- Sagittaria graminea (plant)
arrowhead: The grass-leaved arrowhead (S. graminea) is found throughout eastern North America. S. sagittifolia, which grows in most of Europe, is cultivated in China for its edible tubers. A number of arrowhead species were introduced as ornamentals to Australia. They are listed as invasive species, including S.…
- Sagittaria latifolia (plant)
arrowhead: …in North America is the broadleaf arrowhead (S. latifolia), used frequently in pond restorations to improve feeding areas for birds. The grass-leaved arrowhead (S. graminea) is found throughout eastern North America. S. sagittifolia, which grows in most of Europe, is cultivated in China for its edible tubers. A number of…
- Sagittaria platyphylla (plant)
arrowhead: sagittifolia and S. platyphylla, and have naturalized in many streams, ponds, and agricultural waterways.
- Sagittaria sagittifolia (plant)
arrowhead: S. sagittifolia, which grows in most of Europe, is cultivated in China for its edible tubers. A number of arrowhead species were introduced as ornamentals to Australia. They are listed as invasive species, including S. sagittifolia and S. platyphylla, and have naturalized in many streams,…
- Sagittarius (constellation and astrological sign)
Sagittarius, in astronomy, zodiacal constellation in the southern sky lying between Capricornus and Scorpius, at about 19 hours right ascension and 25° south declination. The centre of the Milky Way Galaxy lies in the radio source Sagittarius A*. Near the western border of Sagittarius is the winter
- Sagittarius A* (astronomy)
Sagittarius A* (Sgr A*), supermassive black hole at the centre of the Milky Way Galaxy, located in the constellation Sagittarius and having a mass equivalent to four million Suns. Sagittarius A* is a strong source of radio waves and is embedded in the larger Sagittarius A complex. Most of the radio
- Sagittarius A* (black hole)
galactic coordinate: …have identified the radio source Sagittarius A*, which is offset from the longitude zero point, as the true centre of the Milky Way Galaxy.)
- Sagittarius serpentarius (bird)
secretary bird, (Sagittarius serpentarius), bird of prey (family Sagittaridae) of the dry uplands of Africa, the only living bird of prey of terrestrial habits. It is a long-legged bird, with a slender but powerful body 1.2 m (3.9 feet) long and a 2.1-metre (6.9-foot) wingspread. Twenty black crest
- Sagittarius, Henricus (German composer)
Heinrich Schütz was a composer, widely regarded as the greatest German composer before Johann Sebastian Bach. In 1599 he became a chorister at Kassel, where the landgrave of Hesse-Kassel provided him with a wide general education. In 1608 Schütz entered the University of Marburg to study law, but
- Sagnac effect (physics)
gyroscope: Optical gyroscopes: …devices are based on the Sagnac effect, first demonstrated by French scientist Georges Sagnac in 1913. In Sagnac’s demonstration, a beam of light was split such that part traveled clockwise and part counterclockwise around a rotating platform. Although both beams traveled within a closed loop, the beam traveling in the…
- sagnaskemmtun (Icelandic literature)
saga: …entertain the household, known as sagnaskemmtun (“saga entertainment”). It seems to have replaced the traditional art of storytelling. All kinds of written narratives were used in sagnaskemmtun—secular, sacred, historical, and legendary. The Icelandic church took a sympathetic view of the writing and reading of sagas, and many of the authors…
- sago (starch)
sago, food starch prepared from carbohydrate material stored in the trunks of several palms, the main source being the true sago palm, Metroxylon sagu, which is, native to the Indonesian archipelago. In Indonesia, sago forests are especially extensive on Seram Island. Borneo produces much of the
- sago palm (plant)
Cycas: The leaves of sago palm (Cycas revoluta) are widely used as ceremonial “palms” and in floriculture. The pithy stems of this and other species are a source of sago, a food starch. Several species, among them the Australian nut palm (C. media) and queen sago (C. circinalis), a…
- Sagoyewatha (Seneca chief)
Red Jacket was a Seneca chief whose magnificent oratory masked his schemes to maintain his position despite double-dealing against his people’s interests. His first Indian name was Otetiani, and he assumed the name Sagoyewatha upon becoming a chief. “Red Jacket” was his English name, a result of
- Sagra, Ramón de la (Spanish anarchist)
anarchism: Anarchism in Spain: The first known Spanish anarchist, Ramón de la Sagra, a disciple of Proudhon, founded the world’s first anarchist journal, El Porvenir, in La Coruña in 1845, which was quickly suppressed. Mutualist ideas were later publicized by Francisco Pi y Margall, a federalist leader and the translator of many of Proudhon’s…
- Sagrada Família (basilica, Barcelona, Spain)
Sagrada Família, Roman Catholic minor basilica in Barcelona, Spain, designed by Antoni Gaudí. Begun in 1882 and still unfinished in the first quarter of the 21st century, the Sagrada Família, notable for its tactile organic form, is one of Barcelona’s most famous landmarks. It is an unexpected
- Sagrada Família, Templo Expiatorio de la (basilica, Barcelona, Spain)
Sagrada Família, Roman Catholic minor basilica in Barcelona, Spain, designed by Antoni Gaudí. Begun in 1882 and still unfinished in the first quarter of the 21st century, the Sagrada Família, notable for its tactile organic form, is one of Barcelona’s most famous landmarks. It is an unexpected
- Sagrario Metropolitano (church, Mexico City, Mexico)
Lorenzo Rodríguez: His Sagrario Metropolitano (c. 1749–69), a small church adjoining the cathedral in Mexico City, is a principal Churrigueresque monument in the New World. Its facades are lavishly ornamented in the tradition of Rodríguez’ native Andalusia but surpass even that style in their richness and complexity of…
- Sagredo, Palazzo (palace, Italy)
Pietro Longhi: …Giants (completed 1734) for the Palazzo Sagredo, was an artistic and critical failure. It is likely that because of this he left Venice for a time and studied at Bologna under the genre painter Giuseppe Maria Crespi.
- Sagua la Grande (Cuba)
Sagua la Grande, city and port, north-central Cuba. It lies on the Sagua la Grande River 15 miles (24 km) from its mouth. The city is a major port and regional manufacturing and commercial centre. The area is known primarily for its sugarcane, but rice, black beans, and livestock also are
- saguaro (plant)
saguaro, (Carnegiea gigantea), large cactus species (family Cactaceae), native to Mexico and to Arizona and California in the United States. The fruits are an important food of American Indians, who also use the woody saguaro skeletons. Ecologically, the plants provide protective nesting sites for
- Saguaro National Monument (region, Arizona, United States)
Saguaro National Park, mountain and desert region in southern Arizona, U.S. The park—consisting of two districts, Saguaro West and Saguaro East, separated by the city of Tucson—embraces forests of saguaro: a giant candelabra-shaped cactus that may reach 50 feet (15 metres) in height and live for
- Saguaro National Park (region, Arizona, United States)
Saguaro National Park, mountain and desert region in southern Arizona, U.S. The park—consisting of two districts, Saguaro West and Saguaro East, separated by the city of Tucson—embraces forests of saguaro: a giant candelabra-shaped cactus that may reach 50 feet (15 metres) in height and live for
- Saguenay (Quebec, Canada)
Saguenay, city, Saguenay–Lac-Saint-Jean region, southern Quebec province, Canada. In 2002 Chicoutimi merged with Jonquière and other former municipalities to form the city of Saguenay; the two former cities became districts of the new entity. Chicoutimi district is situated at the head of
- Saguenay Mass (geological feature, Canada)
anorthosite: … is underlain by anorthosite, the Saguenay Mass alone accounting for a tenth of this. The Morin Anorthosite in the same area occupies 2,600 square km (1,040 square miles), and the Adirondack Anorthosite is exposed over an area of about 3,900 square km (1,560 square miles). The Bushveld Complex underlies an…
- Saguenay River (river, Canada)
Saguenay River, river in Saguenay–Lac-Saint-Jean region, south central Quebec province, Canada. It drains Lac-Saint-Jean into the St. Lawrence River at Tadoussac, about 120 miles (190 km) northeast of Quebec city. Flowing east-southeast, the Saguenay, in the first third of its 105-mile (170-km)
- Saguia el-Hamra (region, Western Sahara, Africa)
Saguia el-Hamra, northern geographic region of Western Sahara, northwest Africa. Stretching between Cape Bojador and the de jure Moroccan border, its area is about 31,660 square miles (82,000 square km). After Spain withdrew from the country in 1976, the region was annexed by Morocco. The chief
- Saguinus (primate genus)
marmoset: …species in the tamarin genus Saguinus. Although they lack the manes of lion tamarins, some have notable features. The emperor tamarin (S. imperator) of the southwestern Amazon basin, for example, has a long white mustache complementing its long grizzled fur and reddish tail, whereas the mustached tamarin (S. mystax) has…
- Saguinus imperator (primate)
marmoset: The emperor tamarin (S. imperator) of the southwestern Amazon basin, for example, has a long white mustache complementing its long grizzled fur and reddish tail, whereas the mustached tamarin (S. mystax) has a small white upswept mustache. The cotton-top tamarin (S. oedipus), found in Colombia and…
- Saguinus midas (primate)
marmoset: The golden-handed tamarin, S. midas, is named for the mythological Greek king.
- Saguinus mystax (primate)
marmoset: …and reddish tail, whereas the mustached tamarin (S. mystax) has a small white upswept mustache. The cotton-top tamarin (S. oedipus), found in Colombia and Panama, has a scruffy white crest of hair on the top of its head. The golden-handed tamarin, S. midas, is named for the mythological Greek king.
- Saguinus oedipus (primate)
marmoset: The cotton-top tamarin (S. oedipus), found in Colombia and Panama, has a scruffy white crest of hair on the top of its head. The golden-handed tamarin, S. midas, is named for the mythological Greek king.
- saguṇa (Hindu concept)
nirguṇa: …or as possessing qualities (saguṇa).
- Sagunto (Spain)
Sagunto, town, Valencia provincia (province), in the comunidad autónoma (autonomous community) of Valencia, eastern Spain, at the foot of the Peñas de Pajarito, on the western bank of the Palancia River, just north-northeast of Valencia city. Of Iberian origin, the town is the ancient Saguntum,
- Saguntum (Spain)
Sagunto, town, Valencia provincia (province), in the comunidad autónoma (autonomous community) of Valencia, eastern Spain, at the foot of the Peñas de Pajarito, on the western bank of the Palancia River, just north-northeast of Valencia city. Of Iberian origin, the town is the ancient Saguntum,
- SAH (medical condition)
subarachnoid hemorrhage, bleeding into the space between the two innermost protective coverings surrounding the brain, the pia mater and the arachnoid mater. A subarachnoid hemorrhage most often occurs as the result of significant head trauma and is usually seen in the setting of skull fractures or
- Saha equation (astronomy)
Saha equation, mathematical relationship between the observed spectra of stars and their temperatures. The equation was stated first in 1920 by the Indian astrophysicist Meghnad N. Saha. It expresses how the state of ionization of any particular element in a star changes with varying temperatures
- Saha ionization (astrophysics)
mass spectrometry: Thermal ionization: Atoms with low ionization potentials can be ionized by contact with the heated surface of a metal, generally a filament, having a high work function (the energy required to remove an electron from its surface) in a process called thermal, or surface, ionization.…
- Saha Pracha Thai Party (political party, Thailand)
Thanom Kittikachorn: Thanom’s United Thai People’s Party won a parliamentary majority, and Thanom continued as both prime minister and minister of defense.
- Saha, Meghnad N. (Indian astrophysicist)
Meghnad N. Saha was an Indian astrophysicist noted for his development in 1920 of the thermal ionization equation, which, in the form perfected by the British astrophysicist Edward A. Milne, has remained fundamental in all work on stellar atmospheres. This equation has been widely applied to the
- Sahab, Muhammad (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
- Ṣaḥāba (Islamic history)
Companions of the Prophet, in Islam, followers of Muhammad who had personal contact with him, however slight. In fact, any Muslim who was alive in any part of the Prophet’s lifetime and saw him may be reckoned among the Companions. The first 4 caliphs, who are the aṣḥāb held in highest esteem among
- Ṣaḥābah (Islamic history)
Companions of the Prophet, in Islam, followers of Muhammad who had personal contact with him, however slight. In fact, any Muslim who was alive in any part of the Prophet’s lifetime and saw him may be reckoned among the Companions. The first 4 caliphs, who are the aṣḥāb held in highest esteem among
- Sahagalli (India)
Sangli, city, southern Maharashtra state, western India. It lies in a upland region along the Krishna River, about 20 miles (32 km) east-northeast of Kolhapur. Sangli is the former capital (1761–1947) of Sangli state. The city’s original name was Sahagalli—from the Marathi terms saha (“six”) and
- Sahagún de Fox, Martha (Mexican first lady)
Vicente Fox: In 2004 Fox’s wife, Martha Sahagún de Fox, briefly considered seeking the Mexican presidency (Fox was constitutionally ineligible for a second term), but her potential candidacy aroused considerable hostility in the public as well as among political leaders. In 2006 Fox left office, succeeded by Felipe Calderón of the…
- Sahagún, Bernardino de (Spanish historian)
encyclopaedia: Special interests: …the 16th-century Spanish Franciscan Fray Bernardino de Sahagún, who spent much of his life in missionary work in Mexico. Sahagún was ordered to write in Nahuatl the information needed by his colleagues for the conversion of the indigenous peoples of the region. The result, the Historia general de las cosas…
- Sahaif-ül-Ahbar (work by Müneccimbaşı)
Ahmed Dede Müneccimbaşı: Sahaif-ül-Ahbar . . . (“The Pages of the Chronicle”), a Turkish summary translation made by the poet Ahmed Nedin, is the only published version. The work is a universal history that starts with Adam and ends in the year 1672. It covers in detail the…
- Sahaj-Dhari (Sikh religious group)
Sikhism: Other groups: The Sahaj-Dharis are one of two groups of Sikhs that do not wear uncut hair. They also reject other injunctions of the Rahit, and they do not adopt typical Sikh personal names. Tat Khalsa scholars once believed that sahaj-dhari meant “slow-adopter” and was used to designate…
- sahaja (Hinduism)
Vaishnava-Sahajiya: Sahaja (Sanskrit: “easy” or “natural”) as a system of worship was prevalent in the Tantric traditions common to both Hinduism and Buddhism in Bengal as early as the 8th–9th centuries. The divine romance of Krishna and Radha was celebrated by the poets Jayadeva (12th century),…
- Sahajayāna (Tantrism)
Hinduism: The rise of devotional Hinduism (4th–11th century): This system, known as Sahajayana (“Vehicle of the Natural” or “Easy Vehicle”), influenced both Bengali devotional Vaishnavism, which produced a sect called Vaishnava-Sahajiya with similar doctrines, and the Natha yogis (mentioned below), whose teachings influenced Kabir and other later bhakti masters.
- Sahajiya (Hindu movement)
Vaishnava-Sahajiya, member of an esoteric Hindu movement centred in Bengal that sought religious experience through the world of the senses, specifically human sexual love. Sahaja (Sanskrit: “easy” or “natural”) as a system of worship was prevalent in the Tantric traditions common to both Hinduism
- Sahak the Great, Saint (Armenian religious leader)
St. Isaac the Great ; Western feast day September 9; Eastern feast day November 20 (or 25); Armenian feast day February 10 (or two weeks before Lent). ) was a celebrated catholicos, or spiritual head, of the Armenian Apostolic Church. He was a principal advocate of Armenian cultural and
- Sahand, Mount (mountain, Iran)
Iran: Volcanic and tectonic activity: … (15,787 feet [4,812 meters]) and Mount Sahand (12,172 feet [3,710 meters]) in the northwest. The Sahand-Bazman Belt, formed by Eocene volcanism, extends some 1,200 miles (1,900 km) from the border with Azerbaijan in the northwest to Baluchistan in the southeast and includes volcanic peaks such as Mount Sahand, Mount Karkas…
- Sahand-Bazman Belt (volcanic belt, Iran)
Iran: Volcanic and tectonic activity: The Sahand-Bazman Belt, formed by Eocene volcanism, extends some 1,200 miles (1,900 km) from the border with Azerbaijan in the northwest to Baluchistan in the southeast and includes volcanic peaks such as Mount Sahand, Mount Karkas in Eṣfahān province, Mount Lalahezar in Kermān province, and Bazman…
- Sahaptian (people)
Sahaptin, linguistic grouping of North American Indian tribes speaking related languages within the Penutian family. They traditionally resided in what are now southeastern Washington, northeastern Oregon, and west-central Idaho, U.S., in the basin of the Columbia River and its tributaries. Major
- Sahaptian languages
Penutian languages: …plus three extinct Costanoan languages), Sahaptin (two languages), Yakonan (two extinct languages), Yokutsan (three languages), and Maiduan (four languages)—plus Klamath-Modoc, Cayuse (extinct), Molale (extinct), Coos, Takelma (extinct), Kalapuya
- Sahaptin (people)
Sahaptin, linguistic grouping of North American Indian tribes speaking related languages within the Penutian family. They traditionally resided in what are now southeastern Washington, northeastern Oregon, and west-central Idaho, U.S., in the basin of the Columbia River and its tributaries. Major
- Sahaptin languages
Penutian languages: …plus three extinct Costanoan languages), Sahaptin (two languages), Yakonan (two extinct languages), Yokutsan (three languages), and Maiduan (four languages)—plus Klamath-Modoc, Cayuse (extinct), Molale (extinct), Coos, Takelma (extinct), Kalapuya
- Sahara (film by Eisner [2005])
Matthew McConaughey: …period included the adventure romp Sahara (2005), the football drama We Are Marshall (2006), and the Hollywood satire Tropic Thunder (2008).
- Sahara (desert, Africa)
Sahara, (from Arabic ṣaḥrāʾ, “desert”) largest desert in the world. Filling nearly all of northern Africa, it measures approximately 3,000 miles (4,800 km) from east to west and between 800 and 1,200 miles from north to south and has a total area of some 3,320,000 square miles (8,600,000 square
- Sahara (film by Korda [1943])
Rudolph Maté: …Pride of the Yankees (1942), Sahara (1943), and Cover Girl (1944). His other notable credits included Dodsworth (1936), Stella Dallas (1937), Love Affair (1939), My Favorite Wife (1940), and Gilda (1946).
- Sahara desert ant (insect)
Sahara desert ant, any of several species of ant in the genus Cataglyphis that dwell in the Sahara, particularly C. fortis and C. bicolor. The navigational capabilities of these ants have been the subject of numerous scientific investigations. Well adapted to the extreme conditions of their
- Sahara sand viper (snake)
Cerastes: …above each eye, and the common, or Sahara, sand viper (C. vipera), which lacks these scales. Both species are small (seldom more than 60 cm [about 2 feet] long), stocky, and broad-headed and are found in northern Africa and the Middle East.
- Saharan Arab Democratic Republic (self-declared state)
Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic (SADR), self-declared state claiming authority over the disputed territory of Western Sahara, which is presently occupied by Morocco. The independence of the SADR has been recognized at various points by some 80 countries, although, beginning in the mid-1990s, a
- Saharan Atlas (mountains, Africa)
Saharan Atlas, part of the chain of Atlas Mountains, extending across northern Africa from Algeria into Tunisia. The principal ranges from west to east are the Ksour, Amour, Ouled-Naïl, Zab, Aurès, and Tébessa (Tabassah). Mount Chélia (7,638 feet [2,328 m]) is the highest point in northern Algeria,
- Saharan languages
Saharan languages, group of languages that constitutes one of the major divisions of Nilo-Saharan languages. Saharan languages are spoken mainly around Lake Chad—which is located at the conjunction of Chad, Cameroon, Nigeria, and Niger—but also in Libya and Sudan. Subdivided into eastern and
- Saharan Taouratine Series (rock unit, Africa)
Africa: Continental formations: The Saharan Taouratine Series, containing fossils of vegetation and of great reptiles, was laid down during the Jurassic. In the upper Karoo System of subequatorial Africa, formed during the early Triassic Period, the Beaufort Series contains fossils of fish, amphibians, and reptiles. The final stages of…
- Saharanpur (India)
Saharanpur, city, northwestern Uttar Pradesh state, northern India. It is situated at the northern end of the Upper Ganges-Yamuna Doab, about 35 miles (56 km) west-northwest of Haridwar, Uttarakhand. Saharanpur was founded about 1340 and is named for Shah Haran Chishti, a Muslim saint. It is a
- Saharawi Arab Democratic Republic (self-declared state)
Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic (SADR), self-declared state claiming authority over the disputed territory of Western Sahara, which is presently occupied by Morocco. The independence of the SADR has been recognized at various points by some 80 countries, although, beginning in the mid-1990s, a
- Ṣaḥārāʾ (desert, Africa)
Sahara, (from Arabic ṣaḥrāʾ, “desert”) largest desert in the world. Filling nearly all of northern Africa, it measures approximately 3,000 miles (4,800 km) from east to west and between 800 and 1,200 miles from north to south and has a total area of some 3,320,000 square miles (8,600,000 square
- Sahariya (people)
Rajasthan: Population composition: Sahariya communities are found in the southeast, and the Rabari, who traditionally are cattle breeders, live to the west of the Aravallis in west-central Rajasthan.
- Saharsa (India)
Saharsa, city, east-central Bihar state, northeastern India. It is situated just east of the Kosi River. The city is a major rail and road hub and has an electric power station. It was constituted a municipality in 1961. The surrounding region consists of fertile alluvial plains irrigated by the
- Sahbāʾ, Wadi al- (river, Arabia)
Arabian Desert: Physiography: …by such wadis as Al-Rimah–Al-Bāṭin, Al-Sahbāʾ, and Dawāsir-Jawb, which carried vast loads of sediment from the interior toward the Persian Gulf. The Al-Dibdibah region once was the delta of Wadi Al-Rimah–Al-Bāṭin, and Al-Budūʿ Plain was the delta of Wadi Al-Sahbāʾ. The gravel plains of Raydāʾ and Abū Baḥr, and adjacent…
- Sahdol (India)
Shahdol, town, eastern Madhya Pradesh state, central India. It lies along the Murna River (a tributary of the Son River) about 110 miles (177 km) northwest of Bilaspur. The town is an agricultural market and a rail and road junction. It has a government college and a law school affiliated with
- Sahel (region, Africa)
Sahel, semiarid region of western and north-central Africa extending from Senegal eastward to Sudan. It forms a transitional zone between the arid Sahara (desert) to the north and the belt of humid savannas to the south. The Sahel stretches from the Atlantic Ocean eastward through northern Senegal,
- Sahel (plain, Tunisia)
Al-Sāḥil, coastal plain in the eastern Mediterranean littoral of Tunisia that includes a sandy coast with large bays and lagoons of the Mediterranean and is situated between the sea and the steppe country of central Tunisia. The region extends from the town of Al-Nafīdah on the central coast of the
- Sahel: Man in Distress (work by Salgado)
Sebastião Salgado: This was followed by Sahel: Man in Distress (1986), a book on the 1984–85 famine in the Sahel region of Africa, and An Uncertain Grace (1990), which included a remarkable group of photographs of mud-covered workers at the Serra Pelada gold mine in Brazil.
- Sahelanthropus tchadensis (fossil hominin)
Australopithecus: …the human lineage (hominins) include Sahelanthropus tchadensis (7–6 mya), Orrorin tugenensis (6 mya), Ardipithecus kadabba (5.8–5.2 mya), and Ar. ramidus (5.8–4.4 mya)—that is, pre-Australopithecus species that are considered to be ancient humans—and one additional species of early human, Kenyanthropus platyops (3.5 mya). The first undisputed
- Saheth-Maheth (India)
Gonda: Saheth-Maheth, northwest, was the site of Shravasti, an ancient Buddhist monastic estate. Pop. (2001) 120,301; (2011) 114,046.
- Sahgal, Nayantara (Indian journalist and author)
Nayantara Sahgal is an Indian journalist and novelist whose fiction presents the personal crises of India’s elite amid settings of political upheaval. Sahgal was educated in the United States at Wellesley College (B.A., 1947). Well acquainted with Indian aristocracy—her uncle was Jawaharlal Nehru,
- Sahgal, Nayantara Pandit (Indian journalist and author)
Nayantara Sahgal is an Indian journalist and novelist whose fiction presents the personal crises of India’s elite amid settings of political upheaval. Sahgal was educated in the United States at Wellesley College (B.A., 1947). Well acquainted with Indian aristocracy—her uncle was Jawaharlal Nehru,
- Sahib al-Fath (Somalian Muslim leader)
Aḥmad Grāñ was the leader of a Muslim movement that all but subjugated Ethiopia. At the height of his conquest, he held more than three-quarters of the kingdom, and, according to the chronicles, the majority of men in these conquered areas had converted to Islam. Once Aḥmad Grāñ had gained control
- Sāhibdīn (Indian painter)
Sāhibdīn was an outstanding Indian artist of the Mewār school of Rājasthanī painting (see Mewār painting). He is one of the few Rājasthanī artists whose name is known, and his work dominated the Mewār school during the first half of the 17th century. Though he was a Muslim, Sāhibdīn was fully at
- Sahid Minar (building, Kolkata, India)
Kolkata: Architecture: The beautiful column of the Shaheed Minar (Ochterlony Monument) is 165 feet (50 metres) high—its base is Egyptian, its column Syrian, and its cupola in the Turkish style. Victoria Memorial Hall represents an attempt to combine classical Western influence with Mughal architecture; the Nakhoda Mosque is modeled on the tomb…
- Sahidic (dialect)
Coptic language: Sahidic (from Arabic, aṣ-Ṣaʿīd [Upper Egypt]) was originally the dialect spoken around Thebes; after the 5th century it was the standard Coptic of all of Upper Egypt. It is one of the best-documented and well-known dialects.
- Ṣaḥīḥ (work by Muslim ibn al-Ḥajjāj)
Muslim ibn al-Ḥajjāj: …widely; his great work, the Ṣaḥīḥ (“The Genuine”), is said to have been compiled from about 300,000 traditions, which he collected in Arabia, Egypt, Syria, and Iraq. The Ṣaḥīḥ has been unanimously acclaimed as authoritative and is one of the six canonical collections of Ḥadīth. Muslim was careful to give…
- Sāḥil (region, Africa)
Sahel, semiarid region of western and north-central Africa extending from Senegal eastward to Sudan. It forms a transitional zone between the arid Sahara (desert) to the north and the belt of humid savannas to the south. The Sahel stretches from the Atlantic Ocean eastward through northern Senegal,
- Sāḥil, Al- (plain, Tunisia)
Al-Sāḥil, coastal plain in the eastern Mediterranean littoral of Tunisia that includes a sandy coast with large bays and lagoons of the Mediterranean and is situated between the sea and the steppe country of central Tunisia. The region extends from the town of Al-Nafīdah on the central coast of the
- Sahiwal (Pakistan)
Sahiwal, city, east-central Punjab province, eastern Pakistan. It lies on the vast Indus River plain in the densely populated region between the Sutlej and Ravi rivers. The city was founded in 1865 and was named for Sir Robert Montgomery, then lieutenant governor of the Punjab in British-controlled
- Sahl at-Tustarī (Muslim scholar and mystic)
Sālimīyah: …the Muslim scholar and mystic Sahl at-Tustarī (d. ad 896). The school was named after one of his disciples, Muḥammad ibn Sālim (d. ad 909). Even though the Sālimīyah were not a Ṣūfī (mystic) group in the strict sense of the word, they utilized many Ṣūfī terms and ideas in…
- Sahl ʿAkkār (region, Middle East)
Syria: Relief: It then widens into the ʿAkkār Plain, which continues south across the Lebanon border.
- Sahl, Mort (American comedian)
stand-up comedy: The new wave: The groundbreaker was Mort Sahl, who appeared onstage sitting on a stool with a rolled-up newspaper in his hand and talked in normal conversational tones—delivering not gag lines but caustic commentary on the political leaders, popular culture, and pillars of respectability of American society during the conservative 1950s.…
- Sahlé Mariam (emperor of Ethiopia)
Menilek II was the king of Shewa (or Shoa; 1865–89) and emperor of Ethiopia (1889–1913). One of Ethiopia’s greatest rulers, he expanded the empire almost to its present-day borders, repelled an Italian invasion in the Battle of Adwa in 1896, and carried out a wide-ranging program of modernization.
- Sahle Maryam (emperor of Ethiopia)
Menilek II was the king of Shewa (or Shoa; 1865–89) and emperor of Ethiopia (1889–1913). One of Ethiopia’s greatest rulers, he expanded the empire almost to its present-day borders, repelled an Italian invasion in the Battle of Adwa in 1896, and carried out a wide-ranging program of modernization.
- Sahle Miriam (emperor of Ethiopia)
Menilek II was the king of Shewa (or Shoa; 1865–89) and emperor of Ethiopia (1889–1913). One of Ethiopia’s greatest rulers, he expanded the empire almost to its present-day borders, repelled an Italian invasion in the Battle of Adwa in 1896, and carried out a wide-ranging program of modernization.
- Sahle Selassie (king of Ethiopia)
Sahle Selassie was the ruler (1813–47) of the kingdom of Shewa (Shoa), Ethiopia. He was the grandfather of Emperor Menilek II (reigned 1889–1913) and the great-grandfather of Emperor Haile Selassie I. His name means “Clemency of the Trinity.” A member of the Amhara royal family, Sahle Selassie
- Sahlin, Mona (Swedish politician)
Magdalena Andersson: Early life and career: …adviser for Social Democratic leader Mona Sahlin (2007–09), and served as deputy director general of the Swedish Tax Agency (2009–12). From 2012 until 2014 Andersson was the economic policy spokesperson for the Social Democrats. After the Social Democrats won the 2014 general election, she became the minister of finance in…
- Sahlins, Marshall (American anthropologist)
Marshall Sahlins was an American anthropologist, educator, activist, and author who through his study of the people and culture of the South Pacific—primarily Hawaii and Fiji—made monumental contributions to his field. Though his work is widely respected, a number of his theories placed him at the
- śahnāī (musical instrument)
shehnai, double-reed conical oboe of North India. The shehnai is made of wood, except for a flaring metal bell attached to the bottom of the instrument, and measures about 12–20 inches (30–50 cm) in length, with six to eight keyless finger holes along its body. Possessing a two-octave range, the
- Sahni, Bhisham (Hindi writer, actor, teacher, and translator)
Bhisham Sahni was a Hindi writer, actor, teacher, translator, and polyglot who was especially known for his poignant and realistic work Tamas (1974; Darkness), depicting the aftermath of the 1947 partition of India. In 1986 filmmaker Govind Nihalani adapted the work into a made-for-television