- Rudd, Mark (American activist)
Weather Underground: Bernardine Dohrn, James Mellen, and Mark Rudd and advocated street fighting as a method for weakening U.S. imperialism. At the SDS national convention in June 1969, the Third World Marxists presented a position paper titled “You Don’t Need a Weatherman to Know Which Way the Wind Blows” in the SDS…
- Rudd, Paul (American actor)
Paul Rudd is an American actor, film and television producer, and screenwriter best known for his comedy roles. He was often cast as a charismatic everyman. Rudd’s notable credits include Wet Hot American Summer (2001), Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy (2004), The 40-Year-Old Virgin (2012),
- Rudd, Paul Stephen (American actor)
Paul Rudd is an American actor, film and television producer, and screenwriter best known for his comedy roles. He was often cast as a charismatic everyman. Rudd’s notable credits include Wet Hot American Summer (2001), Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy (2004), The 40-Year-Old Virgin (2012),
- Rudd, Steele (Australian writer)
Steele Rudd was a novelist, playwright, and short-story writer whose comic characters are a well-known part of Australia’s literary heritage. Son of a blacksmith, Rudd worked as a horsebreaker, stockman, and drover before going to Brisbane, where he became a clerk and began to write poems and
- rudder (steering mechanism)
rudder, part of the steering apparatus of a boat or ship that is fastened outside the hull, usually at the stern. The most common form consists of a nearly flat, smooth surface of wood or metal hinged at its forward edge to the sternpost. It operates on the principle of unequal water pressures.
- Rudder Grange (novel by Stockton)
Frank Stockton: His adult novel Rudder Grange (1879), originally serialized in Scribner’s Monthly, recounted the whimsically fantastic and amusing adventures of a family living on a canal boat. Its success encouraged two sequels, Rudder Grangers Abroad (1891) and Pomona’s Travels (1894). The Casting Away of Mrs. Lecks and Mrs. Aleshine…
- Rudder of the Ship of Knowledge (work by Nicodemus the Hagiorite)
Saint Nicodemus the Hagiorite: Nicodemus’ outstanding work, the Pedalion, or Rudder of the Ship of Knowledge, is a commentary on Greek church law. Its bias against the Latin church, although partly attributable to interpolations by another editor, reflects the author’s negative feelings toward the institutions of Western Christianity. Nicodemus did not hesitate, however,…
- rudder pedal (mechanics)
airplane: Elevator, aileron, and rudder controls: … or wheel control column and rudder pedals, which control the movement of the elevator and ailerons and the rudder, respectively, through a system of cables or rods. In very sophisticated modern aircraft, there is no direct mechanical linkage between the pilot’s controls and the control surfaces; instead they are actuated…
- rudder reversal (aerial maneuver)
air warfare: Air superiority: …executing a maneuver called a rudder reversal, in which he would turn and do a snap roll, suddenly reducing his forward motion so that the speeding attacker would overshoot and find the intended victim on his tail. Tight maneuvers such as the rudder reversal were most effective when attempted with…
- Ruddigore; or, The Witch’s Curse (operetta by Gilbert and Sullivan)
Arthur Sullivan: …The Town of Titipu (1885), Ruddigore (1887), The Yeomen of the Guard (1888), and The Gondoliers (1889). The collective works of Gilbert and Sullivan became known as the “Savoy Operas.”
- ruddy duck (bird)
duck: … group, typified by the blue-billed ruddy duck (Oxyura jamaicensis), are highly aquatic diving ducks characterized by legs set far toward the rear of the body. The whistling ducks (Dendrocygna), also called tree ducks, are not true ducks but are more closely related to geese and swans. Ducks that are not…
- ruddy kingfisher (bird)
coraciiform: Locomotion and feeding: The ruddy kingfisher (Halcyon coromanda), widespread in Southeast Asia, eats many large land snails. It seizes a snail with its bill and beats it against a rock until the shell is broken and the meat can be extracted.
- ruddy shelduck (bird)
shelduck: The ruddy shelduck (Casarca ferruginea), ranging from North Africa and Spain to Mongolia, is orangish, with a pale head and white wing patches. Drakes of most shelduck species have melodious whistling calls and are aggressive year-round. In the European species the hen is solitary at the…
- ruddy turnstone (bird)
ruddy turnstone, shorebird species of the genus Arenaria. See
- Rude, François (French sculptor)
François Rude was a French sculptor, best known for his social art (art that inspires and captures the interest of a broad public), including public monuments such as the Departure of the Volunteers of 1792 (1833–36), popularly called La Marseillaise. Rude rejected the classical repose of late
- Rudel, Julius (Austrian-American conductor)
Julius Rudel was an Austrian-born American conductor and opera impresario who was conductor or director of the New York City Opera, 1944–79. Rudel attended the Vienna Academy of Music and, after immigrating to the United States in 1938, studied at the Mannes School of Music in New York. In 1943 he
- Rudenko, Ludmilla Vladimirovna (Ukrainian chess player)
Ludmilla Vladimirovna Rudenko was a Ukrainian chess player who was the women’s world champion (1950–53). Rudenko was trained as an economic planner in Odessa. Although she began playing chess as a child, Rudenko did not compete in tournaments before she moved to Moscow in 1925 to work for an
- Rudenko, Mykola (Ukrainian poet)
Ukraine: Ukraine under Shcherbytsky: …Ukraine, headed by the poet Mykola Rudenko; by the end of the 1970s, its members were almost all in concentration camps or in exile abroad. The expirations of political prisoners’ sentences were increasingly followed by rearrest and new sentences on charges of criminal activity. Incarceration in psychiatric institutions became a…
- Rüdesheim (Germany)
Rüdesheim, town, Hessen Land (state), western Germany. It is situated in the Rheingau (region) at the foot of the Taunus Mountains and is a chief centre of the Rhine wine industry. It was first mentioned in 864. The Brömserburg, an early castle of the archbishops of Mainz, was rebuilt as a
- Rüdesheim am Rhein (Germany)
Rüdesheim, town, Hessen Land (state), western Germany. It is situated in the Rheingau (region) at the foot of the Taunus Mountains and is a chief centre of the Rhine wine industry. It was first mentioned in 864. The Brömserburg, an early castle of the archbishops of Mainz, was rebuilt as a
- Rudge, Barnaby (fictional character)
Barnaby Rudge, fictional character, the developmentally disabled protagonist of Charles Dickens’s historical novel Barnaby Rudge
- Rüdiger, Aleksey Mikhailovich (patriarch of Moscow)
Aleksey II was the Russian Orthodox Patriarch of Moscow and All Russia from 1990 to 2008. Ridiger graduated from Leningrad Theological Academy in 1953 and was consecrated an archbishop in the Russian Orthodox Church in 1964. From 1968 to 1986 he was metropolitan of Tallinn and Estonia; in July 1986
- Rudin (novel by Turgenev)
Rudin, novel by Ivan Turgenev, published as a serial in the journal Sovremennik and as a book in 1856. The novel tells of an eloquent intellectual, Dmitry Rudin, a character modeled partly on the revolutionary agitator Mikhail Bakunin, whom Turgenev had known in Moscow in the 1830s. Rudin’s power
- Rudinì, Antonio Starabba, marchese di (premier of Italy)
Antonio Starabba, marquis di Rudinì was an Italian statesman, premier of Italy (1891–92, 1896–98). A member of an aristocratic but liberal Sicilian family, Rudinì joined the revolutionaries of 1860, and, in 1864, following the Piedmontese annexation, he was appointed mayor of Palermo. In that post
- rudist (fossil mollusk)
Cretaceous Period: Correlation: Rudist, inoceramid, and exogyrid bivalves have been used in many areas to subdivide (zone) the Cretaceous Period for the purpose of correlation. Rudist bivalves, for example, have been employed in conjunction with larger foraminiferans to zone sediments of the Tethyan regions in parts of Europe.…
- rudite (sedimentary rock)
sedimentary rock: Conglomerates and breccias: Sometimes the term rudite (or rudaceous) is used to collectively refer to both breccias and conglomerates.
- Rūdkhāneh-ye Harīrūd (river, Central Asia)
Harīrūd, river, Central Asia. It rises on the western slopes of the rugged Selseleh-ye Kūh-e Bābā range, an outlier of the Hindu Kush mountains, in central Afghanistan. Flowing west past Chaghcharān and the ancient city of Herāt (whence its name is derived), then north, it forms sections of the
- Rudkøbing (Denmark)
Langeland: …1550), and its principal town, Rudkøbing, was chartered in 1287. The undulating, well-wooded land has fertile clay loams that support grain, and cattle and pigs are raised. There is a well-preserved Stone Age barrow in the southern part of the island, and Rudkøbing has several medieval churches and houses. A…
- Rudman, Warren (United States senator)
boxing: Intercollegiate boxing: Senators William Proxmire and Warren Rudman, and President Gerald Ford, who was a boxing coach for a time at Yale University. The Universities of Idaho, Virginia, and Wisconsin, Syracuse University, and Idaho, Louisiana, Michigan, Pennsylvania, San Jose, and Washington State universities had leading programs. One hundred institutions had teams…
- Rudman, Warren Bruce (United States senator)
boxing: Intercollegiate boxing: Senators William Proxmire and Warren Rudman, and President Gerald Ford, who was a boxing coach for a time at Yale University. The Universities of Idaho, Virginia, and Wisconsin, Syracuse University, and Idaho, Louisiana, Michigan, Pennsylvania, San Jose, and Washington State universities had leading programs. One hundred institutions had teams…
- Rudnicki, Adolf (Polish author)
Adolf Rudnicki was a Polish novelist and essayist noted for his depictions of the Holocaust in Nazi-occupied Poland. Born into a Jewish family, Rudnicki was educated in Warsaw and worked as a bank clerk. Mobilized in the Polish army in 1939, he fought in the September campaign and was taken
- Rudnyi (Kazakhstan)
Rūdnyy, city, northern Kazakhstan. It lies on the Tobyl River. Rūdnyy, meaning “ore” in Russian, was founded in 1955 beside the huge ore-dressing combine, then under construction, which mines and processes the rich Sokolovka and Sarbay iron-ore deposits. A reservoir on the Tobyl supplies the city
- Rudnyj (Kazakhstan)
Rūdnyy, city, northern Kazakhstan. It lies on the Tobyl River. Rūdnyy, meaning “ore” in Russian, was founded in 1955 beside the huge ore-dressing combine, then under construction, which mines and processes the rich Sokolovka and Sarbay iron-ore deposits. A reservoir on the Tobyl supplies the city
- Rudnyy (Kazakhstan)
Rūdnyy, city, northern Kazakhstan. It lies on the Tobyl River. Rūdnyy, meaning “ore” in Russian, was founded in 1955 beside the huge ore-dressing combine, then under construction, which mines and processes the rich Sokolovka and Sarbay iron-ore deposits. A reservoir on the Tobyl supplies the city
- Rūdnyy (Kazakhstan)
Rūdnyy, city, northern Kazakhstan. It lies on the Tobyl River. Rūdnyy, meaning “ore” in Russian, was founded in 1955 beside the huge ore-dressing combine, then under construction, which mines and processes the rich Sokolovka and Sarbay iron-ore deposits. A reservoir on the Tobyl supplies the city
- Rudolf (king of France)
Rudolf was the duke of Burgundy (921–936) and later king of the West Franks, or France (923–936), who, after a stormy career typical of the general political instability that characterized the age, succeeded in consolidating his authority shortly before he died. Rudolf was the son-in-law of Robert
- Rudolf (antiking of Germany)
Rudolf was a German anti-king, opponent of Henry IV. Rudolf was granted the duchy of Swabia in 1057 by the dowager empress Agnes of Poitou, regent for her infant son Henry IV. She also appointed him administrator of the kingdom of Burgundy and gave him her daughter Matilda in marriage (1059).
- Rudolf (count palatine of the Rhine)
Germany: Constitutional conflicts in the 14th century: …of Brandenburg and his kinsman Rudolf, count palatine of the Rhine. The other five assembled at Rhens on July 11 and elected Charles under the title of Charles IV. The new king was spared a lengthy conflict with his rival, who died of a stroke in 1347. Shortly after his…
- Rudolf I (king of Germany)
Rudolf I was the first German king of the Habsburg dynasty. A son of Albert IV, Count of Habsburg, Rudolf on the occasion of his father’s death (c. 1239) inherited lands in upper Alsace, the Aargau, and Breisgau. A partisan of the Hohenstaufen Holy Roman emperor Frederick II and his son Conrad IV,
- Rudolf I (king of Burgundy)
Rudolf I was the first king of Juran (Upper) Burgundy (888–912). The son of Conrad, count of Auxerre of the powerful German Welf (Guelf) family, Rudolf succeeded to the duchy of Burgundy in 885 or 886. In January 888 he was crowned king at the abbey of St. Maurice d’Agaune and quickly extended his
- Rudolf II (king of Burgundy)
Rudolf II was the king of Burgundy (912–937) who ruled Italy for nearly four years (923–926) during the chaotic period at the end of the Carolingian era. The son of Rudolf I, founder of the kingdom of Jurane (Upper) Burgundy (i.e., the part of Burgundy north of Provence), and a descendant of the
- Rudolf II (duke of Austria)
Germany: Rudolf of Habsburg: …on Rudolf’s sons Albert and Rudolf in 1282. These acquisitions placed the Habsburgs in the first rank of the German territorial princes and lent impetus to a gradual shift in the political centre of gravity from the Rhineland to eastern and southern Germany. The growing Habsburg power, however, disquieted the…
- Rudolf II (Holy Roman emperor)
Rudolf II was the Holy Roman emperor from 1576 to 1612. His ill health and unpopularity prevented him from restraining the religious dissensions that eventually led to the Thirty Years’ War (1618–48). The eldest surviving son of the emperor Maximilian II and Maria, who was the daughter of the
- Rudolf III (king of Burgundy)
Rudolf III was the last of the independent kings of Burgundy (993–1032). Son and successor of Conrad the Peaceful, Rudolf was unable to control the rising power of the nobility and the increasing encroachments of Otto-William, count of Besançon, and Emperor Henry II of Germany. In 1016 he was
- Rudolf III (duke of Austria)
house of Habsburg: Austria and the rise of the Habsburgs in Germany: King Albert I’s son Rudolf III of Austria had been king of Bohemia from 1306 to 1307, and his brother Frederick I had been German king as Frederick III (in rivalry or conjointly with Louis IV the Bavarian) from 1314 to 1330. Albert V of Austria was in 1438…
- Rudolf Island (Russia)
Franz Josef Land: The easternmost includes Rudolf Island, whose Fligeli Cape is the northernmost point in Russia, and the large islands of Zemlya Vilcheka and Greem-Bell (Graham Bell). This group is separated from the central group, which contains most of the islands, by the Avstriysky (Austrian) Strait. The western group, divided…
- Rudolf IV (duke of Austria)
archduke: …(Pfalz-Erzherzog) was first assumed by Rudolf IV, Duke of Austria, on the strength of a forged privilege, in the hope of gaining for the dukes of Austria an equal status with the electors of the Holy Roman Empire. The emperor Charles IV refused to recognize the title, and it was…
- Rudolf Kárpáti: Last of a Long Line
The small eastern European nation of Hungary has contributed greatly to Olympic history, and perhaps in no field so much as in fencing. Hungarian athletes have historically excelled at the sport, winning gold medals in every individual sabre competition between 1924 and 1964. One of Hungary’s most
- Rudolf of Habsburg (king of Germany)
Rudolf I was the first German king of the Habsburg dynasty. A son of Albert IV, Count of Habsburg, Rudolf on the occasion of his father’s death (c. 1239) inherited lands in upper Alsace, the Aargau, and Breisgau. A partisan of the Hohenstaufen Holy Roman emperor Frederick II and his son Conrad IV,
- Rudolf of Rheinfelden (antiking of Germany)
Rudolf was a German anti-king, opponent of Henry IV. Rudolf was granted the duchy of Swabia in 1057 by the dowager empress Agnes of Poitou, regent for her infant son Henry IV. She also appointed him administrator of the kingdom of Burgundy and gave him her daughter Matilda in marriage (1059).
- Rudolf of Saxony (German duke)
Germany: Wenceslas: However, another elector, Duke Rudolf of Saxony, and a powerful group of northern German princes contended that the electors could not raise one of their own members to the kingship. The Golden Bull had declared otherwise, but Rudolf held his ground and declined to participate in the subsequent proceedings.…
- Rudolf of Swabia (antiking of Germany)
Rudolf was a German anti-king, opponent of Henry IV. Rudolf was granted the duchy of Swabia in 1057 by the dowager empress Agnes of Poitou, regent for her infant son Henry IV. She also appointed him administrator of the kingdom of Burgundy and gave him her daughter Matilda in marriage (1059).
- Rudolf the Pious (king of Burgundy)
Rudolf III was the last of the independent kings of Burgundy (993–1032). Son and successor of Conrad the Peaceful, Rudolf was unable to control the rising power of the nobility and the increasing encroachments of Otto-William, count of Besançon, and Emperor Henry II of Germany. In 1016 he was
- Rudolf the Sluggard (king of Burgundy)
Rudolf III was the last of the independent kings of Burgundy (993–1032). Son and successor of Conrad the Peaceful, Rudolf was unable to control the rising power of the nobility and the increasing encroachments of Otto-William, count of Besançon, and Emperor Henry II of Germany. In 1016 he was
- Rudolf von Ems (German poet)
Rudolf von Ems was a prolific and versatile Middle High German poet. Between about 1220 and 1254 he wrote five epic poems, totaling more than 93,000 lines. Though the influence of earlier masters of the courtly epic is evident in his work—his style is modeled on Gottfried von Strassburg, while his
- Rudolf von Rheinfelden (antiking of Germany)
Rudolf was a German anti-king, opponent of Henry IV. Rudolf was granted the duchy of Swabia in 1057 by the dowager empress Agnes of Poitou, regent for her infant son Henry IV. She also appointed him administrator of the kingdom of Burgundy and gave him her daughter Matilda in marriage (1059).
- Rudolf von Schwaben (antiking of Germany)
Rudolf was a German anti-king, opponent of Henry IV. Rudolf was granted the duchy of Swabia in 1057 by the dowager empress Agnes of Poitou, regent for her infant son Henry IV. She also appointed him administrator of the kingdom of Burgundy and gave him her daughter Matilda in marriage (1059).
- Rudolf, Archduke, crown prince of Austria (crown prince of Austria)
Archduke Rudolf, crown prince of Austria was the crown prince of Austria and heir to the Austro-Hungarian throne. His reformist and liberal ideas were stifled by his conservative father. The only son of the emperor Franz Joseph and the empress Elizabeth, Rudolf received an extensive education and
- Rudolf, Erzherzog und Kronprinz von Österreich (crown prince of Austria)
Archduke Rudolf, crown prince of Austria was the crown prince of Austria and heir to the Austro-Hungarian throne. His reformist and liberal ideas were stifled by his conservative father. The only son of the emperor Franz Joseph and the empress Elizabeth, Rudolf received an extensive education and
- Rudolf, Lake (lake, East Africa)
Lake Rudolf, fourth largest of the eastern African lakes. It lies mainly in northern Kenya, with its northern end stretching into Ethiopia. The lake lies in the eastern arm of eastern Africa’s Rift Valley. It covers an area of 2,473 square miles (6,405 square km) and lies at 1,230 feet (375 metres)
- Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer (recording by Autry)
Gene Autry: …Comes Santa Claus” (1947), “Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer” (1949), and “Frosty the Snow Man” (1950). In 2024 the U.S. Library of Congress added his recording of “Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer” to the National Recording Registry, a list of audio recordings deemed “culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant.”
- Rudolph, Alan (American director)
Robert Altman: M*A*S*H and the 1970s: …supporting the career of director Alan Rudolph, whose Welcome to L.A. (1976) and Remember My Name (1978) were produced by Altman.
- Rudolph, Eric (American bomber)
Olympic Games: Atlanta, Georgia, U.S., 1996: The perpetrator, American Eric Rudolph, also later bombed a gay night club in 1997 and an abortion clinic in 1998. He was sentenced to multiple terms of life imprisonment in 2005.
- Rudolph, Lucretia (American first lady)
Lucretia Garfield was an American first lady (March 4–September 19, 1881), the wife of James A. Garfield, 20th president of the United States. Although first lady for only a few months, she was one of the most interesting women to have held that job, and some of her early achievements and choices
- Rudolph, Maya (American comedian and actress)
Amy Poehler: Producing and directing: …SNL alumnae Rachel Dratch and Maya Rudolph.
- Rudolph, Paul (American architect)
Paul Rudolph was one of the most prominent Modernist architects in the United States after World War II. His buildings are notable for creative and unpredictable designs that appeal strongly to the senses. Rudolph received a bachelor’s degree in architecture from Alabama Polytechnic Institute in
- Rudolph, Paul Marvin (American architect)
Paul Rudolph was one of the most prominent Modernist architects in the United States after World War II. His buildings are notable for creative and unpredictable designs that appeal strongly to the senses. Rudolph received a bachelor’s degree in architecture from Alabama Polytechnic Institute in
- Rudolph, Wilhelm (German biblical scholar)
biblical literature: Jeremiah: One 20th-century German biblical scholar, Wilhelm Rudolph, has attempted to arrange the chapters of the book according to certain chronological details. He has divided the work into five sections: (1) prophecies against Judah and Jerusalem, chapters 1–25, during the reigns of kings Josiah (640–609) and Jehoiachim (609–598), and the period…
- Rudolph, Wilma (American sprinter)
Wilma Rudolph was an American sprinter, the first American woman to win three track-and-field gold medals in a single Olympics. Rudolph was sickly as a child and could not walk without an orthopedic shoe until she was 11 years old. Her determination to compete, however, made her a star basketball
- Rudolph, Wilma Glodean (American sprinter)
Wilma Rudolph was an American sprinter, the first American woman to win three track-and-field gold medals in a single Olympics. Rudolph was sickly as a child and could not walk without an orthopedic shoe until she was 11 years old. Her determination to compete, however, made her a star basketball
- Rudolphi’s rorqual (mammal)
sei whale, (Balaenoptera borealis), species of baleen whale capable of short bursts of speed that make it the swiftest of the rorquals. Usually attaining a length of about 13–15 metres (43–49 feet), this cetacean is bluish gray or blackish above with paler underparts and a relatively large
- Rudolphi, Karl (German anatomist)
Johannes Müller: …of the sober, precise anatomist Karl Rudolphi and thereby freed himself from naturalistic speculation.
- Rudolphine Tables (astronomy)
Rudolphine Tables, planetary tables and star catalog published in 1627 by Johannes Kepler, based principally on the observations of Tycho Brahe. The best of the pretelescopic catalogs, it is accurate to a few minutes of arc and contains positions for 1,005 stars (increased by Kepler from Tycho’s
- Rudra (Vedic deity)
Rudra, (Sanskrit: “Howler”), relatively minor Vedic god and one of the names of Śiva, a major god of later Hinduism. Śiva is considered to have evolved from Rudra, and the two share a fierce, unpredictable, destructive nature. In the Vedas, Rudra is known as the divine archer, who shoots arrows of
- Rudra Singh (king of Assam)
Assam: Prehistory to c. 1950: …during the rule of King Rudra Singh (reigned 1696–1714), before the kingdom was occupied by warriors from Myanmar in the late 18th century.
- Rudra-sampradaya of Vaishnavism (Hindu sect)
Vallabhacharya, school of Hinduism prominent among the merchant class of northern and western India. Its members are worshippers of Krishna and followers of the Pushtimarg (“Way of Flourishing”) group, founded by the 16th-century teacher Vallabha and his son Vitthala (also known as Gosainji). The
- Rudradaman (Shaka ruler)
Shaka satrap: …first great Shaka ruler was Rudradaman I, Chastana’s grandson, who reigned after 130 ce. The direct line of Chastana became extinct in 304–305 ce with the death of Vishvasena, son of Bhartridaman. It is doubtful that the dynasty was important in the 4th century, although one of its members—probably Rudrasimha…
- Rudramāla (temple, Siddhapur, India)
South Asian arts: Medieval temple architecture: North Indian style of Gujarāt: The Rudramāla at Siddhapur, the most magnificent temple of the 12th century, is now in a much ruined condition, with only the toraṇa (gateway) and some subsidiary structures remaining. Successively damaged and rebuilt, the Somanātha at Prabhāsa Patan was the most famous temple of Gujarāt, its…
- Rudras (Hindu deities)
Rudra: …of the storm gods, the Rudras, sometimes called Maruts.
- rudus (road construction)
road: The Roman roads: …inches in size, (2) the rudus, a 9-inch-thick layer of concrete made from stones under 2 inches in size, (3) the nucleus layer, about 12 inches thick, using concrete made from small gravel and coarse sand, and, for very important roads, (4) the summum dorsum, a wearing surface of large…
- Rudyerd, John (British engineer)
lighthouse: The beginning of the modern era: …second wooden tower, constructed by John Rudyerd, which was destroyed by fire in 1755. Rudyerd’s lighthouse was followed by John Smeaton’s famous masonry tower in 1759. Smeaton, a professional engineer, embodied an important new principle in its construction whereby masonry blocks were dovetailed together in an interlocking pattern. Despite the…
- rue (plant and herb)
rue, (Ruta graveolens), small perennial shrub in the family Rutaceae used as a culinary and medicinal herb. Native to the Balkan Peninsula, rue is cultivated for its strongly aromatic leaves, which can be used fresh or dry in small amounts. Rue is an evergreen plant with gland-studded foliage. The
- Rue des boutiques obscures (novel by Modiano)
Patrick Modiano: …Rue des boutiques obscures (1978; Missing Person)—a thriller in which a man searches for his own identity—won the Prix Goncourt.
- Rue des tambourins (work by Amrouche)
Marguerite Taos Amrouche: A second novel, Rue des tambourins (1960; “Street of the Tabors”), describes a sense of marginality and owes a great deal to its author’s recollections of her childhood in Tunis.
- rue family (plant family)
Rutaceae, the rue family of flowering plants (order Sapindales), composed of 160 genera and about 2,070 species. Rutaceae includes woody shrubs and trees (and a few herbaceous perennials) and is distributed throughout the world, especially in warm temperate and tropical regions. The largest numbers
- Rue, Pierre de La (Flemish composer)
Pierre de La Rue was a composer in the Flemish, or Netherlandish, style that dominated Renaissance music, known for his religious music. Little is known of La Rue’s early life. He may have worked first as a part-time singer in Brussels (1469), then perhaps in Ghent (1471–72) and Nieuwpoort
- Rue, Warren De la (British scientist and inventor)
Warren De la Rue was an English pioneer in astronomical photography, the method by which nearly all modern astronomical observations are made. De La Rue was educated at the Collège Sainte-Barbe in Paris and entered his father’s printing business. In 1851, working with inventor Edwin Hill, he
- Ruebush-Kieffer (American company)
shape-note singing: History: Southern firms such as Ruebush-Kieffer and A.J. Showalter began to publish small collections of music every year or two. These upright songbooks gradually began to supplant the large oblong tunebooks and their fixed repertoire. After 1900, mass-market publishers such as James D. Vaughan, V.O. Stamps, and J.R. (“Pap”) Baxter…
- Rueda, Lope de (Spanish dramatist)
Lope de Rueda was an outstanding figure of the early Spanish theatre who did much to popularize it and prepared the way for Lope de Vega. A gold-beater by trade, Rueda was probably attracted to the stage by touring Italian actors; he organized a traveling theatre company and as its autor, or
- Ruehl, Mercedes (American actress)
- Rueil, Peace of (French history)
the Fronde: …war, the government negotiated the Peace of Rueil (ratified April 1, 1649), which granted amnesty to the rebels and confirmed the concessions to Parlement.
- Rueil-Malmaison (France)
Rueil-Malmaison, town, western residential and industrial suburb of Paris, Hauts-de-Seine département, Île-de-France région, north-central France. Originally called Rotoialum or Roialum, it was a resort of the Merovingian kings, a Frankish dynasty (6th–8th century). In 1346 Rueil was burned by the
- Ruelas, Julio (Mexican graphic artist)
Latin American art: Modernismo (1890–1920): …the beginning of the century, Julio Ruelas, a Mexican graphic artist, created etched images depicting his own tormented-looking face. He incorporated black, twisted lines and swirling patterns similar to those used by his more abstract Norwegian contemporary Edvard Munch.
- Ruesch, Jurgen (American psychiatrist)
communication: The American psychiatrist and scholar Jurgen Ruesch identified 40 varieties of disciplinary approaches to the subject, including architectural, anthropological, psychological, political, and many other interpretations of the apparently simple interaction described by Richards. In total, if such informal communications as sexual attraction and play behaviour are included, there exist at…
- Ruether, Rosemary (American theologian)
ecofeminism: Origins of ecofeminism: One founder of ecofeminism, theologian Rosemary Ruether, insisted that all women must acknowledge and work to end the domination of nature if they were to work toward their own liberation. She urged women and environmentalists to work together to end patriarchal systems that privilege hierarchies, control, and unequal socioeconomic relations.…
- RUF (guerrilla unit, Sierra Leone)
Revolutionary United Front (RUF), guerrilla unit formed in 1991 in Sierra Leone whose actions created instability in the country that led to the overthrow of the government and a long civil war. The group later financed itself through control of the country’s diamond resources and for 11 years
- Rufanos (Greek scholar)
Armenian alphabet: …and by a Greek called Rufanos. Isaac founded a school of translators and had the Bible translated into Armenian in the new script. The oldest surviving documents in Armenian date from the 9th to 10th century ad.
- ruff (collar)
ruff, in dresswear, crimped or pleated collar or frill, usually wide and full, worn in Europe, especially from the mid-16th century into the 17th century, by both men and women. The beginnings of the ruff can be seen in the early years of the 16th century, when men allowed the top of the shirt to
- ruff (bird)
ruff, (Philomachus pugnax), in zoology, Old World bird of the sandpiper subfamily Calidritinae (family Scolopacidae, order Charadriiformes) remarkable for its unusual courtship plumage and behaviour. The name ruff applies to the species or may be applied to the male only. In spring the 30-cm
- Ruff, Lindy (Canadian ice-hockey player and coach)
Buffalo Sabres: Buffalo hired former Sabres player Lindy Ruff to serve as head coach in 1997, and he guided the team to a conference finals berth in his first season at the helm. In 1998–99 the seventh-seeded (out of eight Eastern Conference teams) Sabres reached the second Stanley Cup finals in franchise…