- Kiss Me, Kate (musical by Porter)
Cole Porter: …Lady (1939), Panama Hattie (1940), Kiss Me, Kate (1948, based on William Shakespeare’s The Taming of the Shrew), Can-Can (1953), and Silk Stockings (1955). He concurrently worked on a number of motion pictures.
- Kiss Me, Kiss Me, Kiss Me (album by the Cure)
the Cure: Mainstream success: Kiss Me, Kiss Me, Kiss Me (1987) highlighted the various faces of love and lust across musical styles, which spanned the punchy and playful horns of “Why Can’t I Be You?,” the slashing funk textures of “Hot Hot Hot!!!,” and the melodic guitar lines of…
- Kiss Me, Stupid (film by Wilder [1964])
Billy Wilder: Films of the 1960s of Billy Wilder: The provocative Kiss Me, Stupid (1964) was reviled by contemporary critics, condemned by the Legion of Decency, and failed at the box-office. Although film historians have had a more mixed response, Kiss Me, Stupid is generally thought to represent the nadir of Wilder’s career. Ray Walston played…
- Kiss My Math: Showing Pre-Algebra Who’s Boss (work by McKellar)
Danica McKellar: …or Breaking a Nail (2007), Kiss My Math: Showing Pre-Algebra Who’s Boss (2008), Hot X: Algebra Exposed! (2010), and Girls Get Curves: Geometry Takes Shape (2012). The popular books were written in the style of a teen magazine and contained examples that were chosen to be accessible and appealing to…
- Kiss of Death (film by Hathaway [1947])
Kiss of Death, American film noir, released in 1947, that is especially noted for the chilling performance by Richard Widmark in his screen debut. Nick Bianco (played by Victor Mature) decides to testify against his former mob cronies in order to win release from prison and be reunited with his
- Kiss of the Spider Woman (film by Babenco [1985])
Hector Babenco: Babenco’s first American feature was Kiss of the Spider Woman (1985), a quirky near-surreal comic drama about a theatrically gay man (played by William Hurt) jailed for sexual offenses and a political prisoner (Raul Julia) who share an Argentine jail cell. The film earned Academy Award nominations for best picture…
- Kiss of the Spider Woman (musical by Kander and Ebb)
Chita Rivera: …the film goddess Aurora in Kiss of the Spider Woman. Her energetic, sultry performance earned Rivera her second Tony Award. She received additional Tony nominations for a 2003 revival of Nine and for the autobiographical Chita Rivera: The Dancer’s Life (2005). Other notable credits included regional theatre productions of Kander…
- Kiss of the Spider Woman (novel by Puig)
Kiss of the Spider Woman, novel by Manuel Puig, published in 1976 as El beso de la mujer araña. Mostly consisting of dialogue between two men in an Argentine jail cell, the novel traces the development of their unlikely friendship. Molina is a middle-aged lower-middle-class gay man who passes the
- Kiss the Blood Off My Hands (film by Foster [1948])
Norman Foster: …Mitchum, and the bleak noir Kiss the Blood off My Hands, starring Burt Lancaster and Joan Fontaine. Tell It to the Judge (1949) and Father Is a Bachelor (1950) were light romantic comedies, but Woman on the Run (1950) was a proficient thriller starring Ann Sheridan and Dennis O’Keefe, and…
- Kiss the Girls (film by Fleder [1997])
James Patterson: …including Kiss the Girls (1995; film 1997), Mary, Mary (2005), Cross (2006; film 2012), Kill Alex Cross (2011), Alex Cross, Run (2013), Cross the Line (2016), Target: Alex Cross (2018), and Deadly Cross
- Kiss the Girls (novel by Patterson)
James Patterson: …than a dozen sequels, including Kiss the Girls (1995; film 1997), Mary, Mary (2005), Cross (2006; film 2012), Kill Alex Cross (2011), Alex Cross, Run (2013), Cross the Line (2016), Target: Alex Cross
- Kiss to the Leper, The (work by Mauriac)
François Mauriac: Le Baiser au lépreux (1922; The Kiss to the Leper) established Mauriac as a major novelist. Mauriac showed increasing mastery in Le Désert de l’amour (1925; The Desert of Love) and in Thérèse Desqueyroux (1927; Thérèse), whose heroine is driven to attempt the murder of her husband to escape her…
- Kiss, Kiss (work by Dahl)
Roald Dahl: …adults, which was followed by Kiss, Kiss (1959), which focused on stormy romantic relationships.
- Kiss, The (painting by Munch)
Edvard Munch: Paintings of love and death: Love’s blossoming is shown in The Kiss (1892), in which a man and woman are locked in a tender and passionate embrace, their bodies merging into a single undulating form and their faces melting so completely into each other that neither retains any individual features. An especially powerful image of…
- Kiss, The (sculpture by Rodin)
Auguste Rodin: Toward the achievement of his art: …sensuous of these groups was The Kiss, sometimes considered his masterpiece. The work, originally conceived as the figures of Paolo and Francesca for The Gates of Hell, was first exhibited in 1887 and exposed him to numerous scandals.
- Kiss, The (sculpture by Brancusi)
Western sculpture: Avant-garde sculpture (1909–20): His Kiss (1908), with its two blocklike figures joined in symbolic embrace, has a concentration of expression in simple form. In this and subsequent works Brancusi favoured hard materials and surfaces as well as self-enclosed volumes that often impart an introverted character to his subjects. His…
- Kiss, The (American film, 1896)
May Irwin: …Rice, shared a prolonged kiss; The Kiss (1896), one of the earliest commercially distributed films, was denounced from pulpits across the country. In Courted into Court (1896), she sang “Mister Johnson, Turn Me Loose” and introduced “A Hot Time in the Old Town.”
- kissa (poetry)
Punjabi literature: …the Gurus”) and Sufi poetry, qissas (kissas)—epic poems celebrating the lovers and heroes who are the subjects of folk tales—are an important part of Punjabi literature. The most significant of those were the story of Heer and Ranjha by Waris Shah (1725–95) and that of Sassi and Sohni by Hashim…
- kissanga (musical instrument)
pluriarc, west African stringed musical instrument having a deep boxlike body from which project between two and eight slender, curved arms; one string runs from the end of each arm to a string holder on the belly. The strings are plucked, usually by the fingers, occasionally by plectra attached to
- Kíssavos (mountain, Greece)
Ossa, mountain massif, nomós (department) of Lárissa (Modern Greek: Lárisa), eastern Thessaly (Thessalía), Greece. It lies on the Gulf of Thérmai (Thermaïkós) and is separated on the north from the Olympus (Ólympos) massif by the Vale of Tempe (Témbi). Rising from a broad, steep-sided plateau to a
- Kissavos (mountain, Greece)
Ossa, mountain massif, nomós (department) of Lárissa (Modern Greek: Lárisa), eastern Thessaly (Thessalía), Greece. It lies on the Gulf of Thérmai (Thermaïkós) and is separated on the north from the Olympus (Ólympos) massif by the Vale of Tempe (Témbi). Rising from a broad, steep-sided plateau to a
- Kisses for My President (film by Bernhardt [1964])
Curtis Bernhardt: 1950s and ’60s: Kisses for My President (1964) was his last film, an overlong but occasionally funny yarn about a woman (Polly Bergen) who is the first to become a U.S. president and her struggles with the office and her family, especially her husband (Fred MacMurray). Although not…
- Kissi (people)
Kisi, group of some 120,000 people inhabiting a belt of hills covered by wooded savannas where Guinea, Sierra Leone, and Liberia meet; they speak a language of the Atlantic branch of the Niger-Congo family. Rice, cultivated in marshes, is the staple of the Kisi diet; other foods include yams,
- Kissidougou (Guinea)
Kissidougou, town and administrative capital of Kissidougou region, southeastern Guinea, West Africa. It is located at the intersection of roads from Faranah, Guéckédou, and Kankan. The town was founded in the 1890s as a French outpost in the campaigns against Samory Touré, the Malinke
- Kissimmee River (river, Florida, United States)
Kissimmee River, river in central Florida, U.S., flowing between Lakes Kissimmee (north) and Okeechobee (south). It originally had a course of about 100 miles (160 km), but in the 1960s it was canalized for flood-control purposes to a 56-mile (90-km) length. The river basin drains approximately
- Kissing a Fool (film by Ellin [1998])
David Schwimmer: Other film and TV credits: …movies as The Pallbearer (1995), Kissing a Fool (1998), and All the Rage (1999) were largely unsuccessful. In 2001 he appeared in the acclaimed World War II television miniseries Band of Brothers, portraying Capt. Herbert Sobel, a strict officer in Easy Company. That year he also starred in Uprising, a…
- Kissing Booth, The (film by Marcello [2018])
Jacob Elordi: The Kissing Booth and Euphoria: …as bad-boy Noah Flynn in The Kissing Booth. The latter, a teen rom-com, was a huge hit, and Elordi literally became famous overnight; after the movie’s midnight release, he awoke to millions of new Instagram followers.
- kissing bug (insect)
assassin bug: Predatory behaviour: The masked hunter (or masked bedbug hunter; Reduvius personatus), when threatened, will also bite humans, causing pain and localized swelling. The masked hunter is widely known for its ability to camouflage itself as a ball of dust during the immature stages, when the body, legs, and…
- kissing bug (insect, subfamily Triatominae)
assassin bug: Predatory behaviour: …known as triatomine bugs or kissing bugs. Some species of triatomine bugs—particularly members of the genera Panstrongylus, Rhodnius, and Triatoma—are carriers of the protozoan parasite Trypanosoma cruzi, which causes Chagas disease. Triatomines can survive in a variety of habitats, including underneath rocks and bark, inside the nests of other animals,…
- kissing bug (insect)
heteropteran: Harmful aspects: …the American tropics, occurs through cone nose bugs (Reduviidae), so-called because of the shape of their head. The insect receives trypanosomes when it feeds on the blood of an infected person. The trypanosome passes part of its life cycle in the insect and again becomes infective to humans. Instead of…
- kissing disease (pathology)
mononucleosis, infection in humans, caused by the Epstein-Barr virus (EBV), whose most common symptoms are fever, general malaise, and sore throat. The disease occurs predominantly in persons from 10 to 35 years old, but it is known to appear at any age. Infection of young children by the EBV
- kissing gourami (fish)
perciform: Aquarium fishes: …and the kissing gourami (Helostoma temmincki), and various gobies (Gobiidae), blennies, and blennylike fishes of the suborder Blennioidei.
- Kissing Jessica Stein (film by Herman-Wurmfeld [2001])
Jon Hamm: …play Lipschtick for the film Kissing Jessica Stein (2001), which was written by Jennifer Westfeldt, with whom he became romantically involved. (The pair would separate in 2015.) He spent two years (2002–04) on the TV police procedural The Division, and after the series was canceled, he landed recurring roles in…
- Kissinger, Henry (United States statesman)
Henry Kissinger was an American political scientist, who, as adviser for national security affairs and as secretary of state, was a major influence in the shaping of U.S. foreign policy from 1969 to 1976 under Presidents Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford. In 1973 he was jointly awarded the Nobel Prize
- Kissinger, Henry Alfred (United States statesman)
Henry Kissinger was an American political scientist, who, as adviser for national security affairs and as secretary of state, was a major influence in the shaping of U.S. foreign policy from 1969 to 1976 under Presidents Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford. In 1973 he was jointly awarded the Nobel Prize
- Kissós, Mount (mountain, Greece)
Thessaloníki: …foothills and slopes of Mount Khortiátis (Kissós; 3,940 feet [1,201 metres]), overlooking the delta plains of the Gallikós and Vardar (Axiós or Vardaráis) rivers.
- Kistna River (river, India)
Krishna River, river of south-central India. One of India’s longest rivers, it has a total course of about 800 miles (1,290 km). The river rises in western Maharashtra state in the Western Ghats range near the town of Mahabaleshwar, not far from the coast of the Arabian Sea. It flows east to Wai
- Kisumu (Kenya)
Kisumu, town, capital of Nyanza province, Kenya, lying on the northeastern shore of Lake Victoria. It is the commercial, industrial, and transportation centre of western Kenya, serving a hinterland populated by almost four million people. Kisumu is an important link in the trade route between Lake
- kiswah (Islam)
kiswah, black brocade cloth that covers the most sacred shrine of Islām, the Kaʿbah (q.v.) in Mecca. A new kiswah is made in Egypt every year and carried to Mecca by pilgrims. On it is embroidered in gold the Muslim profession of faith (shahādah) and a gold band of ornamental calligraphy carrying
- kiSwahili language (African language)
Swahili language, Bantu language spoken either as a mother tongue or as a fluent second language on the east coast of Africa in an area extending from Lamu Island, Kenya, in the north to the southern border of Tanzania in the south. (The Bantu languages form a subgroup of the Benue-Congo branch of
- Kiswahili language (African language)
Swahili language, Bantu language spoken either as a mother tongue or as a fluent second language on the east coast of Africa in an area extending from Lamu Island, Kenya, in the north to the southern border of Tanzania in the south. (The Bantu languages form a subgroup of the Benue-Congo branch of
- Kiswahili literature
Swahili literature, that body of creative writing done in Swahili, a Bantu language of Africa. The earliest preserved Swahili writing, from the early 18th century, is written in Arabic script, and subsequent writings were primarily in three main dialects: kiUnjuga, kiMvita, and kiAmu. In the 1930s,
- kiSwahili literature
Swahili literature, that body of creative writing done in Swahili, a Bantu language of Africa. The earliest preserved Swahili writing, from the early 18th century, is written in Arabic script, and subsequent writings were primarily in three main dialects: kiUnjuga, kiMvita, and kiAmu. In the 1930s,
- kit (musical instrument)
kit, small fiddle with a muted tone, carried by dancing masters in their pockets in the 16th–18th century. A last descendant of the medieval rebec, the kit evolved as a narrow, boat-shaped instrument with usually three or four strings. Later, narrow, violin-shaped kits were also built. Dancing
- kit fox (mammal)
fox: Classification: macrotis (kit fox); large-eared pale foxes of the western North American plains (swift fox) and deserts (kit fox); shy and uncommon; adult length about 40–50 cm without the 20–30-cm tail, weight about 1.5–3 kg; burrow dweller that feeds on small animals (rodents, rabbits, insects); coat gray…
- Kit-Cat Club (English political group)
Kit-Cat Club, Association of early 18th-century Whig leaders that met in London. Members included the writers Richard Steele, Joseph Addison, and William Congreve and such political figures as Robert Walpole and the duke of Marlborough. They first met in the tavern of Christopher Cat, whose mutton
- Kita (district, Ōsaka, Japan)
Ōsaka-Kōbe metropolitan area: Street patterns: Kita (“The North”) is located just south of Ōsaka railway station, where the city’s highest-priced land is found. Kita has a complex of high-rise office buildings and a large underground shopping centre. Minami (“The South”) has many theatres and restaurants. Ōsaka’s industrial areas are on…
- Kita Ikki (Japanese military officer)
Ōkawa Shūmei: …right-wing advocate of the period, Kita Ikki. Together they founded the influential nationalistic Yūzonsha (Society for the Preservation of the National Essence) in 1919. Through its magazine, Otakebi (“War Cry”), the Yūzonsha advocated the return of Japan to the simpler military values of its feudal past as well as the…
- Kita Morio (Japanese author)
Japanese literature: The postwar novel: The novels of Kita Morio were characterized by an attractive streak of humour that provided a welcome contrast to the prevailingly dark tonality of other contemporary Japanese novels. His Nire-ke no hitobito (1963–64; The House of Nire), though based on the careers of his grandfather and his father…
- Kitā Rujār (work by Idrīsī)
Muḥammad al-Idrīsī: …of descriptive geography, known as Kitāb nuzhat al-mushtāq fī ikhtirāq al-āfāq and also as Kitā Rujār, or Al-Kitāb al-Rujārī (“The Book of Roger”). In compiling it, al-Idrīsī combined material from Arabic and Greek geographic works with information obtained through firsthand observation and eyewitness reports. The king and his Muslim geographer…
- Kita-Daitō Island (island, Pacific Ocean)
Daitō Islands: North Daitō (Kita-Daitō) and South Daitō (Minami-Daitō) islands are the largest of the group and lie close to one another, while the smaller Oki-Daitō Island lies about 93 miles (150 km) south of them. North and South Daitō have a combined area of 15.7 square…
- Kita-Ibaraki (Japan)
Kitaibaraki, city, northeastern Ibaraki ken (prefecture), northeast-central Honshu, Japan. It lies on the Pacific Ocean, about 25 miles (40 km) northeast of Hitachi. The western part of the city occupies hills that slope toward the rest of the city on the coast. Agriculture (rice) and fishing
- Kita-Kantō (region, Japan)
Northern Kantō, industrial region, east-central Japan, occupying portions of Gumma, Saitama, and Tochigi ken (prefectures). Situated just north of, and adjacent to, the Keihin (Tokyo-Yokohama) Industrial Zone, the area consists mostly of plains, interrupted by the Kantō Range and Echigo Range.
- Kita-Kyūshū (Japan)
Kitakyūshū, city, northern Fukuoka ken (prefecture), northern Kyushu, Japan. It is situated on the Tsushima and Kanmon (Shimonoseki) straits (west and north, respectively) and the Inland Sea (east), the narrow Kanmon strait linking the two larger marine features. The city was created in 1963 by the
- Kita-Kyūshū (region, Japan)
Northern Kyūshū, industrial region of southwestern Japan, centring on the city and port of Kita-Kyūshū and bounded by the Gen Sea to the northwest and the Inland Sea to the east. The region is drained by the Onga, Chikugo, and Yamakuni rivers and is composed of portions of Fukuoka, Saga, Ōita, and
- Kitāb ādāb al-kabīr (work by Ibn al-Muqaffaʿ)
Arabic literature: The concept of adab: …composed a manual for secretaries, Kitāb ādāb al-kabīr (“The Major Work on Secretarial Etiquette”). At a later date, another translation movement, much encouraged by the Abbasid caliph al-Maʾmūn, rendered much of the Hellenistic heritage from Greek, often via Syriac, into Arabic, the products of which were stored in the great…
- Kitāb adab al-kātib (work by Ibn Qutaybah)
Ibn Qutaybah: …to Ibn Qutaybah include the Kitāb adab al-kātib (“Secretary’s Guide”), a compendium of Arabic usage and vocabulary; Kitāb al-ʿArab (“Book of the Arabs”), a defense of Arab rather than Iranian cultural preeminence; Kitāb al-maʿārif (“Book of Knowledge”), a handbook of history; Kitāb al-shiʿr wa al-shuʿarāʾ (“Book of Poetry and Poets”),…
- Kitāb al Mufaṣṣal fī al-Naḥw (work by Zamakhsharī)
Abu al-Qāsim Maḥmūd ibn ʿUmar al-Zamakhsharī: Of al-Zamakhsharī’s grammatical works, Al-Mufaṣṣal fī ʿilm al-ʿArabīyah (“Detailed Treatise on Arabic Linguistics,” written 1119–21, published 1859; it is sometimes titled Kitāb al Mufaṣṣal fī al-Naḥw ["Detailed Treatise on Grammar"]) is celebrated for its concise but exhaustive exposition. He was also the author of a collection of old proverbs;…
- Kitāb al-adwiya al-mufradah (work by Idrīsī)
Muḥammad al-Idrīsī: …matters as well, and his Kitāb al-adwiyah al-mufradah (“Book of Simple Drugs”), in which he lists the names of drugs in as many as 12 languages, demonstrates the range of his linguistic abilities. Al-Idrīsī seems to have had a good knowledge of Arabic literature, and—judging by some of his verse…
- Kitāb al-aghānī (work by Abū al-Faraj al-Iṣbahānī)
Abū al-Faraj al-Iṣbahānī: Kitāb al-aghānī (“The Book of Songs”), his major work, contains songs, biographical information, and much information concerning the life and customs of the early Arabs and of the Muslim Arabs of the Umayyad and ʿAbbāsid periods.
- Kitāb al-amānāt wa al-iʿtiqādāt (work by Saʿadia ben Joseph)
Judaism: Saʿadia ben Joseph: …Kitāb al-amānāt wa al-iʿtiqādāt (Beliefs and Opinions), is modeled on similar Muʿtazilite treatises and on the Muʿtazilite classification of theological subject matter known as the Five Principles.
- Kitāb al-aṣnām (work by Hishām ibn al-Kalbī)
Hishām ibn al-Kalbī: …Arabs; and Kitāb al-aṣnām (The Book of Idols), in which he discusses the gods of the pre-Islamic Arabs. The discussions in Kitāb al-aṣnām are supplemented by relevant excerpts from pre-Islamic poetry. His writings are of particular importance for having preserved valuable information on Arabian antiquities and tribal customs and…
- Kitāb al-asrār (book by Al Neimi)
Salwa Al Neimi: Salwa’s collection of short stories, Kitāb al-asrār (2nd ed., 2010; “The Book of Secrets”), reflected both her dislike of hypocrisy and her belief in the liberating power of the written word. In it she explored such matters as sexual experiences outside marriage, difficulties in the relationship of a married couple,…
- Kitāb al-awsaṭ (work by al-Masʿūdī)
al-Masʿūdī: Al-Masʿūdī followed it with Kitāb al-awsaṭ (“Book of the Middle”), variously described as a supplement to or an abridgment of the Akhbār al-zamān. The Kitāb is undoubtedly a chronological history. A manuscript in the Bodleian Library, Oxford, may possibly be one volume of it.
- Kitāb al-badīʿ (work by Ibn al-Muʿtazz)
Arabic literature: Emerging poetics: …for his Kitāb al-badīʿ (The Book of Tropes), in which he provides a list of five major poetic devices (including metaphor and simile) and then lists a further group of “discourse embellishments.” While his goal was to demonstrate that these devices were present in Arabic writing from the outset…
- Kitāb al-bayān wa al-tabyīn (work by al-Jāḥiẓ)
Arabic literature: Al-Jāḥiẓ and Abū Ḥayyān al-Tawḥīdī: …influential work of early criticism, Kitāb al-bayān wa al-tabyīn (“Book of Clarity and Clarification”). Apart from sheer erudition and a delight in controversy, what sets al-Jāḥiẓ’s works apart is, first, his total mastery of a clear and concise Arabic style that reflected the new influences on the Muslim community and,…
- Kitāb al-buldān (work by al-Yaʿqūbī)
al-Yaʿqūbī: …Wāḍiḥ”), and a general geography, Kitāb al-buldān (“Book of the Countries”).
- Kitāb al-diriyak (work by Galen)
Mosul school: …of Galen’s medical treatise the Kitāb al-diryāq (“Book of Antidotes”) is a good example of the earlier work of the Mosul school. It depicts four figures surrounding a central seated figure who holds a crescent-shaped halo. By the 13th century the Baghdad school, which combined the styles of the Syrian…
- Kitāb al-filā-ḥah (work by Ibn al-ʿAwwām)
Ibn al-ʿAwwām: …the Arabic treatise on agriculture, Kitāb al-filā-ḥah, the outstanding medieval work on the subject. The Spanish translation, published in the early 1800s, consists of 35 chapters dealing with agronomy, cattle and poultry raising, and beekeeping. It deals with 585 plants; explains the cultivation of more than 50 fruit trees; and…
- Kitāb al-Fiṣal (work by Ibn Ḥazm)
Spain: Literature: …output of Ibn Ḥazm includes Kitāb al-Fiṣal, a history of religions that was not surpassed by Western scholars until well into the 19th century. He also was a leading exponent of the Ẓāhirī school of jurisprudence, which stressed thorough knowledge of the Qurʾān and the Hadith. He applied the principles…
- Kitāb al-Ḥadīth (work by Badāʾūnī)
ʿAbd al-Qādir Badāʾūnī: …most highly regarded were the Kitāb al-Ḥadīth (“Book of Ḥadīth”), the sayings of the Prophet Muhammad, no longer extant; a section of the Tārīkh-e alfī (“History of the Millennium”), commissioned by Akbar to celebrate the millenary of the Hijrah (Hegira) in 1591/92, on which more than 10 authors collaborated; and…
- Kitāb al-ḥāwī (work by al-Rāzī)
al-Rāzī: …Cremona’s 12th-century Latin translation, and Kitāb al-ḥāwī, the “Comprehensive Book,” in which he surveyed Greek, Syrian, and early Arabic medicine as well as some Indian medical knowledge. Throughout his works he added his own considered judgment and his own medical experience as commentary. Among his numerous minor medical treatises is…
- Kitāb al-Ḥayawān (work by al-Jāḥiẓ)
biology: Arab domination of biology: Among his biological writings is Kitāb al-ḥayawān (“Book of Animals”), which, although revealing some Greek influence, is primarily an Arabic work. In it the author emphasized the unity of nature and recognized relationships between different groups of organisms. Because al-Jāḥiẓ believed that earth contained both male and female elements, he…
- Kitāb al-ḥudūd (work by Israeli)
Isaac ben Solomon Israeli: Of his philosophical writings, Kitāb al-ḥudūd (Hebrew: Sefer ha-gevulim, “The Book of Definitions”) is best known. Beginning with a discussion of Aristotle’s four types of inquiry, Israeli goes on to present 56 definitions, including definitions of wisdom, intellect, soul, nature, reason, love, locomotion, and time. Others of his philosophical…
- Kitāb al-Ḥulaf (work by Mishael ben Uzziel)
biblical literature: Collations of the Masoretic materials: …Mishael ben Uzziel in his Kitāb al-Ḥulaf (before 1050). A vast amount of Masoretic information, drawn chiefly from Spanish manuscripts, is to be found in the text-critical commentary known as Minhath Shai, by Solomon Jedidiah Norzi, completed in 1626 and printed in the Mantua Bible of 1742. Benjamin Kennicott collected…
- Kitāb al-imtā wa al-muʾānasah (work by Tawḥīdī)
Arabic literature: Al-Jāḥiẓ and Abū Ḥayyān al-Tawḥīdī: …his renowned anthology of anecdotes, Kitāb al-imtāʾ wa al-muʾānasah (“Book of Enjoyment and Bonhomie”), and his often scurrilous commentary on cultural and political infighting, Kitāb mathālib al-wazīrayn (“Book on the Foibles of the Two Ministers”), provide ample justification for his reputation as one of Arabic’s greatest stylists.
- Kitāb al-ishitqāq (work by Ibn Durayd)
Ibn Durayd: …Ibn Durayd’s other works are Kitāb al-ishtiqāq (“Book of Derivation”), on the etymology of Arab names, and al-Malāḥin (“Ambiguities of Speech”), a book of ambivalent words for the use of persons forced to swear. Ibn Durayd was also a gifted poet.
- Kitāb al-Iʿtibār (work by Ibn Munqidh)
Islamic world: Effect of the Crusades in Syria: …can be found in the Kitāb al-Iʿtibār (“Book of Reflection”), the memoirs of Usāmah ibn Munqidh (1095–1188). Born in Syria, he was a small boy when the first generation of Franks controlled Jerusalem. As an adult, he fought with Saladin (Ṣalāḥ al-Dīn Yūsuf ibn Ayyūb) and lived to see him…
- Kitab al-jabr wa al-muqābalah (work by al-Khwārizmī)
Islamic world: The ʿAbbāsids: …title of his major work, Kitāb al-jabr wa al-muqābalah (“The Book of Integration and Equation”). Movements such as falsafah (a combination of the positive sciences with logic and metaphysics) and kalām (systematic theological discourse) applied Hellenistic thought to new questions. The translation of Indo-Persian lore promoted the development of adab,…
- Kitāb al-jawāhir (work by Israeli)
Isaac ben Solomon Israeli: …a larger exegetical effort, and Kitāb al-jawāhir (“Book of Substances”).
- Kitāb al-jilwah (Yazīdī religious literature)
Yazīdī: Two short books, Kitāb al-jilwah (“Book of Revelation”) and Maṣḥafrash (“Black Book”), form the sacred scriptures of the Yazīdīs. It is now widely suspected that both volumes were compiled by non-Yazīdīs in the 19th century and then were passed off as ancient manuscripts but that their contents do…
- Kitāb al-maghāzī (work by ibn Isḥāq)
Muhammad: Biographical sources: Muḥammad ibn Isḥāq’s (died 767–768) Kitāb al-maghāzī (“Book of [the Prophet’s] Military Expeditions”). However, this work is extant only in later reworkings and abridgements, of which the best known is ʿAbd al-Malik ibn Hishām’s (died 833–834) Sīrat Muḥammad rasūl Allāh (“Life of Muhammad, the Messenger of God”). Ibn Isḥāq’s original…
- Kitāb al-maghāzī (work by al-Wāqidī)
al-Wāqidī: …Arab historian, author of the Kitāb al-maghāzī, a well-known work on the military campaigns (al-maghāzī) of the Prophet Muhammad.
- Kitāb al-manāẓir (work by Ibn al-Haytham)
Ibn al-Haytham: Major works: …al-Haytham’s most important work is Kitāb al-manāẓir (“Optics”). Although it shows some influence from Ptolemy’s 2nd century ad Optics, it contains the correct model of vision: the passive reception by the eyes of light rays reflected from objects, not an active emanation of light rays from the eyes. It combines…
- Kitāb al-Manṣūrī (work by al-Rāzī)
al-Rāzī: …significant medical works are the Kitāb al-Manṣūrī, which he composed for the Rayy ruler Manṣūr ibn Isḥaq and which became well known in the West in Gerard of Cremona’s 12th-century Latin translation, and Kitāb al-ḥāwī, the “Comprehensive Book,” in which he surveyed Greek, Syrian, and early Arabic medicine as well…
- Kitāb al-maʿārif (work by Ibn Qutaybah)
Ibn Qutaybah: …rather than Iranian cultural preeminence; Kitāb al-maʿārif (“Book of Knowledge”), a handbook of history; Kitāb al-shiʿr wa al-shuʿarāʾ (“Book of Poetry and Poets”), a chronological anthology of early Arabic poetry, with an introduction that presented Ibn Qutaybah’s canons of literary criticism; and Kitāb ʿuyūn al-akhbar (“Book of Choice Narratives”), a…
- Kitāb al-muḥāḍarah wa al-mudhākarah (work by ibn Ezra)
Moses ibn Ezra: …treatise on the poetic art, Kitāb al-muḥāḍarah wa al-mudhākarah (“Conversations and Recollections”; translated into Hebrew as Shirat Yisraʾel, or “Song of Israel,” in 1924 by B. Halper). Dealing with Arabic, Castilian, and Jewish poetry, the work is an important Spanish literary history.
- Kitāb al-mukhtaṣar fī ḥisāb al-jabr waʾl-muqābala, Al- (work by al-Khwārizmī)
Islamic world: The ʿAbbāsids: …title of his major work, Kitāb al-jabr wa al-muqābalah (“The Book of Integration and Equation”). Movements such as falsafah (a combination of the positive sciences with logic and metaphysics) and kalām (systematic theological discourse) applied Hellenistic thought to new questions. The translation of Indo-Persian lore promoted the development of adab,…
- Kitāb al-Muʿtabar (work by Abū al-Barakāt)
Judaism: Other Jewish thinkers, c. 1050–c. 1150: His chief philosophical work, Kitāb al-muʿtabar (“The Book of That Which Has Been Established by Personal Reflection”), contains very few references to Jewish texts or topics. Abū al-Barakāt rejected Aristotelian physics completely. According to him, time is the measure of being and not, as Aristotle taught, the measure of…
- Kitāb al-najāt (work by Avicenna)
Avicenna: Life and education: …Knowledge) and Kitāb al-najāt (Book of Salvation), and compiled new and more-accurate astronomical tables.
- Kitāb al-rūh (work by Qayyīm al-Jawzīyah)
death: Islām: According to the Kitāb al-rūh, wicked souls are instructed “to depart to the wrath of God.” Fearing what awaits them, they seek refuge throughout the body and have to be extracted “like the dragging of an iron skewer through moist wool, tearing the veins and sinews.” Angels place…
- Kitāb al-shifāʾ (work by Avicenna)
Kitāb al-shifāʾ, a voluminous philosophical and scientific encyclopaedia by the Muslim philosopher and physician Avicenna. It treats logic, the natural sciences, psychology, the quadrivium (geometry, astronomy, mathematics, and music), and metaphysics and is a major work of medieval Muslim
- Kitāb al-shiʿr wa al-shuʿarāʾ (work by Ibn Qutaybah)
Ibn Qutaybah: …Knowledge”), a handbook of history; Kitāb al-shiʿr wa al-shuʿarāʾ (“Book of Poetry and Poets”), a chronological anthology of early Arabic poetry, with an introduction that presented Ibn Qutaybah’s canons of literary criticism; and Kitāb ʿuyūn al-akhbar (“Book of Choice Narratives”), a collection of adab studies dealing with the authority of…
- Kitāb al-ṣināʿ atayn, al-kitābah wa al-shiʿr (work by ʿAskarī)
Arabic literature: Compilations and manuals: …was Abū Hilāl al-ʿAskarī’s 10th-century Kitāb al-ṣināʿatayn, al-kitābah wa al-shiʿr (“The Book of the Two Skills, Scribal Arts and Poetry”), the title of which notes what was for al-ʿAskarī the relatively recent placement of textual analysis devoted to artistic prose alongside the traditionally prestigious genre of poetry. While al-ʿAskarī joined…
- Kitāb al-Sirāj (work by Maimonides)
Moses Maimonides: Works: …his commentary on the Mishna, Kitāb al-sirāj, also written in Arabic. The Mishna is a compendium of decisions in Jewish law that dates from earliest times to the 3rd century. Maimonides’ commentary clarified individual words and phrases, frequently citing relevant information in archaeology, theology, or science. Possibly the work’s most…
- Kitāb al-tanbīh wa al-ishrāf (work by al-Masʿūdī)
al-Masʿūdī: …his life, that he wrote Kitāb al-tanbīh wa al-ishrāf (“The Book of Notification and Verification”), in which he summarized, corrected, and brought up to date the contents of his former writings, especially the three historical works.
- Kitāb al-ʿArab (work by Ibn Qutaybah)
Ibn Qutaybah: …of Arabic usage and vocabulary; Kitāb al-ʿArab (“Book of the Arabs”), a defense of Arab rather than Iranian cultural preeminence; Kitāb al-maʿārif (“Book of Knowledge”), a handbook of history; Kitāb al-shiʿr wa al-shuʿarāʾ (“Book of Poetry and Poets”), a chronological anthology of early Arabic poetry, with an introduction that presented…
- Kitāb al-ʿayn (work by al-Khalīl ibn Aḥmad)
al-Khalīl ibn Aḥmad: Khalīl’s dictionary, Kitāb al-ʿayn (“Book of the [Letter] ʿAyn”), may have been written in part by his student al-Layth ibn al-Muẓaffar of Khorāsān, who was at one time secretary to the Barmakid viziers of the ʿAbbāsid court. It is arranged according to a novel alphabetical order based…
- Kitāb al-ʿibar (work by Ibn Khaldūn)
Islamic arts: Historiography: Ibn Khaldūn: …to a projected general history, Kitāb al-ʿibar, sought to explain the basic factors in the historical development of the Islamic countries. His own experiences, gained on a variety of political missions in North Africa, proved useful in establishing general principles that he could apply to the manifestations of Islamic civilization.…
- Kitab an-nabat (work by al-Dīnawarī)
al-Dīnawarī: …the preserved fragments of his Kitāb al-nabāt (“Book of Plants”), one of the most famous early Muslim works on botany. Of lexicographical character, it includes oral and written Arabic botanical traditions as well as much Persian material. Written in beautiful prose, it was the standard work in the field for…