- Petiso, El (president of Bolivia)
Hugo Bánzer Suárez was a soldier and politician who was president of Bolivia from 1971 to 1978 and from 1997 to 2001. Bánzer was educated at the Bolivian Army Military College and in two United States Army training schools. He served as minister of education from 1964 to 1966 in the cabinet of
- petit battement sur le cou-de-pied (ballet)
battement: …of the supporting leg; and petit battement sur le cou-de-pied (“small beatings on the instep”), in which the working foot touches the front and back of the instep of the supporting leg.
- Petit Bayreuth, Le (French music group)
Emmanuel Chabrier: …of the group known as Le Petit Bayreuth. Chabrier’s best music was written between 1881 and 1891 when, after visiting Spain (where he was inspired by the folk music), he settled in Touraine. His works during this period include the piano pieces Dix pièces pittoresques (1880), Trois valses romantiques for…
- Petit Caporal, Le (emperor of France)
Napoleon I was a French general, first consul (1799–1804), and emperor of the French (1804–1814/15), one of the most celebrated personages in the history of the West. He revolutionized military organization and training; sponsored the Napoleonic Code, the prototype of later civil-law codes;
- Petit Cénacle (French literary group)
cénacle: …Romantics, became known as the Petit Cénacle. When Hugo’s poetic drama Hernani was performed in 1830, their clamour and applause supporting the play overwhelmed the scorn of the traditionalists who had come to disparage it, thus ending the battle of the Romantics—the so-called battle of Hernani—for the demise of the…
- Petit Chose, Le (work by Daudet)
Alphonse Daudet: Life: …omissions, for his semiautobiographical novel Le Petit Chose (1868; “The Little Thing”). At the end of the year he joined his elder brother, Ernest, in Paris.
- petit feu, colour of the (pottery painting)
Chinese pottery: Song dynasty: The earliest known example of overglaze painting in the history of Chinese pottery bears a date equivalent to 1201. The technique was more widely used for the decoration of Cizhou wares in the 14th century. In both the variety and the vigour of their forms and decoration, Cizhou stonewares present…
- Petit homme de Dieu, Le (work by Lemonnier)
Camille Lemonnier: …a mystical naturalism, as in Le Petit homme de Dieu (1903; “The Little Man of God”). Finally, he returned to naturalism. His style had gained in subtlety without losing its force and culminated in L’Hallali (1906; “The Finish”). His vast descriptive work, La Belgique (1888; “The Belgian”), sums up his…
- Petit Jehan de Saintré (work by La Sale)
Antoine de La Sale: …writer chiefly remembered for his Petit Jehan de Saintré, a romance marked by a great gift for the observation of court manners and a keen sense of comic situation and dialogue.
- petit jury (law)
petit jury, a group chosen from the citizens of a district to try a question of fact. Distinct from the grand jury, which formulates accusations, the petit jury tests the accuracy of such accusations by standards of proof. Generally, the petit jury’s function is to deliberate questions of fact,
- petit mal (pathology)
epilepsy: Generalized-onset seizures: …to by the older term petit mal. Minor movements such as blinking may be associated with absence seizures. After the short interruption of consciousness, the individual is mentally clear and able to resume previous activity. Absence seizures occur mainly in children and do not appear initially after age 20; they…
- Petit Palais (building, Paris, France)
Paris: The Invalides of Paris: …the Grand Palais and the Petit Palais.
- Petit Piton (rock, Saint Lucia)
Saint Lucia: Relief and drainage: …southwest are the Gros and Petit Pitons (2,619 feet [798 metres] and 2,460 feet [750 metres], respectively), two immense pyramids of rock rising sharply from the sea and enclosing a small bay. Near Petit Piton, in the crater of an ancient volcano, are the boiling sulphur springs from which the…
- petit point (embroidery)
petit point, form of canvas embroidery similar to cross-stitch embroidery (q.v.), but even finer because of its small scale. The squareness and regularity of the outlines of the forms represented is less apparent at ordinary viewing distance. The stitch used—also called petit point or tent
- petit point stitch (needlepoint)
needlepoint: …intersection of threads, and the tent stitch, which covers only one. Since the 16th century the most commonly used stitches have been the tent (or continental) stitch, the vertically worked Florentine stitch (also called the flame, bargello, or Hungarian stitch), and the cross-stitch. In the 20th century the basket weave,…
- Petit porcelain (porcelain)
Petit porcelain, French hard-paste porcelain produced by Jacob Petit (b. 1796). Petit worked at the porcelain factory at Sèvres as a painter. With his brother Mardochée he bought a porcelain factory in Fontainebleau in 1830, finally settling in Paris in 1863. The wares he made were of a purely
- Petit Prince, Le (fable by Saint-Exupéry)
The Little Prince, fable and modern classic by French aviator and writer Antoine de Saint-Exupéry that was published with his own illustrations in French as Le Petit Prince in 1943. The simple tale tells the story of a child, the little prince, who travels the universe gaining wisdom. The novella
- Petit Soldat, Le (film by Godard [1960])
Jean-Luc Godard: Breathless and filmmaking style and themes: …notably Le Petit Soldat (1963; The Little Soldier), an ironically flippant tragedy, banned for many years, about torture and countertorture. Vivre sa vie (1962; My Life to Live), a study of a young Parisian prostitute, used, with ironical solipsism, pastiches of documentary form and clinical jargon. Godard’s 1963 film Le…
- Petit Testament, Le (poem by Villon)
François Villon: Life: …himself entitled Le Lais (The Legacy). It takes the form of a list of “bequests,” ironically conceived, made to friends and acquaintances before leaving them and the city. To his barber he leaves the clippings from his hair; to three well-known local usurers, some small change; to the clerk…
- Petit Trianon, Le (château, Versailles, France)
Ange-Jacques Gabriel: His best-known work is the Petit Trianon at Versailles, which is universally famous for its harmonious proportions and elegant, Palladian-inspired lines.
- Petit, Alexis-Thérèse (French chemist)
Pierre-Louis Dulong: …physics was carried out with Alexis-Thérèse Petit. In 1817 they showed that Newton’s law of cooling was true only for small differences in temperature. Their work on the measurement of temperature and the transfer of heat (1818) was honoured by the French Academy.
- Petit, Jacob (French pottery manufacturer)
Petit porcelain: …French hard-paste porcelain produced by Jacob Petit (b. 1796). Petit worked at the porcelain factory at Sèvres as a painter. With his brother Mardochée he bought a porcelain factory in Fontainebleau in 1830, finally settling in Paris in 1863. The wares he made were of a purely ornamental character; e.g.,…
- Petit, Philippe (French high-wire artist)
Philippe Petit is a French-born high-wire walker who attained worldwide celebrity on August 7, 1974, with his unauthorized crossing between the newly built twin towers of the World Trade Center in New York City, about 1,350 feet (411 metres) above the ground. Petit was arrested for this exploit and
- Petit, Roland (French dancer and choreographer)
Roland Petit was a French dancer and choreographer whose dramatic ballets combined fantasy with elements of contemporary realism. Trained at the Paris Opéra Ballet school, he joined the company in 1940 but left in 1944 to create and perform his own works at the Théâtre Sarah Bernhardt, in Paris. In
- Petit-Bassam Island (island, Côte d’Ivoire)
Côte d’Ivoire: Urban environment: Petit-Bassam Island, where Treichville lies, also contains the settlements of Marcory and Koumassi. Beyond them Port-Bouët grew up on the seashore, 8 miles (13 km) southeast of Plateau. Squatters helped develop Yopougon-Attié and Abobo across the bay to the west. Greater Abidjan was finally organized…
- Petit-Bourbon, Théâtre du (theater, Paris, France)
Giacomo Torelli: There Torelli equipped the Théâtre du Petit-Bourbon in Paris with numerous devices such as the first effective machinery for rapid changes of heavy sets, which greatly encouraged the development of elaborate stage effects. Among his triumphs in Paris was the operatic production of Andromède (1650) by Pierre Corneille. Torelli…
- Petit-Quevilly, Le (France)
Le Petit-Quevilly, southwestern inner-city suburb of Rouen, Seine-Maritime département, Normandy région, northwestern France, on the Seine River. The name Quevilly comes from the Latin Quevillicium—in ancient French Chivilly, or Chevilli—meaning “a row of spikes” that enclosed a park where the
- Petit-Saint-Bernard, Col du (pass, France)
Little Saint Bernard Pass, pass (7,178 ft [2,188 m]) situated just southwest of the Italian border in Savoie département of southeastern France; it lies between the Mont Blanc Massif (north) and the Graian Alps (south-southeast). The road across the pass connects Bourg-Saint-Maurice (7 mi [11 km]
- Petitcodiac River (river, New Brunswick, Canada)
Petitcodiac River, river in southeastern New Brunswick, Canada. About 60 miles (97 km) long, the river flows northeast and east and then south through a wide estuary (20 miles long) to Shepody Bay, an inlet of Chignecto Bay, and the northern extremity of the Bay of Fundy. A tidal bore or wave, 3–6
- petite Brabançon (dog)
Brussels griffon: …Brussels griffon is called a petit Brabançon.
- Petite Démocrate, La (ship)
Citizen Genêt Affair: …dispatching of the prize ship Little Sarah (refitted as La Petite Démocrate), Washington and his cabinet demanded Genêt’s recall. With the radical Jacobins newly in power in France, his arrest was ordered, and he faced possible death if he returned home. Washington declined to extradite him, and in 1794 Genêt…
- Petite Fadette, La (novel by Sand)
George Sand: …François le Champi (1848), and La Petite Fadette (1849), the familiar theme of George Sand’s work—love transcending the obstacles of convention and class—in the familiar setting of the Berry countryside, regained pride of place. These rustic tales are probably her finest works. She subsequently produced a series of novels and…
- Petite Idole (novel by Bernhardt)
Sarah Bernhardt: International success: …1920 Bernhardt published a novel, Petite Idole, that is not without interest since the actress-heroine of the story constitutes an idealization of its author’s own career and ambitions. Facts and fiction are difficult to disentangle in her autobiography, Ma Double Vie: mémoires de Sarah Bernhardt (1907; My Double Life: Memoirs…
- Petite Kabylie (region, Algeria)
Atlas Mountains: Climate of the Atlas Mountains: …of Mount Babor in the Little Kabylie region are covered with snow for four or five months, while the Moroccan High Atlas retains its snows until the height of summer. Winter in the Atlas is hard, imposing severe conditions upon the inhabitants.
- Petite Paroisse, La (work by Daudet)
Alphonse Daudet: Legacy: …struggling against religious fanaticism; and La Petite Paroisse (1895), the contrarieties of jealousy. In Sapho (1884), underlying the moral issue, there is Daudet’s evaluation of a whole generation of young men, together with a statement of the age-old dilemma of the lover who must choose between freedom and pity for…
- Petite poèmes en prose (work by Baudelaire)
Charles Baudelaire: Prose poems: Baudelaire’s Petits poèmes en prose was published posthumously in 1869 and was later, as intended by the author, entitled Le Spleen de Paris (translated as The Parisian Prowler). He did not live long enough to bring these poems together in a single volume, but it is…
- Petite Rivière Noire, Piton de la (mountain, Mauritius)
Mauritius: Relief and drainage: …(2,717 feet [828 metres]) is Piton de la Petite Rivière Noire in the southwest. The two major rivers, the Grand River South East and the Black River, are the primary sources of hydroelectric power. Lake Vacoas, one of the main reservoirs, is the chief source of water.
- petitio principii (logic)
circular argument, logical fallacy in which the premise of an argument assumes the conclusion to be true. A circular argument’s premise explicitly or implicitly assumes that its conclusion is true rather than providing any supporting statements. If the conclusion and premise were switched, the
- petition (law)
petition, written instrument directed to some individual, official, legislative body, or court in order to redress a grievance or to request the granting of a favour. Petitions are also used to collect signatures to enable a candidate to get on a ballot or to put an issue before the electorate.
- petition (form of prayer)
prayer: Petition: The role of the request in religion has played such a central part that by metonymy (using a word for another expected word) it has given its name to prayer. However contestable this may sometimes be, it is impossible to refuse to recognize the…
- Petition crown (English coin)
coin: Modern coinage: It was the “Petition” crown made by Thomas Simon, engraver at the mint under the Commonwealth, and bears on the edge a petition to the king that he might be given the same office under the restored monarchy. For the great recoinage under William III, provincial mints were…
- petition mill (fraud)
bankruptcy fraud: Petition mills: Petition mills take advantage of poor debtors who wish to save their homes. Under this form of fraud, a tenant will be contacted by an agency offering to work with the debtor’s landlord to prevent eviction. The debtor then agrees to pay the…
- Petition of Right (British history [1628])
Petition of Right, (1628) petition sent by the English Parliament to King Charles I complaining of a series of breaches of law. The petition sought recognition of four principles: no taxation without the consent of Parliament, no imprisonment without cause, no quartering of soldiers on subjects,
- petition, right to (law)
First Amendment: Freedoms of speech, of the press, of assembly, and to petition: …press, of assembly, and to petition—discussed here together as “freedom of expression”—broadly protect expression from governmental restrictions. Thus, for instance, the government may not outlaw antiwar speech, speech praising violence, racist speech, pro-communist speech, and the like. Nor may the government impose special taxes on speech on certain
- Petitot, Jean (Swiss painter)
Jean Petitot was a Swiss painter who was the first great miniature portraitist in enamel. The son of the sculptor Faulle Petitot, he was apprenticed to a Swiss jeweler from 1622 to 1626. About 1633 he went to France, where he probably became the pupil of Jean and Henri Toutin, the originators of
- Petits Enfants du siècle, Les (work by Rochefort)
French literature: Feminist writers: Josyane and the Welfare) and Claire Etcherelli’s Élise; ou, la vraie vie (1967; Elise; or, The Real Life). But an equally significant impact was made by writers looking for ways of transforming masculine language for women-generated versions of feminine subjectivity. The texts of James Joyce…
- Petits poèmes en prose (work by Baudelaire)
Charles Baudelaire: Prose poems: Baudelaire’s Petits poèmes en prose was published posthumously in 1869 and was later, as intended by the author, entitled Le Spleen de Paris (translated as The Parisian Prowler). He did not live long enough to bring these poems together in a single volume, but it is…
- Petkoff, Teodoro (Venezuelan political leader)
Movement Toward Socialism: …the dismissal of its leader, Teodoro Petkoff, for remarks criticizing the Soviet Union’s invasion of Czechoslovakia in 1968 and his rejection of Eurocommunism and the Soviet model. The MAS quickly won the support of most members of the Communist Party and a majority of communist trade union leaders. In the…
- Petkov, Kiril (prime minister of Bulgaria)
North Macedonia: Independence of North Macedonia: …with Bulgaria’s new prime minister, Kiril Petkov, in Sofia in an attempt to reduce tensions between the two countries.
- Petkov, Nikola (Bulgarian officer)
Bulgaria: Consolidation of power: …in November, the Agrarian leader, Nikola Petkov, emerged as the opposition’s principal spokesman. However, he was charged with plotting to overthrow the government and was expelled from the Grand National Assembly along with most of his associates. In June 1947 Petkov was arrested, and on September 23 he was executed.…
- Petkova, Maria (Bulgarian athlete)
Evelin Schlaak: …soon broken by a Bulgarian, Maria Petkova, but at the 1980 Olympics in Moscow, Jahl achieved the four longest throws of the competition, easily defeating Petkova to become the first woman to win consecutive Olympic gold medals in that event. Jahl’s other successes included six East German championships, European championships…
- Petliura, Symon (Ukrainian political leader)
Symon Petlyura was a socialist leader of Ukraine’s unsuccessful fight for independence following the Russian revolutions of 1917. One of the founders of the Ukrainian Social-Democratic Workers’ Party in 1905, Petlyura published two socialist weekly newspapers before the onset of World War I, when
- Petlyura, Symon (Ukrainian political leader)
Symon Petlyura was a socialist leader of Ukraine’s unsuccessful fight for independence following the Russian revolutions of 1917. One of the founders of the Ukrainian Social-Democratic Workers’ Party in 1905, Petlyura published two socialist weekly newspapers before the onset of World War I, when
- Petlyura, Symon Vasylevych (Ukrainian political leader)
Symon Petlyura was a socialist leader of Ukraine’s unsuccessful fight for independence following the Russian revolutions of 1917. One of the founders of the Ukrainian Social-Democratic Workers’ Party in 1905, Petlyura published two socialist weekly newspapers before the onset of World War I, when
- PETM
Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM), a short interval of maximum temperature lasting approximately 100,000 years during the late Paleocene and early Eocene epochs (roughly 55 million years ago). The interval was characterized by the highest global temperatures of the Cenozoic Era (65 million
- PETN (chemical compound)
PETN, a highly explosive organic compound belonging to the same chemical family as nitroglycerin and nitrocellulose. PETN has the chemical formula C5H8N4O12. It is prepared by reacting pentaerythritol (C5H12O4), an alcohol traditionally used in paints and varnishes, with nitric acid (HNO2). The
- Peto Sjarif (Minangkabau leader)
Imam Bondjol was a Minangkabau religious leader and a key member of the Padri faction in the religious Padri War, which divided the Minangkabau people of Sumatra in the 19th century. When in about 1803 three pilgrims inspired by the ideas of the puritan Wahhābī sect returned from Mecca and launched
- Peto, John Frederick (American painter)
John Frederick Peto was an American still-life painter who, though influenced by the style and subject matter of the better-known trompe l’oeil (“fool-the-eye”) still-life painter William Harnett, developed a distinctive mode of expression. Biographical information on Peto is meagre, and few of his
- Petőfi Sándor (Hungarian poet)
Sándor Petőfi was one of the greatest Hungarian poets and a revolutionary who symbolized the Hungarian desire for freedom. Petőfi had an eventful youth; he studied at eight different schools, joined for a short time a group of strolling players, and enlisted as a private soldier, but because of ill
- Petőfi, Sándor (Hungarian poet)
Sándor Petőfi was one of the greatest Hungarian poets and a revolutionary who symbolized the Hungarian desire for freedom. Petőfi had an eventful youth; he studied at eight different schools, joined for a short time a group of strolling players, and enlisted as a private soldier, but because of ill
- Petosiris (Egyptian high priest)
Egyptian art and architecture: Greco-Roman Egypt: …interesting is the tomb of Petosiris, high priest of Thoth in nearby Hermopolis Magna in the late 4th century bce. It is in the form of a small temple with a pillared portico, elaborate column capitals, and a large forecourt. In its mural decorations a strong Greek influence merges with…
- Petoskey (Michigan, United States)
Petoskey, resort city, seat (1902) of Emmet county, northwestern Lower Peninsula of Michigan, U.S. It is located on Little Traverse Bay of Lake Michigan, about 70 miles (110 km) northeast of Traverse City. Settled in 1852 and named for the Ottawa chief Pet-o-sega, it was the site of St. Francis
- Petr Chelčický (Czech author)
Peter Chelčický was a Czech religious and political writer, the foremost thinker of the 15th-century Czech Hussite Reformation movement. A member of the south Bohemian gentry, Chelčický was much influenced by the thought of the English heretic John Wycliffe and the martyred Czech Reformer Jan Hus.
- Petr of Aspelt (Bohemian archbishop)
Czechoslovak history: The Luxembourg dynasty: …of advisers, headed by Archbishop Petr of Aspelt, tried to uphold the royal authority. In the resulting conflict, a powerful aristocratic faction scored a decisive victory in 1318. Its leader, Jindřich of Lípa, virtually ruled over Bohemia until his death in 1329. Meanwhile, John found satisfaction in tournaments and military…
- PETRA (collider)
DESY: …DESY completed construction of the Positron-Electron Tandem Ring Accelerator (PETRA), a larger collider capable of reaching 19 GeV per beam. In 1979 experiments with PETRA yielded the first direct evidence for the existence of gluons, the messenger particles of the strong force that bind quarks together within protons and
- Petra (ancient city, Jordan)
Petra, ancient city, centre of an Arab kingdom in Hellenistic and Roman times, the ruins of which are in southwest Jordan. The city was built on a terrace, pierced from east to west by the Wadi Mūsā (the Valley of Moses)—one of the places where, according to tradition, the Israelite leader Moses
- Petra Velikogo, Zaliv (inlet, Sea of Japan)
Peter the Great Bay, inlet, Sea of Japan, northwestern Pacific Ocean, in the Maritime (Primorye) region of far eastern Russia. The bay extends for 115 miles (185 km) from the mouth of the Tumen River (on the Russian-Chinese border) northeast across to Cape Povorotny. The bay reaches inland for 55
- Petra-Sancta system (heraldry)
heraldry: The reading of heraldry: …as the system of Sylvester Petra-Sancta, an Italian herald, it makes use of the following equivalents: argent is denoted by a plain field, or by dots or points, gules by perpendicular lines, azure by horizontal lines, vert by lines from dexter chief to sinister base, purpure by lines from sinister…
- Petracha (king of Ayutthaya)
Phetracha was the king of the Tai kingdom of Ayutthaya, or Siam (ruled 1688–1703), whose policies reduced European trade and influence in the country and helped preserve its independence. Phetracha was the foster brother of King Narai, whose patronage helped him rise to become head of the Elephant
- Petraeus, David (United States commander in chief of Central Command)
David Petraeus is a U.S. army general who was appointed by Pres. George W. Bush to head multinational forces in Iraq (2007–08) and who later served as commander in chief of Central Command (Centcom; 2008–10) and as commander of U.S. and NATO forces in Afghanistan (2010–11). He later was director of
- Petraeus, David Howell (United States commander in chief of Central Command)
David Petraeus is a U.S. army general who was appointed by Pres. George W. Bush to head multinational forces in Iraq (2007–08) and who later served as commander in chief of Central Command (Centcom; 2008–10) and as commander of U.S. and NATO forces in Afghanistan (2010–11). He later was director of
- Petrakis, Harry Mark (American author)
Harry Mark Petrakis was an American novelist and short-story writer whose exuberant and sensitive works deal with the lives of Greek immigrants in urban America. Petrakis, the son of an Eastern Orthodox priest, attended the University of Illinois (1940–41) and held a variety of jobs to support
- Petralona skull (hominin fossil)
Petralona skull, an ancient human cranium discovered in 1960 in a cave near Thessaloníki, northeastern Greece. The age of this skull has been difficult to establish. At first it was believed to be contemporary with Neanderthals, perhaps no older than 120,000 years. Some methods, however, indicate
- Petrarca, Francesco (Italian poet)
Petrarch was an Italian scholar, poet, and humanist whose poems addressed to Laura, an idealized beloved, contributed to the Renaissance flowering of lyric poetry. Petrarch’s inquiring mind and love of Classical authors led him to travel, visiting men of learning and searching monastic libraries
- Petrarch (Italian poet)
Petrarch was an Italian scholar, poet, and humanist whose poems addressed to Laura, an idealized beloved, contributed to the Renaissance flowering of lyric poetry. Petrarch’s inquiring mind and love of Classical authors led him to travel, visiting men of learning and searching monastic libraries
- Petrarch’s Secret (work by Petrarch)
Petrarch: Moral and literary evolution (1340–46) of Petrarch: …a common reading of the Secretum meum (1342–43). It is an autobiographical treatise consisting of three dialogues between Petrarch and St. Augustine in the presence of Truth. In it he maintains hope that, even amidst worldly preoccupations and error, even while absorbed in himself and his own affairs, a man…
- Petrarchan conceit (literature)
conceit: The Petrarchan conceit, which was especially popular with Renaissance writers of sonnets, is a hyperbolic comparison most often made by a suffering lover of his beautiful mistress to some physical object—e.g., a tomb, the ocean, the sun. Edmund Spenser’s Epithalamion, for instance, characterizes the beloved’s eyes…
- Petrarchan sonnet (poetry)
sonnet: …beloved, Laura—established and perfected the Petrarchan (or Italian) sonnet, which remains one of the two principal sonnet forms, as well as the one most widely used. The other major form is the English (or Shakespearean) sonnet.
- Petrarchism (literature)
Italian literature: Petrarch (1304–74): The literary phenomenon known as Petrarchism developed rapidly within the poet’s lifetime and continued to grow during the following three centuries, deeply influencing the literatures of Italy, Spain, France, and England. His followers did not merely imitate but accepted his practice of strict literary discipline and his forms, including his…
- Petrashevsky Circle (Russian intellectual organization)
Fyodor Dostoyevsky: Political activity and arrest of Fyodor Dostoyevsky: …began to participate in the Petrashevsky Circle, a group of intellectuals who discussed utopian socialism. He eventually joined a related, secret group devoted to revolution and illegal propaganda. It appears that Dostoyevsky did not sympathize (as others did) with egalitarian communism and terrorism but was motivated by his strong disapproval…
- Petrassi, Goffredo (Italian musician)
Goffredo Petrassi was one of the most influential Italian composers of the 20th century. He is known for incorporating various avant-garde techniques into a highly personal style. Petrassi was born to a family of modest means. He studied voice for some time at the Schola Cantorum di San Salvatore
- Petre (New Zealand)
Wanganui, city (“district”) and port, southwestern North Island, New Zealand, near the mouth of the Wanganui River. The site lies within a tract bought by the New Zealand Company in 1840. The company established a settlement in 1841 and named it Petre. It was renamed in 1844, the present name
- Petre, Sir Edward, 2nd Baronet (English Jesuit)
Sir Edward Petre, 2nd Baronet was an English Jesuit, favourite of King James II of Great Britain. Educated in France, he entered the Society of Jesus in 1652 and took orders in 1671, when he returned to England. In 1679 he succeeded to the family baronetcy and estates and was appointed vice
- Petrea (plant genus)
Verbenaceae: Outstanding among the 30 Petrea species, all tropical American, is a woody evergreen vine called purple wreath, or sandpaper vine (P. volubilis). It bears long, hanging clusters of violet-blue pansylike flowers and has oval leaves so rough as to be likened to sandpaper. The 220 species of the genus…
- Petrea volubilis (plant)
Verbenaceae: …a woody evergreen vine called purple wreath, or sandpaper vine (P. volubilis). It bears long, hanging clusters of violet-blue pansylike flowers and has oval leaves so rough as to be likened to sandpaper. The 220 species of the genus Lippia bear clusters of white, rose, or purplish flowers. L. canescens…
- Petreius, Johann (German printer)
Nicolaus Copernicus: Publication of De revolutionibus of Nicolaus Copernicus: …top printer in the city, Johann Petreius, who had published a number of ancient and modern astrological works during the 1530s. It was not uncommon for authors to participate directly in the printing of their manuscripts, sometimes even living in the printer’s home. However, Rheticus was unable to remain and…
- petrel (bird)
petrel, any of a number of seabirds of the order Procellariiformes, particularly certain members of the family Procellariidae, which also includes the fulmars and the shearwaters. Members of the family Hydrobatidae are increasingly called storm petrels; those of the Pelecanoididae are usually
- Petrenko, Kirill (Russian-born conductor)
Bavarian State Orchestra: Kirill Petrenko succeeded Nagano in 2013.
- Petrenko, Viktor (Ukrainian figure skater)
Oksana Baiul: …Zmiyvskaya and fellow figure skater Viktor Petrenko (1992 World and Olympic gold medalist), Baiul began to flourish. She won the World Championships in 1993.
- Petrescu, Cezar (Romanian author)
Romanian literature: Between the wars: …as for a number of Cezar Petrescu’s novels and even some of Ion Minulescu’s poems. Hortensia Papadat-Bengescu’s trilogy of novels (Fecioarele despletite [1926; “Disheveled Virgins”], Concert din muzică de Bach [1927; “A Bach Concert”], and Drumul ascuns [1933; “The Hidden Way”]) is a document of changing lifestyles and urbanization, similar…
- Petrescu, Elena (wife of Nicolae Ceauşescu)
Nicolae Ceaușescu: In 1939 he married Elena Petrescu, a Communist activist. While in prison, Ceaușescu became a protégé of his cell mate, the Communist leader Gheorghe Gheorghiu-Dej, who would become the undisputed Communist leader of Romania beginning in 1952. Escaping prison in August 1944 shortly before the Soviet occupation of Romania,…
- Petri, Elio (Italian filmmaker)
Elio Petri was an Italian motion-picture director and screenwriter. Petri’s formal education was limited; most of his formative experiences occurred on the streets, in his neighbourhood, and in the local cell of the Italian Communist Party, of which he was a militant member until 1956. That year,
- Petri, Laurentius (Swedish archbishop)
Laurentius Petri was a Lutheran churchman, a leader of the Protestant Reformation in Sweden and the first Protestant archbishop of Uppsala (1531–73). His influence was very great, although he was less dynamic and forceful than his brother Olaus. The Swedish Bible of 1541, for which he was
- Petri, Olaus (Swedish church leader)
Olaus Petri was a Lutheran churchman who, with his brother Laurentius, played a decisive role in the reformation of the Swedish church. He studied at Wittenberg (1516–18) and absorbed the reformed teaching of Martin Luther and Philipp Melanchthon. When Gustavus Vasa was crowned king in 1523, Olaus
- Petrie, Andrew (Australian explorer)
Maroochydore: …Maroochy River was sighted by Andrew Petrie in 1862, and Petrie took the name for the river and the district from an Aboriginal word meaning “water where the black swan lives.” The town of Maroochydore, founded in 1900 as a port serving inland districts and for timber exports from the…
- Petrie, Daniel (Canadian director)
A Raisin in the Sun: The film was nominated for two Golden Globe Awards—for best actress for McNeil and best actor for
- Petrie, Sir Flinders (British archaeologist)
Sir Flinders Petrie was a British archaeologist and Egyptologist who made valuable contributions to the techniques and methods of field excavation and invented a sequence dating method that made possible the reconstruction of history from the remains of ancient cultures. He was knighted in 1923.
- Petrie, Sir William Matthew Flinders (British archaeologist)
Sir Flinders Petrie was a British archaeologist and Egyptologist who made valuable contributions to the techniques and methods of field excavation and invented a sequence dating method that made possible the reconstruction of history from the remains of ancient cultures. He was knighted in 1923.
- Petrified Forest National Monument (monument, Argentina)
Santa Cruz: The northeast-central Petrified Forest National Monument (1954) covers nearly 14 square miles (35 square km). Los Glaciares National Park, which lies farther south and has an area of 1,722 square miles (4,459 square km), including Lake Argentino, was designated a UNESCO World Heritage site in 1981. In…
- Petrified Forest National Park (national park, Arizona, United States)
Petrified Forest National Park, desert area containing plant and animal fossils and archaeological sites in eastern Arizona, U.S., 19 miles (30 km) east of Holbrook. It was established as a national monument in 1906 and as a national park in 1962. The area within the park proper is 146 square miles