- Rijn, Rembrandt Harmenszoon van (Dutch artist)
Rembrandt was a Dutch Baroque painter and printmaker, one of the greatest storytellers in the history of art, possessing an exceptional ability to render people in their various moods and dramatic guises. Rembrandt is also known as a painter of light and shade and as an artist who favoured an
- Rijn, Saskja van (Dutch heiress)
Rembrandt: The myth of Rembrandt’s fall: The death of Rembrandt’s wife, Saskia, and the presumed rejection of the Night Watch by those who commissioned it were long supposed to be the most important events leading to the presumed change in Rembrandt’s life after 1642. But modern art-historical research has questioned the myth of a crisis in…
- Rijndael (computer program)
AES: …October 2000 NIST announced that Rijndael, a program created by two Belgian cryptographers, Joan Daemen and Vincent Rijmen, had been accepted as the new standard, or the Advanced Encryption Standard (AES). The NIST predecessor, the National Bureau of Standards, had expected the DES to be implemented in special-purpose hardware and…
- Rijsbrack, Jan Michiel (English sculptor)
John Michael Rysbrack was one of the principal sculptors and designers in England in the 18th century. Rysbrack studied at Antwerp, probably in the workshop of Michael van de Voort. In 1720 he established himself in London, where he lived until his death. Rysbrack worked in a classical, sometimes
- rijsttafel (food)
rijsttafel, an elaborate meal of Indonesian dishes developed during the Dutch colonial era. The Dutch were likely inspired by a similar Indonesian multiple-dish meal known as nasi padang. While it remains popular in the Netherlands, many native Indonesians eschew rijsttafel because of its political
- Rijswijk (Netherlands)
Rijswijk, gemeente (municipality), western Netherlands, on the southeastern outskirts of The Hague (’s-Gravenhage). The Reformed church dates from the 14th century, and there are some 17th-century houses. Although primarily residential, the town has oil wells, laboratories, and an important
- Rijswijk, Treaty of (Europe [1697])
King William’s War: …protracted war ended with the Treaty of Rijswijk (1697). Because of the importance of Indian participation, it is also known as the first of the four French and Indian Wars.
- Rikaze (China)
Xigazê, city, south-central Tibet Autonomous Region, western China. Situated on a well-defended height (elevation 12,800 feet [3,900 metres]) overlooking the confluence of two rivers in one of the most fertile valley areas of Tibet, it is the traditional centre of the area known as Tsang or
- Riker, William (American political scientist)
William Riker was an American political scientist who popularized the use of mathematical models, and in particular game theory, in the study of political behaviour. After moving with his family to Indiana in 1932, Riker graduated from Shortridge High School in Indianapolis in 1938 and attended
- Riker, William Harrison (American political scientist)
William Riker was an American political scientist who popularized the use of mathematical models, and in particular game theory, in the study of political behaviour. After moving with his family to Indiana in 1932, Riker graduated from Shortridge High School in Indianapolis in 1938 and attended
- Rikers Island (island, New York, United States)
Rikers Island, island in the East River near the entrance of Bowery Bay, north of La Guardia Airport, New York, New York, U.S. Politically part of the borough of the Bronx (north), Rikers Island is joined to the borough of Queens by a bridge (inaccessible to the public). The island was owned from
- Rikham (European grammarian)
Joseph Kimhi was a European grammarian, biblical exegete, and poet who, with his sons, Moses and David, made fundamental contributions to establishing Hebrew-language studies. Through his many translations into Hebrew of works written in Arabic by Spanish Jews, Kimhi came to play a principal part
- Rikhter, Svyatoslav Teofilovich (Russian musician)
Sviatoslav Richter was a Soviet pianist whose technical virtuosity, combined with subtle introspection, made him one of the preeminent pianists of the 20th century. Though his repertoire was enormous, he was especially praised for his interpretations of J.S. Bach, Robert Schumann, Franz Liszt,
- rikka (floral arrangement)
rikka, (Japanese: “standing flowers”), in classical Japanese floral art, a highly conventionalized and formal style of flower arranging. It is difficult to say when rikka became a distinct, recognized form, because it evolved over several centuries. The first rules for rikka arrangements may be
- Rikken Dōshi-kai (political party, Japan)
Kōshaku Katsura Tarō: His Rikken Dōshikai was at first unsuccessful but eventually became one of the two major political groups in pre-World War II Japan. Katsura’s third premiership lasted only seven weeks (December 1912–February 1913) and ended amidst riots against his oligarchic methods and his program for greater armaments.…
- Rikken Dōshikai (political party, Japan)
Kōshaku Katsura Tarō: His Rikken Dōshikai was at first unsuccessful but eventually became one of the two major political groups in pre-World War II Japan. Katsura’s third premiership lasted only seven weeks (December 1912–February 1913) and ended amidst riots against his oligarchic methods and his program for greater armaments.…
- Rikken Kaishintō (political party, Japan)
Kaishintō, a leading Japanese political party from its founding in 1882 by the democratic leader Ōkuma Shigenobu until its merger with several smaller parties in 1896. It generally represented the urban elite of intellectuals, industrialists, and merchants. Its platform, like that of its main
- Rikken Kokumintō (political party, Japan)
Inukai Tsuyoshi: …a new political party, the Constitutional National Party (Rikken Kokumintō). In 1913 he headed a popular movement against the autocratic and unpopular government of the former army general Katsura Tarō. As a result of Inukai’s efforts, Katsura was forced to resign, opening the way for the gradual development of a…
- Rikken Seiyūkai (political party, Japan)
Rikken Seiyūkai, the dominant Japanese political party from its inception in 1900 until 1940, when all parties were absorbed into the government-controlled Taisei Yokusankai (“Imperial Rule Assistance Association”). The Rikken Seiyūkai was founded by one of the leading government bureaucrats, Itō
- Rikki Don’t Lose That Number (song by Becker and Fagen)
Donald Fagen: …owing in particular to “Rikki Don’t Lose That Number,” ultimately the band’s greatest hit single, written by Fagen and Becker. With a more accomplished group of musicians, Steely Dan went on a second tour. Worn from the uncompromising pressure of touring, the band took a break from live performances,…
- Rikki-Tikki-Tavi (story by Kipling)
The Jungle Book: …python; Bagheera the panther; and Rikki-tikki-tavi the mongoose.
- Riksdag (Swedish parliament)
Adolf Frederick: …king’s reign rested in the Riksdag (parliament). Twice he tried to free himself of its control. In his first attempt (1756)—aided by his influential wife, Queen Louisa Ulrika, who was sister to Frederick II of Prussia—he nearly lost his throne, but in his second (1768–69)—with the assistance of his son,…
- Riksdag (Swedish states general [1435-1865])
Riksdag, (Swedish: “Day of the Realm”), the Swedish states general from 1435 to 1865, unique in Europe because it included the peasantry as the fourth state. The Riksdag had the power to elect kings, to tax, and to declare war. Adroit kings were able to play off the states against each other, but
- Riksmål (Norwegian language)
Bokmål, a literary form of Norwegian developed by the gradual reform of written Danish in conformity to Norwegian usage. Bokmål means in Norwegian “book language” and Riksmål approximately “official language” (meaning literally, “language of the
- Riksteatret (theater, Norway)
Norway: Cultural institutions: …the state traveling theatre, the Riksteatret, organizes tours throughout the country, giving as many as 1,200 performances annually. The Norwegian Opera, opened in 1959, receives state subsidies (as do most other theatres).
- Rikuchū Coast National Park (national park, Japan)
Iwate: …serves as the gateway to Rikuchū Coast National Park, which includes some rugged, scenic shoreline. The western fringe of the prefecture is part of Towada-Hachimantai National Park.
- RIL (Indian company)
Reliance Industries Limited, privately owned conglomerate that operates in petrochemical production and refining, textile, retail, marketing, telecommunications, and other industries. It was the first privately owned Indian company to enter the Fortune 500. Headquarters are in Mumbai. Reliance
- ril (Danish dance)
reel: …and Wales and, as the ril, in Denmark. Popular reels include the Irish Sixteenhand Reel and the Scottish reels Mairi’s Wedding and the Duke of Perth.
- Rila (mountains, Bulgaria)
Rila, highest mountain range in Bulgaria and in the Balkan Peninsula, and one of the highest ranges in Europe. A northwestern section of the Rhodope Mountains, it has an area of 1,015 square miles (2,629 square km) and extends for about 50 miles (80 km) between the Thracian Plain at central
- Rila Monastery (monastery, Bulgaria)
Rila Monastery, historic monastery and cultural site in the Rhodope Mountains of southwestern Bulgaria. It is situated in a valley of the Rila massif, some 70 miles (110 km) south of Sofia. Rila is a symbol of Bulgarian national identity, and it is the most prominent monastery of the Bulgarian
- Rila Mountains (mountains, Bulgaria)
Rila, highest mountain range in Bulgaria and in the Balkan Peninsula, and one of the highest ranges in Europe. A northwestern section of the Rhodope Mountains, it has an area of 1,015 square miles (2,629 square km) and extends for about 50 miles (80 km) between the Thracian Plain at central
- Rila Planina (mountains, Bulgaria)
Rila, highest mountain range in Bulgaria and in the Balkan Peninsula, and one of the highest ranges in Europe. A northwestern section of the Rhodope Mountains, it has an area of 1,015 square miles (2,629 square km) and extends for about 50 miles (80 km) between the Thracian Plain at central
- Rila, John of (Bulgarian saint)
Rila Monastery: …was founded by the hermit John of Rila (Yoan of Rila, in Bulgarian Ivan Rilski), who is the traditional patron saint of Bulgaria. Rila grew rapidly in power and influence from the 13th to the 14th century. After a devastating fire, it was rebuilt and fortified (c. 1334–35) in its…
- Rila, Neophyte of (Bulgarian monk)
Bulgaria: Spread of education: With the monk Neofit Rilski (Neophyte of Rila) as its teacher, it was the first school to teach in Bulgarian. Its work was facilitated by the appearance of a Bulgarian publishing industry and a small but influential periodical press. By the 1870s the guilds, town and village councils,…
- Riley, Bridget (British artist)
Bridget Riley is an English artist whose vibrant optical pattern paintings were central to the Op art movement of the 1960s. Riley spent her childhood in Cornwall and attended Goldsmiths College (1949–52; now part of the University of London) and the Royal College of Art (1952–55; B.A.). Until 1960
- Riley, Bridget Louise (British artist)
Bridget Riley is an English artist whose vibrant optical pattern paintings were central to the Op art movement of the 1960s. Riley spent her childhood in Cornwall and attended Goldsmiths College (1949–52; now part of the University of London) and the Royal College of Art (1952–55; B.A.). Until 1960
- Riley, Charles Valentine (American entomologist)
Charles Valentine Riley was a British-born American entomologist who contributed much to the advancement of the systematic study of insects of economic significance in the United States and helped to establish the Division of Entomology (later called Entomology Research Division) of the U.S.
- Riley, Fort (fort, Kansas, United States)
Kansas: Military installations: Fort Riley, near Junction City, was established in 1853 and was also a military outpost. In the 20th century, it became an important infantry-training centre, the home of the famous 1st Infantry Division (“the Big Red One”). McConnell Air Force Base at Wichita is a…
- Riley, James Whitcomb (American author)
James Whitcomb Riley was a poet remembered for nostalgic dialect verse and often called “the poet of the common people.” Riley’s boyhood experience as an itinerant sign painter, entertainer, and assistant to patent-medicine vendors gave him the opportunity to compose songs and dramatic skits, to
- Riley, Jeannie C. (American singer)
Tom T. Hall: …the popular music scene when Jeannie C. Riley’s recording of his pointed story song “Harper Valley P.T.A.” topped the charts in the country and pop categories. Meanwhile, Mercury Records encouraged Hall to perform his own songs, and his first recorded single with the company—“I Washed My Face in the Morning…
- Riley, Mickey (American athlete)
Michael Riley Galitzen was an American diver who won four Olympic medals. Galitzen captured a springboard silver and a platform bronze at the 1928 Olympics in Amsterdam. At the 1932 Games in Los Angeles, he won a gold in the springboard and a silver in the platform event. Galitzen also earned
- Riley, Pat (American basketball player, coach, and executive)
Pat Riley is an American basketball player, coach, and executive who was one of the most successful National Basketball Association (NBA) coaches of all time. Riley filed for a trademark on the term three-peat when he was head coach of the Los Angeles Lakers in 1988, even though the team had only
- Riley, Patrick James (American basketball player, coach, and executive)
Pat Riley is an American basketball player, coach, and executive who was one of the most successful National Basketball Association (NBA) coaches of all time. Riley filed for a trademark on the term three-peat when he was head coach of the Los Angeles Lakers in 1988, even though the team had only
- Riley, Teddy (American musician and producer [b. 1967])
Michael Jackson: The King of Pop: …by New Jack Swing sensation Teddy Riley—solidified Jackson’s dominance of pop music. In 2001 he was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame; the Jackson 5 were inducted in 1997.
- Riley, Terry (American composer)
harmony: Avant-garde conceptions of harmony: Such a work as Terry Riley’s In C, for example, consists basically of a sustained triad on C (lasting, at the performer’s option, anywhere from 30 minutes to several hours), over which fleeting dissonances are occasionally sounded, seldom more revolutionary than an F sharp or B flat. Here again,…
- Riley-Day syndrome (pathology)
Riley-Day syndrome, an inherited disorder occurring almost exclusively in Ashkenazic Jews that is caused by abnormal functioning of the autonomic nervous system. Riley-Day syndrome is characterized by emotional instability, decreased tear production, low blood pressure upon standing up (postural
- rilievo stiacciato (sculpture)
Desiderio da Settignano: …masterfully employed the technique of rilievo stiacciato (low, or flattened, relief) in a style related to that of Donatello. The delicacy of contrast in his carvings gives his surfaces a glowing, ethereal quality, as seen in his Angel from the Altar of the Sacrament (1458–61) and many of his busts…
- Rilindja (literary movement)
Albanian literature: …of this period, known as Rilindja (“Renaissance”), and writers of the time came to be known collectively as Rilindas.
- Rilke, Rainer Maria (Austrian-German poet)
Rainer Maria Rilke was an Austro-German poet who became internationally famous with such works as Duino Elegies and Sonnets to Orpheus. Rilke was the only son of a not-too-happy marriage. His father, Josef, a civil servant, was a man frustrated in his career; his mother, the daughter of an
- Rilke, René Maria (Austrian-German poet)
Rainer Maria Rilke was an Austro-German poet who became internationally famous with such works as Duino Elegies and Sonnets to Orpheus. Rilke was the only son of a not-too-happy marriage. His father, Josef, a civil servant, was a man frustrated in his career; his mother, the daughter of an
- rill (lunar feature)
rille, any of various valleys or trenches on the surface of the Moon. The term was introduced by early telescopic observers—probably by the German astronomer Johann Schröter about 1800—to denote such lunar features. The word rima (from Latin, “fissure”) is often used for the same kind of features.
- rill mining
mining: Cut-and-fill mining: …mining and sublevel stoping called rill mining. In this method drifts are driven in the ore separated by a slice of ore two or three normal slices high. As in sublevel stoping, vertical slices are removed by longhole drilling and blasting, but, as the slices are extracted, filling is carried…
- Rilla, Wolf (film director)
Village of the Damned: Production notes and credits:
- rille (lunar feature)
rille, any of various valleys or trenches on the surface of the Moon. The term was introduced by early telescopic observers—probably by the German astronomer Johann Schröter about 1800—to denote such lunar features. The word rima (from Latin, “fissure”) is often used for the same kind of features.
- Rilski, Ivan (Bulgarian saint)
Rila Monastery: …was founded by the hermit John of Rila (Yoan of Rila, in Bulgarian Ivan Rilski), who is the traditional patron saint of Bulgaria. Rila grew rapidly in power and influence from the 13th to the 14th century. After a devastating fire, it was rebuilt and fortified (c. 1334–35) in its…
- Rilski, Neofit (Bulgarian monk)
Bulgaria: Spread of education: With the monk Neofit Rilski (Neophyte of Rila) as its teacher, it was the first school to teach in Bulgarian. Its work was facilitated by the appearance of a Bulgarian publishing industry and a small but influential periodical press. By the 1870s the guilds, town and village councils,…
- riluzole (drug)
amyotrophic lateral sclerosis: Diagnosis and treatment: …treatment with a drug called riluzole. Riluzole is the only drug treatment available specifically for ALS and has been shown to increase survival by about two to three months. A surgical treatment available to patients with advanced disease is tracheostomy, in which an opening is created in the trachea in…
- rim (technology)
bicycle: Wheels: Bicycle wheels have a rim to retain the tire, a ball-bearing hub, and spokes between hub and rim. Spokes are made of steel wire, laced tangentially and kept under tension by threaded nipples in the rims that are adjusted to keep the rim straight (true). Hub axles are held…
- RIM (Canadian company)
BlackBerry: …2016 by the Canadian company Research in Motion (RIM; BlackBerry from 2013 on) that were among the first popular smartphones.
- RIM (biology)
evolution: Reproductive isolation: …that prevent interbreeding are called reproductive isolating mechanisms (RIMs). Oaks on different islands, minnows in different rivers, or squirrels in different mountain ranges cannot interbreed because they are physically separated, not necessarily because they are biologically incompatible. Geographic separation, therefore, is not a RIM.
- RIM (materials processing)
major industrial polymers: Polyurethane elastomers: This technology, known as reaction injection molding, accounts for much of the production of thermosetting elastomers made from polyurethane. Polyurethane elastomers are made into automobile parts, industrial rollers, flexible molds, forklift tires, roller-skate and skateboard wheels, medical equipment, and shoe soles.
- rim syncline (geology)
salt dome: Physical characteristics of salt domes.: …a circular depression called a rim syncline may encircle or nearly encircle the domal uplift. Unaffected strata develop into highs surrounded by low areas. These highs, called remnant highs or turtleback highs, do not have as much vertical relief as the salt domes among which they are interspersed. Present-day structure…
- Rim-Sin (king of Larsa)
Larsa: Under Warad-Sin’s son Rim-Sin (1822–1763), the arts, especially the old Sumerian scribal schools, received great encouragement. The days of Larsa were numbered, however, for Hammurabi of Babylon, who had long been determined to destroy his most dangerous enemy, defeated Rim-Sin in 1763 bc and substituted his own authority…
- rim-type flywheel (machine component)
flywheel: A rim-type flywheel will burst at a much lower rotary speed than a disk-type wheel of the same weight and diameter. For minimum weight and high energy-storing capacity, a flywheel may be made of high-strength steel and designed as a tapered disk, thick at the centre…
- ríma (Icelandic poetry)
ríma, versified sagas, or episodes from the sagas, a form of adaptation that was popular in Iceland from the 15th century. One of three genres of popular early Icelandic poetry (the other two being dances and ballads), rímur were produced from the 14th to the 19th century. They combine an
- rima glottidis (anatomy)
glottis, either the space between the vocal fold and arytenoid cartilage of one side of the larynx and those of the other side, or the structures that surround that space. See
- Rima Hyginus (lunar rille)
Moon: Effects of impacts and volcanism: …and some of these—such as Rima Hyginus and the rilles around the floor of the large old crater Alphonsus—are peppered with rimless eruption craters. Though the Moon shows both tension and compression features (low wrinkle ridges, usually near mare margins, may result from compression), it gives no evidence of having…
- Rímac (district, Peru)
Rímac, distrito (district) of the Lima–Callao metropolitan area, north of central Lima, Peru. Created a district in 1921, the site was settled in early colonial days. The Puente de Piedras (“Bridge of Stone”) was built in 1610. Notable colonial landmarks include the promenade and Monastery of the
- Rímac River (river, South America)
Andes Mountains: Physiography of the Central Andes: …west slope of which the Rímac River rises in a cluster of lakes fed by glaciers and descends rapidly to the ocean (15,700 feet in 60 miles). Ticlio Pass, at an altitude of some 15,800 feet, is used by a railway. Many small lakes and ponds are found on the…
- Rimado de palacio (work by López de Ayala)
Pedro López de Ayala: …is chiefly remembered for his Rimado de palacio (c. 1400), one of the last works in cuaderna vía (Spanish narrative verse form consisting of 4-line stanzas, each line having 14 syllables and identical rhyme), an autobiographical satire on contemporary society. Ayala’s translations from Livy, Boccaccio, and others gave him a…
- Rimah–Al-Bāṭin, Wadi Ar- (river, Saudi Arabia)
Arabian Desert: Physiography: …represented by such wadis as Al-Rimah–Al-Bāṭin, Al-Sahbāʾ, and Dawāsir-Jawb, which carried vast loads of sediment from the interior toward the Persian Gulf. The Al-Dibdibah region once was the delta of Wadi Al-Rimah–Al-Bāṭin, and Al-Budūʿ Plain was the delta of Wadi Al-Sahbāʾ. The gravel plains of Raydāʾ and Abū Baḥr, and…
- rimantadine (drug)
rimantadine, drug used to treat infections caused by influenza type A virus, the most common cause of influenza epidemics. Rimantadine is a derivative of the antiviral agent amantadine. It is composed of an alicyclic compound called adamantane that contains a methyl group (CH3) attached to an
- Rimas (work by Bécquer)
Spanish literature: The Romantic movement: poet Gustavo Adolfo Bécquer, in Rimas (published posthumously in 1871; “Rhymes”), expressed his own tortured emotions, suffering, and solitude but also celebrated love, poetry, and intimacy while experimenting with free verse. Rimas influenced more 20th-century Spanish poets than any other 19th-century work.
- Rimas (work by Camões)
Luís de Camões: Literary works of Luís de Camões: The first edition of Camões’s Rimas was published in 1595, 15 years after his death. The editor, Fernão Rodrigues Lobo Soropita, had exercised scrupulous care in collecting the poems from manuscript songbooks, but even so he could not avoid the inclusion of some apocryphal poems. The increasing fame of Camões’s…
- Rimatara (island, French Polynesia)
Tubuai Islands: …square miles [39 square km]), Rimatara, (3 square miles [8 square km]), Rurutu (11 square miles [29 square km]), and Tubuai (18 square miles [47 square km])—as well as the tiny, uninhabited Marotiri Islands at the southern end of the chain, and Maria Atoll in the north.
- Rimbaud, Arthur (French poet)
Arthur Rimbaud was a French poet and adventurer who won renown in the Symbolist movement and markedly influenced modern poetry. Rimbaud grew up at Charleville in the Ardennes region of northeastern France. He was the second son of an army captain and a local farmer’s daughter. The father spent
- Rimbaud, Jean Nicolas Arthur (French poet)
Arthur Rimbaud was a French poet and adventurer who won renown in the Symbolist movement and markedly influenced modern poetry. Rimbaud grew up at Charleville in the Ardennes region of northeastern France. He was the second son of an army captain and a local farmer’s daughter. The father spent
- rime (poetic device)
rhyme, the correspondence of two or more words with similar-sounding final syllables placed so as to echo one another. Rhyme is used by poets and occasionally by prose writers to produce sounds appealing to the reader’s senses and to unify and establish a poem’s stanzaic form. End rhyme (i.e.,
- Rime (work by Petrarch)
Petrarch: Break with his past (1346–53): The theme of his Canzoniere (as the poems are usually known) therefore goes beyond the apparent subject matter, his love for Laura. For the first time in the history of the new poetry, lyrics are held together in a marvelous new tapestry, possessing its own unity. By selecting all…
- rime (weather)
rime, white, opaque, granular deposit of ice crystals formed on objects that are at a temperature below the freezing point. Rime occurs when supercooled water droplets (at a temperature lower than 0° C [32° F]) in fog come in contact with a surface that is also at a temperature below freezing; the
- rime ice (weather)
rime, white, opaque, granular deposit of ice crystals formed on objects that are at a temperature below the freezing point. Rime occurs when supercooled water droplets (at a temperature lower than 0° C [32° F]) in fog come in contact with a surface that is also at a temperature below freezing; the
- Rime in morte di Laura (poems by Petrarch)
Petrarch: Break with his past (1346–53): …During Laura’s Life”) and the Rime in morte di Laura (“Poems After Laura’s Death”), which he now selected and arranged to illustrate the story of his own spiritual growth. The choice of poems was further governed by an exquisite aesthetic taste and by a preference for an approximately chronological arrangement,…
- Rime in vita di Laura (poems by Petrarch)
Petrarch: Break with his past (1346–53): …divided into two parts: the Rime in vita di Laura (“Poems During Laura’s Life”) and the Rime in morte di Laura (“Poems After Laura’s Death”), which he now selected and arranged to illustrate the story of his own spiritual growth. The choice of poems was further governed by an exquisite…
- Rime nuove (work by Carducci)
Giosuè Carducci: Rime nuove (1887; The New Lyrics) and Odi barbare (1877; The Barbarian Odes) contain the best of Carducci’s poetry: the evocations of the Maremma landscape and the memories of childhood; the lament for the loss of his only son; the representation of great historical events; and the ambitious…
- Rime of the Ancient Mariner, The (work by Coleridge)
The Rime of the Ancient Mariner, poem in seven parts by Samuel Taylor Coleridge that first appeared in Lyrical Ballads, published collaboratively by Coleridge and William Wordsworth in 1798. The title character detains one of three young men on their way to a wedding feast and mesmerizes him with
- rime riche (prosody)
rime riche, in French and English prosody, a rhyme produced by agreement in sound not only of the last accented vowel and any succeeding sounds but also of the consonant preceding this rhyming vowel. A rime riche may consist of homographs (fair/fair) or homophones (write/right). It is distinguished
- rime royal (poetic form)
rhyme royal, seven-line iambic pentameter stanza rhyming ababbcc. The rhyme royal was first used in English verse in the 14th century by Geoffrey Chaucer in Troilus and Criseyde and The Parlement of Foules. Traditionally, the name rhyme royal is said to derive from The Kingis Quair (“The King’s
- Rime spirituali (work by Colonna)
Vittoria Colonna: …that have been collected as Rime spirituali (1882) and in other volumes. She also wrote much religious poetry.
- rime suffisante (prosody)
rime suffisante, in French and English prosody, end rhyme produced by agreement in sound of an accented final vowel and following final consonant or consonants, if any. Examples of rimes suffisantes in English include the rhymes ship/dip and flee/see. It is distinguished from rime
- Rimers of Eldritch, The (play by Wilson)
Lanford Wilson: The Rimers of Eldritch (1967) examines life in a small town.
- Rimes, LeAnn (American singer)
LeAnn Rimes is an American country music singer who topped the charts at age 13 with her rendition of “Blue.” She drew attention and admiration for her vocal similarity to country legend Patsy Cline. Rimes began singing at age two and won her first competition when she was five. Like Cline, Rimes
- rimfire cartridge (ammunition)
cartridge: …was exploded in the cartridge rim. Later improvements changed the point of impact from the rim to the centre of the cartridge, where a percussion cap was inserted. The cartridge with a percussion cap, or cup, centred on the base of the cartridge—centre-fire—predominated in all larger calibres, but rimfire cartridges…
- Rimini (Italy)
Rimini, town, Emilia-Romagna regione, northern Italy. The town is located along the Riviera del Sole of the Adriatic Sea at the mouth of the Marecchia River, just northeast of Mount Titano and the Republic of San Marino. The Romans called it Ariminum, from Ariminus, the old name of the Marecchia,
- Rimini, A. (Italian physicist)
philosophy of physics: The theory of Ghirardi, Rimini, and Weber: …in the 1980s by Ghirardi, Rimini, and Weber and is thus sometimes referred to as “GRW”; it was subsequently developed by Philip Pearle and John Stewart Bell (1928–90).
- Rimini, Council of (Roman Catholic history)
Council of Ariminum, (359 CE), in early Christianity, one of the several 4th-century church councils concerned with Arianism. It was called by the pro-Arian Roman emperor Constantius II and held at Ariminum (modern Rimini, Italy). It was attended by some 400 bishops of the Western Roman Empire,
- Rimini, Gregory of (Italian philosopher)
Gregory Of Rimini was an Italian Christian philosopher and theologian whose subtle synthesis of moderate nominalism with a theology of divine grace borrowed from St. Augustine strongly influenced the mode of later medieval thought characterizing some of the Protestant Reformers. In 1357 Gregory was
- Rimmon (ancient god)
Hadad, the Old Testament Rimmon, West Semitic god of storms, thunder, and rain, the consort of the goddess Atargatis. His attributes were identical with those of Adad of the Assyro-Babylonian pantheon. He was the chief baal (“lord”) of the West Semites (including both sedentary and nomadic
- Rimmon (Connecticut, United States)
Seymour, town (township), New Haven county, southwestern Connecticut, U.S. It lies along the Naugatuck River near New Haven. The area was settled about 1678 as part of Derby on land purchased from the Pequot Indians, who called it Naugatuck. It was known successively as Rimmon (1670); Chusetown
- Rîmnicu Vîlcea (Romania)
Râmnicu Vâlcea, city, capital of Vâlcea judeƫ (county), south-central Romania, on the Olt River. Documented as a town in the late 14th century, it was a local market town during the Middle Ages. Historical buildings in the city include the house of Anton Pann, folklorist and writer, and the local
- Rimouski (Quebec, Canada)
Rimouski, city, Bas-Saint-Laurent region, eastern Quebec province, Canada. The city lies on a hillside sloping gently toward its deepwater port (sheltered by the Île Saint-Barnabé) on the south shore of the St. Lawrence River estuary. The land was granted to Augustin Rouer de la Cardonnière in