- packing (poitical strategy)
Gill v. Whitford: …to have Democratic majorities (“packing”) and by dispersing Democratic voters among districts designed to have Republican majorities (“cracking”). By thus reducing the total number of districts that were likely to elect Democrats, the drafters hoped to limit Democratic representation in the state legislature and to maintain Republican control of…
- packing density (geology)
sedimentary rock: Fabric: …across a thin section (packing density).
- packing fraction (physics)
William Draper Harkins: …introduced the concept of the packing fraction, a measure of the energy involved in the association of protons and neutrons within the nucleus of an atom. Utilizing Einstein’s concept of the equivalence of mass and energy, he demonstrated that by combining four hydrogen atoms to produce one helium atom, a…
- packing proximity (geology)
sedimentary rock: Fabric: …number of grain-to-grain contacts (packing proximity) and to comparisons between the sum of the lengths of grains to the total length of a traverse across a thin section (packing density).
- packrat (rodent)
woodrat, (genus Neotoma), any of 23 species of medium-sized North American and Central American rodents. Some species are commonly known as “packrats” for their characteristic accumulation of food and debris on or near their dens. These collections, called “middens,” may include bones, sticks, dry
- packrat (rodent)
woodrat: The bushy-tailed woodrat (Neotoma cinerea), often called a packrat, is among the largest and most common woodrats, weighing up to 600 grams (about 1.3 pounds) and having a body length of up to 25 cm (nearly 10 inches). Its slightly shorter tail is long-haired and bushy,…
- Packsche Händel (German history)
Otto von Pack: …these became known as the Pack Affairs (Packsche Händel). After a meeting between the Holy Roman emperor Ferdinand I and a number of Catholic princes at Breslau (1527), Pack reported to Philip the Magnanimous, the Protestant landgrave of Hesse, that an offensive alliance had been formed against Germany’s Protestant rulers.…
- Packwood, Bob (United States senator)
Mitch McConnell: Senate: Bob Packwood of Oregon. In a speech on the Senate floor, McConnell threatened to launch investigations into Democratic politicians who had faced similar charges in the past, among them Sen. Ted Kennedy. His Democratic colleagues prevailed, however, and McConnell publicly changed his mind about Packwood,…
- paclitaxel (chemical compound)
taxol, organic compound with a complex multi-ring molecule that occurs in the bark of Pacific yew trees (Taxus brevifolia). It is active against certain cancers of the lung, ovary, breast, head, and neck, disrupting cell division and interfering with separation of the nuclear chromosomes. A
- Paço, Terreiro do (square, Lisbon, Portugal)
Lisbon: City layout: …water to the vast arcaded Commerce Square (Praça do Comércio). The three landward sides of the square are surrounded by uniform buildings dating from the 18th century. That formal Baroque-inspired layout is pierced by a monumental archway, built a century later, marking the entry north into the central city. In…
- Pacoh (people)
Vietnam: Languages: …Indonesian peoples; others—including the Bru, Pacoh, Katu, Cua, Hre, Rengao, Sedang, Bahnar, Mnong, Mang (Maa), Muong, and Stieng—speak Mon-Khmer languages, connecting them with the Khmer. French missionaries and
- Pacoima (neighborhood, Los Angeles, California, United States)
Los Angeles Riots of 1992: …the Los Angeles region, from Pacoima in the San Fernando Valley to Long Beach, south of the city. Much of the worst rioting, though, occurred in South Central, the Pico-Union neighbourhood, and Koreatown, where relations between Korean merchants and their African American customers had already been tense. As firefighters battled…
- Pacorus (Parthian prince)
Pacorus was a Parthian prince, son of King Orodes II (reigned c. 55/54–37/36 bc); he apparently never ascended the throne. In the summer of 51 bc Pacorus was sent to invade Syria with an army commanded by Osaces, an older warrior. Osaces, however, was killed in battle, and early the next year
- Pacorus I (Parthian prince)
Pacorus was a Parthian prince, son of King Orodes II (reigned c. 55/54–37/36 bc); he apparently never ascended the throne. In the summer of 51 bc Pacorus was sent to invade Syria with an army commanded by Osaces, an older warrior. Osaces, however, was killed in battle, and early the next year
- Pacorus II (king of Parthia)
Pacorus II was the king of Parthia (reigned ad 78–c. 115/116). Little is known of his reign, which seems to have been filled with rebellions and the rule of counterkings (Artabanus IV, Osroes, and Vologases II). In 110 Pacorus sold the Parthian client kingdom of Osroëne to Abgar VII, son of Izates,
- Pacquiao, Emmanuel Dapidran (Filipino boxer and politician)
Manny Pacquiao is a professional boxer, media celebrity, and politician who became world-famous for winning boxing titles in more weight classes than any other boxer in history. His rise from abject poverty to the pinnacle of his sport was made even more remarkable by his life outside the ring. The
- Pacquiao, Manny (Filipino boxer and politician)
Manny Pacquiao is a professional boxer, media celebrity, and politician who became world-famous for winning boxing titles in more weight classes than any other boxer in history. His rise from abject poverty to the pinnacle of his sport was made even more remarkable by his life outside the ring. The
- Pact for Mexico (Mexican history)
Mexico: Peña Nieto and the return of PRI rule: …things done, announced a “Pact for Mexico” that joined the PRI, PAN, and PRD in support of a 95-point agenda of policy reform. The pact generated considerable discontent within the PAN and especially within the PRD, many of whose members expressed unhappiness with their leaders’ decision to collaborate with…
- Pact government (South African history)
South Africa: Afrikaner rebellion and nationalism: …Labour parties known as the Pact government.
- Pact of Steel (Italy–Germany [1939])
Pact of Steel, Alliance between Germany and Italy. Signed by Adolf Hitler and Benito Mussolini on May 22, 1939, it formalized the 1936 Rome-Berlin Axis agreement, linking the two countries politically and
- pacta sunt servanda (law principle)
international law: Treaties: …known by the Latin formula pacta sunt servanda (“agreements must be kept”) is arguably the oldest principle of international law. Without such a rule, no international agreement would be binding or enforceable. Pacta sunt servanda is directly referred to in many international agreements governing treaties, including the Vienna Convention on…
- Pactianae coniurationis commentarium (work by Poliziano)
Poliziano: …he wrote the dramatic report Pactianae coniurationis commentarium (1478). In May 1479, as a result of a quarrel with Lorenzo’s wife, Clarice Orsini, he was expelled from the Medici household. In December, instead of accompanying Lorenzo on a difficult diplomatic mission to Naples, he undertook a series of journeys in…
- Pactum Hludowicianum (decree by Louis I)
Louis I: The challenges of empire: The historic Pactum Hludowicianum, also issued in 817, replaced the ill-defined "friendship alliance" between the Carolingians and the popes with a carefully arranged imperial-papal relationship that the emperor dominated. Louis later described the pope as his helper (adiutor) in caring for God’s people. He was no less…
- pactus (law history)
Germanic law: …to as an “agreement,” or pactus. The Visigothic laws were an exception; they always appear to have been formulated by the king and chief landowners without popular participation. Gradually, first the Lombard and then the Frankish kings overcame their people’s aversion to central government and began to legislate unilaterally. The…
- pacu (fish)
South America: The Amazonian and Guianan forests: …invertebrates and fishes, such as pacu (Metynnis), a big brownish flat fish, the meat of which is highly valued; coumarou (Curimato), which is a toothless vegetarian fish resembling the marine mullet; electric eel (Electrophorus electricus); pirarucu (Arapaima gigas), which can attain a length of 15 feet (4.5 metres) and a…
- Pacuvius, Marcus (Roman dramatist)
Marcus Pacuvius was the greatest Roman tragic dramatist before Accius. The bearer of an Oscan name, Pacuvius was probably educated at Tarentum and must have been equally at home in Oscan, Latin, and Greek, as was his uncle and teacher, the poet Quintus Ennius. As a young man he followed Ennius to
- PAD (political party, Thailand)
Thailand: Thaksin Shinawatra: …led by the urban-based opposition People’s Alliance for Democracy (PAD)—who came to be known as the “yellow shirts” for the colour they wore during demonstrations—and grew steadily in size. Because Thaksin had lost the loyalty of many ranking military officers, he was unable to order that force be used to…
- pada (Indian music)
South Asian arts: South India: Pada and javali are two kinds of love songs using the poetic imagery characteristic of the romantic-devotional movement mentioned earlier. Tillana has a text composed mostly of meaningless syllables, which may include the onomatopoeic syllables used to represent the different drum sounds. This is a…
- Padalka, Gennady (Russian cosmonaut)
Charles Simonyi: …lifted off with Russian cosmonaut Gennady Padalka and U.S. astronaut Michael Barratt aboard Soyuz TMA-14, a flight to the ISS that made Simonyi the first repeat space tourist. They returned to Earth on April 8, traveling on Soyuz TMA-13.
- padam (poetry)
padam, love poem in Karnatak (Carnatic) music. A padam is slow in tempo and grave in import, and it is usually treated as allegorical: the yearning of the nayika (heroine) is interpreted as the soul’s longing for the nayaka (hero). The best-regarded padams were written in Sanskrit and Telugu by
- Padamo River (river, South America)
Orinoco River: Physiography of the Orinoco: …bank and the Manaviche, Ocamo, Padamo, and Cunucunuma rivers on the right.
- padān (Zoroastrianism and Parsiism)
ceremonial object: Objects used in rites of passage: …shawl, a cotton veil (padan) to cover the nose and mouth, and a mace are added; the Brahmanic (Vedic) initiate also receives a tall staff and a black antelope skin. In Sikhism (an Indian religion founded by Guru Nanak in the 16th century), initiations of novices formerly included drinking…
- Padang (Indonesia)
Padang, kota (city), capital of West Sumatra (Sumatera Barat) propinsi (or provinsi; province), Indonesia. Padang is the chief port on Sumatra’s western coast and is the main city of the Minangkabau people of West Sumatra. It was the site of Dutch settlements early in the 17th century, and
- Padang Highlands (region, Indonesia)
Padang Highlands, region near the western coast of the island of Sumatra, Indonesia. It is part of the Barisan Mountains of Sumatera Barat provinsi (“province”). The highest among several volcanoes in the highlands is Mount Marapi (9,485 feet [2,891 m]). A favourite resort area because of its
- Padang, Urang (people)
Minangkabau, largest ethnic group on the island of Sumatra, Indonesia, whose traditional homeland is the west-central highlands. The Minangkabau have extensive terraced fields and garden plots in which they raise irrigated rice, tobacco, and cinnamon, as well as fruits and vegetables. Their crafts
- Padarthatattvanirupana (work by Siromani)
Indian philosophy: The new school: …Navya-Nyaya philosophers, Raghunatha Shiromani in Padarthatattvanirupana undertook a bold revision of the traditional categorical scheme by (1) identifying “time,” “space,” and “ether” with God, (2) eliminating the category of mind by reducing it to matter, (3) denying atoms (paramanu) and dyadic (paired) combinations of them (dvyanuka), (4) eliminating “number,” “separateness,”…
- padauk (tree)
narra, (genus Pterocarpus), genus of timber trees of the pea family (Fabaceae), native to Asia and Africa. Narra wood is primarily used for cabinetwork; it is usually red or rose colour, often variegated with yellow. The wood is hard and heavy, and the pattern of the grain and the colouring are
- Padaung (people)
body modifications and mutilations: The torso: The Padaung women of Myanmar were famous for stretching their necks—by means of coiled brass neck rings—to a length of about 15 inches (38 cm), pushing down the collarbone, compressing the rib cage, and pulling up about four thoracic vertebrae into the neck.
- padāvalī (Indian literature)
South Asian arts: Bengali: The third genre, padāvalī (“string of verse”) songs, is also found elsewhere; inspired by the religious bhakti movement, the songs resemble the devotional poetry of the Nāyaṉārs and Āḻvārs in Tamil. It was such poetry that established Bengali as a significant literary language. The earliest work in what…
- Padda oryzivora (bird)
Java sparrow, (Padda oryzivora), bird of the mannikin group in the family Estrildidae (order Passeriformes). One of the best-known cage birds, it is an attractive pet that chirps and trills. Native to Java and Bali, it has become established in the wild elsewhere in Asia as well as in Fiji, Mexico,
- Paddington (film by King [2014])
Jim Broadbent: …as an antiques dealer in Paddington (2014), an adaptation of the classic children’s book series about a Peruvian bear exploring London. He later appeared in the sequel (2017). Roles in 2015 included the avuncular mentor of a young man who becomes entangled in a web of international espionage in the…
- Paddington (area, London, United Kingdom)
Paddington, area in the borough of Westminster, London. Formerly (until 1965) a metropolitan borough, it is located west of St. Marylebone and north of Kensington Gardens and Hyde Park. Its southern section includes the neighbourhood of Bayswater, and in its northern portion is Maida Vale. The area
- Paddington 2 (film by King [2017])
Jim Broadbent: He later appeared in the sequel (2017). Roles in 2015 included the avuncular mentor of a young man who becomes entangled in a web of international espionage in the television miniseries London Spy, a kindly Irish priest in the cinematic adaptation of Colm Tóibín’s novel Brooklyn (2009), and an antagonist…
- paddle (watercraft)
canoe: …propelled by one or more paddles (not oars). Paddlers face the bow.
- paddle shot (cricket)
cricket: Technical development: …batting styles, such as the paddle shot (wherein the ball is hit behind the wicket because there are usually no fielders there) and the lofted shot (where the batsman tries to hit the ball past the fielders and over their heads). Twenty20 (T20), a style of one-day cricket consisting of…
- paddle tennis (sport)
paddle tennis, small-scale form of tennis similar to a British shipboard game of the 1890s. Frank P. Beal, a New York City official, introduced paddle tennis on New York playgrounds in the early 1920s. He had invented it as a child in Albion, Mich. It became popular, and national championship
- paddle tennis (sport)
platform tennis, sport that is a combination of tennis and squash, devised in 1928 by American sports enthusiasts Fessenden Blanchard and James Cogswell at Scarsdale, N.Y. It is played on specially constructed platforms, 60 by 30 feet (18 by 9 m), surrounded by back and side walls of tightly strung
- paddle wheel (ship part)
paddle wheel, method of ship propulsion that was once widely employed but is now almost entirely superseded by the screw propeller. Early experiments with steam-driven paddles acting as oars led several inventors, including Robert Fulton, to mount the paddles in a wheel form, either at the stern or
- paddlefish (fish species)
paddlefish, (Polyodon spathula), archaic freshwater fish with a paddlelike snout, a wide mouth, smooth skin, and a cartilaginous skeleton. A relative of the sturgeon, the paddlefish makes up the family Polyodontidae in the order Acipenseriformes. A paddlefish feeds with its mouth gaping open and
- paddlefish (fish family)
chondrostean: >paddlefishes (family Polyodontidae) in the order Acipenseriformes. Some taxonomies also include the bichirs and reedfish of Africa (order Polypteriformes), but this remains a subject of much debate. Many taxonomists argue that the subclass Chondrostei is a paraphyletic group—that is,
- Paddleton (film by Lehmann [2019])
Ray Romano: …was cast in the movie Paddleton, playing a bachelor whose similarly unmarried friend is diagnosed with a terminal illness, and he played an attorney in Martin Scorsese’s mob drama The Irishman.
- paddock dredging (mining)
placer mining: A later method known as paddock dredging allows placer deposits to be mined even when they are not adjacent to a river. In this method the dredge floats in its own pond, which is continuously extended by digging at one end while simultaneously being filled at the other end with…
- Paddock, Charles William (American athlete)
Charley Paddock was an American sprinter, world record holder for the 100-metre dash (1921–30) and the 200-metre dash (1921–26). He also held the world record for the 100-yard dash (1921, 1924–26) and the 220-yard dash (1921–26). In addition, he was a member of a world record-holding 4 × 100-metre
- Paddock, Charley (American athlete)
Charley Paddock was an American sprinter, world record holder for the 100-metre dash (1921–30) and the 200-metre dash (1921–26). He also held the world record for the 100-yard dash (1921, 1924–26) and the 220-yard dash (1921–26). In addition, he was a member of a world record-holding 4 × 100-metre
- paddy (agriculture)
paddy, small, level, flooded field used to cultivate rice in southern and eastern Asia. Wet-rice cultivation is the most prevalent method of farming in the Far East, where it utilizes a small fraction of the total land yet feeds the majority of the rural population. Rice was domesticated as early
- Paddy Clarke Ha Ha Ha (novel by Doyle)
Roddy Doyle: Other writings: Doyle’s fourth novel, Paddy Clarke Ha Ha Ha (1993), won the Booker Prize. Set in the 1960s in a fictional community similar to Barrytown, the book examines the cruelty inflicted upon children by other children. The protagonist, 10-year-old Paddy Clarke, fears his classmates’ ostracism, especially after the breakup…
- Paddy’s Milestone (island, Scotland, United Kingdom)
Ailsa Craig, granite islet, South Ayrshire council area, Scotland, at the mouth of the Firth of Clyde and 10 miles (16 km) off the coast of South Ayrshire, to which it belongs. It is nicknamed “Paddy’s Milestone” for its location halfway between Glasgow and Belfast (Northern Ireland). The name
- pademelon (marsupial)
wallaby: Often called pademelons, the three species of scrub wallabies (Thylogale) of New Guinea, the Bismarck Archipelago, and Tasmania are small and stocky, with short hind limbs and pointy noses. They are hunted for meat and fur. A similar species is the short-tailed scrub wallaby, or quokka (Setonix…
- Paderborn (Germany)
Paderborn, city, North Rhine–Westphalia Land (state), central Germany. It lies on the Pader River, a small affluent of the Lippe formed from rain seepage on the slope of the Egge Mountains (Eggegebirge) and emerging from below the cathedral in about 200 springs, about 60 miles (100 km)
- Paderewski, Ignacy Jan (composer and prime minister of Poland)
Ignacy Jan Paderewski was a Polish pianist, composer, and statesman, who was prime minister of Poland in 1919. Paderewski was the son of a steward of a Polish landowner. He studied music from 1872 at the Warsaw Conservatory and from 1878 taught piano there, and in 1880 he married one of his pupils,
- Padilla, Alejandro (United States senator)
Alex Padilla is the first Latino to represent California in the United States Senate. He was appointed to the position in 2021 after previously serving as California’s secretary of state (2015–21). Padilla, a Democrat, won a full Senate term in 2022. Padilla was born in the Panorama City
- Padilla, Alex (United States senator)
Alex Padilla is the first Latino to represent California in the United States Senate. He was appointed to the position in 2021 after previously serving as California’s secretary of state (2015–21). Padilla, a Democrat, won a full Senate term in 2022. Padilla was born in the Panorama City
- Padilla, Heberto (Cuban poet)
Heberto Padilla was a controversial poet who came to international attention for a political scandal in revolutionary Cuba that is known as the “Padilla affair.” After elementary and secondary education in his native province of Pinar del Río, Padilla studied law at the University of Havana but did
- Padilla, José (New Granada general)
history of Latin America: Mobility and hierarchy: …Manuel Piar in Venezuela and José Padilla in New Granada rose to the rank of general and admiral, respectively, in Bolívar’s forces. In practice, however, the old hierarchies did not fall so easily and continued on informally. Those nonwhites who managed to achieve the status of elites were clearly exceptions…
- Padilla, Juan (Spanish missionary)
Juan Padilla was the first Christian missionary martyred within the territory of the present United States. After serving as a soldier, Padilla joined the Franciscans in Andalusia. He went to Spanish Mexico in 1528 and in the following year accompanied an expedition to Nueva Galicia (northwestern
- Padilla, Juan de (Spanish military leader)
Juan de Padilla was an aristocratic Spanish military leader of the Castilian Comunidades (Comuneros) in their unsuccessful revolt (1520–21) against the government of the Habsburg emperor Charles V (King Charles I of Spain). Padilla was a member of an ancient noble family of Toledo. Charles, who
- Padjelanta National Park (national park, Sweden)
Padjelanta National Park, park in Norrbotten län (county), northwestern Sweden, adjoining Norway (west) and Sarek National Park (east). It is the largest of the Swedish national parks and one of the largest parks in Europe, with an area of 776 square miles (2,010 square km). It was established in
- padlock (lock)
lock: Development of modern types.: …locks were used only for padlocks and trick boxes. In the last half of the 19th century, as developed for safes and strong-room doors, they proved to be the most secure form of closure. The number of possible combinations of letters or numbers is almost infinite and they have no…
- Padlock Law (Spanish history)
José Canalejas: …prime minister whose anticlerical “Padlock Law” forbade the establishment of new religious orders and introduced obligatory military service.
- Padma (Hindu mythology)
Lakshmi: …lotus and was known as Padma, or Kamala, both of which mean “Lotus”; when he was the ax-wielding Parashurama, the destroyer of the warrior class, she was his wife Dharani; when he was King Rama, she was his queen Sita. In the most widely received account of Lakshmi’s birth, she…
- Padma ’Byung-Gnas (Buddhist mystic)
Padmasambhava was a legendary Indian Buddhist mystic who introduced Tantric Buddhism to Tibet and who is credited with establishing the first Buddhist monastery there. According to tradition, he was a native of Udyāna (now Swat, Pak.), an area famed for its magicians. Padmasambhava was a Tantrist
- Padma Awards (civilian awards, India)
Padma Awards, three awards—Padma Vibhushan, Padma Bhushan, and Padma Shri—that are among the highest civilian honors in India. The awards can be given for achievements in any field, including art, social work, public affairs, science and engineering, trade and industry, medicine, literature and
- Padma River (river, Asia)
Padma River, main channel of the greater Ganges (Ganga) River in Bangladesh. For some 90 miles (145 km) the Ganges River forms the western boundary between India and Bangladesh before it enters Bangladesh at the northern edge of the Kushtia district as the upper segment of the Padma River. The
- Padmaavat (film by Bhansali [2018])
Deepika Padukone: Actress and producer: In the historical Bollywood drama Padmaavat (2018), Padukone appeared as Padmavati, a Rajput queen. Padukone’s husband, Ranveer Singh, played ʿAlāʾ al-Dīn Khaljī (Alauddin Khalji), a ruler of the Delhi Sultanate. Although some characters portrayed in Padmaavat are based on historical figures, the movie’s story is said to be based on…
- Padmanabhapuram Palace (palace, India)
Nagercoil: …is the tourist centre of Padmanabhapuram Palace, which was formerly the residence of the Travancore raja. Pop. (2001) 208,179; (2011) 224,849.
- Padmapada (Indian philosopher)
Indian philosophy: Shankara’s theory of error and religious and ethical concerns: …the State of Nonaction”), and Padmapada, author of Panchapadika, a commentary on the first five padas, or sections, of the bhashya. These early pupils raised and settled issues that were not systematically discussed by Shankara himself—issues that later divided his followers into two large groups: those who followed the Vivarana…
- Padmasambhava (Buddhist mystic)
Padmasambhava was a legendary Indian Buddhist mystic who introduced Tantric Buddhism to Tibet and who is credited with establishing the first Buddhist monastery there. According to tradition, he was a native of Udyāna (now Swat, Pak.), an area famed for its magicians. Padmasambhava was a Tantrist
- padmasana (yoga practice)
asana: …common is the padmasana (“lotus posture”).
- Padmāvatī (work by Jāyasī)
South Asian arts: Hindi: …also is the religious epic Padmāvatī by Jāyasī, a Muslim from former Oudh state. Written in Awadhi (c. 1540), the epic is composed according to the conventions of Sanskrit poetics.
- Padmavati the Harlot (work by Das)
Kamala Das: …Child Prostitute” (1977) and “Padmavati the Harlot” (1992). Notable among her many Malayalam works were the short-story collection Thanuppu (1967; “Cold”) and the memoir Balyakalasmaranakal (1987; “Memories of Childhood”). Perhaps her best-known work was an autobiography, which first appeared as a series of columns in the weekly Malayalanadu, then…
- Padmore, George (Trinidadian author and Pan-Africanist)
Pan-Africanism: History of Pan-Africanist intellectuals: James and George Padmore, both of whom came from Trinidad. From the 1930s until his death in 1959, Padmore was one of the leading theorists of Pan-African ideas. Also influential were Léopold Senghor and Aimé Césaire, who were natives of Senegal and Martinique, respectively. A disciple of…
- Padova (Italy)
Padua, city, Veneto region, northern Italy, on the River Bacchiglione, west of Venice. As the Roman town Patavium—founded, according to legend, by the Trojan hero Antenor—it was first mentioned in 302 bce, according to the Roman historian Livy, who was born there (59 bce). The town prospered
- Padova, Università Degli Studi di (university, Padua, Italy)
University of Padua, autonomous coeducational state institution of higher learning in Padua, Italy. The university was founded in 1222 by a secession of about a thousand students from the University of Bologna, reinforced by additional migrations from Bologna in 1306 and 1322. Like Bologna, it was
- Pádraic Henry Pearse (Irish poet and statesman)
Patrick Pearse was an Irish nationalist leader, poet, and educator. He was the first president of the provisional government of the Irish republic proclaimed in Dublin on April 24, 1916, and was commander in chief of the Irish forces in the anti-British Easter Rising that began on the same day. The
- padrao (Portuguese stone pillar)
Vasco da Gama: The first voyage: The fleet also carried padrões (stone pillars) to set up as marks of discovery.
- Padre Isla, El (Spanish author)
José Francisco de Isla was a Spanish satirist and preacher noted for his novel known as Fray Gerundio. Isla showed intellectual promise early and entered the Jesuit order as a novice in 1719, studying at the University of Salamanca. He was named professor of sacred literature in 1727 and taught
- Padre Island (island, Texas, United States)
Padre Island, barrier island, 113 miles (182 km) long and up to 3 miles (5 km) wide, lying in the Gulf of Mexico along the southeastern coast of Texas, U.S. It extends south from Corpus Christi to Port Isabel, just north of the Mexican border, and is separated from the mainland by Laguna Madre
- Padre Island National Seashore (national seashore, Texas, United States)
Padre Island: …the island was designated a national seashore. Its area of 203 square miles (526 square km) extends over a 70-mile (115-km) stretch of the island’s central portion. It contains the longest remaining stretch of undeveloped barrier island in the United States; only its northern tip is inhabited. There is camping…
- Padre Martini (Italian composer)
Giovanni Battista Martini was an Italian composer, music theorist, and music historian who was internationally renowned as a teacher. Martini was educated by his father, a violinist; by Luc’Antonio Predieri (harpsichord, singing, organ); and by Antonio Riccieri (counterpoint). He was ordained in
- Padre Padrone (film by Taviani brothers [1977])
Taviani brothers: Their first major success, Padre Padrone (1977; “Father Master”), is based on the life of an Italian linguist who in his youth was an illiterate shepherd. In the later La notte di San Lorenzo (1982; The Night of the Shooting Stars), a mother recounts for her child her wartime…
- Padres (American baseball team)
San Diego Padres, American professional baseball team based in San Diego that plays in the National League (NL). The Padres were founded in 1969 and have won two NL pennants (1984 and 1998). The franchise came into existence alongside three other expansion teams in 1969. The Padres lost 110 games
- Padri (Islamic sect)
Padri War: …between reformist Muslims, known as Padris, and local chieftains assisted by the Dutch. In the early 19th century the puritan Wahhābīyah sect of Islām spread to Sumatra, brought by pilgrims who entered the island through Pedir, a northern port. The Padris, as these Sumatran converts to Wahhābīyah came to be…
- Padri War (Southeast Asian history)
Padri War, (1821–37), armed conflict in Minangkabau (Sumatra) between reformist Muslims, known as Padris, and local chieftains assisted by the Dutch. In the early 19th century the puritan Wahhābīyah sect of Islām spread to Sumatra, brought by pilgrims who entered the island through Pedir, a
- padrona, La (work by Betti)
Ugo Betti: His first play, La padrona (first performed 1927; “The Landlady”), drew mixed reactions, but later successful plays include Frana allo scalo Nord (first performed 1933; Eng. trans., Landslide, 1964), the story of a natural disaster and collective guilt; Delitto all’Isola delle Capre (first performed 1950; Eng. trans., Crime…
- Padua (Italy)
Padua, city, Veneto region, northern Italy, on the River Bacchiglione, west of Venice. As the Roman town Patavium—founded, according to legend, by the Trojan hero Antenor—it was first mentioned in 302 bce, according to the Roman historian Livy, who was born there (59 bce). The town prospered
- Padua, University of (university, Padua, Italy)
University of Padua, autonomous coeducational state institution of higher learning in Padua, Italy. The university was founded in 1222 by a secession of about a thousand students from the University of Bologna, reinforced by additional migrations from Bologna in 1306 and 1322. Like Bologna, it was
- Paduan school (painting)
Francesco Squarcione: …Renaissance painter who founded the Paduan school and is known for being the teacher of Andrea Mantegna and other noteworthy painters.
- Paducah (Kentucky, United States)
Paducah, city, seat of McCracken county, southwestern Kentucky, U.S., at the confluence of the Ohio (there bridged to Brookport, Illinois) and Tennessee rivers. The site, known as Pekin, was part of a grant to soldier and frontiersman George Rogers Clark. At his death his brother William, who was
- Padukone, Deepika (Indian actress)
Deepika Padukone is one of the most successful Bollywood actresses of the early 21st century. A global fashion icon and an ambassador for renowned brands such as Louis Vuitton and Cartier, Padukone is known for her striking looks and for the roles she played in several top-grossing Bollywood
- Padukone, Prakash (Indian badminton player)
Prakash Padukone is an Indian badminton champion who dominated the national badminton scene for almost a decade (1971–80) and put India on the sport’s international map. Padukone won the national senior championship in 1971 at age 16, thereby becoming the youngest player to have achieved the feat.