- King Ottocar, His Rise and Fall (work by Grillparzer)
Franz Grillparzer: …performed or published until 1825; King Ottocar, His Rise and Fall). Here the action is drawn from Austrian history, and the rise of Rudolph of Habsburg (the first of Grillparzer’s characters to avoid guilt and tragedy) is contrasted with the fall of the tyrant Ottokar of Bohemia, so that Ottokar’s…
- king oyster mushroom (fungus)
king oyster mushroom, (Pleurotus eryngii), widely cultivated edible mushroom. King oyster mushrooms are native to temperate, humid areas of the Mediterranean, Asia, and North Africa and are extensively grown in East Asia. Known for their meaty texture, rich umami taste, and long shelf life, they
- king penguin (bird)
king penguin, (Aptenodytes patagonicus), second largest member of the penguin order (Sphenisciformes), characterized by its dignified, upright posture, long bill, and vivid coloration. Although many ornithologists divide the species into two subspecies, Aptenodytes patagonicus patagonicus and A.
- King Philip (Wampanoag leader)
Metacom was a sachem (intertribal leader) of a confederation of indigenous peoples that included the Wampanoag and Narraganset. Metacom led one of the most costly wars of resistance in New England history, known as King Philip’s War (1675–76). Metacom was the second son of Massasoit, a Wampanoag
- King Philip’s War (British-Native American conflict)
King Philip’s War, (1675–76), in British American colonial history, war that pitted Native Americans against English settlers and their Indian allies that was one of the bloodiest conflicts (per capita) in U.S. history. Historians since the early 18th century, relying on accounts from the
- King Rama IX Royal Park (botanical park, Bangkok, Thailand)
Bangkok: Cultural life: In 1987 the 200-acre (80-hectare) King Rama IX Royal Park with its extensive botanical gardens was opened to commemorate the king’s 60th birthday.
- King Ranch (ranch, Texas, United States)
King Ranch, largest ranch in the United States, composed of a group of four tracts of land in southeastern Texas, totaling approximately 825,000 acres (333,800 hectares). The King Ranch was established by Richard King, a steamboat captain born in 1825 in Orange county, New York. Drawn to Texas by
- King Rat (novel by Clavell)
James Clavell: Asian Saga novel series: He based his first novel, King Rat (1962; film 1965), on his experiences as a POW, and writing the book proved to be a cathartic experience for him. King Rat was the first book in what he called his “Asian Saga,” which chronicles the adventures and exploits of English characters…
- King Records (American music company)
King Records in the Queen City: Record store owner Syd Nathan established King Records in Cincinnati, Ohio, in 1943. Situated just across the Ohio River from more rural, Southern-oriented Kentucky, Nathan recorded country acts who came to town to play on WLW’s Midwestern Hayride and the touring black singers and bands…
- King Records in the Queen City
Record store owner Syd Nathan established King Records in Cincinnati, Ohio, in 1943. Situated just across the Ohio River from more rural, Southern-oriented Kentucky, Nathan recorded country acts who came to town to play on WLW’s Midwestern Hayride and the touring black singers and bands who
- King René’s Daughter (work by Hertz)
Henrik Hertz: …and Kong Renés datter (1845; King René’s Daughter), based on Provençal folklore. He was also a prolific writer of many kinds of verse. Unfortunately he often felt compelled to conform to his audience’s tastes in form rather than to meet his own artistic demands, and his reputation faded along with…
- King Richard (film by Green [2021])
Beyoncé: Acting career and soundtracks: …“Be Alive” for the film King Richard (2021), and it received an Oscar nomination for best original song.
- King Rother (German romance)
König Rother, medieval German romance (c. 1160) that is the earliest record of the type of popular entertainment literature circulated by wandering minstrels. It combines elements from German heroic literature (without the grimness of the older tales) with Orientalisms derived from the Crusades. In
- king salmon (fish)
chinook salmon, (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) prized North Pacific food and sport fish of the family Salmonidae. It weighs up to 60 kg (130 pounds) and is silvery with round black spots. Spawning runs occur in spring, adults swimming as far as 3,200 km (2,000 miles) up the Yukon. Young chinook salmon
- King Saud University (university, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia)
Riyadh: Education: King Saʿūd University (1957) and Islamic University of Imam Muḥammad ibn Saʿūd (1953) are both national universities. In addition, there are a number of military academies, including King ʿAbd al-ʿAzīz Military College (1955), King Khālid Military College (1982), and King Fahd Security College, originally established…
- king snake (reptile)
king snake, (genus Lampropeltis), any of a group of moderate-sized to large terrestrial snakes found from southeastern Canada to Ecuador. Adults generally range in length from 1 to 1.5 metres (3.3 to 5 feet), but some have grown to 2.1 metres (6.8 feet). They are nonvenomous constrictors and have a
- King Solomon’s Mines (novel by Haggard)
King Solomon’s Mines, novel by H. Rider Haggard, published in 1885. One of the first African adventure stories, it concerns the efforts of a group of Englishmen to find the legendary diamond mines of King Solomon. The explorer Allan Quatermain agrees to take Sir Henry Curtis and a friend on an
- King Solomon’s Mines (ancient mine, Israel)
Timnaʿ: The ancient mines, called Mikhrot Shelomo ha-Melekh (“King Solomon’s Mines”), are at the top of a north-south–trending mesa, about 1,000 feet (305 m) long and more than 425 feet (130 m) wide at its widest point. Scenic columnar rock formations along the mesa’s north wall show traces of the…
- King Sound (inlet, Western Australia, Australia)
King Sound, inlet of the Indian Ocean, northern Western Australia, measuring 90 miles by 35 miles (145 km by 56 km). Its entrance is flanked by Cape Leveque to the west and the four island clusters of the Buccaneer Archipelago in Yampi Sound to the east. The mouths of the Fitzroy, Meda, Lennard,
- king trumpet mushroom (fungus)
king oyster mushroom, (Pleurotus eryngii), widely cultivated edible mushroom. King oyster mushrooms are native to temperate, humid areas of the Mediterranean, Asia, and North Africa and are extensively grown in East Asia. Known for their meaty texture, rich umami taste, and long shelf life, they
- King Tut (song by Martin)
Steve Martin: …and his hit single “King Tut” (1978) sold more than a million copies.
- King Tut (king of Egypt)
Tutankhamun was a king of ancient Egypt (reigned c. 1333–24 bce), known chiefly for his intact tomb, KV 62 (tomb 62), discovered in the Valley of the Kings in 1922. During his reign, powerful advisers restored the traditional Egyptian religion and art, both of which had been set aside by his
- King v. Burwell (law case)
King v. Burwell, legal case in which the U.S. Supreme Court on June 25, 2015, held (6–3) that consumers who purchase health insurance on an exchange (marketplace) run by the federal government under the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA; commonly ACA) are eligible for subsidies in
- king vulture (bird)
vulture: New World vultures: The king vulture (Sarcoramphus papa) is the most colourful vulture. The head and neck are red, yellow, and bluish; the eyes are white with red eye-rings; the body is buff above and white below; and the neck fringe is gray. Its wingspan is about 2 metres;…
- King William Island (island, Nunavut, Canada)
King William Island, island, in the Canadian Arctic Archipelago, western Nunavut territory, between Victoria Island and Boothia Peninsula. The island is separated from the mainland (Adelaide Peninsula) by the Storis Passage and Simpson Strait. It is about 110 miles (175 km) long and 100 miles (160
- King William pine (plant)
Tasmanian cedar: The third species, King William pine (A. selaginoides), is a timber tree that may grow as high as 30 metres (100 feet) and as large in circumference as 2.7 metres (9 feet). Its dark green, leathery leaves contain volatile oils.
- King William’s Town (South Africa)
King William’s Town, town, Eastern Cape province, South Africa, west of East London. Founded as a missionary station in 1826, King William’s Town later (after 1835) served as a military headquarters for British Kaffraria and as a centre for German settlement before officially becoming a town in
- King William’s War (history of North America)
King William’s War, (1689–97), North American extension of the War of the Grand Alliance, waged by William III of Great Britain and the League of Augsburg against France under Louis XIV. Canadian and New England colonists divided in support of their mother countries and, together with their
- King ʿAbd al-ʿAzīz City for Science and Technology (Saudi Arabian government organization)
Riyadh: Education: …located in Riyadh is the King ʿAbd al-ʿAzīz City for Science and Technology (KACST), which carries out research designed to promote the enrichment of Saudi society through technological development. KACST is linked to some of the world’s preeminent scientific and technological centres, with whom a number of cooperative projects—including the…
- King ʿAbd Allāh University of Science and Technology (university, Saudi Arabia)
Saudi Arabia: Education: …level, in September 2009 the King Abdullah University of Science and Technology was opened near Jeddah. The campus hosted state-of-the-art laboratories, virtual reality facilities, and one of the world’s most powerful supercomputers. The coed university—many of whose students were drawn from abroad—strove to provide a comparatively liberal environment relative to…
- King’s and Queen’s Young Company (British theatrical company)
Christopher Beeston: …Company, more popularly known as Beeston’s Boys, a company that was established by royal warrant. Beeston was a lifelong friend of Thomas Heywood and produced many of his plays and also contributed verses to Heywood’s prose work An Apology for Actors (1612).
- King’s Antiquary (British official)
museum: Royal collections: …appointment in 1533 of a King’s Antiquary, whose task was to list and describe the antiquities of the country. (Similar appointments were made subsequently by the Habsburg monarchs and by King Gustav II Adolf of Sweden.) It was not until the 17th century that the first important royal collection was…
- King’s Bench Division (British law)
Queen’s Bench Division, in England and Wales, one of three divisions of the High Court of Justice, the others being the Chancery Division (formerly the Court of Chancery) and the Family Division. Formerly one of the superior courts of common law in England, Queen’s or (during a kingship) King’s
- King’s Bench, Court of (British law)
Queen’s Bench Division, in England and Wales, one of three divisions of the High Court of Justice, the others being the Chancery Division (formerly the Court of Chancery) and the Family Division. Formerly one of the superior courts of common law in England, Queen’s or (during a kingship) King’s
- King’s Bridge (bridge, Edinburgh, Scotland, United Kingdom)
Edinburgh: Edinburgh’s bridges: …Rock) to Regency building, while King’s Bridge (1833), leaping westward from the Castle Rock, was the vital link in the so-called “western approach.” Throughout the Victorian and Edwardian ages, the city grew in every direction, recording in its stone tenements and detached mansions every foible of changing taste: Neoclassical, Gothic,…
- King’s Chamber (English government)
Wardrobe: Originally part of the King’s Chamber, the Wardrobe, a small adjacent room in which kings kept their clothes and treasures, first became a distinct government agency in the late 12th century as part of the process in which sections of the royal household became in effect departments of government.…
- King’s Chamber (archaeological site, Egypt)
Pyramids of Giza: …room proper, usually termed the King’s Chamber. This room is entirely lined and roofed with granite. From the chamber two narrow shafts run obliquely through the masonry to the exterior of the pyramid; it is not known whether they were designed for a religious purpose or were meant for ventilation.…
- King’s College (college, London, United Kingdom)
University of London: In 1829 King’s College was founded under Anglican auspices, but its charter was blocked by the dissenters. In 1836 the University of London was created as an administrative entity that would hold no classes of its own but would examine and confer degrees on students of the…
- King’s College (university, New York City, New York, United States)
Columbia University, major private institution of higher education in New York, New York, U.S. It is one of the eight Ivy League schools, widely regarded for their high academic standards, selectivity in admissions, and social prestige. Founded in 1754 as King’s College, it was renamed Columbia
- King’s College at York, University of (university, Toronto, Ontario, Canada)
University of Toronto, coeducational institution of higher learning that is the provincial university of Ontario and one of the oldest and largest universities in Canada. It is composed of federated, affiliated, and constituent colleges, a union based originally on British models, and of faculties,
- King’s Collegiate School (school, Windsor, Nova Scotia, Canada)
boarding school: History of boarding schools across the world: Canada’s oldest boarding school, the King’s-Edgehill School, was founded as King’s Collegiate School in 1788 in Windsor, Nova Scotia. It was the first school in Canada to receive royal assent, granted by George III in 1789. The school was created in the wake of the American Revolution to ensure that…
- King’s Confession (Protestantism)
Scots Confession: The Second Scots Confession, also called the King’s Confession and the National Covenant (1581), was a supplement to the First Scots Confession. It was a strongly antipapal statement adopted by the king, council, and court and by all the Scottish people in 1581. It was also…
- King’s Counsel (British law)
legal profession: England after the Conquest: …most senior could be made Queen’s (or King’s) Counsel.
- King’s Court (English law)
curia: … Curia, also known as the Curia Regis, or Aula Regis (“King’s Court”). It was introduced at the time of the Norman Conquest (1066) and lasted to about the end of the 13th century. The Curia Regis was the germ from which the higher courts of law, the Privy Council, and…
- King’s Disease (album by Nas)
Nas: However, King’s Disease (2020), which was produced by Hit-Boy, showed none of the defects that critics perceived in the previous release and won near-universal praise.
- King’s English, The (work by Fowler brothers)
punctuation: Punctuation in English since 1600: … and Francis George Fowler, in The King’s English, published in 1906, who established the current British practice of light punctuation. Punctuation in the United States has followed much the same path as in Britain, but the rules laid down by American authorities have in general been more rigid than the…
- king’s evil (medical disorder)
king’s evil, scrofula (q.v.), or struma, a tuberculous swelling of the lymph glands, once popularly supposed to be curable by the touch of royalty. The custom of touching was first adopted in England by Edward the Confessor and in France by Philip I. In England the practice was attended with great
- King’s Flush (work by Benítez Rojo)
Antonio Benítez Rojo: …first book, the short-story collection Tute de reyes (“King’s Flush”), won Cuba’s major literary award, the Casa de las Américas Prize, in 1967, and in 1969 he won the Writers’ Union annual short-story prize with his volume El escudo de hojas secas (“The Shield of Dry Leaves”).
- King’s Fool, The (play by Hugo)
Rigoletto: …play Le Roi s’amuse (The King Amuses Himself; also performed in English as The King’s Fool) by Victor Hugo, Verdi’s opera was nearly kept off the stage by censors. With Rigoletto, Verdi reached a new level in his career; his next two operas, Il trovatore and La traviata, exhibit…
- King’s Gallery, the (art gallery, Buckingham Palace, London, United Kingdom)
the King’s Gallery, name given to either of two small public art galleries in the United Kingdom that exhibit the Royal Collection. The first gallery, then called the Queen’s Gallery, opened in 1962 at Elizabeth II’s official London residence, Buckingham Palace, in the borough of Westminster. It is
- King’s Grammar (work by Lily)
William Lily: Lily’s Grammar, as the work came to be known, was first published around 1540 and was actually a combined version of two shorter Latin syntaxes that Lily had written some years before. Henry VIII and his successor, Edward VI, ordered the book to be used…
- King’s Henchman, The (opera by Millay and Taylor)
Edna St. Vincent Millay: The resulting work, The King’s Henchman, first produced in 1927, became the most popular American opera up to its time and, published in book form, sold out four printings in 20 days.
- King’s Highway (ancient road, Middle East)
King’s Highway, ancient thoroughfare that connected Syria and the Gulf of Aqaba by way of what is now Jordan. Mentioned in the Old Testament, it is one of the world’s oldest continuously used communication routes. The King’s Highway was an important thoroughfare for north-south trade from ancient
- King’s House (building, Brussels, Belgium)
Brussels: City layout: …its north by the ornate King’s House (Maison du Roi/Broodhuis; almost entirely rebuilt during 1873–95), which contains the Brussels City Museum. The area surrounding the Grand’ Place, known as the Îlot Sacré (“Sacred Isle”), includes the late 19th-century Stock Exchange. Perhaps the most famous curiosity of this quarter is the…
- King’s Indian Defense (chess opening)
chess: The Soviet school: …Isaac Boleslavsky showed in the King’s Indian Defense how White could be allowed a free rein to occupy the centre by advancing the c-, d-, e-, and even f-pawns. But Black could obtain counterplay by advancing the e-pawn to e5 and exchanging it on d4—a surrender of the centre that…
- king’s letter boy (naval rank)
midshipman, title used in the Royal Navy from about 1660 for “young gentlemen” in training at sea to qualify for service as commissioned officers. Continental and U.S. navies adopted the title and system. The equivalent French title is aspirant, and the Spanish is guardia marina. In the early 21st
- King’s Lynn (town, England, United Kingdom)
King’s Lynn, town and seaport, King’s Lynn and West Norfolk borough, administrative and historic county of Norfolk, eastern England. The town lies along the estuary of the River Ouse (or Great Ouse) as it enters The Wash, a shallow North Sea inlet. In 1204 a royal charter established Lynn as a free
- King’s Lynn and West Norfolk (district, England, United Kingdom)
King’s Lynn and West Norfolk, borough (district), administrative and historic county of Norfolk, eastern England. The borough is bounded by the North Sea to the north and its shallow bay, The Wash, to the northwest. The low-lying area straddles on the west a small part of the Fens, a vast, fertile,
- King’s Man, The (film by Vaughn [2021])
Ralph Fiennes: …Sutton Hoo in England, and The King’s Man, an action film centring on a spy agency. The following year Fiennes starred as an egotistical chef in The Menu (2022), which combines satire with horror.
- King’s Men (English theatrical company)
King’s Men, English acting company that adopted the name the King’s Men after it came under the patronage of James I in 1603. Its previous name, dating to the 1590s, was the Lord Chamberlain’s Men. Considered the premier theater company in Jacobean England, it included William Shakespeare as its
- king’s messenger (medieval European government official)
missus dominicus, officials sent by some Frankish kings and emperors to supervise provincial administration. Used sporadically by Merovingian and early Carolingian rulers, the missi became a normal part of the administrative machinery under Charlemagne (reigned 768–814). From about 802 onward
- King’s Mill Station (Tennessee, United States)
Kingsport, city, Sullivan county, northeastern Tennessee, U.S., on the Holston River, near the Virginia border, about 90 miles (145 km) northeast of Knoxville. The area was settled in the late 1700s when entrepreneur William King founded a boatyard along the river. The region was part of the
- King’s Mound (archaeological site, Kerch, Ukraine)
Kerch: …and burial mounds, notably the King’s Mound. Later a part of the Roman Empire, Panticapaeum suffered severely from barbarian invasions and was devastated by the Huns in 375 ce. After a checkered history, it was ceded by the Mongols to the Genoese in 1318. It was then known as Korchev…
- King’s New Square (square, Copenhagen, Denmark)
Copenhagen: …former centre of the city, Kongens Nytorv (“King’s New Square”), laid out in the 17th century. Buildings there include the Thott Palace (now the French Embassy) and the Charlottenborg Palace (now the Royal Academy of Fine Arts), both of the 17th century, and the Royal Theatre, built in 1874.
- king’s paprika (spice)
paprika: A sharper Hungarian variety, Koenigspaprika, or king’s paprika, is made from the whole pepper.
- King’s Peace (ancient Greek history)
ancient Iran: Artaxerxes I to Darius III: …request, and dictate the so-called King’s Peace of 387–386 bc. Once again the Greeks gave up any claim to Asia Minor and further agreed to maintain the status quo in Greece itself.
- King’s Players (French theatrical company)
Théâtre de l’Hôtel de Bourgogne: …company in Paris, known as Les Comédiens du Roi (“the King’s Players”), established itself in the theatre about 1610. The Comédiens enjoyed considerable success and gradually assumed full-time use of the theatre. They were without an important rival until 1634, when a second theatre, the Théâtre du Marais, was built…
- King’s Port (Tennessee, United States)
Kingsport, city, Sullivan county, northeastern Tennessee, U.S., on the Holston River, near the Virginia border, about 90 miles (145 km) northeast of Knoxville. The area was settled in the late 1700s when entrepreneur William King founded a boatyard along the river. The region was part of the
- King’s Scholar (English education)
Eton College: …history, Eton names about 14 King’s Scholars, or Collegers, each year, for a schoolwide total of 70. The selection is based on the results of a competitive examination open to boys between 12 and 14 years of age. King’s Scholars are awarded scholarships ranging from 10 to 100 percent of…
- King’s School, the (school, Canterbury, England, United Kingdom)
boarding school: History of boarding schools across the world: In the United Kingdom, the King’s School in Canterbury traces its history back to 597 ce, though little is known with certainty about its earliest days; its history is better known from 1541, when it was reestablished under Henry VIII and its current name began to be used. It…
- king’s spear (plant)
asphodel: Yellow asphodel, or king’s spear (Asphodeline lutea), has fragrant yellow flowers and is grown as a landscaping plant.
- King’s Speech, The (film by Hooper [2010])
George VI: …captured in the motion picture The King’s Speech (2010), which depicts his long-term relationship with the unconventional Australian speech therapist Lionel Logue and climaxes with the king’s inspiring live radio address on September 3, 1939, as Britain entered World War II.
- King’s Stanley (England, United Kingdom)
Western architecture: Construction in iron and glass: The cloth mill at King’s Stanley, Gloucestershire (1812–13), is more convincing as an iron-frame building. Fully fireproof and avoiding the use of timber, it is clad in an attractive red-brick skin with Venetian windows and angle quoins. Leading Regency architects even used cast-iron construction members in major public buildings…
- King’s Thief, The (film by Leonard [1955])
Robert Z. Leonard: Later films: …his best film in years, The King’s Thief (1955), a costume drama starring David Niven and Ann Blyth. That film turned out to be Leonard’s last at MGM. His last two films were the Italian production Beautiful but Dangerous (1955; La donna più bella del mondo) with Gina Lollobrigida and…
- king’s yellow (pigment)
orpiment: …a very fine grade called king’s yellow, which was used until cadmium yellow (principally cadmium sulfide) became available.
- King’s-Edgehill School (school, Windsor, Nova Scotia, Canada)
boarding school: History of boarding schools across the world: Canada’s oldest boarding school, the King’s-Edgehill School, was founded as King’s Collegiate School in 1788 in Windsor, Nova Scotia. It was the first school in Canada to receive royal assent, granted by George III in 1789. The school was created in the wake of the American Revolution to ensure that…
- King, Alan (American comedian)
Martin Scorsese: Films of the 1990s: GoodFellas, Cape Fear, and Casino: …performances (especially by Sharon Stone, Alan King, James Woods, Don Rickles, and Dickie Smothers). Kundun (1997) followed; it was a respectful, handsomely mounted biography of the 14th Dalai Lama that proceeded at a stately pace, unspooling through the remarkable events of his life, commencing with the Dalai Lama’s discovery as…
- King, Albert (American musician)
Albert King was an American blues musician who created a unique string-bending guitar style that influenced three generations of musicians. He was one of 13 children born to an itinerant Mississippi preacher and his wife. When he was eight years old, his widowed mother moved the family to eastern
- King, Angus (United States senator)
Angus King is an American politician who was elected as an Independent to the U.S. Senate in 2012 and began representing Maine in that body the following year. He previously served as governor of the state (1995–2003). King was born and raised in Alexandria, Virginia. After attending Dartmouth
- King, Angus Stanley, Jr. (United States senator)
Angus King is an American politician who was elected as an Independent to the U.S. Senate in 2012 and began representing Maine in that body the following year. He previously served as governor of the state (1995–2003). King was born and raised in Alexandria, Virginia. After attending Dartmouth
- King, Augusta Ada (British mathematician)
Ada Lovelace was an English mathematician, an associate of Charles Babbage, for whose prototype of a digital computer she created a program. She has been called the first computer programmer. Lovelace was the daughter of famed poet Lord Byron and Annabella Milbanke Byron, who legally separated two
- King, B.B. (American musician)
B.B. King was an American guitarist and singer who was a principal figure in the development of blues and from whose style leading popular musicians drew inspiration. King was reared in the Mississippi Delta, and gospel music in church was the earliest influence on his singing. To his own
- King, Ben E. (American singer)
Ben E. King was an American rhythm and blues singer who was the leader of the vocal group the Drifters in the late 1950s and early ’60s. He later earned acclaim as a solo artist with several hit singles, most notably “Stand by Me” (1961). King’s early childhood was spent in North Carolina, where he
- King, Betsy (American golfer)
golf: The Ladies Professional Golf Association (LPGA): Pat Daniel, Betsy King, Patty Sheehan, Juli Inkster, and Laura Davies were among the top players of the 1980s and ’90s. By the turn of the century, when the annual purse for LPGA events had increased to more than $37 million per year, the tour was dominated…
- King, Billie Jean (American tennis player)
Billie Jean King is an American tennis player whose influence and playing style elevated the status of women’s professional tennis beginning in the late 1960s. In her career, she won 39 major titles, competing in both singles and doubles. King was athletically inclined from an early age. She first
- King, Blues Boy (American musician)
B.B. King was an American guitarist and singer who was a principal figure in the development of blues and from whose style leading popular musicians drew inspiration. King was reared in the Mississippi Delta, and gospel music in church was the earliest influence on his singing. To his own
- King, Carol Weiss (American lawyer)
Carol Weiss King was an American lawyer who specialized in immigration law and the defense of the civil rights of immigrants. King graduated from Barnard College in New York City in 1916 and entered New York University Law School. In 1917 she married George C. King, an author. She graduated from
- King, Carole (American singer-songwriter)
Carole King is an American songwriter and singer (alto) who composed a string of hit songs in the 1960s and ’70s and was one of the most prolific female musicians in the history of pop music. King’s mother, Eugenia Gingold, an actress and theater critic, was the source of her early music education.
- King, Clarence (American geologist)
Clarence King was an American geologist and mining engineer who organized and directed the U.S. Geological Survey of the 40th parallel, an intensive study of the mineral resources along the site of the proposed Union Pacific Railroad. In 1863 King set out from the eastern seaboard, by foot and on
- King, Coretta Scott (American civil-rights activist)
Coretta Scott King was an American civil rights activist who was the wife of Martin Luther King, Jr. Coretta Scott graduated from Antioch College in Yellow Springs, Ohio, and in 1951 enrolled at the New England Conservatory of Music in Boston. While working toward a degree in voice, she met Martin
- King, Cycle of the (French epic)
epic: Chansons de geste: The Cycle of the King consists of the songs in which Charlemagne himself is a principal figure.
- King, Don (American boxing promoter)
Don King is an American boxing promoter known for his flamboyant manner and outrageous hair styled to stand straight up. He first came to prominence with his promotion of the 1974 “Rumble in the Jungle” bout between Muhammad Ali and George Foreman in Kinshasa, Zaire (now the Democratic Republic of
- King, Donald (American boxing promoter)
Don King is an American boxing promoter known for his flamboyant manner and outrageous hair styled to stand straight up. He first came to prominence with his promotion of the 1974 “Rumble in the Jungle” bout between Muhammad Ali and George Foreman in Kinshasa, Zaire (now the Democratic Republic of
- King, Edward (United States general)
Bataan Death March: Lead-up to the march: Edward (“Ned”) King, U.S. commander of all ground troops on Bataan, surrendered his thousands of sick, enervated, and starving troops on April 9, 1942. The siege of Bataan was the first major land battle for the Americans in World War II and one of the…
- King, Ernest Joseph (United States admiral)
Ernest Joseph King was an American admiral who was commander in chief of U.S. naval forces and chief of naval operations throughout most of World War II. He masterminded the successful U.S. military campaign against Japan in the Pacific. King graduated from the United States Naval Academy at
- King, Frank (American artist)
Frank King was an American comic-strip artist who created Gasoline Alley, a long-popular comic strip notable for its sympathetic picture of small-town life. After working as a cartoonist for the Minneapolis Times from 1901 to 1905, King moved to Chicago, where he attended the Chicago Academy of
- King, Franklin Hiram (American inventor)
Franklin Hiram King was an American agricultural scientist, inventor of the cylindrical tower silo. He also invented a gravity system of ventilation for dairy barns that was widely used until electrically powered blowers became commonly available. King worked for the Wisconsin Geological Survey
- King, Gayle (American broadcast journalist)
Charles Barkley: In 2023–24 Barkley and Gayle King hosted the evening talk show King Charles on CNN. Beginning with his years as a player, Barkley was never shy about expressing his opinions—often with a large dose of humor—which helped him create a persona that transcended the basketball world.
- King, George (British author)
new religious movement: Scientific NRMs: UFO groups and Scientology: …the Aetherius Society, organized by George King, maintained that space aliens held the key to the salvation both of the planet as a whole and of every individual on Earth.
- King, Geste of the (French epic)
epic: Chansons de geste: The Cycle of the King consists of the songs in which Charlemagne himself is a principal figure.