- transplantation, tissue (medicine)
regenerative medicine: Cell and bioartificial tissue transplantation: …and allogeneic cell and bioartificial tissue transplantations have been performed. Examples of autogeneic transplants using differentiated cells include blood transfusion with frozen stores of the patient’s own blood and repair of the articular cartilage of the knee with the patient’s own articular chondrocytes (cartilage cells) that have been expanded in…
- transplanting (horticulture)
transplant, in horticulture, plant or tree removed from one location and reset in the ground at another. Most small deciduous trees may be moved with no soil attached to their roots. Trees of more than 7.5 cm (3 inches) in trunk diameter, however, are best moved balled and burlapped, that is, with
- Transplants (poetry by Macdonald)
Cynthia Macdonald: …subjects of her poems in Transplants (1976) in threatening strange environments. (W)holes (1980) also focuses on grotesques and incongruous surroundings. Her later poetic works include Alternate Means of Transport (1985), Living Wills (1991), and I Can’t Remember (1997). She also wrote the libretto for The Rehearsal (1978), an opera by…
- Transpolar Drift (current)
sea ice: Pack ice drift and thickness: …North American Arctic) and the Transpolar Drift (the major current flowing into the Atlantic Ocean from the eastern or Eurasian Arctic). The clockwise rotation of the Beaufort Gyre and the movement of the Transpolar Drift, the result of large-scale atmospheric circulation, are dominated by a high-pressure centre over the western…
- transponder
satellite communication: How satellites work: …with the use of a transponder—an integrated receiver and transmitter of radio signals. A satellite has to withstand the shock of being accelerated during launch up to the orbital velocity of 28,100 km (17,500 miles) an hour and a hostile space environment where it can be subject to radiation and…
- transport (biological circulaton)
angiosperm: Evolution of the transport process: This internal circulation, usually called transport, is present in all vascular plants, even the most primitive ones.
- Transport Act (United Kingdom [1962])
carriage of goods: Roads, railways, and inland waterways: …to the railways, and the Transport Act of 1962 enacted that the Railways Board shall not be regarded as a common carrier. Consequently, carriage by railways was regulated by the contract between the British Railways Board and the shipper or other contracting party, as laid down in the Book of…
- Transport and General Workers’ Union (British trade union)
Transport and General Workers’ Union (TGWU), labour union that was the largest in Great Britain throughout much of the 20th century. It originated in 1889 with the formation of the Dockers’ Union. In 1922 that union led the merger of 14 unions to form an organization representing more than 300,000
- transport layer (OSI level)
computer science: Networking and communication: The network and transport layers break messages into the standard-size packets and route them to their destinations. The session layer supports interactions between applications on two communicating machines. For example, it provides a mechanism with which to insert checkpoints (saving the current status of a task) into a…
- transport level (OSI level)
computer science: Networking and communication: The network and transport layers break messages into the standard-size packets and route them to their destinations. The session layer supports interactions between applications on two communicating machines. For example, it provides a mechanism with which to insert checkpoints (saving the current status of a task) into a…
- transport phenomenon (physics)
transport phenomenon, in physics, any of the phenomena involving the movement of various entities, such as mass, momentum, or energy, through a medium, fluid or solid, by virtue of nonuniform conditions existing within the medium. Variations of concentration in a medium, for example, lead to the
- transport plane (aircraft)
airplane, any of a class of fixed-wing aircraft that is heavier than air, propelled by a screw propeller or a high-velocity jet, and supported by the dynamic reaction of the air against its wings. For an account of the development of the airplane and the advent of civil aviation see history of
- transport protein (biology)
angiosperm: Structural basis of transport: …group of enzymelike compounds called permeases. Plasmodesmata may penetrate neighbouring cell walls at areas called primary pit fields. Also, some substances pass out of cells into the apoplast and are transported by energy-requiring processes into the protoplast of another cell.
- transport unit (engineering)
canals and inland waterways: Modern waterway engineering: …economics are based on the transport unit (x tons moved y miles in 1 person-hour), waterways must provide larger tonnage units than those possible on road or rail in order to be competitive.
- transport-limited slope (geology)
valley: Hillslopes: Transport-limited slopes occur where weathering processes are efficient at producing debris but where transport processes are inefficient at removing it from the slope. Such slopes lack free faces and faceted appearances, and they are generally covered with a soil mantle. The profile of this type…
- transportation (occultism)
apport: …human beings is sometimes called transportation. Spiritualists explain apport as a process involving dematerialization and subsequent reintegration of the objects. Although numerous instances of apport have been reported, many have been proven to be fraudulent.
- transportation (technology)
transportation, the movement of goods and persons from place to place and the various means by which such movement is accomplished. The growth of the ability—and the need—to transport large quantities of goods or numbers of people over long distances at high speeds in comfort and safety has been an
- transportation (punishment)
parole: …power to pronounce sentences of transportation themselves, usually for a period specified in the sentence, though most sentences of transportation were modified by executive action. England developed a system of “ticket of leave,” in which convicts detained under a sentence of transportation were allowed a measure of freedom or the…
- Transportation Building (World’s Columbian Exposition, Chicago, Illinois, United States)
Louis Sullivan: Work in association with Adler: …and Sullivan contribution was the Transportation Building, which stood apart and was painted in various strong colours as if in protest. It was a long, low arcaded building with a large polychromed archway entrance (the so-called Golden Door). Not all visitors were impressed by the neo-Roman grandeur of the fair.…
- transportation economics
transportation economics, the study of the allocation of transportation resources in order to meet the needs of a society. In a macroeconomic sense, transportation activities form a portion of a nation’s total economic product and play a role in building or strengthening a national or regional
- transportation industry
marketing: Transportation firms: As a product moves from producer to consumer, it must often travel long distances. Many products consumed in the United States have been manufactured in another area of the world, such as Asia or Mexico. In addition, if the channel of distribution includes…
- transportation law
transportation economics: Transportation regulation and deregulation: For many years, the economic practices of much of the transportation system in the United States were regulated. Today, interstate pipeline and some interstate railroad traffic is regulated, as is intrastate motor carriage in most states. At one time, nearly all…
- Transportation Security Administration (United States government)
Transportation Security Administration (TSA), U.S. agency created following the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks that is mandated with developing and implementing policies to ensure the safety of the nation’s transportation systems. It was established by the Aviation and Transportation
- transportation, history of (technology)
history of Europe: Economic effects: …production heightened demands on the transportation system to move raw materials and finished products. Massive road and canal building programs were one response, but steam engines also were directly applied as a result of inventions in Britain and the United States. Steam shipping plied major waterways soon after 1800 and…
- Transportation, U.S. Department of (United States government)
U.S. Department of Transportation, executive agency of the U.S. federal government responsible for programs and policies relating to transportation. Established in 1966, it controls the Federal Aviation Administration, Federal Highway Administration, Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration,
- transporter bridge (engineering)
movable bridge: …bridges include drawbridges, vertical-lift bridges, transporter bridges, and swing (pivot) bridges.
- transporter terminal (airport)
airport: Transporter designs: In the early 1960s the transporter concept originated as a method of reducing aircraft maneuvering on the apron and of eliminating the need for passengers to climb up and down stairways in order to enter or exit the aircraft. In a concept derived…
- Transporter, The (film by Yuen [2002])
Jason Statham: Acting career: …assumed the title role in The Transporter, about a former special forces soldier who delivers items for criminals. The movie was a box-office success, and two sequels (2005 and 2008) followed. During this time, Statham also starred in The Italian Job (2003), a heist dramedy that featured Mark Wahlberg and…
- Transportes Aéreos de Portugal (Portuguese company)
Mozambique: Transportation and telecommunications: …but after World War II Portugal’s national airline opened a route between Beira and Maputo. Eventually colonial Mozambique developed its own airline. It was replaced in 1980 by Mozambique Airlines (Linhas Aéreas de Moçambique; LAM), the national carrier, which also provides international service. Mozambique has a number of domestic airports…
- transposable element (genetics)
transposon, class of genetic elements that can “jump” to different locations within a genome. Although these elements are frequently called “jumping genes,” they are always maintained in an integrated site in the genome. In addition, most transposons eventually become inactive and no longer move.
- transposase (enzyme)
nucleic acid: Site-specific recombination: …transposons encode an enzyme called transposase that acts much like λ-integrase by cleaving the ends of the transposon as well as its target site. Transposons differ from bacteriophage λ in that they do not have a separate existence outside of the chromosome but rather are always maintained in an integrated…
- transposing musical instrument
transposing musical instrument, instrument that produces a higher or lower pitch than indicated in music written for it. Examples include clarinets, the English horn, and saxophones. Musical notation written for transposing instruments shows the relative pitches, rather than the exact pitches,
- transposition (learning)
animal learning: Discrimination of relational and abstract stimuli: The phenomenon of transposition, first studied in chicks by the Gestalt psychologist Wolfgang Köhler, suggests that animals may solve even simple discriminations in ways more complex than the experimenter had imagined. Köhler trained his chicks to perform simple discriminations—say, to choose a large white circle (five centimetres in…
- transposition cipher (cryptology)
transposition cipher, simple data encryption scheme in which plaintext characters are shifted in some regular pattern to form ciphertext. In manual systems transpositions are generally carried out with the aid of an easily remembered mnemonic. For example, a popular schoolboy cipher is the “rail
- transposition of the great arteries (pathology)
congenital heart disease: …the complex abnormality known as transposition of the great arteries, the aorta, the great conduit of blood to the organs and tissues of the body, rises from the right ventricle, which under normal anatomic configurations pumps blood to the lungs; at the same time, the pulmonary artery, the conduit of…
- transposition, law of (logic)
formal logic: Logical manipulations in LPC: …follow from these by the law of transposition; e.g., since (a) ⊃ (b) is valid, so is ∼(b) ⊃ ∼(a). The quantification of wffs containing three, four, etc., variables can be dealt with by the same rules.
- transposon (genetics)
transposon, class of genetic elements that can “jump” to different locations within a genome. Although these elements are frequently called “jumping genes,” they are always maintained in an integrated site in the genome. In addition, most transposons eventually become inactive and no longer move.
- Transrapid (train)
railroad: Maglev: The German system, known as Transrapid, achieves levitation by magnetic attraction; deep skirtings on its vehicles, wrapping around the outer rims of the guideway, contain levitation and guidance electromagnets which, when energized, are attracted to ferromagnetic armature rails at the guideway’s extremities and lift the vehicle. The Japanese technology is…
- Transsexual Phenomenon, The (work by Benjamin)
Harry Benjamin: In 1966 he published The Transsexual Phenomenon, which drew on his work with clients who had a variety of “sexual disorders.” He argued that transsexuals were a group distinct from transvestites (heterosexual men who derived sexual pleasure from dressing in women’s clothing but who did not wish to become…
- transsexuality
transsexuality, variant of gender identity in which the affected person believes that he or she should belong to the opposite sex. The transsexual male, for example, was born with normal female genitalia and other secondary characteristics of the feminine sex; very early in life, however, he
- Transsiberian (film by Anderson [2008])
Ben Kingsley: …You Kill Me (2007), and Transsiberian (2008). He subsequently took supporting roles in the Martin Scorsese films Shutter Island (2010) and Hugo (2011), in the latter portraying French film pioneer Georges Méliès.
- Transsibirskaya Zheleznodorozhnaya Magistral (railway, Russia)
Trans-Siberian Railroad, the longest single rail system in the world, stretching 5,771 miles (9,288 km) across Russia between Moscow and Vladivostok. If its connection to the port station of Nakhodka is also included, the system reaches a total of 5,867 miles (9,441 km). The Trans-Siberian Railroad
- transsignification (theology)
transubstantiation: …meaning, they coined the terms transsignification and transfinalization to be used in preference to transubstantiation. But, in his encyclical Mysterium fidei in 1965, Pope Paul VI called for a retention of the dogma of real presence together with the terminology of transubstantiation in which it had been expressed.
- transthyretin (gene)
amyloidosis: …mutations in a gene designated TTR (transthyretin). Transthyretin protein, produced by the TTR gene, normally circulates in the blood and plays an important role in the transport and tissue delivery of thyroid hormone and retinol. FAP primarily affects the nervous system, resulting in abnormal nerve sensation, pain, and limb weakness.…
- Transtisza (region, Hungary)
Hungary: Traditional regions: …Danube and Tisza rivers, and Transtisza (Tiszántúl), the region east of the Tisza. Kiskunság consists primarily of a mosaic of small landscape elements—sand dunes, loess plains, and floodplains. Kecskemét is the market centre for the region, which is also noted for its isolated farmsteads, known as tanyák. Several interesting groups…
- Tranströmer, Tomas (Swedish poet)
Tomas Tranströmer was a Swedish lyrical poet noted for his spare but resonant language, particularly his unusual metaphors—more transformative than substitutive—which have been associated with a literary surrealism. His verse was at once revelatory and mysterious. Tranströmer was awarded the Nobel
- Tranströmer, Tomas Gösta (Swedish poet)
Tomas Tranströmer was a Swedish lyrical poet noted for his spare but resonant language, particularly his unusual metaphors—more transformative than substitutive—which have been associated with a literary surrealism. His verse was at once revelatory and mysterious. Tranströmer was awarded the Nobel
- Transtsendentnye i algebraicheskie chisla (work by Gelfond)
Aleksandr Osipovich Gelfond: …Transtsendentnye i algebraicheskie chisla (1952; Transcendental and Algebraic Numbers). In Ischislenie konechnykh raznostey (1952; “Calculus of Finite Differences”), he summarized his approximation and interpolation studies.
- transubstantiation (theology)
transubstantiation, in Christianity, the change by which the substance (though not the appearance) of the bread and wine in the Eucharist becomes Christ’s real presence—that is, his body and blood. In Roman Catholicism and some other Christian churches, the doctrine, which was first called
- transumpt
diplomatics: Types of documents: In documents known as transumpts, which recited earlier documents or charters as part of their text, it often happened that the earlier document was forged, but, being included in the new, it received validation. The original documents and copies considered above were issued at the request of the recipient…
- transuranic element (chemical element group)
transuranium element, any of the chemical elements that lie beyond uranium in the periodic table—i.e., those with atomic numbers greater than 92. Twenty-six of these elements have been discovered and named or are awaiting confirmation of their discovery. Eleven of them, from neptunium through
- transuranium element (chemical element group)
transuranium element, any of the chemical elements that lie beyond uranium in the periodic table—i.e., those with atomic numbers greater than 92. Twenty-six of these elements have been discovered and named or are awaiting confirmation of their discovery. Eleven of them, from neptunium through
- transurethral resection of the prostate (medicine)
prostate cancer: Treatment: A second surgical procedure, transurethral resection of the prostate (TURP), is used to relieve symptoms but does not remove all of the cancer. TURP is often used in men who cannot have a radical prostectomy because of advanced age or illness or in men who have a noncancerous enlargement…
- Transvaal (historical province, South Africa)
Transvaal, former province of South Africa. It occupied the northeastern part of the country. The Limpopo River marked its border with Botswana and Zimbabwe to the north, while the Vaal River marked its boundary with Orange Free State province to the south. It was bounded by Mozambique and
- Transvaal Basin (geological feature, South Africa)
mineral deposit: Iron deposits: …dos Carajas in Brazil, the Transvaal Basin deposits of South Africa, and the Hamersley Basin of Australia.
- Transvaal Drakensberg (mountains, Africa)
Great Escarpment, plateau edge of southern Africa that separates the region’s highland interior plateau from the fairly narrow coastal strip. It lies predominantly within the Republic of South Africa and Lesotho but extends northeastward into eastern Zimbabwe (where it separates much of that
- Transvaal jade (gem)
grossular: …the name South African, or Transvaal, jade in an attempt to increase its selling price. Nearly all grossular used for faceted gems is orange to reddish brown. The reddish brown material is called cinnamon stone, or hessonite. Grossular typically exhibits internal swirls, which help to distinguish it from spessartine, which…
- Transvaal Ndebele (South African people)
Ndebele, any of several Bantu-speaking African peoples who live primarily in the Limpopo and Mpumalanga provinces in South Africa. The Ndebele are ancient offshoots of the main Nguni-speaking peoples and began migrations to the Transvaal region in the 17th century. The main group of Transvaal
- Transvaal Sotho (people)
Pedi, a Bantu-speaking people inhabiting Limpopo province, South Africa, and constituting the major group of the Northern Sotho ethnolinguistic cluster of peoples, who numbered about 3,700,000 in the late 20th century. Their traditional territory, which is known as Bopedi, is located between the
- Transvaal, the (South African history)
South African Republic (SAR), 19th-century Boer state formed by Voortrekkers (Boer migrants from the British Cape Colony) in what is now northern South Africa. Its internationally recognized existence began with the Sand River Convention in 1852, when the British withdrew from the Southern African
- transvection (occultism)
levitation: …figures of folklore is called transvection and is said to involve the rubbing of “flying ointment” on their bodies before flying to the sabbath (see witches’ sabbath). The levitation of saints is usually directly upward, whereas that of witches has the dynamic purpose of transportation. Theologians long debated whether transvection…
- transversal (geometry)
nomogram: …a straight index line (transversal) that passes through the solution value on the third. Some chart forms employ one or more curved graduated lines; or if straight, they may be arranged in the shape of the letter N.
- transverse acceleration stress (physics)
acceleration stress: Transverse acceleration stress: Transverse acceleration stress occurs when the direction of acceleration is sideways with relation to the long axis of the body. The effects of transverse acceleration are not as great as those of equivalent forces in the previous two cases. Thus, the position…
- transverse arch (anatomy)
foot: …absorbs shock in walking; a transverse arch, across the metatarsals, also helps distribute weight. The heel bone helps support the longitudinal foot arch.
- transverse axis
symmetry: Symmetry in animals: …sagittal, or median vertical-longitudinal, and transverse, or cross, axes. Such an animal therefore not only has two ends but also has two pairs of symmetrical sides. There are but two planes of symmetry in a biradial animal, one passing through the anteroposterior and sagittal axes and the other through the…
- transverse canyon
river: Formation of canyons and gorges: …activity permit the development of transverse canyons. Transverse canyons, gorges, or water gaps are most easily explained in terms of accelerated headward erosion of rivers along faults cutting across the trend of resistant ridges. In such cases, the fault zone allows rivers to preferentially expand through an already existing ridge…
- transverse carpal ligament (anatomy)
carpal tunnel syndrome: …of fibrous tissue called the transverse carpal ligament. Through the tunnel run the median nerve, several blood vessels, and nine finger flexor tendons. The tendons are rodlike structures that transmit forces from muscles in the forearm to the fingers and enable the fingers to close, as when making a fist.
- transverse colon (anatomy)
colon: …to the left side (transverse colon), and down the left side (descending colon) and then loops (at the sigmoid flexure, or sigmoid colon) to join the rectum. The purpose of the colon is to lubricate waste products, absorb remaining fluids and salts, and store waste products until they are…
- transverse crevasse (glaciology)
crevasse: …in areas of compressive stress; transverse crevasses, which develop in areas of tensile stress and are generally curved downstream; marginal crevasses, which develop when the central area of the glacier moves considerably faster than the outer edges; and bergschrund crevasses, which form between the cirque and glacier head. At the…
- transverse electromagnetic mode (physics)
radiation: The field concept: …of light in the so-called transverse electromagnetic mode—one in which the directions of the electric field, the magnetic field, and the propagation of the wave are mutually perpendicular. They constitute a right-handed coordinate system; i.e., with the thumb and first two fingers of the right hand perpendicular to each other,…
- transverse fissure (anatomy)
cerebrum: …parietal and occipital lobes; the transverse fissure, which divides the cerebrum from the cerebellum; and the longitudinal fissure, which divides the cerebrum into two hemispheres.
- transverse flute (musical instrument)
flute: In transverse, or cross, flutes (i.e., horizontally held and side blown), the stream of breath strikes the opposite rim of a lateral mouth hole. Vertical flutes such as the recorder, in which an internal flue or duct directs the air against a hole cut in the side of…
- transverse fracture (pathology)
fracture: …configuration on the bone: a transverse fracture is perpendicular to the axis of the bone, while an oblique fracture crosses the bone axis at approximately a 45 degree angle. A spiral fracture, characterized by a helical break, commonly results from a twisting injury.
- transverse frame (ship part)
ship: Structural integrity: …structure consists of a keel, transverse frames, and cross-ship deck beams that join the frame ends—all supporting a relatively thin shell of deck, sides, and bottom. This structural scheme, which became prevalent with European ships during the Middle Ages, has continued into the age of steel shipbuilding. However, it has…
- transverse isotropy (physics)
mechanics of solids: Anisotropy: …to that direction, are called transversely isotropic; they have five independent elastic constants. Examples are provided by fibre-reinforced composite materials, with fibres that are randomly emplaced but aligned in a single direction in an isotropic or transversely isotropic matrix, and by single crystals of hexagonal close packing such as zinc.
- transverse magnification (optics)
magnification: Linear (sometimes called lateral or transverse) magnification refers to the ratio of image length to object length measured in planes that are perpendicular to the optical axis. A negative value of linear magnification denotes an inverted image. Longitudinal magnification denotes the factor by which an…
- Transverse Mercator Projection (cartography)
map: Geographic and plane coordinate systems: …long in north–south dimension, the Transverse Mercator is generally used, while for those long in east–west direction, the Lambert conformal (intersecting cone) projection is usually employed. In the case of large regions, two or more zones may be established to limit distortions. Positions of geodetic control points have been computed…
- transverse presentation (childbirth)
presentation: Face presentation and transverse (cross) presentation are rare.
- Transverse Ranges (mountains, North America)
Pacific mountain system: Physiography: …of the H, while the Transverse Ranges bend eastward from the California Coast Ranges to form the closed base of the H. Inside the H north of the Klamath Mountains are the drowned inside passage of British Columbia, the Puget Sound Lowland of Washington, and the Willamette River valley of…
- transverse reaction (biology)
stereotyped response: Taxes: Dorsal (or ventral) transverse reaction is demonstrated when the impact of the stimulus is kept at right angles to both longitudinal and transverse axes of the body. Locomotion need not occur. This reaction is given to light by various aquatic crustaceans—Argulus, the fish louse, and Artemia, the brine…
- transverse stream (geology)
valley: Drainage patterns: In contrast, transverse streams cut across structural trends. Streams flowing down the tilted sediments of the cuesta are called dip streams because they parallel the structural dip of the strata. Streams draining the cuesta scarp into longitudinal valleys flowing opposite to the structural dip are called antidip…
- transverse tubule (anatomy)
muscle: The myofibril: These channels are called the transverse tubules (T tubules) because they run across the fibre. The transverse tubular system is a network of interconnecting rings, each of which surrounds a myofibril. It provides an important communication pathway between the outside of the fibre and the myofibrils, some of which are…
- transverse unit
video tape recorder: …of video tape units: the transverse, or quad, and the helical.
- Transverse Volcanic Axis (mountain range, Mexico)
Cordillera Neo-Volcánica, relatively young range of active and dormant volcanoes traversing central Mexico from Cape Corrientes on the west coast, southeast to Jalapa and Veracruz on the east coast. The cordillera forms the southern boundary of Mexico’s Mesa Central and includes the volcanic peaks
- transverse wave (physics)
transverse wave, motion in which all points on a wave oscillate along paths at right angles to the direction of the wave’s advance. Surface ripples on water, seismic S (secondary) waves, and electromagnetic (e.g., radio and light) waves are examples of transverse waves. A simple transverse wave can
- transversion mutation (genetics)
point mutation: …point mutations: transition mutations and transversion mutations. Transition mutations occur when a pyrimidine base (i.e., thymine [T] or cytosine [C]) substitutes for another pyrimidine base or when a purine base (i.e., adenine [A] or guanine [G]) substitutes for another purine base. In double-stranded DNA each of the bases pairs with…
- transversospinalis muscle (anatomy)
muscle: Tetrapod musculature: …deepest set of muscles, the transversospinalis group, are short and run obliquely forward, over one to four vertebrae, from the transverse process of one vertebra to the lamina (the flat plate of bone at the base of the vertebral spine) of a more anterior vertebra. The transversospinalis group is particularly…
- transvestism
transvestism, practice of wearing the clothes of the opposite sex. The term transvestism came into use following the publication in 1910 of Die Transvestiten (The Transvestites), a work by German physician Magnus Hirschfeld. The term originally was applied to cross-dressing associated with
- Transvestites, The (work by Hirschfeld)
Magnus Hirschfeld: …an important study on cross-dressing, The Transvestites (1910). Hirschfeld was one of the founders of the Medical Society for Sexual Science and Eugenics, established in 1913. The next year he published his study Homosexuality in Men and Women, which was based on the expansive statistical surveys on homosexuality that he…
- Transvolgans (Russian religious and political group)
Maximus The Greek: This was between the Nonpossessors (or Transvolgans), who believed that monasteries should not own property and who had liberal political views, and the Possessors (or Josephites), who held opposite opinions on monastic property and strongly supported the monarchy, including its autocratic aspects. The Nonpossessors came to be led by…
- Transworld Corporation (American company)
Trans World Airlines, Inc.: …of a holding company called Transworld Corp. in 1979, but Transworld sold TWA to the public in 1984 in the course of defending itself against a threatened hostile takeover. By then TWA was experiencing financial troubles, and in late 1985 the American investor Carl C. Icahn acquired the airline. In…
- Transylvania (region, Romania)
Transylvania, historic eastern European region, now in Romania. After forming part of Hungary in the 11th–16th centuries, it was an autonomous principality within the Ottoman Empire (16th–17th century) and then once again became part of Hungary at the end of the 17th century. It was incorporated
- Transylvania 6-5000 (film by De Luca [1985])
Geena Davis: >Transylvania 6-5000, with Jeff Goldblum (both 1985), before her breakthrough role opposite Goldblum in David Cronenberg’s horror film The Fly (1986).
- Transylvania Convention (legendary organization)
Boonesborough: The Transylvania Convention held at the fort in May 1775 was the first legislative assembly west of the Appalachian Mountains. During the American Revolution, the settlement was under constant Indian attack. The first marriage in Kentucky took place on August 7, 1776, between Samuel Henderson (Richard’s…
- Transylvania University (university, Kentucky, United States)
Kentucky: Education: Transylvania University in Lexington, chartered in 1780, is the oldest institution of higher learning west of the Allegheny Mountains. The University of Louisville, founded by the city council in 1798, is the oldest public university in the state. It became part of the state university…
- Transylvanian Alps (mountains, Romania)
Transylvanian Alps, mountainous region of south-central Romania. It consists of that section of the Carpathian Mountain arc from the Prahova River valley (east) to the gap in which flow the Timiş and Cerna rivers. Average elevation in the Transylvanian Alps is 4,920–5,740 feet (1,500–1,750 metres).
- Transylvanian Basin (plateau, Romania)
Carpathian Mountains: Geology: …the South Carpathian Block, the Transylvanian Plateau spreads out, filled with loose rock formations of the Cenozoic Era (i.e., the past 65 million years.
- Transylvanian Plateau (plateau, Romania)
Carpathian Mountains: Geology: …the South Carpathian Block, the Transylvanian Plateau spreads out, filled with loose rock formations of the Cenozoic Era (i.e., the past 65 million years.
- Transylvanian rug
Transylvanian rug, any of the large numbers of floor coverings found in the churches of Transylvania (part of Romania), to which they had been donated by pious families. Some of these rugs are of Turkish manufacture, survivals of a massive importation centuries ago. Turkey is generally assumed to
- Transylvanian Saxons (people)
Transylvanian Saxons, German-speaking population that in the Middle Ages settled in Transylvania, then part of Hungary. The Transylvanian Saxons represented one of the three nations that made up the Transylvanian feudal system. Their region was called the Szászföld (Hungarian: Saxon Lands) or