- Otrante, Joseph Fouché, duc d’ (French statesman)
Joseph Fouché, duc d’Otrante was a French statesman and organizer of the police, whose efficiency and opportunism enabled him to serve every government from 1792 to 1815. Fouché was educated by the Oratorians at Nantes and Paris but was not ordained a priest. In 1791 the Oratorian order was
- Otranto (Italy)
Otranto, town and archiepiscopal see, Puglia (Apulia) region, southeastern Italy, on the east coast of the Salentine Peninsula (the “heel” of Italy), on the Strait of Otranto (40 miles [64 km] wide), opposite Albania. It is the easternmost town in Italy and is an old port of communication with
- Otranto, Strait of (Mediterranean Sea)
Adriatic Sea: The Strait of Otranto at its southeasterly limit links it with the Ionian Sea. It is about 500 miles (800 km) long with an average width of 100 miles, a maximum depth of 4,035 feet (1,324 metres), and an area of 50,590 sq mi (131,050 sq…
- Otras inquisiciones (1937–1952) (work by Borges)
Jorge Luis Borges: Life: …essays, Otras inquisiciones (1937–1952) (Other Inquisitions, 1937–1952), revealed him at his analytic best. When Perón was deposed in 1955, Borges became director of the national library, an honorific position, and also professor of English and American literature at the University of Buenos Aires. By this time, Borges suffered from…
- Otrepyev, Grigory Yury Bogdanovich (Russian pretender)
False Dmitry: …Boris Godunov succeeded him, the first False Dmitry appeared and challenged Godunov’s right to the throne. The first pretender is considered by many historians to have been Grigory (Yury) Bogdanovich Otrepyev, a member of the gentry who had frequented the house of the Romanovs before becoming the monk Grigory and…
- Otric (10th-century teacher)
Sylvester II: Early life and clerical career: …fame aroused the jealousy of Otric, master of the cathedral school at Magdeburg in Saxony (presently in Germany), who denounced Gerbert to Emperor Otto II. In December 980 Otto provoked a debate in Ravenna between Gerbert and Otric on the subject of classifying knowledge. The vehement argument that resulted was…
- Otro Canto (poetry by Castillo)
Ana Castillo: Castillo’s first collection of poems, Otro Canto (1977), was published as a chapbook. In 1979, shortly after receiving an M.A. in social sciences from the University of Chicago, she published a second chapbook, The Invitation, in which female speakers describe the experience of the erotic. Castillo’s work draws on the…
- otro rostro del peronísmo, El (work by Sabato)
Ernesto Sábato: …Perón in 1955, Sábato published El otro rostro del peronismo (1956; “The Other Face of Peronism”), which is an attempt to study the historical and political causes of the violence and unrest of Perón’s rule. The essay “El caso Sábato” (1956; “The Sábato Case”) is a plea for reconciliation of…
- Otrochestvo (work by Tolstoy)
Leo Tolstoy: First publications of Leo Tolstoy: … he soon added Otrochestvo (1854; Boyhood) and Yunost (1857; Youth). A number of stories center on a single semiautobiographical character, Dmitry Nekhlyudov, who later reappeared as the hero of Tolstoy’s novel Resurrection. In “Lyutsern” (1857; “Lucerne”), Tolstoy uses the diary form first to relate an incident, then to reflect on…
- Otsego (county, New York, United States)
Otsego, county, central New York state, U.S., comprising a rugged upland region bordered by the Unadilla River to the west and the Susquehanna River to the southwest. Originating in Otsego Lake in the northern part of the county, the Susquehanna is one of the longest rivers of the Eastern Seaboard.
- Ōtsu (Japan)
Ōtsu, capital, Shiga ken (prefecture), southern Honshu, Japan, on the shore of Lake Biwa. A castle town established by Toyotomi Hideyoshi in the 16th century, it is situated at the junction of ancient highways, including the Tōkaidō (Eastern Sea Highway). Ōtsu has long been a gateway to Kyōto and a
- Ott, Mel (American baseball player, manager, and broadcaster)
Mel Ott was an American professional baseball player, manager, and broadcaster who played his entire 22-year career with the New York Giants (1926–47). Ott had a unique batting stance with an extremely high and prolonged leg-kick, which helped the slight, 5-foot 9-inch (1.75-metre) outfielder
- Ott, Melvin Thomas (American baseball player, manager, and broadcaster)
Mel Ott was an American professional baseball player, manager, and broadcaster who played his entire 22-year career with the New York Giants (1926–47). Ott had a unique batting stance with an extremely high and prolonged leg-kick, which helped the slight, 5-foot 9-inch (1.75-metre) outfielder
- ottava rima (poetic form)
ottava rima, Italian stanza form composed of eight 11-syllable lines, rhyming abababcc. It originated in the late 13th and early 14th centuries and was developed by Tuscan poets for religious verse and drama and in troubadour songs. The form appeared in Spain and Portugal in the 16th century. It
- Ottaviani, Alfredo (Italian cardinal)
Pius XII: After World War II: …hands of conservative cardinals, including Alfredo Ottaviani, head of the Holy Office. In 1952 Luigi Gedda, president of Catholic Action, fearing that the Christian Democrats might lose the municipal elections in Rome, proposed a Christian Democratic coalition with the parties of the right, an idea rejected by Alcide De Gasperi,…
- Ottaviano (pope)
John XII was the pope, the leader of the Roman Catholic Church, from 955 to 964. He was the youngest pope in history. He was the only son of Duke Alberic II of Spoleto, then ruler of Rome, who ordered Octavian’s election (December 16, 955) as pope when he was only about 18 years of age. The young
- Ottaviano de Monticelli (antipope [1159–1164])
Victor (IV) was an antipope from 1159 to 1164 and the second antipope designated as Victor IV. He was the first of four antipopes established against Pope Alexander III by the Holy Roman emperor Frederick I Barbarossa. (In adopting his papal name, he ignored the antipope Victor of 1138.) Made
- Ottawa (national capital, Canada)
Ottawa, city, capital of Canada, located in southeastern Ontario. In the eastern extreme of the province, Ottawa is situated on the south bank of the Ottawa River across from Gatineau, Quebec, at the confluence of the Ottawa (Outaouais), Gatineau, and Rideau rivers. The Ottawa River (some 790 miles
- Ottawa (Kansas, United States)
Ottawa, city, seat (1864) of Franklin county, eastern Kansas, U.S. It lies on the Marais des Cygnes River. Ottawa was founded in 1864 near the Ottawa Indian Baptist Mission, which had been established in 1837 on lands given (1832) to the Ottawa Indians in exchange for their Ohio lands. During the
- Ottawa (Illinois, United States)
Ottawa, city, seat (1831) of La Salle county, north-central Illinois, U.S. It lies at the confluence of the Fox and Illinois rivers, about 80 miles (130 km) southwest of Chicago. The site was inhabited by Illinois Indians when it was visited by French explorers Jacques Marquette and Louis Jolliet
- Ottawa (people)
Ottawa, Algonquian-speaking North American Indians whose original territory focused on the Ottawa River, the French River, and Georgian Bay, in present northern Michigan, U.S., and southeastern Ontario and southwestern Quebec, Canada. According to tradition, the Ottawa, Ojibwa, and Potawatomi were
- Ottawa Agreements (British history)
Ottawa Agreements, trade policies, based on the system of imperial preference, negotiated between the United Kingdom and Commonwealth nations in 1932. See imperial
- Ottawa Convention (international treaty)
Jan Egeland: …represented Norway in negotiating the Ottawa Treaty (1997) to ban land mines. From 1999 to 2001 he was a special adviser on Colombia to UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan, who on June 6, 2003, appointed him undersecretary-general for humanitarian affairs and emergency relief coordinator.
- Ottawa Redblacks (Canadian football team)
Canadian Football League: …Division are the Hamilton Tiger-Cats, Ottawa Redblacks, Montreal Alouettes, and Toronto Argonauts.
- Ottawa River (river, Canada)
Ottawa River, river in east-central Canada, the chief tributary of the St. Lawrence River. It rises in the Laurentian Plateau of western Quebec and flows swiftly westward to Lake Timiskaming and then southeastward, forming for most of its course the Quebec–Ontario provincial border before it joins
- Ottawa Senators (Canadian hockey team)
Ottawa Senators, Canadian professional ice hockey team based in Ottawa that plays in the Eastern Conference of the National Hockey League (NHL). The Senators have won one Eastern Conference championship (2007). The Senators made their debut as an expansion team in 1992, taking their nickname from
- Ottawa Treaty (international treaty)
Jan Egeland: …represented Norway in negotiating the Ottawa Treaty (1997) to ban land mines. From 1999 to 2001 he was a special adviser on Colombia to UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan, who on June 6, 2003, appointed him undersecretary-general for humanitarian affairs and emergency relief coordinator.
- Ottawa Valley (region, Canada)
Canada: The Great Lakes–St. Lawrence lowlands: …Axis, the lowlands embrace the Ottawa valley and the St. Lawrence valley to a point some 70 miles (110 km) downstream from Quebec city. During the last glacial period, this area was inundated by ocean water, known as the Champlain Sea, which produced a very flat plain. The level plain…
- Ottendorfer, Anna Sartorius Uhl (German-American publisher and philanthropist)
Anna Sartorius Uhl Ottendorfer was a publisher and philanthropist who helped establish a major German-American newspaper and contributed liberally to German-American institutions. Anna Sartorius received a scanty education. About 1836 she immigrated to the United States and settled in New York
- Ottepel (work by Ehrenburg)
Ilya Grigoryevich Ehrenburg: …produced the novel Ottepel (1954; The Thaw), which provoked intense controversy in the Soviet press, and the title of which has become descriptive of that period in Soviet literature. It dealt with Soviet life in a more realistic way than had the officially approved literature of the preceding period. In…
- otter (mammal)
otter, (subfamily Lutrinae), any of 13 species of semiaquatic mammals that belong to the weasel family (Mustelidae) and are noted for their playful behaviour. The otter has a lithe and slender body with short legs, a strong neck, and a long flattened tail that helps propel the animal gracefully
- otter civet (mammal)
civet: The Sunda otter civet (Cynogale bennetti), the African civet (Civettictis civetta), and the rare Congo water civet (Genetta piscivora) are semiaquatic. Civets feed on small animals and on vegetable matter. Their litters usually consist of two or three young.
- Otter Creek (river, Vermont, United States)
Otter Creek, river originating at Mount Tabor, southern Vermont, U.S., that flows about 100 miles (160 km) north and west to Lake Champlain, near Ferrisburg. It is the longest river in the state. In its upper course, Otter Creek flows between the Taconic Range and the Green
- otter shrew (mammal)
otter shrew, (subfamily Potamogalinae), any of three species of amphibious and carnivorous tropical African insectivores that are not “true” shrews (family Soricidae). All are nocturnal and den in cavities and burrows in stream banks; tunnel entrances are underwater. Otter shrews have small eyes
- otter trawl (fishing equipment)
conservation: In the oceans: The otter trawl is the most widely used bottom-fishing gear. As it is dragged forward, a pair of flat plates called otter boards—one on each side of the trawl net and weighing several tons—spreads horizontally to keep the mouth of the trawl open; at the same…
- Otter, Anne Sofie von (Swedish singer)
Anne Sofie von Otter is a Swedish mezzo-soprano known especially for her effective singing of young male operatic roles and for her performance of German lieder. Von Otter was the daughter of a diplomat and grew up in Stockholm, Bonn (then the capital of West Germany), and London. She studied at
- Otter, William D. (Canadian army officer)
William D. Otter was a Canadian army officer. He joined the army and helped suppress the Riel (North West) Rebellion (1885). He became the first commanding officer of the Royal Canadian regiment of infantry (1893) and led a Canadian force in the South African War (1899–1902). He was appointed chief
- Otter, William Dillon (Canadian army officer)
William D. Otter was a Canadian army officer. He joined the army and helped suppress the Riel (North West) Rebellion (1885). He became the first commanding officer of the Royal Canadian regiment of infantry (1893) and led a Canadian force in the South African War (1899–1902). He was appointed chief
- otter-cat (mammal)
jaguarundi, (Puma yagouaroundi), small, unspotted New World cat (family Felidae), also known as the otter-cat because of its otterlike appearance and swimming ability. The jaguarundi is native to forested and brushy regions, especially those near water, from South America to the southwestern United
- otterhound (breed of dog)
otterhound, dog breed first described in the 14th century. Developed in England to hunt otters on both land and water, it resembles a rough-coated bloodhound and has a large head, pendulous ears, and a dense, shaggy, water-resistant coat. Its webbed feet make it an excellent swimmer. It stands 24
- Otters, Algae, and Plants, Oh My
Explore other Botanize! episodes and read about sea otters, tropic cascades, kelp, and eelgrass. Melissa Petruzzello: Hello again. You are listening to Botanize!, and I’m your host, Melissa Petruzzello, Encyclopædia Britannica’s plant and environmental science editor. In my first episode, I
- Ottilien (river, Papua New Guinea)
Ramu River, river on the island of New Guinea, Papua New Guinea, southwestern Pacific Ocean. One of the longest rivers in the country, it rises in the east on the Kratke Range and flows northwest through the great Central Depression, where it receives numerous streams draining the Bismarck (south)
- Öttingen–Schrattenhofen faience (pottery)
Öttingen–Schrattenhofen faience, German tin-glazed earthenware made in Bavaria in the 18th and 19th centuries. The factory was first established at Öttingen in 1735 and two years later was moved to Schrattenhofen. The ware is characteristic of much produced in Bavaria—e.g., cylindrical beer
- Otto (Austrian duke)
Austria: Accession of the Habsburgs: …the brothers Albert II and Otto, Habsburg Austria received its first important accession of territory. In 1335 Kärnten and Carniola were acquired after the death of Henry of Gorizia, while, with the help of Luxembourg troops, Henry’s daughter Margaret Maultasch managed to retain the Tirol. Albert and his brother Otto…
- Otto (king of Bavaria)
Otto was an insane king of Bavaria, the younger son of King Maximilian II. Otto fell insane in 1872 and, from 1880 onward, had to be kept under strict surveillance. When his elder brother, King Louis II, likewise insane, died in 1886, he became king under the regency first of his uncle Luitpold,
- Otto (king of Greece)
Otto was the first king of the modern Greek state (1832–62), who governed his country autocratically until he was forced to become a constitutional monarch in 1843. Attempting to increase Greek territory at the expense of Turkey, he failed and was overthrown. The second son of King Louis I of
- Otto cycle (engineering)
four-stroke cycle, principle by which most modern automobile engines function. As illustrated by the figure, while the inlet valve is open, the piston first descends on the intake stroke. An ignitable mixture of gasoline vapour and air is drawn into the cylinder by the partial vacuum thus created.
- Otto der Grosse (Holy Roman emperor)
Otto I was the duke of Saxony (as Otto II, 936–961), German king (from 936), and Holy Roman emperor (962–973) who consolidated the German Reich by his suppression of rebellious vassals and his decisive victory over the Hungarians. His use of the church as a stabilizing influence created a secure
- Otto der Schütz (work by Gottfried Kinkel)
Gottfried Kinkel: One of Kinkel’s poetic epics, Otto der Schütz (1846; “Otto the Marksman”), which has been considered a forerunner of Joseph Victor von Scheffel’s Der Trompeter von Säckingen, was published in more than 70 editions and was mainly responsible for Kinkel’s influence on his contemporaries. His poetry is characterized by a…
- Otto e mezzo (film by Fellini [1963])
Lina Wertmüller: …classic Otto e mezzo (1963; 812. She then wrote and directed her first film, I basilischi (1963; The Lizards). At about this time she became friends with the actor Giancarlo Giannini, who would star in most of her subsequent films.
- Otto engine (technology)
gasoline engine: Development of gasoline engines: ) The four-stroke Otto engine was an immediate success. In spite of its great weight and poor economy, nearly 50,000 engines with a combined capacity of about 200,000 horsepower were sold in 17 years, followed by the rapid development of a wide variety of engines of the same…
- Otto I (Holy Roman emperor)
Otto I was the duke of Saxony (as Otto II, 936–961), German king (from 936), and Holy Roman emperor (962–973) who consolidated the German Reich by his suppression of rebellious vassals and his decisive victory over the Hungarians. His use of the church as a stabilizing influence created a secure
- Otto II (duke of Bavaria)
Otto II was the duke of Bavaria and also a leading noble in Saxony, the most implacable opponent of the German king Henry IV. In 1061, Agnes of Poitou, regent for her young son Henry IV, invested Otto with the duchy of Bavaria. The following year, however, he helped Archbishop Anno of Cologne to
- Otto II (Holy Roman emperor)
Otto II was the German king from 961 and Holy Roman emperor from 967, sole ruler from 973, son of Otto I and his second wife, Adelaide. Otto, a cultivated man, continued his father’s policies of promoting a strong monarchy in Germany and of extending the influence of his house in Italy. In 961 he
- Otto III (Holy Roman emperor)
Otto III was a German king and Holy Roman emperor who planned to recreate the glory and power of the ancient Roman Empire in a universal Christian state governed from Rome, in which the pope would be subordinate to the emperor in religious as well as in secular affairs. Son of the Holy Roman
- Otto IV (Holy Roman emperor)
Otto IV was a German king and Holy Roman emperor, candidate of the German anti-Hohenstaufen faction, who, after struggling against two Hohenstaufen kings, was finally deposed. A member of the Welf dynasty, Otto was a son of Henry the Lion of Brunswick and Matilda, daughter of Henry II of England.
- Otto of Brunswick (Holy Roman emperor)
Otto IV was a German king and Holy Roman emperor, candidate of the German anti-Hohenstaufen faction, who, after struggling against two Hohenstaufen kings, was finally deposed. A member of the Welf dynasty, Otto was a son of Henry the Lion of Brunswick and Matilda, daughter of Henry II of England.
- Otto Of Freising (German bishop)
Otto Of Freising was a German bishop and author of one of the most important historico-philosophical works of the Middle Ages. Otto entered (1132 or 1133) the Cistercian monastery at Morimond in eastern Champagne and became its abbot in 1138 but was immediately called as bishop to Freising in
- Otto of Nordheim (duke of Bavaria)
Otto II was the duke of Bavaria and also a leading noble in Saxony, the most implacable opponent of the German king Henry IV. In 1061, Agnes of Poitou, regent for her young son Henry IV, invested Otto with the duchy of Bavaria. The following year, however, he helped Archbishop Anno of Cologne to
- otto of rose (essential oil)
attar of roses, fragrant, colourless or pale-yellow liquid essential oil distilled from fresh petals of Rosa damascena and R. gallica and other species of the rose family Rosaceae. Rose oils are a valuable ingredient of fine perfumes and liqueurs. They are also used for flavouring lozenges and
- Otto Perl Alliance (German organization)
Otto Perl: …author and cofounder of the Selbsthilfebund der Körperbehinderten (Self-Help Alliance of the Physically Handicapped, or Otto Perl Alliance; 1919–31), the first emancipatory self-help organization representing the interests of the physically disabled in Germany.
- Otto the Great (Holy Roman emperor)
Otto I was the duke of Saxony (as Otto II, 936–961), German king (from 936), and Holy Roman emperor (962–973) who consolidated the German Reich by his suppression of rebellious vassals and his decisive victory over the Hungarians. His use of the church as a stabilizing influence created a secure
- Otto von Brunswick (Holy Roman emperor)
Otto IV was a German king and Holy Roman emperor, candidate of the German anti-Hohenstaufen faction, who, after struggling against two Hohenstaufen kings, was finally deposed. A member of the Welf dynasty, Otto was a son of Henry the Lion of Brunswick and Matilda, daughter of Henry II of England.
- Otto von Nordheim (duke of Bavaria)
Otto II was the duke of Bavaria and also a leading noble in Saxony, the most implacable opponent of the German king Henry IV. In 1061, Agnes of Poitou, regent for her young son Henry IV, invested Otto with the duchy of Bavaria. The following year, however, he helped Archbishop Anno of Cologne to
- Otto, Frei (German architect)
Frei Otto was a German architect and design engineer and winner of the 2015 Pritzker Prize, who is known for his tensile architectural designs—lightweight tentlike structures such as the central sports stadium of the Munich 1972 Olympic Games. Otto was raised in Berlin. Both his father and his
- Otto, Frei Paul (German architect)
Frei Otto was a German architect and design engineer and winner of the 2015 Pritzker Prize, who is known for his tensile architectural designs—lightweight tentlike structures such as the central sports stadium of the Munich 1972 Olympic Games. Otto was raised in Berlin. Both his father and his
- Otto, Jim (American football player)
Las Vegas Raiders: …quarterback Daryle Lamonica and center Jim Otto, the Raiders won the AFL championship in December 1967, a victory that sent the team to its first Super Bowl the following January (a loss to the Green Bay Packers). John Madden was hired as head coach in 1969, and under his guidance…
- Otto, Kristin (German swimmer)
Kristin Otto is a former German swimmer and the first female athlete to win six gold medals at a single Olympic Games. Otto entered a special sports school at age 11 after East Germany’s comprehensive scouting program identified her as a swimming prospect. In 1982 she set her first world record as
- Otto, Nikolaus (German engineer)
Nikolaus Otto was a German engineer who developed the four-stroke internal-combustion engine, which offered the first practical alternative to the steam engine as a power source. Otto built his first gasoline-powered engine in 1861. Three years later he formed a partnership with the German
- Otto, Nikolaus August (German engineer)
Nikolaus Otto was a German engineer who developed the four-stroke internal-combustion engine, which offered the first practical alternative to the steam engine as a power source. Otto built his first gasoline-powered engine in 1861. Three years later he formed a partnership with the German
- Otto, Rudolf (German philosopher and theologian)
Rudolf Otto was a German theologian, philosopher, and scholar of religion, who exerted worldwide influence through his investigation of the human experience of the holy. Das Heilige (1917; The Idea of the Holy, 1923) is his most important work. His ideas were influential in the development of the
- Otto, Sylke (German athlete)
Sylke Otto is a German luger who won gold medals at the 2002 and 2006 Winter Olympics. Otto began lugeing at age 10 when she was encouraged to try the sport by team trainers visiting her school. She started competing in 1983, joined the German national luge team in 1991, and won her first overall
- Otto-Heinrichsbau (building, Heidelberg, Germany)
Western architecture: Germany: An architectural example is the Otto-Heinrichsbau added to the Gothic castle at Heidelberg (burned by the French in 1689). The three tall stories presented the usual verticality of northern architecture, but there was an understanding of the Classical superimposition of the orders with Corinthian above Ionic. Nevertheless, there was a…
- Ottobeuren (Germany)
Memmingen: Ottobeuren, just southeast, has an enormous Benedictine abbey, first founded in 764, with 250 rooms, 20 halls, and 6 courts. Pop. (2003 est.) 41,133.
- Ottoboni, Pietro Vito (pope)
Alexander VIII was the pope from 1689 to 1691, best known for his condemnation of Gallicanism, a French clerical and political movement that sought to limit papal authority. Ottoboni was born into a wealthy Venetian family. He was a distinguished student at the University of Padua and subsequently
- Ottokar, Graf Czernin von und zu Chudenitz (foreign minister of Austria)
Ottokar Czernin was the foreign minister of Austria-Hungary (1916–18), whose efforts to disengage his country from its participation in World War I failed to prevent the dissolution of the Habsburg monarchy in 1918. Czernin, born into the Czech aristocracy, entered the Austro-Hungarian diplomatic
- ottoman (furniture)
ottoman, deeply upholstered seat of any shape, with or without a back, introduced into Europe in the late 18th century from Turkey, where, piled with cushions, it was the central piece of domestic seating. One of the early versions was designed as a piece of fitted furniture to go entirely around
- Ottoman court carpet
Ottoman court carpet, floor covering handwoven under the earlier Ottoman sultans of Turkey. Extremely fine, handsome carpets—of wool pile on a foundation of silk or wool, having floral patterning, often with schemes of large or small circular medallions—and comparable prayer rugs were made for the
- Ottoman Empire (historical empire, Eurasia and Africa)
Ottoman Empire, empire created by Turkish tribes in Anatolia (Asia Minor) that grew to be one of the most powerful states in the world during the 15th and 16th centuries. The Ottoman period spanned more than 600 years and came to an end only in 1922, when it was replaced by the Turkish Republic and
- Ottoman Liberty Society (Turkish revolutionary group)
Young Turks: …Greece) organized to form the Ottoman Liberty Society in 1906. This secret revolutionary group merged with the CUP in Paris the following year, bringing to the Young Turk ideologists the command of the III Army Corps. Later in 1907 the CUP and the League of Private Initiative and Decentralization agreed,…
- Ottoman Public Debt Administration (Turkish history)
Ottoman Empire: The 1875–78 crisis: …and a European-controlled organization, the Ottoman Public Debt Administration (OPDA), was set up to collect the payments.
- Ottoman Turkish language
Turkish language: …Turkish is the descendant of Ottoman Turkish and its predecessor, so-called Old Anatolian Turkish, which was introduced into Anatolia by the Seljuq Turks in the late 11th century ce. Old Turkish gradually absorbed a great many Arabic and Persian words and even grammatical forms and was written in Arabic script.…
- Ottoman Way (Ottoman Empire)
Ottoman Empire: Classical Ottoman society and administration: …and language known as the Ottoman Way. Those who lacked any of those attributes were considered to be members of the subject class, the “protected flock” of the sultan.
- Ottoman-Venetian War (European history)
Siege of Corfu: …August 20, 1716, during the Ottoman-Venetian War (1714–18), which was the last in a series of wars between the two Mediterranean powers that stretched back to the fifteenth century. The failure to take Corfu by the Ottoman forces was hailed as a great victory across Christian Europe.
- Ottone in Villa (opera by Vivaldi)
Antonio Vivaldi: Life: …1713 when his first opera, Ottone in villa, was produced in Vicenza. Returning to Venice, Vivaldi immediately plunged into operatic activity in the twin roles of composer and impresario. From 1718 to 1720 he worked in Mantua as director of secular music for that city’s governor, Prince Philip of Hesse-Darmstadt.…
- Ottoneum (theater, Kassel, Germany)
Kassel: …in Karlsaue Park and the Ottoneum (1604–07; largely rebuilt in 1697), which is claimed to be the oldest theatre building in Germany and which now houses a natural history museum. Other museums in the city include the Hesse Provincial Museum; the German Wallpaper Museum, which contains an unusual wallpaper collection;…
- Ottonian art
Ottonian art, painting, sculpture, and other visual arts produced during the reigns of the German Ottonian emperors and their first successors from the Salic house (950–1050). As inheritors of the Carolingian tradition of the Holy Roman Empire, the German emperors also assumed the Carolingian
- Ottonian dynasty (Middle Ages)
Christianity: Political relations between East and West: …the 10th century, however, the Ottonian dynasty in Germany established a new imperial line and became the preeminent power in Latin Europe. The Ottos, accustomed to the tradition in which great landowners built and owned the churches on their estates as private property, treated Rome and all important sees in…
- Ottonian privilege (Holy Roman Empire)
Saxon Dynasty: He concluded the Privilegium Ottonianum, a treaty that regulated relations between emperor and pope, and initiated a Holy Roman Empire of the German nation. His son Otto II (973–83) continued his policy, but his grandson Otto III (983–1002) was interested in Italian affairs to the detriment of Germany.
- Ottowintech (South Korean company)
Bae Yong-Jun: …struggling Ottowintech, which he renamed KeyEast. Under his oversight, the entertainment firm became hugely profitable. Backed by such success, Bae shifted his focus from acting to business in the early 2010s.
- ottrelite (mineral)
ottrelite, manganese-rich variety of the silicate mineral chloritoid
- Ottsy i deti (work by Turgenev)
Fathers and Sons, novel by Ivan Turgenev, published in 1862 as Ottsy i deti. Quite controversial at the time of its publication, Fathers and Sons concerns the inevitable conflict between generations and between the values of traditionalists and intellectuals. The physician Bazarov, the novel’s
- ottu (musical instrument)
nagaswaram: …a drone played on the ottu, a similar instrument used only for that purpose.
- Ottumwa (Iowa, United States)
Ottumwa, city, seat (1844) of Wapello county, southeastern Iowa, U.S., on the Des Moines River, about 25 miles (40 km) southeast of Oskaloosa. It was laid out in 1843 during a land rush when the region was opened to settlers. Originally called Appanoose Rapids, the name was changed to Louisville
- Ottweiler porcelain (art)
Ottweiler porcelain, true, or hard-paste, German porcelain produced in the Rhineland from 1763 onward. The factory was started by Étienne-Dominique Pellevé, a porcelain maker from Rouen, France, under the patronage of Prince Wilhelm Heinrich of Nassau-Saarbrücken. The Ottweiler factory was situated
- otu (plant)
Magnoliales: Timber: Cleistopholis patens (otu) yields a soft, light wood from western Africa that finds some of the same uses as balsa wood—e.g., in buoys, life rafts, and floats. The fibrous inner bark is of some value for cordage and coarse netting. In South America, balsalike wood is obtained…
- Otunbayeva, Roza (Kyrgyz politician)
Roza Otunbayeva is a Kyrgyz politician who served as president (2010–11) of the interim government of Kyrgyzstan that came to power with the ouster of Pres. Kurmanbek Bakiyev. An ethnic Kyrgyz, Otunbayeva grew up in Kirgiziya and completed her education in Russia, earning a degree in philosophy
- Otus insularis (bird)
owl: General features: …owl (Pyrroglaux podargina) and the Seychelles owl (Otus insularis), are endemic island species with small populations. Owls often attain higher population densities than hawks and have survived better in areas of human activity. Their nocturnal habits and inconspicuous daytime behaviour provide them some protection from shooting. The greatest population densities…
- Otus scops (bird)
owl: Form and function: …the Eurasian scops owl (O. scops) and the screech owl, geographic variation is so great that some divergent races are more different from one another than some species are from one another. In the far north there is only a faint pattern on a whitish background; in humid temperate…
- Otus trichopsis (bird)
owl: Ecology: The whiskered owl (Otus trichopsis) takes flying insects in foliage. Fish owls (Ketupa and Scotopelia) are adapted for taking live fish but also eat other animals. Specialized forms of feeding behaviour have been observed in some owls. The elf owl (Micrathene whitneyi), for instance, has been…