- Pattle, Julia Margaret (British photographer)
Julia Margaret Cameron was a British photographer who is considered one of the greatest portrait photographers of the 19th century. The daughter of an officer in the East India Company, Julia Margaret Pattle married jurist Charles Hay Cameron in 1838. The couple had six children, and in 1860 the
- Patton (film by Schaffner [1970])
Francis Ford Coppola: Early years: …Schaffner on the screenplay for Patton (1970).
- Patton Township (Pennsylvania, United States)
Monroeville, borough (municipality), Allegheny county, southwestern Pennsylvania, U.S., on the Pennsylvania Turnpike, 13 miles (21 km) east of Pittsburgh. In the 19th century it was widely known as a stagecoach stop between Pittsburgh and Philadelphia, and its subsequent growth resulted from its
- Patton, Antwan André (American rapper)
Outkast: ) and Antwan André Patton (byname Big Boi; b. February 1, 1975, Savannah, Georgia, U.S.) joined forces at a performing arts high school in Atlanta. Discovering their mutual admiration for hip-hop and the funk musicians who became their stylistic touchstones (Parliament-Funkadelic, Sly and the Family Stone, and…
- Patton, Charley (American musician)
Charley Patton was an American blues singer-guitarist who was among the earliest and most influential Mississippi blues performers. Patton spent most of his life in the Delta region of northwestern Mississippi, and from about 1900 he was often based at Dockery’s plantation in Sunflower county.
- Patton, Charlie (American musician)
Charley Patton was an American blues singer-guitarist who was among the earliest and most influential Mississippi blues performers. Patton spent most of his life in the Delta region of northwestern Mississippi, and from about 1900 he was often based at Dockery’s plantation in Sunflower county.
- Patton, George (United States general)
George Patton was a U.S. Army officer who was an outstanding practitioner of mobile tank warfare in the European and Mediterranean theatres during World War II. His strict discipline, toughness, and self-sacrifice elicited exceptional pride within his ranks, and the general was colourfully referred
- Patton, George Smith, Jr. (United States general)
George Patton was a U.S. Army officer who was an outstanding practitioner of mobile tank warfare in the European and Mediterranean theatres during World War II. His strict discipline, toughness, and self-sacrifice elicited exceptional pride within his ranks, and the general was colourfully referred
- Patton, Jody Allen (American businesswoman and philanthropist)
Paul Allen: …Allen cofounded, with his sister Jo Lynn (“Jody”) Allen Patton, the personal holding company Vulcan Inc. to oversee his investments. He became the owner of the professional basketball team the Portland Trail Blazers (from 1988) and a cofounder, with Patton, of the Paul G. Allen Family Foundation (1990)—a private foundation…
- pāṭṭu (Indian literature)
South Asian arts: Period of the Tamil Cōḷa Empire (10th–13th century): …led to the literature of pāṭṭu (“song”), in which only Dravidian, or Tamil, phonemes may occur and Tamil-like second-syllable rhymes are kept. The best known pāṭṭu is Rāmacaritam (c. 12th–13th century; “Deeds of Rāma”), probably the earliest Malayalam work written in a mixture of Tamil and Malayalam. Other pāṭṭus in…
- Patty Berg Award (golf award)
Patty Berg: …1978 the LPGA established the Patty Berg Award for outstanding contributions to women’s golf; the prize was awarded to Berg in 1990. She continued to appear occasionally in tournaments in later years and conducted golf clinics as she toured the country for Wilson Sporting Goods. Berg also wrote several books…
- Pattypuffs and Thinifers (work by Maurois)
children’s literature: The 20th century: Patapoufs et filifers, by André Maurois, a gentle satire on war, has lasted (Eng. trans. Pattypuffs and Thinifers, 1948; reissued 1968). His fantastic Le Pays des 36,000 volontés is almost as popular. The famous dramatist Charles Vildrac has done much to advance the cause of…
- Patuakhali (Bangladesh)
Patuakhali, town, south-central Bangladesh. It is situated along the Patuakhali River, a distributary of the Arial Khan River. A trading centre for rice, flour, jute, textiles, and milled wood, it is connected by road and river with Barisal. It is home to the Patuakhali Science and Technology
- Patuca River (river, Honduras)
Patuca River, river in northeastern Honduras, formed southeast of Juticalpa by the merger of the Guayape and Guayambre rivers. It flows northeastward for approximately 200 miles (320 km), emerging from the highlands and crossing the Mosquito Coast to empty into the Caribbean Sea at Patuca Point.
- Patwin (people)
Fairfield: …Suisun Bay, was inhabited by Suisun (Patwin) Indians, who were attacked by Spaniards in 1810. In the 1830s the Mexican governor gave local Indians a land grant known as Suisun Rancho. The settlement fared poorly, however, and the grant was sold. Fairfield was founded in 1856 by Robert Waterman, a…
- Patyn, William (British lord chancellor)
William of Waynflete was an English lord chancellor and bishop of Winchester who founded Magdalen College of the University of Oxford. Little is known of his early years, but he evidently earned a reputation as a scholar before becoming master of Winchester College in 1429. He became a fellow at
- Pátzcuaro (Mexico)
primitive culture: The community of self-serving households: …town and tourist centre of Pátzcuaro. These are the fishing-, agricultural-, and handicraft-specialist villages of the Tarascan Indians. But many more thousands of Tarascans also live scattered in the adjacent mountains, making only infrequent visits to the market centres.
- Pátzcuaro, Lake (lake, Mexico)
Mexico: Drainage of Mexico: Lakes Pátzcuaro and Cuitzeo, west of Mexico City, are remnants of vast lakes and marshes that covered much of the southern Mesa Central before European settlement.
- Patzinakoi (people)
Pechenegs, a seminomadic, apparently Turkic people who occupied the steppes north of the Black Sea (8th–12th century) and by the 10th century were in control of the lands between the Don and lower Danube rivers (after having driven the Hungarians out); they thus became a serious menace to
- Pau (France)
Pau, town, capital of Pyrénées-Atlantiques département, Nouvelle-Aquitaine région, southwestern France. The capital of the former province of Béarn, Pau is mainly a spa and tourism centre. It stands on the edge of a plateau 130 feet (40 metres) above the valley of the Pau Stream, which descends
- pau-brasil (wood)
Pedro Álvares Cabral: …from a kind of dyewood, pau-brasil, that is found there.
- Pau-Brasil (manifesto by Andrade)
Oswald de Andrade: …Andrade, in his literary manifesto Pau-Brasil (1925; “Brazil Wood”), called for a rejection of Portuguese social and literary artifice and a return to what he saw as the primitive spontaneity of expression of the indigenous Brazilians, emphasizing the need for modern Brazil to become aware of its own heritage. To…
- paua (marine snail)
abalone, any of several marine snails, constituting the genus Haliotis and family Haliotidae in the subclass Prosobranchia (class Gastropoda), in which the shell has a row of holes on its outer surface. Abalones are found in warm seas worldwide. The dishlike shell is perforated near one edge by a
- Paucituberculata (order of marsupials)
opossum: Classification: Order Paucituberculata (rat, or shrew, opossums) 6 species in 1 family. Family Caenolestidae 6 species in 3 genera found in South America.
- Pauḍyāl, Lekhnāth (Nepalese author)
Nepali literature: The poet Lekhnāth Pauḍyāl in the early 20th century also tended to the colloquial and used the rhythms of popular songs in some of his poems.
- Pauger, Adrien de (French engineer)
New Orleans: Foundation and early settlement: An engineer, Adrien de Pauger, drafted the first plan for the town, encompassing what is now the Vieux Carré and consisting of 66 squares forming a parallelogram.
- Pauhai, Bernice (Hawaiian princess)
Bishop Museum: …American husband of Hawaiian Princess Bernice Pauahi (died 1884), the last direct descendant of Kamehameha I. In 1961 a planetarium and an observatory were added to emphasize the role of astronomy in the cultural history of Pacific Island peoples. The Bishop Museum also operates the Hawai‘i Maritime Center (in Honolulu…
- Pauker, Ana (Romanian politician)
Romania: The seizure of power: …mainly of ethnic Romanians), and Ana Pauker, who headed the “Muscovites” (those who had spent their careers mainly in the Soviet Union and were not ethnic Romanians). Extraordinary pressure by Soviet authorities forced King Michael to appoint a procommunist government led by the fellow-traveler Petru Groza on March 6.
- Paul (emperor of Russia)
Paul was the emperor of Russia from 1796 to 1801. Son of Peter III (reigned 1762) and Catherine the Great (reigned 1762–96), Paul was reared by his father’s aunt, the empress Elizabeth (reigned 1741–61). After 1760 he was tutored by Catherine’s close adviser, the learned diplomat Nikita Ivanovich
- Paul (king of Greece)
Paul was the king of Greece (1947–64) who helped his country overcome communist guerrilla forces after World War II. Paul, the third son of King Constantine I of Greece, left Greece with his father following Constantine’s deposition in 1917. He refused the crown after the death of his brother, King
- Paul (film by Mottola [2011])
Jane Lynch: …Lynch appeared in the comedies Paul (2011), The Three Stooges (2012), and A.C.O.D. (2013) and had recurring roles in a number of TV series, including Party Down (2009–10). She also lent her voice to the animated movies Wreck-It Ralph (2012) and its sequel, Ralph Breaks the Internet (2018). In 2017…
- Paul and Thecla, Acts of (apocryphal work)
Acts of Paul, one of the earliest of a series of pseudepigraphal (noncanonical) New Testament writings known collectively as the Apocryphal Acts. Probably written about ad 160–180, the Acts of Paul is an account of the Apostle Paul’s travels and teachings. It includes, among others, an episode
- Paul and Virginia (work by Bernardin de Saint-Pierre)
Jacques-Henri Bernardin de Saint-Pierre: …who is best remembered for Paul et Virginie, a short novel about innocent love.
- Paul Brown Stadium (stadium, Cincinnati, Ohio, United States)
Cincinnati Bengals: …moved into a football-only venue, Paul Brown Stadium.
- Paul Bunyan, Operation (North Korean history)
Moon Jae-In: Early life and education: Moon participated in Operation Paul Bunyan, the subsequent massive show of force that accompanied the complete removal of the tree. After completing his military service in 1978, Moon returned to his studies and earned a law degree from Kyung Hee University in 1980. In 1982 he established a…
- Paul et Virginie (work by Bernardin de Saint-Pierre)
Jacques-Henri Bernardin de Saint-Pierre: …who is best remembered for Paul et Virginie, a short novel about innocent love.
- Paul I (emperor of Russia)
Paul was the emperor of Russia from 1796 to 1801. Son of Peter III (reigned 1762) and Catherine the Great (reigned 1762–96), Paul was reared by his father’s aunt, the empress Elizabeth (reigned 1741–61). After 1760 he was tutored by Catherine’s close adviser, the learned diplomat Nikita Ivanovich
- Paul I, Saint (pope)
Saint Paul I ; feast day June 28) was the pope from 757 to 767. His alliance with the Franks strengthened the young Papal States. Consecrated deacon by Pope St. Zacharias, he became a key member of the Curia under his brother Pope Stephen II (or III), whom he was elected on April 26, 757, to
- Paul II (pope)
Paul II was an Italian pope from 1464 to 1471. He was bishop of the Italian cities of Cervia and Vicenza before being made cardinal by Pope Eugenius IV in 1440. After services in the Curia under popes Nicholas V and Calixtus III, he became governor of Campania in 1456. Elected Pope Pius II’s
- Paul III (pope)
Paul III was an Italian noble who was the last of the Renaissance popes (reigned 1534–49) and the first pope of the Counter-Reformation. The worldly Paul III was a notable patron of the arts and at the same time encouraged the beginning of the reform movement that was to deeply affect the Roman
- Paul III and His Grandsons Ottavio and Cardinal Alessandro Farnese (work by Titian)
Titian: Portraits: …most celebrated of all is Paul III and His Grandsons Ottavio and Cardinal Alessandro Farnese (1546). A painting of a family group, it is most searching in psychological revelation. The feeble pope, then aged 78, appears to turn suddenly in his chair toward Ottavio Farnese, his 22-year-old grandson. Ottavio’s overly…
- Paul IV (pope)
Paul IV was an Italian Counter-Reformation pope from 1555 to 1559, whose anti-Spanish policy renewed the war between France and the Habsburgs. Of noble birth, he owed his ecclesiastical advancement to the influence of his uncle Cardinal Oliviero Carafa. As bishop of Chieti, Carafa served Pope Leo X
- Paul Karadjordjević, Prince (regent of Yugoslavia)
Prince Paul Karadjordjević was the regent of Yugoslavia in the period leading into World War II. Paul’s uncle was King Peter I of Serbia, and Paul’s mother was a Russian princess of the Demidov family. He was educated in Geneva and Belgrade, and in 1910 he moved to Britain to attend the University
- Paul Laurence Dunbar High School (high school, Washington, D.C., United States)
Dunbar High School, high school in Washington, D.C., that was the first Black public high school in the United States. Since it opened in 1870, it has educated many notable figures, including surgeon Charles Richard Drew, jurist William Henry Hastie, Jr., and writer Jean Toomer. Its faculty has
- Paul McCartney and Wings (British-American rock group)
Paul McCartney and Wings, British-American rock band founded by Beatles icon Paul McCartney (b. June 18, 1942, Liverpool, England) and his wife, Linda McCartney (b. Linda Eastman, September 24, 1941, Scarsdale, New York—d. April 17, 1998, Tucson, Arizona). After a lackluster start, the band became
- Paul McCartney: A Life in Pictures
A masterful vocalist, skilled bass player, extraordinary melodist, and underrated lyricist, Paul McCartney joined with John Lennon to form one of the most renowned songwriting partnerships in the history of popular music. Together they created scores of instantly recognizable chart-topping hits for
- Paul of Aegina (Greek physician)
Paul of Aegina was an Alexandrian physician and surgeon, the last major ancient Greek medical encyclopaedist, who wrote the Epitomēs iatrikēs biblio hepta, better known by its Latin title, Epitomae medicae libri septem (“Medical Compendium in Seven Books”), containing nearly everything known about
- Paul of Samosata (bishop of Antioch)
Paul of Samosata was a heretical bishop of Antioch in Syria and proponent of a kind of dynamic Monarchian doctrine on the nature of Jesus Christ (see Monarchianism). The only indisputably contemporary document concerning him is a letter written by his ecclesiastical opponents, according to which he
- Paul of Tella (bishop of Syria)
biblical literature: Syriac versions: …version) was made by Bishop Paul of Tella in 617 from the Hexaplaric text of the Septuagint. A Palestinian Syriac version, extant in fragments, is known to go back to at least 700, and a fresh recension was made by Jacob of Edessa (died 708).
- Paul Of The Cross, Saint (Roman Catholic priest)
Saint Paul of The Cross ; canonized 1867; feast day October 19) was the founder of the order of missionary priests known as the Passionists. In 1720 Paul dedicated his life to God and began to experience visions, in the last of which the Virgin Mary appeared to him. He was inspired by this vision
- Paul of Thebes, St. (Christian hermit)
St. Paul of Thebes ; feast day January 15) was an ascetic who is traditionally regarded as the first Christian hermit. According to St. Jerome, his biographer, Paul fled to the Theban desert during the persecution of Christians (249–251) under the Roman emperor Decius. Thereafter he lived a life of
- Paul Of Venice (Italian philosopher)
Paul Of Venice was an Italian Augustinian philosopher and theologian who gained recognition as an educator and author of works on logic. Paul studied at the universities of Oxford and Padua, where he also lectured (1408–15), and became Venetian ambassador to Poland (1413), but difficulties with the
- Paul Pry (American newspaper)
Anne Newport Royall: …1831 she began to publish Paul Pry, a Washington newspaper; it was succeeded by The Huntress (1836–54). In those newspapers Royall crusaded against government corruption and incompetence and promoted states’ rights, Sunday mail service, and tolerance for Roman Catholics and Masons. John Quincy Adams called her a “virago errant in…
- Paul Revere’s Ride (work by Fischer)
David Hackett Fischer: His groundbreaking Paul Revere’s Ride (1994) was a close biographical study of Revere and that famous event. The work debunked myths and resituated Revere—he of the legendary cry “The British are coming!”—as a colonist who, as such, would have considered himself British as well. Washington’s Crossing (2004)…
- Paul Revere’s Ride (poem by Longfellow)
Paul Revere’s Ride, poem by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, published in 1861 and later collected in Tales of a Wayside Inn (1863). This popular folk ballad about a hero of the American Revolution is written in anapestic tetrameter, which was meant to suggest the galloping of a horse, and is narrated
- Paul Taylor Dance Company (American dance company)
Kyle Abraham: …Only the Lonely for the Paul Taylor Dance Company, and Ash, a solo piece for Misty Copeland, principal dancer with the American Ballet Theatre.
- Paul the Apostle, St. (Christian Apostle)
St. Paul the Apostle was one of the leaders of the first generation of Christians, often considered to be the most important person after Jesus in the history of Christianity. In his own day, although he was a major figure within the very small Christian movement, he also had many enemies and
- Paul The Deacon (Italian historian)
Paul The Deacon was a Lombard historian and poet, whose Historia Langobardorum (“History of the Lombards”) is the principal source on his people. Born to a rich and noble family of Friuli, northeast of Venice, Paul spent many years at the Lombard court in Pavia, serving as councillor under King
- Paul the Hermit (Christian hermit)
St. Paul of Thebes ; feast day January 15) was an ascetic who is traditionally regarded as the first Christian hermit. According to St. Jerome, his biographer, Paul fled to the Theban desert during the persecution of Christians (249–251) under the Roman emperor Decius. Thereafter he lived a life of
- Paul the Silentiary (Greek author)
Greek literature: Nonliturgical poetry: Paul the Silentiary in the mid-6th century used the same Homeric form for a long descriptive poem on the Church of the Divine Wisdom (Hagia Sophia) in Constantinople. Many brief occasional poems were written in hexameters or elegiac couplets until the late 6th century. But…
- Paul trap (electromagnetic device)
Wolfgang Paul: …for his development of the Paul trap—an electromagnetic device that captures ions (electrically charged atoms) and holds them long enough for their properties to be accurately measured.
- Paul V (pope)
Paul V was an Italian pope from 1605 to 1621. A distinguished canon lawyer, he was papal envoy to Spain for Pope Clement VIII, who made him cardinal in 1596. He became vicar of Rome in 1603 and on May 16, 1605, was elected as Pope Leo XI’s successor at a time when the Kingdom of Naples and the
- Paul VI, St. (pope)
St. Paul VI ; canonized October 14, 2018; feast day September 26) was an Italian pope (reigned 1963–78) during a period including most of the Second Vatican Council (1962–65) and the immediate postconciliar era, in which he issued directives and guidance to a changing Roman Catholic Church. His
- Paul’s Boutique (album by Beastie Boys)
Beastie Boys: …Records for their 1989 release, Paul’s Boutique, the Beastie Boys strategically appropriated retro-funk influences, adding an acoustic dimension to digital sound-collage techniques learned from Rick Rubin and Grandmaster Flash.
- Paul’s Case (short story by Cather)
Paul’s Case, short story by Willa Cather, published in the collection The Troll Garden in 1905. It recounts the tragic results of a boy’s desire to escape what he sees as a dull and stifling environment. The protagonist is a sensitive high-school student who despises his middle-class home and
- Paul’s Harbor (Alaska, United States)
Kodiak, city, Kodiak Island, southern Alaska, U.S. It is situated on Chiniak Bay, on the northeastern coast of Kodiak Island. Founded in 1792 by Aleksandr Andreyevich Baranov, manager in America for the Northeastern Company (later the Russian-American Company), it was first known as Pavlovsk Gavan,
- Paul, Aaron (American actor)
Breaking Bad: Premise and characters: …former student Jesse Pinkman (Aaron Paul) to make and sell methamphetamine. Their laboratory is a used recreational vehicle parked in the desert. Their product is exceptionally pure and atypically colored blue, unlike any form of “crystal meth” anyone has ever tried before or even seen. It becomes in high…
- Paul, Acts of (apocryphal work)
Acts of Paul, one of the earliest of a series of pseudepigraphal (noncanonical) New Testament writings known collectively as the Apocryphal Acts. Probably written about ad 160–180, the Acts of Paul is an account of the Apostle Paul’s travels and teachings. It includes, among others, an episode
- Paul, Alice (American suffragist)
Alice Paul was an American women’s suffrage leader who first proposed an equal rights amendment to the U.S. Constitution. Paul was reared in a Quaker home. She graduated from Swarthmore College (1905) and pursued postgraduate studies at the New York School of Social Work. She then went to England
- Paul, Annamie (Canadian politician)
Justin Trudeau: The 2021 snap election: …Green Party was guided by Annamie Paul. The Bloc Québécois entered the contest under the leadership of Yves-François Blanchet.
- Paul, Bruno (German artist)
Ludwig Mies van der Rohe: Early training and influence: …to become an apprentice with Bruno Paul, a leading furniture designer who worked in the Art Nouveau style of the period. Two years later he received his first commission, a traditional suburban house. Its perfect execution so impressed Peter Behrens, then Germany’s most progressive architect, that he offered the 21-year-old…
- Paul, Chris (American basketball player)
Chris Paul is an American professional basketball player who became one of the premier stars of the National Basketball Association (NBA) in the early 21st century. Paul’s career single-handedly gives the lie to one of basketball’s enduring myths: the pure point guard. Supposedly, the pure point is
- Paul, Christopher Emmanuel (American basketball player)
Chris Paul is an American professional basketball player who became one of the premier stars of the National Basketball Association (NBA) in the early 21st century. Paul’s career single-handedly gives the lie to one of basketball’s enduring myths: the pure point guard. Supposedly, the pure point is
- Paul, Jean (German author)
Jean Paul was a German novelist and humorist whose works were immensely popular in the first 20 years of the 19th century. His pen name, Jean Paul, reflected his admiration for the French writer Jean-Jacques Rousseau. Jean Paul’s writing bridged the shift in literature from the formal ideals of
- Paul, John (United States naval officer)
John Paul Jones was an American naval hero in the American Revolution, renowned for his victory over British ships of war off the east coast of England (September 23, 1779). Apprenticed at age 12 to John Younger, a Scottish merchant shipper, John Paul sailed as a cabin boy on a ship to Virginia,
- Paul, Les (American inventor and musician)
Les Paul was an American jazz and country guitarist and inventor who was perhaps best known for his design of a solid-body electric guitar, though he also made notable contributions to the recording process. Paul designed a solid-body electric guitar in 1941. However, by the time the Les Paul
- Paul, Lewis (English inventor)
Lewis Paul was an English inventor who devised the first power spinning machine, in cooperation with John Wyatt. Paul was the son of a Huguenot refugee, at whose death he became a ward of the Earl of Shaftesbury. He began working with Wyatt about 1730, and they patented their machine in 1738. The
- Paul, Maury (American journalist)
Cholly Knickerbocker: …taken over in 1919 by Maury Paul.
- Paul, Rand (United States senator)
Rand Paul is an American politician who was elected as a Republican to the U.S. Senate in 2010 and began his term representing Kentucky the following year. He sought his party’s nomination in the U.S. presidential election of 2016. Rand, the middle of five children, was the son of Ron Paul, a
- Paul, Randal Howard (United States senator)
Rand Paul is an American politician who was elected as a Republican to the U.S. Senate in 2010 and began his term representing Kentucky the following year. He sought his party’s nomination in the U.S. presidential election of 2016. Rand, the middle of five children, was the son of Ron Paul, a
- Paul, Robert W. (British inventor)
history of film: Edison and the Lumière brothers: …1896 by the scientific-instrument maker Robert W. Paul. In 1899 Paul formed his own production company for the manufacture of actualities and trick films, and until 1905 Paul’s Animatograph Works, Ltd., was England’s largest producer, turning out an average of 50 films per year. Between 1896 and 1898, two Brighton…
- Paul, Ron (American politician)
Ron Paul is an American politician, who served as a Republican member of the U.S. House of Representatives (1976–77, 1979–85, 1997–2013) and who unsuccessfully ran as the 1988 Libertarian presidential candidate. He later sought the Republican nomination for president in 2008 and 2012. Paul grew up
- Paul, Ronald Ernest (American politician)
Ron Paul is an American politician, who served as a Republican member of the U.S. House of Representatives (1976–77, 1979–85, 1997–2013) and who unsuccessfully ran as the 1988 Libertarian presidential candidate. He later sought the Republican nomination for president in 2008 and 2012. Paul grew up
- Paul, Saint (Christian Apostle)
St. Paul the Apostle was one of the leaders of the first generation of Christians, often considered to be the most important person after Jesus in the history of Christianity. In his own day, although he was a major figure within the very small Christian movement, he also had many enemies and
- Paul, the Apostle of Jesus Christ (work by Baur)
Ferdinand Christian Baur: …der Apostel Jesu Christi (1845; Paul, the Apostle of Jesus Christ), Baur applied the same principles to the life and thought of the Apostle Paul and concluded that Paul did not write all of the letters then attributed to him. Baur considered only the letters to the Galatians, Corinthians, and…
- Paul, Thomas (American clergyman)
African Meeting House: Origins: …preacher from New Hampshire named Thomas Paul founded and led a congregation of the African Baptist Church. Its first meetings were held at Faneuil Hall—Boston’s public meeting hall where patriots of the American Revolution had held their meetings. There is a surviving account of a baptism of “nine Negroes” on…
- Paul, Wolfgang (German physicist)
Wolfgang Paul was a German physicist who shared one-half of the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1989 with the German-born American physicist Hans G. Dehmelt. (The other half of the prize was awarded to the American physicist Norman F. Ramsey.) Paul received his share of the prize for his development of
- Paul-Boncour, Joseph (French politician)
Joseph Paul-Boncour was a French leftist politician who served as the minister of labour, of war, and of foreign affairs and, for four years, France’s permanent representative to the League of Nations. After receiving a degree in law from the University of Paris, Paul-Boncour practiced law,
- Paula (film by Maté [1952])
Rudolph Maté: In 1952 he helmed Paula, a soap opera starring Loretta Young, on whose television series Maté would work in 1959–60. Second Chance (1953) was a passable noir originally released in 3-D and starring Robert Mitchum, Linda Darnell, and Jack Palance. The Black Shield of
- Paula (work by Allende)
Isabel Allende: >Paula (1994), was written as a letter to her daughter, who died of a hereditary blood disease in 1992. A more lighthearted book, Afrodita: cuentos, recetas, y otros afrodisíacos (1997; Aphrodite: A Memoir of the Senses), shared her personal knowledge of aphrodisiacs and includes family…
- Paula (Malta)
Paola, town, eastern Malta, just south of Valletta and adjacent to Tarxien to the southeast. It was founded in 1626 by the grand master of the Hospitallers (Knights of Malta), Antoine de Paule, and it remained a small village until the late 19th century, when it grew rapidly as a residential
- Paula (photograph by Stieglitz)
Alfred Stieglitz: The Photo-Secession: For example, the negative for Paula was made in 1889, but the first confirmed exhibition of a print of it was in 1921, and the oldest extant print is dated 1916. If judged from the work that Stieglitz chose to reproduce while editor of Camera Notes, or from the 15…
- Paula (Roman religious devotee)
St. Jerome: Life: , Marcella, Paula, and her daughters Blesilla and Eustochium). He taught them the Hebrew text of the Psalms, orally and in letters, he answered their biblical problems, and he was their master in spirituality as well. Under these conditions, he wrote a defense of the perpetual virginity…
- Paula Spencer (novel by Doyle)
Roddy Doyle: Other writings: …Doors (1996) and its sequel, Paula Spencer (2006), are told through the unflinching perspective of Paula Spencer, a working-class woman who is in a violent marriage when the first book begins. In 2023 Doyle’s publisher announced a third book in the Paula Spencer series, The Women Behind the Door (2024).
- Paula’s Home Cooking (American television show)
Paula Deen: …to the 2002 premiere of Paula’s Home Cooking, Deen’s own cable-television show on the Food Network. Viewers were captivated as much by Deen’s unsophisticated and self-deprecating sense of humour, her nonjudgmental attitude, and her all-around rustic charm as they were by her cooking, and the show not only shot to…
- Paulding, James Kirke (American writer)
James Kirke Paulding was a dramatist, novelist, and public official chiefly remembered for his early advocacy and use of native American material in literature. At 18 he went to New York City, where he formed a lasting friendship with the Irving brothers. This association aroused his enthusiasm for
- Paule, Antoine de (Grand Master of the Hospitallers)
Paola: …the Hospitallers (Knights of Malta), Antoine de Paule, and it remained a small village until the late 19th century, when it grew rapidly as a residential district for workers from the adjacent Grand Harbour dockyards. It has a well-preserved Neolithic temple and the Ħal Saflieni Hypogeum (catacombs), discovered in 1902…
- Paulescu, Nicolae C. (Romanian physiologist)
Nicolas C. Paulescu was a Romanian physiologist who conducted groundbreaking research on the antidiabetic hormone insulin. However, his anti-Semitic writings contributed to the rise of the fascist Iron Guard movement (1930–41). As a young student, Paulescu developed an interest in the arts and in
- Paulescu, Nicolas C. (Romanian physiologist)
Nicolas C. Paulescu was a Romanian physiologist who conducted groundbreaking research on the antidiabetic hormone insulin. However, his anti-Semitic writings contributed to the rise of the fascist Iron Guard movement (1930–41). As a young student, Paulescu developed an interest in the arts and in
- Paulescu, Nicolas Constantin (Romanian physiologist)
Nicolas C. Paulescu was a Romanian physiologist who conducted groundbreaking research on the antidiabetic hormone insulin. However, his anti-Semitic writings contributed to the rise of the fascist Iron Guard movement (1930–41). As a young student, Paulescu developed an interest in the arts and in