- Aranrhod (Celtic deity)
Dôn: …frequently with various gods, and Aranrhod, a sky goddess and symbol of fertility, who bore Gwydion twin sons: Dylan, a sea god, and Lleu Llaw Gyffes (Lleu of the Dexterous Hand), whom many scholars consider analogous to the Irish god Lug.
- Aransas National Wildlife Refuge (refuge, Texas, United States)
Aransas National Wildlife Refuge, coastal habitat conservation area in southern Texas, U.S., located about 50 miles (80 km) northeast of Corpus Christi. The refuge, parts of which are jointly administered by state and federal agencies, covers a total of 181 square miles (469 square km) on the Gulf
- Arany, János (Hungarian poet)
János Arany was the greatest Hungarian epic poet. Born of an impecunious farming family, he went to school in Debrecen, Hungary, but abandoned his studies to join for a short time a group of strolling players. Arany made his real advent on the literary scene in 1847 with his popular epic Toldi,
- Aranya Low Cost Housing (housing project by Doshi)
Balkrishna Doshi: …in Ahmedabad (1973) and the Aranya Low Cost Housing in Indore (1989). The latter, arguably his best-known project, was a township for low- to middle-income families. The master plan called for a central spine of private businesses and houses constructed on each side. A cluster of 10 residences share a…
- Aranyaka (Hindu literature)
Aranyaka, a later development of the Brahmanas, or expositions of the Vedas, which were composed in India in about 700 bce. The Aranyakas are distinguished from the Brahmanas in that they may contain information on secret rites to be carried out only by certain persons, as well as more
- Arányi, Jelly d’ (Hungarian musician)
Jelly d’Arányi was a violinist known for her performances of contemporary music. Béla Bartók’s two sonatas for violin and piano were written for her; Maurice Ravel’s Tzigane for Violin and Orchestra and Ralph Vaughan Williams’ Violin Concerto were dedicated to her. The grandniece of the celebrated
- Arao (Japan)
Arao, city, northwestern Kumamoto ken (prefecture), west-central Kyushu, Japan. It faces Ariake Bay, about 20 miles (32 km) northwest of Kumamoto city. Arao was a poor village until the opening of the Miike coal mine and the arrival of a major railway in the early 20th century. A military munitions
- Aráoz, Mercedes (Peruvian politician)
Peru: The short presidencies of Martín Vizcarra (2018–20), Manuel Merino (2020), and Francisco Sagasti (2020–21) and the COVID-19 pandemic: …back by electing Vice President Mercedes Aráoz as the country’s interim leader. The competing claims to the country’s leadership lasted only a few days, however. When it became clear that the military and police backed Vizcarra, Aráoz resigned. Moreover, in mid-January the Constitutional Court reaffirmed the constitutionality of Vizcarra’s dismissal…
- Arap Petra Velikogo (novel by Pushkin)
Aleksandr Pushkin: The early years: …novel, Arap Petra Velikogo (1827; The Negro of Peter the Great). Like many aristocratic families in early 19th-century Russia, Pushkin’s parents adopted French culture, and he and his brother and sister learned to talk and to read in French. They were left much to the care of their maternal grandmother,…
- Arapaho (people)
Arapaho, North American Indian tribe of Algonquian linguistic stock who lived during the 19th century along the Platte and Arkansas rivers of what are now the U.S. states of Wyoming, Colorado, Nebraska, and Kansas. Their oral traditions suggest that they once had permanent villages in the Eastern
- Arapaho-Cheyenne War (United States history)
Sand Creek Massacre: …a chief cause of the Arapaho-Cheyenne war that followed and had far-reaching influence in the Plains Wars of the next decade. Sand Creek Massacre National Historic Site was opened in 2007 to preserve the location of the incident.
- arapaima (fish)
pirarucu, (Arapaima gigas), ancient, air-breathing, giant fish of Amazonian rivers and lakes. One of the largest freshwater fishes in the world, the pirarucu attains a length of nearly 3 metres (10 feet) and a weight of 220 kg (485 pounds). The fish has a peculiar profile in that the front of the
- Arapaima gigas (fish)
pirarucu, (Arapaima gigas), ancient, air-breathing, giant fish of Amazonian rivers and lakes. One of the largest freshwater fishes in the world, the pirarucu attains a length of nearly 3 metres (10 feet) and a weight of 220 kg (485 pounds). The fish has a peculiar profile in that the front of the
- Arapesh (people)
gender role: For example, the Arapesh people of New Guinea saw men and women as having similar roles in society and being equally responsible for raising children.
- Araraquara (Brazil)
Araraquara, city, in the highlands of central São Paulo estado (state), Brazil, lying at 2,119 feet (646 metres) above sea level on a tributary of the Jacaré-Guaçu River. Formerly known as Freguesia de São Bento de Araraquara, it was given town status in 1817 and was made the seat of a municipality
- Araras (Carchemish statesman)
Anatolia: The neo-Hittite states from c. 1180 to 700 bce: …protected by a “guardian” called Yariris (formerly known as Araras), who was once believed to be a usurper. In the introduction to one of his texts, Yariris emphasizes his diplomatic relations with what evidently are the states of Egypt and Babylon as well as with the Mysians (on the northwest…
- Ararat (work by Glück)
Louise Glück: …concerns are also evident in Ararat (1990), which has been acclaimed for searing honesty in its examination of the family and the self.
- Ararat (Victoria, Australia)
Ararat, city, southwestern Victoria, Australia, on the northern flanks of the Pyrenees Range, near the Hopkins River. The community and a nearby peak (2,020 feet [616 metres] high) were named in 1840 by a sheep farmer who likened his settling there to the legendary resting of Noah’s Ark on Mount
- Ararat (film by Egoyan [2002])
Atom Egoyan: Ararat (2002) marked a departure from Egoyan’s usual subject matter by addressing the controversial subject of the Armenian massacres by the Young Turk government during World War I. He approached the topic obliquely, choosing to centre the plot on a contemporary filmmaker producing a shallow…
- Ararat Plain (region, Asia)
Armenia: Relief: …the southwest, a large depression—the Ararat Plain—lies at the foot of Mount Aragats and the Geghama Range; the Aras River cuts this important plain into halves, the northern half lying in Armenia and the southern in Turkey and Iran.
- Ararat, Mount (mountain, Turkey)
Mount Ararat, volcanic massif in extreme eastern Turkey, overlooking the point at which the frontiers of Turkey, Iran, and Armenia converge. Its northern and eastern slopes rise from the broad alluvial plain of the Aras River, about 3,300 feet (1,000 metres) above sea level; its southwestern slopes
- araray (vocal music)
Ethiopian chant: …which most melodies are performed; araray, presumably containing “cheerful” melodies, sung in a higher range, and used less frequently in services; and ezel, associated with periods of fasting and sorrow and used exclusively for Holy Week. According to church tradition, each style of zema is associated with a different person…
- arartree (plant)
arartree, (Tetraclinis articulata), only species of the genus Tetraclinis of the cypress family (Cupressaceae), found in hot, dry areas of southeastern Spain, Malta, and northern Africa. A pyramidal tree 12 to 15 metres (about 40 to 50 feet) tall, the arartree has fragrant, brown or reddish-brown
- ARAS (physiology)
hallucination: The nature of hallucinations: …to be mediated by the ascending midbrain reticular activating system (a network of nerve cells in the brainstem). Analyses of hallucinations reported by sufferers of neurological disorders and by neurosurgical patients in whom the brain is stimulated electrically have shown the importance of the temporal lobes (at the sides of…
- Aras Nehri (river, Asia)
Aras River, river rising south of Erzurum in the Bingöl Dağları (mountains) of Turkey; it flows eastward, forming for approximately 275 miles (440 km) the international boundary between Armenia and Azerbaijan on the north and Turkey and Iran on the south. Below the eastern boundary of Armenia, the
- Aras River (river, Asia)
Aras River, river rising south of Erzurum in the Bingöl Dağları (mountains) of Turkey; it flows eastward, forming for approximately 275 miles (440 km) the international boundary between Armenia and Azerbaijan on the north and Turkey and Iran on the south. Below the eastern boundary of Armenia, the
- Arason, Jón (Icelandic poet and bishop)
Jón Arason was a poet and the last Roman Catholic bishop in Iceland, remembered as a national as well as a religious hero. The son of poor parents, he rose quickly to eminence in the church and was consecrated bishop of Hólar, the northern diocese of Iceland, in 1522. He administered his diocese
- arati (Hinduism and Jainism)
arti, in Hindu and Jain rites, the waving of lighted lamps before an image of a god or a person to be honoured. In performing the rite, the worshiper circles the lamp three times in a clockwise direction while chanting a prayer or singing a hymn. Arti is one of the most frequently observed parts of
- Aratinga canicularis (bird)
conure: Among them is the half-moon conure, A. canicularis, called Petz’s conure, or “dwarf parrot”; from Central America, it is 24 cm (about 10 inches) long and mostly green, with orange forehead, dull-blue crown, and blue in the wings. The large (to 50 cm [20 inches]) Patagonian conure, or burrowing…
- Arator, The (essays by Taylor)
agrarianism: Agrarianism in the 18th and 19th centuries: … defended the Jeffersonian view in The Arator (1813). Taylor decried the use of the law to favour factional and commercial interests, upheld wide property ownership, defended decentralized political power, and advocated rural rather than urban living. For Taylor, as for Jefferson, it was the free farmer whose independence was crucial…
- aratrika (Hinduism and Jainism)
arti, in Hindu and Jain rites, the waving of lighted lamps before an image of a god or a person to be honoured. In performing the rite, the worshiper circles the lamp three times in a clockwise direction while chanting a prayer or singing a hymn. Arti is one of the most frequently observed parts of
- Aratta (ancient city, Sumer)
Enmerkar: …subjugation of a rival city, Aratta, it is now believed that two separate epics tell this tale. One is called Enmerkar and the Lord of Aratta. The longest Sumerian epic yet discovered, it is the source of important information about the history and culture of the Sumero-Iranian border area. According…
- Aratus (crustacean genus)
crustacean: Distribution and abundance: One of the mangrove crabs, Aratus, can climb trees. Some crabs spend so much time away from the water that they are known as land crabs; however, these crustaceans must return to the water when their larvae are ready to hatch. The most terrestrial of the Crustacea are the wood…
- Aratus (Greek poet)
Aratus was a Greek poet of Soli in Cilicia, best remembered for his poem on astronomy, Phaenomena. He resided at the courts of Antigonus II Gonatas, king of Macedonia, and Antiochus I of Syria. The Phaenomena, a didactic poem in hexameters, is his only completely extant work. Lines 1–757 versify a
- Aratus Of Sicyon (Greek statesman)
Aratus Of Sicyon was a Greek statesman of the Hellenistic Period, a skilled diplomatist and guerrilla fighter who for many years was the leading spirit of the Achaean League. After liberating Sicyon in 251, he established a democracy there and united it with the Achaean League for defense against
- Arau, Alfonso (Mexican actor and director)
history of film: Mexico: The actor Alfonso Arau directed a highly popular film based on a novel written by his wife, Laura Esquivel, Como agua para chocolate (1992; Like Water for Chocolate). He then went on to be a director in American film and television. Alfonso Cuarón, who had been working…
- Arauca (department, Colombia)
Arauca, departamento, northeastern Colombia. It lies in the Orinoco River basin and is bounded north by Venezuela and south by the Casanare and Meta rivers. Arauca was given intendency status in 1955 and department status in 1991. It consists of llanos (plains) except in the extreme west, where it
- Arauca River (river, South America)
Arauca River, western tributary of the Orinoco River, flowing through Venezuela and Colombia. It rises in the Cordillera Oriental of the Andes mountains, near the Venezuelan-Colombian border. Its easterly course is about 500 miles (800 km) long and forms part of the Venezuelan-Colombian boundary.
- Arauca, Río (river, South America)
Arauca River, western tributary of the Orinoco River, flowing through Venezuela and Colombia. It rises in the Cordillera Oriental of the Andes mountains, near the Venezuelan-Colombian border. Its easterly course is about 500 miles (800 km) long and forms part of the Venezuelan-Colombian boundary.
- Araucana, La (poem by Ercilla y Zúñiga)
Araucanian wars: …Araucanians in the epic poem La Araucana (1569–89). This work is known as the “Aeneid of the Chileans.”
- Araucanía (region, Chile)
Araucanía, región, southern Chile. It lies between the Biobío and Toltén rivers and is bordered by Argentina on the east and the Pacific Ocean on the west. It is divided into the provinces of Malleco and Cautín. The region embraces the coastal mountain range, the fertile Central Valley, and the
- Araucaniad, The (poem by Ercilla y Zúñiga)
Araucanian wars: …Araucanians in the epic poem La Araucana (1569–89). This work is known as the “Aeneid of the Chileans.”
- Araucanian (people)
Araucanian, any member of a group of South American Indians that are now concentrated in the fertile valleys and basins of south-central Chile, from the Biobío River in the north to the Toltén River in the south. Although the pre-Columbian Araucanians did not themselves recognize political or
- Araucanian language
South America: Linguistic patterns: Mapuche speakers, who constitute the largest Indian population in Chile, are restricted to the south-central part of the country, with smaller groups found in Argentina, especially in Neuquén province.
- Araucanian wars (Chilean history)
Araucanian wars, series of conflicts between the Araucanian Indians of Chile and the Spanish conquistadores in the 16th century, and one battle between the Araucanians and independent Chile in the 19th century. The Araucanians were nomadic hunting and food-gathering peoples divided into three
- Araucaria (plant genus)
Araucaria, genus of 20 species of pinelike coniferous plants in the family Araucariaceae. They are found in Brazil, Chile, Argentina, New Guinea, New Caledonia, Norfolk Island, and Australia. The name of the genus is derived from Arauco, the name of a district in southern Chile where the trees were
- Araucaria angustifolia (plant)
Paraná pine, (Araucaria angustifolia), important evergreen timber conifer of the family Araucariaceae, native to the mountains of southern Brazil and adjacent areas of Paraguay and Argentina. Although the plant is widely cultivated elsewhere in South America, it is critically endangered in its
- Araucaria araucana (plant)
monkey puzzle tree, (Araucaria araucana), an evergreen ornamental and timber conifer of the family Araucariaceae, native to the Andes Mountains of South America. Although the tree was declared a natural monument in Chile in 1976 to afford it protection from logging, the species is listed as an
- Araucaria bidwillii (plant)
bunya pine, (Araucaria bidwillii), large evergreen conifer of the family Araucariaceae, native to humid areas in southeastern Queensland, Australia. The saplings are sold as houseplants in many areas, and the cream-coloured wood is used for veneers, plywood, and boxes. The tree’s large sweet seeds
- Araucaria cunninghamii (plant)
Moreton Bay pine, (Araucaria cunninghamii), large evergreen timber conifer of the family Araucariaceae. The Moreton Bay pine is native to the coastal rainforests of northern New South Wales to northern Queensland in eastern Australia and the Arfak Mountains of western New Guinea. The plant is
- Araucaria heterophylla (plant)
Norfolk Island pine, (Araucaria heterophylla), evergreen timber and ornamental conifer of the family Araucariaceae, native to Norfolk Island, situated in the South Pacific Ocean between New Caledonia and New Zealand. The wood of large trees is used in construction, furniture, and shipbuilding. The
- Araucariaceae (gymnosperm family)
conifer: Annotated classification: Family Araucariaceae From Triassic; massive seed cones with a single large seed on each cone scale; highly reduced scales completely fused to the much larger bracts; species of Araucaria have branches densely clothed with prickly, spirally arranged, clawlike-to-wedge-shaped leaves; dammars (Agathis) have well-separated, oppositely arranged oval…
- Arauco (province, Chile)
Biobío: …the provincias of Ñuble, Concepción, Arauco, and Biobío. The islands of Santa María, in the Bay of Arauco, and Mocha, 14 miles (23 km) offshore, are part of Arauco provincia. Biobío region spans the coastal mountain range, the cool, fertile Central Valley, and the Andean cordillera. Biobío region is drained…
- Arauco domado (work by Oña)
Pedro de Oña: His most famous work is Primera parte de Arauco domado (1596; “First Part of the Araucan Conquest”), a verse epic in rhymed couplets depicting the deeds of the Marquis of Canete, viceroy of Peru from 1556 to 1560, based in part on the famous La Araucana (1569, 1578, 1589; “The…
- Arauco Tamed (work by Oña)
Pedro de Oña: His most famous work is Primera parte de Arauco domado (1596; “First Part of the Araucan Conquest”), a verse epic in rhymed couplets depicting the deeds of the Marquis of Canete, viceroy of Peru from 1556 to 1560, based in part on the famous La Araucana (1569, 1578, 1589; “The…
- Araújo Lima, Pedro de (Brazilian politician)
Brazil: Pedro I and the regency: Pedro de Araújo Lima succeeded him. Many Brazilians were impatient with the regency and believed that the entire nation would rally behind the young ruler once he was crowned. On July 23, 1840, both houses of parliament agreed that he had attained his majority, though…
- Araunah the Jebusite (Jewish merchant)
Jerusalem: Ancient origins of the city: … on the threshing floor of Araunah (Ornan) the Jebusite. Thus Jerusalem became the place of the royal palace and the sacred site of a monotheistic religion.
- Arausio, Battle of (Roman history)
Battle of Arausio, (Oct. 6, 105 bc), the defeat of a Roman army by Germanic tribes near Arausio (now Orange in southern France). The Cimbri and the Teutoni had invaded the Roman province of Transalpine Gaul about 110 bc. The consul Gnaeus Mallius Maximus was sent from Italy in 105 with an army to
- Arauz, Andrés (Ecuadorian politician)
Ecuador: Ecuador from the late 20th century: The Correa-endorsed Andrés Arauz headed the Union for Hope (Unión por la Esperanza; UNES) ticket; Yaku Pérez represented the Indigenous Pachakutik party; and political outsider Xavier Hervas was the candidate of the Democratic Left (Izquierda Democrática; ID) party. In the first round voting, in February 2021, none…
- ʿArava, Ha- (region, Palestine)
Wadi Al-ʿArabah, topographic depression in southern Palestine extending about 100 miles (160 km) south from the Dead Sea to the Gulf of Aqaba; it is part of the East African Rift System. Largely sandy desert, it is divided between Israel and Jordan. In the Old Testament, except in Deuteronomy 2:8,
- Aravali Range (hill system, India)
Aravalli Range, hill system of northern India, running northeasterly for 350 miles (560 km) through Rajasthan state. Isolated rocky offshoots continue to just south of Delhi. The series of peaks and ridges, with breadths varying from 6 to 60 miles (10 to 100 km), are generally between 1,000 and
- Aravalli Range (hill system, India)
Aravalli Range, hill system of northern India, running northeasterly for 350 miles (560 km) through Rajasthan state. Isolated rocky offshoots continue to just south of Delhi. The series of peaks and ridges, with breadths varying from 6 to 60 miles (10 to 100 km), are generally between 1,000 and
- Aravena, Alejandro (Chilean architect)
Alejandro Aravena is a Chilean architect known for his socially conscious building projects that attempt to break down economic inequality in urban areas. In 2016, he became the first Chilean to win the Pritzker Prize. Aravena earned a degree in architecture in 1992 from Pontifical Catholic
- Aravidu dynasty (Indian dynasty)
Aravidu dynasty, fourth and last dynasty of the Hindu empire of Vijayanagar in southern India. Its founder was Tirumala, whose brother Rama Raya had been the masterful regent of the Sadasiva Raya of the Tuluva dynasty. Rama Raya’s death at the Battle of Rakasa-Tangadi (also known as Talikota) in
- Aravinda, Shri (Indian philosopher and yogi)
Sri Aurobindo was a yogi, seer, philosopher, poet, and Indian nationalist who propounded a philosophy of divine life on earth through spiritual evolution. Aurobindo’s education began in a Christian convent school in Darjeeling (Darjiling). While still a boy, he was sent to England for further
- Arawa (Papua New Guinea)
Arawa, town, southeast coast of Bougainville Island, Papua New Guinea. Arawa is a planned suburban town on flatland near Arawa Bay. It was built to house the employees of Bougainville Copper Ltd., a mining company established in the late 1960s to run an open-pit mine at nearby Panguna. After Papua
- Arawak (people)
Arawak, American Indians of the Greater Antilles and South America. The Taino, an Arawak subgroup, were the first native peoples encountered by Christopher Columbus on Hispaniola. It was long held that the island Arawak were virtually wiped out by Old World diseases to which they had no immunity
- Arawakan languages
Arawakan languages, most widespread of all South American Indian language groups. Before the Spanish conquest, Arawakan languages were spoken in a number of disconnected areas from what is now Cuba and the Bahamas southward to the present Gran Chaco and the sources of the Xingu River in southern
- arawana (fish)
arawana, (species Osteoglossum bicirrhosum), freshwater fish of tropical South America in the family Osteoglossidae (order Osteoglossiformes). Arawanas seldom reach lengths of more than 60 cm (2 feet) but are regarded as superb sports fish and highly edible. In appearance they have large scales and
- Arawn (Celtic mythology)
Pwyll: He became a friend of Arawn, king of Annwn (the underworld), and exchanged shapes and kingdoms with him for a year and a day, thus gaining the name Pwyll Pen Annwn (“Head of Annwn”). With the aid of the goddess Rhiannon, who loved him, Pwyll won her from his rival,…
- Araxes River (river, Asia)
Aras River, river rising south of Erzurum in the Bingöl Dağları (mountains) of Turkey; it flows eastward, forming for approximately 275 miles (440 km) the international boundary between Armenia and Azerbaijan on the north and Turkey and Iran on the south. Below the eastern boundary of Armenia, the
- Araya, Johnny (Costa Rican politician)
Costa Rica: Costa Rica in the 21st century: …also prompted his runoff opponent, Johnny Araya of the PLN—longtime mayor of San José and the leading contender to replace the deeply unpopular Chinchilla—to withdraw from the contest. The PAC won only 13 of the 57 available legislative seats but was able to form a ruling coalition.
- Araz River (river, Asia)
Aras River, river rising south of Erzurum in the Bingöl Dağları (mountains) of Turkey; it flows eastward, forming for approximately 275 miles (440 km) the international boundary between Armenia and Azerbaijan on the north and Turkey and Iran on the south. Below the eastern boundary of Armenia, the
- Arazzeria Medicea (factory, Florence, Italy)
tapestry: 16th century: The Arrazeria Medicea founded in 1546 in Florence by the Medici grand duke Cosimo I (1519–74) was the most important tapestry factory instituted in Italy during the 16th century and survived into the early 18th century. It was headed initially by the famous mid-15th-century Flemish weavers…
- ʿArāʾīsh, Al- (Morocco)
Larache, Atlantic port city, northern Morocco, at the mouth of the Loukkos (Lucus) River. The ruins of ancient Lixus, successively a Phoenician, Carthaginian, and Roman settlement, are 2 miles (3 km) northeast on the river’s north bank. Larache was under Spanish rule from 1610 to 1689 and from 1912
- Arba-ilu (Iraq)
Erbil, city, capital of Erbil muḥāfaẓah (governorate), northern Iraq. The city is also the capital of the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) in Iraq and is among the largest cities in that country. It is one of the most ancient cities in the world, dating back at least to 2300 bce. Erbil has long
- Arbacia punctulata (echinoderm)
sea urchin: …the genus Arbacia, such as A. punctulata, the common urchin from Cape Cod to the West Indies, are familiar subjects in embryology; a female may release several million eggs at a time. In the West Indies, sea eggs—the ovaries of Tripneustes ventricosus—are eaten raw or fried; in the Mediterranean region,…
- Arbasino, Alberto (Italian author and critic)
Italian literature: Experimentalism and the new avant-garde: …critic, antinovelist, and vitriolic essayist Alberto Arbasino, whose Fratelli d’Italia (the title, meaning “Brothers of Italy,” alludes ironically, not to say derisively, to the Italian national anthem), first published in 1963, had a second, amplified edition in 1976 and a third, running to 1,371 pages, in 1993; and Luigi Malerba,…
- Arbat Prospekt (street, Moscow, Russia)
Moscow: The inner city: …to this bustling thoroughfare is Arbat Prospekt (also called Old Arbat), one of the most picturesque streets of Moscow and now closed to vehicular traffic.
- arbaʿ kanfot (Jewish garment)
arbaʿ kanfot, religious undergarment in Judaism that possibly came into use during times of persecution as a substitute for the larger and more conspicuous prayer shawl (ṭallit). Both garments have fringes (tzitzit) on the four corners, increasing the likelihood that one was a conscious imitation
- arbaʿ kanfoth (Jewish garment)
arbaʿ kanfot, religious undergarment in Judaism that possibly came into use during times of persecution as a substitute for the larger and more conspicuous prayer shawl (ṭallit). Both garments have fringes (tzitzit) on the four corners, increasing the likelihood that one was a conscious imitation
- Arbaʿa ṭurim (work by Jacob ben Asher)
Joseph ben Ephraim Karo: …Bet Yosef on the codification Arbaʿa ṭurim (1475; “Four Rows”) of Jacob ben Asher. Following Asher’s topical arrangement, Karo brought together the legal decisions of three leading representative Talmudists: Moses Maimonides, Isaac Alfasi, and Asher ben Jehiel. When he found disagreement among the three, Karo took the majority opinion as…
- Arbe (island, Croatia)
Rab, island in the Adriatic Sea in western Croatia. It forms the northernmost part of Dalmatia. Rab reaches a maximum elevation of 1,339 feet (408 metres) at Mount Kamenjak and comprises three ridges of limestone. More than 300 freshwater springs provide a valuable water supply to the population of
- Arbeau, Thoinot (French dance theorist and historian)
Thoinot Arbeau was a theoretician and historian of the dance, whose Orchésographie (1588) contains carefully detailed, step-by-step descriptions of 16th-century and earlier dance forms. Ordained a priest in 1530, he became a canon at Langres (1547), where he was encouraged to pursue his studies by
- ARBED SA (Luxembourger company)
Luxembourg: Manufacturing and trade: …the late 1970s ARBED (Aciéries Réunies de Burbach-Eich-Dudelange) SA was Luxembourg’s only remaining steelmaker. In 2001 ARBED merged with the Spanish company Aceralia and the French company Usinor to form Arcelor, which subsequently joined Mittal to create ArcelorMittal, the world’s largest steel company at the time of its formation…
- Arbeiter Zeitung (socialist newspaper)
Victor Adler: …after its ban, published the Arbeiter Zeitung (“Workers’ Paper”), which became the socialists’ main organ. He was chiefly responsible for founding the united Social Democratic Party of Austria (December 1888–January 1889), in which he remained a leading figure, and he made it into a multinational party advocating federalism and autonomy…
- Arbeiter-Illustrierte Zeitung (German newspaper)
John Heartfield: …works were created for the Arbeiter-Illustrierte Zeitung (AIZ; “Workers’ Illustrated Newspaper”), a widely circulated left-wing weekly that he worked for from 1927 to 1938. Because he was a regular contributor to journals and newspapers, his work was gaining a lot of exposure—so much so that in 1929 an entire room…
- Arbeiterfrage und das Christenthum, Die (work by Ketteler)
Wilhelm Emmanuel, baron von Ketteler: …comprehensively expressed in his book Die Arbeiterfrage und das Christenthum (1864; “The Labourer Question and Christianity”), which strongly stimulated the interest of German Roman Catholics in social problems. Ketteler’s paramount concern for the need of a Christian foundation supplied the quintessence of his other writings and his sermons. His most…
- Arbeitergilden der Gegenwart, Die (work by Brentano)
Lujo Brentano: …England that resulted in his Die Arbeitergilden der Gegenwart (1871–72; “Workers’ Guilds of the Present”). In it he argued that modern trade unions were the successors of the medieval guilds. The book soon became an authoritative source on industrial-era work associations. His other works, which are of a more theoretical…
- Arbeitsgemeinschaft der Öffentlich-Rechtlichen Rundfunkanstalten Deutschlands (German television station)
Germany: Broadcasting: …form one evening television offering, ARD (Arbeitsgemeinschaft der Öffentlich-Rechtlichen Rundfunkanstalten Deutschlands). This is complemented by a second television network, ZDF (Zweites Deutsches Fernsehen), which is based in Mainz. A third channel is operated by ARD but is organized and broadcast regionally, with special emphasis placed on local and regional events…
- Arbela (Iraq)
Erbil, city, capital of Erbil muḥāfaẓah (governorate), northern Iraq. The city is also the capital of the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) in Iraq and is among the largest cities in that country. It is one of the most ancient cities in the world, dating back at least to 2300 bce. Erbil has long
- Arbela, Battle of (331 BCE)
Battle of Gaugamela, (October 1, 331 bce) clash between the forces of Alexander the Great of Macedonia and Darius III of Persia that decided the fate of the Persian Achaemenian Empire. From his accession in 336 bce at age 20, Alexander had set his mind on the conquest of Persia. Indeed, he had
- Arbenz Guzmán, Jacobo (president of Guatemala)
Jacobo Arbenz was a soldier, politician, and president of Guatemala (1951–54) whose nationalistic economic and social reforms alienated conservative landowners, conservative elements in the army, and the U.S. government and led to his overthrow. Arbenz, the son of a Swiss pharmacist who had
- Arbenz, Jacobo (president of Guatemala)
Jacobo Arbenz was a soldier, politician, and president of Guatemala (1951–54) whose nationalistic economic and social reforms alienated conservative landowners, conservative elements in the army, and the U.S. government and led to his overthrow. Arbenz, the son of a Swiss pharmacist who had
- Arber, Agnes (British botanist)
Agnes Arber was a botanist noted chiefly for her studies in comparative anatomy of plants, especially monocotyledons. She attended the universities of London (B.Sc., 1899; D.Sc., 1905) and Cambridge (M.A.) and in 1909 married Edward Alexander Newell Arber, a paleobotanist who had been her teacher
- Arber, Edward (British scholar)
Edward Arber was a scholar whose editing, and publication at reasonable prices, of Elizabethan and Restoration texts first made detailed study of them possible to the ordinary student. An Admiralty clerk, he studied literature and entered academic life, serving as professor of English at Birmingham
- Arber, Werner (Swiss microbiologist)
Werner Arber is a Swiss microbiologist, corecipient with Daniel Nathans and Hamilton Othanel Smith of the United States of the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine for 1978. All three were cited for their work in molecular genetics, specifically the discovery and application of enzymes that break
- Arbëresh (Albanian dialect)
Albanian literature: The Arbëresh writers, as they are commonly called, profited from the absence of state-imposed restrictions in Italy and published freely to preserve and celebrate their ethnic Albanian heritage. (The term Arbëresh denotes both their dialect and their ethnic origins; it is derived from the word Arbëria,…
- Arbëri
Albania, country in southern Europe, located in the western part of the Balkan Peninsula on the Strait of Otranto, the southern entrance to the Adriatic Sea. The capital city is Tirana (Tiranë). Albanians refer to themselves as shqiptarë—often taken to mean “sons of eagles,” though it may well
- ʿArbī ad-Darqāwī, Mawlāy al- (Ṣūfī mystic)
Darqāwā: …18th century by Mawlāy al-ʿArbī ad-Darqāwī (c. 1737–1823) in Morocco. An offshoot of the Shadhīlī Ṣūfīs, the order brought together individuals of varied social class. Its doctrine is orthodox, emphasizing devotion to, contemplation of, and union with God, attainable by frequent solitary prayer or in communal sessions where phrase…