- Kreuznach (Germany)
Bad Kreuznach, city, Rhineland-Palatinate Land (state), west-central Germany. It lies along the Nahe River, a tributary of the Rhine, about 20 miles (32 km) southwest of Mainz. The site of a Roman fortress and later (819) of a Carolingian palace (Cruciniacum), it fell to the bishops of Speyer in
- Kreuzzeitung (German newspaper)
Ludwig von Gerlach: The founding of the Kreuzzeitung gave him a platform from which to expound his conservative views. A strong Christian, Ludwig advocated freedom of the church from state interference and the formation of Protestants and Catholics into one conservative political bloc. He influenced practical politics chiefly through his brother. After…
- Krėvė, Vincas (Lithuanian author)
Vincas Krėvė-Mickievičius was a Lithuanian poet, philologist, and playwright whose mastery of style gave him a foremost place in Lithuanian literature. After serving as Lithuanian consul in Azerbaijan, Krėvė became professor of Slavonic languages and literature in Kaunas (1922–39) and later in
- Krėvė-Mickievičius, Vincas (Lithuanian author)
Vincas Krėvė-Mickievičius was a Lithuanian poet, philologist, and playwright whose mastery of style gave him a foremost place in Lithuanian literature. After serving as Lithuanian consul in Azerbaijan, Krėvė became professor of Slavonic languages and literature in Kaunas (1922–39) and later in
- Krevo, Union of (Polish history)
Poland: The marriage of Jadwiga: …negotiations were finalized through the Union of Krewo. Jagiełło accepted Roman Catholicism for himself and Lithuania proper—the other duchies were already Christian (Eastern Orthodox)—and promised to join (applicare) his Lithuanian and Ruthenian lands to the Polish crown. He became the king of Poland under the name of Władysław II Jagiełło…
- krewe (social club)
New Orleans: Cultural life: …Carnival group (called a “krewe”) was the Mystick Krewe of Comus, which appeared in 1857, though celebrations by masked participants date to the 1820s. The krewe of Rex came into existence in 1872. In 1992 the city council began requiring all krewes to be racially integrated; as a result,…
- Krewo, Union of (Polish history)
Poland: The marriage of Jadwiga: …negotiations were finalized through the Union of Krewo. Jagiełło accepted Roman Catholicism for himself and Lithuania proper—the other duchies were already Christian (Eastern Orthodox)—and promised to join (applicare) his Lithuanian and Ruthenian lands to the Polish crown. He became the king of Poland under the name of Władysław II Jagiełło…
- Kreytserova sonata (work by Tolstoy)
Leo Tolstoy: Conversion and religious beliefs: …afterword to Kreytserova sonata [1891; The Kreutzer Sonata], a dark novella about a man who murders his wife) total abstinence as an ideal. His wife, already concerned about their strained relations, objected. In defending his most-extreme ideas, Tolstoy compared Christianity to a lamp that is not stationary but is carried…
- KrF2 (chemical compound)
krypton: Compounds: …°F); the compound formed is krypton difluoride, KrF2. Several other methods for the synthesis of KrF2 are now known, including irradiation of krypton and fluorine mixtures with ultraviolet radiation at −196 °C (−321 °F).
- KRG (government, Iraq)
Iraq: Fight against ISIL: …autonomous zone controlled by the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG). On August 8 the United States began to launch limited air strikes against ISIL to prevent it from advancing farther into Kurdish territory. KRG forces, known as the peshmerga, were able to drive out ISIL from some areas—including areas that were…
- Kribi (Cameroon)
Kribi, town and port located in southwestern Cameroon. It lies at the edge of the tropical rainforest zone, on the Gulf of Guinea of the Atlantic Ocean. In 1828 a commercial factory was constructed in Kribi to trade cheap manufactured imports for ivory, rubber, palm oil, and other products. It
- Krieg (work by Renn)
Ludwig Renn: …best known for Krieg (1928; War), a novel based on his World War I battle experiences, the narrator and principal character of which was named Ludwig Renn. The stark simplicity of the novel emphasizes the uncompromising brutality of combat.
- Krieger Vasena, Adalbert (Argentine statesman)
Argentina: Military government, 1966–73: Adalbert Krieger Vasena, minister of economy and labour, attempted to stabilize the economy by again devaluing the currency and then undertaking programs in electric power, steel, roads, and housing. In May 1969 disturbances and riots in the cities of Corrientes, Rosario, and particularly Córdoba rose…
- Krieger, Adam (German composer)
Adam Krieger was a composer who is considered the most varied and original master of the German Baroque song. Krieger was educated at Leipzig, where he was organist at St. Nicholas church. From 1657 he was in Dresden as court organist to the elector of Saxony. His surviving compositions are mostly
- Krieger, Johann Philipp (German composer)
Johann Philipp Krieger was a German composer known especially for his church cantatas, fugues, and keyboard suites. Krieger studied at Nürnberg and Copenhagen and became court organist at Bayreuth in 1670. Later he studied and toured in Italy, working with Johann Rosenmüller in Venice and Bernardo
- Krieger, Murray (American literary critic)
Murray Krieger was an American literary critic known for his studies of the special nature of the language of imaginative literature. Krieger attended Rutgers University (1940–42), the University of Chicago (M.A., 1948), and Ohio State University (Ph.D., 1952). He taught at the Universities of
- Krieger, Robby (American musician)
the Doors: May 20, 2013, Rosenheim, Germany), Robby Krieger (b. January 8, 1946, Los Angeles, California, U.S.), and John Densmore (b. December 1, 1945, Los Angeles).
- Krieghoff, Cornelius (Dutch-Canadian painter)
Cornelius Krieghoff was a Dutch-Canadian painter. After studying in Düsseldorf, he emigrated to New York about 1837 and later moved to Canada. Working in Montreal and Quebec, he produced more than 2,000 images of American Indian and French-Canadian life and colourful landscapes in a detailed,
- Kriegs Akademie (military academy, Berlin, Germany)
military, naval, and air academies: …the system was the venerable War Academy, or Kriegs Akademie, at Berlin, founded in 1810 and offering the highest advanced education for commissioned officers. A great complex of technical and auxiliary schools, such as for cavalry and engineering, filled in the system. After World War I the entire complex was…
- Kriegsmarine (armed forces of the Third Reich)
Wehrmacht: Operation of the Wehrmacht: …outbreak of war, Luftwaffe and Kriegsmarine units were theoretically subordinated to army command at a tactical level. This did not yield a seamless combined arms approach, however, as the OKW never functioned as a true joint staff. When cross-branch cooperation did occur, it was often the result of local commanders…
- Kriegsnovellen (work by Liliencron)
Detlev, baron von Liliencron: …stories and short novels, notably Kriegsnovellen (1895; “War Stories”). But he is best known for his lyric poems, published in several collections between 1883 and 1909. The best of these poems are characterized by a vividness of expression and accuracy of detail. Liliencron’s insights and observations are original, and he…
- Kriemhild (German legendary figure)
Kriemhild, in Germanic heroic legend, sister of the Burgundian kings Gunther, Gernot, and Giselher. In Norse legend she is called Gudrun, and the lays in which she appears are variant tales of revenge. In the Nibelungenlied, she is the central character, introduced as a gentle princess courted by
- Krier, Léon (Belgian architect)
Western architecture: Postmodernism: …Hans Hollein, Ricardo Bofill, and Léon Krier, provided designs for an exhibition organized by the Venice Biennale under the title, “The Presence of the Past.” These key architects of postmodernism represented several different outlooks but shared a desire to banish the fear of memory from modern architectural design.
- Krig. 1940 (novel by Solstad)
Dag Solstad: … (1977; “Betrayal: Prewar Years”) and Krig. 1940 (1978; “War: 1940”) were the first two in a series of novels that gave a minutely documented account of Norway in World War II. Solstad’s later works include Roman 1987 (1987; “Novel 1987”), which won the Nordic Council Literature Prize; Genanse og verdighet…
- Krige, Mattheus Uys (South African dramatist)
Uys Krige was a South African dramatist, poet, translator, and short-story writer. Krige was educated at the University of Stellenbosch and lived from 1931 to 1935 in France and Spain, where he learned Romance languages. He began his writing career as a reporter on the Rand Daily Mail. He began to
- Krige, Uys (South African dramatist)
Uys Krige was a South African dramatist, poet, translator, and short-story writer. Krige was educated at the University of Stellenbosch and lived from 1931 to 1935 in France and Spain, where he learned Romance languages. He began his writing career as a reporter on the Rand Daily Mail. He began to
- Krigwa Players (American theatrical company)
Regina M. Anderson: …Krigwa Players evolved into the Negro Experimental Theatre (also known as the Harlem Experimental Theatre), which in 1931 produced Anderson’s one-act play Climbing Jacob’s Ladder, about a lynching that happened while people prayed in church. The next year the theatre produced her one-act play Underground, about the Underground Railroad. Both…
- Krik? Krak! (short stories by Danticat)
Edwidge Danticat: The following year Krik? Krak!, a collection of short stories, was published. The collection, which took its title from a call-and-response phrase common in Haitian storytelling, was a finalist for the National Book Award. Her second novel, The Farming of Bones (1998), used as its title the Haitian…
- Krikalyov, Sergey Konstantinovich (Russian cosmonaut)
Sergey Konstantinovich Krikalyov is a Russian cosmonaut whose six spaceflights from 1988 to 2005 earned him the world record for most time in space. After earning a degree in mechanical engineering from the Leningrad Technical Institute, Krikalyov joined NPO Energia (now RKK Energia), the largest
- krill (crustacean)
krill, any member of the crustacean order Euphausiacea or of the genus Euphausia within that suborder. Euphausiids are shrimplike marine animals that are pelagic in habit (i.e., they live in the open sea). They differ from true shrimp (order Decapoda) in that their gills are located on the swimming
- Krim (republic, Ukraine)
Crimea, autonomous republic, southern Ukraine. The republic is coterminous with the Crimean Peninsula, lying between the Black Sea and the Sea of Azov. In 2014 Russia covertly invaded and illegally annexed Crimea, a move that was denounced by the international community. Area 10,400 square miles
- Krim, Mathilde (American medical researcher)
Mathilde Krim was an American medical researcher and health educator, known for her determined work in combating AIDS and HIV through research and education. Krim was educated at the University of Geneva (B.S., 1948; Ph.D., 1953). She worked on biomedical research projects at the Weizmann Institute
- Kriminalpolizei (Nazi Germany)
Gestapo: … Heinrich Müller—was joined with the Kriminalpolizei (“Criminal Police”) under the umbrella of a new organization, the Sicherheitspolizei (Sipo; “Security Police”). Under a 1939 SS reorganization, the Sipo was joined with the Sicherheitsdienst, an SS intelligence department, to form the Reichssicherheitshauptamt (“Reich Security Central Office”) under Heydrich. In that bureaucratic maze,…
- Krimml Waterfalls (waterfall, Austria)
Krimmler Waterfall, waterfall on the Krimmler River, a tributary of the upper Salzach, in Bundesland (federal state) Salzburg, west-central Austria. The highest cataract in the Austrian Alps, with a fall of 1,247 feet (380 m), it drops in three stages—upper, middle, and lower. Its upper fall is the
- Krimmler Wasserfälle (waterfall, Austria)
Krimmler Waterfall, waterfall on the Krimmler River, a tributary of the upper Salzach, in Bundesland (federal state) Salzburg, west-central Austria. The highest cataract in the Austrian Alps, with a fall of 1,247 feet (380 m), it drops in three stages—upper, middle, and lower. Its upper fall is the
- Krimmler Waterfall (waterfall, Austria)
Krimmler Waterfall, waterfall on the Krimmler River, a tributary of the upper Salzach, in Bundesland (federal state) Salzburg, west-central Austria. The highest cataract in the Austrian Alps, with a fall of 1,247 feet (380 m), it drops in three stages—upper, middle, and lower. Its upper fall is the
- Krimpen, Jan van (Dutch designer)
Jan van Krimpen was an outstanding modern designer of typefaces for books and postage stamps. Van Krimpen received an art education at the academy of art at The Hague. An early interest in poetry led him in 1917 to publish the poetic works of his friends in a series for which he designed the
- Krindachevka (Ukraine)
Krasnyy Luch, city, eastern Ukraine, on the southern slopes of the Donets Hills. Originally established as a mining site in the 1880s, it was incorporated as a city in 1926. Krasnyy Luch historically has been an important anthracite-mining centre of the Donets Basin coalfield. The city also has
- Kringle, Kris (movie character)
Miracle on 34th Street: …lives intersect with that of Kris Kringle (Edmund Gwenn), an elderly man hired to play Santa at New York City’s famous Macy’s department store, Susan begins to suspect he may be the real St. Nick. After a jealous fellow employee frames him for an assault, Kringle is placed in a…
- Krinsky, Henry (American executive)
Henry Crown was a business executive and philanthropist. Crown left school in the eighth grade, worked as an office boy, and in 1919 borrowed $10,000 to found Material Service Corp. with his brothers Irving and Sol. The firm began as a sand, gravel, and lime business that, in 1959, merged into the
- Krio (African language)
Sierra Leone: Languages: Krio, a language derived from English and a variety of African languages, is the mother tongue of the Creoles and the country’s lingua franca. Among the Niger-Congo languages, the Mande group is the largest and includes Mende, Kuranko, Kono, Yalunka, Susu, and Vai. The Mel…
- Kripalani, Acharya (Indian educator, social activist, and politician)
Jivatram Bhagwandas Kripalani was a prominent Indian educator, social activist, and politician in both pre- and post-independence India, who was a close associate of Mohandas K. Gandhi and a longtime supporter of his ideology. He was a leading figure in the Indian National Congress (Congress Party)
- Kripalani, Jivatram Bhagwandas (Indian educator, social activist, and politician)
Jivatram Bhagwandas Kripalani was a prominent Indian educator, social activist, and politician in both pre- and post-independence India, who was a close associate of Mohandas K. Gandhi and a longtime supporter of his ideology. He was a leading figure in the Indian National Congress (Congress Party)
- Kripke, Saul (American logician and philosopher)
Saul Kripke was an American logician and philosopher who from the 1960s was one of the most powerful and influential thinkers in contemporary analytic (Anglophone) philosophy. Kripke began his important work on the semantics of modal logic (the logic of modal notions such as necessity and
- Kripke, Saul Aaron (American logician and philosopher)
Saul Kripke was an American logician and philosopher who from the 1960s was one of the most powerful and influential thinkers in contemporary analytic (Anglophone) philosophy. Kripke began his important work on the semantics of modal logic (the logic of modal notions such as necessity and
- Kripo (Nazi Germany)
Gestapo: … Heinrich Müller—was joined with the Kriminalpolizei (“Criminal Police”) under the umbrella of a new organization, the Sicherheitspolizei (Sipo; “Security Police”). Under a 1939 SS reorganization, the Sipo was joined with the Sicherheitsdienst, an SS intelligence department, to form the Reichssicherheitshauptamt (“Reich Security Central Office”) under Heydrich. In that bureaucratic maze,…
- Krippel, Mária (Hungarian actress)
Mari Jászai was a Hungarian actress, one of the greatest Hungarian tragediennes. Jászai’s rise to the top of her profession from a background of poverty was the result of enormous strength of will and an exceptional sense of vocation. She started her career as a chorus singer with small companies,
- kris (Roma institution)
Roma: …of social control was the kris, connoting both the body of customary law and values of justice as well as the ritual and formation of the tribunal of the band. Basic to the Roma code were the all-embracing concepts of fidelity, cohesiveness, and reciprocity within the recognized political unit. The…
- Kris (work by Boye)
Karin Boye: Among her novels are Kris (1934; “Crisis”), based on her struggle to accept her lesbianism, and Kallocain (1940; Eng. trans.,1940), which describes the insupportable oppression of a totalitarian society of the future. During World War II Karin Boye committed suicide.
- kris (dagger)
dagger: …types include the wavy-bladed Malayan kris, the short, curved kukri used by the Gurkhas, the Hindu katar with its flat triangular blade, and innumerable others.
- Kris, Ernst (psychologist and art historian)
Ernst Kris was a psychologist and historian of art, known for his psychoanalytic studies of artistic creation and for combining psychoanalysis and direct observation of infants in child psychology. Kris received his doctorate in art history from the University of Vienna in 1922 and was appointed an
- Krise der Sozialdemokratie, Die (work by Luxemburg)
Marxism: The radicals: …Die Krise der Sozialdemokratie [The Crisis in the German Social-Democracy]), she is known for her book Die Akkumulation des Kapitals (1913; The Accumulation of Capital). In this work she returned to Marx’s economic analysis of capitalism, in particular the accumulation of capital as expounded in volume 2 of Das…
- Kriser och Kransar (work by Sjöberg)
Birger Sjöberg: …unleashed his full fury in Kriser och Kransar (1926; “Crises and Laurel Wreaths”), a relentless and explosive confrontation with post-World War I life and an artistic breakthrough to new forms and highly modern poetic devices.
- Krishna (Hindu deity)
Krishna, one of the most widely revered and most popular of all Indian divinities, worshipped as the eighth incarnation (avatar, or avatara) of the Hindu god Vishnu and also as a supreme god in his own right. Krishna became the focus of numerous bhakti (devotional) cults, which have over the
- Krishna (district, India)
Krishna, district, east-central Andhra Pradesh state, southern India. It is bounded by the Bay of Bengal on the southeast, and the Krishna River constitutes its southwestern border. The district lies mainly in the delta of the Krishna River, and it has a network of irrigation canals that connect
- Krishna Consciousness
Hare Krishna: …outgrowth of the popular Bengali bhakti (devotional) yoga tradition, or Krishna Consciousness, which began in the 16th century. Bhakti yoga’s founder, Chaitanya Mahaprabhu (1485–1534?), advocated the pursuit of mystical devotion through repetitive chanting, especially of the Hare Krishna mantra:
- Krishna Deva Raya (emperor of India)
South Asian arts: 14th–19th century: …by Vijayanagar kings, beginning with Kṛṣṇa Dēva Rāya, himself a poet versed in Sanskrit, Kannada, and Telugu. The rāyala yugam (“age of kings”) was known for its courtly prabandhas, virtuoso poetic narratives by and for pandits (learned men). Among the most famous court poets were Piṅgaḷi Sūranna, whose verse novel,…
- Krishna I (Rashtrakuta king)
Rashtrakuta dynasty: Krishna I (reigned c. 756–773), built the rock temple of Kailasa at Ellora (designated a UNESCO World Heritage site in 1983); another king, Amoghavarsha I, who reigned from about 814 to 878, was the author of part of the Kavirajamarga, the earliest known Kannada poem.…
- Krishna II (Rāṣṭrakūṭa king)
India: The tripartite struggle: …ensued during the reign of Krishna II (reigned c. 878–914).
- Krishna III (Rāṣṭrakūṭa king)
India: The tripartite struggle: The reign of Krishna III (reigned c. 939–968) saw a successful campaign against the Colas, a matrimonial alliance with the Gangas, and the subjugation of Vengi. Rashtrakuta power declined suddenly, however, after the reign of Indra, and this was fully exploited by the feudatory Taila.
- Krishna River (river, India)
Krishna River, river of south-central India. One of India’s longest rivers, it has a total course of about 800 miles (1,290 km). The river rises in western Maharashtra state in the Western Ghats range near the town of Mahabaleshwar, not far from the coast of the Arabian Sea. It flows east to Wai
- Krishnagar (India)
Krishnanagar, city, west-central West Bengal state, northeastern India. It lies just south of the Jalangi River. The city is a road and rail junction and the major agricultural distribution centre for the region. Sugar milling is the major industry. It is also the site of a hospital, a
- Krishnagiri Forest (national park, India)
Mumbai: Cultural life: Krishnagiri Forest, a national park in the northern part of metropolitan Mumbai, is a pleasant vacation resort located near the Kanheri Caves; the caves, numbering more than 100, were the site of an ancient Buddhist university and contain gigantic Buddhist sculptures dating from the 2nd…
- Krishnamurthy, R. (Indian writer)
South Asian arts: Tamil: …half of the 20th century, R. Krishnamurthy was an immensely popular writer. Under the pseudonym Kalki, he was an influential journalist who wrote voluminous historical romances.
- Krishnamurthy, Yamini (Indian dancer)
Yamini Krishnamurthy is a dancer of bharata natyam and other classical Indian styles who was an influential force in India’s dance world for decades. Krishnamurthy began her training in bharata natyam, a graceful dance that incorporates geometric movements and rhythmic foot patterns, as a child at
- Krishnamurti, Jiddu (Indian spiritual leader)
Jiddu Krishnamurti was an Indian spiritual leader. He was educated in theosophy by the British social reformer Annie Besant, who proclaimed him the coming “World Teacher,” a messianic figure who would bring about world enlightenment. He became a teacher and writer, and from the 1920s he spent much
- Krishnanagar (India)
Krishnanagar, city, west-central West Bengal state, northeastern India. It lies just south of the Jalangi River. The city is a road and rail junction and the major agricultural distribution centre for the region. Sugar milling is the major industry. It is also the site of a hospital, a
- Krishnarāja Lake (reservoir, India)
Mysuru: Krishnaraja Lake, a large reservoir with a dam, lies 12 miles (19 km) northwest of Mysuru at the Kaveri River. Spreading below the dam are the terraced Brindavan Gardens with their cascades and fountains, which are floodlit at night. Somnathpur, to the east, has a…
- Krishnavarman (Indian ruler)
Kadamba family: …principality under his younger son, Krishnavarman. A period of warfare between the two branches of the family followed, during which the junior branch initially triumphed but was quickly forced to acknowledge the suzerainty of first the Pallavas and then the senior branch. The Kadamba kingdom came to an end with…
- Krisis der europäischen Wissenschaften und die transzendentale Phänomenologie, Die (work by Husserl)
phenomenology: Basic concepts: …in die phänomenologische Philosophie (1936; The Crisis of European Sciences and Transcendental Phenomenology), Husserl arrived at the life-world—the world as shaped within the immediate experience of each person—by questioning back to the foundations that the sciences presuppose. In Die Krisis he analyzed the European crisis of culture and philosophy, which…
- Kristall (Soviet space module)
Mir: …equipment and a large airlock; Kristall (1990), a materials-sciences laboratory; and Spektr (1995) and Priroda (1996), two science modules containing remote-sensing instruments for ecological and environmental studies of Earth. With the exception of its first occupants, Mir’s cosmonaut crews traveled between the station and Earth in upgraded Soyuz TM spacecraft,…
- Kristallnacht (German history)
Kristallnacht, the night of November 9–10, 1938, when German Nazis attacked Jewish persons and property. The name Kristallnacht refers ironically to the litter of broken glass left in the streets after these pogroms. The violence continued during the day of November 10, and in some places acts of
- Kristallögat (novel by Enquist)
Per Olov Enquist: Enquist’s first novels, Kristallögat (1961; “The Crystal Eye”) and Färdvägen (1963; “The Route Travelled”), reflect his aesthetic interest in the form of the novel and the influence of the French new novel. As the political climate of the 1960s changed, Enquist moved from a liberal viewpoint to a…
- Kristeligt Folkeparti (political party, Denmark)
Denmark: Postwar politics: …the Center Democrats (Centrum-Demokraterne), the Christian People’s Party (Kristeligt Folkeparti), and the Progress Party (Fremskridtspartiet), an antitax party. A weak minority government under Poul Hartling of the Liberal Party tried to solve the country’s growing economic problems, but his austerity program resulted in protests from trade unions and the opposition.…
- Kristelijke Volkspartij (political party, Belgium)
Henri, Count Carton de Wiart: …the Catholic Party as the Social Christian Party. Serving as minister without portfolio (1949–50) and minister of justice (1950), he devoted much effort to an unsuccessful attempt to return the exiled Belgian king Leopold III to power.
- Kristen Batak Protestant, Huria (church, Indonesia)
Batak Protestant Christian Church, church in northern Sumatra, Indon., organized as an independent church in 1930 and constituting the largest Lutheran church in Asia. It developed from the work of missionaries of the Rhenish Mission Society, established in Barmen, Ger., in 1828. Under the
- Kristensen, Aage Tom (Danish author and critic)
Tom Kristensen was a Danish poet, novelist, and critic who was one of the central literary figures of the disillusioned generation after World War I. Educated at the University of Copenhagen, Kristensen taught briefly before he turned to writing. He was particularly influential as a literary critic
- Kristensen, Knud (prime minister of Denmark)
Knud Kristensen was a politician who, as leader of the first elected post-World War II Danish government, rekindled national hopes for the reacquisition of the historical territory of Schleswig from Germany. He also founded the Independent Party. Entering Parliament in 1920, Kristensen became a
- Kristensen, Tom (Danish author and critic)
Tom Kristensen was a Danish poet, novelist, and critic who was one of the central literary figures of the disillusioned generation after World War I. Educated at the University of Copenhagen, Kristensen taught briefly before he turned to writing. He was particularly influential as a literary critic
- Kristensen, William Brede (Dutch scholar)
classification of religions: Phenomenological: …of the earliest Dutch phenomenologists, W. Brede Kristensen (1867–1953), spoke of his work as follows:
- Kristersson, Ulf (prime minister of Sweden)
Ulf Kristersson is a Swedish politician, leader of the Moderate Party (2018– ) and prime minister of Sweden (2022– ). Kristersson led a centre-right coalition that formed the first government open to and dependent upon the support of the far-right anti-immigrant Sweden Democrats. A child of
- Kristersson, Ulf Hjalmar Ed (prime minister of Sweden)
Ulf Kristersson is a Swedish politician, leader of the Moderate Party (2018– ) and prime minister of Sweden (2022– ). Kristersson led a centre-right coalition that formed the first government open to and dependent upon the support of the far-right anti-immigrant Sweden Democrats. A child of
- Kristeva, Julia (French author)
Julia Kristeva is a Bulgarian-born French psychoanalyst, critic, novelist, and educator, best known for her writings in structuralist linguistics, psychoanalysis, semiotics, and philosophical feminism. Kristeva received a degree in linguistics from the University of Sofia in 1966 and later that
- Kristiania (national capital, Norway)
Oslo, capital and largest city of Norway. It lies at the head of Oslo Fjord in the southeastern part of the country. The original site of Oslo was east of the Aker River. The city was founded by King Harald Hardraade about 1050, and about 1300 the Akershus fortress was built by Haakon V. After the
- Kristiania Bohème (artists circle)
Edvard Munch: Early years: …his artistic development was the Kristiania Bohème, a circle of writers and artists in Kristiania, as Oslo was then called. Its members believed in free love and generally opposed bourgeois narrow-mindedness. One of the older painters in the circle, Christian Krohg, gave Munch both instruction and encouragement.
- Kristiansand (Norway)
Kristiansand, town and seaport, southern Norway. Located on the Skagerrak (strait between Norway and Denmark) at the mouth of the Otra River, it has a spacious, ice-free harbour, protected by offshore islands, and is the largest community of Sørlandet region. It was founded and fortified in 1641 by
- Kristiansen, Ingrid (Norwegian athlete)
London Marathon: …most men’s victories, three, and Ingrid Kristiansen of Norway holds the women’s record with four marathon wins.
- Kristianstad (former county, Sweden)
Kristianstad, former län (county) of southern Sweden, extending between Skalder Bay on the Kattegat (strait) and Hanö Bay on the Baltic Sea. Founded as a county in 1719, it was merged with the county of Malmöhus in 1997 to form the county of
- Kristianstad (Sweden)
Kristianstad, city, Skåne län (county), southern Sweden, lying on Hammar Lake and the Helge River. It was founded in 1614 by King Christian IV of Denmark and Norway as a border defense against Sweden. Ceded to Sweden in 1658, it was retaken by Christian V in 1676 and finally acquired by Sweden in
- Kristiansund (Norway)
Kristiansund, town and port, western Norway. The town is situated on three tiny coastal islets facing the Norwegian Sea; its harbour is protected by an inlet in the adjacent island of Frei and by the island of Averøy (west). In the area around the town, ruins of habitations have been found that may
- Kristin Lavransdatter (film by Ullmann [1995])
Liv Ullmann: …directed the films Sofie (1992); Kristin Lavransdatter (1995); Trolösa (1999; Faithless), for which Bergman wrote the screenplay; and Miss Julie (2014), which she adapted from August Strindberg’s play of the same name. In 2022 Ullmann received an honorary Academy Award, noted for a “bravery and emotional transparency [that] has gifted…
- Kristin Lavransdatter (novel by Undset)
Kristin Lavransdatter, historical novel in three volumes by Sigrid Undset, published from 1920 to 1922. For this work Undset was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1928. The trilogy is set in medieval Norway and consists of Kransen (1920; The Bridal Wreath; U.K. title, The Garland), Husfrue
- Kristina (queen of Sweden)
Christina was the queen of Sweden (1644–54) who stunned all Europe by abdicating her throne. She subsequently attempted, without success, to gain the crowns of Naples and of Poland. One of the wittiest and most learned women of her age, Christina is best remembered for her lavish sponsorship of the
- Kristmundsson, Adalsteinn (Icelandic writer)
Icelandic literature: Poetry: Steinn Steinarr (Aðalsteinn Kristmundsson), who was deeply influenced by Surrealism, experimented with abstract styles and spearheaded modernism in Icelandic poetry with his collection Ljóð (1937; “Poems”).
- Kristni saga (Icelandic saga)
saga: Native historical accounts: …history of Iceland followed later: Kristni saga describes Iceland’s conversion to Christianity about the end of the 10th century and the emergence of a national church. Hungrvaka (“The Appetizer”) contains accounts of the lives of the first five bishops of Skálholt, from the mid-11th century to the third quarter of…
- Kristofer av Bayern (king of Denmark, Norway, and Sweden)
Christopher III was the king of the Danes (1439–48), Swedes (1441–48), and Norwegians (1442–48) whose reign saw a sharp decline in royal power as a result of commercial domination by the north German trading centres of the Hanseatic League and increasing political authority of the Danish and
- Kristofferson, Kris (American singer, songwriter, and actor)
Kris Kristofferson is an American singer, songwriter, and actor known for his gravelly voice and rugged good looks and a string of country music hits, notably “Me and Bobby McGee,” “Help Me Make It Through the Night,” “For the Good Times,” and “Once More with Feeling.” As a teenager, Kristofferson
- Kristofferson, Kristoffer (American singer, songwriter, and actor)
Kris Kristofferson is an American singer, songwriter, and actor known for his gravelly voice and rugged good looks and a string of country music hits, notably “Me and Bobby McGee,” “Help Me Make It Through the Night,” “For the Good Times,” and “Once More with Feeling.” As a teenager, Kristofferson
- Kristol, Bill (American editor and political analyst)
The Weekly Standard: …magazine founded in 1995 by William Kristol, Fred Barnes, and John Podhoretz with financial backing from Rupert Murdoch’s News Corporation. One of the young writers on the staff of the magazine in 1995 was American conservative pundit and popular Fox News talk show host Tucker Carlson. The Weekly Standard largely…
- Kristol, Irving (American essayist, editor, and publisher)
Irving Kristol was an American essayist, editor, and publisher, best known as an intellectual founder and leader of the neoconservative movement in the United States. His articulation and defense of conservative ideals against the dominant liberalism of the 1960s influenced generations of