- Kotik Letayev (work by Bely)
Andrey Bely: …writing his Kotik Letayev (1922; Kotik Letaev), a short autobiographical novel suggestive of the style of James Joyce. Eventually Bely left Steiner’s group for personal reasons, but he remained attached to anthroposophical ideas to the end of his life.
- Kotka (Finland)
Kotka, city, southeastern Finland, on two islands, Hovinsaari and Kotkansaari, at the mouth of the Kymi River on the Gulf of Finland, east-northeast of Helsinki. Kotkansaari was fortified by the Russians between 1790 and 1800, and its main fort was destroyed by a British fleet in 1855 during
- Kotkansaari (island, Finland)
Kotka: …on two islands, Hovinsaari and Kotkansaari, at the mouth of the Kymi River on the Gulf of Finland, east-northeast of Helsinki. Kotkansaari was fortified by the Russians between 1790 and 1800, and its main fort was destroyed by a British fleet in 1855 during secondary operations of the Crimean War.…
- Kotkin, David (American entertainer)
David Copperfield is an American entertainer, one of the best-known stage illusionists of the late 20th and early 21st centuries. Copperfield is the first to admit that he entered show business to overcome his shyness with the opposite sex; he started out at age 10 as a ventriloquist. Switching to
- Kotlas (Russia)
Kotlas, city, Arkhangelsk oblast (region), northwestern Russia, at the confluence of the Northern Dvina and Vychegda rivers. It is a major focus of river and rail communications and a transshipment point, handling chiefly coal and timber. The city, chartered in 1917, has large sawmilling,
- Kotlina Sandomierska (region, Poland)
Sandomierz Basin, lowland region, southeastern Poland, located south of the Lublin Uplands and north of the Western Carpathian foothills. It is drained by the Vistula River and its tributary the San River. The Sandomierz Basin is a structural depression with natural transportation routes connecting
- Kötlum, Jóhannes Jónasson úr (Icelandic poet)
Jóhannes Bjarni Jónasson was an Icelandic poet and reformer whose works reflect his resistance to the political and economic trends that he perceived as threatening Iceland’s traditional democracy. The son of a poor farmer, Jónasson studied at Reykjavík Teacher’s Training College and worked first
- Kotlyarevsky, Ivan (Ukrainian author)
Ivan Kotlyarevsky was an author whose burlesque-travesty of Virgil’s Aeneid was the first work written wholly in the Ukrainian language; it distinguished him as the father of modern Ukrainian literature. The Eneida (1798) transmutes Aeneas and the Trojans into dispossessed Cossacks of the period
- koto (musical instrument)
koto, long Japanese board zither having 13 silk strings and movable bridges. The body of the instrument is made of paulownia wood and is about 190 cm (74 inches) long. When the performer is kneeling or seated on the floor, the koto is held off the floor by two legs or a bridge-storage box; in most
- Koto River (river, north-central Africa)
Kotto River, river rising on the border between the Central African Republic and South Sudan in north-central Africa. It flows 400 miles (640 km) south, southwest, and south again past Bria, Central African Republic, to join the Ubangi River 60 miles (100 km) east of Mobaye. The river separates the
- koto-dama (Shintō philosophy)
norito: …founded on the concept of koto-dama, the spiritual power that resides in words. According to ancient belief, beautiful, correct words bring about good, whereas ugly, coarse language can cause evil. Accordingly, norito are expressed in elegant, classical language, typified by that found in the Engi-shiki (“Institutes of the Engi Period”),…
- Koto-shiro-nushi (Japanese mythology)
Ebisu: …is also sometimes associated with Koto-shiro-nushi (“Sign-Master”), a son of the mythological hero Ōkuninushi and associated with happiness because of the role he once played as a pacifier in a conflict between earthly and heavenly deities. See also Shichi-fuku-jin.
- Kotobre, Kwame Anokye Frimpon (Asante priest)
Okomfo Anokye was a fetish priest (traditional spiritual leader) and cofounder of the Asante empire who was considered to be the greatest lawgiver and wisest sage of the Asante people in western Africa. He is known for his reported abilities in healing and regulating nature and for establishing
- Kotohira Shrine (shrine, Shikoku, Japan)
Takamatsu: …base for pilgrimages to the Kotohira Shrine, 19 miles (30 km) southwest. Pop. (2005) 418,125; (2010) 419,429.
- kotoite (mineral)
borate mineral: ludwigite, sussexite, and kotoite.
- Kotoko (people)
Lake Chad: Settlement history: …is believed that the modern Kotoko, a fishing people on the Chari near Lake Chad, are descendants of the Sao.
- Kōtoku (emperor of Japan)
Taika era reforms: …and the newly enthroned emperor Kōtoku promptly took the era name Taika (“Great Change”) for the first half of his reign.
- Kōtoku Shūsui (Japanese political leader)
Kōtoku Shūsui was a Socialist leader, one of the first proponents of radical political action in Japan. His execution resulted in the temporary abatement of the growing Socialist movement in Japan. Of relatively humble origin, Kōtoku started work as a houseboy in the Tokyo home of Hayashi Yūzō, one
- Kotor (Montenegro)
Kotor, walled town, seaport, and resort at the south end of Kotor Bay, one of four bays of the Gulf of Kotor (Boka Kotorska), on the Adriatic coastline of Montenegro. The town, situated about 30 miles (50 km) south of Nikšić, lies at the foot of the sheer Lovćen massif, which rises to 5,738 feet
- Kotor, Gulf of (Montenegro)
Gulf of Kotor, winding, fjordlike inlet of the Adriatic coast, Montenegro. A fine natural harbour, it comprises four bays linked by narrow straits. The stark mountains around the bay slope steeply to a narrow shoreline on which citrus fruits and subtropical plants grow and tourist facilities have
- Kotosh (archaeological site, Peru)
Kotosh, pre-Columbian site, near the modern city of Huánuco in present-day central highland Peru, known for its early temple structures. These earliest buildings, some of which have interior wall niches and mud-relief decorative friezes, date to the end of the Late Preceramic Period (c. 2000–1800
- kotow (Chinese ritual)
kowtow, in traditional China, the act of supplication made by an inferior to his superior by kneeling and knocking his head to the floor. This prostration ceremony was most commonly used in religious worship, by commoners who came to make a request of the local district magistrate, and by officials
- Kotrag (Bulgar khan)
Bulgar: Kurt’s son Kotrag avoided the Khazars by leading his horde far to the north, where it eventually occupied an ill-defined country around the confluence of the Volga and Kama rivers. Subdivided there into three groups (probably through mergers with indigenous peoples or with other immigrants), the horde…
- Kotri (Pakistan)
Kotri, town, south-central Sindh province, southeastern Pakistan, on the west bank of the Indus River. An important railway junction, Kotri is connected by bridge with Hyderabad on the opposite bank. Incorporated as a municipality in 1854, it has jute mills and factories that produce telephone and
- Kotri Barrage (dam, Pakistan)
Indus River: Irrigation of the Indus River: The Kotri Barrage, also known as the Ghulam Muhammad Barrage, was opened in 1955. It is near Hyderabad and is nearly 3,000 feet (900 metres) long. The right-bank canal provides additional water to the city of Karachi. Sugarcane cultivation has been expanded, and yields of rice…
- Kotroman, Stephen (ruler of Bosnia)
Kotromanić Dynasty: The dynasty was founded by Stephen Kotroman, a vassal of the Hungarian king and the ruler of a portion of Bosnia from 1287 to 1316. His son Stephen Kotromanić became the independent lord of all Bosnia in 1322. Extending his domain southward, Stephen Kotromanić incorporated both the land of Hum…
- Kotromanić Dynasty (Bosnian history)
Kotromanić Dynasty, royal house that ruled Bosnia from the late 13th to the mid-15th century. The dynasty was founded by Stephen Kotroman, a vassal of the Hungarian king and the ruler of a portion of Bosnia from 1287 to 1316. His son Stephen Kotromanić became the independent lord of all Bosnia in
- Kotromanić, Stephen (ruler of Bosnia)
Bosnia and Herzegovina: Ancient and medieval periods: 1180–1204), Ban Stjepan (Stephen) Kotromanić (ruled 1322–53) of the Kotromanić dynasty, and Stjepan’s successor, King Tvrtko I (ruled 1353–91). Under Stjepan Kotromanić, Bosnia expanded southward, incorporating the principality of Hum (modern Herzegovina). During the reign of Tvrtko I, Bosnia reached farther south and acquired a portion…
- Kotromanić, Stjepan (ruler of Bosnia)
Bosnia and Herzegovina: Ancient and medieval periods: 1180–1204), Ban Stjepan (Stephen) Kotromanić (ruled 1322–53) of the Kotromanić dynasty, and Stjepan’s successor, King Tvrtko I (ruled 1353–91). Under Stjepan Kotromanić, Bosnia expanded southward, incorporating the principality of Hum (modern Herzegovina). During the reign of Tvrtko I, Bosnia reached farther south and acquired a portion…
- Kotsiubinsky, Mikhaylo Mikhaylovich (Ukrainian author)
Mikhaylo Kotsyubinsky was a novelist and short-story writer whose work was one of the highest achievements of Ukrainian modernism. Kotsyubinsky graduated from Shargorod Seminary in 1880. He did not begin to publish his writing until 10 years later, working in the interim as a teacher and
- Kotsyubinsky, Mikhaylo (Ukrainian author)
Mikhaylo Kotsyubinsky was a novelist and short-story writer whose work was one of the highest achievements of Ukrainian modernism. Kotsyubinsky graduated from Shargorod Seminary in 1880. He did not begin to publish his writing until 10 years later, working in the interim as a teacher and
- Kott language (Siberian language)
Paleo-Siberian languages: Yeniseian, Luorawetlan, and Nivkh: Kott (Kot; also called Assan or Asan), Arin, and Pumpokol, now extinct members of this group, were spoken chiefly to the south of the present-day locus of Ket and Yug.
- Kott, Jan (American critic and scholar)
William Shakespeare: New interpretive approaches: Jan Kott, writing in the disillusioning aftermath of World War II and from an eastern European perspective, reshaped Shakespeare as a dramatist of the absurd, skeptical, ridiculing, and antiauthoritarian. Kott’s deeply ironic view of the political process impressed filmmakers and theatre directors such as Peter…
- Kottayam (India)
Kottayam, town, southern Kerala state, southwestern India. It is situated near Vembanad Lake at the mouth of the Minachil River, south-southeast of Kochi (Cochin). The town is a centre of the Syrian Christian community, which traces its origin to the apostle St. Thomas, who is believed to have
- Kottbus (Germany)
Cottbus, city, Brandenburg Land (state), eastern Germany. It lies on the Spree River, at the southeastern edge of the Spree Forest, near the German border with Poland. First mentioned in 1156 and chartered in the early 13th century, Cottbus became an exclave of Brandenburg in 1445–55 in
- Kotte (historical kingdom, Sri Lanka)
Kotte, Sinhalese kingdom that flourished in Ceylon (Sri Lanka) during the 15th century. Its king, Parākramabāhu VI (1412–67), was the last native sovereign to unify all of Ceylon under one rule. By 1450, Parākramabāhu VI had, with his conquest of the kingdom of Jaffna in northern Ceylon, unified
- Kotte (Sri Lanka)
Sri Jayewardenepura Kotte, city and legislative capital of Sri Lanka. It is located in the southwestern part of the country, about 5 miles (8 km) southeast of the commercial capital of Colombo, of which it was once a suburb. An urban council governs Sri Jayewardenepura Kotte and the neighbouring
- Kotto River (river, north-central Africa)
Kotto River, river rising on the border between the Central African Republic and South Sudan in north-central Africa. It flows 400 miles (640 km) south, southwest, and south again past Bria, Central African Republic, to join the Ubangi River 60 miles (100 km) east of Mobaye. The river separates the
- Kotto, Yaphet (American actor)
Alien: Plot and characters: Alien, set in the year 2122 ce, tells the story of the deep-space commercial mining ship Nostromo. The ship is on its way back to Earth, carrying a load of extraterrestrial ore, when its crew…
- kotyle (measurement)
metrētēs: …smallest capacity unit was the kotyle (16.5 cubic inches; 0.475 pint; 270 cubic cm), the metrētēs equaled 144 kotyle, or 12 khous, or 2 xestes. Reconstructed earthenware cylinders excavated in the Acropolis in Athens furnish the oldest known evidence of the Greek system of liquid measurement.
- Kotzebue (Alaska, United States)
Kotzebue, city, northwestern Alaska, U.S. Lying 550 miles (885 km) northwest of Anchorage, it is situated at the northwestern end of Baldwin Peninsula, on Kotzebue Sound. The area, which was a trading centre for a number of widely scattered Arctic villages, has long been inhabited by Inupiat
- Kotzebue Sound (Pacific Ocean)
Otto von Kotzebue: …coast, and discovered and named Kotzebue Sound, off western Alaska, as well as several islands in the Society and Marshall groups in the Pacific.
- Kotzebue, August von (German playwright)
August von Kotzebue was a German playwright widely influential in popularizing poetic drama, into which he instilled melodramatic sensationalism and sentimental philosophizing. Kotzebue’s first comedy, written while he was a law student at Jena, gave him entrée into court literary circles in
- Kotzebue, Otto von (Russian explorer)
Otto von Kotzebue was a Russian naval officer who completed three circumnavigations of the Earth, charted much of the Alaskan coast, and discovered and named Kotzebue Sound, off western Alaska, as well as several islands in the Society and Marshall groups in the Pacific. A son of the dramatist
- Kotzeluch, Leopold Anton (Czech composer)
Leopold Koželuch was a Czech composer of ballets, operas, and symphonies. Koželuch studied composition in Prague with his uncle Jan Koželuch and piano with F. Dussek and became known as a composer of ballets in the 1770s. In 1778 he went to Vienna, where he became a fashionable piano teacher.
- Kou Qianzhi (Chinese Daoist)
Kou Qianzhi was a Daoist religious leader who organized many of the ceremonies and rites of the Tianshidao (“Way of the Celestial Masters”) movement and reformulated its theology. His influence was such that he had Daoism established as the official state religion of the Northern Wei dynasty
- Kouachi, Chérif (French terrorist)
al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula: …soon revealed that Said and Cherif Kouachi, the two brothers suspected of carrying out the Charlie Hebdo attack, had ties to militant groups and that Said, the older brother, had traveled to Yemen to meet with members of AQAP and possibly to receive training. On January 14 AQAP formally claimed…
- Kouachi, Saïd (French terrorist)
al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula: …emerging information soon revealed that Said and Cherif Kouachi, the two brothers suspected of carrying out the Charlie Hebdo attack, had ties to militant groups and that Said, the older brother, had traveled to Yemen to meet with members of AQAP and possibly to receive training. On January 14 AQAP…
- Kouang-Tchéou-Wan (region, China)
Leizhou Peninsula: Usually referred to as Kwangchowan, it was called Kouang-Tchéou-Wan by the French. Its capital was at Zhanjiang, renamed Fort Bayard by the French. Occupied by the Japanese in World War II, it was returned to China by France in 1946.
- Kouchner, Bernard (French foreign minister)
Natalie Nougayrède: …pointed questioning of Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner.
- Koudelka, Josef (Czech-born French photographer)
Josef Koudelka is a Czech-born French photographer known best for his black-and-white images of Europe’s itinerant Roma people. Koudelka graduated from the Czech Technical University in Prague in 1961 with a degree in aeronautical engineering. He pursued a career in engineering but was also an
- Koudougou (Burkina Faso)
Koudougou, town, central Burkina Faso (formerly Upper Volta), western Africa. It lies on the railway between Ouagadougou and Abidjan, Côte d’Ivoire, which gives landlocked Burkina Faso access to the coast. There is some peanut (groundnut), tobacco, and cotton production in the area, and the town
- Koufax, Sandy (American baseball player)
Sandy Koufax is an American professional baseball player who, despite his early retirement due to arthritis, was ranked among the sport’s greatest pitchers. A left-hander, he pitched for the Brooklyn Dodgers in the National League (NL) from 1955 to 1957, continuing, after they became the Los
- Koufax, Sanford (American baseball player)
Sandy Koufax is an American professional baseball player who, despite his early retirement due to arthritis, was ranked among the sport’s greatest pitchers. A left-hander, he pitched for the Brooklyn Dodgers in the National League (NL) from 1955 to 1957, continuing, after they became the Los
- Kouilou River (river, Republic of the Congo)
Kouilou River, stream in western Congo (Brazzaville), formed at Makabana by the confluence of the Niari and Louesse rivers and flowing west to empty into the Atlantic Ocean near Kayes, northwest of Pointe-Noire. It is navigable for about 40 miles (65 km) below Kakamoéka and is also used to float
- Koula carpet
Kula carpet, floor covering handwoven in Kula, a town east of İzmir, in western Turkey. Kula prayer rugs were produced throughout the 19th century and into the 20th and have been favourites among collectors. Usually the arch (to indicate the direction of Mecca, the holy city) is low and
- Koulikoro (Mali)
Koulikoro, town, southwestern Mali. Situated about 35 miles (55 km) northeast of Bamako, the national capital, the town serves as a centre of transportation. It is the upper river terminus for large boats on the 1,000-mile (1,600-km) navigable section of the middle Niger River and the last stop on
- Koulougli (people)
Libya: Ethnic groups and languages: The Koulouglis are descended from the Janissaries (elite Turkish soldiers who ruled Libya following the Ottoman conquest) and the Amazigh and Christian slave women with whom they intermarried. They have served since Ottoman times as a scribal class and are concentrated in and around villages and…
- Koulountou River (river, Africa)
Koulountou River, chief tributary of the Gambia River, rising in the Fouta Djallon region of Guinea. It flows 140 miles (225 km) northward to join the Gambia above Barra Kunda Falls and the Gambia
- Koum, Jan (Ukrainian-American businessman and computer programmer)
WhatsApp: …2009 by Brian Acton and Jan Koum. Koum, a Ukrainian immigrant who had just begun attending classes at San Jose State University, and Acton, a Stanford-educated programmer, met while Acton was working for Internet pioneer Yahoo! in 1997. Koum was soon offered a job with the Mountain View, California-based company,…
- Koumba (Cameroon)
Kumba, town located in southwestern Cameroon. It is situated about 40 miles (65 km) north-northwest of Doula. Kumba is an important regional transportation centre, connected by railway to Douala and by roads to Buea (south), Mamfe (north), Bafang (northeast), and Douala. Kumba is also a trade
- Koumbi Saleh (historical city, Mali)
Kumbi, last of the capitals of ancient Ghana, a great trading empire that flourished in western Africa from the 9th through the 13th century. Situated about 200 miles (322 km) north of modern Bamako, Mali, Kumbi at the height of its prosperity, before 1240, was the greatest city of western Africa
- koumiss (alcoholic beverage)
Khalkha: …mare’s milk, or airag, called kumys in Russian (koumiss).
- Koumoundhoúros, Aléxandros (prime minister of Greece)
Aléxandros Koumoundhoúros was a politician who was nine times prime minister of Greece between 1865 and 1882. He was known for his strong anti-Turkish policies. A native of the Peloponnese (Modern Greek: Pelopónnisos), Koumoundhoúros fought in the Cretan insurrection against the Turks (1841) and
- Koundara (Guinea)
Koundara, town, northwestern Guinea, on the road from Labé to Senegal and at the intersection of roads from Youkounkoun and Guinea-Bissau. It has replaced Youkounkoun, 15 miles (24 km) northeast, as the chief trading centre for cattle, chickens, rice, peanuts (groundnuts), millet, and corn (maize).
- Kounotori (Japanese spacecraft)
H-II Transfer Vehicle (HTV), uncrewed Japanese spacecraft that carries supplies to the International Space Station (ISS). The first HTV was launched from the Tanegashima Space Centre on Tanegashima Island, Kagoshima prefecture, on September 11, 2009. The Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency launched
- Kountché, Seyni (military dictator of Niger)
Ibrahim Baré Maïnassara: …later became aide-de-camp to President Seyni Kountché. Extremely loyal to the president, Maïnassara was appointed commander of the Presidential Guard in 1976 and in 1978 was given charge of the army’s prestigious airborne regiment. He held a series of overseas posts, including military attaché to the Nigerois embassy in Paris…
- Kountouriótis, Geórgios (Greek politician)
War of Greek Independence: …guerrilla leader Theódoros Kolokotrónis and Geórgios Kountouriótis, who was head of the government that had been formed in January 1822 but that was forced to flee to the island of Hydra (Ýdra) in December 1822. After a second civil war (1824), Kountouriótis was firmly established as leader, but his government…
- kouprey (mammal)
kouprey, (Bos sauveli), elusive wild ox (tribe Bovini, family Bovidae) of Indochina and one of the world’s most endangered large mammals, if it is not already extinct. Unknown to science until 1937, the kouprey was rare even then: no more than an estimated 2,000 existed in eastern Thailand,
- Koureotis (Greek holiday)
Apaturia: …day was probably the third, Koureotis, when children born since the last festival were presented by their fathers or guardians; after an oath had been taken as to their legitimacy, their names were inscribed in the register.
- Kourion (ancient city, Cyrpus)
Cyprus: Greek immigration: …ancient Greek kingdoms on Cyprus: Curium (Greek: Kourion), Paphos, Marion, Soli (Greek: Soloi), Lapithos, and Salamis. About 800 bce a Phoenician colony was founded at Citium (Greek: Kition), near modern Larnaca
- Kouris River (river, Cyprus)
Cyprus: Drainage and soils: …to Morphou Bay; and the Kouris flows southward to Episkopi Bay. The rivers are fed entirely from the runoff of winter precipitation; in summer they become dry courses. The island’s major soil types consist of imperfect, gravelly lithosols found in the Troodos and Kyrenia mountains and agriculturally productive vertisols located…
- kouros (Greek sculpture)
kouros, archaic Greek statue representing a young standing male. Although the influence of many nations can be discerned in particular elements of these figures, the first appearance of such monumental stone figures seems to coincide with the reopening of Greek trade with Egypt (c. 672 bc). The
- Kourou (French Guiana)
Kourou, coastal town, north-central French Guiana, on the Kourou River. From 1854 to 1944 it served as a French penal colony. In the 1760s about 15,000 settlers from France and Germany, imagining the town to be the legendary El Dorado, arrived there to establish a colony under French sponsorship.
- Kourouma, Ahmadou (Ivorian author)
Ahmadou Kourouma was an Ivorian novelist and playwright who wrote in a form of French that scandalized the establishment and affected French colonial policies. Kourouma spent his early years in Guinea and attended secondary school in Bamako, Mali, until he was expelled and was drafted into the army
- Kouroussa (Guinea)
Kouroussa, town and river port, east-central Guinea. It lies at the head of navigation of the upper Niger River and along the railroad and road from Conakry to Kankan. Kouroussa is the chief trading centre for the rice, onions, millet, peanuts (groundnuts), sesame, cotton, and cattle raised in the
- Kourtney and Kim Take New York (American television series)
Kim Kardashian: …starred in the spin-off series Kourtney and Kim Take New York (2011–12). In 2020 Kim and other members of the family signed a production deal with the streaming service Hulu, and the following year Keeping Up with the Kardashians ended. In 2022 the reality series The Kardashians began airing on…
- Koussa, Moussa (Libyan foreign minister)
Libya Revolt of 2011: Uprising: …March 30 Libyan foreign minister Moussa Koussa defected, fleeing to the United Kingdom. The defection of Koussa, a former head of Libyan intelligence and a longtime member of Qaddafi’s inner circle, was interpreted as a sign that support for Qaddafi among senior Libyan officials was beginning to wane.
- Koussevitzky, Serge (American conductor)
Serge Koussevitzky was a Russian-born American conductor and publisher, a champion of modern music who commissioned and performed many important new works. Koussevitzky studied the double bass in Moscow, becoming a virtuoso, and in Russia, Germany, and England gave recitals at which he played his
- Koussi, Mount (mountain, Chad)
Mount Koussi, highest summit (11,204 feet [3,415 m]) in the Sahara, situated 109 miles (176 km) north-northwest of Faya in the Tibesti massif, northwestern Chad. It is an extinct volcano with a crater approximately 12 miles (19 km) wide and 4,000 feet (1,200 m)
- Koussinoc (Maine, United States)
Augusta, capital (1831) of Maine, U.S., seat (1799) of Kennebec county, at the head of navigation on the Kennebec River, 57 miles (92 km) northeast of Portland. The city’s establishment and early prosperity, which began with the arrival of traders from the Plymouth colony of Massachusetts in 1628,
- koutai (Japanese music)
Japanese performing arts: 7th to 16th centuries: …style of kyōgen music (koutai) is distinct from that of Noh music; it is derived directly from popular songs. Kyōgen plays with music are, however, a rarity. The usual play is a straight dialogue drama, making it perhaps the oldest developed form of nonmusical play in East Asia. Dialogue…
- Koutoubia Mosque (mosque, Marrakech, Morocco)
Almohads: The Booksellers’ Mosque (Kutubiyyah) in Marrakech and the older parts of the mosque of Taza date from his reign. Neither did the movement for a return to traditionalist Islam survive; both the mystical movement of the Sufis and the philosophical schools represented by Ibn Ṭufayl and Averroës (Ibn…
- Kouwenhoven, William B. (American engineer)
cardiopulmonary resuscitation: …was provided by electrical engineer William B. Kouwenhoven and colleagues, also at Johns Hopkins, who in 1960 described the “closed-chest cardiac massage,” a method of restoring circulation in a heart-attack victim by pushing down rhythmically on the sternum. The combination of Kouwenhoven’s technique with Safar’s ventilation technique evolved into the…
- Kouyoumdjian, Dikran (British author)
Michael Arlen was a British author whose novels and short stories epitomized the brittle gaiety and underlying cynicism and disillusionment of fashionable post-World War I London society. The son of an Armenian merchant, Arlen was brought up in England, to which his father had escaped to avoid
- Kováč, Michal (president of Slovakia)
Slovakia: History of Slovakia: In February 1993 Michal Kováč, the deputy chairman of the Movement for a Democratic Slovakia (Hnutie Za Democratické Slovensko; HZDS), became president of the republic. Difficulties immediately arose in maintaining a coalition government, with the result that the HZDS and the rather autocratic figure of Mečiar tended to…
- Kovačevski, Dimitar (prime minister of North Macedonia)
North Macedonia: Independence of North Macedonia: Deputy Finance Minister Dimitar Kovačevski replaced Zaev as party leader in December and, on January 16, 2022, was sworn in as prime minister. Soon after taking office, Kovačevski met with Bulgaria’s new prime minister, Kiril Petkov, in Sofia in an attempt to reduce tensions between the two countries.
- Kovačić, Ivan Goran (Croatian author)
Croatian literature: …and Antun Branko Šimić, while Ivan Goran Kovačić, in Jama (1943; The Pit), a long poem evoking the horror of war, retained a classical elegance in his verse. Prose writers included Dinko Šimunović, whose memorable stories depicted both the backwardness and the beauty of Dalmatia; Ivana Brlić-Mažuranić, who earned lasting…
- Kovacs, Ernest Edward (American comedian)
Ernie Kovacs was an American television comedian. Kovacs created the television comedy variety show The Ernie Kovacs Show (1952–53, 1956) and became noted for his zany slapstick sketches. He later hosted the quiz show Take a Good Look (1959–61) and acted in such films as Operation Mad Ball (1957)
- Kovacs, Ernie (American comedian)
Ernie Kovacs was an American television comedian. Kovacs created the television comedy variety show The Ernie Kovacs Show (1952–53, 1956) and became noted for his zany slapstick sketches. He later hosted the quiz show Take a Good Look (1959–61) and acted in such films as Operation Mad Ball (1957)
- Kovalchuk, Ilya (Russian hockey player)
Winnipeg Jets: …the development of young star Ilya Kovalchuk, the first overall selection of the 2001 NHL draft, and the Thrashers posted their first winning record during the 2005–06 season. In 2006–07 the team captured a division title but was swept by the New York Rangers in its lone playoff appearance while…
- Kovalenko, Tatyana Vasilyevna Kazankina (Soviet athlete)
Tatyana Kazankina is a Soviet athlete who won three Olympic gold medals and set seven world records in women’s running events during the 1970s and ’80s. A seemingly fragile individual standing 1.61 metres (5 feet 3 inches) tall and weighing just 48 kg (106 pounds), Kazankina made an international
- Kovalev, Sergey (Russian boxer)
Bernard Hopkins: …when he was defeated by Sergey Kovalev in a unanimous decision. In what was described as his last fight, Hopkins fought Joe Smith, Jr., in 2016. The bout was close until the eighth round, when Hopkins fell out of the ring after being hit by a series of punches and…
- Kovalevskaya, Sofya Vasilyevna (Russian mathematician)
Sofya Vasilyevna Kovalevskaya was a mathematician and writer who made a valuable contribution to the theory of partial differential equations. She was the first woman in modern Europe to gain a doctorate in mathematics, the first to join the editorial board of a scientific journal, and the first to
- Kovalevsky, Aleksandr Onufriyevich (Russian embryologist)
Aleksandr Onufriyevich Kovalevsky was a Russian founder of comparative embryology and experimental histology, who established for the first time the existence of a common pattern in the embryological development of all multicellular animals. Kovalevsky received a doctor of science degree from the
- Kovats, Tania (British sculptor)
National Maritime Museum: Richard Wright, Christy Symington, and Tania Kovats.
- Koven, Reginald De (American composer)
Reginald De Koven was an American composer, conductor, and critic who helped establish the style of American light opera. De Koven graduated from the University of Oxford (1879) and studied composition in Germany, Austria, and France. On his return to the United States he contributed music
- Kovic, Ron (American activist and author)
Ron Kovic is a Vietnam War veteran, activist, and author who became a leading antiwar figure in the 1970s. Kovic had been wounded and paralyzed during his service in the war. In 1976 he detailed his experiences in the best-selling memoir Born on the Fourth of July, which was adapted into an Academy
- Kovic, Ronald Lawrence (American activist and author)
Ron Kovic is a Vietnam War veteran, activist, and author who became a leading antiwar figure in the 1970s. Kovic had been wounded and paralyzed during his service in the war. In 1976 he detailed his experiences in the best-selling memoir Born on the Fourth of July, which was adapted into an Academy
- Kovind, Ram Nath (president of India)
Ram Nath Kovind is an Indian lawyer and politician who served as president of India (2017–22). He was the second person from the Dalit caste, after Kocheril Raman Narayanan, and the first member of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) to hold the office. Kovind grew up in humble circumstances in a