- wildcat (mammal)
bobcat, (Lynx rufus), bobtailed North American cat (family Felidae), found from southern Canada to southern Mexico. The bobcat is a close relative of the somewhat larger Canada lynx (Lynx canadensis). A long-legged cat with large paws, a rather short body, and tufted ears, the bobcat is 60–100 cm
- Wildcat (roller coaster, Lancaster, Pennsylvania, United States)
roller coaster: Expansion in the United States: Indeed, the Wildcat at Rocky Springs (Lancaster, Pa.), built in 1928 by Philadelphia Toboggan, is considered the steepest wooden coaster ever made, with a reputed drop of 90 feet 3 inches (27.5 metres) at 60 degrees. It was demolished in 1984.
- wildcat (mammal, Felis silvestris)
wildcat, (species Felis silvestris), a small wild member of the cat family (Felidae) native to Eurasia and Africa. There are some three to five subspecies. The name wildcat is also used as a general term for feral domestic cats and for any of the smaller wild species of the cat family. The nominate
- wildcat bank (United States history)
wildcat bank, unsound bank chartered under state law during the period of uncontrolled state banking (1816–63) in the United States. Such banks distributed nearly worthless currency backed by questionable security (e.g., mortgages, bonds) and were located in inaccessible areas to discourage note
- Wildcat Bill (American mountain man)
William Thomas Hamilton was a mountain man, trapper, and scout of the American West. Brought to America at age two, Hamilton grew up in St. Louis, Mo., and began trapping at an early age on the North Platte and Green rivers (in present-day Nebraska and Wyoming). He became an Indian fighter in the
- wildcat strike (industrial relations)
wildcat strike, work stoppage undertaken by employees without the consent of their respective unions. Such strikes are not necessarily illegal, but they often violate terms of a collective bargaining agreement. The name is based on the stereotypical characteristics associated with wildcats:
- Wildcats (film by Ritchie [1986])
Michael Ritchie: The 1980s: Less popular was Wildcats (1986), a formulaic but efficient comedy that had Goldie Hawn as a teacher who quits her job in the suburbs to coach football at an inner-city high school; Wesley Snipes, LL Cool J, and Woody Harrelson—all of whom were appearing in their first credited…
- Wilde (film by Gilbert [1997])
Stephen Fry: …Irish writer Oscar Wilde in Wilde (1997). His other big-screen credits included two installments (2013, 2014) in the Hobbit series, and he lent his voice to such movies as Alice in Wonderland (2010) and Missing Link (2019). Fry made his directorial debut in 2003 with Bright Young Things, an adaptation…
- Wilde, Cornel (American actor)
Cornel Wilde was an American actor and filmmaker who attained stardom with his sensitive portrayal of composer Frédéric Chopin in the motion picture A Song to Remember (1945), for which he received an Academy Award nomination. Wilde, a member of the 1936 Olympic fencing team, studied to become a
- Wilde, Cornelius Louis (American actor)
Cornel Wilde was an American actor and filmmaker who attained stardom with his sensitive portrayal of composer Frédéric Chopin in the motion picture A Song to Remember (1945), for which he received an Academy Award nomination. Wilde, a member of the 1936 Olympic fencing team, studied to become a
- Wilde, F. A. (German physician)
birth control: Methods: …was recorded by German physician F.A. Wilde in 1823. The medical forerunner of the intrauterine device was the stem pessary, first described and illustrated in 1868. By 1909, Richard Richter, a practitioner from near Breslau (Wrocław in present-day Poland), had described most of the advantages and disadvantages of this method…
- Wilde, Jimmy (Welsh boxer)
Jimmy Wilde was a Welsh professional boxer, world flyweight (112 pounds) champion from 1916 to 1923. (Read Gene Tunney’s 1929 Britannica essay on boxing.) Wilde won 131 fights (99 by knockouts), lost 3 (not counting a three-round exhibition match), drew 2, and had 13 no decisions (a common result
- Wilde, Lady Jane Francesca (Irish author)
witching hour: In literature and folklore: …19th-century Irish poet and folklorist Lady Jane Wilde, a number of Irish love charms and rituals against harm involved tonics taken at midnight or visits to graveyards or churches at that particular time.
- Wilde, Olivia (American actress, director, and screenwriter)
Olivia Wilde is an American actress, director, and screenwriter who first gained fame in front of the camera, known for her performances on both television and film. She later found success as a director of movies that typically focus on women and explore feminist themes. (Read Martin Scorsese’s
- Wilde, Oscar (Irish author)
Oscar Wilde was an Irish wit, poet, and dramatist whose reputation rests on his only novel, The Picture of Dorian Gray (1891), and on his comic masterpieces Lady Windermere’s Fan (1892) and The Importance of Being Earnest (1895). He was a spokesman for the late 19th-century Aesthetic movement in
- Wilde, Oscar Fingal O’Flahertie Wills (Irish author)
Oscar Wilde was an Irish wit, poet, and dramatist whose reputation rests on his only novel, The Picture of Dorian Gray (1891), and on his comic masterpieces Lady Windermere’s Fan (1892) and The Importance of Being Earnest (1895). He was a spokesman for the late 19th-century Aesthetic movement in
- Wilde, William R. (Irish physician)
otolaryngology: …specialty was first formulated by William R. Wilde of Dublin, who in 1853 published Practical Observations on Aural Surgery, and the Nature and Treatment of Diseases of the Ear. Further advances were made with the development of the otoscope, an instrument that enabled visual examination of the tympanic membrane (eardrum).
- wildebeest (mammal)
gnu, (genus Connochaetes), either of two species of large African antelopes of the family Bovidae in the tribe Alcelaphini. They are among the most specialized and successful of African herbivores and are dominant in plains ecosystems. The common wildebeest (Connochaetes taurinus) is a keystone
- Wildenstein, Nathan (French art dealer)
art market: Paris: …years; the leading dealers were Nathan Wildenstein, the father-and-son partnership of Ernest and René Gimpel, and Jacques Seligmann. For Wildenstein and the Gimpels, the core business was initially in 18th-century French fine art, though both firms (which sustained a partnership, E. Gimpel and Wildenstein, in New York from 1902 to…
- Wildenvey, Herman (Norwegian poet)
Herman Wildenvey was a Norwegian poet whose sunny songs of simple sensual pleasure are unusual in the sombre history of Norwegian verse. When in 1904 the steamer Norge wrecked on a trip to the United States, with 600 or more passengers aboard, Wildenvey was among the few who survived. After
- Wilder Mind (album by Mumford & Sons)
Mumford & Sons: It and the album Wilder Mind, which was released two months later, signaled a new direction for the group, which largely eschewed folk for a more classic rock sound.Delta (2018) continued in that vein but was more experimental.
- Wilder, Alec (American composer)
Alec Wilder was an American composer best known for his collaboration with singers Frank Sinatra and Bing Crosby. Wilder had an eclectic musical career as the composer of popular music during the 1930s and ’40s, a blend of popular and classical music during the 1940s, and chamber music during the
- Wilder, Alexander Lafayette Chew (American composer)
Alec Wilder was an American composer best known for his collaboration with singers Frank Sinatra and Bing Crosby. Wilder had an eclectic musical career as the composer of popular music during the 1930s and ’40s, a blend of popular and classical music during the 1940s, and chamber music during the
- Wilder, Billy (American director and producer)
Billy Wilder was an Austrian-born American motion-picture scenarist, director, and producer known for films that humorously treat subjects of controversy and offer biting indictments of hypocrisy in American life. His work often focused on subjects that had previously been considered unacceptable
- Wilder, Douglas (American politician)
Douglas Wilder is an American politician, the first popularly elected African American governor in the United States. Wilder received a bachelor’s degree in chemistry from Virginia Union University (1951) and a law degree from Howard University (1959). He pursued a legal and political career in
- Wilder, Gene (American actor)
Gene Wilder was an American comic actor best known for his portrayals of high-strung neurotic characters who generally seemed to be striving unsuccessfully to appear more balanced than they were. In addition, his characters often shared a sort of tender vulnerability. As a youth in Milwaukee,
- Wilder, Laura Ingalls (American author)
Laura Ingalls Wilder was an American author of children’s fiction based on her own youth in the American Midwest. Laura Ingalls grew up in a family that moved frequently from one part of the American frontier to another. Her father took the family by covered wagon to Minnesota, Iowa, Missouri,
- Wilder, Lawrence Douglas (American politician)
Douglas Wilder is an American politician, the first popularly elected African American governor in the United States. Wilder received a bachelor’s degree in chemistry from Virginia Union University (1951) and a law degree from Howard University (1959). He pursued a legal and political career in
- Wilder, Russel M. (American pathologist)
Howard T. Ricketts: …1909 Ricketts and his assistant, Russel M. Wilder, went to Mexico City to study epidemic typhus. They found that it was transmitted by the human louse (Pediculus humanus) and located the disease-causing organism both in the blood of the victim and in the bodies of lice. Before he succumbed to…
- Wilder, Samuel (American director and producer)
Billy Wilder was an Austrian-born American motion-picture scenarist, director, and producer known for films that humorously treat subjects of controversy and offer biting indictments of hypocrisy in American life. His work often focused on subjects that had previously been considered unacceptable
- Wilder, Thornton (American writer)
Thornton Wilder was an American writer whose innovative novels and plays reflect his views of the universal truths in human nature. He is probably best known for his plays. After graduating from Yale University in 1920, Wilder studied archaeology in Rome. From 1930 to 1937 he taught dramatic
- Wilder, Thornton Niven (American writer)
Thornton Wilder was an American writer whose innovative novels and plays reflect his views of the universal truths in human nature. He is probably best known for his plays. After graduating from Yale University in 1920, Wilder studied archaeology in Rome. From 1930 to 1937 he taught dramatic
- Wilderness (work by Doyle)
Roddy Doyle: Other writings: …of books for children, including Wilderness (2007) and A Greyhound of a Girl (2011). Two Pints (2012), Two More Pints (2014), and Two for the Road (2019) are humorous dialogue-only books in which two men meet at a pub and chew the fat over politics, celebrities, sports, and family life.…
- Wilderness Act (United States [1964])
Wilderness Act, U.S. environmental protection legislation (1964) that created the National Wilderness Preservation System, setting 9 million acres (3.6 billion hectares) aside from development and providing a mechanism for additional acreage to be preserved. The Wilderness Act was a landmark
- Wilderness of Mirrors, A (novel by Frisch)
Max Frisch: …Mein Name sei Gantenbein (1964; A Wilderness of Mirrors) portray aspects of modern intellectual life and examine the theme of identity. His autobiographical works included two noteworthy diaries, Tagebuch 1946–1949 (1950; Sketchbook 1946–1949) and Tagebuch 1966–1971 (1972; Sketchbook 1966–1971). His later novels included Montauk: Eine Erzählung (1975),
- Wilderness of Zin, The (work by Lawrence and Woolley)
T.E. Lawrence: Early life: …together, it was published as The Wilderness of Zin in 1915.
- Wilderness Road (historical trail, United States)
Cumberland Gap: …by Thomas Walker, and the Wilderness Road blazed by Daniel Boone runs through it. Named for the duke of Cumberland, son of George II, it became the main artery of trans-Allegheny migration that opened the Northwest Territory for settlement and permitted the extension of the western boundary of the 13…
- Wilderness Society (American sporting organization)
hiking: … in Great Britain and the Wilderness Society in the United States. Those organizations encourage hiking and preserve footpaths, bridle paths, and rights of way in parkland and recognized open spaces in areas of natural beauty against the encroachment of builders, local authorities, and national undertakings. They also help hikers to…
- Wilderness Society (Australian organization)
the Greens: …the UTG joined with the Tasmanian Wilderness Society (TWS) to quickly mobilize opposition to a hydroelectric plant that was planned for the Gordon River below its confluence with the Franklin River. When the UTG dissolved in 1979, TWS leader Bob Brown launched a nationwide “No Dams” campaign against the initiative,…
- Wilderness Station, A (short stories by Munro)
Alice Munro: …Friend of My Youth (1990), A Wilderness Station (1994), and The Love of a Good Woman (1998). The latter volume received both Canada’s esteemed Giller Prize (later the Scotiabank Giller Prize) and the National Book Critics Circle Award in the U.S. Her book Open Secrets (1994) contains stories that range…
- Wilderness Tips (short stories by Atwood)
Margaret Atwood: Girls (1977), Bluebeard’s Egg (1983), Wilderness Tips (1991), Moral Disorder (2006), Stone Mattress (2014), and Old Babes in the Wood: Stories (2023). In addition, she continues to write poetry. Her 16th collection, Dearly, was published in 2020. Atwood’s nonfiction includes Negotiating with the Dead: A Writer on Writing
- Wilderness Waterway (area, Florida, United States)
Everglades National Park: …trails, including the 99-mile (159-km) Wilderness Waterway along the park’s western side. In addition, private companies offer guided tram and boat tours in portions of the park. Forested areas and the main visitor centre suffered damage from Hurricane Andrew in 1992. As a result of that storm, the park was…
- Wilderness, Battle of the (American Civil War [1864])
Battle of the Wilderness, battle in the American Civil War fought in northern Virginia on May 5–7, 1864, the first battle of Union General Ulysses S. Grant’s "Overland Campaign," a relentless drive to defeat once and for all Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee’s Army of Northern Virginia and capture the
- Wilders, Geert (Dutch politician)
Geert Wilders is a Dutch politician who became an influential force on his country’s political right through the promotion of anti-Islamic and anti-immigration views. He served as a member of the Dutch House of Representatives from 1998 and as leader of the Party for Freedom (Partij voor de
- Wilderspin, Samuel (British educator)
preschool education: History: …notably by the British educator Samuel Wilderspin, who wrote some of the earliest and most widely disseminated monographs on infant education.
- Wildest Dreams (album by Turner)
Tina Turner: … (1986), Foreign Affair (1989), and Wildest Dreams (1996). Her greatest-hits compilation All the Best was released in 2004. Turner continued touring into the 21st century and also appeared on other artists’ albums, notably Herbie Hancock’s River: The Joni Letters (2007), a Grammy-winning tribute to Joni Mitchell.
- Wildeve, Damon (fictional character)
Damon Wildeve, fictional character, an innkeeper who is secretly involved in a passionate affair with Eustacia Vye though engaged (and later married) to Thomasin Yeobright, in the novel The Return of the Native (1878) by Thomas
- Wildfang, Der (play by Kotzebue)
August von Kotzebue: …best in such comedies as Der Wildfang (1798; “The Trapping of Game”) and Die deutschen Kleinstädter (1803; “The German Small-towner”), which contain admirable pictures of provincial German life. He also wrote some novels as well as historical and autobiographical works.
- wildfire (disease)
Dmitry Ivanovsky: …in 1887 to investigate “wildfire,” a disease that was infecting tobacco plantations of the Ukraine and Bessarabia. In 1890 he was commissioned to study a different disease that was destroying tobacco plants in Crimea. He determined that the infection was mosaic disease, which was believed at the time to…
- wildfire (conflagration)
wildfire, uncontrolled fire in a forest, grassland, brushland, or land sown to crops. The terms forest fire, brush fire, etc., may be used to describe specific types of wildfires; their usage varies according to the characteristics of the fire and the region in which it occurs. Fire danger in a
- Wildflower (album by Crow)
Sheryl Crow: Other albums and projects: Her other albums include Wildflower (2005), a collection of introspective songs; Detours (2008), a combination of socially conscious songs and personal reminiscences; and 100 Miles from Memphis (2010), a collaborative effort featuring artists such as Justin Timberlake and Keith Richards of the Rolling
- wildflower (plant)
wildflower, any flowering plant that has not been genetically manipulated. Generally the term applies to plants growing without intentional human aid, particularly those flowering in spring and summer in woodlands, prairies, and mountains. Wildflowers are the source of all cultivated garden
- Wildflowers (album by Petty)
Tom Petty: …solo albums, including the multimillion-selling Wildflowers (1994), which was presented as a solo album but featured contributions from the Heartbreakers, most notably guitarist Campbell, ever Petty’s essential collaborator.
- wildfowl (bird group)
anseriform: … (in the United States) or wildfowl (in Europe). The three species of screamers are quite different from waterfowl in general appearance. They are moderately long-legged birds about the size of a turkey, with chickenlike beaks and exceptionally large feet.
- Wildfowl and Wetlands Trust, The (nature preserve, Gloucestershire, England, United Kingdom)
The Wildfowl and Wetlands Trust, centre of the world’s largest collection of waterfowl. It was established in 1946 by Sir Peter Scott on 418 acres (169 hectares) along the River Severn near Slimbridge, Gloucestershire, Eng. Nearly a quarter of the land is fenced off for captive birds and breeding
- Wildgans, Anton (Austrian dramatist and poet)
Anton Wildgans was an Austrian dramatist and poet known for his mystical dramas charged with the symbolic messages typical of German Expressionism. The son of a judge, Wildgans became a lawyer but soon turned to writing. His childhood had been marred by his relations with his stepmother. His early
- Wilding, Michael (Australian author)
Australian literature: Literature from 1970 to 2000: …as, for example, Frank Moorhouse, Michael Wilding, and Peter Carey. These writers, provocative and scandalous in the manner of the 1970s, broke free from all restraints and explored the many possibilities of fantasy—sexual, science fiction, gothic. Allowing for the liberalism of their values, their stories in fact display an almost…
- Wilding, Tony (New Zealand athlete)
tennis: The early 20th century: He and his doubles partner, Tony Wilding of New Zealand, wrested the Davis Cup from Great Britain in 1907 and held it until 1911, arousing enduring public interest in Australia and New Zealand.
- wildland fire (conflagration)
wildfire, uncontrolled fire in a forest, grassland, brushland, or land sown to crops. The terms forest fire, brush fire, etc., may be used to describe specific types of wildfires; their usage varies according to the characteristics of the fire and the region in which it occurs. Fire danger in a
- Wildlife (film by Dano [2019])
Carey Mulligan: …in Paul Dano’s critically praised Wildlife (2019). Her complex performance of a woman avenging her best friend’s assault by targeting men willing to take advantage of an inebriated woman in Promising Young Woman (2020) earned her a best-actress Oscar nomination. She next portrayed a widow in Suffolk living on what…
- Wildlife (novel by Ford)
Richard Ford: In Wildlife (1990) Ford depicted a teenager in Montana who witnesses the breakup of his parents’ marriage. Canada (2012) chronicles the experiences of a man whose life is shaped by his parents’ bungled attempt to rob a bank during his youth. Rock Springs (1987), Women with…
- Wildlife (work by Alston)
dance: Costume and stage sets in Western theatre dance: In Richard Alston’s Wildlife (1984) the geometrically shaped kites suspended from the flies actually inspired some of the dancers’ sharply angled movements as well as making them visually more striking in performance.
- wildlife conservation
bison: …American and Canadian cattlemen and conservationists resulted in the protection of the remaining animals in government preserves, zoos, and ranches on both sides of the border. The present commercial herds now total as many as 400,000 individuals. Some 31,000 bison are part of conservation herds made up of 20,000 plains…
- Wildlife Conservation Society
zoo: Function and purpose: The New York Zoological Society maintains an Institute for Research in Animal Behavior and, in Trinidad, the William Beebe Tropical Research Station. In Great Britain the Zoological Society of London maintains, in addition to a modern hospital and pathology laboratories, two general research institutes—the Nuffield Institute…
- Wildlife in America (work by Matthiessen)
Peter Matthiessen: …15 books of nonfiction, including Wildlife in America (1959), a history of the destruction of wildlife in North America; The Cloud Forest: A Chronicle of the South American Wilderness (1961); and Under the Mountain Wall: A Chronicle of Two Seasons in the Stone Age (1962), about his experiences as a…
- Wildman, Sir John (English agitator)
Sir John Wildman was an English agitator and Leveler associate who outlasted vicissitudes under three British kings and two protectors. Wildman was of obscure ancestry. Educated at Cambridge, he first came into prominence in October 1647, when he helped to write the first Agreement of the People.
- Wilds (South Carolina, United States)
Florence, city, seat (1889) of Florence county, northeastern South Carolina, U.S. Established in the 1850s as a rail junction and transfer point for the Wilmington and Manchester, the Northwestern, and the Cheraw and Darlington railroads, it was called Wilds for a judge in the town but later
- Wildspitze (mountain, Austria)
Ötztal Alps: …are snow- and glacier-covered, including Wildspitze (12,382 feet [3,774 metres]), the highest point both in the range and in the Austrian Tirol. The Ötztaler Ache, a tributary of the Inn River, divides the main part of the range to the southwest from the Stubaier Alpen section to the northeast. The…
- Wile E. Coyote (cartoon character)
Road Runner: …efforts of a coyote (Wile E. Coyote) to catch him.
- Wiler, Lake (lake, Switzerland)
lake: Chemical precipitates: In Switzerland, Lake Wiler (Wilersee) was treated by the removal of water just above the sediments during stagnation periods.
- Wilersee (lake, Switzerland)
lake: Chemical precipitates: In Switzerland, Lake Wiler (Wilersee) was treated by the removal of water just above the sediments during stagnation periods.
- Wiles, Andrew (British mathematician)
Andrew Wiles is a British mathematician who proved Fermat’s last theorem. In recognition, he was awarded a special silver plaque—he was beyond the traditional age limit of 40 years for receiving the gold Fields Medal—by the International Mathematical Union in 1998. He also received the Wolf Prize
- Wiles, Andrew John (British mathematician)
Andrew Wiles is a British mathematician who proved Fermat’s last theorem. In recognition, he was awarded a special silver plaque—he was beyond the traditional age limit of 40 years for receiving the gold Fields Medal—by the International Mathematical Union in 1998. He also received the Wolf Prize
- Wiles, Sir Andrew John (British mathematician)
Andrew Wiles is a British mathematician who proved Fermat’s last theorem. In recognition, he was awarded a special silver plaque—he was beyond the traditional age limit of 40 years for receiving the gold Fields Medal—by the International Mathematical Union in 1998. He also received the Wolf Prize
- Wiley Act (United States [1906])
Pure Food and Drug Act, in U.S. history, legislation passed in 1906 to ensure the sanitary preparation of consumable goods. The Pure Food and Drug Act required accurate ingredient labeling and prohibited the sale of adulterated and misbranded food and drugs in interstate commerce. As the first
- Wiley, Genie (American child)
Genie was an American child raised in social isolation and subject to severe abuse and neglect prior to being discovered by a social worker in 1970. The child, called Genie by scientists to protect her identity, was physically underdeveloped, incontinent, barely able to walk, and unable to speak
- Wiley, Harvey W. (American chemist)
Meat Inspection Act of 1906: Origins of reform: …in the 1880s, American chemist Harvey W. Wiley, chief of the Bureau of Chemistry of the USDA, issued reports noting the health hazards posed by the adulteration of processed foods such as canned meat and by chemicals used as preservatives and colouring agents. The Association of Official Agricultural Chemists (an…
- Wiley, Kehinde (American artist)
Kehinde Wiley is an American artist best known for portraits that feature African Americans in the traditional settings of Old Master paintings. Wiley’s childhood experiences in the South Central neighborhood of Los Angeles were enriched by his mother’s passion for education. At the age of 11, he
- Wiley, Susan (American child)
Genie was an American child raised in social isolation and subject to severe abuse and neglect prior to being discovered by a social worker in 1970. The child, called Genie by scientists to protect her identity, was physically underdeveloped, incontinent, barely able to walk, and unable to speak
- Wilfred of York (English saint)
Saint Wilfrid ; feast day October 12) was one of the greatest English saints, a monk and bishop who was outstanding in bringing about close relations between the Anglo-Saxon Church and the papacy. He devoted his life to establishing the observances of the Roman Church over those of the Celtic
- Wilfrid of York (English saint)
Saint Wilfrid ; feast day October 12) was one of the greatest English saints, a monk and bishop who was outstanding in bringing about close relations between the Anglo-Saxon Church and the papacy. He devoted his life to establishing the observances of the Roman Church over those of the Celtic
- Wilfrid, Saint (English saint)
Saint Wilfrid ; feast day October 12) was one of the greatest English saints, a monk and bishop who was outstanding in bringing about close relations between the Anglo-Saxon Church and the papacy. He devoted his life to establishing the observances of the Roman Church over those of the Celtic
- Wilfridian (British religious society)
Frederick William Faber: …hymnist, and founder of the Wilfridians, a religious society living in common without vows.
- Wilgus, William John (American engineer)
immersed tube: Wilgus in the Detroit River in 1903 for the Michigan Central Railroad. Wilgus dredged a trench in the riverbed, floated segments of steel tube into position, and sank them; the segments were locked together by divers and pumped out and could then be covered with…
- Wilhelm Alexander (grand duke of Luxembourg)
William IV was the grand duke of Luxembourg (1905–12), the eldest son of grand duke Adolf of Nassau. Falling severely ill soon after his accession, he eventually on March 19, 1908, had his consort Maria Anna of Braganza named regent, or governor (Statthalterin). Also, having no sons and wishing to
- Wilhelm der Weise (landgrave of Hesse-Kassel)
William IV was the landgrave (or count) of Hesse-Kassel from 1567 who was called “the Wise” because of his accomplishments in political economy and the natural sciences. The son of the landgrave Philip the Magnanimous, he participated with his brother-in-law Maurice of Saxony in the princely
- Wilhelm Ernst (duke of Weimar)
Johann Sebastian Bach: The Weimar period: Encouraged by Wilhelm Ernst, he concentrated on the organ during the first few years of his tenure. From Weimar, Bach occasionally visited Weissenfels; in February 1713 he took part in a court celebration there that included a performance of his first secular cantata, Was mir behagt, also…
- Wilhelm Friedrich Ludwig (emperor of Germany)
William I was a German emperor from 1871, as well as king of Prussia from 1861. He was a sovereign whose conscientiousness and self-restraint fitted him for collaboration with stronger statesmen in raising his monarchy and the house of Hohenzollern to predominance in Germany. He was the second son
- Wilhelm Gustloff (German ocean liner)
Wilhelm Gustloff, German ocean liner that was sunk by a Soviet submarine on January 30, 1945. An estimated 9,000 passengers were killed in the sinking, making it the greatest maritime disaster in history. The MV Gustloff was the first ship built specifically for the German Labour Front’s Kraft
- Wilhelm Heinrich (king of Great Britain)
William IV was the king of Great Britain and Ireland and king of Hanover from June 26, 1830. Personally opposed to parliamentary reform, he grudgingly accepted the epochal Reform Act of 1832, which, by transferring representation from depopulated “rotten boroughs” to industrialized districts,
- Wilhelm I (emperor of Germany)
William I was a German emperor from 1871, as well as king of Prussia from 1861. He was a sovereign whose conscientiousness and self-restraint fitted him for collaboration with stronger statesmen in raising his monarchy and the house of Hohenzollern to predominance in Germany. He was the second son
- Wilhelm II (emperor of Germany)
William II was the German emperor (kaiser) and king of Prussia from 1888 to the end of World War I in 1918, known for his frequently militaristic manner as well as for his vacillating policies. William was the eldest child of Crown Prince Frederick (later Emperor Frederick III) and of Victoria, the
- Wilhelm Meister’s Apprenticeship (bildungsroman by Goethe)
Wilhelm Meister’s Apprenticeship, classic bildungsroman by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, published in German in four volumes in 1795–96 as Wilhelm Meisters Lehrjahre. Wilhelm Meisters Wanderjahre (1821; published in final form, 1829; Wilhelm Meister’s Travels), Goethe’s final novel, can be considered
- Wilhelm Meister’s Years of Travel (work by Goethe)
German literature: Weimar Classicism: Goethe and Schiller: …continuation, Wilhelm Meisters Wanderjahre (1821–29; Wilhelm Meister’s Years of Travel), the notion of a significant destiny toward which the hero develops—inward compulsion finding direction through experience, the ego-driven goal of formation of the inner kernel of selfhood—gives way to a more modest ideal of restraint and self-control achieved through adapting…
- Wilhelm Meisters Lehrjahre (bildungsroman by Goethe)
Wilhelm Meister’s Apprenticeship, classic bildungsroman by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, published in German in four volumes in 1795–96 as Wilhelm Meisters Lehrjahre. Wilhelm Meisters Wanderjahre (1821; published in final form, 1829; Wilhelm Meister’s Travels), Goethe’s final novel, can be considered
- Wilhelm Meisters theatralische Sendung (novel by Goethe)
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe: First Weimar period (1776–86) of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe: …Wilhelm Meisters theatralische Sendung (The Theatrical Mission of Wilhelm Meister), each year until 1785. In a rough-and-tumble, ironic way, reminiscent of the English novelist Henry Fielding, it tells the story of a gifted young man who aims for stardom in a reformed German national theatrical culture. At first the…
- Wilhelm Meisters Wanderjahre (work by Goethe)
German literature: Weimar Classicism: Goethe and Schiller: …continuation, Wilhelm Meisters Wanderjahre (1821–29; Wilhelm Meister’s Years of Travel), the notion of a significant destiny toward which the hero develops—inward compulsion finding direction through experience, the ego-driven goal of formation of the inner kernel of selfhood—gives way to a more modest ideal of restraint and self-control achieved through adapting…
- Wilhelm of Holland (king of Germany)
William was a German king from Oct. 3, 1247, elected by the papal party in Germany as antiking in opposition to Conrad IV and subsequently gaining general recognition. As William II, he was also count of Holland, succeeding his father, Count Floris IV, in 1234. William was elected German king to
- Wilhelm Tell (play by Schiller)
William Tell, verse drama in five acts by German dramatist Friedrich Schiller, published and produced in 1804 as Wilhelm Tell. During the 15th century, in the Swiss canton of Uri, the legendary hero Wilhelm Tell leads the people of the forest cantons in rebellion against tyrannical Austrian rule.
- Wilhelm von Hirsau (German abbot)
William Of Hirsau was a German cleric, Benedictine abbot, and monastic reformer, the principal German advocate of Pope Gregory VII’s clerical reforms, which sought to eliminate clerical corruption and free ecclesiastical offices from secular control. William was sent as a child to the monastic