pippin

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Any of several varieties of eating apple that have a yellow or green skin with patches of red
{n} the name of an admired apple
{i} any of several varieties of sweet round apples (often with green or yellow skins)
a small sweet apple (pepin). or Pepin or Pippin the Short born 714 died Sept. 24, 768, Saint-Denix, Neustria King of the Franks (751-768), the first king of the Carolingian dynasty and the father of Charlemagne. A son of Charles Martel, he became mayor of Neustria, Burgundy, and Provence in 741 and de facto ruler of the Franks when his brother entered a monastery in 747. With the backing of the pope, he deposed the last Merovingian ruler, Childeric III, in 751 and was crowned king by the bishops of his realm and, possibly, by the papal legate St. Boniface. Pippin was crowned king in 754 by Pope Stephen II. The king bestowed on the pope the Donation of Pippin and invaded Italy twice (754, 756) to protect the pope from the Lombards. He also put down revolts in Saxony and Bavaria and struggled to subdue rebellious Aquitaine. Pippin called several church councils and promoted religious reform in the kingdom. Donation of Pippin Pippin III Pippin the Short Pippin Horace
any of numerous superior eating apples with yellow or greenish yellow skin flushed with red
An apple from a tree raised from the seed and not grafted; a seedling apple
A name given to apples of several different kinds, as Newtown pippin, summer pippin, fall pippin, golden pippin
Cox's Orange Pippin
An English cultivar of eating apple
A pippin
pip
Donation of Pippin
(754) Promise made by the Frankish king Pippin III to win for Pope Stephen II Byzantine imperial lands in Italy conquered by the Lombards. The Donation was made in the context of the papal struggle with the Lombards, the collapse of Byzantine support for the papacy, and Pippin's elevation to the royal throne with papal support. In 756 it was written in a document that became the basis of papal rule over central Italy, which lasted until the 19th century. Pippin won territory from the Lombard king in two military campaigns (754, 756) and gave it to the papacy. The Donation was later confirmed and enlarged by Charlemagne (774)
Horace Pippin
born Feb. 22, 1888, West Chester, Pa., U.S. died July 6, 1946, West Chester U.S. folk painter. Pippin served in the infantry in World War I, but he was wounded in 1918 and discharged with a partially paralyzed right arm. His first large canvas was an eloquent protest against war, End of the War: Starting Home (1931-34). His primary theme became the African American experience, as seen in his series entitled Cabin in the Cotton (mid 1930s) and his paintings of episodes in the lives of the antislavery leader John Brown and Pres. Abraham Lincoln. After the art world discovered Pippin in 1937, he received wide acclaim as the greatest black painter of his time
cox's orange pippin
a yellow Pippin with distinctive flavor
pippins
plural of pippin
pippin