- Rideau Canal (canal, Ontario, Canada)
Rideau Canal, inland waterway between the Canadian capital of Ottawa and Lake Ontario at Kingston, Ontario. Completed in 1832, the 200-km (125-mile) canal uses both the Rideau and Cataraqui rivers and a series of lakes, including Upper Rideau Lake at its summit, to create its waterway. Built as a
- Ridenhour, Carlton (American rapper)
Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five: …the likes of Public Enemy’s Chuck D and Boogie Down Production’s KRS-One to create provocative social commentary in the manner of Bob Dylan and Bob Marley. The group also tackled drug abuse in “White Lines” (1983). By the mid-1980s the group had disbanded, and later reunions were short-lived. In 2007…
- Ridenhour, Ronald (American journalist)
My Lai Massacre: Cover-up, investigation, and legacy: By late April 1968 Ronald Ridenhour, a helicopter door gunner who had trained with members of Charlie Company, had begun to pursue an informal investigation of the massacre after learning of it from troops who had been present that day. Ridenhour spent the rest of his time in Vietnam…
- rider (document)
insurance: Special riders: The insured may, at a nominal charge, attach to the contract a waiver-of-premium rider under which premium payments will be waived in the event of total and permanent disability before the age of 60. Under the disability income rider, should the insured become totally…
- Rider College (university, Lawrenceville, New Jersey, United States)
Rider University, private, coeducational institution of higher learning in Lawrenceville, New Jersey, U.S. It includes colleges of Business Administration, Liberal Arts, Education, Sciences, and Continuing Studies. It also includes a music school, Westminster Choir College, at nearby Princeton, New
- Rider on the White Horse, The (work by Storm)
Theodor Woldsen Storm: …greatest novella, Der Schimmelreiter (1888; The Rider on the White Horse [also published as The Dykemaster]), which, with its forceful hero and terse, objective style, shows vivid imagination and great narrative verve. Among his other major works are the charming story Pole Poppenspäler (1874), the historical novella Aquis submersus (1875),…
- Rider University (university, Lawrenceville, New Jersey, United States)
Rider University, private, coeducational institution of higher learning in Lawrenceville, New Jersey, U.S. It includes colleges of Business Administration, Liberal Arts, Education, Sciences, and Continuing Studies. It also includes a music school, Westminster Choir College, at nearby Princeton, New
- Rider, Lucy Jane (American social worker and educator)
Lucy Jane Rider Meyer was an American social worker and educator whose activity within the Methodist church was aimed at training and organizing workers to provide health and social services for the poor, the elderly, and children. Lucy Rider attended public schools and the New Hampton Literary
- Rider, The (film by Zhao [2017])
Chloé Zhao: Zhao’s second movie, The Rider (2017), was inspired when she met rodeo bronco rider and horse trainer Brady Jandreau on the Pine Ridge reservation. She wanted to make him the centre of a movie and had begun filming when Jandreau was thrown by a bronco and suffered a…
- Riders to the Sea (one-act play by Synge)
Riders to the Sea, one-act play by John Millington Synge, published in 1903 and produced in 1904. Riders to the Sea is set in the Aran Islands off the west coast of Ireland and is based on a tale Synge heard there. It won critical acclaim as one of dramatic literature’s greatest one-act plays. The
- Riders, The (novel by Winton)
Tim Winton: …time his international best seller The Riders (1995) was short-listed for the Booker Prize, Winton had become Australia’s most successful author since Nobel Prize laureate Patrick White.
- ridge (landform)
Mercury: Basin and surrounding region: …smooth plains that are extensively ridged and fractured in a prominent radial and concentric pattern. The largest ridges are a few hundred kilometres long, about 3 km (2 miles) wide, and less than 300 metres (1,000 feet) high. More than 200 fractures that are comparable to the ridges in size…
- ridge and swale (topography)
continental shelf: …a gently rolling topography called ridge and swale. Continental shelves make up about 8 percent of the entire area covered by oceans.
- Ridge and Valley (region, United States)
Ridge and Valley, physiographic province, part of the Appalachian Highlands in the eastern United States. It is bordered on the east by the Blue Ridge and Piedmont provinces and on the west by the Appalachian Plateau. As its name implies, the province is a series of alternating ridges and valleys
- ridge push (geology)
plate tectonics: Mantle convection: …(the Mid-Atlantic Ridge), known as ridge push, in the Atlantic Ocean. This push is caused by gravitational force, and it exists because the ridge occurs at a higher elevation than the rest of the ocean floor. As rocks near the ridge cool, they become denser, and gravity pulls them away…
- ridge, oceanic (geology)
oceanic ridge, any of several continuous submarine mountain chains rising from the ocean floor. Individually, oceanic ridges are the largest features in ocean basins. Collectively, they form the oceanic ridge system, which extends approximately 80,000 km (50,000 miles) through all the world’s
- Ridge, Thomas Joseph (American politician)
Tom Ridge is an American politician who was governor of Pennsylvania (1995–2001) and who later served as the first director of the Office of Homeland Security (2001–03) and the first secretary of the Department of Homeland Security (2003–05). Ridge earned a scholarship to Harvard University (B.S.,
- Ridge, Tom (American politician)
Tom Ridge is an American politician who was governor of Pennsylvania (1995–2001) and who later served as the first director of the Office of Homeland Security (2001–03) and the first secretary of the Department of Homeland Security (2003–05). Ridge earned a scholarship to Harvard University (B.S.,
- ridge-ridge transform fault (geology)
submarine fracture zone: …plates and is called a ridge–ridge transform fault. The differential movement along a transform fault agrees with the fault motions determined by seismic analyses. Differential movement and earthquakes do not occur beyond an offset because the seafloor areas on both sides of the fracture zone in such localities are parts…
- ridged field cultivation (agriculture)
terrace cultivation, method of growing crops on sides of hills or mountains by planting on graduated terraces built into the slope. Though labour-intensive, the method has been employed effectively to maximize arable land area in variable terrains and to reduce soil erosion and water loss. In most
- ridged green snake
green snake: aestivus), often called vine snake, is about 75 cm (23 inches) long.
- Ridgeley, Andrew (British singer, songwriter, and record producer)
George Michael: Early life: …close friends with a classmate, Andrew Ridgeley, who shared his love of music. Within a few years, they formed a ska band with other friends called the Executive, but it was short-lived. It was then that Panayiotou changed his name to George Michael.
- ridgepole (architecture)
construction: Primitive building: the Stone Age: …of columns to support a ridgepole and matching rows of columns along the long walls; rafters were run from the ridgepole to the wall beams. The lateral stability of the frame was achieved by burying the columns deep in the ground; the ridgepole and rafters were then tied to the…
- Ridgeville (Illinois, United States)
Evanston, city, Cook county, northeastern Illinois, U.S. It lies on Lake Michigan, 13 miles (21 km) north of downtown Chicago. Illinois and later Potawatomi Indians were early inhabitants of the area. French explorers passed through the area in the 17th century and called it Grosse Pointe. In a
- Ridgewood (New Jersey, United States)
Ridgewood, village, Bergen county, northeastern New Jersey, U.S. It lies along the Saddle River, 5 miles (8 km) northeast of Paterson, New Jersey. Dutch farmers settled in the area in the late 1600s. The village’s Old Paramus Reformed Church, built about 1800 and remodeled in 1875, is on the site
- Ridgway ware (pottery)
Ridgway ware, type of Staffordshire pottery first produced by the brothers Job and George Ridgway in 1792 at the Bell Works at Shelton, Hanley, North Staffordshire, Eng. Despite family tensions, the Ridgways continued to produce their high-quality earthenware with blue printed designs well into the
- Ridgway, Gary (American serial killer)
Gary Ridgway is an American criminal who was the country’s deadliest convicted serial killer. He claimed to have killed as many as 80 women—many of whom were prostitutes—in Washington during the 1980s and ’90s, although he pled guilty (2003) to only 48 murders. Ridgway grew up in what became
- Ridgway, Gary Leon (American serial killer)
Gary Ridgway is an American criminal who was the country’s deadliest convicted serial killer. He claimed to have killed as many as 80 women—many of whom were prostitutes—in Washington during the 1980s and ’90s, although he pled guilty (2003) to only 48 murders. Ridgway grew up in what became
- Ridgway, George (British potter)
ironstone china: Job and George Ridgway made a similar product under the name stone china. The wares, usually service pieces and vases based on Oriental shapes, were most often decorated with painted Chinese and Japanese motifs, some of which were executed by transfer printing. An ironstone china called graniteware,…
- Ridgway, Job (British potter)
ironstone china: Job and George Ridgway made a similar product under the name stone china. The wares, usually service pieces and vases based on Oriental shapes, were most often decorated with painted Chinese and Japanese motifs, some of which were executed by transfer printing. An ironstone china…
- Ridgway, Matthew Bunker (United States general)
Matthew Bunker Ridgway was a U.S. Army officer who planned and executed the first major airborne assault in U.S. military history with the attack on Sicily in July 1943. A 1917 graduate of the United States Military Academy at West Point, New York, Ridgway was assigned as an instructor at the
- Ridi Vihara (monastery, Sri Lanka)
Kurunegala: …northeast of the town lies Ridi Vihara, the “silver monastery,” which was founded (100 bce) on the site of a vein of silver. Pop. (2007 est.) 30,324.
- Ridiger, 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
- Ridin’ the Moon in Texas (work by Shange)
Ntozake Shange: …included Nappy Edges (1978) and Ridin’ the Moon in Texas (1987). She also published the novels Sassafrass, Cypress & Indigo (1982), about the diverging lives of three sisters and their mother; the semiautobiographical Betsey Brown (1985); and Liliane: Resurrection of the Daughter (1994), a coming-of-age story about a wealthy Black…
- riding
horsemanship, the art of riding, handling, and training horses. Good horsemanship requires that a rider control the animal’s direction, gait, and speed with maximum effectiveness and minimum efforts. Horsemanship evolved, of necessity, as the art of riding with maximum discernment and a minimum of
- Riding High (film by Capra [1950])
Frank Capra: The 1950s and beyond: …film of the 1950s was Riding High (1950), an uninspired musical remake of Broadway Bill that featured Bing Crosby, as did Here Comes the Groom (1951). After failing to get the romantic comedy Roman Holiday off the ground (it was ultimately made by Wyler in 1953), Capra did not make…
- Riding Mountain National Park (national park, Manitoba, Canada)
Manitoba: Sports and recreation: Manitoba has one national park, Riding Mountain, and numerous provincial parks.
- Riding with the King (album by Clapton and King)
Eric Clapton: …a pair of Grammy-winning collaborations: Riding with the King (2000) with blues legend B.B. King and The Road to Escondido (2006) with roots guitarist J.J. Cale. The critical and commercial success of these albums solidified his stature as one of the world’s greatest rock musicians, and subsequent releases, such as…
- Riding, 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
- Ridler, Anne (British writer)
Anne Ridler was an English poet and dramatist noted for her devotional poetry and for verse drama that shows the influence of the later work of T.S. Eliot. Ridler was born into a literary family; her father, Henry Bradby, was a poet and editor, and her mother, Violet Milford, was the author of
- Ridley, Henry Nicholas (British botanist)
Henry Nicholas Ridley was an English botanist who was largely responsible for establishing the rubber industry in the Malay Peninsula. After receiving a science degree at Exeter College, Oxford, in 1877, Ridley took a botanical post at the British Museum. He remained there until 1888, when he went
- Ridley, Nicholas (English bishop)
Nicholas Ridley was a Protestant martyr, one of the finest academic minds in the early English Reformation. Ridley attended Pembroke Hall, Cambridge, and was ordained a priest (c. 1524). After a period of study in France, he returned to Cambridge, where he settled down to a scholarly career. About
- Ridolfi Plot (English history)
Elizabeth I: Religious questions and the fate of Mary, Queen of Scots: …her life, known as the Ridolfi Plot. Both threats were linked at least indirectly to Mary, Queen of Scots, who had been driven from her own kingdom in 1568 and had taken refuge in England. The presence, more prisoner than guest, of the woman whom the Roman Catholic Church regarded…
- Ridolfi, Roberto (Italian conspirator)
Roberto Ridolfi was a Florentine conspirator who attempted in 1570–71 to overthrow Queen Elizabeth I of England in favour of Mary Stuart, Queen of Scots, who then was to be married to Thomas Howard, 4th Duke of Norfolk. Ridolfi intended to secure these results by the murder of Elizabeth and a
- Ridsdel, John (Canadian businessman)
Justin Trudeau: Policy proposals and the challenge of ruling: …beheading in the Philippines of John Ridsdel, a Canadian former mining executive, by the Abu Sayyaf Group, a Filipino militant Islamist organization. Ridsdel, who had been taken hostage in September 2015, was executed after the deadline passed for payment of a ransom of some $6 million demanded by the kidnappers.…
- RIE (finishing process)
integrated circuit: Etching: …with strong chemicals or by reactive ion etching (RIE). RIE is like sputtering in the argon chamber, but the polarity is reversed and different gas mixtures are used. The atoms on the surface of the wafer fly away, leaving it bare.
- Rie (Dutch athlete)
Hendrika Mastenbroek was a Dutch swimmer, who at the 1936 Olympics in Berlin became the first female athlete to win four medals at a single Games. Mastenbroek swam in the canals of Rotterdam, Netherlands, to train for distance races and in indoor pools to train for sprint races. In 1934 she won the
- Rie, Dame Lucie (British potter)
Dame Lucie Rie was an Austrian-born British studio potter. Her unique and complex slip-glaze surface treatment and inventive kiln processing influenced an entire generation of younger British ceramists. Rie was educated at the Vienna Gymnasium and at the Arts and Crafts School. Her early ceramics
- riebeckite (mineral)
riebeckite, a sodium-iron silicate mineral [Na2Fe2+3Fe3+2Si8O22(OH)2] in the amphibole family. It forms part of a solid-solution series that includes both magnesioriebeckite (formed when iron is replaced by magnesium) and glaucophane (formed when iron is replaced by magnesium and aluminum).
- Riebeeck, Jan van (Dutch colonial administrator)
Jan van Riebeeck was a Dutch colonial administrator who founded (1652) Cape Town and thus opened Southern Africa for white settlement. Van Riebeeck joined the Dutch East India Company (Vereenigde Oost-indische Compagnie; commonly called VOC) as an assistant surgeon and sailed to Batavia in April
- Riecke’s principle (geology)
Riecke’s principle, in geology, statement that a mineral grain possesses a greater solubility under high stress than it does under low stress. According to this principle, stressed grains in a rock will dissolve more readily than will unstressed grains in the same rock, and material may be
- Ried (Austria)
Ried, town, northern Austria, located west of Wels. It has a museum of folklore and a parish church (1721–33) with two 17th-century altars. The town is the market and administrative centre for the fertile Innviertel (“Inn District”). It is a rail junction and manufactures furniture, shoes, and
- Ried im Innkreis (Austria)
Ried, town, northern Austria, located west of Wels. It has a museum of folklore and a parish church (1721–33) with two 17th-century altars. The town is the market and administrative centre for the fertile Innviertel (“Inn District”). It is a rail junction and manufactures furniture, shoes, and
- Ried, Benedikt (Bohemian architect)
Western architecture: Eastern Europe: …late 15th-century architect in Prague, Benedikt Ried. The interior of his Vladislav Hall, Prague (1493–1510), with its intertwining ribbon vaults, represents the climax of the late Gothic; but as the work on the exterior continued, the ornamental features of windows and portals are Classical. Religious architecture continued in the Gothic…
- Riedel thyroiditis (medical condition)
Riedel thyroiditis, extremely rare form of chronic inflammation of the thyroid gland, in which the glandular tissues assume a densely fibrous structure, interfering with production of thyroid hormone and compressing the adjacent trachea and esophagus. The thyroid becomes enlarged, often
- Riedel, Eduard (German architect)
Neuschwanstein Castle: …translated into architectural plans by Eduard Riedel. In 1874 Riedel was succeeded as chief architect by Georg von Dollmann, who in turn was succeeded by Julius Hofmann in 1886.
- Riedsburg (Ohio, United States)
Kent, city, Portage county, northeastern Ohio, U.S., on the Cuyahoga River, immediately northeast of Akron. The site was first settled in about 1805 by John and Jacob Haymaker and was called Riedsburg. It was later named Franklin Mills, and when incorporated as a village in 1867 it was renamed for
- Riefenstahl, Berta Helene Amalie (German director and actor)
Leni Riefenstahl was a German motion-picture director, actress, producer, and photographer who is best known for her documentary films of the 1930s dramatizing the power and pageantry of the Nazi movement. Riefenstahl studied painting and ballet in Berlin, and from 1923 to 1926 she appeared in
- Riefenstahl, Leni (German director and actor)
Leni Riefenstahl was a German motion-picture director, actress, producer, and photographer who is best known for her documentary films of the 1930s dramatizing the power and pageantry of the Nazi movement. Riefenstahl studied painting and ballet in Berlin, and from 1923 to 1926 she appeared in
- Rieff, Philip (American psychologist)
Sigmund Freud: If, as American sociologist Philip Rieff once contended, “psychological man” replaced such earlier notions as political, religious, or economic man as the 20th century’s dominant self-image, it is in no small measure due to the power of Freud’s vision and the seeming inexhaustibility of the intellectual legacy he left…
- Rieger, František Ladislav (Czech leader)
František Ladislav Rieger was a politician and leader of the more conservative Czech nationalists who was the principal spokesman for Bohemian autonomy within the Habsburg Empire. In April 1848 Rieger headed the national deputation that presented Czech demands to the Austrian government, and he was
- Riegger, Wallingford (American composer)
Wallingford Riegger was a prolific U.S. composer of orchestral works, modern dance and film scores, and teaching pieces and choral arrangements. Riegger moved with his family first to Indianapolis, Ind., and then at age 15 to New York City. In 1900 he began playing cello in the family ensemble. He
- Riego phase, El (Mexican prehistory)
Mexico: Pre-Columbian Mexico: In the earlier El Riego (7000–5000 bc) and Coxcatlán (5000–3400 bc) phases of this sequence, the inhabitants of the Tehuacán Valley were probably seasonal nomads who divided their time between small hunting encampments and larger temporary villages, which were used as bases for collecting plants such as various…
- Riego y Núñez, Rafael de (Spanish military officer)
Spain: The failure of liberalism: …a pronunciamiento organized by Major Rafael de Riego y Núñez and supported by the local liberals organized in Masonic lodges.
- Riehl, Alois (Austrian philosopher)
Kantianism: Epistemological Neo-Kantianism: …realism of the scientific monist Alois Riehl and of his disciple Richard Hönigswald. Riehl held, in direct opposition to the Marburgian logisticism, that the thing-in-itself participates positively in the constitution of knowledge inasmuch as all perception includes a reference to things outside the subject.
- Riehl, Wilhelm Heinrich (German author)
Wilhelm Heinrich Riehl was a German journalist and historian whose early emphasis on social structures in historical development were influential in the rise of sociological history. After entering the University of Marburg to study theology in 1841, Riehl transferred to the University of Tübingen
- Riel (work by Coulter)
Canadian literature: Drama: …such as John Coulter, whose Riel (1962) creates a heroic figure of Louis Riel, the leader of the Métis rebellion in 1885. As regional and experimental theatres multiplied, increasingly innovative and daring productions were mounted, such as John Herbert’s Fortune and Men’s Eyes (1967), on homosexuality in prison; George Ryga’s…
- riel (currency)
Cambodia: Finance: …issues the national currency, the riel. The Foreign Trade Bank, originally established to manage commercial relations with other communist countries, facilitates the financing of the country’s commercial activities. Most other banks are either foreign-owned or joint ventures with a foreign partner; the first of these ventures was established in 1992…
- Riel, Louis (Métis leader)
Louis Riel was a Canadian leader of the Métis in western Canada. Riel grew up in the Red River Settlement in present-day Manitoba. He studied for the priesthood in Montreal (though he was never ordained) and worked at various jobs before returning to Red River in the late 1860s. In 1869 the
- Riella (plant genus)
bryophyte: Annotated classification: …terrestrial except the aquatic genus Riella; distributed mainly in milder temperate climates; 3 genera with approximately 20 species. Order Monocleales Large thalli of mainly uniformly parenchymatous cells, reclining; thallus forked to irregularly branched; archegonia within a sleevelike chamber behind the lobe apex; antheridia in padlike receptacles in the same location…
- Riemann hypothesis (mathematics)
Riemann hypothesis, in number theory, hypothesis by German mathematician Bernhard Riemann concerning the location of solutions to the Riemann zeta function, which is connected to the prime number theorem and has important implications for the distribution of prime numbers. Riemann included the
- Riemann integral (mathematics)
analysis: The Riemann integral: ) The task of analysis is to provide not a computational method but a sound logical foundation for limiting processes. Oddly enough, when it comes to formalizing the integral, the most difficult part is to define the term area. It is easy to define…
- Riemann surface (mathematics)
analysis: Analysis in higher dimensions: …was the concept of a Riemann surface. The complex numbers can be viewed as a plane (see Fluid flow), so a function of a complex variable can be viewed as a function on the plane. Riemann’s insight was that other surfaces can also be provided with complex coordinates, and certain…
- Riemann zeta function (mathematics)
Riemann zeta function, function useful in number theory for investigating properties of prime numbers. Written as ζ(x), it was originally defined as the infinite series ζ(x) = 1 + 2−x + 3−x + 4−x + ⋯. When x = 1, this series is called the harmonic series, which increases without bound—i.e., its sum
- Riemann, Bernhard (German mathematician)
Bernhard Riemann was a German mathematician whose profound and novel approaches to the study of geometry laid the mathematical foundation for Albert Einstein’s theory of relativity. He also made important contributions to the theory of functions, complex analysis, and number theory. Riemann was
- Riemann, Georg Friedrich Bernhard (German mathematician)
Bernhard Riemann was a German mathematician whose profound and novel approaches to the study of geometry laid the mathematical foundation for Albert Einstein’s theory of relativity. He also made important contributions to the theory of functions, complex analysis, and number theory. Riemann was
- Riemann, Hugo (German musicologist)
Hugo Riemann was a German musicologist whose works on music harmony are considered to have been the foundation of modern music theory. Riemann’s early musical training was in piano and theory, and he later studied law, philosophy, and history before returning to his musical studies at the Leipzig
- Riemann, Karl Wilhelm Julius Hugo (German musicologist)
Hugo Riemann was a German musicologist whose works on music harmony are considered to have been the foundation of modern music theory. Riemann’s early musical training was in piano and theory, and he later studied law, philosophy, and history before returning to his musical studies at the Leipzig
- Riemannian geometry (mathematics)
Riemannian geometry, one of the non-Euclidean geometries that completely rejects the validity of Euclid’s fifth postulate and modifies his second postulate. Simply stated, Euclid’s fifth postulate is: through a point not on a given line there is only one line parallel to the given line. In
- Riemenschneider, Tilman (German sculptor)
Tilman Riemenschneider was a master sculptor whose wood portrait carvings and statues made him one of the major artists of the late Gothic period in Germany; he was known as the leader of the Lower Franconia school. Riemenschneider was the son of the mint master of Würzburg and opened a highly
- Rienzi (opera by Wagner)
Richard Wagner: Early life: Nevertheless, in 1840 he completed Rienzi (after Bulwer-Lytton’s novel), and in 1841 he composed his first representative opera, Der fliegende Holländer (The Flying Dutchman), based on the legend about a ship’s captain condemned to sail forever.
- Riesch, Maria (German skier)
Vancouver 2010 Olympic Games: Notable Events from the Vancouver Winter Games: February 19:
- Riese, Der (work by Sternheim)
Carl Sternheim: …first play, Die Hose (The Underpants), was published and performed in 1911 under the title Der Riese (“The Giant”) because the Berlin police had forbidden the original title on the grounds of gross immorality. It has as its main character Theobald Maske. He and others of the Maske family…
- Riesener, Jean-Henri (German cabinetmaker)
Jean-Henri Riesener was the best-known cabinetmaker in France during the reign of Louis XVI. Riesener was the son of an usher in the law courts of the elector of Cologne. After moving to Paris he joined the workshop of Jean-François Oeben in 1754, and, when Oeben died in 1763, Riesener was put in
- Riesenflugzeug (aircraft)
military aircraft: Bombers: …bombers known as Riesenflugzeug, or R-planes. Typical of these was the Staaken R.VI number R.25, which was powered by four 260-horsepower Mercedes engines. This had a takeoff weight of 11,372 kg (25,269 pounds), which included a crew of seven and a bomb load of up to 1,800 kg (4,000 pounds).
- Riesengebirge (mountains, Europe)
Giant Mountains, mountains, major segment of the Sudeten in northeastern Bohemia and part of the western Czech-Polish frontier. The highest peak in both the mountains and Bohemia is Sněžka (5,256 feet [1,602 m]). The Elbe (Czech: Labe) River rises in Bohemia on the southern slope, and tributaries
- Riesling (wine)
Alsace: Geography: Riesling, Gewürztraminer, Sylvaner, Auxerrois, and Pinot Blanc are among the notable white wines produced. Colmar is the principal centre of the wine-growing region, whose vineyards extend in a narrow strip along the lower slopes of the Vosges west of the city. Parts of the alluvial…
- Riesman, David (American sociologist)
David Riesman was an American sociologist and author most noted for The Lonely Crowd: A Study of the Changing American Character (with Reuel Denney and Nathan Glazer, 1950), a work dealing primarily with the social character of the urban middle class. “The lonely crowd” became a catchphrase
- Riess, Adam (American astronomer)
Adam Riess is an American astronomer who was awarded the 2011 Nobel Prize for Physics for his discovery of dark energy, a repulsive force that is the dominant component (73 percent) of the universe. He shared the prize with physicist Saul Perlmutter and astronomer Brian Schmidt. Riess wrote
- Riess, Adam Guy (American astronomer)
Adam Riess is an American astronomer who was awarded the 2011 Nobel Prize for Physics for his discovery of dark energy, a repulsive force that is the dominant component (73 percent) of the universe. He shared the prize with physicist Saul Perlmutter and astronomer Brian Schmidt. Riess wrote
- Riesz, Frigyes (Hungarian mathematician)
Frigyes Riesz was a Hungarian mathematician and pioneer of functional analysis, which has found important applications to mathematical physics. Riesz taught mathematics at the University of Kolozsvár (Cluj) from 1911 and in 1922 became editor of the newly founded Acta Scientiarum Mathematicarum,
- Riesz-Fischer theorem (mathematics)
Frigyes Riesz: The Riesz-Fischer theorem of 1907, concerning the equivalence of the Hilbert space of sequences of convergent sums of squares with the space of functions of summable squares, formed the mathematical basis for demonstrating the equivalence of matrix mechanics and wave mechanics, a major breakthrough in early…
- Riete (Italy)
Rieti, city, Lazio (Latium) regione, central Italy, on the Velino River in the Abruzzi Apennines, just southeast of Terni. The ancient town was first settled by the Sabines and then became the Roman Reate. It belonged to the Lombard duchy of Spoleto in the early European Middle Ages and later
- Rieti (Italy)
Rieti, city, Lazio (Latium) regione, central Italy, on the Velino River in the Abruzzi Apennines, just southeast of Terni. The ancient town was first settled by the Sabines and then became the Roman Reate. It belonged to the Lombard duchy of Spoleto in the early European Middle Ages and later
- Rietveld, Gerrit Thomas (Dutch architect)
Gerrit Thomas Rietveld was a Dutch architect and furniture designer notable for his application of the tenets of the de Stijl movement. He was an apprentice in his father’s cabinetmaking business from 1899 to 1906 and later studied architecture in Utrecht. Rietveld began his association with the
- Rievaulx (abbey, North Yorkshire, England, United Kingdom)
Rievaulx, ruined Cistercian abbey, Ryedale district, administrative county of North Yorkshire, historic county of Yorkshire, England. It lies in the seclusion of a deep valley to which it has given its name, in the North York Moors National Park. The monastery was the mother church of the
- Rif (mountains, Morocco)
Rif, mountain range of northern Morocco, extending from Tangier to the Moulouya River valley near the Moroccan-Algerian frontier. For the greater part of its 180-mile (290-km) length, the range hugs the Mediterranean Sea, leaving only a few narrow coastal valleys suitable for agriculture or urban
- Rif (Jewish scholar)
Isaac ben Jacob Alfasi was a Talmudic scholar who wrote a codification of the Talmud known as Sefer ha-Halakhot (“Book of Laws”), which ranks with the great codes of Maimonides and Karo. Alfasi lived most of his life in Fès (from which his surname was derived) and there wrote his digest of the
- Rif (people)
Rif, any of the Berber peoples occupying a part of northeastern Morocco known as the Rif, an Arabic word meaning “edge of cultivated area.” The Rif are divided into 19 groups or social units: 5 in the west along the Mediterranean coast, 7 in the centre, 5 in the east, and 2 in the southeastern
- Rif language
Rif: The others generally speak Rif, a regionally variable Berber language, but many also speak Spanish or Arabic. The Rif are Muslims.