- Issues in Science and Religion (work by Barbour)
Ian Barbour: His Issues in Science and Religion (1966) was one of the first books to treat the fields as two disciplines that shared a common ground rather than as two completely separate or conflicting spheres of study. The publication, which many credited with having created the interdisciplinary…
- Issus, Battle of (Persian history)
Battle of Issus, (333 bce), conflict early in Alexander the Great’s invasion of Asia in which he defeated a Persian army under King Darius III. This was one of the decisive victories by which Alexander conquered the Achaemenian Empire. Issus is a plain on the coast of the Gulf of İskenderun, in
- Issy-les-Moulineaux (France)
Issy-les-Moulineaux, town, suburb of Paris, in Hauts-de-Seine département, Île-de-France région, north-central France. It is bounded to the northeast by the city limits of Paris. The town’s manufacturing industries include electrical equipment, chemicals, and printing and publishing, but in general
- Issyk-Kul (Kyrgyzstan)
Balykchy, town, capital of Ysyk-Köl oblasty (province), northeastern Kyrgyzstan. It is a port located on the western shore of Lake Ysyk (Issyk-Kul) and is linked to Frunze, about 87 miles (140 km) north-northwest. Balykchy’s economy centres on a food industry, including meat-packing and cereal
- Issyk-Kul (oblast, Kyrgyzstan)
Ysyk-Köl, oblasty (province), northeastern Kyrgyzstan. In the northeast is Lake Ysyk (Issyk-Kul) at an elevation of 5,276 feet (1,608 metres) and surrounded by ranges rising to some 17,100 feet (5,200 metres), while in the southeast, on the frontier with China, are the highest peaks of the Tien
- Issyk-kul, Ozero (lake, Kyrgyzstan)
Lake Ysyk, a drainless lake in northeastern Kyrgyzstan. Situated in the northern Tien Shan (“Celestial Mountains”), it is one of the largest high-mountain lakes in the world and is famous for its magnificent scenery and unique scientific interest. It is situated within the bottom edges of the Lake
- Īstādeh-ye Moqor (lake, Afghanistan)
Afghanistan: Drainage of Afghanistan: …southwest and the saline Lake Īstādeh-ye Moqor, situated 60 miles (100 km) south of Ghaznī in the southeast. There are five small lakes in the Bābā Mountains known as the Amīr lakes; they are noted for their unusual shades of colour, from milky white to dark green, a condition caused…
- Istaevone (mythology)
Germanic peoples: Ingaevones, the Herminones, and the Istaevones—but the basis for this grouping is unknown. Tacitus records a variant form of the genealogy according to which Mannus had a larger number of sons, who were regarded as the ancestors of the Suebi, the Vandals, and others. At any rate, the currency of…
- Istakhr (ancient city, Iran)
Persepolis: History of Persepolis: …ce the nearby city of Istakhr (Estakhr, Stakhr) was the seat of local government, and Istakhr acquired importance as a centre of priestly wisdom and orthodoxy. Thereafter the city became the centre of the Persian Sasanian dynasty, though the stone ruins that still stand just west of Persepolis suggest that…
- Istállóskő, Mount (mountain, Hungary)
Bükk Mountains: Maximum elevation is reached at Mount Istállóskő (3,146 feet [959 m]). The central core of the Bükk is a 12.5-by-4.5-mile (20-by-7-kilometre) limestone plateau (called Giants’ Table) with a rim of white cliffs dominating the surrounding lower mountains. The Bükk is an intensely folded and faulted block range. Along fault lines…
- Istanbul (Turkey)
Istanbul, largest city and principal seaport of Turkey. It was the capital of both the Byzantine Empire and the Ottoman Empire. The old walled city of Istanbul stands on a triangular peninsula between Europe and Asia. Sometimes as a bridge, sometimes as a barrier, Istanbul for more than 2,500 years
- İstanbul (Turkey)
Istanbul, largest city and principal seaport of Turkey. It was the capital of both the Byzantine Empire and the Ottoman Empire. The old walled city of Istanbul stands on a triangular peninsula between Europe and Asia. Sometimes as a bridge, sometimes as a barrier, Istanbul for more than 2,500 years
- Istanbul Agreement (World War I)
Constantinople Agreement, (March 18, 1915), secret World War I agreement between Russia, Britain, and France for the postwar partition of the Ottoman Empire. It promised to satisfy Russia’s long-standing designs on the Turkish Straits by giving Russia Constantinople (Istanbul), together with a
- İstanbul Bogazi (strait, Turkey)
Bosporus, strait (boğaz, “throat”) uniting the Black Sea and the Sea of Marmara and separating parts of Asian Turkey (Anatolia) from European Turkey. The Bosporus is 19 miles (30 km) long and has a maximum width of 2.3 miles (3.7 km) at the northern entrance and a minimum width of 2,450 feet (750
- Istanbul Technical University (university, Istanbul, Turkey)
Istanbul: Health and education: There is also a technical university on the Galata side of the Horn as well as an Academy of Fine Arts and schools of technology, commerce, and economics. Foreign educational institutions include the American Robert College for boys (founded in 1863) and the American College for girls (founded in…
- İstanbul Üniversitesi (university, Istanbul, Turkey)
Istanbul: Health and education: Istanbul University (İstanbul Üniversitesi), founded in 1453, includes faculties of letters, science, law, medicine, and forestry and has facilities in Beyazıt, Avcılar, Çapa, Cerrahpaşa, Bahçeköy, Kadıköy, and Şişli. There is also a technical university on the Galata side of the Horn as well as an…
- Istanbul University (university, Istanbul, Turkey)
Istanbul: Health and education: Istanbul University (İstanbul Üniversitesi), founded in 1453, includes faculties of letters, science, law, medicine, and forestry and has facilities in Beyazıt, Avcılar, Çapa, Cerrahpaşa, Bahçeköy, Kadıköy, and Şişli. There is also a technical university on the Galata side of the Horn as well as an…
- istanköy (island, Greece)
Cos, island off the southwestern coast of Turkey, the third largest of the Dodecanese Islands, Greece. A ragged limestone ridge runs along the southern coast. The highest point of the island, Mount Dhíkaios (2,776 feet [846 metres]), divides the island near its centre. A fertile lowland stretches
- Istanu (Anatolian god)
history of Mesopotamia: The Hurrian and Mitanni kingdoms: The sun god Shimegi and the moon god Kushuh, whose consort was Nikkal, the Ningal of the Sumerians, were of lesser rank. More important was the position of the Babylonian god of war and the underworld, Nergal. In northern Syria the god of war Astapi and the goddess…
- Istaravshan (Tajikistan)
Istaravshan, city, Tajikistan, in the northern foothills of the Turkistan Range. One of the most ancient cities of the republic, it may date from the 6th century ce, but it bore its former name only from the 17th to the early 21st century. It was famous in the past for its handicrafts, particularly
- ISTEA (United States history [1991])
Norman Mineta: …the key representatives behind the Intermodal Surface Transportation Efficiency Act of 1991 (ISTEA), which created a framework for how highways and transportation in the United States would be funded after the completion of the Interstate Highway System. Under ISTEA, transportation would be planned using a multimodal approach in which highways,…
- Isteni igazságra vezérlő kalauz (work by Pázmány)
Hungarian literature: Effects of the Counter-Reformation: His Isteni igazságra vezérlő kalauz (1613; “Guide to Divine Truth”) was a refutation of non-Catholic religious doctrines and a masterpiece of Baroque prose.
- Isthmian Games (ancient Greek festival)
Isthmian Games, in ancient Greece, a festival of athletic and musical competitions in honour of the sea god Poseidon, held in the spring of the second and fourth years of each Olympiad at his sanctuary on the Isthmus of Corinth. Legend attributed their origin either to Sisyphus, king of Corinth, or
- isthmic pregnancy (medicine)
pregnancy: Ectopic pregnancy: An isthmic pregnancy differs from one in the ampulla or infundibulum because the narrow tube cannot expand. Rupture of the affected tube with profuse intra-abdominal hemorrhage occurs early, usually within eight weeks after conception.
- isthmus (geography)
isthmus, narrow strip of land connecting two large land areas otherwise separated by bodies of water. Isthmuses are of great importance in plant and animal geography because they offer a path for the migration of plants and animals between the two land masses they connect. Unquestionably the two
- isthmus of the fallopian tube (anatomy)
fallopian tube: The isthmus is a small region, only about 2 cm (0.8 inch) long, that connects the ampulla and infundibulum to the uterus. The final region of the fallopian tube, known as the intramural, or uterine, part, is located in the top portion (fundus) of the uterus;…
- Istiblennius zebra (fish)
blenny: The rockskipper (Istiblennius zebra) is a small Hawaiian blenny representative of several that live along shores and can hop about on land. The Hawaiian Runula goslinei and the Pacific R. tapeinosoma, both of which are small, are noted for nipping at swimmers.
- istiḥsān (Islamic law)
istiḥsān, in Islamic law, juristic discretion—i.e., the use of a jurist’s own judgment to determine the best solution to a religious problem that cannot be solved by simply citing sacred texts. Istiḥsān found special application as Islam spread to new lands and encountered new environments.
- Istiompax indicus (fish)
marlin: The black marlin (Istiompax indica) grows as large or larger than the blue. It is known to reach a weight of more than 700 kg (1,500 pounds). An Indo-Pacific species, it is blue or blue-gray above and lighter below; its distinctive stiff pectoral fins are set…
- Istiophoridae (fish family)
perciform: Annotated classification: Family Istiophoridae (billfishes, marlins, sailfishes, and spearfishes) Bill round and shorter compared with sword of swordfish; dorsal fin long, extending almost the length of back of body and reaching striking height in the sailfish, Istiophorus gladius; pelvic fins present as thin filaments; body scaled; 2 small…
- Istiophorus (fish)
sailfish, (genus Istiophorus), (genus ), valued food and game fish of the family Istiophoridae (order Perciformes) found in warm and temperate waters around the world. The sailfish has a long, rounded spear extending from its snout but is distinguished from related species, such as marlins, by its
- Istiophorus albicans (fish)
sailfish: platypterus) and the Atlantic sailfish (I. albicans).
- Istiqlāl (political party, Morocco)
Morocco: The French Zone: …took the new title of Ḥizb al-Istiqlāl (Independence Party). In January 1944 the party submitted to the sultan and the Allied (including the French) authorities a memorandum asking for independence under a constitutional regime. The nationalist leaders, including Aḥmad Balafrej, secretary general of the Istiqlāl, were unjustly accused and arrested…
- Istiqlal Mosque (mosque, Jakarta, Indonesia)
Jakarta: City layout: The Istiqlal Mosque, in the northeast corner of Medan Merdeka opposite Lapangan Banteng, is one of the largest mosques in Southeast Asia. The National Museum (formerly the Central Museum), on the west side of Medan Merdeka, houses a collection of historical, cultural, and artistic artifacts.
- istiṣlāḥ (Islamic law)
istiṣlāḥ, in Islamic law, consideration of benefit, a norm employed by Muslim jurists to solve perplexing problems that find no clear answer in sacred religious texts. In such a situation, the judge reaches a decision by determining first what is materially most beneficial to the community as a
- Istitutioni harmoniche (treatise by Zarlino)
Gioseffo Zarlino: Zarlino’s first treatise, Istitutioni harmoniche (1558), brought him rapid fame. It gives a shrewd account of musical thinking during the first half of the 16th century, and Zarlino’s thoughts on tuning, chords, and modes anticipate 17th- and 18th-century developments. He discussed the tuning of the first four intervals…
- Istituto Dramma Italiano (Italian organization)
Italy: Theatre: … (Ente Teatrale Italiano; ETI), the Institute for Italian Drama (Istituto Dramma Italiano; IDI), concerned with promoting Italian repertory, and the National Institute for Ancient Drama (Istituto Nazionale del Dramma Antico; INDA). In 1990 the government tightened its legislation on eligibility for funding, which severely affected fringe and experimental theatres. Financial…
- Istituto Mobiliare Italiano (Italian holding company)
Italy: Economic policy: …new state-run holding companies, the Italian Industrial Finance Institute (Istituto Mobiliare Italiano; IMI) and the Institute for Industrial Reconstruction (Istituto per la Ricostruzione Industriale; IRI), were set up to bail out failing firms and to provide capital for new industrial investment; they also provided trained managers and effective financial supervision.…
- Istituto Nazionale del Dramma Antico (Italian organization)
Italy: Theatre: …promoting Italian repertory, and the National Institute for Ancient Drama (Istituto Nazionale del Dramma Antico; INDA). In 1990 the government tightened its legislation on eligibility for funding, which severely affected fringe and experimental theatres. Financial constraints in subsequent years led to an increasing number of international coproductions.
- Istituto Nazionale della Previdenza Sociale (Italian government)
Italy: Health and welfare: …range of benefits, is the National Social Insurance Institute (Istituto Nazionale della Previdenza Sociale; INPS).
- Istituto Nazionale delle Assicurazioni (Italian corporation)
Italy: Public and private sectors: …l’Energia Elettrica; ENEL), and the State Insurance Fund (Istituto Nazionale delle Assicurazioni; INA). Other principal agencies include the Azienda Nazionale Autonoma delle Strade Statali (ANAS), responsible for some 190,000 miles (350,000 km) of the road network, and the Ente Ferrovie dello Stato (FS; “State Railways”), which controls the majority of…
- Istituto per la Ricostruzione Industriale (Italian corporation)
Italy: Economic policy: …Mobiliare Italiano; IMI) and the Institute for Industrial Reconstruction (Istituto per la Ricostruzione Industriale; IRI), were set up to bail out failing firms and to provide capital for new industrial investment; they also provided trained managers and effective financial supervision. Italy thus acquired a huge, state-led industrial sector, which was…
- Istiwāʾīyah, Al- (historical region, Africa)
Sudan: Ismāʿīl Pasha and the growth of European influence: …establish Egyptian hegemony over the equatorial regions of central Africa and to curtail the slave trade on the upper Nile. Baker remained in equatorial Africa until 1873, where he established the Equatoria province as part of the Egyptian Sudan. He had extended Egyptian power and curbed the slave traders on…
- Istmo de Panamá (isthmus, Central America)
Isthmus of Panama, land link extending east-west about 400 miles (640 km) from the border of Costa Rica to the border of Colombia. It connects North America and South America and separates the Caribbean Sea (Atlantic Ocean) from the Gulf of Panama (Pacific Ocean). The narrowest part of the Americas
- Istoria civile del regno di Napoli (work by Giannone)
Pietro Giannone: …del regno di Napoli (1723; The Civil History of the Kingdom of Naples)—a polemical survey of Neapolitan history in which he espoused the side of the civil power in its conflicts with the Roman Catholic hierarchy. As a result of this, the Istoria was placed on the Index librorum prohibitorum…
- Istoria del concilio tridentino (work by Sarpi)
Paolo Sarpi: Sarpi’s writings.: …printed in his lifetime, the History of the Council of Trent, appeared in London in 1619, under the pseudonym Pietro Soave Polano. Though put on Rome’s Index of prohibited books, it went through several editions and five translations in 10 years.
- Istoria e dimostrazioni intorno alle macchie solari e loro accidente (work by Galileo)
Galileo: Telescopic discoveries of Galileo: This controversy resulted in Galileo’s Istoria e dimostrazioni intorno alle macchie solari e loro accidenti (“History and Demonstrations Concerning Sunspots and Their Properties,” or “Letters on Sunspots”), which appeared in 1613. Against Scheiner, who, in an effort to save the perfection of the Sun, argued that sunspots are satellites of…
- Istoria sfete udovice Judit u versih harvacchi slozena (work by Marulić)
Croatian literature: …Croatian Verses,” usually known as Judita), a plea for the national struggle against the Ottoman Empire; Hanibal Lucić, author of Robinja (“The Slave Girl”), the first South Slav secular play; Marin Držić, who wrote pastoral dramas and comedies portraying Renaissance Dubrovnik (his comedy Dundo Maroje, first performed about 1551, played
- istoriato style (pottery decoration)
istoriato style, style of pottery decoration, originating about 1500 in Faenza, Italy, and popular throughout the 16th century, in which paintings comparable in seriousness to Italian Renaissance easel paintings were applied to maiolica ware. The subjects—biblical, historical, and mythological
- Istorie fiorentine (work by Machiavelli)
Niccolò Machiavelli: The Florentine Histories: ” Machiavelli’s longest work—commissioned by Pope Leo X in 1520, presented to Pope Clement VII in 1525, and first published in 1532—is a history of Florence from its origin to the death of Lorenzo di Piero de’ Medici in 1492. Adopting the approach of…
- Istoriya gosudarstva rossiyskogo (work by Karamzin)
Nikolay Mikhaylovich Karamzin: …was devoted to his 12-volume Istoriya gosudarstva rossiyskogo (1816–29; “History of the Russian State”). Though based on original research, this first general survey of Russian history was conceived as a literary rather than an academic work. The history is, in effect, an apology for Russian autocracy. It is the first…
- Istoriya odnoy zhizhni (work by Zoshchenko)
Mikhail Mikhaylovich Zoshchenko: …requirements of Socialist Realism—notably in Istoriya odnoy zhizhni (1935; “The Story of One Life”), dealing with the construction, by forced labour, of the White Sea–Baltic Waterway—but with little success. In 1943 the magazine Oktyabr began to serialize his psychological-introspective series of episodes, anecdotes, and reminiscences entitled Pered voskhodom solntsa (“Before…
- Istoriya Rossiyskaya s samikh drevneyshikh vremyon (work by Tatishchev)
Vasily Nikitich Tatishchev: (1768–1848; History of Russia from the Most Early Times), relied on sources that have since to a great extent disappeared. It amassed a great volume of data based on original sources and was a pioneering work in its attempt to depict the development of the Russian…
- Istoriya Vsesoyuznoy Kommunisticheskoy Partii (Bolshevikov): Kratky kurs (work by Stalin)
Marxism: Stalin: …Partii (Bolshevikov): Kratky kurs (1938; A Short History of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union), and on a materialism that can be considered roughly identical to that of Feuerbach. His work Voprosy leninizma (1926; Problems of Leninism), which appeared in 11 editions during his lifetime, sets forth an ideology…
- Istoro Nal, Mount (mountain, Asia)
Hindu Kush: Physiography: … (Nowshāk; 24,557 feet [7,485 metres]), Istoro Nal (24,242 feet [7,389 metres]), and Tirich Mir. Most major glaciers of the Hindu Kush—among them Kotgaz, Niroghi, Atrak, and Tirich—are in the valleys of this section.
- Istra (peninsula, Croatia and Slovenia)
Istria, triangular peninsula that is part of Croatia and Slovenia. It extends into the northeastern Adriatic Sea between the Gulf of Venice (west) and the Gulf of Kvarner (east). The peninsula has an area of 1,220 square miles (3,160 square km). The northern portion is part of Slovenia, while the
- Istranca Mountains (mountains, Turkey)
Turkey: The northern folded zone: …and the main mountain range—the Yıldız (Istranca)—reaches only 3,379 feet (1,030 metres). Lowlands also occur to the south of the Sea of Marmara and along the lower Sakarya River east of the Bosporus. High ridges trending east-west rise abruptly from the Black Sea coast, and the coastal plain is thus…
- Istria (peninsula, Croatia and Slovenia)
Istria, triangular peninsula that is part of Croatia and Slovenia. It extends into the northeastern Adriatic Sea between the Gulf of Venice (west) and the Gulf of Kvarner (east). The peninsula has an area of 1,220 square miles (3,160 square km). The northern portion is part of Slovenia, while the
- Istrie, Jean-Baptiste Bessières, duc d’ (French soldier)
Jean-Baptiste Bessières, duke d’Istrie was a French soldier and, as one of Napoleon’s marshals, commander of the imperial guard after 1804. His appointment as marshal signaled Napoleon’s intention to develop the imperial guard. In 1792 Bessières joined Louis XVI’s constitutional guard as a private.
- Istriot language
Romance languages: Languages of the family: …one thousand speakers; known as Istriot, it may be related to Vegliot. Though some scholars connect it with Rhaetian Friulian dialects or with Venetian dialects of Italian, others maintain that it is an independent language. There are no texts except those collected by linguists. A little farther north in the…
- Istropolitana, Academia (university, Bratislava, Slovakia)
Slovakia: Education: …the largest and oldest is Comenius University in Bratislava (founded 1919). Also in Bratislava are the Slovak University of Technology, the University of Economics, and several arts academies. Košice also has universities and a school of veterinary medicine. Since independence, additional colleges and universities have opened in Trnava, Banská Bystrica,…
- Istroromanian (dialect)
Romanian language: …and southeastern North Macedonia; and Istroromanian, also nearly extinct, spoken in Istria, a peninsula that is part of Croatia and Slovenia. Mutual intelligibility between the major dialects is difficult; the Meglenoromanian, Istroromanian, and Aromanian are sometimes classed as languages distinct from Romanian proper, or Dacoromanian, which has many slightly varying…
- Isturgi (Spain)
Andújar, city, Jaén provincia (province), in the comunidad autónoma (autonomous community) of Andalusia, southern Spain, northwest of Jaén city, on the Guadalquivir River. Called Isturgi, or Ilurgia, by the Celto-Iberians, it was besieged and captured by the Roman general Scipio Africanus the Elder
- István Báthory (king of Poland)
Stephen Báthory was a prince of Transylvania (1571–76) and king of Poland (1575–86) who successfully opposed the Habsburg candidate for the Polish throne, defended Poland’s eastern Baltic provinces against Russian incursion, and attempted to form a great state from Poland, Muscovy, and
- István, Count Tisza (prime minister of Hungary)
István, Count Tisza was a Hungarian statesman who became prime minister of Hungary as well as one of the most prominent defenders of the Austro-Hungarian dualist system of government. He was an opponent of voting franchise reform in Hungary, and he was a loyal supporter of the monarchy’s alliance
- István, Szent (king of Hungary)
Stephen I ; canonized 1083; feast day August 16) was the first king of Hungary, who is considered to be the founder of the Hungarian state and one of the most-renowned figures in Hungarian history. Stephen was a member of the Árpád dynasty and son of the supreme Magyar chieftain Géza. He was born a
- ISU (ice skating organization)
figure skating: Pioneers of the sport: The International Skating Union (ISU), founded in the Netherlands in 1892, was created to oversee skating internationally. It sanctions speed skating as well as figure skating and sponsors the world championships held annually since 1896. With more than 50 member nations, the ISU establishes rules about…
- ISU (tank)
tank: World War II: …128-mm-gun Jagdtiger and the 122-mm-gun ISU, which in effect were turretless tanks. In addition, all armies developed lightly armoured self-propelled antitank guns. The U.S. Army developed a specialized category of tank destroyers that resembled self-propelled guns in being relatively lightly armoured but that, like tanks, had rotating turrets.
- ISU
shooting: International competition and organization: …changed its name to the International Shooting Sport Federation (ISSF) in 1998.
- ISU Grand Prix (ice skating competition)
figure skating: Grand Prix and Junior Grand Prix: The Grand Prix consists of six events: Skate America, Skate Canada, Sparkassen Cup on Ice, Trophée Lalique, Cup of Russia, and NHK Trophy. Each event includes no more than 12 (singles events) or 10 (pairs events) entrants. Skaters who finished in the top six positions at…
- ISU Junior Grand Prix (ice skating competition)
figure skating: Grand Prix and Junior Grand Prix: The Junior Grand Prix series gives international competition experience to promising future world-level skaters. Skaters are invited to participate by their home countries, and they must be under 19 (singles skaters) or 21 (pairs and dance) years of age when they enter. There are a total…
- Isua (Greenland)
geologic history of Earth: Formation of the secondary atmosphere: 8 billion years ago) at Isua in West Greenland, and thus this process must have been operative by this time. Iron formations dating to early Precambrian time (4.6 billion to 541 million years ago) are so thick and common that they provide the major source of the world’s iron. Large…
- Isum, John (English composer)
John Isham was an English composer and organist. Educated at Merton College, Oxford, he went to London and became an assistant to the organist and composer William Croft, whom he succeeded as organist of St. Anne’s, Soho (serving 1711–18). He accompanied Croft to Oxford and there acquired a
- Isurus (fish)
mako shark, (genus Isurus), either of two species of swift, active, potentially dangerous sharks of the mackerel shark family, Lamnidae. The shortfin mako (Isurus oxyrinchus) is found in all tropical and temperate seas, and the longfin mako (I. paucus) is scattered worldwide in tropical seas. Mako
- Isurus oxyrinchus (shark)
mako shark: The shortfin mako (Isurus oxyrinchus) is found in all tropical and temperate seas, and the longfin mako (I. paucus) is scattered worldwide in tropical seas.
- Isurus paucus (fish)
mako shark: …and temperate seas, and the longfin mako (I. paucus) is scattered worldwide in tropical seas.
- Isvekov, Sergey Mikhailovich (Russian patriarch)
Pimen was the 14th Russian Orthodox patriarch of Moscow and of all Russia. He served as spiritual leader of his church during the final years of official Soviet repression and the subsequent period of religious renewal following the dissolution of the U.S.S.R. Pimen was tonsured a monk in 1927 and
- ISWA (Nigerian Islamic group)
Boko Haram, Islamic sectarian movement, founded in 2002 by Muhammed Yusuf in northeastern Nigeria, that since 2009 has carried out assassinations and large-scale acts of violence in that country. The group’s initial proclaimed intent was to uproot the corruption and injustice in Nigeria, which it
- ISWAP (Nigerian Islamic group)
Boko Haram, Islamic sectarian movement, founded in 2002 by Muhammed Yusuf in northeastern Nigeria, that since 2009 has carried out assassinations and large-scale acts of violence in that country. The group’s initial proclaimed intent was to uproot the corruption and injustice in Nigeria, which it
- It (novel by King)
It, novel by Stephen King, published in 1986, that is one of the author’s quintessential horror stories, exploring childhood terrors and trauma and chronicling their enduring impact on the lives of victims. It enjoys enduring popularity and is especially known for the evil character called
- It (poem by Christensen)
Inger Christensen: …her long poem Det (1969; It) brought Christensen international acclaim. A 200-page exploration of the word it, the poem reveals the intellectual influence of thinkers such as Lars Gustafsson, Søren Kierkegaard, Noam Chomsky, and R.D. Laing. The volume Alfabet (1981; Alphabet) builds on her earlier analogies between language and physical…
- It (film by Muschietti [2017])
Stephen King: Other novels: …It (1986; TV miniseries 1990; films 2017 and 2019); Misery (1987; film 1990); The Tommyknockers (1987; TV miniseries 1993); and The Dark Half (1989; film 1993).
- It (work by Glyn)
Elinor Glyn: …filmed, including Three Weeks and It (1927), which had an American setting. The film version of It for some years made the word “it” a synonym for sex appeal. Unable to manage her finances in Hollywood, she returned to England in 1929. She completed her autobiography, Romantic Adventure, in 1936.
- It (film by Badger and von Sternberg, 1927)
Clara Bow: …Girl after she performed in It (1927), the popular silent-film version of Elinor Glyn’s novel of that name. She personified the vivacious, emancipated flapper of the 1920s. From 1927 to 1930 she was one of the top five Hollywood box-office attractions.
- IT band syndrome (pathology)
iliotibial band syndrome (ITBS), inflammation of the band of fibrous tissue known as the iliotibial band (or tract), which extends from the ilium of the hip to the tibia (shinbone). Typically, iliotibial band syndrome (ITBS) results from overuse injury, seen most commonly in distance runners and
- IT calorie (unit of measurement)
calorie: …of heat energy, is the International Table calorie (IT calorie), originally defined as 1860 international watt-hour. It is equal to 4.1868 joules and is used in engineering steam tables.
- It Came from Outer Space (film by Arnold [1953])
Jack Arnold: …next film was the groundbreaking It Came from Outer Space (1953). Based on a Ray Bradbury story, the quietly creepy yarn about aliens who take over the identities of small-town Arizonans after their spaceship crashes is considered one of the seminal films in the science-fiction genre. It also boasted one…
- It Can’t Happen Here (novel by Lewis)
It Can’t Happen Here, novel by Sinclair Lewis, published in 1935. It is a cautionary tale about the rise of fascism in the United States. During the presidential election of 1936, Doremus Jessup, a newspaper editor, observes with dismay that many of the people he knows support the candidacy of a
- It Catches My Heart in Its Hands (poetry by Bukowski)
Charles Bukowski: …1963, the year he published It Catches My Heart in Its Hands—a collection of poetry about alcoholics, prostitutes, losing gamblers, and down-and-out people—Bukowski had a loyal following. Notable later poetry collections include Mockingbird Wish Me Luck (1972), Love Is a Dog from Hell (1977), War All the Time (1984), and…
- It Changed My Life: Writings on the Women’s Movement (work by Friedan)
Betty Friedan: In 1976 Friedan published It Changed My Life: Writings on the Women’s Movement and in 1981 The Second Stage, an assessment of the status of the women’s movement. The Fountain of Age (1993) addresses the psychology of old age and urged a revision of society’s view that aging means…
- It Chapter Two (film by Muschietti [2019])
It: …was released in 2017 and 2019, and in both movies Bill Skarsgård assumed the role of the terrifying clown.
- It Don’t Come Easy (song by Starr)
Ringo Starr: …during the 1970s, notably “It Don’t Come Easy” (1971), “Back Off Boogaloo” (1972), and “Photograph” and “You’re Sixteen” (both 1973). Starr continued to release albums and to play on solo records for Lennon and Harrison, but his successes became more modest as time went on.
- It Ends with Us (novel by Hoover)
Colleen Hoover: Hoover’s best-known book is perhaps It Ends with Us (2016). The novel centres on Lily Bloom, a florist who grew up in a violent home. After finding herself in an abusive relationship, she remembers her own childhood, including her first love, a homeless teenager. A sequel, It Starts with Us,…
- It Gets Better Project (social media project)
Dan Savage: The video kicked off the It Gets Better Project, which compiled thousands of similar user-created support messages, including videos by U.S. Pres. Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton, Lady Gaga, Stephen Colbert, and Ellen DeGeneres.
- It Had to Happen (film by Del Ruth [1936])
Roy Del Ruth: Middle years: …the more serious political drama It Had to Happen (1936), although George Raft and Rosalind Russell made for an unlikely pairing. Private Number (1936) was a sodden soap opera, with Robert Taylor as the scion of a wealthy family; he secretly marries a housemaid (Loretta Young), to the displeasure of…
- It Happened at the World’s Fair (film by Taurog [1963])
Norman Taurog: Elvis movies: …featured “Return to Sender”; and It Happened at the World’s Fair (1963), with Presley performing at the Seattle World’s Fair. Although they were box-office successes, critics derided the films as formulaic and musically uninspired.
- It Happened Here (film by Brownlow and Mollo [1965])
It Happened Here, British war film, released in 1965, that was an outstanding achievement in independent filmmaking; the pseudodocumentary imagines what would have happened if Germany had defeated England during World War II. The movie is set in 1944–45, with Britain under Nazi control. Pauline
- It Happened One Night (novel by Adams)
Samuel Hopkins Adams: …novels became movie scenarios, notably It Happened One Night (1934) and a musical, The Harvey Girls (1942). Grandfather Stories (1955) was based on reminiscences of his grandfather in upper New York State. He also wrote under the name Warner Fabian.
- It Happened One Night (film by Capra [1934])
Frank Capra: The golden period of Frank Capra: Capra’s “golden period” began with It Happened One Night (1934), the first motion picture to win an Academy Award in five major categories: best picture, best actor, best actress, best director, and best adapted screenplay. The making of this enduring romantic comedy about a runaway heiress (Claudette Colbert) and the…
- It Happened to Jane (film by Quine [1959])
Richard Quine: …with Quine on the comedy It Happened to Jane, which also starred Doris Day.