- Udržal, František (Czech leader)
Austria: Conflicts of nationality: The Czech agrarian leader František Udržal stated in parliament: “We wish to save the Austrian parliament from utter ruin, but we wish to save it for the Slavs of Austria, who form two-thirds of the population.” A population census taken in 1910 more or less confirmed the Slav claim:…
- UDSR (political party, France)
René Pleven: …was president of the left-centre Democratic and Socialist Union of the Resistance (Union Démocratique et Socialiste de la Résistance; UDSR); he was twice minister of defense (1949–50, 1952–54) and twice premier (July 1950–February 1951 and August 1951–January 1952).
- UDT (United States military unit)
Navy SEAL: History: …combat demolition units (NCDUs) and underwater demolition teams (UDTs) whose “frogmen” were trained to destroy obstacles on enemy-held beaches prior to amphibious landings in Europe and the Pacific. Other special units of that war were scouts and raiders, who were assigned to reconnoitre coastal areas and guide landing craft to…
- Udvar-Hazy Center (museum facility, Chantilly, Virginia, United States)
National Air and Space Museum: Udvar-Hazy, the Udvar-Hazy Center was built to simulate an air hangar, allowing for a large exhibition space. The facility displays larger artifacts, including a Concorde (the first supersonic transport), the space shuttle Discovery, and a Sopwith Camel from World War I. It also houses the Mary Baker…
- Udvar-Hazy, Steven F. (American businessman)
National Air and Space Museum: …aviation businessman and major donor Steven F. Udvar-Hazy, the Udvar-Hazy Center was built to simulate an air hangar, allowing for a large exhibition space. The facility displays larger artifacts, including a Concorde (the first supersonic transport), the space shuttle Discovery, and a Sopwith Camel from World War I. It also…
- ue-no-hakama (Japanese dress)
sokutai: …baggy white damask trousers (ue-no-hakama) and a voluminous yellow outer robe (hō) cut in the Chinese style but tucked in at the waist and patterned with the Chinese phoenix (hōō).
- Uea (island, New Caledonia)
Ouvéa Island, northernmost of the Loyalty Islands, an island group within the French overseas country of New Caledonia, southwestern Pacific Ocean. Ouvéa is a crescent-shaped atoll, 30 miles (50 km) long and 4.5 miles (7 km) wide. The most fertile of the group, it is wooded and produces copra for
- Ueber die Autonomie der Rabbinen (work by Holdheim)
Samuel Holdheim: …die Autonomie der Rabbinen (“The Autonomy of the Rabbis”). In this work he concluded that Jewish marriage and divorce laws were obsolete because they represented the national aspect of Judaism (no longer valid) as against its enduring religious aspect. Such laws, he held, should be superseded by the laws of…
- Ueberroth, Peter (American sports administrator)
baseball: The postwar period: Eckert (1965–69), Bowie Kuhn (1969–84), Peter Ueberroth (1984–89), A. Bartlett Giamatti (1989), Fay Vincent (1989–92), and Allan H. (“Bud”) Selig.
- Uebi Scebeli (river, Africa)
Shebeli River, river in eastern Africa, rising in the Ethiopian Highlands and flowing southeast through the arid Ogaden Plateau. The Shebeli River crosses into Somalia north of Beledweyne (Beletwene) and continues south to Balcad, about 20 miles (32 km) from the Indian Ocean, turning southwest
- Ueda (Japan)
Ueda, city, Nagano ken (prefecture), Honshu, Japan. It lies along the Chikuma River. Ueda was a castle town during the Tokugawa period (1603–1867) and later became a centre of silk manufacturing and the site of the Sericultural Professional School. The city’s silk industry declined during the
- Ueda Akinari (Japanese writer)
Ueda Akinari was a preeminent writer and poet of late 18th-century Japan, best known for his tales of the supernatural. Ueda was adopted into the family of an oil and paper merchant and brought up with great kindness. A childhood attack of smallpox left him with some paralysis in his hands, and it
- Ueda Bin (Japanese scholar)
Japanese literature: Western influences on poetry: …poetry, the translations made by Ueda Bin of the French Parnassian and Symbolist poets made an even more powerful impression. Ueda wrote, “The function of symbols is to help create in the reader an emotional state similar to that in the poet’s mind; symbols do not necessarily communicate the same…
- Ueda Senjiro (Japanese writer)
Ueda Akinari was a preeminent writer and poet of late 18th-century Japan, best known for his tales of the supernatural. Ueda was adopted into the family of an oil and paper merchant and brought up with great kindness. A childhood attack of smallpox left him with some paralysis in his hands, and it
- UEFA (sports organization)
football: International organization: In 1954 the Union of European Football Associations (UEFA) and the Asian Football Confederation (AFC) were established. Africa’s governing body, the Confédération Africaine de Football (CAF), was founded in 1957. The Confederation of North, Central American and Caribbean Association Football (CONCACAF) followed four years later. The Oceania Football…
- UEFA Cup (soccer tournament)
football: Europe: The UEFA Cup, first contested as the Fairs Cup in 1955–58, has had a wider pool of entrants and winners.
- UEFA European Championship (football tournament)
European Championship, in football (soccer), a quadrennial tournament held between the member countries of the Union of European Football Associations (UEFA). The European Championship is second in prestige to the World Cup among international football tournaments. The first final of the European
- UEFI (computer program)
BIOS: …century, BIOS was supplanted by United Extensible Firmware Interface (UEFI), which can handle much larger drives and operate faster than BIOS.
- UEL (Canadian history)
Canada: The influence of the American Revolution: The refugees, known as United Empire Loyalists, were the object of considerable concern to the British government, which sought to compensate them for their losses and to assist them in establishing new homes. Some went to the United Kingdom, others to the British West Indies, but the majority immigrated…
- Ueland, Ole Gabriel Gabrielson (Norwegian educator and politician)
Ole Gabriel Gabrielson Ueland was a teacher and politician, the foremost champion of Norway’s peasant class during the middle of the 19th century. A schoolteacher when first elected to the Storting (national parliament) in 1833, Ueland became the chief spokesman of Norway’s peasantry in that body
- Uele River (river, Central Africa)
Georg August Schweinfurth: …al Ghazāl and discovered the Uele River, a tributary of the Congo.
- Uemura Bunrakuken (Japanese puppet master)
Japanese performing arts: Meiji period: …of a troupe organized by Uemura Bunrakuken early in the century). The popular term for puppet drama, Bunraku, dates from this time. Learning to chant puppet texts became a vogue during the late Meiji period. In 1909 the Shōchiku theatrical combine supported performances at the Bunraku Puppet Theatre in Ōsaka,…
- Uemura Shōen (Japanese painter)
Japanese art: Japanese-style painting: …his most distinguished student was Uemura Shōen, a woman who revived a style reminiscent of ukiyo-e beauty portraits but instead idealized women in domestic settings.
- Ueno (Japan)
Ueno, city, Mie ken (prefecture), Honshu, Japan. It lies in an intermontane basin at the head of the Kii Peninsula. The city developed around a castle built in 1611 and still retains some of its early character. Hakuho Park is on the site of the old castle, which was rebuilt in 1953. The Aizen
- Ueno Dōbutsuen (zoo, Tokyo, Japan)
Ueno Zoological Gardens, oldest and most famous zoological garden in Japan. It was founded in 1882, and its administration was transferred to the Tokyo city government in 1924. Occupying a 32-acre (13-hectare) site in the Ueno district of Tokyo, it is landscaped in traditional Japanese style. The
- Ueno Park (zoo, Tokyo, Japan)
Ueno Zoological Gardens, oldest and most famous zoological garden in Japan. It was founded in 1882, and its administration was transferred to the Tokyo city government in 1924. Occupying a 32-acre (13-hectare) site in the Ueno district of Tokyo, it is landscaped in traditional Japanese style. The
- Ueno Zoological Gardens (zoo, Tokyo, Japan)
Ueno Zoological Gardens, oldest and most famous zoological garden in Japan. It was founded in 1882, and its administration was transferred to the Tokyo city government in 1924. Occupying a 32-acre (13-hectare) site in the Ueno district of Tokyo, it is landscaped in traditional Japanese style. The
- Uerdingen (Germany)
Krefeld, city and port, North Rhine–Westphalia Land (state), western Germany. The medieval city centre of Krefeld is situated 6 miles (10 km) west of the Rhine River. The city stretches in an east-west direction, with Uerdingen, a second city centre, lying along the Rhine itself and containing a
- Ueshiba Morihei (Japanese martial arts master)
aikido: …of the Japanese martial-arts expert Ueshiba Morihei. There are no offensive moves in aikido. As taught by Ueshiba, it was so purely defensive an art that no direct contest between practitioners was possible. Later a student of Ueshiba, Tomiki Kenji, developed a competition style (known as Tomiki aikido) that incorporated…
- UESU (Ukrainian company)
Yulia Tymoshenko: …1995 Tymoshenko became president of United Energy Systems of Ukraine (UESU). The company imported gas from Russia, which could then be reexported to the West or sold internally. In return, UESU exported metals, pipes, and other goods to Russia. The business earned her the epithet of “the gas princess.” She…
- Uesugi Family (Japanese warrior clan)
Uesugi Family, one of the most important warrior clans in Japan from early in the 15th century until the last half of the 19th. The Uesugi were already dominant in the Kantō region of Honshu when the appointment of the head of the family to the hereditary post of governor-general of Kantō in 1439
- Uesugi Harunori (Japanese noble)
Yonezawa: …against the Hōjō clan, and Uesugi Harunori (1756–1822), who introduced silk weaving into the city. Yonezawa is a stop on the Shinkansen (Bullet Train) line to Yamagata city and is a popular tourist destination and a gateway to Bandai-Asahi National Park. Pop. (2005) 93,178; (2010) 89,401.
- Uesugi Kagekatsu (Japanese feudal lord)
Uesugi Family: Uesugi Kagekatsu (1555–1623), who succeeded Kenshin as head of the clan, became one of the early allies in the campaign of Toyotomi Hideyoshi to reunify Japan. Before Hideyoshi died, he appointed Kagekatsu to serve as one of the five regents for his infant son Hideyori.
- Uesugi Kenshin (Japanese military leader)
Uesugi Kenshin was one of the most powerful military figures in 16th-century Japan. Nagao Torachiyo was the third son of the head of Echigo province in northeastern Japan. With the death of his father in 1543, the family’s control of the area began to disintegrate. Torachiyo not only restored order
- Uesugi Norimasa (Japanese government official)
Uesugi Kenshin: In 1552 Uesugi Norimasa, who had inherited the position of kanrei, or governor-general, of Kantō and whose family had long been the most powerful in the area, was defeated by the Hōjō clan and took shelter with Torachiyo, whom he adopted as his son. Torachiyo then changed…
- Uesugi Terutora (Japanese military leader)
Uesugi Kenshin was one of the most powerful military figures in 16th-century Japan. Nagao Torachiyo was the third son of the head of Echigo province in northeastern Japan. With the death of his father in 1543, the family’s control of the area began to disintegrate. Torachiyo not only restored order
- UF (chemistry)
dialysis: …this process is prevented by ultrafiltration, by which some of the water, along with some dissolved materials, is forced through the membrane by maintaining the blood at a higher pressure than the solution.
- UFA (German film company)
UFA, German motion-picture production company that made artistically outstanding and technically competent films during the silent era. Located in Berlin, its studios were the best equipped and most modern in the world. It encouraged experimentation and imaginative camera work and employed such
- Ufa (Russia)
Ufa, city and capital, Bashkortostan republic, western Russia. It lies along the Belaya (White) River just below its confluence with the Ufa River. A defensive site in a loop formed by the two rivers led to the foundation there of a fortress in 1574 to protect the trade route across the Ural
- Ufa Plateau (plateau, Russia)
Ufa Plateau, plateau lying immediately to the west of the central Ural Mountains in Bashkortostan and in Sverdlovsk oblast (province), west-central Russia. The plateau embraces parts of the basins of the Ufa, Yuryuzan, and Ay rivers. It has a total north-south length of 95 miles (150 km). The
- Ufa River (river, Russia)
Ural Mountains: Drainage: The Chusovaya and Ufa rivers of the Central and Southern Urals, which later join the Volga drainage basin, have their sources on the eastern slope.
- UFC (political party, Togo)
Faure Gnassingbé: Presidency: …the main opposition group, the Union of Forces of Change (Union des Forces du Changement; UFC), disputed the outcome. In May the RPT-led government reached an agreement with the UFC that provided for their participation in the new government; the decision, however, was not universally accepted within the UFC and…
- Ufer, Walter (American painter)
Walter Ufer was an American painter who was a member of the Taos Society of Artists and who specialized in portraits of Indians and landscapes of the southwestern United States. Ufer studied at the Royal Academy in Dresden, Ger., and at the Art Institute of Chicago. In 1911 he abandoned a career in
- Uferrandsiedlungen (pile houses)
Lake Dwellings, German Pfahlbauten: “pile structures,” remains of prehistoric settlements within what are today the margins of lakes in southern Germany, Switzerland, France, and Italy. According to the theory advanced by the Swiss archaeologist Ferdinand Keller in the mid-19th century, the
- Uffington White Horse (monument, England, United Kingdom)
Berkshire: …the Iron Age, is the Uffington White Horse, which is carved into the chalk of the White Horse Hill. The monument is 360 feet (110 metres) long and has a maximum height of 130 feet (40 metres). Settlements uncovered in the river valleys and eastern Berkshire also date from the…
- Uffizi Gallery (museum, Florence, Italy)
Uffizi Gallery, art museum in Florence that has the world’s finest collection of Italian Renaissance painting, particularly of the Florentine school. It also has antiques, sculpture, and more than 100,000 drawings and prints. (Read Sister Wendy’s Britannica essay on art appreciation.) In 1559 the
- Ufford, Robert de, 1st Earl of Suffolk (English soldier and statesman)
Robert de Ufford, 1st earl of Suffolk was a leading English soldier and statesman during the reign of Edward III of England. The 1st Earl’s father, Robert (1279–1316), who was summoned to Parliament as a baron in 1309, was the son of Robert de Ufford, twice justiciar of Ireland in Edward I’s reign.
- Ufimian Stage (geology)
Permian Period: Early work: The Ufimian-Kazanian Stage (a regional stage overlapping the current Roadian Stage and the remainder of the Wordian Stage) in between Murchison’s upper and lower parts of the Permian System was considered to be a close lithologic and age equivalent of the Zechstein of northwestern Europe.
- Ufimskoye Plato (plateau, Russia)
Ufa Plateau, plateau lying immediately to the west of the central Ural Mountains in Bashkortostan and in Sverdlovsk oblast (province), west-central Russia. The plateau embraces parts of the basins of the Ufa, Yuryuzan, and Ay rivers. It has a total north-south length of 95 miles (150 km). The
- UFJ Holdings, Inc. (Japanese bank holding company)
UFJ Holdings, Inc., Japanese bank holding company that became one of the world’s largest banking institutions through the merger of Sanwa Bank, Tōkai Bank, and Tōyō Trust in 2001. With headquarters in Ōsaka, UFJ operates banks, issues credit cards, provides venture capital funding, and offers other
- UFO
unidentified flying object (UFO), any aerial object or optical phenomenon not readily identifiable to the observer. UFOs became a major subject of interest following the development of rocketry after World War II and were thought by some researchers to be intelligent extraterrestrial life visiting
- UFO cloud (meteorology)
lee wave: They may produce clouds, called wave clouds, when the air becomes saturated with water vapour at the top of the wave.
- UFO group
new religious movement: Scientific NRMs: UFO groups and Scientology: Many NRMs claim to be not religions at all but rather “scientific truth” that has not yet been acknowledged or discovered by the official scientific community. In the search for authority for new teachings, certain NRMs have thus tapped into what…
- Ufrat (river, Middle East)
Euphrates River, river, Middle East. The longest river in southwest Asia, it is 1,740 miles (2,800 km) long, and it is one of the two main constituents of the Tigris-Euphrates river system. The river rises in Turkey and flows southeast across Syria and through Iraq. Formed by the confluence of the
- UFW (American labor union)
United Farm Workers (UFW), U.S. labour union founded in 1962 as the National Farm Workers Association by the labour leaders and activists Cesar Chavez and Dolores Huerta. It seeks to empower migrant farmworkers and to improve their wages and working conditions. The union also works to promote
- UG (linguistics)
universal grammar, theory proposing that humans possess innate faculties related to the acquisition of language. The definition of universal grammar has evolved considerably since first it was postulated and, moreover, since the 1940s, when it became a specific object of modern linguistic research.
- Ugadi (Hindu festival)
Ugadi, Hindu festival celebrating the new year in the Indian states of Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, and Karnataka. In Maharashtra and Goa states it is known as Gudi Padwa. Ugadi is celebrated on the first day of the Hindu month of Chaitra (March–April) following the South Indian Amavasyant calendar,
- Ugaki Kazushige (Japanese statesman)
Ugaki Kazushige was a Japanese soldier-statesman, who in the years before World War II headed the so-called Control Faction of the Japanese army, a group that stressed the development of new weapons and opposed the rightist “Imperial Way” faction, which emphasized increased indoctrination of troops
- ugali (food)
Kenya: Daily life and social customs: Foods common throughout Kenya include ugali, a mush made from corn (maize) and often served with such greens as spinach and kale. Chapati, a fried pitalike bread of Indian origin, is served with vegetables and stew; rice is also popular. Seafood and freshwater fish are eaten in most parts of…
- Uganda
Uganda, landlocked country in east-central Africa. About the size of Great Britain, Uganda is populated by dozens of ethnic groups. The English language and Christianity help unite these diverse peoples, who come together in the cosmopolitan capital of Kampala, a verdant city whose plan includes
- Uganda kob (mammal)
artiodactyl: Social behaviour: At the other extreme, male Uganda kob antelopes (Kobus kob) hold territories, for breeding only, that are as small as 15 to 30 metres (50 to 100 feet) in diameter. There are 30 to 40 territories on the breeding ground of a herd, and groups of females and young move…
- Uganda Museum (museum, Kampala, Uganda)
museum: Africa: …were founded in 1901, the Uganda Museum originated in 1908 from collections assembled by the British District Commissioners, and the National Museum of Kenya (now part of the National Museums of Kenya) in Nairobi was commenced by the East Africa and Uganda Natural History Society in 1909. Mozambique’s first museum,…
- Uganda National Liberation Front (Ugandan political movement)
Uganda: Tyranny under Amin: …former exiles, calling itself the Uganda National Liberation Front (UNLF), with a former leading figure in the DP, Yusufu Lule, as president, took office in April 1979. Because of disagreement over economic strategy and the fear that Lule was promoting the interests of his own Ganda people, he was replaced…
- Uganda Peoples Congress (Ugandan political party)
flag of Uganda: …25, 1962, the newly dominant Uganda People’s Congress (UPC) rejected the flag proposal. Instead, the UPC horizontal tricolour of black-yellow-red was repeated to produce six equal horizontal stripes, and the crested crane was placed on a white disk in the centre. In this design, recommended by Minister of Justice Grace…
- Uganda protectorate (African history)
Kenya: The British East Africa Company: …territory in what is now Uganda; when it became involved with the kingdoms of Buganda and Bunyoro, it incurred a great debt and therefore was forced to limit its activities to regions nearer the coast. This financial problem was finally resolved in 1895 when the British government made Buganda a…
- Uganda railway (railway, Africa)
Kenya: The Uganda railway and European settlement: The East Africa Protectorate was valued by Europeans as a corridor to the fertile land around Lake Victoria, but the government’s offer to lease land to British settlers was initially not popular. Two factors, however, changed this negative attitude: a…
- Uganda, Bank of (Ugandan economy)
Uganda: Finance and trade: Uganda’s central bank, the Bank of Uganda, was founded in 1966. It monitors Uganda’s commercial banks, serves as the government’s bank, and issues the national currency, the Uganda shilling. The government sets the shilling’s official exchange rate against foreign currencies.
- Uganda, flag of
national flag consisting of six horizontal stripes of black, yellow, and red, with a central white disk bearing a crested crane. The flag has a width-to-length ratio of 2 to 3.Buganda, one of the kingdoms of Uganda, was one of the few precolonial African states to have a national flag of its own;
- Uganda, history of
history of Uganda, a survey of notable events and people in the history of Uganda. The country, located in east-central Africa, is landlocked. Uganda’s borders, drawn in an artificial and arbitrary manner in the late 19th century by colonial powers, encompass two essentially different types of
- Uganda, Martyrs of (African history)
Martyrs of Uganda, group of 45 Anglican and Roman Catholic martyrs who were executed during the persecution of Christians under Mwanga, kabaka (ruler) of Buganda (now part of Uganda), from 1885 to 1887. The 22 African Roman Catholic martyrs were collectively beatified by Pope Benedict XV in 1920
- Uganda, Republic of
Uganda, landlocked country in east-central Africa. About the size of Great Britain, Uganda is populated by dozens of ethnic groups. The English language and Christianity help unite these diverse peoples, who come together in the cosmopolitan capital of Kampala, a verdant city whose plan includes
- Ugarit (ancient city, Syria)
Ugarit, ancient city lying in a large artificial mound called Ras Shamra (Raʾs Shamrah), 6 miles (10 km) north of Latakia (Al-Lādhiqiyyah) on the Mediterranean coast of northern Syria. Its ruins, about half a mile from the shore, were first uncovered by the plow of a peasant at Al-Bayḍā Bay.
- Ugaritic alphabet (writing system)
Ugaritic alphabet, cuneiform writing system used on the Syrian coast from the 15th to 13th century bc. It is believed that it was invented independent of other cuneiform writing systems and of the linear North Semitic alphabet, though similarities in certain letters suggest that it may have been
- Ugaritic language
cuneiform: Hittite and other languages: …yielding a Semitic dialect named Ugaritic, closely related to Old Phoenician. Hurrian inscriptions in the same script were also found, as were texts in conventional Middle Babylonian cuneiform.
- Ugarte, Augusto Pinochet (president of Chile)
Augusto Pinochet was the leader of the military junta that overthrew the socialist government of Pres. Salvador Allende of Chile on September 11, 1973. Pinochet was head of Chile’s military government (1974–90). During his dictatorial reign tens of thousands of opponents of his regime were
- UGCC (political organization, Ghana)
J.B. Danquah: …1947 he cofounded the moderate United Gold Coast Convention (UGCC), a party that comprised mainly the elite of Gold Coast society and demanded constitutional reforms and eventual self-government. Danquah led the UGCC in inviting Nkrumah to be secretary-general of the nascent party but, along with the rest of the party’s…
- Ugedei (Mongol khan)
Ögödei was the son and successor of the Mongol ruler Genghis Khan, who greatly expanded the Mongol Empire. The third son of Genghis, Ögödei succeeded his father in 1229. He was the first ruler of the Mongols to call himself khagan (“great khan”); his father used only the title khan. He made his
- Ugetsu (film by Mizoguchi)
Ueda Akinari: Ugetsu monogatari was the basis for the film Ugetsu (1953), directed by Mizoguchi Kenji.
- Ugetsu monogatari (work by Ueda Akinari)
Ueda Akinari: …he produced Ugetsu monogatari (Tales of Moonlight and Rain). These ghost tales showed a concern for literary style not present in most popular fiction of the time, in which the text was usually simply an accompaniment for the illustrations that formed the main part of the books.
- Ugetsu monogatari (film by Mizoguchi)
Ueda Akinari: Ugetsu monogatari was the basis for the film Ugetsu (1953), directed by Mizoguchi Kenji.
- Ughelli (Nigeria)
Ughelli, town, Delta state, southern Nigeria. Ughelli lies in the western Niger River delta east of Warri. Originally an agricultural-trade centre (cassava [manioc], plantains, sugarcane, palm oil and kernels) for the Urhobo (Isoko) people, it has also developed industries producing sheet glass,
- Ughoton (Benin)
African art: Edo peoples: At Ughoton, to the southwest of Benin, a different type of mask is used, in the cult of the water spirit Igbile. Both the cult and the sculptural style seem to have derived from the Ijo.
- Uglich (Russia)
Volga River: Dams and reservoirs: …and the next complex, at Uglich (96 square miles), was put into operation in 1939. The Rybinsk Reservoir, completed in 1941 and encompassing an area of about 1,750 square miles, was the first of the large reservoir projects. Following World War II, work continued below Rybinsk. The reservoirs at Nizhny…
- Ugly American, The (novel by Lederer and Burdick)
The Ugly American, novel by William J. Lederer and Eugene Burdick, published in 1958. A fictionalized account of Americans working in Southeast Asia, the book was notable chiefly for exposing many of the deficiencies in U.S. foreign-aid policy and for causing a furor in government circles.
- Ugly Betty (American television program)
Salma Hayek: …of the hit television series Ugly Betty (2006–10), a comedy starring America Ferrera as fashion-challenged Betty Suarez, assistant to the editor in chief of a fashion magazine. Hayek also had recurring roles on that show, in 2006–07, and on the sitcom 30 Rock, in 2009. Meanwhile, she continued to act…
- Ugly Duchess, The (work by Feuchtwanger)
Lion Feuchtwanger: …was Die hässliche Herzogin (1923; The Ugly Duchess), about Margaret Maultasch, duchess of Tirol. His finest novel, Jud Süss (1925; also published as Jew Süss and Power), set in 18th-century Germany, revealed a depth of psychological analysis that remained characteristic of his subsequent work—the Josephus-Trilogie (Der jüdische Krieg, 1932; Die…
- Ugly Love (novel by Hoover)
Colleen Hoover: Hoover’s other notable books include Ugly Love (2014), in which a man and a woman agree to limit their relationship to sex, but both have trouble adhering to that promise. In November 9 (2015) a woman has a chance encounter with a writer, who uses her as inspiration for his…
- Ugly One with the Jewels and Other Stories, The (album by Anderson)
Laurie Anderson: … (1989), Bright Red (1994), and The Ugly One with the Jewels and Other Stories (1995).
- Ugly Truth, The (film by Luketic [2009])
Katherine Heigl: Right, The Ugly Truth (2009), and Life As We Know It (2010), about a mismatched couple entrusted with raising an orphaned infant. She also appeared in the action comedies Killers (2010), as a woman who unknowingly marries a former assassin, and One for the Money (2012),…
- Ugly Vegetables, The (picture book by Lin)
Grace Lin: Those drawings turned into The Ugly Vegetables (1999), a picture book about a Chinese American girl who learns to appreciate the garden of Chinese vegetables that she and her mother have grown. The book was an American Booksellers Association “Pick of the List.”
- UglyDolls (film by Asbury [2019])
Kelly Clarkson: …voice to the animated comedies UglyDolls (2019) and Trolls World Tour (2020).
- Ugo di Segni (pope)
Gregory IX was one of the most vigorous of the 13th-century popes (reigned 1227–41), a canon lawyer, theologian, defender of papal prerogatives, and founder of the papal Inquisition. Gregory promulgated the Decretals in 1234, a code of canon law that remained the fundamental source of
- Ugōkai (Japanese art)
Kaburagi Kiyokata: …group of painter friends, called Ugōkai (“the Rabble”), and aimed at improving the art of ukiyo-e, which had deteriorated into superficial genre painting and illustration. He succeeded in producing paintings of the new Tokyo and its daily life, giving it psychological depth and freshness. Among his representative works are Ichiyō…
- Ugolino (work by Gerstenberg)
Heinrich Wilhelm von Gerstenberg: His powerful and gruesome tragedy Ugolino (1768) ranges in its expression from the heroic to the macabre. During his Copenhagen years he also wrote the text of a cantata, Ariadne auf Naxos (1767), that was set to music by Johann Adolph Scheibe and Johann Christian Bach and later adapted for…
- Ugolino di Segni (pope)
Gregory IX was one of the most vigorous of the 13th-century popes (reigned 1227–41), a canon lawyer, theologian, defender of papal prerogatives, and founder of the papal Inquisition. Gregory promulgated the Decretals in 1234, a code of canon law that remained the fundamental source of
- Ugolnye Kopi (Russia)
Kopeysk, city, Chelyabinsk oblast (region), west central Russia, in the southern Urals. Founded in 1920, it became a city in 1933. It is one of the centres of lignite (brown coal) mining in the Chelyabinsk coal basin. The population has been declining since the late 1960s because of mechanization
- Ugra, Battle of the (Russian history)
Battle of the Ugra, (1480), bloodless confrontation between the armies of Muscovy and the Golden Horde, traditionally marking the end of the “Mongol yoke” in Russia. By 1480 the Golden Horde had lost control of large portions of its empire; Ivan III of Moscow had stopped paying tribute to the Horde
- Ugrasena (ruler of Magadha)
India: Magadhan ascendancy: …a century until ousted by Mahapadma Nanda. The Nandas are universally described as being of low origin, perhaps Sudras. Despite these rapid dynastic changes, Magadha retained its position of strength. The Nandas continued the earlier policy of expansion. They are proverbially connected with wealth, probably because they realized the importance…
- Ugrešić, Dubravka (Croatian author)
Croatian literature: …spirited stories and novels by Dubravka Ugrešić; essays and novels by feminist journalist and writer Slavenka Drakulić (The Balkan Express, 1993); genre novels by the popular Pavao Pavličić; prose by a prolific Croatian-Bosnian writer of the younger generation, Miljenko Jergović, and, at the turn of the 21st century, by Zoran…
- Ugrian (people)
Finno-Ugric religion: The Finno-Ugric peoples: …by 3000 bce, when the Ugrians formed their own group. One branch moved northeast, behind the Ural Mountains: the Khanty, living east of the Ob River, and the Mansi, living west of the Ob River. The other branch spread southward and made contact with the Bulgar Turks and the Khazars.…