- Knox, Robert (Scottish surgeon)
body snatching: Body snatchers and their methods: Robert Knox, the anatomist who bought the bodies of the victims, also went unpunished, although his reputation and career were damaged. Murders for anatomical specimens are documented elsewhere in Britain and in Cincinnati, Ohio, and Baltimore, Maryland, in the United States. Such murders were not…
- Knox, Ronald (British theologian)
Ronald Knox was an English author, theologian, and dignitary of the Roman Catholic Church, best known for his translation of the Bible. Born into an Anglican family, he was educated at Balliol College, Oxford, and in 1912 was appointed chaplain of Trinity College, Oxford. He became a Roman Catholic
- Knox, Rose Markward (American businesswoman)
Rose Markward Knox was an American businesswoman who was highly successful in promoting and selling gelatin for widespread home and industrial use. Rose Markward married Charles B. Knox, a salesman, in 1883. In 1890 they invested their $5,000 savings in a prepared gelatin (gelatine) business to be
- Knox, William (Scottish poet)
Abraham Lincoln: Lincoln’s family: …of an obscure Scottish poet, William Knox. Lincoln often quoted Knox’s lines beginning: “Oh! why should the spirit of mortal be proud?” He liked to relax with the comic writings of Petroleum V. Nasby, Orpheus C. Kerr, and Artemus Ward, or with a visit to the popular theater.
- Knox-Porter Resolution (United States history)
Somerville: The Knox-Porter Resolution, ending the state of war between the United States and the Central Powers (Germany and Austria-Hungary), was signed (July 2, 1921) by President Warren G. Harding at the Somerville estate of Joseph Frelinghuysen. Raritan Valley Community College (1965) is in the borough. Inc.…
- Knoxville (Tennessee, United States)
Knoxville, city, seat (1792) of Knox county, eastern Tennessee, U.S., on the Tennessee River, which is formed just east of the city by the confluence of the Holston and French Broad rivers. It is situated between the Cumberland Mountains to the northwest and the Great Smoky Mountains to the
- Knoxville Whig (newspaper)
William G. Brownlow: …and Independent (1839–49) and the Knoxville Whig (1849–69 and 1875–77).
- KNP (political organization, Poland)
Poland: The rebirth of Poland: …he had set up a Polish National Committee in Paris, which the French viewed as a quasi-government. Under its aegis a Polish army composed mainly of volunteers from the United States was placed under the command of General Józef Haller.
- KNPC (Kuwaiti company)
Kuwait: Oil: …achieved full ownership of the Kuwait National Petroleum Company (KNPC), which it had formed in 1960 with private Kuwaiti investors. The KNPC, designed to serve as an integrated oil company, controlled the supply and distribution of petroleum products within the country and began marketing operations abroad. In 1980 the government…
- KNU (political organization, Myanmar)
Myanmar: Myanmar since 1988: …in April 2024 when the Karen National Union (KNU) seized control of Myawaddy, a town on the Myanmar-Thailand border and a major point of trade with Thailand. The victory not only showcased the KNU’s military capability but also highlighted the weakening control of the military junta over Myanmar. The capture…
- knuckle (anatomy)
knuckle, the joint of a finger. The knuckle joint of an animal killed for eating is the tarsal or carpal joint of its leg. The word is used also in medical parlance to describe a loop of bowel within a hernial sac. “Knuckling” is used to describe a deformity of the leg of a horse caused by a
- knuckle-walking (animal behavior)
gorilla: This mode of locomotion, called knuckle walking, is shared with chimpanzees. Occasionally gorillas stand erect, mainly when displaying. Females and young climb more than males, mainly because much vegetation cannot support the weight of males.
- knuckleball (baseball)
Hoyt Wilhelm: ) Wilhelm’s knuckleball quickly proved to be an asset to the Giants, with whom he won a World Series championship in 1954. Unfortunately, the dancing pitch sometimes baffled his own catchers too, until Paul Richards, the manager of the Baltimore Orioles during the majority of Wilhelm’s tenure…
- knucklebone (dice)
dice: History: …immediate forerunners of dice were knucklebones (astragals: the anklebones of sheep, buffalo, or other animals), sometimes with markings on the four faces. Such objects are still used in some parts of the world.
- Knuckles (mountains, Sri Lanka)
Knuckles, mountains in Sri Lanka, running north–south to the north of the Mahaweli Ganga Valley, rising to 6,112 ft (1,863 m) at Knuckles Peak, about 10 mi northeast of Wattegama. The region receives an average rainfall of 100–200 in. (2,500–5,000 mm). Tea, rubber, rice, vegetables, and cardamom
- Knuckles Peak (mountain, Sri Lanka)
Knuckles: …6,112 ft (1,863 m) at Knuckles Peak, about 10 mi northeast of Wattegama. The region receives an average rainfall of 100–200 in. (2,500–5,000 mm). Tea, rubber, rice, vegetables, and cardamom are grown in the area. Of irregular shape, the mountain range extends for 25 mi in length and reaches 15…
- Knuckles, Mount (mountain, Sri Lanka)
Knuckles: …6,112 ft (1,863 m) at Knuckles Peak, about 10 mi northeast of Wattegama. The region receives an average rainfall of 100–200 in. (2,500–5,000 mm). Tea, rubber, rice, vegetables, and cardamom are grown in the area. Of irregular shape, the mountain range extends for 25 mi in length and reaches 15…
- knuckling (equine disorder)
knuckle: “Knuckling” is used to describe a deformity of the leg of a horse caused by a contraction of the posterior tendon of the fetlock.
- Knucksie (American baseball player)
Phil Niekro was arguably the greatest knuckleball pitcher in the history of Major League Baseball (MLB). He employed the pitch—which has become a rarity and is difficult to master but is less taxing on a pitcher’s arm than other pitches—in a 24-year MLB career that took him to the All-Star Games
- Knud den Hellige (king of Denmark)
Canute IV ; canonized 1101; feast days January 19, July 10) was a martyr, patron saint, and king of Denmark from 1080 to 1086. The son of King Sweyn II Estrithson of Denmark, Canute succeeded his brother Harold Hen as king of Denmark. Canute opposed the aristocracy and kept a close association with
- Knud den Store (king of England, Denmark, and Norway)
Canute (I) was a Danish king of England (1016–35), of Denmark (as Canute II; 1019–35), and of Norway (1028–35), who was a power in the politics of Europe in the 11th century, respected by both emperor and pope. Neither the place nor the date of his birth is known. Canute was the grandson of the
- Knudsen gas (physics)
gas: Free-molecule gas: The mean free path in a gas may easily be increased by decreasing the pressure. If the pressure is halved, the mean free path doubles in length. Thus, at low enough pressures the mean free path can become sufficiently large that collisions of…
- Knudsen, Erik (Danish author)
Danish literature: Postwar literary trends: …wrote excellent nonsense verse, and Erik Knudsen, also a brilliant satirical playwright. Both studied contemporary problems and reacted against the antirationalism and anti-intellectualism of the Heretica movement. Tove Ditlevsen was another important poet, as well as a novelist and short-story writer, unattached to any group; her often intensely personal work…
- Knudsen, Hans Christian (Norwegian missionary)
Bethanie: …in the early 1840s by Hans Christian Knudsen, a Norwegian missionary of the Rhenish (German Lutheran) Missionary Society. Schmelen and Knudsen made the earliest (independent) attempts at putting the difficult Nama (Khoisan) language into written form. German colonial troops were stationed at Bethanie in 1894. The region surrounding Bethanie has…
- Knudsen, Keith (American musician)
the Doobie Brothers: ), drummer Keith Knudsen (b. February 18, 1948, Le Mars, Iowa—d. February 8, 2005, San Francisco, California), vocalist-keyboardist Michael McDonald (b. February 12, 1952, St. Louis, Missouri), multi-instrumentalist John McFee (b. September 9, 1950, Santa Cruz, California), saxophonist Cornelius Bumpus (b. January 13, 1952, Dallas, Texas—d. February…
- Knudsen, Knud (Norwegian linguist)
Norwegian language: In the 1840s Knud Knudsen formulated a policy of gradual reform that would bring the written norm closer to that spoken norm and thereby create a distinctively Norwegian language without the radical disruption envisaged by the supporters of Aasen’s New Norwegian. This solution was supported by most of…
- Knudsen, Signius Wilhelm Poul (American industrialist)
William S. Knudsen was a Danish-born American industrialist, an effective coordinator of automobile mass production who served as president of General Motors Corporation (1937–40) and directed the government’s massive armaments production program for World War II. After Knudsen immigrated to the
- Knudsen, William S (American industrialist)
William S. Knudsen was a Danish-born American industrialist, an effective coordinator of automobile mass production who served as president of General Motors Corporation (1937–40) and directed the government’s massive armaments production program for World War II. After Knudsen immigrated to the
- Knudstorp, Jørgen Vig (Danish businessman)
Jørgen Vig Knudstorp is a Danish business executive who was CEO (2004–16) and executive chairman (2017– ) of the LEGO Group. He was credited with turning around the Danish toy maker. Knudstorp’s original ambition was to become a teacher, and he taught kindergarten for 18 months following his
- Knudtzon, Jørgen Alexander (Norwegian scholar)
Anatolian languages: Early research: …1902, when Assyriologist Jørgen Alexander Knudtzon pointed out that the language of the so-called Arzawa letters (e.g., Hittite), from the Amarna archive, had an apparent affinity with Indo-European.
- Knut den Hellige (king of Denmark)
Canute IV ; canonized 1101; feast days January 19, July 10) was a martyr, patron saint, and king of Denmark from 1080 to 1086. The son of King Sweyn II Estrithson of Denmark, Canute succeeded his brother Harold Hen as king of Denmark. Canute opposed the aristocracy and kept a close association with
- Knut den Mektige (king of England, Denmark, and Norway)
Canute (I) was a Danish king of England (1016–35), of Denmark (as Canute II; 1019–35), and of Norway (1028–35), who was a power in the politics of Europe in the 11th century, respected by both emperor and pope. Neither the place nor the date of his birth is known. Canute was the grandson of the
- Knut den Store (king of England, Denmark, and Norway)
Canute (I) was a Danish king of England (1016–35), of Denmark (as Canute II; 1019–35), and of Norway (1028–35), who was a power in the politics of Europe in the 11th century, respected by both emperor and pope. Neither the place nor the date of his birth is known. Canute was the grandson of the
- Knut Eriksson (king of Sweden)
Sweden: Civil wars: Erik’s son Knut killed Sverker’s son (1167) and was accepted as king of the entire country. Knut organized the currency system, worked for the organization of the church, and established a fortress on the site of Stockholm. After his death in 1196, members of the families of…
- Knut the Holy (king of Denmark)
Canute IV ; canonized 1101; feast days January 19, July 10) was a martyr, patron saint, and king of Denmark from 1080 to 1086. The son of King Sweyn II Estrithson of Denmark, Canute succeeded his brother Harold Hen as king of Denmark. Canute opposed the aristocracy and kept a close association with
- Knut, Sankt (king of Denmark)
Canute IV ; canonized 1101; feast days January 19, July 10) was a martyr, patron saint, and king of Denmark from 1080 to 1086. The son of King Sweyn II Estrithson of Denmark, Canute succeeded his brother Harold Hen as king of Denmark. Canute opposed the aristocracy and kept a close association with
- Knute Rockne–All American (film by Bacon [1940])
Lloyd Bacon: Warner Brothers: Knute Rockne–All American (1940) was one of the era’s best sports biopics, while Honeymoon for Three (1941) was an unremarkable comedy. Bacon got his one chance to direct Errol Flynn in Footsteps in the Dark (1941), which featured Flynn not as a swashbuckler or a…
- Knuth, Donald (American mathematician and computer scientist)
Donald Knuth is an American mathematician and computer scientist known for his authoritative multivolume series of books The Art of Computer Programming (1968– ) and the text-formatting language TeX. Knuth received a bachelor’s degree in mathematics in 1960 from the Case Institute of Technology
- Knuth, Donald Ervin (American mathematician and computer scientist)
Donald Knuth is an American mathematician and computer scientist known for his authoritative multivolume series of books The Art of Computer Programming (1968– ) and the text-formatting language TeX. Knuth received a bachelor’s degree in mathematics in 1960 from the Case Institute of Technology
- Knutsford (England, United Kingdom)
Knutsford, town (parish), Cheshire East unitary authority, historic county of Cheshire, northwestern England. It is located on the Cheshire Plain southwest of the city of Manchester. Knutsford received a market, free burgage (tenure from the crown), and power to elect a mayor from a charter of
- Knutsson Bonde, Karl (king of Sweden)
Charles VIII Knutsson was the king of Sweden (1448–57, 1464–65, 1467–70), who represented the interests of the commercially oriented, anti-Danish Swedish nobility against the older landowning class of nobles who favoured a union with Denmark. He was twice removed from office by his opponents. His
- Knutsson, Erik (king of Sweden)
Sweden: Civil wars: …the archbishop was that of Erik Knutsson in 1210. The church also gave its sanction to the “crusades” against Finland and the eastern Baltic coast; the action combined an attempt at Christianization with an attempt at conquering the areas.
- Knutsson, Gösta (Swedish author)
children’s literature: National and modern literature: …of the supergirl Pippi Longstocking; Gösta Knutsson, with her well-liked Pelle svanslös (1939; Eng. trans., The Adventures of the Cat Who Had No Tail). The psychological realistic novel, delving deeply into the inner lives of children, has been developed by Maria Gripe, whose Hugo and Josephine trilogy may become classic;…
- Knüttelvers (literature)
doggerel: The German version, called Knüttelvers (literally “cudgel verse”), was popular during the Renaissance and was later used for comic effect by such poets as J.W. von Goethe and Friedrich von Schiller. Doggerel verse is still commonly heard in limericks and nonsense verse, popular songs, and commercial jingles.
- Knyaz Andrei Aleksandrovich (Russian prince)
Andrei Alexandrovich, prince of Russia , was the grandson of Tsar Alexander III of Russia who narrowly escaped death after the Russian Revolution and was freed by German troops shortly before the World War I armistice. The prince fled to Paris with his father, Grand Duke Alexander Mikhaylovich, and
- Knyaz Igor (opera by Borodin)
opera: Russian opera: Borodin’s incomplete Knyaz Igor (Prince Igor, his own libretto; completed and edited by Nikolay Rimsky-Korsakov and Aleksandr Glazunov) was staged posthumously in St. Petersburg in 1890. Resembling the style of French grand opera, the work is notable for its use of an idiom based on Russian folk song and…
- Knyphausen, Wilhelm, Freiherr von (German general)
Wilhelm, baron von Knyphausen was a German soldier who after 1777 commanded “Hessian” troops on the British side in the American Revolution. A lieutenant general with 42 years of military service, Knyphausen went to North America in 1776 as second in command (under General Leopold von Heister) of
- Knytlinga saga (Danish mythology)
Slavic religion: Principal divine beings: …by Helmold and in the Knytlinga saga (a Danish legend that recounts the conquest of Arkona through the efforts of King Valdemar I of Denmark against the pagan and pirate Slavs) Zcerneboch (or Chernobog), the Black God, and Tiarnoglofi, the Black Head (Mind or Brain). The Black God survives in…
- Ko (floral art)
Ko, one of the four major schools of floral art in Japan. Dating from the Tokugawa period (1603–1868), the Ko school developed the shōka style of the earlier Ikenobō school into a more naturalistic type of arrangement. Calling the arrangements seika rather than shōka, the Ko school retained the
- kō (Confucianism)
xiao, in Confucianism, the attitude of obedience, devotion, and care toward one’s parents and elder family members that is the basis of individual moral conduct and social harmony. Xiao consists in putting the needs of parents and family elders over self, spouse, and children, deferring to parents’
- Ko Hŭi-dong (Korean artist)
Ko Hŭi-dong was a Korean artist who pioneered in the application of Western techniques to traditional painting styles. After World War II, he became a member of the South Korean government of Syngman Rhee. Born into a high-ranking aristocratic family, Ko in 1908 became the first Korean student to
- Ko Hung (Chinese alchemist)
Ge Hong was a figure in Chinese Daoism, perhaps the best-known alchemist, who tried to combine Confucian ethics with the occult doctrines of Daoism. In his youth he received a Confucian education, but later he grew interested in the Daoist cult of physical immortality (xian). His monumental work,
- Ko Sira (album by Sangaré)
Oumou Sangaré: With the album Ko Sira (1993), Sangaré stretched the boundaries of wassoulou music by drawing more heavily from internationally popular styles—such as rock, funk, and soul—while maintaining a distinctly African sound. Several songs on Worotan (1996), for instance, featured soul-influenced wind arrangements led by American saxophonist Pee Wee…
- Ko Un (Korean poet)
Ko Un is a prolific Korean poet who gained an international readership with verse informed by both his political activism in Korea and a broader concern for humanity. Ko was born in a farming village, and his schooling took place under Japanese authorities who were intent on suppressing Korean
- Ko yao (pottery)
Ge kiln, kiln known for the wares it produced during the early Song dynasty (960–1162), probably in the Zhejiang province in China. Scholars are uncertain of the kiln’s exact location. Legends recorded in documents of the Ming dynasty suggest that the kiln was named after the elder brother of the
- Ko-chiu (China)
Gejiu, city, southern Yunnan sheng (province), China. It lies near the Vietnamese border and is the site of China’s most important tin-mining operation. Gejiu was originally a small mining settlement called Gejiuli; mining of silver was begun there under the Yuan (1206–1368) and Ming (1368–1644)
- ko-en-gen (game)
top: …game known for centuries as Ko-en-gen was introduced in Europe as diablo and became the rage. A spool (“devil”) was whipped up by a cord, tossed up by the player, and caught again on the cord. The hexagonal teetotum (known to the ancient Greeks and Romans), marked distinctively on each…
- Ko-erh-mu (China)
Golmud, city, central Qinghai sheng (province), western China. Golmud is an important highway centre, standing at the intersection of two ancient routes that more recently have become highways. One links Xining in Qinghai and Lanzhou in Gansu province in the east with the western Qaidam Basin area;
- Ko-Ko the Clown (cartoon character)
Fleischer brothers: …was rotoscoped into the character Ko-Ko the Clown, who starred in the Out of the Inkwell series (1919–29), produced and distributed by the Bray Studio in New York City. The basic premise for the series is a live-action Max Fleischer dipping a pen in an ink bottle and drawing Ko-Ko…
- Ko-no-hana-saku-ya-hime (Japanese deity)
Yama-no-kami: Another prominent mountain deity is Ko-no-hana-saku-ya-hime—wife of the divine grandchild Ninigi and mother of two mythological princes, Fireshade and Fireshine—who resides on Fuji-yama. A widespread tradition connected with the worship of Yama-no-kami is the offering of a salt-sea fish called okoze.
- ko-tsuzumi (drum)
tsuzumi: …commonly used tsuzumi are the ko-tsuzumi and the ō-tsuzumi, found in the music of Noh and Kabuki theatres. Although the ko-tsuzumi and the ō-tsuzumi are quite similar in appearance, the manner in which they are played and the sound and tone they produce are quite distinct. Both heads of the…
- koala (marsupial)
koala, (Phascolarctos cinereus), tree-dwelling marsupial of coastal eastern and southern Australia classified in the family Phascolarctidae (suborder Vombatiformes). Due to the animal’s superficial resemblance to a small bear, the koala is sometimes referred to, albeit erroneously, as the koala
- koala bear (marsupial)
koala, (Phascolarctos cinereus), tree-dwelling marsupial of coastal eastern and southern Australia classified in the family Phascolarctidae (suborder Vombatiformes). Due to the animal’s superficial resemblance to a small bear, the koala is sometimes referred to, albeit erroneously, as the koala
- Kōami Family (Japanese artists)
Kōami Family was a group of Japanese lacquerware artists who were eminent for 19 generations in the Muromachi, Azuchi-Momoyama, and Tokugawa periods. Michinaga (1410–78) was a personal attendant to the military ruler Ashikaga Yoshimasa and excelled in two techniques of lacquer design. The
- Kōami Michinaga (Japanese artist)
Kōami Family: Michinaga (1410–78) was a personal attendant to the military ruler Ashikaga Yoshimasa and excelled in two techniques of lacquer design. The takamaki-e technique consists of building decorative motifs with a mixture of lacquer putty, white lead, lampblack, camphor, and gold or silver foil in relief…
- Kōami Nagashige (Japanese artist)
Kōami Family: …member of the 10th generation, Nagashige (1599–1651), made what is deemed by some the finest piece of Japanese lacquerware in existence: a set of stands presented as a wedding gift to the daughter of the military ruler Tokugawa Iemitsu.
- koan (Zen Buddhism)
koan, in Zen Buddhism of Japan, a succinct paradoxical statement or question used as a meditation discipline for novices, particularly in the Rinzai sect. The effort to “solve” a koan is intended to exhaust the analytic intellect and the egoistic will, readying the mind to entertain an appropriate
- koān (Zen Buddhism)
koan, in Zen Buddhism of Japan, a succinct paradoxical statement or question used as a meditation discipline for novices, particularly in the Rinzai sect. The effort to “solve” a koan is intended to exhaust the analytic intellect and the egoistic will, readying the mind to entertain an appropriate
- kob (mammal)
kob, (Kobus kob), small, stocky African antelope (tribe Reduncini, family Bovidae) that occurs in large numbers on floodplains of the northern savanna. The kob ranges from Senegal in the west to the Ethiopian border in the east and southward into western Uganda and eastern Democratic Republic of
- Koba the Dread (work by Amis)
Martin Amis: …subject of both the nonfiction Koba the Dread (2002) and the novel House of Meetings (2006). In his novel The Pregnant Widow (2010), Amis examined the sexual revolution of the 1970s and its repercussions on a group of friends who lived through it. The pop culture indictment Lionel Asbo: State…
- koban (coin)
coin: Japan: …being ōban and the smaller koban. Other gold pieces are the small rectangular pieces of one and two bu issued from time to time; round gold is rare and usually of provincial mints. Silver was originally in the form of stamped bars called long silver; these were supplemented by small…
- Kobar Sink (basin, Eritrea)
Denakil Plain: The Kobar Sink, a huge basin in the northern part of the plain, drops to 381 feet (116 m) below sea level. The Denakil Plain was formed by the evaporation of an inland sea. About 450 square miles (1,200 square km) is covered by salt; salt…
- Kobarid, Battle of (European history)
Battle of Caporetto, (October 24–December 19, 1917), Italian military disaster during World War I in which Italian troops retreated before an Austro-German offensive on the Isonzo front in northeastern Italy, where the Italian and Austrian forces had been stalemated for two and a half years. In the
- Kobayashi Hideo (Japanese author)
Kobayashi Hideo was one of the most influential critics in the Japanese cultural world. Kobayashi studied French literature at Tokyo Imperial University (now the University of Tokyo) and graduated in 1927. In the early 1930s he was associated with the novelists Kawabata Yasunari and Yokomitsu
- Kobayashi Ichizō (Japanese businessman)
Tōhō Motion Picture Company: …was founded in 1936 by Kobayashi Ichizō, a former businessman who was the creator of an all-girl “opera troupe.” In 1932 he had organized the Tokyo Takarazuka Theatre Corporation, subsequently acquiring several established theatres and building new and larger ones. His structures housed three or more separate theatres, a model…
- Kobayashi Issa (Japanese poet)
Issa was a Japanese haiku poet whose works in simple, unadorned language captured the spiritual loneliness of the common man. As a boy, Issa found relations with his stepmother so difficult that in 1777 he was sent by his father to Edo (present-day Tokyo), where he studied haikai under the poet
- Kobayashi Kiyochika (Japanese printmaker)
Kobayashi Kiyochika was a Japanese printmaker who adopted the effects of Western lithography and engraving, especially in his wood-block prints. Kobayashi first studied Japanese painting and later oil painting as well as photography. Initially under the influence of such masters of Ukiyo-e
- Kobayashi Kokei (Japanese painter)
Kobayashi Kokei was an artist who greatly contributed to modern Japanese painting. Orphaned early in life, Kobayashi went to Tokyo when he was 17 and studied traditional Japanese painting with Kajita Hanko (1870–1917). He joined the Restored Japan Academy of Art and became one of its most prominent
- Kobayashi Makoto (Japanese scientist)
Kobayashi Makoto is a Japanese scientist who was a corecipient, with Yoichiro Nambu and Maskawa Toshihide, of the 2008 Nobel Prize for Physics. Kobayashi and Maskawa shared half the prize for their discovery of the origin of broken symmetry, which created at least six quarks moments after the big
- Kobayashi Masaki (Japanese director)
Kobayashi Masaki was a Japanese motion-picture director whose 9 12-hour trilogy, Ningen no joken (The Human Condition: No Greater Love, 1959; Road to Eternity, 1959; A Soldier’s Prayer, 1961), a monumental criticism of war, constitutes the best example of his films of social concern. Drafted into
- Kobayashi Nobuyuki (Japanese poet)
Issa was a Japanese haiku poet whose works in simple, unadorned language captured the spiritual loneliness of the common man. As a boy, Issa found relations with his stepmother so difficult that in 1777 he was sent by his father to Edo (present-day Tokyo), where he studied haikai under the poet
- Kobayashi Shigeru (Japanese painter)
Kobayashi Kokei was an artist who greatly contributed to modern Japanese painting. Orphaned early in life, Kobayashi went to Tokyo when he was 17 and studied traditional Japanese painting with Kajita Hanko (1870–1917). He joined the Restored Japan Academy of Art and became one of its most prominent
- Kobayashi Takiji (Japanese author)
Kobayashi Takiji was an outstanding writer of the proletarian literary movement in pre-World War II Japan. Kobayashi attended Otaru (Hokkaido) Higher Commercial School, where he showed literary promise. On graduation in 1924 he took a position with a bank in Otaru, while his interest in literature
- Kobayashi Yatarō (Japanese poet)
Issa was a Japanese haiku poet whose works in simple, unadorned language captured the spiritual loneliness of the common man. As a boy, Issa found relations with his stepmother so difficult that in 1777 he was sent by his father to Edo (present-day Tokyo), where he studied haikai under the poet
- Kobayashi, Tadashi (Japanese art critic)
Kaigetsudō Ando: …by late 20th-century art critic Tadashi Kobayashi, the typical “Kaigetsudō beauty” was drawn against a flat, or neutral, background, standing in a boldly coloured, beautifully patterned kimono with her stomach thrust forward and her head and shoulders angled back. This pose, together with a small head and delicate facial features…
- Kobayashi-Maskawa model (physics)
CP violation: …confirm detailed predictions of the Kobayashi-Maskawa theory, but the effects are very small. CP violation is expected to be more prominent in the decay of the particles known as B-mesons, which contain a bottom quark instead of the strange quark of the K-mesons. Experiments at facilities that can produce large…
- kobdas (Scandinavian ritual drum)
kobdas, magic drum used for trance induction and divination by the Lapp shaman, or noiade. The drum consisted of a wooden frame, ring, or bowl over which a membrane of reindeer hide was stretched. The hide was usually covered with figures of deities, tutelary spirits of the noiade, and otherworld
- Kobdo (Mongolia)
Hovd, town, administrative headquarters of Hovd aymag (province), western Mongolia, in the northern foothills of the Mongol Altayn Nuruu (Mongolian Altai Mountains) at an elevation of 4,260 ft (1,300 m). Har Us Nuur (lake) lies to the east and is fed by the Hovd Gol (river). Founded in 1731 as a
- Kobdo River (river, Mongolia)
Mongolia: Drainage: …Mongolian interior are the Khovd (Hovd), which rises from the glaciers of the Mongolian Altai Mountains, and the Zavkhan (Dzavhan), which runs off the southern slopes of the Khangai Mountains. Other rivers east of the Zavkhan end in salt lakes or disappear in the Gobi. Generally, Mongolian rivers are swift…
- Kōbe (Japan)
Kōbe, city, capital of Hyōgo ken (prefecture), west-central Honshu, Japan. Kōbe, its neighbouring city Ōsaka, and nearby Kyōto are the centres of the Keihanshin Industrial Zone, the second largest urban and industrial agglomeration in Japan, and the city and its surroundings constitute the western
- Kobe beef (food)
Kobe beef, highly prized Wagyu beef from the Kōbe region of Honshu island, Japan. What foie gras is to liver, Kobe beef is to steak. It comes from any of four related breeds of native Japanese cattle, known collectively as Wagyu, and the terms Wagyu and Kobe have come to be used almost
- Kōbe earthquake of 1995 (Japan)
Kōbe earthquake of 1995, (Jan. 17, 1995) large-scale earthquake in the Ōsaka-Kōbe (Hanshin) metropolitan area of western Japan that was among the strongest, deadliest, and costliest to ever strike that country. The earthquake hit at 5:46 am on Tuesday, Jan. 17, 1995, in the southern part of Hyōgo
- Kōbe Steel, Ltd. (Japanese manufacturer)
Kōbe Steel, Ltd., major Japanese manufacturer of iron and steel, nonferrous metal products, and machinery. Headquarters are in Kōbe with offices in Tokyo and Ōsaka. Founded in 1905, the company by the late 1960s was one of Japan’s largest steel producers. The company produces pig iron, milled and
- Kobe, Tim (American designer)
industrial design: Design in the 21st century: technology and democracy: Tim Kobe of the San Francisco architectural firm Eight Inc. designed the standard Apple computer stores from the earliest establishments in San Francisco (2001) to shopping malls and renovated buildings across the United States (2001–04), including larger new structures in Chicago (2003) and New York…
- Kobel, Allan (Canadian musician)
the Guess Who: The principal members were Chad Allan (original name Allan Kobel; b. c. 1945), Randy Bachman (b. September 27, 1943, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada), Garry Peterson (b. May 26, 1945), Jim Kale (b. August 11, 1943, Winnipeg), Burton Cummings (b. December 31, 1947, Winnipeg), Kurt Winter (b. April 2, 1946; d.…
- København (national capital, Denmark)
Copenhagen, capital and largest city of Denmark. It is located on the islands of Zealand (Sjælland) and Amager, at the southern end of The Sound (Øresund). A small village existed on the site of the present city by the early 10th century. In 1167 Bishop Absalon of Roskilde built a castle on an
- Københavns Universitet Botanisk Have (garden, Copenhagen, Denmark)
Copenhagen University Botanical Garden, one of the notable botanical gardens of Europe. Founded in 1759 on part of the ancient fortifications of Copenhagen, the garden occupies more than 9 hectares (24 acres) and has about 15,000 kinds of plants, both under glass and outdoors. The outdoor plantings
- Københavns Zoologisk Have (zoo, Copenhagen, Denmark)
Copenhagen Zoo, zoological garden founded in 1859 in Copenhagen. Though privately owned, the zoo receives financial support from the Danish government. More than 2,000 specimens of about 250 species are exhibited on the 10-hectare (25-acre) grounds. Included are many rare species, such as the musk
- Koberger, Anton (German printer)
history of publishing: Early printer-publishers in Germany: …lead in the book trade, Anton Koberger operated on a large, international scale. At his peak, he ran 24 presses and had links with Basel, Strassburg, Lyon, Paris, and many other cities. He could be called the first great businessman publisher and the first publisher to rise socially—to membership in…
- Kobia, Samuel (Kenyan religious leader)
Samuel Kobia is an African religious leader, theologian, and ecumenist who served as general secretary of the World Council of Churches (WCC) from 2004 to 2009. Kobia earned a degree in theology from St. Paul’s United Theological College in Limuru, Kenya; a diploma in urban ministry from McCormick