- waka (Japanese poetry)
waka, Japanese poetry, specifically the court poetry of the 6th to the 14th century, including such forms as the chōka and sedōka, in contrast to such later forms as renga, haikai, and haiku. The term waka also is used, however, as a synonym for tanka (“short poem”), which is the basic form of
- waka-tokoris (Bolivian dance)
Bolivia: Traditional culture: …invaders, the dance of the waka-tokoris satirizes bullfights, and the morenada mocks white men, who are depicted leading imported African slaves. Some highly embroidered and colourful costumes imitate pre-Columbian dress. Many costumes are accompanied by elaborate masks made of plaster, cloth, or tin cans and topped by feather headdresses. The…
- Wakakusa (temple, Ikaruga, Japan)
Hōryū Temple, Japanese Buddhist temple complex in the town of Ikaruga, northwestern Nara ken (prefecture), west-central Honshu, Japan. One of the Seven Great Temples of Nara, the Hōryū is also the centre of the Shōtoku sect of Buddhism. The temple was one of some 48 Buddhist monuments in the area
- Wakamatsu (Japan)
Kitakyūshū: Wakamatsu produces metals, machinery, ships, and chemicals and is a major coal port for northern Kyushu. Tobata is one of the main deep-sea-fishing bases of western Japan, has a large output of cotton textiles, and contains numerous metal industries. Kokura, a former arsenal town, specializes…
- wakan (religious concept)
wakan, among various American Indian groups, a great spiritual power of supernatural origin belonging to some natural objects. Wakan may be conceived of as a weak or strong power; the weak powers can be ignored, but the strong ones must be placated. Poisonous plants and reptiles can contain wakan,
- Wakan rōei shū (work by Fujiwara Yukinari)
Fujiwara Yukinari: …works include his versions of Wakan rōei shū (“Collection of Japanese and Chinese Poems to be Sung”) and of the anthology of Chinese poet Po Chü-i, Haku Rakuten shikan (“Poetry Volume of Haku Rakuten”). In addition, he wrote Gonki (“Diary of Gon”), his diary.
- Wakan-Tanka (Sioux religion)
nature worship: Nature as a sacred totality: … is described similarly, but as Wakan-Tanka it may refer to a collective unity of gods with great power (wakan). The manitou of the Algonquin is not, like wakan, merely an impersonal power that is inherent in all things of nature but is also the personification of numerous manitous (powers), with…
- wakanda (religious concept)
wakan, among various American Indian groups, a great spiritual power of supernatural origin belonging to some natural objects. Wakan may be conceived of as a weak or strong power; the weak powers can be ignored, but the strong ones must be placated. Poisonous plants and reptiles can contain wakan,
- Wakar talauci da wadata (work by Umaru)
African literature: Hausa: …Alhaji Umaru in his poem Wakar talauci da wadata (1903; “Song of Poverty and of Wealth”). There was poetic reaction to the presence of British colonial forces: Malam Shi’itu’s Bakandamiya (“Hippo-Hide Whip”) and Alhaji Umaru’s Zuwan nasara (“Arrival of the Christians”). Much poetry dealt with the Prophet Muhammad and other…
- Wakasa House (house, Tokyo, Japan)
Horiguchi Sutemi: …(1934), Nakanishi House (1936), and Wakasa House (1939). His major works since World War II include the Hasshokan Hotel at Nagoya and the Japanese pavilion for the Quadriennale (1954) at São Paulo, Brazil. He wrote a number of books on Japanese teahouses and dwellings.
- Wakashan languages
Nuu-chah-nulth: ” They speak a Wakashan language.
- wakashū kabuki (theater, Japan)
Japan: Commerce, cities, and culture: A further development was the wakashū (“young-man style”) kabuki, in which the young men were also available as sexual partners; this also was prohibited because of widespread homosexuality. All kabuki was banned following the death of the shogun Iemitsu in 1652. It was allowed once again, but only after substantial…
- Wakata, Koichi (Japanese engineer and astronaut)
Koichi Wakata is a Japanese astronaut who accumulated a number of records during his career. Among them, he spent the longest time in space of anyone who was not an American astronaut or a Russian cosmonaut, staying in orbit for over 504 days. He was the first Japanese astronaut to go on five
- Wakatipu Lake (lake, New Zealand)
Wakatipu Lake, lake in south-central South Island, New Zealand. The S-shaped lake measures 48 miles (77 km) by 3 miles (5 km) and has an area of 113 square miles (293 square km). It is the second largest of the Southern Lakes, exceeded only by Te Anau. The lake’s name is of Maori derivation and may
- Wakatsuki Reijirō (prime minister of Japan)
Japan: Aggression in Manchuria: Prime Minister Wakatsuki Reijirō gave way in December 1931 to Inukai Tsuyoshi. Inukai’s plans to stop the army by imperial intervention were frustrated. On May 15, 1932, naval officers took the lead in a terrorist attack in Tokyo that cost Inukai his life but failed to secure…
- Wakaukanome (Shintō goddess)
Ukemochi no Kami, (Japanese: “Goddess Who Possesses Food”), in Shintō mythology, the goddess of food. She is also sometimes identified as Wakaukanome (“Young Woman with Food”) and is associated with Toyuke (Toyouke) Ōkami, the god of food, clothing, and housing, who is enshrined in the Outer Shrine
- Wakayama (prefecture, Japan)
Wakayama, ken (prefecture), west-central Honshu, Japan. It occupies the southwestern and southern portions of the Kii Peninsula, which faces the Kii Strait (west) and the Pacific Ocean (south). Wakayama city, on the Kii Strait, is the prefectural capital. Most of the prefecture’s area is
- Wakayama (Japan)
Wakayama, city, capital of Wakayama ken (prefecture), west-central Honshu, Japan. It is situated in the northwestern part of the prefecture at the mouth of the Kino River, on the Kii Peninsula, and lies along the Kii Strait, which leads from the Pacific Ocean into the Inland Sea. It is the capital
- wake (religious rite)
wake, watch or vigil held over the body of a dead person before burial and sometimes accompanied by festivity; also, in England, a vigil kept in commemoration of the dedication of the parish church. The latter type of wake consisted of an all-night service of prayer and meditation in the church.
- Wake Forest College (university, Winston-Salem, North Carolina, United States)
Wake Forest University, private, coeducational institution of higher learning in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, U.S., affiliated with the Baptist State Convention of North Carolina. The university consists of Wake Forest College, the Wayne Calloway School of Business and Accountancy, the School of
- Wake Forest Manual Labor Institute (university, Winston-Salem, North Carolina, United States)
Wake Forest University, private, coeducational institution of higher learning in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, U.S., affiliated with the Baptist State Convention of North Carolina. The university consists of Wake Forest College, the Wayne Calloway School of Business and Accountancy, the School of
- Wake Forest University (university, Winston-Salem, North Carolina, United States)
Wake Forest University, private, coeducational institution of higher learning in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, U.S., affiliated with the Baptist State Convention of North Carolina. The university consists of Wake Forest College, the Wayne Calloway School of Business and Accountancy, the School of
- Wake Island (film by Farrow [1942])
John Farrow: Films of the 1940s: …at Paramount with the patriotic Wake Island (1942), starring Brian Donlevy, Robert Preston, and William Bendix. It received an Academy Award nomination for best picture and earned Farrow his only nomination for best director. Other films set during World War II included Commandos Strike at Dawn (1942) with Paul Muni;…
- Wake Island (island, Pacific Ocean)
Wake Island, atoll in the central Pacific Ocean, about 2,300 miles (3,700 km) west of Honolulu. It is an unincorporated territory of the United States and comprises three low-lying coral islets (Wilkes, Peale, and Wake) that rise from an underwater volcano to 21 feet (6 metres) above sea level and
- Wake Island, Battle of (World War II)
Battle of Wake Island, (December 8–23, 1941), during World War II, battle for Wake Island, an atoll consisting of three coral islets (Wilkes, Peale, and Wake) in the central Pacific Ocean. During the battle a small force of U.S. Marines and civilian defenders fought elements of the Imperial
- Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go (song by Michael)
George Michael: Career with Wham!: Its infectious first single, “Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go,” was supported by a music video that showcased the band’s youthful energy, good looks, and colorful style, all of which seemed tailor-made for the burgeoning MTV era. Michael and Ridgeley became teen idols, although Michael quickly emerged as the…
- Wake Me When It’s Over (film by LeRoy [1960])
Mervyn LeRoy: Return to Warner Brothers: Mister Roberts, The Bad Seed, and Gypsy: The comedy Wake Me When It’s Over (1960) featured Dick Shawn and Ernie Kovacs as army pals who, out of boredom, build a resort on the Japanese island where they are stationed. The Devil at 4 o’Clock (1961) starred Tracy and Sinatra in a drama about the…
- Wake of Jamey Foster, The (play by Henley)
Holly Hunter: …Heart (1981; Hunter’s Broadway debut), The Wake of Jamey Foster (1982), and The Miss Firecracker Contest (1984). In addition to her stage work, she played small roles in a few television movies as well as in Jonathan Demme’s 1984 film Swing Shift, and that same year she was an uncredited…
- Wake of the Ferry (painting by Sloan)
John French Sloan: …of romantic melancholy, as in Wake of the Ferry (1907). Occasionally, as in Fifth Avenue Critics, Sloan imparted a sharp satiric note into his work. Late in life Sloan turned back to the Art Nouveau motifs that had characterized his early work.
- Wake Up and Dream (film by Bacon [1945])
Lloyd Bacon: Later years of Lloyd Bacon: …comedy and a romance, and Wake Up and Dream, an adventure that followed a girl’s search for her brother, a soldier listed as missing in action. Bacon had not helmed many musicals since the mid-1930s, but he was assigned a string of Technicolor productions, commencing with Three Little Girls in…
- Wake Up and Live (film by Lanfield [1937])
Sidney Lanfield: Films of the 1930s: Lanfield and Faye reteamed for Wake Up and Live (1937), a satire about a mock feud between journalist Walter Winchell and bandleader Ben Bernie, both of whom played themselves. The film was enormously successful, as was Thin Ice (1937), featuring Henie as a ski instructor romanced by a prince (Tyrone…
- Wake Up Little Susie (song by Felice and Boudleaux Bryant)
the Everly Brothers: …of chart-topping hits, including “Wake Up Little Susie” (1957), “All I Have to Do Is Dream” (1958), and “Cathy’s Clown” (1960).
- Wake, Isaac (English diplomat)
history of Europe: The crisis in Germany: The English ambassador in Turin, Isaac Wake, was sanguine: “The gates of Janus have been shut,” he exulted in late 1617, promising “calm and Halcyonian days not only unto the inhabitants of this province of Italye, but to the greatest part of Christendome.” That Wake was so soon proved wrong…
- wake-robin (plant)
cuckoopint, (Arum maculatum), tuberous herb of the arum family (Araceae), native to southern Europe and northern Africa. Like many other aroids, cuckoopint contains a bitter, sometimes poisonous, sap; the red berries are particularly toxic. In England, where it is common in woods and hedgerows, it
- Wakefield (England, United Kingdom)
Wakefield, urban area (from 2011 built-up area), city, and metropolitan borough (district) in the southeastern portion of the metropolitan county of West Yorkshire, historic county of Yorkshire, northern England. The metropolitan borough extends eastward from the former coal-mining and
- Wakefield (district, England, United Kingdom)
Wakefield: …built-up area), city, and metropolitan borough (district) in the southeastern portion of the metropolitan county of West Yorkshire, historic county of Yorkshire, northern England.
- Wakefield (film by Swicord [2016])
Jennifer Garner: Roles from the 2010s and divorce from Affleck: …Bryan Cranston) who disappears in Wakefield (2016), and a mother seeking revenge in Peppermint (2018). She starred in the HBO series Camping in 2018, a U.S. adaptation of a British series with the same name. The show, however, received generally poor reviews and was canceled after one season.
- Wakefield cycle (medieval literature)
Wakefield plays, a cycle of 32 scriptural plays, or mystery plays, of the early 15th century, which were performed during the European Middle Ages at Wakefield, a town in the north of England, as part of the summertime religious festival of Corpus Christi. The text of the plays has been preserved
- Wakefield Master (medieval literature)
Wakefield plays: …talented reviser, known as the Wakefield Master, is easily recognizable for its brilliant handling of metre, language, and rhyme, and for its wit and satire. His Second Shepherds’ Play is widely considered the greatest work of medieval English drama.
- Wakefield plays (medieval literature)
Wakefield plays, a cycle of 32 scriptural plays, or mystery plays, of the early 15th century, which were performed during the European Middle Ages at Wakefield, a town in the north of England, as part of the summertime religious festival of Corpus Christi. The text of the plays has been preserved
- Wakefield, Battle of (English history)
Yorkshire: History and architecture: …the Roses occurred in Yorkshire: Wakefield (1460), in which Richard, 3rd duke of York, was slain, and Towton (1461), which saw the decisive defeat of the Lancastrians by the Yorkists. The county was the principal site of the Pilgrimage of Grace, an unsuccessful uprising in 1536 against Henry VIII’s Reformation…
- Wakefield, Edward Gibbon (British colonial administrator)
Edward Gibbon Wakefield was a British colonizer of South Australia and New Zealand and inspirer of the Durham Report (1839) on Canadian colonial policy. In 1814 Wakefield became secretary to the British minister at Turin, Italy, and in 1816 he married. His wife died in 1820, and in 1826, while on
- Wakefield, Sir Wavell (British athlete)
William Wavell Wakefield, Baron Wakefield was one of England’s finest rugby union players, known for his quickness and skillful dribbling as a forward. He led the English national team in its glory days of the 1920s. Wakefield, affectionately known as “Wakers,” was educated at Sedbergh School and
- Wakefield, William Wavell Wakefield, Baron (British athlete)
William Wavell Wakefield, Baron Wakefield was one of England’s finest rugby union players, known for his quickness and skillful dribbling as a forward. He led the English national team in its glory days of the 1920s. Wakefield, affectionately known as “Wakers,” was educated at Sedbergh School and
- wakefulness (physiology)
sleep: Developmental patterns of sleep and wakefulness: How much sleep does a person need? While the physiological bases of the need for sleep remain conjectural, rendering definitive answers to this question impossible despite contemporary knowledge, much evidence has been gathered on how much sleep people do in fact obtain. Perhaps the…
- Wakeman, Rick (British musician)
art rock: …as Keith Emerson (ELP) and Rick Wakeman (Yes) moved from having supporting roles to making featured contributions.
- wakerobin (plant)
trillium, (genus Trillium), genus of about 25 species of spring-flowering perennial herbs of the family Melanthiaceae, native to North America and Asia. Many species of Trillium are cultivated in wildflower gardens. Trillium plants have oval bracts that resemble and function as leaves and arise
- Wakers (British athlete)
William Wavell Wakefield, Baron Wakefield was one of England’s finest rugby union players, known for his quickness and skillful dribbling as a forward. He led the English national team in its glory days of the 1920s. Wakefield, affectionately known as “Wakers,” was educated at Sedbergh School and
- Wākhān (mountain corridor, Afghanistan)
Vākhān, a mountainous region and panhandle in the Pamir Mountains of extreme northeastern Afghanistan. From the demarcation of the Afghan frontier (1895–96), the panhandle formed a political buffer between Russian Turkistan, British India, and China. It is now bounded by Tajikistan (north), China
- Wakhan Corridor (mountain corridor, Afghanistan)
Vākhān, a mountainous region and panhandle in the Pamir Mountains of extreme northeastern Afghanistan. From the demarcation of the Afghan frontier (1895–96), the panhandle formed a political buffer between Russian Turkistan, British India, and China. It is now bounded by Tajikistan (north), China
- Wakhī language
Iranian languages: Dialects: Speakers of Wakhī number more than 50,000 or so in the region of the upper Panj River. Vākhān (Wākhān), the Persian name for the region in which Wakhī is spoken, is based on the local name Wux̌, a Wakhī development of *Waxšu, the old name of the…
- waki (Japanese theater)
Japanese performing arts: 7th to 16th centuries: …chief (shite) or supporting (waki) actors of Noh but by kyōgen actors, who also acted the roles of villagers or fishermen in Noh plays. The antecedents of kyōgen cannot be described with certainty, but it is probable that kyōgen’s short sketches of master-servant quarrels, husband-wife arguments, animal fables, and…
- wakīl (Shīʿism)
al-Aḥsāʾī: …the imam were performed by wakīls, or agents, who were in contact with the mahdi, the last imam and a messianic deliverer. But following the death of ʿAlī ibn Muḥammad as-Sāmarrīʾ in 940, this direct contact between the community and the mahdi ceased. The Shīʿites believed that some day prior…
- Waking in Blue (poem by Lowell)
Robert Lowell, Jr.: Chief among these are “Waking in Blue,” which tells of his confinement in a mental hospital, and “Skunk Hour,” which conveys his mental turmoil with dramatic intensity.
- Waking Life (film by Linklater [2001])
Richard Linklater: First films: Dazed and Confused and Before Sunrise: …of his first films with Waking Life (2001). That film is something of a sequel in spirit to Slacker, in that it flows from vignette to vignette of people waxing philosophical, although, unlike the earlier movie, it does so while following a main character. Critics praised Waking Life’s rotoscoped (a…
- Waking the Dead (film by Gordon [2000])
Billy Crudup: Early roles and breakout performance in Almost Famous: …by his deceased girlfriend in Waking the Dead (2000). His breakout performance, however, was in Cameron Crowe’s 2000 film Almost Famous, playing a musician based on American guitarist Glenn Frey, who performed in the 1970s country rock band the Eagles.
- Wakkanai (Japan)
Wakkanai, city, northernmost Hokkaido, Japan. It is situated on the Noshappu Peninsula, facing Sōya Bay and the Sōya Peninsula. Most of the city occupies the Sōya plateau, which is a northern extension of the Teshio Range. The Sōya Line (railway) was opened in 1926, and regular steamship service
- Wakley, Thomas (British editor)
The Lancet: …founder and first editor was Thomas Wakley, considered at the time to be a radical reformer. Wakley stated that the intent of the new journal was to report on the metropolitan hospital lectures and to describe the important cases of the day. The Lancet has since played an important role…
- wakō (Japanese history)
wakō, any of the groups of marauders who raided the Korean and Chinese coasts between the 13th and 16th centuries. They were often in the pay of various Japanese feudal leaders and were frequently involved in Japan’s civil wars during the early part of this period. In the 14th century Japanese
- wakonda (religious concept)
wakan, among various American Indian groups, a great spiritual power of supernatural origin belonging to some natural objects. Wakan may be conceived of as a weak or strong power; the weak powers can be ignored, but the strong ones must be placated. Poisonous plants and reptiles can contain wakan,
- Wakoski, Diane (American poet)
Diane Wakoski is an American poet known for her personal verses that examine loss, pain, and sexual desire and that frequently reproduce incidents and fantasies from her own turbulent life. Her poetry probes the difficulties that the individual encounters in relationships with others, with the
- wakrapuku (musical instrument)
Native American music: Aerophones: …of spiral-shaped horn called the wakrapuku, which is made from sections of cattle horn or pieces of sheet metal; the instrument is played in pairs during an annual fertility ritual. The Mapuche play an end-blown horn called the trutruka, made from a bamboo tube wrapped in horse intestine and capped…
- Waks, Jack Arnold (American director)
Jack Arnold was an American director who was considered one of the leading auteurs in the science-fiction genre of the 1950s. Arnold began his career directing and producing dozens of industrial films and documentaries for the government and the private sector. In 1953 he joined Universal Studios,
- Waksman, Selman Abraham (American biochemist)
Selman Abraham Waksman was a Ukrainian-born American biochemist who was one of the world’s foremost authorities on soil microbiology. After the discovery of penicillin, he played a major role in initiating a calculated, systematic search for antibiotics among microbes. His screening methods and
- Wal-Mart (American company)
Walmart, Inc. (WMT) is an American multinational discount store operator and one of the largest corporations in the global retail industry. Its company headquarters is located in Bentonville, Arkansas. Walmart’s business strategy sprung from the late 19th century five-and-dime retail model, but it
- Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. (American company)
Walmart, Inc. (WMT) is an American multinational discount store operator and one of the largest corporations in the global retail industry. Its company headquarters is located in Bentonville, Arkansas. Walmart’s business strategy sprung from the late 19th century five-and-dime retail model, but it
- Wala, Saint (Frankish count)
Saint Wala ; feast day August 31) was a Frankish count, Benedictine abbot, and influential minister at the courts of the Holy Roman emperors Charlemagne and Louis I the Pious. He stood for imperial unity against the traditionalist party, which looked for partition of the emperors’ lands. A cousin
- Walachia (historical region, Romania)
Walachia, principality on the lower Danube River, which in 1859 joined Moldavia to form the state of Romania. Its name is derived from that of the Vlachs, who constituted the bulk of its population. Walachia was bounded on the north and northeast by the Transylvanian Alps, on the west, south, and
- Walachian Plain (plain, Romania)
Danube River: Physiography: …the left lies the low Romanian Plain, which is separated from the main stream by a strip of lakes and swamps. The tributaries in this section are comparatively small and account for only a modest increase in the total runoff. They include the Olt, the Siret, and the Prut. The…
- Walafrid Strabo (Benedictine abbot)
Walafrid Strabo was a Benedictine abbot, theologian, and poet whose Latin writings were the principal exemplar of German Carolingian culture. Walafrid received a liberal education at the abbey of Reichenau on Lake Constance. After further studies under the celebrated Rabanus Maurus of Fulda Abbey,
- Walapai (people)
Native American: Reorganization: …argument was cited by the Hualapai against the Santa Fe Railway, which in 1944 was required to relinquish about 500,000 acres (200,000 hectares) it thought it had been granted by the United States. A special Indian Claims Commission, created by an act of Congress on August 13, 1946, received petitions…
- Walasiewicz, Stanisława (American athlete)
Stanisława Walasiewicz was a Polish-American athlete who, during an unusually long career (over 20 years), won two Olympic medals and some 40 Amateur Athletic Union (AAU) championships and was credited with nearly a dozen world records in women’s running and jumping events. While on a shopping trip
- Walasiewicz, Stefania (American athlete)
Stanisława Walasiewicz was a Polish-American athlete who, during an unusually long career (over 20 years), won two Olympic medals and some 40 Amateur Athletic Union (AAU) championships and was credited with nearly a dozen world records in women’s running and jumping events. While on a shopping trip
- Walbeeck, Johannes van (Dutch colonist)
Netherlands Antilles: Curaçao: In 1634 Johannes van Walbeeck of the Dutch West India Company occupied and fortified the island, which became the base for a rich entrepôt trade flourishing through the 18th century. During the colonial period, Curaçao was a major Caribbean centre for the transatlantic slave trade.
- Walbrook, Anton (British actor)
The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp: …German officer Theo Kretschmar-Schuldorff (Anton Walbrook). Candy and Theo become friends when they recover in the same hospital, and Theo becomes engaged to Edith. In 1918 Candy, who has since realized that he was in love with Edith, romances nurse Barbara Wynne (Kerr). In a British prisoner-of-war camp, Theo,…
- Wałbrzych (Poland)
Wałbrzych, city, Dolnośląskie województwo (province), southwestern Poland, in the central Sudeten (Sudety) mountains. The second largest town in Lower Silesia (after Wrocław), it is an important rail junction. The city was first chronicled as the location of a castle built by Bolesław I in 1290.
- Walburga, Saint (Frankish abbess)
Saint Walburga ; feast day February 25) was an abbess and missionary who, with her brothers Willibald of Eichstätt and Winebald of Heidenheim, was important in St. Boniface’s organization of the Frankish church. Walburga was a Benedictine at the monastery of Wimborne, Dorsetshire, when Winebald
- Walch, Jakob (Italian painter)
Jacopo de’ Barbari was a Venetian painter and engraver influenced by Antonello da Messina. Barbari probably painted the first signed and dated (1504) pure still life (a dead partridge, gauntlets, and arrow pinned against a wall). Until c. 1500, he remained in Venice. A large engraved panorama of
- Walcheren (region, Netherlands)
Zeeland: Walcheren, Zuid-Beveland, and Sint Philipsland. None of these has preserved a true insular character, all being connected to each other or to Noord-Brabant province inland by dams or bridges.
- Walchia (fossil plant genus)
conifer: Annotated classification: …resembled that of araucarians; include Walchia, Voltzia, and Voltziopsis. †Family Cheirolepidiaceae Mesozoic; scales shed from the cone together with the seeds; large bracts remain attached to the axis in a semblance of a complete cone; distinctive pollen, called Classopollis; foliage resembles that found in the modern Cupressaceae; great variety of…
- Walchiaceae (fossil plant family)
conifer: Annotated classification: †Families Walchiaceae and Voltziaceae Paleozoic and Mesozoic; show many stages in the transformation of the seed-bearing dwarf shoots of cordaiteans into the unified, flattened seed scales of modern conifers; foliage resembled that of araucarians; include Walchia, Voltzia, and Voltziopsis. †Family
- Walcott, Charles Doolittle (American paleontologist)
Lipalian interval: paleontologist Charles D. Walcott, who suggested that living forms rapidly evolved during the time between the deposition of the youngest Precambrian and the oldest Cambrian sediments and that no record of this interval, the Lipalian interval, exists because the rocks have been eroded or remain undiscovered.…
- Walcott, Derek (West Indian poet)
Derek Walcott was a West Indian poet and playwright noted for works that explore the Caribbean cultural experience. He received the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1992. Walcott was educated at St. Mary’s College in Saint Lucia and at the University of the West Indies in Jamaica. He began writing
- Walcott, Derek Alton (West Indian poet)
Derek Walcott was a West Indian poet and playwright noted for works that explore the Caribbean cultural experience. He received the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1992. Walcott was educated at St. Mary’s College in Saint Lucia and at the University of the West Indies in Jamaica. He began writing
- Walcott, Jersey Joe (American boxer)
Jersey Joe Walcott was an American world heavyweight boxing champion from July 18, 1951, when he knocked out Ezzard Charles in seven rounds in Pittsburgh, Pa., until Sept. 23, 1952, when he was knocked out by Rocky Marciano in 13 rounds in Philadelphia. (Read Gene Tunney’s 1929 Britannica essay on
- Walcott, Louis Eugene (American religious leader)
An influential and often controversial Black religious leader, Louis Farrakhan has since 1978 been the leader of the Nation of Islam, an African American movement that combines elements of Islam with Black nationalism. Born Louis Eugene Walcott on May 11, 1933, in the Bronx, New York, he was raised
- Walcott, Mary Morris Vaux (American artist and naturalist)
Mary Morris Vaux Walcott was an American artist and naturalist who is remembered for her paintings of the wildflowers of North America, particularly as published by the Smithsonian Institution. Mary Vaux was born to a wealthy Quaker family. For several years after her graduation in 1879 from the
- Wald, Abraham (American statistician)
probability theory: Applications of conditional probability: …by the Hungarian-born American statistician Abraham Wald in response to the demand for more efficient methods of industrial quality control during World War II. They also enter into insurance risk theory, which is discussed in the section Stochastic processes: Insurance risk theory.
- Wald, George (American biochemist)
George Wald was an American biochemist who received (with Haldan K. Hartline of the United States and Ragnar Granit of Sweden) the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine in 1967 for his work on the chemistry of vision. While studying in Berlin as a National Research Council fellow (1932–33), Wald
- Wald, Lillian D. (American sociologist)
Lillian D. Wald was an American nurse and social worker who founded the internationally known Henry Street Settlement in New York City (1893). Wald grew up in her native Cincinnati, Ohio, and in Rochester, New York. She was educated in a private school, and after abandoning a plan to attend Vassar
- Waldalgesheim style (Celtic art)
history of Europe: Rituals, religion, and art: …4th century bce with the Waldalgesheim style, and, after this point, its most interesting branch was found in Britain, which saw a very individual development and where La Tène art continued to flourish after this style had passed its zenith on the Continent. The La Tène style was used on…
- Waldburg, Saint (Frankish abbess)
Saint Walburga ; feast day February 25) was an abbess and missionary who, with her brothers Willibald of Eichstätt and Winebald of Heidenheim, was important in St. Boniface’s organization of the Frankish church. Walburga was a Benedictine at the monastery of Wimborne, Dorsetshire, when Winebald
- Walddorfschule (education)
Waldorf school, school based on the educational philosophy of Rudolf Steiner, an Austrian educator and the formulator of anthroposophy. Steiner’s first school opened in 1919 in Stuttgart, Germany, for the children of the Waldorf-Astoria Company’s employees; his schools thereafter became known as
- Waldeck (former state, Germany)
Waldeck, a former Kreis (administrative district) and state of Germany, between Westphalia and Hesse-Nassau. For centuries a principality and from November 1918 to March 1929 a republic and constituent state of the Weimar Republic, it was on April 1, 1929, amalgamated with Prussia at the request of
- Waldeck-Rousseau (French warship)
Ton Duc Thang: …while aboard the French warship Waldeck-Rousseau on its way to curb revolutionary activities in Russia, he took part in an unsuccessful plot to turn the battleship over to the Bolshevik revolutionaries. He also instigated strikes against French intervention in revolutionary China in 1925. As a result of such activities, the…
- Waldeck-Rousseau, Loi (French law)
René Waldeck-Rousseau: In 1884 he sponsored the Loi Waldeck-Rousseau, which made trade unions legal, though with important restrictions. After another term as deputy (1885–89), he retired to make his fortune at the bar. In 1894, however, he became a senator.
- Waldeck-Rousseau, Pierre-Marie-René (French politician)
René Waldeck-Rousseau was a politician who, as premier of France, settled the Dreyfus Affair. He was also responsible for the legalization of trade unions in France (1884). A rising conservative lawyer, known for his eloquence and mastery of legal detail, Waldeck-Rousseau was elected a deputy in
- Waldeck-Rousseau, René (French politician)
René Waldeck-Rousseau was a politician who, as premier of France, settled the Dreyfus Affair. He was also responsible for the legalization of trade unions in France (1884). A rising conservative lawyer, known for his eloquence and mastery of legal detail, Waldeck-Rousseau was elected a deputy in
- Waldemar I (Danish king)
Rügen: …destroyed by the Danish king Waldemar I when he conquered and Christianized the island in 1168. Rügen thereafter was ruled by native princes under Danish supremacy until 1218 and passed to Pomerania (Pomorze) in 1325, to Sweden in 1648, and to Prussia in 1815. The natural and historic treasures on…
- Waldemeyer, Moritz (German artist and designer)
Hussein Chalayan: … and German artist and designer Moritz Waldemeyer, who was known for his experiments with lighting. An exhibition of Chalayan’s work was held at the Design Museum, London, in 2009. Chalayan was also the head of fashion at the University of Applied Arts Vienna from 2014 to 2019. In 2006 he…