- Jamuka (Mongolian leader)
Genghis Khan: Early struggles: …furnishing 20,000 men and persuading Jamuka, a boyhood friend of Temüjin’s, to supply an army as well. The contrast between Temüjin’s destitution and the huge army furnished by his allies is hard to explain, and no authority other than the narrative of the Secret History is available.
- Jamuna (river, Asia)
Brahmaputra River, major river of Central and South Asia. It flows some 1,800 miles (2,900 km) from its source in the Himalayas to its confluence with the Ganges (Ganga) River, after which the mingled waters of the two rivers empty into the Bay of Bengal. Along its course the Brahmaputra passes
- Jamʿīyyah al-ʿUlamāʾ al-Muslimīn al-Jazaʾrīyyah (Muslim religious organization)
Association of Algerian Muslim Ulama, a body of Muslim religious scholars (ʿulamāʾ) who, under French rule, advocated the restoration of an Algerian nation rooted in Islamic and Arabic traditions. The association, founded in 1931 and formally organized on May 5, 1935, by Sheikh ʿAbd al-Hamid ben
- Jamʿiyyat-e Eslāmī (political group, Afghanistan)
Afghanistan: Mohammad Zahir Shah (1933–73): …religious organization known as the Islamic Society (Jamʿiyyat-e Eslāmī), which was founded by a number of religiously minded individuals, including members of the University of Kabul faculty of religion, in 1971. The Islamists were highly influenced by the militant ideology of Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood and were ardently opposed to the…
- Jan and Dean (American music duo)
surf music: As Jan and Dean, Jan Berry (b. April 3, 1941, Los Angeles, California, U.S.—d. March 26, 2004, Los Angeles) and Dean Torrence (b. March 10, 1941, Los Angeles) gave voice to surf music with distinctive falsetto harmonies, especially on “Surf City” (1963). It was the Beach…
- Jan III Sobieski (king of Poland)
John III Sobieski was the elective king of Poland (1674–96), a soldier who drove back the Ottoman Turks and briefly restored the kingdom of Poland-Lithuania to greatness for the last time. Sobieski’s ancestors were of the lesser nobility, but one of his great-grandfathers was the famous
- Jan Kazimierz Waza (king of Poland)
John II Casimir Vasa was the king of Poland (1648–68) and pretender to the Swedish throne, whose reign was marked by heavy losses of Polish territory incurred in wars against the Ukrainians, Tatars, Swedes, and Russians. The second son of Sigismund III Vasa, king of Poland and of Sweden, John
- Jan Lokpal Bill (India [2010])
Anna Hazare: …that the legislation, called the Jan Lokpal Bill (or Citizen’s Ombudsman Bill), did not give the ombudsman enough powers to make it effective. Activists wanted the ombudsman to be able to investigate corruption at all levels. In April 2011 Hazare began another hunger strike to further these demands, and after…
- Jan Mayen (island, Norway)
Jan Mayen, island, part of the Kingdom of Norway, in the Greenland Sea of the Arctic Ocean, about 300 mi (500 km) east of Greenland. It is approximately 35 mi long and 9 mi across at its widest point, with an area of 144 sq mi (373 sq km). It is the peak of a submarine volcanic ridge, and
- Jan Milíč z Kroměříže (Bohemian theologian)
John Milíč was a theologian, orator, and reformer, considered to be the founder of the national Bohemian religious reform movement. Milíč was educated at Prague and ordained about 1350, entering the imperial chancery of Charles IV in 1358. Later, he received a clerical benefice from Pope Innocent
- Jan Nepomucký, Svatý (Czech saint)
St. John of Nepomuk ; canonized 1729; feast day May 16) was one of the patron saints of the Czechs who was murdered during the bitter conflict of church and state that plagued Bohemia in the latter 14th century. In 1383 John began studies at Padua, Italy, where he became a doctor of canon law and
- Jan of Jenštein (Bohemian archbishop)
Czechoslovak history: The Luxembourg dynasty: …with the church, represented by Jan of Jenštein, archbishop of Prague, the king achieved temporary success; the archbishop resigned and died in Rome (1400). The nobility’s dissatisfaction with Wenceslas’s regime was serious; it developed mainly over the selection of candidates for high offices, which noble families regarded as their domain…
- Jan Olbracht (king of Poland)
John I Albert was the king of Poland and a military leader whose reign marked the growth of Polish parliamentary government. The second son of King Casimir IV of Poland and Elizabeth of Habsburg, John Albert received a comprehensive education. He proved his military ability by defeating the Tatars
- Jan S Čech (king of Bohemia)
John was the king of Bohemia from 1310 until his death, and one of the more popular heroic figures of his day, who campaigned across Europe from Toulouse to Prussia. He was born the son of the future Holy Roman emperor Henry VII of the house of Luxembourg and was made count of Luxembourg in 1310.
- Jan Six (etching by Rembrandt)
Rembrandt: The myth of Rembrandt’s fall: …portrait (1647) of his friend Jan Six and especially the Hundred Guilder Print, a large (unfinished) print with episodes from chapter 19 of The Gospel According to Matthew.
- Jan van Avesnes (count of Hainaut and Holland)
John II was the count of Hainaut (1280–1304) and of the Dutch provinces of Holland and Zeeland (1299–1304), who united the counties and prevented the northward expansion of the house of Dampierre, the counts of Flanders. Eldest son of John of Avesnes, count of Hainaut, and Alida, sister of Count
- Jan z Rokycan (Bohemian archbishop)
Jan Rokycana was a priest, archbishop, and follower of Jan Hus (1372/73–1415); he was a chief organizer of the papally denounced Hussite Church and a major figure in Bohemian church history. Rokycana went to Prague probably in 1410, assisting and later succeeding Jakoubek of Stříbro as organizer of
- Jan z Tęczyna (work by Niemcewicz)
Julian Ursyn Niemcewicz: …to Poland with his three-volume Jan z Tęczyna (1825; “Jan of Tęczyn”), which was influenced by the Scottish novelist Sir Walter Scott.
- Janáček, Leoš (Czech composer)
Leoš Janáček was a composer, one of the most important exponents of musical nationalism of the 20th century. Janáček was a choirboy at Brno and studied at the Prague, Leipzig, and Vienna conservatories. In 1881 he founded a college of organists at Brno, which he directed until 1920. He directed the
- Janaki (Hindu mythology)
Sita, in Hinduism, the consort of the god Rama. Her abduction by the demon king Ravana and subsequent rescue are the central incidents in the great Hindu epic Ramayana (“Rama’s Journey”). Sita was raised by King Janaka; she was not his natural daughter but sprang from a furrow when he was ploughing
- Janakiraman, T. (Indian author)
South Asian arts: Tamil: Contemporary literature is represented by T. Janakiraman, who writes novels, short stories, and plays with themes from urban Tamil middle-class family life; Jayakanthan, a sharp and passionate writer, with a tendency to shock his readers; and L.S. Ramatirthan, probably the finest stylist at work in Tamil today, who started by…
- janam-sakhi (Sikh literature)
South Asian arts: Punjabi: …identifiable as Punjabi is the Janam-sākhī, a 16th-century biography of Gurū Nānak by Bala. In 1604, Arjun, the fifth Gurū of the Sikhs, collected the poems of Nānak and others into what is certainly the most famous book to originate in the Punjab (though its language is not entirely Punjabi),…
- Janata Dal (political party, India)
India: The premiership of Rajiv Gandhi: Singh’s new Janata Dal (JD; “People’s Party”) coalition. In the general elections held in November, Gandhi barely managed to retain his own Lok Sabha seat, as the Congress (I) Party, winning only 193 seats, lost its majority. The Janata Dal (141 seats) emerged with the second largest…
- Janata Dal (S) (political party, India)
India: V.P. Singh’s coalition—its brief rise and fall: …Sabha belonged to Shekhar, whose Janata Dal (S)—the S stood for Socialist—gained the support of Gandhi and thus came to be invited by President Ramaswamy Venkataraman to serve as prime minister before the end of 1990. Devi Lal, who in August had been ousted by Singh, again became deputy prime…
- Janata Dal (Secular) (political party, India)
Janata Dal (Secular), regional political party primarily in Karnataka state, southern India. It also has a presence in adjoining Kerala state and in national politics. The party, formed in 1999, had its origins in the Janata (People’s) Party, founded in 1977 as a coalition of several smaller
- Janata Dal (United) (political party, India)
Janata Dal (United), regional political party in Bihar and Jharkhand states, eastern India. It also has had a presence in national politics and in the central government in New Delhi. The party’s origin can be traced to the founding of the Janata (People’s) Party in 1977, a coalition of several
- Janata Morcha (political party, India)
Bharatiya Janata Party: Origin and establishment: …political parties to form the Janata Party and took over the reins of government. Plagued by factionalism and internal disputes, however, the government collapsed in July 1979. The BJP was formally established in 1980, following a split by dissidents within the Janata coalition, whose leaders wanted to prohibit elected BJS…
- Janata Party (political party, India)
Bharatiya Janata Party: Origin and establishment: …political parties to form the Janata Party and took over the reins of government. Plagued by factionalism and internal disputes, however, the government collapsed in July 1979. The BJP was formally established in 1980, following a split by dissidents within the Janata coalition, whose leaders wanted to prohibit elected BJS…
- Janatha Vimukti Peramuna (revolutionary organization, Sri Lanka)
Sri Lanka: Independent Ceylon (1948–71): …discontent was mobilized by the People’s Liberation Front (Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna; JVP), a group of revolutionary youth who launched an unsuccessful armed rebellion in 1971.
- janbiyyah (weapon)
Yemen: Resources and power: …swords and daggers, particularly the janbiyyah, a symbolic, largely ornamental dagger worn by many Yemeni men). There are deposits of copper, as well as some evidence of sulfur, lead, zinc, nickel, silver, and gold, and surveys in the late 20th and early 21st centuries indicated that some of these deposits…
- Janco, Marcel (artist)
Dada: Richard Hülsenbeck, Tristan Tzara, Marcel Janco, and Emmy Hennings. When a paper knife inserted into a French-German dictionary pointed to the French word dada (“hobby-horse”), it was seized upon by the group as appropriate for their anti-aesthetic creations and protest activities, which were engendered by disgust for bourgeois values…
- Jandial (temple, Taxila, Pakistan)
Taxila: Archaeology: The Jandial temple, set up on an artificial mound, closely resembles the Classical temples of Greece. Its Ionic columns and pilasters are composed of massive blocks of sandstone. Built in the Scythio-Parthian period, it is probably the temple described by Philostratus in his Life of Apollonius…
- Jandl, Ernst (Austrian poet)
concrete poetry: …promoted concrete poetry, as did Ernst Jandl and Friederike Mayröcker. The movement drew inspiration from Dada, Surrealism, and other nonrational 20th-century movements. Concrete poetry has an extreme visual bias and in this way is usually distinguished from pattern poetry. It attempts to move away from a purely verbal concept of…
- Jandudum Cernimus (work by Pius IX)
Pius IX: Ultramontanism of Pius IX: …in the pope’s refusal, in Jamdudum Cernimus, to have any dealings with the new Italian kingdom. On both scores, the Syllabus undermined the liberal Catholics’ position, for it destroyed their following among intellectuals and placed their program out of court.
- Jane (comic strip)
comic strip: Europe: …original strip was Norman Pett’s Jane (1932–59), published in the Daily Mirror. It used an artful striptease theme and had great popularity with servicemen during World War II. The mildly satirical strip was pioneered in the Daily Express by Flook (begun 1949), a continuing narrative of various kinds of adventure…
- Jane (American women’s collective)
Jane, Chicago-based women’s collective that provided more than 11,000 safe albeit illegal abortions between 1969 and 1973. The underground clinic, a small branch of the Chicago Women’s Liberation Union, strove to strengthen the pro-choice movement and abolish expensive, unsafe, and callously
- Jane Addams Hull-House Museum (museum, Chicago, Illinois, United States)
Jane Addams: …itself was preserved as a monument to Jane Addams.
- Jane Austen Book Club, The (film by Swicord [2007])
Emily Blunt: Breakthrough films: The Devil Wears Prada, Young Victoria, and Sicario: …roles in films such as The Jane Austen Book Club and Charlie Wilson’s War (both 2007). She then appeared opposite Amy Adams in the dark comedy Sunshine Cleaning (2008), about two sisters who start a crime-scene clean-up business. Her star turn as Queen Victoria in The Young Victoria proved her…
- Jane Avril (painting by Toulouse-Lautrec)
graphic design: Art Nouveau: …1893 poster of the dancer Jane Avril, who was then performing at the Jardin de Paris. In this poster and others like it, Toulouse-Lautrec captured the lively atmosphere by reducing imagery to simple flat shapes that convey an expression of the performance and environment. Although Toulouse-Lautrec only produced about three…
- Jane Eyre (film by Zeffirelli [1996])
Franco Zeffirelli: His later films included Jane Eyre (1996), Tea with Mussolini (1999), and Callas Forever (2002). He continued to film operas such as I Pagliacci (1981), Cavalleria rusticana (1982), Otello (1986), and La Bohème (2008), often working in myriad roles, including opera director and production and costume designer.
- Jane Eyre (film by Stevenson [1943])
Robert Stevenson: Early films: adaptation (1943) of Charlotte Brontë’s Jane Eyre starred Joan Fontaine, Orson Welles (whose hand hovers over this atmospheric production), and Margaret O’Brien; Elizabeth Taylor appeared in an uncredited role. In the mystery Dishonored Lady (1947), Hedy Lamarr portrayed a magazine editor accused of murder. To the Ends of
- Jane Eyre (film by Fukunaga [2011])
Judi Dench: Fairfax in Jane Eyre (2011), an adaptation of the Charlotte Brontë novel. In Clint Eastwood’s biopic J. Edgar (2011), she portrayed the mother of J. Edgar Hoover (played by Leonardo DiCaprio), and, in the drama My Week with Marilyn (2011), she appeared as actress Sybil
- Jane Eyre (novel by Brontë)
Jane Eyre, novel by Charlotte Brontë, first published in 1847 as Jane Eyre: An Autobiography, with Currer Bell (Brontë’s pseudonym) listed as the editor. Widely considered a classic, it gave new truthfulness to the Victorian novel with its realistic portrayal of the inner life of a woman, noting
- Jane Fonda in Five Acts (film by Lacy [2018])
Jane Fonda: The documentary Jane Fonda in Five Acts (2018) chronicled her life and career.
- Jane Goodall: A Life in Pictures
Jane Goodall, renowned scientist and conservationist, has dedicated her life to studying and protecting chimpanzees in Gombe Stream National Park in Tanzania. Not only has her work with our closest evolutionary relatives been scientifically fruitful, but it also has served to elucidate our own
- Jane Got a Gun (film by O’Connor [2016])
Natalie Portman: Black Swan and Thor series: …pioneer in the vengeance tale Jane Got a Gun (2016).
- Jane Seymour (queen of England)
Jane Seymour was the third wife of King Henry VIII of England and mother of King Edward VI. She succeeded—where Henry’s previous wives had failed—in providing a legitimate male heir to the throne. Jane’s father was Sir John Seymour of Wolf Hall, Savernake, Wiltshire. She became a lady in waiting to
- Jane the Virgin (American television series)
Jenna Ortega: …role in the television series Jane the Virgin (2014–19), playing the younger version of the title character. Her appearances on the hit show helped her gain some recognition in Hollywood. She was then cast in the films The Little Rascals Save the Day (2014) and After Words (2015) as well…
- Jane’s Addiction (American musical group)
alternative rock: In Hollywood, Jane’s Addiction signed with Warner Brothers Records and made Nothing’s Shocking (1988), an album on which they offered odd guitar tones and disrupted metres as clearly and forcefully as had been done on any classic rock recording. Just as the 1990s dawned, the Smashing Pumpkins…
- Janenz, Theodor Friedrich Emil (German actor)
Emil Jannings was a German actor who was internationally known for his tragic roles in motion pictures. He was the recipient of the first Academy Award for best actor. Jannings was reared in Görlitz, Germany, where he began his stage career. He joined a traveling stock company and in 1906 began
- Janequin, Clément (French composer)
Clément Janequin was a leading 16th-century French composer of chansons, famous for his program chansons, part-songs in which sounds of nature, of battles, and of the streets are imitated. He worked in Bordeaux in the service of Lancelot du Fau, who became bishop of Luçon, and later for the bishop
- Janesville (Wisconsin, United States)
Janesville, city, seat (1839) of Rock county, southern Wisconsin, U.S. It lies on the Rock River, about 15 miles (25 km) north of Beloit and 40 miles (65 km) southeast of Madison. Settled in 1835 and named for a pioneer, Henry F. Janes, it developed as a trading centre for the surrounding
- Janet (French painter)
Jean Clouet was a Renaissance painter of portraits celebrated for the depth and delicacy of his characterization. Although he lived in France most of his life, records show that he was not French by origin and was never naturalized. He was one of the chief painters to Francis I as early as 1516 and
- Janet Jackson’s Rhythm Nation 1814 (album by Jackson)
Janet Jackson: …with her most diverse work, Janet Jackson’s Rhythm Nation 1814. The album delivered seven pop Top Ten hit singles, including “Miss You Much,” “Escapade,” and “Love Will Never Do (Without You).”
- Janet, Pierre (French neurologist and psychologist)
Pierre Janet was a French psychologist and neurologist influential in bringing about in France and the United States a connection between academic psychology and the clinical treatment of mental illnesses. He stressed psychological factors in hypnosis and contributed to the modern concept of mental
- Janet, Pierre-Marie-Félix (French neurologist and psychologist)
Pierre Janet was a French psychologist and neurologist influential in bringing about in France and the United States a connection between academic psychology and the clinical treatment of mental illnesses. He stressed psychological factors in hypnosis and contributed to the modern concept of mental
- Janevski, Slavko (Macedonian author)
Macedonian literature: …the work of Aco Šopov, Slavko Janevski, Blaže Koneski, and Gane Todorovski. Janevski was also a distinguished prose writer and the author of the first Macedonian novel, Selo zad sedumte jaseni (1952; “The Village Beyond the Seven Ash Trees”). His most ambitious work was a cycle of six novels that…
- Janeway, James (British author)
children’s literature: Prehistory (early Middle Ages to 1712): …Token for Children (1671), by James Janeway. The Puritan outlook was elevated by Bunyan’s Pilgrim’s Progress (1678), which, often in simplified form, was either forced upon children or more probably actually enjoyed by them in lieu of anything better. Mrs. Overtheway (in Juliana Ewing’s Mrs. Overtheway’s Remembrances, 1869), recalling her…
- Jang Bahadur (prime minister of Nepal)
Jung Bahadur was the prime minister and virtual ruler of Nepal from 1846 to 1877, who established the powerful Rana dynasty of hereditary prime ministers, an office that remained in his family until 1951. Jung Bahadur, a man of great courage and ability, gained control over the government after
- Jang Hye-Jin (South Korean actress)
- Jang Seung-Up (Korean painter)
Chang Sŭng-ŏp was an outstanding painter of the late Chosŏn dynasty (1392–1910) in Korea. An orphan, Chang worked as a servant to a wealthy family, learning his art by watching the master’s son study painting. Although he later worked with Chinese painting manuals, he had no formal teachers, and
- Jang Song Thaek (Korean official)
Kim Jong-Un: Leader of North Korea: …2013 Kim executed his uncle Jang Song-Thaek, saying that he had “removed the scum” from the KWP. Jang was a member of Kim Jong Il’s inner circle and had served as a virtual regent for the younger Kim after his father’s death. Jang’s execution also marked a break with Beijing,…
- Janggala (historical kingdom, Indonesia)
Indonesia: Government and politics: …other over the northern part, Janggala. Erlangga’s sons refused to honour their father’s intentions. Fighting broke out, and the Kadiri rulers were unable to establish their uneasy domination over the kingdom until the early 12th century. The consequences of Erlangga’s decision to split the kingdom are mourned in the Nagarakertagama,…
- Jangjangbure (island, The Gambia)
MacCarthy Island, island, in the Gambia River, 176 miles (283 km) upstream from Banjul, central Gambia. It was ceded in 1823 to Captain Alexander Grant of the African Corps, who was acting for the British crown. Designated as a site for freed slaves, the island was renamed for Sir Charles
- Jango (Brazilian politician)
João Goulart was a reformist president of Brazil (1961–64) until he was deposed. The son of a wealthy rancher, Goulart graduated from the law school of Porto Alegre University in 1939. As a protégé of Getúlio Vargas, the populist president of Brazil (1930–45, 1951–54), Goulart was elected to the
- Jani Beg (Uzbek leader)
Kazakhstan: Kazakhstan to c. 1700 ce: …the leadership of Karay and Jani Beg, some 200,000 dissatisfied subjects of the Uzbek khan Abū’l-Khayr (Abū al-Khayr) moved into Mughulistān, whose khan, Esen Bogha (Buga), settled them between the Chu and Talas rivers. These separatist Uzbeks became known as Kazakh (“Independent” or “Vagabond”) Uzbeks, and over time a significant…
- Jani Beg (Mongol ruler)
Russia: Tatar rule: …death of Öz Beg’s son Jani Beg in 1357, however, the empire began to reveal serious internal strains. The tribes of the west paid little heed to the khans who appeared in dizzying succession in Sarai; the northern Russian princes fell to quarreling and to maneuvering for their own advantage…
- Janibeg (Mongol ruler)
Russia: Tatar rule: …death of Öz Beg’s son Jani Beg in 1357, however, the empire began to reveal serious internal strains. The tribes of the west paid little heed to the khans who appeared in dizzying succession in Sarai; the northern Russian princes fell to quarreling and to maneuvering for their own advantage…
- Janicius, Klemens (Polish poet)
Polish literature: The Renaissance period: …verse, and religious poems; and Klemens Janicki (Janicius), a peasant who studied in Italy and won there the title of poet laureate. Janicki was the most original Polish poet of the age.
- Janicki, Klemens (Polish poet)
Polish literature: The Renaissance period: …verse, and religious poems; and Klemens Janicki (Janicius), a peasant who studied in Italy and won there the title of poet laureate. Janicki was the most original Polish poet of the age.
- Janiculum (hill, Rome, Italy)
Rome: Other hills: …Trastevere, is the Gianicolo (Janiculum Hill). The Janiculum crest was made into a park in 1870 to honour Giuseppe Garibaldi for his heroic but unsuccessful defense of the short-lived Roman Republic of 1849.
- Janid dynasty (Asian history)
history of Central Asia: The Uzbeks: …and even more under the Ashtarkhanids (also known as Astrakhanids, Tuquy-Timurids, or Janids) who succeeded them during the 1600s, Central Asia experienced a decline in prosperity compared with the preceding Timurid period, in part because of a marked reduction in the transcontinental caravan trade following the opening of new oceanic…
- Janie Porter Barrett School for Girls (school, Virginia, United States)
Janie Porter Barrett: …the school was renamed the Janie Porter Barrett School for Girls.
- Janie’s Got A Gun (recording by Aerosmith)
Aerosmith: …featured the Grammy Award-winning “Janie’s Got a Gun,” and it marked a return to the hard rock success of Toys in the Attic. The band followed with Get a Grip (1993), an album that generated a pair of Grammys for the singles “Livin’ on the Edge” and “Crazy.” During…
- Janīn (town, West Bank)
Jenin, town in the West Bank. Originally administered as part of the British mandate of Palestine (1920–48), Jenin was in the area annexed by Jordan in 1950 following the first of the Arab-Israeli wars (1948–49). After the Six-Day War of 1967, it was part of the West Bank territory under Israeli
- Janina (Greece)
Ioánnina, city and dímos (municipality), periféreia (region) of Epirus (Modern Greek: Ípeiros), northwestern Greece. It is located on a plateau on the western side of Lake Ioánnina (ancient Pambotis), facing the gray limestone mass of Mount Mitsikéli. Ioánnina was first mentioned in ecclesiastical
- Janis, Irving (American psychologist)
groupthink: …developed by the social psychologist Irving Janis in his classic 1972 study, Victims of Groupthink: A Psychological Study of Foreign-Policy Decisions and Fiascoes, which focused on the psychological mechanism behind foreign policy decisions such as the Pearl Harbor bombing, the Vietnam War, and the Bay of Pigs invasion.
- Janis: Little Girl Blue (film by Berg [2015])
Janis Joplin: …correspondence in the documentary film Janis: Little Girl Blue (2015). She was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1995 and received a Grammy Award for lifetime achievement in 2005.
- Janissary (Turkish military)
Janissary, member of an elite corps in the standing army of the Ottoman Empire from the late 14th century to 1826. Highly respected for their military prowess in the 15th and 16th centuries, the Janissaries became a powerful political force within the Ottoman state. During peacetime they were used
- Janissary music
Janissary music, in a narrow sense, the music of the Turkish military establishment, particularly of the Janissaries, an elite corps of royal bodyguards (disbanded 1826); in a broad sense, a particular repertory of European music the military aspect of which derives from conscious imitation of the
- Janiszewski, Zygmunt (Polish mathematician)
Wacław Sierpiński: …might emerge, and Sierpiński, with Zygmunt Janiszewski and Stefan Mazurkiewicz, planned the future shape of the Polish mathematical community: it would be centred in Warsaw and Lvov, and, because resources for books and journals would be scarce, research would be concentrated in set theory, point-set topology, the theory of real…
- Janitor Who Paints, The (painting by Hayden)
Palmer Hayden: His best-known work, The Janitor Who Paints (c. 1937), shows an African American artist painting a mother and child in a cramped apartment that contains the tools necessary for both the artist’s work and that of the janitor. The original version of the painting, now painted over, included…
- Janizary (Turkish military)
Janissary, member of an elite corps in the standing army of the Ottoman Empire from the late 14th century to 1826. Highly respected for their military prowess in the 15th and 16th centuries, the Janissaries became a powerful political force within the Ottoman state. During peacetime they were used
- Janjangbure (The Gambia)
Georgetown, town, port on MacCarthy Island in the Gambia River in central Gambia. It was founded in 1823 by Captain Alexander Grant as a settlement for freed slaves. Georgetown’s Wesleyan Mission (1823) introduced the peanut (groundnut), a crop still exported downstream on the Gambia River.
- Janjangbureh (The Gambia)
Georgetown, town, port on MacCarthy Island in the Gambia River in central Gambia. It was founded in 1823 by Captain Alexander Grant as a settlement for freed slaves. Georgetown’s Wesleyan Mission (1823) introduced the peanut (groundnut), a crop still exported downstream on the Gambia River.
- Janjaweed (Sudanese militia)
Janjaweed, Arab militia active in Sudan, particularly in the Darfur region. The militia’s name is thought by many to be derived from the Arabic jinnī (spirit) and jawad (horse), although its etymological origins are not completely clear. The Janjaweed has its origins in the long-running civil war
- Janjawid (Sudanese militia)
Janjaweed, Arab militia active in Sudan, particularly in the Darfur region. The militia’s name is thought by many to be derived from the Arabic jinnī (spirit) and jawad (horse), although its etymological origins are not completely clear. The Janjaweed has its origins in the long-running civil war
- Janka, Carlo (Swiss skier)
Carlo Janka is a Swiss Alpine skier whose clean, efficient style and poised determination helped establish him as one of the sport’s top all-around competitors in the early 21st century. Janka was born in a mountain village in southeastern Switzerland and began skiing at age two. As a teenager he
- Jankov, Battle of (European history)
history of Europe: The European war in Germany, 1635–45: …back in Bohemia, and at Jankov (March 6, 1645) they totally destroyed another imperial army. The emperor and his family fled to Graz, while the Swedes advanced to the Danube and threatened Vienna. Reinforcements were also sent to assist the French campaign against Bavaria, and on August 3 Maximilian’s forces…
- Janković, Danica (Serbian author)
folk dance: Ljubica Janković and Danica Janković and modern scholarship: Two sisters from Serbia, Ljubica Janković and Danica Janković, devoted much of their lives to collecting and analyzing folk dances from southeastern Europe. Between 1934 and 1964 they published eight volumes and several monographs of dance research. In the work…
- Janković, Ljubica (Serbian author)
folk dance: Ljubica Janković and Danica Janković and modern scholarship: Two sisters from Serbia, Ljubica Janković and Danica Janković, devoted much of their lives to collecting and analyzing folk dances from southeastern Europe. Between 1934 and 1964 they published eight volumes and several monographs of dance research.…
- Janmashtami (Hindu festival)
Janmashtami, Hindu festival celebrating the birth (janma) of the god Krishna on the eighth (ashtami) day of the dark fortnight of the month of Bhadrapada (August–September). The number eight has another significance in the Krishna legend in that he is the eighth child of his mother, Devaki. The
- Jannat al-ʿArīf (building, Granada, Spain)
Alhambra: The palace and grounds: …of the Sun”) is the Generalife (from Arabic: Jannat al-ʿArīf [“Garden of the Architect”]), constructed in the early 14th century as a summer palace. The complex is centred on picturesque courtyards such as the Patio del Ciprés de la Sultana (Court of the Sultana’s Cypress). Terraced gardens, pools, and fountains…
- Jannāt and Iblīs (novel by El Saadawi)
Nawal El Saadawi: …institution, Jannāt wa Iblīs (1992; Jannāt and Iblīs). The female protagonists are Jannāt, whose name is the plural of the Arabic word for paradise, and Iblīs, whose name refers to the Devil.
- Jannāt wa Iblīs (novel by El Saadawi)
Nawal El Saadawi: …institution, Jannāt wa Iblīs (1992; Jannāt and Iblīs). The female protagonists are Jannāt, whose name is the plural of the Arabic word for paradise, and Iblīs, whose name refers to the Devil.
- Jannequin, Clément (French composer)
Clément Janequin was a leading 16th-century French composer of chansons, famous for his program chansons, part-songs in which sounds of nature, of battles, and of the streets are imitated. He worked in Bordeaux in the service of Lancelot du Fau, who became bishop of Luçon, and later for the bishop
- Janney, Allison (American actress)
Allison Janney is an American actress who won acclaim on stage, film, and television but is perhaps best known for her portrayal of C.J. Cregg, the White House press secretary on the hit TV show The West Wing (1999–2006). She later won an Academy Award for her performance in the movie I, Tonya
- Janney, Allison Brooks (American actress)
Allison Janney is an American actress who won acclaim on stage, film, and television but is perhaps best known for her portrayal of C.J. Cregg, the White House press secretary on the hit TV show The West Wing (1999–2006). She later won an Academy Award for her performance in the movie I, Tonya
- Jannings, Emil (German actor)
Emil Jannings was a German actor who was internationally known for his tragic roles in motion pictures. He was the recipient of the first Academy Award for best actor. Jannings was reared in Görlitz, Germany, where he began his stage career. He joined a traveling stock company and in 1906 began
- János Hill (hill, Budapest, Hungary)
Budapest: Transportation: …sightseers to the top of János Hill, which, at 1,729 feet (527 metres) above sea level, is the highest point in Budapest. The Children’s Railway (Gyermekvasút), which winds through the hills, is managed largely by children.