- Ekofisk (oil field, Norway)
Ekofisk, group of Norwegian offshore natural-gas and oil fields located in the North Sea about 180 miles (290 km) southwest of Norway, halfway between Norway and the United Kingdom. The Ekofisk district includes the Ekofisk field itself (1969; petroleum) and the original, relatively small
- Ekoi (people)
Ekoi, group of peoples situated in extreme southeastern Nigeria and extending eastward into neighbouring Cameroon. Ekoid Bantu languages are spoken by many groups, including the Atam, Boki, Mbembe, Ufia, and Yako. The Ekoi live in proximity to the Efiks of southeastern Nigeria and claim to have
- Ekoid Bantu (people)
Ekoi, group of peoples situated in extreme southeastern Nigeria and extending eastward into neighbouring Cameroon. Ekoid Bantu languages are spoken by many groups, including the Atam, Boki, Mbembe, Ufia, and Yako. The Ekoi live in proximity to the Efiks of southeastern Nigeria and claim to have
- Ekottarikagama (Buddhist literature)
miracle: India: According to the Anguttara Nikaya, one of the collections of the Buddha’s sayings, there are three kinds of miracles—the miracle of magic, the miracle of thought reading, and the miracle of instruction—and of these the last is the most wonderful and excellent, whereas the other two are not…
- Ekpe society (African secret society)
Calabar: …of Old Calabar by the Ekpe secret society, which was controlled by the towns’ merchant houses.
- Ekpo (African secret society)
Calabar: …of Old Calabar by the Ekpe secret society, which was controlled by the towns’ merchant houses.
- ekpu (African figurine)
African art: Ibibio: …several hundred ancestor figures, called ekpu, of the Ibibio coastal trade centre of Oron, some of which are thought to date from the late 18th century. They are bearded figures 3 to 4 feet (90 to 120 cm) high and are so individual as to suggest portraiture, despite their schematic…
- Ekrem, Recaizade Mahmud (Turkish author)
Recaizade Mahmud Ekrem was a writer who was one of the outstanding figures in 19th-century Turkish literature. The son of a poet and scholar, Ekrem was apprenticed to a number of government offices after his formal education. Later he became an official in the Council of State and a teacher of
- Ekron (ancient city, Israel)
Ekron, ancient Canaanite and Philistine city, one of the five cities of the Philistine pentapolis, and currently identified with Tel Miqne (Arabic: Khirbat al-Muqannaʿ), south of the settlement of Mazkeret Batya, central Israel. Although it was allocated to Judah after the Israelite conquest
- Ekstase (film by Machatý [1932])
Gustav Machatý: …to Sunday), and Ekstase (1933; Ecstasy). The last—starring Hedy Kiesler (later Hedy Lamarr) as an unsatisfied wife in search of passion—made Machatý world famous but also brought him trouble with the enforcers of the Hays Production Code. Even absent its nudity and sexual content, which are tame by 21st-century standards,…
- Ekster, Aleksandra Aleksandrovna (Russian artist)
Aleksandra Aleksandrovna Ekster was a Russian artist of international stature who divided her life between Kiev, St. Petersburg, Moscow, Vienna, and Paris, thus strengthening the cultural ties between Russia and Europe. In this way and through her own artistic achievement, she did much to further
- ekthesis (logic)
ekthesis, (Greek: “to expose,” or “to set forth”), in logic, process used by Aristotle to establish the validity of certain propositions or syllogisms. For example, in the Analytica priora he argued: “If A belongs to no B; neither will B belong to any A; for if it did belong to any A, say Γ
- Ekvthime Mthatzmideli (Eastern Orthodox monk)
Euthymius The Hagiorite was a monastic leader, scholar, and writer whose propagation of Greek culture and Eastern Orthodox tradition generated the golden age of Georgian education and literature. The son of a Georgian noble and court official, Euthymius accompanied his father into monastic
- Ekwan (Korean Buddhist monk)
Mādhyamika: …625 by the Korean monk Ekwan.
- Ekwensi, Cyprian (Nigerian author)
Cyprian Ekwensi was an Igbo novelist, short-story writer, and children’s author whose strength lies in his realistic depiction of the forces that have shaped the African city dweller. Ekwensi was educated at Ibadan (Nigeria) University College and at the Chelsea School of Pharmacy in London. His
- Ekwensi, Cyprian Odiatu Duaka (Nigerian author)
Cyprian Ekwensi was an Igbo novelist, short-story writer, and children’s author whose strength lies in his realistic depiction of the forces that have shaped the African city dweller. Ekwensi was educated at Ibadan (Nigeria) University College and at the Chelsea School of Pharmacy in London. His
- El (Semitic deity)
El, the general term for “deity” in Semitic languages as well as the name of the chief deity of the West Semites. In the ancient texts from Ras Shamra (ancient Ugarit) in Syria, El was described as the titular head of the pantheon, husband of Asherah, and father of all the other gods (except for
- El Al Israel Airlines
El Al Israel Airlines, Israeli airline founded by Israel in November 1948 after the establishment of the new nation. It flew its first commercial scheduled flights—to Rome and Paris—in July 1949, and by the 1980s it was flying routes from Jerusalem and Tel Aviv to many of the major cities of
- El Arbolillo (archaeological site, Mexico)
Middle American Indian: The prehistoric period: …central valley of Mexico at El Arbolillo, Zacatenco, Tlatilco, and, finally, Ticoman. The same developmental sequence occurred in the Formative period of highland Guatemala, as shown in the excavations at Kaminaljuyú near Guatemala City.
- El Argar (prehistoric culture)
El Argar, culture characterized by a flourishing metallurgy of bronze, silver, and gold that appeared at the beginning of the 2nd millennium bc in the Almería (southeastern) region of the Iberian Peninsula. The culture, which developed a lively trade with centres in the eastern Mediterranean,
- El Avila National Park (national park, Venezuela)
Venezuela: Conservation: El Avila National Park (1958) is popular among hikers and campers from the Caracas area; including Naiguatá Peak and other formations in the Coastal Range, the park supports a variety of wildlife at elevations ranging from about 400 to more than 9,000 feet (120 to…
- El Banco (Colombia)
El Banco, city, northern Colombia, at the junction of the Magdalena and César rivers. The conquistador Gonzalo Jiménez de Quezada arrived at the site in 1537 and found the Indian village of Sompallón; he called it Barbudo (“Bearded One”) because of its bearded chief. In 1544 Alonzo de San Martín
- El Bulli (restaurant, Roses, Spain)
Ferran Adrià: …creative force behind the restaurant El Bulli (closed in 2011), pioneered the influential culinary trend known as molecular gastronomy, which uses precise scientific techniques to create inventive and evocative high-end cuisine. In the early 21st century many considered him the best chef in the world.
- El Callao (Venezuela)
El Callao, town, Bolívar estado (state), eastern Venezuela. It is situated on the right bank of the Yuruari River, about 135 miles (272 km) east-southeast of Ciudad Bolívar in the Venezuelan Guiana Highlands. The town has been a gold-mining centre since 1853, following the discovery of the metal in
- El Cayo (Belize)
San Ignacio, town, west-central Belize. It lies along the Belize River near the Guatemalan border. San Ignacio and its sister town Santa Elena make up Belize’s second largest urban area. The two towns are separated by the Macal River and Belize’s only suspension bridge. With Benque Viejo del
- El Centro (California, United States)
El Centro, city, seat (1907) of Imperial county, southeastern California, U.S. It lies 120 miles (200 km) east of San Diego and 10 miles (16 km) north of Mexicali, Mexico. A desert community located some 50 feet (15 metres) below sea level, it is the largest settlement below sea level in the United
- El Cerrito (California, United States)
El Cerrito, city, Contra Costa county, California, U.S. El Cerrito lies on the eastern shore of San Francisco Bay, north of Oakland and 15 miles (25 km) northeast of San Francisco via the San Francisco–Oakland Bay Bridge. The early village—named Rust for Wilhelm F. Rust, a German blacksmith and
- El Chapo (Mexican criminal)
Joaquín Guzmán was the head of the Sinaloa drug cartel, one of the most powerful criminal organizations in Mexico from the late 20th century. Guzmán was born and raised in Badiraguato municipality, an impoverished and remote area of Sinaloa state in northwestern Mexico that was the birthplace of
- El Chichón (volcano, Mexico)
Mount Pinatubo: …that thrown up by the El Chichón volcano (1982), making Pinatubo perhaps the largest eruption of the 20th century. Pinatubo erupted again in late August 1992, killing more than 72 people.
- El Colegio Penstock Tunnel (tunnel, Colombia)
tunnels and underground excavations: Heavy ground: The 5-mile, 14-foot El Colegio Penstock Tunnel in Colombia was completed in 1965 in bituminous shale, requiring the replacement and resetting of more than 2,000 rib sets, which buckled as the invert (bottom supports) and sides gradually squeezed in up to 3 feet, and by deferring concreting until…
- El de Antequera (king of Aragon)
Ferdinand I was the king of Aragon from 1412 to 1416, the second son of John I of Castile and Eleanor, daughter of Peter IV of Aragon. Because his elder brother, Henry III, was an invalid, Ferdinand took the battlefield against the Muslims of Granada. When Henry III died in 1406, his son John II
- El de Las Navas (king of Castile)
Alfonso VIII was the king of Castile from 1158, son of Sancho III, whom he succeeded when three years old. Before Alfonso came of age, his reign was troubled by internal strife and the intervention of the kingdom of Navarre in Castilian affairs. Throughout his reign he maintained a close alliance
- El del Puñal (king of Aragon)
Peter IV was the king of Aragon from January 1336, son of Alfonso IV. Peter was the most cultivated of Spanish 14th-century kings but was also an inveterate political intriguer whose ability to dissemble was notorious. Through his voluminous correspondence, the workings of his mind are far better
- El Dorado (album by Shakira)
Shakira: Her next album, El Dorado (2017), won the Grammy Award for best Latin pop album and the Latin Grammy for best contemporary pop vocal album. El Dorado’s standout track was the single “La bicicleta,” a duet with Carlos Vives that won Latin Grammys for best record of the…
- El Dorado (Arkansas, United States)
El Dorado, city, seat (1843) of Union county, southern Arkansas, U.S., 100 miles (160 km) south of Little Rock. The site was selected in 1843 by county commissioners Robert Black, John Hampton, and Green Newton, who were instructed to locate centrally the county seat. Its Spanish name (meaning
- El Dorado (film by Hawks [1967])
Howard Hawks: Final films: El Dorado (1967), with Caan, Wayne, and Robert Mitchum, was either a sequel to or a remake of Rio Bravo, with Mitchum in Martin’s role. Rio Lobo (1970), yet another variation on the formula, found Wayne supported by an odd cast that included Jennifer O’Neill…
- El Escorial (Spain)
El Escorial, village, western Madrid provincia (province) and comunidad autónoma (autonomous community), central Spain, in the Guadarrama mountains, 26 miles (42 km) northwest of Madrid. It is the site of the Royal Monastery of San Lorenzo de El Escorial, a monastery originally Hieronymite but
- El Escorial library (library, El Escorial, Spain)
El Escorial: El Escorial library, founded by Philip II, houses a rare collection of more than 4,700 manuscripts, many of them illuminated, and 40,000 printed books. Pop. (2005) 13,768.
- El Estor (Guatemala)
Lake Izabal: …settlement on the shores is El Estor, which originated as the trading outpost of the United Fruit Company and whose name is derived from the English word store. Nickel has been mined near the lake.
- El Ferrol (Spain)
Ferrol, port city, A Coruña provincia (province), in the northern section of the comunidad autónoma (autonomous community) of Galicia, in extreme northwestern Spain. It is located on the Ferrol Inlet of the Atlantic Ocean. Named for a farol (lighthouse) that marked the entrance to its harbour, the
- El Ferrol del Caudillo (Spain)
Ferrol, port city, A Coruña provincia (province), in the northern section of the comunidad autónoma (autonomous community) of Galicia, in extreme northwestern Spain. It is located on the Ferrol Inlet of the Atlantic Ocean. Named for a farol (lighthouse) that marked the entrance to its harbour, the
- El fondo del vaso (work by Ayala)
Spanish literature: The novel: …Life, 1964] and its sequel El fondo del vaso [1962; “In the Bottom of the Glass”]), he cultivated themes that allowed him to obliquely re-create aspects of the Civil War as well as to address more-universal social concerns. These works offer devastating appraisals of the Spanish political scene from multiple…
- El Gigante (tree, Oaxaca, Mexico)
tree: Trees of special interest: …Mexican swamp cypress is “El Gigante,” located at Tule, Oaxaca. The trunk of this massive tree is buttressed and not circular; if the bays and promontories of the buttresses are followed, the basal circumference is nearly 46 metres (151 feet).
- El Guerrouj, Hicham (Moroccan athlete)
Hicham El Guerrouj is a Moroccan middle-distance runner, who became the first man to hold world records in the mile and the 1,500-metre races both indoors and outdoors. El Guerrouj—inspired by the accomplishments of his countryman Said Aouita, a gold medalist in the 5,000 metres at the 1984 Los
- El Jobo (archaeological site, Colombia)
Native American art: Colombia: …have been found, notably at El Jobo, in Falcón, that date to about 14,920 bce. Carved stone was used for such objects as small pendants or fetishes; shell and bone are also known to have been used.
- El Lahun (ancient site, Egypt)
Al-Lāhūn, ancient Egyptian site, located southwest of Al-Fayyūm near the southward turn of the Baḥr Yūsuf canal in Al-Fayyūm muḥāfaẓah (governorate). Al-Lāhūn was the location of a Middle Kingdom (1938–c. 1630 bce) pyramid and of a workmen’s village of approximately the same date, and findings in
- El Malpais National Monument (national monument, New Mexico, United States)
El Malpais National Monument, high-valley lava flow area, Cibola county, west-central New Mexico, U.S., about 15 miles (24 km) southwest of Grants. The area covered by black lava flow extends about 133 square miles (344 square km), although the monument itself covers 179 square miles (464 square
- El Monte (California, United States)
El Monte, city, Los Angeles county, California, U.S. El Monte lies 12 miles (20 km) east of downtown Los Angeles. Spanish missionaries and soldiers inhabited the area in the 18th and early 19th centuries and named the location for its meadows (an archaic sense of the Spanish word monte). The site,
- El Morro (fortress, San Juan, Puerto Rico)
Puerto Rico: Early settlement: …San Felipe del Morro (El Morro) castle, which was perfectly located to dominate the narrow entrance to the harbour. Finally they added a stronger and larger fortress (San Cristóbal) to the northeast, on the Atlantic side of the city. In the early 17th century the city was surrounded by…
- El Morro National Monument (national monument, New Mexico, United States)
El Morro National Monument, rock formation and archaeological site in west-central New Mexico, U.S., 12 miles (19 km) southeast of Ramah. The monument was established in 1906 and has an area of 2 square miles (5 square km). El Morro (the “Headlands,” or “Bluff”), or Inscription Rock, is a soft
- El Moutawakel, Nawal (Moroccan athlete)
Morocco: Sports and recreation: …field events, one of whom—Nawal El Moutawakel in the 400 metre hurdles—was the first woman from an Arab or Islamic country to win an Olympic gold medal. Tennis and golf have also become popular. Several Moroccan professional players have competed in international competition, and the country fielded its first…
- El Niño (oceanic and climatic phenomenon)
El Niño, in oceanography and climatology, the anomalous appearance, every few years, of unusually warm ocean conditions along the tropical west coast of South America. This event is associated with adverse effects on fishing, agriculture, and local weather from Ecuador to Chile and with far-field
- El Niño/Southern Oscillation (atmospheric phenomenon)
Australia: Climate: …negative phases are related to El Niño episodes in the South Pacific, and most of Australia’s major droughts have been related to those episodes. Prolonged positive SOI phases (during La Niña) normally bring above-average rainfall and floods to eastern and northern Australia. In each case, however, the correlations are not…
- El Oficio (prehistoric culture)
Spain: Prehistory: …such as El Argar and El Oficio (Almería), where the richest women were adorned with silver diadems while their male consorts were equipped with bronze swords, axes, and polished pottery. At Fuente-Álamo (Almería) the elite lived apart from the village, in square stone houses with round granaries and a water…
- El Oriente (region, Ecuador)
Oriente, region of eastern Ecuador, comprising the eastern slopes of the Ecuadorian Andes and the lowland areas of rainforest in the Amazon basin. It is bounded on the north by San Miguel and Putumayo rivers and on the east and south by Peru. Oriente has an area of about 50,000 square miles
- El Panama Hotel (hotel, Panama City, Panama)
Edward Durell Stone: …outside the United States are El Panamá Hotel, Panama City, Panama (1946), notable for its pioneering use of cantilevered balconies in the construction of a resort hotel; the U.S. Embassy in New Delhi (1954); and the Nuclear Research Center, near Islāmābād, Pak. (1966). The embassy in New Delhi, with its…
- El Paraíso (archaeological site, Peru)
El Paraíso, Late Preceramic site in the present-day Chillón Valley on the central Peruvian coast, generally believed to date just before the beginning of the Initial Period (c. 2100–1800 bc). It is notable for its large mud and rock apartment-like dwelling units. It is believed to be roughly
- El Paso (Texas, United States)
El Paso, city, seat (1850) of El Paso county, extreme western Texas, U.S. It is located on the Rio Grande, there bridged to Juárez, Mexico, just south of the New Mexico line. The largest of the U.S.-Mexican border cities, it lies at the foot of the Franklin Mountains (at an elevation of 3,762 feet
- El Paso (song by Robbins)
Marty Robbins: His signature song, “El Paso,” entered 1960 as the number one single on both the country (7 weeks) and pop (2 weeks) charts for Billboard. At 4:40 in length, the song far exceeded the usual 2:30–2:50 time of most pop and country recordings of the day, but that…
- El Paso del Norte (Mexico)
Juárez, city, northern Chihuahua estado (state), northern Mexico. It is located on the Rio Grande (Río Bravo del Norte) opposite El Paso, Texas, U.S., with which it is connected by bridges. Formerly known as El Paso del Norte, it was renamed in 1888 for the Mexican president Benito Juárez, who
- El Paso, University of Texas at (university, El Paso, Texas, United States)
El Paso: The University of Texas at El Paso originated as the Texas State School of Mines and Metallurgy in 1913. Several of its original buildings were modeled on the Potala Palace of Lhasa, Tibet. The university sponsors the Sun Bowl, festivities held in conjunction with an annual…
- El Progreso (Honduras)
El Progreso, city, northwestern Honduras, on the Ulúa River, southeast of San Pedro Sula. The city, founded in 1927 as a banana trade centre, grew in the 1970s into a commercial and transshipment centre for the Caribbean ports and the interior. Industries include cement products, metalware, shoes,
- El Pueblo de la Reina de los Angeles (California, United States)
Los Angeles , city, seat of Los Angeles county, southern California, U.S. It is the second most populous city and metropolitan area (after New York City) in the United States. The city sprawls across a broad coastal plain situated between mountains and the Pacific Ocean; the much larger Los Angeles
- El Puerto de Santa María (Spain)
El Puerto de Santa María, port city, Cádiz provincia (province), in the Andalusia comunidad autónoma (autonomous community), southern Spain, at the mouth of Guadalete River on the Bay of Cádiz, southwest of Jerez de la Frontera. The Roman Portus Menesthei, it was once the site of naval arsenals and
- El Reno (Oklahoma, United States)
El Reno, city, seat (1907) of Canadian county, central Oklahoma, U.S., on the North Canadian River, immediately west of Oklahoma City. Settled in 1889 when the Rock Island Railroad arrived, the town was named for old Fort Reno (established as a fort in 1875), itself named for Union General Jesse L.
- El Saadawi, Nawal (Egyptian physician, psychiatrist, author and feminist)
Nawal El Saadawi was an Egyptian public health physician, psychiatrist, author, and advocate of women’s rights. Sometimes described as “the Simone de Beauvoir of the Arab world,” El Saadawi was a feminist whose writings and professional career were dedicated to political and sexual rights for
- El Salvador
El Salvador, country of Central America. El Salvador is the smallest and most densely populated of the seven Central American countries. Despite having little level land, it traditionally was an agricultural country, heavily dependent upon coffee exports. By the end of the 20th century, however,
- El Salvador (Chile)
El Salvador, mining centre, northern Chile. It lies in the Atacama Desert, at an elevation of more than 7,500 feet (2,300 metres) above sea level and some 75 miles (120 km) northeast of the port of Chañaral. The copper-mining complex includes two open-pit mines (Campamento Antiguo and Damiana
- El Salvador, flag of
horizontally striped blue-white-blue national flag that normally incorporates the national coat of arms in its centre. The flag has a width-to-length ratio of 189 to 335, or approximately 4 to 7.During the Napoleonic Wars in Europe, Spanish colonies of the New World began to administer their own
- El Salvador, history of
history of El Salvador, a survey of important events and people in the history of El Salvador from the time of European settlement. Bounded by Honduras to the north and east, by the Pacific Ocean to the south, and by Guatemala to the northwest, El Salvador is the smallest and most densely populated
- El Salvador, Republic of
El Salvador, country of Central America. El Salvador is the smallest and most densely populated of the seven Central American countries. Despite having little level land, it traditionally was an agricultural country, heavily dependent upon coffee exports. By the end of the 20th century, however,
- El Salvador, República de
El Salvador, country of Central America. El Salvador is the smallest and most densely populated of the seven Central American countries. Despite having little level land, it traditionally was an agricultural country, heavily dependent upon coffee exports. By the end of the 20th century, however,
- El Salvador, University of (university, San Salvador, El Salvador)
San Salvador: The National University of El Salvador was founded there in 1841 as Colegio de la Asunción. San Salvador is also the seat of the Central American University of José Simeón Cañas (1965). During the late 1970s the city became the focus of violence between the government…
- El Seíbo (Dominican Republic)
El Seíbo, city, eastern Dominican Republic, on the Soco River. Founded in 1502, the city serves as a trading centre for the agricultural hinterland. The region yields cacao, coffee, sugarcane, and corn (maize), in addition to beeswax and medicinal plants. Cattle are also raised. The city lies on
- El Tajín (archaeological site, Mexico)
Native American art: Mexico and Middle America: …up a major centre at El Tajín, remained limited to their own group. Other pre-Totonac folk who were active in Veracruz produced innumerable “smiling face” figurines and related works that give an impression of an exuberant, happy people. Remarkable among these clayworks are the small clay whistles that abound in…
- El Teniente (Chile)
El Teniente, mining settlement, O’Higgins región, central Chile. The site of the world’s largest underground copper mine, it lies in the Andes Mountains about 60 miles (100 km) southeast of Santiago. It accounts for much of Chile’s annual copper production. Copper is smelted at El Teniente,
- El Tigre (Venezuela)
El Tigre, city, central Anzoátegui estado (state), northeastern Venezuela. It is situated in the highlands east of the Barcelona gap. The city is a commercial centre in the Oficina oil fields. Oil is piped 100 miles (160 km) north-northeastward to Puerto La Cruz, which produces some of Venezuela’s
- El Tor (bacterium biotype)
cholera: The cholera bacterium and toxin: …into two biotypes: classical and El Tor. These two biotypes each contain two serotypes, called Inaba and Ogawa (some classifications recognize a third serotype, Hikojima), which are differentiated based on their biochemical properties, namely their expression of type-specific antigens. Inaba and Ogawa serotypes both express a common cholera antigen known…
- El trueno entre las hojas (book by Rao Bastos)
Augusto Roa Bastos: …first collection of short stories, El trueno entre las hojas (1953; “Thunder Among the Leaves”), which he also adapted as a film script, describes the Paraguayan experience with emphasis on violence and social injustice. Roa Bastos began to experiment with magic realism, in which realistic descriptions are enhanced by myths…
- El Yopal (Colombia)
Yopal, town and capital of Casanare departamento, eastern Colombia. The original settlement (caserío) of Yopal was founded in 1935 by Pedro Pablo González, and it has been the seat of Casanare intendency (now departamento) since the creation of Casanare in 1974. Located at the western edge of the
- El Zanjón, peace of (Spain [1878])
Spain: The restored monarchy, 1875–1923: …accepted the peace settlement of El Zanjón (1878), the restored monarchy provided the most stable government Spain had known since 1833. This stability was sustained by an uneven but respectable economic growth.
- El ʿAl Netive Awir Le-Yisraʾel
El Al Israel Airlines, Israeli airline founded by Israel in November 1948 after the establishment of the new nation. It flew its first commercial scheduled flights—to Rome and Paris—in July 1949, and by the 1980s it was flying routes from Jerusalem and Tel Aviv to many of the major cities of
- EL-1 (nuclear reactor)
Frédéric and Irène Joliot-Curie: 15, 1948, of ZOE (zéro, oxyde d’uranium, eau lourde), the first French nuclear reactor, which, though only moderately powerful, marked the end of the Anglo-Saxon monopoly. In April 1950, however, during the climax of the cold war and anticommunism, Prime Minister Georges Bidault removed him without explanation from…
- El-al ben Shachar (Jewish physician and scholar)
Hillel ben Samuel was a physician, Talmudic scholar, and philosopher who defended the ideas of the 12th-century Jewish philosopher Maimonides during the “years of controversy” (1289–90), when Maimonides’ work was challenged and attacked; Hillel ben Samuel denounced in turn the adherents of the
- El-Djelfa (Algeria)
Djelfa, town, north-central Algeria, in the Oulad Naïl Mountains at an elevation of 3,734 feet (1,138 metres). It is situated between the towns of Bou Saâda and Laghouat. Djelfa town is at a point of transition between the dry, steppelike High Plateaus of the north, with their chotts (intermittent
- El-Djouf (desert region, western Africa)
El-Djouf, desert region in western Africa, at the western edge of the Sahara. It occupies the border region of eastern Mauritania and western
- El-Ferdan Bridge (bridge, Suez Canal, Egypt)
El-Ferdan Bridge, longest rotating metal bridge in the world, spanning the western shipping lane of the Suez Canal in northeastern Egypt, from the lower Nile River valley near Ismailia to the Sinai Peninsula. Opened on November 14, 2001, the bridge has a single railway track running down the middle
- El-Giza (Egypt)
Giza, city, capital of Al-Jīzah muḥāfaẓah (governorate) in Upper Egypt, located on the west bank of the Nile River just south-southwest of Cairo. It is a suburb of the national capital, with a distinctive character enriched by several archaeological and cultural sites. The district was settled in
- El-Hamra Plateau (plateau, Libya)
Al-Ḥamrāʾ Plateau, desolate rocky plateau of the Sahara, northwestern Libya. Located mostly in Tripolitania, it occupies an area measuring about 275 miles (440 km) by 190 miles (305 km). Its bare rock outcrops reach a height of about 2,700 feet (825 metres). Wells are drilled for petroleum, which
- El-Khazzani, Ayoub (Moroccan militant)
Paris attacks of 2015: Prelude to the attacks: Ayoub El-Khazzani, a militant with ties to ISIL, smuggled an AK-47, a semiautomatic pistol, and hundreds of rounds of ammunition onto the crowded Paris-bound train. A potential massacre was averted when El-Khazzani was subdued by passengers, among them a pair of off-duty U.S. military personnel…
- ELA-STV (labor organization, Spain)
Spain: Labour and taxation: …Sindical Independiente de Funcionarios); the Basque Workers’ Solidarity (Euzko Langilleen Alkartasuna–Solidaridad de Trabajadores Vascos; ELA-STV), which is independent but has ties to the Basque Nationalist Party; and the General Confederation of Labour (Confederación General del Trabajo; CGT), the tiny remnant of the once-powerful anarcho-syndicalist union organization. Overall, with about one-sixth…
- elaboration-likelihood model (psychology)
persuasion: …the conflict-resolution model is the elaboration-likelihood model (ELM) of persuasion, put forth in 1980 by American psychologists John Cacioppo and Richard Petty. The ELM emphasizes the cognitive processing with which people react to persuasive communications. According to this model, if people react to a persuasive communication by reflecting on the…
- elachista (matter)
atomism: The elachista of the early Aristotelian commentators: …systems the atoms were called elachista (“very small” or “smallest”). The choice of this term was connected with the Aristotelian rejection of the infinite divisibility of matter. Each substance had its own minimum of magnitude below which it could not exist. If such a minimum particle were to be divided,…
- Elaeagnaceae (plant family)
Elaeagnaceae, the oleaster family of flowering plants (order Rosales), comprising 45–60 species in 3 genera. The oleaster family is largely composed of shrubs and small trees of the Northern Hemisphere, especially in steppe and coastal regions. The plants have a characteristic silvery or
- Elaeagnus angustifolia (tree)
oleaster, small deciduous tree of Eurasia, about 4.5 to 6 m (15 to 20 feet) high. It has smooth, dark brown branches that often bear spines and narrow, light green leaves that are silvery on the undersides from a covering of minute scales. The flowers are small, greenish, fragrant, and
- Elaeis (plant genus)
palm: Distribution: …Chamaerops in Europe and Africa, Elaeis (oil palm) and Raphia (raffia palm, or jupati) in Africa and America, and Borassus (palmyra palm), Calamus (rattan palm), Hyphaene (doum palm), and Phoenix (date palm) in Africa and Asia. Numbers of individuals of a species may be few or many.
- Elaeis guineensis (tree)
oil palm, (Elaeis guineensis), African tree in the palm family (Arecaceae), cultivated as a source of oil. The oil palm is grown extensively in its native West and Central Africa, as well as in Malaysia and Indonesia. Palm oil, obtained from the fruits, is used in making soaps, cosmetics, candles,
- Elaeis melanococca (tree)
oil palm: The American oil palm (Elaeis oleifera) is native to Central and South America and is sometimes cultivated under the erroneous name Elaeis melanococca. Unlike the African oil palm, the trunk of the American oil palm creeps along the ground and bears flat leaves. Both the American…
- Elaeis oleifera (tree)
oil palm: The American oil palm (Elaeis oleifera) is native to Central and South America and is sometimes cultivated under the erroneous name Elaeis melanococca. Unlike the African oil palm, the trunk of the American oil palm creeps along the ground and bears flat leaves. Both the American…
- elaenia (bird)
elaenia, (genus Elaenia), any of about 20 species of plain-coloured New World flycatchers, family Tyrannidae (order Passeriformes), with a short bill and modest, ragged crest, usually concealing a white or yellow crown patch. Found in Central America, South America, and the West Indies, most