- Lee, Nelle Harper (American writer)
Harper Lee was an American writer nationally acclaimed for her novel To Kill a Mockingbird (1960). Harper Lee’s father was Amasa Coleman Lee, a lawyer who by all accounts resembled the hero of her novel in his sound citizenship and warmheartedness. The plot of To Kill a Mockingbird is based in part
- Lee, Opal (American activist)
Opal Lee’s life has been defined by one date: June 19. Meet Opal Lee Lee became widely known in the 21st century as the “Grandmother of Juneteenth” for her role in having the date—when Union soldiers arrived in Texas in 1865 to tell the enslaved people of the state of that the Emancipation
- Lee, Peggy (American singer and songwriter)
Peggy Lee was an American popular singer and songwriter, known for her alluring, delicately husky voice and reserved style. The writer of more than 250 songs, she is regarded as the first important female singer-songwriter in the history of American popular music, noted for her brazen and sensuous
- Lee, Rebecca Davis (American physician)
Rebecca Lee Crumpler was the first Black woman to become a medical doctor in the United States and one of the first African Americans to write a medical book. She published A Book of Medical Discourses in 1883. At a time when most medical schools did not admit African Americans, and fewer than 300
- Lee, Reginald (British ship lookout)
Titanic: Final hours: Two lookouts, Frederick Fleet and Reginald Lee, were stationed in the crow’s nest of the Titanic. Their task was made difficult by the fact that the ocean was unusually calm that night: because there would be little water breaking at its base, an iceberg would be more difficult to spot.…
- Lee, Richard Henry (United States statesman)
Richard Henry Lee was an American statesman. Educated in England at Wakefield Academy, Lee returned to America in 1751 and served as a justice of the peace in Westmoreland county, Va. He also served in the Virginia House of Burgesses (1758–75). Lee opposed arbitrary British policies at the time of
- Lee, River (river, England, United Kingdom)
River Lea, river rising north of Luton in the county of Bedfordshire, England. It flows for 46 miles (74 km) east and then south to enter the River Thames near Bromley-by-Bow, in the London borough of Tower Hamlets. In the 17th century an important aqueduct known as the New River was constructed in
- Lee, Robert E. (Confederate general)
Robert E. Lee was a U.S. Army officer (1829–61), Confederate general (1861–65), college president (1865–70), and central figure in contending memory traditions of the American Civil War. Robert Edward Lee was the son of Henry (“Light-horse Harry”) Lee and Ann Hill Carter Lee. His father had been a
- Lee, Robert Edward (Confederate general)
Robert E. Lee was a U.S. Army officer (1829–61), Confederate general (1861–65), college president (1865–70), and central figure in contending memory traditions of the American Civil War. Robert Edward Lee was the son of Henry (“Light-horse Harry”) Lee and Ann Hill Carter Lee. His father had been a
- Lee, Robert Edward (Confederate general)
Robert E. Lee was a U.S. Army officer (1829–61), Confederate general (1861–65), college president (1865–70), and central figure in contending memory traditions of the American Civil War. Robert Edward Lee was the son of Henry (“Light-horse Harry”) Lee and Ann Hill Carter Lee. His father had been a
- Lee, Rowland V. (American director)
Rowland V. Lee was an American film director of silent and sound pictures who worked in a variety of genres. Born to stage-veteran parents, Lee began performing at an early age. In 1917 he started acting in films, but, after serving in the military during World War I, he returned to Hollywood
- Lee, Rowland Vance (American director)
Rowland V. Lee was an American film director of silent and sound pictures who worked in a variety of genres. Born to stage-veteran parents, Lee began performing at an early age. In 1917 he started acting in films, but, after serving in the military during World War I, he returned to Hollywood
- Lee, Sammy (American diver)
Sammy Lee was an American diver, the first Asian American man to win an Olympic gold medal and the first diver to win consecutive Olympic gold medals in the platform event. While growing up, Lee, the son of Korean immigrants, faced racial prejudice and was permitted to use his community’s public
- Lee, Shelton Jackson (American director)
Spike Lee is an American filmmaker known for his uncompromising provocative approach to controversial subject matter. The son of the jazz composer Bill Lee, he was reared in a middle-class Brooklyn neighbourhood. He majored in communications at Atlanta’s Morehouse College, where he directed his
- Lee, Sir Christopher Frank Carandini (English actor)
Christopher Lee was an English actor known for his film portrayals of villains ranging from Dracula to J.R.R. Tolkien’s wizard Saruman. Lee was born to an Italian contessa and a British army officer. After a stint at Wellington College (1936–39), he joined the Royal Air Force (1941–46), attaining
- Lee, Spike (American director)
Spike Lee is an American filmmaker known for his uncompromising provocative approach to controversial subject matter. The son of the jazz composer Bill Lee, he was reared in a middle-class Brooklyn neighbourhood. He majored in communications at Atlanta’s Morehouse College, where he directed his
- Lee, Stan (American comic book writer)
Stan Lee was an American comic book writer best known for his work with Marvel Comics. Among the hundreds of characters and teams that he helped to create were the Fantastic Four, Spider-Man, the Avengers, and the X-Men. After graduating from high school at age 16, Lieber was hired as an editorial
- Lee, Suni (American gymnast)
Suni Lee is an American gymnast who won three medals at the 2020 Olympic Games in Tokyo (delayed until 2021 because of the COVID-19 pandemic). Lee captured the individual all-around gold medal, becoming the fifth consecutive American woman to claim the sport’s most coveted prize. She also earned
- Lee, Sunisa (American gymnast)
Suni Lee is an American gymnast who won three medals at the 2020 Olympic Games in Tokyo (delayed until 2021 because of the COVID-19 pandemic). Lee captured the individual all-around gold medal, becoming the fifth consecutive American woman to claim the sport’s most coveted prize. She also earned
- Lee, Tancy (Scottish boxer)
Jimmy Wilde: …during the 17th round against Tancy Lee of Scotland. After regaining the European title, Wilde fought the American flyweight champion, Young Zulu Kid (Giuseppe Di Melfi), on Dec. 18, 1916. With his 11th-round knockout, Wilde became the first world flyweight champion, a title that he held until he was knocked…
- Lee, Tommy (American musician)
Pamela Anderson: …within a few weeks married Tommy Lee, drummer for the heavy metal band Mötley Crüe. A videotape of their personal lives, including footage of the couple engaging in sex, was stolen from their home in 1995, and copies quickly became widely available. While she continued to appear on Baywatch and…
- Lee, Tsung-Dao (Chinese-American physicist)
Tsung-Dao Lee is a Chinese-born American physicist who, with Chen Ning Yang, received the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1957 for work in discovering violations of the principle of parity conservation (the quality of space reflection symmetry of subatomic particle interactions), thus bringing about
- Lee, Vernon (English essayist)
Vernon Lee was an English essayist and novelist who is best known for her works on aesthetics. Paget was born to cosmopolitan and peripatetic intellectuals who in 1873 settled their family in Florence. In 1878 she determined to publish under a masculine pseudonym in order to be taken seriously, and
- Lee, William (American writer)
William S. Burroughs was an American writer of experimental novels that evoke, in deliberately erratic prose, a nightmarish, sometimes wildly humorous world. His sexual explicitness (he was an avowed and outspoken homosexual) and the frankness with which he dealt with his experiences as a drug
- Lee, William (English inventor)
William Lee was an English inventor who devised the first knitting machine (1589), the only one in use for centuries. Its principle of operation remains in use. Lee, a clergyman at Calverton, is said to have developed the machine because a woman whom he was courting showed more interest in knitting
- Lee, Witness (Chinese religious leader)
the Local Church: …one of the church’s elders, Witness Lee (1905–97), to lead the mission in Taiwan. Under Lee’s direction the church flourished and spread to neighbouring countries, eventually reaching the United States. There it attracted members from Chinese American communities and later from the general population. In 1962 Lee moved to California,…
- Lee, Yuan T. (Taiwanese-American chemist)
Yuan T. Lee is a Taiwanese-American chemist who, with Dudley R. Herschbach and John C. Polanyi, received the Nobel Prize for Chemistry in 1986 for his role in the development of chemical-reaction dynamics. Lee was educated in Taiwan and at the University of California at Berkeley (Ph.D., 1965). He
- Lee-Enfield rifle (weapon)
Lee-Enfield rifle, rifle adopted by the British army as its basic infantry weapon in 1902. The short, magazine-loaded Lee-Enfield (Mark I, or SMLE) superseded the longer Lee-Enfield that was first produced in 1895. The short rifle had a length of 44.5 inches (111.6 cm) and combined the bolt action
- Leeb, Wilhelm von (German general)
Battle of France: Allied defenses and the German plan of attack: Wilhelm von Leeb’s Army Group C would demonstrate against the Maginot Line, and Gen. Fedor von Bock’s Army Group B would carry out the invasion of Belgium and the Netherlands. Allied armies would thus be drawn forward into Belgium in accordance with their expectations of…
- leech (annelid)
leech, (subclass Hirudinea), any of about 650 species of segmented worms (phylum Annelida) characterized by a small sucker, which contains the mouth, at the anterior end of the body and a large sucker located at the posterior end. All leeches have 34 body segments. The length of the body ranges
- Leech, John (British caricaturist)
John Leech was an English caricaturist notable for his contributions to Punch magazine. Leech was educated at Charterhouse, where he met William Makepeace Thackeray, who was to be his lifelong friend. He then began to study medicine but soon drifted into the artistic profession and in 1835
- leechcraft (medical procedure)
leeching, the application of a living leech to the skin in order to initiate blood flow or deplete blood from a localized area of the body. Through the 19th century leeching was frequently practiced in Europe, Asia, and America to deplete the body of quantities of blood, in a manner similar to
- leechee (fruit)
lychee, (Litchi chinensis), evergreen tree of the soapberry family (Sapindaceae), grown for its edible fruit. Lychee is native to Southeast Asia and has been a favourite fruit of the Cantonese since ancient times. The fruit is usually eaten fresh but can also be canned or dried. The flavour of the
- leeching (medical procedure)
leeching, the application of a living leech to the skin in order to initiate blood flow or deplete blood from a localized area of the body. Through the 19th century leeching was frequently practiced in Europe, Asia, and America to deplete the body of quantities of blood, in a manner similar to
- LEED (physics)
electron diffraction: …techniques, such as LEEDX (low-energy electron diffraction), depend on these diffraction patterns to examine solids, liquids, and gases.
- LEED® standards (architecture)
LEED® standards, a certification program devised in 1994 by the U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC; founded 1993) to encourage sustainable practices design and development by means of tools and criteria for performance measurement. It is “a voluntary, consensus-based, market-driven building rating
- Leeder, Sigurd (British dancer)
Rudolf Laban: Sigurd Leeder and Kurt Jooss, also pupils, further developed and made extensive use of eukinetics in their teaching and choreography.
- Leedes, William (British explorer)
Ralph Fitch: with John Newberry, John Eldred, William Leedes, and James Story, Fitch embarked in the Tiger and reached Syria in late April. (Act I, scene 3 of William Shakespeare’s Macbeth alludes to the trip.) From Aleppo (Syria), they went overland to the Euphrates, which they descended to Al-Fallūjah, now in Iraq,…
- Leeds (England, United Kingdom)
Leeds, urban area (from 2011 built-up area), city, and metropolitan borough, metropolitan county of West Yorkshire, historic county of Yorkshire, northern England. It lies along the River Aire about 30 miles (48 km) northeast of Manchester. The coal and iron ore deposits in the locality, a
- Leeds (district, England, United Kingdom)
Leeds: …built-up area), city, and metropolitan borough, metropolitan county of West Yorkshire, historic county of Yorkshire, northern England. It lies along the River Aire about 30 miles (48 km) northeast of Manchester. The coal and iron ore deposits in the locality, a plentiful supply of soft water from the Aire’s tributaries,…
- Leeds and Liverpool Canal (canal, England, United Kingdom)
canals and inland waterways: Technological development: …Bingley, for example, on the Leeds and Liverpool Canal, a lock staircase was built, and, on the hilly areas at Ketley in Shropshire, inclined planes were constructed in 1788 to haul tugboats from one level to another. The longest plane, about 69 metres (225 feet), was on the Hobbacott Down…
- Leeds Civic Hall (building, Leeds, England, United Kingdom)
Leeds: …nearby on Millennium Square is Leeds Civic Hall (1933), which contains the city council chambers, the lord mayor’s office, and a banqueting hall. A newer and larger performance venue, first direct arena, opened in 2013. Another significant 21st-century addition to Leeds’s architectural landscape is the Trinity Leeds shopping centre, which…
- Leeds Corn Exchange (building, Leeds, England, United Kingdom)
Leeds: The Leeds Corn Exchange (1864), a masterpiece of Victorian architecture, was designed by Cuthbert Brodrick—as was Leeds Town Hall (1858), envisioned as a municipal palace and dedicated by Queen Victoria but now principally a concert and performance venue. Located nearby on Millennium Square is Leeds Civic…
- Leeds Intelligencer (British newspaper)
Yorkshire Post, daily newspaper that is the chief Conservative paper published in England outside London. It is one of the most prestigious provincial papers in Britain. The Post is descended from the Leeds Intelligencer, a four-page weekly founded in Leeds, Yorkshire, England, by Griffith Knight
- Leeds Times (British publication)
Samuel Smiles: …edited the progressive and reformist Leeds Times. His radicalism was a practical application of the doctrines of the utilitarian philosophers (“philosophical radicals”) Jeremy Bentham and James Mill. He was a zealous advocate of material progress based on individual enterprise and free trade. From 1845 to 1866 he was engaged in…
- Leeds Town Hall (building, Leeds, England, United Kingdom)
Leeds: …designed by Cuthbert Brodrick—as was Leeds Town Hall (1858), envisioned as a municipal palace and dedicated by Queen Victoria but now principally a concert and performance venue. Located nearby on Millennium Square is Leeds Civic Hall (1933), which contains the city council chambers, the lord mayor’s office, and a banqueting…
- Leeds, Thomas Osborne, 1st duke of (English statesman)
Thomas Osborne, 1st duke of Leeds was an English statesman who, while chief minister to King Charles II, organized the Tories in Parliament. In addition, he played a key role in bringing William and Mary to the English throne in 1689. The son of a Royalist Yorkshire landowner, Osborne did not
- Leeds, Thomas Osborne, 1st Duke of, Marquess of Carmarthen, Earl of Danby, Viscount Latimer of Danby, Viscount Osborne of Dunblane, Baron Osborne of Kiveton (English statesman)
Thomas Osborne, 1st duke of Leeds was an English statesman who, while chief minister to King Charles II, organized the Tories in Parliament. In addition, he played a key role in bringing William and Mary to the English throne in 1689. The son of a Royalist Yorkshire landowner, Osborne did not
- LEEDX (physics)
electron diffraction: …techniques, such as LEEDX (low-energy electron diffraction), depend on these diffraction patterns to examine solids, liquids, and gases.
- Leedy, U. G. (American musician)
marimba: Deagan and U.G. Leedy. It is a tube-resonated instrument pitched an octave below the orchestral xylophone; its range varies, but 312octaves upward from the C below middle C is common. Players may hold two sticks in each hand to play up to four notes at a time.…
- leek (plant)
leek, (Allium porrum), hardy biennial plant of the amaryllis family (Amaryllidaceae), grown as a vegetable. The leek is an ancient crop and is native to eastern Mediterranean lands and the Middle East. The plant is related to the onion and has a mild, sweet, onionlike flavour. Leek stalks are
- Leerdam (Netherlands)
glassware: Belgium and the Netherlands: The Dutch glassworks at Leerdam played an important part in the modern movement and followed a line of development distinct from that of the Scandinavian factories. In 1915 the decision was made to invite designs from artists, and by the early 1920s excellent simple tablewares were being made to…
- lees (fermentation sediment)
wine: Postfermentation treatment: …found in the sediment, or lees. Separation of the supernatant wine from the lees is called racking. The containers are kept full from this time on by “topping,” a process performed frequently, as the temperature of the wine, and hence its volume, decreases. During the early stages, topping is necessary…
- Leese, Oliver (British general)
World War II: The Italian front, 1944: …commanded by Major General Sir Oliver Leese, from the Adriatic flank of the peninsula to the west, where it was to strengthen the 5th Army’s pressure around Monte Cassino and on the approaches to the valley of the Liri (headstream of the Garigliano). The combined attack, which was started in…
- Leeser, Isaac (American rabbi)
Judaism: American Judaism: …head of the traditionalists was Isaac Leeser (1806–68), a native of Germany, who had attempted to create an indigenous American community along the lines of a modernized traditionalism. After his death, Conservative forces became disorganized, but, in reaction to Reform, they defined themselves by their attachment to the Sabbath, the…
- leeuw van Vlaanderen, De (work by Conscience)
Hendrik Conscience: …De leeuw van Vlaanderen (1838; The Lion of Flanders), the passionate epic of the revolt of the Flemish towns against France and the victory of the Flemish militia at the Battle of the Golden Spurs (1302), he not only created the Flemish novel but wrote an outstanding historical novel in…
- Leeuw, Gerardus van der (Dutch theologian)
Gerardus van der Leeuw was a Dutch Reformed theologian and historian of religions, who contributed significantly to the phenomenological (descriptive) analysis of religious experience. Leeuw proposed that a nonrational (mystical) tradition underlies the evolution of religious manifestations. He
- Leeuwarden (Netherlands)
Leeuwarden, gemeente (municipality), northern Netherlands. Leeuwarden lies at the junction of the Harlinger-Trek Canal and the Dokkumer Ee Canal. Originally a port on the Middelzee (reclaimed since the 13th century), it was chartered in 1435, became the capital of Friesland in 1504, and was from
- Leeuwen, Denys van (Flemish theologian)
Dionysius the Carthusian was a theologian and mystic, one of the important contributors to, and propagators of, the influential school of Rhenish spirituality originating in the 14th century. Educated at the University of Cologne, Dionysius entered the Carthusian order at the charterhouse of
- Leeuwenhoek, Antonie van (Dutch scientist)
Antonie van Leeuwenhoek was a Dutch microscopist who was the first to observe bacteria and protozoa. His researches on lower animals refuted the doctrine of spontaneous generation, and his observations helped lay the foundations for the sciences of bacteriology and protozoology. At a young age,
- Leeuwin-Naturaliste National Park (national park, Western Australia, Australia)
Devil’s Lair: …in the dune limestone of Leeuwin–Naturaliste Ridge during the the Quaternary Period (about 2.6 million years ago to the present). The cave’s floor, composed of dozens of distinct layers, is an amalgam of thin, lightly cemented sandy strata, flowstone, limestone fragments, and stalagmitic masses. Since the 1970s, excavation in the…
- Leeuwis, Denys de (Flemish theologian)
Dionysius the Carthusian was a theologian and mystic, one of the important contributors to, and propagators of, the influential school of Rhenish spirituality originating in the 14th century. Educated at the University of Cologne, Dionysius entered the Carthusian order at the charterhouse of
- Leeward Islands (islands, French Polynesia)
Îles Sous le Vent, archipelago of five inhabited volcanic islands and four uninhabited, low-lying coral atolls constituting the western part of the Society Islands, French Polynesia, in the central South Pacific. Raiatea, the principal island, and neighbouring Tahaa are part of a single submarine
- Leeward Islands (islands, West Indies)
Leeward Islands, an arc of West Indian islands that constitute the most westerly and northerly of the Lesser Antilles, at the northeastern end of the Caribbean Sea, between latitudes 16° and 19° N and longitudes 61° and 65° W. The history of British, French, Spanish, and Dutch colonialism in the
- Leeward Islands (islands, Cabo Verde)
Sotavento Islands, island group in the Atlantic Ocean off the coast of western Africa and the southern of two island groups that constitute Cabo Verde. The archipelago consists of the islands of Brava, Fogo, Maio, and Santiago, as well as the islets of Grande, Luís Carneiro, and Cima, together
- Lefèbvre, Alexandre (French-American inventor)
bicycle: Treadles and pedals: powered velocipedes: Documents indicate that Alexandre Lefèbvre of Saint-Denis, France, built a two-wheeled velocipede powered by treadles connected to cranks on the rear wheel in 1842. Lefèbvre took his velocipede with him when he immigrated to California in 1861, and it still exists there in the History San José museum.…
- Lefèbvre, Anne (French scholar and translator)
Anne Dacier was a classical commentator, translator, and editor, famous throughout Europe for her translations of the Iliad and the Odyssey, for her part in the French literary controversy between the “ancients and moderns,” and for her work, with her husband, André Dacier, on the famous Delphin
- Lefebvre, Eugène (pilot)
stunt flying: Eugène Lefebvre was the first engineer and chief pilot of the Wright company in France. (On September 7, 1909, Lefebvre was the first pilot to die in an airplane crash. In the text following, pilots who died when their airplanes crashed or in aerial combat…
- Lefebvre, François-Joseph, Duc De Dantzig (French general)
François-Joseph Lefebvre, duke de Dantzig was a French general who was one of the 18 marshals of the empire appointed by Napoleon in May 1804. Lefebvre, the son of an Alsatian miller, worked for a time as a clerk before entering a military career in the French Guards in 1773. A sergeant at the
- Lefebvre, Georges (French historian)
Georges Lefebvre was a French historian noted for his studies of various aspects of the French Revolution. Lefebvre’s major work, Les Paysans du Nord pendant la Révolution française (1924; “The Peasants of the North During the French Revolution”), was the result of 20 years of research into the
- Lefebvre, Jean-François (French noble)
French literature: The Enlightenment: …of Jean Calas and the chevalier de La Barre.
- Lefebvre, Marcel (French archbishop)
Marcel Lefebvre was an ultraconservative Roman Catholic archbishop who opposed the liberalizing changes begun by the Second Vatican Council (1962–65) and who was excommunicated in 1988 for consecrating new traditionalist bishops without the approval of the Holy See in Rome. He created the bishops
- Lefebvre, Pierre-François-Joseph, duc de Dantzig (French general)
François-Joseph Lefebvre, duke de Dantzig was a French general who was one of the 18 marshals of the empire appointed by Napoleon in May 1804. Lefebvre, the son of an Alsatian miller, worked for a time as a clerk before entering a military career in the French Guards in 1773. A sergeant at the
- Lefèvre d’Étaples, Jacques (French humanist and theologian)
Jacques Lefèvre d’Étaples was an outstanding French humanist, theologian, and translator whose scholarship stimulated scriptural studies during the Protestant Reformation. Ordained a priest, Lefèvre taught philosophy in Paris from about 1490 to 1507. During visits to Italy in 1492 and 1500, he
- Lefevre, Pierre (French theologian)
Peter Faber was a French Jesuit theologian and a cofounder of the Society of Jesus, who was tutor and friend of Ignatius Loyola at Paris. He was appointed professor of theology at Rome by Pope Paul III (1537), founded Jesuit colleges at Cologne and in Spain, and was a delegate to the Council of
- Lefká Mountains (mountains, Greece)
Lefká Mountains, highest and most precipitous massif in western Crete (Modern Greek: Kríti), located a few miles south of the Cretan capital, Chaniá, in the nomós (department) of Chaniá, Greece. The limestone peaks have been hollowed out by erosion into high plains such as the Omalós (1,650–3,300
- Lefká, Mount (mountain, Greece)
Lefká Mountains: The highest is Mount Lefká at 8,045 ft (2,452 m). The major stream rising from the Lefká is the Plataniás, which flows past Lákkoi northwestward into the Kólpos (gulf) Khaníon. The region is believed to be the last habitat of the Cretan agrimi, a wild goat. The Lefká…
- Lefkáda (island, Greece)
Leucas, Greek island in the Ionian Sea (Modern Greek: Ióvio Pélagos). It constitutes a dímos (municipality) and with the island of Meganísi forms the perifereiakí enótita (regional unit) of Levkás in the Ionian Islands (Iónia Nisiá) periféreia (region), western Greece. The 117-square-mile
- Lefkandi (grave, Euboea, Greece)
ancient Greek civilization: The post-Mycenaean period and Lefkandi: …uncovered at a site called Lefkandi on Euboea, the island along the eastern flank of Attica (the territory controlled by Athens). The grave, which dates to about 1000 bce, contains the (probably cremated) remains of a man and a woman. The large bronze vessel in which the man’s ashes were…
- Lefkofsky, Eric (American entrepreneur)
Andrew Mason: …the company’s founder, Chicago entrepreneur Eric Lefkofsky. In 2006 Mason earned a scholarship to attend the University of Chicago’s Harris School of Public Policy after creating Policy Tree, a visualization tool for policy debates.
- Lefkoşa (national capital, Cyprus)
Nicosia, city and capital of the Republic of Cyprus. It lies along the Pedieos River, in the centre of the Mesaoria Plain between the Kyrenia Mountains (north) and the Troodos range (south). The city is also the archiepiscopal seat of the autocephalous (having the right to elect its own archbishop
- Lefkosía (national capital, Cyprus)
Nicosia, city and capital of the Republic of Cyprus. It lies along the Pedieos River, in the centre of the Mesaoria Plain between the Kyrenia Mountains (north) and the Troodos range (south). The city is also the archiepiscopal seat of the autocephalous (having the right to elect its own archbishop
- Lefkowitz, Mary (American scholar)
Afrocentrism: Criticism of Afrocentrism: …History (1996), the American classicist Mary Lefkowitz attempted to refute most of the assertions made by Bernal, Diop, and others.
- Lefkowitz, Robert J. (American physician and biologist)
Robert J. Lefkowitz is an American physician and molecular biologist who demonstrated the existence of receptors—molecules that receive and transmit signals for cells. His research on the structure and function of cell-surface receptors—particularly of G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs), the
- Lefkowitz, Robert Joseph (American physician and biologist)
Robert J. Lefkowitz is an American physician and molecular biologist who demonstrated the existence of receptors—molecules that receive and transmit signals for cells. His research on the structure and function of cell-surface receptors—particularly of G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs), the
- Lefschetz, Solomon (American mathematician)
mathematics: Algebraic topology: …then by the American engineer-turned-mathematician Solomon Lefschetz, concerning the nature of manifolds of arbitrary dimension. Roughly speaking, a manifold is the n-dimensional generalization of the idea of a surface; it is a space any small piece of which looks like a piece of n-dimensional space. Such an object is often…
- left (ideology)
left, in politics, the portion of the political spectrum associated in general with egalitarianism and popular or state control of the major institutions of political and economic life. The term dates from the 1790s, when in the French revolutionary parliament the socialist representatives sat to
- Left Alone Revisited (album by Shepp and Waldron)
Archie Shepp: …to release new material, including Left Alone Revisited (2005), a tribute with pianist Mal Waldron to jazz singer Billie Holiday; Wo!man (2011), an album of duets with German pianist Joachim Kühn; and Ocean Bridges (2020), which incorporated rap and hip-hop. The National Endowment for the Arts named Shepp a Jazz…
- Left and Right Hand of Count Leo Tolstoy, The (essay by Mikhaylovsky)
Nikolay Konstantinovich Mikhaylovsky: …most celebrated pieces were “The Left and Right Hand of Count Leo Tolstoy” (1873), which accurately predicted Tolstoy’s later social doctrines, and “A Cruel Talent” (1882), a criticism of Fyodor Dostoyevsky’s The Possessed.
- Left Bank (historical region, Ukraine)
Ukraine: The Ruin: …the east, known as the Left Bank, together with Kyiv (which actually was located west of the river); the arrangement was confirmed in 1686 by the Treaty of Eternal Peace between Poland and Russia.
- Left Bank (district, Paris, France)
Paris: City site: …designation of Right Bank and Left Bank (when facing downstream). Specific places, however, are usually indicated by arrondissement or by quarter (quartier).
- Left Bank Outfall Drain (waterway, Pakistan)
Pakistan: The Indus River plain: …the World Bank, constructed the Left Bank Outfall Drain (LBOD) in the 1980s and ’90s. The intent was to build a large artificial waterway roughly east of and parallel to the Indus to carry salt water from the plains of Punjab and Sindh provinces to the Arabian Sea coast in…
- Left Bank school (French film movement)
Alain Resnais: …milieu was that of the Left Bank school of filmmakers, so called for their political philosophy as well as for a formidable intellectuality related to the cosmopolitan bohemianism of the Saint-Germain-des-Prés district, on the Left Bank of the Seine, in Paris. The orientation of this group was opposite to that…
- Left Bank, The (short stories by Rhys)
Jean Rhys: …a collection of short stories, The Left Bank (1927), was followed by such novels as Postures (1928), After Leaving Mr. Mackenzie (1931), Voyage in the Dark (1934), and Good Morning, Midnight (1939).
- Left Behind (film by Armstrong [2014])
Nicolas Cage: …of an airline pilot in Left Behind (2014), an adaptation of the first book (1995) of Tim LaHaye and Jerry B. Jenkins’s highly successful Left Behind series about the Rapture, and in Oliver Stone’s Snowden (2016) he was cast as a former intelligence officer.
- Left Behind series (book series by Lahaye and Jenkins)
Left Behind series, series of 16 thriller novels written by Jerry B. Jenkins and Tim LaHaye about Evangelical Christians living through an end-times apocalypse inspired by the Book of Revelation. The best-selling books were published by Tyndale House from 1995 to 2007 and generated spinoffs, audio
- Left Book Club (political book club)
Sir Victor Gollancz: Through the Left Book Club, which he founded in 1936, he mobilized intellectuals and the public in the fight against fascism, and after World War II he was a leader in organizing relief efforts in Europe, especially in Germany, through the Save Europe Now campaign. At home…
- Left Chamber (Japanese government)
Dajōkan: …1871, into three chambers: a Left Chamber (Sa-in), the legislative body; a Right Chamber (U-in), which directed the various ministries; and a Central Chamber (Sei-in), which subsumed the powers of the other two chambers.
- Left Communist (Russian political faction)
Left Communist, in Soviet history, one of a group within the Communist Party which in the first half of 1918 opposed Lenin’s practical policies for preserving Communist rule in Russia. The group was led by Nikolay I. Bukharin. Rather than make peace, the Left Communists favoured waging a
- left fielder (baseball)
baseball: Outfielders: The three outfield positions are left fielder, centre fielder, and right fielder. Outfielders must be able to judge the trajectory of flies and have enough speed to run to the point where the ball will come down. Batted or thrown balls that pass beyond the infielders along the ground must…