- Ryabushinsky Family (Russian family)
Ryabushinsky Family, family of wealthy Russian industrialists. Descended from peasants, they successfully invested in textiles, land, and banking in the 19th and early 20th centuries. They were prominent in liberal politics prior to the Russian Revolution in 1917. Mikhayl Y. Ryabushinsky purchased
- Ryabushinsky, Mikhayl Y. (Russian businessman)
Ryabushinsky Family: Mikhayl Y. Ryabushinsky purchased a fabric store in Moscow in 1844 and two years later opened a cloth factory. His sons, Pavel and Vasily Mikhaylovich Ryabushinsky, expanded the business, eventually consolidating their manufacturing facilities at a large complex near Vyshny-Volochek in 1869. In 1900 seven…
- Ryabushinsky, Pavel Pavlovich (Russian businessman)
Ryabushinsky Family: Pavel Pavlovich Ryabushinsky (1871–1924), the oldest brother and, from 1894, head of the family’s business concerns, opened the first Russian automotive factory in Moscow in 1916. A staunch supporter of the Russian war effort in World War I, he opposed the Bolsheviks, and Soviet historians…
- Ryabushinsky, Vasily Mikhaylovich (Russian businessman)
Ryabushinsky Family: His sons, Pavel and Vasily Mikhaylovich Ryabushinsky, expanded the business, eventually consolidating their manufacturing facilities at a large complex near Vyshny-Volochek in 1869. In 1900 seven of Pavel’s sons took control of the Kharkov Land Bank and, in 1902, opened their own banking house, extending branches throughout northern and…
- ryadovoy (Soviet soldier)
Red Army: …was subsequently called simply a ryadovoy (“ranker”). Discipline in the Soviet forces was always strict and punishments severe; during World War II, penal battalions were given suicidal tasks. In 1960, however, new regulations were introduced making discipline, and certainly punishments, less severe. Officers were to use more persuasion and were…
- ryal (English coin)
coin: Gold coinage: …the ship (rose noble, or ryal) and raised its value to 10 shillings, while a new gold coin, the angel, was introduced to replace the old value of the noble; the penny was reduced to 12 grains. The angel is so called from its type of St. Michael and Lucifer.…
- Ryan White CARE Act (United States [1990])
Ryan White: …the same year, the federal Ryan White Comprehensive AIDS Resource Emergency (CARE) Act was adopted to provide funding for medical care and support services for individuals and families living with HIV/AIDS.
- Ryan White Comprehensive AIDS Resource Emergency Act (United States [1990])
Ryan White: …the same year, the federal Ryan White Comprehensive AIDS Resource Emergency (CARE) Act was adopted to provide funding for medical care and support services for individuals and families living with HIV/AIDS.
- Ryan X-13 Vertijet (aircraft)
helicopter: Fixed jet: An early example, the Ryan X-13 Vertijet, was launched from a trailer bed that was erected vertically prior to takeoff. The aircraft flew successfully in vertical and horizontal modes, including takeoff and “tail-sitter” landings, but the operational limitations in terms of speed, range, and payload were too great for further…
- Ryan XV-5A Vertifan (aircraft)
helicopter: Fixed jet: The Ryan XV-5A Vertifan used a jet engine to drive horizontally mounted fans in the nose and wing; it was nominally successful. Another type of fixed jet used separate batteries of jet engines, some dedicated to vertical flight and some to horizontal flight, but this expensive technology…
- Ryan’s Daughter (film by Lean [1970])
David Lean: …Russian Revolution, and the romantic Ryan’s Daughter (1970) followed, both exhibiting the grand scale, lush cinematography, and breathtaking landscapes that had become the hallmark of Lean’s work. Doctor Zhivago received mixed reviews but was a popular success. Ryan’s Daughter was financially successful, but critics panned it. Lean was humiliated by…
- Ryan, George (American politician)
Patrick Fitzgerald: …among them former Illinois governor George Ryan and associates of Chicago Mayor Richard M. Daley. He again drew on the finer points of law, using mail fraud charges to bring indictments against Ryan.
- Ryan, Irene (American actress)
The Beverly Hillbillies: …the show featured Granny (Irene Ryan), a matriarch with uncommon folk wisdom and uncanny natural abilities (such as telling the exact time from the position of the Sun); Elly May (Donna Douglas), Jed’s pretty yet naive daughter, who is courted by various potential beaux from Hollywood; and Jethro Bodine…
- Ryan, Kay (American poet)
Kay Ryan is an American poet laureate (2008–10) who wrote punchy, wry verses about commonplace things with consummate craft, humour, and intelligence. Ryan grew up in a succession of small towns in California’s Central Valley, where her father worked at a variety of jobs (including oil well
- Ryan, Leo (American politician)
Jim Jones: Leo Ryan of California arrived in Guyana with a group of reporters and relatives of cultists to conduct an unofficial investigation of alleged abuses. Four days later, as Ryan’s party and 14 defectors from the cult prepared to leave from an airstrip near Jonestown, Jones…
- Ryan, Lucy (New Zealand-born actress)
Lucy Lawless is a New Zealand-born actress who became famous for her portrayal of the title character in the popular television show Xena: Warrior Princess (1995–2001). As a youth, Lawless performed in school productions, and in college she studied opera singing. However, she later dropped her
- Ryan, Lynn Nolan, Jr. (American baseball player)
Nolan Ryan is an American professional right-handed baseball pitcher who in 1983 became the first pitcher to surpass Walter Johnson’s record of 3,508 career strikeouts, set in 1927. Ryan retired in 1993 at age 46 with a record 5,714 strikeouts. Ryan was taught to play baseball by an elder brother
- Ryan, Matt (American football player)
Atlanta Falcons: …coach Mike Smith, rookie quarterback Matt Ryan, and newly acquired running back Michael Turner, the Falcons qualified for the play-offs by adding seven wins to the previous year’s total to compile an 11–5 record.
- Ryan, Meg (American actress)
Tom Hanks: After starring opposite actress Meg Ryan in the romantic comedy Joe Versus the Volcano (1990), Hanks reteamed with her in Sleepless in Seattle (1993) and You’ve Got Mail (1998), both directed by Nora Ephron. He portrayed the drunken manager of a women’s baseball team in the comedy A League…
- Ryan, Nolan (American baseball player)
Nolan Ryan is an American professional right-handed baseball pitcher who in 1983 became the first pitcher to surpass Walter Johnson’s record of 3,508 career strikeouts, set in 1927. Ryan retired in 1993 at age 46 with a record 5,714 strikeouts. Ryan was taught to play baseball by an elder brother
- Ryan, Paul (American politician)
Paul Ryan is an American Republican politician who served as a congressman from Wisconsin in the U.S. House of Representatives (1999–2019), where he was speaker from 2015 to 2019. He was selected by Mitt Romney to be his vice presidential running mate in the 2012 presidential election. While
- Ryan, Paul Davis (American politician)
Paul Ryan is an American Republican politician who served as a congressman from Wisconsin in the U.S. House of Representatives (1999–2019), where he was speaker from 2015 to 2019. He was selected by Mitt Romney to be his vice presidential running mate in the 2012 presidential election. While
- Ryan, Rex (American football coach)
New York Jets: …2009, under new head coach Rex Ryan, the Jets repeated their 9–7 record from the previous season but this time advanced to the play-offs, where they won two road contests before ultimately falling to the Indianapolis Colts in the AFC championship game. The following season, the Jets again posted upset…
- Ryan, Robert (American actor)
Robert Ryan was a U.S. film actor. He trained for the stage at Max Reinhardt’s workshop in Hollywood, and after World War II he became a successful character actor. Often playing tough guys and bullies, he earned acclaim for his roles in The Woman on the Beach (1947), Crossfire (1947), The Set-Up
- Ryan, T. Claude (American aeronautical engineer)
T. Claude Ryan was an American airline entrepreneur and aircraft manufacturer who designed the plane from which Charles Lindbergh’s Spirit of St. Louis was built. Ryan learned to fly in 1917, trained with the U.S. Army Air Corps in 1919 at Marsh Field, California, and served with the U.S. Aerial
- Ryan, Thelma Catherine (American first lady)
Pat Nixon was an American first lady (1969–74), the wife of Richard Nixon, 37th president of the United States, who espoused the cause of volunteerism during her husband’s term. Nicknamed “Pat” because of her birth on the eve of St. Patrick’s Day, Thelma Catherine Ryan was the daughter of William
- Ryan, Thomas Fortune (American financier)
Thomas Fortune Ryan was an American financier who played a key role in numerous mergers and business reorganizations that took place about the turn of the 20th century, including those resulting in the creation of the Metropolitan Street Railway Company and the American Tobacco Company. Born in
- Ryan, Tim (American politician)
Nancy Pelosi: … was elected president in 2016, Tim Ryan from Ohio challenged Pelosi for minority leader. Pelosi ultimately prevailed.
- Ryan, Tommy (American boxer)
Kid McCoy: …sparring partner of welterweight champion Tommy Ryan, McCoy pleaded with Ryan for a title match as a benefit for himself, asserting that he was in ill health and needed money. Ryan, deceived, did not train seriously for the fight. McCoy, who was in excellent condition, knocked the champion out in…
- Ryan, Tubal Claude (American aeronautical engineer)
T. Claude Ryan was an American airline entrepreneur and aircraft manufacturer who designed the plane from which Charles Lindbergh’s Spirit of St. Louis was built. Ryan learned to fly in 1917, trained with the U.S. Army Air Corps in 1919 at Marsh Field, California, and served with the U.S. Aerial
- Ryanair (Irish company)
Ireland: Air facilities: …travel, most notably that of Ryanair, which began operation in 1985 and has served as a model for lower-fare European air travel.
- Ryania angustifolia (plant)
Malpighiales: Salicaceae: Ryania angustifolia, of the Neotropics, is noted for having an extremely toxic and violent gastric poison in all parts of the plant, a poison that is used to kill alligators. The poisonous agent, ryanodine, is also an effective insecticide.
- Ryazan (oblast, Russia)
Ryazan, oblast (region), western Russia. It occupies the middle Oka River basin and extends southward across the northern end of the Central Russian Upland and Oka-Don Plain to the upper Don River basin. North of the Oka is the Meshchera Lowland, with extensive swamps of reed and grass marsh and
- Ryazan (medieval Russian principality)
Ryazan, medieval Russian principality from the 12th to the early 16th century. Ryazan became an independent princedom early in the 12th century under Yaroslav, the son of the grand prince Svyatoslav of Kiev. Its capital city was Old Ryazan on the Oka River, about 150 miles (240 km) southeast of
- Ryazan (Russia)
Ryazan, city and administrative centre of Ryazan oblast (region), western Russia. It lies along the Oka River on the site of the ancient town of Pereyaslavl-Ryazansky, about 120 miles (193 km) southeast of Moscow. The original Ryazan, first recorded in 1095, lay downstream at the Pronya confluence.
- RYB colour model
RGB colour model: …one of which is the RYB colour model. The RYB colour model is used by artists primarily working in paint. If all of its primary colours—red, yellow, and blue—are combined, theoretically they would create black. This is because the pigments of paint selectively absorb and reflect light to create colour.…
- Rybachy Peninsula (peninsula, Russia)
Rybachy Peninsula, peninsula in the northwestern part of the Murmansk oblast (province), northwestern Russia, jutting into the Barents Sea. Its most northerly point is Cape Nemetsky. Geologically, the peninsula is strikingly different from the rest of the Kola Peninsula, from which it is separated
- Rybachye (Kyrgyzstan)
Balykchy, town, capital of Ysyk-Köl oblasty (province), northeastern Kyrgyzstan. It is a port located on the western shore of Lake Ysyk (Issyk-Kul) and is linked to Frunze, about 87 miles (140 km) north-northwest. Balykchy’s economy centres on a food industry, including meat-packing and cereal
- Rybačij Peninsula (peninsula, Russia)
Rybachy Peninsula, peninsula in the northwestern part of the Murmansk oblast (province), northwestern Russia, jutting into the Barents Sea. Its most northerly point is Cape Nemetsky. Geologically, the peninsula is strikingly different from the rest of the Kola Peninsula, from which it is separated
- Rybakov, Anatoly (Russian author)
Anatoly Rybakov was a Russian author whose novels of life in the Soviet Union under Joseph Stalin’s dictatorship were published—and became popular—after the institution of glasnost in the late 1980s. In 1933 Rybakov completed his studies in transport engineering and soon after was arrested for
- Rybakov, Anatoly Naumovich (Russian author)
Anatoly Rybakov was a Russian author whose novels of life in the Soviet Union under Joseph Stalin’s dictatorship were published—and became popular—after the institution of glasnost in the late 1980s. In 1933 Rybakov completed his studies in transport engineering and soon after was arrested for
- Rybakov, Anatoly Naumovich (Russian author)
Anatoly Rybakov was a Russian author whose novels of life in the Soviet Union under Joseph Stalin’s dictatorship were published—and became popular—after the institution of glasnost in the late 1980s. In 1933 Rybakov completed his studies in transport engineering and soon after was arrested for
- Rybinsk (Russia)
Rybinsk, city, Yaroslavl oblast (region), northwestern Russia, on the Volga River. The 12th-century village of Rybnaya sloboda became the town of Rybinsk in 1777. Its river port flourished after the opening (1810) of the Mariinsk Waterway, linking the Volga to the Baltic Sea, and again with the
- Rybinsk Reservoir (reservoir, Russia)
Rybinsk Reservoir, large artificial body of water on the upper Volga River, northwestern Russia, formed by two dams on the Volga and its tributary, the Sheksna. The project began in 1935, the artificial lake began to form in 1941, and, when the project was completed in 1947, a lake of 1,768 square
- Rybinskoye Vodokhranilishche (reservoir, Russia)
Rybinsk Reservoir, large artificial body of water on the upper Volga River, northwestern Russia, formed by two dams on the Volga and its tributary, the Sheksna. The project began in 1935, the artificial lake began to form in 1941, and, when the project was completed in 1947, a lake of 1,768 square
- Rybnaya (Russia)
Rybinsk, city, Yaroslavl oblast (region), northwestern Russia, on the Volga River. The 12th-century village of Rybnaya sloboda became the town of Rybinsk in 1777. Its river port flourished after the opening (1810) of the Mariinsk Waterway, linking the Volga to the Baltic Sea, and again with the
- Rybnik (Poland)
Rybnik, city, southwestern Śląskie województwo (province), southern Poland, on the Nacyna River. Situated in a sub-Carpathian valley in a forested area of the Upper Silesian coalfields, Rybnik has coal mining, metalworks, and several vocational schools. Beginning as a fishing village in the 10th
- Ryckel, Denys (Flemish theologian)
Dionysius the Carthusian was a theologian and mystic, one of the important contributors to, and propagators of, the influential school of Rhenish spirituality originating in the 14th century. Educated at the University of Cologne, Dionysius entered the Carthusian order at the charterhouse of
- Rydberg atom (physics)
spectroscopy: RIS schemes: …and exists in a so-called Rydberg state. In such a state the electron has been promoted to an orbit that is so far from the nucleus that it is scarcely bound. Even an electric field of moderate strength can be pulsed to remove the electron and complete the resonance-ionization process.…
- Rydberg constant (physics)
Rydberg constant, (symbol R∞ or RΗ ), fundamental constant of atomic physics that appears in the formulas developed (1890) by the Swedish physicist Johannes Rydberg, describing the wavelengths or frequencies of light in various series of related spectral lines, most notably those emitted by
- Rydberg state (physics)
spectroscopy: RIS schemes: …and exists in a so-called Rydberg state. In such a state the electron has been promoted to an orbit that is so far from the nucleus that it is scarcely bound. Even an electric field of moderate strength can be pulsed to remove the electron and complete the resonance-ionization process.…
- Rydberg, Abraham Viktor (Swedish author)
Viktor Rydberg was an author of the Romantic school who, with his broad range of achievements, greatly influenced Swedish cultural life. Rydberg grew up among strangers, with no home of his own; his mother had died in a cholera epidemic, and his father became an alcoholic. He had to break off his
- Rydberg, Johannes (Swedish physicist)
Johannes Rydberg was a Swedish physicist for whom the Rydberg constant in spectroscopy is named. Educated at the University of Lund, Rydberg received his bachelor’s degree in 1875 and his doctorate in mathematics in 1879. He became lecturer in physics there in 1882 and assistant at the Physics
- Rydberg, Viktor (Swedish author)
Viktor Rydberg was an author of the Romantic school who, with his broad range of achievements, greatly influenced Swedish cultural life. Rydberg grew up among strangers, with no home of his own; his mother had died in a cholera epidemic, and his father became an alcoholic. He had to break off his
- Ryde (Isle of Wight, England, United Kingdom)
Ryde, town (parish) on the northeastern coast of the Isle of Wight, historic county of Hampshire, southern England. It lies opposite Portsmouth on the mainland. The town is located on the site of a former village called La Rye, which the French destroyed early in the 14th century. Still a small
- Rydell, Mark (American actor and director)
Mark Rydell is an American actor and director who was best known for helming On Golden Pond (1981). Rydell trained at the Juilliard School of Music and The Actors Studio. He initially worked as a jazz pianist, and in 1952 he made his Broadway debut, appearing in Seagulls over Sorrento. The
- Rydell, Mortimer (American actor and director)
Mark Rydell is an American actor and director who was best known for helming On Golden Pond (1981). Rydell trained at the Juilliard School of Music and The Actors Studio. He initially worked as a jazz pianist, and in 1952 he made his Broadway debut, appearing in Seagulls over Sorrento. The
- Ryder Cup (golf trophy)
Ryder Cup, biennial professional team golf event first held in 1927. It was played between teams of golfers from the United States and Great Britain until the 1970s, when the British team was expanded to include players from Ireland (1973) and from all of Europe (1979). The trophy was donated by
- Ryder, Albert Pinkham (American painter)
Albert Pinkham Ryder was an American painter, noted for his highly personal seascapes and mystical allegorical scenes. About 1870 Ryder settled permanently in New York City, where he briefly studied painting. His formal training, however, did little to affect his early work, consisting largely of
- Ryder, Charles (fictional character)
Charles Ryder, fictional character, a British officer who provides the narrative voice in Evelyn Waugh’s novel Brideshead Revisited
- Ryder, Richard (British philosopher)
speciesism: …introduced by the English philosopher Richard Ryder in the 1970s and subsequently popularized by the Australian philosopher Peter Singer. Ryder, Singer, and other opponents of speciesism have claimed that it is exactly analogous to racism, sexism, and other forms of irrational discrimination and prejudice.
- Ryder, Samuel (British merchant)
Ryder Cup: The trophy was donated by Samuel Ryder, a British seed merchant, for a biennial golf competition to alternate between British and U.S. venues. The players for each side were chosen by professional golf associations. The competition has been match play, foursomes (partners taking alternate strokes) one day and singles the…
- Ryder, Winona (American actress)
Winona Ryder is an American actress who played prominent roles in such popular films as Beetlejuice (1988), Heathers (1988), Bram Stoker’s Dracula (1992), and The Age of Innocence (1993). Ryder initially was known for playing offbeat, outsider characters but later gained critical acclaim in leading
- Rydz-Śmigły, Edward (Polish military officer)
World War II: The campaign in Poland, 1939: …the commander in chief, Marshal Edward Rydz-Śmigły. The Poles’ forward concentration in general forfeited their chance of fighting a series of delaying actions, since their foot-marching army was unable to retreat to their defensive positions in the rear or to man them before being overrun by the invader’s mechanized columns.
- rye (cereal)
rye, (Secale cereale), cereal grass (family Poaceae) and its edible grain that is chiefly used to make rye bread and rye whiskey. It is high in carbohydrates and dietary fibre and provides small quantities of protein, potassium, and B vitamins. Rye is also used as livestock feed, as a pasture
- Rye (England, United Kingdom)
Rye, town (parish), Rother district, administrative county of East Sussex, historic county of Sussex, southeastern England. It is situated on a hill by the River Rother, about 2 miles (3 km) from the English Channel. Originally a seaport, Rye was incorporated in 1289 and became a full member of the
- Rye (New York, United States)
Rye, city and town (township), on Long Island Sound, in Westchester county, southeastern New York, U.S. The original town site, at Pendingo Neck, was first settled (1660) by a company of men from Greenwich, Connecticut, who had purchased the land from the Siwanoy Indians; they named it (1665) for
- rye bread (food)
kvass: …local or private custom, although rye bread fermented with malt is the base. Mint is frequently added for flavouring, or sometimes fruit, such as apples or raspberries.
- Rye House Plot (alleged conspiracy, England [1683])
Rye House Plot, (1683), alleged Whig conspiracy to assassinate or mount an insurrection against Charles II of England because of his pro-Roman Catholic policies. The plot drew its name from Rye House at Hoddesdon, Hertfordshire, near which ran a narrow road where Charles was supposed to be killed
- rye whiskey (liquor)
rye whiskey, whiskey that is distilled from a mash in which rye grain predominates. See
- Ryedale (district, England, United Kingdom)
Ryedale, district, administrative county of North Yorkshire, historic county of Yorkshire, northern England. It is named for a small dale and river draining into the Vale of Pickering. Malton is the administrative centre. The predominantly rural district is the largest in area in North Yorkshire.
- ryegrass (plant)
ryegrass, (genus Lolium), genus of about 10 species of grass in the family Poaceae. A number of species are grown as forage and lawn grasses in temperate Eurasia and Africa, and both perennial ryegrass (Lolium perenne) and annual ryegrass (L. multiflorum) are important constituents of pasture and
- Ryerson Polytechnic Institute (institution, Toronto, Ontario, Canada)
Ryerson University, privately endowed institution of higher learning in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It was founded in 1948 as the Ryerson Institute of Technology, named after the educator Egerton Ryerson (1803–82). In 1963–64 the school’s name changed to Ryerson Polytechnic Institute, and in 2002 it
- Ryerson University (institution, Toronto, Ontario, Canada)
Ryerson University, privately endowed institution of higher learning in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It was founded in 1948 as the Ryerson Institute of Technology, named after the educator Egerton Ryerson (1803–82). In 1963–64 the school’s name changed to Ryerson Polytechnic Institute, and in 2002 it
- Ryerson, Adolphus Egerton (Canadian educator)
Egerton Ryerson was a Canadian provincial educator and Methodist church leader who founded the public education system of what is now Ontario province. After his own local education, Ryerson taught for a time at a nearby school. He took further studies in Hamilton, Ontario, and then entered the
- Ryerson, Egerton (Canadian educator)
Egerton Ryerson was a Canadian provincial educator and Methodist church leader who founded the public education system of what is now Ontario province. After his own local education, Ryerson taught for a time at a nearby school. He took further studies in Hamilton, Ontario, and then entered the
- Ryknield Street (Roman road, Staffordshire, England, United Kingdom)
Staffordshire: …are now Watling Street and Ryknield Street, intersecting near Lichfield. Roman settlements developed along those roads, including Letocetum (near Wall; at their intersection) and Pennocrucium (near Penkridge). From the 7th until the 9th century the area was the centre of the Anglo-Saxon kingdom of Mercia. Tamworth was the kingdom’s political…
- Rykov, Aleksey Ivanovich (Soviet statesman)
Aleksey Ivanovich Rykov was a Bolshevik leader who became a prominent Soviet official after the Russian Revolution (October 1917) and one of Joseph Stalin’s major opponents during the late 1920s. Rykov joined the Russian Social-Democratic Workers’ Party at the age of 18, became a member of its
- Rylance, Mark (British actor and director)
Mark Rylance is a British theatre actor and director recognized not only for his period-specific enactments of both male and female roles in the works of William Shakespeare but also for his poignant portrayals of contemporary characters. Rylance, habitually consumed by his roles, often kept in
- Ryland v. Fletcher (British law case)
tort: Strict liability statutes: …by the English decision of Ryland v. Fletcher (1868), which held that anyone who in the course of “non-natural” use of his land accumulates thereon for his own purposes anything likely to do mischief if it escapes is answerable for all direct damage thereby caused. The German statutes, however, deserve…
- Ryland, William Wynne (British engraver)
William Blake: Education as artist and engraver: …the successful and fashionable engraver William Wynne Ryland. Ryland’s fee, perhaps £100, was both “more attainable” than that of fashionable painters and still, for the Blakes, very high; furthermore the boy interposed an unexpected objection: “Father, I do not like the man’s face; it looks as if he will live…
- Ryle, Gilbert (British philosopher)
Gilbert Ryle was a British philosopher and a leading figure in the “Oxford philosophy,” or “ordinary language,” movement. Ryle gained first-class honours at Queen’s College, Oxford, and became a lecturer at Christ Church College in 1924. Throughout his career, which remained centred at Oxford, he
- Ryle, Sir Martin (British astronomer)
Sir Martin Ryle was a British radio astronomer who developed revolutionary radio telescope systems and used them for accurate location of weak radio sources. With improved equipment, he observed the most distant known galaxies of the universe. Ryle and Antony Hewish shared the Nobel Prize for
- Ryleev, Kondraty Fyodorovich (Russian poet)
Kondraty Fyodorovich Ryleyev was a Russian poet and revolutionary, a leader in the Decembrist revolt of 1825. Ryleyev came from a family of poor gentry. He served in the army, spending time in Germany, Switzerland, and France. After his return to Russia, he went to live in Voronezh province, where
- Ryleyev, Kondraty Fyodorovich (Russian poet)
Kondraty Fyodorovich Ryleyev was a Russian poet and revolutionary, a leader in the Decembrist revolt of 1825. Ryleyev came from a family of poor gentry. He served in the army, spending time in Germany, Switzerland, and France. After his return to Russia, he went to live in Voronezh province, where
- Ryman, Robert (American painter)
Robert Ryman was an American painter whose lifelong production of white paintings reflect a connection to minimalism. Despite the look of his paintings, however, Ryman did not consider himself an abstract painter because, as he said, “I don’t abstract from anything.…I am involved with real space,
- Rymer, Thomas (English critic)
Thomas Rymer was an English literary critic who introduced into England the principles of French formalist Neoclassical criticism. As historiographer royal, he also compiled a collection of treaties of considerable value to the medievalist. Rymer left Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge, without
- Rynchopidae (bird)
skimmer, any of three species of water birds that constitute the family Rynchopidae in the order Charadriiformes. The skimmer is distinguished by a unique bladelike bill, the lower mandible of which is one-third longer than the upper mandible. By day the skimmer rests onshore, and at twilight the
- Rynchops nigra (bird)
skimmer: The largest skimmer is the black skimmer (Rynchops nigra; see photograph) of America, which grows to 50 cm (20 inches) long. The African skimmer (R. flavirostris) and the Indian skimmer (R. albicollis) are smaller.
- ryo (musical scale)
Japanese music: Tonal system: >ryo scale shows no great difference from the Chinese seven-tone scale. The ritsu scale, however, seems to reveal the early presence of an indigenous Japanese tonal ideal with the placement of its half steps.
- Ryōan Temple (temple, Kyōto, Japan)
Ryōan Temple, Japanese Buddhist temple in Kyōto, famous for its abstract meditation garden (c. 1500). An area approximately 30 by 70 ft (10 by 20 m) is covered with raked gravel and set with 15 stones divided into five unequal groups. The pattern of the design may be interpreted as rocky islets in
- Ryōan-ji (temple, Kyōto, Japan)
Ryōan Temple, Japanese Buddhist temple in Kyōto, famous for its abstract meditation garden (c. 1500). An area approximately 30 by 70 ft (10 by 20 m) is covered with raked gravel and set with 15 stones divided into five unequal groups. The pattern of the design may be interpreted as rocky islets in
- Ryōbu Shintō (Japanese religion)
Ryōbu Shintō, in Japanese religion, the syncretic school that combined Shintō with the teachings of the Shingon sect of Buddhism. The school developed during the late Heian (794–1185) and Kamakura (1192–1333) periods. The basis of the school’s beliefs was the Japanese concept that Shintō deities
- Ryōjin hishō (folk song collection)
Japanese literature: Prose: The collection of folk songs Ryōjin hishō, compiled in 1179 by the emperor Go-Shirakawa, suggests the vitality of this burgeoning popular culture even as the aristocratic society was being threatened with destruction.
- ryōkai mandara (Japanese painting)
Japanese art: Esoteric Buddhism: …important iconographic images was the ryōkai mandara (“mandala of the two worlds”), which consisted of two parts—the kongō-kai (“diamond world”) and the taizō-kai (“womb world”)—that organized the Buddhist divinities and their relationships in a prescribed gridlike configuration. The deities or spiritual entities portrayed in these paired paintings represent, in the…
- Ryōkan (Japanese poet)
Ryōkan was a Zen Buddhist priest of the late Tokugawa period (1603–1867) who was renowned as a poet and calligrapher. The eldest son of a village headman, he became a Buddhist priest at about the age of 17 under the religious name of Taigu Ryōkan. When he was 21 he met an itinerant monk, Kokusen,
- Ryōnin (Japanese Buddhist leader)
Ryōnin was a Japanese Buddhist leader who founded the Yūzū Nembutsu (“All-Permeating Amida Buddha”) sect of True Pure Land Buddhism. He initiated the renewal of Buddhist thought in the Kamakura period (1192–1333), when other new schools of Buddhism, such as Zen and Nichiren, also
- Ryorikh, Nikolay Konstantinovich (Russian set designer)
Nicholas Roerich was a Russian painter, scenic designer, and writer who is perhaps best known for his work with Serge Pavlovich Diaghilev’s Ballets Russes and especially for his monumental historical sets. One noteworthy example was his costume and stage design for the 1913 premiere of Igor
- ryotwari system (Indian revenue system)
ryotwari system, one of the three principal methods of revenue collection in British India. It was prevalent in most of southern India, being the standard system of the Madras Presidency (a British-controlled area now constituting much of present-day Tamil Nadu and portions of neighbouring states).
- Rypien, Mark (American football player)
Washington Commanders: Joe Theismann, Doug Williams, and Mark Rypien. Running back John Riggins, wide receiver Art Monk, and cornerback Darrell Green—all future Hall of Famers—starred for the Redskins during their Super Bowl-winning run, which was also famous for featuring rugged offensive lines known by the nickname “the Hogs.” Gibbs retired in 1993,…