- Muda, Tuanku (Minangkabau leader)
Imam Bondjol was a Minangkabau religious leader and a key member of the Padri faction in the religious Padri War, which divided the Minangkabau people of Sumatra in the 19th century. When in about 1803 three pilgrims inspired by the ideas of the puritan Wahhābī sect returned from Mecca and launched
- Müdafaa-i Hukuk Cemiyetleri (Turkish history)
Associations for the Defense of Rights, patriotic league formed in Anatolia and in Thrace in 1918, after the defeat of the Ottoman Empire in World War I. Its purposes were to defend Turkey against foreign occupation and to preserve its territorial integrity, and it served as the political
- mudang (Korean religion)
mudang, in Korean shamanism, a priestess who employs magic to effect cures, to tell fortunes, to soothe spirits of the dead, and to repulse evil. Her male counterpart is called a paksu. Both, however, are also known by numerous other names in various parts of Korea. Hereditary mudang, especially in
- Mudanjiang (China)
Mudanjiang, city in southeastern Heilongjiang sheng (province), China. It is located about 70 miles (110 km) west of the Chinese-Russian border. It is situated on the upper reaches of the Mudan River (Mudan Jiang), which is a tributary of the Sungari (Songhua) River in the mountains of eastern
- Mudanting (kunqu drama)
Bandō Tamasaburō V: …starring in a production of Mudanting (“The Peony Pavilion”) at the Shanghai International Arts Festival in 2009. The opera was widely praised, and it played in Tokyo the following year. During his lengthy career, Tamasaburō was honoured with many awards, including the prestigious Kyoto Prize (2011) for his contributions to…
- Mudanya, Armistice of (Europe-Turkey)
20th-century international relations: The reorganization of the Middle East: …the Turks relented, and the Armistice of Mudanya (October 11) ended the fighting. Eight days later Lloyd George’s Cabinet was forced to resign. A new peace conference produced the Treaty of Lausanne (July 24, 1923), which returned eastern Thrace to Turkey and recognized the Nationalist government in return for demilitarization…
- Mudawwanah (Moroccan law)
Morocco: Justice: …have sought reforms in the Mudawwanah, or code of personal status and family law, in an effort to change inequities in inheritance, divorce, and other matters that have traditionally favoured men. In 2004 parliament issued a new, more liberal, personal status code.
- Mudbound (film by Rees [2017])
Mary J. Blige: Acting career: … (2013), Black Nativity (2013), and Mudbound (2017). For her work in the latter movie, a drama about racism in 1940s Mississippi, Blige earned an Academy Award nomination for best supporting actress. In addition, “Mighty River,” which she cowrote and sang for the film’s soundtrack, received an Oscar nod.
- Mudd, Roger (American journalist)
Tom Brokaw: …coanchor the Nightly News with Roger Mudd. After a year, network executives made Brokaw the sole anchor of the show. He was in competition with news anchors Dan Rather at CBS and Peter Jennings at ABC, and for the next two decades the three anchors represented the faces of their…
- Mudd, Samuel A. (American physician)
assassination of Abraham Lincoln: Mourning, manhunt, and aftermath: Samuel Mudd, who would later be convicted of conspiracy, though his descendants waged a protracted battle to prove his innocence. While a massive manhunt, fueled by a $100,000 reward, filled the countryside surrounding Washington with troops and other searchers, Booth and Herold, aided by a…
- Muddiman, Henry (English journalist)
Henry Muddiman was an English journalist who supported the Royalist cause during the Civil Wars and became a privileged publisher of newsletters after the Restoration of the monarchy in 1660. Muddiman issued the Parliamentary Intelligencer and Mercurius Publicus (Public Mercury), advocating a free
- Muddy River (Massachusetts, United States)
Brookline, town (township), an exclave of Norfolk county, eastern Massachusetts, U.S. It lies between Suffolk and Middlesex counties and is almost surrounded by Boston. Settled in 1638 as part of Boston, it was called Muddy River until incorporated as a town of Suffolk county in 1705. Named for a
- Muddy River Hamlet (Massachusetts, United States)
Brookline, town (township), an exclave of Norfolk county, eastern Massachusetts, U.S. It lies between Suffolk and Middlesex counties and is almost surrounded by Boston. Settled in 1638 as part of Boston, it was called Muddy River until incorporated as a town of Suffolk county in 1705. Named for a
- müde Tod, Der (film by Lang [1921])
Fritz Lang: Early life and German films: …are Der müde Tod (1921; Destiny), an allegorical melodrama; Dr. Mabuse, der Spieler - Ein Bild der Zeit (1922; Dr. Mabuse: The Gambler), a crime thriller; and Die Nibelungen: Siegfried (1924; Siegfried) and Die Nibelungen: Kriemhilds Rache (1924; Kriemhild’s Revenge), both of which were based on a 13th-century epic saga.…
- Mudejar (Spanish Muslim community)
Mudejar, (from Arabic mudajjan, “permitted to remain”), any of the Muslims who remained in Spain after the Reconquista, or Christian reconquest, of the Iberian Peninsula (11th–15th century). In return for the payment of a poll tax, the Mudejars—most of whom converted to Islam after the Arab
- Mudéjar (Spanish Muslim community)
Mudejar, (from Arabic mudajjan, “permitted to remain”), any of the Muslims who remained in Spain after the Reconquista, or Christian reconquest, of the Iberian Peninsula (11th–15th century). In return for the payment of a poll tax, the Mudejars—most of whom converted to Islam after the Arab
- mudfish (fish)
mudminnow: …sometimes called rockfish, and the central mudminnow (U. limi) mudfish or dogfish. Mudminnows are often used as bait and sometimes kept in home aquariums.
- mudfish (fish)
bowfin, (Amia calva), freshwater fish of the order Amiiformes (infraclass Holostei); it is the only recognized living representative of its family (Amiidae), which dates back to the Jurassic Period (201.3 million to 145 million years ago). The bowfin is a voracious fish found in sluggish waters in
- mudflow (geology)
mudflow, flow of water that contains large amounts of suspended particles and silt. It has a higher density and viscosity than a streamflow and can deposit only the coarsest part of its load; this causes irreversible sediment entrainment. Its high viscosity will not allow it to flow as far as a
- Mudge, Thomas (British watchmaker)
Thomas Mudge was considered England’s greatest watchmaker, who was the inventor of the lever escapement, the most dependable and widely used device for regulating the movement of the spring-driven watch. Mudge served as apprentice to the watchmaker George Graham before opening his own a shop a few
- Mudgett, Herman (American serial killer)
H.H. Holmes was an American swindler and confidence trickster who is widely considered the country’s first known serial killer. Mudgett was born into a wealthy family and showed signs of high intelligence from an early age. Always interested in medicine, he allegedly trapped animals and performed
- mudhīf (architecture)
Lake Ḥammār: …houses of woven reeds (Arabic: mudhīf). The structures have Gothic-appearing arches made of bundles of reeds fastened together at the top; the walls are woven in intricate patterns of reeds. A 4th-millennium-bce plaque from the Sumerian city of Uruk on the western edge of the marshes depicts such a structure,…
- Mudie’s Circulating Library (library, London, United Kingdom)
library: Subscription libraries: …influence over publishers and authors: Mudie’s Circulating Library, for instance, established in London in 1842, would account for the sale of as much as 75 percent of a popular novel’s edition. Nevertheless, these libraries were for the most part unable to survive, and the service they gave is now largely…
- muditā (Buddhist doctrine)
muditā, (Sanskrit and Pāli), in Buddhism, the perfect virtue of joy. See
- mudlark (bird)
mudlark, bird of the family Grallinidae
- Mudlark, The (film by Negulesco [1950])
Jean Negulesco: Millionaire and Three Coins: The Mudlark (1950) was also a well-received drama about an orphan (Andrew Ray) who sneaks into Windsor Castle to see Queen Victoria (Irene Dunne), who is still mourning the death of Prince Albert. The film featured strong performances, including Alec Guinness as Benjamin Disraeli. Take…
- mudminnow (fish)
mudminnow, any of several hardy fishes, family Umbridae (order Esociformes), found in cool, mud-bottomed ponds, lakes, and streams of southeastern Europe and North America. Somewhat pikelike fishes with rounded snouts and tails, mudminnows are about 7.5 to 15 cm (3 to 6 inches) long. They
- mudnest builder (bird family)
Grallinidae, bird family (order Passeriformes) that includes the mudlark, apostle bird, and white-winged chough. The four species, generally restricted to Australia and New Zealand, are 19 to 50 cm (7.5 to 20 inches) long. They are sometimes called mudnest builders, because high in a tree they make
- Mudo, El (Spanish painter)
Juan Fernández de Navarrete was a painter of the Spanish Mannerist school. He studied in Italy, mostly in Venice, where he was influenced by Sebastiano del Piombo, Tintoretto, and Titian. In 1568 he was appointed painter to the king, who chose him (1576) to play a major role in the decoration of El
- mudor šuan (religious rite)
mudor šuan, ceremony held by the Votyaks, or Udmurts (people of the Ural Mountains), to consecrate a new family or clan shrine (kuala) and a sacred container (voršud) kept on a shelf within the shrine. Mudor itself means “ground,” so that the ceremony in fact was the blessing of a new site taken
- mudra (symbolic gestures)
mudra, (“seal,” “mark,” or “gesture”), in Buddhism and Hinduism, a symbolic gesture of the hands and fingers used either in ceremonies and dance or in sculpture and painting. Mudras used in ceremony and dance tend to be numerous, complicated, and often esoteric (the hasta-mudrās of Hindu classical
- mudrā (symbolic gestures)
mudra, (“seal,” “mark,” or “gesture”), in Buddhism and Hinduism, a symbolic gesture of the hands and fingers used either in ceremonies and dance or in sculpture and painting. Mudras used in ceremony and dance tend to be numerous, complicated, and often esoteric (the hasta-mudrās of Hindu classical
- Mudrarakshasa (play by Vishakhadatta)
South Asian arts: The theatre: …a rare semi-historical play called Mudrārākṣasa (“Minister Rākṣasa and his Signet Ring”), apparently was a courtier at the Gupta court. His play is a dramatization of the Machiavellian political principles expounded in the book Artha-śāstra, by Kauṭilya, who appears as the hero of the play.
- mudrock
sedimentary rock: Terrigenous clastic rocks: …rather simplistically, referred to as mudrocks. Mudrocks actually can include any clastic sedimentary rock in which the bulk of the clasts have diameters finer than 116 millimetre. Varieties include siltstone (average grain size between 116 and 1256 millimetre) and claystone (discrete particles are
- Mudrooroo (Australian author)
Colin Johnson was an Australian novelist and poet who depicted the struggles of modern Aboriginals to adapt to life in a society dominated by whites. Johnson was educated in a Roman Catholic orphanage in Australia. He traveled widely, including a six-year stay in India, where he lived for some time
- Mudrooroo Narogin (Australian author)
Colin Johnson was an Australian novelist and poet who depicted the struggles of modern Aboriginals to adapt to life in a society dominated by whites. Johnson was educated in a Roman Catholic orphanage in Australia. He traveled widely, including a six-year stay in India, where he lived for some time
- Mudrooroo Nyoongah (Australian author)
Colin Johnson was an Australian novelist and poet who depicted the struggles of modern Aboriginals to adapt to life in a society dominated by whites. Johnson was educated in a Roman Catholic orphanage in Australia. He traveled widely, including a six-year stay in India, where he lived for some time
- Mudros, Armistice of (Turkish history [1918])
Armistice of Mudros, (Oct. 30, 1918), pact signed at the port of Mudros, on the Aegean island of Lemnos, between the Ottoman Empire and Great Britain (representing the Allied powers) marking the defeat of the Ottoman Empire in World War I (1914–18). Under the terms of the armistice, the Ottomans
- mudskipper (fish)
mudskipper, any of about six species of small tropical gobies of the family Gobiidae (order Perciformes). Mudskippers are found in the Indo-Pacific, from Africa to Polynesia and Australia. They live in swamps and estuaries and on mud flats and are noted for their ability to climb, walk, and skip
- mudstone (rock)
mudstone, sedimentary rock composed primarily of clay- or silt-sized particles (less than 0.063 mm [0.0025 inch] in diameter); it is not laminated or easily split into thin layers. Some geologists designate as mudstone any similar rock that is blocky or massive; others, however, prefer a broader
- Mudumalai Wildlife Sanctuary (wildlife preserve, India)
Mudumalai Wildlife Sanctuary, wildlife preserve in western Tamil Nadu state, southern India. Established in 1940, it has an area of 124 square miles (322 square km) and is located about 35 miles (56 km) north of Udhagamandalam on the main road to Mysore. The sanctuary is composed of hills and
- mudzi (village)
Malawi: Settlement patterns: A rural village—called a mudzi—is usually small. Organized around the extended family, it is limited by the amount of water and arable land available in the vicinity. On the plateaus, which support the bulk of the population, the most common village sites are at the margins of madambo, which…
- Mueller Range (plateau, Australia)
Australia: The Western Plateau: In the Kimberleys and the Mueller Range there are extensive outcrops of flat-lying massive sandstone that have been dissected to give rise to striking isolated rock features known variously as plateaus, mesas, and buttes. Under those circumstances, local joints and bedding planes in the rocks, combined with the permeable nature…
- Mueller v. Allen (law case)
Mueller v. Allen, case in which the U.S. Supreme Court on June 29, 1983, ruled (5–4) that a Minnesota law that allowed state taxpayers to deduct various educational expenses—including those incurred at sectarian schools—did not violate the First Amendment’s establishment clause, which generally
- Mueller, Herta (Romanian-born German writer)
Herta Müller is a Romanian-born German writer who won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 2009 for her works revealing the harshness of life in Romania under the dictatorship of Nicolae Ceaușescu. The award cited Müller for depicting “the landscape of the dispossessed” with “the concentration of
- Mueller, Lisel (German-American poet)
Lisel Mueller was a German-born American poet known for her warm introspective poetry. She was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry in 1997 for her volume Alive Together: New and Selected Poems. Mueller fled Nazi Germany for the United States with her mother and sister in 1939. Her father, Fritz
- Mueller, Robert (American law enforcement official)
Robert Mueller is an American law enforcement official who served as director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) from 2001 to 2013. In 2017–19 he was special counsel to a Department of Justice investigation into possible Russian interference in the U.S. presidential election of 2016.
- Mueller, Robert Swan, III (American law enforcement official)
Robert Mueller is an American law enforcement official who served as director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) from 2001 to 2013. In 2017–19 he was special counsel to a Department of Justice investigation into possible Russian interference in the U.S. presidential election of 2016.
- Mueller, Sir Ferdinand Jakob Heinrich, Freiherr von (German botanist)
Sir Ferdinand von Mueller was a German-born Australian botanist and explorer who was known for his studies of the plants of Australia. After an apprenticeship as pharmacist, Mueller began the study of botany at the University of Kiel. Soon after receiving his Ph.D., he left Germany for Adelaide,
- Mueller, Sir Ferdinand von (German botanist)
Sir Ferdinand von Mueller was a German-born Australian botanist and explorer who was known for his studies of the plants of Australia. After an apprenticeship as pharmacist, Mueller began the study of botany at the University of Kiel. Soon after receiving his Ph.D., he left Germany for Adelaide,
- Muellertal (forest, Luxembourg)
Luxembourg: Relief and soils: …a great beech forest, the Müllerthal, as well as a sandstone area featuring an attractive ruiniform topography. The country’s eastern border with Germany is formed (successively from north to south) by the Our, Sûre, and Moselle rivers. The slopes of the Moselle River valley, carved in chalk and calcareous clay,…
- Muenster cheese (food)
Münster cheese, semisoft cow’s-milk cheese that originated in a monastery in Alsace. Though noted for its pungent earthy aroma when ripe, Münster is considerably milder as a young cheese. It is customarily flavoured with wild cumin and formed into disks, approximately 8 inches (20 cm) in diameter
- muerte de Artemio Cruz, La (novel by Fuentes)
The Death of Artemio Cruz, novel by Carlos Fuentes, published in Spanish as La muerte de Artemio Cruz in 1962. An imaginative portrait of an unscrupulous individual, the story also serves as commentary on Mexican society, most notably on the abuse of power—a theme that runs throughout Fuentes’s
- muerte no entrará en palacio, La (work by Marqués)
René Marqués: These were La muerte no entrará en palacio (“Death Will Not Enter the Palace”), a political allegory in which a governor betrays his youthful ideals by succumbing to foreign imperialism; Un niño azul para esa sombra (“A Blue Child for That Shadow”); and Los soles truncos (“Maimed…
- muerte y la doncella, La (play by Dorfman)
Ariel Dorfman: …muerte y la doncella (1990; Death and the Maiden), perhaps his best-known work, was completed in Chile as he observed his country’s painful transition from authoritarianism to democracy. The politically charged play follows Paulina Salas, a former political prisoner in an unnamed Latin American country, whose husband unknowingly brings home…
- Muertes de perro (novel by Ayala)
Francisco Ayala: …novels, Muertes de perro (1958; Death as a Way of Life) and El fondo del vaso (1962; “The Bottom of the Glass”). His later works include the short-story collections El jardín de las delicias (1971; “Garden of Delights”) and El jardín de las malicias (1988; “Garden of Malice”). In 1991…
- Muette de Portici (opera by Auber)
Daniel-François-Esprit Auber: …spectacular Muette de Portici (1828; Mute Girl of Portici, also known as Masaniello) has been regarded as an archetype of French grand opera. It greatly impressed Richard Wagner, who modeled his Rienzi (1840) after it. In addition to anticipating the works of Giacomo Meyerbeer, Auber’s Le Philtre (1831) provided the…
- muezzin (Islamic religious official)
muezzin, in Islam, the official who proclaims the call to prayer (adhān) on Friday for the public worship and the call to the daily prayer (ṣalāt) five times a day, at dawn, noon, midafternoon, sunset, and nightfall. To summon worshippers, the Jews use a trumpet and the Christians use a bell, but
- Muezzin, Le (work by Bourboune)
Mourad Bourboune: Le Muezzin (1968) presents the principal character in enigmatic terms and uses him to show the rupture of modern-day North Africans with their past. The protagonist is an atheistic muezzin (the caller to daily prayers) whose sacrilegious violence acts to exorcise and delineate the sham…
- Mufaḍḍal al-Ḍabbī, al- (Arab compiler)
Al-Mufaḍḍaliyyāt: …ancient Arabic poems, compiled by al-Mufaḍḍal ibn Muḥammad ibn Yaʿlah al-Ḍabbī between 762 and 784. It is of the highest importance as a record of the thought and poetic art of Arabia in the last two pre-Islamic centuries. Not more than five or six of the 126 poems appear to…
- Mufaḍḍal ibn Muḥammad ibn Yaʿlah al-Ḍabbī, al- (Arab compiler)
Al-Mufaḍḍaliyyāt: …ancient Arabic poems, compiled by al-Mufaḍḍal ibn Muḥammad ibn Yaʿlah al-Ḍabbī between 762 and 784. It is of the highest importance as a record of the thought and poetic art of Arabia in the last two pre-Islamic centuries. Not more than five or six of the 126 poems appear to…
- Mufaḍḍaliyyāt, Al- (Arabic anthology)
Al-Mufaḍḍaliyyāt, anthology of ancient Arabic poems, compiled by al-Mufaḍḍal ibn Muḥammad ibn Yaʿlah al-Ḍabbī between 762 and 784. It is of the highest importance as a record of the thought and poetic art of Arabia in the last two pre-Islamic centuries. Not more than five or six of the 126 poems
- Mufaṣṣal fī ʿilm al-ʿArabīyah, Al- (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;…
- muff (clothing)
muff, in wearing apparel, usually cylindrical covering of fur, fabric, feathers, or other soft material, with open ends into which the hands are placed to keep them warm. Originally a purse and hand warmer in one, the muff was first introduced to women’s fashion in 1570, when fur trimming was
- Muffat, Georg (German composer)
Georg Muffat was a composer whose concerti grossi and instrumental suites were among the earliest German examples of those genres. Muffat held positions as organist at Molsheim and Strasbourg cathedrals and in 1678 became organist to the archbishop of Salzburg. In 1681 he went to Italy and in Rome
- muffin method (cookery)
cake: The muffin method involves adding the combined liquid ingredients to the combined dry ingredients; but, although rapid and easy, this method unmodified produces a cake that tends to be coarse-textured and to have poor keeping quality. Chiffon cake is made by a modification of the muffin…
- muffle colour (pottery painting)
Chinese pottery: Song dynasty: The earliest known example of overglaze painting in the history of Chinese pottery bears a date equivalent to 1201. The technique was more widely used for the decoration of Cizhou wares in the 14th century. In both the variety and the vigour of their forms and decoration, Cizhou stonewares present…
- muffle kiln
pottery: Painting: …of kiln, known as a muffle kiln, in which they are fired. Overglaze colours consist of pigments mixed with glaze material suspended in a medium, such as gum arabic, with an alkaline flux added to lower the melting point below that of the glaze. They were first used in Persia…
- muffler (boxing)
Jack Broughton: …boxing rules, and inventor of mufflers, the precursors of modern boxing gloves.
- muffler (engine part)
muffler, device through which the exhaust gases from an internal-combustion engine are passed to attenuate (reduce) the airborne noise of the engine. To be efficient as a sound reducer, a muffler must decrease the velocity of the exhaust gases and either absorb sound waves or cancel them by
- Mufjir, Nahr (river, Israel)
H̱adera: The seasonal watercourse Naẖal H̱adera (then called by its Arabic name of Nahr Mufjir), which flowed through the town, flooded the low-lying area annually during the winter rains and created malarial swamps. Many of the early settlers died from the disease. With the aid of the French-Jewish philanthropist…
- mufti (Islamic title)
mufti, an Islamic legal authority who gives a formal legal opinion (fatwa) in answer to an inquiry by a private individual or judge. A fatwa usually requires knowledge of the Qurʾān and Hadith (narratives concerning the Prophet’s life and sayings), as well as knowledge of exegesis and collected
- Mufti, Saʿid al- (prime minister of Jordan)
Saʿid al-Mufti was a Jordanian politician, three-time prime minister (April–December 1950, May–December 1955, May–June 1956), and leader of the influential non-Arab Circassian community in Jordan. Al-Mufti and other members of the minority Circassian community were among the first to welcome
- Mufu Mountains (mountains, China)
Mufu Mountains, range at the border of Hunan, Hubei, and Jiangxi provinces, east-central China. The Mufu extend northeastward for more than 125 miles (200 km), from near Pingjiang in Hunan to the Yangtze River (Chang Jiang) valley west of Jiujiang. The elevation of the range averages about 3,300
- Mufu Shan (mountains, China)
Mufu Mountains, range at the border of Hunan, Hubei, and Jiangxi provinces, east-central China. The Mufu extend northeastward for more than 125 miles (200 km), from near Pingjiang in Hunan to the Yangtze River (Chang Jiang) valley west of Jiujiang. The elevation of the range averages about 3,300
- Mufulira (Zambia)
Mufulira, town, north-central Zambia. Mufulira is situated just southwest of the frontier with the Democratic Republic of the Congo. It is one of the country’s chief copper-mining centres; the rich local deposits have been exploited for many years. Smelting and refining of copper and an
- Mufumbiro Mountains (mountains, Africa)
Virunga Mountains, volcanic range north of Lake Kivu in east-central Africa, extending about 50 miles (80 km) along the borders of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Rwanda, and Uganda. The range runs east-west, perpendicular to the rift valley in which lie Lakes Kivu and Edward. Of its eight
- Mug (castle, Turkistan)
Central Asian arts: Sogdiana: …the great feudal castle of Mug survive. Among the objects excavated there was part of a wooden shield with the painted figure of a rider (State Hermitage Museum), which foreshadows a type commonly found in Islamic Persian book illumination. Mounted on a splendidly caparisoned horse, he wears a tunic of…
- mugabe (African title)
Nkole: …centralized state, headed by the mugabe (king). Hima were bound to the mugabe by an oath of fealty. Iru headmen were appointed over communities of their fellows, and through them Hima chiefs collected tribute.
- Mugabe, Grace (first lady of Zimbabwe)
Robert Mugabe: Succession controversy of Robert Mugabe: In 2014, however, Mugabe’s wife, Grace, launched a string of stinging verbal assaults on Mujuru’s character, culminating with Mujuru being dismissed from the vice presidency in December 2014 and expelled from the party months later. Emmerson Mnangagwa, another decorated liberation war hero with a prominent standing in ZANU-PF, replaced Mujuru…
- Mugabe, Robert (president of Zimbabwe)
Robert Mugabe was the first prime minister (1980–87) of the reconstituted state of Zimbabwe, formerly Rhodesia. A Black nationalist of Marxist persuasion, he eventually established one-party rule in his country, becoming executive president of Zimbabwe in 1987. He resigned on November 21, 2017,
- Mugabe, Robert Gabriel (president of Zimbabwe)
Robert Mugabe was the first prime minister (1980–87) of the reconstituted state of Zimbabwe, formerly Rhodesia. A Black nationalist of Marxist persuasion, he eventually established one-party rule in his country, becoming executive president of Zimbabwe in 1987. He resigned on November 21, 2017,
- Mugagga, Saint (Ugandan saint)
Martyrs of Uganda: Mugagga, Mukasa Kiriwawanvu, Adolphus Mukasa Ludigo, Gyavira, and Kizito. The soldiers and officials Bruno Serunkuma, James Buzabaliawo, and Luke Banabakintu were martyred with them.
- mugam (musical composition)
Azerbaijan: Cultural life: Mugams, vocal and instrumental compositions, are also widely known, the town of Shusha being particularly renowned for this art.
- Mugano-Salyan (region, Azerbaijan)
Azerbaijan: Economic regions: The Mugano-Salyan region, lying south of the Kura River and within the boundaries of the Mili and Mugan plains, specializes in cotton growing (under irrigation), producing about seven-tenths of the gross cotton output of Azerbaijan. Cotton-ginning plants are located in Bärdä, Salyan, and Äli-Bayramlı, all of…
- mugger (reptile)
mugger, (Crocodylus palustris), species of freshwater crocodile known for its broad head and snout, robust body (which gives it a superficial resemblance to the American alligator [Alligator mississippiensis]), and use of tools to attract prey. Muggers inhabit freshwater streams, ponds, and
- mugger crocodile (reptile)
mugger, (Crocodylus palustris), species of freshwater crocodile known for its broad head and snout, robust body (which gives it a superficial resemblance to the American alligator [Alligator mississippiensis]), and use of tools to attract prey. Muggers inhabit freshwater streams, ponds, and
- Muggeridge, Edward James (British photographer)
Eadweard Muybridge was an English photographer important for his pioneering work in photographic studies of motion and in motion-picture projection. Edward James Muggeridge adopted the name Eadweard Muybridge, believing it to be the original Anglo-Saxon form of his name. He immigrated to the United
- Muggeridge, Malcolm (British journalist and social critic)
Malcolm Muggeridge was a British journalist and social critic. A lecturer in Cairo in the late 1920s, he worked for newspapers in the 1930s before serving in British intelligence during World War II. He then resumed his journalistic career, including a stint as editor of Punch (1953–57). An
- Muggeridge, Malcolm Thomas (British journalist and social critic)
Malcolm Muggeridge was a British journalist and social critic. A lecturer in Cairo in the late 1920s, he worked for newspapers in the 1930s before serving in British intelligence during World War II. He then resumed his journalistic career, including a stint as editor of Punch (1953–57). An
- muggins (domino game)
muggins, domino game similar to the regular drawing game except for the rule that if a player can play a piece that makes the sum of the open-end pips on the layout a multiple of five, he scores that number. Each player takes five pieces. If the leader poses (places) either 5-5 (double-five), 6-4,
- muggins (cribbage)
cribbage: The play and the showing: …opponent may call out, “Muggins,” and score for himself any points overlooked.
- Muggleton, Lodowick (English religious leader)
Lodowick Muggleton was an English Puritan religious leader and anti-Trinitarian heretic whose followers, known as Muggletonians, believed he was a prophet. After claiming to have had spiritual revelations, beginning in 1651, Muggleton and his cousin John Reeve announced themselves as the two
- Mughair, Tall al- (ancient city, Iraq)
Ur, important city of ancient southern Mesopotamia (Sumer), situated about 140 miles (225 km) southeast of the site of Babylon and about 10 miles (16 km) west of the present bed of the Euphrates River. In antiquity the river ran much closer to the city; the change in its course has left the ruins
- Mughal architecture
Mughal architecture, building style that flourished in northern and central India under the patronage of the Mughal emperors from the mid-16th to the late 17th century. The Mughal period marked a striking revival of Islamic architecture in northern India. Under the patronage of the Mughal emperors,
- Mughal carpet
Mughal carpet, any of the handwoven floor coverings made in India in the 16th and 17th centuries for the Mughal emperors and their courts. Aside from patterns in the Persian manner, a series of distinctively Indian designs were developed, including scenic and landscape carpets; animal carpets with
- Mughal dynasty (India [1526-1857])
Mughal dynasty, Muslim dynasty of Turkic-Mongol origin that ruled most of northern India from the early 16th to the mid-18th century. After that time it continued to exist as a considerably reduced and increasingly powerless entity until the mid-19th century. The Mughal dynasty was notable for its
- Mughal Empire (India [1526-1857])
Mughal dynasty, Muslim dynasty of Turkic-Mongol origin that ruled most of northern India from the early 16th to the mid-18th century. After that time it continued to exist as a considerably reduced and increasingly powerless entity until the mid-19th century. The Mughal dynasty was notable for its
- Mughal glass
Mughal glass, type of glass made in India during the Mughal period (1556–1707). Because imported Persian craftsmen were patronized by the Mughal court, Mughal glass of the 17th and 18th centuries shows an obvious indebtedness to Persian influences. Floral arabesques and sprays and, to a lesser
- Mughal painting
Mughal painting, style of painting, confined mainly to book illustration and the production of individual miniatures, that evolved in India during the reigns of the Mughal emperors (16th–18th century). In its initial phases it showed some indebtedness to the Ṣafavid school of Persian painting but