- Kenduskeag Plantation (Maine, United States)
Bangor, city, seat (1816) of Penobscot county, east-central Maine, U.S. It is a port of entry at the head of navigation on the Penobscot River opposite Brewer. The site, visited in 1604 by Samuel de Champlain, was settled in 1769 by Jacob Buswell. First called Kenduskeag Plantation (1776) and later
- Keneally, Thomas (Australian author)
Thomas Keneally is an Australian writer best known for his historical novels. Keneally’s characters are gripped by their historical and personal past, and decent individuals are portrayed at odds with systems of authority. At age 17 Keneally entered a Roman Catholic seminary, but he left before
- Kenem (oasis, Egypt)
Al-Wāḥāt al-Khārijah, oasis in the Libyan (Western) Desert, part of Al-Wādī al-Jadīd (“New Valley”) muḥāfaẓah (governorate), in south-central Egypt. It is situated about 110 miles (180 km) west-southwest of Najʿ Ḥammādī, to which it is linked by railroad. The name Wāḥāt al-Khārijah means “Outer
- Kenema (Sierra Leone)
Kenema, town, southeastern Sierra Leone. Located on the government railway and at a gap in the Kambui Hills, the town is the centre of the Alluvial Diamond Mining Scheme Area and the site of the Government Diamond Office (1959), concerned with the exportation of diamonds. It is also an important
- Keneset ha-Gedolah (ancient Jewish assembly)
Kneset ha-Gedola, (“Men of the Great Assembly”), assembly of Jewish religious leaders who, after returning (539 bc) to their homeland from the Babylonian Exile, initiated a new era in the history of Judaism. The assembly dates from the Persian period, of which very little factual history is known.
- Kenfig Burrows (dunes, Wales, United Kingdom)
Porthcawl: …in the dunes known as Kenfig Burrows, are hidden the last remnants of the town and castle of Kenfig, which were overwhelmed by sand about 1400. Porthcawl is a leading holiday resort in southern Wales and has one of the largest trailer parks in Europe. Tourist attractions in the area…
- Këngët e Milosaos (work by Rada)
Albanian literature: …known by its Albanian title Këngët e Milosaos (1836; “The Songs of Milosao”), is a Romantic ballad infused with patriotic sentiments. De Rada was also the founder of the first Albanian periodical, Fiámuri Arbërit (“The Albanian Flag”), which was published from 1883 to 1888. Other Arbëresh writers of note are…
- Kenilorea, Peter (prime minister of Solomon Islands)
Solomon Islands: Independence: Peter Kenilorea, who had helped lead Solomon Islands to independence, became its first prime minister (1978–81) and served a second term from 1984 to 1986. Solomon Mamaloni, another pre-independence leader, served as prime minister several times in the 1980s and ’90s; resigning from his final…
- Kenilworth (novel by Scott)
Kenilworth, novel by Sir Walter Scott, published in 1821 and considered one of his finest historical novels. Set in Elizabethan England, the plot relates the disaster that follows an attempt by the earl of Leicester, a favourite of Queen Elizabeth I, to avoid the queen’s displeasure at his
- Kenilworth Castle (castle, England, United Kingdom)
Simon de Montfort, earl of Leicester: …dower claims, Simon now made Kenilworth Castle (a royal grant) his headquarters. He cultivated the friendship of the radical reformer Robert Grosseteste, bishop of Lincoln, and took Robert’s friend, the Oxford Franciscan Adam de Marisco, as spiritual director. Although regarded as a king’s man, Simon was one of the committee…
- Kenilworth, Hyde of, Viscount (English statesman)
Lawrence Hyde, 1st earl of Rochester was an influential English statesman who served under Charles II, James II, William III, and Queen Anne. The second son of the renowned statesman and historian Edward Hyde, 1st earl of Clarendon, he entered Parliament in 1660 and was master of the robes from
- Kenite (ancient people)
Kenite, member of a tribe of itinerant metalsmiths related to the Midianites and the Israelites who plied their trade while traveling in the region of the Arabah (the desert rift valley extending from the Sea of Galilee to the Gulf of Aqaba) from at least the 13th century to the 9th century bc. The
- Kenitra (Morocco)
Kenitra, port city, northern Morocco. It is situated 10 miles (16 km) above the mouth of the Sebou River. Before the French protectorate was established, Kenitra (Arabic: Al-Qunayṭirah, “Little Bridge”) was a fort; the settlement and port, built by order of Marshal L.-H.-G. Lyautey, date from 1913.
- Kenju Daishi (Japanese Buddhist patriarch)
Rennyo was a Japanese Buddhist leader and eighth patriarch of the Hongan Temple in Kyōto. Rennyo furthered the Buddhist reform initiated by Shinran (13th century) that created the Jōdo Shinshū (“True Pure Land sect”) and inspired the Ikkō rebellions, 15th-century uprisings by militant,
- Kenmure, William Gordon, 6th Viscount (Scottish Jacobite)
William Gordon, 6th Viscount Kenmure was a Scottish Jacobite who was miscast as a leader in the rebellion of 1715 on behalf of James Edward, the Old Pretender, against King George I. His father, Alexander Gordon, 5th Viscount Kenmure (d. 1698), had fought for King William III against the forces of
- Kennan, George F. (American diplomat and historian)
George F. Kennan was an American diplomat and historian best known for his successful advocacy of a “containment policy” to oppose Soviet expansionism following World War II. Upon graduation from Princeton in 1925, Kennan entered the foreign service. He was sent overseas immediately and spent
- Kennan, George Frost (American diplomat and historian)
George F. Kennan was an American diplomat and historian best known for his successful advocacy of a “containment policy” to oppose Soviet expansionism following World War II. Upon graduation from Princeton in 1925, Kennan entered the foreign service. He was sent overseas immediately and spent
- Kennebec (county, Maine, United States)
Kennebec, county, west-central Maine, U.S. It is a region of rolling lowlands with higher elevations on the northwest. Foremost among the county’s many streams is the Kennebec River, which traverses it from north to south and supplies hydropower for several cities. Other major waterways are the
- Kennebec and Edwards Dam (dam, United States)
Kennebec River: At one time, the Kennebec and Edwards Dam, built on the river in 1837, furnished hydropower at Bingham, Skowhegan, Waterville, and Gardiner. Growing environmental concerns, however, led the U.S. government to order the removal of the dam. After it was demolished in 1999, an upstream stretch of the river…
- Kennebec River (river, Maine, United States)
Kennebec River, river in west-central Maine, U.S. The Kennebec rises from Moosehead Lake and flows south for about 150 miles (240 km) to the Atlantic Ocean. It was explored by Samuel de Champlain between 1604 and 1605. Fort St. George, founded in 1607 at the head of navigation on the river near
- Kennebec: Cradle of Americans (work by Coffin)
Robert P. Tristram Coffin: …novel about the Maine coast; Kennebec (1937), part of a historical series on American rivers; and Maine Doings (1950), informal essays on New England life.
- Kennebunk (Maine, United States)
Kennebunkport: ” The adjoining town of Kennebunk was settled about 1650 and was included in the town of Wells; it was set off and incorporated in 1820. Both Kennebunk and Kennebunkport were busy shipping and shipbuilding centres in the 18th century and are now popular summer resorts. The rocky shores of…
- Kennebunkport (Maine, United States)
Kennebunkport, town, York county, southwestern Maine, U.S. It is situated at the mouth of the Kennebunk River, on the Atlantic coast. It is adjacent to Kennebunk and lies 29 miles (47 km) southwest of Portland. The original settlement (1629) by Richard Vines was brought under the control of
- Kennecott Mine (mine, Alaska, United States)
Alaska: Resources and power: …with the closing of the Kennecott Mine in 1938, although there are new prospects elsewhere.
- Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts (cultural complex, Washington, District of Columbia, United States)
Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, large cultural complex (opened 1971) in Washington, D.C., with a total of six stages, designed by Edward Durell Stone. The complex, surfaced in marble, makes use of the ornamental facade screens for which the architect is known. Its three main theatres are
- Kennedy Center Honors (American arts award)
Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts: …of performers are awarded the Kennedy Center Honors.
- Kennedy Channel (channel, Arctic Ocean)
Kennedy Channel, Arctic sea passage between Ellesmere Island, Canada (west), and northwestern Greenland (east). It is 16–24 mi (26–39 km) wide and extends northward for 110 mi from the Kane Basin to the Hall Basin, forming part of the waterway between Baffin Bay, an inlet of the North Atlantic
- Kennedy family tree
Arguably the most famous political family in modern American history, the Kennedys have repeatedly experienced triumph and tragedy on an unimaginable scale. Sprouting from Irish immigrant roots that flourished in Boston and benefiting from a fortune amassed in moviemaking, selling liquor (allegedly
- Kennedy Round (international trade)
international trade: The General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade: …States and led to the Kennedy Round negotiations in GATT, held in Geneva from May 1964 to June 1967.
- Kennedy Schlossberg, Caroline Bouvier (American attorney, author, and ambassador)
A public figure since the age of three, when she moved into the White House with her parents and baby brother, Caroline Kennedy is an attorney, author, and ambassador, but, to many, she is best known as the eldest surviving child of U.S. Pres. John F. Kennedy and first lady Jacqueline Bouvier
- Kennedy Space Center (launch center, Merritt Island, Florida, United States)
Kennedy Space Center, one of NASA’s 10 field centres and from 1968 its primary launch centre for human spaceflight, located on Merritt Island, Florida. It encompasses 144,000 acres (58, 275 hectares) and includes among its facilities the Vehicle Assembly Building and the Launch Control Center as
- Kennedy v. Louisiana (law case)
Anthony Kennedy: …by the United States; in Kennedy v. Louisiana (2008), which banned capital punishment for child rape; in Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission (2010), which struck down U.S. campaign finance laws banning corporate and union spending on political advertising; in United
- Kennedy, Adrienne (American writer)
African American literature: Reconceptualizing Blackness: Adrienne Kennedy, another 1960s writer who was similarly more postmodernist than nationalist, made her avant-garde theater debut with stunningly innovative, nightmarish one-act plays, most notably Funnyhouse of a Negro (produced 1962) and The Owl Answers (produced 1963), which featured surrealist spectacles of Black women caught…
- Kennedy, Aimee Elizabeth (American religious leader)
Aimee Semple McPherson was a controversial American Pentecostal evangelist and early radio preacher whose International Church of the Foursquare Gospel brought her wealth, notoriety, and a following numbering in the tens of thousands. Aimee Kennedy was reared by her mother as a Salvation Army
- Kennedy, Anthony (United States jurist)
Anthony Kennedy is an associate justice of the Supreme Court of the United States from 1988 to 2018. Kennedy received a bachelor’s degree from Stanford University in 1958 and a law degree from Harvard University in 1961. He was admitted to the bar in 1962 and subsequently practiced law in San
- Kennedy, Anthony McLeod (United States jurist)
Anthony Kennedy is an associate justice of the Supreme Court of the United States from 1988 to 2018. Kennedy received a bachelor’s degree from Stanford University in 1958 and a law degree from Harvard University in 1961. He was admitted to the bar in 1962 and subsequently practiced law in San
- Kennedy, Arthur (American actor)
Arthur Kennedy was an American character actor featured in many films and nominated for five Academy Awards. Kennedy, who studied acting at the Carnegie Institute of Technology in Pittsburgh, Pa., began an unsuccessful Broadway career before he was taken to Hollywood by James Cagney and cast as
- Kennedy, assassination of John F. (United States history)
assassination of John F. Kennedy, mortal shooting of John F. Kennedy, the 35th president of the United States, as he rode in a motorcade in Dallas, Texas, on November 22, 1963. His accused killer was Lee Harvey Oswald, a former U.S. Marine who had embraced Marxism and defected for a time to the
- Kennedy, Bobby (American politician)
Robert F. Kennedy was a U.S. attorney general and adviser during the administration of his brother Pres. John F. Kennedy (1961–63) and later a U.S. senator (1965–68). He was the son of Rose and Joseph P. Kennedy. He was assassinated while campaigning for the Democratic Party’s presidential
- Kennedy, Bobby, Jr. (American environmental lawyer and activist)
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. is an American environmental lawyer, member of the prominent Kennedy political family, and activist who became a leading figure among vaccine skeptics. In April 2023 he launched a campaign seeking the Democratic Party’s nomination for the United States presidential election
- Kennedy, Burt (American screenwriter and director)
Budd Boetticher: Westerns: …he aligned himself with writer Burt Kennedy and actor Randolph Scott for a series of taut, psychologically complex westerns. The first was Seven Men from Now (1956), with Scott as an ex-sheriff who methodically tracks down the seven criminals who killed his wife; Lee Marvin was impressive as an opportunistic…
- Kennedy, Byron (Australian film producer)
George Miller: …film workshop, where Miller met Byron Kennedy. The two became frequent collaborators, and in 1971 they made the critically acclaimed short film Violence in the Cinema, Part 1.
- Kennedy, Cape (cape, Florida, United States)
Cape Canaveral, cape and city in Brevard county, east-central Florida, U.S. The cape is a seaward extension of Canaveral Island, a barrier island running southeastward along the coast of the Atlantic Ocean. The cape is separated from Merritt Island to the west by the Banana River, and the island is
- Kennedy, Caroline (American attorney, author, and ambassador)
A public figure since the age of three, when she moved into the White House with her parents and baby brother, Caroline Kennedy is an attorney, author, and ambassador, but, to many, she is best known as the eldest surviving child of U.S. Pres. John F. Kennedy and first lady Jacqueline Bouvier
- Kennedy, Caroline Bouvier (American attorney, author, and ambassador)
A public figure since the age of three, when she moved into the White House with her parents and baby brother, Caroline Kennedy is an attorney, author, and ambassador, but, to many, she is best known as the eldest surviving child of U.S. Pres. John F. Kennedy and first lady Jacqueline Bouvier
- Kennedy, Charles (Scottish politician)
Charles Kennedy was a Scottish politician and leader of the Liberal Democrats from 1999 to 2006. Kennedy received his early education at schools in the Scottish Highlands and matriculated at the University of Glasgow; he also studied at Indiana University in the United States in the early 1980s as
- Kennedy, Charles Peter (Scottish politician)
Charles Kennedy was a Scottish politician and leader of the Liberal Democrats from 1999 to 2006. Kennedy received his early education at schools in the Scottish Highlands and matriculated at the University of Glasgow; he also studied at Indiana University in the United States in the early 1980s as
- Kennedy, Christopher (American businessman)
Merchandise Mart: History: Christopher Kennedy, a grandson of Joseph and son of Robert F. Kennedy, was president of the Mart from 2000 to 2011.
- Kennedy, Edward Moore (United States senator)
Ted Kennedy was a U.S. senator representing Massachusetts from 1962 to 2009. He was a prominent figure in the Democratic Party and in liberal politics beginning in the 1960s, and he became one of the most influential and respected members of the Senate during his long tenure in office. A member of
- Kennedy, Ethel (American human rights activist)
Ethel Kennedy is a lifelong advocate for social justice and human rights, who is perhaps best known for the tragedy that helped define her life, including the assassination of her husband, Robert F. Kennedy, and the deaths of 2 of their 11 children. Ethel Skakel, the sixth of George and Ann
- Kennedy, Ethel Skakel (American human rights activist)
Ethel Kennedy is a lifelong advocate for social justice and human rights, who is perhaps best known for the tragedy that helped define her life, including the assassination of her husband, Robert F. Kennedy, and the deaths of 2 of their 11 children. Ethel Skakel, the sixth of George and Ann
- Kennedy, Eunice Mary (American philanthropist)
Eunice Kennedy Shriver was an American social activist who worked tirelessly to improve the lives of the intellectually disabled and, in an effort to provide a forum for them to compete athletically, founded (1968) the Special Olympics. Shriver, daughter of Rose and Joseph P. Kennedy and sister of
- Kennedy, George (American actor)
Charade: Cast:
- Kennedy, George Harris, Jr. (American actor)
Charade: Cast:
- Kennedy, Jackie (American first lady)
Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis was an American first lady (1961–63), who was the wife of John F. Kennedy, 35th president of the United States, and was noted for her style and elegance. Her second husband, Aristotle Onassis, was one of the wealthiest men in the world. Jacqueline was the elder of two
- Kennedy, Jacqueline (American first lady)
Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis was an American first lady (1961–63), who was the wife of John F. Kennedy, 35th president of the United States, and was noted for her style and elegance. Her second husband, Aristotle Onassis, was one of the wealthiest men in the world. Jacqueline was the elder of two
- Kennedy, James (bishop of Saint Andrews)
Scotland: The early Stewart kings: …and that of James III, James Kennedy, bishop of St. Andrews, played a statesmanlike part in seeking to preserve peace. James II took a violent line against overambitious subjects. In 1452 he stabbed William Douglas, 8th earl of Douglas, to death, and in 1455 James Douglas, 9th earl of Douglas,…
- Kennedy, Jean (American diplomat)
Ethel Kennedy: Becoming a Kennedy: …and ultimately became roommates with Jean Kennedy, a younger sister of John F. Kennedy and Robert F. Kennedy. In 1945 Skakel, then 17 years old, met Robert Kennedy during a ski trip, but at the time he was seeing her elder sister Patricia Skakel. When that relationship ended, Ethel Skakel…
- Kennedy, John (United States senator [born 1951])
John Kennedy is an American politician who was elected to the U.S. Senate as a Republican in 2016 and began representing Louisiana the following year. He previously was the state treasurer (2000–17). Kennedy was born in Centreville, Mississippi, but raised in nearby Zachary, Louisiana, a small town
- Kennedy, John Arthur (American actor)
Arthur Kennedy was an American character actor featured in many films and nominated for five Academy Awards. Kennedy, who studied acting at the Carnegie Institute of Technology in Pittsburgh, Pa., began an unsuccessful Broadway career before he was taken to Hollywood by James Cagney and cast as
- Kennedy, John F. (president of United States)
John F. Kennedy was the 35th president of the United States (1961–63), who faced a number of foreign crises, especially in Cuba and Berlin, but managed to secure such achievements as the Nuclear Test-Ban Treaty and the Alliance for Progress. He was assassinated while riding in a motorcade in
- Kennedy, John F., International Airport (airport, New York City, New York, United States)
I.M. Pei: …design the multiairline terminal at John F. Kennedy International Airport, New York City. In 1964 he was also chosen to design the John F. Kennedy Memorial Library at Harvard University. Pei’s innovative East Building (1978) of the National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C., is an elegant triangular composition that was…
- Kennedy, John F., Jr. (American publisher)
John F. Kennedy, Jr. was an American publisher, lawyer, and member of the prominent Kennedy political family who was the son of U.S. Pres. John F. Kennedy and Jacqueline (née Bouvier) Kennedy (later Onassis). Born less than three weeks after his father, a U.S. senator of Massachusetts, had been
- Kennedy, John F., Memorial Library (library, Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States)
I.M. Pei: …also chosen to design the John F. Kennedy Memorial Library at Harvard University. Pei’s innovative East Building (1978) of the National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C., is an elegant triangular composition that was hailed as one of his finest achievements. In addition to designing public buildings, Pei was active in…
- Kennedy, John Fitzgerald (president of United States)
John F. Kennedy was the 35th president of the United States (1961–63), who faced a number of foreign crises, especially in Cuba and Berlin, but managed to secure such achievements as the Nuclear Test-Ban Treaty and the Alliance for Progress. He was assassinated while riding in a motorcade in
- Kennedy, John Fitzgerald, Jr. (American publisher)
John F. Kennedy, Jr. was an American publisher, lawyer, and member of the prominent Kennedy political family who was the son of U.S. Pres. John F. Kennedy and Jacqueline (née Bouvier) Kennedy (later Onassis). Born less than three weeks after his father, a U.S. senator of Massachusetts, had been
- Kennedy, John Neely (United States senator [born 1951])
John Kennedy is an American politician who was elected to the U.S. Senate as a Republican in 2016 and began representing Louisiana the following year. He previously was the state treasurer (2000–17). Kennedy was born in Centreville, Mississippi, but raised in nearby Zachary, Louisiana, a small town
- Kennedy, John P. (American author and statesman)
John P. Kennedy was an American statesman and writer whose best remembered work was his historical fiction. Kennedy was admitted to the Maryland bar in 1816. From 1821 he served two terms in the Maryland House of Delegates and three terms in the U.S. Congress and was secretary of the navy in the
- Kennedy, John Pendleton (American author and statesman)
John P. Kennedy was an American statesman and writer whose best remembered work was his historical fiction. Kennedy was admitted to the Maryland bar in 1816. From 1821 he served two terms in the Maryland House of Delegates and three terms in the U.S. Congress and was secretary of the navy in the
- Kennedy, Joseph P. (American businessman)
Joseph P. Kennedy was an American businessman and financier who served in government commissions in Washington, D.C. (1934–37), and as ambassador to Great Britain (1937–40). He was the father of U.S. Pres. John F. Kennedy and Senators Robert F. Kennedy and Ted Kennedy. Joseph Kennedy was the son of
- Kennedy, Joseph P., Jr. (American pilot)
Joseph P. Kennedy: Joseph, Jr., for example, became an isolationist and John an ardent advocate of U.S. participation in world affairs; Robert, perhaps because of the age gap, became shy—an affliction he battled throughout his life.
- Kennedy, Joseph Patrick (American businessman)
Joseph P. Kennedy was an American businessman and financier who served in government commissions in Washington, D.C. (1934–37), and as ambassador to Great Britain (1937–40). He was the father of U.S. Pres. John F. Kennedy and Senators Robert F. Kennedy and Ted Kennedy. Joseph Kennedy was the son of
- Kennedy, Leo (Canadian poet)
Montreal group: …of literary standards in Canada; Leo Kennedy; and Francis Reginald Scott; as well as two kindred spirits from Toronto, E.J. Pratt and Robert Finch. First brought together at McGill University in Montreal, these poets founded the Canadian Mercury (1928–29), a literary organ for young writers,
- Kennedy, Merna (American actress)
The Circus: Cast:
- Kennedy, Paul (British historian)
United Kingdom: The Napoleonic Wars: The historian Paul Kennedy has written of British and French power in this period:
- Kennedy, Robert F. (American politician)
Robert F. Kennedy was a U.S. attorney general and adviser during the administration of his brother Pres. John F. Kennedy (1961–63) and later a U.S. senator (1965–68). He was the son of Rose and Joseph P. Kennedy. He was assassinated while campaigning for the Democratic Party’s presidential
- Kennedy, Robert F., Jr. (American environmental lawyer and activist)
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. is an American environmental lawyer, member of the prominent Kennedy political family, and activist who became a leading figure among vaccine skeptics. In April 2023 he launched a campaign seeking the Democratic Party’s nomination for the United States presidential election
- Kennedy, Robert Francis (American politician)
Robert F. Kennedy was a U.S. attorney general and adviser during the administration of his brother Pres. John F. Kennedy (1961–63) and later a U.S. senator (1965–68). He was the son of Rose and Joseph P. Kennedy. He was assassinated while campaigning for the Democratic Party’s presidential
- Kennedy, Robert Francis, Jr. (American environmental lawyer and activist)
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. is an American environmental lawyer, member of the prominent Kennedy political family, and activist who became a leading figure among vaccine skeptics. In April 2023 he launched a campaign seeking the Democratic Party’s nomination for the United States presidential election
- Kennedy, Rose (American political figure)
Rose Kennedy was an American political figure who, as the matriarch of the Kennedys, a family that created a political dynasty in the United States, drew on her Roman Catholic faith to endure what she characterized as a life of agonies and ecstasies. Though she held no political position herself,
- Kennedy, Rosemary (sister of John F. Kennedy)
Rose Kennedy: Their oldest daughter, Rosemary, was institutionalized for retardation from early adulthood after undergoing an unsuccessful lobotomy in 1941. Their first son, Joseph P., Jr., a fighter pilot, was killed in 1944 during World War II. In 1948 their daughter Kathleen was killed in a plane crash. Though their…
- Kennedy, Ted (United States senator)
Ted Kennedy was a U.S. senator representing Massachusetts from 1962 to 2009. He was a prominent figure in the Democratic Party and in liberal politics beginning in the 1960s, and he became one of the most influential and respected members of the Senate during his long tenure in office. A member of
- Kennedy, Walter (Scottish poet)
Walter Kennedy was a Scottish poet, remembered chiefly for his flyting (Scots dialect: “scolding”) with his professional rival William Dunbar. The Flyting of Dunbar and Kennedie, in which the two poets alternate in heaping outrageous abuse on one another, is the outstanding example of this
- Kennedy, William (American author and journalist)
William Kennedy is an American author and journalist whose novels feature elements of local history, journalism, and supernaturalism. Kennedy graduated from Siena College, Loudonville, New York, in 1949 and worked as a journalist in New York state and in San Juan, Puerto Rico, where he also began
- Kennedy, William Joseph (American author and journalist)
William Kennedy is an American author and journalist whose novels feature elements of local history, journalism, and supernaturalism. Kennedy graduated from Siena College, Loudonville, New York, in 1949 and worked as a journalist in New York state and in San Juan, Puerto Rico, where he also began
- Kennedy-Nixon debates (American history)
Television in the United States: The Kennedy-Nixon debates: On Sept. 26, 1960, a debate between the two major candidates for the presidency of the United States was presented on television for the first time. CBS produced the debate, under the direction of Don Hewitt, who would go on to be the…
- Kennel (missile)
rocket and missile system: Antiship: …antiship missiles, beginning with the AS-1 Kennel. The destruction of an Israeli destroyer by two SS-N-2 Styx missiles fired by Soviet-supplied Egyptian missile boats in October 1967 demonstrated the effectiveness of the Soviet systems, and the Western powers developed their own guided missiles. The resultant systems began entering service in…
- Kennel Club of England (British organization)
Cavalier King Charles Spaniel: …dogs became recognized by the Kennel Club in England as the Cavalier King Charles Spaniel. It soon became one of the most popular breeds in England and, much later, North America.
- Kennelly, Arthur Edwin (American electrical engineer)
Arthur Edwin Kennelly was a U.S. electrical engineer who made innovations in analytic methods in electronics, particularly the definitive application of complex-number theory to alternating-current (ac) circuits. After working as an office boy for a London engineering society, as an electrician,
- Kennelly–Heaviside layer (atmospheric science)
E region, ionospheric region that generally extends from an altitude of 90 km (60 miles) to about 160 km (100 miles). As in the D region (70–90 km), the ionization is primarily molecular—i.e., resulting from the splitting of neutral molecules—oxygen (O2) and nitrogen (N2)—into electrons and
- Kenner mission (Confederate history)
Kenner mission, in U.S. history, secret attempt on the part of the Confederacy in 1864 to elicit European recognition in exchange for Southern abolition of slavery. Duncan Farrar Kenner, a prosperous Louisiana sugar planter and Thoroughbred horse breeder, represented his state in the Confederate
- Kenner, Duncan Farrar (Confederate politician)
Kenner mission: Duncan Farrar Kenner, a prosperous Louisiana sugar planter and Thoroughbred horse breeder, represented his state in the Confederate House of Representatives throughout the war. As the conflict dragged on, he became increasingly convinced that the South could not win without English and French recognition of…
- Kennesaw Mountain National Battlefield Park (park, Georgia, United States)
Marietta: Kennesaw Mountain National Battlefield Park, established in 1917 and occupying 4.5 square miles (11.7 square km), preserves the site, and thousands of soldiers are buried in the Marietta National and Confederate cemeteries.
- Kennet (former district, England, United Kingdom)
Kennet, former district, administrative and historic county of Wiltshire, southern England, in the east-central part of the county, about midway between Bristol and London. Kennet is a rural area of rolling chalk uplands, including Marlborough Downs (about 400 to 950 feet [120 to 290 metres] high)
- Kennet Avenue (ancient structure, Avebury, England, United Kingdom)
Avebury: …of a route called the Kennet Avenue (or West Kennet Avenue) into the interior of the great circle. The Kennet Avenue originally consisted of stones 80 feet (25 metres) apart, arranged in pairs (according to their shapes) that faced each other across the 50-foot (15-metre) width of the avenue. It…
- Kenneth I (king of Scots and Picts)
Kenneth I was the first king of the united Scots of Dalriada and the Picts and so of Scotland north of a line between the Forth and Clyde rivers. Of his father, Alpin, little is known, though tradition credits him with a signal victory over the Picts by whom he was killed three months later (c.
- Kenneth II (king of Scots and Picts)
Kenneth II was the king of the united Picts and Scots (from 971), son of Malcolm I. He began his reign by ravaging the Britons, probably as an act of vengeance, but his name is also included among a group of northern and western kings said to have made submission to the Anglo-Saxon king Edgar in
- Kenneth III (king of Scots)
Kenneth III was the king of the Scots (from 997), son of Dub and grandson of Malcolm I. He succeeded to the throne perhaps after killing his cousin Constantine III (reigned 995–997); he was himself killed at Monzievaird by Malcolm (son of Kenneth II), who became Malcolm II. Gruoch, wife of the
- Kenneth Kaunda Foundation (organization, Zambia)
Zambia: Media and publishing: The Zambia Educational Publishing House (formerly the Kenneth Kaunda Foundation) is a government-backed publisher of the works of Zambian authors and school textbooks. The University of Zambia publishes books and journals. Some other publishers are church-supported. Zambian scholars have contributed to knowledge in a wide range…
- Kenneth, Saint (Irish abbot)
Saint Kenneth ; feast day October 11) was an Irish abbot, monastic founder, and missionary who contributed to the conversion of the Picts. He is one of the most popular Celtic saints in Scotland (where he is called Kenneth) and in Ireland (where he is called Canice) and patron saint of the diocese