- Welsh poppy (plant)
Meconopsis: …European representative is the yellow-flowered Welsh poppy (M. cambrica).
- Welsh rabbit (food)
Welsh rarebit, a traditional British dish consisting of toasted bread topped with a savory cheddar cheese sauce that typically includes such ingredients as beer or ale, Worcestershire sauce, cayenne, mustard, and paprika. If an egg is served atop the dish, it is called buck rarebit. The origins of
- Welsh rarebit (food)
Welsh rarebit, a traditional British dish consisting of toasted bread topped with a savory cheddar cheese sauce that typically includes such ingredients as beer or ale, Worcestershire sauce, cayenne, mustard, and paprika. If an egg is served atop the dish, it is called buck rarebit. The origins of
- Welsh Revenue Authority (Welsh government)
Wales: Constitutional framework: …of 2014, which established the Welsh Revenue Authority to manage and collect taxes for the Welsh government. The 60-seat National Assembly comprises 40 members who are directly elected from the 40 parliamentary constituencies and an additional 20 members who are elected through proportional representation. The National Assembly elects a first…
- Welsh springer spaniel (breed of dog)
springer spaniel: The Welsh springer spaniel, known since at least the 14th century, is somewhat smaller than the English; its flat coat is always red-brown and white, with feathering on the chest, legs, and belly. It stands 17 to 19 inches (43 to 48 cm). It is noted…
- Welsh terrier (breed of dog)
Welsh terrier, breed of terrier native to Wales, where it has been used as a hunter of foxes, otters, and badgers. The Welsh terrier is a small, Airedale-like dog with a characteristically game and energetic nature. It has a hard, wiry coat, usually black-and-tan, stands about 15 inches (38 cm)
- Welshpool (Wales, United Kingdom)
Welshpool, town, Powys county, historic county of Montgomeryshire, eastern Wales. It lies in the valley of the River Severn, just west of the boundary with Shropshire, England. Welshpool’s charter, granting market rights, dates from 1263. Lying near the English border, the town showed pro-English
- Welt als Wille und Vorstellung, Die (work by Schopenhauer)
continental philosophy: Schopenhauer: In his major philosophical work, The World as Will and Representation (1819), Schopenhauer reiterated Kant’s claim that, given the structure of human cognition, knowledge of things as they really are is impossible; the best that can be obtained are comparatively superficial representations of things.
- Welt ist schön, Die (work by Renger-Patzsch)
Albert Renger-Patzsch: In his book Die Welt ist schön (1928; “The World Is Beautiful”), he showed images from both nature and industry, all treated in his clear, transparent style. Such images were closely related to the paintings of the Neue Sachlichkeit movement of painters, who created detached and literal renderings…
- Welt, Die (German newspaper)
Die Welt, daily newspaper, one of the most influential in Germany and the only one of national scope and stature published in Bonn during that city’s time as West German capital. Die Welt was established in 1946 as a four-page semiweekly by British occupation authorities in Hamburg. The paper’s
- Weltalter, Die (work by Schelling)
Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph von Schelling: Period of the later, unpublished philosophy: …Die Weltalter (written in 1811; The Ages of the World) and through the manuscripts of his later lectures. In Die Weltalter Schelling wanted to relate the history of God. God, who originally is absorbed in a quiet longing, comes to himself by glimpsing in himself ideas through which he becomes…
- Weltbühne, Die (journal)
Carl von Ossietzky: …and became editor of the Weltbühne, a liberal political weekly, in 1927, where in a series of articles he unmasked the Reichswehr (German army) leaders’ secret preparations for rearmament. Accused of treason, Ossietzky was sentenced in November 1931 to 18 months’ imprisonment but was granted amnesty in December 1932.
- Weltbürgertum und Nationalstaat (work by Meinecke)
Friedrich Meinecke: In Weltbürgertum und Nationalstaat (1908; Cosmopolitanism and the National State), he optimistically traced Germany’s emergence from the cosmopolitanism of the 18th century to the nationalism of the 19th. His Idee der Staatsräson in der neueren Geschichte (1924; Machiavellism; the Doctrine of Raison d’État and Its Place in Modern History) has…
- Weltchronik (work by Rudolf von Ems)
Rudolf von Ems: …Alexander, Willehalm von Orlens, and Weltchronik, an ambitious, uncompleted world chronicle that ends with the death of Solomon. The popularity of Rudolf’s writings can be gauged by the fact that there are more than 80 extant manuscripts and manuscript fragments of the Weltchronik alone.
- Weltgeschichte des jüdischen Volkes, Die (work by Dubnow)
Simon Markovich Dubnow: …historical studies is his monumental Die Weltgeschichte des jüdischen Volkes, 10 vol. (1925–30; “The World History of the Jewish People”; Eng. trans. History of the Jews), which was translated into several languages. The work is notable for its scholarship, impartiality, and cognizance of social and economic currents in Jewish history.…
- Weltgeschichtliche Betrachtungen (work by Burckhardt)
Jacob Burckhardt: Works of Jacob Burckhardt: Weltgeschichtliche Betrachtungen (1905; Force and Freedom: Reflections on History, 1943) epitomizes his philosophy of history. Historische Fragmente (“Historical Fragments,” 1929 in Gesamtausgabe; Judgments on History and Historians, 1958) selects highlights from his lecture manuscripts and demonstrates impressively Burckhardt’s gift for visualizing history as a whole. Both books contain…
- Welti, Emil (Swiss statesman)
Emil Welti was a statesman, six times president of the Swiss Confederation, and a champion of federal centralization. Political leader and Landammann (chief executive) of his native canton of Aargau in 1858, 1862, and 1866, Welti entered the federal Ständerat (council of cantons) in 1857 and
- Welti, Friedrich Emil (Swiss statesman)
Emil Welti was a statesman, six times president of the Swiss Confederation, and a champion of federal centralization. Political leader and Landammann (chief executive) of his native canton of Aargau in 1858, 1862, and 1866, Welti entered the federal Ständerat (council of cantons) in 1857 and
- Weltkirche (religion)
Roman Catholicism: The church since Vatican II: …called the emergence of the Weltkirche (German: “world church”). Vatican II was not dominated by the churches of Europe and the Americas, the traditional centres of Catholic strength. The Weltkirche continued to develop during the rest of the 20th century, as the Catholic church established a vigorous presence in Africa…
- Weltpolitik (German history)
20th-century international relations: Germany’s new course: …in favour of a flamboyant Weltpolitik (world policy) aimed at making Germany’s presence abroad commensurate with her new industrial might. Where Bismarck considered colonies a dangerous luxury given Germany’s geographic position, the kaiser thought them indispensable for Germany’s future. Where Bismarck sought alliances to avoid the risk of war on…
- Weltschmerz (Romantic literary concept)
Weltschmerz, the prevailing mood of melancholy and pessimism associated with the poets of the Romantic era that arose from their refusal or inability to adjust to those realities of the world that they saw as destructive of their right to subjectivity and personal freedom—a phenomenon thought to
- Welty, Eudora (American author)
Eudora Welty was an American short-story writer and novelist whose work is mainly focused with great precision on the regional manners of people inhabiting a small Mississippi town that resembles her own birthplace and the Delta country. Welty attended Mississippi State College for Women before
- Welty, Eudora Alice (American author)
Eudora Welty was an American short-story writer and novelist whose work is mainly focused with great precision on the regional manners of people inhabiting a small Mississippi town that resembles her own birthplace and the Delta country. Welty attended Mississippi State College for Women before
- Welwitschia (gnetophyte genus)
plant: Annotated classification: >Welwitschia. Division Pinophyta (conifers) Gymnospermous plants; mostly trees with abundant xylem composed of tracheids only; resin ducts present; leaves simple, needlelike, scalelike, with a single vein or, less commonly, strap-shaped with multiple veins; reproduction by well-defined cones; seeds exposed on
- welwitschia (plant)
welwitschia, (Welwitschia mirabilis), unusual gymnosperm plant that is the sole member of the gnetophyte family Welwitschiaceae. Welwitschia is found only in the Namib desert of southwestern Africa near the coast of Angola and Namibia as well as inland to about 150 km (more than 90 miles). It is
- Welwitschia bainesii (plant)
welwitschia, (Welwitschia mirabilis), unusual gymnosperm plant that is the sole member of the gnetophyte family Welwitschiaceae. Welwitschia is found only in the Namib desert of southwestern Africa near the coast of Angola and Namibia as well as inland to about 150 km (more than 90 miles). It is
- Welwitschia mirabilis (plant)
welwitschia, (Welwitschia mirabilis), unusual gymnosperm plant that is the sole member of the gnetophyte family Welwitschiaceae. Welwitschia is found only in the Namib desert of southwestern Africa near the coast of Angola and Namibia as well as inland to about 150 km (more than 90 miles). It is
- Welwitschiaceae (gnetophyte family)
Welwitschiaceae, family of gymnosperm plants in the order Gnetales. The only extant genus, Welwitschia, comprises a single species, W. mirabilis, native to the Namib desert of southwestern Africa. A number of fossilized leafy shoots, seedlings, pollen, and microstrobili (cones) similar to
- Welwitschiales (gnetophyte order)
gnetophyte: Annotated classification: Order Welwitschiales 2 immense, permanent leaves, which become split and frayed with age; seeds with winglike extensions that may aid in dispersal; restricted to Namib Desert of Africa and vicinity; 1 family, Welwitschiaceae, with 1 member, Welwitschia mirabilis. There
- Welwyn (England, United Kingdom)
Welwyn Garden City, new town and urban area (from 2011 built-up area) in Welwyn Hatfield district, administrative and historic county of Hertfordshire, southeast-central England. It is located on the northern periphery of London. It was founded in 1920 by Sir Ebenezer Howard as a planned town to
- Welwyn Garden City (England, United Kingdom)
Welwyn Garden City, new town and urban area (from 2011 built-up area) in Welwyn Hatfield district, administrative and historic county of Hertfordshire, southeast-central England. It is located on the northern periphery of London. It was founded in 1920 by Sir Ebenezer Howard as a planned town to
- Welwyn Hatfield (district, England, United Kingdom)
Welwyn Hatfield, district, administrative and historic county of Hertfordshire, southeastern England, directly north of the metropolitan county of Greater London. Welwyn Garden City is the district seat. Welwyn Hatfield district is an area of rolling open countryside within the Thames basin, and
- Wembanyama, Victor (French basketball player)
Victor Wembanyama is a French professional basketball player known for his graceful style of play and extraordinary height (7 feet 4 inches [2.23 meters]). He was widely considered to be the most promising prospect of his generation when he was selected by the San Antonio Spurs with the first pick
- Wembley (England, United Kingdom)
Brent: …1965 by the amalgamation of Wembley and Willesden (both in the former Middlesex county). It is named for the small River Brent, a tributary of the River Thames that formed the boundary between the former boroughs of Wembley and Willesden. Within the borough are Victorian and later residential suburbs, industrial…
- Wembley Stadium (stadium, London, United Kingdom)
Wembley Stadium, stadium in the borough of Brent in northwestern London, England, built as a replacement for an older structure of the same name on the same site. The new Wembley was the largest stadium in Great Britain at the time of its opening in 2007, with a seating capacity of 90,000. It is
- Weme River (river, Africa)
Ouémé River, river rising in the Atacora massif in northwestern Benin. It is approximately 310 miles (500 km) in length and flows southward, where it is joined by its main affluent, the Okpara, on the left bank and by the Zou on the right. It then divides into two branches, the western one
- Wemlinger, Claire (American actress)
Claire Trevor was an American actor who appeared in dozens of motion pictures during her half-century-long career, often as a tough-talking though vulnerable and kindhearted floozy. Films of the 1930s and ’40s provided many of her most notable roles, among them a prostitute in Stagecoach (1939); a
- Wemys, Jean Margaret (Canadian writer)
Margaret Laurence was a Canadian writer whose novels portray strong women striving for self-realization while immersed in the daily struggle to make a living in a male-dominated world. Her first publications reflect her life with her engineer husband (later divorced) in Somaliland (1950–52) and
- Wen Bi (Chinese artist)
Wen Zhengming was a Chinese painter, calligrapher, and scholarly figure who was a student of Shen Zhou; these two artists are considered the leading figures of the Wu school of scholar-artists in China. Born to an established family, Wen Zhengming was brought up in a strongly Confucian home, and he
- Wen Boren (Chinese painter)
Chinese painting: Ming dynasty (1368–1644): …Wen Jia and his nephew Wen Boren. Their landscapes display a lyrical delicacy in composition, touch, and colour, qualities that in the work of lesser late Ming artists of the Wu school degenerated into a precious and artificial style.
- Wen Chang (Chinese deity)
Wendi, the Chinese god of literature, whose chief heavenly task, assigned by the Jade Emperor (Yudi), is to keep a log of men of letters so that he can mete out rewards and punishments to each according to merit. He also maintains a register of the titles and honours each writer has received. Among
- Wen Chang Dijun (Chinese deity)
Wendi, the Chinese god of literature, whose chief heavenly task, assigned by the Jade Emperor (Yudi), is to keep a log of men of letters so that he can mete out rewards and punishments to each according to merit. He also maintains a register of the titles and honours each writer has received. Among
- Wen Cheng-ming (Chinese artist)
Wen Zhengming was a Chinese painter, calligrapher, and scholarly figure who was a student of Shen Zhou; these two artists are considered the leading figures of the Wu school of scholar-artists in China. Born to an established family, Wen Zhengming was brought up in a strongly Confucian home, and he
- Wen Feiqing (Chinese poet)
Wen Tingyun was a Chinese lyric poet of the late Tang dynasty who helped to establish a new style of versification associated with the ci form, which flourished in the subsequent Song dynasty (960–1279). Derived from ballads performed by professional female singers in the wineshops and brothels of
- Wen fu (work by Lu Ji)
Lu Ji: The Art of Writing), a subtle and important work of literary criticism that defines and demonstrates the principles of composition with rare insight and precision.
- Wen hsüan (Chinese literary work)
Xie Lingyun: …Six Dynasties poets in the Wenxuan (“Literary Anthology”), the 6th-century canon that defined later Chinese literary tastes.
- Wen Jia (Chinese painter)
Chinese painting: Ming dynasty (1368–1644): …gifted pupils were his son Wen Jia and his nephew Wen Boren. Their landscapes display a lyrical delicacy in composition, touch, and colour, qualities that in the work of lesser late Ming artists of the Wu school degenerated into a precious and artificial style.
- Wen Jiabao (premier of China)
Wen Jiabao is a Chinese official who was the premier (prime minister) of China from 2003 to 2013. Wen studied at the Beijing Institute of Geology, where he earned a graduate degree in structural geology in 1968. While a student at the institute, he joined the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), and upon
- Wen Qi (Chinese poet)
Wen Tingyun was a Chinese lyric poet of the late Tang dynasty who helped to establish a new style of versification associated with the ci form, which flourished in the subsequent Song dynasty (960–1279). Derived from ballads performed by professional female singers in the wineshops and brothels of
- Wen T’ing-yün (Chinese poet)
Wen Tingyun was a Chinese lyric poet of the late Tang dynasty who helped to establish a new style of versification associated with the ci form, which flourished in the subsequent Song dynasty (960–1279). Derived from ballads performed by professional female singers in the wineshops and brothels of
- Wen Ti (Chinese deity)
Wendi, the Chinese god of literature, whose chief heavenly task, assigned by the Jade Emperor (Yudi), is to keep a log of men of letters so that he can mete out rewards and punishments to each according to merit. He also maintains a register of the titles and honours each writer has received. Among
- Wen Tingyun (Chinese poet)
Wen Tingyun was a Chinese lyric poet of the late Tang dynasty who helped to establish a new style of versification associated with the ci form, which flourished in the subsequent Song dynasty (960–1279). Derived from ballads performed by professional female singers in the wineshops and brothels of
- Wen Tong (Chinese painter)
Chinese painting: Song (960–1279), Liao (907–1125), and Jin (1115–1234) dynasties: …Mi Fu, the bamboo painter Wen Tong, the plum painter and priest Zhongren Huaguang, and the figure and horse painter Li Gonglin. Su and Mi, together with their friend Huang Tingjian, were also the foremost calligraphers of the dynasty, all three developing the tradition established by Zhang Xu, Yan Zhenqing,…
- Wen Yiduo (Chinese poet)
Chinese literature: May Fourth period: Xu Zhimo and the American-educated Wen Yiduo, were creating new forms based on Western models, introducing the beauty of music and colour into their extremely popular lyrical verse.
- Wen Zhengming (Chinese artist)
Wen Zhengming was a Chinese painter, calligrapher, and scholarly figure who was a student of Shen Zhou; these two artists are considered the leading figures of the Wu school of scholar-artists in China. Born to an established family, Wen Zhengming was brought up in a strongly Confucian home, and he
- Wen-Amon (Egyptian official)
prophecy: The ancient Middle East: …Egyptian text (11th century bce), Wen-Amon (a temple official at Karnak) was sent by the pharaoh to Gebal (Byblos) to procure timber. While Wen-Amon was there, a young noble of that city was seized by his god and in frenzy gave a message to the king of Gebal that the…
- Wen-chou (China)
Wenzhou, city and port, southeastern Zhejiang sheng (province), southeastern China. It is situated on the south bank of the Ou River, some 19 miles (30 km) from its mouth. The estuary of the Ou River is much obstructed by small islands and mudbanks, but the port is accessible by ships of up to
- Wen-hsiang (Chinese statesman)
Wenxiang was an official and statesman in the last years of the Qing dynasty (1644–1911/12), who took a lead in promoting Western studies, reforming the Chinese government, and introducing Western technology into China. In 1861 Wenxiang was appointed the first principal director of the Zongli
- wen-jen-hua (Chinese painting)
wenrenhua, ideal form of the Chinese scholar-painter who was more interested in personal erudition and expression than in literal representation or an immediately attractive surface beauty. First formulated in the Northern Song period (960–1127)—at which time it was called shidafuhua—by the
- Wen-shu Shih-li (bodhisattva)
Mañjuśrī, in Mahāyāna Buddhism, the bodhisattva (“Buddha-to-be”) personifying supreme wisdom. His name in Sanskrit means “gentle, or sweet, glory”; he is also known as Mãnjughoṣa (“Sweet Voice”) and Vāgīśvara (“Lord of Speech”). In China he is called Wen-shu Shih-li, in Japan Monju, and in Tibet
- Wen-ti (emperor of Sui dynasty)
Wendi was the emperor who reigned from 581–604 and reunified and reorganized China after 300 years of instability, founding the Sui dynasty (581–618). He conquered southern China, which long had been divided into numerous small kingdoms, and he broke the power of the Turks in the northern part of
- Wen-ti (emperor of Han dynasty)
Wendi was the posthumous name (shi) of the fourth emperor (reigned 180–157 bc) of the Han dynasty (206 bc–ad 220) of China. His reign was marked by good government and the peaceful consolidation of imperial power. A son of Liu Bang (the Gaozu emperor), the founder of the Han dynasty, Liu Heng was
- Wen-tsung (emperor of Tang dynasty)
Wenzong was the temple name (miaohao) of the 15th emperor (reigned 827–840) of the Tang dynasty (618–907) of China. He attempted unsuccessfully to free the court from the influence of the palace eunuchs, who had usurped much of the imperial power. His carefully laid plots against the eunuchs all
- Wen-wang (ruler of Zhou)
Wenwang was the father of Ji Fa (the Wuwang emperor), the founder of the Zhou dynasty (1046–256 bc) and one of the sage rulers regarded by Confucian historians as a model king. Wen was the ruler of Zhou, one of the semibarbaric states on the western frontier of China, long a battleground between
- wen-yen (Chinese literary language)
Chinese languages: Han and Classical Chinese: Han Chinese developed more polysyllabic words and more specific verbal and nominal (noun) categories of words. Most traces of verb formation and verb conjugation began to disappear. An independent Southern tradition (on the Yangtze River), simultaneous with Late Archaic Chinese, developed a special…
- Wenan (Chinese philosopher)
Lu Jiuyuan was an idealist neo-Confucian philosopher of the Southern Song and rival of his contemporary, the great neo-Confucian rationalist Zhu Xi. Lu’s thought was revised and refined three centuries later by the Ming dynasty neo-Confucian Wang Yangming. The name of their school is the Learning
- Wenatchee (Washington, United States)
Wenatchee, city, seat (1899) of Chelan county, central Washington, U.S., in the foothills of the Cascade Range, just below the confluence of the Wenatchee and Columbia rivers, opposite East Wenatchee; the name derives from the Yakima Indian wenachi, meaning “river flowing from a canyon.” It was
- Wenatchee (people)
Plateau Indian: Language: Sinkaietk, Lake, Wenatchee, Sanpoil, Nespelim, Spokan, Kalispel, Pend d’Oreille, Coeur d’Alene, and Flathead peoples. Some early works incorrectly denote all Salishan groups as “Flathead.”
- Wenceslas (king of Bohemia and Germany)
Wenceslas was a German king and, as Wenceslas IV, king of Bohemia. His weak and tempestuous, though eventful, reign was continually plagued by wars and princely rivalries that he was unable to control, plunging his territories into a state of virtual anarchy until he was stripped of his powers
- Wenceslas (Holy Roman emperor)
Charles IV was a German king and king of Bohemia from 1346 to 1378 and Holy Roman emperor from 1355 to 1378, one of the most learned and diplomatically skillful sovereigns of his time. He gained more through diplomacy than others did by war, and through purchases, marriages, and inheritance he
- Wenceslas I (king of Bohemia)
Wenceslas I was the king of Bohemia from 1230 who brought Austria under his dynasty while using the influence of German colonists and craftsmen to keep Bohemia strong, prosperous, and culturally progressive. Succeeding his father, Přemysl Otakar I, in 1230, Wenceslas prevented Mongol armies from
- Wenceslas I (prince of Bohemia)
Wenceslas I ; feast day September 28) was the prince of Bohemia, a martyr, and the patron saint of the Czech Republic. Wencelas was raised a Christian by his grandmother St. Ludmila, but his ambitious mother, Drahomíra (Dragomir), a pagan, had her murdered and acted as regent herself, until
- Wenceslas II (king of Bohemia and Poland)
Wenceslas II was the king of Bohemia from 1278 and of Poland from 1300 who ably ruled his Bohemian kingdom and spread his influence not only into Poland but also into Hungary. Succeeding to the throne at the age of seven on the death of his father, Přemysl Otakar II, in 1278, Wenceslas lived at the
- Wenceslas III (king of Bohemia and Hungary)
Wenceslas III was the last king of the Přemyslid dynasty of Bohemia, king of Hungary from 1301 to 1304, and claimant to the Polish throne; his brief reign in Bohemia was cut short by his assassination, which also prevented him from asserting his right to Poland. Wenceslas renounced his hereditary
- Wenceslas IV (king of Bohemia and Germany)
Wenceslas was a German king and, as Wenceslas IV, king of Bohemia. His weak and tempestuous, though eventful, reign was continually plagued by wars and princely rivalries that he was unable to control, plunging his territories into a state of virtual anarchy until he was stripped of his powers
- Wenceslas, Saint (prince of Bohemia)
Wenceslas I ; feast day September 28) was the prince of Bohemia, a martyr, and the patron saint of the Czech Republic. Wencelas was raised a Christian by his grandmother St. Ludmila, but his ambitious mother, Drahomíra (Dragomir), a pagan, had her murdered and acted as regent herself, until
- Wencheng (Chinese philosopher)
Wang Yangming was a Chinese scholar-official whose idealistic interpretation of neo-Confucianism influenced philosophical thinking in East Asia for centuries. Though his career in government was rather unstable, his suppression of rebellions brought a century of peace to his region. His
- Wenchuan Da Dizhen (China)
Sichuan earthquake of 2008, massive and enormously devastating earthquake that occurred in the mountainous central region of Sichuan province in southwestern China on May 12, 2008. The epicentre of the magnitude-7.9 quake (measured as magnitude 8.0 by the Chinese) was located near the city of
- Wenchuan dizhen (China)
Sichuan earthquake of 2008, massive and enormously devastating earthquake that occurred in the mountainous central region of Sichuan province in southwestern China on May 12, 2008. The epicentre of the magnitude-7.9 quake (measured as magnitude 8.0 by the Chinese) was located near the city of
- Wenchuan Earthquake (China)
Sichuan earthquake of 2008, massive and enormously devastating earthquake that occurred in the mountainous central region of Sichuan province in southwestern China on May 12, 2008. The epicentre of the magnitude-7.9 quake (measured as magnitude 8.0 by the Chinese) was located near the city of
- Wend (people)
Wend, any member of a group of Slavic tribes that had settled in the area between the Oder River (on the east) and the Elbe and Saale rivers (on the west) by the 5th century ad, in what is now eastern Germany. The Wends occupied the eastern borders of the domain of the Franks and other Germanic
- Wend Kuuni (film by Kaboré [1983])
Third Cinema: …and Burkinabé director Gaston Kaboré’s Wend Kuuni (1983; “God’s Gift”), about a mute boy who regains his speech after viewing a tragedy, characterize the second phase. In the third phase, combative films, such as Chilean film director Miguel Littin’s La tierra prometida (1973; The Promised Land), place production in the…
- Wendat (people)
Huron, Iroquoian-speaking North American Indians who were living along the St. Lawrence River when contacted by French explorer Jacques Cartier in 1534. Many aspects of Huron culture were similar to those of other Northeast Indians. Traditionally, the Huron lived in villages of large bark-covered
- Wendat Confederacy (American Indian confederacy)
Wendat Confederacy, among North American Indians, a confederacy of four Iroquois-speaking bands of the Huron nation—the Rock, Bear, Cord, and Deer bands—together with a few smaller communities that joined them at different periods for protection against the Iroquois Confederacy. When first
- Wendel, Heinrich (German theatrical designer)
Heinrich Wendel was a German theatrical designer who pioneered new techniques in stagecraft with the Wuppertal theatre company from 1953 to 1964 and then with the German Opera on the Rhine, Düsseldorf. Wendel trained in Bremen, Berlin, and Hamburg and during World War II worked for theatres in
- Wenden (Latvia)
Cēsis, city and district centre, Latvia, situated on the Gauja River at the foot of the Vidzeme (Livonia) highlands, 55 miles (90 km) northeast of the city of Riga. It is an old city, first mentioned in documents in 1206, and its castle dates from 1207. It was once a prosperous town of the
- Wenders, Wim (German director)
Wim Wenders is a German film director who, along with Rainer Werner Fassbinder and Werner Herzog, was one of the principal members of the New German Cinema of the 1970s. During the late 1960s Wenders studied at the University of Television and Film Munich while working as a film critic. After
- Wendi (emperor of Wei dynasty)
Cao Pi was the founder of the short-lived Wei dynasty (ad 220–265/266) during the Sanguo (Three Kingdoms) period of Chinese history. The son of the great general and warlord Cao Cao of the Han dynasty (206 bc–ad 220), Cao Pi succeeded his father as king of Wei upon the latter’s death in 220. At the
- Wendi (emperor of Ming dynasty)
Yongle was the reign name (nianhao) of the third emperor (1402–24) of China’s Ming dynasty (1368–1644), which he raised to its greatest power. He moved the capital from Nanjing to Beijing, which was rebuilt with the Forbidden City. Zhu Di’s father, the Hongwu emperor, had rapidly risen from a poor
- Wendi (emperor of Sui dynasty)
Wendi was the emperor who reigned from 581–604 and reunified and reorganized China after 300 years of instability, founding the Sui dynasty (581–618). He conquered southern China, which long had been divided into numerous small kingdoms, and he broke the power of the Turks in the northern part of
- Wendi (emperor of Han dynasty)
Wendi was the posthumous name (shi) of the fourth emperor (reigned 180–157 bc) of the Han dynasty (206 bc–ad 220) of China. His reign was marked by good government and the peaceful consolidation of imperial power. A son of Liu Bang (the Gaozu emperor), the founder of the Han dynasty, Liu Heng was
- Wendi (Chinese deity)
Wendi, the Chinese god of literature, whose chief heavenly task, assigned by the Jade Emperor (Yudi), is to keep a log of men of letters so that he can mete out rewards and punishments to each according to merit. He also maintains a register of the titles and honours each writer has received. Among
- wendigo (Algonkian mythology)
wendigo, a mythological cannibalistic monster in the spiritual tradition of North American Algonquian-speaking tribes. It is associated with winter and described as either a fearsome beast that stalks and eats humans or as a spirit that possesses humans, causing them to turn into cannibals. There
- Wendish languages
Sorbian languages, closely related West Slavic languages or dialects; their small number of speakers in eastern Germany are the survivors of a more extensive medieval language group. The centre of the Upper Sorbian speech area is Bautzen, near the border with the Czech Republic, while Cottbus, near
- Wendling, Anton (German artist)
stained glass: 20th century: …Schwarz and the stained-glass artist Anton Wendling were able to resume careers interrupted by the Nazi era and to set the course for a whole new generation of stained-glass artists, especially in the Rhineland. Inspired by the example of Thorn Prikker, these artists have continued to explore the unique qualities…
- Wendron Moor (moor, England, United Kingdom)
Kerrier: Wendron Moor, 400 to 800 feet (120 to 245 metres) in elevation, an igneous-based granite intrusive in the centre of the plateau, is used for grazing cattle. From the early 18th century the northern border area of Wendron Moor and the adjacent sandstone plateau was…
- Wendt, Albert (Samoan writer)
Albert Wendt is a Samoan novelist and poet who wrote about present-day Samoan life. Perhaps the best-known writer in the South Pacific, Wendt sought to counteract the frequently romanticized, often racist literature about Polynesians written by outsiders. Wendt was born into a Samoan family with
- Wendt, Alexander (American political scientist and educator)
Alexander Wendt is a German-born American political scientist and educator, one of the most-influential theorists of the social-constructivist approach to the study of international relations. Wendt was a graduate of Macalester College (B.A. 1982) and obtained a Ph.D. from the University of
- Wendt, George (American actor)
Cheers: …occasional accountant Norm Peterson (George Wendt); and his best friend, salt-of-the-earth mailman Cliff Clavin (John Ratzenberger).
- Wendy and Lucy (film by Reichardt [2008])
Michelle Williams: …solo turn in Kelly Reichardt’s Wendy and Lucy (2008), in which she evinced the solitary desperation of an impoverished drifter. For her emotionally raw performance in Blue Valentine (2010), which sketched the story of a crumbling marriage, Williams captured an Oscar nomination for best actress.