- Dalmatian language
Dalmatian language, extinct Romance language formerly spoken along the Dalmatian coast from the island of Veglia (modern Krk) to Ragusa (modern Dubrovnik). Ragusan Dalmatian probably disappeared in the 17th century; the Vegliot Dalmatian dialect became extinct in the 19th
- dalmatic (ecclesiastical garb)
dalmatic, liturgical vestment worn over other vestments by Roman Catholic, Lutheran, and some Anglican deacons. It probably originated in Dalmatia (now in Croatia) and was a commonly worn outer garment in the Roman world in the 3rd century and later. Gradually, it became the distinctive garment of
- Dalmatin, Jurij (Slovene translator)
Slovene literature: …the first Slovene book (1550), Jurij Dalmatin, who translated the Bible into Slovene (1584), and Adam Bohorič, who established a Slovene orthography and analyzed Slovene grammar (1584), created, with others, a corpus of writings in Slovene that even the Counter-Reformation, which was otherwise successful in restoring Catholicism to Slovenia, could…
- Dalmation pellitory (plant)
pyrethrum: Species: Dalmation pellitory, or pyrethrum daisy (Chrysanthemum cinerariifolium), is daisylike in appearance, with white ray flowers surrounding a yellow centre. The blue-gray leaves are deeply divided. The plant is native to the Balkans and is important commercially as a source of pyrethrin.
- Dalmatische, Das (work by Bartoli)
Matteo Giulio Bartoli: In an important early study, Das Dalmatische (1906; “Dalmatian”), he documented and analyzed the now-extinct Romance dialect of the Adriatic island of Veglia (Krk, Yugos.). He later advanced his theories about language in Introduzione alla neolinguistica (1925; “Introduction to Neolinguistics”) and Saggi di linguistica spaziale (1945; “Essays on Areal Linguistics”).…
- Dalmiro (Spanish writer)
José de Cadalso y Vázquez was a Spanish writer famous for his Cartas marruecas (1793; “Moroccan Letters”), in which a Moorish traveler in Spain makes penetrating criticisms of Spanish life. Educated in Madrid, Cadalso traveled widely and, although he hated war, enlisted in the army against the
- Dalnevostochnaya Respublika (historical state, Russia)
Far Eastern Republic, nominally independent state formed by Soviet Russia in eastern Siberia in 1920 and absorbed into the Soviet Union in 1922. At the time of the Far Eastern Republic’s creation, the Bolsheviks controlled Siberia west of Lake Baikal, while Japan held much of the Pacific coast,
- Dalny (China)
Dalian, city and port, southern Liaoning sheng (province), northeastern China. It consists of the formerly independent cities of Dalian and Lüshun, which were amalgamated (as Lüda) in 1950; in 1981 the name Dalian was restored, and Lüshun became a district of the city. Situated at the southern tip
- Daloa (Côte d’Ivoire)
Daloa, town, west-central Côte d’Ivoire (Ivory Coast), at the intersection of major north-south and east-west routes. It is the chief collecting point for a forest region that sends coffee, cocoa, kola nuts, and timber (sipo) to the coast for export. Daloa is also a local trade centre for rice,
- Dalong (Chinese artist)
Wu Changshuo was a Chinese seal carver, painter, and calligrapher who was prominent in the early 20th century. Wu was born into a scholarly family and began writing poems and carving seals by age 10. As a young man, Wu passed the civil service examinations and started a family, while still pursuing
- dalostone (rock)
dolomite: General considerations: …bulk of the dolomite constitutes dolostone formations that occur as thick units of great areal extent in many sequences of chiefly marine strata. (The rock dolostone is referred to by only the mineral name—i.e., dolomite—by many geologists.) The Dolomite Alps of northern Italy are a well-known example. Other relatively common…
- Dalou Mountains (mountains, China)
Sichuan: Relief: …on the northeast, while the Dalou Mountains, a lower and less continuous range with an average elevation of 5,000 to 7,000 feet (1,500 to 2,100 metres), border the south. To the west the Daxue Mountains of the Tibetan borderland rise to an average elevation of 14,500 feet (4,400 metres). To…
- Dalou, Aimé-Jules (French sculptor)
Jules Dalou was a French sculptor noted for allegorical group compositions of Baroque inspiration and for simpler studies of common people, representative of the naturalist trend in French sculpture. Dalou’s chief mentor was Jean-Baptiste Carpeaux, who encouraged his training first, and briefly, at
- Dalou, Jules (French sculptor)
Jules Dalou was a French sculptor noted for allegorical group compositions of Baroque inspiration and for simpler studies of common people, representative of the naturalist trend in French sculpture. Dalou’s chief mentor was Jean-Baptiste Carpeaux, who encouraged his training first, and briefly, at
- Dalpé, Jean Marc (Canadian author)
Canadian literature: The Quiet Revolution of French Canadian minorities: …the 1980s and 1990s, both Jean Marc Dalpé (Le Chien [1987; “The Dog”]) and Michel Ouellette (French Town [1994]) won Canada’s Governor General’s Award for drama in French. Poet Patrice Desbiens explored the alienation of the Francophone minority in his bilingual poetry collection L’Homme invisible/The Invisible Man (1981). Novelist and…
- Dalradian Series (geology)
Dalradian Series, sequence of highly folded and metamorphosed sedimentary and volcanic rocks of late Precambrian to Early Cambrian age, about 540 million years old, that occurs in the southeastern portions of the Scottish Highlands of Great Britain, where it occupies a belt 720 kilometres (450
- Dalriada (historical kingdom, Ireland)
Dalriada, Gaelic kingdom that, at least from the 5th century ad, extended on both sides of the North Channel and composed the northern part of the present County Antrim, Northern Ireland, and part of the Inner Hebrides and Argyll, in Scotland. In earlier times, Argyll had received extensive
- Dalruadhain (Scotland, United Kingdom)
Campbeltown, small royal burgh (town) and seaport, Argyll and Bute council area, historic county of Argyllshire, western Scotland. Campbeltown is the main centre of the Peninsula of Kintyre, which is 40 miles (65 km) long and protrudes into the Atlantic. By sea it is 83 miles (134 km) southwest of
- Dalrymple, Alexander (British geographer and hydrographer)
Alexander Dalrymple was a Scottish geographer, the first hydrographer of the British Admiralty and proponent of the existence of a vast, populous continent in the South Pacific, which he called the Great South Land. Dalrymple spent most of the time between 1757 and 1764 in the East Indies trying to
- Dalrymple, George (Australian explorer)
Herbert River: Explored in 1864 by George Dalrymple, the river was named after Sir Robert George Herbert, the state’s first premier. Dense forests along its middle course furnish lumber, while sugarcane is grown on flats near the coast. Wallaman Falls (970 feet [296 m]), on the tributary Stony Creek, forms the…
- Dalrymple, Sir John (English leader)
William III: The Glen Coe massacre: …merely dismissing from his secretaryship Sir John Dalrymple, on whom responsibility for the massacre was finally placed. In Ireland war formally broke out in 1689, when James landed there with French support. But the successful defense of Londonderry and of Enniskillen, and William’s own victory at the Battle of the…
- Dalseong Fortress (fort, South Korea)
Daegu: …Daegu’s other attractions are the Dalseong Fortress, an earthen-mound fort that protected Daegu for many centuries but is now a popular park, and Apsan Park, from which a cable car takes visitors up to Mount Ap for views of the city. Daegu is home to a number of colleges and…
- Dalsland (province, Sweden)
Dalsland, landskap (province), southwestern Sweden, on the Norwegian border, one of the smaller traditional provinces in the country. It is bounded to the east by Lake Vänern, to the west by Norway and the province of Bohuslän, and to the north by the province of Värmland. Dalsland is included in
- Dalton (Georgia, United States)
Dalton, city, seat (1851) of Whitfield county, northwestern Georgia, U.S., encircled by the Cohutta Mountains. Although founded in 1837 as Cross Plains, it was renamed, probably, for the mother of Edward White (head of the syndicate that bought the townsite), whose maiden name was Dalton. It
- dalton (physics)
atomic mass unit (AMU), in physics and chemistry, a unit for expressing masses of atoms, molecules, or subatomic particles. An atomic mass unit is equal to 1 12 the mass of a single atom of carbon-12, the most abundant isotope of carbon, or 1.660538921 × 10 −24 gram. The mass of an atom consists of
- Dalton Brothers (American outlaws)
Dalton Brothers, four train and bank robbers famous in U.S. Western history: Grattan (“Grat”; 1861–92), William (“Bill”; 1863–94), Robert (“Bob”; 1870–92), and Emmett (1871–1937). Their older cousins were the outlaw Younger brothers. Their father, Lewis Dalton, a rambler and saloonkeeper, abandoned
- Dalton Defenders Museum (museum, Coffeyville, Kansas, United States)
Coffeyville: The Dalton Defenders Museum in Coffeyville commemorates local citizens who in October 1892 died in a gun battle with the Dalton brothers, local desperadoes. Montgomery State Fishing Lake is located northwest of the city. Inc. 1872. Pop. (2000) 11,021; (2010) 10,295.
- Dalton Highway (highway, Alaska, United States)
Alaska: Transportation: The Dalton Highway, a 414-mile (666-km) road paralleling the Trans-Alaska Pipeline, runs from Fairbanks to Prudhoe Bay and combines with the existing highway system to provide an overland route from the ice-free southern ports to the Arctic Ocean. The highway becomes more remote and rugged as…
- Dalton Laboratory Plan (education)
Dalton Plan, secondary-education technique based on individual learning. Developed by Helen Parkhurst in 1919, it was at first introduced at a school for the handicapped and then in 1920 in the high school of Dalton, Mass. The plan had grown out of the reaction of some progressive educators to the
- Dalton minimum (solar phenomenon [1790–1830])
Dalton minimum, period of reduced sunspot activity that occurred between roughly 1790 and 1830. It was named for the English meteorologist and chemist John Dalton. Sunspot activity waxes and wanes with over about an 11-year cycle. During the Dalton minimum, the solar cycle continued; however, the
- Dalton Plan (education)
Dalton Plan, secondary-education technique based on individual learning. Developed by Helen Parkhurst in 1919, it was at first introduced at a school for the handicapped and then in 1920 in the high school of Dalton, Mass. The plan had grown out of the reaction of some progressive educators to the
- Dalton State College (college, Dalton, Georgia, United States)
- Dalton’s law (physical science)
Dalton’s law, the statement that the total pressure of a mixture of gases is equal to the sum of the partial pressures of the individual component gases. The partial pressure is the pressure that each gas would exert if it alone occupied the volume of the mixture at the same temperature. This
- Dalton, Bill (American outlaw)
Dalton Brothers: Western history: Grattan (“Grat”; 1861–92), William (“Bill”; 1863–94), Robert (“Bob”; 1870–92), and Emmett (1871–1937). Their older cousins were the outlaw Younger brothers.
- Dalton, Emmet (American outlaw)
Dalton Brothers: …1863–94), Robert (“Bob”; 1870–92), and Emmett (1871–1937). Their older cousins were the outlaw Younger brothers.
- Dalton, John (British scientist)
John Dalton was an English meteorologist and chemist, a pioneer in the development of modern atomic theory. Dalton was born into a Quaker family of tradesmen; his grandfather Jonathan Dalton was a shoemaker, and his father, Joseph, was a weaver. Joseph married Deborah Greenup in 1755, herself from
- Dalton, Katharina (British gynecologist)
premenstrual syndrome: …was named by British physician Katharina Dalton in the 1950s.
- Dalton, Katharina Dorothea Kuipers (British gynecologist)
premenstrual syndrome: …was named by British physician Katharina Dalton in the 1950s.
- Dalton, Roque (El Salvadoran poet)
El Salvador: The arts: …country’s most widely respected poets, Roque Dalton, was assassinated in 1975 as a result of leftist internecine struggle.
- Dalton, William (American vaudeville star)
Julian Eltinge was an American vaudeville star, often called the greatest female impersonator in theatrical history. Eltinge played his first female role at age 10. A graduate of Harvard, he entered vaudeville in 1904, soon commanding one of the highest salaries in show business. During a
- Dalton, William (American outlaw)
Dalton Brothers: Western history: Grattan (“Grat”; 1861–92), William (“Bill”; 1863–94), Robert (“Bob”; 1870–92), and Emmett (1871–1937). Their older cousins were the outlaw Younger brothers.
- daltonide compound (chemistry)
nonstoichiometric compound: …berthollide compounds in distinction from daltonides (in which the atomic ratios are those of small integers), nonstoichiometric compounds are best known among the transition elements. Several of them are important as components of solid-state electronic devices, such as rectifiers, thermoelectric generators, photodetectors, thermistors, and magnets useful in high-frequency circuits.
- Daltrey, Roger (British singer)
the Who: May 19, 1945, London, England), Roger Daltrey (b. March 1, 1944, London), John Entwistle (b. October 9, 1944, London—d. June 27, 2002, Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S.), and Keith Moon (b. August 23, 1946, London—d. September 7, 1978, London). Moon was replaced by Kenney Jones (b. September 16, 1948, London).
- daluo (musical instrument)
luogu: …present in most styles are daluo (large gong without a boss, beaten with a padded mallet), bo (cymbals), and gu (skin-headed drum, beaten with two sticks). The xiaoluo (small gong without a boss, beaten with a stick or a thin plate), ling (handbells), and ban (woodblock) are sometimes added. Whatever…
- Dalva (novel by Harrison)
Jim Harrison: Harrison was especially praised for Dalva (1988; television film 1996), which featured his first female protagonist. The Road Home (1998) expounds upon the family saga begun in Dalva. Other collections of novellas include Julip (1994), The Beast God Forgot to Invent (2000), The Farmer’s Daughter (2010), The River Swimmer (2013),…
- DALY
alcohol consumption: Individual and social effects: …pressure than from alcoholism, the disability-adjusted life years (a technical measure for computing the loss of healthy life as the result of disability) resulting from alcohol abuse nearly equals that from high blood pressure and smoking combined. Alcoholics and problem drinkers also undoubtedly contribute to the deterioration of the mental…
- Daly City (California, United States)
Daly City, city, San Mateo county, California, U.S. Daly City is adjacent to San Francisco, between the San Bruno Mountains and the Pacific Ocean on the San Francisco peninsula. First inhabited by Ohlone Indians, the site became a Spanish land grant (largely uninhabited) in the 18th century. Later
- Daly Clark, Marie Maynard (American biochemist)
Marie Maynard Daly was an American biochemist whose research helped advance the fields of molecular biology, cell metabolism, and cardiovascular disease. Daly was the first African American woman to earn a Ph.D. degree in chemistry in the United States. Daly’s parents cultivated her academic
- Daly detector (instrument)
mass spectrometry: Daly detector: In 1960 N.R. Daly introduced a form of detector with properties superior to the electron multipliers described above. In this design the incident ions are attracted to a rounded electrode of a few centimetres in dimension that is held at 10,000 to 20,000…
- Daly River (river, Northern Territory, Australia)
Daly River, river in northwestern Northern Territory, Australia; it is formed by the juncture of the King, Katherine, and Flora rivers in the hills west of Arnhem Land and flows northwest for about 200 miles (320 km) to Anson Bay on the Timor Sea. With its major tributary, the Fergusson, the Daly
- Daly, Augustin (American dramatist and theatrical manager)
Augustin Daly was an American playwright and theatrical manager whose companies were major features of the New York and London stage. Although Daly’s childhood was spent in amateur performances of the Romantic blank-verse drama of the period, it was as a writer of more realistic melodramas that he
- Daly, César-Denis (French architect)
Louis Sullivan: Legacy of Louis Sullivan: The French architect César-Denis Daly, for example, in an essay reprinted in a Chicago architectural journal, stated that
- Daly, Chuck (American basketball coach)
Detroit Pistons: …the guidance of head coach Chuck Daly, these Detroit teams were characterized by their extremely physical—some would say dirty—style of play, which earned them the nickname “Bad Boys.” After another trip to the conference finals in 1991 (a loss to Michael Jordan and the ascendant Chicago Bulls), Detroit regressed and…
- Daly, John (American golfer)
British Open: History: American John Daly won that year after a play-off with Italy’s Costantino Rocca, beginning another period of American supremacy at the Open in which 10 of the next 13 winners hailed from the United States, including Tiger Woods, who won three championships (2000, 2005–06). Subsequent years…
- Daly, John Augustin (American dramatist and theatrical manager)
Augustin Daly was an American playwright and theatrical manager whose companies were major features of the New York and London stage. Although Daly’s childhood was spent in amateur performances of the Romantic blank-verse drama of the period, it was as a writer of more realistic melodramas that he
- Daly, Marcus (American industrialist)
Marcus Daly was an American mining tycoon. Known as the “Copper King,” he was the prime mover behind the Anaconda Copper Mining Co., one of the world’s largest copper producers. Emigrating from Ireland to New York City in 1856, Daly soon moved westward, finding work in mines in California and Utah
- Daly, Marie Maynard (American biochemist)
Marie Maynard Daly was an American biochemist whose research helped advance the fields of molecular biology, cell metabolism, and cardiovascular disease. Daly was the first African American woman to earn a Ph.D. degree in chemistry in the United States. Daly’s parents cultivated her academic
- Daly, Mary (American theologian, philosopher, and ethicist)
Mary Daly was an American theologian, philosopher, and ethicist who pioneered radical feminist theology. Daly was born into a Roman Catholic family. After earning a Ph.D. in religion from St. Mary’s College (1953), she studied medieval philosophy and Thomist theology at the University of Fribourg,
- Daly, Reginald Aldworth (Canadian-American geologist)
Reginald Aldworth Daly was a Canadian-American geologist who independently developed the theory of magmatic stoping, whereby molten magma rises through the Earth’s crust and shatters, but does not melt, the surrounding rocks. The rocks, being denser than the magma, then sink, making room for the
- Dalziel, Diana (American editor and fashion expert)
Diana Vreeland was an American editor and fashion expert whose dramatic personality and distinctive tastes marked her successful leadership of major American fashion magazines during the mid-20th century. Diana Dalziel was the daughter of a Scottish father and an American mother in whose home the
- dam (female parent)
dog: Behavioral development: …deaf, totally dependent on the dam for warmth and nourishment. The dam will instinctively suckle and protect her young, often keeping other dogs and all but the most trusted people away from the whelping box. Between 10 and 14 days after birth, the eyes and ear canals open, and the…
- dam (engineering)
dam, structure built across a stream, a river, or an estuary to retain water. Dams are built to provide water for human consumption, for irrigating arid and semiarid lands, or for use in industrial processes. They are used to increase the amount of water available for generating hydroelectric
- Dam Busters, The (film by Anderson [1955])
The Dam Busters, British World War II film, released in 1955, that chronicles the preparations for and the execution of Operation Chastise (May 16–17, 1943), in which a British air squadron used bouncing bombs to destroy hydroelectric dams that were vital to Germany’s production of war matériel.
- Dam, Carl Peter Henrik (Danish biochemist)
Henrik Dam was a Danish biochemist who, with Edward A. Doisy, was awarded the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine in 1943 for research into antihemorrhagic substances and the discovery of vitamin K (1939). Dam, a graduate of the Polytechnic Institute of Copenhagen (1920), taught in the School of
- Dam, Henrik (Danish biochemist)
Henrik Dam was a Danish biochemist who, with Edward A. Doisy, was awarded the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine in 1943 for research into antihemorrhagic substances and the discovery of vitamin K (1939). Dam, a graduate of the Polytechnic Institute of Copenhagen (1920), taught in the School of
- DAMA (communications)
telecommunications media: Satellite links: …upon request—a process known as demand assigned multiple access (DAMA)—multibeam satellites can link widely distributed mobile and fixed users that cannot be linked economically by optical fibre cables or earthbound radio relays.
- Dama dama (mammal)
fallow deer, (Dama dama), medium-sized deer of the family Cervidae (order Artiodactyla) that is frequently kept on estates, in parks, and in zoos. The common fallow deer (Dama dama dama) is native to the eastern Mediterranean; a second, larger, more brightly coloured, short-antlered form, the
- Dama dama mesopotamica (mammal)
Persian deer, fallow deer (Dama mesopotamica) of western Asia. The maral, an Asiatic red deer, also is often called Persian deer. See fallow
- dama de Elche, La (sculpture)
Elche: …La dama de Elche (“The Lady of Elche”), was found on a nearby archaeological site in 1897; a mosaic floor with Latin inscriptions was also uncovered there in 1959. A local custom—declared a national artistic monument in 1931—is observed annually on August 14–15 in the 17th-century church of Santa…
- dama gazelle (mammal)
gazelle: The three largest species—the dama gazelle, Grant’s gazelle, and Soemmering’s gazelle—are placed in the genus Nanger (formerly considered a subgenus), and three of the smaller species—Thomson’s gazelle, the red-fronted gazelle, and the Mongalla gazelle—have become the genus Eudorcas
- Damad Ferid Paşa (Ottoman vizier)
Turkey: Mustafa Kemal and the Turkish War of Independence, 1919–23: The unpopular grand vizier, Damad Ferid Pasha, resigned and was replaced by the more sympathetic Ali Riza Pasha. Negotiations with the Kemalists were followed by the election of a new parliament, which met in Istanbul in January 1920. A large majority in parliament was opposed to the official government…
- Dāmād, Muḥammad Bāqir ibn ad- (Islamic philosopher)
Mīr Dāmād was a philosopher, teacher, and leader in the cultural renascence of Iran during the Ṣafavid dynasty. A descendant of a well-known Shīʿī family, Mīr Dāmād spent most of his life in Isfahan as a student and teacher. Mīr Dāmād’s major contribution to Islāmic philosophy was his concept of
- Damagaram (Niger)
Zinder, city, south-central Niger. The country’s second largest city, it was the capital of a Muslim dynasty established in the 18th century, which freed itself from the sovereignty of Bornu in the mid-19th century. The city was occupied by French troops in 1899, and it served as the capital of the
- Damage (film by Malle [1992])
Jeremy Irons: …appeared in the sensual drama Damage (1992), the action movie Die Hard: With a Vengeance (1995), and as Humbert Humbert in Lolita (1997), a controversial adaptation of Vladimir Nabokov’s novel. In the animated blockbuster The Lion King (1994), Irons provided the voice of a villainous lion.
- damage buoyancy (nautical science)
ship: Damage buoyancy and stability: Building a ship that can be neither sunk nor capsized is beyond practicality, but a ship can be designed to survive moderate damage and, if sinking is inevitable, to sink slowly and without capsizing in order to maximize the survival chances…
- damage stability (nautical science)
ship: Damage buoyancy and stability: …subdivision but in lack of damage stability. Longitudinal bulkheads in the vicinity of the torpedo hits limited the flooding to one side, causing the ship to heel quickly to the point where normal hull openings were submerged. As a consequence of this disaster, commercial ships are now forbidden from having…
- damage, malicious (law)
collective behaviour: Common misconceptions: …is much less looting and vandalism than is popularly supposed. Even among persons who converge from outside the community there is more petty pilfering for souvenirs than serious crime. Fourth, initially an altruistic selflessness is more prevalent than self-pity and self-serving activity. Frequently noted are dramatic instances of persons who…
- Damaged (album by Black Flag)
Black Flag: …its vocalist, Black Flag released Damaged (1981), its first full-length album. Later recordings flirted with heavy metal, and the band also provided musical accompaniment to Rollins’s poetry before breaking up in 1986.
- Damaged Child (photograph by Mann)
Sally Mann: In Damaged Child, one of Mann’s earliest portraits in the series (begun in 1984), her eldest daughter, Jessie, appears with a swollen eye and an expression seething with recrimination, a look some interpreted as belonging to a victim of child abuse. In truth, Jessie had been…
- Damaged Lives (film by Ulmer [1933])
Edgar G. Ulmer: Early work: In 1933 Ulmer helmed Damaged Lives, an exploitation entry about a couple nearly destroyed by venereal disease. It was a commercial success despite having been banned in a number of U.S. cities. He had a less-controversial hit with The Black Cat (1934), though the subject matter was still sensationalistic.…
- Damages (American television series)
Television in the United States: Prime time in the new century: … (2004–11), Over There (2005), and Damages (2007–10; Audience Network, 2011–12); TNT supplied The Closer (2005–12), Saving Grace (2007–10), and Raising the Bar (2008–09); USA Network’s Monk (2002–09) won seven Emmy Awards; and AMC’s Mad Men (begun 2007) won six in its first season,
- damages (law)
damages, in law, money compensation for loss or injury caused by the wrongful act of another. Recovery of damages is the objective of most civil litigation. Originally redress of wrongs was direct—an eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth. The introduction of monetary systems and dissatisfaction with
- Dāmājī (Gaikwar ruler)
India: Subordinate Maratha rulers: The rule of Damaji (died 1768) at Baroda was followed by a period of some turmoil. The Gaekwads still remained partly dependent on Pune and the peshwa, especially to intervene in moments of succession crisis. The eventual successor of Damaji, Fateh Singh (ruled 1771–89), did not remain allied…
- Damaliscus dorcas dorcas (mammal)
blesbok: An isolated related subspecies, the bontebok (Damaliscus pygargus dorcas), confined to the coastal plain of Western Cape province, came nearer to extinction and is still uncommon; the largest population, of 200–250, lives in Bontebok National Park.
- Damaliscus lunatus (mammal)
topi, (Damaliscus lunatus), one of Africa’s most common and most widespread antelopes. It is a member of the tribe Alcelaphini (family Bovidae), which also includes the blesbok, hartebeest, and wildebeest. Damaliscus lunatus is known as the topi in East Africa and as the sassaby or tsessebe in
- Damaliscus pygargus dorcas (mammal)
blesbok: An isolated related subspecies, the bontebok (Damaliscus pygargus dorcas), confined to the coastal plain of Western Cape province, came nearer to extinction and is still uncommon; the largest population, of 200–250, lives in Bontebok National Park.
- Damaliscus pygargus phillipsi (mammal)
blesbok, (Damaliscus pygargus phillipsi), one of the gaudiest of the antelopes, a South African version of the closely related sassaby. The blesbok ranged the treeless Highveld in countless thousands throughout the mid-19th century but was hunted nearly to extinction. It has been reintroduced,
- Daman (India)
Daman, town, capital of Dadra and Nagar Haveli and Daman and Diu union territory, western India. The town, together with numerous villages in the surrounding area, forms an enclave in southeastern Gujarat state and is situated on the Gulf of Khambhat (Cambay) of the Arabian Sea. Known as Damão, the
- Daman and Diu (former union territory, India)
Daman and Diu, former union territory of India, which comprised two widely separated districts on the country’s western coast. Daman is an enclave on the state of Gujarat’s southern coast, situated 100 miles (160 km) north of Mumbai (Bombay). Diu encompasses an island off the southern coast of
- Daman Ganga River (river, India)
Dadra and Nagar Haveli: Geography: …which are crossed by the Daman Ganga River and its tributaries. The only navigable river in Dadra and Nagar Haveli, the Daman Ganga rises in Maharashtra and flows northwestward through the territory toward Daman, a port once famous for its docks.
- Damanhūr (Egypt)
Damanhūr, city, capital of Al-Buḥayrah muḥāfaẓah (governorate) in the western Nile River delta, Lower Egypt. Its name is derived from the ancient Egyptian Timinhor (“City of Horus”) and has historically applied to several centres in Egypt, mostly in the delta. The capital of a Ptolemaic nome,
- Damão (India)
Daman, town, capital of Dadra and Nagar Haveli and Daman and Diu union territory, western India. The town, together with numerous villages in the surrounding area, forms an enclave in southeastern Gujarat state and is situated on the Gulf of Khambhat (Cambay) of the Arabian Sea. Known as Damão, the
- damar (varnish resin)
dammar, any of a variety of hard varnish resins obtained from coniferous and hardwood trees characteristic of Southeast and East Asia. These include the conifer genus Agathis (family Araucariaceae), such flowering plants as Shorea (especially S. wiesneri) and other genera of the family
- Damar, Al- (Sudan)
Al-Dāmir, town, northeastern Sudan. It lies on the right (east) bank of the Nile River, at an elevation of 1,158 feet (353 metres), about 155 miles (250 km) northeast of Khartoum. Al-Dāmir is a local commercial centre for the date-producing areas to the north. The town’s industries include date
- Damara (people)
Bergdama, a seminomadic people of mountainous central Namibia. They speak a Khoisan (click) language, but culturally they are more like the peoples of central and western Africa, though their origin is obscure. When first encountered by Europeans, in the 17th and 18th centuries, many of the
- Damaraland (historical region, Namibia)
Damaraland, historical region of Namibia; the name is in part a misnomer, as it was originally applied to lands of north-central Namibia predominantly occupied by the Herero and Khoekhoe people rather than the Bergdama (Damara), the latter having been displaced and subjugated by the other two when
- Damaraland mole rat (rodent)
eusocial species: …rat (Heterocephalus glaber) and the Damaraland mole rat (Cryptomys damarensis), are the only vertebrates that engage in truly eusocial behaviour.
- Damaran Belt (geological region, Africa)
Precambrian: Occurrence and distribution of Precambrian rocks: Damaran belts in Africa, the Labrador Trough in Canada, and the Eastern Ghats belt in India. Several small relict areas, spanning a few hundred kilometres across, exist within or against Phanerozoic orogenic belts and include the Lofoten islands of Norway, the
- ḍamaru (drum)
drum: The modern Indian damaru is an hourglass-shaped clapper drum—when it is twisted its heads are struck by the ends of one or two cords attached to the shell. Barrel and shallow-nailed drums are particularly associated with India and East Asia; notable are the taiko drums of Japan, made…
- Damas, Léon (French Guiana writer)
Caribbean literature: …Roumain (Haiti), Nicolás Guillén (Cuba), Léon Damas (French Guiana), and Aimé Césaire (Martinique). Jean Price-Mars, a Haitian ethnologist, in Ainsi parla l’oncle (1928; “Thus Spoke the Uncle”), declared that his purpose was to “restore to the Haitian people the dignity of their folklore.” The achievement of this negritude, finely expressed…