- rehabilitation, medical and vocational
rehabilitation, medical and vocational, use of medical and vocational techniques to enable a sick or handicapped person to live as full a life as his or her remaining abilities and degree of health will allow. The emphasis is first on the medical aspects, later on physical therapy and occupational
- rehabilitative justice (penology)
crime: Crime and social policy: …the United States, for example, rehabilitation programs were largely abandoned because of the widely held view that they did not reduce future criminal activity, and the death penalty was reinstated because of the pervasive sentiment that it did. By the beginning of the 21st century, however, support for capital punishment…
- rehabilitator
rehabilitation robot: …of rehabilitation robot is a therapy robot, which is sometimes called a rehabilitator. Research in neuroscience has shown that the brain and spinal cord retain a remarkable ability to adapt, even after injury, through the use of practiced movements. Therapy robots are machines or tools for rehabilitation therapists that allow…
- Rehan, Ada (American actress)
Ada Rehan was an American actress of the late 19th century, one of the finest of her day, whose great popularity grew from performances of Shakespeare and adaptations of European comedies. Ada Crehan grew up in Brooklyn, New York, where her family settled shortly after the Civil War. She followed
- Rehberg, August Wilhelm (German political theorist)
Karl, Reichsfreiherr vom und zum Stein: Influence of August Rehberg.: August Wilhelm Rehberg, whom he met in Göttingen, became a close friend and exercised a greater influence on Stein than did any of his academic teachers. Rehberg was a political thinker who advocated a liberal–conservative policy to preserve the old where it had proved itself…
- Rehe (China)
Chengde, city in northern Hebei sheng (province), China. The city is situated in the mountains separating the North China Plain from the plateaus of Inner Mongolia, approximately 110 miles (180 km) northeast of Beijing, on the Re River (Re He; “Hot River”), a small tributary of the Luan River. The
- rehearsal (performing arts)
directing: The rehearsal process: The director’s efforts are naturally affected by the length of time given to rehearsals. These vary according to economic pressures, national customs, and union rules. In some countries, notably the United States, the actors’ union has used its powers to escalate salaries and…
- rehearsal (psychology)
attention: Memory and habituation: …process in many circumstances is rehearsal. In this sense rehearsal means the mental repetition of incoming information. One consequence of rehearsal is that input items spend an extended period of time in the short-term memory store. It is also generally the case that what is attended to and rehearsed eventually…
- Rehearsal Transpros’d, The (work by Marvell)
English literature: Literary reactions to the political climate: …(later bishop of Oxford) in The Rehearsal Transprosed (1672, with a sequel in 1673) and providing so vivid an exposition of Whig suspicions of the restored monarchy’s attraction to absolutism in An Account of the Growth of Popery, and Arbitrary Government in England (1677) that a reward of £100 was…
- Rehearsal, The (play by Villiers)
heroic play: …satirized the heroic play in The Rehearsal (first performed 1671), its particular target being Dryden. Although Dryden continued to use the form through the mid-1670s, the heroic play had largely died out as a genre by the end of the decade. The term heroic play has also been applied to…
- reheat (mechanical engineering)
afterburner, second combustion chamber in a turbojet (q.v.) or turbofan engine, immediately in front of the engine’s exhaust nozzle. The injection and combustion of extra fuel in this chamber provide additional thrust for takeoff or supersonic flight. In most cases the afterburner can nearly double
- reheat turbine (device)
gas-turbine engine: Intercooling, reheating, and regeneration: …(2) increasing turbine output by reheating after partial expansion, or (3) decreasing fuel consumption by regeneration.
- Rehman Dheri (archaeological site, India)
India: Principal sites: An even earlier example is Rehman Dheri, near Dera Ismail Khan, which appears to have achieved its walled status during the last centuries of the 4th millennium. There the roughly rectangular, grid-patterned settlement was surrounded by a massive wall of mud brick. Early Harappan Kalibangan (Kali Banga) in Rajasthan resembled…
- Rehman, Shabana (Norwegian performer)
Shabana Rehman is a Pakistani-born Norwegian performer and comedian who courted controversy with her satirical reflections on Islam and the cultural divide that set apart Norway’s Muslim community. Shortly after she was born, Rehman’s family relocated to Oslo. She was raised in Holmlia, a
- Rehman, Waheeda (Indian actress)
Guru Dutt: …launched the career of actress Waheeda Rehman. She achieved a cult following through her performances opposite Dutt in both Pyassa and Kaagaz ke phool. As a director, Dutt is known for his imaginative use of light and shade, his evocative imagery, and a striking ability to weave multiple thematic layers…
- Rehn, Ludwig (German surgeon)
history of medicine: Heart surgery: …sutured (first done successfully by Ludwig Rehn of Frankfurt am Main, in 1896); the pericardial cavity—the cavity formed by the sac enclosing the heart—could be drained in purulent infections (as had been done by Larrey in 1824); and the pericardium could be partially excised for constrictive pericarditis when it was…
- Rehnquist, William (chief justice of United States)
William Rehnquist was the 16th chief justice of the United States, appointed to the Supreme Court in 1971 and elevated to chief justice in 1986. Rehnquist served in the U.S. Army Air Forces during World War II. After the war, he attended Stanford University, where he was awarded bachelor’s (1948),
- Rehnquist, William Donald (chief justice of United States)
William Rehnquist was the 16th chief justice of the United States, appointed to the Supreme Court in 1971 and elevated to chief justice in 1986. Rehnquist served in the U.S. Army Air Forces during World War II. After the war, he attended Stanford University, where he was awarded bachelor’s (1948),
- Rehnquist, William Hubbs (chief justice of United States)
William Rehnquist was the 16th chief justice of the United States, appointed to the Supreme Court in 1971 and elevated to chief justice in 1986. Rehnquist served in the U.S. Army Air Forces during World War II. After the war, he attended Stanford University, where he was awarded bachelor’s (1948),
- Rehoboam (king of Israel)
biblical literature: The divided monarchy: …bce), he was succeeded by Rehoboam, who proved to be unfit for the task of reigning. Prior to Solomon’s death, Jeroboam the Ephraimite, a young overseer of the forced labour battalions of the “house of Joseph” in the north, had encountered Ahijah, a prophet from the old shrine of the…
- Rehoboth (Namibia)
Rehoboth, town, central Namibia. The town is located about 52 miles (84 km) south of Windhoek, the national capital, and lies on the banks of the dry, sandy bed of the Rehoboth River at an elevation of 4,544 feet (1,385 metres). Rehoboth is situated in an arid, sparsely populated region within the
- Rehoboth Baster (people)
Baster, (from Afrikaans baster, “bastard,” or “half-breed”), member of an ethnically mixed group in Namibia and northwestern South Africa, most of whom are descendants of 17th- and 18th-century Dutch and French men and indigenous Nama (Khoekhoe) women of southwestern Africa. They speak a language
- Rehobother (people)
Baster, (from Afrikaans baster, “bastard,” or “half-breed”), member of an ethnically mixed group in Namibia and northwestern South Africa, most of whom are descendants of 17th- and 18th-century Dutch and French men and indigenous Nama (Khoekhoe) women of southwestern Africa. They speak a language
- Reḥovot (Israel)
Reḥovot, city, central Israel, on the coastal plain south-southwest of Tel Aviv–Yafo, in the centre of the country’s most productive citrus belt. The name (Hebrew: “broad places,” or “room”) is from the biblical allusion in Genesis 26:22. Founded in 1890 by Warsaw Jews, Reḥovot soon became
- Rehovot HaNahar (work by Greenberg)
Hebrew literature: Israeli literature: Greenberg’s Rehovot HaNahar (1951; “Streets of the River”) traces the process by which the humiliation of the massacred is transmuted by the pride of martyrdom into the historical impulse of messianic redemption. In a long dramatic poem, Bein ha-Esh ve-ha-Yesha (1957; Between the Fire and Salvation),…
- rehydration (physiology)
cholera: Symptoms and treatment: For oral rehydration the solution is made by using oral rehydration salts (ORS)—a measured mixture of glucose, sodium chloride, potassium chloride, and trisodium citrate. The mixture can be prepackaged and administered by nonmedical personnel, allowing cholera to be treated even under the most adverse conditions. ORS can…
- Rei militaris instituta (work by Vegetius)
Vegetius: …Rei militaris instituta, also called Epitoma rei militaris, written sometime between 384 and 389, advocated a revival of the old system but had almost no influence on the decaying military forces of the later Roman Empire. His rules on siege craft and on the need for discipline, however, were studied…
- rei miro (ornament)
rei miro, wooden gorget, or pectoral (breast ornament), once worn by high-ranking inhabitants of Rapa Nui (Easter Island). The rei miro (according to Rongorongo: The Easter Island Script, rei is a cognate of the Hawaiian word lei, and miro means ‘wood’) is of simple, elegant design, usually
- Rei Momo (album by Byrne)
David Byrne: …career began in earnest with Rei Momo (1989), which drew on Afro-Latin styles; other solo releases include Uh-Oh (1992), Feelings (1997), and Grown Backwards (2004). In addition, he collaborated with Eno again on the gospel-inspired Everything That Happens Will Happen Today (2008) and with singer-songwriter St. Vincent on Love This…
- Rei-sai (Shintō festival)
Shintō: Varieties of festival, worship, and prayer: …Festival), an Annual Festival (Rei-sai), and the Divine Procession (Shinkō-sai). The Divine Procession usually takes place on the day of the Annual Festival, and miniature shrines (mikoshi) carried on the shoulders are transported through the parish. The order of rituals at a grand festival is usually as follows:
- Reich (German political concept)
Reich, (German: “Empire”), any of the empires of the Germans or Germany: the Holy Roman Empire (q.v.); the Second Reich, led by the Prussian Hohenzollerns (1871–1918); or the Third Reich of Nazi Germany (1933–45). See
- Reich Gottes und Menschensohn (work by Otto)
Rudolf Otto: Later works.: …Reich Gottes und Menschensohn (1934; The Kingdom of God and Son of Man, 1938). Of the three books, the latter is especially important for glimpses of new insight that seem to point beyond the earlier, more widely acclaimed volume; it renders the hint of ultimacy that appears in present history.
- Reich Security Central Office (division of SS, Nazi Germany)
SS: …most important division was the Reichssicherheitshauptamt (RSHA; Reich Security Central Office), which oversaw the Sicherheitspolizei (Sipo; Security Police), which, in turn, was divided into the Kriminalpolizei (Kripo; Criminal Police) and the dreaded Gestapo under Heinrich Müller. The RSHA also included the Sicherheitsdienst (SD; Security Service), a security department in charge…
- Reich Sports Field (sports complex, Berlin, Germany)
Olympic Games: Berlin, Germany, 1936: …race were commonplace; and the Reich Sports Field, a newly constructed sports complex that covered 325 acres (131.5 hectares) and included four stadiums, was draped in Nazi banners and symbols. Nonetheless, the attraction of a spirited sports competition was too great, and in the end 49 countries chose to attend…
- Reich, Frank (American football player and coach)
Buffalo Bills: Backup quarterback Frank Reich rallied the Bills to five unanswered touchdowns, and Buffalo prevailed over the Oilers 41–38 in overtime. The Bills’ feat was the greatest point-differential comeback in NFL history, including both regular-season and postseason games. The team’s momentum continued throughout the AFC playoffs, and the…
- Reich, Marcel (German columnist and television personality)
Marcel Reich-Ranicki was a Polish-born German columnist and television personality who became Germany’s most influential literary critic. Reich grew up in Berlin and Warsaw. During World War II his Jewish parents were confined to the Warsaw ghetto and were then killed at the Treblinka concentration
- Reich, Philipp Erasmus (German publisher)
history of publishing: Germany: A Weidmann partner, Philipp Erasmus Reich, was known in the 18th century as “the prince of the German book trade.” He could be said to have invented the net price principle (see below Price regulation) and the idea of a booksellers’ association (1765), which in 1825 became the…
- Reich, Stephen Michael (American composer)
Steve Reich is an American composer who was one of the leading exponents of Minimalism, a style based on repetitions and combinations of simple motifs and harmonies. Reich was the son of an attorney and a singer-lyricist. He majored in philosophy at Cornell University (1953–57) and then studied
- Reich, Steve (American composer)
Steve Reich is an American composer who was one of the leading exponents of Minimalism, a style based on repetitions and combinations of simple motifs and harmonies. Reich was the son of an attorney and a singer-lyricist. He majored in philosophy at Cornell University (1953–57) and then studied
- Reich, Wilhelm (Austrian psychologist)
Wilhelm Reich was a Viennese psychiatrist who developed a system of psychoanalysis that concentrated on overall character structure rather than on individual neurotic symptoms. His early work on psychoanalytic technique was overshadowed by his involvement in the sexual politics movement and by
- Reich-Ranicki, Marcel (German columnist and television personality)
Marcel Reich-Ranicki was a Polish-born German columnist and television personality who became Germany’s most influential literary critic. Reich grew up in Berlin and Warsaw. During World War II his Jewish parents were confined to the Warsaw ghetto and were then killed at the Treblinka concentration
- Reicha, Anton (music theorist and teacher)
Franz Liszt: Youth and early training: …foreigner; instead, he studied with Anton Reicha, a theorist who had been a pupil of Joseph Haydn’s brother Michael, and Ferdinando Paer, the director of the Théâtre-Italien in Paris and a composer of light operas. Liszt’s Paris debut on March 7, 1824, was sensational. Other concerts quickly followed, as well…
- Reichardt, Kelly (American screenwriter and director)
Lily Gladstone: Theater, film, and television roles: …and she reunited with director Reichardt in 2019 for a small role in the film drama First Cow. In 2022 she starred as Tana, a grieving woman on a road trip from the Midwest toward the Texas-Mexico border, in the adventure drama The Unknown Country. On the small screen, Gladstone…
- Reichelderfer, Francis W. (American meteorologist)
weather forecasting: Practical applications: …area gained in importance after Francis W. Reichelderfer was appointed chief of the U.S. Weather Bureau (USWB) in 1939. Reichelderfer had previously modernized the U.S. Navy’s meteorological service and made it a model of support for naval aviation. During World War II the discovery of very strong wind currents at…
- Reichenau (island, Germany)
Reichenau, island in the Untersee, the western arm of Lake Constance (Bodensee) in Baden-Württemberg Land (state), southwestern Germany. Belonging to the city of Konstanz, it is 3 miles (5 km) long and 1 mile (1.6 km) wide and is connected to the mainland by a causeway 1.25 miles (2 km) long.
- Reichenau Bridge (bridge, Germany)
bridge: Christian Menn: The Reichenau Bridge (1964) over the Rhine, a deck-stiffened arch with a span of 98 metres (328 feet), shows Menn’s characteristic use of a wide, prestressed concrete deck slab cantilevering laterally from both sides of a single box. For the high, curving Felsenau Viaduct (1974) over…
- Reichenau, Walther von (German general)
Walther von Reichenau was a German field marshal who commanded the army that captured Warsaw (1939) and the 6th Army in its encircling movement through Belgium (1940) on the Western front during World War II. The son of a general of the artillery, von Reichenau followed his father’s career, joining
- Reichenbach (Poland)
Dzierżoniów, city, Dolnośląskie województwo (province), southwestern Poland, on the Piława River in Lower Silesia. The community was founded as Reichenbach in the 12th century and received town rights in the 13th. The duke of Ziębice (Münsterberg) pledged the town to Bohemia (1335), whence it
- Reichenbach Falls (waterfalls, Switzerland)
Reichenbach Falls, falls on the Reichenbach (creek) in Bern canton, central Switzerland, one of the highest falls in the Alps. There are five cascades with an overall height of 650 feet (200 m); best known are Upper and Lower Reichenbach Falls, with a drop of about 300 feet (90 m). Much of
- Reichenbach, Convention of (Europe [1790])
Ewald Friedrich, count von Hertzberg: …foreign minister and signed the Convention of Reichenbach with Austria (1790), by which the latter renounced any territorial acquisitions in the Turkish war. Retiring from the ministry in 1791, Hertzberg nevertheless continued to provide unsolicited advice until his death in 1795.
- Reichenbach, Georg von (German instrument maker)
Georg von Reichenbach was a German maker of astronomical instruments who introduced the meridian, or transit, circle, a specially designed telescope for measuring both the time when a celestial body is directly over the meridian (the longitude of the instrument) and the angle of the body at
- Reichenbach, Hans (American philosopher)
Hans Reichenbach was a philosopher and educator who was a leading representative of the Vienna Circle and founder of the Berlin school of logical positivism, a movement that viewed logical statements as revealing only the basic structure of a priori mental categories and language. He contributed
- Reichenbach, Treaty of (Austria-Prussia-Russia [1813])
Klemens von Metternich: Ministry during the Napoleonic Wars: Even so, in the subsequent Treaty of Reichenbach, June 24, 1813, between Austria, Prussia, and Russia, Metternich undertook to bring Austria into the war against France if Napoleon rejected the peace terms that he was offering.
- Reichenbachfälle (waterfalls, Switzerland)
Reichenbach Falls, falls on the Reichenbach (creek) in Bern canton, central Switzerland, one of the highest falls in the Alps. There are five cascades with an overall height of 650 feet (200 m); best known are Upper and Lower Reichenbach Falls, with a drop of about 300 feet (90 m). Much of
- Reichenberg (Czech Republic)
Liberec, city, northwestern Czech Republic. It lies in the valley of the Lužická Nisa (German: Lausitzer Neisse) River amid the Giant (Krkonoše) Mountains. Founded in the 13th century and chartered in 1577, Liberec was inhabited mainly by Germans until their expulsion after World War II. Called the
- Reichenthal, Laura (American poet and critic)
Laura Riding was an American poet, critic, and prose writer who was influential among the literary avant-garde during the 1920s and ’30s. From 1918 to 1921 Riding attended Cornell University, Ithaca, N.Y., and soon her poetry began to gain attention. Early on she came to be associated with the
- Reicher, Steve (British psychologist)
deindividuation: Group norms: The British psychologists Steve Reicher, Russell Spears, and Tom Postmes argued that the notion of a loss of selfhood relies, inaccurately, on an individualistic conception of the self; rational action is equated with the individual self, and group membership is equated with the loss of identity and of…
- Reichle, Hans (German sculptor)
Western sculpture: Central Europe: …some quarters, Hans Krumper and Hans Reichle produced bronze figures less indebted to the Classical tradition but with stronger individuality. Jörg Zürn, whose finest wood carvings are to be seen at Überlingen, and Ludwig Münsterman, in Oldenburg, continued in the Mannerist style, whereas Georg Petel, who came under the influence…
- Reichs, Kathy (American author and forensic anthropologist)
Kathy Reichs is an American forensic anthropologist and author of a popular series of mystery books centring on the protagonist Temperance (“Bones”) Brennan. Reichs studied anthropology at American University, earning a B.A. in 1971. She then received an M.A. (1972) and a Ph.D. (1975) in physical
- Reichsabschied (German Diet resolution)
Diet: …“recess of the empire” (Reichsabschied). The emperor could ratify part of the recess or the whole of it, but he could not modify the words of the recess. Until the 17th century the Diet possessed effective legal power, including the decision of war or peace, but the Peace of…
- Reichsadlerhumpen (glass)
glassware: Germany: …the imperial double-headed eagle (Reichsadlerhumpen); representations of the emperor with his seven electors, either seated or mounted on horseback (Kurfürstenhumpen); subjects from the Old and New Testaments; and allegorical themes such as the Eight Virtues and the Ages of Man. These were painted between borders of multicoloured or white…
- Reichsautobahnen (German highway)
Autobahn, high-speed, limited-access highway, the basis of the first modern national expressway system. Planned in Germany in the early 1930s, the Autobahnen were extended to a national highway network (Reichsautobahnen) of 2,108 km (1,310 miles) by 1942. West Germany embarked on an ambitious
- Reichsbank (German bank)
Walther Funk: …1938 and president of the Reichsbank from 1939.
- Reichsbürgergesetz (German history)
Nürnberg Laws: One, the Reichsbürgergesetz (German: “Law of the Reich Citizen”), deprived Jews of German citizenship, designating them “subjects of the state.” The other, the Gesetz zum Schutze des Deutschen Blutes und der Deutschen Ehre (“Law for the Protection of German Blood and German Honour”), usually called simply the…
- Reichsfeinde (German history)
Germany: Domestic concerns: …SPD along with the Progressives Reichsfeinde (“enemies of the empire”) because he believed that each sought in its own way to change the fundamental conservative political character of the empire.
- Reichsführer (Nazi official)
Führer: …and law, as well as Reichsführer Heinrich Himmler, head of the unified police system. Also directly responsible to (and selected by) the Führer were many territorial leaders (43 in greater Germany) known as Gauleiter (“district leaders”).
- Reichsfürstenstand (German nobility)
prince: Germany: …Princes of the Realm (Reichsfürstenstand) came into being from the 1180s and comprised dukes, counts palatine, margraves, landgraves, archbishops, bishops, certain abbots, and the masters of the military-religious orders. New admissions to this estate required not only the sovereigns’ bestowal of the title Fürst (lower than that of duke…
- Reichshoffen, Battle of (1870, Franco-German War)
Franco-German War: The French collapse and the siege of Paris: …suffering a check at the Battle of Wörth on August 6, 1870, the commander of the French right (south) wing, Marshal Patrice Mac-Mahon, retreated westward. That same day, about 40 miles (65 km) to the northeast, the commander of the French left wing, Marshal Achille Bazaine, was dislodged from near…
- Reichskammergericht (court, Holy Roman Empire)
Reichskammergericht, supreme court of the Holy Roman Empire. The court was established by Maximilian I in 1495 and survived as the empire’s highest court until the empire’s dissolution in 1806. From the early Middle Ages, the Holy Roman Empire’s supreme court had been the Hofgericht, in which the
- Reichskommissariat Ukraine (German-Ukrainian history)
Ukraine: The Nazi occupation of Soviet Ukraine: …remainder was organized as the Reichskommissariat Ukraine.
- Reichslandbund (German political organization)
Agrarian League, extraparliamentary organization active under the German empire from 1893. Formed to combat the free-trade policies (initiated in 1892) of Chancellor Leo, Graf (count) von Caprivi, the league worked for farmers’ subsidies, import tariffs, and minimum prices. Caprivi’s successor
- Reichsleiter (Nazi official)
Führer: Directly below him were several Reichsleiter (“Reich leaders”) with various portfolios, such as finance, propaganda, foreign policy, and law, as well as Reichsführer Heinrich Himmler, head of the unified police system. Also directly responsible to (and selected by) the Führer were many territorial leaders (43 in greater Germany) known as…
- Reichsrat (Austrian imperial council)
Austria: Constitutional experimentation, 1860–67: …Francis Joseph ordered that the Reichsrat, an empirewide, purely advisory council of state, be enlarged by the addition of 38 members proposed by the provincial diets and selected by the crown. Its main task was to advise the emperor on the composition of a new constitution. The body divided into…
- Reichsregiment (Roman history)
Maximilian I: Consolidation of power: …and invested it in the Reichsregiment, a supreme council of 21 electors, princes, and others. They even considered deposing him, but the plan miscarried because of their own apathy and Maximilian’s effective countermeasures. He strengthened his European position by an agreement with France, and he regained prestige within the empire…
- Reichsritter (German knight)
Germany: The nobility: The imperial knights (Reichsritter) held their estates as tenants in chief of the crown. The provincial nobility (Landesadel) had lost direct contact with the crown and were being compelled by degrees to acknowledge the suzerainty of the local prince. The imperial knights had been extensively employed by the…
- Reichssicherheitshauptamt (division of SS, Nazi Germany)
SS: …most important division was the Reichssicherheitshauptamt (RSHA; Reich Security Central Office), which oversaw the Sicherheitspolizei (Sipo; Security Police), which, in turn, was divided into the Kriminalpolizei (Kripo; Criminal Police) and the dreaded Gestapo under Heinrich Müller. The RSHA also included the Sicherheitsdienst (SD; Security Service), a security department in charge…
- Reichsstadt (Holy Roman Empire)
imperial city, any of the cities and towns of the Holy Roman Empire that were subject only to the authority of the emperor, or German king, on whose demesne (personal estate) the earliest of them originated. The term freie Reichsstadt, or Free Imperial City, was sometimes used interchangeably with
- Reichstadt, Napoléon-François-Charles-Joseph Bonaparte, Herzog von, principe di Parma, Piacenza, e Guastalla (Austrian-Italian noble)
Napoléon-François-Charles-Joseph Bonaparte, duke von Reichstadt , duke von Reichstadt was the only son of Emperor Napoleon I and Empress Marie-Louise; at birth he was styled king of Rome. Three years after his birth, the French empire to which he was heir collapsed, and he was taken by the empress
- Reichstag (building, Berlin, Germany)
Reichstag, building in Berlin that is the meeting place of the Bundestag (“Federal Assembly”), the lower house of Germany’s national legislature. One of Berlin’s most famous landmarks, it is situated at the northern end of the Ebertstrasse and near the south bank of the Spree River. Tiergarten Park
- Reichstag (German government [1871-1945])
German Empire: Establishment of the North German Confederation: …adopted by the North German Reichstag on April 17, 1867. Four years later it became, almost without change, the constitution of the German Empire. Two principles were balanced against each other—the sovereignty of the German states and the national unity of the German people. In constitutional theory the first carried…
- Reichstag (German history)
Diet, legislature of the German empire, or Holy Roman Empire, from the 12th century to 1806. In the Carolingian empire, meetings of the nobility and higher clergy were held during the royal progresses, or court journeys, as occasion arose, to make decisions affecting the good of the state. After
- Reichstag fire (German history)
Reichstag fire, burning of the Reichstag (parliament) building in Berlin on the night of February 27, 1933, a key event in the establishment of the Nazi dictatorship and widely believed to have been contrived by the newly formed Nazi government itself to turn public opinion against its opponents
- Reichstein, Tadeus (Swiss chemist)
Tadeus Reichstein was a Swiss chemist who, with Philip S. Hench and Edward C. Kendall, received the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine in 1950 for his discoveries concerning hormones of the adrenal cortex. Reichstein was educated in Zürich and held posts in the department of organic chemistry
- Reichsvertretung der Juden in Deutschland
Leo Baeck: Role as Jewish leader: …der Juden in Deutschland (National Agency of Jews in Germany) under Leo Baeck and Otto Hirsch (1885–1941), the jurist and community leader who was killed in the Mauthausen concentration camp. Under constant attack, this group took charge of Jewish life in Germany. Millions of dollars were spent annually in…
- Reid’s Yellow Dent (corn)
origins of agriculture: Maize, or corn: …Belt for many years was Reid’s Yellow Dent, which originated from a fortuitous mixture of a dent and a flint variety.
- Reid, Andrew Walter (American football coach)
Andy Reid is one of the most successful coaches in the National Football League (NFL). He transformed the Kansas City Chiefs into an American football powerhouse and guided them to three Super Bowl victories (2020, 2023, 2024). Reid also was on the coaching staff of the Green Bay Packers when the
- Reid, Andy (American football coach)
Andy Reid is one of the most successful coaches in the National Football League (NFL). He transformed the Kansas City Chiefs into an American football powerhouse and guided them to three Super Bowl victories (2020, 2023, 2024). Reid also was on the coaching staff of the Green Bay Packers when the
- Reid, Antonio (American musician and producer)
New jack swing: The key producers were L.A., Babyface, and Teddy Riley, who crafted romantic songs for the dance floor. L.A. (Antonio Reid, whose nickname was derived from his allegiance to the Los Angeles Dodgers baseball team) and Babyface (youthful-looking Kenneth Edmonds) had been members of the Deele, a group based in…
- Reid, Eric (American football player)
Colin Kaepernick: One of his teammates, safety Eric Reid, soon joined him in kneeling. As the 2016 season progressed, other NFL players—as well as athletes in other sports—emulated their actions.
- Reid, Etta Lucille (American musician)
Etta Baker was an American folk musician who influenced the folk music revival of the 1950s and ’60s with her mastery of East Coast Piedmont blues, a unique fingerpicking style of guitar-playing that is common to the Appalachian Mountains, especially areas of Georgia, the Carolinas, and Virginia.
- Reid, Forrest (Northern Irish novelist and critic)
Forrest Reid was a Northern Irish novelist and critic who early came under the influence of Henry James. He is best known for his romantic and mystical novels about boyhood and adolescence and for a notable autobiography, Apostate (1926). After taking his degree at the University of Cambridge, Reid
- Reid, Frances (American actress)
Days of Our Lives: …of the most-enduring performers was Frances Reid, who played matriarch Alice Horton; she was a regular on the show from its debut until 2007. MacDonald Carey, who appeared in many Hollywood motion pictures in the 1940s and ’50s, played Alice’s husband, Dr. Tom Horton, and was the soap’s main attraction…
- Reid, Harry (United States senator)
Harry Reid was an American politician who represented Nevada in the U.S. Senate (1987–2017). He served as Democratic party whip (1999–2005), minority leader (2005–07; 2015–17), and majority leader (2007–15). He previously was a member of the U.S. House of Representatives (1983–87). Reid was raised
- Reid, Harry Fielding (American seismologist)
Harry Fielding Reid was an American seismologist and glaciologist who in 1911 developed the elastic rebound theory of earthquake mechanics, still accepted today. Reid was professor of applied mechanics at Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, from 1896 until he became emeritus professor in 1930. His
- Reid, Harry Mason (United States senator)
Harry Reid was an American politician who represented Nevada in the U.S. Senate (1987–2017). He served as Democratic party whip (1999–2005), minority leader (2005–07; 2015–17), and majority leader (2007–15). He previously was a member of the U.S. House of Representatives (1983–87). Reid was raised
- Reid, John (American golfer)
golf: The United States and Canada: Its progenitor was John Reid, a Scot from Dunfermline who became known as “the father of American golf.” Reid, on learning that fellow Scot Robert Lockhart was returning to the old country on business, asked him to bring back some golf clubs and balls. This done, Reid and…
- Reid, R. E. H. (Irish paleontologist)
dinosaur: Growth and life span: …de Ricqlès in Paris and R.E.H. Reid in Ireland showed that dinosaur skeletons grew quite rapidly. The time required for full growth has not been quantified for most dinosaurs, but de Ricqlès and his colleagues have shown that duckbills (hadrosaurs) such as Hypacrosaurus and Maiasaura reached adult size in seven…
- Reid, Richard (terrorist)
Richard Reid is a British Islamist militant who gained notoriety as the so-called Shoe Bomber in 2001 after he attempted—by igniting explosives hidden in the soles of his high-top basketball shoes—to blow up an airplane on which he and some 200 other passengers were traveling. Reid was the only son
- Reid, Richard Colvin (terrorist)
Richard Reid is a British Islamist militant who gained notoriety as the so-called Shoe Bomber in 2001 after he attempted—by igniting explosives hidden in the soles of his high-top basketball shoes—to blow up an airplane on which he and some 200 other passengers were traveling. Reid was the only son
- Reid, Robert (American artist)
the Ten: Willard Leroy Metcalf, Edmund Tarbell, Robert Reid, and E.E. Simmons. When Twachtman died in 1902, William Merritt Chase replaced him.