- Aman-Jean, Édmond-François (French painter)
Georges Seurat: …a studio with another painter, Édmond-François Aman-Jean, who then joined him in Lehmann’s class. But Seurat and Aman-Jean departed from the policies of the École des Beaux-Arts in admiring the warm landscapes of Jean-Baptiste Millet at the Louvre. The two friends often frequented dance halls and cabarets in the evening,…
- Amana (Egyptian god)
Amon, Egyptian deity who was revered as king of the gods. Amon may have been originally one of the eight deities of the Hermopolite creation myth; his cult reached Thebes, where he became the patron of the pharaohs by the reign of Mentuhotep I (2008–1957 bce). At that date he was already identified
- Amana Church Society
Amana Colonies: The Amana Church Society, separately organized in 1932, continues its pietistic traditions, emphasizes Bible study and prayer, and remains the dominant force in the community. Simple worship services are conducted in German in unadorned village churches. The Amana Church Society, which is governed by elected elders…
- Amana Colonies (settlement, Iowa, United States)
Amana Colonies, settlement in Iowa county, east-central Iowa, U.S. It lies near the Iowa River, 20 miles (32 km) west-northwest of Iowa City, and comprises a group of seven small villages: Amana, East Amana, Middle Amana, High Amana, West Amana, South Amana, and Homestead. Amana developed from the
- Amana Society (American corporation)
Amana Colonies: …a joint-stock corporation, called the Amana Society, with the workers as stockholders. In addition to its farms, the Amana Society operates factories that produce woolens, furniture, wines, bakery goods, and meat specialties. Amana Refrigeration, Inc., formerly a division of the Amana Society, manufactures refrigerators, freezers, and microwave ovens. The Amana…
- Amanat wa-iʿtiqadat (work by Saʿadia ben Joseph)
Judaism: Saʿadia ben Joseph: …Kitāb al-amānāt wa al-iʿtiqādāt (Beliefs and Opinions), is modeled on similar Muʿtazilite treatises and on the Muʿtazilite classification of theological subject matter known as the Five Principles.
- Amanat, Agha Hasan (Pakistani poet)
South Asian arts: Theatre in Pakistan: …drama written by the poet Agha Hasan Amanat and produced in 1855 in the palace courtyard of the last nawab of Oudh, Wajid Ali Shah. The story deals with the love of a fairy and Prince Gulfam. The fairy takes her lover to heaven where the angry and jealous Indra…
- AMANDA (research project)
Antarctica: Climate of Antarctica: …on Earth is AMANDA, the Antarctic Muon and Neutrino Detector Array. This involves an array of hundreds of optical devices set at depths of up to 1.2 miles (2 km) in the ice below the South Pole. It is essentially a telescope built within the ice sheet to detect high-energy…
- Amanda Smith Industrial School for Girls (orphanage, Harvey, Illinois, United States)
Amanda Smith: …Illinois and chartered as the Amanda Smith Industrial School for Girls. It was destroyed by fire in 1918.
- Amandava amandava (bird)
avadavat, (species Amandava, or Estrilda, amandava), plump, 8-centimetre- (3-inch-) long bird of the waxbill (q.v.) group (order Passeriformes), a popular cage bird. The avadavat is abundant in marshes and meadows of southern Asia (introduced in Hawaii). The male, in breeding plumage, is bright red
- Amandava formosa (bird)
munia: …Thailand to Java and the green munia, or green tiger finch (Amandava formosa), of India. The white-throated munia is also called silverbill, as are other birds with silver bills. For red munia, see avadavat.
- Amandiers sont morts de leurs blessures, Les (work by Ben Jelloun)
Tahar Ben Jelloun: …the same year, he published Les Amandiers sont morts de leurs blessures (“The Almond Trees Are Dead from Their Wounds”)—poems and stories on his grandmother’s death, the Palestinian question, North African immigration to France, love, and eroticism. A third novel, Moha le fou, Moha le sage (1978; “Moha the Fool,…
- Amangku Buwono I (Southeast Asian ruler)
Gianti Agreement: …Mangkubumi, later known as Sultan Amangku Buwono I, who built his palace in Jogjakarta. Raden Mas Said signed a treaty with the company in 1757, which entitled him to have a part of eastern Mataram. He was thenceforth known as Mangkunegara I.
- Amanishakhete (queen of Nubia)
Nubia: …in 45 bce of Queen Amanishakhete. She and her immediate successors temporarily arrested the loss of Egyptian culture, but thereafter it continued unchecked. Meanwhile, in 23 bce, a Roman army under Gaius Petronius destroyed Napata.
- amanita (fungus)
amanita, (genus Amanita), genus of several hundred species of mushrooms in the family Amanitaceae. Some species of Amanita are poisonous to humans. The amanitas typically have white spores, a ring on the stem slightly below the cap, a veil (volva) torn as the cap expands, and a cup from which the
- Amanita (fungus)
amanita, (genus Amanita), genus of several hundred species of mushrooms in the family Amanitaceae. Some species of Amanita are poisonous to humans. The amanitas typically have white spores, a ring on the stem slightly below the cap, a veil (volva) torn as the cap expands, and a cup from which the
- Amanita bisporigera (mushroom)
amanita: …are the destroying angels (A. bisporigera, A. ocreata, A. verna, and A. virosa). They develop a large white fruiting body and are found in forests during wet periods in summer and autumn. Death cap (A. phalloides), also deadly, is found in woods or their borders. It has a green…
- Amanita brunnescens (mushroom)
amanita: Other poisonous species include the brown American star-footed amanita (A. brunnescens) and the panther cap (A. pantherina). Common edible species include Caesar’s mushroom (A. caesarea), the blusher mushroom (A. rubescens), and the grisette (A. vaginata). See also mushroom poisoning
- Amanita caesarea (mushroom)
amanita: Common edible species include Caesar’s mushroom (A. caesarea), the blusher mushroom (A. rubescens), and the grisette (A. vaginata). See also mushroom poisoning.
- Amanita muscaria (mushroom)
fly agaric, (Amanita muscaria), poisonous mushroom in the family Amanitaceae (order Agaricales) found in forests, pastures, and fields throughout temperate and boreal regions of the Northern Hemisphere. It is hallucinogenic and was once used as a fly poison. The large iconic mushroom is usually
- Amanita ocreata (mushroom)
amanita: bisporigera, A. ocreata, A. verna, and A. virosa). They develop a large white fruiting body and are found in forests during wet periods in summer and autumn. Death cap (A. phalloides), also deadly, is found in woods or their borders. It has a green or brown…
- Amanita pantherina (fungus)
amanita: brunnescens) and the panther cap (A. pantherina). Common edible species include Caesar’s mushroom (A. caesarea), the blusher mushroom (A. rubescens), and the grisette (A. vaginata). See also mushroom poisoning.
- Amanita phalloides (mushroom)
death cap, (Amanita phalloides), species of poisonous mushroom, the deadliest known to humans. The death cap is responsible for the majority of mushroom poisonings worldwide, some of which prove to be fatal. Death caps are native to Europe, where they are widespread throughout the continent as well
- Amanita rubescens (mushroom)
amanita: caesarea), the blusher mushroom (A. rubescens), and the grisette (A. vaginata). See also mushroom poisoning.
- Amanita vaginata (mushroom)
amanita: rubescens), and the grisette (A. vaginata). See also mushroom poisoning.
- Amanita verna (mushroom)
amanita: ocreata, A. verna, and A. virosa). They develop a large white fruiting body and are found in forests during wet periods in summer and autumn. Death cap (A. phalloides), also deadly, is found in woods or their borders. It has a green or brown cap and…
- Amanita virosa (mushroom)
amanita: verna, and A. virosa). They develop a large white fruiting body and are found in forests during wet periods in summer and autumn. Death cap (A. phalloides), also deadly, is found in woods or their borders. It has a green or brown cap and appears in summer…
- Amanitaceae (family of fungi)
Agaricales: Other families and genera: The family Amanitaceae contains many species that are poisonous. The genus Amanita contains the destroying angels (A. bisporigera, A. ocreata, A. verna, and A. virosa) and the death cap (A. phalloides), which are among the deadliest mushrooms known.
- Amano Hiroshi (Japanese materials scientist)
Amano Hiroshi is a Japanese materials scientist who was awarded the 2014 Nobel Prize in Physics for inventing blue light-emitting diodes (LEDs). He shared the prize with Japanese materials scientist Akasaki Isamu and Japanese-born American materials scientist Shuji Nakamura. Amano became a student
- Amano Yukiya (Japanese diplomat)
Yukiya Amano was a Japanese expert in nuclear disarmament and nonproliferation who was director general (2009–19) of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA). Amano joined Japan’s Foreign Ministry after graduating from Tokyo University’s law faculty in 1972. In 1988 he was appointed director
- Amano, Yukiya (Japanese diplomat)
Yukiya Amano was a Japanese expert in nuclear disarmament and nonproliferation who was director general (2009–19) of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA). Amano joined Japan’s Foreign Ministry after graduating from Tokyo University’s law faculty in 1972. In 1988 he was appointed director
- Amanpour, Christiane (journalist)
Christiane Amanpour is an English-born journalist who, as a correspondent for CNN, was one of the leading war reporters of the late 20th and early 21st centuries. She later hosted the ABC news program This Week (2010–11) and the PBS interview series Amanpour & Company (2018– ). Amanpour’s father,
- amantadine (drug)
amantadine, drug used to treat infections caused by influenza type A virus, the most common cause of influenza epidemics. Amantadine and its derivative, rimantadine, can be used successfully in the prevention and treatment of influenza A; however, these agents have no effect against influenza B
- amante fedele, L’ (work by Bontempelli)
Massimo Bontempelli: His L’amante fedele (1953; “The Faithful Lover”), a collection of surrealistic stories, won Italy’s highest literary award, the Strega Prize.
- amantes de Teruel, Los (work by Hartzenbusch)
Juan Eugenio Hartzenbusch: …ended with the production of Los amantes de Teruel (1837), a vivid dramatization of a legend, followed by successes with comedias de magia (“comedies of magic”)—e.g., Los polvos de la madre Celestina, 1840—and adaptations of Golden Age plays. He entered the Spanish Academy (1847) and became director of the national…
- amantes pasajeros, Los (film by Almodóvar [2013])
Pedro Almodóvar: …comedy Los amantes pasajeros (I’m So Excited!), set aboard an airplane preparing for an emergency landing, followed in 2013. Three years later he helmed and wrote Julieta, a drama about an estranged mother and daughter; it was based on several short stories by Alice Munro. Almodóvar then worked with…
- Amants, heureux amants (work by Larbaud)
French literature: The avant-garde: …influenced in its turn Larbaud’s Amants, heureux amants (1923; “Lovers, Happy Lovers”).
- Amants, Les (film by Malle [1958])
Louis Malle: His second, Les Amants (1958; The Lovers), was a commercial success and established Malle and its star, Jeanne Moreau, in the film industry. The film’s lyrical love scenes, tracked with exquisite timing, exhibit Malle’s typically bold and uninhibited treatment of sensual themes. Social alienation and isolation was the subject of…
- Amānullāh Khan (ruler of Afghanistan)
Amānullāh Khan was the ruler of Afghanistan (1919–29) who led his country to full independence from British influence. A favoured son of the Afghan ruler Ḥabībullāh Khan, Amānullāh took possession of the throne immediately after his father’s assassination in 1919, at a time when Great Britain
- Amapá (state, Brazil)
Amapá, estado (state), northern Brazil. It is bounded on the north by a small portion of Suriname and by French Guiana, on the northeast by the Atlantic Ocean, on the south and west by the Brazilian state of Pará, and on the southeast by the Amazon River. Formerly a part of Pará state, Amapá was
- Amapá Biodiversity Corridor (area, Brazil)
Amapá: …park is part of the Amapá Biodiversity Corridor, a protected area that was established in 2003. The corridor covers more than 70 percent of the state. By the second decade of the 21st century, however, the state’s ecology had begun to be transformed by increasing oil exploration and mining activity…
- Amapala (Honduras)
Amapala, port, southwestern Honduras, on Isla de Tigre (Tiger Island) in the Gulf of Fonseca. It is the main Pacific port of Honduras, serving both coastal and overseas trade. The coastal marshes abound in wild ducks, and there is deep-sea fishing in the Pacific waters of the gulf. Pop. (2001)
- Amar Jawan Jyoti (Indian memorial)
India Gate: The flames demarcate the Amar Jawan Jyoti, a small monument that has served as India’s tomb of the unknown soldier since 1971.
- Amar Singh, Rānā (Mewār ruler)
India: Submission of Mewar: The Rana Amar Singh then initiated negotiations (1615). He recognized Jahāngīr as his suzerain, and all his territory in Mughal possession was restored, including Chitor—although it could not be fortified. Amar Singh was not obliged to attend the imperial court, but his son was to represent him;…
- Amar y Borbón, Josefa (Spanish author)
Spanish literature: New critical approaches: Josefa Amar y Borbón defended women’s admission to learned academies, asserting their equal intelligence in “Discurso en defensa del talento de las mujeres y de su aptitud para el gobierno y otros cargos en que se emplean los hombres” (1786; “Discourse in Defense of the…
- Amar-Suena (king of Ur)
history of Mesopotamia: The 3rd dynasty of Ur: …Ur-Nammu and his successors Shulgi, Amar-Su’ena, Shu-Sin, and Ibbi-Sin, this dynasty lasted for a century (c. 2112–c. 2004). Ur-Nammu was at first “governor” of the city of Ur under Utu-hegal. How he became king is not known, but there may well be some parallels between his rise and the career…
- Amara, Lucine (American opera singer)
Lucine Amara is an American operatic soprano, prima donna of the Metropolitan Opera (Met) in New York. She was regarded as one of the finest lyric sopranos of her generation. Amara studied singing in San Francisco, where she sang in the chorus of the San Francisco Opera (1945–46) and made her
- ʿAmārah Dunqas (Funj dynasty leader)
Funj Dynasty: …White Nile, was founded by ʿAmārah Dunqas in 1504–05. The Funj expanded northward from this region at the same time the ʿAbdallabi dynasty was extending its dominion southward from the region of Sūbah.
- ʿAmārah, Al- (Iraq)
Al-ʿAmārah, city, capital of Maysān muḥāfaẓah (governorate), southeastern Iraq. Situated on a low ridge beside the Tigris River, it is Iraq’s chief port on that waterway south of Baghdad. It is a trade centre for agricultural produce, livestock, wool, and hides and is known for weaving and
- Amaral dos Barretos (Brazil)
Barretos, city, north-central São Paulo estado (state), Brazil. It lies near the Pardo River at 1,713 feet (522 metres) above sea level. Known at various times as Amaral dos Barretos, Espírito Santo de Barreto, and Espírito Santo dos Barretos, the settlement was given town status and was made the
- Amaral Martins, António Jacinto do (Angolan poet)
António Jacinto was a white Angolan poet, short-story writer, and cabinet minister in his country’s first postwar government. The son of Portuguese settlers in Angola, Jacinto became associated with militant movements against Portuguese colonial rule and was arrested in 1961. He was sent to São
- Amaral, Delcídio do (Brazilian politician)
Petrobras scandal: Delcídio do Amaral of the PT, an important ally of Rousseff, who became the first sitting senator to be arrested since at least the 1980s. Amaral and Esteves were accused of obstructing the scandal investigation by attempting to pressure a former Petrobras executive not to…
- Amaral, Tarsila do (Brazilian artist)
Tarsila do Amaral was a Brazilian painter who blended local Brazilian content with international avant-garde aesthetics. Amaral, who is usually simply called Tarsila, began studying academic painting in 1916. In 1920 she traveled to Paris, where she took classes at the Académie Julian, returning to
- amaranth (plant)
amaranth, (genus Amaranthus), genus of 60–70 species of flowering plants in the family Amaranthaceae, distributed nearly worldwide. Several amaranth species are useful as food crops and are grown both for their leaves and for their edible seeds, which are a nutritious pseudocereal (nongrass seeds
- amaranth (dye)
dye: Food dyes: The azo dye amaranth was banned in 1976 after a long court battle but is still approved in many countries—including Canada, whose list includes one other azo dye, Ponceau SX, which is banned in the United States.
- amaranth family (plant family)
Amaranthaceae, (family Amaranthaceae), amaranth family of flowering plants (order Caryophyllales), with about 175 genera and more than 2,500 species, mostly herbs and subshrubs, distributed nearly worldwide. A number of species, including beets and quinoa, are important food crops, and several are
- Amaranthaceae (plant family)
Amaranthaceae, (family Amaranthaceae), amaranth family of flowering plants (order Caryophyllales), with about 175 genera and more than 2,500 species, mostly herbs and subshrubs, distributed nearly worldwide. A number of species, including beets and quinoa, are important food crops, and several are
- Amaranthus (plant)
amaranth, (genus Amaranthus), genus of 60–70 species of flowering plants in the family Amaranthaceae, distributed nearly worldwide. Several amaranth species are useful as food crops and are grown both for their leaves and for their edible seeds, which are a nutritious pseudocereal (nongrass seeds
- Amaranthus caudatus (plant)
Amaranthaceae: Major genera and species: Some species—namely, Inca wheat, or love-lies-bleeding (Amaranthus caudatus), red amaranth (A. cruentus), and quinoa (Chenopodium quinoa)—are high-protein pseudo-grain crops of interest to agricultural researchers. Quinoa in particular, touted as a health food, grew in popularity worldwide during the early 21st century.
- Amaranthus cruentus (plant)
Amaranthaceae: Major genera and species: …wheat, or love-lies-bleeding (Amaranthus caudatus), red amaranth (A. cruentus), and quinoa (Chenopodium quinoa)—are high-protein pseudo-grain crops of interest to agricultural researchers. Quinoa in particular, touted as a health food, grew in popularity worldwide during the early 21st century.
- Amaranthus graecizans (plant)
pigweed: Prostrate pigweed, or mat amaranth (A. graecizans), grows along the ground surface with stems rising at the tips; spiny pigweed, or spiny amaranth (A. spinosus), has spines at the base of the leafstalks; and rough pigweed, or redroot (A. retroflexus), is a stout plant up…
- Amaranthus hypochondriacus (plant)
Amaranthaceae: Major genera and species: …herbs, including the ornamentals love-lies-bleeding, prince’s feather (A. hybridus), and Joseph’s coat (A. tricolor). The genus also contains many weedy plants known as pigweed, especially rough pigweed (A. retroflexus), prostrate pigweed (A. graecizans), and white pigweed (A. albus), which are common in waste areas throughout Europe and parts of the…
- Amaranthus palmeri (plant)
amaranth: Weed species: At least one species, Palmer’s amaranth (A. palmeri), has developed resistance to the common herbicide glyphosate and is a troublesome pest in genetically modified cotton and soybean crops in the United States.
- Amaranthus retroflexus (plant)
pigweed: …base of the leafstalks; and rough pigweed, or redroot (A. retroflexus), is a stout plant up to 3 metres (about 10 feet) tall.
- Amaranthus spinosus (plant)
pigweed: …stems rising at the tips; spiny pigweed, or spiny amaranth (A. spinosus), has spines at the base of the leafstalks; and rough pigweed, or redroot (A. retroflexus), is a stout plant up to 3 metres (about 10 feet) tall.
- Amaranthus tricolor (plant)
Amaranthaceae: Major genera and species: hybridus), and Joseph’s coat (A. tricolor). The genus also contains many weedy plants known as pigweed, especially rough pigweed (A. retroflexus), prostrate pigweed (A. graecizans), and white pigweed (A. albus), which are common in waste areas throughout Europe and parts of the Americas.
- Amarapura (Myanmar)
Amarapura, town, central Myanmar (Burma). It lies on the left bank of the Irrawaddy River. A suburb of Mandalay, it is also known as Taung myo (Southern Town) or Myohaung (Old City). Founded by King Bodawpaya in 1783 as his new capital, it supplanted Ava, 6 miles (10 km) southwest. Its population
- Amarapura (Buddhism)
Buddhism: Sri Lanka: The Amarapura sect, founded in the early 19th century, opened its ranks to members of lower castes. The third division, the Ramanya sect, is a small modernist group that emerged in the 19th century. In addition, several reform groups were established among the laity. These groups…
- Amaravalli (India)
Amreli, city, southwestern Gujarat state, west-central India. It lies in the southeast-central part of the Kathiawar Peninsula, 125 miles (200 km) southwest of Ahmadabad. Amreli is primarily a commercial centre. Its industries include the manufacture of khadi (coarse cotton cloth), tanning, silver
- Amaravathi (India)
Amaravati, village, central Andhra Pradesh state, southern India. It is situated on the Krishna River, about 18 miles (29 km) west-northwest of Vijayawada and 20 miles (32 km) north-northwest of Guntur. Amaravati, meaning “Abode of the Gods,” was said to be the site where the mythical beings devas,
- Amaravati (India)
Amaravati, village, central Andhra Pradesh state, southern India. It is situated on the Krishna River, about 18 miles (29 km) west-northwest of Vijayawada and 20 miles (32 km) north-northwest of Guntur. Amaravati, meaning “Abode of the Gods,” was said to be the site where the mythical beings devas,
- Amarāvatī sculpture
Amarāvatī sculpture, Indian sculpture that flourished in the Andhra region of southeastern India from about the 2nd century bc to the end of the 3rd century ad, during the rule of the Sātavāhana dynasty. It is known for its superb reliefs, which are among the world’s finest examples of narrative
- Amarcord (film by Fellini [1973])
Roger Corman: New World Pictures: and Whispers (1972), Federico Fellini’s Amarcord (1973), and Volker Schlöndorff’s The Tin Drum (1979). Corman sold New World Pictures in 1983 and founded Concorde-New Horizons, a company devoted strictly to movie production.
- amaretto (liqueur)
amaretto, liqueur of Italian origin made from alcohol infused with stone-fruit pits or almonds. Two families in the small Italian city of Saronno, in Lombardy, claim to have originated amaretto, its name derived from the Italian adjective amaro, meaning “bitter.” The Reina family’s recipe draws on
- Amargosa Range (mountains, United States)
Amargosa Range, group of mountains in eastern California and southern Nevada, U.S., separating Death Valley from the Amargosa Desert. Part of the Basin Ranges of eastern California, the Amargosa Range extends 110 miles (180 km) from Grapevine Peak (8,705 feet [2,653 m]), south-southeastward to the
- Amargosa River (river, United States)
Death Valley: Physical environment: The Amargosa River brings some water into the southern end of the valley from desert areas to the east, but most of its flow is underground. Salt Creek, draining the northern arm of the valley, also has only short stretches of perennial surface flow.
- Amarigna language
Amharic language, one of the two main languages of Ethiopia (along with the Oromo language). It is spoken principally in the central highlands of the country. Amharic is an Afro-Asiatic language of the Southwest Semitic group and is related to Geʿez, or Ethiopic, the liturgical language of the
- Amarillo (Texas, United States)
Amarillo, city, seat (1887) of Potter county (and partly in Randall county), on the high plains of northern Texas, U.S. The chief city of the Texas Panhandle, Amarillo is located on a sandy playa, or dry lake bed, and the tawny colour of its soil lends the city its name (Spanish: Yellow). At first
- Amarillo (painting by Herrera)
Carmen Herrera: …dimensionality in works such as Amarillo (1971), painted on four-inch plywood.
- Amarillo Ramp (work by Smithson)
Robert Smithson: …an Earthwork to be titled Amarillo Ramp. This piece was finished posthumously (1973) by Holt, Tony Shafrazi, and Richard Serra.
- ʿAmarīnah, Tall al- (ancient site, Egypt)
Tell el-Amarna, site of the ruins and tombs of the city of Akhetaton (“Horizon of the Aton”) in Upper Egypt, 44 miles (71 km) north of modern Asyūṭ. On a virgin site on the east bank of the Nile River, Akhenaten (Amenhotep IV) built the city about 1348 bce as the new capital of his kingdom when he
- Amarinya language
Amharic language, one of the two main languages of Ethiopia (along with the Oromo language). It is spoken principally in the central highlands of the country. Amharic is an Afro-Asiatic language of the Southwest Semitic group and is related to Geʿez, or Ethiopic, the liturgical language of the
- Amarkantak (India)
South Asian arts: Medieval temple architecture: North Indian style of central India: Another important site is Amarkantak, where there are a large group of temples, the most important of which is the Karṇa. Although generally of the 11th century, they are quite simple, lacking the rich sculptural decoration so characteristic of the period. By contrast, the Virāṭeśvara temple at Sohāgpur, with…
- Amarna Age (Egyptian history)
Palestine: Late Bronze Age: …is often known as the Amarna Age and is vividly illustrated by several hundred letters written in cuneiform script, found in Egypt at Tell el-Amarna, site of the capital of the “heretic king” Akhenaton. The unusual concern of the pharaohs with the affairs of Palestine was chiefly a result of…
- Amarna Letters (Akkadian literature)
Amarna Letters, cache of clay tablets discovered at Tell el-Amarna in Egypt and dating to the reigns of kings Amenhotep III and Akhenaton of the 18th dynasty. The Amarna Letters provide invaluable insight into the nature of diplomatic relations among the great nations and petty states of the 14th
- Amarna style (ancient Egyptian art)
Amarna style, revolutionary style of Egyptian art created by Amenhotep IV, who took the name Akhenaton during his reign (1353–36 bce) in the 18th dynasty. Akhenaton’s alteration of the artistic and religious life of ancient Egypt was drastic, if short-lived. His innovations were centred upon a new
- Amarna, Tall al- (ancient site, Egypt)
Tell el-Amarna, site of the ruins and tombs of the city of Akhetaton (“Horizon of the Aton”) in Upper Egypt, 44 miles (71 km) north of modern Asyūṭ. On a virgin site on the east bank of the Nile River, Akhenaten (Amenhotep IV) built the city about 1348 bce as the new capital of his kingdom when he
- Amarna, Tell el- (ancient site, Egypt)
Tell el-Amarna, site of the ruins and tombs of the city of Akhetaton (“Horizon of the Aton”) in Upper Egypt, 44 miles (71 km) north of modern Asyūṭ. On a virgin site on the east bank of the Nile River, Akhenaten (Amenhotep IV) built the city about 1348 bce as the new capital of his kingdom when he
- Amarsipidae (fish family)
perciform: Annotated classification: Nomeidae, Ariommidae, Amarsipidae, and Tetragonuridae Eocene to present; slender to ovate, deep-bodied fishes; dorsal fin continuous or spinous portion set off from soft portion by deep notch; in the most generalized species, which resemble Kyphosidae, the soft dorsal is preceded by about 6 low, stoutish spines; other…
- Amaru (South American mythology)
Native American religions: Initiation: …time a formless water serpent, Amaru, was the first female being. Her female followers stole ritual flutes, kuai, from the males of that age and initiated Amaru by placing her in a basket while they blessed food for her. Insects and worms tried to penetrate the basket, and eventually a…
- Amaryllidaceae (plant family)
Amaryllidaceae, amaryllis family of perennial herbs in the flowering plant order Asparagales, containing 73 genera and at least 1,600 species, distributed primarily in tropical and subtropical areas of the world. Members of the family have bulbs or underground stems, several strap- or lance-shaped
- Amaryllis (literary character)
Amaryllis, in Roman literature, a stock female character, a natural, pretty young woman who was usually a shepherdess. Amaryllis is mentioned in classical pastoral poetry and in later works, such as Thomas Campion’s “I Care Not for These Ladies” (1601) and John Milton’s “Lycidas”
- Amaryllis at the Fair (novel by Jefferies)
Richard Jefferies: He also dictated a novel, Amaryllis at the Fair (1887), which is sometimes compared to Thomas Hardy’s regional novels. Earlier novels by Jefferies include the beautiful Dewy Morn, 2 vol. (1884), and Green Ferne Farm (1880).
- Amaryllis belladonna (plant)
Amaryllidaceae: …many garden ornamentals, especially the belladonna lily (Amaryllis belladonna), snowdrop (Galanthus), snowflake (Leucojum), and daffodil (Narcissus). Many tropical lilylike plants also belong to the subfamily, such as the Cape tulip, or blood lily (Haemanthus),
- amaryllis family (plant family)
Amaryllidaceae, amaryllis family of perennial herbs in the flowering plant order Asparagales, containing 73 genera and at least 1,600 species, distributed primarily in tropical and subtropical areas of the world. Members of the family have bulbs or underground stems, several strap- or lance-shaped
- Amaseia (Turkey)
Amasya, city, capital of Amasya il (province), northern Turkey, on the Yeşil River, also called the Iris River. Capital of the kings of Pontus until about 183 bce, it was made a free city and the administrative centre of a large territory by Pompey in 65 bce. In the 2nd century ce it received the
- Amasia (Turkey)
Amasya, city, capital of Amasya il (province), northern Turkey, on the Yeşil River, also called the Iris River. Capital of the kings of Pontus until about 183 bce, it was made a free city and the administrative centre of a large territory by Pompey in 65 bce. In the 2nd century ce it received the
- Amasis (king of Egypt)
Amasis was a king (reigned 570–526 bce) of the 26th dynasty (664–525 bce; see ancient Egypt: The Late period [664–332 bce]) of ancient Egypt, a general who seized the throne during a revolt against King Apries. The account of the 5th-century-bce Greek historian Herodotus reveals Amasis as a shrewd
- Amasis Painter (Greek artist)
Amasis Painter was an ancient Greek vase painter who, with Exekias, was among the most accomplished of Archaic vase painters. He was responsible for the decoration of several of the black-figure amphorae (two-handled jars), cenochoae (wine pitchers), and lekythoi (oil flasks) of the Amasis Potter.
- amastoid skull (anatomy)
artiodactyl: Specializations of the head: Amastoid skulls are found in most suiform groups (including entelodonts, anthracotheres, and all living suiform groups); mastoid skulls occur in some early suiform groups, oreodonts, and all remaining artiodactyls that have lived since the end of the Eocene Epoch (about 33.9 million years ago). Hippopotamuses…