- Guntur (India)
Guntur, city, eastern Andhra Pradesh state, southern India. It lies on a lowland plain in the Krishna River delta. The city was founded in the mid-18th century by the French, but in 1788 it was ceded to the British. It became a municipality in 1866. A railroad junction and trade centre, Guntur’s
- Gunung Kinabalu (mountain, Malaysia)
Mount Kinabalu, the highest peak in Malaysia and the Malay Archipelago, rising to 13,435 feet (4,095 metres). It is located on the island of Borneo in Sabah state in Malaysia. It is the third highest peak on an island on Earth, after Puncak Jaya in New Guinea and Mauna Kea in Hawaii. Lying near the
- Gunung Marapi (volcano, Sumatra, Indonesia)
Mount Marapi, an active volcano located in the Padang Highlands of western Sumatra, Indonesia. The mountain is part of the Ring of Fire—a long, horseshoe-shaped, seismically active belt that rings the Pacific Ocean. The highest peak among several volcanoes in the highlands, Mount Marapi rises to
- Gunung Merapi (volcano, Java, Indonesia)
Mount Merapi, volcanic mountain peak located near the center of the island of Java, Indonesia. The volcano is about 20 miles (32 km) north of Yogyakarta and somewhat farther south of Semarang. Merapi (“Mountain of Fire”) rises to 9,551 feet (2,911 meters) and has steep slopes with dense vegetation
- Gunung Tahan (mountain, Malaysia)
Mount Tahan, highest peak of the Malay Peninsula (7,175 feet [2,187 m]), in the Tahan Range, West Malaysia. Mount Tahan is the central feature of Taman Negara National Park and a destination for mountaineers who begin their ascent from nearby Kuala Tahan, headquarters of the park. The Tahan Range
- Gunung Tambora (volcano, Indonesia)
Mount Tambora, volcanic mountain on the northern coast of Sumbawa island, Indonesia, that in April 1815 exploded in the largest volcanic eruption in recorded history. It is now 2,851 metres (9,354 feet) high, having lost much of its top in the 1815 eruption. The volcano remains active; smaller
- Günz Glacial Stage
Günz Glacial Stage, major division of Pleistocene time and deposits in the Alpine region of Europe (the Pleistocene Epoch began about 2.6 million years ago and ended about 11,700 years ago). The Günz Glacial Stage is one of the early recognized divisions that reflected the importance of repeated
- Günz-Mindel Interglacial Stage
Günz-Mindel Interglacial Stage, major division of Pleistocene time and deposits in the Alpine region of Europe and one of the divisions of the geological system that recognized the multiplicity of Pleistocene glaciations (the Pleistocene Epoch began about 2.6 million years ago and ended about
- Günzburg, David, Baron (Russian Hebraist and community leader)
David, Baron Günzburg was a prominent Orientalist and Hebraist, Russian Jewish community leader, and bibliophile. The son of Horace Günzburg and the grandson of Joseph Günzburg, both noted philanthropists, he received a traditional Jewish education. His university training in Oriental and Arabic
- Günzburg, Horace, Baron (Russian philanthropist and civil-rights activist)
Horace, Baron Günzburg was a Russian businessman, philanthropist, and vigilant fighter for the rights of his Jewish co-religionists in the teeth of persecution by the Russian government. His father was the philanthropist Joseph Günzburg. His son David became a prominent Orientalist and bibliophile.
- Günzburg, Joseph, Baron (Russian philanthropist and banker)
Joseph, Baron Günzburg was a Jewish philanthropist, banker, and financier who contributed much to the industrialization of 19th-century Russia and who successfully fought some of the discriminatory measures against Jews in Russia. His son Horace carried on his philanthropic work, and his grandson
- Günzburg, Mordecai Aaron (Lithuanian-Jewish author)
Hebrew literature: Romanticism: … in the Ukraine and with Mordecai Aaron Ginzberg (Günzburg), in Lithuania. In the 1820s an orthodox reaction set in, coinciding with the rise of a Romanticist Hebrew school of writers. A.D. Lebensohn wrote fervent love songs to the Hebrew language, and his son Micah Judah, the most gifted poet of…
- Guo Jingjing (Chinese diver)
Guo Jingjing is a Chinese diver who competed in four consecutive Summer Olympic Games, winning gold medals in the 3-metre springboard and synchronized 3-metre springboard (with partner Wu Minxia) events in 2004 and repeating the feat in 2008 (again partnered with Wu on the synchronized event).
- Guo Kaizhen (Chinese scholar)
Guo Moruo was a Chinese scholar, one of the leading writers of 20th-century China, and an important government official. The son of a wealthy merchant, Guo Moruo early manifested a stormy, unbridled temperament. After receiving a traditional education, he in 1913 abandoned his Chinese wife from an
- Guo Moruo (Chinese scholar)
Guo Moruo was a Chinese scholar, one of the leading writers of 20th-century China, and an important government official. The son of a wealthy merchant, Guo Moruo early manifested a stormy, unbridled temperament. After receiving a traditional education, he in 1913 abandoned his Chinese wife from an
- Guo Shoujing (Chinese scientist)
China: Economy of China: …Chinese astronomer and hydraulic engineer, Guo Shoujing—an action entirely within Chinese tradition. This was preceded, however, by another measure in the field of economic communications that was unorthodox in Chinese eyes: about 1280, concessions for grain transport overseas were granted to some private Chinese entrepreneurs from the southeastern coastal region…
- Guo Songtao (Chinese diplomat)
Guo Songtao was a Chinese diplomat and liberal statesman who was his country’s first resident minister of modern times to be stationed in a Western country. Guo served in various Chinese bureaucratic and administrative posts during the 1850s and ’60s. He was notable for his advocacy of a peaceful
- Guo Taiqi (Chinese diplomat)
Guo Taiqi was a Chinese official and diplomat who played a major role in determining his country’s foreign policy during the 1930s and ’40s. The son of a scholar, Guo was sent by the Chinese government to study in the United States in 1904. The Chinese Revolution of 1911 broke out while he was
- Guo Xi (Chinese painter)
Guo Xi was one of the most famous artists of the Northern Song period in China. Guo’s collected notes on landscape painting, Linquan Gaozhi (“Lofty Record of Forests and Streams”), describes with much detail the purposes and techniques of painting and is a valuable aid to understanding the
- Guo Xiang (Chinese philosopher)
Guo Xiang was a Chinese neo-Daoist philosopher to whom is attributed a celebrated commentary on the Zhuangzi, one of the basic Daoist writings. Guo was a high government official. His Zhuangzizhu (“Commentary on the Zhuangzi”) is thought to have been begun by another neo-Daoist philosopher, Xiang
- Guo Yuehua (Chinese table tennis player)
table tennis: History: …World Cup was held, and Guo Yuehua of China won the $12,500 first prize. Table tennis became an Olympic sport in 1988, with singles and doubles competition for men and women.
- Guo Zixing (Chinese rebel leader)
Hongwu: Emergence as general: One such rebel was Guo Zixing, who in 1352 led a large force to attack and take Haozhou. Zhu joined the rebel forces and changed his name to Zhu Yuanzhang, rising from the ranks to become second-in-command. Guo Zixing, a mere bandit leader, became jealous of Zhu Yuanzhang, who…
- Guo Ziyi (Chinese general)
Guo Ziyi was one of the greatest of Chinese generals, later deified in popular religion. Guo served three emperors of the Tang dynasty and is most noted for his successful fight against the rebellion of the Chinese general An Lushan in 755–757. From 760 to 765 he was occupied in defending China’s
- Guodu (play by Xiong Foxi)
Xiong Foxi: …Tuhu (1933; “The Butcher”), and Guodu (1936; “River Crossing”; later rewritten and published as Houfang [1937; “Rearguard”]). His productions, which often used Western dramatic techniques and emphasized the importance of staging, won him wide renown; he described his experiences in the book Xiju dazhonghua zhi shiyan (1936; “Experiments in Popularizing…
- Guojia Hangtianju (Chinese space agency)
China National Space Administration (CNSA), Chinese government organization founded in 1993 to manage national space activities. The organization is composed of four departments: General Planning; System Engineering; Science, Technology, and Quality Control; and Foreign Affairs. The chief executive
- guote Gerhart, Der (work by Rudolf von Ems)
Rudolf von Ems: His earliest preserved poem, Der guote Gerhart (“Gerhard the Good”), is the story of a Cologne merchant who, despite his unaristocratic calling, has all the courtly qualities of an Arthurian knight. His charity and humility result in his being offered the crown of England, which he rejects. The charm…
- Guoxingye (Chinese pirate)
Zheng Chenggong was a pirate leader of Ming forces against the Manchu conquerors of China, best known for establishing Chinese control over Taiwan. Zheng Chenggong was born in a small Japanese coastal town to a Japanese mother and a Chinese father, Zheng Zhilong, a maritime adventurer who made a
- Guoyu
Chinese languages: Modern Standard Chinese (Mandarin): The pronunciation of Modern Standard Chinese is based on the Beijing dialect, which is of the Northern, or Mandarin, type. It employs about 1,300 different syllables. There are 22 initial consonants, including stops (made with momentary, complete closure in the vocal…
- Guozijian (college, Nanking, China)
Nanjing: The early empires: An imperial college—the Guozijian—attracted students from throughout the empire, as well as from Japan, Korea, Okinawa, and Siam (Thailand). The scholars of this college helped compile the Yongle Dadian (“The Great Canon of the Yongle Era”); its printing plant issued fine editions of many classics, as well as…
- guppy (fish)
guppy, (Poecilia reticulata or Lebistes reticulatus), colourful, live-bearing freshwater fish of the family Poeciliidae, popular as a pet in home aquariums. The guppy is hardy, energetic, easily kept, and prolific. The male guppy, much the brighter coloured of the sexes, grows to about 4
- Guppy configuration (submarine design)
submarine: Postwar developments: …52 war-built submarines to the Guppy configuration (an acronym for “greater underwater propulsive power,” with the “y” added for phonetics). These submarines had their deck guns removed and streamlined conning towers fitted; larger batteries and a snorkel were installed; four torpedoes and, in some craft, one of the four diesel…
- Gupta alphabet
Gupta script, any of a group of Indian alphabetic writing systems (sometimes modified to represent syllables instead of single sounds) derived from a northern Indian alphabet of the 4th–6th century ad. The ruling Gupta state at that time gave the script its name. It was developed out of Brāhmī and
- Gupta dynasty (Indian dynasty)
Gupta dynasty, rulers of the Magadha (now Bihar) state in northeastern India. They maintained an empire over northern and parts of central and western India from the early 4th to the late 6th century ce. Historians once regarded the Gupta period as the classical age of India—during which the norms
- Gupta script
Gupta script, any of a group of Indian alphabetic writing systems (sometimes modified to represent syllables instead of single sounds) derived from a northern Indian alphabet of the 4th–6th century ad. The ruling Gupta state at that time gave the script its name. It was developed out of Brāhmī and
- Gupta, Archana Garodia (Indian author, entrepreneur, business leader, and quizzer)
quiz: Why people quiz: Archana Garodia Gupta, the winner in 2001 of the fourth season of Mastermind India, went on to win the Champion of Champions title. To do so, she had to defeat three other Mastermind winners. But quizzing often continues to be perceived as a space for…
- Gupta, Krishna G. (Indian political leader)
India: Reforms of the British Liberals: …League; the other a Hindu, Krishna G. Gupta, the senior Indian in the ICS. Morley also persuaded a reluctant Lord Minto to appoint to the viceroy’s executive council the first Indian member, Satyendra P. Sinha (1864–1928), in 1909. Sinha (later Lord Sinha) had been admitted to the bar at Lincoln’s…
- Gupta, Modadugu (Indian scientist)
Modadugu Gupta is an Indian scientist, who boosted food yields in impoverished areas with innovative approaches to aquaculture. Gupta earned a doctorate from the University of Calcutta and joined the Indian Council of Agricultural Research as a research associate. He later began a longtime
- Gupta, Sanjay (American neurosurgeon and medical correspondent)
Sanjay Gupta is an American neurosurgeon and chief medical correspondent for CNN (Cable News Network). Gupta is best known for his captivating reports on health and medical topics, as well as his appearances on multiple CNN television shows, including American Morning and House Call with Dr. Sanjay
- GUPW (Palestinian organization)
General Union of Palestinian Women (GUPW), umbrella organization for Palestinian women’s groups that was founded in 1965 as part of the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO). Its general goal is to raise the status of women in Palestinian society by increasing their participation in social,
- guqin (musical instrument)
qin, fretless Chinese board zither with seven strings. Traditionally the body of the qin was of a length that represented the 365 days of the year (3 chi [a chi is a Chinese foot], 6 cun [a cun is a Chinese inch, one-tenth of a chi], and 5 fen [a fen is one-tenth of a Chinese inch] long). The qin
- Gūr (Iran)
Fīrūzābād, town situated about 55 miles (88 km) south of Shīrāz, in the Fars region of south-central Iran. The town is said to have been founded by the Sāsānian king Ardashīr I (ad 224–241) in commemoration of his victory over the Parthian king Artabanus. The Sāsānian town was circular in plan and
- gur (unit of measurement)
measurement system: The Babylonians: … equaled 60 gin or 1 gur. The gur represented a volume of almost 303 litres (80 U.S. gallons).
- Gur languages
Gur languages, a branch of the Niger-Congo language family comprising some 85 languages that are spoken by approximately 20 million people in the savanna lands north of the forest belt that runs from southeastern Mali across northern Côte d’Ivoire, through much of Burkina Faso, to all of northern
- Gur Sobha (work by Sainapati)
Sikhism: Devotional and other works: The first is Sainapati’s Gur Sobha (1711; “Radiance of the Guru”), which provides a general account of Guru Gobind Singh’s life as well as a description of the founding of the Khalsa. A second work, Ratan Singh Bhangu’s Panth Prakash (later termed Prachin Panth Prakash to distinguish it from…
- gur-bila (Sikh literature)
Sikhism: Devotional and other works: The gur-bilas literature produced a style of hagiography that focused on the mighty deeds of the Gurus, particularly Hargobind and Gobind Singh. Unlike the janam-sakhis, the gur-bilas emphasized the destiny of the Gurus to fight against the forces of evil and their supreme courage in this…
- Gūr-e Amīr (mausoleum, Samarkand, Uzbekistan)
Gūr-e Amīr, mausoleum of the 14th-century Mongol conqueror Timur, or Tamerlane, in Samarkand, Uzbekistan. Though it has suffered from time and earthquakes, the monument is still sumptuous. Completed in 1404, it was originally intended to be the tomb of Timur’s grandson Muhammad Shah, but after
- Gur-Emir (mausoleum, Samarkand, Uzbekistan)
Gūr-e Amīr, mausoleum of the 14th-century Mongol conqueror Timur, or Tamerlane, in Samarkand, Uzbekistan. Though it has suffered from time and earthquakes, the monument is still sumptuous. Completed in 1404, it was originally intended to be the tomb of Timur’s grandson Muhammad Shah, but after
- gur-khān (Mongolian title)
Genghis Khan: Rise to power of Genghis Khan: …and to get himself elected gur-khān, or supreme khan, by them. Yet he was an intriguer, a man to take the short view, ready to desert his friends, even turn on them, for the sake of a quick profit. But for Temüjin, it might have been within Jamuka’s power to…
- Gurage (people)
Gurage, ethnolinguistic group of the fertile and semi-mountainous region some 150 miles (240 kilometres) south and west of Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, bounded by the Awash River on the north, the Gilgel Gibe River (a tributary of the Omo River) on the southwest, and Lake Ziway on the east. The groups
- Gurage language
Ethio-Semitic languages: central Eritrea; Argobba; Hareri; and Gurage. Although some scholars once considered the so-called Ethiopic languages to be a branch within Semitic, these languages are now referred to as Ethio-Semitic. They are generally grouped together with the dialects of the South Arabic language as Southern Peripheral Semitic or South Arabic-Ethiopic.
- Guramishvili, Davit (Georgian poet)
Georgian literature: The 18th and 19th centuries: …emerged in the next generation: Davit Guramishvili used colloquial language to write revealing autobiographical poetry that has a Romantic immediacy, and Besiki (pseudonym of Besarion Gabashvili) adapted conventional poetics to passionate love poetry. Both died in the 1790s while in exile.
- Gūrān (archaeological site, Iran)
ancient Iran: The Neolithic Period (New Stone Age): …western Iranian sites as Āsīāb, Gūrān, Ganj Dareh (Ganj Darreh), and Ali Kosh. Similar developments in the Zagros Mountains, on the Iraqi side of the modern border, are also traceable at sites such as Karīm Shahīr and Zawi Chemi–Shanidar. This phase of early experimentation with sedentary life and domestication was…
- Gurdās Bhallā, Bhāī (Sikh writer)
Gurdās, Bhāī was the most famous of all Sikh poets and theologians apart from the 10 Gurūs (the founders and early leaders of the Sikh community). Bhāī is an honorific title meaning “brother.” Bhāī Gurdās’ fame rests on being the scribe of the Kartārpur Pothī, the manuscript of Sikh scripture
- Gurdās, Bhāī (Sikh writer)
Gurdās, Bhāī was the most famous of all Sikh poets and theologians apart from the 10 Gurūs (the founders and early leaders of the Sikh community). Bhāī is an honorific title meaning “brother.” Bhāī Gurdās’ fame rests on being the scribe of the Kartārpur Pothī, the manuscript of Sikh scripture
- Gurdaspur (India)
Gurdaspur, town, northern Punjab state, northwestern India. It is situated about 8 miles (13 km) west of the Beas River and is roughly the same distance southeast of the border with Pakistan. Gurdaspur is on the main highway to Amritsar (southwest), Punjab’s largest city. The town is primarily a
- Gurdin, Natasha (American actress)
Natalie Wood was an American film actress who transitioned from child stardom to a successful movie career as an adult. She was best known for ingenue roles that traded on her youthful appeal. Zacharenko was born to Russian immigrant parents. She began appearing in movies at age five and received
- Gurdjieff, George Ivanovitch (Armenian religious leader)
George Ivanovitch Gurdjieff was a Greco-Armenian mystic and philosopher who founded an influential quasi-religious movement. Details of Gurdjieff’s early life are uncertain, but he is thought to have spent his early adult years traveling in Egypt and other parts of the Middle East, India, and
- Gurdjieff, Georgii Ivanovitch (Armenian religious leader)
George Ivanovitch Gurdjieff was a Greco-Armenian mystic and philosopher who founded an influential quasi-religious movement. Details of Gurdjieff’s early life are uncertain, but he is thought to have spent his early adult years traveling in Egypt and other parts of the Middle East, India, and
- Gurdjieff, Georgy (Armenian religious leader)
George Ivanovitch Gurdjieff was a Greco-Armenian mystic and philosopher who founded an influential quasi-religious movement. Details of Gurdjieff’s early life are uncertain, but he is thought to have spent his early adult years traveling in Egypt and other parts of the Middle East, India, and
- Gurdon Institute (research institute, Cambridge, United Kingdom)
John Gurdon: …Research Campaign Institute (later the Wellcome Trust/Cancer Research UK Gurdon Institute), a Cambridge-based institution that he cofounded in 1989 and that in 2004 was named for him. He directed the institute until 2001, after which he focused on research full-time.
- Gurdon, John (British biologist)
John Gurdon is a British developmental biologist who was the first to demonstrate that egg cells are able to reprogram differentiated (mature) cell nuclei, reverting them to a pluripotent state, in which they regain the capacity to become any type of cell. Gurdon’s work ultimately came to form the
- Gurdon, Sir John Bertrand (British biologist)
John Gurdon is a British developmental biologist who was the first to demonstrate that egg cells are able to reprogram differentiated (mature) cell nuclei, reverting them to a pluripotent state, in which they regain the capacity to become any type of cell. Gurdon’s work ultimately came to form the
- gurdwara (Sikh temple)
gurdwara, in Sikhism, a place of worship in India and overseas. The gurdwara contains—on a cot under a canopy—a copy of the Adi Granth (“First Volume”), the sacred scripture of Sikhism. It also serves as a meeting place for conducting business of the congregation and wedding and initiation
- Gurev (Kazakhstan)
Atyrau, city, western Kazakhstan. It is a port on the Ural (Zhayyq) River near its mouth on the Caspian Sea. Founded as a fishing settlement in the mid-17th century by the fishing entrepreneur Mikhail Guryev, it soon became a fort on the Ural fortified line manned by the Ural Cossacks. Fishing and
- Gurevich, Mikhail (Soviet engineer)
MiG: …by Artem Mikoyan (M) and Mikhail Gurevich (G). (The i in MiG is the Russian word meaning “and.”)
- Gurgān (Iran)
Gorgān, city, capital of Golestān province, north-central Iran. It is situated along a small tributary of the Qareh River, 23 miles (37 km) from the Caspian Sea. The city, in existence since Achaemenian times, long suffered from inroads of the Turkmen tribes who occupied the plain north of the
- Gurgaon (India)
Gurugram, city, southeastern Haryana state, northwestern India. It is situated between Delhi (northeast) and Rewari (southwest), to which it is connected by road and rail. Gurugram was traditionally an agricultural trade centre. By the last decades of the 20th century, however, manufacturing had
- Gurgī (archaeological site, India)
South Asian arts: Medieval temple architecture: North Indian style of central India: There must have existed at Gurgī a large number of temples, though all of them now are in total ruin. Judging from a colossal image of Śiva-Pārvatī and a huge entrance, which have somehow survived, the main temple must have been of very great size. Another important site is Amarkantak,…
- Gurgum (historical kingdom, Turkey)
Anatolia: The neo-Hittite states from c. 1180 to 700 bce: …743 Milid, Kummuhu, Arpad, and Gurgum still belonged to the Urartian sphere of influence, but in 740 Tiglath-pileser conquered Arpad, and a large group of princes, among them the kings of Kummuhu, Que, Carchemish (where a King Pisiris reigned), and Gurgum, offered their submission to the Assyrians. King Tutammu of…
- Guri Dam (dam, Venezuela)
Guri Dam, hydroelectric project and reservoir on the Caroní River, Bolívar State, eastern Venezuela, on the site of the former village of Guri (submerged by the reservoir), near the former mouth of the Guri River. The first stage of the facility was completed in 1969 as a 348-foot- (106-metre-)
- Guri Reservoir (reservoir, Venezuela)
Orinoco River: Physiography of the Orinoco: …bank after passing through the Guri Reservoir formed by Guri (Raúl Leoni) Dam, above Ciudad Guayana (also called Santo Tomé de Guayana). Farther upstream, on the Churún River (a tributary of the Caroní), are Angel Falls, the highest waterfall in the world (3,212 feet [979 metres]). Many lagoons, including the…
- Gurib-Fakim, Ameenah (president of Mauritius)
Mauritius: Leadership by Navin Ramgoolam, Anerood and Pravind Jugnauth, and Ameenah Gurib-Fakim: …the country’s first female president, Ameenah Gurib-Fakim. She was sworn in to the primarily ceremonial post on June 5. Her tenure was cut short, however, when she was accused of having engaged in financial misconduct in 2018. She denied the allegations but nonetheless offered to resign, stepping down on March…
- Guriev (Kazakhstan)
Atyrau, city, western Kazakhstan. It is a port on the Ural (Zhayyq) River near its mouth on the Caspian Sea. Founded as a fishing settlement in the mid-17th century by the fishing entrepreneur Mikhail Guryev, it soon became a fort on the Ural fortified line manned by the Ural Cossacks. Fishing and
- Gurira, Danai (American actress)
Danai Gurira is a Zimbabwean American stage and screen actress and playwright. Although Gurira is perhaps best known for her roles in the television series The Walking Dead and the Marvel Cinematic Universe’s Black Panther movies, she is also an award-winning playwright whose works include In the
- Gurira, Danai Jekesai (American actress)
Danai Gurira is a Zimbabwean American stage and screen actress and playwright. Although Gurira is perhaps best known for her roles in the television series The Walking Dead and the Marvel Cinematic Universe’s Black Panther movies, she is also an award-winning playwright whose works include In the
- Gurjara (people)
India: The Guptas: …has been suggested that the Gurjaras, who gradually spread to various parts of northern India, may be identified with the Khazars, a Turkic people of Central Asia. The Huna invasion challenged the stability of the Gupta kingdom, even though the ultimate decline may have been caused by internal factors. A…
- Gurjara-Pratihara dynasty (Indian history)
Gurjara-Pratihara dynasty, either of two dynasties of medieval Hindu India. The line of Harichandra ruled in Mandor, Marwar (Jodhpur, Rajasthan), during the 6th to 9th centuries ce, generally with feudatory status. The line of Nagabhata ruled first at Ujjain and later at Kannauj during the 8th to
- Gurjev (Kazakhstan)
Atyrau, city, western Kazakhstan. It is a port on the Ural (Zhayyq) River near its mouth on the Caspian Sea. Founded as a fishing settlement in the mid-17th century by the fishing entrepreneur Mikhail Guryev, it soon became a fort on the Ural fortified line manned by the Ural Cossacks. Fishing and
- Gurkha (people)
Gurkha, soldier from Nepal serving in either the British or Indian army. The term Gurkha refers to the region around the town of Gurkha, whose Shah dynasty (1559–2008) consolidated the modern state of Nepal through military conquest in the late 18th century. The dynasty continued to rule Nepal
- Gurkha (Nepal)
Gurkha, town, central Nepal. It is located on a hill overlooking the Himalayas. The town is famous for its shrine of Gorakhnath, the patron saint of the region. There is also a temple to the Hindu goddess Bhavani (Devi). The ancestral home of the ruling house of Nepal, Gurkha was seized in 1559 by
- Gurkha (historical state, Nepal)
Nepal: Middle period: …of the principalities—Gorkha (also spelled Gurkha), ruled by the Shah family—began to assert a predominant role in the hills and even to pose a challenge to Nepal Valley. The Mallas, weakened by familial dissension and widespread social and economic discontent, were no match for the great Gorkha ruler Prithvi Narayan…
- Gurkha language
Nepali language, member of the Pahari subgroup of the Indo-Aryan group of the Indo-Iranian division of the Indo-European languages. Nepali is spoken by more than 17 million people, mostly in Nepal and neighbouring parts of India. Smaller speech communities exist in Bhutan, Brunei, and Myanmar.
- Gurkha War (British-Asian history)
China: Tibet and Nepal: …after 1801, had caused the Anglo-Nepalese War of 1814–16 and brought the Gurkhas under British influence. During the war the Gurkhas sent several missions to China in vain expectation of assistance. When political unrest flared up in Nepal after 1832, an anti-British clique seized power and sought assistance from China…
- Gurkhali language
Nepali language, member of the Pahari subgroup of the Indo-Aryan group of the Indo-Iranian division of the Indo-European languages. Nepali is spoken by more than 17 million people, mostly in Nepal and neighbouring parts of India. Smaller speech communities exist in Bhutan, Brunei, and Myanmar.
- Gurko, Vasily Iosifovich (Russian officer)
Vasily Iosifovich Gurko was a Russian cavalry officer and the last chief of the General Staff of tsarist Russia (October 1916–February 1917) and Russian commander in chief from March to June 1917. The son of Field Marshal Iosif Vladimirovich Gurko, Gurko graduated from the General Staff Academy and
- Gurley, Ralph Randolph (American abolitionist)
Ralph Randolph Gurley was for 50 years an administrator (secretary, then vice president, and finally director for life) and spokesman of the American Colonization Society, a group established to transfer freeborn blacks and emancipated slaves in the United States to overseas colonies or client
- Gurma (people)
Gurma, an ethnic group that is chiefly centred on the town of Fada N’Gourma in eastern Burkina Faso, although smaller numbers inhabit northern Togo, northern Benin, and southwestern Niger. They speak a language of the Gur branch of Niger-Congo languages. Like the closely related Mossi, Konkomba,
- Gurmanche (people)
Gurma, an ethnic group that is chiefly centred on the town of Fada N’Gourma in eastern Burkina Faso, although smaller numbers inhabit northern Togo, northern Benin, and southwestern Niger. They speak a language of the Gur branch of Niger-Congo languages. Like the closely related Mossi, Konkomba,
- Gurmat (religion)
Sikhism, religion and philosophy founded in the Punjab region of the Indian subcontinent in the late 15th century. Its members are known as Sikhs. The Sikhs call their faith Gurmat (Punjabi: “the Way of the Guru”). According to Sikh tradition, Sikhism was established by Guru Nanak (1469–1539) and
- gurmata (Sikhism)
Akal Takht: …carried unanimously; they then became gurmatas (decisions of the Guru) and were binding on all Sikhs. Both political and religious decisions were taken at Akal Takht meetings up until 1809, when Maharaja Ranjit Singh, the leader of the newly unified Sikh state, abolished political gurmatas and began to seek counsel…
- Gurmukhi alphabet
Gurmukhi alphabet, writing system developed by the Sikhs in India for their sacred literature. It seems to have been modified from the Lahnda script, which is used to write the Punjabi, Sindhi, and Lahnda (now considered to consist of Siraiki and Hindko) languages. Lahnda, Gurmukhi, and two other
- Gurnah, Abdulrazak (Tanzanian-born British author)
Abdulrazak Gurnah is a Tanzanian-born British author known for his novels about the effects of colonialism, the refugee experience, and displacement in the world. He won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 2021. Gurnah was born to a Muslim family of Yemeni descent in the Sultanate of Zanzibar, an
- gurnard (fish)
sea robin, any of the slim bottom-dwelling fish of the family Triglidae, found in warm and temperate seas of the world. Sea robins are elongated fish with armoured bony heads and two dorsal fins. Their pectoral fins are fan-shaped, with the bottom few rays each forming separate feelers. These
- gurnard, flying (marine fish)
flying gurnard, (family Dactylopteridae), any of a small group of marine fish comprising the family Dactylopteridae (order Scorpaeniformes). Flying gurnards are similar to the sea robins, or gurnards (family Triglidae, order Scorpaeniformes), and are sometimes considered as relatives of that group
- Gurney’s pitta (bird)
pitta: Gurney’s pitta (P. gurneyi)—a gorgeous 21-cm (8-inch) bird with a blue cap, black mask, yellow collar, black breast, buff wings, and turquoise tail—is today among the rarest birds in the world. Though once not uncommon from peninsular Thailand to the lowland forests of Myanmar, it…
- Gurney, Edmund (British psychologist)
music: The concept of dynamism: …spokesman, the 19th-century English psychologist Edmund Gurney (1847–88), for example, may incorporate formalist, symbolist, expressionist, and psychological elements, in varying proportions, to explain the phenomenon of music. Although some disagreements are more apparent than real because of the inherent problems of terminology and definition, diametrically opposing views are also held…
- Gurney, Elizabeth (British philanthropist)
Elizabeth Fry was a British Quaker philanthropist and one of the chief promoters of prison reform in Europe. She also helped to improve the British hospital system and the treatment of the insane. The daughter of a wealthy Quaker banker and merchant, she married (1800) Joseph Fry, a London
- Gurney, Ivor (British composer and poet)
English literature: The literature of World War I and the interwar period: …in service); Siegfried Sassoon and Ivor Gurney caught the mounting anger and sense of waste as the war continued; and Isaac Rosenberg (perhaps the most original of the war poets), Wilfred Owen, and Edmund Blunden not only caught the comradely compassion of the trenches but also addressed themselves to the…
- Gurney, Joseph John (British minister)
Society of Friends: The impact of evangelicalism: …the leading English evangelical Friend, Joseph John Gurney (one of the few systematic theologians ever produced in the Society of Friends), led to a further separation when the evangelical or “Gurneyite” New England Yearly Meeting disowned John Wilbur, an orthodox quietist Friend.
- Gurney, Oliver Robert (British archaeologist)
Anatolia: The Hittite empire to c. 1180 bce: Gurney summarizes the Egyptian text as follows: