- Eisenstein, Sergey Mikhaylovich (Soviet film director)
Sergei Eisenstein was a Russian film director and theorist whose work includes the three film classics Battleship Potemkin (1925), Alexander Nevsky (1938), and Ivan the Terrible (released in two parts, 1944 and 1958). In his concept of film montage, images, perhaps independent of the “main” action,
- Eiserne Kreuz (German military award)
Iron Cross, Prussian military decoration instituted in 1813 by Frederick William III for distinguished service in the Prussian War of Liberation. Use of the decoration was revived by William I for the Franco-Prussian War of 1870, recreated in 1914 for World War I, and last revived by Adolf Hitler o
- Eiserne Prinz, der (Prussian prince)
Frederick Charles, prince of Prussia was a prince of Prussia and a Prussian field marshal, victor in the Battle of Königgrätz (Sadowa) on July 3, 1866. The eldest son of Prince Charles of Prussia and nephew of the future German emperor William I, Frederick Charles was educated from childhood for a
- Eisk (Russia)
Yeysk, city, Krasnodar kray (territory), southwestern Russia. It was founded as a port in 1848 on the southern side of Taganrog Gulf of the Sea of Azov. Fishing and associated industries (fish canning) are important; other industries include agricultural processing. The city is a noted health
- Eisleben (Germany)
Eisleben, city, Saxony-Anhalt Land (state), central Germany. It is situated in the eastern foothills of the Harz Mountains. First mentioned in 994 as a market called Islebia and in 1180 as a town, it belonged to the counts of Mansfeld until it passed to Saxony in 1780. It was assigned to Prussia in
- Eisler, Hanns (German composer)
theatre music: Music for motion pictures: Hanns Eisler, a German-born composer, formed his own theories of film music, based on empirical experience composing in this medium. His published findings recommended short musical forms in a film context, the composer’s conscious awareness of the film’s realistic sound element (the “where” and “when”…
- Eisner Award (comic book award)
Will Eisner: Tributes and legacy: The Will Eisner Comic Industry Awards were established in his name in 1988. The Eisners, which are considered the Academy Awards of the American comic book industry, are presented annually at the San Diego Comic-Con.
- Eisner, Kurt (German journalist and statesman)
Kurt Eisner was a German socialist journalist and statesman who organized the Socialist Revolution that overthrew the monarchy in Bavaria (1918). Eisner studied literature and neo-Kantian philosophy with Hermann Cohen at the University of Marburg. In 1892 he published Friedrich Nietzsche und die
- Eisner, Michael (American executive)
Michael Eisner is an American business and entertainment executive who was known for his role in reviving the fortunes of, successively, the television network ABC, the film studio Paramount Pictures, and the Disney Company. Eisner grew up in a wealthy family and graduated from a private boarding
- Eisner, Michael Dammann (American executive)
Michael Eisner is an American business and entertainment executive who was known for his role in reviving the fortunes of, successively, the television network ABC, the film studio Paramount Pictures, and the Disney Company. Eisner grew up in a wealthy family and graduated from a private boarding
- Eisner, Will (American artist and author)
Will Eisner was an American comics artist who was a pioneer of the American comic book industry. Eisner is best remembered for creating the series The Spirit, featuring the titular crime-fighting superhero, which was published from 1940 to 1952. Eisner’s book A Contract with God, and Other Tenement
- Eisner, William Erwin (American artist and author)
Will Eisner was an American comics artist who was a pioneer of the American comic book industry. Eisner is best remembered for creating the series The Spirit, featuring the titular crime-fighting superhero, which was published from 1940 to 1952. Eisner’s book A Contract with God, and Other Tenement
- Eisriesenwelt (cave, Austria)
ice cave: The Eisriesenwelt (“Ice Giant World”) in Austria exhibits a frozen landscape that extends 42 km (26.1 miles).
- Eisschiessen (sport)
Eisstockschiessen, a game played on ice in the winter and on asphalt or other surfaces during the rest of the year, similar to curling and shuffleboard. The game became popular in Bavaria and Austria by the late 19th century. Teams consist of four players and one substitute. The rink is 28 metres
- Eissner, Clara (German socialist)
Clara Zetkin was a German feminist, Socialist, and Communist leader, who after World War I played a leading role in the new Communist Party of Germany (Kommunistische Partei Deutschlands; KPD) and the Comintern (Third International). Clara Eissner was educated at the Leipzig Teachers’ College for
- Eisstockschiessen (sport)
Eisstockschiessen, a game played on ice in the winter and on asphalt or other surfaces during the rest of the year, similar to curling and shuffleboard. The game became popular in Bavaria and Austria by the late 19th century. Teams consist of four players and one substitute. The rink is 28 metres
- eisteddfod (Welsh literary assembly)
eisteddfod, formal assembly of Welsh bards and minstrels that originated in the traditions of court bards of medieval times. The modern National Eisteddfod, revived in the 19th century and held each summer alternately in a site in North or South Wales, has been broadened to include awards for
- eisteddfodau (Welsh literary assembly)
eisteddfod, formal assembly of Welsh bards and minstrels that originated in the traditions of court bards of medieval times. The modern National Eisteddfod, revived in the 19th century and held each summer alternately in a site in North or South Wales, has been broadened to include awards for
- eisteddfods (Welsh literary assembly)
eisteddfod, formal assembly of Welsh bards and minstrels that originated in the traditions of court bards of medieval times. The modern National Eisteddfod, revived in the 19th century and held each summer alternately in a site in North or South Wales, has been broadened to include awards for
- EITA (Indian trade association)
Confederation of Indian Industry (CII), trade association representing the interests of Indian businesses in various sectors, chiefly including engineering, manufacturing, consulting, and services. The organization was founded as the Engineering and Iron Trades Association (EITA) in 1895. It
- EITC (taxation)
minimum wage: …alternatives to minimum-wage laws include Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) programs, which aid low-wage earners through decreased taxes and tax refunds, and an unconditional social-security system known as basic income, which periodically provides citizens with a lump sum of money.
- Either/Or: A Fragment of Life (work by Kierkegaard)
Søren Kierkegaard: Stages on life’s way: …one of the essays of Either/Or, the aesthete sees boredom as the root of all evil and is preoccupied with making life interesting; and the famous seducer in the same volume seems less concerned with sex than with the fascinating spectacle of watching himself seduce his victim.
- Eitner, Robert (German musicologist)
Robert Eitner was a German musicologist, editor, and bibliographer. Largely self-taught in music, Eitner in 1853 settled in Berlin, where he gave lessons and performed his own compositions in concerts. In 1863 he opened a music school, but his growing interest in historical research led him to
- Eivissa (island, Spain)
Ibiza, island, Balearic Islands provincia (province) and comunidad autónoma (autonomous community), Spain. Ibiza is the third largest of the Balearic Islands. It lies in the western Mediterranean 50 miles (80 km) southwest of Majorca. The island was a strategic point of great importance in ancient
- Eivissa (Spain)
Spain: Phoenicians of Spain: Eivissa (Ibiza) became a major Carthaginian colony, and the island produced dye, salt, fish sauce, and wool. A shrine with offerings to the goddess Tanit was established in the cave at Es Cuyram, and the Balearic Islands entered Eivissa’s commercial orbit after 400 bce. In 237…
- ejaculation (physiology)
ejaculation, the release of sperm cells and seminal plasma from the male reproductive system. Ejaculation takes place in two phases: in the first, or emission, stage, sperm are moved from the testes and the epididymis (where the sperm are stored) to the beginning of the urethra, a hollow tube
- ejaculatory duct (anatomy)
ejaculatory duct, either of two hollow tubes, each formed by union of the ampulla of a ductus deferens (q.v.) and the excretory duct of a seminal vesicle (q.v.). The ducts, which open into the urethra about halfway through the prostate gland (q.v.), function to mix the sperm stored in the ampulla
- ejaculatory impotence (sexual dysfunction)
impotence: In ejaculatory impotence, the male achieves an erection but cannot reach orgasm in the partner’s vagina. The erection may be maintained for long periods, even long after the female partner has achieved orgasm. This form of impotence nearly always has an emotional rather than physical cause.
- Eje Volcánico (mountain range, Mexico)
Cordillera Neo-Volcánica, relatively young range of active and dormant volcanoes traversing central Mexico from Cape Corrientes on the west coast, southeast to Jalapa and Veracruz on the east coast. The cordillera forms the southern boundary of Mexico’s Mesa Central and includes the volcanic peaks
- ejecta (meteorite)
Mars: Southern cratered highlands: …named because the lobes of ejecta—the material thrown out from the crater and extending around it—are bordered with a low ridge, or rampart. The ejecta apparently flowed across the ground, which may indicate that it had a mudlike consistency. Some scientists have conjectured that the mud formed from a mixture…
- ejecta (volcanism)
mountain ecosystem: Environment: In volcanic regions tephra (erupted ash) may also contribute to soil depth and fertility.
- ejecta blanket (geology)
Mercury: Basin and surrounding region: …basin rim and the basin ejecta terrains. The rim consists of a ring of irregular mountain blocks approaching 3 km (2 miles) in height, the highest mountains yet seen on Mercury, bounded on the interior by a relatively steep slope, or escarpment. A second, much smaller escarpment ring stands about…
- ejecta terrain (geology)
Mercury: Basin and surrounding region: …basin rim and the basin ejecta terrains. The rim consists of a ring of irregular mountain blocks approaching 3 km (2 miles) in height, the highest mountains yet seen on Mercury, bounded on the interior by a relatively steep slope, or escarpment. A second, much smaller escarpment ring stands about…
- ejection fraction (medicine)
cardiovascular disease: Ventricular dysfunction in heart failure: …blood that is ejected (called ejection fraction) and has significant functional consequences. Ejection fraction, therefore, is a benchmark for assessing ventricular function and failure on a chronic basis.
- ejective (linguistics)
phonetics: Types of airstream: …resulting sound is called an ejective. Amharic, the national language of Ethiopia, uses this mechanism to produce both ejective stops and fricatives, which contrast with the more usual stops and fricatives made with a pulmonic airstream mechanism. A downward movement of the glottis is used in the production of implosive…
- ejectment (law)
ejectment, in Anglo-American property law, legal action for recovery of land from one wrongfully in possession and monetary compensation for his unlawful detention of the land. The action, traceable to the Roman law, had its early development in feudal England. By the second half of the 16th
- ejectosome (biology)
algae: The algal cell: Ejectosomes are structures that are analogous to ejectile organelles and are found in the class Cryptophyceae. Several classes of algae in the division Chromophyta have mucous organelles that secrete slime. Gonyostomum semen, a freshwater member of the class Raphidophyceae, has numerous mucocysts, which, when such…
- Ejegod, Erik (king of Denmark)
Denmark: The monarchy: …Holy; 1080–86), Oluf Hunger (1086–95), Erik Ejegod (1095–1103), and Niels (1104–34). Their reigns were marked by conflict over the extent of the king’s power, and both Canute and Niels were assassinated. By 1146 civil war had divided the kingdom between three contenders.
- Ejército de Liberación Nacional (Colombian guerrilla group)
Colombia: La Violencia, dictatorship, and democratic restoration: The first was the National Liberation Army (Ejército de Liberación Nacional; ELN), which was created by a group of Colombian students who had studied in Cuba. Founded in 1964, the ELN followed strategies espoused by Che Guevara. Another guerrilla group, which followed two years later, was the Colombian Revolutionary…
- Ejército Revolucionario del Pueblo (political organization, Argentina)
Argentina: Military government, 1966–73: …by a Trotskyite group, the People’s Revolutionary Army (Ejército Revolucionario del Pueblo; ERP), and by Peronist groups. In 1970 one of these Peronist organizations, the Montoneros, destroyed the moderate Peronist union leadership and captured and killed former president Aramburu, who had been organizing a movement for a return to constitutional…
- Ejército Zapatista de Liberación Nacional (political movement, Mexico)
Zapatista National Liberation Army (EZLN), guerrilla group in Mexico, founded in the late 20th century and named for the early 20th-century peasant revolutionary Emiliano Zapata. On Jan. 1, 1994, the Zapatistas staged a rebellion from their base in Chiapas, the southernmost Mexican state, to
- Ejercito, Joseph (president of the Philippines)
Joseph Estrada is a Filipino actor and politician who served as president of the Philippines (1998–2001) and later mayor of Manila (2013–19). The son of a government engineer, Estrada entered the Mapua Institute of Technology with the intention of following in his father’s footsteps, but he
- ejido (communal land)
ejido, in Mexico, village lands communally held in the traditional Indian system of land tenure that combines communal ownership with individual use. The ejido consists of cultivated land, pastureland, other uncultivated lands, and the fundo legal (townsite). In most cases the cultivated land is
- Ejima affair (Japanese history)
Kaigetsudō Ando: …a scandal known as the Ejima affair. (This scandal involved an affair between noted Kabuki actor Ikushima Shingorō and the highborn Lady Ejima, a member of the shogun’s court. Both were exiled—to different places.) Ando may have resumed his original trade upon his pardon and return to Edo in 1722,…
- Ejin Qi (banner, China)
Gansu: History: …You (Alax You) Qi and Ejina (Ejin) Qi banners in northwestern Gansu were detached and incorporated into the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region. In 1958 the affixed Ningxia province was separated from Gansu to become the Hui Autonomous Region of Ningxia. In 1969 the two aforementioned banners were returned to Gansu…
- Ejina Qi (banner, China)
Gansu: History: …You (Alax You) Qi and Ejina (Ejin) Qi banners in northwestern Gansu were detached and incorporated into the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region. In 1958 the affixed Ningxia province was separated from Gansu to become the Hui Autonomous Region of Ningxia. In 1969 the two aforementioned banners were returned to Gansu…
- Ejiofor, Chiwetel (British actor)
Chiwetel Ejiofor is an award-winning British actor, writer, and director known for bringing a quiet gravitas and multidimensionality to a wide variety of roles. He became a familiar screen presence in the 2000s with parts in Dirty Pretty Things (2002), Love Actually (2003), and Kinky Boots (2005)
- Ejiofor, Chiwetelu Umeadi (British actor)
Chiwetel Ejiofor is an award-winning British actor, writer, and director known for bringing a quiet gravitas and multidimensionality to a wide variety of roles. He became a familiar screen presence in the 2000s with parts in Dirty Pretty Things (2002), Love Actually (2003), and Kinky Boots (2005)
- ejiri (African figurine)
African art: Ijo: The western Ijo use ejiri figures, in which the head of the household is represented upon a highly schematic quadruped that is said to represent the guardian spirit of the family. Similar objects are made by the Edo-speaking Urhobo, to the north of the Ijo, where they are used…
- Ejmiadzin (Armenia)
Ejmiatsin, city, west-central Armenia. It lies on the plain of the Aras River, 12 miles (20 km) west of Yerevan. Ejmiatsin is the seat of the supreme catholicos, or primate, of the Armenian Apostolic Church. Ejmiatsin originated in the 7th century bce as the town of Vardkesavan and was renamed
- Ejmiatsin (Armenia)
Ejmiatsin, city, west-central Armenia. It lies on the plain of the Aras River, 12 miles (20 km) west of Yerevan. Ejmiatsin is the seat of the supreme catholicos, or primate, of the Armenian Apostolic Church. Ejmiatsin originated in the 7th century bce as the town of Vardkesavan and was renamed
- Ek, Daniel (Swedish entrepreneur)
Daniel Ek is a Swedish entrepreneur who in 2006 cofounded Spotify, an Internet music-streaming service that provides listeners with legal, ad-supported access to millions of songs, rejecting traditional models of downloading and eliminating per-song costs. Ek grew up in Ragsved, near Stockholm,
- Ek, Mats (Swedish dancer and choreographer)
Sylvie Guillem: …2002 she added Swedish choreographer Mats Ek’s Carmen to her repertoire. Following a world tour, Guillem retired in 2015.
- eka-lead (chemical element)
flerovium (Fl), artificially produced transuranium element of atomic number 114. In 1999 scientists at the Joint Institute for Nuclear Research in Dubna, Russia, and the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in Livermore, California, produced atoms of flerovium from colliding atoms of calcium-48
- eka-thallium (chemical element)
nihonium (Nh), artificially produced transuranium element of atomic number 113. In 2004 scientists at the RIKEN Nishina Center for Accelerator-Based Science in Saitama, Japan announced the production of one atom of element 113, which was formed when bismuth-209 was fused with zinc-70. Extremely
- Ekanatha (Hindu poet-saint and mystic)
Eknath was a poet-saint and mystic of Vaishnavism, the branch of Hinduism that reveres the deity Vishnu and his avatars (incarnations). Eknath is best known for his translations of various Sanskrit texts into Marathi (the local language of the Maharashtra region of central India), his authorship of
- Ekaterinburg (Russia)
Yekaterinburg, city and administrative center of Sverdlovsk oblast (region), west-central Russia. The city lies along the Iset River, which is a tributary of the Tobol River, and on the eastern slope of the Ural Mountains, slightly east of the border between Europe and Asia. Yekaterinburg is
- Ekaterinodar (Russia)
Krasnodar, city and administrative centre of Krasnodar kray (territory), southwestern Russia, lying along the Kuban River. Founded about 1793 as a Cossack guardpost on the Kuban frontier, it developed as a military town. In 1867, after the Caucasian wars, it became a city and centre of the fertile
- Ekaterinoslav (Ukraine)
Dnipro, city, south-central Ukraine. It lies along the Dnieper River, near its confluence with the Samara. The river was considerably widened by the construction of a dam about 50 miles (80 km) downstream. Founded in 1783 as Katerynoslav on the river’s north bank, the settlement was moved to its
- Ekberg, Anita (Swedish-born actress)
La Dolce Vita: …one showing the blonde, zaftig Anita Ekberg frolicking in the Trevi Fountain. La Dolce Vita is credited with contributing the word paparazzi to the English language (it derives from the name of the photographer in the film, Paparazzo) and adding the adjective “Felliniesque,” referring in part to the director’s embrace…
- Ekberg, Kerstin Anita Marianne (Swedish-born actress)
La Dolce Vita: …one showing the blonde, zaftig Anita Ekberg frolicking in the Trevi Fountain. La Dolce Vita is credited with contributing the word paparazzi to the English language (it derives from the name of the photographer in the film, Paparazzo) and adding the adjective “Felliniesque,” referring in part to the director’s embrace…
- EKC (pathology)
adenovirus: Adenoviruses can also cause epidemic keratoconjunctivitis (EKC) and are considered to be responsible for an outbreak of respiratory disease among military recruits in 1997. Like the cold viruses, adenoviruses are often found in latent infections in clinically healthy persons. Of the 47 different adenovirus species, only a few commonly cause…
- EKD (church, Germany)
The Evangelical Church in Germany, federation of Lutheran, Reformed, and United (a combination of Lutheran and Reformed) territorial churches in Germany. Organized in 1948 after the difficult years of the Nazi era (1933–45), it helped the German Protestant churches restore themselves, and it
- Ekeberg, Anders Gustav (Swedish chemist)
Anders Gustav Ekeberg was a Swedish chemist who in 1802 discovered the element tantalum. After graduation from the University of Uppsala and travels in Germany, Ekeberg returned to Uppsala and began teaching, introducing the chemistry of Antoine-Laurent Lavoisier. Though he was partly deaf from a
- Ekeblad, Eva (Swedish aristocrat and agronomist)
Eva Ekeblad was a Swedish aristocrat and agronomist who was best known for her work involving potatoes, notably developing (1746) methods for both distilling alcohol and making flour from the tuber. She was born into nobility, and in 1741, at age 16, she married Count Claes Claesson Ekeblad, a
- Ekeblad, Eva, Countess (Swedish aristocrat and agronomist)
Eva Ekeblad was a Swedish aristocrat and agronomist who was best known for her work involving potatoes, notably developing (1746) methods for both distilling alcohol and making flour from the tuber. She was born into nobility, and in 1741, at age 16, she married Count Claes Claesson Ekeblad, a
- Ekecheiria (ancient Greece)
The Olympic Truce: The creation of the Ekecheiria, the Olympic truce, lies within the traditional story of the founding of the ancient Olympic Games. Two warring kings of the area around Olympia, Iphitos and Cleomenes, joined with the Spartan lawgiver Lycurgus in an agreement to hold the Games…
- Ekelöf, Gunnar (Swedish poet)
Gunnar Ekelöf was an outstanding Swedish poet and essayist. Ekelöf exerted great influence on his contemporaries. His radically modern style was influenced by such poets as Charles Baudelaire, Arthur Rimbaud, Ezra Pound, and T.S. Eliot. In such poetry from the 1930s as Sent på jorden (1932; “Late
- Ekelund, Vilhelm (Swedish author)
Swedish literature: Development of lyric poetry: One of the most notable, Vilhelm Ekelund, was in his youth the chief exponent of Symbolism in Sweden and later, as an author of aphorisms, exerted much influence on the development of literary modernism. Among the most popular poets were Dan Andersson, Birger Sjöberg, and Hjalmar Gullberg. In Gullberg’s poetry,…
- Ekerot, Bengt (Swedish actor and director)
The Seventh Seal: …the personification of Death (Bengt Ekerot) comes for him, the knight suggests a chess match with his life as the prize. Throughout the game Death interrupts the play in order to spread more calamities on the world without ever answering the knight’s almost desperate inquiries about the existence of…
- Eket (people)
Ibibio: (Eket), Delta (Andoni-Ibeno), Western (Anang), and Eastern (the Ibibio proper).
- EKG (medicine)
electrocardiography, method of graphic tracing (electrocardiogram; ECG or EKG) of the electric current generated by the heart muscle during a heartbeat. The tracing is recorded with an electrocardiograph (actually a relatively simple string galvanometer), and it provides information on the
- Ekhmīn (Egypt)
Akhmīm, town, Sawhāj muḥāfaẓah (governorate), Upper Egypt, on the east bank of the Nile River, above Sawhāj on the west bank. Extensive necropolises dating from the 6th dynasty (c. 2325–c. 2150 bce) until the late Coptic period reveal the site’s antiquity. In 1981 remains of a temple (Roman period)
- Ekhof, Hans Konrad Dieterich (German actor)
Konrad Ekhof was an actor and director who, with Caroline Neuber and Friedrich Schröder, was a major influence in the development of a German theatrical tradition. In 1739 Ekhof became a member of the company managed by Johann Friedrich Schönemann, an association that extended over 17 years. Ekhof
- Ekhof, Konrad (German actor)
Konrad Ekhof was an actor and director who, with Caroline Neuber and Friedrich Schröder, was a major influence in the development of a German theatrical tradition. In 1739 Ekhof became a member of the company managed by Johann Friedrich Schönemann, an association that extended over 17 years. Ekhof
- Ekibastuz (Kazakhstan)
Ekibastuz, city and major opencut coal-mining centre in northeastern Kazakhstan, on the Ertis-Qaraghandy Canal. Coal was discovered in the region in 1876 and was mined on a small scale. Only after construction of a railway in 1953 did large-scale exploitation of Ekibastuz’s rich but low-grade coal
- Ekimov, Alexei (Soviet-born American physicist)
Alexei Ekimov is a Soviet-born American physicist who was awarded the 2023 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his work in producing quantum dots, which are very small particles whose unusual quantum properties depend on their size. He shared the prize with American chemist Louis Brus and French-born
- ekistics (sociology)
ekistics, science of human settlements. Ekistics involves the descriptive study of all kinds of human settlements and the formulation of general conclusions aimed at achieving harmony between the inhabitants of a settlement and their physical and sociocultural environments. Descriptive study
- Ekkehard (work by Scheffel)
Joseph Victor von Scheffel: …of Säckingen”) and historical novel Ekkehard (1855) appealed to sentimental popular taste and made him one of the most widely read German authors of his time.
- Ekkehard I of St. Gall (German monk and poet)
Ekkehard I the Elder was a teacher, monk, hymnist, and poet whom some scholars regard as the author of Waltharius, a celebrated Latin heroic poem based on the life of King Walter of Aquitaine. Of noble birth, Ekkehard was educated at the Benedictine monastery of Sankt Gallen (St. Gall) in
- Ekkehard I the Elder (German monk and poet)
Ekkehard I the Elder was a teacher, monk, hymnist, and poet whom some scholars regard as the author of Waltharius, a celebrated Latin heroic poem based on the life of King Walter of Aquitaine. Of noble birth, Ekkehard was educated at the Benedictine monastery of Sankt Gallen (St. Gall) in
- Ekkehard IV (German historian)
Ekkehard IV was a teacher, glossarist, writer, famous as one of the principal authors of Casus Sancti Galli (“The Events of Sankt Gallen [St. Gall]”)—an important history of the monastery. He grew up at Sankt Gallen, being educated by the celebrated German scholar Notker Labeo, Ekkehard I’s nephew.
- Ekkehart I of St. Gall (German monk and poet)
Ekkehard I the Elder was a teacher, monk, hymnist, and poet whom some scholars regard as the author of Waltharius, a celebrated Latin heroic poem based on the life of King Walter of Aquitaine. Of noble birth, Ekkehard was educated at the Benedictine monastery of Sankt Gallen (St. Gall) in
- Ekkehart I the Elder (German monk and poet)
Ekkehard I the Elder was a teacher, monk, hymnist, and poet whom some scholars regard as the author of Waltharius, a celebrated Latin heroic poem based on the life of King Walter of Aquitaine. Of noble birth, Ekkehard was educated at the Benedictine monastery of Sankt Gallen (St. Gall) in
- Ekklesia (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
- Ekklesiazousai (play by Aristophanes)
Women at the Ecclesia, drama by Aristophanes, performed about 392 bce. One of Aristophanes’ less-appealing plays, it treats the takeover by the women of Athens of the Ecclesia, the Athenian democratic assembly. They carry out this mission dressed as men, and, once they have achieved their goal,
- ekkyklema (Greek theater)
eccyclema, in classical Greek theatre, stage mechanism consisting of a low platform that rolled on wheels or revolved on an axis and could be pushed onstage to reveal an interior or some offstage scene such as a tableau. It was introduced to the Attic stage in the 5th century to provide directors a
- Ekloge ek ton ekklesiastikon historion (work by Theodorus Lector)
Theodorus Lector: …known by its Latin title Historia tripartita because it derived from three separate 5th-century chronicles, those of Socrates Scholasticus, Sozomen, and Theodoret of Cyrrhus. The Eklogē recounts in four books the fortunes of the church from 313, early in the reign of the emperor Constantine the Great, to the year…
- Ekman current meter (oceanography)
V. Walfrid Ekman: The Ekman current meter, an instrument with a simple and reliable mechanism, has been used, with subsequent improvements, to the present, while the Ekman reversing water bottle is used in freshwater lakes and sometimes in the ocean to obtain water samples at different depths with a…
- Ekman layer (oceanography)
Ekman layer, a vertical region of the ocean affected by the movement of wind-driven surface waters. This layer, named for the Swedish oceanographer V. Walfrid Ekman, extends to a depth of about 100 metres (about 300 feet). Ekman deduced the layer’s existence in 1902 from the results obtained from a
- Ekman reversing water bottle (oceanography)
V. Walfrid Ekman: …to the present, while the Ekman reversing water bottle is used in freshwater lakes and sometimes in the ocean to obtain water samples at different depths with a simultaneous measurement of water temperatures. He displayed his theoretical and experimental talents in his study of so-called dead water, which causes slow-moving…
- Ekman spiral (oceanography)
Ekman spiral, theoretical displacement of current direction by the Coriolis effect, given a steady wind blowing over an ocean of infinite depth, extent, and uniform eddy viscosity. According to the concept proposed by the 20th-century Swedish oceanographer V.W. Ekman, the surface layers are
- Ekman transport (oceanography)
ocean current: Ekman layer: This phenomenon is called Ekman transport, and its effects are widely observed in the oceans.
- Ekman, Gösta (Swedish actor)
Gösta Ekman was a Swedish actor and director noted for his versatility on stage and screen. Ekman premiered in 1906 at Stockholm’s Oscar Theatre and, after an apprenticeship on tour and in the provinces, returned to Stockholm (1913) to win acclaim for his classic portrayals, such as Lionel in
- Ekman, Kerstin (Swedish author)
Swedish literature: Political writing: Kerstin Ekman, initially a writer of detective novels, came to prominence with her meticulously documented Katrineholm series, which chronicled the lives of women in small-town Sweden. Another author who shed light on the underprivileged and socially defenseless, this time in the nation’s capital, was Heidi…
- Ekman, Paul (American psychologist)
lying: The psychology of lying: American psychologist Paul Ekman showed that people who are good at detecting mendacity pay careful attention to nonverbal cues. Fleeting alterations in the speaker’s facial expression (“microexpressions”) are especially revealing. Ekman also showed that subjects can be taught to recognize and interpret microexpressions, a skill that results…
- Ekman, V. Walfrid (Swedish scientist)
V. Walfrid Ekman was a Swedish physical oceanographer best known for his studies of the dynamics of ocean currents. The common oceanographic terms Ekman layer, denoting certain oceanic or atmospheric layers occurring at various interfaces; Ekman spiral, used in connection with vertical oceanic
- Ekman, Vagn Walfrid (Swedish scientist)
V. Walfrid Ekman was a Swedish physical oceanographer best known for his studies of the dynamics of ocean currents. The common oceanographic terms Ekman layer, denoting certain oceanic or atmospheric layers occurring at various interfaces; Ekman spiral, used in connection with vertical oceanic
- Eknath (Hindu poet-saint and mystic)
Eknath was a poet-saint and mystic of Vaishnavism, the branch of Hinduism that reveres the deity Vishnu and his avatars (incarnations). Eknath is best known for his translations of various Sanskrit texts into Marathi (the local language of the Maharashtra region of central India), his authorship of
- Eko (island, Nigeria)
Lagos: …city’s population is centred on Lagos Island, in Lagos Lagoon, on the Bight of Benin in the Gulf of Guinea. Lagos is Nigeria’s largest city and one of the largest in sub-Saharan Africa.