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albe

  • 1 Albe

    ALB, ALBE, AWBE
    A shirt or white linen garment, reaching to the heels and folded round the loins by a girdle. Formerly the common dress of the Roman Catholic Clergy, but now used only in sacred functions - The second vestment put on by the priest when preparing for the celebration of mass. Sometimes richly embroidered, and even jewelled round the bottom edge and the wrists, from the loth to the 16th century. The Albe used by Sir Thomas a Becket, when an exile from England, is still preserved, with his mitre and other portions of his episcopal robes in the Cathedral Church of Sens. It is ornamented with purple and gold apparels. ————————
    ALBE (Albus, White)
    A long, white linen gown reaching to the feet and secured by a girdle. The ends of the sleeves and hem of the garment were embroidered (see Alb)

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Albe

  • 2 Alb

    ALB, ALBE, AWBE
    A shirt or white linen garment, reaching to the heels and folded round the loins by a girdle. Formerly the common dress of the Roman Catholic Clergy, but now used only in sacred functions - The second vestment put on by the priest when preparing for the celebration of mass. Sometimes richly embroidered, and even jewelled round the bottom edge and the wrists, from the loth to the 16th century. The Albe used by Sir Thomas a Becket, when an exile from England, is still preserved, with his mitre and other portions of his episcopal robes in the Cathedral Church of Sens. It is ornamented with purple and gold apparels.

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Alb

  • 3 Awbe

    ALB, ALBE, AWBE
    A shirt or white linen garment, reaching to the heels and folded round the loins by a girdle. Formerly the common dress of the Roman Catholic Clergy, but now used only in sacred functions - The second vestment put on by the priest when preparing for the celebration of mass. Sometimes richly embroidered, and even jewelled round the bottom edge and the wrists, from the loth to the 16th century. The Albe used by Sir Thomas a Becket, when an exile from England, is still preserved, with his mitre and other portions of his episcopal robes in the Cathedral Church of Sens. It is ornamented with purple and gold apparels. ———————— See alb

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Awbe

  • 4 Crookes, Sir William

    SUBJECT AREA: Electricity
    [br]
    b. 17 June 1832 London, England
    d. 4 April 1919 London, England
    [br]
    English chemist and physicist who carried out studies of electrical discharges and cathode rays in rarefied gases, leading to the development of the cathode ray tube; discoverer of the element thallium and the principle of the Crookes radiometer.
    [br]
    Crookes entered the Royal College of Chemistry at the age of 15, and from 1850 to 1854 held the appointment of Assistant at the college. In 1854 he became Superintendent of the Meteorological Department at the Radcliffe Observatory in Oxford. He moved to a post at the College of Science in Chester the following year. Soon after this he inherited a large fortune and set up his own private laboratory in London. There he studied the nature of electrical discharges in gases at low pressure and discovered the dark space (later named after him) that surrounds the negative electrode, or cathode. He also established that the rays produced in the process (subsequently shown by J.J.Thompson to be a stream of electrons) not only travelled in straight lines, but were also capable of producing heat and/or light upon impact with suitable anode materials. Using a variety of new methods to investigate these "cathode" rays, he applied them to the spectral analysis of compounds of selenium and, as a result, in 1861 he discovered the element thallium, finally establishing its atomic weight in 1873. Following his discovery of thallium, he became involved in two main lines of research: the properties of rarified gases, and the investigation of the elements of the "rare earths". It was also during these experiments that he discovered the principle of the Crookes radiometer, a device in which light is converted into rotational motion and which used to be found frequently in the shop windows of English opticians. Also among the fruits of this work were the Crookes tubes and the development of spectacle lenses with differential ranges of radiational absorption. In the 1870s he became interested in spiritualism and acquired a reputation for his studies of psychic phenomena, but at the turn of the century he returned to traditional scientific investigations. In 1892 he wrote about the possibility of wireless telegraphy. His work in the field of radioactivity led to the invention of the spinthariscope, an early type of detector of alpha particles. In 1900 he undertook investigations into uranium which led to the study of scintillation, an important tool in the study of radioactivity.
    While the theoretical basis of his work has not stood the test of time, his material discoveries, observations and investigations of new facts formed a basis on which others such as J.J. Thomson were to develop subatomic theory. His later involvement in the investigation of spiritualism led to much criticism, but could be justified on the basis of a belief in the duty to investigate all phenomena.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Knighted 1897. Order of Merit 1910. FRS 1863. President, Royal Society 1913–15. Honorary LLD Birmingham. Honorary DSc Oxon, Cambridge, Sheffield, Durham, Ireland and Cape of Good Hope.
    Bibliography
    1874, On Attraction and Repulsion Resulting from Radiation.
    1874, "Researches in the phenomenon of spiritualism", Society of Metaphysics; reprinted in facsimile, 1986.
    Further Reading
    E.E.Fournier D'Albe, 1923, Life of Sir William Crookes. Who Was Who II, 1916–28, London: A. \& C. Black. T.I.Williams, 1969, A Biographical Dictionary of Scientists. See also Braun, Karl Ferdinand.
    KF / MG

    Biographical history of technology > Crookes, Sir William

См. также в других словарях:

  • Albe — eines Diakons Die Albe (von lateinisch alba: die weiße) ist ein aus der antiken Tunika hervorgegangenes, knöchellanges Gewand aus weißem oder heute auch naturfarbenem Leinen. Mit Bezug auf die Alte Kirche und ihre Tradition symbolisiert die Albe… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Albé — Escudo …   Wikipedia Español

  • albe — (Fernando álvarez de Tolède, duc d ) (1508 1582) général et homme politique espagnol. Gouverneur des Pays Bas (1567 1573), il réprima impitoyablement la révolte des gueux , puis celle du Portugal (1582). ⇒ALBE, adj. et subst. A. Adj. et subst.,… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • Albé — Albé …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Albe — Al be , Albee Al bee , conj. [See {Albeit}.] Although; albeit. [Obs.] [1913 Webster] Albe Clarissa were their chiefest founderess. Spenser. [1913 Webster] || …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Albe — Albe, 1) (Kirchw.), so v.w. Alba; 2) (Naturg.), so v.w. Albel …   Pierer's Universal-Lexikon

  • Albe [1] — Albe, kleiner Weißfisch …   Meyers Großes Konversations-Lexikon

  • Albe [2] — Albe, Stadt, s. Alba 2) …   Meyers Großes Konversations-Lexikon

  • Albe — (lat. alba vestis), das lange weiße Untergewand der zelebrierenden kath. und anglikan. Priester [Abb.] …   Kleines Konversations-Lexikon

  • Albe — (alba camisia), langes weißes Kleid, das der Priester während seines hl. Amtes am Altare trägt …   Herders Conversations-Lexikon

  • ALBE — Cretae Uibs, Steph …   Hofmann J. Lexicon universale

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