- Liu, Lin-Gun (Australian geophysicist)
high-pressure phenomena: Earth science: …understanding of deep-earth mineralogy when Lin-gun Liu of the Australian National University used a diamond-anvil cell to synthesize silicate perovskite, a dense form of the common mineral enstatite, MgSiO3. Subsequent studies by Liu revealed that many of the minerals believed to constitute the deep interior of the Earth transform to…
- Liu, Lucy (American actress)
femme fatale: …Nikita (1990), and Uma Thurman, Lucy Liu, Vivica A. Fox, and Darryl Hannah in Kill Bill (2003–04) are street-smart gunrunners, trained assassins, and martial arts experts. They are as physically strong as they are alluring and beautiful. In the live-action/animated comedy Who Framed Roger Rabbit (1988), the character of Jessica…
- Liu, Simu (Canadian actor, stuntperson, author, and advocate)
Simu Liu is a Canadian actor, stuntperson, author, and advocate. After spending many years as a moderately successful actor, Liu became a celebrity with the blockbuster Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings (2021). He portrayed the titular martial arts superhero and was the first actor of Asian
- Liu-chiu (archipelago, Taiwan)
P’eng-hu Islands, archipelago and hsien (county) of Taiwan. It consists of about 64 small islands that lie approximately 30 miles (50 km) west of the coast of mainland Taiwan, from which it is separated by the P’eng-hu Channel. Of volcanic origin, many of the islands consist of weathered basalt,
- Liu-chou (China)
Liuzhou, city, central Zhuang Autonomous Region of Guangxi, southern China. Liuzhou, the second largest city in Guangxi, is a natural communication centre, being situated at the confluence of several tributaries that form the Liu River, which flows southward into a tributary of the Xi River. In
- Liu-p’an Shan (mountains, China)
Liupan Mountains, mountain range in northern China extending southward from the Hui Autonomous Region of Ningxia across the eastern panhandle of Gansu province and into western Shaanxi province. The range is formed by the uplifted western edge of the structural basin that underlies the Loess
- Liu-Song dynasty (Chinese history)
Taoism: The great Southern masters: …portents in favor of the Liu-Song dynasty (420–479), in whose rulers Taoists complacently agreed to recognize the fulfillment of the old messianic prophesies and the legitimate continuation of the Han dynasty. Lu was frequently invited to the capital (present-day Nanjing), where the Chongxuguan (Abbey) was founded for him and served…
- Liu-t’iao Pien (wall, China)
Willow Palisade, ditch and embankment built across parts of southern Northeast China (historically called Manchuria) and planted with willows during the early Qing dynasty (1644–1911/12). Possibly from as early as 1000 bce, the Chinese (Han) inhabiting Manchuria primarily occupied a triangular area
- Liu-Tsu tan-ching (Chinese Buddhism)
Platform Sutra, important text from the Ch’an (Zen) school of Chinese Buddhism, most likely composed in the 8th century ce. It is attributed to the sixth patriarch of the Ch’an tradition, Hui-neng (638–713), although it is most likely the work of subsequent disciples who sought to legitimate their
- Liubech (Ukraine)
Russia: The rise of Kiev: …their Turkic allies, met at Liubech, north of Kiev, and agreed to divide the Kievan territory among themselves and their descendants; later, however, Vladimir II Monomakh made a briefly successful attempt (1113–25) to reunite the land of Rus.
- Liubertsy (Russia)
Lyubertsy, city, Moscow oblast (region), Russia. It lies in the greenbelt, southeast of Moscow city. Before the October Revolution in 1917 it was an agricultural centre, but its position at an important railway junction made it an attractive site for industry. In the early Soviet period, the
- Liubimov, Yury Petrovich (Soviet theatrical director)
Yury Petrovich Lyubimov was a Soviet theater director and actor noted for his two decades of somewhat experimental productions for the Taganka Theatre in Moscow. Lyubimov served in the Soviet army during World War II, and upon his release in 1946, he joined the company of the Yevgeny Vakhtangov
- Liudolf (duke of Swabia)
Liudolf was the duke of Swabia and son of the Holy Roman emperor Otto I, against whom he led a revolt. Liudolf, Otto’s son by his marriage to the English princess Eadgyth, was made duke of Swabia by his father in 950. In 952, feeling his inheritance rights threatened by Otto’s second marriage (to
- Liudolfing dynasty (German history)
Saxon Dynasty, ruling house of German kings (Holy Roman emperors) from 919 to 1024. It came to power when the Liudolfing duke of Saxony was elected German king as Henry I (later called the Fowler), in 919. Henry I’s son and successor, Otto I the Great (king 936–973, western emperor from 962), won a
- Liudprand (Lombard king)
Liutprand was a Lombard king of Italy whose long and prosperous reign was a period of expansion and consolidation for the Lombards. From his position as a Lombard chief, Liutprand gained the throne in 712, when revolution ended a succession of weak kings. He used to his advantage the Iconoclastic
- Liudprand of Cremona (Lombard bishop)
Liutprand of Cremona was a Lombard diplomat, historian, and bishop of Cremona whose chronicles are a major source for the history of the 10th century. A member of an aristocratic family, Liutprand grew up in Pavia, at the court of Hugh of Provence, king of Italy. When Hugh died in exile in 947,
- liufa (philosophy of painting)
art criticism: …century), who offered the “Six Principles” for great art—a major principle being the qi yun sheng dong (“spirit resonance, life-motion”)—and to literati, who wrote biographies of great artists. For these and other regional approaches to art evaluation and historiography, see art, African; arts, Central Asian; arts, East Asian; arts,
- Liukin, Anastasiya Valeryevna (American gymnast)
Nastia Liukin is an American gymnast who won five medals at the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing, more than any other gymnast at the Games. Liukin was born into a family of extraordinary gymnasts. Her Kazakh-born father and coach, Valery Lyukin, won four medals for the Soviet Union at the 1988 Olympic
- Liukin, Nastia (American gymnast)
Nastia Liukin is an American gymnast who won five medals at the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing, more than any other gymnast at the Games. Liukin was born into a family of extraordinary gymnasts. Her Kazakh-born father and coach, Valery Lyukin, won four medals for the Soviet Union at the 1988 Olympic
- Liulichang Market (market, Beijing, China)
Beijing: Commerce and finance: The restored Liulichang Market is located just south of the Heping Gate in the old outer city. The area acquired its name (which means “Glazier’s Shop”) from the colourful glazed tiles that were made there during the Ming dynasty, but in the latter part of the 18th…
- Liulin (ancient site, China)
China: 4th and 3rd millennia bce: In east China the Liulin and Huating sites in northern Jiangsu (first half of 4th millennium) represent regional cultures that derived in large part from that of Qingliangang. Upper strata also show strong affinities with contemporary Dawenkou sites in southern Shandong, northern Anhui, and northern Jiangsu. Dawenkou culture (mid-5th…
- Liupan Mountains (mountains, China)
Liupan Mountains, mountain range in northern China extending southward from the Hui Autonomous Region of Ningxia across the eastern panhandle of Gansu province and into western Shaanxi province. The range is formed by the uplifted western edge of the structural basin that underlies the Loess
- Liupan Shan (mountains, China)
Liupan Mountains, mountain range in northern China extending southward from the Hui Autonomous Region of Ningxia across the eastern panhandle of Gansu province and into western Shaanxi province. The range is formed by the uplifted western edge of the structural basin that underlies the Loess
- Liupanshui (China)
Guizhou: Settlement patterns: …larger and more populous is Liupanshui, a municipality created by combining the Liuzhi, Panxian, and Shuicheng special districts in Guizhou’s coal-rich western area. Most of the other cities are the seats of government and are the economic and communications centres for the various regions of the province.
- Liutiaobian (wall, China)
Willow Palisade, ditch and embankment built across parts of southern Northeast China (historically called Manchuria) and planted with willows during the early Qing dynasty (1644–1911/12). Possibly from as early as 1000 bce, the Chinese (Han) inhabiting Manchuria primarily occupied a triangular area
- Liutici (people)
Henry II: …made a pact with the Liutitian tribe against the Christian Bolesław, and he allowed the Liutitians to resist German missionaries east of the Elbe River. Henry was more interested in consolidating his own political power than in spreading Christianity. Supported by his tribal allies, he waged several campaigns against Poland,…
- Liutprand (Lombard king)
Liutprand was a Lombard king of Italy whose long and prosperous reign was a period of expansion and consolidation for the Lombards. From his position as a Lombard chief, Liutprand gained the throne in 712, when revolution ended a succession of weak kings. He used to his advantage the Iconoclastic
- Liutprand of Cremona (Lombard bishop)
Liutprand of Cremona was a Lombard diplomat, historian, and bishop of Cremona whose chronicles are a major source for the history of the 10th century. A member of an aristocratic family, Liutprand grew up in Pavia, at the court of Hugh of Provence, king of Italy. When Hugh died in exile in 947,
- Liutprando (Lombard king)
Liutprand was a Lombard king of Italy whose long and prosperous reign was a period of expansion and consolidation for the Lombards. From his position as a Lombard chief, Liutprand gained the throne in 712, when revolution ended a succession of weak kings. He used to his advantage the Iconoclastic
- Liuva (Visigoth king)
Leovigild: Another brother, Liuva, ruled in Septimania, but after his death (572) Leovigild became sole king. Throughout his reign he was constantly at war. He took (569) Leon and Zamora from the Suebi in the northwest and Córdoba (571–572) from the Greeks in the south. One of Leovigild’s…
- Liuyi Jushi (Chinese author and statesman)
Ouyang Xiu was a Chinese poet, historian, and statesman of the Song dynasty who reintroduced the simple “ancient style” in Chinese literature and sought to reform Chinese political life through principles of classical Confucianism. Ouyang Xiu’s father, a judge in Mianyang, died when Ouyang was
- Liuzhou (China)
Liuzhou, city, central Zhuang Autonomous Region of Guangxi, southern China. Liuzhou, the second largest city in Guangxi, is a natural communication centre, being situated at the confluence of several tributaries that form the Liu River, which flows southward into a tributary of the Xi River. In
- Liv (people)
Baltic states: Early Middle Ages: Their kinsmen, the Livs, inhabited four major areas in northern Latvia and northern Courland. The western Balts were divided into at least eight recognizable groupings. The westernmost, the Prussians, formed 10 principalities in what subsequently became East Prussia. The Jotvingians and Galindians inhabited an area to the south
- LIV Golf Investments (Saudi-backed company)
Phil Mickelson: LIV tour and lawsuit: …support of the Saudi-backed company LIV Golf Investments, which was launching a tour that offered multimillion-dollar paydays to PGA players. Some claimed that LIV was an attempt by the Saudi government to “sportswash” its human rights violations. Mickelson told a reporter that, although he thought the Saudis were “scary” and…
- Livadia, Treaty of (China-Russia [1879])
Ili crisis: …was duped into signing the Treaty of Livadia (October 1879), which returned Ili in name but actually allowed almost three-quarters of it to remain in Russian hands. In addition, the Russians were given the right to establish consulates in seven key places and were promised an indemnity of 5,000,000 rubles.
- Livadiya Palace (building, Yalta, Ukraine)
Yalta: …met at Yalta in the Livadiya Palace in what became known as the Yalta Conference. Pop. (2001) 81,654; (2005 est.) 80,140.
- Live 8 (music event, Hyde Park, London [2005])
Pink Floyd: Split and later albums: …a single performance at the Live 8 benefit concert in 2005. Gilmour and Mason later used recordings made with Wright (who died in 2008) to create what they said was the final Pink Floyd album, The Endless River (2014). Pink Floyd was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of…
- Live a Little, Love a Little (film by Taurog [1968])
Norman Taurog: Elvis movies: Trouble (1967), Speedway (1968), and Live a Little, Love a Little (1968).
- Live Aid (benefit concert [1985])
Live Aid, benefit concert held simultaneously at Wembley Stadium in London and JFK Stadium in Philadelphia on July 13, 1985. Organized by Boomtown Rats front man Bob Geldof and Ultravox vocalist Midge Ure, the event drew an estimated 1.5 billion television viewers and raised millions of dollars for
- Live at the Apollo (album by Brown)
James Brown: …and in concert” albums—his landmark Live at the Apollo (1963), which stayed on the charts for 66 weeks, and his 1964 follow-up, Pure Dynamite! Live at the Royal, which charted for 22 weeks.
- Live at the Old Waldorf (album by Television)
Television: …catalog were released, along with Live at the Old Waldorf, a concert album that captured the group at the end of its 1978 tour. Verlaine also pursued a solo career.
- live birth (biology)
viviparity, retention and growth of the fertilized egg within the maternal body until the young animal, as a larva or newborn, is capable of independent existence. The growing embryo derives continuous nourishment from the mother, usually through a placenta or similar structure. This is the case in
- Live Bodies (novel by Gee)
Maurice Gee: Prowlers to Access Road: …in New Zealand; and in Live Bodies (1998), which tells the story of an antifascist Austrian Jew who is interned at Somes Island in Wellington Harbour during World War II.
- Live Bullet (album by Seger)
Bob Seger: …in Seger’s record sales, with Live Bullet (1976) staying on the Billboard charts for more than three years and commencing a string of seven consecutive Top Ten albums, including Night Moves (1976), Against the Wind (1980), and Like a Rock (1986).
- Live by Night (film by Affleck [2016])
Ben Affleck: Film directing: …to the director’s chair for Live by Night (2016), a Prohibition-era drama that he adapted from a Lehane novel. Affleck also starred in the film, playing a gangster. In 2023 he received widespread praise for Air, a sports drama bout how Nike signed Michael Jordan to a historic endorsement deal.…
- Live Flesh (film by Almodóvar [1997])
Pedro Almodóvar: Films: Carne trémula (1997; Live Flesh), based on a Ruth Rendell novel and starring Javier Bardem, examines the tangled consequences of an accidental gunshot. It was also the first of numerous Almodóvar films to feature Penélope Cruz.
- Live for Life (film by Lelouch [1967])
Claude Lelouch: …directed Vivre pour vivre (1967; Live for Life), Mariage (1974; Marriage), Robert et Robert (1978; “Robert and Robert”), and À nous deux (1979; Us Two). For Toute une vie (1974; And Now My Love), he and Uytterhoeven received Oscar nominations for their original screenplay. Lelouch’s later notable movies included the…
- Live Free or Die Hard (film by Wiseman [2007])
Bruce Willis: …Hard with a Vengeance (1995), Live Free or Die Hard (2007), and A Good Day to Die Hard (2013).
- Live in London (album by Cohen)
Leonard Cohen: …was recorded for the album Live in London (2009), a two-disc set which proved that at age 73 Cohen was as vibrant and vital as ever. The aptly titled Old Ideas (2012) was a bluesy exploration of familiar Cohen themes—spirituality, love, and loss—that eschewed the synthesized melodies of much of…
- Live in No Shoes Nation (album by Chesney)
Kenny Chesney: …and in 2017 he released Live in No Shoes Nation, his eighth album to reach the number-one spot on the Billboard 200 chart. His later recordings included Songs for the Saints (2018) and Here and Now (2020).
- Live Like Pigs (play by Arden)
John Arden: His next play, Live Like Pigs (1958), was set on a housing estate. This was followed by his best-known work, Serjeant Musgrave’s Dance (1959), set in a colliery town in 1860–80. Both plays caused controversy.
- Live like You Were Dying (album by McGraw)
Tim McGraw: …2004 McGraw released the album Live Like You Were Dying. Its title song, penned by Nashville songwriters Craig Wiseman and Tim Nichols, was a tribute to McGraw’s father, who had died of brain cancer that January. That same year, in a rare collaboration between a contemporary country singer and a…
- live load
bridge: Live load and dead load: The primary function of a bridge is to carry traffic loads: heavy trucks, cars, and trains. Engineers must estimate the traffic loading. On short spans, it is possible that the maximum conceivable load will be achieved—that is to say, on…
- Live MCMXCIII (album by the Velvet Underground)
John Cale: Solo career: …and recorded the concert album Live MCMXCIII, which includes the classic Velvet Underground songs “Venus in Furs” and “All Tomorrow’s Parties,” among others.
- Live Nation Entertainment (American corporation)
rock: Rock in the early 21st century: …music corporation emerged, led by Live Nation, the live-music division of Clear Channel.
- live oak (plant)
live oak, any of several species of North American evergreen oak trees . Live oaks derive their name from the fact that they have foliage year round and because lumbered or injured trees send up many sprouts, which also produce sprouts if cut themselves. Specifically, the term refers to the
- Live or Die (poetry by Sexton)
Anne Sexton: Live or Die, a further record of mental illness, won the 1967 Pulitzer Prize for poetry and was followed by, among others, Love Poems (1969), Transformations (1971), The Book of Folly (1972), and The Death Notebooks (1974).
- live sharksucker (fish)
remora: The live sharksucker, or slender suckerfish (Echeneis naucrates), is the longest, growing up to 110 cm (43.3 inches) in length; the white suckerfish, or white remora (Remora albescens), is the shortest, the largest individuals measuring only 30 cm as adults. Remoras feed on the leavings of…
- Live Through This (album by Hole)
Courtney Love: …release of Hole’s second album, Live Through This (1994). Two months later Pfaff died of a heroin overdose. In 1998 Hole released Celebrity Skin, a commercial and critical success, but the group disbanded in May 2002.
- live video broadcasting
livestreaming, real-time transmission of information over the Internet in video format. Livestreaming is considered a form of broadcasting, with media intended for reception by the general public on a global scale. It differs from other forms of video viewing on the Internet in that video files are
- live video streaming
livestreaming, real-time transmission of information over the Internet in video format. Livestreaming is considered a form of broadcasting, with media intended for reception by the general public on a global scale. It differs from other forms of video viewing on the Internet in that video files are
- Live with Kelly and Ryan (American television program)
Ryan Seacrest: …Kelly, which was subsequently renamed Live with Kelly and Ryan. He left that show in 2023, but in 2024 took over from Pat Sajak as the host of the popular game show Wheel of Fortune.
- Live! With Kelly and Michael (American television program)
Michael Strahan: …of the syndicated talk show Live! With Kelly and Michael; with Ripa, he later won two Daytime Emmy Awards for outstanding entertainment talk show host (2015 and 2016). He left the program in 2016 to cohost Good Morning America, where he had occasionally appeared since 2014. Also in 2016 he…
- Live! With Regis and Kathie Lee (American television program)
Regis Philbin: …program was nationally syndicated as Live! With Regis and Kathie Lee. Focusing on celebrity interviews and home-oriented advice, Live! attracted one of the fastest-growing American talk-show audiences in the early 1990s. After Gifford left the program in July 2000, Philbin continued to host the popular morning talk show. It was…
- live-ball era (baseball history)
baseball: League formation: …1920, ushering in the “live-ball era” (the period of inside-game dominance was also known as the “dead-ball era”). The inside game was a style of play that emphasized pitching, speed, and batsmanship. Bunting was very common, and doubles and triples were more heralded than home runs (which during this…
- live-bearer (fish)
live-bearer, any of the numerous live-bearing topminnows of the family Poeciliidae (order Atheriniformes), found only in the New World and most abundantly in Mexico and Central America. Most of the many species are rather elongated, and all are small, the largest growing to only about 15
- live-bearing mammal (mammal subclass)
mammal: Classification: Subclass Theria (live-bearing mammals) Metatheria (marsupials) More than 330 species in 7 orders. Order Diprotodontia (kangaroos, koalas, wombats, possums, and kin)
- live-forever (plant)
houseleek, (genus Sempervivum), genus of about 30 species of low-growing succulent plants in the stonecrop family (Crassulaceae), native to Europe, Morocco, and western Asia. The name houseleek refers to the growth of some species on thatched roofs in Europe; live-forever indicates their hardiness
- live-roller conveyor (mechanical device)
conveyor: Live-roller conveyors are gravity-roller conveyors that are power driven by means of a belt snubbed against the underpart of the rolls or by a chain driving sprockets attached to the rolls.
- Lively, Blake (American actress)
Blake Lively is an American actress who first garnered attention for her role in the coming-of-age comedy-drama The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants (2005). She then became a star with her portrayal of “It” girl Serena van der Woodsen in the TV series Gossip Girl (2007–12), about the scandalous
- Lively, Dame Penelope Margaret (British author)
Penelope Lively is a British writer of well-plotted novels and short stories that stress the significance of memory and historical continuity. After spending her childhood in Egypt, Lively was sent to London at the age of 12 when her parents were divorced. She graduated from St. Anne’s College,
- Lively, Penelope (British author)
Penelope Lively is a British writer of well-plotted novels and short stories that stress the significance of memory and historical continuity. After spending her childhood in Egypt, Lively was sent to London at the age of 12 when her parents were divorced. She graduated from St. Anne’s College,
- liveness (acoustics)
acoustics: Acoustic criteria: “Liveness” refers directly to reverberation time. A live room has a long reverberation time and a dead room a short reverberation time. “Intimacy” refers to the feeling that listeners have of being physically close to the performing group. A room is generally judged intimate when…
- Livens, Johannis (Dutch painter)
Jan Lievens was a versatile painter and printmaker whose style derived from both the Dutch and Flemish schools of Baroque art. A contemporary of Rembrandt, he was a pupil of Joris van Schooten (1616–18) and of Rembrandt’s teacher Pieter Lastman in Amsterdam (1618–20). After residing in Leiden for a
- liver (anatomy)
liver, the largest gland in the body, a spongy mass of wedge-shaped lobes that has many metabolic and secretory functions. The liver secretes bile, a digestive fluid; metabolizes proteins, carbohydrates, and fats; stores glycogen, vitamins, and other substances; synthesizes blood-clotting factors;
- liver cancer (pathology)
liver cancer, any of several forms of disease characterized by tumours in the liver; benign liver tumours remain in the liver, whereas malignant tumours are, by definition, cancerous. Most malignant liver tumours are hepatomas, also called hepatocellular carcinomas (HCCs), which begin in the
- liver cell (anatomy)
digestive system disease: Liver: …the three functional components: the hepatocyte (liver cell), the bile secretory (cholangiolar) apparatus, or the blood vascular system. Although an agent tends to cause initial damage in only one of these areas, the resulting disease may in time also involve other components. Thus, although viral hepatitis (inflammation of the liver)…
- liver disease
metabolic disease: Fatty acid oxidation defects: …with LCHAD deficiency can induce liver disease during pregnancy in a mother who is a heterozygous carrier for the condition. This appears to be due to a combination of the metabolic demands of pregnancy, the lack of enzyme activity in the fetus, and the reduced activity of the enzyme in…
- liver fluke (Fasciola hepatica)
fascioliasis: …caused by the liver fluke Fasciola hepatica, a small parasitic flatworm that lives in the bile ducts and causes a condition known as liver rot.
- liver fluke (trematode group)
liver fluke, any of certain parasitic flatworms that invade the liver of the host animal. See
- liver function test (medicine)
liver function test, any laboratory procedure that measures and assesses various aspects of liver function. Because of the diversity of liver function and the varied and complicated metabolic processes that may be affected by disease states, more than 100 tests have been devised to test liver
- Liver Is the Cock’s Comb, The (painting by Gorky)
Arshile Gorky: In such works as The Liver Is the Cock’s Comb (1944) and How My Mother’s Embroidered Apron Unfolds in My Life (1944), biomorphic forms that suggest plants or human viscera float over an indeterminate background of melting colours. The erotic significance of the loosely painted forms and elegant, fine…
- liver rot (disease)
fascioliasis: …causes a condition known as liver rot.
- liver sinusoid (anatomy)
portal vein: In the liver the blood from the portal vein flows through a network of microscopic vessels called sinusoids in which the blood is relieved of worn-out red cells, bacteria, and other debris and in which nutrients are added to the blood or removed from it for storage.…
- liver transplant (medicine)
transplant: The liver: The liver is a complicated organ that produces clotting factors and many other vital substances in the blood and that removes many wastes and toxic by-products from the circulation. It is, in effect, a chemical factory. The two categories of fatal liver disease that…
- Liverdun, Treaty of (France [1632])
Charles III: …and Bar-le-Duc and to the Treaty of Liverdun (1632), by which Louis XIII occupied Stenay, Jometz, and Clermont. In 1633 Charles was forced to cede his capital, Nancy, to France for four years. He then abdicated in the name of his brother, Cardinal Francis (1634), and joined the Germans fighting…
- liverleaf (plant)
hepatica, (genus Hepatica), any of about seven species of small herbaceous plants of the buttercup family (Ranunculaceae) that grow in shady wooded areas of the north temperate zone. The plants are stemless low perennials with three-lobed leaves that remain green over winter. The flowers are
- Livermore (California, United States)
Livermore, city, Alameda county, western California, U.S. It is situated on the eastern edge of the Livermore-Amador Valley, 33 miles (53 km) southeast of Oakland. The area was originally inhabited by Costanoan Indians. Located partly on the site of the Rancho Las Positas (granted to Robert
- Livermore, Mary Ashton Rice (American activist)
Mary Ashton Rice Livermore was an American suffragist and reformer who believed that woman being able to vote would help address social issues. s Mary Rice attended the Female Seminary in Charlestown, Massachusetts, where she remained to teach for two years after her graduation in 1836. From 1839
- livermorium (chemical element)
livermorium (Lv), artificially produced transuranium element of atomic number 116. In 2000 scientists at the Joint Institute for Nuclear Research in Dubna, Russia, and the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in Livermore, California, announced the production of atoms of livermorium when
- Liverpool (former town, Nova Scotia, Canada)
Liverpool, former town, Queens county, southeastern Nova Scotia, Canada, lying at the mouth of the Mersey River, 88 miles (142 km) west-southwest of Halifax. In 1996 it amalgamated with Queens Municipal District to form the Region of Queens Municipality. The site was called Ogumkiqueok by the
- Liverpool (England, United Kingdom)
Liverpool, city and seaport, northwestern England, forming the nucleus of the metropolitan county of Merseyside in the historic county of Lancashire. The city proper, which is a metropolitan borough of Merseyside, forms an irregular crescent along the north shore of the Mersey estuary a few miles
- Liverpool 1980s overview
A decade and a half after the Beatles emerged from the Cavern, a new generation of Liverpudlian music arose from the subterranean shabbiness of Eric’s Club, run by Roger Eagle from 1976 until it closed in 1980. Less a distinctive sound than an attitude, the Liverpool beat of the late 1970s and ’80s
- Liverpool and Manchester Railway (British railway)
George Stephenson: When the Liverpool-Manchester line was nearing completion in 1829, a competition was held for locomotives; Stephenson’s new engine, the Rocket, which he built with his son, Robert, won with a speed of 36 miles (58 km) per hour. Eight locomotives were used when the Liverpool-Manchester line opened…
- Liverpool Anglican Cathedral (cathedral, Liverpool, England, United Kingdom)
Sir Giles Gilbert Scott: …commission being for the new Liverpool Anglican Cathedral. The construction of this massive Gothic structure in red sandstone, begun in 1904, spanned Scott’s entire working life and was completed only in 1980 by two of his associates, F.G. Thomas and R.A. Pickney. He was knighted after the consecration ceremony in…
- Liverpool Care Pathway for the Dying Patient (medicine)
palliative care: Developments in palliative care: …by developments such as the Liverpool Care Pathway for the Dying Patient and the Gold Standards Framework in the United Kingdom and by groups such as the National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization in the United States, Palliative Care Australia, and the Indian Association of Palliative Care in India. The…
- Liverpool delft (pottery)
Liverpool delft, tin-glazed earthenware made from about 1710 to about 1760 in Liverpool, Eng., which, along with Bristol and London (Southwark and Lambeth), was one of the three main centres of English delftware. Some of the wares produced at Liverpool are similar to those of Bristol and London:
- Liverpool FC (English football club)
Liverpool FC, English professional football (soccer) club based in Liverpool. It is the most successful English team in European football tournament history, having won six European Cup/Champions League trophies. The club has also won the English top-division league title 19 times. Everton FC was
- Liverpool Football Club (English football club)
Liverpool FC, English professional football (soccer) club based in Liverpool. It is the most successful English team in European football tournament history, having won six European Cup/Champions League trophies. The club has also won the English top-division league title 19 times. Everton FC was
- Liverpool Metropolitan Cathedral (cathedral, Liverpool, England, United Kingdom)
5 Historic Buildings in Liverpool: Liverpool Metropolitan Cathedral: (Eddy Rhead) Until the erection of today’s popular 1960s building, Roman Catholics in Liverpool had no true cathedral in which to worship. Edward Welby Pugin, son of the more famous Augustus, was commissioned to design a cathedral in 1853 but only part of it…