- ching-hsi (Chinese theatre)
jingxi, popular Chinese theatrical form that developed in the mid-19th century. It incorporated elements of huidiao from Anhui, dandiao from Hubei, and kunqu, the traditional opera that had predominated since the 16th century. Sung in Mandarin, the dialect of Beijing and of the traditional elite,
- ching-hu (musical instrument)
jinghu, Chinese two-stringed fiddle that is the principal melodic instrument in jingxi (Peking opera) ensembles. The smallest (and therefore highest-pitched) of the Chinese spike fiddles (huqin), the jinghu is about 50 cm (20 inches) in length. Its body is a bamboo tube, covered at the playing end
- Ching-hung (China)
Jinghong, city, southern Yunnan sheng (province), southwestern China. It is situated in a rich basin on the west bank of the Mekong (Lancang) River, near the borders of Myanmar (Burma) and Laos. A military-civilian administration of Cheli Region was set up there during the Yuan dynasty (1206–1368).
- Ching-p’o language
Sino-Tibetan languages: Tibeto-Burman languages: Lahu, Lisu, Kachin (Jingpo), Kuki-Chin, the obsolete Xixia (Tangut), and other languages. The Tibetan writing system (which dates from the 7th century) and the Burmese (dating from the 11th century) are derived from the Indo-Aryan (Indic) tradition. The Xixia system (developed in the 11th–13th century in northwestern…
- Ching-shan Park (park, Beijing, China)
Beijing: Recreation: Jingshan (Prospect Hill) Park, also known as Meishan (Coal Hill) Park, is a man-made hill, more than a mile (1.6 km) in circumference, located north of the Forbidden City. The hill, offering a spectacular panorama of Beijing from its summit, has five ridges, with a…
- Ching-t’ai (emperor of Ming dynasty)
Jingtai was the reign name (nianhao) of the seventh emperor of the Ming dynasty. He ascended to the throne after his brother, the Zhengtong emperor, was captured while leading the imperial forces against the Oryat (western Mongol) leader Esen Taiji in 1449. When Esen tried to take advantage of his
- ching-t’ien (Chinese history)
well-field system, the communal land organization supposedly in effect throughout China early in the Zhou dynasty (c. 1046–256 bce). The well-field system was first mentioned in the literature of the late Zhou dynasty (c. 4th century bce), especially in the writings of the famous Confucian
- Ching-t’u (Buddhist school)
Pure Land Buddhism, devotional cult of the Buddha Amitabha—“Buddha of Infinite Light,” known in China as Emituofo and in Japan as Amida. It is one of the most popular forms of Mahayana Buddhism in eastern Asia. Pure Land schools believe that rebirth in Amitabha’s Western Paradise, Sukhavati, known
- Ching-te-chen (China)
Jingdezhen, city, northeastern Jiangxi sheng (province), southeastern China. Situated on the south bank of the Chang River, it was originally a market town called Changnanzhen and received its present name in 1004, the first year of the Jingde era during the Song dynasty (960–1279). Throughout the
- Ching-ti (emperor of Han dynasty)
Jingdi was the posthumous name (shi) of the fifth emperor of the Han dynasty, during whose reign (157–141 bc) an attempt was made to limit the power of the great feudal princes, who had been enfeoffed in separate kingdoms during the tolerant rule of Jingdi’s father, the Wendi emperor (reigned
- ching-tso (meditation technique)
ching-tso, meditation technique associated with Neo-Confucianism. Influenced by both Taoist and Ch’an (Zen) Buddhist forms of meditation, it involves sitting in a relaxed fashion with the intent of quieting the flow of discursive thought and the attainment of the original goodness of human nature
- Ching-wei (Chinese revolutionary)
Wang Ching-wei was an associate of the revolutionary Nationalist leader Sun Yat-sen, rival of Chiang Kai-shek (Jiang Jieshi) for control of the Nationalist government in the late 1920s and early ’30s, and finally head of the regime established in 1940 to govern the Japanese-conquered territory in
- Chingachgook (fictional character)
Chingachgook, fictional character, a Mohican chief in four of the novels by James Fenimore Cooper known under the collective title The Leatherstocking Tales—comprising The Pioneers (1823), The Last of the Mohicans (1826), The Pathfinder (1840), and The Deerslayer (1841). Chingachgook is a lifelong
- Chingaira, Dickson (Zimbabwean musician)
chimurenga: …most notably Oliver Mtukudzi and Comrade Chinx (Dickson Chingaira), began performing their own versions of chimurenga. Mtukudzi enriched his sound with elements of reggae, jazz, mbira, and various African popular musics, including Rhodesian jit and South African mbaqanga, both of which featured quick-paced rippling melodies of electric guitars. His song…
- Chingde chongdeng lu (work compiled by Daoyun)
Zen: Origins and nature: …Buddhist monk Daoyun in 1004, Records of the Transmission of the Lamp (Chingde chongdeng lu) offers an authoritative introduction to the origins and nature of Zen Buddhism. The work describes the Zen school as consisting of the authentic Buddhism practiced by monks and nuns who belong to a large religious…
- Chinggiss Khan (Mongol ruler)
Genghis Khan was a Mongolian warrior-ruler, one of the most famous conquerors of history, who consolidated tribes into a unified Mongolia and then extended his empire across Asia to the Adriatic Sea. Genghis Khan was a warrior and ruler of genius who, starting from obscure and insignificant
- Chingichnish (North American Indian deity)
Luiseño: In deference to this god, Chingichnish, they held a series of initiation ceremonies for boys, some of which involved a drug made from jimsonweed (Datura stramonium). This was drunk to inspire visions or dreams of the supernatural, which were central to the Luiseño religion. Equally important were mourning ceremonies, a…
- Chingis Khan (Mongol ruler)
Genghis Khan was a Mongolian warrior-ruler, one of the most famous conquerors of history, who consolidated tribes into a unified Mongolia and then extended his empire across Asia to the Adriatic Sea. Genghis Khan was a warrior and ruler of genius who, starting from obscure and insignificant
- Chingiz-Tau Mountains (mountains, Kazakhstan)
Kazakhstan: Relief: … in the west and the Chingiz-Tau Range in the east. In the east and southeast, massifs (enormous blocks of crystalline rock) are furrowed by valleys. The Altai mountain complex to the east sends three ridges into the republic, and, farther south, the Tarbagatay Range is an offshoot of the Naryn-Kolbin…
- Chingiz-Tau Range (mountains, Kazakhstan)
Kazakhstan: Relief: … in the west and the Chingiz-Tau Range in the east. In the east and southeast, massifs (enormous blocks of crystalline rock) are furrowed by valleys. The Altai mountain complex to the east sends three ridges into the republic, and, farther south, the Tarbagatay Range is an offshoot of the Naryn-Kolbin…
- Chingleput (India)
Chengalpattu, town, northeastern Tamil Nadu state, southeastern India. It is located along the Palar River, about 35 miles (56 km) south-southwest of the city of Chennai (Madras). Chengalpattu dates from the early Chola dynasty of the 2nd century bce. Its name means “Town of Red Lotuses.” The
- Chingli (China)
Jinan, city and capital, Shandong sheng (province), China. It lies in the northern foothills of the Mount Tai massif, on the high ground just south of the Huang He (Yellow River), which provides the major route along the north side of the Shandong Hills. Pop. (2002 est.) city, 2,345,969; (2007
- Chinglish (play by Hwang)
David Henry Hwang: In 2011 Chinglish appeared on Broadway. It was written in English and Mandarin (with supertitles) and examined the subject of cultural and linguistic misunderstandings.
- Chingola (Zambia)
Chingola, municipality, north-central Zambia. It is situated approximately 5,000 feet (1,520 metres) above sea level in densely wooded country, and it has road and rail connections to the towns of Kitwe, Mufulira, and Chililabombwe. Chingola was founded in 1943 and was declared a municipality in
- Chingpaw language
Sino-Tibetan languages: Tibeto-Burman languages: Lahu, Lisu, Kachin (Jingpo), Kuki-Chin, the obsolete Xixia (Tangut), and other languages. The Tibetan writing system (which dates from the 7th century) and the Burmese (dating from the 11th century) are derived from the Indo-Aryan (Indic) tradition. The Xixia system (developed in the 11th–13th century in northwestern…
- Chingunjav (Mongol leader)
Mongolia: The ascendancy of the Manchu: …led by a noble named Chingünjav. He was a coconspirator with an Oirat leader named Amursanaa, who in turn had first submitted to the Manchu and then rebelled against them. This was the last period of general warfare involving the Mongols, and it ended with a considerable redistribution of the…
- Chinhoyi (Zimbabwe)
Chinhoyi, town, north-central Zimbabwe. It lies west of the Hunyani River and Falls and is located on highway and rail routes to the national capital, Harare (formerly Salisbury), and to Lusaka, Zambia. Chinhoyi is the centre of a productive agricultural area (tobacco, corn [maize], cattle) and a
- Chini, Eusebio Francesco (Jesuit missionary)
Eusebio Kino was a Jesuit missionary, cartographer, rancher, and explorer in Spanish service, founder of numerous missions in the Pimería Alta region, now divided between the Mexican state of Sonora and the U.S. state of Arizona. Educated in Germany in philosophy, mathematics, and astronomy, he
- Chinju (South Korea)
Jinju, city, South Gyeongsang do (province), southern South Korea. It is situated west of Changwon along the Nam River, a tributary of the Nakdong River. It was the center of local administration beginning in the Three Kingdoms period (c. 57 bce–668 ce), under various names, and from 1896 to 1925
- Chink in the Armour, The (novel by Lowndes)
Marie Adelaide Lowndes: …and Barbara Rebell (1905)—she wrote The Chink in the Armour (1912), a psychological study of a murder-plot victim. The Lodger, published the following year, was a fictional treatment of the Jack the Ripper murders. Her numerous works, spanning the first 40 years of the 20th century, include a series featuring…
- Chinkana (archaeological site, Isla del Sol, Bolivia)
Isla del Sol: …takes its name from the Temple of the Sun, traditionally the site where Manco Capac and Mama Ocllo, the founders of the Inca dynasty, were sent to earth by the sun god. The temple was probably built by Topa Inca Yupanqui (reigned c. 1471–93), who reputedly occupied the best preserved…
- chinkapin (tree grouping)
chinquapin, any of several species of trees in various genera of the beech family (Fagaceae). Notably, they include several deciduous trees of the genus Castanea and evergreen trees and shrubs of the genus Castanopsis and Chrysolepis. Chinquapins in the chestnut genus Castanea have hairy leaves and
- chinkara (mammal)
gazelle: Asian gazelles: A sixth Asian gazelle, the Indian gazelle or chinkara (G. bennetti), survives in the deserts of India and Pakistan.
- chinkin-bori (Japanese art)
chinkin-bori, (Japanese: “gold-inlay carving”), in Japanese lacquerwork, technique for decorating lacquer ware with patterns delineated by thin lines of gold inlay. After the pattern has been incised into the lacquer surface with a fine chisel, raw lacquer is rubbed into the grooves as an adhesive
- Chinmayananda (Indian spiritual thinker)
Chinmayananda was an Indian spiritual thinker and authority on the Vedanta system of Indian philosophy. Menon was born into an aristocratic family of Kerala state. After obtaining degrees in law and English literature from Lucknow University, he joined the Indian independence movement in 1942,
- Chinmayananda Saraswati (Indian spiritual thinker)
Chinmayananda was an Indian spiritual thinker and authority on the Vedanta system of Indian philosophy. Menon was born into an aristocratic family of Kerala state. After obtaining degrees in law and English literature from Lucknow University, he joined the Indian independence movement in 1942,
- Chinnamp’o (North Korea)
Namp’o, city, South P’yŏngan do (province), southwestern North Korea. It is about 30 miles (50 km) southwest of P’yŏngyang, on the estuary of the Taedong River. Formerly a fishing village, it developed rapidly after it became an open port in 1897. The harbour can accommodate ships of 20,000 tons
- Chino, Eusebio Francesco (Jesuit missionary)
Eusebio Kino was a Jesuit missionary, cartographer, rancher, and explorer in Spanish service, founder of numerous missions in the Pimería Alta region, now divided between the Mexican state of Sonora and the U.S. state of Arizona. Educated in Germany in philosophy, mathematics, and astronomy, he
- Chinoise, La (film by Godard [1967])
Jean-Luc Godard: Breathless and filmmaking style and themes: …left-wing thought was implicit in La Chinoise (1967; its title is slang for Parisian Maoists) and was confirmed by Godard’s active participation in the Paris student riots of 1968 and other demonstrations. Weekend, also made in 1967, was a hard-hitting denunciation of modern French society.
- chinoiserie (design)
chinoiserie, 17th- and 18th-century Western style of interior design, furniture, pottery, textiles, and garden design that represents fanciful European interpretations of Chinese styles. In the first decades of the 17th century, English and Italian and, later, other craftsmen began to draw freely
- Chinon (France)
Chinon, town, Indre-et-Loire département, Centre région, western France, on the banks of the Vienne River, south-southwest of Tours. It is famous for its medieval streets and a ruined château, where the first meeting between St. Joan of Arc and King Charles VII of France took place in 1429. A
- Chinon, Truce of (European history)
France: Philip Augustus: By the Truce of Chinon (September 18, 1214), John recognized the conquests of Philip Augustus and renounced the suzerainty of Brittany, although the complete submission of Poitou and Saintonge was to take another generation.
- Chinook (people)
Chinook, North American Indians of the Northwest Coast who spoke Chinookan languages and traditionally lived in what are now Washington and Oregon, from the mouth of the Columbia River to The Dalles. The Chinook were famous as traders, with connections stretching as far as the Great Plains. The
- Chinook (computer program)
checkers: …the first computer program, named Chinook, to win a world championship from a human at any game. Chinook lost its first championship challenge match in 1990 to the American mathematician Marion Tinsley, with two wins against four losses. In a 1994 rematch their first six games ended in draws, at…
- chinook (wind)
chinook, warm, dry wind descending the eastern slopes of the Rocky Mountains, primarily in winter. Winds of the same kind occur in other parts of the world and are known generally as foehns
- Chinook Jargon (language)
Chinook Jargon, pidgin, presently extinct, formerly used as a trade language in the Pacific Northwest region of North America. It is thought to have originated among the Northwest Coast Indians, especially the Chinook and the Nuu-chah-nulth (Nootka) peoples. The peoples of the Northwest Coast
- Chinook language
agglutination: …In Wishram, a dialect of Chinook (a North American Indian language), the word ačimluda (“He will give it to you”) is composed of the elements a- “future,” -č- “he,” -i- “him,” -m- “thee,” -1- “to,” -ud- “give,” and -a “future.”
- chinook salmon (fish)
chinook salmon, (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) prized North Pacific food and sport fish of the family Salmonidae. It weighs up to 60 kg (130 pounds) and is silvery with round black spots. Spawning runs occur in spring, adults swimming as far as 3,200 km (2,000 miles) up the Yukon. Young chinook salmon
- chinquapin (tree grouping)
chinquapin, any of several species of trees in various genera of the beech family (Fagaceae). Notably, they include several deciduous trees of the genus Castanea and evergreen trees and shrubs of the genus Castanopsis and Chrysolepis. Chinquapins in the chestnut genus Castanea have hairy leaves and
- chinsō (Japanese art)
chinsō, in Japanese art, type of Buddhist portraiture developed especially by the Zen sect about 1200. Chinsō were official pictures of high ecclesiastics, usually posed seated in a chair and dressed in their official robes. These intimate portraits show great technical mastery and meticulous
- chinstrap penguin (bird)
chinstrap penguin, (Pygoscelis antarctica), species of penguin (order Sphenisciformes) characterized by a cap of black plumage on the top of the head, a white face, and a fine, continuous band of black feathers that extends from one side of the head to the other across each cheek and under the
- Chinsura (India)
Hugli: Chinsurah was an important 17th-century settlement of the Dutch, who built a factory (trading station) there in 1656. In 1825 Chinsurah and other Dutch settlements were ceded to the British in exchange for holdings in Sumatra (Indonesia). Important historical buildings include a Muslim imām-baṛah (meeting…
- chintz (fabric)
chintz, plainwoven, printed or solid-colour, glazed cotton fabric, frequently a highly glazed printed calico. Originally “chintz” (from the Hindi word meaning “spotted”) was stained or painted calico produced in India. The modern fabric is commonly made in several colours on a light ground and used
- Chinvat peretu (Zoroastrianism)
immortality: …Zoroaster accepted the notion of Chinvat peretu, or the Bridge of the Requiter, which was to be crossed after death and which was broad for the righteous and narrow for the wicked, who fell from it into hell. In Indian philosophy and religion, the steps upward—or downward—in the series of…
- Chinyanja (language)
Chewa: Their language, Chewa, is also called Chichewa, Nyanja, or Chinyanja and is important in Malawi.
- Chinzei (Japanese Buddhist sect)
Jōdo, (Japanese: Way to the Pure Land), devotional sect of Japanese Buddhism stressing faith in the Buddha Amida and heavenly reward. See Pure Land
- chinzō (Japanese art)
chinsō, in Japanese art, type of Buddhist portraiture developed especially by the Zen sect about 1200. Chinsō were official pictures of high ecclesiastics, usually posed seated in a chair and dressed in their official robes. These intimate portraits show great technical mastery and meticulous
- Chioggia (Italy)
Chioggia, town, southeastern Veneto regione (region), northern Italy. The town lies at the southern end of the Veneta Lagoon, 15 miles (24 km) south of the city of Venice, of which it is a suffragan diocese. Chioggia occupies several islands and is joined by a bridge to the mainland at the seaside
- Chioggia, Battle of (Italian history)
Carlo Zeno: …victory over the Genoese at Chioggia, near Venice, in 1380 was a turning point in the struggle between the two great maritime republics.
- Chionanthus (plant, Chionanthus genus)
fringe tree, (genus Chionanthus), genus of about 150 species of flowering trees and shrubs in the oleander family (Oleaceae). They get their name from the long, fringy flowers that cover the trees in spring. The flowers hang in clusters of about the same length as the simple oval leaves and have
- Chionanthus retusus (plant)
fringe tree: The Chinese fringe tree (C. retusus) seldom reaches more than 6 metres (20 feet).
- Chionanthus virginicus (plant)
fringe tree: The white fringe tree (Chionanthus virginicus) from southeastern North America, reaches about 10 metres (33 feet) in height. The Chinese fringe tree (C. retusus) seldom reaches more than 6 metres (20 feet).
- Chionaspis furfura (insect)
scurfy scale, (Chionaspis furfura), a species of insect in the armoured scale family, Diaspididae (order Homoptera), that is found on shaded trees, giving the bark a scurfy appearance. This insect has gray, pear-shaped females (about 3 mm [0.1 inch] long) and smaller, white males with three
- Chione (Greek mythology)
Eumolpus: …of the god Poseidon and Chione (Snow Girl), daughter of the north wind, Boreas; after various adventures he became king in Thrace but was killed while helping the Eleusinians in their war against Erectheus of Athens.
- Chionis (bird)
sheathbill, (family Chionididae), either of two species of white stout-billed Antarctic shorebirds making up genus Chionis (order Charadriiformes), the only bird family confined to south polar regions. It is named for the rough, horny sheath around the base of its bill shielding its nostrils. The
- Chionis alba (bird)
sheathbill: The pure-white snowy sheathbill (C. alba), 40 cm (16 inches) long, has a yellow bill. The lesser sheathbill (C. minor) is black-billed and is about 38 cm (15 inches) long.
- Chionis minor (bird)
sheathbill: The lesser sheathbill (C. minor) is black-billed and is about 38 cm (15 inches) long.
- Chionite (people)
ancient Iran: Conflicts with Rome: …a new enemy, the nomadic Chionites, on his eastern frontier. After a long campaign against them (353–358), he returned to Mesopotamia and, with the help of Chionite auxiliaries, captured the city of Amida (modern Diyarbakır, Turkey) on the upper Tigris, an episode vividly narrated by the Roman historian Ammianus Marcellinus…
- Chios (island, Greece)
Chios, island and dímos (municipality), situated 5 miles (8 km) off the western coast of Turkey in the Aegean Sea, North Aegean (Modern Greek: Vóreio Aigaío) periféreia (region), eastern Greece. Of volcanic and limestone origins, it is about 30 miles (50 km) long north-south and from 8 to 15 miles
- Chios, Battle of (Greek history)
Battle of Chios, (201 bce). The naval defeat of Philip V of Macedon at Chios was the last large-scale naval battle between fleets sent out by independent Greek states. At the time, it was thought that it had secured independence for the smaller states, but in fact it only opened the way for Roman
- Chiozzotto (Italian composer)
Giovanni Croce was a composer who, with Andrea and Giovanni Gabrieli, was one of the leading Venetian composers of his day. Croce was a priest by 1585. About 1593 he became assistant choirmaster at St. Mark’s, and in 1603 choirmaster. His madrigals and canzonets (published in seven books,
- Chip (people)
African dance: Rhythm: Neighbouring Chip men perform a light run, playing flutes of four different pitches that combine to form a rhythmic melody. At the end of each phrase the dancers turn toward the centre of their circle to perform a climax of light hopping movements as they play.…
- chip (electronics)
computer chip, integrated circuit or small wafer of semiconductor material embedded with integrated circuitry. Chips comprise the processing and memory units of the modern digital computer (see microprocessor; RAM). Chip making is extremely precise and is usually done in a “clean room,” since even
- chip (electronics)
integrated circuit (IC), an assembly of electronic components, fabricated as a single unit, in which miniaturized active devices (e.g., transistors and diodes) and passive devices (e.g., capacitors and resistors) and their interconnections are built up on a thin substrate of semiconductor material
- chip breaker (tool)
hand tool: Plane: Now called the double iron, it is a feature of all but the smallest of modern planes.
- chip circuit (electronics)
integrated circuit (IC), an assembly of electronic components, fabricated as a single unit, in which miniaturized active devices (e.g., transistors and diodes) and passive devices (e.g., capacitors and resistors) and their interconnections are built up on a thin substrate of semiconductor material
- chip shot (golf)
golf: Procedure: …or he may play a chip shot, in which the ball flies partway through the air, as to the edge of the close-clipped surface of the green, and then rolls the remaining distance.
- Chip Woman’s Fortune, The (play by Richardson)
African American literature: Playwrights and editors: … such as Willis Richardson, whose The Chip Woman’s Fortune (produced 1923) was the first nonmusical play by an African American to be produced on Broadway. African American editors such as Charles S. Johnson, whose monthly Opportunity was launched in 1923 under the auspices of the National Urban League, and the…
- Chip, of the Flying U (novel by Bower)
B.M. Bower: …she published her first novel, Chip, of the Flying U, about the lives of cowboy Chip Bennett and his group of hands at the Flying U ranch. She revisited the characters in several sequels, including The Happy Family (1910) and Flying U Ranch (1914). These novels achieved significant popularity in…
- Chip, Will (English writer)
Hannah More was an English religious writer, best known as a writer of popular tracts and as an educator of the poor. As a young woman with literary aspirations, More made the first of her visits to London in 1773–74. She was welcomed into a circle of Bluestocking wits and was befriended by Sir
- Chipata (Zambia)
Chipata, town, southeastern Zambia, near the Malawi frontier. It is an upland town, approximately 3,600 feet (1,100 metres) above sea level. Tobacco is the major local cash crop. Peanuts (groundnuts) are processed into oil products, and cotton, corn (maize), and wheat are also grown. Formerly an
- Chipaya language
South American Indian languages: To date only Uru-Chipaya, a language in Bolivia, is surely relatable to a Macro-Mayan phylum of North America and Mesoamerica. Hypotheses about the probable centre of dispersion of language groups within South America have been advanced for stocks like Arawakan and Tupian, based on the principle (considered questionable…
- chipboard (paper product)
chipboard, cheap cardboard or paperboard used as backing for photographs or in making cartons and boxes where strength and appearance are not essential. Chipboard is made of mixed, unbleached paper stock in thicknesses of 0.006 inch (0.15 mm) and up. One or both surfaces may be coated with manila
- chipboard (construction material)
construction: Timber frames: …with panels of plywood or particleboard to provide a surface to attach the exterior cladding and for lateral stability against wind. Plywood and particleboard are fabricated in panels of standard sizes. Plywood is made of thin layers of wood, rotary-cut from logs and glued together with the wood grain running…
- Chipewayan syllabary (writing system)
North American Indian languages: Writing and texts: …used for Cree and Ojibwa), Chipewayan syllabary (based on the Cree syllabary), the Eskimo syllabary of the central and eastern Canadian Arctic (also based on the Cree syllabary), and the Fox syllabary (also called the Great Lakes syllabary), used by Potawatomi, Fox, Sauk, Kickapoo, and some Ojibwa
- Chipewyan (people)
Chipewyan, Athabaskan-speaking North American Indians of northern Canada. They originally inhabited a large triangular area with a base along the 1,000-mile-long (1,600 km) Churchill River and an apex some 700 miles (1,100 km) to the north; the land comprises boreal forests divided by stretches of
- Chiphyŏnjŏn (academy, Korea)
Korea: The establishment of a Confucian state: …a royal academy called the Hall of Worthies (Jiphyeonjeon) was established, where bright young scholars engaged in study and research. In 1443 the Korean phonetic alphabet, Hangul (Korean: “Great Script”), was completed under Sejong’s direction.
- Chipko andolan (Indian environmental movement)
Chipko movement, nonviolent social and ecological movement by rural villagers, particularly women, in India in the 1970s, aimed at protecting trees and forests slated for government-backed logging. The movement originated in the Himalayan region of Uttarakhand (then part of Uttar Pradesh) in 1973
- Chipko movement (Indian environmental movement)
Chipko movement, nonviolent social and ecological movement by rural villagers, particularly women, in India in the 1970s, aimed at protecting trees and forests slated for government-backed logging. The movement originated in the Himalayan region of Uttarakhand (then part of Uttar Pradesh) in 1973
- chipless machining (technology)
forging, in metallurgy, process of shaping metal and increasing its strength by hammering or pressing. In most forging an upper die is forced against a heated workpiece positioned on a stationary lower die. If the upper die or hammer is dropped, the process is known as drop forging. To increase the
- Chiplunkar, Vishnu Krishna (Indian educator)
India: The first partition of Bengal: …emulate the so-called “Indian Jesuits”—Vishnu Krishna Chiplunkar (1850–82), Gopal Ganesh Agarkar (1856–95), Tilak, and Gokhale—who were pioneers in the founding of indigenous educational institutions in the Deccan in the 1880s. The movement for national education spread throughout Bengal, as well as to Varanasi (Banaras), where Pandit Madan Mohan Malaviya…
- Chipman, John (American chemist and metallurgist)
John Chipman was an American physical chemist and metallurgist who was instrumental in applying the principles of physical chemistry to constituents in liquid metals and to the chemical reactions between slag and liquid iron that are important in the production of pig iron and steel. Chipman was
- chipmunk (rodent)
chipmunk, (genus Tamias), any of 25 species of small, striped, terrestrial squirrels with large internal cheek pouches used for transporting food. They have prominent eyes and ears, a furry tail, and delicate claws. All are active only during the day, and all but one are North American, occurring
- chipotle (food)
chipotle, jalapeño chili pepper that is dried through smoking. It is a common ingredient in the popular Mexican sauce called mole. When jalapeños meet vast quantities of charcoal and smoke, they take on a new life and a new name: chipotles, shrivelled nuggets of heat and flavour that can transform
- Chippendale (furniture)
Chippendale, various styles of furniture fashionable in the third quarter of the 18th century and named after the English cabinetmaker Thomas Chippendale. The first style of furniture in England named after a cabinetmaker rather than a monarch, it became the most famous name in the history of
- Chippendale, Thomas (British cabinetmaker)
Thomas Chippendale was one of the leading cabinetmakers of 18th-century England and one of the most perplexing figures in the history of furniture. His name is synonymous with the Anglicized Rococo style. Nothing is known of Chippendale’s early life until his marriage to Catherine Redshaw in London
- Chippendale, Thomas, II (British cabinetmaker)
Thomas Chippendale, II was the son of the cabinetmaker Thomas Chippendale, who succeeded his father as head of the family workshop. Until the retirement of Thomas Haig in 1796, the firm traded under the title Chippendale and Haig. Though the business was declared bankrupt in 1804, the younger
- Chippenham (England, United Kingdom)
Chippenham, town (parish), administrative and historic county of Wiltshire, southwestern England. It is located on the River Avon (Lower, or Bristol, Avon) in the northwestern part of the county. Chippenham was the site of a royal residence during the Middle Ages and appears in Domesday Book (1086)
- Chipperfield, David (British architect)
David Chipperfield is a British architect who is especially known for quietly incorporating modern, minimal designs with historic buildings. He was praised for his reconstruction of the Neues Museum (2010) in Berlin, and the Procuratie Vecchie (2022; Old Procuracies), the 16th-century building on
- Chipperfield, Sir David Alan (British architect)
David Chipperfield is a British architect who is especially known for quietly incorporating modern, minimal designs with historic buildings. He was praised for his reconstruction of the Neues Museum (2010) in Berlin, and the Procuratie Vecchie (2022; Old Procuracies), the 16th-century building on