- Tay Son Brothers (Vietnamese rebels)
Tay Son Brothers, is the collective name for Nguyen Hue (b. c. 1752—d. 1792), Nguyen Nhac (b. c. 1752—d. Dec. 16, 1793), and Nguyen Lu (b. c. 1752—d. 1792); the name was derived from their home village, Tay Son, Vietnam. They were the leaders from 1771 of an insurrection that was initially local in
- Tay Son rebellion (Vietnamese history)
history of Southeast Asia: Crisis and response: …1802 there raged a struggle—the Tay Son rebellion—over the very nature of the state. This rebellion threatened to sweep away the entire Confucian establishment of Vietnam, and perhaps would have done so if its leader had not attempted to accomplish too much too quickly. Elsewhere, war and confusion held societies…
- Tay, River (river, Scotland, United Kingdom)
River Tay, longest river in Scotland, flowing about 120 miles (193 km) from its source on the north slopes of Ben Lui to the North Sea below Dundee. The river drains 2,400 square miles (6,216 square km), the largest drainage area in Scotland. Before reaching the stretch of Loch Tay (15 miles [24
- Tay-Sachs disease (medical disorder)
Tay-Sachs disease, hereditary metabolic disorder that causes progressive mental and neurologic deterioration and results in death in early childhood. The disease is inherited as an autosomal recessive trait and occurs most commonly among people of eastern European (Ashkenazic) Jewish origin. In
- Taya, Maaouya Ould Sidi Ahmed (president of Mauritania)
Mauritania: Presidency of Maaouya Ould Sidi Ahmed Taya (1984–2005): Maaouya Ould Sidi Ahmed Taya took over the presidency and the office of prime minister from Ould Haidalla in a bloodless coup, and Mauritania renewed diplomatic ties with Morocco in 1985, seeking again to resolve the dispute in Western Sahara.
- Tayacian industry (archaeology)
Tayacian industry, primitive flake-tool tradition of France and Israel, believed to be essentially a smaller edition of the Clactonian industry
- tayageum (musical instrument)
taegŭm, large transverse bamboo flute with a distinctive sound, widely used in Korean music. The taegǔm is about 31 inches (80 cm) long. It has a mouthpiece opening and six finger holes, as well as two to five open holes toward the end. A special aperture covered with a reed membrane gives the
- Tayama Katai (Japanese novelist)
Tayama Katai was a novelist who was a central figure in the development of the Japanese naturalist school of writing. Tayama’s early work was highly romantic, but with the essay “Rokotsu naru byōsha” (1904; “Straightforward Description”) he pointed the way toward the more realistic path he was to
- Tayama Rokuya (Japanese novelist)
Tayama Katai was a novelist who was a central figure in the development of the Japanese naturalist school of writing. Tayama’s early work was highly romantic, but with the essay “Rokotsu naru byōsha” (1904; “Straightforward Description”) he pointed the way toward the more realistic path he was to
- Tayassu pecari (mammal)
peccary: The white-lipped peccary (T. pecari) is slightly darker and larger, weighing 25–40 kg (55–88 pounds). Named for the white area around the mouth, its range is limited to Central and South America, where forest and scrub are the primary habitats. These peccaries live in herds of…
- Tayassu tajacu (mammal)
peccary: The collared peccary (Tayassu tajacu) is the smallest and the most common, living throughout the entire tayassuid range in a variety of habitats. Distinguished by a pale stripe around the neck, collared peccaries are less than a metre (three feet) long and weigh between 17 and…
- Tayassuidae (mammal)
peccary, (family Tayassuidae), any of the three species of piglike mammal found in the southern deserts of the United States southward through the Amazon basin to Patagonian South America (see Patagonia). Closely resembling the wild pig (see boar), the peccary has dark coarse hair and a large head
- Taychiut (Mongolian family)
Genghis Khan: Early struggles: …clan, led by the rival Taychiut family, abandoned his widow, Höelün, and her children, considering them too weak to exercise leadership and seizing the opportunity to usurp power. For a time the small family led a life of extreme poverty, eating roots and fish instead of the normal nomad diet…
- Taydula (Russia)
Tula, city and administrative centre of Tula oblast (region), western Russia. It lies along the Upa River, which is a tributary of the Oka River. First mentioned in 1146 as Taydula, Tula became the principal stronghold on the southern approaches to Moscow in the 16th century and the centre of a
- Taygete (Greek mythology)
Pleiades: …the Oceanid Pleione: Maia, Electra, Taygete, Celaeno, Alcyone, Sterope, and Merope. They all had children by gods (except Merope, who married Sisyphus).
- Taygete (astronomy)
Pleiades: Electra, Merope, Taygete, Celaeno, and Sterope, names now assigned to individual stars), daughters of Atlas and Pleione, were changed into the stars. The heliacal (near dawn) rising of the Pleiades in spring of the Northern Hemisphere has marked from ancient times the opening of seafaring and farming…
- Táygetos (mountains, Greece)
Taïyetos Mountains, mountain range, southern Peloponnese (Modern Greek: Pelopónnisos), Greece. The maximum elevation is approximately 7,874 feet (2,400 m) in the range, which imposes a barrier between the regions of Laconia (Lakonía) and Messenia (Messinía). Called the five-fingered mountain by the
- Taygetus Mountains (mountains, Greece)
Taïyetos Mountains, mountain range, southern Peloponnese (Modern Greek: Pelopónnisos), Greece. The maximum elevation is approximately 7,874 feet (2,400 m) in the range, which imposes a barrier between the regions of Laconia (Lakonía) and Messenia (Messinía). Called the five-fingered mountain by the
- Tayghetus Mountains (mountains, Greece)
Taïyetos Mountains, mountain range, southern Peloponnese (Modern Greek: Pelopónnisos), Greece. The maximum elevation is approximately 7,874 feet (2,400 m) in the range, which imposes a barrier between the regions of Laconia (Lakonía) and Messenia (Messinía). Called the five-fingered mountain by the
- Tayif, aṭ- (Saudi Arabia)
Al-Ṭāʾif, city, western Saudi Arabia. Lying at an elevation of 6,165 feet (1,879 metres) on a tableland southeast of Mecca, it is the country’s principal summer resort. Once the seat of the pagan goddess Allat, it is revered now as the site of the tomb of ʿAbd Allāh ibn ʿAbbās, a cousin of the
- tayil (music genre)
Native American music: Southern Cone: …this people is known as tayil and is performed only by women. Tayil recall a man’s ancestral lineage and are essential to the healing rituals led by female shamans. The style of tayil varies from one singer to the next, because each lineage has its own method of vocal production,…
- Tayler, Doris May (British writer)
Doris Lessing was a British writer whose novels and short stories are largely concerned with people involved in the social and political upheavals of the 20th century. She was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 2007. Her family was living in Persia at the time of her birth but moved to a
- Taylor Greene, Marjorie (American politician)
Marjorie Taylor Greene is an American Republican politician and member of the U.S. House of Representatives (2021– ). A polarizing figure because of her combative style and controversial views, Greene first drew national attention when running for Congress because she had promoted QAnon conspiracy
- Taylor series (mathematics)
Taylor series, in mathematics, expression of a function f—for which the derivatives of all orders exist—at a point a in the domain of f in the form of the power series Σ ∞n = 0 f (n) (a) (z − a)n/n! in which Σ denotes the addition of each element in the series as n ranges from zero (0) to infinity
- Taylor Standard Series Method (shipbuilding)
David Watson Taylor: …known since 1910 as the Taylor Standard Series Method, he determined the actual effect of changing those characteristics, making it possible to estimate in advance the resistance of a ship of given proportions. His Speed and Power of Ships (1910), setting forth this knowledge, is still informative.
- Taylor Valley (valley, Antarctica)
Antarctica: Glaciation: “dry valleys” as the Wright, Taylor, and Victoria valleys near McMurdo Sound. Doubt has been shed on the common belief that Antarctic ice has continuously persisted since its origin by the discovery reported in 1983 of Cenozoic marine diatoms—believed to date from the Pliocene Epoch (about 5.3 million to 2.6…
- Taylor, A.J.P. (British historian and journalist)
A.J.P. Taylor was a British historian and journalist noted for his lectures on history and for his prose style. Taylor attended Oriel College, Oxford, graduating with first-class honours in 1927. In 1931 he began writing reviews and essays for the Manchester Guardian (later The Guardian). He
- Taylor, Alan John Percivale (British historian and journalist)
A.J.P. Taylor was a British historian and journalist noted for his lectures on history and for his prose style. Taylor attended Oriel College, Oxford, graduating with first-class honours in 1927. In 1931 he began writing reviews and essays for the Manchester Guardian (later The Guardian). He
- Taylor, Albert Hoyt (American physicist and radio engineer)
Albert Hoyt Taylor was an American physicist and radio engineer whose work underlay the development of radar in the United States. Taylor was trained at Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois, and the University of Göttingen, Germany. He taught at Michigan State College in East Lansing and at
- Taylor, Ann (British author)
children’s literature: From T.W. to Alice (1712?–1865): …by “Several Young Persons,” including Ann and Jane Taylor. The Taylor sisters, though adequately moral, struck a new note of sweetness, of humour, at any rate of nonpriggishness. Their “Twinkle, twinkle, little star,” included in Rhymes for the Nursery (1806), has not only been memorized but actually liked by many…
- Taylor, Bayard (American travel writer)
Bayard Taylor was an American author known primarily for his lively travel narratives and for his translation of J.W. von Goethe’s Faust. A restless student, Taylor was apprenticed to a printer at age 17. In 1844 his first volume of verse, Ximena, was published. He then arranged with The Saturday
- Taylor, Brook (British mathematician)
Brook Taylor was a British mathematician, a proponent of Newtonian mechanics and noted for his contributions to the development of calculus. Taylor was born into a prosperous and educated family who encouraged the development of his musical and artistic talents, both of which found mathematical
- Taylor, Cecil (American musician)
Cecil Taylor was an American jazz musician and composer, among the leading free-jazz pianists. Taylor attended the New York College of Music and the New England Conservatory of Music but was influenced more decisively by the music of jazz pianists Duke Ellington, Thelonious Monk, and Horace Silver.
- Taylor, Cecil Percival (American musician)
Cecil Taylor was an American jazz musician and composer, among the leading free-jazz pianists. Taylor attended the New York College of Music and the New England Conservatory of Music but was influenced more decisively by the music of jazz pianists Duke Ellington, Thelonious Monk, and Horace Silver.
- Taylor, Charles (president of Liberia)
Charles Taylor was a Liberian politician and guerrilla leader who served as Liberia’s president from 1997 until he was forced into exile in 2003. He was widely held responsible for the country’s devastating civil war during the 1990s and for crimes committed during the civil war in neighbouring
- Taylor, Charles (Canadian philosopher)
Charles Taylor is a Canadian philosopher known for his examination of the modern self. He produced a large body of work that is remarkable for its range—both for the number of areas and issues it addresses as well as for the breadth of scholarship it draws upon. His writings have been translated
- Taylor, Charles Ghankay (president of Liberia)
Charles Taylor was a Liberian politician and guerrilla leader who served as Liberia’s president from 1997 until he was forced into exile in 2003. He was widely held responsible for the country’s devastating civil war during the 1990s and for crimes committed during the civil war in neighbouring
- Taylor, Charles H. (American publisher)
The Boston Globe: …when it was purchased by Charles H. Taylor. Under Taylor as publisher, the Globe began to publish an evening as well as a morning edition, to increase its coverage of New England and local news, and to feature big headlines, especially on sensational stories of crime and catastrophe. Taylor laced…
- Taylor, Charles Margrave (Canadian philosopher)
Charles Taylor is a Canadian philosopher known for his examination of the modern self. He produced a large body of work that is remarkable for its range—both for the number of areas and issues it addresses as well as for the breadth of scholarship it draws upon. His writings have been translated
- Taylor, Claudia Alta (first lady of the United States)
Lady Bird Johnson was an American first lady (1963–69), the wife of Lyndon B. Johnson, 36th president of the United States, and an environmentalist noted for her emphasis on beautification. The daughter of Thomas Jefferson Taylor, a prosperous businessman, and Minnie Patillo Taylor, Claudia Alta
- Taylor, Cora (American journalist)
Stephen Crane: He was accompanied by Cora Taylor, a former brothel-house proprietor. At the end of the war they settled in England in a villa at Oxted, Surrey, and in April 1898 Crane departed to report the Spanish-American War in Cuba, first for the New York World and then for the…
- Taylor, Dame Elizabeth Rosemond (American actress)
Elizabeth Taylor was an American motion picture actress noted for her unique beauty and her portrayals of volatile and strong-willed characters. Taylor’s American parents were residing in England at the time of her birth. Shortly before the outbreak of World War II, the family returned to the
- Taylor, David Watson (American naval architect)
David Watson Taylor was an American marine architect who built the first ship-model testing establishment in the United States at the Washington (D.C.) Navy Yard, and formulated basic principles of ship design. Taylor graduated from the U.S. Naval Academy in Annapolis, Md., and studied advanced
- Taylor, Drew Hayden (Canadian author)
Canadian literature: Drama: …Indian Medicine Shows, 1995), and Drew Hayden Taylor (Toronto at Dreamer’s Rock, 1990; In a World Created by a Drunken God, 2006) expose the stereotypes and dilemmas of different First Nations peoples and their troubled relation to the dominant culture, often making effective and comic use of indigenous languages and…
- Taylor, Edward (American poet)
Edward Taylor was one of the foremost poets in colonial British North America. Unwilling to subscribe to the required oath of conformity because of his staunch adherence to Congregational principles, Taylor gave up schoolteaching in England, emigrated to New England, and was immediately admitted as
- Taylor, Edward Plunket (Canadian businessman)
Northern Dancer: …Ontario, farm of his owner, E.P. Taylor, one of Canada’s wealthiest men and the chairman of the Ontario Jockey Club. As a two-year-old, the colt won seven of nine races and had a winning streak of eight races leading up to the 1964 Kentucky Derby. Taylor hoped his colt would…
- Taylor, Elizabeth (American actress)
Elizabeth Taylor was an American motion picture actress noted for her unique beauty and her portrayals of volatile and strong-willed characters. Taylor’s American parents were residing in England at the time of her birth. Shortly before the outbreak of World War II, the family returned to the
- Taylor, Elizabeth (British author)
Elizabeth Taylor was a British novelist noted for her precise use of language and scrupulously understated style. Her first novel, At Mrs Lippincote’s, was published in 1945; like most of her work, it has a largely uneventful plot but portrays with unerring accuracy the behaviour of women in
- Taylor, Elizabeth (American singer)
Elizabeth Taylor Greenfield was an American singer whose exceptional voice made her a popular performer in Great Britain. Born a slave, Taylor accompanied her mistress to Philadelphia, Pa., in her childhood. When her mistress joined the Society of Friends and freed her slaves, Elizabeth chose to
- Taylor, Frank B. (American geologist)
continental drift: In 1908 Frank B. Taylor of the United States invoked the notion of continental collision to explain the formation of some of the world’s mountain ranges.
- Taylor, Frederick W. (American inventor and engineer)
Frederick W. Taylor was an American inventor and engineer who is known as the father of scientific management. His system of industrial management, known as Taylorism, greatly influenced the development of industrial engineering and production management throughout the world. Taylor was the son of
- Taylor, Frederick Winslow (American inventor and engineer)
Frederick W. Taylor was an American inventor and engineer who is known as the father of scientific management. His system of industrial management, known as Taylorism, greatly influenced the development of industrial engineering and production management throughout the world. Taylor was the son of
- Taylor, Gordon Rattray (British author and broadcaster)
Gordon Rattray Taylor was a British author who specialized in writing popular works on broad scientific and social issues. After studying at Trinity College, Cambridge, Taylor began a career in journalism in 1933. During World War II he worked with the British Broadcasting Corporation’s (BBC’s)
- Taylor, Griffith (Australian geographer)
Australia: White Australia policy: …interwar period the Australian geographer Griffith Taylor argued that there were stringent environmental limits that would restrict Australia’s population to approximately 20 million people by the end of the 20th century. Taylor was vilified and finally hounded out of Australia, but his “environmental determinism,” like his remarkable prediction, was well…
- Taylor, Henry (British general)
Great Stupa: Henry Taylor came upon the site and documented his findings. Restoration work began in 1881 and was completed in 1919 under the supervision of John Hubert Marshall, director general of the Indian Archaeological Survey. The Great Stupa and Sanchi’s other Buddhist monuments were collectively designated…
- Taylor, Henry (British swimmer)
Henry Taylor was a British swimmer who won five Olympic medals and was the first man to hold world records in the 400-metre, 880-yard, and 1,500-metre freestyle events. Taylor competed at the 1906 Intercalated Games in Athens, where he captured a gold medal in the 1-mile (1,609-metre) freestyle, a
- Taylor, James (American musician)
James Taylor is an American singer, songwriter, and guitarist who defined the singer-songwriter movement of the 1970s. Bob Dylan brought confessional poetry to folk rock, but Taylor became the epitome of the troubadour whose life was the subject of his songs. Among the experiences that shaped
- Taylor, James Bayard (American travel writer)
Bayard Taylor was an American author known primarily for his lively travel narratives and for his translation of J.W. von Goethe’s Faust. A restless student, Taylor was apprenticed to a printer at age 17. In 1844 his first volume of verse, Ximena, was published. He then arranged with The Saturday
- Taylor, Jane (British author)
children’s literature: From T.W. to Alice (1712?–1865): …Young Persons,” including Ann and Jane Taylor. The Taylor sisters, though adequately moral, struck a new note of sweetness, of humour, at any rate of nonpriggishness. Their “Twinkle, twinkle, little star,” included in Rhymes for the Nursery (1806), has not only been memorized but actually liked by many generations of…
- Taylor, Jean (American mathematician)
Plateau problem: …1976 when the American mathematicians Jean Taylor and Frederick Almgren obtained the mathematical derivation of the Plateau conjecture, which states that, when several soap films join together (for example, when several bubbles meet each other along common interfaces), the angles at which the films meet are either 120 degrees (for…
- Taylor, Jeff (American businessman)
Monster: com was created by American Jeff Taylor to provide online career and recruitment services. Notably, it was one of the first commercial Web sites. In 1999 Monsterboard.com was merged with Online Career Center to create Monster.com. Following the early success of Monster, additional online recruitment sites were created for individual…
- Taylor, Jeremy (British author)
Jeremy Taylor was an Anglican clergyman and writer. Taylor was educated at the University of Cambridge and was ordained in 1633. He never lacked for patrons: Archbishop Laud granted him a fellowship to All Souls College, Oxford, in 1635; William Juxon, bishop of London, presented him the living of
- Taylor, Jewel Howard (Liberian politician)
George Weah: Political aspirations: …October 2017 presidential election, with Jewel Howard Taylor, senator for Bong county and former wife of the ousted president Taylor, as his running mate.
- Taylor, Jim (American football player)
Chuck Bednarik: …between the end zone and Jim Taylor as the Packer fullback rumbled across the Eagles’ 10-yard-line only to be brought down by Bednarik, who remained on top of Taylor until time ran out to clinch the championship for Philadelphia.
- Taylor, Jim (American writer, director, and producer)
Alexander Payne: …the screenplay with a friend, Jim Taylor. A broad skewering of the pervasive abortion debate in American public life, the film starred Laura Dern as a pregnant woman who becomes a pawn of both pro-choice and pro-life activists. With its largely unsympathetic protagonist and its gleefully cynical attitude toward deeply…
- Taylor, John (American politician and philosopher)
John Taylor was one of the leading American philosophers of the liberal agrarian political movement—commonly known as Jeffersonian democracy—during the early national period. Orphaned as a child, Taylor grew up in the home of his uncle, Edmund Pendleton. He received his education from private
- Taylor, John (British charlatan)
Johann Sebastian Bach: Last years: …unsuccessful eye operations performed by John Taylor, the itinerant English quack who numbered Handel among his other failures; and Bach died on July 28, 1750, at Leipzig. His employers proceeded with relief to appoint a successor; Burgomaster Stieglitz remarked, “The school needs a cantor, not a musical director—though certainly he…
- Taylor, John (British writer)
John Taylor was a minor English poet, pamphleteer, and journalist who called himself “the Water Poet.” The son of a surgeon, Taylor was sent to a grammar school but became, as he said, “mired in Latin accidence” and was apprenticed to a Thames boatman. He served in the navy and saw action at Cádiz
- Taylor, John (British clergyman)
Jonathan Edwards: Pastorate at Stockbridge: …reply to the English divine John Taylor of Norwich, whose works attacking Calvinism (based on the thought of the 16th-century Protestant reformer John Calvin) had “made a mighty noise in America.” Edwards defended the doctrine not only by citing biblical statements about the corruption of the human heart but also…
- Taylor, John (British adventuress)
Mary Anne Talbot was a British woman who served in the English army and navy disguised as a man. She was later known as the "British Amazon." Talbot’s mother died at her birth, and she believed herself to be the illegitimate child of William Talbot, 1st Earl Talbot. She was seduced in 1792 by
- Taylor, John Henry (British golfer)
John Henry Taylor was an English professional golfer, a member of the “Great Triumvirate”—with Harry Vardon and James Braid—that won the Open Championship (British Open) 16 times between 1894 and 1914; Taylor won in 1894, 1895, 1900, 1909, and 1913. He was the first English professional to win the
- Taylor, John I. (American businessman)
Fenway Park: In 1911 Red Sox owner John I. Taylor was looking for locations to build a new ballpark, and later that year his father bought more than 365,000 square feet (33,900 square metres) of land in the Boston neighborhood of Fenway-Kenmore. In September work began on a stadium that Taylor called…
- Taylor, Joseph (British actor)
Joseph Taylor was an English actor mentioned in the First Folio of Shakespeare in 1623 as one of the 26 who took principal parts in all of those plays and one of the 10 actors who signed the dedication of the first folio (1647) of Beaumont and Fletcher. Taylor acted with the Duke of York’s Men in
- Taylor, Joseph H., Jr. (American astronomer)
Joseph H. Taylor, Jr. is an American radio astronomer and physicist who, with Russell A. Hulse, was the corecipient of the 1993 Nobel Prize for Physics for their joint discovery of the first binary pulsar. Taylor studied at Haverford College, Pennsylvania (B.A., 1963), and earned a Ph.D. in
- Taylor, Joseph Hooton (American astronomer)
Joseph H. Taylor, Jr. is an American radio astronomer and physicist who, with Russell A. Hulse, was the corecipient of the 1993 Nobel Prize for Physics for their joint discovery of the first binary pulsar. Taylor studied at Haverford College, Pennsylvania (B.A., 1963), and earned a Ph.D. in
- Taylor, Kamala (Indian author)
Kamala Markandaya was an Indian novelist whose works concern the struggles of contemporary Indians with conflicting Eastern and Western values. A Brahman, Markandaya studied at the University of Madras, then worked as a journalist. In 1948 she settled in England and later married an Englishman. Her
- Taylor, Koko (American blues singer)
Koko Taylor was an American blues singer who forged a musical career that spanned nearly half a century and earned her the nickname “Queen of the Blues.” Both of Taylor’s parents had died by the time she was 11 years old, and she and her five siblings picked cotton to survive. In the evenings they
- Taylor, Krissy (American fashion model)
Krissy Taylor was an American fashion model perhaps best known as a face of the cosmetics companies CoverGirl and L’Oréal. She was the sister of supermodel Niki Taylor. Taylor walked the runways for the top fashion houses, including Fendi and Ralph Lauren. She was featured in the leading beauty and
- Taylor, Kristen Erin (American fashion model)
Krissy Taylor was an American fashion model perhaps best known as a face of the cosmetics companies CoverGirl and L’Oréal. She was the sister of supermodel Niki Taylor. Taylor walked the runways for the top fashion houses, including Fendi and Ralph Lauren. She was featured in the leading beauty and
- Taylor, Lance (American disc jockey, rapper, and record producer)
Afrika Bambaataa is an American disc jockey (deejay or DJ) and music producer who is credited as being a leading disseminator of hip-hop music and culture. A pioneer of breakbeat deejaying, a style marked by the quick repetition of fast-paced, syncopated drum samples, Bambaataa is often referred to
- Taylor, Laurette (American actress)
Laurette Taylor was an American actress who was perhaps best known for her roles in plays written by her second husband, J. Hartley Manners. Most notable was her comedic performance in Peg O’ My Heart (1912). Under the name La Belle Laurette, Taylor made her childhood stage debut in Lynn,
- Taylor, Lawrence (American football player)
Lawrence Taylor is an American collegiate and professional gridiron football player, considered one of the best linebackers in the history of the game. As a member of the New York Giants of the National Football League (NFL), he won Super Bowl championships following the 1986 and 1990 seasons.
- Taylor, Lawrence Julius (American football player)
Lawrence Taylor is an American collegiate and professional gridiron football player, considered one of the best linebackers in the history of the game. As a member of the New York Giants of the National Football League (NFL), he won Super Bowl championships following the 1986 and 1990 seasons.
- Taylor, Lili (American actress)
Vincent D’Onofrio: …starred with Tracy Ullman and Lili Taylor in Household Saints (1993). His other roles included Orson Welles in Tim Burton’s biopic Ed Wood (1994), a police officer in Kathryn Bigelow’s dystopic Strange Days (1995), a jilted husband in Feeling Minnesota (1996), and
- Taylor, Lionel (American football player)
Denver Broncos: …time, however, including wide receiver Lionel Taylor, who led the AFL in receptions five times, and running back Floyd Little. After the 1970 NFL-AFL merger, the Broncos continued to dwell in the divisional cellar before having their first winning season in 1973.
- Taylor, Liz (American actress)
Elizabeth Taylor was an American motion picture actress noted for her unique beauty and her portrayals of volatile and strong-willed characters. Taylor’s American parents were residing in England at the time of her birth. Shortly before the outbreak of World War II, the family returned to the
- Taylor, Lucy Hobbs (American dentist)
Lucy Hobbs Taylor was the first American woman to earn a degree in dentistry. Lucy Hobbs graduated from the Franklin Academy in Malone, New York, in 1849 and became a schoolteacher. While teaching in Brooklyn, Michigan, she began the study of medicine, and in 1859 she moved to Cincinnati, Ohio,
- Taylor, Major (American cyclist)
Major Taylor was the 1899 world champion in cycling, a winner of many national and international honors, and the first American-born Black athlete of wide renown to reach his sport’s international pinnacle. Taylor overcame racism, including Jim Crow restrictions, bans by racing organizations, and
- Taylor, Margaret (American first lady)
Margaret Taylor was an American first lady (1849–50), the wife of Zachary Taylor, 12th president of the United States. Margaret Smith was the daughter of wealthy plantation owners Ann Mackall and Walter Smith. Although details of her childhood are hazy, it is known that she was educated at home.
- Taylor, Marjorie (American politician)
Marjorie Taylor Greene is an American Republican politician and member of the U.S. House of Representatives (2021– ). A polarizing figure because of her combative style and controversial views, Greene first drew national attention when running for Congress because she had promoted QAnon conspiracy
- Taylor, Marshall Walter (American cyclist)
Major Taylor was the 1899 world champion in cycling, a winner of many national and international honors, and the first American-born Black athlete of wide renown to reach his sport’s international pinnacle. Taylor overcame racism, including Jim Crow restrictions, bans by racing organizations, and
- Taylor, Maxwell Davenport (United States army officer)
Maxwell Davenport Taylor was a U.S. Army officer who became a pioneer in airborne warfare in Europe during World War II and who later served as U.S. ambassador to South Vietnam during the early years of the Vietnam War. A 1922 graduate of the United States Military Academy at West Point, New York,
- Taylor, Meldrick (American boxer)
Julio César Chávez: …a knockout, Chávez knocked down Meldrick Taylor with 12 seconds remaining in the match. Though Taylor staggered to his feet, the referee stopped the fight in the last seconds of the round. Chávez vacated the IBF junior-welterweight title but held the WBC title for seven years before losing it in…
- Taylor, Mick (British musician)
John Mayall: Clapton, Peter Green, and Mick Taylor, he exerted an indirect but considerable influence on the course of rock music. Older by 10 years than most of his colleagues, Mayall was a canny operator whose devoted admirers cherished their hero’s rugged individuality and anti-commercial stance. However, his musical instincts were…
- Taylor, Moses (American merchant)
James Stillman: …Stillman became a protégé of Moses Taylor, then a wealthy merchant and banker. In 1891, having participated in a number of Taylor’s projects, Stillman succeeded Taylor’s son-in-law as president of the National City Bank.
- Taylor, Myron C. (American financier and diplomat)
Myron C. Taylor was an American financier and diplomat who was the chief executive of the United States Steel Corporation in the 1930s. Though admitted to the bar in 1895, Taylor spent much of his early career in the textile business, operating mills in New England and elsewhere until 1923. At the
- Taylor, Myron Charles (American financier and diplomat)
Myron C. Taylor was an American financier and diplomat who was the chief executive of the United States Steel Corporation in the 1930s. Though admitted to the bar in 1895, Taylor spent much of his early career in the textile business, operating mills in New England and elsewhere until 1923. At the
- Taylor, Nicole Renée (American fashion model)
Niki Taylor is an American fashion model best known as a face of the cosmetics company CoverGirl. She is the sister of model Krissy Taylor (1978–95). Taylor walked the runways for the world’s top fashion houses, including Chanel and Givenchy, and was featured on more than 400 magazine covers.
- Taylor, Niki (American fashion model)
Niki Taylor is an American fashion model best known as a face of the cosmetics company CoverGirl. She is the sister of model Krissy Taylor (1978–95). Taylor walked the runways for the world’s top fashion houses, including Chanel and Givenchy, and was featured on more than 400 magazine covers.
- Taylor, Paul (American dancer and choreographer)
Paul Taylor was an American modern dancer and choreographer noted for the inventive, frequently humorous, and sardonic dances that he choreographed for his company. Entering Syracuse University in 1947 on a scholarship, Taylor took painting classes and joined the swim team. He began dance training