- Temple School (seminary, Independence, Missouri, United States)
Community of Christ: Temple School, a ministerial and leadership seminary, is in Independence.
- Temple Scroll
biblical literature: The Book of Jubilees: The (unpublished) Temple Scroll, a book of sectarian prescriptions that paraphrases—also as divine revelation—a part of the Mosaic Law and was composed by the Dead Sea sect before 100 bce (i.e., in the same period as the Book of Jubilees), closely resembles some parts of the Book…
- temple sleep (religion)
oracle: …the most common methods was incubation, in which the inquirer slept in a holy precinct and received an answer in a dream.
- Temple University (university, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States)
Temple University, public, coeducational institution of higher learning based in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S. It is a state-related university and comprises nine campuses: four in Philadelphia, two in Montgomery county, one in Harrisburg, and two abroad, in Rome and Tokyo. Courses are also
- Temple, Frederick (archbishop of Canterbury)
Frederick Temple was the archbishop of Canterbury and an educational reformer who was sometimes considered to personify, by his rugged appearance and terse manner as a schoolmaster and bishop, the ideal of “manliness” fashionable during the Victorian era (1837–1901) in Britain. Ordained a priest in
- Temple, George Nugent Temple Grenville, 2nd Earl (British statesman)
George Nugent Temple Grenville, 1st marquess of Buckingham was George Grenville’s second son, created (1784) the marquess of Buckingham (the town). He made his mark as lord lieutenant of Ireland. Educated at Eton and Christ Church, Oxford, Temple was member of Parliament for Buckinghamshire from
- Temple, Henry John, 3rd Viscount Palmerston (prime minister of United Kingdom)
Lord Palmerston was an English Whig-Liberal statesman whose long career, including many years as British foreign secretary (1830–34, 1835–41, and 1846–51) and prime minister (1855–58 and 1859–65), made him a symbol of British nationalism. The christening of Henry John Temple in the “House of
- Temple, Le (prison, Paris, France)
Le Temple, in Paris, originally a fortified monastery of the Templars and later a royal prison. It was built in the 12th century northeast of the city in an area commanded by the Templars; the area is now the Temple quarter of Paris (3rd arrondissement). By the 13th century the Temple, especially
- Temple, Presentation of Christ in the (religious festival)
Candlemas, Christian festival on February 2 commemorating the occasion when the Virgin Mary, in obedience to Jewish law, went to the Temple in Jerusalem both to be purified 40 days after the birth of her son, Jesus, and to present him to God as her firstborn (Luke 2:22–38). The festival was
- Temple, Richard Grenville-Temple, 1st Earl, Viscount Cobham, Baron Cobham (British statesman)
Richard Grenville-Temple, 1st Earl Temple was an English statesman, the brother-in-law of William Pitt, under whom he served as the first lord of the Admiralty. The eldest son of Richard Grenville (d. 1727) and Hester, afterward Countess Temple, he was educated at Eton and was member of Parliament
- Temple, Richard Grenville-Temple, 1st Earl, Viscount Cobham, Baron Cobham (British statesman)
Richard Grenville-Temple, 1st Earl Temple was an English statesman, the brother-in-law of William Pitt, under whom he served as the first lord of the Admiralty. The eldest son of Richard Grenville (d. 1727) and Hester, afterward Countess Temple, he was educated at Eton and was member of Parliament
- Temple, Shirley (American actress and diplomat)
Shirley Temple was an American actress and public official who was an internationally popular child star of the 1930s, best known for sentimental musicals. For much of the decade, she was one of Hollywood’s greatest box-office attractions. Encouraged to perform by her mother, Temple began taking
- Temple, Shirley Jane (American actress and diplomat)
Shirley Temple was an American actress and public official who was an internationally popular child star of the 1930s, best known for sentimental musicals. For much of the decade, she was one of Hollywood’s greatest box-office attractions. Encouraged to perform by her mother, Temple began taking
- Temple, Sir William, Baronet (English statesman)
Sir William Temple, Baronet was an English statesman and diplomat who formulated the pro-Dutch foreign policy employed intermittently during the reign of King Charles II. In addition, his thought and prose style had a great influence on many 18th-century writers, particularly on Jonathan Swift.
- Temple, The (courthouse, London, United Kingdom)
The Temple, in London, series of buildings associated with the legal profession. The Temple lies between Fleet Street and the Embankment in the City of London and is mainly divided into the Inner Temple and the Middle Temple, two of the four Inns of Court, which are controlled by their respective
- Temple, William (archbishop of Canterbury)
William Temple was the archbishop of Canterbury who was a leader in the ecumenical movement and in educational and labour reforms. Temple was the son of Frederick Temple, who also served as archbishop of Canterbury (1896–1902). The younger Temple lectured in philosophy at Queen’s College, Oxford
- Templeman, Ted (American record producer)
the Doobie Brothers: Early years: …the attention of record producer Ted Templeman, who had signed the Doobie Brothers to Warner Brothers Records by the end of 1970. Templeman went on to produce every studio album by the band until Cycles (1989).
- Templer, Sir Gerald (British official)
Malayan Emergency: …leadership of British high commissioner Sir Gerald Templer, however, the British began addressing political and economic grievances. In the early 1950s several measures, including local elections and the creation of village councils, were introduced to facilitate independence. In addition, many Chinese were granted citizenship. Such actions decreased support for the…
- Templeton Prize (award)
Templeton Prize, award presented annually to a living person who has “made an exceptional contribution to affirming life’s spiritual dimension, whether through insight, discovery, or practical works.” Though the prize is considered by some to be the equivalent of a Nobel Prize for religion,
- Templeton Prize for Progress in Religion (award)
Templeton Prize, award presented annually to a living person who has “made an exceptional contribution to affirming life’s spiritual dimension, whether through insight, discovery, or practical works.” Though the prize is considered by some to be the equivalent of a Nobel Prize for religion,
- Templeton Prize for Progress Toward Research or Discoveries About Spiritual Realities (award)
Templeton Prize, award presented annually to a living person who has “made an exceptional contribution to affirming life’s spiritual dimension, whether through insight, discovery, or practical works.” Though the prize is considered by some to be the equivalent of a Nobel Prize for religion,
- Templeton, Fay (American singer and actress)
Fay Templeton was an American singer and actress who enjoyed popularity in a career that extended from light opera to burlesque to musical theatre. Templeton was the daughter of theatrical parents—principals in the touring John Templeton Opera Company—and grew up entirely in that milieu. She was
- Templeton, James (Scottish manufacturer)
floor covering: Carpet and rug weaving: …process, which was patented by James Templeton of Glasgow, gave increased colour range to carpet designs.
- Templewood of Chelsea, Viscount (British statesman)
Sir Samuel Hoare, 2nd Baronet was a British statesman who was a chief architect of the Government of India Act of 1935 and, as foreign secretary (1935), was criticized for his proposed settlement of Italian claims in Ethiopia (the Hoare–Laval Plan). He was the elder son of Sir Samuel Hoare, whose
- Templo Mayor (archaeological site, Mexico)
Templo Mayor, archaeological site, located just off Mexico City’s Plaza de la Constitución, of the Templo Mayor, or the Great Pyramid of Tenochtitlán. Excavation of the temple, which was first constructed about 1325, began in 1978. In 1987 a museum was built on the site to store and exhibit the
- Templum Domini (ancient temple, Jerusalem)
Dome of the Rock: Purpose and significance: …of the Rock with the Temple of Solomon (Templum Domini); its image was iconographically employed in both artwork and ritual objects to represent the Temple. The Knights Templar were quartered there following the conquest of Jerusalem by a Crusader army in 1099, and Templar churches in Europe imitated its design.…
- tempo (art)
film: Tempo: The tempo or pace that an audience senses in a film may be influenced in three ways: by the actual speed and rhythm of movement and cuts within the film, by the accompanying music, and by the content of the story. For most people,…
- tempo (music)
tempo, speed or pacing of a piece of music, playing an essential role in performance and acting as the heartbeat of expression. The word tempo, meaning “time” in Italian, is derived from the Latin tempus. Prior to the 17th century, Western classical music rarely made use of tempo markings, since
- Tempo das frutas (short stories by Piñon)
Nélida Piñon: …first collection of short stories: Tempo das frutas (1966; “Season of Fruit”). In 1970 she launched a program in creative writing at the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro. Her next novel, A casa da paixão (1972; “The House of Passion”; winner of the Mário de Andrade Prize from the…
- tempo e o vento, O (novel by Veríssimo)
Érico Lopes Veríssimo: , Time and the Wind, 1951), traces the history of a Brazilian family through several generations to the late 20th century. It is perhaps the most faithful portrayal of the gaucho.
- tempo giusto (music)
folk music: Singing styles: …which he named parlando-rubato and tempo giusto. Parlando-rubato, stressing the words, departs frequently from strict metric and rhythmic patterns and is often highly ornamented, while tempo giusto follows metric patterns and maintains an even tempo. Both singing styles can be heard in many parts of Europe and in European-derived folk…
- tempo mark (music)
musical notation: Tempo and duration: The tempo mark is a sign that lies outside the staff. It appears above and may be a precise fixing of one duration (“♩ = 120 MM” means that the quarter note lasts 1120 of a minute, or one-half second), or it may be an approximate…
- Tempō reforms (Japanese history)
Tempō reforms, (1841–43), unsuccessful attempt by the Tokugawa shogunate (1603–1868) to restore the feudal agricultural society that prevailed in Japan at the beginning of its rule. Named after the Tempō era (1830–44) in which they occurred, the reforms demonstrated the ineffectiveness of
- tempo rubato (music)
rubato, (from Italian rubare, “to rob”), in music, subtle rhythmic manipulation and nuance in performance. For greater musical expression, the performer may stretch certain beats, measures, or phrases and compact others. The technique is seldom indicated on a musical score but may be utilized
- tempo si è fermato, Il (film by Olmi [1959])
Ermanno Olmi: …tempo si è fermato (1959; Time Stood Still), an analysis of the relationship between two guards forced to spend the winter together in inactivity. The success of this film led to the formation of 22 December S.p.A., a production company cofounded by Olmi that distributed his first commercial feature film,…
- Tempo, Il (Italian newspaper)
Il Tempo, morning daily newspaper published in Rome, one of Italy’s outstanding newspapers and one with broad appeal and influence in the Roman region. It was founded in 1944 by Renato Angiolillo as a conservative paper with a strong anticommunist bias. Il Tempo quickly became recognized as a
- temporal arteritis (pathology)
connective tissue disease: Necrotizing vasculitides: Giant-cell or temporal arteritis occurs chiefly in older people and is manifested by severe temporal or occipital headaches (in the temples or at the back of the head), mental disturbances, visual difficulties, fever, anemia, aching pains and weakness in the muscles of the shoulder and pelvic girdles…
- temporal bone
skull: The parietal and temporal bones form the sides and uppermost portion of the dome of the cranium, and the frontal bone forms the forehead; the cranial floor consists of the sphenoid and ethmoid bones. The facial area includes the zygomatic, or malar, bones (cheekbones), which join with the…
- temporal cortex (anatomy)
autism: Neuropathology: …has been observed is the temporal lobe. The temporal lobe specializes in the processing of auditory stimuli and houses the Wernicke area, a region of motor neurons involved in speech comprehension.
- temporal division (law)
property law: Temporal divisions: Anglo-American law is notorious for the number and complexity of temporal divisions of ownership it allows. The English law on the topic was considerably simplified in 1925, when it became impossible to have legal ownership divided temporally other than between landlord and tenant.…
- temporal isolation (biology)
temporal isolation, in biology, a type of reproductive isolation mechanism among sexual organisms in which the differences in the timing of critical reproductive events prevent members of closely related species, which could otherwise breed with one another, from mating and producing hybrid
- temporal law (international law)
Cornelis van Bynkershoek: …helped develop international law along positivist lines.
- temporal lobe (anatomy)
autism: Neuropathology: …has been observed is the temporal lobe. The temporal lobe specializes in the processing of auditory stimuli and houses the Wernicke area, a region of motor neurons involved in speech comprehension.
- temporal logic
applied logic: Temporal logic: Temporal notions have historically close relationships with logical ones. For example, many early thinkers who did not distinguish logical and natural necessity from each other (e.g., Aristotle) assimilated to each other necessary truth and omnitemporal truth (truth obtaining at all times), as well…
- temporal summation (physiology)
summation: …on one nerve are called temporal summation; the addition of simultaneous stimuli from several conducting fibres is called spatial summation.
- Temporale (Christianity)
church year: The major church calendars: …two concurrent cycles: (1) the Proper of Time (Temporale), or seasons and Sundays that revolve around the movable date of Easter and the fixed date of Christmas, and (2) the Proper of Saints (Sanctorale), other commemorations on fixed dates of the year. Every season and holy day is a celebration,…
- temporalis muscle (anatomy)
zygomatic arch: …another major chewing muscle, the temporalis, passes through the arch. The zygomatic arch is particularly large and robust in herbivorous animals, including baboons and apes. In human evolution the zygomatic arch has tended to become more gracile (slender). For example, Australopithecus robustus, an early hominid, had a large zygomatic arch,…
- Temporary Emergency Relief Administration (United States history)
Franklin D. Roosevelt: Paralysis to presidency of Franklin D. Roosevelt: …Republican-dominated legislature to establish the Temporary Emergency Relief Administration, which eventually provided unemployment assistance to 10 percent of New York’s families. His aggressive approach to the economic problems of his state, along with his overwhelming electoral victory in 1930, boosted Roosevelt into the front ranks of contenders for the Democratic…
- temporary hair loss (dermatology)
baldness: …destruction of hair follicles, and temporary hair loss, arising from transitory damage to the follicles. The first category is dominated by male pattern baldness (androgenetic alopecia), which occurs to some degree in as much as 40 percent of some male populations. The hair loss in male pattern baldness progresses gradually,…
- Temporary Higher Church Administration (Russian Orthodoxy)
Renovated Church: … and Vladimir Krasnitsky, organized a Temporary Higher Church Administration, which rapidly evolved into a general movement aimed at deposing the patriarch and introducing radical church reforms. The Temporary Administration found support among some bishops, but it was particularly popular with the “white,” or married, clergy, who were excluded from promotion…
- temporary incapacity benefit
insurance: Classes of benefits: Second is a temporary incapacity benefit, which lasts as long as the medical benefit except that a waiting period of a few days is frequently prescribed. The benefit varies from country to country, ranging from 50 percent of the employee’s wage to 100 percent; the most common benefits…
- temporary injunction (law)
injunction: A temporary injunction is normally in effect only until the hearing of the action is held, or for some lesser period; it is intended to preserve the status quo or prevent irreparable harm before the case can be fully heard.
- temporary insanity (mental disorder)
Henry Clay: Early years: …use a successful plea of temporary insanity to save from the gallows a client accused of murder. Those strategies were among the innovations that marked him as a legal pioneer.
- temporary lake (hydrology)
inland water ecosystem: The origin of inland waters: …the termini are permanent or temporary lakes that become saline as evaporation concentrates dissolved salts that either have been introduced by rainwater or have been leached out of substrata within the drainage basin. In arheic systems water falls unpredictably in small amounts and follows haphazard drainage patterns. Apart from rivers…
- Temporary Laws (Russian history)
organized labour: Russia: …with the publication of the Temporary Laws of March 4, 1906, legalizing the formation of public organizations. Union activists attempted to organize nationally, but before an all-Russia trade-union congress could take place, the union movement succumbed to a wave of reaction set off by the dissolution of the second state…
- temporary plankton (biology)
marine ecosystem: Seasonal cycles of production: …and, as a result, the meroplanktonic component of the plankton is higher at these times. General patterns of plankton abundance may be further influenced by local conditions. Heavy rainfall in coastal regions (especially areas in which monsoons prevail) can result in nutrient-rich turbid plumes (i.e., estuarine or riverine plumes) that…
- Temporary Shelter (short stories by Gordon)
Mary Gordon: …works included the short-story collections Temporary Shelter (1987) and The Stories of Mary Gordon (2006) and the novels Men and Angels (1985), The Other Side (1989), Spending (1998), Pearl (2005), The Love of My Youth (2011), There Your Heart Lies
- temporary tooth (biology)
human digestive system: The teeth: …as the deciduous, milk, or primary dentition, is acquired gradually between the ages of six months and two years. As the jaws grow and expand, these teeth are replaced one by one by the teeth of the secondary set. There are five deciduous teeth and eight permanent teeth in each…
- Tempra (chemical compound)
acetaminophen, drug used in the treatment of mild pain, such as headache and pain in joints and muscles, and to reduce fever. Acetaminophen is the major metabolite of acetanilid and phenacetin, which were once commonly used drugs, and is responsible for their analgesic (pain-relieving) effects.
- Temps des assassins, Le (work by Soupault)
Philippe Soupault: Le Temps des assassins (1945; Age of Assassins), a memoir, details Soupault’s six-month imprisonment by the Vichy government in Tunis, Tunisia, where he worked as a journalist and as director of Radio Tunis. A second autobiography, Mémoires de l’oubli (“Memoirs of Oblivion”), was published in 1981. Soupault also wrote a…
- Temps du mépris, Le (work by Malraux)
André Malraux: Literary works: In the novel Le Temps du mépris (1935; Days of Contempt, or Days of Wrath), Malraux tells a story of the underground resistance to the Nazis within Hitler’s Germany. Despite Malraux’s evident Marxist sympathies and his bitter criticisms of fascism, this was the only one of his books…
- Temps immobile, Le (work by Mauriac)
Claude Mauriac: Mauriac’s best-known work, the 10-volume Le Temps immobile (1974–88; “Time Immobilized”), consists of excerpts from letters, documents, and parts of other writers’ works interspersed with entries from his own diaries. These books paint a rich picture of 50 years of French intellectual life, with separate volumes devoted to his father,…
- Temps Modernes, Les (French review)
littérature engagée: In his introductory statement to Les Temps Modernes (1945), a review devoted to littérature engagée, Sartre criticized Marcel Proust for his self-involvement and referred to Gustave Flaubert, whose private means allowed him to devote himself to a perfectionist art, as a “talented coupon clipper.”
- Temps, Le (novel by Hémon)
Louis Hémon: …serialized in a Paris magazine, Le Temps (1914), the novel appeared in book form in 1916, went through many editions, and was translated into all the major languages. Hémon did not live to see its success: he was killed in a train accident before it was published.
- Tempskya (fossil tree fern genus)
Tempskya, genus of fossil tree ferns of the Mesozoic Era (about 65 to 250 million years ago), constituting the family Tempskyaceae, order Polypodiales. It was among the most bizarre of plants, with an unbranched trunk up to 40 cm (16 inches) across, tapering bluntly to a height of about 6 metres
- Temptation of Saint Anthony, The (novel by Flaubert)
The Temptation of Saint Anthony, novel by Gustave Flaubert, published in 1874 as La Tentation de Saint Antoine. It was also translated as The First Temptation of Saint Anthony. Flaubert called the subject of the narrative his “old infatuation,” which he had begun developing in 1839 as an attempt to
- Temptation of St. Anthony (print by Schongauer)
engraving: His “Temptation of St. Anthony” (c. 1470) is unprecedented in its sophisticated use of the medium to achieve a sense of form and surface texture.
- Temptation of St. Anthony, The (triptych painting by Bosch)
Hiëronymus Bosch: Bosch’s The Temptation of St. Anthony displays his ascent to stylistic maturity. The brushstrokes are sharper and terser, with much more command than before. The composition becomes more fluid, and space is regulated by the incidents and creatures that the viewer’s attention is focused on. His…
- Temptation of the West, The (work by Malraux)
André Malraux: Life: …La Tentation de l’Occident (The Temptation of the West). His novels Les Conquérants (The Conquerors), published in 1928, La Voie royale (The Royal Way), published in 1930, and the masterpiece La Condition humaine in 1933 (awarded the Prix Goncourt) established his reputation as a leading French novelist and a…
- Temptations, the (American singing group)
the Temptations, American vocal group noted for their smooth harmonies and intricate choreography. Recording primarily for Motown Records, they were among the most popular performers of soul music in the 1960s and ’70s. The principal members of the group were Otis Williams (original name Otis
- Temptress Moon (film by Chen Kaige [1996])
Chen Kaige: …directed the romance Fengyue (1996; Temptress Moon) and the historical drama Jing Ke ci Qinwang (1998; The Emperor and the Assassin) before venturing into English-language cinema with the poorly received thriller Killing Me Softly (2002). He returned to a focus on Chinese subjects with the sentimental He ni zai yiqi…
- tempura (food)
tempura, cooking technique of Japanese origin that involves dipping fish, shellfish, meat, or vegetables in a light flour batter and then deep-frying the food. Tempura is popular in Japan and in Japanese restaurants around the world, but the frying technique was very probably borrowed from
- tempus (music)
mensural notation: …two or three breves (𝄺); tempus, division of the breve into two or three semibreves (𝆺); and prolatio, division of the semibreve into two or three minima (𝆺𝅥). Time signatures (q.v.) showed tempus and prolatio. Coloration, at first red, then white, notes (such as , 𝅆, 𝆹,
- Tempyō no iraka (work by Inoue)
Inoue Yasushi: …notably Tempyō no iraka (1957; The Roof Tile of Tempyō), which depicts the drama of 8th-century Japanese monks traveling to China and bringing back Buddhist texts and other artifacts to Japan.
- Tempyō period (Japanese history)
Nara period, (ad 710–784), in Japanese history, period in which the imperial government was at Nara, and Sinicization and Buddhism were most highly developed. Nara, the country’s first permanent capital, was modeled on the Chinese T’ang dynasty (618–907) capital, Ch’ang-an. Nara artisans produced
- Tempyō style (Japanese art)
Tempyō style, Japanese sculptural style of the Late Nara period (724–794), greatly influenced by the Chinese Imperial style of the T’ang dynasty (618–907). During this prolific era, many of the supreme sculptural achievements of Japanese Buddhist art were created in unbaked clay, solid wood, and
- Temuchin (Mongol ruler)
Genghis Khan was a Mongolian warrior-ruler, one of the most famous conquerors of history, who consolidated tribes into a unified Mongolia and then extended his empire across Asia to the Adriatic Sea. Genghis Khan was a warrior and ruler of genius who, starting from obscure and insignificant
- Temuco (Chile)
Temuco, city, southern Chile. It lies on the Río Cautín. It was founded in 1881 as a frontier outpost after the area was ceded to Chile in a treaty signed on nearby Cerro (Hill) Nielol with the Araucanian Indians, long inhabitants of the region. Temuco’s development was aided by the arrival of
- Temüjin (Mongol ruler)
Genghis Khan was a Mongolian warrior-ruler, one of the most famous conquerors of history, who consolidated tribes into a unified Mongolia and then extended his empire across Asia to the Adriatic Sea. Genghis Khan was a warrior and ruler of genius who, starting from obscure and insignificant
- Temunot me-hạye ha-kefar (novel by Oz)
Amos Oz: Temunot me-hạye ha-kefar (2009; Scenes from Village Life) and Ben hạverim (2012; Between Friends) are, respectively, a novel set in an Israeli village and a collection of short stories set on a kibbutz. Ha-Beśorah ʿal-pi Yehudah (2014; “The Gospel According to Judas”) investigates the nature of betrayal by weaving…
- Temür (emperor of Yuan dynasty)
Temür was the grandson and successor of the great Kublai Khan; he ruled (1295–1307) as emperor of the Yuan (Mongol) dynasty (1206–1368) of China and as great khan of the Mongol Empire. He was the last Yuan ruler to maintain firm control over China, but he never exercised real power over Mongol
- Temür Kutlugh (Mongol emperor)
Battle of the Vorskla River: … was deposed and replaced by Temür Kutlugh as khan and Edigü as emir. In order to restore his authority, Tokhtamysh requested aid from Vytautas, who was eager to extend his domain, which reached the Dnieper River in the east, into the lands of the Golden Horde. Vytautas gathered an army…
- Ten (film by Kiarostami [2002])
Abbas Kiarostami: With Dah (2002; Ten) Kiarostami took advantage of the creative freedom offered by lightweight digital video equipment to do a film of 10 scenes set entirely in the front seat of a car. A young divorced woman drives around Tehrān and has conversations with her son and a…
- Ten (album by Pearl Jam)
Pearl Jam: Formation of the band and Ten: …band released its first album, Ten, in 1991. Alternative rock had already begun to receive mainstream acceptance, thanks largely to the popularity of Nirvana, which, like Pearl Jam, was part of Seattle’s vibrant music scene. Ten (featuring the major hits “Jeremy,” “Evenflow,” and “Alive”) became a multimillion-seller. “Jeremy” earned
- Ten Benny (film by Bross [1995])
Adrien Brody: …starred in the unsuccessful drama Ten Benny (1995). He was cast in Terrence Malick’s The Thin Red Line (1998), but his part largely disappeared in editing. Brody won notice for his performance as an aspiring punk rocker in Spike Lee’s Summer of Sam (1999), and he appeared in Barry Levinson’s…
- Ten Books of Histories (work by Gregory of Tours)
biography: Middle Ages: Bishop Gregory of Tours’s History of the Franks depicts artlessly but vividly, from firsthand observation, the lives and personalities of the four grandsons of Clovis and their fierce queens in Merovingian Gaul of the 6th century. Bede’s Ecclesiastical History of the English People, of the 8th century, though lacking…
- Ten Books on Architecture (work by Alberti)
aesthetics: Medieval aesthetics: …architecture, De Re Aedificatoria (1452; Ten Books on Architecture). Alberti also advanced a definition of beauty, which he called concinnitas, taking his terminology from Cicero. Beauty is for Alberti such an order and arrangement of the parts of an object that nothing can be altered except for the worse. This…
- Ten Cantons (ancient region, Germany)
Agri Decumates, in antiquity, the Black Forest and adjoining areas of what is now southwestern Germany between the Rhine, Danube, and Main rivers. The name may imply earlier occupation by a tribe with 10 cantons. The Romans under the Flavian emperors began annexing the area in ad 74 to secure
- Ten Classics of Mathematics (Chinese mathematics)
East Asian mathematics: The textual sources: …known as Shibu suanjing (“Ten Classics of Mathematics”), became the manual for officials trained in the newly established office of mathematics. Although some people continued to be officially trained as mathematicians thereafter, no advancement in mathematics can be documented until the 11th century. At that time (1084) the “Ten…
- Ten Commandments (Old Testament)
Ten Commandments, list of religious precepts that, according to various passages in Exodus and Deuteronomy, were divinely revealed to Moses on Mount Sinai and were engraved on two tablets of stone. The Commandments are recorded virtually identically in Exodus 20:2–17 and Deuteronomy 5:6–21. The
- Ten Commandments, The (film by DeMille [1923])
Cecil B. DeMille: Early life and silent films: The Squaw Man to The Godless Girl: The Ten Commandments (1923) has two stories, the first being that of the Exodus and the second being about a conflict in modern times between two brothers, one who is a Christian and the other who rejects religion. Despite the commercial success of The Ten…
- Ten Commandments, The (film by DeMille [1956])
Cecil B. DeMille: Films of the 1940s and 1950s: North West Mounted Police to The Ten Commandments: DeMille’s final movie, The Ten Commandments (1956), was a remake of his 1923 film but without the modern-day story. Heston starred (in his best-known role) as Moses and Yul Brynner as his foe the Pharaoh Ramses. The vast scale of The Ten Commandments (particularly in the scenes of…
- Ten Days in a Mad House (work by Bly)
Nellie Bly: …World and later collected in Ten Days in a Mad House (1887), precipitated a grand-jury investigation of the asylum and helped bring about needed improvements in patient care. Similar reportorial gambits took her into sweatshops, jails, and the legislature (where she exposed bribery in the lobbyist system). She was far…
- Ten Days in the Hills (novel by Smiley)
Jane Smiley: …Heaven (2000), about horse racing; Ten Days in the Hills (2007), a reworking of Giovanni Boccaccio’s Decameron set in Hollywood; and Private Life (2010), which examines a woman’s marriage and interior life. Some Luck (2014), which covers 33 years in the history of the Langdons, a farming family, was the…
- Ten Days of Penitence (Judaism)
yamim noraʾim, in Judaism, the High Holy Days of Rosh Hashana (on Tishri 1 and 2) and Yom Kippur (on Tishri 10), in September or October. Though the Bible does not link these two major festivals, the Talmud does. Consequently, yamim noraʾim is sometimes used to designate the first 10 days of the
- Ten Days that Shook the World (film by Eisenstein)
Sergei Eisenstein: …a film entitled Oktyabr (October, or Ten Days That Shook the World), which in the space of two hours dealt with the shifts of power in the government after the 1917 Revolution, the entrance on the scene of Lenin, and the struggle between the Bolsheviks and their political and…
- Ten Days that Shook the World (work by Reed)
John Reed: …in his best known book, Ten Days That Shook the World (1919).
- Ten Days Wonder (film by Chabrol)
Anthony Perkins: …The Champagne Murders (1968), and Ten Days Wonder (1972), and in such American films as Pretty Poison (1968), Catch-22 (1970), and WUSA (1970). Some of his other screen credits include The Life and Times of Judge Roy Bean (1972), Murder on the Orient Express (1974), and Edge of
- Ten Easy Pieces (album by Webb)
Jimmy Webb: Later hits and works: Later solo albums include Ten Easy Pieces (1996), Twilight of the Renegades (2005), Just Across the River (2010), and Still Within the Sound of My Voice (2013).
- Ten Eyck, Richard (American industrial designer)
Richard Ten Eyck was an industrial designer whose career was integral to the development of American industry and its products after World War II. From 1938 to 1939 Ten Eyck attended the University of Illinois, where he studied industrial design. He left school to work for a tool company in Aurora,