[Bartholdi], a French sculptor, born at Colmar; his principal works, "Lion le Belfort," and "Liberté éclairant le Monde," the largest bronze statue in the world, being 150 ft. high, erected at the entrance of New York harbour; b. 1834.
[Bartholomew, St.], an apostle of Christ, and martyr; represented in art with a knife in one hand and his skin in the other; sometimes been painted as being flayed alive, also as headless. Festival, Aug. 24.
[Bartholomew Fair], an annual market held at Smithfield, London, and instituted in 1133 by Henry I., to be kept on the saint's day, but abolished in 1853, when it ceased to be a market and became an occasion for mere dissipation and riot.
[Bartholomew Hospital], an hospital in Smithfield, London, founded in 1123; has a medical school attached to it, with which the names of a number of eminent physicians are associated.
[Bartholomew's Day, St.], 24th August, day in 1572 memorable for the wholesale massacre of the Protestants in France at the instance of Catharine de Medici, then regent of the kingdom for her son, Charles IX., an event, cruelly gloried in by the Pope and the Spanish Court, which kindled a fire in the nation that was not quenched, although it extinguished Protestantism proper in France, till Charles was coerced to grant liberty of conscience throughout the realm.
[Bartizan], an overhanging wall-mounted turret projecting from the walls of ancient fortifications.
[Bartlett, John H.], an American ethnologist and philologist, born at Rhode Island, U.S.; author of "Dictionary of Americanisms," among other works particularly on ethnology (1805-1886).
[Bartoli, Daniele], a learned Italian Jesuit, born at Ferrara (1635-1685).
[Bartoli, Pietro], Italian engraver, engraved a great number of ancient works of art (1635-1700).
[Bartolini, Lorenzo], a Florentine sculptor, patronised by Napoleon; produced a great number of busts (1777-1850).