- Langtoft, Peter (English historian)
Peter Langtoft was an author of an Anglo-Norman chronicle in alexandrines, and a canon of the Augustinian priory at Bridlington. He took his name from the village of Langtoft in East Yorkshire. It is known that he acted as procurator for the prior or chapter (1271–86), but he later seems to have
- Langton, Christopher (American computer scientist)
artificial life: …impetus of American computer scientist Christopher Langton, who named the field and in 1987 organized the first International Conference on the Synthesis and Simulation of Living Systems, or Artificial Life 1, at the Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico. Langton characterized artificial life as “locating life-as-we-know-it within the larger…
- Langton, Stephen (archbishop of Canterbury)
Stephen Langton was an English cardinal whose appointment as archbishop of Canterbury precipitated King John’s quarrel with Pope Innocent III and played an important part in the Magna Carta crisis. Langton, son of a lord of a manor in Lincolnshire, became early in his career a prebendary of York.
- Langton, Walter (English politician)
Walter Langton was a leading adviser of King Edward I of England; he was treasurer of the exchequer from 1295 to 1307 and bishop of Lichfield from 1296 until his death. In both capacities he was greedy and unpopular. From June 1296 to November 1297, Langton was in France and Flanders on diplomatic
- Langtry, Emilie Charlotte (British actress)
Lillie Langtry was a British beauty and actress, known as the Jersey Lily. She was the daughter of the dean of Jersey. In 1874 she married Edward Langtry, who died in 1897, and in 1899 she married Hugo de Bathe, who became a baronet in 1907. In 1881 Langtry caused a sensation by being the first
- Langtry, Lillie (British actress)
Lillie Langtry was a British beauty and actress, known as the Jersey Lily. She was the daughter of the dean of Jersey. In 1874 she married Edward Langtry, who died in 1897, and in 1899 she married Hugo de Bathe, who became a baronet in 1907. In 1881 Langtry caused a sensation by being the first
- language
language, a system of conventional spoken, manual (signed), or written symbols by means of which human beings, as members of a social group and participants in its culture, express themselves. The functions of language include communication, the expression of identity, play, imaginative expression,
- Language (work by Sapir)
Edward Sapir: His publications included Language (1921), which was most influential, and a collection of essays, Selected Writings of Edward Sapir in Language, Culture, and Personality (1949).
- Language (work by Bloomfield)
linguistics: Structural linguistics in America: …version with the new title Language; this book dominated the field for the next 30 years. In it Bloomfield explicitly adopted a behaviouristic approach to the study of language, eschewing in the name of scientific objectivity all reference to mental or conceptual categories. Of particular consequence was his adoption of…
- language acquisition
language: Language acquisition: In regard to the production of speech sounds, all typical humans are physiologically alike. It has been shown repeatedly that children learn the language of those who bring them up from infancy. These are often the biological parents, but one’s first language is…
- Language and Silence (work by Steiner)
George Steiner: Language and Silence (1967) is a collection of essays that examines the dehumanizing effect that World War II and the Holocaust had on literature. Steiner considered himself “at home in three and a half languages” (the half for American English as contrasted with British English).…
- language bioprogram hypothesis (linguistics)
creole languages: Theories of creolization: …and became known as the lexical learning hypothesis, children who were exposed to a pidgin at an early age created a creole language by adopting only the vocabularies of the pidgin. They developed new grammars following the default specifications of the biological blueprint for language, known as universal grammar or…
- language game (philosophy)
Christianity: Influence of logical positivism: …of language in the various language games developed within different human activities and forms of life; and it was suggested that religious belief has its own autonomous validity, not subject to verificationist or scientific or other extraneous criteria. Statements about God and eternal life do not make true-or-false factual claims…
- language ideology (anthropology)
anthropology: Linguistic anthropology: A significant language ideology associated with the formation of modern nation-states constructs certain ways of speaking as “standard languages”; once a standard is defined, it is treated as prestigious and appropriate, while others languages or dialects are marginalized and stigmatized.
- Language in Action (work by Hayakawa)
S.I. Hayakawa: His first book, Language in Action (1941), was a popular treatment of the semantic theories of Alfred Korzybski and was followed by years of teaching, writing, and lecturing in that field.
- language isolate (linguistics)
Mesoamerican Indian languages: …some 10 language families (including language isolates) that are native to Mesoamerica. The term “Mesoamerica” refers to a culture area originally defined by a number of culture traits shared among the pre-Columbian cultures of the geographical region that extends from the Pánuco River in northern Mexico to the Lempa River…
- language laboratory
pedagogy: Speaking-listening media: Language laboratories are study rooms equipped with electronic sound-reproduction devices, enabling students to hear model pronunciations of foreign languages and to record and hear their own voices as they engage in pattern drills. Such laboratories are effective modes of operant learning, and, after a minimum…
- language learning
language: Language acquisition: In regard to the production of speech sounds, all typical humans are physiologically alike. It has been shown repeatedly that children learn the language of those who bring them up from infancy. These are often the biological parents, but one’s first language is…
- Language of Equilibrium, The (work by Kosuth)
Joseph Kosuth: …from a number of philosophers; The Language of Equilibrium (2007) on the island of San Lazzaro for the Venice Biennale; and Neither Appearance nor Illusion (2009–10) at the Louvre in Paris. Later works included the Mondrian’s Work series, comprising neon-lit silkscreens on glass inspired by Piet Mondrian’s writing and art.
- Language of Morals, The (work by Hare)
ethics: Universal prescriptivism: In The Language of Morals (1952), the British philosopher R.M. Hare (1919–2002) supported some elements of emotivism but rejected others. He agreed that moral judgments are not primarily descriptions of anything; but neither, he said, are they simply expressions of attitudes. Instead, he suggested that moral…
- Language of the Birds, The (sculpture by Kiefer)
Anselm Kiefer: …Paete non dolet (2006) and The Language of the Birds (2013), as well as vitrines of plaster gowns laced with glass shards (Die Schechina, 2010) or of cast resin plants (Morgenthau, 2015). His later paintings, including Superstrings, Runes, The Norns, Gordian Knot (2019), consider myths, poems, and string theory as…
- Language of the Night, The (work by Jolas)
Eugene and Maria Jolas: His best volume was The Language of Night (1932).
- language school (Chinese school)
Tongwenguan, first institution in China for the study of Western thought and society. The Tongwenguan was originally established in 1862 to teach Western languages and thereby free Chinese diplomats from reliance on foreign interpreters. In 1866 the study of astronomy and mathematics was added to
- language universal
creole languages: Theories of creolization: Universalists claim that creoles developed according to universals of language development. According to the version of this hypothesis called the language bioprogram hypothesis, which was later revised and became known as the lexical learning hypothesis, children who were exposed to a pidgin at an early…
- language variant
language: Language variants: The word language contains a multiplicity of different designations. Two senses have already been distinguished: language as a universal species-specific capability of the human race and languages as the various manifestations of that capability, as with English, French, Latin, Swahili, Malay, and so…
- language, philosophy of
philosophy of language, philosophical investigation of the nature of language; the relations between language, language users, and the world; and the concepts with which language is described and analyzed, both in everyday speech and in scientific linguistic studies. Because its investigations are
- language, programming
computer programming language, any of various languages for expressing a set of detailed instructions for a digital computer. Such instructions can be executed directly when they are in the computer manufacturer-specific numerical form known as machine language, after a simple substitution process
- Language, Truth, and Logic (work by Ayer)
Language, Truth, and Logic, work by the British philosopher A.J. Ayer, published in 1936, that became a popular manifesto of logical positivism, a philosophical movement that originated in the 1920s in discussions among members of the Vienna Circle, a group of philosophers, scientists, and
- languages by number of native speakers
The world’s 8 billion inhabitants speak thousands of languages, but most of them are spoken by small populations. About 5 billion people are native speakers of just 25 languages. Below is a list of the 25 languages with the highest number of native speakers, according to data from the Ethnologue
- languages by total number of speakers
Billions of people around the world speak more than one language. In the case of lingua francas—languages, such as English and French, that people learn to facilitate communication across boundaries—the high number of non-native speakers often approaches or exceeds the number of native speakers.
- Languages of Africa, The (work by Greenberg)
Joseph H. Greenberg: 1963 as The Languages of Africa). From the time of its publication, the work has been controversial. Some linguists consider it the most influential study on African languages, while others find Greenberg’s work to be only a modification of the earlier classification scheme of Diedrich Westermann.
- Languages of Art (work by Goodman)
aesthetics: Symbolism in art: His Languages of Art (1968) was the first work of analytical philosophy to produce a distinct and systematic theory of art. Goodman’s theory has attracted considerable attention, the more so in that it is an extension of a general philosophical perspective, expounded in works of great…
- Languages of Criticism and the Structure of Poetry, The (work by Crane)
R.S. Crane: His landmark book, The Languages of Criticism and the Structure of Poetry (1953), formed the theoretical basis of the group. Although Crane was an outspoken opponent of the New Criticism, he argued persuasively for a pluralism that values separate, even contradictory, critical schools.
- Languages of Truth: Essays 2003–2020 (work by Rushdie)
Salman Rushdie: Post-fatwa writings: Languages of Truth: Essays 2003–2020 appeared in 2021.
- langue (linguistics)
semiotics: … or actual individual utterances, from langue, the underlying system of conventions that makes such utterances understandable; it is this underlying langue that most interests semioticians.
- langue d’oïl (language)
French literature: The origins of the French language: …to the Alps was the langue d’oïl (the future French), and to the south it was the langue d’oc (Occitan), terms derived from the respective expressions for “yes.”
- Langue de Barbarie (sandspit, Africa)
Sénégal River: Physiography and hydrology: …of a long sandspit, the Barbary Tongue (Langue de Barbarie). Saint-Louis lies in the river’s estuary, which extends for about 10 miles (16 km) to the river’s mouth.
- Langue des calculs, La (work by Condillac)
Étienne Bonnot de Condillac: …works La Logique (1780) and La Langue des calculs (1798; “The Language of Calculation”), Condillac emphasized the importance of language in logical reasoning, stressing the need for a scientifically designed language and for mathematical calculation as its basis. His economic views, which were presented in Le Commerce et le gouvernement,…
- Languedoc (region, France)
Languedoc, historical and cultural region encompassing the southern French départements of Hérault, Gard, and Ardèche and parts of Haute-Loire, Lozère, Tarn, Tarn-et-Garonne, Haute-Garonne, and Ariège and coextensive with the former province of Languedoc. Languedoc is a center of the distinctive
- Languedoc Canal (canal, France)
Canal du Midi, historic canal in the Languedoc region of France, a major link in the inland waterway system from the Bay of Biscay of the Atlantic Ocean to the Mediterranean Sea. It was built in the 17th century at a time when France was the centre of civil engineering excellence. The Canal du Midi
- Languedoc language
Occitan language, modern name given by linguists to a group of dialects that form a Romance language that was spoken in the early 21st century by about 1,500,000 people in southern France, though many estimates range as low as one-third that number. The UNESCO Red Book lists some of the dialects of
- Languedoc-Roussillon (region, France)
Languedoc-Roussillon, former région of France. As a région, it encompassed the southern départements of Lozère, Gard, Hérault, Aude, and Pyrénées-Orientales and was roughly coextensive with the former province of Languedoc. In 2016 the Languedoc-Roussillon région was joined with the région of
- Languedocian language
Occitan language, modern name given by linguists to a group of dialects that form a Romance language that was spoken in the early 21st century by about 1,500,000 people in southern France, though many estimates range as low as one-third that number. The UNESCO Red Book lists some of the dialects of
- Languet, Hubert (French scholar)
humanism: Sidney and Spenser: …of the prominent French scholar Hubert Languet and was tutored in science by the learned John Dee. His brief career as writer, statesman, and soldier was of such acknowledged brilliance as to make him, after his tragic death in battle, the subject of an Elizabethan heroic cult. Sidney’s major works—Astrophel…
- languid (organ pipe)
keyboard instrument: Flue pipes: …the speaking length by the languid, a flat plate; the only airway connection between the foot and the speaking length is a narrow slit called the flue. The wind emerges through the flue and strikes the upper lip, producing an audible frequency, the pitch of which is determined by and…
- languid ladies (plant)
Mertensia: Languid ladies (M. paniculata), from western North America, is smaller, hairy, and summer blooming, and it has smaller, more nodding blooms.
- Languish, Lydia (fictional character)
Lydia Languish, fictional character, the sentimental heroine of Richard Brinsley Sheridan’s comic play The Rivals
- langur (primate)
langur, general name given to numerous species of Asian monkeys belonging to the subfamily Colobinae. The term is often restricted to nearly two dozen species of leaf monkeys but is also applied to various other members of the subfamily. Leaf monkeys and other langurs are gregarious, diurnal, and
- languriid beetle (insect)
lizard beetle, (family Languriidae), any of some 400 species of long, narrow beetles (insect order Coleoptera), most of which are found in Asia and North America. Adult lizard beetles are 2 to 10 mm (0.1 to 0.4 inch) long, are reddish in colour with dark wing covers (elytra), and feed on leaves and
- Languriidae (insect)
lizard beetle, (family Languriidae), any of some 400 species of long, narrow beetles (insect order Coleoptera), most of which are found in Asia and North America. Adult lizard beetles are 2 to 10 mm (0.1 to 0.4 inch) long, are reddish in colour with dark wing covers (elytra), and feed on leaves and
- Langway, Rod (American hockey player)
Washington Capitals: … and defensemen Larry Murphy and Rod Langway led the team to five consecutive second-place divisional finishes between 1983–84 and 1987–88. Washington won its first division title in 1988–89 and appeared in the conference finals in 1989–90, but the Capitals failed to advance any further in the postseason through the mid-1990s.
- langyao (pottery glaze)
sang de boeuf, a glossy, rich, bloodred glaze often slashed with streaks of purple or turquoise used to decorate pottery, particularly porcelain. The effect is produced by a method of firing that incorporates copper, a method first discovered by the Chinese of the Ming dynasty, probably during the
- Lanham Act (United States)
advertising fraud: Lanham Act and state laws: …regarding false advertising under the Lanham Act. To establish a violation under the Lanham Act, consumers and competitors must prove that the advertiser made false statements, that the false advertisements actually deceived or had the capacity to deceive, that the deception was material, that the falsely advertised product was sold…
- Laniarius (bird genus)
shrike: Bell-shrikes or bellbirds, members of the African genus Laniarius, also of the bush-shrike group, often have names imitative of the males’ notes: boubou and gonolek. They are about 20 cm (8 inches) long, plain-coloured, often with a slash of white on the wings. All black…
- Laniarius aethiopicus (bird)
shrike: …with red-tinged underparts, is the tropical boubou (L. aethiopicus). Black above and bright red below are the black-headed, or Abyssinian, gonolek (L. erythrogaster) and the Barbary shrike (L. barbarus).
- Laniarius barbarus (bird)
shrike: erythrogaster) and the Barbary shrike (L. barbarus).
- Laniarius erythrogaster (bird)
shrike: …bright red below are the black-headed, or Abyssinian, gonolek (L. erythrogaster) and the Barbary shrike (L. barbarus).
- Laniarius leucorhynchus (bird)
shrike: All black forms include the sooty boubou (L. leucorhynchus). Black and white, with red-tinged underparts, is the tropical boubou (L. aethiopicus). Black above and bright red below are the black-headed, or Abyssinian, gonolek (L. erythrogaster) and the Barbary shrike (L. barbarus).
- Lanier, Bob (American basketball player)
Detroit Pistons: …future Hall of Fame centre Bob Lanier with the first selection of the 1970 NBA draft, but the team’s mediocrity continued as they had only three winning seasons in Lanier’s 10 years with the Pistons.
- Lanier, Jaron (American scientist)
virtual reality: Entertainment: Jaron Lanier, another researcher at Atari, shared Zimmerman’s interest in electronic music. Beginning in 1983, they worked together on improving the design of the data glove, and in 1985 they left Atari to start up VPL Research; its first commercial product was the VPL DataGlove.
- Lanier, Nicholas (English composer)
Nicholas Lanier was an English composer, singer, and painter, who probably introduced Italian monody into England. In 1617 he painted the scenery, composed the music for, and sang in Ben Jonson’s masque Lovers Made Men, using the new monodic recitative style. In 1625 he became music master to
- Lanier, Sidney (American poet)
Sidney Lanier was an American musician and poet whose verse often suggests the rhythms and thematic development of music. Lanier was reared by devoutly religious parents in the traditions of the Old South. As a child he wrote verses and was especially fond of music. After graduation in 1860 from
- Lanier, Willie (American football player)
Willie Lanier is an American professional football player who was an outstanding defensive player for the Kansas City Chiefs in the 1960s and ’70s, a time when the ability of African Americans to play the key defensive position of middle linebacker was questioned. Lanier was named to the Little
- Lanier, Willie Edward (American football player)
Willie Lanier is an American professional football player who was an outstanding defensive player for the Kansas City Chiefs in the 1960s and ’70s, a time when the ability of African Americans to play the key defensive position of middle linebacker was questioned. Lanier was named to the Little
- Laniere, Nicholas (English composer)
Nicholas Lanier was an English composer, singer, and painter, who probably introduced Italian monody into England. In 1617 he painted the scenery, composed the music for, and sang in Ben Jonson’s masque Lovers Made Men, using the new monodic recitative style. In 1625 he became music master to
- Laniidae (bird)
shrike, (family Laniidae), any of approximately 30 species of medium-sized predatory birds (order Passeriformes); in particular, any of the more than 25 species of the genus Lanius, constituting the subfamily of true shrikes, Laniinae. With their bills they can kill large insects, lizards, mice,
- Lanikai (Hawaii, United States)
Kailua-Lanikai, twin residential communities, southeastern Oahu island, Hawaii, U.S. Extending along Kailua Bay, they lie 13 miles (21 km) northeast of Honolulu and just south of Kaneohe. According to Hawaiian legend, the mountainous area surrounding Kailua was formed from a giant turned to stone.
- Lanín National Park (national park, Argentina)
Neuquén: …National Park, the province has Lanín and Laguna Blanca national parks.
- Lanius (bird)
butcherbird: …name is given to the Lanius species (see shrike) of the family Laniidae and in Australia to the four to seven species of Cracticus; these are contrastingly patterned (usually black-gray-white) members of the family Cracticidae (order Passeriformes). Cracticus species are stocky, about 28 cm (11 inches) long, with big feet…
- Lanius collurio (bird)
migration: In Europe: Golden orioles (Oriolus oriolus) and red-backed shrikes (Lanius collurio) go to East Africa by way of Greece and Egypt. Swallows—particularly barn swallows (Hirundo rustica) and house martins (Delichon urbica)—and swifts (Apus apus) pass the winter in Africa south of 20° N latitude, particularly in
- Lanius excubitor (bird)
shrike: …most widespread species is the great gray shrike (L. excubitor), called northern shrike in Canada and the United States, a 24-cm (9.5-inch) black-masked bird. The only other New World species is the similar but smaller loggerhead shrike (L. ludovicianus) of North America. Several Eurasian species have reddish or brown markings.
- Lanius ludovicianus (bird)
shrike: …is the similar but smaller loggerhead shrike (L. ludovicianus) of North America. Several Eurasian species have reddish or brown markings.
- Lanka (Hindu mythology)
Vishvakarman: …architect of the mythical city Lanka and is also said to have made the great image of Jagannatha at Puri (Orissa). He revealed the sciences of architecture and mechanics to humans and is the patron deity of workers, artisans, and artists.
- Länkäran (Azerbaijan)
Länkäran, city, southeastern Azerbaijan. It lies on the shore of the Caspian Sea, in the Länkäran Lowland. First mentioned in the 17th century, it was capital of the Talysh khanate of Iran in the 18th century. It was held by Russia from 1728 to 1735 but only fell definitively to Russia in 1813.
- Länkäran Lowland (lowlands, Azerbaijan)
Azerbaijan: Relief, drainage, and soils: …feet [2,492 meters]), and the Länkäran Lowland, along the Caspian coast. This lowland, an extension of the Kura-Aras Lowland, reaches the Iranian border near Astara.
- Lankavatara-sutra (Buddhist text)
Lankavatara-sutra, distinctive and influential philosophical discourse in the Mahayana Buddhist tradition that is said to have been preached by the Buddha in the mythical city Lanka. Dating from perhaps the 4th century, although parts of it may be earlier, it is the chief canonical exposition of
- Lankester, Sir Edwin Ray (British zoologist)
Sir Edwin Ray Lankester was a British authority on general zoology at the turn of the 19th century, who made important contributions to comparative anatomy, embryology, parasitology, and anthropology. In 1871, while a student at the University of Oxford, Lankester became one of the first persons to
- Lankford, James (United States senator)
James Lankford is an American politician who was elected as a Republican to the U.S. Senate in 2014 and began representing Oklahoma the following year. He previously served in the U.S. House of Representatives (2011–15). Lankford grew up in Texas. He studied secondary education at the University of
- LANL (laboratory, Los Alamos, New Mexico, United States)
Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL), the laboratory that produced the first atomic bombs used during World War II and home of the primary nuclear weapons research facility in the United States. It is located in Los Alamos, New Mexico, 35 miles (56 km) northwest of Santa Fe. In 1942 General Leslie
- Lanman, Charles Rockwell (American scholar)
Charles Rockwell Lanman was an American scholar of Sanskrit who wrote the widely used Sanskrit Reader (1884) and helped edit the “Harvard Oriental Series,” which offered scholarly English translations of the ancient Hindu Vedic texts. He received his doctorate from Yale University, where he studied
- Lannemezan, Plateau de (plateau, France)
alluvial fan: The Plateau de Lannemezan on the northern side of the Pyrenees in France, for example, is a large piedmont alluvial fan that is still being built up by the tributaries of the Garonne and Adour rivers. This fan, though, is much too large to have been…
- Lannes, Jean, duc de Montebello (French general)
Jean Lannes, duc de Montebello was a French general who, despite his humble origins, rose to the rank of marshal of the First Empire. Napoleon said of him, “I found him a pygmy and left him a giant.” Lannes, the son of a stable boy, learned to read and write from a village priest and was
- Lanning, Andy (writer)
Guardians of the Galaxy: …team of Dan Abnett and Andy Lanning, who were largely responsible for the revival of Marvel’s “cosmic” comic properties, introduced a new team, set in the present day, in Guardians of the Galaxy vol. 2, no. 1 (May 2008). This new generation of Guardians included galactic adventurer Star-Lord; Bug, a…
- Lanois, Daniel (Canadian musician and producer)
Bob Dylan: …with Oh Mercy, produced by Daniel Lanois. When Life magazine published a list of the 100 most influential Americans of the 20th century in 1990, Dylan was included, and in 1991 he received a lifetime achievement award from the Recording Academy. In 1992 Columbia Records celebrated the 30th anniversary of…
- lanolin (chemical compound)
lanolin, purified form of wool grease or wool wax (sometimes erroneously called wool fat), used either alone or with soft paraffin or lard or other fat as a base for ointments, emollients, skin foods, salves, superfatted soaps, and fur dressing. Lanolin, a translucent, yellowish-white, soft,
- lanosterol (chemical compound)
carbonium ion: Reactions.: …by way of another compound, lanosterol. In this transformation, acid-catalyzed rearrangements—reaction type 6, described earlier—occur repeatedly.
- Lanoye, Tom (Belgian author)
Belgian literature: Prose: Such authors as Tom Lanoye and Stefan Hertmans made their mark in more than one genre. Lanoye was a performing poet and a passionate, often iconoclastic critic as well as a fiction writer. Hertmans’s critical essays are cosmopolitan and erudite, his poetry hermetic, and his fiction hallucinatory.
- Lanrezac, Charles (French general)
Charles Lanrezac was a French army commander during the first part of World War I who, though a capable tactician, proved unable to stop the German advance in northern France and was consequently replaced. Rising steadily in the French army, Lanrezac had by 1914 become a member of the Conseil
- Lansbury, Angela (American actress)
Angela Lansbury was a British-born American character actress who achieved success and acclaim for her stage, film, and television work. Lansbury and her widowed mother, actress Moyna MacGill, emigrated from England to the United States in 1940. From 1940 to 1942 Lansbury studied acting at the
- Lansbury, George (British politician)
George Lansbury was a leader of the British Labour Party (1931–35), a Socialist and poor-law reformer who was forced to resign the party leadership because of his extreme pacifism. A railway worker at the age of 14 and later a timber merchant, he became a propagandist for Henry Mayers Hyndman’s
- Lansdown Crescent (terrace, Bath, England, United Kingdom)
Bath: …the son; the Guildhall, 1775; Lansdown Crescent, built by John Palmer, 1796–97; and the 1795 pavilion in Sydney Gardens, Bathwick, which now houses the art collection of the Holburne Museum. In 1942 the Assembly Rooms of 1771 were destroyed in an air raid from which the whole city suffered severely,…
- Lansdowne portait (painting by Gilbert Stuart)
George Washington, full-length oil portrait of George Washington created in 1796 by his most famous portraitist, Gilbert Stuart. It shows Washington during his last year as president of the United States and is a strong demonstration of Stuart’s skills. This portrait of the gentlemanly planter who
- Lansdowne, Henry Charles Keith Petty-Fitzmaurice, 5th marquess of (British diplomat)
Henry Charles Keith Petty-Fitzmaurice, 5th marquess of Lansdowne was an Irish nobleman and British diplomat who served as viceroy of Canada and of India, secretary for war, and foreign secretary. The eldest son of the 4th marquess, he attended Eton and, on the death of his father, succeeded at age
- Lansdowne, William Petty-Fitzmaurice, 1st marquess of (prime minister of Great Britain)
William Petty-Fitzmaurice, 1st marquess of Lansdowne was a British statesman and prime minister (July 1782 to April 1783) during the reign of George III. The son of John Fitzmaurice, who took the additional name of Petty on succeeding to the Irish estates of his uncle and who was created earl of
- Lansel, Peider (Romansh poet)
Peider Lansel was a Romansh leader of the revival of Rhaeto-Romance language and culture and one of its most accomplished lyric poets. Spending every summer at his family’s native village of Sent in the Engadine, Lansel devoted himself to the collection and critical examination of Rhaeto-Romance
- Lansing (Michigan, United States)
Lansing, capital of Michigan, U.S., located in Ingham county. The city site, on the Grand River at its junction with the Red Cedar River, was a wilderness when the state capital was moved there from Detroit (about 85 miles [140 km] southeast) in 1847. At first called Village of Michigan, in 1849 it
- Lansing Declaration (United States government)
Tomáš Masaryk: Fight for Czech and Slovak independence: The Lansing Declaration of May 1918 expressed the sympathy of the U.S. government with the Czechoslovak freedom movement, and Czechoslovakia’s liberation became one of Wilson’s Fourteen Points for the post-World War I peace settlement. Masaryk also concluded the so-called Pittsburgh Convention with the Slovak associations in…
- Lansing Group (geology)
Kansas City Group: …Group underlie those of the Lansing Group and overlie those of the Pleasanton Group, all of which are included within the Missourian Series. The Kansas City Group consists of six limestone formations that alternate with six shale units. The rocks are fossiliferous and contain important fusulinid genera useful for stratigraphic…
- Lansing, Robert (United States statesman)
Robert Lansing was an international lawyer and U.S. secretary of state (1915–20), who negotiated the Lansing–Ishii Agreement (1917) attempting to harmonize U.S.–Japanese relations toward China; he eventually broke with Pres. Woodrow Wilson over differences in approach to the League of Nations.
- Lansing–Ishii Agreement (United States-Japanese history)
Lansing–Ishii Agreement, (Nov. 2, 1917), attempt to reconcile conflicting U.S. and Japanese policies in China during World War I by a public exchange of notes between the U.S. secretary of state, Robert Lansing, and Viscount Ishii Kikujirō of Japan, a special envoy to Washington. Japan promised