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ALCESTE LULLY

  • Alceste (Lully)
  • Opera by Jean-Baptiste Lully

    Alceste, ou Le triomphe d'Alcide is a tragédie en musique in a prologue and five acts by Jean-Baptiste Lully. The French-language libretto is by Philippe

    Alceste (Lully)

    Alceste (Lully)

    Alceste_(Lully)

  • Jean-Baptiste Lully
  • Italian-French composer (1632–1687)

    sons (Louis Lully, Jean-Baptiste Lully fils, and Jean-Louis Lully) had musical careers as successive surintendants of the King's Music. Lully himself was

    Jean-Baptiste Lully

    Jean-Baptiste Lully

    Jean-Baptiste_Lully

  • Alceste
  • Topics referred to by the same term

    Misanthrope by Molière Alceste (Lully), a 1674 opera by Jean-Baptiste Lully Alceste (Handel), a 1750 opera by George Frideric Handel Alceste (Gluck), a 1767

    Alceste

    Alceste

  • List of operas by title
  • Polyxène, Jean-Baptiste Lully, Pascal Collasse, 1687 Acis and Galatea, George Frideric Handel, 1718 Acis et Galatée, Jean-Baptiste Lully, 1686 Actéon, Marc-Antoine

    List of operas by title

    List_of_operas_by_title

  • List of compositions by Jean-Baptiste Lully
  • Verzeichnis sämtlicher Werke von Jean-Baptiste Lully). Cadmus et Hermione (1673) Alceste (1674) Thésée (1675) Atys (1676) Isis (1677) Psyché (1678)

    List of compositions by Jean-Baptiste Lully

    List of compositions by Jean-Baptiste Lully

    List_of_compositions_by_Jean-Baptiste_Lully

  • Pierre Beauchamp
  • French choreographer, dancer, and composer (1631-1705)

    Pomone (opera, 1671) L'Impatience (1661) La Naissance de Vénus (1665) Alceste (1674) Atys (1676) Isis (1677) Le Triomphe de l'amour, avec Pécour (1681)

    Pierre Beauchamp

    Pierre Beauchamp

    Pierre_Beauchamp

  • Tragédie en musique
  • Opera genre

    lyric tragedy), is a genre of French opera introduced by Jean-Baptiste Lully and used by his followers until the second half of the eighteenth century

    Tragédie en musique

    Tragédie_en_musique

  • Christophe Rousset
  • French harpsichordist and conductor

    2017 – Palazzetto Bru Zane [2] Armide (Lully), 2015 – Aparté Pygmalion (Rameau), 2017 – Aparté Alceste (Lully), 2017 – Aparté Les Horaces (Salieri), 2018

    Christophe Rousset

    Christophe Rousset

    Christophe_Rousset

  • Michel Blondy
  • Rameau 1736: Les Voyages de l'amour, music by Boismortier 1739: Alceste, music by Lully See La Princesse d'Elide, Gallica. Michel Blondy on Data.bnf.fr

    Michel Blondy

    Michel_Blondy

  • Paris Opera
  • Opera and ballet company of France

    all, thirteen of Lully's tragédie en musique were performed there (see the list of compositions by Jean-Baptiste Lully). After Lully died (in 1687), the

    Paris Opera

    Paris Opera

    Paris_Opera

  • Loure
  • French Baroque dance

    be well observed". Examples of loures are found in the works of Lully (e.g., Alceste), Rameau (e.g. Les Indes galantes) and of Bach (e.g.: French Suite

    Loure

    Loure

  • Philippe Quinault
  • French dramatist and librettist

    came Cadmus et Hermione (1674), Alceste ou le Triomphe d'Alcide (1674), Thésée (1675), Atys (1676), and Isis (1677). Alceste was received very negatively

    Philippe Quinault

    Philippe Quinault

    Philippe_Quinault

  • Castanets
  • Handheld percussion instrument

    such as demons (Alceste) and nightmares (Atys). Their association with African dances is even stated in the ballet Flore (1669) by Lully, "... les Africains

    Castanets

    Castanets

    Castanets

  • French opera
  • transferred the privilege of producing operas from Perrin to Jean-Baptiste Lully. Lully, a Florentine, was already the favourite musician of the king, who had

    French opera

    French opera

    French_opera

  • The Alcestiad
  • Opera by Louise Talma, 1962

    Pheres Plays The Cocktail Party Operas Alceste (Lully, 1674) Admeto (Handel, 1727) Alceste (Gluck, 1767) Alceste (Schweitzer, 1773) The Alcestiad (Talma

    The Alcestiad

    The_Alcestiad

  • Armida (Salieri)
  • Opera by Antonio Salieri

    plot is based on the epic poem Gerusalemme liberata by Torquato Tasso. Lully, Handel and Traetta, to name but a few, had already composed operas based

    Armida (Salieri)

    Armida (Salieri)

    Armida_(Salieri)

  • Étienne-Joseph Floquet
  • French composer (1748–1785)

    new musical score for Philippe Quinault's libretto Alceste, originally set by Jean-Baptiste Lully in 1674. Floquet's version was rehearsed but then rejected

    Étienne-Joseph Floquet

    Étienne-Joseph_Floquet

  • Charles Perrault
  • French author (1628–1703)

    genre known as opera, collaborating with composer Jean-Baptiste Lully. After Alceste (1674) was denounced by traditionalists who rejected it for deviating

    Charles Perrault

    Charles Perrault

    Charles_Perrault

  • Rondo
  • Musical form consisting of principal and contrasting themes

    to be found in Italian opera, it was the French composer Jean-Baptiste Lully (sometimes referred to as the father of the rondo or rondeau form), and

    Rondo

    Rondo

    Rondo

  • Sébastien de Brossard
  • French music theorist, composer and collector (1655-1730)

    Catherine Cessac, "The Presentation of Lully's Alceste at the Strasbourg Académie de Musique," in John Hajdu Heyer, ed., Lully Studies (Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge

    Sébastien de Brossard

    Sébastien de Brossard

    Sébastien_de_Brossard

  • Paris Opera Ballet
  • French ballet company

    Beauchamps, whom Lully engaged for the 'ballets ordinaires', who composed the ballets of the infernal scenes of Psyché and Alceste. It was also d'Olivet

    Paris Opera Ballet

    Paris_Opera_Ballet

  • Howard Crook
  • American lyric tenor (1947–2024)

    Ténèbres; with Louis Devos; Lully's Atys with William Christie; Lully's Armide with Philippe Herreweghe; Lully's Alceste, Rameau's Castor et Pollux and

    Howard Crook

    Howard_Crook

  • Pietro Antonio Fiocco
  • Italian composer

    same year, he composed a prologue for Alceste by Pietro Andrea Ziani sung in Hanover in 1682, and for the Lully operas Amadis, Acis et Galathée, Armide

    Pietro Antonio Fiocco

    Pietro_Antonio_Fiocco

  • Marc Minkowski
  • French conductor of classical music (born 1962)

    Gluck, including Armide (at the Centre de Musique Baroque de Versailles), Alceste and Iphigénie en Tauride (at the English Bach Festival at the Royal Opera

    Marc Minkowski

    Marc Minkowski

    Marc_Minkowski

  • History of opera
  • Aspect of musical history

    privilege passed to Jean-Baptiste Lully, a composer of Florentine origin (his real name was Giovanni Battista Lulli). Lully adapted opera to French taste

    History of opera

    History of opera

    History_of_opera

  • Festival de Beaune
  • Giustizia Lully Armide 2016 34th - Rameau Zoroastre, Vivaldi Tamerlano 2017 35th Festival - Alessandro Scarlatti: Mitridate, Handel Ottone, Lully Alceste 2018

    Festival de Beaune

    Festival_de_Beaune

  • Marianne Dujardin
  • French opera singer

    de La Barre (16 May 1705), and in a reprisal of Alceste by Philippe Quinault and Jean-Baptiste Lully (25 November 1706). From then on, she also performed

    Marianne Dujardin

    Marianne_Dujardin

  • Jean-François Gardeil
  • French baritone and theatre director

    roles in Atys by Lully, at the Opéra-Comique, Florence and New York in 1987, 1989 and 1992. He was also Straton in Alceste by Lully at Versailles and

    Jean-François Gardeil

    Jean-François Gardeil

    Jean-François_Gardeil

  • 1673 in music
  • Jean-Baptiste Lully – La pastorale comique, LWV 33 Wolfgang Carl Briegel – Das verliebte Gespenst Jean-Baptiste Lully Cadmus et Hermione Alceste Antonio Sartorio

    1673 in music

    1673_in_music

  • Les Talens Lyriques
  • French musical ensemble created in 1991

    Aparté Jean-Baptiste Lully, Alceste (opéra), 2017 - Aparté Jean-Baptiste Lully, Isis (opéra), 2019 - Aparté Jean-Baptiste Lully, Psyché (opera), 2023

    Les Talens Lyriques

    Les_Talens_Lyriques

  • Jacques Vigouroux Duplessis
  • French painter

    the set of the tragic opera Atys survives, and print editions of operas Alceste (1708) and Armide (1710) included engravings based on his sets. He moved

    Jacques Vigouroux Duplessis

    Jacques Vigouroux Duplessis

    Jacques_Vigouroux_Duplessis

  • Marie-Louise Desmatins
  • French opera singer

    Isis (1704 revival), Roland (1705 revival), Bellérophon (1705 revival), Alceste (1706 revival), as well as in Pascal Collasse's Enée et Lavinie (1690)

    Marie-Louise Desmatins

    Marie-Louise Desmatins

    Marie-Louise_Desmatins

  • Thibault Vinçon
  • French film and theater actor (born 1976)

    Le Misanthrope directed by Simon Delétang at the Théâtre de Lorient, as Alceste Étoile d'or de la révélation masculine for his role in the film Les Amitiés

    Thibault Vinçon

    Thibault Vinçon

    Thibault_Vinçon

  • Amanda Forsythe
  • American singer

    Dyer, Richard (2 April 2004). "Boston Baroque, Opera Boston to unite in 'Alceste'". Boston.com. Retrieved 9 February 2017 – via The Boston Globe. "Bmop ::

    Amanda Forsythe

    Amanda_Forsythe

  • Montaigne (record label)
  • but also occasional older music such as Malgoire's recording of Lully's opera Alceste. The catalogue of Montaigne was later acquired by Louis Bricard's

    Montaigne (record label)

    Montaigne_(record_label)

  • Overture
  • Instrumental introduction to an opera, ballet, or oratorio

    first appears in the court ballet and operatic overtures of Jean-Baptiste Lully, which he elaborated from a similar, two-section form called ouverture,

    Overture

    Overture

  • Alcestis (play)
  • Ancient Greek tragedy by Euripides

    least seven operas based on the play, six of them named Alceste: the 1674 opera by Jean-Baptiste Lully, a 1750 opera by George Frideric Handel, a 1767 opera

    Alcestis (play)

    Alcestis (play)

    Alcestis_(play)

  • Clive Wearing
  • British conductor with severe amnesia

    provided choruses for operas staged by the London Opera Centre, including Lully's Alceste and Mozart's Marriage of Figaro, which was performed at Sadler's Wells

    Clive Wearing

    Clive_Wearing

  • Jean-Philippe Rameau
  • French composer and music theorist (1683–1764)

    composers and music theorists of the 18th century, he replaced Jean-Baptiste Lully as the dominant composer of French opera and is also considered the leading

    Jean-Philippe Rameau

    Jean-Philippe Rameau

    Jean-Philippe_Rameau

  • Théâtre du Palais-Royal (rue Saint-Honoré)
  • Parisian theatre

    and 3 meters deep. Several of Lully's operas (tragédies en musique) were premiered at the Palais-Royal, including Alceste (19 January 1674), Amadis (18

    Théâtre du Palais-Royal (rue Saint-Honoré)

    Théâtre du Palais-Royal (rue Saint-Honoré)

    Théâtre_du_Palais-Royal_(rue_Saint-Honoré)

  • List of French haute-contre roles
  • coupé, Les Fragments de M. De Lully, first staged on 10 September 1702 (Pitou, 1983, article: "Les Fragments de Lully", p. 192). The spectacle coupé

    List of French haute-contre roles

    List_of_French_haute-contre_roles

  • Royal Opera of Versailles
  • Opera house of the Palace of Versailles, France

    throughout the grounds in temporary theaters. On 4 July, Jean-Baptiste Lully's Alceste was performed for the court in the Cour de Marbre; on 11 July, Philippe

    Royal Opera of Versailles

    Royal Opera of Versailles

    Royal_Opera_of_Versailles

  • Funeral march
  • Musical genre

    figures.  However, already in 1674 Jean-Baptiste Lully used his Pompe funèbre in his opera Alceste. Other ancient funeral marches, however intended for

    Funeral march

    Funeral_march

  • List of Innsbruck Festival of Early Music productions
  • Germanico in Germania (2015) Jean-Baptiste Lully: Armide ("Baroque Opera: Young" production) (2015) Gluck Alceste René Jacobs (2016) Cesti Le nozze in sogno

    List of Innsbruck Festival of Early Music productions

    List_of_Innsbruck_Festival_of_Early_Music_productions

  • 1674 in music
  • Christmas season) Gaspar Sanz – Instrucción de Música Jean-Baptiste LullyAlceste January 9 – Reinhard Keiser, opera composer (died 1739) July 11 or

    1674 in music

    1674_in_music

  • History of music in Paris
  • of the twenty-six-year-old Jean-Baptiste Lully at the court, the ballet began to take on a new dimension. Lully premiered his first Grand Ballet Royal,

    History of music in Paris

    History of music in Paris

    History_of_music_in_Paris

  • Joseph Legros
  • French opera singer (1739–1793)

    singing the principal roles in revivals of the operas by Jean-Baptiste Lully and Jean-Philippe Rameau, and in the new works by their late followers.

    Joseph Legros

    Joseph Legros

    Joseph_Legros

  • Jean-Louis Martinoty
  • French writer and opera director (1946-2016)

    Johann Strauss, conductor Nikolaus Harnoncourt, Zurich Opera 1991 : Alceste by Lully, conductor Jean-Claude Malgoire, decors Hans Schavernoch, costumes

    Jean-Louis Martinoty

    Jean-Louis Martinoty

    Jean-Louis_Martinoty

  • Opera in German
  • instance he included dances after the model of the French tradition of Lully. The recitative in his operas was always in German so the audience could

    Opera in German

    Opera in German

    Opera_in_German

  • Gregory Reinhart
  • American bass opera singer (born 1951)

    Sant'Alessio (Demonio) Liebermann The Picture of Dorian Gray (Basil Hallward) Lully Alceste (Caron) Magnard Bérénice (Mucien) Manoury K... (The Investigating magistrate/The

    Gregory Reinhart

    Gregory Reinhart

    Gregory_Reinhart

  • Hippolyte et Aricie
  • 1733 opera by Jean-Philippe Rameau

    situated the second act in the Underworld, following the example of Lully's Alceste (1671), Isis (1674), and Proserpine (1680), as well as later works

    Hippolyte et Aricie

    Hippolyte et Aricie

    Hippolyte_et_Aricie

  • Judith Chazin-Bennahum
  • American historian

    "Unmasking the Body: From Lully to the Revolution." Dance Chronicle 33.2 (2010). Review of Musique et geste en France de Lully à la Révolution: Études sur

    Judith Chazin-Bennahum

    Judith_Chazin-Bennahum

  • Pluto (god)
  • God in Greek mythology

    Orfeo (1647); Cesti's Il pomo d'oro (1668); Sartoris's Orfeo (1672); Lully's Alceste, a tragédie en musique (1674); Charpentier's chamber opera La descente

    Pluto (god)

    Pluto (god)

    Pluto_(god)

  • Mauricio Buraglia
  • Colombian musician and composer

    Ensemble Matheus, Jean-Crstophe Spinosi (Virgin classics) Jean-Baptiste Lully]] "Alceste" La Grande Écurie et la Chambre du Roy, Jean-Claude Malgoire ( Montaigne)

    Mauricio Buraglia

    Mauricio_Buraglia

  • 1674
  • Calendar year

    127 votes for and 166 against. January 19 – The tragic opera Alceste, by Jean-Baptiste Lully, is performed for the first time, presented by the Paris Opera

    1674

    1674

    1674

  • Les amours de Ragonde
  • prestigious tragédies en musique by Jean-Baptiste Lully, including moments from Armide, Atys and Alceste. The next time the opera was heard was after Mouret's

    Les amours de Ragonde

    Les_amours_de_Ragonde

  • List of prominent operas
  • opera seria in English. After Metastasio's 1729 libretto Artaserse. 1767 Alceste (Gluck). Gluck's second "reform" opera, nowadays usually given in its French

    List of prominent operas

    List_of_prominent_operas

  • Theatre of France
  • Donneau de Visé) Bellérophon (opéra) – 1679 Philippe Quinault (1635–1688). Alceste (musical tragedy) – 1674 Proserpine (musical tragedy) – 1680 Amadis de

    Theatre of France

    Theatre_of_France

  • 61st Annual Grammy Awards
  • 2019 award ceremony for music

    Friedemann Engelbrecht, producer (The BBC Symphony Orchestra; BBC Singers) Lully: Alceste Christophe Rousset, conductor; Edwin Crossley-Mercer, Emiliano Gonzalez

    61st Annual Grammy Awards

    61st_Annual_Grammy_Awards

  • List of compositions by Niels Viggo Bentzon
  • – Baritone Sax Sonata Op. 486 – Soloists Duo, for two pianos Op. 487 – Alceste Overture, for two pianos Op. 488 – Concerto; for reduced string section

    List of compositions by Niels Viggo Bentzon

    List of compositions by Niels Viggo Bentzon

    List_of_compositions_by_Niels_Viggo_Bentzon

  • List of operas by composer
  • Gustav Luders: The Sho-Gun (1904) Jean-Baptiste Lully (1632–1687): Achille et Polyxène, Acis et Galatée, Alceste, Amadis, Armide, Atys, Bellérophon, Cadmus

    List of operas by composer

    List_of_operas_by_composer

  • List of compositions by Erkki Melartin
  • Klage eines Mädchens (Woldemar Kolpytschew) Skymning, Op. 14, No. 2 (1901) Alceste (Nino Runeberg) Vintermorgon, Op. 14, No. 3 (1901) Arvid Mörne Kväll på

    List of compositions by Erkki Melartin

    List_of_compositions_by_Erkki_Melartin

  • Grammy Award for Best Opera Recording
  • Award for opera productions

    Toro & Judith van Wanroij (soloists); Maximilien Ciup (producer) – Lully: Alceste (Les Talens Lyriques; Chœur de chambre de Namur) Sebastian Weigle (conductor);

    Grammy Award for Best Opera Recording

    Grammy_Award_for_Best_Opera_Recording

  • Teseo
  • Opera seria by Handel

    adaptation of a French libretto written by Philippe Quinault for Jean-Baptiste Lully,Thésée, presented in Paris in 1675. After the second performance theatre

    Teseo

    Teseo

    Teseo

  • 17th-century French literature
  • Epoch of a European Culture

    Bellérophon (opera) 1679 Médée (tragedy) 1693 Philippe Quinault (1635–1688) Alceste (musical tragedy) 1674 Proserpine (musical tragedy) 1680 Amadis de Gaule

    17th-century French literature

    17th-century French literature

    17th-century_French_literature

  • Château de Meudon
  • Historic palace in Meudon, France

    bringing back Alceste from the underworld; Height 3 feet 10 inches; Width 3 feet. It is a question of "Hercules returning to Admetus his wife Alceste that he

    Château de Meudon

    Château_de_Meudon

  • List of opera genres
  • often castrati. Griselda (1721), Cleofide (Hasse, 1731), Ariodante (1735), Alceste (1767), La clemenza di Tito (1791) Alessandro Scarlatti, Vivaldi, Hasse

    List of opera genres

    List of opera genres

    List_of_opera_genres

  • Agrippina (opera)
  • 1709 opera seria by G. F. Handel

    composers including Reinhard Keiser, Arcangelo Corelli and Jean-Baptiste Lully. This practice of adapting and borrowing was common at the time but is carried

    Agrippina (opera)

    Agrippina (opera)

    Agrippina_(opera)

  • List of opera librettists
  • ascolto Ranieri de' Calzabigi (1714–1795) for Christoph Willibald Gluck: Alceste, Orfeo ed Euridice, Paride ed Elena Salvadore Cammarano (1801–1852) for

    List of opera librettists

    List_of_opera_librettists

  • 1670s
  • Decade

    127 votes for and 166 against. January 19 – The tragic opera Alceste, by Jean-Baptiste Lully, is performed for the first time, presented by the Paris Opera

    1670s

    1670s

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ALCESTE LULLY

  • Alberte
  • Girl/Female

    Danish, French, German, Swedish, Teutonic

    Alberte

    Intelligent; Famous; Female Version of Albert; Bright Nobility

    Alberte

  • Allete
  • Girl/Female

    French

    Allete

    Winged.

    Allete

  • Acestes
  • Boy/Male

    Greek

    Acestes

    A Trojan king from Greek mythology.

    Acestes

  • Waldron
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Waldron

    English : from a Germanic personal name composed of the elements walh ‘foreigner’ + hrafn ‘raven’.English : habitational name from a place in Sussex named Waldron, from Old English w(e)ald ‘forest’ + ærn ‘house’, ‘dwelling’. The surname is now also common in Ireland, especially in Connacht.English : This is the name of a prominent NH family, established there since the 17th century. Richard Walderne (b. c. 1615) came to New England from Alchester, Warwickshire, England, about 1640 and settled at Dover, NH.

    Waldron

  • CELESTE
  • Female

    English

    CELESTE

    English form of French Céleste, CELESTE means "heavenly."

    CELESTE

  • ALBERTE
  • Female

    Danish

    ALBERTE

    , nobly bright.

    ALBERTE

  • Alberte
  • Girl/Female

    Teutonic

    Alberte

    Intelligent or noble.

    Alberte

  • ALBERTE
  • Female

    Norwegian

    ALBERTE

    Danish and Norwegian feminine form of Latin Albertus, ALBERTE means "bright nobility."

    ALBERTE

  • Ballester
  • Surname or Lastname

    Catalan

    Ballester

    Catalan : occupational name for a maker of crossbows or a soldier armed with a crossbow, from Catalan ballester ‘crossbowman’ or ‘crossbow maker’, an agent derivative of ballesta ‘crossbow’ (Latin ballista ‘(military) catapult’).English and German : occupational name, cognate with 1, from an agent derivative of Middle English, Old French baleste ‘crossbow’.

    Ballester

  • CÉLESTE
  • Female

    French

    CÉLESTE

    French feminine form of Latin unisex Cælestis, CÉLESTE means "heavenly."

    CÉLESTE

  • Alcestis
  • Girl/Female

    Greek

    Alcestis

    Name of a woman who gave her life to save her hushand.

    Alcestis

  • Alcee
  • Girl/Female

    Italian

    Alcee

    Famous bearer: Alcine is mistress of alluring enchantments and sensual pleasures in the Orlando...

    Alcee

  • ALBERTE
  • Male

    Portuguese

    ALBERTE

    Galician-Portuguese form of Latin Albertus, ALBERTE means "bright nobility."

    ALBERTE

  • ALESTER
  • Male

    Gaelic

    ALESTER

    Gaelic form of Latin Alexandrus, ALESTER means "defender of mankind."

    ALESTER

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Online names & meanings

  • Lekha
  • Girl/Female

    Hindu

    Lekha

    Writing, Mark, Horizon the crescent Moon

  • Nisroch
  • Girl/Female

    Biblical

    Nisroch

    Flight, proof, temptation, delicate.

  • Wolfrik
  • Boy/Male

    German

    Wolfrik

    Wolf ruler.

  • Abeela |
  • Girl/Female

    Muslim

    Abeela |

    To be beautiful

  • Pearse
  • Boy/Male

    Australian, British, English, Irish

    Pearse

    From the Piers; Tone; Rock

  • Ragasudha
  • Girl/Female

    Hindu, Indian

    Ragasudha

    Melody with Healing Touch

  • Duraimani | துரைமாநீ
  • Boy/Male

    Tamil

    Duraimani | துரைமாநீ

  • Wahaad
  • Boy/Male

    Arabic

    Wahaad

    Bangla

  • Sishupala
  • Boy/Male

    Hindu

    Sishupala

    (King of Chedi and an avowed enemy of Krishna.)

  • Rogers
  • Girl/Female

    British, English, Newzealand

    Rogers

    Famous Spear

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Other words and meanings similar to

ALCESTE LULLY

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ALCESTE LULLY

  • Almesse
  • n.

    See Alms.

  • Ecballium
  • n.

    A genus of cucurbitaceous plants consisting of the single species Ecballium agreste (or Elaterium), the squirting cucumber. Its fruit, when ripe, bursts and violently ejects its seeds, together with a mucilaginous juice, from which elaterium, a powerful cathartic medicine, is prepared.

  • Elater
  • n.

    The active principle of elaterium, being found in the juice of the wild or squirting cucumber (Ecballium agreste, formerly Motordica Elaterium) and other related species. It is extracted as a bitter, white, crystalline substance, which is a violent purgative.

  • Elaterium
  • n.

    A cathartic substance obtained, in the form of yellowish or greenish cakes, as the dried residue of the juice of the wild or squirting cucumber (Ecballium agreste, formerly called Momordica Elaterium).

  • Alcoate
  • n.

    Alt. of Alcohate

  • Moose
  • n.

    A large cervine mammal (Alces machlis, or A. Americanus), native of the Northern United States and Canada. The adult male is about as large as a horse, and has very large, palmate antlers. It closely resembles the European elk, and by many zoologists is considered the same species. See Elk.

  • Elk
  • n.

    A large deer, of several species. The European elk (Alces machlis or Cervus alces) is closely allied to the American moose. The American elk, or wapiti (Cervus Canadensis), is closely related to the European stag. See Moose, and Wapiti.