- Levi, Primo (Italian writer and chemist)
Primo Levi was an Italian-Jewish writer and chemist, noted for his restrained and moving autobiographical account of and reflections on survival in the Nazi concentration camps. Levi was brought up in the small Jewish community in Turin, studied at the University of Turin, and graduated summa cum
- Levi, Salomon (Austrian composer)
Salomon Sulzer was an Austrian Jewish cantor, considered the most important composer of synagogue music in the 19th century. Sulzer was trained in cantorial singing from childhood, studying in Austria and Switzerland and travelling in France. In 1820 he was appointed cantor at Hohenems and served
- Lévi, Sylvain (French orientalist)
Sylvain Lévi was a French Orientalist who wrote on Eastern religion, literature, and history and is particularly noted for his dictionary of Buddhism. Appointed a lecturer at the school of higher studies in Paris (1886), he taught Sanskrit at the Sorbonne (1889–94) and wrote his doctoral
- Levi, Testament of (Pseudepigrapha)
biblical literature: Testaments of the Twelve Patriarchs: …Scrolls: the Aramaic “Testament of Levi” (fragments of it were also discovered in Aramaic in the medieval Geniza, or synagogue storeroom, in Cairo) and a Hebrew fragment of the “Testaments of Naphtali.” A Hebrew “Testament of Judah,” which was used both by the Book of Jubilees and the Testaments of…
- Levi-Civita, Tullio (Italian mathematician)
Tullio Levi-Civita was an Italian mathematician known for his work in differential calculus and relativity theory. At the University of Padua, he studied under Gregorio Ricci Curbastro, with whom he later collaborated in founding the absolute differential calculus (now known as tensor analysis).
- Levi-Montalcini, Rita (Italian-American neurologist)
Rita Levi-Montalcini was an Italian American neurologist who, with biochemist Stanley Cohen, shared the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine in 1986 for her discovery of a bodily substance that stimulates and influences the growth of nerve cells. Levi-Montalcini studied medicine at the University
- Lévi-Strauss, Claude (French anthropologist)
Claude Lévi-Strauss was a French social anthropologist and leading exponent of structuralism, a name applied to the analysis of cultural systems (e.g., kinship and mythical systems) in terms of the structural relations among their elements. Structuralism has influenced not only social science but
- Leviathan (ship)
ship: Passenger liners in the 20th century: Line’s Leviathan; the Imperator became the Cunard Line’s Berengaria; and the Bismarck became the White Star Line’s Majestic. That war severely cut traffic, although ships were used for troop transport. By eliminating German competition and seizing their great ships, the Western Allies returned to competing among…
- Leviathan (telescope, Birr, Ireland)
William Parsons, 3rd earl of Rosse: …largest reflecting telescope, the “Leviathan,” of the 19th century.
- Leviathan (work by Schmidt)
Arno Schmidt: …series of novellas, beginning with Leviathan (1949; Eng. trans. Leviathan), in which a doomed attempt to escape a bombing raid in a commandeered train reflects the plight of humankind as the plaything of a malicious God.
- Leviathan (Middle Eastern mythology)
Leviathan, in Jewish mythology, a primordial sea serpent. Its source is in prebiblical Mesopotamian myth, especially that of the sea monster in the Ugaritic myth of Baal (see Yamm). In the Old Testament, Leviathan appears in Psalms 74:14 as a multiheaded sea serpent that is killed by God and given
- Leviathan (work by Hobbes)
Leviathan, magnum opus of the early-modern English political philosopher, ethicist, metaphysician, and scientist Thomas Hobbes (1588–1679). First published in 1651, Leviathan; or, The Matter, Form, and Power of a Commonwealth, Ecclesiastical and Civil develops a theory of politics presented in
- Leviathan (novel by Auster)
Paul Auster: …novels Moon Palace (1989) and Leviathan (1992). The Invention of Solitude (1982) is both a memoir about the death of his father and a meditation on the act of writing. Auster also penned several verse volumes including Unearth (1974) and Wall Writing (1976) as well as the essay collections White…
- Leviathan of the Seven Heads (Middle Eastern mythology)
Leviathan, in Jewish mythology, a primordial sea serpent. Its source is in prebiblical Mesopotamian myth, especially that of the sea monster in the Ugaritic myth of Baal (see Yamm). In the Old Testament, Leviathan appears in Psalms 74:14 as a multiheaded sea serpent that is killed by God and given
- Leviathan; or the Matter, Form, and Power of a Commonwealth, Ecclesiastical and Civil (work by Hobbes)
Leviathan, magnum opus of the early-modern English political philosopher, ethicist, metaphysician, and scientist Thomas Hobbes (1588–1679). First published in 1651, Leviathan; or, The Matter, Form, and Power of a Commonwealth, Ecclesiastical and Civil develops a theory of politics presented in
- Levin, Carl (United States senator)
Gary Peters: Carl Levin announced that he would not seek reelection in 2014, Peters ran for his seat and won by a large margin. He entered the Senate the following year.
- Levin, Fishel Aaronovich (American chemist)
Phoebus Levene was a Russian-born American chemist and pioneer in the study of nucleic acids. On receiving an M.D. degree from the St. Petersburg Imperial Medical Academy in 1891, Levene fled from Russian anti-Semitism and settled in New York City. While practicing medicine there, he studied
- Levin, Gerald (American entrepreneur)
WarnerMedia: Time Warner: …died in December 1992, and Gerald (Jerry) Levin became CEO of Time Warner Inc.
- Levin, Henry (American director)
Henry Levin was an American filmmaker who was an efficient contract director of B-movies and worked in a variety of genres, including film noir, musical, western, and science fiction. Levin worked in the theatre as an actor and director before launching a film career in the early 1940s. He was
- Levin, Ira (American author)
The Stepford Wives: …Wives, novel by American author Ira Levin, published in 1972. It has been described as the first “feminist horror novel,” with echoes of Levin’s earlier horror masterpiece Rosemary’s Baby.
- Levin, Ira Marvin (American author)
The Stepford Wives: …Wives, novel by American author Ira Levin, published in 1972. It has been described as the first “feminist horror novel,” with echoes of Levin’s earlier horror masterpiece Rosemary’s Baby.
- Levin, Irv (American sports owner)
Los Angeles Clippers: …owner of the Boston Celtics, Irv Levin, a Californian, wanted to move the Celtics to his home state but was prevented by the NBA from moving the historic franchise. As a compromise, the owner of the Braves, John Y. Brown, traded franchises with Levin, who relocated his new team to…
- Levin, Jerry (American entrepreneur)
WarnerMedia: Time Warner: …died in December 1992, and Gerald (Jerry) Levin became CEO of Time Warner Inc.
- Levin, Joseph (American attorney)
Morris Dees: …Center (SPLC) with American attorney Joseph Levin in 1971 in Montgomery, Alabama. Under Dees’s leadership, the SPLC won several unprecedented lawsuits against hate organizations and their leaders.
- Levin, Konstantine (fictional character)
Konstantine Levin, fictional character whose happy marriage is presented as a contrast to the tragic love affair between Anna Karenina and Count Vronsky in Leo Tolstoy’s novel Anna Karenina
- Levin, Meyer (American author)
Meyer Levin was an American author of novels and nonfiction about the Jewish people and Israel. Levin first became known with the novel Yehuda (1931). In 1945 he wrote and produced the first Palestinian feature film, My Father’s House (book, 1947), which tells of Jews who are driven out of Poland
- Levin, Rahel (German patroness)
Rahel Varnhagen von Ense was a German literary hostess from early in the 19th century whose soirees were attended by many of the German Romantics, notably August Wilhelm von Schlegel, Friedrich von Schlegel, Ludwig Tieck, and Heinrich Heine. Levin was from a wealthy Jewish family of Berlin. Her
- Levin, Simon A. (American ecologist)
patch dynamics: History of patch dynamics: In the 1970s, American ecologist Simon A. Levin and American zoologist Robert T. Paine developed a mathematical theory to describe the pattern and dynamics of an intertidal community as a patch mosaic created and maintained by tidal disturbances. By the end of the following decade, patch dynamics had emerged as…
- Levin, Tony (American musician)
King Crimson: Turmoil and hiatus: …singer Adrian Belew, and bassist Tony Levin. The band’s reimagined musical style drew inspiration from African and Indonesian music and incorporated elements of postpunk and minimalist music. The group released three more albums in this incarnation: Discipline (1981), Beat (1982), and Three of a Perfect Pair (1984). In 1984 Fripp…
- Levin, Vladimir (Russian computer programmer)
cybercrime: Wire fraud: …fraud schemes was orchestrated by Vladimir Levin, a Russian programmer with a computer software firm in St. Petersburg. In 1994, with the aid of dozens of confederates, Levin began transferring some $10 million from subsidiaries of Citibank, N.A., in Argentina and Indonesia to bank accounts in San Francisco, Tel Aviv,…
- Lévinas, Emmanuel (French philosopher)
Emmanuel Lévinas was a Lithuanian-born French philosopher renowned for his powerful critique of the preeminence of ontology (the philosophical study of being) in the history of Western philosophy, particularly in the work of the German philosopher Martin Heidegger (1889–1976). Lévinas began his
- Levine, Adam (American musician)
Adam Levine is an American musician, actor, and television personality who first gained fame as the lead singer and chief songwriter of Maroon 5 and later broadened his audience as a coach on the television singing competition The Voice (2011–19). Levine grew up in Los Angeles; his father was the
- Levine, Adam Noah (American musician)
Adam Levine is an American musician, actor, and television personality who first gained fame as the lead singer and chief songwriter of Maroon 5 and later broadened his audience as a coach on the television singing competition The Voice (2011–19). Levine grew up in Los Angeles; his father was the
- Levine, Dov (American physicist)
quasicrystal: Quasiperiodicity: Dov Levine and Paul Steinhardt, physicists at the University of Pennsylvania, proposed a resolution of this apparent conflict. They suggested that the translational order of atoms in quasicrystalline alloys might be quasiperiodic rather than periodic. Quasiperiodic patterns share certain characteristics with periodic patterns. In particular,…
- Levine, Jack (American artist)
Jack Levine was a painter who was prominent in the American Social Realist school of the 1930s. Trained first at the Jewish Welfare Center in Roxbury, Massachusetts, and later at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, Levine also studied at Harvard University from 1929 to 1931. From 1935
- Levine, James (American conductor and pianist)
James Levine was an American conductor and pianist, especially noted for his work with the Metropolitan Opera (Met) of New York City. He was considered the preeminent American conductor of his generation. As a piano prodigy, Levine made his debut in 1953 with the Cincinnati Orchestra in Ohio. He
- Levine, Larry (American sound engineer)
Gold Star Studios and the “Wall of Sound”: …of percussion—and he encouraged engineer Larry Levine to swamp everything in echo, seeking to convey intense emotion through texture, atmosphere, and rhythm.
- Levine, Philip (American poet)
Philip Levine was an American poet of urban working-class life. Levine was of Russian Jewish descent. He studied at Wayne University (now Wayne State University), Detroit (B.A., 1950; M.A., 1955), and the University of Iowa (M.F.A., 1957). He worked at a series of industrial jobs before he began
- LeVine, Robert (American anthropologist)
personality: Deviation from trait theory: …anthropologists, such as the American Robert LeVine, to remark that modern personality trait theory is ethnocentric. For example, the folk-psychological concepts and the trait matrices derived from factor analyses include culture-specific assumptions about personal experiences, such as the distinctions between mind and body, natural and supernatural, and intellect and morality,…
- Levine, Samm (American actor)
Freaks and Geeks: Cast and characters: …ventriloquist Neal Schweiber, played by Samm Levine, and lanky, awkward Bill Haverchuck, played by Martin Starr.
- Levine, Sherrie (American artist)
Sherrie Levine is an American conceptual artist known for remaking famous 20th-century works of art either through photographic reproductions (termed re-photography), drawing, watercolour, or sculpture. Her appropriations are conceptual gestures that question the Modernist myths of originality and
- Levine, Ted (American actor)
The Silence of the Lambs: …the meantime, Buffalo Bill (Ted Levine) kidnaps Catherine Martin (Brooke Smith), the daughter of a U.S. senator.
- Levingston, Roberto Marcelo (president of Argentina)
Argentina: Military government, 1966–73: General Roberto Marcelo Levingston replaced Onganía, but inflation returned and terrorist acts increased; Levingston was overthrown in March 1971 and replaced by General Alejandro Agustín Lanusse, who promised to reestablish democratic elections by the end of 1973.
- Levins, Richard (American mathematical ecologist)
patch dynamics: History of patch dynamics: …developed by American mathematical ecologist Richard Levins and others in the 1970s, and with the theory of island biogeography, developed by American ecologist Robert MacArthur and American biologist E.O. Wilson in the 1960s. (The former theory proposed that the collective activities of several distinct but interacting populations drive the ecological…
- Levinsohn, Isaac Baer (Russian-Jewish author)
Hebrew literature: Romanticism: …the Enlightenment proper began with Isaac Baer Levinsohn in the Ukraine and with Mordecai Aaron Ginzberg (Günzburg), in Lithuania. In the 1820s an orthodox reaction set in, coinciding with the rise of a Romanticist Hebrew school of writers. A.D. Lebensohn wrote fervent love songs to the Hebrew language, and his…
- Levinson, André (Russian writer)
dance criticism: The 20th century: The Russian writer André Levinson provided early assessments of the Diaghilev troupe, working first for several publications in St. Petersburg and then, after 1918, in Paris. Levinson gained an international reputation through his criticism of ballet as well as other dance forms, exemplified by Fuller, Duncan, and the…
- Levinson, Arthur (American businessman)
chairperson: Arthur Levinson (2011– ) of Apple Inc.; Christine Lagarde, managing director and chairman of the board (2011–19) of the International Monetary Fund; and Jamie Dimon, who became both CEO (2006– ) and chairman (2007– ) of JPMorgan Chase & Co. Other executives with multiple roles…
- Levinson, Barry (American director and screenwriter)
Barry Levinson is an American film director and screenwriter known for his versatility. Levinson worked as a comedy writer for Carol Burnett and Mel Brooks in the 1970s. During that time he also cowrote the screenplay for the crime drama …And Justice for All, which earned him an Academy Award
- Levinson, Daniel J. (American psychologist)
human behaviour: Personality and social development: The American psychologist Daniel J. Levinson also divides adult life into qualitatively distinct periods. Confining his study to men, Levinson identified five eras within their lives that are not stages of biological, psychological, or social development but that together constitute a life-cycle structure. The eras are (1) preadulthood…
- Levinson, Salmon Oliver (American lawyer)
Salmon Oliver Levinson was a lawyer who originated and publicized the “outlawry of war” movement in the United States. Levinson practiced law in Chicago from 1891 and became noted for his skill in reorganizing the finances of distressed corporations. In an article in the New Republic, March 9,
- levirate (sociology)
levirate, custom or law decreeing that a widow should, or in rare cases must, marry her dead husband’s brother. The term comes from the Latin levir, meaning “husband’s brother.” The “brother” may be a biological sibling of the deceased or a person who is socially classified as such. Where the
- Lévis (Quebec, Canada)
Lévis, city, Chaudière-Appalaches region, southern Quebec province, Canada. It is located on the south shore of the St. Lawrence River, opposite the city of Quebec, with which it is linked by ferry. The settlement, founded in 1647, was formerly called Aubigny in honour of the Duke of Richmond (who
- Lévis-Lauzon (Quebec, Canada)
Lévis, city, Chaudière-Appalaches region, southern Quebec province, Canada. It is located on the south shore of the St. Lawrence River, opposite the city of Quebec, with which it is linked by ferry. The settlement, founded in 1647, was formerly called Aubigny in honour of the Duke of Richmond (who
- Levison, Harold (American astronomer)
comet: Dynamics: In 1996 American astronomer Harold Levison introduced a new taxonomy that involved a quantity called the Tisserand parameter:
- Levisticum officinale (herb)
lovage, (Levisticum officinale), perennial herb of the parsley family (Apiaceae) native to southern Europe. It is cultivated for its stalks and foliage, which are used for herbal tea, as a vegetable, and to flavour foods, particularly meats. Its rhizomes (underground stems) are used as a
- Levita, Elijah Bokher (Italian grammarian)
Elijah Bokher Levita was a German-born Jewish grammarian whose writings and teaching furthered the study of Hebrew in European Christendom at a time of widespread hostility toward the Jews. Levita went to Italy early in life and in 1504 settled at Padua. There he wrote a manual of Hebrew (1508)
- Levitan, Isaak Ilyich (Russian painter)
Isaak Ilyich Levitan was a Lithuanian-born Jewish painter who was one of Russia’s most influential landscape artists and the founder of what has been called the “mood landscape.” Levitan’s childhood and youth were marked by poverty and the death of his parents; his mother died when he was 15 years
- levitation
levitation, rising of a human body off the ground, in apparent defiance of the law of gravity. The term designates such alleged occurrences in the lives of saints and of spiritualist mediums, generally during a séance; levitation of furniture and other objects during a séance has also been
- Levitch, Joseph (American comedian)
Jerry Lewis was an American comedian, actor, and director whose unrestrained comic style made him one of the most popular performers of the 1950s and ’60s. Lewis was born into a vaudeville family, and at age 12 he developed a comedy act in which he mimed to records. He dropped out of high school in
- Levite (ancient Israelite history)
Levite, member of a group of clans of religious functionaries in ancient Israel who apparently were given a special religious status, conjecturally for slaughtering idolaters of the golden calf during the time of Moses (Ex. 32:25–29). They thus replaced the firstborn sons of Israel who were
- Levithan, David (American author)
John Green: …Grayson, Will Grayson (2010), with David Levithan. The novel relates the story of two extremely different teenagers who are both named Will Grayson. Their lives become intertwined after they meet. Green’s next book, The Fault in Our Stars, was published in 2012 and was turned into a film in 2014.…
- Leviticus (Old Testament)
Leviticus, third book of the Latin Vulgate Bible, the name of which designates its contents as a book (or manual) primarily concerned with priests (members of the priestly tribe of Levi) and their duties. Although Leviticus is basically a book of laws, it also contains some narrative text (chapters
- Levitra (drug)
PDE-5 inhibitor: …as Viagra) and vardenafil (Levitra). PDE-5 inhibitors work by blocking, or inhibiting, the action of phosphodiesterase-5 (PDE-5), an enzyme naturally present in the corpus cavernosum, the spongy erectile tissue of the penis. Under normal circumstances, sexual arousal in the male stimulates neurons in the corpus cavernosum to release nitric…
- Levitsky, Dmitry Grigoryevich (Ukrainian-Russian painter)
Dmitry Grigoryevich Levitsky was a Ukrainian Russian artist who was the foremost portraitist of the era of Catherine the Great and conveyor of the ideals of the Enlightenment in the Russian Empire. The son of a priest who was also a master of Ukrainian gravure printing, Levitsky inherited both his
- Levitsky, Ivan (Ukrainian author)
Ivan Levitsky was a Ukrainian Realist novelist of the postserfdom reform period. He drew upon his background as a seminary student and, later, a provincial teacher, to depict the educated and lower classes in some of the earliest social novels in Ukrainian literature. His works include Prichepa
- Levitt and Sons, Inc. (American company)
United States: Postwar domestic reorganization: …pioneered by the firm of Levitt and Sons, Inc., and other developers. All this activity created millions of new jobs. The Serviceman’s Readjustment Act of 1944, known as the G.I. Bill of Rights, also helped ease military personnel back into civilian life. It provided veterans with loans, educational subsidies, and…
- Levitt, Helen (American photographer and filmmaker)
Helen Levitt was an American street photographer and filmmaker whose work captures the bustle, squalor, and beauty of everyday life in New York City. Levitt began her career in photography at age 18 working in a portrait studio in the Bronx. After seeing the works of French photographer
- Levitt, Michael (American-British-Israeli chemist)
Michael Levitt is an American British Israeli chemist who was awarded the 2013 Nobel Prize for Chemistry for developing accurate computer models of chemical reactions that were able to use features of both classical physics and quantum mechanics. He shared the prize with American-Austrian chemist
- Levitt, Steven D. (American economist)
Steven D. Levitt is an American economist whose work has been influential in many social science disciplines, including political economy, sociology, political science, the economics of crime, and the study of law. In 2003 he received the John Bates Clark Medal, which is awarded annually by the
- Levitt, Steven David (American economist)
Steven D. Levitt is an American economist whose work has been influential in many social science disciplines, including political economy, sociology, political science, the economics of crime, and the study of law. In 2003 he received the John Bates Clark Medal, which is awarded annually by the
- Levittown (New Jersey, United States)
Willingboro, township, Burlington county, western New Jersey, U.S. It lies midway between Camden and Trenton (both in New Jersey) on Rancocas Creek, just upstream from the creek’s mouth in the Delaware River. English Quakers settled there about 1677. The community, which originally included what is
- Levittown (New York, United States)
Levittown, unincorporated residential community in Hempstead town (township), Nassau county, western Long Island, New York, U.S. Developed between 1946 and 1951 by the firm of Levitt and Sons, Inc., Levittown was an early example of a completely preplanned and mass-produced housing complex. More
- Levittown (Pennsylvania, United States)
Levittown, extensive, unincorporated suburban housing development in Bucks county, eastern Pennsylvania, U.S., near the big bend of the Delaware River, approximately midway between Philadelphia and Trenton, New Jersey. It was built between 1951 and 1958 by Levitt & Sons, Inc., who repeated there
- Levitzky, Sara (Russian-American actress)
Sara Adler was a Russian-born American actress, one of the most celebrated figures in the American Yiddish theatre. Sara Levitzky was born of a well-to-do Jewish family. She studied singing at the Odessa Conservatory for a time and then joined a Yiddish theatre troupe managed by Maurice Heine, whom
- Lévka 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
- Levkádhia (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
- Levkás (Greece)
Leucas: The chief town, Levkás, lies at the northeastern corner, which in antiquity was separated by a marshy isthmus. It was formerly called Amaxíkhi or Santa Maura; the latter is also the Venetian name for the island. Most of the population inhabit the wooded east coast and its valleys.
- Levkás (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
- Levnî, Abdülcelil (Ottoman painter)
Abdülcelil Levnî was the most accomplished and famous Ottoman painter of the early 18th-century “Tulip Period.” He went as a young man to Constantinople, where he studied at the academy of painting at the Topkapı Palace. He later became chief court painter to the Ottoman sultan Mustafa II, and he
- Levo-Dromoran (drug)
drug use: Opium, morphine, heroin, and related synthetics: …comparable to morphine in potency; levorphanol (Levo-Dromoran) is an important synthetic with five times the potency of morphine. These synthetics exhibit a more favourable tolerance factor than the more potent of the opiates, but in being addictive they fall short of an ideal analgesic. Of this entire series, codeine has…
- levodopa (chemical compound)
levodopa, Organic compound (L-3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine) from which the body makes dopamine, a neurotransmitter deficient in persons with parkinsonism. When given orally in large daily doses, levodopa can lessen the effects of the disease. However, it becomes less effective over time and causes
- levohyoscyamine (chemical compound)
atropine: …mixture of D- and L-hyoscyamine in plants such as belladonna, henbane (Hyoscyamus niger), jimsonweed (Datura stramonium), the mandrake Mandragora officinarum, and Scopolia, all of the family Solanaceae. Atropine forms a series of well-crystallized salts, of which the sulfate is principally used in medicine. Both atropine and
- Levon I (king of Armenia)
Levon I was the king of Armenia (reigned 1199–1219), who rallied the Armenians after their dispersion by the Seljuq Turks and consolidated the kingdom in Cilicia, southeastern Asia Minor. Through his friendly relations with the German emperors Frederick I Barbarossa and Henry VI, he was crowned by
- Levon the Great (king of Armenia)
Levon I was the king of Armenia (reigned 1199–1219), who rallied the Armenians after their dispersion by the Seljuq Turks and consolidated the kingdom in Cilicia, southeastern Asia Minor. Through his friendly relations with the German emperors Frederick I Barbarossa and Henry VI, he was crowned by
- levonorgestrel (hormone)
levonorgestrel, synthetic progestogen (any progestational steroid, such as progesterone) that is used as a form of contraception in women. Levonorgestrel is the mirror compound (enantiomer) of norgestrel, which was synthesized in the early 1960s by American scientist Herschel Smith at the
- levorotatory
optical activity: …a negative specific rotation is levorotatory, designated by the prefix l or (-).
- levorphanol (drug)
drug use: Opium, morphine, heroin, and related synthetics: …comparable to morphine in potency; levorphanol (Levo-Dromoran) is an important synthetic with five times the potency of morphine. These synthetics exhibit a more favourable tolerance factor than the more potent of the opiates, but in being addictive they fall short of an ideal analgesic. Of this entire series, codeine has…
- LeVox, Gary (American musician)
Rascal Flatts: The members were lead vocalist Gary LeVox (original name Gary Wayne Vernon, Jr.; b. July 10, 1970, Columbus, Ohio, U.S.), bassist Jay DeMarcus (in full Stanley Wayne DeMarcus, Jr.; b. April 26, 1971, Columbus), and guitarist Joe Don Rooney (b. September 13, 1975, Baxter Springs, Kansas).
- Lèvres rouges, Les (film by Kümel [1971])
Delphine Seyrig: …in Les Lèvres rouges (1971; Daughters of Darkness), and in Luis Buñuel’s Le Charme discret de la bourgeoisie (1972; The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie).
- Levski, Vasil (Bulgarian revolutionary)
Vasil Levski was a Bulgarian revolutionary leader in the struggle for liberation of Bulgaria from Ottoman rule. Initially a monk (1858–64), Vasil Kunchev soon dedicated himself to the work of freeing Bulgaria and for his courage was nicknamed Levski (“Lionlike”). Levski united the two legions of
- Levuka (Fiji)
Levuka, port town on the east coast of Ovalau island and capital of Lomaiviti province, central Fiji, South Pacific. Settled by a U.S. adventurer in 1822, the area was the centre of a cotton boom during the American Civil War (1861–65), when world cotton supplies were disrupted. Levuka was chosen
- Levy, Barbara (United States senator)
Barbara Boxer is an American politician whose ardent support for myriad progressive causes, including environmentalism and reproductive rights, while representing California as a Democrat in the U.S. House of Representatives (1983–93) and Senate (1993–2017) contributed to her reputation as one of
- Lévy, Bernard-Henri (French philosopher, journalist, filmmaker, and public intellectual)
Bernard-Henri Lévy is a French philosopher, journalist, filmmaker, and public intellectual who was a leading member of the Nouveaux Philosophes (New Philosophers). Lévy spent his childhood in Morocco and France, where his family finally settled in 1954. His father was the wealthy founder of a
- Levy, Dan (Canadian actor)
Eugene Levy: American Pie and Schitt’s Creek: …teamed up with his son, Dan Levy, to create and star in the sitcom Schitt’s Creek, which also featured his daughter, Sarah Levy. The show depicts the Rose family: Johnny Rose (Eugene Levy); his wife, Moira Rose (O’Hara); and their children, David Rose (Dan Levy) and Alexis Rose (Annie Murphy).…
- Levy, David (Israeli politician)
David Levy was an Israeli politician who was a leader of Israel’s Sephardic Jews and who held numerous government offices. After attending primary and secondary schools in Morocco, Levy emigrated to Israel with his family in 1957. When he was in his 20s, Levy decided that politics, particularly the
- Levy, David H. (Canadian astronomer and science writer)
David H. Levy is a Canadian astronomer and science writer who discovered—along with Carolyn Shoemaker and Eugene Shoemaker—the fragmented comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 in 1993. Levy developed an interest in astronomy at an early age, but in college he studied English literature, receiving a bachelor’s
- Levy, Edward (British newspaper editor and proprietor)
Edward Levy-Lawson, 1st Baron Burnham was an English newspaper proprietor who virtually created the London Daily Telegraph. He was educated at University College school. His father, Joseph Moses Levy, acquired the Daily Telegraph and Courier in 1855, a few months after it was founded by Colonel
- Levy, Elias (French composer)
Fromental Halévy was a French composer whose five-act grand opera La Juive (1835; “The Jewess”) was, with Giacomo Meyerbeer’s Les Huguenots, the prototype of early French grand opera. Halévy studied at the Paris Conservatoire from the age of 10 and won the Prix de Rome in 1819 for his cantata
- Levy, Eugene (Canadian actor)
Eugene Levy is a Canadian actor and writer, especially known for playing comedic characters who are well-meaning but often dim-witted. He notably portrayed Noah Levenstein in the American Pie movies and cocreated and starred in the hit TV series Schitt’s Creek (2015–20). Levy is one of three
- Levy, Jerre (American psychologist)
human intelligence: Hemispheric studies: …brain’s two hemispheres, the psychologist Jerre Levy and others found that the left hemisphere is superior in analytical tasks, such as are involved in the use of language, while the right hemisphere is superior in many forms of visual and spatial tasks. Overall, the right hemisphere tends to be more…