- Rubidoux, Mount (mountain, Riverside, California, United States)
Riverside: Mount Rubidoux (1,399 feet [426 metres]) is a popular site for slab rock climbing. Other area recreational attractions include Lake Perris State Recreation Area, Mockingbird Canyon, and Sycamore Canyon Park. Inc. city, 1883. Pop. (2010) 303,871; Riverside–San Bernardino–Ontario Metro Area, 4,224,851; (2020) 314,998; Riverside–San Bernardino–Ontario…
- Rubik’s Cube (puzzle toy)
Rubik’s Cube, toy, popular in the 1980s, that was designed by Hungarian inventor Erno Rubik. Rubik’s Cube consists of 26 small cubes that rotate on a central axis; nine coloured cube faces, in three rows of three each, form each side of the cube. When the cube is twisted out of its original
- Rubik, Erno (Hungarian inventor)
Erno Rubik is the inventor of Rubik’s Cube, a popular toy of the 1980s. Rubik’s Cube consists of 26 small cubes that rotate on a central axis; nine colored cube faces, in three rows of three each, form each side of the cube. When the cube is twisted out of its original arrangement, the player must
- Rubin’s test (medicine)
Rubin’s test, diagnostic method for determining whether the fallopian tubes in the human female are occluded. (The fallopian tubes are slender hollow structures on each side of the uterus through which the eggs travel from the ovaries to the uterus.) The test is helpful in explaining certain
- Rubin, Eduard Alexander (Swiss officer)
small arm: The smokeless powder revolution: In 1881 a Swiss officer, Eduard Alexander Rubin, was the first to perfect a full-length copper-jacketed bullet.
- Rubin, Frederick Jay (American record producer)
Rick Rubin is an American record producer whose light touch and keen ear made him one of the most sought-after producers in popular music. Rubin grew up listening to heavy metal and early punk, and he frequently took the train into Manhattan from his Long Island home to see New York punk pioneers
- Rubin, Jerry (American political activist)
Jerry Rubin was an American political activist turned businessman who gained his widest renown from the anti-Vietnam War protests during the 1968 Democratic National Convention in Chicago and the subsequent Chicago Seven trial, in which—after one defendant was removed to be tried separately—he and
- Rubin, Rick (American record producer)
Rick Rubin is an American record producer whose light touch and keen ear made him one of the most sought-after producers in popular music. Rubin grew up listening to heavy metal and early punk, and he frequently took the train into Manhattan from his Long Island home to see New York punk pioneers
- Rubin, Robert E. (American attorney)
Eddie Lampert: …Sachs, where he worked under Robert E. Rubin, who later became the U.S. treasury secretary. Risk analysis became one of Lampert’s specialties; even as a relatively fresh hire, he reduced his department’s exposure to the stock market when he foresaw overvaluations that led to the market crash in 1987.
- Rubin, Zick (American social psychologist)
love: Psychological theories of love: …1970s the American social psychologist Zick Rubin developed a conception of love as consisting of attachment, caring, and intimacy and a conception of liking as consisting of closeness, admiration, respect, and warmth. He incorporated these elements into detailed questionnaires of liking and loving whose scalable answers collectively provide a relatively…
- Rubini, Giovanni Battista (Italian singer)
Giovanni Battista Rubini was an Italian tenor remembered as the major early exponent of the Romantic style of Vincenzo Bellini and Gaetano Donizetti. Rubini showed early musical promise and was engaged as violinist and chorister at the Riccardi Theatre in Bergamo at the age of 12. He made his
- Rubinoos, the (American musical group)
the Hollies: …such as the Raspberries and the Rubinoos. Unlike most groups of their vintage, the Hollies had their greatest successes in the 1970s, with “Long Cool Woman (in a Black Dress)” (1972) and “The Air That I Breathe” (1974). The group was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame…
- Rubins, Harold Francis (American author)
Harold Robbins was an American author credited with popularizing a prurient style of mass-market fiction that traded on the public appetite for tales of profligate Hollywood stars and glamorous criminals. Robbins was known to have fabricated numerous episodes that were repeated by journalists and
- Rubins, Kate (American astronaut)
Kate Rubins is an American astronaut who has made two flights to the International Space Station (ISS). As a child, Rubins was interested in becoming an astronaut, and her growing interest in science led her to microbiology. She received a bachelor’s degree in that subject from the University of
- Rubins, Kathleen Hallisey (American astronaut)
Kate Rubins is an American astronaut who has made two flights to the International Space Station (ISS). As a child, Rubins was interested in becoming an astronaut, and her growing interest in science led her to microbiology. She received a bachelor’s degree in that subject from the University of
- Rubinstein, Anton (Russian composer and musician)
Anton Rubinstein was a Russian composer and one of the greatest pianists of the 19th century. In 1835 Rubinstein’s father opened a small factory in Moscow, and there in the same year his brother Nikolay was born. Both boys were taught piano, first by their mother and then by Aleksandr Villoing.
- Rubinstein, Anton Grigoryevich (Russian composer and musician)
Anton Rubinstein was a Russian composer and one of the greatest pianists of the 19th century. In 1835 Rubinstein’s father opened a small factory in Moscow, and there in the same year his brother Nikolay was born. Both boys were taught piano, first by their mother and then by Aleksandr Villoing.
- Rubinstein, Arthur (American musician)
Artur Rubinstein was a Polish American virtuoso pianist regarded by many as the 20th century’s foremost interpreter of the repertoire. Rubinstein began study at the age of three and at the age of eight studied at the Warsaw Conservatory. The following year he became a pupil of Heinrich Barth in
- Rubinstein, Artur (American musician)
Artur Rubinstein was a Polish American virtuoso pianist regarded by many as the 20th century’s foremost interpreter of the repertoire. Rubinstein began study at the age of three and at the age of eight studied at the Warsaw Conservatory. The following year he became a pupil of Heinrich Barth in
- Rubinstein, Helena (American businesswoman)
Helena Rubinstein was a cosmetician, business executive, and philanthropist. She founded Helena Rubinstein, Inc., a leading manufacturer and distributor of women’s cosmetics. Rubinstein was one of eight daughters of a middle-class Jewish family in Poland. She studied medicine briefly in Switzerland
- Rubinstein, Ida (Russian dancer)
Ida Rubinstein was a dancer, actress, and patron of the performing arts. An orphan of a well-to-do Jewish family, Rubinstein used her sizable inheritance for commissions for the arts. As a young woman, she studied mime and recitation and was a great admirer of the American dancer Isadora Duncan.
- Rubinstein, Nikolay (Russian musician)
Anton Rubinstein: …the same year his brother Nikolay was born. Both boys were taught piano, first by their mother and then by Aleksandr Villoing. Anton gave his first public recital in Moscow in 1839, and the following year Villoing took him abroad for a three-year concert tour. He appeared in Paris, London,…
- Rubio, Marco (United States senator)
Marco Rubio is an American politician who was elected as a Republican to the U.S. Senate in 2010 and began his term representing Florida the following year. He sought his party’s nomination in the U.S. presidential election of 2016. Rubio’s parents left their native Cuba in 1956, during the
- Rubio, Marco Antonio (United States senator)
Marco Rubio is an American politician who was elected as a Republican to the U.S. Senate in 2010 and began his term representing Florida the following year. He sought his party’s nomination in the U.S. presidential election of 2016. Rubio’s parents left their native Cuba in 1956, during the
- Rubis (French submarine class)
submarine: Attack submarines: …first nuclear attack submarine, the Rubis, was laid down in 1976 with antisubmarine torpedo and sonar systems inherited from the diesel-electric Agosta class. Beginning in 1984, the four vessels of this class were given improved sonar and silencing and were fitted with dive-launched Exocet antiship missiles. The Rubis vessels, the…
- rubisco (enzyme)
photosynthesis: Carboxylation: …is catalyzed by the enzyme ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase (Rubisco), proceeds by the addition of carbon dioxide to the five-carbon compound ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate (RuBP) and the splitting of the resulting six-carbon compound into two molecules of PGA. This reaction occurs three times during each complete turn of the cycle; thus, six…
- Rubivirus (virus genus)
virus: Annotated classification: …2 recognized genera: Alphavirus and Rubivirus. Alphavirus consists of viruses transmitted by arthropods (exclusively mosquitoes); prototypes include Sindbis virus and eastern and western equine encephalitis viruses. Rubivirus contains non-arthropod-borne viruses, including the causative agent of German measles. Family Flaviviridae
- Rubizhne (Ukraine)
Rubizhne, city, eastern Ukraine, on the Donets River. The settlement dates from the 18th century and was incorporated in 1934. Rubizhne has an engineering industry and, with Lysychansk and Syeverodonetsk, is one of the most important chemical centres in Ukraine. The city’s chemical industry dates
- ruble (currency)
ruble, the monetary unit of Russia (and the former Soviet Union) and Belarus (spelled rubel). The origins of the Russian ruble as a designation of silver weight can be traced to the 13th century. In 1704 Tsar Peter I (the Great) introduced the first regular minting of the ruble in silver. During
- Rublyov, Saint Andrey (Russian painter)
Saint Andrey Rublyov ; feast day January 29) was one of the greatest medieval Russian painters, whose masterpiece is a magnificent icon of “The Old Testament Trinity,” now in the Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow. Little is known of his life except that he was the assistant of another great painter called
- RuBP (chemical compound)
photosynthesis: Carboxylation: …dioxide to the five-carbon compound ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate (RuBP) and the splitting of the resulting six-carbon compound into two molecules of PGA. This reaction occurs three times during each complete turn of the cycle; thus, six molecules of PGA are produced.
- rubrication (calligraphy)
rubrication, in calligraphy and typography, the use of handwriting or type of a different colour on a page, derived from the practice of setting off liturgical directions, headings of statutes, and the like in red. Specifically, it applied to the rules prescribed for the conduct of religious
- Rubrisciurus rubriventer (rodent)
squirrel: Natural history: …tropical squirrels, such as the Sulawesi giant squirrel (Rubrisciurus rubriventer) and the northern Amazon red squirrel (Sciurus igniventris), nest at middle levels but travel and forage low in the understory or on the ground. The African palm squirrels (genus Epixerus) are long-legged runners that forage only on the ground. Certain…
- rubrospinal tract (anatomy)
human nervous system: Rubrospinal tract: The rubrospinal tract arises from cells in the caudal part of the red nucleus, an encapsulated cell group in the midbrain tegmentum. Fibers of this tract decussate at midbrain levels, descend in the lateral funiculus of the spinal cord (overlapping ventral parts of…
- Rubruquis, Wilhelmus (French explorer)
Willem Van Ruysbroeck was a French Franciscan friar whose eyewitness account of the Mongol realm is generally acknowledged to be the best written by any medieval Christian traveller. A contemporary of the English scientist and philosopher Roger Bacon, he was cited frequently in the geographical
- Rubtab (people)
Sudan: Ethnic groups: …proper, the Shāyqiyyah, and the Rubtab. The Juhaynah, by contrast, traditionally consisted of nomadic tribes, although some of them have now become settled. Among the major tribes in the Juhaynah grouping are the Shukriyah, the Kababish, and the Baqqārah. All three of these tribes herd camels or cattle on the…
- Rubtsova, Olga Nikolayevna (Russian chess player)
Olga Nikolayevna Rubtsova was a Russian chess player who was the women’s world champion (1956–58). In 1936 Rubtsova graduated as an engineer from Bauman Moscow Higher Technical School (now Bauman Moscow State Technical University). By then she had already established herself as a premiere chess
- Rubtsovsk (Russia)
Rubtsovsk, city, Altay kray (territory), west-central Russia, on the Aley River and the Turk-Sib Railway. It is the centre of an important region of mining nonferrous ores. The city manufactures agricultural machinery, chiefly diesel tractors and electrical equipment for tractors, as well as flour
- Rubulavirus (virus genus)
paramyxovirus: Examples of Paramyxovirinae genera include Rubulavirus, which is composed of several species of human parainfluenza viruses and the mumps viruses; Avulavirus, which contains the species Newcastle disease virus (of poultry) as well as various avian paramyxoviruses; and Morbillivirus, which contains the agents that cause
- Rubus (plant)
bramble, (genus Rubus), large genus of flowering plants in the rose family (Rosaceae), consisting of usually prickly shrubs. Brambles occur naturally throughout the world, especially in temperate areas, and a number are invasive species outside their native range. Many are widely cultivated for
- Rubus armeniacus (plant)
blackberry: Major species: …blackberry (Rubus laciniatus) and the Himalayan blackberry (R. armeniacus), are invasive species that spread rapidly by animal-mediated seed dispersal and vegetative reproduction. At least two South American Rubus species are listed as vulnerable on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species.
- Rubus chamaemorus (plant)
cloudberry, (Rubus chamaemorus), creeping herbaceous plant, native to the Arctic and subarctic regions of the north temperate zone, and its edible raspberry-like fruit. Inuit and Sami peoples collect the sweet juicy fruits in autumn to freeze for winter food. In markets of northern Scandinavia,
- Rubus idaeus (plant)
loganberry: …and the red raspberry (Rubus idaeus), a cosmopolitan species. It is grown in large quantities in Oregon and Washington and is also cultivated in England and Australia, among other places. The fruit is canned, frozen for preserve or pie stock, or made into wine.
- Rubus laciniatus (plant)
blackberry: Major species: …cutleaf, or evergreen, blackberry (Rubus laciniatus) and the Himalayan blackberry (R. armeniacus), are invasive species that spread rapidly by animal-mediated seed dispersal and vegetative reproduction. At least two South American Rubus species are listed as vulnerable on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species.
- Rubus loganobaccus (plant)
loganberry, (Rubus loganobaccus), species of bramble of the rose family (Rosaceae) that originated in Santa Cruz, California, in 1881. Raised from seed by James Harvey Logan, a lawyer and amateur horticulturist, the plant is thought to be a hybrid between the wild blackberry (Rubus ursinus) of the
- Rubus occidentalis (fruit)
raspberry: Cultivation: Two North American species of black raspberries (R. occidentalis and R. leucodermis) are also grown commercially in some areas, though production is limited. Raspberry plants are fairly resistant to disease and pests but must be staked or trellised to control their wild growth. Red varieties are usually propagated by suckers…
- Rubus ursinus (plant)
loganberry: …between the wild blackberry (Rubus ursinus) of the Pacific coast and the red raspberry (Rubus idaeus), a cosmopolitan species. It is grown in large quantities in Oregon and Washington and is also cultivated in England and Australia, among other places. The fruit is canned, frozen for preserve or pie…
- Rubusti, Jacopo (Italian painter)
Tintoretto was a great Italian Mannerist painter of the Venetian school and one of the most important artists of the late Renaissance. His paintings include Vulcan Surprising Venus and Mars (c. 1555), the Mannerist Christ and the Adulteress (c. 1545–48), and his masterpiece of 1592–94, the Last
- ruby (gemstone)
ruby, gemstone composed of transparent red corundum (q.v.), a mineral form of aluminum oxide, Al2O3. Its colour varies from deep cochineal to pale rose red, in some cases with a tinge of purple; the most valued is a pigeon-blood red. The red colour arises from the replacement of a small number of
- Ruby Falls (waterfall, Lookout Mountain, United States)
Lookout Mountain: …145-foot- (45-metre-) high waterfall (Ruby Falls), and atop are the gardens and strange rock formations known as Rock City. During the American Civil War, the “Battle Above the Clouds” was fought in 1863 on and around this summit.
- Ruby Gentry (film by Vidor [1952])
King Vidor: Later films: Vidor had more success with Ruby Gentry (1952), a melodrama that starred Jones as a Southern vixen who marries a wealthy man (Karl Malden) but has an eye for a former boyfriend (Charlton Heston). Vidor then waited three years for his next feature film, which turned out to be the…
- ruby glass (glassware)
ruby glass, deep-red glass deriving its colour from gold chloride. Originally known in the ancient world, its rediscovery was long sought by European alchemists and glassmakers, who believed it had curative properties. A Hamburg physician, Andreas Cassius, in 1676 reported his discovery of the red
- ruby laser (device)
telecommunications media: Optical transmission: …without the invention of the ruby laser, first demonstrated in 1960, which produces intense light with very narrow spectral line width by the process of coherent stimulated emission. Today, semiconductor injection-laser diodes are used for high-speed, long-distance optical communication.
- ruby maser (device)
maser: …other kinds, such as solid-state ruby masers.
- Ruby Ridge (United States history)
Ruby Ridge, location of an incident in August 1992 in which Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) agents and U.S. marshals engaged in an 11-day standoff with self-proclaimed white separatist Randy Weaver, his family, and a friend named Kevin Harris in an isolated cabin in Boundary county, Idaho.
- ruby silver (mineral)
proustite, a sulfosalt mineral, silver arsenic sulfide (Ag3AsS3), that is an important source of silver. Sometimes called ruby silver because of its scarlet-vermilion colour, it occurs in the upper portions of most silver veins, where it is less common than pyrargyrite. Large, magnificent crystals,
- Ruby Sparks (film by Dayton and Faris [2012])
Antonio Banderas: >Ruby Sparks (2012); and Machete Kills (2013), an over-the-top action thriller. In The 33 (2015), which was based on a true event, Banderas played a worker who becomes trapped after a mine collapses in Chile. He joined the ensemble of Terrence Malick’s Knight of Cups
- ruby spinel (mineral)
ruby spinel, natural or synthetic gem-quality spinel (q.v.; magnesium aluminum oxide) that resembles ruby. The two natural gems are generally found together in gem gravels, to the extent that spinel has been called “mother of ruby.” Many historic rubies were probably spinels; the Timur Ruby in the
- Ruby, Don’t Take Your Love to Town (song by Tillis)
Kenny Rogers: …My Condition Was In),” “Ruby, Don’t Take Your Love to Town” (written by Mel Tillis), “Reuben James,” and “Something’s Burning.” The band also hosted Rollin’ on the River (1971–73), a variety show that took place on a Mississippi riverboat set and featured guests such as musicians Kris Kristofferson, B.B.…
- Ruby, Jack (American assassin)
Jack Ruby was an American nightclub owner who killed Lee Harvey Oswald, the suspected assassin of Pres. John F. Kennedy, on November 24, 1963, as Oswald was being transferred to a county jail. Despite Ruby’s claims to the contrary—and a lack of evidence—some have posited that he was part of a
- Ruby, Jack L. (American assassin)
Jack Ruby was an American nightclub owner who killed Lee Harvey Oswald, the suspected assassin of Pres. John F. Kennedy, on November 24, 1963, as Oswald was being transferred to a county jail. Despite Ruby’s claims to the contrary—and a lack of evidence—some have posited that he was part of a
- ruby-crowned kinglet (bird)
kinglet: In the ruby-crowned kinglet (R. calendula) of North America, the crown mark is a mere tick of red, appearing on the male only and usually concealed.
- ruby-tailed wasp (insect)
cuckoo wasp, any member of the insect family Chrysididae (Chrysalidae) of the order Hymenoptera. The family is large, common, and widely distributed. More than 1,000 species of the genus Chrysis alone have been described. Most cuckoo wasps are small, seldom exceeding 1.2 cm (about 0.5 inch) in
- ruby-throated hummingbird (bird)
hummingbird: Only the ruby-throated hummingbird (Archilochus colubris) breeds in eastern North America, where it is found from Nova Scotia to Florida. The northernmost hummingbird is the rufous (Selasphorus rufus), which breeds from southeastern Alaska to northern California. The broad-tailed hummingbird (S. platycercus) breeds in the western United States…
- Rubyfruit Jungle (work by Brown)
American literature: New fictional modes: …who explored lesbian life in Rubyfruit Jungle (1973). Other significant works of fiction by women in the 1970s included Ann Beattie’s account of the post-1960s generation in Chilly Scenes of Winter (1976) and many short stories, Gail Godwin’s highly civilized The Odd Woman (1974), Mary Gordon’s portraits of
- Rubʿ al-Khali (desert, Arabia)
Rubʿ al-Khali, vast desert region in the southern Arabian Peninsula, constituting the largest portion of the Arabian Desert. It covers an area of about 250,000 square miles (650,000 square km) in a structural basin lying mainly in southeastern Saudi Arabia, with lesser portions in Yemen, Oman, and
- RUC (Northern Ireland police)
Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC), state police force in Northern Ireland, established in 1922. The RUC had a paramilitary character until 1970, when the force was remodeled along the lines of police forces in Great Britain. In 1970 the security of Northern Ireland became the responsibility of the
- Rucelinus (French philosopher and theologian)
Roscelin was a French philosopher and theologian known as the originator of an extreme form of nominalism holding that universals are nothing more than verbal expressions. His only extant work seems to be a letter to the French philosopher Peter Abelard, who studied under him at Besançon; the
- Rucellai, Giovanni (Italian author)
blank verse: …poem Le api (1539) by Giovanni Rucellai. Rucellai was the first to use the term versi sciolti, which became translated into English as “blank verse.” It soon became the standard metre of Italian Renaissance drama, used in such major works as the comedies of Ludovico Ariosto, L’Aminta of Torquato Tasso,…
- Rucellai, Giovanni (Italian merchant and banker)
Florence: The early period: …chiefly Cosimo de’ Medici and Giovanni Rucellai in the 15th century, were able to shape civic politics and culture through a system of oligarchy and patronage. They underwrote the accomplishments that are now singled out with the term “Renaissance,” and their palaces came to dominate the city as fully as…
- Rucellai, Palazzo (palace, Florence, Italy)
Palazzo Rucellai, early Renaissance palace in Florence, designed c. 1445–70 by Leon Battista Alberti for the Rucellai, a wealthy Tuscan mercantile family. Alberti’s overriding concern with balance and proportion is evident in his symmetrical treatment of the palace’s facade. The use of the three
- Ruch Autonomii Śląska (European history)
Silesia: …by the founding of the Silesian Autonomy Movement (Ruch Autonomii Śląska) in 1990 and the Union of People of Silesian Nationality (Związek Ludności Narodowości Śląskiej) in 1996. Central to the controversial assertion of Silesian nationality were conflicting linguistic interpretations: some scholars (and Silesian nationalists) argued that Silesian was a language…
- Ruche, La (artists’ colony, France)
The Beehive, artists’ settlement on the outskirts of the Montparnasse section of Paris, which in the early 20th century was the centre of much avant-garde activity. The Beehive housed the ramshackle living quarters and studios of many painters and sculptors, among them Marc Chagall, Fernand Léger,
- Ruchnoy Protivotankovy Granatomet 2 (weapon)
small arm: Antitank weapons: …Ruchnoy Protivotankovy Granatomet 2 (RPG-2), a “Light Antitank Grenade Launcher” featuring a reusable launcher that lobbed an 82-mm shaped-charge warhead more than 150 yards. After 1962, with their RPG-7, they combined recoilless launch with a rocket sustainer to deliver a 5-pound (2-kg) warhead to targets beyond 500 yards. The…
- Ruchnoy Protivotankovy Granatomet 7 (weapon)
small arm: Antitank weapons: After 1962, with their RPG-7, they combined recoilless launch with a rocket sustainer to deliver a 5-pound (2-kg) warhead to targets beyond 500 yards. The Soviet RPGs became powerful weapons in the hands of guerrillas and irregular fighters in conflict against more conventionally armed and heavily armoured forces. As…
- Rucho v. Common Cause (United States law case)
gerrymandering: …of political gerrymandering claims in Rucho v. Common Cause (2019). There the Court’s conservative majority, over the bitter objections of its more liberal members, declared (5–4) that “partisan gerrymandering claims present political questions beyond the reach of the federal courts.”
- ruck (sports)
rugby: Principles of play: …is known as a “ruck.” In this situation, teams must approach the ball from their own side of the ball only and must remain on their feet while playing the ball. When the player with the ball is stopped but not taken down to the ground, the struggle for…
- Ruck, Alan (American actor)
Will Arnett: Education and career: …against actors Rainn Wilson and Alan Ruck.
- Rückblicke (work by Kandinsky)
Wassily Kandinsky: Russian interlude: His autobiographical Rückblicke (“Retrospect”) was translated into Russian and published by the Moscow municipal authorities. In 1919 he created the Institute of Artistic Culture, became director of the Moscow Museum for Pictorial Culture, and helped to organize 22 museums across the Soviet Union. In 1920 he was…
- Ruckelshaus, William D. (United States jurist)
Watergate scandal: The Ervin hearings: …Night Massacre,” both Richardson and William D. Ruckelshaus, the deputy attorney general, resigned rather than carry out the order, and Cox was finally dismissed by a compliant solicitor general, Robert Bork. It was another extraordinary historical moment. Many responsible American officials literally feared a White House coup d’état.
- Ruckers, Hans, The Elder (Flemish instrument maker)
Hans Ruckers, the Elder was the most famous of all harpsichord makers and founder of a dynasty of Flemish instrument makers whose harpsichords provided an important model for later north European builders. Little is known of his life. His earliest known instrument is a double virginal (a
- Rückert, Friedrich (German poet)
Friedrich Rückert was a prolific German poet known for his facility with many different verse forms. Rückert studied at Würzburg and Heidelberg and qualified for, but withdrew from, an academic career. A gifted linguist, he was self-educated in Oriental languages and, through translations and
- Rückseite des Spiegels: Versuch einer Naturgeschichte menschlichen Erkennens, Die (work by Lorenz)
Konrad Lorenz: …einer Naturgeschichte menschlichen Erkennens (1973; Behind the Mirror: A Search for a Natural History of Human Knowledge), Lorenz examined the nature of human thought and intelligence and attributed the problems of modern civilization largely to the limitations his study revealed.
- Rucuyen (people)
South American forest Indian: Social organization: The Rucuyen, a Carib tribe of French Guiana, for some time maintained in servitude a great number of the Oyampī, their Tupí neighbours. In the northwest Amazon, Arawak and Tucano tribes hunt and enslave Makú men, who are forced to work in their gardens; the Makú…
- Rud-e Aras (river, Asia)
Aras River, river rising south of Erzurum in the Bingöl Dağları (mountains) of Turkey; it flows eastward, forming for approximately 275 miles (440 km) the international boundary between Armenia and Azerbaijan on the north and Turkey and Iran on the south. Below the eastern boundary of Armenia, the
- Rūd-e Kārūn (river, Iran)
Kārūn River, river in southwestern Iran, a tributary of the Shatt al-Arab, which it joins at Khorramshahr. It rises in the Bakhtīārī Mountains west of Eṣfahān and follows a tortuous course trending basically southwest. The Kārūn’s total length is 515 miles (829 km), though the direct distance from
- Ruda Śląska (Poland)
Ruda Śląska, city, Śląskie województwo (province), south-central Poland, in the heart of the Upper Silesia coal-mining region. An old industrial city, Ruda Śląska was founded in the Middle Ages as an iron-mining settlement, but it was not incorporated until after World War II. Poland’s first coal
- Rudabai Vav (stepwell, Adalaj, India)
stepwell: Origins and major sites: …the new capital of Ahmadabad—the Rudabai Vav and the Dada Harir Vav. Both are five stories deep with octagonal subterranean pools, each commissioned by a female patron. Although the Rudabai Vav boasts three separate entrances (a rarity), it and the Dada Harir Vav are conceptual cousins, built virtually simultaneously just…
- Rūdakī (Persian poet)
Rūdakī was the first poet of note to compose poems in the “New Persian,” written in Arabic alphabet, widely regarded as the father of Persian poetry. A talented singer and instrumentalist, Rūdakī served as a court poet to the Sāmānid ruler Naṣr II (914–943) in Bukhara until he fell out of favour in
- Rudawlī (India)
Chishtīyah: …in the 15th century at Rudawlī and the Niẓāmīyah, revived in the 18th century in Delhi.
- Rudbeck, Olof (Swedish author and scientist)
Swedish literature: The 17th century: It was Olof Rudbeck, however, who became interested in Verelius’s work and developed a theory that Sweden was the lost Atlantis and had been the cradle of Western civilization. He proposed this idea in Atland eller Manheim (1679–1702), which, translated into Latin as Atlantica, attained European fame.
- Rudbeckia (plant genus)
coneflower: The third genus, Rudbeckia, has about 25 annual, biennial, and perennial species with simple or segmented leaves, yellow ray flowers, and brown or black disk flowers. Black-eyed Susan (R. hirta), thimble-flower (R. bicolor), and coneflower (R. laciniata) are grown as border plants. Golden glow (R. laciniata variety hortensia)…
- Rudbeckia bicolor (plant)
coneflower: hirta), thimble-flower (R. bicolor), and coneflower (R. laciniata) are grown as border plants. Golden glow (R. laciniata variety hortensia) is a popular double-flowered variety.
- Rudbeckia hirta (plant)
black-eyed Susan, (Rudbeckia hirta), North American coneflower (family Asteraceae) commonly cultivated as an attractive garden ornamental. Growing as annuals or short-lived perennials, black-eyed Susans are native to prairies and open woodlands and are attractive to both birds and butterflies. The
- Rudchenko, Panas (Ukrainian author)
Ukrainian literature: Panas Myrny (pseudonym of Panas Rudchenko) was the major representative of Ukrainian realism. His depiction of social injustice and the birth of social protest in Khiba revut voly, yak yasla povni? (1880; “Do the Oxen Low When the Manger Is Full?”) had a new psychological…
- rudd (fish)
rudd, (Scardinius erythrophthalmus), stout-bodied freshwater sport fish of the carp family, Cyprinidae, similar to the related roach, but more golden, with yellow-orange eyes, deep red fins, and a sharp-edged belly. The rudd is widely distributed in Europe and Asia Minor and has been introduced
- Rudd’s mouse (mammal)
African spiny mouse: …in this subfamily; these are Rudd’s mouse (Uranomys ruddi), the Congo forest mouse (Deomys ferrugineus), and brush-furred rats (genus Lophuromys).
- Rudd, Amber (British politician)
Theresa May: The novichok attack in Salisbury, air strikes in Syria, and the Windrush scandal: This time Amber Rudd, the home secretary and a key ally of May, was forced to resign because of her role in the implementation of the government’s controversial policy regarding individuals who had immigrated to Britain from the Caribbean in the 1950s and ’60s. Because the paperwork…
- Rudd, Kevin (prime minister of Australia)
Kevin Rudd is an Australian politician, who served as leader of the Australian Labor Party (ALP; 2006–10; 2013) and prime minister of Australia (2007–10; 2013). Rudd grew up on a farm in Eumundi, Queensland. Politically active from his youth, he joined the ALP in 1972. He attended the Australian
- Rudd, Kevin Michael (prime minister of Australia)
Kevin Rudd is an Australian politician, who served as leader of the Australian Labor Party (ALP; 2006–10; 2013) and prime minister of Australia (2007–10; 2013). Rudd grew up on a farm in Eumundi, Queensland. Politically active from his youth, he joined the ALP in 1972. He attended the Australian