- Kobilic, Milosh (Serbian noble)
Battle of Kosovo: …killed by a Serbian knight, Miloš Obilić, in the immediate aftermath of the battle. Although both sides suffered huge losses, the Ottomans possessed the resources to raise another army and Serbia became part of the Ottoman Empire.
- Kobilka, Brian K. (American physician and biologist)
Brian K. Kobilka is an American physician and molecular biologist whose research on the structure and function of cell-surface molecules known as G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs)—the largest family of signal-receiving molecules found in organisms—contributed to profound advances in cell biology
- Kobilka, Brian Kent (American physician and biologist)
Brian K. Kobilka is an American physician and molecular biologist whose research on the structure and function of cell-surface molecules known as G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs)—the largest family of signal-receiving molecules found in organisms—contributed to profound advances in cell biology
- Koblenz (Germany)
Koblenz, city, Rhineland-Palatinate Land (state), western Germany. It lies at the junction of the Rhine and Moselle (Mosel) rivers (hence its Roman name, Confluentes) and is surrounded by spurs from the Eifel, Hunsrück, Westerwald, and Taunus mountains. A Roman town founded in 9 bce, it was a
- Kōbō Daishi (Japanese Buddhist monk)
Kūkai was one of the best-known and most-beloved Buddhist saints in Japan, founder of the Shingon (“True Word”) school of Buddhism that emphasizes spells, magic formulas, ceremonials, and masses for the dead. He contributed greatly to the development of Japanese art and literature and pioneered in
- kobold (German folklore)
kobold, in German folklore, mischievous household spirit who usually helps with chores and gives other valuable services but who often hides household and farm tools or kicks over stooping persons. He is temperamental and becomes outraged when he is not properly fed. He sometimes sings to children.
- Kobomani tapir (mammal)
tapir: bairdii), the little black, or Kobomani, tapir (T. kabomani), and the South American lowland tapir (T. terrestris). This geographic distribution, with four species in Central and South America and one in Southeast Asia, is peculiar. Fossil remains from Europe, China, and North America show that tapirs were once widespread, but…
- Kobuk Valley National Park (national park, Alaska, United States)
Kobuk Valley National Park, large wilderness area in northwestern Alaska, U.S. It is part of a vast region of national parks, monuments, and preserves located north of the Arctic Circle that stretches for hundreds of miles from west to east. It is bordered to the north by Noatak National Preserve
- kŏbuksŏn (ship)
Yi Sun-shin: …supplies, and developing the renowned kŏbuksŏn (“turtle ship”). The kŏbuksŏn is thought to have been the first ironclad battleship in history. Its upper deck was covered with armoured plates to protect its crew, and spikes and knives were attached to the plates to discourage enemies from boarding. The ship’s bow…
- Kōbun (emperor of Japan)
Jinshin-no-ran: …the throne as the emperor Kōbun through the efforts of the aristocratic clans that had resisted Tenji’s centralization measures. Prince Ōama, brother of the deceased emperor, gathered together his own military forces and defeated Ōtomo at his capital in Ōmi province (modern Shiga prefecture). Ōama then succeeded to the throne…
- kobun (Japanese organized crime)
yakuza: …the followers are known as kobun (“protégés,” or “apprentices”; literally “child status”). The rigid hierarchy and discipline are usually matched by a right-wing ultranationalistic ideology. Kobun traditionally take a blood oath of allegiance, and a member who breaks the yakuza code must show penance—historically through a ritual in which the…
- Koburg (Germany)
Coburg, city, northern Bavaria Land (state), central Germany. It lies on the Itz River, in the foothills of the Thuringian Forest, some 80 miles (130 km) west of the Czech border. Coburg was an imperial possession in the 10th century, and it was first mentioned in a document of 1056. The counts of
- Kobus (mammalian genus)
Kobus, genus of antelopes, family Bovidae (order Artiodactyla), containing about six species—the waterbucks and lechwes, the kob, and the puku. Members of this genus are native to Africa south of the Sahara. They usually live in herds and are generally found near water, in such places as plains,
- Kobus defassa (mammal)
Kobus: ellipsiprymnus) and defassa (K. defassa) waterbucks. Males of all species have long, heavily ridged horns that curve backward and then upward.
- Kobus ellipsiprymnus (mammal)
artiodactyl: Reproduction: …season of the waterbuck (Kobus ellipsiprymnus) is continuous in Uganda, but in Zambia its breeding season shows a sharp peak at the height of the rains.
- Kobus 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
- Kobus kob kob (mammal subspecies)
kob: …are three distinct subspecies: the western kob (Kobus kob kob), the Uganda kob (K. kob thomasi), and the white-eared kob (K. kob leucotis) of eastern South Sudan.
- Kobus kob leucotis (mammal subspecies)
bovid: Natural history: …possibly hundreds of thousands of white-eared kob and tiang on the floodplains of South Sudan. Over a million saiga lived in Kazakhstan and Kalmykia until the early 1990s, when the breakup of the Soviet Union left them largely unprotected, and the unsettled steppe of eastern Mongolia still supports an estimated…
- Kobus kob thomasi (mammal)
artiodactyl: Social behaviour: At the other extreme, male Uganda kob antelopes (Kobus kob) hold territories, for breeding only, that are as small as 15 to 30 metres (50 to 100 feet) in diameter. There are 30 to 40 territories on the breeding ground of a herd, and groups of females and young move…
- Kobus leche (mammal)
lechwe: …two species of lechwes: the common lechwe (Kobus leche) and the Nile lechwe (K. megaceros). The three subspecies of the common lechwe—the red lechwe (K. leche leche), the Kafue lechwe (K. leche kafuensis), and the black lechwe (K. leche smithemani)—inhabit floodplains bordering marshes and swamps of the southern savanna, from
- Kobus leche kafuensis (mammal)
lechwe: leche leche), the Kafue lechwe (K. leche kafuensis), and the black lechwe (K. leche smithemani)—inhabit floodplains bordering marshes and swamps of the southern savanna, from southeastern Democratic Republic of the Congo through Zambia and northern Botswana to Angola. The Nile lechwe lives on the Nile floodplain bordering Al-Sudd…
- Kobus leche leche (mammal)
lechwe: …subspecies of the common lechwe—the red lechwe (K. leche leche), the Kafue lechwe (K. leche kafuensis), and the black lechwe (K. leche smithemani)—inhabit floodplains bordering marshes and swamps of the southern savanna, from southeastern Democratic Republic of the Congo through Zambia and northern Botswana to Angola. The Nile lechwe lives…
- Kobus leche smithemani (mammal)
Kobus: …some forms, among them the black and Nile lechwes (K. leche smithemani and K. megaceros), the male is dark blackish brown and the female reddish brown. Markings on these antelopes include patches of white, such as a white ring on the rump of the common waterbuck and black markings on…
- Kobus megaceros (mammal)
Kobus: …among them the black and Nile lechwes (K. leche smithemani and K. megaceros), the male is dark blackish brown and the female reddish brown. Markings on these antelopes include patches of white, such as a white ring on the rump of the common waterbuck and black markings on the legs,…
- Kobus vardoni (mammal)
puku, antelope species of the genus Kobus
- Kobyla, Andrey Ivanovich (Russian aristocrat)
Romanov dynasty: Descendants of Andrey Ivanovich Kobyla (Kambila), a Muscovite boyar who lived during the reign of the grand prince of Moscow Ivan I Kalita (reigned 1328–41), the Romanovs acquired their name from Roman Yurev (died 1543), whose daughter Anastasiya Romanovna Zakharina-Yureva was the first wife of Ivan IV…
- kobza (musical instrument)
bandura, a stringed instrument of the psaltery family considered the national musical instrument of Ukraine. It is used chiefly to accompany folk music. The bandura has an oval wooden body; a short, fretless neck attached to the soundboard in an off-centre position; 4 to 8 bass strings running from
- kobza (ancient musical instrument)
bandura: …to the bandura was the kobza, a three- to eight-string instrument mentioned in Greek literature of the 6th century. During the Middle Ages it was prominent in eastern European courts, where it was used to accompany singing and dancing. Additional strings were added to the kobza in the 14th or…
- Kobzar (work by Shevchenko)
Taras Hryhorovych Shevchenko: …first collection of poems, entitled Kobzar (1840; “The Bard”), expressed the historicism and the folkloristic interests of the Ukrainian Romantics, but his poetry soon moved away from nostalgia for Cossack life to a more sombre portrayal of Ukrainian history, particularly in the long poem “The Haidamaks” (1841). When the secret…
- kobzari (ancient music)
bandura: …bandura had been adopted by kobzari, professional musicians—many of whom were blind—who used the instrument as an accompaniment for epic ballads (dumy) that recounted the exploits of the Ukrainian Cossacks. By the late 19th and early 20th centuries kobzari were persecuted for expressing nationalistic sentiments in their music, and in…
- KOC (Kuwaiti company)
history of Arabia: Postwar Arabia, to 1962: The Kuwait Oil Company, a joint Anglo-American enterprise, began production in June 1946. Thereafter oil was discovered in many other places, mostly in the Persian Gulf. Vast petroleum revenues brought enormous changes to Saudi Arabia and transformed the gulf states. The market for labour brought migrants…
- Kocaeli (Turkey)
İzmit, city, northwestern Turkey. It lies near the head of İzmit Gulf of the Sea of Marmara. The city spreads across several hills and over a narrow plain that contains its commercial and industrial sections. Originally a Megarian city founded in the 8th century bce and called Astacus (or Olbia),
- Kocaeli (province, Turkey)
Kocaeli, il (province), northwestern Turkey. It is bounded to the north by the Black Sea and to the west by the Sea of Marmara. The province is drained by the lower course of the Sakarya River. İzmit, lying on the Gulf of İzmit, is the capital and chief city. Kocaeli was once part of the kingdom of
- Kocaeli earthquake of 1999 (Turkey)
İzmit earthquake of 1999, devastating earthquake that struck near the city of İzmit in northwestern Turkey on August 17, 1999. Thousands of people were killed, and large parts of a number of mid-sized towns and cities were destroyed. The earthquake, which occurred on the northernmost strand of the
- Kocbek, Edvard (Slovene poet)
Slovene literature: …the finest of Slovene writers, Edvard Kocbek, had been ruined because he dared to portray the Partisans of World War II objectively, in his masterpiece Strah in pogum (1951; “Fear and Courage”). Powerful currents from Europe and America—including existentialism, the absurd, stream of consciousness, magic realism, neoexpressionism, modernism, and postmodernism—soon…
- Koch (people)
Koch, ethnic group dispersed over parts of India (mainly Assam and West Bengal states) and Bangladesh. While their original language is a Tibeto-Burman dialect, large sections of the group in the 21st century spoke Bengali or other Indo-Aryan languages. In the 16th century a Koch chief established
- Koch Bihar (historical state, India)
Koch: …chief established the state of Koch Bihar, and they now call themselves Rajbanshi (“Of Royal Blood”), resent being called by the old tribal name, and follow Hindu customs. But their claim to the high status of the Kshatriya class of Hindus is not generally admitted, and many of the endogamous…
- Koch Bihar (India)
Cooch Behar, town, eastern West Bengal state, northeastern India. It lies just east of the Torsa River. The town is an agricultural market centre, has major road and rail connections, and is linked by air with Kolkata. Leather-goods manufacture is an important industry. Once the seat of a princely
- Koch brothers (American businessmen)
Charles and David Koch were American brothers who were majority co-owners of the energy conglomerate Koch Industries, Inc., and major financial supporters of libertarian and conservative causes in the United States in the late 20th and early 21st centuries. Through the success of their company, one
- Koch Industries, Inc. (American corporation)
Charles and David Koch: Early life and business activities: …1967 and renamed the company Koch Industries, Inc., in 1968. David joined the company in 1970, later becoming executive vice president. In 1983 Charles and David purchased William’s and Frederick’s interest in Koch Industries for $1.1 billion. Under Charles’s leadership, the company extended its interests into areas far beyond petroleum…
- Koch sisters (circus performers)
circus: Acts of skill: Another unique act, the Koch sisters, performed on a giant semaphore arm that revolved slowly as they balanced on the outside edge. In the late 20th century one of the most renowned Russian trapeze acts, “The Flying Cranes,” used dramatic devices to tell the story of fallen Soviet war…
- Koch snowflake (mathematics)
number game: Pathological curves: Von Koch’s snowflake curve, for example, is the figure obtained by trisecting each side of an equilateral triangle and replacing the centre segment by two sides of a smaller equilateral triangle projecting outward, then treating the resulting figure the same way, and so on. The…
- Koch triangle (mathematics)
number game: Pathological curves: Von Koch’s snowflake curve, for example, is the figure obtained by trisecting each side of an equilateral triangle and replacing the centre segment by two sides of a smaller equilateral triangle projecting outward, then treating the resulting figure the same way, and so on. The…
- Koch’s postulates (bacteriology)
Robert Koch: Contributions to general bacteriology and pathology: These four basic criteria, called Koch’s postulates, are:
- Koch, Anton (German painter)
Western painting: Germany: Only Joseph Anton Koch and Cornelius, who were both older and more experienced, achieved great vigour in their history paintings, combining medievalizing tendencies with the powerful classicism of Carstens (see above Neoclassicism: Germany and Austria), as seen in Cornelius’ “The Recognition of Joseph by His Brethren” (1815–16;…
- Koch, Bill (American skier)
Nordic skiing: …skiing was popularized by American Bill Koch when he used a skating stride, pushing his skis outside the parallel tracks. His innovative style is now used in freestyle events. The freestyle technique requires longer poles and shorter skis than the classic style. It also requires higher boots that give improved…
- Koch, C.J. (Australian author)
C.J. Koch was an Australian novelist whose sensually detailed works often explore the relationship of illusion with reality. Koch was educated in Hobart at the University of Tasmania and worked for the Australian Broadcasting Commission as a radio producer before devoting himself to writing in
- Koch, Charles (American businessman)
Charles and David Koch: …held corporations in the world, Charles and David Koch became two of the richest persons in the country.
- Koch, Charles and David (American businessmen)
Charles and David Koch were American brothers who were majority co-owners of the energy conglomerate Koch Industries, Inc., and major financial supporters of libertarian and conservative causes in the United States in the late 20th and early 21st centuries. Through the success of their company, one
- Koch, Charles de Ganahl (American businessman)
Charles and David Koch: …held corporations in the world, Charles and David Koch became two of the richest persons in the country.
- Koch, Chris (American journalist)
Pacifica Radio: The 1960s through ’80s: …WBAI producers Richard Elman and Chris Koch, the latter a protégé of Thompson, interviewed a disgruntled former FBI trainee on his experiences with the bureau. For three hours WBAI listeners heard Jack Levine disclose anecdotes of racism and anti-Semitism at the agency. The FBI retaliated by producing a dossier of…
- Koch, Christina (American astronaut)
Jessica Meir: …2019 Meir and fellow astronaut Christina Koch went outside the ISS to replace a battery unit. It was the first all-woman space walk. They took two more space walks during the expedition. Altogether they spent almost 22 hours outside the ISS. Meir spent 205 days in orbit. Because the human…
- Koch, Christopher John (Australian author)
C.J. Koch was an Australian novelist whose sensually detailed works often explore the relationship of illusion with reality. Koch was educated in Hobart at the University of Tasmania and worked for the Australian Broadcasting Commission as a radio producer before devoting himself to writing in
- Koch, David (American businessman)
Charles and David Koch: … in the world, Charles and David Koch became two of the richest persons in the country.
- Koch, David Hamilton (American businessman)
Charles and David Koch: … in the world, Charles and David Koch became two of the richest persons in the country.
- Koch, Ed (American politician)
Ed Koch was an American politician who served as mayor of New York City (1978–89) and was known for his tenacity and brashness. After serving in the army during World War II, Koch graduated from New York University Law School (1948). He subsequently practiced law, becoming a founding partner of
- Koch, Edward Irving (American politician)
Ed Koch was an American politician who served as mayor of New York City (1978–89) and was known for his tenacity and brashness. After serving in the army during World War II, Koch graduated from New York University Law School (1948). He subsequently practiced law, becoming a founding partner of
- Koch, Erich (German Nazi)
Ukraine: The Nazi occupation of Soviet Ukraine: …the Reichskommissariat, ruthlessly administered by Erich Koch, Ukrainians were slated for servitude. The collective farms, whose dissolution was the fervent hope of the peasantry, were left intact, industry was allowed to deteriorate, and the cities were deprived of foodstuffs as all available resources were directed to support the German war…
- Koch, Fred C. (American inventor and businessman)
Charles and David Koch: Early life and business activities: The brothers’ father, Fred C. Koch, made his early fortune from his invention of a new technique of thermal cracking, by which petroleum is converted into lighter oils and gasoline. Charles and David were educated at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), receiving master’s degrees in engineering in…
- Koch, Frederick Henry (American theatrical manager and educator)
Frederick Henry Koch was the founder of the Carolina Playmakers at the University of North Carolina and is considered the father of American folk drama. Koch received his B.A. from Ohio Wesleyan University in 1900 and his M.A. from Harvard University in 1909. In 1905 he began teaching at the
- Koch, Helge von (Swedish mathematician)
Niels Fabian Helge von Koch was a Swedish mathematician famous for his discovery of the von Koch snowflake curve, a continuous curve important in the study of fractal geometry. Von Koch was a student of Gösta Mittag-Leffler and succeeded him as professor of mathematics at Stockholm University in
- Koch, Howard (American writer, producer, and actor)
Michael Curtiz: The late 1930s and the 1940s: Epstein, and Howard Koch won the award for their screenplay, and Curtiz won the award for best director.
- Koch, Hugo A. (Dutch cryptologist)
cryptology: Developments during World Wars I and II: …United States, European engineers, notably Hugo A. Koch of the Netherlands and Arthur Scherbius of Germany, independently discovered the rotor concept and designed machines that became the precursors of the best-known cipher machine in history, the German Enigma used in World War II. (See figure.)
- Koch, Ilse (German war criminal)
Ilse Koch was the German wife of a commandant (1937–41) of Buchenwald concentration camp, notorious for her perversion and cruelty. On May 29, 1937, she married Karl Otto Koch, a colonel in the SS who was commander of the Sachsenhausen camp. In the summer of 1937 he was transferred to Buchenwald,
- Koch, Jodocus (German religious reformer)
Justus Jonas was a German religious reformer and legal scholar. A colleague of Martin Luther, he played a prominent role in the early Reformation conferences, particularly at Marburg (1529) and at Augsburg (1530), where he helped draft the Augsburg Confession, a fundamental statement of Lutheran
- Koch, Johannes (German theologian)
Johannes Cocceius was a Dutch theologian of the Reformed Church, biblical scholar, prolific writer, and a leading exponent of covenant theology, a school of religious thought emphasizing the compacts between God and man. Educated in biblical languages, Cocceius was appointed in 1630 to the
- Koch, Karl Otto (German Nazi commandant)
Karl Otto Koch was a German commandant of several Nazi concentration camps and husband of the infamous Ilse Koch. Koch was a decorated veteran of World War I who had been wounded and captured by the British and held as a prisoner of war. He failed at several civilian jobs before joining the SS, the
- Koch, Kenneth (American author)
Kenneth Koch was an American teacher and author noted especially for his witty, often surreal, sometimes epic, poetry. He was also an accomplished playwright. Koch attended Harvard University (B.A., 1948) and Columbia University (M.A., 1953; Ph.D., 1959), where he subsequently taught for many
- Koch, Kenneth Jay (American author)
Kenneth Koch was an American teacher and author noted especially for his witty, often surreal, sometimes epic, poetry. He was also an accomplished playwright. Koch attended Harvard University (B.A., 1948) and Columbia University (M.A., 1953; Ph.D., 1959), where he subsequently taught for many
- Koch, Marianne (German actress)
A Fistful of Dollars: …point he frees Marisol (Marianne Koch), a local woman who is being held as the unwilling mistress of Ramón Rojo (Gian Maria Volonté), and helps her flee the town with her husband and young son. This enrages Ramón, and the Rojos brutally beat and torture the stranger. However, he…
- Koch, Marita (German athlete)
Marita Koch is an East German athlete who collected a remarkable 16 individual and team world records in outdoor sprints, as well as 14 world records in indoor events. In her only Olympic Games, at Moscow in 1980, she won two medals. An injury forced Koch to withdraw from the 1976 Olympics in
- Koch, Martin (Swedish author)
Martin Koch was a Swedish novelist who was first among the “proletarian authors” to make a deep impression on Swedish readers. Koch came from a lower middle-class family, which his father deserted when the children were very young. The young Koch worked as a labourer’s helper, studied art, and
- Koch, Niels Fabian Helge von (Swedish mathematician)
Niels Fabian Helge von Koch was a Swedish mathematician famous for his discovery of the von Koch snowflake curve, a continuous curve important in the study of fractal geometry. Von Koch was a student of Gösta Mittag-Leffler and succeeded him as professor of mathematics at Stockholm University in
- Koch, Robert (German bacteriologist)
Robert Koch was a German physician and one of the founders of bacteriology. He discovered the anthrax disease cycle (1876) and the bacteria responsible for tuberculosis (1882) and cholera (1883). For his discoveries in regard to tuberculosis, he received the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine
- Koch, Robert Heinrich Hermann (German bacteriologist)
Robert Koch was a German physician and one of the founders of bacteriology. He discovered the anthrax disease cycle (1876) and the bacteria responsible for tuberculosis (1882) and cholera (1883). For his discoveries in regard to tuberculosis, he received the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine
- Koch, Rudolf (German artist)
Rudolf Koch was a German calligrapher, type designer, and teacher, a major influence on decorative arts in early 20th-century Germany. Koch’s formal education ended when he finished high school in Nürnberg, Ger. He moved to Hanau, where he attended evening art classes while serving as an apprentice
- Köcha-hon-mana (U.S. Army soldier)
Lori Piestewa was a U.S. Army soldier who became the first American servicewoman to perish in the Iraq War (2003–11) and the first Native American servicewoman in history to die in combat on foreign soil. Piestewa was captured by enemy forces during an ambush in Iraq and mortally wounded. She was
- Kochab (star)
navigation: Latitude measurements: …position of the nearby star Kochab. When the navigators got close to the Equator, these stars fell below the horizon; there it became necessary to rely on observing the altitude of the noonday Sun and calculating latitude with the aid of an almanac.
- Kochanowski, Jan (Polish poet)
Jan Kochanowski was a humanist poet who dominated the culture of Renaissance Poland. Born into the country nobility, Kochanowski studied at the Jagiellonian University in Kraków and later, between 1552 and 1559, at the University of Padua in Italy. On his return to Poland in 1559, he served as a
- Kochańska, Prakseda Marcelina (Polish singer)
Marcella Sembrich was a Polish coloratura known for both her operatic and her concert work. Marcelina Kochańska learned to play the violin and piano from her father and performed on both instruments in recital when she was 12 years old. She also studied piano and voice with Wilhelm Stengel, whom
- Kocharian, Robert (president of Armenia)
Robert Kocharian is an Armenian politician who served as prime minister (1997–98) and president (1998–2008) of Armenia. His political career focused primarily on the conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh, a self-declared country whose territory is claimed by both Armenia and Azerbaijan. Kocharian’s
- Kocharian, Robert Sedraki (president of Armenia)
Robert Kocharian is an Armenian politician who served as prime minister (1997–98) and president (1998–2008) of Armenia. His political career focused primarily on the conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh, a self-declared country whose territory is claimed by both Armenia and Azerbaijan. Kocharian’s
- Kocharyan, Robert (president of Armenia)
Robert Kocharian is an Armenian politician who served as prime minister (1997–98) and president (1998–2008) of Armenia. His political career focused primarily on the conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh, a self-declared country whose territory is claimed by both Armenia and Azerbaijan. Kocharian’s
- Kochba, Simeon bar (Jewish leader)
Bar Kokhba was a Jewish leader who led a bitter but unsuccessful revolt (132–135 ce) against Roman dominion in Judaea. During his tour of the Eastern Empire in 131, the Roman emperor Hadrian decided upon a policy of Hellenization to integrate the Jews into the empire. Circumcision was proscribed, a
- Koche-Otte, Benita (German weaver and textile designer)
Bauhaus: …Bauhaus women include: Gertrud Arndt, Benita Koche-Otte, Gunta Stözl, and Lucia Moholy, who was László Moholy-Nagy’s wife from 1921 to 1934.
- Köchel, Ludwig Alois Ferdinand, Ritter von (Austrian scholar)
Ludwig, Ritter von Köchel was an Austrian scholar who compiled the most complete chronological catalog of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart’s works, which are identified almost universally by the letter “K” (for Köchel) or “KV” (for Köchel and Verzeichnis, “catalog”) and their numerical position in the
- Köchel, Ludwig, Ritter von (Austrian scholar)
Ludwig, Ritter von Köchel was an Austrian scholar who compiled the most complete chronological catalog of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart’s works, which are identified almost universally by the letter “K” (for Köchel) or “KV” (for Köchel and Verzeichnis, “catalog”) and their numerical position in the
- Kochen, Simon B. (mathematician)
metalogic: Elementary logic: …two mathematicians, James Ax and Simon B. Kochen, to problems in the field of algebra (on p-adic fields).
- Kocher, Emil Theodor (Swiss surgeon)
Emil Theodor Kocher was a Swiss surgeon who won the 1909 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine for his work on the thyroid gland. After qualifying in medicine at the University of Bern in 1865, Kocher studied in Berlin, London, Paris, and Vienna, where he was a pupil of Theodor Billroth. In 1872
- Kochi (India)
Kochi, city and major port on the Malabar Coast of the Arabian Sea, west-central Kerala state, southwestern India. Also the name of a former princely state, “Kochi” is sometimes used to refer to a cluster of islands and towns, including Ernakulam, Mattancheri, Fort Cochin, Willingdon Island, Vypin
- Kōchi (prefecture, Japan)
Kōchi, ken (prefecture), southern Shikoku, Japan, stretching in an arc around Tosa Bay of the Pacific Ocean. It is the largest prefecture on the island. The population is concentrated on the Tosa plain, which, except on the south, is surrounded by mountains. Although it is isolated by poor
- Kochi Fighting Dogs (Japanese baseball team)
Manny Ramirez: …when he signed with the Kochi Fighting Dogs of a Japanese independent league. However, he left the team later that year because of a knee injury.
- Kochia scoparia (plant)
Bassia: Summer cypress, sometimes called Belvedere cypress (Kochia scoparia), is a widely grown annual that was formerly placed in the genus Bassia. One variety, known as firebush or burning bush, is a globe-shaped subshrub with narrow hairy leaves that turn purplish red in autumn; it is…
- Kochno, Boris (French writer)
Boris Kochno was a Russian-born writer and ballet librettist who collaborated with ballet impresario Serge Diaghilev during the last years of the Ballets Russes, then became a major influence on post-World War II French ballet. Kochno studied at the Imperial Lycée in Moscow until the 1917 Russian
- Kochowski, Wespazjan (Polish poet and historian)
Wespazjan Kochowski was a Polish poet and historian whose works helped spark Polish nationalism. During his years in military service (1650–61), Kochowski fought against the Cossacks and the Swedes. He later became court historian for King John III Sobieski and was present at Sobieski’s victory
- Koƈi Bey (Ottoman statesman)
Koƈu Bey was a Turkish minister and reformer, a notable early observer of the Ottoman decline. Originally from Albania, Koƈu Bey was sent to Constantinople, where he was educated in the Imperial Palace. He later entered the service of a number of Ottoman sultans, finding particular favour with
- Kock, H. Merkus de (Dutch general)
Diponegoro: Under Gen. H. Merkus de Kock, the Dutch proceeded to develop a system of small, mutually protecting outposts linked by good roads that enabled them to quell the natives’ guerrilla warfare. In 1830 Diponegoro agreed to meet with Dutch representatives for peace negotiations, but during the…
- Kock, Paul de (French author)
Paul de Kock was a prolific French author whose novels about Parisian life were, in his day, popular reading throughout Europe. The son of a refugee Dutch banker who was guillotined during the Revolution, Kock became a bank clerk in 1808. He abandoned all thoughts of a business career that same
- Koƈu Bey (Ottoman statesman)
Koƈu Bey was a Turkish minister and reformer, a notable early observer of the Ottoman decline. Originally from Albania, Koƈu Bey was sent to Constantinople, where he was educated in the Imperial Palace. He later entered the service of a number of Ottoman sultans, finding particular favour with
- Kōda Rohan (Japanese author)
Kōda Rohan was a Japanese novelist and essayist whose stories of heroic characters balanced the more romantic tendency of his rival, Ozaki Kōyō, in creating a new literature for early modern Japan. Rohan’s early education was strong in the Japanese and Chinese classics, and although he was