- Birth Caul, The (work by Moore)
graphic novel: The graphic novel grows up: …Alan Moore’s comics, such as The Birth Caul (1999) and Snakes and Ladders (2001), explore psychogeography and take on a lyrical, poetic form in an oneric celebration of the power of interwoven words and images. There also has been a huge influx of creative talent from outside comics, from such…
- birth control
birth control, the voluntary limiting of human reproduction, using such means as sexual abstinence, contraception, induced abortion, and surgical sterilization. It includes the spacing as well as the number of children in a family. Birth control encompasses the wide range of rational and irrational
- Birth Control Federation of America (American family planning, social service organization)
Planned Parenthood, American organization that, since its founding in 1942, has worked as an advocate for education and personal liberties in the areas of birth control, family planning, and reproductive health care. Clinics operated by Planned Parenthood provide a range of reproductive health care
- birth control pill
oral contraceptive, any of a class of synthetic steroid hormones that suppress the release of follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) and luteinizing hormone (LH) from the anterior lobe of the pituitary gland in the female body. FSH and LH normally stimulate the release of estrogen from the ovaries,
- birth defect (pathology)
congenital disorder, abnormality of structure and, consequently, function of the human body arising during development. This large group of disorders affects almost 5 percent of infants and includes several major groups of conditions. Malformations are abnormalities of the human form that arise
- Birth of a Dream Weaver: A Writer’s Awakening (memoir by Ngugi)
Ngugi wa Thiong’o: …British control in Kenya; and Birth of a Dream Weaver: A Writer’s Awakening (2016), a chronicle of his years at Makerere University.
- Birth of a Nation, The (film by Griffith [1915])
The Birth of a Nation, landmark silent film starring Lillian Gish, released in 1915, that was the first blockbuster Hollywood hit. It was the longest and most-profitable film then produced and the most artistically advanced film of its day. It secured both the future of feature-length films and the
- Birth of a Salesman (story by Tiptree)
James Tiptree, Jr.: …first story Tiptree published, “Birth of a Salesman” (1968), was characteristic of her early stories in that it was a humorous variation on a standard science fiction theme. Tiptree came into her own with the calmly apocalyptic “The Last Flight of Dr. Ain” (1969; revised 1974). A biologist in…
- Birth of Forms (sculpture by Zadkine)
Ossip Zadkine: …such as the complex sculpture Birth of Forms (1947), he used convexities, concavities, lines, and parallel planes to achieve a sense of rhythm and a multidimensional unity. After the war he returned to France, and in 1946 he visited the bombed Dutch city of Rotterdam. The ruinous state of the…
- Birth of Peace, The (ballet)
René Descartes: Final years and heritage of René Descartes: …the verses of a ballet, The Birth of Peace (1649), to celebrate her role in the Peace of Westphalia, which ended the Thirty Years’ War. The verses in fact were not written by Descartes, though he did write the statutes for a Swedish Academy of Arts and Sciences. While delivering…
- Birth of the Baptist (fresco by Andrea del Sarto)
Andrea del Sarto: …of the Scalzo frescoes, the Birth of the Baptist (1526). From first to last, Sarto’s integrity as a craftsman, his sheer professionalism, is impressively consistent; and it is characteristic of him that he refused to have his works engraved. His real quality is also vividly revealed in his drawings. Among…
- Birth of the Cool (album by Davis)
Gil Evans: …on Miles Davis’s seminal album Birth of the Cool (recorded 1949–50), their first noted collaboration. Throughout most of the 1950s, Evans worked in radio and television, often composing and arranging for singers such as Tony Bennett, Peggy Lee, Johnny Mathis, and Helen Merrill.
- birth of the Virgin (art motif)
Domenico Beccafumi: His “Birth of the Virgin” and “The Expulsion of the Rebel Angels” in the latter show the typical elongated and foreshortened forms employed by the Mannerists. But his work contained many diverging tendencies, producing an overall unevenness.
- Birth of the War God (poem by Kalidasa)
Kumarasambhava, epic poem by Kalidasa written in the 5th century ce. The work describes the courting of the ascetic Shiva, who is meditating in the mountains, by Parvati, the daughter of the Himalayas; the conflagration of Kama (the god of desire)—after his arrow struck Shiva—by the fire from
- Birth of Tragedy out of the Spirit of Music, The (work by Nietzsche)
The Birth of Tragedy, book by German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche, first published in 1872 as Die Geburt der Tragödie aus dem Geiste der Musik. A speculative rather than exegetical work, The Birth of Tragedy examines the origins and development of poetry, specifically Greek tragedy. Nietzsche
- Birth of Tragedy, The (work by Nietzsche)
The Birth of Tragedy, book by German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche, first published in 1872 as Die Geburt der Tragödie aus dem Geiste der Musik. A speculative rather than exegetical work, The Birth of Tragedy examines the origins and development of poetry, specifically Greek tragedy. Nietzsche
- Birth of Venus (painting by Sandro Botticelli)
Birth of Venus, painting by Sandro Botticelli completed about 1485. Birth of Venus is one of the most famous paintings in the world. It was painted by Alessandro di Mariano Filipepi, known as Sandro Botticelli, who was an Italian painter of the Florentine School that emerged in the early
- Birth of Venus, The (painting by Bouguereau)
Musée d’Orsay: …Manet, academic paintings such as The Birth of Venus (1879) by William Bouguereau, and works by previously unknown artists.
- birth order (anthropology)
Micronesian culture: Kinship and marriage: Birth order has traditionally been widely important in Micronesian societies. The eldest child typically represents the family or lineage in public, is expected to inherit any lineal political offices, and directs the use of lineage or family lands. Younger siblings generally exhibit formal respect to…
- birth peak (biology)
primate: Breeding periods: …equatorial belt tend to display birth peaks rather than birth seasons. A birth peak is a period of the year in which a high proportion of births, but not by any means all, are concentrated. Equatorial primates such as guenons, colobus monkeys, howlers, gibbons, chimpanzees, and gorillas might be expected…
- birth rate (statistics)
birth rate, frequency of live births in a given population, conventionally calculated as the annual number of live births per 1,000 inhabitants. See vital
- birth rite (anthropology)
Baltic religion: Sacred times: One birth rite, called pirtīžas, was a special sacral meal in which only women took part. Marriage rites were quite extensive and corresponded closely to similar Old Indian ceremonies. Fire and bread had special importance and were taken along to the house of the newly married…
- birth weight (physiology)
infant mortality rate: Low birth weight: Low birth weight is the single most significant characteristic associated with higher infant mortality. In industrialized countries, low birth weights are characteristic of premature births. However, in LDCs they more frequently occur at full term, because of a lack of adequate maternal nutrition or because of…
- birth-control movement (American social movement)
Planned Parenthood: …traces its beginnings to the birth control movement led by Margaret Sanger and her colleagues, who opened the nation’s first birth control clinic in 1916 in a poverty-stricken neighbourhood of Brooklyn, New York. Created to free women from the “chronic condition” of pregnancy and the dangers of self-induced abortion, the…
- Birthday (painting by Dorothea Tanning)
Birthday, Surrealist self-portrait painted in oils in 1942 by American artist Dorothea Tanning. It was her first major painting and is now in the collection of the Philadelphia Museum of Art. Tanning was born in 1910 in Galesburg, Illinois. In 1930 she moved to Chicago to pursue a career as an
- birthday
list of birth month flowers: …of one’s zodiac sign or birth date numerology, or the same fashion appeal as one’s birthstone, birth month flowers are a lovely seasonal way to brighten up a table or garden space for a birthday celebration. The history of birth month flowers is a bit ambiguous, with some sources proposing…
- Birthday Boys, The (novel by Bainbridge)
Beryl Bainbridge: …Big Adventure (1989; film 1995), The Birthday Boys (1991), Every Man for Himself (1996), Master Georgie (1998), and According to Queeney (2001).
- Birthday Girl (film by Butterworth [2001])
Nicole Kidman: Moulin Rouge!, The Hours, and other movies from the 2000s: …film, and the dark comedy Birthday Girl, in which she played a Russian mail-order bride. Two years later she earned an Academy Award for best actress for her portrayal of Virginia Woolf in The Hours (2002), an adaptation of the Pulitzer Prize-winning novel by Michael Cunningham. A string of critical…
- Birthday Letters (work by Hughes)
English literature: Poetry: In Birthday Letters (1998), Hughes published a poetic chronicle of his much-speculated-upon relationship with Sylvia Plath, the American poet to whom he was married from 1956 until her suicide in 1963. With Tales from Ovid (1997) and his versions of Aeschylus’s Oresteia (1999) and Euripides’ Alcestis…
- Birthday Party, the (rock band)
Nick Cave: …front man for the bands the Birthday Party and the Bad Seeds. He is best known for his haunting ballads about life, love, betrayal, and death.
- Birthday Party, The (film by Friedkin [1968])
William Friedkin: …then took on the more-elevated The Birthday Party (1968), a respectable if static adaptation of Harold Pinter’s enigmatic play. Equally ambitious was The Night They Raided Minsky’s (1968), a lively comedy about an innocent Amish girl who becomes a burlesque dancer in 1920s New York City. Friedkin earned generally positive…
- Birthday Party, The (play by Pinter)
The Birthday Party, drama in three acts by Harold Pinter, produced in 1958 and published in 1959. Pinter’s first full-length play established his trademark “comedy of menace,” in which a character is suddenly threatened by the vague horrors at large in the outside world. The action takes place
- birthday problem (probability theory)
probability theory: The birthday problem: An entertaining example is to determine the probability that in a randomly selected group of n people at least two have the same birthday. If one assumes for simplicity that a year contains 365 days and that each day is equally likely to…
- birther movement (United States politics)
MAGA movement: citizen (“birtherism”), that Democrats’ immigration policies aim to replace white Americans with nonwhite immigrants (see replacement theory), that the 2020 presidential election was stolen from Trump by Democrats through massive voter fraud, and that the January 6, 2021, attack
- birthmark (skin blemish)
nevus, congenital skin lesion, or birthmark, caused by abnormal pigmentation or by proliferation of blood vessels and other dermal or epidermal structures. Nevi may be raised or may spread along the surface of the skin. In other types, such as the blue nevus, proliferative tissue is buried deep
- birthroot (plant)
trillium, (genus Trillium), genus of about 25 species of spring-flowering perennial herbs of the family Melanthiaceae, native to North America and Asia. Many species of Trillium are cultivated in wildflower gardens. Trillium plants have oval bracts that resemble and function as leaves and arise
- Birthstone (novel by Thomas)
D.M. Thomas: …that work, his second novel, Birthstone (1980), is a fantasy. The White Hotel concerns Lisa Erdman, an early patient of Sigmund Freud; it explores her sexual hysteria and her premonitions of the 1941 Babi Yar massacre, in which she eventually dies. Part of the novel is in the form of…
- birthstone (gemstone)
birthstone, gemstone associated with the date of one’s birth, the wearing of which is commonly thought to bring good luck or health. Supernatural powers have long been attributed by astrologers to certain gemstones. The stones now associated with each month, as listed in the table, have only slight
- birthwort family (plant family)
Aristolochiaceae, birthwort family (order Piperales), which contains seven genera and about 590 species of mostly tropical woody vines and a few temperate-zone species. Several species are important as herbal medicines, and a number are grown as ornamentals or curiosities. Phylogenetic evidence has
- Birtwistle, Harrison (British composer)
Harrison Birtwistle was a British composer who began as a clarinetist and shifted to composition in his 20s. He was part of a generation of performers and composers known as the “Manchester School,” who, being from northern England, were unconstrained by London tradition and thus fully adopted
- Birtwistle, Sir Harrison (British composer)
Harrison Birtwistle was a British composer who began as a clarinetist and shifted to composition in his 20s. He was part of a generation of performers and composers known as the “Manchester School,” who, being from northern England, were unconstrained by London tradition and thus fully adopted
- Birunga Mountains (mountains, Africa)
Virunga Mountains, volcanic range north of Lake Kivu in east-central Africa, extending about 50 miles (80 km) along the borders of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Rwanda, and Uganda. The range runs east-west, perpendicular to the rift valley in which lie Lakes Kivu and Edward. Of its eight
- Bīrūnī, al- (Persian scholar and scientist)
al-Bīrūnī was a Muslim astronomer, mathematician, ethnographist, anthropologist, historian, and geographer. Al-Bīrūnī lived during a period of unusual political turmoil in the eastern Islamic world. He served more than six different princes, all of whom were known for their bellicose activities and
- biryani (food)
biryani, flavourful rice dish of Persian origin that has become a popular celebratory dish in South Asia, as well as a widely sold street food. The term biryani comes from the Farsi phrase birinj biriyan, “fried rice.” Rice is fried separately until about half-cooked, usually in oil or ghee, and
- Birzebbuga (Malta)
Birzebbuga, village, southeastern Malta, on Marsaxlokk Bay, southeast of Valletta. The city’s name is derived from the Arabic word for “olive.” The present village originated as a fishing settlement and is now mainly a summer resort, with Pretty Bay as its focal point. Its environs are rich in
- Birżebbuġa (Malta)
Birzebbuga, village, southeastern Malta, on Marsaxlokk Bay, southeast of Valletta. The city’s name is derived from the Arabic word for “olive.” The present village originated as a fishing settlement and is now mainly a summer resort, with Pretty Bay as its focal point. Its environs are rich in
- Birzebbugia (Malta)
Birzebbuga, village, southeastern Malta, on Marsaxlokk Bay, southeast of Valletta. The city’s name is derived from the Arabic word for “olive.” The present village originated as a fishing settlement and is now mainly a summer resort, with Pretty Bay as its focal point. Its environs are rich in
- Birzeit University (university, Israeli-occupied territory)
Hanan Ashrawi: …she joined the faculty of Birzeit University as a professor of medieval and comparative literature and also served as dean of the School of Arts until the Israeli army closed the university in 1988 after the outbreak of the first intifāḍah (Arabic: “shaking off”; see Palestine: The first intifadah) among…
- Birziminium (national capital, Montenegro)
Podgorica, city, administrative centre of Montenegro. It is situated in southern Montenegro near the confluence of the Ribnica and Morača rivers. The first recorded settlement was Birziminium, a caravan stop in Roman times, though it probably was an Illyrian tribal centre earlier. As a feudal state
- BIS (Indian government agency)
Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS), agency of the Indian government established in 1987 to devise uniform standards of quality for broad categories of manufactured and agricultural goods, to perform product testing, and to license the use of an official mark to indicate that a product has been
- BIS
Bank for International Settlements, international bank established at Basel, Switzerland, in 1930, as the agency to handle the payment of reparations by Germany after World War I and as an institution for cooperation among the central banks of the various countries (see Young Plan). It has since
- bis pole (religious carving)
bisj pole, carved wooden pole used in religious rites of the South Pacific Islands. Bisj poles are occasionally found in North America, but they are more common in New Zealand, Vanuatu (formerly the New Hebrides), and especially the Asmat area in southwestern (Indonesian) New Guinea and along the
- bisabol myrrh (gum resin)
myrrh: …Ethiopia, Arabia, and Somalia, while bisabol myrrh is obtained from C. erythraea, which is an Arabian species of similar appearance. Myrrh trees are found on parched rocky hills and grow up to 3 m (9 feet) tall.
- Bisaya (people)
Bisaya, indigenous people of northwestern Borneo, in Malaysia, concentrated above the Padas River and below Beaufort in Sabah state, and in northern Sarawak state. They are of Malay stock and possibly related to the Visayan of the Philippines. The Bisaya speak Murut, leading some to believe they
- Bisayah (people)
Bisaya, indigenous people of northwestern Borneo, in Malaysia, concentrated above the Padas River and below Beaufort in Sabah state, and in northern Sarawak state. They are of Malay stock and possibly related to the Visayan of the Philippines. The Bisaya speak Murut, leading some to believe they
- Bisayan (people)
Visayan, any of three ethnolinguistic groups of the Philippines—Cebuano, Hiligaynon, and
- Bisayas (island group, Philippines)
Visayan Islands, island group, central Philippines. The Visayan group consists of seven large and several hundred smaller islands clustered around the Visayan, Samar, and Camotes seas. The seven main islands are Bohol, Cebu, Leyte, Masbate, Negros, Panay, and Samar. These islands and their smaller
- Bisbee (Arizona, United States)
Bisbee, city, seat (1929) of Cochise county, southeastern Arizona, U.S., 8 miles (13 km) north of the Mexican border. It is built on steep canyon slopes (east of the Mule Mountains) and was for many years a major copper-producing centre; area mines also produced large quantities of malachite,
- Biscari Massacre (World War II)
George Patton: Controversies and appraisal of George Patton: …to be known as the Biscari Massacre. Both claimed that they were following orders not to take prisoners that Patton himself had set forth in a fiery speech to their division a month earlier. Patton denied responsibility, and he was exonerated of any crime.
- Biscay (province, Spain)
Vizcaya, provincia (province) in the comunidad autónoma (autonomous community) of Basque Country, northern Spain. Originally a tribal territory of the Vascones (4th century), Vizcaya was vested in the crown of Castile and Leon in 1379, but the central government has always had difficulties ruling
- Biscay, Bay of (bay, Europe)
Bay of Biscay, wide inlet of the North Atlantic Ocean indenting the coast of western Europe. Forming a roughly triangular body with an area of about 86,000 square miles (223,000 square km), it is bounded on the east by the west coast of France and on the south by the north coast of Spain. Its
- Biscayne Bay (bay, Florida, United States)
Biscayne Bay, shallow inlet of the Atlantic Ocean, indenting the southeast coast of Florida, U.S. About 40 miles (65 km) long and up to 10 miles (16 km) wide, the bay covers about 220 square miles (570 square km) and forms a part of the Intracoastal Waterway. The bay connects with the ocean mainly
- Biscayne National Park (national park, Florida, United States)
Biscayne National Park, area of coral reefs and other marine features in the Atlantic Ocean off the southeastern coast of Florida, U.S., about 20 miles (32 km) south of Miami. Authorized as Biscayne National Monument in 1968 (with a boundary change in 1974), it became a national park in 1980. The
- Bisceglie (Italy)
Bisceglie, town and episcopal see, Puglia (Apulia) regione, southeastern Italy. It lies along the Adriatic Sea and is about 120 miles (190 km) east-northeast of Naples. The Romans called the place Vigiliae, from the watchtowers that were used there in guarding the coast. The town was conquered by
- Bisceglie, Alfonso, duke of (son of Alfonso II of Naples)
Lucrezia Borgia: …the 17-year-old Alfonso, duke of Bisceglie, an illegitimate son of Alfonso II of Naples. Upon Cesare’s alliance with the French king Louis XII (1499) and his subsequent campaign in the Romagna, which threatened Naples, Alfonso fled Rome in August but returned with Lucrezia in October. In July 1500 he was…
- Bischof, Werner (Swiss photographer)
Werner Bischof was a Swiss photojournalist whose photographs are notable for their empathy, strong sense of design, and sensitive use of light. From 1932 to 1936 Bischof attended the Zürich School of Applied Arts, where he studied photography with Hans Finsler. He worked as an advertising and
- Bischof, Werner Adalbert (Swiss photographer)
Werner Bischof was a Swiss photojournalist whose photographs are notable for their empathy, strong sense of design, and sensitive use of light. From 1932 to 1936 Bischof attended the Zürich School of Applied Arts, where he studied photography with Hans Finsler. He worked as an advertising and
- Bischoff, Elmer (American artist)
California: The arts: …such painters as David Park, Elmer Bischoff, and Richard Diebenkorn. Los Angeles has been more successful as a marketplace for art, with a thriving colony of galleries along La Cienega Boulevard. Carmel, Big Sur, Ojai, and Sausalito have harboured communities of practitioners of diverse arts.
- Bischoff, Mount (mountain, Australia)
Australia: The economy: Tin also became significant, Mount Bischoff in Tasmania being the world’s largest lode at its discovery in 1871. The 1880s were predominantly the decade of silver; western New South Wales proved richest, and in 1883 Charles Rasp, a German migrant, first glimpsed the varied riches of Broken Hill. The…
- Bischop, Simon (Dutch theologian)
Simon Episcopius was a Dutch theologian and systematizer of Arminianism, a liberal reaction to the Calvinist doctrine of predestination. He studied theology at Leiden and in 1610 became a pastor at Bleiswyk. He was made a professor at Leiden in 1612, succeeding the strict Calvinist Franciscus
- Biscoe, John (British explorer)
Enderby Land: The English navigator John Biscoe, sailing for Enderby Brothers, a London whaling firm, discovered the coast in 1831 and named it for his employers. Enderby Land, claimed by Australia, is the site of a research station opened by the Soviet Union in 1963.
- Biscop Baducing (English abbot)
Saint Benedict Biscop ; feast day January 12; for English Benedictines and dioceses of Liverpool and Hexham February 13) was the founder and first abbot of the celebrated twin monasteries of SS. Peter (at Wearmouth) and Paul (at Jarrow on Tyne, nearby); he is considered to be the father of
- Biscop, Simon (Dutch theologian)
Simon Episcopius was a Dutch theologian and systematizer of Arminianism, a liberal reaction to the Calvinist doctrine of predestination. He studied theology at Leiden and in 1610 became a pastor at Bleiswyk. He was made a professor at Leiden in 1612, succeeding the strict Calvinist Franciscus
- biscuit (food)
biscuit, in the United States, a small quick bread usually made from flour, salt, and butter or vegetable shortening, with baking powder as a leavening agent. The dough is kneaded briefly and rolled out, and the biscuits are cut with a round cutter. The dough may also be dropped by spoonfuls for an
- biscuit (pottery)
pottery: Decorative glazing: …without a glaze are called biscuit. Early earthenware pottery, as discussed above, was unglazed and therefore slightly porous. Of the unglazed stonewares, the most familiar are the Chinese Ming dynasty teapots and similar wares from Yixing in Jiangsu province, the red stoneware body made at Meissen in Saxony during the…
- biscuit porcelain (pottery)
porcelain: …fired without a glaze, called biscuit porcelain, was introduced in Europe in the 18th century. It was generally used for figures. In the 19th century biscuit porcelain was called Parian ware. Some soft-paste porcelains, which remain somewhat porous, require a glaze. After the body has been fired, the glaze, usually…
- Bise (European wind)
Switzerland: Wind systems: …local winds such as the Bise, a cold northeast wind that sweeps across the Mittelland and funnels down Lake Geneva to the city of Geneva. Foehn (German: Föhn) winds, which are associated with the leading edge of a low-pressure system moving across Europe north of Switzerland, often blow for one…
- bisexuality (human behavior)
bisexuality, in human sexuality, sexual interest in and attraction to members of one’s own and the opposite sex. A bisexual is thus a person with both heterosexual and homosexual desires. Some clinical surveys suggest that a significant number of persons experience bisexual desires and engage in
- bisexuality (biology)
bisexuality, in biology, the condition of an organism capable of producing both male and female gametes (sex cells). In plants and microorganisms, this is often referred to as monoecism. In multicellular animals, bisexuality is usually called hermaphroditism
- biseyao (pottery)
Chinese pottery: The Five Dynasties (907–960) and Ten Kingdoms (902–978): …pale olive-green glaze, were called biseyao (“secret,” or “reserve, colour ware”) by 10th-century writers. It is not known whether this referred to a secret process or to the fact that the ware was reserved for the court.
- BISF (British association)
British Steel Corporation PLC: …the creation (1934) of the British Iron and Steel Federation (BISF), an association of major firms that negotiated both with the government and with rival foreign cartels and firms on issues of pricing, tariffs, quotas, and other policies. During World War II the staff of BISF became almost wholly the…
- Bishamon (Buddhist and Hindu mythology)
Kubera, in Hindu mythology, the king of the yakshas (nature spirits) and the god of wealth. He is associated with the earth, mountains, all treasures such as minerals and jewels that lie underground, and riches in general. According to most accounts, he first lived in Lanka (Sri Lanka), but his
- Bishamon (Japanese god)
Bishamon, in Japanese mythology, one of the Shichi-fuku-jin (“Seven Gods of Luck”). He is identified with the Buddhist guardian of the north, known as Kubera, or Vaiśravaṇa. Bishamon is always depicted as dressed in full armour, carrying a spear and a miniature pagoda. He is the protector of the
- Bishamonten (Japanese god)
Bishamon, in Japanese mythology, one of the Shichi-fuku-jin (“Seven Gods of Luck”). He is identified with the Buddhist guardian of the north, known as Kubera, or Vaiśravaṇa. Bishamon is always depicted as dressed in full armour, carrying a spear and a miniature pagoda. He is the protector of the
- Bishandas (Indian painter)
Bishandas was one of the most skilled portrait painters of the 17th-century Jahāngīr school of Mughal painting. Almost nothing is known of his life, though his name indicates that he was a Hindu. Bishandas was praised by the emperor Jahāngīr as “unequaled in his age for taking likenesses” and was
- Bishāpūr (ancient city, Iran)
Shāpūr II: Conquest of Armenia.: At Bishāpūr in southwestern Iran, a tremendous rock-cut relief depicts him seated on a throne and witnessing a triumph of his army: in the top row he is flanked by nobles of the court, and the lower row contains soldiers who present captives and trophies of…
- Bishārīn (Beja tribe)
Egypt: Ethnic groups: …two tribes—the ʿAbābdah and the Bishārīn. The ʿAbābdah occupy the Eastern Desert south of a line between Qinā and Al-Ghardaqah; there are also several groups settled along the Nile between Aswān and Qinā. The Bishārīn live mainly in Sudan, although some dwell in the ʿIlbah Mountain region, their traditional place…
- Bishkek (national capital, Kyrgyzstan)
Bishkek, city and capital of Kyrgyzstan. It lies in the Chu River valley near the Kyrgyz Mountains at an elevation of 2,500–3,000 feet (750–900 metres). Bishkek is situated along the Alaarcha and Alamedin rivers and intersects in the north with the Bolshoy (Great) Chuysky Canal. In 1825 the Uzbek
- Bishnupur (India)
Bishnupur, historic town, central West Bengal state, northeastern India. It lies just south of the Dhaleshwari (Dhalkisor) River (a tributary of the Damodar River), about 18 miles (29 km) southeast of Bankura. Bishnupur was the capital of the Hindu Mallabhum kingdom, which was founded in the 8th
- bishop (Christianity)
bishop, in some Christian churches, the chief pastor and overseer of a diocese, an area containing several congregations. Roman Catholic, Eastern Orthodox, and other churches have maintained the view that bishops are the successors of the Apostles and that an unbroken line of succession connects
- bishop (bird)
bishop, any of several small African birds belonging to the family Ploceidae (order Passeriformes) and constituting the genus Euplectes. The breeding males are black-bellied and reddish or yellow above, with rufflike head feathering and fluffy rump feathers nearly covering their stumpy tails. The
- bishop (chess)
chess: The pragmatists: …was a depreciation of the bishop: The Hypermoderns had attacked Tarrasch’s high opinion of an unobstructed bishop and said a bishop could profitably be traded for a knight. The post-Soviet players often traded bishop for knight for minimal compensation. They also often exchanged their good bishop, the one less encumbered…
- Bishop Auckland (coalfield, Durham, England, United Kingdom)
railroad: The Stockton and Darlington Railway: Investment in the Bishop Auckland coalfield of western County Durham was heavily concentrated in Darlington, where there was agitation for improvement in the outward shipment of the increasing tonnages produced. The region had become the most extensive producer of coal, most of which was sent by coastal sloop…
- Bishop Blougram’s Apology (work by Browning)
Bishop Blougram’s Apology, long poem by Robert Browning, published in the two-volume collection Men and Women (1855). The poem contains conversations between Bishop Blougram and Gigadibs, a journalist. The two men argue about the nature of reality and the nature of faith. Neither man finally
- Bishop Hill State Historic Site (historical site, Illinois, United States)
Bishop Hill State Historic Site, historic site, Henry county, northwestern Illinois, U.S. It lies about 45 miles (70 km) northwest of Peoria. The village was established in 1846 by Swedish immigrants led by Erik Jansson, who had been influenced by the Pietist movement in Sweden. Fearing persecution
- Bishop Museum (museum, Honolulu, Hawaii, United States)
Bishop Museum, research centre and museum for the study of Hawaiian and Polynesian archaeology, natural history, and culture in Honolulu, Hawaii, U.S. The largest museum in the state of Hawaii, it exhibits Hawaiian and Polynesian arts, crafts, artifacts, and flora and fauna. Among items on display
- Bishop of Broadway (American theatrical producer and playwright)
David Belasco was an American theatrical producer and playwright whose important innovations in the techniques and standards of staging and design were in contrast to the quality of the plays he produced. As a child actor, Belasco appeared with Charles Kean in Richard III and later played in stock
- Bishop Orders His Tomb at St. Praxed’s Church, The (poem by Browning)
The Bishop Orders His Tomb at St. Praxed’s Church, poem considered to be the first blank verse dramatic monologue in English, by Robert Browning, published in the collection Dramatic Romances and Lyrics (1845). The poem is a character study of a powerful, worldly prince of the Roman Catholic Church
- Bishop Rock Lighthouse (lighthouse, Cornwall, England, United Kingdom)
Bishop Rock Lighthouse, 19th-century lighthouse, Scilly Islands, Cornwall. The 19th-century civil-engineering landmark takes perhaps the worst buffeting from heavy seas of any lighthouse in the world. The first tower, begun in 1847, was swept away before the lantern could be installed. The present
- Bishop Theodore of Aquileia, Church of (church, Aquileia, Italy)
Western architecture: First period, to 313 ce: The double church of Bishop Theodore of Aquileia marks a step toward the creation of a monumental edifice of the Christian religion. Standing within the enclosure of a Roman villa, it occupied all the space of the earlier building and more. Two sanctuaries of considerable size, 121…