- Bahāʾī temple
Bahāʾī temple, in the Bahāʾī faith, house of worship open to adherents of all religions. See mashriq
- Bahāʾī, Shaykh (Iranian scholar)
Bahāʾ ad-dīn Muḥammad ibn Ḥusayn al-ʿĀmilī was a theologian, mathematician, jurist, and astronomer who was a major figure in the cultural revival of Ṣafavid Iran. Al-ʿĀmilī was educated by his father, Shaykh Ḥusayn, a Shīʿite theologian, and by excellent teachers of mathematics and medicine. After
- Bahia (Brazil)
Salvador, city, major port, and capital (since 1889) of Bahia estado (state), northeastern Brazil. It is the country’s third largest city. Salvador is situated at the southern tip of a picturesque, bluff-formed peninsula that separates Todos os Santos (All Saints) Bay, a deep natural harbour, from
- Bahia (state, Brazil)
Bahia, estado (state) of eastern Brazil. It is bounded by Piauí and Pernambuco states to the north, by Alagoas and Sergipe states to the northeast, by the Atlantic Ocean to the east, by Espírito Santo and Minas Gerais states to the south, and by Goiás and Tocantins states to the west. The capital,
- Bahía Blanca (Argentina)
Bahía Blanca, city and major port of Argentina, located near Blanca Bay of the Atlantic Ocean in the southwestern part of Buenos Aires provincia (province). The bay forms a natural harbour for the city, which is located 4 miles (6.5 km) upstream on the shallow Napostá Grande River. Explorers in the
- Bahía de Cádiz (inlet, Atlantic Ocean)
Bay of Cádiz, small inlet of the Gulf of Cádiz on the North Atlantic Ocean. It is 7 miles (11 km) long and up to 5 miles (8 km) wide, indenting the coast of Cádiz province, in southwestern Spain. It receives the Guadalete River and is partially protected by the narrow Isle of León, on which the
- Bahía de Coronado (bay, Costa Rica)
Coronado Bay, bay of the Pacific Ocean, bounded on the north, east, and southeast by southwestern Costa Rica. The bay, which measures approximately 25 miles (40 km) from northeast to southwest, extends from the town of Quepos southeastward for approximately 60 miles (100 km) to San Pedro (Llorona)
- Bahía de Guantánamo (bay, Cuba)
Guantánamo Bay, inlet of the Caribbean Sea, indenting southeastern Cuba. A large and well-sheltered bay, it has a narrow entrance to a harbour approximately 6 miles (10 km) wide and 12 miles (19 km) long and capable of accommodating large vessels. Guantánamo Bay is served by the ports of Caimanera
- Bahía de Samaná (bay, Dominican Republic)
Samaná Bay, bay located in the northeastern Dominican Republic and lying along the Mona Passage joining the Atlantic Ocean and the Caribbean Sea. Bounded on the north by the Samaná Peninsula, the bay measures about 40 miles (65 km) east-west and 15 miles (25 km) north-south. Its well-protected
- Bahía Limón (bay, Panama)
Limón Bay, natural harbour of the Caribbean Sea, in Panama at the north end of the Panama Canal. Approximately 4.5 miles (7 km) long and 2.5 miles wide, it is protected from storms by breakwaters at its entrance. The bay serves as a waiting area for ships about to enter the canal. On its eastern
- Bahía Samborombón (bay, Argentina)
Samborombón Bay, bay of the South Atlantic Ocean at the mouth of the Río de la Plata, Argentina, located 100 miles (160 km) southeast of the city of Buenos Aires. The bay arcs southwestward, southeastward, and then eastward for 85 miles (135 km) from Point Piedras to Point Norte of Cape San
- Bahía, Islas de la (islands, Honduras)
Bay Islands, group of small islands of northern Honduras. The main islands are Utila, Roatán, and Guanaja. They have an area of 101 square miles (261 square km) and lie about 35 miles (56 km) offshore in the Caribbean Sea. The main islands were first sighted by Christopher Columbus in 1502 and were
- bahina (musical instrument)
tabla: The baya (bahina or bayan, meaning “left”), played with the left hand, is a deep kettledrum measuring about 25 cm (10 inches) in height, and the drum face is about 20 cm (8 inches) in diameter. It is usually made of copper but may also be…
- Bahinābāī, Bahini (Indian poet-saint)
Bahinābāī, Bahini , poet-saint (sant), remembered as a composer of devotional songs (abhangas) in Marathi to the Hindu deity Viṭṭhal. Her work is preserved through oral performance (kīrtan), old handwritten manuscripts, and modern printed collections. Bahinābāī, in her autobiographical songs,
- Bahinemo (people)
Oceanic art and architecture: The Sepik River regions: The Bahinemo west of the Alamblak carved opposed-hook objects with no head or leg. They also made masks, for display only, which incorporated hooks and human features; these represented bush and water spirits. Groups farther west made hook carvings of the Bahinemo type and also carved…
- Bahing-Vayu languages
Sino-Tibetan languages: Classification: (such as Bodish, Himalayish, Kirantish, Burmish, Kachinish, and Kukish) should be considered as the classificatory peaks around which other Sino-Tibetan languages group themselves as members or more or less distant relatives. Certainly the stage has not yet been reached in which definite boundaries can be laid down and ancestral…
- Bahir (Jewish text)
Sefer ha-bahir, (Hebrew: “Book of Brightness”), largely symbolic commentary on the Old Testament, the basic motif of which is the mystical significance of the shapes and sounds of the Hebrew alphabet. The influence of the Bahir on the development of Kabbala (esoteric Jewish mysticism) was profound
- Bāhir, al- (work by Ibn al-Athīr)
Ibn al-Athīr: …dynasties) of Mosul called al-Bāhir, which was drawn from his own experience and from that of his father, who held office under the Zangids of Mosul. Among his other works were compilations of biographical and genealogical material of earlier authors.
- Bahlūl Lodī (Afghani ruler)
India: The rise of regional states: …his nominal vassal, the Afghan Bahlūl Lodī (reigned 1451–89), and retired to the Badaun district, which he retained until his death in 1478. Before he moved to Delhi, Bahlūl Lodī had already carved out a kingdom in the Punjab that was larger than that of the Sayyid sultans. (See Lodī…
- Bahman Shah, ʿAlāʾ-al-Dīn (Bahmanī ruler)
India: The Bahmani sultanate: …the throne of Daulatabad as ʿAlāʾ al-Dīn Bahman Shah in 1347 and soon moved his capital to the more centrally located Gulbarga on the Deccan plateau. Much of the political and military history of the Bahmanī sultanate can be described as a generally effective attempt to gain control of the…
- Bahmanī sultanate (historical Muslim state, India)
Bahmanī sultanate, Muslim state (1347–1518) in the Deccan in India. The sultanate was founded in 1347 by ʿAlāʾ al-Dīn Bahman Shah, who was supported by other military leaders in rebellion against the sultan of Delhi, Muḥammad ibn Tughluq. The Bahmanī capital was Aḥsanābād (now Gulbarga) between
- Bahnar (people)
Vietnam: Languages: Rengao, Sedang, Bahnar, Mnong, Mang (Maa), Muong, and Stieng—speak Mon-Khmer languages, connecting them with the Khmer. French missionaries and administrators provided Roman script for some of the Montagnard languages, and additional orthographies have since been devised.
- Bahnar language
Austroasiatic languages: Phonological characteristics: , Khmer, Mon, and Bahnar—allow major syllables without final consonants, but no Austroasiatic language allows combinations of two or more final consonants.
- Bahnaric languages
Bahnaric languages, branch of the Mon-Khmer family of languages, itself a part of the Austroasiatic stock. The Bahnaric branch is divided into West, Northwest, North, Central, and South subbranches. North Bahnaric languages, such as Sedang and Halang, are spoken primarily in central Vietnam.
- Bahnhofstrasse (avenue, Zürich, Switzerland)
Switzerland: Daily life and social customs: …shop, especially along Zürich’s famed Bahnhofstrasse, an avenue that is home to both fine shops—including the country’s renowned jewelers and watchmakers—and leading banks. Along the Bahnhofstrasse, shoppers can find Switzerland’s famous timepieces, local handicrafts, and books as well as dine in elegant cafés. Each city and town of any size…
- Bahonar, Mohammad Javad (prime minister of Iran)
Mohammad Javad Bahonar was an Iranian politician who was prime minister of the Islamic Republic of Iran in 1981. In office for less than a month, he was killed by antigovernment forces. Bahonar studied in the Shīʿite holy city of Qom, where he was a student of noted cleric Ayatollah Ruhollah
- Bahoruco, Sierra de (mountains, Hispaniola)
Sierra de Baoruco, mountain range in the southwestern part of the Dominican Republic. It extends about 50 miles (80 km) east from the Haitian border to the Caribbean Sea and lies parallel to the Cordillera Central. Its highest peak is 5,348 feet (1,630 meters). Straddling the Haitian border, the
- Baḥr al-Aḥmar, Al- (governorate, Egypt)
Al-Baḥr al-Aḥmar, muḥāfaẓah (governorate) of Egypt, comprising much of the Eastern Desert (also called Arabian Desert) east of the Nile River valley to the Red Sea; its name means “red sea.” It extends from approximately 29° N latitude southward to the frontier of Sudan. On the west it is bounded
- Baḥr Al-Aḥmar, Al- (sea, Middle East)
Red Sea, narrow strip of water extending southeastward from Suez, Egypt, for about 1,200 miles (1,930 km) to the Bab el-Mandeb Strait, which connects with the Gulf of Aden and thence with the Arabian Sea. Geologically, the Gulfs of Suez and Aqaba (Elat) must be considered as the northern extension
- Baḥr al-Ghazāl (province, South Sudan)
Lado Enclave: …a separate administration for the Baḥr al-Ghazāl (now in the present-day country of South Sudan). In 1877 Emin Paşa (a German administrator) became governor of the equatorial provinces and made his headquarters at Lado, whence he was driven in 1885 by Mahdists from the Sudan. He then removed southward to…
- Baḥr Al-Ghazāl (province, South Sudan)
Lado Enclave: …a separate administration for the Baḥr al-Ghazāl (now in the present-day country of South Sudan). In 1877 Emin Paşa (a German administrator) became governor of the equatorial provinces and made his headquarters at Lado, whence he was driven in 1885 by Mahdists from the Sudan. He then removed southward to…
- Baḥr al-Ghazāl (river, South Sudan)
Baḥr al-Ghazāl, river, South Sudan, chief western affluent of the Nile River. It is 445 miles (716 km) long and joins the Mountain Nile (Baḥr al-Jabal) through Lake No, from which it flows eastward as the White Nile (Baḥr al-Abyaḍ). Vaguely known to early Greek geographers, the river was mapped in
- Baḥr al-Jabal (river, South Sudan)
Baḥr al-Jabal, that section of the Nile River between Nimule near the Uganda border and Malakal in South Sudan. Below Nimule the river flows northward over the Fula Rapids, past Juba (the head of navigation), and through Al-Sudd, the enormous papyrus-choked swamp where half its water is lost. It
- Baḥr al-Zarāf (river, South Sudan)
Baḥr al-Zarāf, river, an arm of the Nile River in Al-Sudd region of South Sudan. It is formed in the swamps north of Shambe, diverting water from the Baḥr al-Jabal (Mountain Nile), and flows 150 miles (240 km) north, past Fangak, to join the Baḥr al-Jabal, 35 miles (56 km) west of Malakal. It is
- Baḥr al-ʿArab (river, Sudan)
Baḥr al-ʿArab, intermittent river of southwestern Sudan, rising northeast of the Tondou (Bongo) Massif, near the border with the Central African Republic. The river flows 500 miles (800 km) east-southeast to join the Baḥr al-Ghazāl, a tributary of the Nile River, at Ghābat al-ʿArab in South Sudan.
- Baḥr as-Salam (river, East Africa)
Nile River: Physiography of Nile River: …Atbara are the Angereb (Arabic: Baḥr Al-Salam) and the Tekezē (Amharic: “Terrible”; Arabic: Nahr Satīt). The Tekezē is the most important of these, having a basin more than double the area of the Atbara itself. It rises among the high peaks of the Ethiopian highlands and flows north through a…
- Bahr el-Arab (river, Sudan)
Baḥr al-ʿArab, intermittent river of southwestern Sudan, rising northeast of the Tondou (Bongo) Massif, near the border with the Central African Republic. The river flows 500 miles (800 km) east-southeast to join the Baḥr al-Ghazāl, a tributary of the Nile River, at Ghābat al-ʿArab in South Sudan.
- Bahr el-Ghazal (province, South Sudan)
Lado Enclave: …a separate administration for the Baḥr al-Ghazāl (now in the present-day country of South Sudan). In 1877 Emin Paşa (a German administrator) became governor of the equatorial provinces and made his headquarters at Lado, whence he was driven in 1885 by Mahdists from the Sudan. He then removed southward to…
- Bahr el-Zaraf (river, South Sudan)
Baḥr al-Zarāf, river, an arm of the Nile River in Al-Sudd region of South Sudan. It is formed in the swamps north of Shambe, diverting water from the Baḥr al-Jabal (Mountain Nile), and flows 150 miles (240 km) north, past Fangak, to join the Baḥr al-Jabal, 35 miles (56 km) west of Malakal. It is
- Baḥr Fāris (gulf, Middle East)
Persian Gulf, shallow marginal sea of the Indian Ocean that lies between the Arabian Peninsula and southwestern Iran. The sea has an area of about 93,000 square miles (241,000 square km). Its length is some 615 miles (990 km), and its width varies from a maximum of about 210 miles (340 km) to a
- Baḥr Sara (river, Africa)
Ouham River, river, one of the main headwaters of the Chari River, central Africa. It rises in two main branches in the elevated plateau country of the western Central African Republic; it then flows north, crossing the international frontier into Chad, where it is known as Baḥr Sara, and joins the
- Baḥr, al- (Companion of Muḥammad)
ʿAbd Allāh ibn al-ʿAbbās was a Companion of the prophet Muḥammad, one of the greatest scholars of early Islām, and the first exegete of the Qurʾān. In the early struggles for the caliphate, Ibn ʿAbbās supported ʿAlī and was rewarded with the governorship of Baṣra. Subsequently he defected and
- Bähr, Georg (German architect)
George Bähr was a German architect who is best known for his design of the Baroque Dresden Frauenkirche (1726–43; destroyed by Allied bombing, 1945; reconstructed 1992–2005). Bähr was apprenticed to a carpenter at a very early age. Official records indicate that he also engaged in work on the
- Bähr, George (German architect)
George Bähr was a German architect who is best known for his design of the Baroque Dresden Frauenkirche (1726–43; destroyed by Allied bombing, 1945; reconstructed 1992–2005). Bähr was apprenticed to a carpenter at a very early age. Official records indicate that he also engaged in work on the
- Bahr, Hermann (Austrian writer)
Hermann Bahr was an Austrian author and playwright who championed (successively) naturalism, Romanticism, and Symbolism. After studying at Austrian and German universities, he settled in Vienna, where he worked on a number of newspapers. His early critical works Zur Kritik der Moderne (1890; “On
- Bahraich (India)
Bahraich, city, northeast-central Uttar Pradesh state, northern India. It is located on a tributary of the Ghaghara River and on a rail line between Lucknow (southwest) and Nepalganj, Nepal (north). The area’s history is little known before it was invaded in 1033 by Sayyid Sālār Masʿūd, an Afghan
- Bahrain
Bahrain, small Arab state situated in a bay on the southwestern coast of the Persian Gulf. It is an archipelago consisting of Bahrain Island and some 30 smaller islands. Its name is from the Arabic term al-baḥrayn, meaning “two seas.” Located in one of the world’s chief oil-producing regions,
- Bahrain and Kuwait, Bank of (bank, Bahrain-Kuwait)
Kuwait: Finance: …with the exception of the Bank of Bahrain and Kuwait, based in Bahrain and owned equally by the two states. An Islamic bank—one bound by stringent religious laws governing financial transactions—has also been established. Before independence an officially sanctioned stock exchange operated, growing to become one of the largest in…
- Bahrain Island (island, Bahrain)
Dilmun: …built of limestone) situated on Bahrain Island, and many thousands of burial mounds attest to the island’s prominence. Qalaʿat (fort) al-Baḥrain, a large low tell covering about 45 acres (18 hectares) on the northern coast of the island, is the largest site and was designated a UNESCO World Heritage site…
- Bahrain Petroleum Company
ʿAwālī: …in the 1930s by the Bahrain Petroleum Company (BAPCO), it is situated just north of Bahrain’s oil fields and southwest of the country’s oil refinery, one of the largest in the world. The municipality was built to house the main offices, headquarters staff, and foreign executives and employees of BAPCO.…
- Bahrain Telecommunications Company (Bahrainian company)
Bahrain: Transportation and telecommunications: Bahrain Telecommunications Company (Batelco), established in 1981, serves the country’s telephone, wireless telephone, data communications, and Internet needs, either directly or through its subsidiaries. Through Batelco, Bahrain has promoted itself as a regional telecommunications centre, connecting the countries of the gulf region with the broader world. In 1998…
- Bahrain, flag of
national flag consisting of a red field (background) with a white, serrated strip at the hoist. The flag’s width-to-length ratio is 3 to 5.The southern coast of the Persian Gulf was characterized by extensive warfare and piracy for many centuries. In 1820 the British were finally successful in
- Bahrain, history of
history of Bahrain, history of Bahrain since the 19th century. For a treatment of earlier periods and of the country in its regional context, see Arabia, history of. Bahrain has been inhabited since prehistoric times, and several thousand burial mounds in the northern part of the main island
- Bahrain, Kingdom of
Bahrain, small Arab state situated in a bay on the southwestern coast of the Persian Gulf. It is an archipelago consisting of Bahrain Island and some 30 smaller islands. Its name is from the Arabic term al-baḥrayn, meaning “two seas.” Located in one of the world’s chief oil-producing regions,
- Bahram (racehorse)
Bahram, (foaled 1932), English racehorse (Thoroughbred), winner in 1935 of the British Triple Crown and never beaten in nine contests. Foaled by Friar’s Daughter and sired by Blandford, Bahram was owned by the Aga Khan and bred at his stud in Curragh, Ireland. Trained by Frank Butters at Newmarket,
- Bahrām Gūr (king of Iran)
Bahrām V was a Sāsānian king (reigned 420–438). He was celebrated in literature, art, and folklore for his chivalry, romantic adventures, and huntsmanship. (Read Sir Walter Scott’s 1824 Britannica essay on chivalry.) He was educated at the court of al-Mundhir, the Lakhmid Arab king of al-Ḥira, in
- Bahrām I (king of Iran)
Bahrām I was a Sāsānian king who reigned from 273–276. A son of Shāpūr I, during his father’s reign he governed the province of Atropatene. His succession to his brother Hormizd I strengthened the position of the Zoroastrian clergy and their high priest Kartēr, and at their insistence Bahrām
- Bahrām II (king of Iran)
Bahrām II was a Sāsānian king who reigned from 276–293, the son and successor of Bahrām I. Soon after becoming king, he was forced to defend his position against a brother, Hormizd, viceroy of the eastern provinces. In 283, exploiting Bahrām’s preoccupations, the Roman emperor Carus invaded
- Bahrām III (king of Iran)
Narses: …the succession of Bahrām’s son, Bahrām III. Narses later antagonized Rome by occupying the independent portion of Armenia. In the following year he suffered a severe reversal, losing his war chest and his harem. He then concluded a peace (296), by the terms of which Armenia remained under Roman suzerainty,…
- Bahrām IV (king of Iran)
Bahrām IV was a Sāsānian king who reigned from 388–399. One of the sons of Shāpūr II, Bahrām first served as governor of Kermān before succeeding his brother Shāpūr III on the throne. Although the partition of Armenia with Rome is frequently ascribed to Bahrām, it probably occurred in 387, during
- Bahrām V (king of Iran)
Bahrām V was a Sāsānian king (reigned 420–438). He was celebrated in literature, art, and folklore for his chivalry, romantic adventures, and huntsmanship. (Read Sir Walter Scott’s 1824 Britannica essay on chivalry.) He was educated at the court of al-Mundhir, the Lakhmid Arab king of al-Ḥira, in
- Bahrām VI (king of Iran)
Bahrām VI Chūbīn was a Sāsānian king (reigned 590–591). A general and head of the house of Mihran at Rayy (near modern Tehrān), he performed, in gaining the throne, a feat exceptional for one not of Sāsānian royal blood. Prominent as master of the household in the Byzantine wars of the Sāsānian
- Bahrām VI Chūbīn (king of Iran)
Bahrām VI Chūbīn was a Sāsānian king (reigned 590–591). A general and head of the house of Mihran at Rayy (near modern Tehrān), he performed, in gaining the throne, a feat exceptional for one not of Sāsānian royal blood. Prominent as master of the household in the Byzantine wars of the Sāsānian
- Bahrān (Zoroastrian deity)
Verethraghna, in Zoroastrianism, the spirit of victory. Together with Mithra, the god of truth, Verethraghna shares martial characteristics that relate him to the Vedic war-god Indra. In Zoroastrian texts, Verethraghna appears as an agent of Mithra and Rashnu, the god of justice, and as the means
- Baḥrayn, Dawlat al-
Bahrain, small Arab state situated in a bay on the southwestern coast of the Persian Gulf. It is an archipelago consisting of Bahrain Island and some 30 smaller islands. Its name is from the Arabic term al-baḥrayn, meaning “two seas.” Located in one of the world’s chief oil-producing regions,
- Bahrdt, Carl Friedrich (German writer)
Carl Friedrich Bahrdt was a German Enlightenment writer, radical theologian, philosopher, and adventurer, best-known for his book Neuesten Offenbarungen Gottes in Briefen und Erzählungen (1773–74; “Latest Revelations of God in Letters and Stories”). At age 16 Bahrdt began to study theology,
- Baḥrī period (Mamlūk history)
Mamluk: The Mamluk dynasty: …call the former the “Baḥrī” period and the latter the “Burjī,” because of the political dominance of the regiments known by these names during the respective times. The contemporary Muslim historians referred to the same divisions as the “Turkish” and “Circassian” periods, in order to call attention to the…
- baht (unit of measurement)
bat, in a measurement system, ancient Hebrew unit of liquid and dry capacity. Estimated at 37 litres (about 6.5 gallons) and approximately equivalent to the Greek metrētēs, the bat contained 10 omers, 1 omer being the quantity (based on tradition) of manna allotted to each Israelite for every day
- baht (Thai currency)
baht, monetary unit of Thailand. Each baht is subdivided into 100 satang. The Bank of Thailand has the exclusive authority to issue currency in Thailand; banknotes are issued in amounts ranging from 10 to 1,000 baht. The obverse side of each note is adorned with a picture of the reigning king of
- Bahubali (Jainism)
Bahubali, According to the traditions of the Indian religion Jainism, the son of the first Tirthankara (literally, “ford maker,” a metaphor for saviour), Rishabhanatha. He is said to have lived many millions of years ago. After Bahubali won a duel with his half brother for control of the kingdom,
- Bahujan Samaj Party (political party, India)
Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP), national political party in India. It was formed in 1984. The BSP states that it represents the people at the lowest levels of the Hindu social system—those officially designated as members of the Scheduled Castes, Scheduled Tribes, and Other Backward Classes—as well as
- Bāhunar, Muḥammad Javād (prime minister of Iran)
Mohammad Javad Bahonar was an Iranian politician who was prime minister of the Islamic Republic of Iran in 1981. In office for less than a month, he was killed by antigovernment forces. Bahonar studied in the Shīʿite holy city of Qom, where he was a student of noted cleric Ayatollah Ruhollah
- Baḥur (Italian grammarian)
Elijah Bokher Levita was a German-born Jewish grammarian whose writings and teaching furthered the study of Hebrew in European Christendom at a time of widespread hostility toward the Jews. Levita went to Italy early in life and in 1504 settled at Padua. There he wrote a manual of Hebrew (1508)
- Bahurupee group
South Asian arts: Modern theatre: …other actors they founded the Bahurupee group in 1949 and produced many Tagore plays including Rakta Karabi (“Red Oleanders”) and Bisarjan (“Sacrifice”).
- Bahūtī, al- (Islamic jurist)
al-Bahūtī was a teacher and the last major exponent in Egypt of the Ḥanbalī school of Islamic law. Little is known about al-Bahūtī except that he spent nearly all of his life teaching and practicing Ḥanbalī law. His legal writings, although not original, are noted for their clarity and are still
- Bahutu (people)
Hutu, Bantu-speaking people of Rwanda and Burundi. Numbering about 9,500,000 in the late 20th century, the Hutu comprise the vast majority in both countries but were traditionally subject to the Tutsi (q.v.), warrior-pastoralists of Nilotic stock. When the Hutu first entered the area, they found it
- Bahya ben Joseph ibn Pakuda (Jewish philosopher)
Bahya ben Joseph ibn Pakuda was a judge of a rabbinical court in Muslim Spain and author of a highly influential and popular work of ethical guidance. About 1080 Bahya wrote, in Arabic, Al-Hidāyah ilā-farāʾ id al-qulūb (“Duties of the Heart”). In a rather inaccurate 12th-century translation into
- Bai (people)
Bai, people of northwestern Yunnan province, southwest China. Minjia is the Chinese (Pinyin) name for them; they call themselves Bai or Bo in their own language, which has been classified within the Yi group of Tibeto-Burman languages. Until recently the language was not written. It contains many
- Bai du ren (film by Zhang [2016])
Wong Kar-Wai: …and produced the romantic comedy Bai du ren (2016; “See You Tomorrow”). It was directed by Zhang Jiajia, who wrote the story on which it was based. Though it starred Leung and had many of the hallmarks of Wong’s movies, it was undermined by an unevenness of tone.
- Bai Feng-yan (Chinese musician)
sanxian: …the 20th century, the musicians Bai Fengyan (1899–1975) and Li Yi (b. 1932) made the sanxian popular as a solo instrument.
- Bai Juyi (Chinese poet)
Bai Juyi was a Chinese poet of the Tang dynasty (618–907) who used his elegantly simple verse to protest the social evils of his day, including corruption and militarism. Bai Juyi began composing poetry at age five. Because of his father’s death in 794 and straitened family circumstances, Bai did
- Bai Letian (Chinese poet)
Bai Juyi was a Chinese poet of the Tang dynasty (618–907) who used his elegantly simple verse to protest the social evils of his day, including corruption and militarism. Bai Juyi began composing poetry at age five. Because of his father’s death in 794 and straitened family circumstances, Bai did
- Bai River (river, Henan and Hubei provinces, China)
Henan: Drainage: …southeast, and the Tang and Bai rivers in the southwest. The latter two drain southward into Hubei, eventually joining the Han River (a major tributary of the Yangtze River [Chang Jiang]).
- Bai River (river, Hebei-Beijing, China)
Chaobai River: …main tributaries, the Chao and Bai ("White") rivers, about 2 miles (3 km) south of the town of Miyun and 10 miles (16 km) south of the Miyun Reservoir (in Beijing municipality). The Chao is fed by source streams in the mountains of northern Hebei and flows southeast on its…
- Bai Xingjian (Chinese writer)
Chinese literature: Prose: …Yu’s pupil Shen Yazhi and Bai Xingjian, younger brother of the poet Bai Juyi. These prose romances, generally short, were written in the classical prose style for the amusement of the literati and did not reach the masses until some of the popular ones were adapted by playwrights in later…
- Baia (historic site, Italy)
Baiae, ancient city of Campania, Italy, located on the west coast of the Gulf of Puteoli (Pozzuoli) and lying 10 miles (16 km) west of Naples and 2 1 2 miles (4 km) from Cumae, of which it was a dependency. According to tradition, Baiae was named after Baios, the helmsman of Ulysses. In 178 bce the
- Baía de Guanabara (bay, Brazil)
Guanabara Bay, bay of the Atlantic Ocean, southeastern Brazil, with Rio de Janeiro on its southwest shore and Niterói on its southeast. Discovered around 1502, it was originally named Rio de Janeiro Bay. About 19 miles (31 km) long with a maximum width of 18 miles, it has a mile-wide entrance that
- Baía de Todos os Santos (bay, Brazil)
Todos os Santos Bay, sheltered bay of the Atlantic Ocean on the eastern coast of Brazil. A natural harbour, it is 25 miles (40 km) long and 20 miles (32 km) wide. Salvador, the principal seaport and capital of Bahia state, is on the peninsula that separates the bay from the Atlantic. Todos os
- Baia Mare (Romania)
Baia Mare, city, capital of Maramureș județ (county), northwestern Romania. It is situated in the Săsar River valley, surrounded by mountains. This location affords the city protection from the cold northeastern winds and sustains a quasi-Mediterranean vegetation. Founded in the 12th century by
- Baiae (historic site, Italy)
Baiae, ancient city of Campania, Italy, located on the west coast of the Gulf of Puteoli (Pozzuoli) and lying 10 miles (16 km) west of Naples and 2 1 2 miles (4 km) from Cumae, of which it was a dependency. According to tradition, Baiae was named after Baios, the helmsman of Ulysses. In 178 bce the
- BAIB excretion
beta-aminoisobutyric acid excretion, a metabolic process under simple genetic control in human beings and the higher primates, the significance of which is not fully understood. Beta-aminoisobutyric acid (BAIB), an amino acid end product of pyrimidine metabolism, is excreted in trace quantities
- Baibars I (Mamlūk sultan of Egypt and Syria)
Baybars I was the most eminent of the Mamlūk sultans of Egypt and Syria, which he ruled from 1260 to 1277. He is noted both for his military campaigns against Mongols and crusaders and for his internal administrative reforms. The Sirat Baybars, a folk account purporting to be his life story, is
- Baic languages
Tibeto-Burman languages: Language groups: …seven major subgroups of Tibeto-Burman: Baic, Karenic, Lolo-Burmese-Naxi, Jingpo-Nungish-Luish, Qiangic, Himalayish, and Kamarupan.
- Baicheng (China)
Baicheng, city, northwestern Jilin sheng (province), northeastern China. The region was originally a hunting ground reserved for the Mongols, and farming was not allowed legally by the Qing government until 1902; it is now an area of extensive agriculture, with pastoral activities playing a major
- Baida (Libya)
Zāwiyat al-Bayḍāʾ, town, northeastern Libya. It is a new town lying on a high ridge 20 miles (32 km) from the Mediterranean Sea. Built in the late 1950s on the site of the tomb of Rawayfī ibn Thābit (a Companion of the Prophet Muhammad), it was planned as the future national capital. Although
- baidarka (boat)
kayak, one of the two common types of canoe used for recreation and sport. It originated with the Eskimos of Greenland and was later also used by Alaskan Eskimos. It has a pointed bow and stern and no keel and is covered except for a cockpit in which the paddler or paddlers sit, facing forward and
- Baidian (building, Beijing, China)
Beijing: Recreation: …of Worship (Baidian), now the Sun Yat-sen Memorial Hall, which dates to the early 15th century; its simple form, masterly design, and sturdy woodwork bear the characteristic marks of early Ming architecture. The Water Pavilion, built out over a lotus pond on three sides to provide a gathering place for…
- Baidu (search engine)
search engine: Mode of operation: …Russian Yandex, and the Chinese Baidu—cannot keep up with the proliferation of Web pages, and each leaves large portions of the Internet uncovered. Moreover, the Internet is layered, with common information easily accessible on the "surface web" by general search engines while other content (on the deep web) is protected…
- Baie d’Ungava (bay, Quebec, Canada)
Ungava Bay, inlet off the Hudson Strait, on the northeast coast of Nord-du-Québec region, northern Quebec province, Canada. The bay is approximately 200 miles (320 km) long, 160 miles (260 km) wide at the mouth, and has a maximum depth of 978 feet (298 m). It is fed by several large rivers, notably
- Baie des Chaleurs (bay, Canada)
Chaleur Bay, inlet of the Gulf of St. Lawrence, extending between Quebec’s Gaspé Peninsula and northern New Brunswick, Canada, and called by the Indians the “sea of fish.” It is a submerged valley of the Restigouche River and is 90 miles (145 km) long and 15 to 25 miles (24 to 40 km) wide. The bay