- Wagner, Cosima (German art director)
Cosima Wagner was the wife of the composer Richard Wagner and director of the Bayreuth Festivals from his death in 1883 to 1908. Cosima was the illegitimate daughter of the composer-pianist Franz Liszt and the countess Marie d’Agoult, who also bore Liszt two other children. Liszt later
- Wägner, Elin (Swedish author)
Swedish literature: The modern novel: Ludvig Nordström, and Elin Wägner. Hellström’s work as a journalist in Europe, the United States, and England greatly influenced him. Irony and careful detail emerged in his best-known novel, Snörmakare Lekholm får en idé (1927; Lacemaker Lekholm Has an Idea). Siwertz was a more elegant stylist, and a…
- Wagner, Herbert (German engineer)
military aircraft: The jet age: …Hans von Ohain in 1933; Herbert Wagner, chief structural engineer for Junkers, in 1934; and government aerodynamicist Helmut Schelp in 1937. Whittle had a running bench model by the spring of 1937, but backing from industrialist Ernst Heinkel gave von Ohain the lead. The He 178, the first jet-powered aircraft,…
- Wagner, Honus (American baseball player)
Honus Wagner was an American professional baseball player, one of the first five men elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame (1936). He is generally considered the greatest shortstop in baseball history and is regarded by some as the finest all-around player in the history of the National League (NL).
- Wagner, Jane (American writer, director and producer)
Lily Tomlin: …and codirected the program with Jane Wagner, who was Tomlin’s longtime collaborator and companion; the couple married in 2013.
- Wagner, John F. (American politician)
United States presidential election of 1956: Democratic nomination: Humphrey of Minnesota, and Mayor John F. Wagner of New York City. Kefauver finished on top in the first ballot but without enough delegates to win outright. In the second ballot, Kennedy finished first but also without the requisite number of delegates. Following Gore’s withdrawal in favor of Kefauver, Kefauver…
- Wagner, John Peter (American baseball player)
Honus Wagner was an American professional baseball player, one of the first five men elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame (1936). He is generally considered the greatest shortstop in baseball history and is regarded by some as the finest all-around player in the history of the National League (NL).
- Wagner, Julius, Ritter von Jauregg (Austrian psychiatrist)
Julius Wagner-Jauregg was an Austrian psychiatrist and neurologist whose treatment of syphilitic meningoencephalitis, or general paresis, by the artificial induction of malaria brought a previously incurable fatal disease under partial medical control. His discovery earned him the Nobel Prize for
- Wagner, Lindsay (American actress)
The Bionic Woman: …character, Jamie Sommers (played by Lindsay Wagner), was a professional tennis player. She first appeared in a 1975 episode of The Six Million Dollar Man as a former love interest of cybernetic agent Steve Austin (Lee Majors). As the two reignited their romance, Sommers suffered a debilitating skydiving injury. Austin…
- Wagner, Martin von (German sculptor)
Neoclassical art: Central Europe: …Tieck; the painter and sculptor Martin von Wagner; and the sculptor Christian Daniel Rauch.
- Wagner, Otto (Austrian architect)
Otto Wagner was an Austrian architect and teacher, generally held to be a founder and leader of the modern movement in European architecture. Wagner’s early work was in the already-established Neo-Renaissance style. In 1893 his general plan (never executed) for Vienna won a major competition, and
- Wagner, Priscilla Ann (American actress and businesswoman)
Priscilla Presley is an American actress and businesswoman best known for her marriage to musician Elvis Presley. Although they eventually divorced, she remained in the public eye and established an acting career. After his death, she became the executor of Graceland, his estate in Memphis,
- Wagner, Richard (German composer)
Richard Wagner was a German dramatic composer and theorist whose operas and music had a revolutionary influence on the course of Western music, either by extension of his discoveries or reaction against them. Among his major works are The Flying Dutchman (1843), Tannhäuser (1845), Lohengrin (1850),
- Wagner, Robert (American actor)
Natalie Wood: She married actor Robert Wagner in 1957 (divorced 1962; remarried 1972) and the following year starred opposite Gene Kelly in Marjorie Morningstar.
- Wagner, Robert F. (United States senator)
Robert F. Wagner was a U.S. senator and leading architect of the modern welfare state. Wagner arrived in the United States at the age of eight and settled with his parents in a New York tenement neighborhood. After graduating from the City College of New York in 1898, he went on to obtain a law
- Wagner, Robert F. (mayor of New York City)
Robert F. Wagner was an American Democratic Party politician who served as mayor of New York City (1954–65). Wagner was named for his father, a U.S. senator and sponsor of the Social Security Act. After an education at Yale University (A.B., 1933, LL.D., 1937), Wagner served as an intelligence
- Wagner, Robert Ferdinand (United States senator)
Robert F. Wagner was a U.S. senator and leading architect of the modern welfare state. Wagner arrived in the United States at the age of eight and settled with his parents in a New York tenement neighborhood. After graduating from the City College of New York in 1898, he went on to obtain a law
- Wagner, Robert Ferdinand, Jr. (mayor of New York City)
Robert F. Wagner was an American Democratic Party politician who served as mayor of New York City (1954–65). Wagner was named for his father, a U.S. senator and sponsor of the Social Security Act. After an education at Yale University (A.B., 1933, LL.D., 1937), Wagner served as an intelligence
- Wagner, Wieland (German opera director)
stagecraft: Projections and special effects: , Richard Wagner’s grandson Wieland reduced three-dimensional scenic elements to the barest essentials and then flooded the stage with multiple overlapping projected patterns. In subsequent years additional scenic elements were added to give variety of texture and depth to the flow of light and pattern. Still later, at the…
- Wagner, Wilhelm Richard (German composer)
Richard Wagner was a German dramatic composer and theorist whose operas and music had a revolutionary influence on the course of Western music, either by extension of his discoveries or reaction against them. Among his major works are The Flying Dutchman (1843), Tannhäuser (1845), Lohengrin (1850),
- Wagner, Winifred (British-born German cultural figure)
Winifred Wagner was a British-born German cultural figure who directed the Bayreuth Festival of Richard Wagner’s operatic works from 1930 to 1944 and gained notoriety for her friendship with Adolf Hitler. As a child, Winifred was adopted by the then-elderly musician Charles Klindworth and his wife
- Wagner-Jauregg, Julius (Austrian psychiatrist)
Julius Wagner-Jauregg was an Austrian psychiatrist and neurologist whose treatment of syphilitic meningoencephalitis, or general paresis, by the artificial induction of malaria brought a previously incurable fatal disease under partial medical control. His discovery earned him the Nobel Prize for
- Wagogo (people)
Gogo, a Bantu-speaking people inhabiting central Tanzania. They live in a portion of the East African Rift System. The land is bounded by hills to the east and south, the Bahi Swamp to the west, and the Masai Steppe to the north. “Gogo” is a sobriquet given by outsiders—probably Nyamwezi traders
- wagon (musical instrument)
wagon, musical instrument, Japanese six-stringed board zither with movable bridges. The wooden body of the wagon is about 190 cm (75 inches) in length. The musician plays the wagon while seated behind the instrument, which rests on the floor. The strings may be strummed with a plectrum (which is
- wagon (horizontal drive)
stagecraft: Horizontal drives: These include the wagon, in which scenery is built on a low platform mounted on casters so that it can be quickly rolled onstage and offstage; the jackknife stage, similar to the wagon except that it is anchored at one corner from which it pivots onstage and offstage;…
- wagon (vehicle)
wagon, four-wheeled vehicle designed to be drawn by draft animals and known to have been used as early as the 1st century bc, incorporating such earlier innovations as the spoked wheel and metal wheel rim. Early examples also had such features as pivoted front axles and linchpins to secure the
- Wagon Master (film by Ford [1950])
John Ford: Postwar career: …more apparent than in his Wagon Master (1950). Its protagonists are a pair of cowpokes played by the familiar character actors Ben Johnson and Harry Carey, Jr., amiable and uncomplicated. Their heroic moment is both reluctant and over in a flash, leaving viewers to assume that they go back to…
- wagon train (North American history)
wagon train, caravan of wagons organized by settlers in the United States for emigration to the West during the late 18th and most of the 19th centuries. Composed of up to 100 Conestoga wagons (q.v.; sometimes called prairie schooners), wagon trains soon became the prevailing mode of long-distance
- Wagon Train (American television series)
David Butler: …for such notable series as Wagon Train, The Deputy, Twilight Zone, Leave It to Beaver, and Daniel Boone. After helming the feature film C’mon, Let’s Live a Little (1967), he retired.
- wagon vault (architecture)
barrel vault, ceiling or roof consisting of a series of semicylindrical arches. See
- Wagon, The (constellation)
Ursa Major, in astronomy, a constellation of the northern sky, at about 10 hours 40 minutes right ascension and 56° north declination. It was referred to in the Old Testament (Job 9:9; 38:32) and mentioned by Homer in the Iliad (xviii, 487). The Greeks identified this constellation with the nymph
- wagon-lit (railroad vehicle)
sleeping car, railroad coach designed for overnight passenger travel. The first sleeping cars were put in service on American railroads as early as the 1830s, but these were makeshift; the first car designed for comfortable nighttime travel was the Pullman sleeper, which was commercially introduced
- Wagoner, David (American poet and novelist)
David Wagoner was an American poet and novelist known for his evocative poems about the lush landscape of the Pacific Northwest, notably “Staying Alive” and “Lost.” Wagoner grew up in Whiting, Indiana, an industrial town in the heavily polluted area between Gary and Chicago, where his father had
- Wagoner, David Russell (American poet and novelist)
David Wagoner was an American poet and novelist known for his evocative poems about the lush landscape of the Pacific Northwest, notably “Staying Alive” and “Lost.” Wagoner grew up in Whiting, Indiana, an industrial town in the heavily polluted area between Gary and Chicago, where his father had
- wagonette (vehicle)
wagonette, horse-drawn carriage designed to carry a large number of passengers who sat on long bench-style seats facing each other. The driver’s seat was separate and mounted from the front, while passengers boarded the vehicle from a door in the rear. The first wagonette was built in England about
- Wagons Roll at Night, The (film by Enright [1941])
Ray Enright: The circus drama The Wagons Roll at Night (1941) was Humphrey Bogart’s only box-office failure in the year that saw him rise to stardom in High Sierra and The Maltese Falcon.
- wagonseel (vehicle)
pageant wagon, wheeled vehicle used in the processional staging of medieval vernacular cycle plays. Processional staging is most closely associated with the English cycle plays performed from about 1375 until the mid-16th century in such cities as York and Chester as part of the Corpus Christi
- wagoto (kabuki drama)
Japanese performing arts: Tokugawa period: …gentle style of acting (wagoto) for erotic love stories in Kyōto, while in Edo a stylized, bravura style of acting (aragoto) was created at almost the same time by the actor Ichikawa Danjūrō I (1660–1704) for bombastic fighting plays. In the play Sukeroku yukari no Edo zakura (Sukeroku: Flower…
- Wagram, Battle of (European history)
Battle of Wagram, (July 5–6, 1809), victory for Napoleon, which forced Austria to sign an armistice and led eventually to the Treaty of Schönbrunn in October, ending Austria’s 1809 war against the French control of Germany. The battle was fought on the Marchfeld (a plain northeast of Vienna)
- Wagram, Louis-Alexandre Berthier, prince de (marshal of France)
Louis-Alexandre Berthier, prince de Wagram was a French soldier and the first of Napoleon’s marshals. Though Berthier was not a distinguished commander, Napoleon esteemed him highly as chief of staff of the Grande Armée from 1805. Responsible for the operation of Napoleon’s armies, he was called by
- Wagstaff, Harold (English rugby player)
Harold Wagstaff was an English rugby player who was a member of the noted Huddersfield team of 1914–15. Wagstaff, nicknamed the “Prince of Centres,” made his debut at the age of 15 and is considered to have been the youngest player to appear on a professional team. Under his captaincy, Huddersfield
- wagtail (bird)
wagtail, any of about 12 species of the bird genus Motacilla, of the family Motacillidae, together with the forest wagtail (Dendronanthus indicus) of Asia. Wagtails are strongly patterned birds of beaches, meadows, and streamsides; they usually nest on the ground but roost in trees. The birds are
- Wagyu (breed of cattle)
Wagyu, slow-growing Japanese cattle breed prized for its tender, flavorful, and highly marbled meat. Evidence suggests that the genetic origins of the breed date back thousands of years. Modern Wagyu cattle are crosses between Japanese Wagyu and cattle that were imported from England, continental
- Wāh (Pakistan)
Wāh, town, Punjab province, northern Pakistan. It is connected by road with Peshāwar and Rāwalpindi and is a growing industrial centre. Wāh’s industries include one of the largest cement factories in the Indian subcontinent, ordnance and tractor plants, and agricultural implements and spare-parts
- Wah, Fred (Canadian poet)
Canadian literature: Poetry and poetics: Fred Wah, one of the founders (along with Bowering and Frank Davey) of the Vancouver poetry magazine Tish, explored his roots in the Kootenays in Pictograms from the Interior of B.C. (1975), later turning to his mixed heritage and Chinese background in Rooftops (1988) and…
- Waha (people)
Ha, a Bantu-speaking people belonging to the Interlacustrine Bantu ethnolinguistic family who live in western Tanzania bordering on Lake Tanganyika. Their country, which they call Buha, comprises grasslands and open woodlands. Agriculture is their primary economic activity. Sorghum, millet, corn
- Wahābī (Islamic movement)
Wahhābī, any adherent of the Islamic reform movement founded by Muḥammad ibn ʿAbd al-Wahhāb in the 18th century in Najd, central Arabia, and adopted in 1744 by the Saudi family. In the 20th and 21st centuries, Wahhābism is prevalent in Saudi Arabia and Qatar. The term Wahhābī is used primarily by
- Wahankh Intef (king of Egypt)
Intef II, was the third king of the 11th dynasty (2081–1938 bce) in ancient Egypt, who during his long reign successfully warred against the allies of the Heracleopolitans—rulers of Middle and Lower Egypt composing the 9th and 10th dynasties (see ancient Egypt: The First Intermediate period). In
- Wāḥāt al-Baḥriyyah, Al- (oasis, Egypt)
Zahi Hawass: …Ṣaqqārah and Al-Wāḥāt al-Baḥriyyah (Bahariya Oasis).
- Wāḥāt al-Khārijah, Al- (oasis, Egypt)
Al-Wāḥāt al-Khārijah, oasis in the Libyan (Western) Desert, part of Al-Wādī al-Jadīd (“New Valley”) muḥāfaẓah (governorate), in south-central Egypt. It is situated about 110 miles (180 km) west-southwest of Najʿ Ḥammādī, to which it is linked by railroad. The name Wāḥāt al-Khārijah means “Outer
- Wāḥat Sīwah (oasis, Egypt)
Siwa Oasis, oasis in Maṭrūḥ muḥāfaẓah (governorate), western Egypt. It lies near the Libyan frontier, 350 miles (560 km) west-southwest of Cairo. The oasis is 6 miles (10 km) long by 4–5 miles (6–8 km) wide and has about 200 springs. Two rock outcrops provide the sites of the old walled settlements
- Wahaya (people)
Haya, East African people who speak a Bantu language (also called Haya) and inhabit the northwestern corner of Tanzania between the Kagera River and Lake Victoria. Two main ethnic elements exist in the population—the pastoral Hima, who are probably descendants of wandering Nilotes, and the more
- Wahballat (king of Palmyra)
ancient Rome: Difficulties in the East: …titles granted to their son Vaballathus. Then in 270, taking advantage of the deaths of Gallienus and Claudius II, she invaded Egypt and a part of Anatolia. This invasion was followed by a rupture with Rome, and in 271 Vaballathus was proclaimed Imperator Caesar Augustus. The latent separatism of the…
- Wahbī, Yūsuf (Egyptian theatrical producer)
Islamic arts: Arab countries: In contrast, Yūsuf Wahbī’s National Troupe performed realistic plays, usually dramas or melodramas, using either colloquial or literary Arabic and sometimes a combination of both.
- waḥdat al-wujūd (Ṣūfī doctrine)
Chishtīyah: …of the unity of being (waḥdat al-wujūd), oneness with God; thus, all material goods were rejected as distracting from the contemplation of God; absolutely no connection with the secular state was permitted; and the recitation of the names of God, both aloud and silently (dhikr jahrī, dhikr khafī), formed the…
- waḥdat ash-shuhūd (Ṣūfī doctrine)
Shaykh Aḥmad Sirhindī: …instead advanced the notion of waḥdat ash-shuhūd (the concept of unity of vision). According to this doctrine, any experience of unity between God and the world he has created is purely subjective and occurs only in the mind of the believer; it has no objective counterpart in the real world.…
- Wahgunyah (New South Wales, Australia)
Corowa, town, New South Wales, Australia. It is located on the Murray River. Immediately opposite Corowa, across the Murray, in Victoria, is the twin town of Wahgunyah. Corowa was established in 1858. The Corowa Conference in 1893 marked an important point in the movement for federation of the
- Wahhāb, Muḥammad ibn ʿAbd al- (Muslim theologian)
Muḥammad ibn ʿAbd al-Wahhāb was a theologian and founder of the Wahhābī movement, which attempted a return to the principles of Islam as practiced by its early forebears (salaf). Having completed his formal education in the holy city of Medina, in Arabia, ʿAbd al-Wahhāb lived abroad for many years.
- Wahhābī (Islamic movement)
Wahhābī, any adherent of the Islamic reform movement founded by Muḥammad ibn ʿAbd al-Wahhāb in the 18th century in Najd, central Arabia, and adopted in 1744 by the Saudi family. In the 20th and 21st centuries, Wahhābism is prevalent in Saudi Arabia and Qatar. The term Wahhābī is used primarily by
- Wahhābism (Islamic movement)
Wahhābī, any adherent of the Islamic reform movement founded by Muḥammad ibn ʿAbd al-Wahhāb in the 18th century in Najd, central Arabia, and adopted in 1744 by the Saudi family. In the 20th and 21st centuries, Wahhābism is prevalent in Saudi Arabia and Qatar. The term Wahhābī is used primarily by
- Wahhābīyah (Islamic movement)
Wahhābī, any adherent of the Islamic reform movement founded by Muḥammad ibn ʿAbd al-Wahhāb in the 18th century in Najd, central Arabia, and adopted in 1744 by the Saudi family. In the 20th and 21st centuries, Wahhābism is prevalent in Saudi Arabia and Qatar. The term Wahhābī is used primarily by
- Wahiawa (Hawaii, United States)
Wahiawa, city, Honolulu county, central Oahu island, Hawaii, U.S. Lying 22 miles (35 km) northwest of Honolulu, it is situated on the 1,000-foot- (300-metre-) high Leilehua Plateau between the two forks of the Kaukonahua Stream. The area was once used as a training ground for Oahu warriors, and
- Wahiawā (Hawaii, United States)
Wahiawa, city, Honolulu county, central Oahu island, Hawaii, U.S. Lying 22 miles (35 km) northwest of Honolulu, it is situated on the 1,000-foot- (300-metre-) high Leilehua Plateau between the two forks of the Kaukonahua Stream. The area was once used as a training ground for Oahu warriors, and
- Wahībah Dunes, Āl (desert, Oman)
Āl Wahībah Dunes, sandy desert, east-central Oman. It fronts the Arabian Sea on the southeast and stretches along the coast for more than 100 miles (160 km). The desert consists of honey-coloured dunes that are dark red at their base and rise to heights of 230 feet (70 m). The sands are
- Wahid, Abdurrahman (president of Indonesia)
Abdurrahman Wahid was an Indonesian Muslim religious leader and politician who was president of Indonesia from 1999 to 2001. Wahid’s grandfathers were among the founders of the world’s largest Islamic organization, the 25-million-member Nahdatul Ulama (NU). Wahid studied the Qurʾān intensively at
- Wahidin Sudirohusodo, Mas (Javanese physician)
Budi Utomo: …originated through the efforts of Mas Wahidin Sudirohusodo (1852–1917), a retired Javanese physician who, attempting to elevate the Javanese people through the study of Western knowledge as well as their own cultural heritage, sought to obtain support for a scholarship fund for Indonesian students. His efforts were supported by Dutch-educated…
- Wahlberg, Donnie (American singer and actor)
Mark Wahlberg: …his release, his older brother Donnie, then a member of the successful band New Kids on the Block, helped him begin a music career. In 1990 Mark styled himself as Marky Mark and formed Marky Mark and the Funky Bunch. The band’s debut album, Music for the People (1991), which…
- Wahlberg, Mark (American actor and producer)
Mark Wahlberg is an American singer and actor who gained fame as a member of the rap group Marky Mark and the Funky Bunch and then as a Calvin Klein model before launching a successful film career. Wahlberg was the youngest of nine children in a working-class family living in the Dorchester
- Wahlberg, Mark Robert Michael (American actor and producer)
Mark Wahlberg is an American singer and actor who gained fame as a member of the rap group Marky Mark and the Funky Bunch and then as a Calvin Klein model before launching a successful film career. Wahlberg was the youngest of nine children in a working-class family living in the Dorchester
- Wahlenbergia (plant)
tuftybell, any of about 260 species of annual and perennial herbs of the genus Wahlenbergia, of the bellflower family (Campanulaceae), mostly native to south temperate regions of the Old World. Ten species of the genus Edraianthus often are included in Wahlenbergia. The ivy-leaved bellflower (W.
- Wahlenbergia hederacea (plant)
tuftybell: The ivy-leaved bellflower (W. hederacea), a European annual, has delicate, hairless, creeping stems and small, pale-blue, veined, bell-shaped flowers. W. marginata, a hairy, erect perennial from East Asia, now is naturalized in southern North America; it is about 45 cm (18 inches) tall, with blue or…
- Wahlenbergia marginata (plant)
tuftybell: W. marginata, a hairy, erect perennial from East Asia, now is naturalized in southern North America; it is about 45 cm (18 inches) tall, with blue or white, upward facing flowers.
- Wahlöö, Per (Swedish journalist and author)
Maj Sjöwall and Per Wahlöö: As a team, Per Wahlöö and his wife, Maj Sjöwall (married in 1962), wrote a series of detective stories in which Martin Beck and his colleagues at the Central Bureau of Investigation in Stockholm were the main characters. From Roseanna (1965) to Terroristerna (1975; “The Terrorists”), the series…
- Wahlverwandtschaften, Die (work by Goethe)
German literature: Goethe and the Romantics: Goethe’s novel Die Wahlverwandtschaften (1809; Elective Affinities), with its emphasis on the supranatural and spiritual as well as on the sainthood of the female protagonist, is an example of this new style. Another example is Part II of his Faust drama. This sprawling cosmic allegory dramatizes the magician’s career at…
- wahoo (plant)
burning bush: …is Euonymus atropurpureus, also called wahoo. This shrub, or small tree, up to 8 metres (26 feet) in height, is native to the eastern and north-central United States. It bears small purplish flowers and small scarlet fruits. The western burning bush (E. occidentalis), up to 5.5 metres (18 feet) tall,…
- wahoo (fish)
wahoo, (Acanthocybium solanderi), swift-moving, powerful, predacious food and game fish of the family Scombridae (order Perciformes) found worldwide, especially in the tropics. The wahoo is a slim, streamlined fish with sharp-toothed, beaklike jaws and a tapered body ending in a slender tail base
- Wahpeton (North Dakota, United States)
Wahpeton, city, seat (1873) of Richland county, southeastern North Dakota, U.S. It lies on the Minnesota border across from Breckenridge, Minnesota, at the point where the Bois de Sioux and Otter Tail rivers merge to become the Red River of the North. Settled in 1864 by Morgan T. Rich and initially
- Wahrān (Algeria)
Oran, city, northwestern Algeria. It lies along an open bay on the Mediterranean Sea coast, about midway between Tangier, Morocco, and Algiers, at the point where Algeria is closest to Spain. With the adjacent city of Mers el-Kebir, a fishing centre at the western end of the bay, Oran is the
- Wahran (Algeria)
Oran, city, northwestern Algeria. It lies along an open bay on the Mediterranean Sea coast, about midway between Tangier, Morocco, and Algiers, at the point where Algeria is closest to Spain. With the adjacent city of Mers el-Kebir, a fishing centre at the western end of the bay, Oran is the
- Wahrheit und Methode (work by Gadamer)
Hans-Georg Gadamer: …work, Wahrheit und Methode (1960; Truth and Method), is considered by some to be the major 20th-century philosophical statement on hermeneutical theory. His other works include Kleine Schriften, 4 vol. (1967–77; Philosophical Hermeneutics, selected essays from vol. 1–3); Dialogue and Dialectic (1980), comprising eight essays on Plato; and Reason in…
- Wahunsenacah (American Indian chief)
Powhatan was a North American Indian leader, father of Pocahontas. He presided over the Powhatan empire at the time the English established the Jamestown Colony (1607). Powhatan had inherited rulership of an empire of six tribes from his father. After succeeding his father, Powhatan brought about
- Wahunsenacawh (American Indian chief)
Powhatan was a North American Indian leader, father of Pocahontas. He presided over the Powhatan empire at the time the English established the Jamestown Colony (1607). Powhatan had inherited rulership of an empire of six tribes from his father. After succeeding his father, Powhatan brought about
- Wahutu (people)
Hutu, Bantu-speaking people of Rwanda and Burundi. Numbering about 9,500,000 in the late 20th century, the Hutu comprise the vast majority in both countries but were traditionally subject to the Tutsi (q.v.), warrior-pastoralists of Nilotic stock. When the Hutu first entered the area, they found it
- Wai Momi (naval base, Hawaii, United States)
Pearl Harbor, naval base and headquarters of the U.S. Pacific Fleet, Honolulu county, southern Oahu Island, Hawaii, U.S. In U.S. history the name recalls the surprise Japanese air attack on December 7, 1941, that temporarily crippled the U.S. Fleet and resulted in the United States’ entry into
- Wai‘ale‘ale, Mount (mountain, Hawaii, United States)
Mount Waialeale, peak, central Kauai island, Hawaii, U.S. Waialeale (Hawaiian: “Rippling Water”), with an elevation of 5,148 feet (1,569 metres), is a dissected (eroded) dome. It is part of a central mountain mass that includes Kawaikini (5,243 feet [1,598 metres]), the island’s highest peak,
- Wai‘anae Range (mountains, Hawaii, United States)
Waianae Range, mountain range forming the western coast of Oahu island, Hawaii, U.S. The range is the oldest area of volcanic activity on the island. It is 22 miles (35 km) long and 9 miles (14 km) wide and is composed of three lava groups. The original caldera, 3 miles (5 km) wide and 5 miles (8
- Wai-O-Tapu (geothermal area, Rotorua, New Zealand)
Rotorua: …the city in 1886; and Wai-O-Tapu, featuring the Lady Knox Geyser, which erupts daily. Those and other geothermal features—along with a spa that offers a selection of mineral-water pools—long have made Rotorua a popular tourist destination. Other attractions include the Rotorua Museum of Art and History in the former government…
- Waialeale, Mount (mountain, Hawaii, United States)
Mount Waialeale, peak, central Kauai island, Hawaii, U.S. Waialeale (Hawaiian: “Rippling Water”), with an elevation of 5,148 feet (1,569 metres), is a dissected (eroded) dome. It is part of a central mountain mass that includes Kawaikini (5,243 feet [1,598 metres]), the island’s highest peak,
- Waianae Range (mountains, Hawaii, United States)
Waianae Range, mountain range forming the western coast of Oahu island, Hawaii, U.S. The range is the oldest area of volcanic activity on the island. It is 22 miles (35 km) long and 9 miles (14 km) wide and is composed of three lava groups. The original caldera, 3 miles (5 km) wide and 5 miles (8
- Waiãpi (people)
Native American music: Aerophones: The Waiãpi people of the Tropical Forest area have an end-blown horn called the nhimia poku that can be played as a solo instrument or in ensembles, depending upon the ritual context. End-blown conch-shell horns with a spiral bore are fairly widespread among Native Americans, who…
- Waiapuka Pool (pool, Lā‘ie, Oahu, Hawaii, United States)
Laie: Nearby Waiapuka Pool is known in Hawaiian literature as the refuge of the beautiful Princess Laieikawai (“Leaf in the Water”), dedicated to the sun god and protected from her father, who had vowed to kill her. Pop. (2000) 4,585; (2010) 6,138.
- Waiariki and Other Stories (work by Grace)
Patricia Grace: Her first book, Waiariki, and Other Stories (1975), presented a multiplicity of Māori voices, revealing much about Māori life and concerns. One of the first books by a Māori writer, it won a PEN/Hubert Church Award for best first book of fiction. Her next book was a novel,…
- waiata aroha (song)
New Zealand literature: Maori narrative: the oral tradition: …kinds of loss or misfortune), waiata aroha (songs about the nature of love—not only sexual love but also love of place or kin), and waiata whaiaaipo (songs of courtship or praise of the beloved). In addition, there are pao (gossip songs), poi (songs accompanying a dance performed with balls attached…
- waiata tangi (song)
New Zealand literature: Maori narrative: the oral tradition: …three kinds of waiata (songs): waiata tangi (laments—for the dead, but also for other kinds of loss or misfortune), waiata aroha (songs about the nature of love—not only sexual love but also love of place or kin), and waiata whaiaaipo (songs of courtship or praise of the beloved). In addition,…
- waiata whaiaaipo (song)
New Zealand literature: Maori narrative: the oral tradition: …of place or kin), and waiata whaiaaipo (songs of courtship or praise of the beloved). In addition, there are pao (gossip songs), poi (songs accompanying a dance performed with balls attached to flax strings, swung rhythmically), oriori (songs composed for young children of chiefly or warrior descent, to help them…
- waiata-a-ringa (song)
New Zealand literature: Maori narrative: the oral tradition: …these traditional forms is the waiata-a-ringa (action song), which fits graceful movements to popular European melodies.
- Waiau River (river, eastern South Island, New Zealand)
Waiau River, river in eastern South Island, New Zealand. It rises in the Spenser Mountains and flows south and east for 105 miles (169 km) to enter the Pacific Ocean, 6 miles (10 km) northeast of Cheviot. Its generally hilly drainage basin, 1,270 square miles (3,290 square km) in area, borders the
- Waiau River (river, southwestern South Island, New Zealand)
Waiau River, river in southwestern South Island, New Zealand. It rises in Lake Manapouri and flows south through the Southland district for 135 miles (217 km) to enter Te Waewae Bay of the Tasman Sea. Its drainage basin includes the Mararoa River, extending 20 miles (32 km) farther inland to the
- Waiau, Lake (lake, Hawaii, United States)
Mauna Kea: …covered the peak and formed Lake Waiau (the only alpine lake in the Hawaiian Islands) at 13,020 feet (3,970 metres). Several caves at heights of more than 12,000 feet (3,500 metres) have been discovered. There ancient Hawaiians quarried the basalt they used for adzes and other cutting tools. An extensive…
- Waiau-ua (river, eastern South Island, New Zealand)
Waiau River, river in eastern South Island, New Zealand. It rises in the Spenser Mountains and flows south and east for 105 miles (169 km) to enter the Pacific Ocean, 6 miles (10 km) northeast of Cheviot. Its generally hilly drainage basin, 1,270 square miles (3,290 square km) in area, borders the