- Ebers, Georg (German Egyptologist)
Ebers papyrus: …Ebers papyrus was acquired by George Maurice Ebers, German Egyptologist and novelist, in 1873.
- Ebers, George Maurice (German Egyptologist)
Ebers papyrus: …Ebers papyrus was acquired by George Maurice Ebers, German Egyptologist and novelist, in 1873.
- Eberswalde (Germany)
Eberswalde, city, Brandenburg Land (state), northeastern Germany. It lies in the Thorn-Eberswalder glacial valley, approximately 30 miles (50 km) northeast of Berlin. Occupation of the area from the early Bronze Age is attested by the discovery in 1913 of a gold hoard dating from about the 11th to
- Eberswalde-Finow (Germany)
Eberswalde, city, Brandenburg Land (state), northeastern Germany. It lies in the Thorn-Eberswalder glacial valley, approximately 30 miles (50 km) northeast of Berlin. Occupation of the area from the early Bronze Age is attested by the discovery in 1913 of a gold hoard dating from about the 11th to
- Ebert, Carl (German-born opera director)
Carl Ebert was a German-born opera director who, as artistic director and producer of the Glyndebourne Festival Opera from 1935 to 1959, established new standards of production in British opera. Ebert started his career as an actor in 1909 and went on to direct the Darmstadt State Theatre before
- Ebert, Friedrich (president of Weimar Republic)
Friedrich Ebert was a leader of the Social Democratic movement in Germany and a moderate socialist, who was a leader in bringing about the constitution of the Weimar Republic, which attempted to unite Germany after its defeat in World War I. He was president of the Weimar Republic from 1919 to
- Ebert, G. (German chemist)
rubber: The rise of synthetic rubber: …and in 1926 the German G. Ebert succeeded in producing a sodium-polymerized rubber from butadiene. During the following decade this material evolved into various types of “buna” rubber (so called from the initial syllables of the two materials used to make them: butadiene and natrium [sodium]).
- Ebert, Roger (American film critic)
Roger Ebert was an American film critic, perhaps the best known of his profession, who became the first person to receive a Pulitzer Prize for film criticism (1975). Ebert’s journalism career began at the Champaign-Urbana News-Gazette, where he worked as a sportswriter from age 15. He was on the
- Ebert, Roger Joseph (American film critic)
Roger Ebert was an American film critic, perhaps the best known of his profession, who became the first person to receive a Pulitzer Prize for film criticism (1975). Ebert’s journalism career began at the Champaign-Urbana News-Gazette, where he worked as a sportswriter from age 15. He was on the
- Ebetsu (Japan)
Ebetsu, city, western Hokkaido, northern Japan. It lies on the lower Ishikari River, about 10 miles (16 km) northeast of Sapporo. Ebetsu originated as a colonial farm village settled by 10 families from the Japanese main island of Honshu in the early Meiji period (1868–1912). It is a satellite city
- Ebilun (Chinese courtier)
Kangxi: Early life: first administered by Sonin, Suksaha, Ebilun, and Oboi—four conservative Manchu courtiers from the preceding reign. One of the first political acts of the four imperial advisers was to replace the so-called Thirteen Offices (Shisan Yanmen) with a Neiwufu (Dorgi Yamun), or Office of Household. The Thirteen Offices, all organized solely…
- Ebionite (religious sect)
Ebionite, member of an early ascetic sect of Jewish Christians. The Ebionites were one of several such sects that originated in and around Palestine in the first centuries ad and included the Nazarenes and Elkasites. The name of the sect is from the Hebrew ebyonim, or ebionim (“the poor”); it was
- Ebira (people)
Igbira, inhabitants of the areas northeast and southwest of the confluence of the Niger and Benue rivers in central Nigeria. Their language is usually classified as a Nupoid variety within the Benue-Congo branch of the Niger-Congo language family. The two main habitats within the Igbira area are a
- Ebira language
Benue-Congo languages: Nupoid: Ebira (1,000,000). They are spoken in the area north and west of the confluence of the Niger and Benue rivers.
- Ebisu (Japanese mythology)
Ebisu, in Japanese mythology, one of the Shichi-fuku-jin (“Seven Gods of Luck”), the patron of fishermen and tradesmen. He is depicted as a fat, bearded, smiling fisherman often carrying a rod in one hand and a tai (sea bream—i.e., a red snapper—symbolic of good luck) in the other. He is a popular
- Ebiya Genzō (Japanese dramatist)
Tsuruya Namboku IV was a Japanese Kabuki playwright of the late Tokugawa period (1603–1867), known for his plays with supernatural themes and macabre and grotesque characters. Little is known of his early years, but in 1755 he became an apprentice of the dramatist Sakurada Jisuke I. About 1780 he
- EBL (European organization)
bridge: Bridge tournaments: …championships were conducted by the European Bridge League (EBL), founded the same year. These tournaments continued through 1937 and were resumed in 1946. At the annual tournament of the EBL held in Oslo, Norway, in 1958, the World Bridge Federation was formed to control the world championship matches as previously…
- Ebla (ancient city, Syria)
Ebla, ancient city 33 miles (53 km) southwest of Aleppo in northwestern Syria. During the height of its power (c. 2600–2240 bce), Ebla dominated northern Syria, Lebanon, and parts of northern Mesopotamia (modern Iraq) and enjoyed trade and diplomatic relations with states as far away as Egypt,
- Eblaite language
Eblaite language, archaic Semitic language, probably the most ancient to survive in substantial form, dating from the third quarter of the 3rd millennium bc. As a Northern Central Semitic language, Eblaite is affiliated with the Afro-Asiatic (formerly Hamito-Semitic) family of languages.
- EBM
machine tool: Electron-beam machining (EBM): The EBM technique is used for cutting fine holes and slots in any material. In a vacuum chamber, a beam of high-velocity electrons is focused on a workpiece. The kinetic energy of the electrons, upon striking the workpiece, changes to heat, which vaporizes…
- EBM (manufacturing)
3D printing: …is electron beam melting (EBM); here the laser apparatus is replaced by an electron gun, which focuses a powerful electrically charged beam onto the powder under vacuum conditions. The most-advanced DMLS and EBM processes can make final products of advanced steel, titanium, and cobalt-chromium alloys.
- Ebner-Eschenbach, Marie, Baroness von (Austrian author)
Marie, baroness von Ebner-Eschenbach was an Austrian novelist who portrayed life among both the poor and the aristocratic. Her first literary venture was the drama Maria Stuart in Schottland (1860), but she found her true sphere in narrative. In Die Prinzessin von Banalien (1872), Božena (1876),
- Ebo Landing (historic site, St. Simons Island, Georgia)
In 1803, having just overpowered their captors on a small slave vessel off the coast of a small island in Georgia, a group of Igbo people chose death over a life of enslavement and defiantly waded into the cool coastal waters and drowned. One of the largest mass suicides of enslaved West Africans
- Ebo of Reims (French archbishop)
Ebbo of Reims was an archbishop whose pioneering missions to the North helped prepare the ground for the Christianization of Denmark and who exercised significant influence on contemporary arts. Born a royal serf, Ebbo was educated and ordained a priest in the Carolingian court, where he became a
- Ebola (disease)
Ebola, contagious disease caused by a virus of the family Filoviridae that is responsible for a severe and often fatal viral hemorrhagic fever. Outbreaks in primates—including gorillas, chimpanzees, and humans—and domestic pigs have been recorded. The disease is characterized by extreme fever,
- Ebola (virus genus)
ebolavirus, genus of viruses in the family Filoviridae, certain members of which are particularly fatal in humans and nonhuman primates. In humans, ebolaviruses are responsible for Ebola virus disease (EVD), an illness characterized primarily by fever, rash, vomiting, diarrhea, and hemorrhaging.
- Ebola hemorrhagic fever (disease)
Ebola, contagious disease caused by a virus of the family Filoviridae that is responsible for a severe and often fatal viral hemorrhagic fever. Outbreaks in primates—including gorillas, chimpanzees, and humans—and domestic pigs have been recorded. The disease is characterized by extreme fever,
- Ebola outbreak of 2014
Ebola outbreak of 2014–16, outbreak of Ebola virus disease that ravaged countries in western Africa in 2014–16 and was noted for its unprecedented magnitude. By January 2016, suspected and confirmed cases had totaled more than 28,600, and reported deaths numbered about 11,300, making the outbreak
- Ebola outbreak of 2014–16
Ebola outbreak of 2014–16, outbreak of Ebola virus disease that ravaged countries in western Africa in 2014–16 and was noted for its unprecedented magnitude. By January 2016, suspected and confirmed cases had totaled more than 28,600, and reported deaths numbered about 11,300, making the outbreak
- Ebola outbreak of 2018–2019
Ebola: Outbreaks: The second largest Ebola outbreak on record began in August 2018 in North Kivu province in the eastern region of the Democratic Republic of the Congo. The outbreak persisted for more than a year. By late October 2019, some 3,100 cases had been confirmed, with more than 2,100…
- Ebola virus (infectious agent)
Ebola: Species of ebolaviruses: Five species of ebolaviruses—known as Zaire ebolavirus, Sudan ebolavirus, Taï Forest ebolavirus, Reston ebolavirus, and Bundibugyo ebolavirus, named for their outbreak locations—have been described. The viruses are known commonly as Ebola virus (EBOV), Sudan virus (SUDV), Taï Forest virus (TAFV), Reston virus (RESTV), and
- Ebola virus disease (disease)
Ebola, contagious disease caused by a virus of the family Filoviridae that is responsible for a severe and often fatal viral hemorrhagic fever. Outbreaks in primates—including gorillas, chimpanzees, and humans—and domestic pigs have been recorded. The disease is characterized by extreme fever,
- ebolavirus (virus genus)
ebolavirus, genus of viruses in the family Filoviridae, certain members of which are particularly fatal in humans and nonhuman primates. In humans, ebolaviruses are responsible for Ebola virus disease (EVD), an illness characterized primarily by fever, rash, vomiting, diarrhea, and hemorrhaging.
- Eboli (Italy)
Eboli, town, Campania regione, southern Italy, east of the city of Salerno. The higher and older section of the town dominates the Sele Plain. Historical monuments include a castle of the Colonna family and the small Romanesque-style Basilica of San Pietro alli Marmi (1150). Eboli is an
- Ebolowa (Cameroon)
Ebolowa, town located in southwestern Cameroon. It lies 70 miles (112 km) south-southwest of Yaoundé, at the intersection of roads to Kribi (west), Yaoundé (northeast), and the neighbouring country of Gabon (south). Ebolowa is a centre of the cocoa trade. An agricultural school operates
- Ebonics (dialect)
Ebonics, dialect of American English spoken by a large proportion of African Americans. Many scholars hold that Ebonics, like several English creoles, developed from contacts between nonstandard varieties of colonial English and African languages. Its exact origins continue to be debated, however,
- ebony (wood)
ebony, wood of several species of trees of the genus Diospyros (family Ebenaceae), widely distributed in the tropics. The best is very heavy, almost black, and derived from heartwood only. Because of its colour, durability, hardness, and ability to take a high polish, ebony is used for cabinetwork
- Ebony (American magazine)
Ebony, monthly magazine geared to a middle-class African American readership. It was the first Black-oriented magazine in the United States to attain national circulation. Ebony was founded in 1945 by John H. Johnson of Chicago, whose first publishing venture was the pocket-size Negro Digest
- ebony family (plant family)
Ericales: Ebenaceae: Ebenaceae, the persimmon or ebony family, includes trees and shrubs placed in four genera, with about 855 species found throughout the tropics and some also in temperate regions. Diospyros (about 800 species) occurs throughout the family’s range. Ebenaceae often have two-ranked leaves that lack…
- eboshi (Japanese religion)
shōzoku: …be either the black lacquered-silk eboshi, for less formal attire, or the more elaborate kanmuri, worn with the saifuku costume. Priests usually carry a shaku, a flat wooden sceptre, either held in the hand or thrust into the belt.
- Ebot (ancient city, Egypt)
Abydos, prominent sacred city and one of the most important archaeological sites of ancient Egypt. The site, located in the low desert west of the Nile River near Al-Balyanā, was a necropolis for the earliest Egyptian royalty and later a pilgrimage centre for the worship of Osiris. The western
- Éboué, Adolphe-Félix-Sylvestre (governor general of French Equatorial Africa)
Félix Éboué was a black colonial administrator who reached the highest level of the French colonial administrative system and played a crucial role in the adherence of French Equatorial Africa to Charles de Gaulle’s Free France in 1940. Éboué graduated from the École Coloniale, a prestigious school
- Éboué, Félix (governor general of French Equatorial Africa)
Félix Éboué was a black colonial administrator who reached the highest level of the French colonial administrative system and played a crucial role in the adherence of French Equatorial Africa to Charles de Gaulle’s Free France in 1940. Éboué graduated from the École Coloniale, a prestigious school
- EBOV (infectious agent)
Ebola: Species of ebolaviruses: Five species of ebolaviruses—known as Zaire ebolavirus, Sudan ebolavirus, Taï Forest ebolavirus, Reston ebolavirus, and Bundibugyo ebolavirus, named for their outbreak locations—have been described. The viruses are known commonly as Ebola virus (EBOV), Sudan virus (SUDV), Taï Forest virus (TAFV), Reston virus (RESTV), and
- EBR-I (nuclear reactor)
breeder reactor: …first experimental breeder reactor, designated EBR-1, was developed in 1951 by U.S. scientists at the National Reactor Testing Station (now called Idaho National Engineering Laboratory), near Idaho Falls, Idaho. France, Great Britain, Japan, and the Soviet Union subsequently built experimental breeders. Although interest in breeder reactors waned after the 1960s…
- EBR-II (nuclear reactor)
nuclear reactor: From production reactors to commercial power reactors: A much larger experimental breeder, EBR-II, was developed and put into service (with power generation) in 1963.
- Ebrāhīm II (Mosāferīd ruler)
Mosāferīd Dynasty: Ebrāhīm II (ruled 997–c. 1030) was able to reestablish Mosāferīd control over Daylam and to expand southward as far as Zanjān. After Ebrāhīm’s death, however, the history of the dynasty becomes fragmentary; Ebrāhīm’s descendants ruled in Daylam, first as vassals of the Ghaznavids and then…
- Ebrāhīm Sīmjūrī (Sāmānid governor)
Sīmjūrid Dynasty: His descendant Ebrāhīm Sīmjūrī became governor of Khorāsān during the reign of the Sāmānid Nūḥ I. Ebrāhīm’s son Abū ol-Ḥasan Sīmjūrī created a virtually independent principality centred in Qohestān in southern Khorāsān. Abū ol-Ḥasan’s son Abū ʿAlī added Herāt to the domains.
- EBRD
European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD), organization established in 1991 to develop a private business sector in the countries of central and eastern Europe after the collapse of communism in the region. The EBRD provides project financing for banks, industries, and businesses in
- Ebreo, Leone (Portuguese-Jewish author)
Benedict de Spinoza: The period of the Ethics of Benedict de Spinoza: …the Dialogues on Love by Leone Ebreo (also known as Judah Abravanel), written in the early 16th century. Spinoza had a copy in Spanish in his library. This text is the source of the key phrases that Spinoza uses at the end of Part V to describe the culmination of…
- Ebro River (river, Spain)
Ebro River, river, the longest in Spain. The Ebro rises in springs at Fontibre near Reinosa in the Cantabrian Mountains, in the Cantabria province of northern Spain. It flows for 565 miles (910 km) in a southeasterly course to its delta on the Mediterranean coast in Tarragona province, midway
- Ebro Valley (valley, Spain)
Pyrenees: Climate of Pyrenees: …Pyrenees the valley of the Ebro—which runs in a general northwest–southeast direction and is blocked by the southwest–northeast-trending Catalonian ranges near the eastern coast of Spain—acts as a “little continent.” Hence, its climate is one of great thermal contrasts that are exaggerated by the generally high altitude of the Iberian…
- Ebroïn (Neustrian official)
Ebroïn was the mayor of the palace in the Frankish kingdom of Neustria for some 20-odd years, from 656. After his Merovingian puppet king, Chlotar III, died in 673, Ebroïn took it upon himself to appoint Chlotar’s brother, Theuderic III, as successor. Irate at the lack of consultation, the magnates
- ebullism (medical disorder)
ebullism, formation of bubbles in the bodily fluids because of an extreme reduction in the surrounding pressure. Aircraft pilots are susceptible to ebullism when they venture into the upper atmosphere; the higher the pilot goes, the lower the surrounding pressure becomes. In the atmospheric
- Eburodunensis, Lacus (lake, Switzerland)
Lake Neuchâtel, largest lake wholly in Switzerland; its area of 84 square miles (218 square km) is divided among the cantons of Neuchâtel, Vaud, Fribourg, and Bern. Lakes Neuchâtel, Biel (Bienne), and Morat, connected by canals, are survivors of a former glacial lake in the lower Aare valley, at
- Eburodunum (Switzerland)
Johann Heinrich Pestalozzi: …1825 a boarding school at Yverdon, near Neuchâtel. Both schools relied for funds on fee-paying pupils, though some poor children were taken in, and these institutes served as experimental bases for proving his method in its three branches—intellectual, moral, and physical, the latter including vocational and civic training. They also…
- Eburon Glacial Stage (geology)
Eburon Glacial Stage, division of Pleistocene time in northern Europe (the Pleistocene Epoch began about 2.6 million years ago and ended about 11,700 years ago). The Eburon Glacial Stage preceded the Waal Interglacial Stage and followed the Tegelen (Tiglian) Interglacial Stage, which were both
- Eburones (people)
history of the Low Countries: The Roman period: …Schelde and the Rhine, the Eburones and the Aduatuci; and, in what is now Luxembourg, the Treveri. North of the Rhine, the Frisii (Frisians) were the principal inhabitants, although the arrival of the Romans brought about a number of movements: the Batavi came to the area of the lower reaches…
- EBV (infectious agent)
Epstein-Barr virus (EBV), virus of the Herpesviridae family that is the major cause of acute infectious mononucleosis, a common syndrome characterized by fever, sore throat, extreme fatigue, and swollen lymph glands. Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) was first reported by British scientists M.A. Epstein,
- EBX Group (Brazilian company)
Eike Batista: …under the rubric of his EBX Group. Like EBX, each of those corporations had an X in its name, which for Batista symbolized the multiplication of wealth. And indeed, Batista’s net worth grew exponentially after 2007—the year he founded OGX, his oil and gas company. He wasted no time in…
- EC (physics)
electron capture, one of three processes of radioactive disintegration known as beta decay
- EC (European economic association)
European Community (EC), former association designed to integrate the economies of Europe. The term also refers to the “European Communities,” which originally comprised the European Economic Community (EEC), the European Coal and Steel Community (ECSC; dissolved in 2002), and the European Atomic
- EC (European organization)
European Commission (EC), an institution of the European Union (EU) and its constituent entities that makes up the organization’s executive arm. The EC also has legislative functions, such as proposing new laws for the European Parliament, and judicial functions, such as finding legal solutions to
- EC cell (anatomy)
human digestive system: Serotonin: …amino acid 5-hydroxytrytophan in the enterochromaffin cells (EC) and in other similar cells called enterochromaffin-like cells (ECL). These cells also secrete histamine and kinins, which likewise have important messenger functions in glandular secretions and on blood vessels. Serotonin acts in paracrine fashion. Both EC and ECL cells are widely distributed…
- ECA (international organization)
Earth Council Alliance (ECA), network of nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) and individuals dedicated to promoting sustainable development. The Earth Council Alliance specifically supports the sustainability goals articulated in three documents: the Earth Charter, an international declaration
- ECA (United States government)
Marshall Plan: Hoffman, the Economic Cooperation Administration (ECA), a specially created bureau, distributed over the next four years some $13 billion worth of economic aid, helping to restore industrial and agricultural production, establish financial stability, and expand trade. Direct grants accounted for the vast majority of the aid, with…
- Eça de Queirós, José Maria de (Portuguese novelist)
José Maria de Eça de Queirós was a novelist committed to social reform who introduced naturalism and realism to Portugal. He is considered to be one of the greatest Portuguese novelists and is certainly the leading 19th-century Portuguese novelist. His works have been translated into many
- Eça de Queiroz, José Maria de (Portuguese novelist)
José Maria de Eça de Queirós was a novelist committed to social reform who introduced naturalism and realism to Portugal. He is considered to be one of the greatest Portuguese novelists and is certainly the leading 19th-century Portuguese novelist. His works have been translated into many
- Écart (French company)
Andrée Putman: …furnishings and interior design business, Écart, in 1978. Although she had turned her back on a career in music, her training informed her design practice—she reinterpreted the balance, harmony, and rhythm of musical composition in her designs through the restraint of simple lines, monochromatic colours, and unique combinations of materials.…
- écarté (card game)
écarté, card game usually played for a stake with nonplayers making side bets. The game was highly popular in France and England in the 19th century but declined thereafter. The play is by two hands, though more players frequently participate by betting with or against either player. A pack of 32
- Ecatommiti (work by Giraldi)
Giambattista Giraldi: His Ecatommiti (1565), 112 stories collected according to the pattern of Boccaccio’s Decameron, aimed at stylistic distinction and, in the manner of Matteo Bandello, showed an appreciation for direct narrative. They are moralistic in tone and were translated and imitated in France, Spain, and England; Shakespeare’s…
- ECB (bank, Europe)
European Central Bank (ECB), central banking authority of the euro zone, which consists of the 19 European Union (EU) member states that have adopted the euro as their common currency. The main task of the European Central Bank (ECB) is to conduct monetary policy in the region by managing the
- ECB (sports organization)
cricket: The Cricket Council and the ECB: A reorganization of English cricket took place in 1969, resulting in the end of the MCC’s long reign as the controlling body of the game, though the organization still retains responsibility for the laws. With the establishment of the Sports Council (a government agency…
- Ecballium elaterium (plant)
squirting cucumber, (Ecballium elaterium), trailing herbaceous plant in the gourd family (Cucurbitaceae). The plant is native to the Mediterranean region but has been introduced to other areas as a garden curiosity for its distinctive explosive fruits. Squirting cucumber contains poisonous
- Ecbasis captivi (Latin beast epic)
Isengrim: …a character in the Latin Ecbasis captivi (c. 940), in which the beasts are unnamed, and under his own name in Ysengrimus (1152). He is the main character in both epics. In the first he is represented as a monk to symbolize slothful and degenerate clergy of the period; in…
- Ecbatana (ancient city, Iran)
Ecbatana, ancient city on the site of which stands the modern city of Hamadān, Iran. Ecbatana was the capital of Media and was subsequently the summer residence of the Achaemenian kings and one of the residences of the Parthian kings. According to ancient Greek writers, the city was founded in
- Ecca Series (geology)
Africa: The Paleozoic Era: …strata are known as the Ecca Series and are divided into three groups: the Lower Ecca (containing almost 1,000 feet [300 metres] of shales), the Middle Ecca (some 1,650 feet [500 metres] of sandstone, seams of coal, and fossilized plants), and the Upper Ecca (about 650 feet [200 metres] of…
- Eccard, Johan (German composer)
Johannes Eccard was a German composer known for his setting of the year’s cycle of Lutheran chorales. After serving the banker Jacob Fugger in Augsburg (1577–78), Eccard joined the chapel of Prince Georg Friedrich of Preussen-Ansbach in Königsberg (now Kaliningrad, Russia) in 1579, becoming
- Eccard, Johannes (German composer)
Johannes Eccard was a German composer known for his setting of the year’s cycle of Lutheran chorales. After serving the banker Jacob Fugger in Augsburg (1577–78), Eccard joined the chapel of Prince Georg Friedrich of Preussen-Ansbach in Königsberg (now Kaliningrad, Russia) in 1579, becoming
- Ecce Ancilla Domini (painting by Rossetti)
Dante Gabriel Rossetti: Early life and works: …it was exhibited in 1850, Ecce Ancilla Domini received severe criticism, which Rossetti could never bear with equanimity. In consequence, he ceased to show in public and gave up oils in favour of watercolours, which he could more easily dispose of to personal acquaintances. He also turned from traditional religious…
- Ecce Homo (Christian art)
Ecce Homo, (Latin: “Behold the Man”), theme prevalent in western Christian art of the 15th to 17th century, so called after the words of Pontius Pilate to the Jews who demanded the crucifixion of Jesus (John 19:5). Paintings on this theme generally conform to one of two types: devotional images of
- Ecce Homo (work by Nietzsche)
Friedrich Nietzsche: Decade of isolation and creativity (1879–89) of Friedrich Nietzsche: …Antichrist), Nietzsche contra Wagner, and Ecce Homo, a reflection on his own works and significance. Twilight of the Idols appeared in 1889; The Antichrist and Nietzsche contra Wagner were not published until 1895, the former mistakenly as book one of The Will to Power; and Ecce Homo was withheld from…
- Ecce Homo (drawings by Grosz)
George Grosz: …the Ruling Class (1921) and Ecce Homo (1922), Grosz depicts fat Junkers, greedy capitalists, smug bourgeoisie, drinkers, and lechers—as well as hollow-faced factory labourers, the poor, and the unemployed.
- Ecce Homo (painting by Rouault)
Christology: Early 20th century to the present: …penetrating iconlike eyes of his Ecce Homo (1936) are particularly striking. Pablo Picasso’s Crucifixion (1930) and his ink drawing of Jesus (1959) evoke the medieval “man of sorrow,” a tradition of depicting Jesus bearing the wounds of his Crucifixion. Although Marc Chagall’s Red Pietà (1956) contains hardly any direct biblical…
- Ecce sacerdos magnus (mass by Palestrina)
Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina: Music of Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina: …found in such masses as Ecce sacerdos magnus; L’Homme armé; Ut, re, mi, fa, sol, la; Ave Maria; Tu es Petrus; and Veni Creator Spiritus. These titles refer to the source of the particular cantus firmus. Palestrina’s mastery of contrapuntal ingenuity may be appreciated to the
- Eccelino III da Romano (Italian noble)
Ezzelino III da Romano was an Italian noble and soldier who was podestà (chief governing officer) of Verona (1226–30, 1232–59), Vicenza (1236–59), and Padua (1237–56). A skilled commander and successful intriguer, he expanded and consolidated his power over almost all northeast Italy by aiding the
- Eccentric Abstraction (art exhibition)
Lucy Lippard: …organized an exhibition entitled “Eccentric Abstraction” at the Fischbach Gallery in New York City. “Eccentric Abstraction” set the standard for what would later be regarded as postminimalism, process, or antiform art. Part of the exhibition’s success was the quality of its sculptures, which included works by such figures as…
- eccentric anomaly (astronomy)
anomaly: The eccentric anomaly is the angle E, between the perihelion B, the centre of the ellipse at C, and the point P′, which is located by drawing a perpendicular to AB passing through the planet and intersecting a circle of diameter AB.
- eccentric circle (mathematics)
astronomy: The motion of the planets: …models were developed, based on eccentric circles and epicycles. (An eccentric circle is a circle that is slightly off-centre from Earth, and an epicycle is a circle that is carried and rides around on another circle.) This innovation is usually attributed to Apollonius of Perga (c. 220 bce), but it…
- Eccentric Neighborhoods (work by Ferré)
Rosario Ferré: …Ferré published the English-language novel Eccentric Neighborhoods, about two Puerto Rican families during the first half of the 20th century, and in 2001 she released Flight of the Swan, about a stranded Russian ballet company caught up in Puerto Rico’s independence movement.
- eccentric weaving
tapestry: Techniques: …tapestries this technique, usually called eccentric weaving, occasionally has been used in making some of the experimental abstract hangings of the later 20th century.
- eccentric-and-rod mechanism (mechanics)
eccentric-and-rod mechanism, arrangement of mechanical parts used to obtain a reciprocating straight-line motion from a rotating shaft; it serves the same purpose as a slider-crank mechanism and is particularly useful when the required stroke of the reciprocating motion is small in comparison with
- eccentricity (mathematics)
conic section: Analytic definition: …is a constant, called the eccentricity of the curve. If the eccentricity is zero, the curve is a circle; if equal to one, a parabola; if less than one, an ellipse; and if greater than one, a hyperbola. See the figure.
- eccentricity (astronomy)
celestial mechanics: Kepler’s laws of planetary motion: … < 1 is called the eccentricity. Thus, e = 0 corresponds to a circle. If the Sun is at the focus S of the ellipse, the point P at which the planet is closest to the Sun is called the perihelion, and the most distant point in the orbit A…
- Eccles, Clinton (British musician)
the Moody Blues: ), and Clint Warwick (original name Clinton Eccles; b. June 25, 1939, Birmingham—d. May 15, 2004, Birmingham). Later members included Justin Hayward (in full David Justin Hayward; b. October 14, 1946, Swindon, Wiltshire, England), John Lodge (b. July 20, 1945, Birmingham), and Patrick Moraz (b. June 24,…
- Eccles, Henry F. (United States rear admiral)
logistics: Fundamentals: …by a retired rear admiral, Henry E. Eccles, whose Logistics in the National Defense appeared in 1959. Expanding Thorpe’s trinity to five (strategy, tactics, logistics, intelligence, communications), Eccles developed a conceptual framework that envisaged logistics as the military element in the nation’s economy and the economic element in its military…
- Eccles, Sir John Carew (Australian physiologist)
Sir John Carew Eccles was an Australian research physiologist who received (with Alan Hodgkin and Andrew Huxley) the 1963 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine for his discovery of the chemical means by which impulses are communicated or repressed by nerve cells (neurons). After graduating from
- Eccles, William Henry (British physicist)
William Henry Eccles was a British physicist who pioneered in the development of radio communication. He received his doctorate from the Royal College of Science, London, in 1901, and then taught at South Western Polytechnic, London (1902–16), and, succeeding Silvanus Thompson, at City and Guilds
- ecclesia (Christadelphian)
Christadelphian: ecclesia, is the principal unit of government in the group; there is no general overall organization, and no distinction is made between clergy and laity. Ruling or serving brethren are elected and minister without compensation. Generally, an ecclesia does not have a building but meets…
- Ecclesia (ancient Greek assembly)
Ecclesia, (“gathering of those summoned”), in ancient Greece, assembly of citizens in a city-state. Its roots lay in the Homeric agora, the meeting of the people. The Athenian Ecclesia, for which exists the most detailed record, was already functioning in Draco’s day (c. 621 bc). In the course of