- Ponting, Ricky (Australian cricketer)
Ricky Ponting is an Australian cricketer and coach who was the country’s premier batsman in the 1990s and early 2000s. Ponting gained a reputation as a cricket prodigy when he scored four centuries (a century is 100 runs in a single innings) for the Under-13s in a Tasmanian cricket week and two
- Ponting, Ricky Thomas (Australian cricketer)
Ricky Ponting is an Australian cricketer and coach who was the country’s premier batsman in the 1990s and early 2000s. Ponting gained a reputation as a cricket prodigy when he scored four centuries (a century is 100 runs in a single innings) for the Under-13s in a Tasmanian cricket week and two
- Pontobdella (leech genus)
annelid: Annotated classification: Piscicola, Pontobdella. Order Arhynchobdellida Pharynx with 3 toothed jaws or none, noneversible; terrestrial or freshwater; bloodsuckers or carnivorous; size, minute to 20 cm; examples of genera: Hirudo, Haemopis, Erpobdella.
- Pontoise (France)
Pontoise, town, capital of Val-d’Oise département, Île-de-France région, north-central France. It is situated on the right bank of the Oise River, just northwest of Paris. In 1966 it became an episcopal see, and its cathedral, formerly Saint-Maclou Church, dates from the 12th century. It has a
- Ponton, Mungo (Scottish scientist and inventor)
photoengraving: Early etched plates: …a Scottish scientist and inventor, Mungo Ponton, of the light-sensitive properties of certain chromium compounds. But Ponton, who demonstrated the chemical change that occurs when glue containing a compound of chromium is acted upon by light, was not concerned with preparation of printing plates, and it remained for William Henry…
- Pontoon (card game)
blackjack, gambling card game popular in casinos throughout the world. Its origin is disputed, but it is certainly related to several French and Italian gambling games. In Britain since World War I, the informal game has been called pontoon. Players hope to get a total card value of 21 or to come
- Pontoon (novel by Keillor)
Garrison Keillor: …Days (1985), Leaving Home (1987), Pontoon (2007), Liberty (2008), Pilgrims (2009), and The Lake Wobegon Virus (2020). Guy Noir and the Straight Skinny (2012) centres on a private detective featured in A Prairie Home Companion. Keillor also published the novels Me (1999) and Love Me (2003) as well as books…
- pontoon bridge
pontoon bridge, floating bridge, used primarily but not invariably for military purposes. See also military bridge. An early pontoon bridge was constructed in 480 bce by Persian engineers to transport Xerxes’ invading army across the Hellespont (Dardanelles). According to Herodotus, the bridge was
- pontoon dock (marine construction)
dock: Floating pontoon docks, of which few have been built, rise and fall with the water level. One such dock floats up or down guided by walls of sheet-steel piling driven to bedrock, which serves to anchor or moor the whole assemblage. Access to shore is provided…
- Pontoporia blainvillei (mammal)
river dolphin: …smallest river dolphin species, the La Plata river dolphin (Pontoporia blainvillei), also lives in South America. Also known as the franciscana, it inhabits the coastal waters of Brazil, Uruguay, and Argentina. Gray above and pale below, this little dolphin grows only 1.2–1.7 metres (4–5.6 feet) long and weighs 20–60 kg…
- Pontoppidan, Erik (Scandinavian theologian and bishop)
Church of Norway: …Catechism published in 1737 by Erik Pontoppidan, a Danish-Norwegian Lutheran professor and bishop, extensively influenced Norwegian religious life for about 200 years. A Pietistic revival from 1797 to 1804 was led by Hans Hauge, a peasant’s son who experienced a religious conversion when he was 25 years old. Although laymen…
- Pontoppidan, Henrik (Danish author)
Henrik Pontoppidan was a Realist writer who shared with Karl Gjellerup the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1917 for “his authentic descriptions of present-day life in Denmark.” Pontoppidan’s novels and short stories—informed with a desire for social progress but despairing, later in his life, of its
- Pontormo, Jacopo da (Florentine artist)
Jacopo da Pontormo was a Florentine painter who broke away from High Renaissance classicism to create a more personal, expressive style that is sometimes classified as early Mannerism. Pontormo was the son of Bartolommeo Carrucci, a painter. According to the biographer Giorgio Vasari, he was
- Pontotoc Ridge (region, Mississippi, United States)
Mississippi: Relief and soils: …Prairie another highland area, the Pontotoc Ridge, extends south from the Tennessee border. This ridge, averaging 400 to 600 feet (120 to 180 metres) above sea level, is one of the state’s most distinctive features. Its fertile sandy loam is excellent for orchards. A low-lying narrow region called Flatwoods skirts…
- Pontriagin, Lev Semenovich (Russian mathematician)
Lev Semyonovich Pontryagin was a Russian mathematician, noted for contributions to topology, algebra, and dynamical systems. Pontryagin lost his eyesight as the result of an explosion when he was about 14 years old. His mother became his tutor, describing mathematical symbols as they appeared to
- Pontrjagin, Lev Semyonovich (Russian mathematician)
Lev Semyonovich Pontryagin was a Russian mathematician, noted for contributions to topology, algebra, and dynamical systems. Pontryagin lost his eyesight as the result of an explosion when he was about 14 years old. His mother became his tutor, describing mathematical symbols as they appeared to
- Pontryagin, Lev Semyonovich (Russian mathematician)
Lev Semyonovich Pontryagin was a Russian mathematician, noted for contributions to topology, algebra, and dynamical systems. Pontryagin lost his eyesight as the result of an explosion when he was about 14 years old. His mother became his tutor, describing mathematical symbols as they appeared to
- Ponts et Chaussées, École des (engineering school, France)
civil engineering: History: …which in 1747 grew the École Nationale des Ponts et Chaussées (“National School of Bridges and Highways”). Its teachers wrote books that became standard works on the mechanics of materials, machines, and hydraulics, and leading British engineers learned French to read them. As design and calculation replaced rule of thumb…
- Pontus (ancient district, Turkey)
Pontus, ancient district in northeastern Anatolia adjoining the Black Sea. In the 1st century bc it briefly contested Rome’s hegemony in Anatolia. An independent Pontic kingdom with its capital at Amaseia (modern Amasya) was established at the end of the 4th century bc in the wake of Alexander’s
- Pontus (Greek god)
Poseidon: He is distinguished from Pontus, the personification of the sea and the oldest Greek divinity of the waters. The name Poseidon means either “husband of the earth” or “lord of the earth.” Traditionally, he was a son of Cronus (the youngest of the 12 Titans) and of Cronus’s sister…
- Pontus Axeinus (sea, Eurasia)
Black Sea, large inland sea situated at the southeastern extremity of Europe. It is bordered by Ukraine to the north, Russia to the northeast, Georgia to the east, Turkey to the south, and Bulgaria and Romania to the west. The roughly oval-shaped Black Sea occupies a large basin strategically
- Pontus Euxinus (sea, Eurasia)
Black Sea, large inland sea situated at the southeastern extremity of Europe. It is bordered by Ukraine to the north, Russia to the northeast, Georgia to the east, Turkey to the south, and Bulgaria and Romania to the west. The roughly oval-shaped Black Sea occupies a large basin strategically
- Pontusson, Jacob (Swedish statesman)
Jacob Pontusson, count de la Gardie , was a Swedish statesman and soldier who was mainly responsible for introducing advanced Dutch military methods into Sweden. He commanded the Swedish forces in Russia and against Poland and later served as one of the five regents jointly ruling Sweden during the
- Pontypool (Wales, United Kingdom)
Pontypool, town and urban area (from 2001 built-up area), Torfaen county borough, historic county of Monmouthshire (Sir Fynwy), southwestern Wales. It is situated in the valley of the Afon Lwyd (“Grey River”) and is the administrative centre of Torfaen county borough. Lying on the eastern edge of
- Pontypool ware (metalwork)
Pontypool ware, japanned (varnished) tinplate produced in Wales at the Allgood family factory in Pontypool and later in Usk, Monmouthshire. It is distinguished from other japanned tinware by its distinctive lustre and unique durability. These features are the results of the experiments by craftsmen
- Pontypridd (Wales, United Kingdom)
Pontypridd, industrial town, Rhondda Cynon Taff county borough, historic county of Glamorgan (Morgannwg), southern Wales. It is situated at the confluence of the Rivers Rhondda and Taff. Pontypridd is a shopping centre for the Rhondda and middle Taff valleys. Its historic coal-mining and
- Pontypridd Bridge (bridge, Wales, United Kingdom)
bridge: Stone arch bridges: …bridge in the British Isles—the Pontypridd Bridge (1750), over the Taff in Wales, with a lofty span of 42 metres (140 feet). In London the young Swiss engineer Charles Labelye, entrusted with the building of the first bridge at Westminster, evolved a novel and ingenious method of sinking the foundations,…
- Pontypŵl (Wales, United Kingdom)
Pontypool, town and urban area (from 2001 built-up area), Torfaen county borough, historic county of Monmouthshire (Sir Fynwy), southwestern Wales. It is situated in the valley of the Afon Lwyd (“Grey River”) and is the administrative centre of Torfaen county borough. Lying on the eastern edge of
- pony (small horse)
pony, any of several breeds of small horses standing less than 14.2 hands (147 cm, or 58 inches) high and noted for gentleness and endurance. Among the common pony breeds are the Shetland, whose docile nature and good endurance make it desirable as a pack animal and a riding horse for children; the
- PONY Baseball, Inc. (sports organization)
baseball: Amateur baseball: …Babe Ruth League (1952) and PONY (Protect Our Nation’s Youth) Baseball, Inc. (1951).
- Pony Express (United States history)
Pony Express, system of U.S. mail delivery by continuous horse-and-rider relays between St. Joseph, Missouri, and Sacramento, California, and from Sacramento to San Francisco, California, by steamer (April 1860–October 1861). Although a financially disastrous brief enterprise, the Pony Express and
- ponyfish (fish)
slipmouth, any of certain fishes (order Perciformes) that are characterized by slimy bodies with small scales and greatly protrusible mouths. The presence of luminescent bacteria cultured within an organ surrounding the esophagus causes the bodies of slipmouths to glow. They derive their name from
- Ponyo (film by Miyazaki [2008])
Miyazaki Hayao: Howl’s Moving Castle and Ponyo: …no ue no Ponyo (2008; Ponyo) was targeted to a younger audience than were most Miyazaki films, but nevertheless it was the top Japanese box-office draw of 2008. Miyazaki later cowrote the screenplays for the Studio Ghibli releases Karigurashi no Arietti (2010; The Secret World of Arrietty), which was based…
- Ponza Islands (islands, Italy)
Ponza Islands, volcanic island group in the Tyrrhenian Sea off the west coast of south-central Italy. The islands include Ponza (the largest), Palmarola, and Zannone in a western cluster and Ventotene and Santo Stefano in an eastern group. The highest point of the island of Ponza is Monte Guardia
- Ponza, Isole di (islands, Italy)
Ponza Islands, volcanic island group in the Tyrrhenian Sea off the west coast of south-central Italy. The islands include Ponza (the largest), Palmarola, and Zannone in a western cluster and Ventotene and Santo Stefano in an eastern group. The highest point of the island of Ponza is Monte Guardia
- Ponzi scheme (crime)
Ponzi scheme, fraudulent and illegal investment operation that promises quick, easy, and significant returns on investments with little or no risk. A Ponzi scheme is a type of pyramid scheme in which the operator, at the pyramid’s top, acquires a small group of investors that is initially provided
- Ponzi, Carlo (Italian criminal)
Ponzi scheme: …the scheme was named for Carlo Ponzi, an Italian immigrant to the United States who scammed thousands of New England residents out of millions of dollars in 1919–20 with his plan to sell European postage stamps. Ponzi initially acquired a small group of investors with the promise of doubling their…
- Ponziane Islands (islands, Italy)
Ponza Islands, volcanic island group in the Tyrrhenian Sea off the west coast of south-central Italy. The islands include Ponza (the largest), Palmarola, and Zannone in a western cluster and Ventotene and Santo Stefano in an eastern group. The highest point of the island of Ponza is Monte Guardia
- Ponzillo, Rosa Melba (American singer)
Rosa Ponselle was an American coloratura soprano of great breadth of range and expressive ability, who is probably best known for her performance in the title role of Vincenzo Bellini’s Norma. Ponzillo began singing at an early age in the cafés and motion-picture theatres of Meriden, Connecticut,
- Ponzo illusion (psychology)
illusion: Visual perceptual illusions: …converging lines, as in the Ponzo illusion, seems larger than another figure of the same size placed between the lines where they are farther apart. In a related experience, linear perspective creates the illusion that parallel lines or contours (such as railroad tracks) converge as they recede from the viewer.
- Poodle (breed of dog)
Poodle, breed of dog thought to have originated in Germany but widely associated with France, where it is hugely popular. The Poodle was developed as a water retriever, and the distinctive clipping of its heavy coat was initiated to increase the animal’s efficiency in the water. The breed has been
- Pooecetes gramineus (bird)
sparrow: …sparrow (Passerculus sandwichensis) and the vesper sparrow (Pooecetes gramineus), finely streaked birds of grassy fields; the song sparrow (Melospiza melodia) and the fox sparrow (Passerella iliaca), heavily streaked skulkers in woodlands; and the white-crowned sparrow (Zonotrichia leucophrys) and the white-throated sparrow (Z. albicollis), larger
- Pooh Perplex: A Freshman Casebook, The (work by Crews)
Frederick Crews: …satiric send-up of literary criticism, The Pooh Perplex: A Freshman Casebook (1963), which contains parodies of scholarly journal articles. In Out of My System: Psychoanalysis, Ideology, and Critical Method (1975), Crews presented a witty defense of the psychoanalytic method while acknowledging its shortcomings. In such later works as Skeptical Engagements…
- Pooideae (plant subfamily)
Poaceae: Distribution and abundance: …forage grasses come from the Pooideae. This subfamily contains almost 3,300 species and is clearly defined by various features, including the absence of the distinctive two-celled hairs found on the leaf epidermis in the rest of the family. The Pooideae reigns in temperate climates and is the only subfamily to…
- pooja (Hinduism)
puja, in Hinduism, ceremonial worship, ranging from brief daily rites in the home to elaborate temple rituals. The word puja is derived from the Dravidian pu (“flower”). In its simplest form, puja usually consists of making an offering of flowers or fruit to an image of a god. The components of a
- poojah (Hinduism)
puja, in Hinduism, ceremonial worship, ranging from brief daily rites in the home to elaborate temple rituals. The word puja is derived from the Dravidian pu (“flower”). In its simplest form, puja usually consists of making an offering of flowers or fruit to an image of a god. The components of a
- pool (game)
pocket billiards, a billiards game, most popular in the United States and Canada, played with a white cue ball and 15 consecutively numbered coloured balls on a rectangular table with six pockets (one at each corner and one at the midpoints of both longer sides). The dimensions of the table are
- pool (insurance)
insurance: Rate making: …statistically sounder rates, insurers often pool loss and claims experience by setting up rating bureaus to calculate rates based on industrywide experience. They may have an agreement that all member companies must use the rates thus developed. The rationale for such agreements is that they help insurers meet the criteria…
- pool (gambling)
pool, method of gambling in which all money bet on the result of a particular event by a number of people is awarded to one or more winners according to conditions established in advance (taxes, operating expenses, and other charges may be deducted from the total pool before prizes are awarded).
- pool (hydrology)
pool and riffle: Pools are most easily seen in a meandering stream where the outer edge of each meander loop is deep and undercut; riffles form in the shallow water of the short, straight, wide reaches between adjacent loops. The pools and riffles form sequences spaced at a…
- pool (British billiards)
pool, British billiards game in which each player uses a cue ball of a different colour and tries to pocket the ball of a particular opponent, thus taking a “life.” Players have three lives and pay into a betting pool at the start of the game. The last player with a life wins the pool. During play,
- pool and riffle (hydrology)
pool and riffle, deep and shallow portions of an undulating stream bed. Pools are most easily seen in a meandering stream where the outer edge of each meander loop is deep and undercut; riffles form in the shallow water of the short, straight, wide reaches between adjacent loops. The pools and
- pool frog (amphibian)
marsh frog: The pool frog (R. lessonae) is the other species of European aquatic frogs. They may interbreed with marsh frogs to produce a hybrid form called the European edible frog (R. esculenta). Male and female edible frogs may breed with males and females of either R. ridibunda…
- pool reactor (fission reactor)
nuclear reactor: Water-cooled, plate-fuel reactors: …water-cooled, plate-fuel reactor is the pool reactor, in which the reactor core is positioned near the bottom of a large, deep pool of water. This has the advantage of simplifying both observation and the placement of channels, commonly referred to as beam ports, from which beams of neutrons can be…
- Pool, Juriaen (Dutch painter)
Rachel Ruysch: After marrying the portrait painter Juriaen Pool in 1693, Ruysch moved with him to The Hague, where they both joined the Guild of St. Luke—a professional artists’ organization that regulated the sales and promotion of artwork in the city—and continued their work for the elector Palatine, Johann Wilhelm von der…
- Pool, Maria Louise (American writer)
Maria Louise Pool was an American writer whose sketches were well received in the period when the so-called local colour movement in American literature was just beginning. Pool attended public schools in her hometown of Rockland and for a time was herself a schoolteacher. By the age of 20 she had
- pool, swimming (sports)
swimming: History: The Romans built swimming pools, distinct from their baths. In the 1st century bce the Roman Gaius Maecenas is said to have built the first heated swimming pool.
- Pool, The (French government agency)
DGSE, (“External Documentation and Counterespionage Service”), secret intelligence and counterintelligence service that operates under the defense ministry of the French government. This agency was established in 1947 to combine under one head a variety of separate agencies, some dating from the
- pool-type reactor (fission reactor)
nuclear reactor: Water-cooled, plate-fuel reactors: …water-cooled, plate-fuel reactor is the pool reactor, in which the reactor core is positioned near the bottom of a large, deep pool of water. This has the advantage of simplifying both observation and the placement of channels, commonly referred to as beam ports, from which beams of neutrons can be…
- Poole (town and unitary authority, England, United Kingdom)
Poole, town and unitary authority, geographic and historic county of Dorset, southwestern England. The old town occupies a site on the north shore of the extensive, almost landlocked tidal Poole Harbour, adjoining the major British resort of Bournemouth to the east. The 25-square-mile
- Poole Harbour (harbour, England, United Kingdom)
Poole: Largest of the islands in Poole Harbour is Brownsea, a bird sanctuary given to the National Trust in 1962. Area 25 square miles (65 square km). Pop. (2001) 138,288; (2011) 147,645.
- Poole’s Index to Periodical Literature (work by Poole)
William Frederick Poole: …was revised and enlarged as Poole’s Index to Periodical Literature (1887–1908).
- Poole, Elijah (American religious leader)
Elijah Muhammad was the leader of the black separatist religious movement known as the Nation of Islam (sometimes called Black Muslims) in the United States. The son of sharecroppers and former slaves, Muhammad moved to Detroit in 1923 where, around 1930, he became assistant minister to the founder
- Poole, William Frederick (American bibliographer)
William Frederick Poole was an American bibliographer and library administrator whose indexing of periodicals became authoritative. As a student at Yale University, Poole learned the principles of indexing from John Edmands (1820–1915), afterward librarian of the Philadelphia Mercantile Library,
- Poolman (film by Pine [2023])
Chris Pine: Jack Ryan and superhero movies: …made his directorial debut with Poolman, which he also starred in and cowrote. The comedic mystery, which received negative reviews, centers on a pool cleaner who becomes an amateur sleuth.
- pools (gambling)
pool, method of gambling in which all money bet on the result of a particular event by a number of people is awarded to one or more winners according to conditions established in advance (taxes, operating expenses, and other charges may be deducted from the total pool before prizes are awarded).
- poona (sport)
badminton: Badminton is derived directly from poona, which was played by British army officers stationed in India in the 1860s. The first unofficial all-England badminton championships for men were held in 1899, and the first badminton tournament for women was arranged the next year.
- Poona (India)
Pune, city, west-central Maharashtra state, western India, at the junction of the Mula and Mutha rivers. Called “Queen of the Deccan,” Pune is the cultural capital of the Maratha peoples. The city first gained importance as the capital of the Bhonsle Marathas in the 17th century. It was temporarily
- Poona Pact (India [1932])
Poona Pact, (September 24, 1932), agreement between Hindu leaders in India granting new rights to Dalits (low-caste Hindu groups then often labeled “untouchables”). The pact, signed at Poona (now Pune, Maharashtra), resulted from the Communal Award of August 4, 1932, a proposal by the British
- Poona Sarvajanik Sabha (Indian political association)
India: Origins of the nationalist movement: …political associations, such as the Poona Sarvajanik Sabha (Poona Public Society), founded by Mahadev Govind Ranade (1842–1901), who had graduated at the top of the first bachelor of arts class at the University of Bombay (now University of Mumbai) in 1862. Ranade found employment in the educational department in Bombay,…
- Poonch (India)
Punch, town, western Jammu and Kashmir union territory, northern India. It lies at the confluence of the Belar and Punch rivers, at the southern foot of the western Pir Panjal Range. Punch is situated near the line of control between the Indian- and Pakistani-administered portions of the Kashmir
- Poonch (district, India)
Azad Kashmir: …of plains country in the Punch region that is characterized by interlocking sandy alluvial fans. Thorn scrub and coarse grass are the dominant forms of vegetation in the south; this scrubland gives way to pine forests at higher elevations in the north.
- Poons, Larry (American artist)
Op art: Richard Anuszkiewicz, Larry Poons, and Jeffrey Steele. The movement first attracted international attention with the Op exhibition “The Responsive Eye” at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City in 1965. Op art painters devised complex and paradoxical optical spaces through the illusory manipulation of such…
- Poopó, Lake (lake, Bolivia)
Lake Poopó, lake in west-central Bolivia, occupying a shallow depression in the Altiplano, or high plateau, at 12,090 feet (3,686 metres) above sea level. Historically the country’s second largest lake, it covered 977 square miles (2,530 square km) at low stage and was about 56 miles (90 km) long
- Poor (Medieval French religious group)
Valdes: …Valdes and his followers—called the Poor, or the Poor of Lyon—were excommunicated for violating the ban on preaching and were banished from the city. They were formally condemned at a church council in 1184 along with other alleged heretics, including the Cathari, against whom Valdes had earlier preached. The severe…
- poor (sociology)
poverty, the state of one who lacks a usual or socially acceptable amount of money or material possessions. Poverty is said to exist when people lack the means to satisfy their basic needs. In this context, the identification of poor people first requires a determination of what constitutes basic
- poor boy (food)
hoagie, submarine sandwich containing Italian meats, cheeses, and other fillings and condiments. The name likely comes from the Philadelphia area where, during World War I, Italian immigrants who worked at the Hog Island shipyard began making sandwiches; they were originally called “hoggies” before
- Poor Christ of Bomba, The (work by Beti)
Mongo Beti: …Pauvre Christ de Bomba (1956; The Poor Christ of Bomba), satirizes the destructive influence of French Catholic missionary activities in Cameroon. It was followed by Mission terminée (1957; also published as Mission to Kala and Mission Accomplished), which attacks French colonial policy through a young man who, upon returning to…
- Poor Clare (religious order)
Poor Clare, any member of the Franciscan Order of St. Clare, a Roman Catholic religious order of nuns founded by St. Clare of Assisi in 1212. The Poor Clares are considered the second of the three Franciscan orders. Because each convent of Poor Clares is largely autonomous, practices have varied
- Poor Clares of St. Colette (religious order)
Poor Clare: …the Colettine Poor Clares, or Poor Clares of St. Colette (P.C.C.), and today are located mostly in France. The Capuchin Sisters, originating in Naples in 1538, and the Alcantarines, of 1631, are also Poor Clares of the strict observance.
- Poor Cow (film by Loach [1967])
Ken Loach: His first feature film, Poor Cow (1967), focuses on the life of a working-class woman whose husband is in jail. It was followed by the poignant Kes (1970), about a boy, abused at home and school, who befriends a fledgling kestrel. That film received much acclaim, including a nomination…
- Poor Fellow My Country (work by Herbert)
Xavier Herbert: His sprawling saga Poor Fellow My Country (1975) expressed his pessimistic view of life but lacked the richness and vitality of Capricornia. His autobiography, Disturbing Element, was published in 1963.
- Poor Folk (novella by Dostoyevsky)
Fyodor Dostoyevsky: Early works of Fyodor Dostoyevsky: …first novella, Bednyye lyudi (1846; Poor Folk), than he was hailed as the great new talent of Russian literature by the most influential critic of his day, the “furious” Vissarion Belinsky.
- Poor Gentleman, A (play by Turgenev)
Ivan Turgenev: Early life and works: …at writing plays, some, like A Poor Gentleman (1848), rather obviously imitative of the Russian master Nikolay Gogol. Of these, The Bachelor (1849) was the only one staged at this time, the others falling afoul of the official censors. Others of a more intimately penetrating character, such as One May…
- poor house (American institution)
almshouse, in the United States, a locally administered public institution that provided housing and health care to people who were of limited financial means and were otherwise disadvantaged. Almshouses radically declined in number in the United States during the mid-20th century, being replaced
- Poor Knights of Christ and of the Temple of Solomon (religious military order)
Templar, member of the Poor Knights of Christ and of the Temple of Solomon, a religious military order of knighthood established at the time of the Crusades that became a model and inspiration for other military orders. Originally founded to protect Christian pilgrims to the Holy Land, the order
- Poor Law (British legislation)
Poor Law, in British history, body of laws undertaking to provide relief for the poor, developed in 16th-century England and maintained, with various changes, until after World War II. The Elizabethan Poor Laws, as codified in 1597–98, were administered through parish overseers, who provided relief
- Poor Law Commission (British history)
public health: National developments in the 18th and 19th centuries: The Poor Law Commission, created in 1834, explored problems of community health and suggested means for solving them. Its report, in 1838, argued that “the expenditures necessary to the adoption and maintenance of measures of prevention would ultimately amount to less than the cost of the…
- Poor Little Rich Girl (film by Cummings [1936])
Irving Cummings: …actress had another hit with Poor Little Rich Girl (1936), one of Temple’s strongest vehicles, thanks in part to the superior support of Alice Faye, Jack Haley, and Gloria Stuart. Less popular was the musical Vogues of 1938 (1937), which was set in the fashion industry and starred Baxter and…
- Poor Little Rich Girl (film by Warhol [1965])
Andy Warhol: Other movies include Poor Little Rich Girl (1965) and Lupe (1966), both of which featured Edie Sedgwick.
- Poor Little Rich Girl (song by Coward)
Noël Coward: …Day I’ll Find You,” “Poor Little Rich Girl,” “Mad About the Boy,” and “I Went to a Marvellous Party.”
- Poor Liza (short story by Karamzin)
Nikolay Mikhaylovich Karamzin: Karamzin’s tale “Bednaya Liza” (1792; “Poor Liza”), about a village girl who commits suicide after a tragic love affair, soon became the most celebrated work of the Russian sentimental school.
- Poor Man and the Lady, The (novel by Hardy)
Thomas Hardy: Early life and works: …he wrote the class-conscious novel The Poor Man and the Lady, which was sympathetically considered by three London publishers but never published. George Meredith, as a publisher’s reader, advised Hardy to write a more shapely and less opinionated novel. The result was the densely plotted Desperate Remedies (1871), which was…
- Poor Man’s Tapestry (work by Onions)
Oliver Onions: His Poor Man’s Tapestry (1946) earned him the James Tait Black Memorial Prize. Onions was married to the Welsh-born novelist Berta Ruck.
- Poor Mouth, The (work by O’Brien)
Celtic literature: The Gaelic Revival: …inspired the brilliant satirical novel An Béal Bocht (1941; The Poor Mouth) by Flann O’Brien (pseudonym of Brian Ó Nualláin).
- Poor of Lyon (Medieval French religious group)
Valdes: …Valdes and his followers—called the Poor, or the Poor of Lyon—were excommunicated for violating the ban on preaching and were banished from the city. They were formally condemned at a church council in 1184 along with other alleged heretics, including the Cathari, against whom Valdes had earlier preached. The severe…
- Poor People’s Campaign (United States history)
Poor People’s Campaign, political campaign that culminated in a demonstration held in Washington, D.C., in 1968, in which participants demanded that the government formulate a plan to help redress the employment and housing problems of the poor throughout the United States. In November 1967 civil
- Poor People’s March (United States history)
Poor People’s Campaign, political campaign that culminated in a demonstration held in Washington, D.C., in 1968, in which participants demanded that the government formulate a plan to help redress the employment and housing problems of the poor throughout the United States. In November 1967 civil
- Poor Richard (fictional American philosopher)
Poor Richard, unschooled but experienced homespun philosopher, a character created by the American writer and statesman Benjamin Franklin and used as his pen name for the annual Poor Richard’s almanac, edited by Franklin from 1732 to 1757. Although the Poor Richard of the early almanacs was a
- poor theatre (art)
Western theatre: Poor theatre: In terms of furthering the actor’s technique, the Polish director Jerzy Grotowski, together with Stanislavsky and Brecht, were the key figures of the 20th century. Grotowski first became internationally known when his Laboratory Theatre, established in Opole, Pol., in 1959, triumphantly toured Europe…