
nouvelle artificial intelligence, an approach to artificial intelligence (AI) pioneered at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) AI Laboratory by the Australian American scientist Rodney Brooks during the latter half of the 1980s. Nouvelle AI distances itself from strong AI, with its
- Nouvelle Amsterdam (island, Indian Ocean)
Nouvelle Amsterdam, island in the southern Indian Ocean, administratively a part of the French Southern and Antarctic Territories (q.v.). An extinct volcano rises to 2,989 feet (911 m) above sea level on the island, which has an area of 18 square miles (47 square km). It was discovered in 1522 by
- nouvelle artificial intelligence (computer science)
nouvelle artificial intelligence, an approach to artificial intelligence (AI) pioneered at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) AI Laboratory by the Australian American scientist Rodney Brooks during the latter half of the 1980s. Nouvelle AI distances itself from strong AI, with its
- Nouvelle Bibliothèque des auteurs ecclésiastiques (work by Dupin)
Louis Ellies Dupin: …whose history of Christian literature, Nouvelle Bibliothèque des auteurs ecclésiastiques, 58 vol. (1686–1704; “New Library of Ecclesiastical Writers”), broke with scholastic tradition by treating biography, literary and doctrinal criticism, and bibliography in one work and by writing in a modern language. The opinions he expressed in this work were strongly…
- Nouvelle Biographie générale (compilation by Hoefer)
encyclopaedia: Biography: Hoefer compiled the Nouvelle Biographie générale (1852–66; “New General Biography”), and J.F. Michaud was responsible for the Biographie universelle (1811–62; “Universal Biography”). These two great works were to a certain extent competitive, which helped to improve their coverage and content; they are still used in research libraries. After…
- nouvelle Carthage, La (work by Eekhoud)
Georges Eekhoud: …novel, La nouvelle Carthage (1888; The New Carthage), set in Antwerp, is saved only by the brilliance of its various episodes.
- nouvelle Carthage, La (work by Eekhoud)
Georges Eekhoud: …novel, La nouvelle Carthage (1888; The New Carthage), set in Antwerp, is saved only by the brilliance of its various episodes.
- nouvelle critique (French literature)
French literature: La Nouvelle Critique (French New Criticism): ” The new and subversive critical tendencies of the 1960s demanded more of the reader, who was to become an active participant in decoding the text, not a passive recipient. The term New Criticism (not to be confused with the Anglo-American New Criticism, developed…
- nouvelle cuisine (gastronomy)
nouvelle cuisine, eclectic style in international cuisine, originating in France during the 1960s and ’70s, that stressed freshness, lightness, and clarity of flavour and inspired new movements in world cuisine. In reaction to some of the richer and more-calorie-laden extravagances of classic
- Nouvelle découverte d’un très grand pays situé dans l’Amérique (work by Hennepin)
Louis Hennepin: …full account of his exploits, Description de la Louisiane (1683), later revised as Nouvelle découverte d’un très grand pays situé dans l’Amérique (1697; “New Discovery of a Very Large Country Situated in America”), in which he claimed to have explored the Mississippi to its mouth. This bold assumption was, however,…
- Nouvelle Géographie universelle, la terre et les hommes, La (work by Reclus)
Élisée Reclus: (1875–94; The Earth and Its Inhabitants, 1878–94), is profusely illustrated with maps, plans, and engravings and characterized by a brillance of exposition that gives his work permanent scientific value.
- nouvelle Héloïse, La (work by Rousseau)
Jean-Jacques Rousseau: Years of seclusion and exile of Jean-Jacques Rousseau: …ou, la nouvelle Héloïse (1761; Julie; or, The New Eloise) came out within 12 months, all three works of seminal importance. The New Eloise, being a novel, escaped the censorship to which the other two works were subject; indeed, of all his books it proved to be the most widely…
- Nouvelle Lambèse (Algeria)
Batna, city, northeastern Algeria. It lies along the Wadi Tilatou and is situated on a well-watered plain that is bounded on the south by the Aurès Massif and on the north by the Batna Mountains. To the west, the cedar-forested Mount Tougour (Pic des Cèdres) rises to 6,870 feet (2,094 metres).
- Nouvelle Mission de Judex, La (film by Feuillade)
Louis Feuillade: Judex (1916) and La Nouvelle Mission de Judex (1917–18; “The New Mission of Judex”) feature Judex, the daring detective with the sweeping black cape, a righter of wrongs who was the prototype of many future film heroes. The tremendous success of these pictures saved the French film industry,…
- Nouvelle Nouvelle Revue française, La (French review)
La Nouvelle Revue française, leading French review of literature and the other arts. It was founded in February 1909 (after a false start in November 1908) by a group that included André Gide, Jacques Copeau, and Jean Schlumberger. The NRF’s founders wished to emphasize aesthetic issues and to
- Nouvelle Relève, La (French-Canadian magazine)
Robert Charbonneau: …friend Paul Beaulieu, he founded La Relève (later called La Nouvelle Relève, “The New Relief”), a nationalist review of art, literature, and philosophy (it ceased publication in 1948). In 1940 he and Claude Hurtubise established the publishing house Éditions de l’Arbre. Over the years, Charbonneau worked as a journalist for…
- Nouvelle Revue de Paris (French magazine)
Gustave Flaubert: Mature career: …who had founded the periodical Revue de Paris, urged him to make haste, but he would not. The novel, with the subtitle Moeurs de province (“Provincial Customs”), eventually appeared in installments in the Revue from October 1 to December 15, 1856. The French government then brought the author to trial…
- Nouvelle Revue française, La (French review)
La Nouvelle Revue française, leading French review of literature and the other arts. It was founded in February 1909 (after a false start in November 1908) by a group that included André Gide, Jacques Copeau, and Jean Schlumberger. The NRF’s founders wished to emphasize aesthetic issues and to
- Nouvelle Vague (French film style)
New Wave, the style of a number of highly individualistic French film directors of the late 1950s. Preeminent among New Wave directors were Louis Malle, Claude Chabrol, François Truffaut, Alain Resnais, and Jean-Luc Godard, most of whom were associated with the film magazine Cahiers du cinéma, the
- Nouvelle-Aquitaine (region, France)
Nouvelle-Aquitaine, région of southwestern France created in 2016 by the union of the former régions of Aquitaine, Poitou-Charentes, and Limousin. It is the largest of France’s 13 metropolitan régions. It is bounded by the régions of Pays de la Loire to the north, Centre to the northeast, and
- Nouvelle-Calédonie (island, New Caledonia)
New Caledonia, largest island of the French unique collectivity of New Caledonia, in the southwestern Pacific Ocean 750 miles (1,200 km) east of Australia. Also known as Grande Terre (Mainland), it is approximately 250 miles (400 km) long and 25 miles (40 km) wide. From its coast, the island of New
- Nouvelle-Calédonie (French unique collectivity, Pacific Ocean)
New Caledonia, French unique collectivity in the southwestern Pacific Ocean, about 900 miles (1,500 km) east of Australia. It includes the island of New Caledonia (the Grande Terre [Mainland]), where the capital, Nouméa, is located; the Loyalty Islands; the Bélep Islands; and the Île des Pins.
- Nouvelle-France (French colonies, North America)
New France, (1534–1763), the French colonies of continental North America, initially embracing the shores of the St. Lawrence River, Newfoundland, and Acadia (Nova Scotia) but gradually expanding to include much of the Great Lakes region and parts of the trans-Appalachian West. The name Gallia Nova
- Nouvelle-France, Compagnie de la (Canadian company)
Canada: The Company of New France: The French government supplied more active support after the remarkable revival of royal power carried out in the 1620s by Armand-Jean du Plessis, cardinal et duc de Richelieu. Richelieu sought to make French colonial policy comparable to that of England and…
- Nouvelle-Orléans (Louisiana, United States)
New Orleans, city, southeastern Louisiana, U.S. Unquestionably one of the most distinctive cities of the New World, New Orleans was established at great cost in an environment of conflict. Its strategic position, commanding the mouth of the great Mississippi-Missouri river system, which drains the
- Nouvelles Inventions pour bien bastir et à petits fraiz (work by Delorme)
Philibert Delorme: …favour and turned to writing Nouvelles Inventions pour bien bastir et à petits fraiz (1561) and Le Premier Tome de l’architecture de Philibert de L’Orme (1567, revised 1568), two architectural treatises expounding the theories behind his practices. These works also attest to the way in which Delorme successfully grafted the…
- Nouvelles Kermesses (work by Eekhoud)
Georges Eekhoud: …Kermesses (1884; “Country Fair”) and Nouvelles Kermesses (1887; “New Country Fair”), graphically describe the seamy side of peasant life; his city novels explore the world of the working classes and social outcasts. In the novel Escal-Vigor (1899; Escal-Vigor: A Strange Love), Eekhoud confronted his own homosexuality.
- Nouvelles Littéraires (French periodical)
history of publishing: Continental Europe: …and intellectual values; and the Nouvelles Littéraires (1922) was founded by André Gillon as a weekly of information, criticism, and bibliography. After World War II there appeared Jean-Paul Sartre’s left-wing monthly Les Temps Modernes (founded 1945), La Table Ronde (1948), and Les Lettres Nouvelles (1953). In Germany, political magazines included…
- Nouvelles méthodes pour la détermination des orbites des comètes (work by Legendre)
Adrien-Marie Legendre: Legendre’s Nouvelles méthodes pour la détermination des orbites des comètes (1806; “New Methods for the Determination of Comet Orbits”) contains the first comprehensive treatment of the method of least squares, although priority for its discovery is shared with his German rival Carl Friedrich Gauss.
- Nouvelles récréations et joyeux devis (work by Des Périers)
Bonaventure Des Périers: …Mirth and Pleasant Conceits, or Novel Pastimes and Merry Tales), the collection of stories and fables on which his fame rests, appeared at Lyon in 1558. The stories are models of simple, direct narration in the vigorous, witty, and picturesque French of the 16th century.
- Nov (novel by Turgenev)
Virgin Soil, novel by Ivan Turgenev, published in Russian as Nov in 1877. Its focus is the young populists who hoped to sow the seeds of revolution in the virgin soil of the Russian peasantry. Turgenev presents realistic and somewhat sympathetic portraits of the many different types of characters
- Nova (American television series)
Public Broadcasting Service: …Performances (begun 1972), the science-oriented Nova (begun 1974), and the current-affairs show Washington Week in Review (begun 1967; later titled Washington Week). Viewers were also drawn to the instructional The French Chef (1963–73), with Julia Child; the political talk show Firing Line (1966–99), hosted by William F. Buckley, Jr.; and…
- Nova (work by Antonio)
Nicolás Antonio: … appeared in two parts (Nova, 1672; Vetus, 1696). The first is a vast bibliography of Peninsular and Spanish colonial writers after 1500, with critical evaluations. The second, a history of Peninsular literature from the reign of Augustus to 1500, marks the emergence of modern bibliography and the transformation of…
- nova (astronomy)
nova, any of a class of exploding stars whose luminosity temporarily increases from several thousand to as much as 100,000 times its normal level. A nova reaches maximum luminosity within hours after its outburst and may shine intensely for several days or occasionally for a few weeks, after which
- nova (surface feature, Venus)
Venus: Coronae: (Such features are sometimes called novae, a name given to them when their evolutionary relationship to coronae was less certain.) Once a diapir has neared the surface and cooled, it loses its buoyancy. The initially raised crust then can sag under its own weight, developing concentric faults as it does…
- Nova Arcádia (Portuguese literary society)
arcádia: In 1790 a Nova Arcádia (“New Arcadia”) came into being, its two most distinguished members being the rival poets Manuel Maria Barbosa du Bocage, who is now remembered for a few outstanding sonnets, and José Agostinho de Macedo, known for his experiments with the epic form. Curvo Semedo…
- Nova Castella, João da (Spanish explorer)
João da Nova was a Spanish navigator who in the service of Portugal discovered the islands of Ascension and St. Helena, both off the southwestern coast of Africa. Commanding a fleet of four ships, Nova left Portugal on a voyage to India in 1501. En route he discovered Ascension Island. In India he
- Nova Constellatio (American coin)
coin: Coins of the United States: …issue of the historic 1783 Nova Constellatio silver patterns of 1,000, 500, and 100 units, from dies by the Englishman Benjamin Dudley, exemplifying the extraordinary Morris Plan, drawn up by Robert Morris, superintendent of finance, which reconciled the diverse colonial moneys of account. In 1786, however, Congress adopted instead the…
- Nova Delphini (astronomy)
star: Peculiar variables: …from Nova Serpentis 1970 and Nova Delphini. The radio emission from the latter objects is consistent with that expected from an expanding shell of ionized gas that fades away as the gas becomes attenuated. The central star of the Crab Nebula has been detected as a radio (and optical) pulsar.
- Nová Dubnica (Slovakia)
Slovakia: Settlement patterns: Partizánske and Nová Dubnica, both in the west, are examples of new towns founded, respectively, just before and after World War II.
- Nova Express (novel by Burroughs)
novel: Expressionism: His later novels Nova Express (1964) and The Ticket That Exploded (1962) use obscene fantasy to present a kind of metaphysical struggle between free spirit and enslaved flesh, evidently an extrapolation of the earlier drug theme. Burroughs is a didactic novelist, and didacticism functions best in a fictional…
- Nova Friburgo (Brazil)
Nova Friburgo, city, east-central Rio de Janeiro estado (state), eastern Brazil. It is situated on the Rio Grande in the Serra de Nova Friburgo, 2,776 feet (846 metres) above sea level. Nova Friburgo has textile mills but is best known as a summer mountain resort, built in Swiss Alpine style, and
- Nova Goa (India)
Panaji, town, capital of Goa state, western India. It lies on the estuary of the Mandavi River at the river’s mouth on the Arabian Sea. Panaji was a tiny village until the mid-18th century, when repeated plagues forced Goa’s Portuguese colonizers to abandon their capital of Velha Goa (Old Goa, or
- Nova Herculis (astronomy)
Nova Herculis, one of the brightest novas of the 20th century, discovered Dec. 13, 1934, by the British amateur astronomer J.P.M. Prentice, in the northern constellation Hercules. It reached an apparent visual magnitude of 1.4 and remained visible to the unaided eye for months. At its centre was
- Nova Iguaçu (Brazil)
Nova Iguaçu, city and suburb of the city of Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro estado (state), Brazil. Formerly called Maxambamba, it lies in the Sarapuí River valley at 85 feet (26 metres) above sea level, about 20 miles (32 km) northwest of Rio de Janeiro. The city’s varied industries include
- Nova Lamego (Guinea-Bissau)
Gabú, town located in eastern Guinea-Bissau. Gabú is situated along the Colufe River, a tributary of the Gêba River, and is an agricultural marketing centre. Peanuts (groundnuts), mostly grown by the primarily Muslim Fulani (Fulbe) peoples, are the principal crop. The town is connected by road to
- Nova laser (laser)
fusion reactor: Inertial confinement: …and most powerful laser, the Nova laser. (The Nova is a 10-beam neodymium-glass laser operated at an energy level of 40,000 joules in a one-nanosecond pulse.) Although the value of this product is comparable to that representing breakeven for magnetic fusion, laser fusion requires a larger value to overcome the…
- Nova Lima (Brazil)
Nova Lima, city, east-central Minas Gerais estado (state), southeastern Brazil. It lies along the Cristais River at 2,444 feet (745 metres) above sea level, just southeast of Belo Horizonte, the state capital. Nova Lima was made the seat of a municipality in 1891 and became a city in 1936. It is
- Nova Lisboa (Angola)
Huambo, city, west-central Angola. It lies south of the Cuanza River on the Bié Plateau at an elevation of 5,581 feet (1,701 metres) and has a temperate climate. The city was founded in 1912 by Portuguese settlers and workers on the Benguela Railway, which was then under construction. It was first
- Nova Methodus pro Maximis et Minimis (work by Leibniz)
Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz: The Hanoverian period of Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz: …the latter year he published Nova Methodus pro Maximis et Minimis (“New Method for the Greatest and the Least”), which was an exposition of his differential calculus.
- Nova Ophiuchi 1604 (supernova)
Kepler’s Nova, one of the few supernovae (violent stellar explosions) known to have occurred in the Milky Way Galaxy. Jan Brunowski, Johannes Kepler’s assistant, first observed the phenomenon in October 1604; Kepler studied it until early 1606, when the supernova was no longer visible to the
- Nova Persei (astronomy)
Nova Persei, bright nova that attained an absolute magnitude of −9.2. Spectroscopic observations of the nova, which appeared in 1901, provided important information about interstellar gas. The shell thrown off by the exploding star was unusually asymmetrical, and a bright nebulosity near the star
- Nová rada (work by Flaška)
Czech literature: Origins and development through the 17th century: …well as the political allegory Nová rada (“The New Council”), written by Smil Flaška to defend the rights of the Bohemian nobility against the crown.
- Nova revija (Slovenian journal)
Slovenia: Media and publishing: …monthly scholarly and literary journal Nova revija (“New Review”) was influential in Slovenia’s political transition. Perhaps its most famous issue was No. 57, released in 1987 with an article titled “Contributions to a Slovenian National Programme,” in which Slovenian intellectuals called for independence and a democratic republic. The Nova Revija…
- Nova Scientia (work by Tartaglia)
Niccolò Fontana Tartaglia: Tartaglia’s Nova Scientia (1537; “A New Science”), a treatise on gunnery, is an important pioneering effort to establish the laws of falling bodies. Soon after the publication of this work, Tartaglia was asked by Girolamo Cardano, physician and lecturer in Milan, to publish his solution to…
- Nova Scotia (province, Canada)
Nova Scotia, Canadian province located on the eastern seaboard of North America, one of the four original provinces (along with New Brunswick, Ontario, and Quebec) that constituted the Dominion of Canada in 1867. Roughly 360 miles (580 km) long but not more than about 80 miles (130 km) wide at any
- Nova Scotia duck tolling retriever (breed of dog)
Nova Scotia duck tolling retriever, breed of sporting dog developed in Canada in the 19th century to lure ducks within gunshot range. The dogs toll (entice) the ducks to approach by their antics onshore and retrieve the downed birds for the hunter. The smallest of the retrievers, the “toller”
- Nova Scotia Magazine (Canadian magazine)
Canadian literature: From settlement to 1900: The first literary journal, the Nova-Scotia Magazine, was published in Halifax in 1789. The town’s literary activity was invigorated by an influx of loyalists during the American Revolution and by the energetic Joseph Howe, a journalist, a poet, and the first premier of Nova Scotia. Two of the most potent…
- Nova Scotia, flag of (Canadian provincial flag)
Canadian provincial flag consisting of a white field (background) with a blue saltire (diagonal cross) extending to the flag corners; a shield in the centre features a red lion on a golden field.The flag is based on the provincial coat of arms, which was itself inspired by the Scottish Cross of St.
- Nova Serpentis 1970 (astronomy)
star: Peculiar variables: …and the shells ejected from Nova Serpentis 1970 and Nova Delphini. The radio emission from the latter objects is consistent with that expected from an expanding shell of ionized gas that fades away as the gas becomes attenuated. The central star of the Crab Nebula has been detected as a…
- Nova Sofala (Mozambique)
Sofala, historic seaport situated at the mouth of the Sofala River on the coast of what was Portuguese East Africa, now Mozambique. Once the first town of the Portuguese possessions of eastern Africa, Sofala declined rapidly in importance after 1890, when Beira was established about 20 miles (30
- Nova Southeastern University (university, Fort Lauderdale, Florida, United States)
Fort Lauderdale: …include Broward Community College (1959), Nova Southeastern University (1964), and Fort Lauderdale College (1940; now part of Florida Metropolitan University). Attractions in the city and nearby communities include museums of art, science, and archaeology; Flamingo Gardens, a botanical garden and aviary; the International Swimming Hall of Fame; Bonnet House (c.…
- Nova Traiana, Via (ancient road, Middle East)
King’s Highway, ancient thoroughfare that connected Syria and the Gulf of Aqaba by way of what is now Jordan. Mentioned in the Old Testament, it is one of the world’s oldest continuously used communication routes. The King’s Highway was an important thoroughfare for north-south trade from ancient
- Nova, João da (Spanish explorer)
João da Nova was a Spanish navigator who in the service of Portugal discovered the islands of Ascension and St. Helena, both off the southwestern coast of Africa. Commanding a fleet of four ships, Nova left Portugal on a voyage to India in 1501. En route he discovered Ascension Island. In India he
- Nova, Juan de (Spanish explorer)
João da Nova was a Spanish navigator who in the service of Portugal discovered the islands of Ascension and St. Helena, both off the southwestern coast of Africa. Commanding a fleet of four ships, Nova left Portugal on a voyage to India in 1501. En route he discovered Ascension Island. In India he
- novaculite (rock)
novaculite, very dense, light-coloured, even-textured sedimentary rock, a bedded chert in which microcrystalline silica (silicon dioxide, SiO2) in the form of quartz predominates over silica in the form of chalcedony. Deposits of novaculite exhibit stratification. The name is applied chiefly to
- Novaës, Guiomar (Brazilian musician)
Guiomar Novaës was a Brazilian pianist known especially for her interpretations of works by Frédéric Chopin and Robert Schumann. After early studies in São Paulo with Luigi Chiafarelli, Novaës was sent by the Brazilian government to the Paris Conservatory, where she took first place in the entrance
- Novaia Zemlia (islands, Russia)
Novaya Zemlya, archipelago in northwestern Russia, lying in the Arctic Ocean and separating the Barents and Kara seas. Novaya Zemlya (“New Land”) consists of two large islands, Severny (northern) and Yuzhny (southern), aligned for 600 miles (1,000 km) in a southwest-northeast direction, plus
- Novak, David (scholar)
Judaism: Modern views of the people Israel: …Body of Faith (1983) and David Novak’s The Election of Israel (1995). Wyschogrod held that the people of Israel were elected because of God’s exceptional love for them and that God’s love existed prior to the revelation to Moses on Mount Sinai. Novak also accepted the traditional belief that God…
- Novak, Joseph (American writer)
Jerzy Kosinski was a Polish-born American writer whose novels were sociological studies of individuals in controlling and bureaucratic societies. Lewinkopf was born to a Jewish family in Poland. According to him, at the age of six, upon the outbreak of World War II, he was separated from his
- Novak, Kim (American actress)
Kim Novak is an American actor who was a popular star in the mid- to late 1950s, best known for her dual performance as Madeleine Elster and Judy Barton in Alfred Hitchcock’s psychological thriller Vertigo (1958). The two women portrayed by Novak are part of a plot to trick an acrophobic former
- Novak, Michael (American theologian, economist, historian, and author)
Michael Novak was an American lay theologian, economist, historian, and author who became a prominent neoconservative political theorist. He is regarded as one of the most important Roman Catholic thinkers of his generation. At age 14, Novak entered the seminary of the Congregation of Holy Cross at
- Novák, Vítězslav (Czech composer)
Vítězslav Novák was a Czech composer who was one of the principal proponents of nationalism in Czech music and the teacher of many Czech composers of the 20th century. Novák studied under Antonín Dvořák at the Prague Conservatory and in 1909 began teaching there. His early works were influenced by
- Novakhovitsh, Ben-Zion (American author)
Yiddish literature: Writers in New York: Morris Winchevsky (pseudonym of Ben-Zion Novakhovitsh) was born in Lithuania, moved to Königsberg, Germany [now Kaliningrad, Russia], in 1877, and began to publish poems, stories, and articles in socialist Hebrew newspapers in the late 1870s. He was arrested and expelled from Prussia. In London he…
- Novalis (German poet)
Novalis was an early German Romantic poet and theorist who greatly influenced later Romantic thought. Novalis was born into a family of Protestant Lower Saxon nobility and took his pseudonym from “de Novali,” a name his family had formerly used. He studied law at the University of Jena (1790),
- Novanglus (president of United States)
John Adams was an early advocate of American independence from Great Britain, a major figure in the Continental Congress (1774–77), the author of the Massachusetts constitution (1780), a signer of the Treaty of Paris (1783), the first American ambassador to the Court of St. James (1785–88), and the
- Novantrone (drug)
multiple sclerosis: Treatment of multiple sclerosis: the immunosuppressant drug mitoxantrone (Novantrone), and ocrelizumab (Ocrevus).
- Novara (Italy)
Novara, city, Piemonte (Piedmont) regione, northwestern Italy. It lies along the Agogna River, west of Milan. It originated as the Roman colony of Novaria, which was founded by Julius Caesar and destroyed in the 5th century; a new commune, established in the 6th century, was burned by the Holy
- Novara, Battle of (Italy [1821])
Congress of Laibach: …down by the Austrians at Novara on April 8, 1821.
- Novara, Battle of (Italy [1849])
Battle of Novara, (March 23, 1849), battle of the first Italian War of Independence in which 70,000 Austrian troops under Field Marshal Joseph Radetzky thoroughly defeated 100,000 poorly trained Italian troops (not all of whom were actually employed in the battle) under Charles Albert, king of
- Novara, Domenico Maria de (Italian astronomer)
Nicolaus Copernicus: Early life and education: …principal astronomer at the university, Domenico Maria de Novara (Latin: Domenicus Maria Novaria Ferrariensis; 1454–1504). Novara had the responsibility of issuing annual astrological prognostications for the city, forecasts that included all social groups but gave special attention to the fate of the Italian princes and their enemies. Copernicus, as is…
- Novaria (Italy)
Novara, city, Piemonte (Piedmont) regione, northwestern Italy. It lies along the Agogna River, west of Milan. It originated as the Roman colony of Novaria, which was founded by Julius Caesar and destroyed in the 5th century; a new commune, established in the 6th century, was burned by the Holy
- Novarro, Ramon (American actor)
Sam Wood: Early work: … (1932), a football drama starring Ramon Novarro; Prosperity (1932), the ninth and last teaming of popular comedians Dressler and Polly Moran; and Hold Your Man (1933), a calculated showcase for the charismatic pair of Clark Gable and Jean Harlow. Wood’s other credits from 1933 were The Barbarian, a romantic drama…
- Novartis AG (Swiss company)
Novartis AG, Swiss company that is one of the world’s largest manufacturers of pharmaceuticals. It was formed in 1997 from the merger of two major Swiss drug companies, Ciba-Geigy AG and Sandoz AG. Novartis is headquartered in Basel. Ciba-Geigy originated in the merger of two smaller Swiss firms,
- Novarupta (volcano, Alaska, United States)
Novarupta, volcanic vent and lava dome, southern Alaska, U.S., located at an elevation of 841 metres (2,759 feet) within Katmai National Park and Preserve. Its violent eruption, which began on June 6, 1912, and lasted 60 hours, is considered the largest volcanic eruption of the 20th century.
- Novatian (antipope)
Novatian was the second antipope in papal history, in 251. He was the first Roman theologian to write in Latin and inspired the Novatian Schism—a break from the Christian church by rigorists who condemned apostasy. (His name was certainly Novatianus—not Novatus, as given by the Greeks.) Novatian