- Ala Wai Canal (canal, Hawaii, United States)
Waikiki: In the 1920s the Ala Wai Canal was built, diverting the water that went into Waikiki and helping to expand the potential for tourism. Waikiki’s beach, now a tourist mecca, is one of the best known in the world; its white sand, however, is mostly imported, because erosion constantly…
- Ala-Kul, Ozero (lake, Kazakhstan)
Lake Alakol, salt lake in Kazakhstan, 110 miles (180 km) east of Lake Balqash, near the border with the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, China. Lake Alakol has a drainage basin of about 26,500 square miles (68,700 square km). The lake covers an area of 1,025 square miles, reaches a depth of about
- alaafin (African political title)
Oyo: …the new seat of the alaafin (alafin) of Oyo (the political leader of the Yoruba people) by Alaafin Atiba, after Old Oyo (also called Katunga), the capital of the Oyo empire, was completely destroyed by Fulani conquerors. New Oyo was aligned with Ibadan in the Yoruba civil wars of the…
- Alaap (British music group)
bhangra: …1979 a Southall group called Alaap released Teri Chunni De Sitare, a forward-looking album that combined the ornamented vocal melodies and metric framework of bhangra with the rhythmic drive and synthesized orchestral interjections of disco dance music. Offering a modern musical image with a distinctly South Asian flavour, the album…
- Alaap (Indian music)
alap, in the art musics of South Asia, improvised melody structures that reveal the musical characteristics of a raga. Variant forms of the word—alap in northern Indian music and alapana in Carnatic music (where the term ragam improvisation is also used)—are often found. Alap ordinarily constitutes
- ʿalâb (geology)
Mauritania: Soils: …in long ridges known as ʿalâb, which are sometimes 300 feet (90 metres) high; they frequently overlap with one another, forming a network of domes and basins.
- Alabama (Confederate ship)
Alabama claims: …centred on the Confederate cruiser Alabama, built in England and used against the Union as a commerce destroyer, which captured, sank, or burned 68 ships in 22 months before being sunk by the USS Kearsarge off Cherbourg, Fr. (June 1864).
- Alabama (state, United States)
Alabama, constituent state of the United States of America, admitted to the union in 1819 as the 22nd state. Alabama forms a roughly rectangular shape on the map, elongated in a north-south direction. It is bordered by Tennessee to the north, Georgia to the east, and Mississippi to the west. The
- Alabama A & M University (school, Normal, Alabama, United States)
Alabama Agricultural and Mechanical University, public, coeducational institution of higher learning in Normal, Alabama, U.S., a historically black school. The university comprises the schools of Graduate Studies and Extended Education, Agricultural and Environmental Sciences, Arts and Sciences,
- Alabama Agricultural and Mechanical University (school, Normal, Alabama, United States)
Alabama Agricultural and Mechanical University, public, coeducational institution of higher learning in Normal, Alabama, U.S., a historically black school. The university comprises the schools of Graduate Studies and Extended Education, Agricultural and Environmental Sciences, Arts and Sciences,
- Alabama claims (United States history)
Alabama claims, maritime grievances of the United States against Great Britain, accumulated during and after the American Civil War (1861–65). The claims are significant in international law for furthering the use of arbitration to settle disputes peacefully and for delineating certain
- Alabama Gang (stock-car racing)
Bobby Allison: Early life: …the roots of the “Alabama Gang,” a group of drivers that operated out of a shop near Birmingham.
- Alabama Platform (United States history)
Alabama Platform, in U.S. history, Southern political leader William L. Yancey’s response (1848) to the antislavery Wilmot Proviso (q.v.). The Alabama platform insisted that the U.S. government protect slavery in territories ceded to the United States by Mexico and that no territorial legislature
- Alabama Polytechnic Institute (university, Alabama, United States)
Auburn University, public, coeducational institution of higher education located in Auburn, Alabama, U.S. The university offers a broad range of undergraduate and graduate degree programs and is noted for its colleges of engineering and business. Degrees in nursing, pharmacy, and veterinary
- Alabama River (river, United States)
Alabama River, river in southern Alabama, U.S. It is formed by the Coosa and Tallapoosa rivers, 7 miles (11 km) northeast of Montgomery, winds westward to Selma, and then flows southward. Its navigable length is 305 miles (491 km), and the river drains 22,800 square miles (59,050 square km). It
- Alabama Shakes (American rock band)
Alabama Shakes, American roots rock quartet that achieved commercial and critical success with a genre-defying sound and electrifying live performances. The band released two well-received albums—Boys & Girls (2012) and Sound & Color (2015)—before frontwoman Brittany Howard embarked on a solo
- Alabama State University (university, Montgomery, Alabama, United States)
Alabama State University, public, coeducational institution of higher learning in Montgomery, Alabama, U.S. It is a historically black school, and its enrollment is predominantly African American. Alabama State offers bachelor’s and master’s degree programs in the schools of Music and Graduate
- Alabama v. Garrett (law case [2001])
Americans with Disabilities Act: In Alabama v. Garrett (2001), the majority ruled that state workers cannot sue a state for damages if that state violates the provisions of the ADA, but three years later, in Tennessee v. Lane (2004), the court decided in favour of two people with physical disabilities…
- Alabama, flag of (United States state flag)
U.S. state flag consisting of a white field with a red saltire (diagonal cross).During the Civil War (1861–65) an unofficial flag of blue with a yellow or white star represented the separation of Alabama from the Union. Another blue flag flew over the state capitol; its obverse side showed the
- Alabama, University of (university, Tuscaloosa, Alabama, United States)
University of Alabama, state university with campuses at Tuscaloosa (main campus), Birmingham, and Huntsville. All three branches offer a wide university curriculum and programs for bachelor’s, master’s, and doctorate degrees. The University of Alabama School of Law is in Tuscaloosa, and the School
- alabaster (mineral)
alabaster, fine-grained, massive gypsum that has been used for centuries for statuary, carvings, and other ornaments. It normally is snow-white and translucent but can be artificially dyed; it may be made opaque and similar in appearance to marble by heat treatment. Florence, Livorno, and Milan, in
- Alabaster, William (English scholar)
William Alabaster was an English poet, mystic, and scholar in Latin and Hebrew. He wrote a Latin tragedy, Roxana (1597, published 1632), that the 18th-century critic Samuel Johnson thought was the finest Latin writing in England prior to John Milton’s elegies. Alabaster was educated at the
- alabastron (flask)
alabastron, elongated, narrow-necked flask, used as a perfume or unguent container. The Greek alabastron has no handles but often lugs (ear-shaped projections), sometimes pierced with string holes. There are three types of classical alabastron: a basic Corinthian bulbous shape about 3 to 4 inches
- Alaca Hüyük (archaeological site, Turkey)
Alaca Hüyük, ancient Anatolian site northeast of the old Hittite capital of Hattusa at Boğazköy, north-central Turkey. Its excavation was begun by Makridi Bey in 1907 and resumed in 1935 by the Turkish Historical Society. Inside a sphinx gate, traces of a large Hittite building were discovered.
- Alacahöyük (archaeological site, Turkey)
Alaca Hüyük, ancient Anatolian site northeast of the old Hittite capital of Hattusa at Boğazköy, north-central Turkey. Its excavation was begun by Makridi Bey in 1907 and resumed in 1935 by the Turkish Historical Society. Inside a sphinx gate, traces of a large Hittite building were discovered.
- Alacaluf (people)
Alacaluf, South American Indian people, very few (about 10) in number, living on the eastern coast of Isla Wellington in southern Chile. Their culture closely resembles that of the extinct Chono (q.v.) to the north and the Yámana (q.v.) to the south. The Alacaluf environment is a wild and rugged
- Alacant (Spain)
Alicante, port city, capital of Alicante provincia (province), in the comunidad autónoma (autonomous community) of Valencia, southeastern Spain. It is located on Alicante Bay of the Mediterranean Sea. Founded as Akra Leuke (“White Summit”) by Phocaean Greeks (from the west coast of Asia Minor) in
- Alacoque, Saint Margaret Mary (French saint)
St. Claude La Colombière: …French Jesuit priest who assisted St. Margaret Mary Alacoque in establishing the devotion to the Sacred Heart. He was her confessor, and his writings and testimony helped to validate her mystical visions and elevated the Sacred Heart as an important feature of Roman Catholic devotion.
- ALAD (gene)
lead poisoning: Susceptibility and treatment: …in a gene known as ALAD (delta-aminolevulinate dehydratase) results in the production of an enzyme called ALAD2, which has an abnormally high binding affinity for lead. Both the normal enzyme, known as ALAD1, and the variant enzyme function in heme biosynthesis and therefore play an underlying role in the formation…
- ALAD1 (enzyme)
lead poisoning: Susceptibility and treatment: …the normal enzyme, known as ALAD1, and the variant enzyme function in heme biosynthesis and therefore play an underlying role in the formation of red blood cells. In the presence of lead, however, the activity of either form of the enzyme is inhibited, and, following lead exposure, individuals with the…
- ALAD2 (enzyme)
lead poisoning: Susceptibility and treatment: …production of an enzyme called ALAD2, which has an abnormally high binding affinity for lead. Both the normal enzyme, known as ALAD1, and the variant enzyme function in heme biosynthesis and therefore play an underlying role in the formation of red blood cells. In the presence of lead, however, the…
- Aladağ (mountain, Turkey)
Taurus Mountains: Aladağ (10,935 feet [3,333 metres]) in the Taurus proper and Mount Erciyes in the outlying offshoot of the Nur Mountains are the highest peaks; many other peaks reach between 10,000 and 12,000 feet (3,000–3,700 metres).
- Ālādāgh (mountain range, Iran)
Elburz Mountains: …the range merges into the Ālādāgh, the more southerly of the two principal ranges there. More commonly, however, the westernmost part of the range is called the Talish (Talysh, Talesh, or Tavālesh) Range, or the Bogrov Dāgh. The Elburz Range, in its strictest sense, forms part of the central stretch…
- Aladdin (work by Oehlenschläger)
Adam Gottlob Oehlenschläger: …cycles of lyric poems and Aladdin, a poetic drama on the writer’s own life, with the lamp of the story symbolizing intuitive poetic genius. Oehlenschläger was by now recognized as an important Romantic poet and an able practitioner of what Friedrich Schlegel termed Universalpoesie, a universal, historical, comparative approach to…
- Aladdin (fictional hero)
Aladdin, hero of one of the best-known stories in The Thousand and One Nights. The son of a deceased Chinese tailor and his poor widow, Aladdin is a lazy, careless boy who meets an African magician claiming to be his uncle. The magician brings Aladdin to the mouth of a cave and bids him enter and
- Aladdin (animated film by Clements [1992])
Alan Menken: …would become another Disney success, Aladdin (1992), and Menken subsequently teamed up with lyricist Tim Rice. Aladdin became one of Disney’s biggest animated hits, and it netted Menken two more Academy Awards. Newsies (1992), a live-action Disney musical for which Menken wrote songs (with lyricist Jack Feldman), was less successful.…
- Aladdin (film by Ritchie [2019])
Alan Menken: …and the Beast (2017) and Aladdin (2019).
- ALADDIN (American computer science project)
Manuel Blum: …they were part of the ALADDIN (algorithm adaptation dissemination and integration) project, which received funding from the U.S. National Science Foundation for matching algorithms developed in academia with potential industrial applications.
- ALADI (international organization)
Latin American Integration Association, organization that was established by the Treaty of Montevideo (August 1980) and became operational in March 1981. It seeks economic cooperation among its members. Original members were Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, Mexico, Paraguay,
- Aladins Problem (work by Jünger)
Ernst Jünger: In such later books as Aladins Problem (1983), he tended to condemn the militaristic attitudes that had led to Germany’s disastrous participation in the World Wars. Jünger’s Sämtliche Werke (“Complete Works”) were published in 18 volumes from 1978 to 1983.
- Aladura (Nigerian religion)
Aladura, (Yoruba: “Owners of Prayer”), religious movement among the Yoruba peoples of western Nigeria, embracing some of the independent prophet-healing churches of West Africa. The movement, which in the early 1970s had several hundred thousand adherents, began about 1918 among the younger elite
- Alâeddin Ali Aşık Paşa (Turkish author)
Aşık Paşa was a poet who was one of the most important figures in early Turkish literature. Very little about his life is known. A wealthy and respected figure in his community, he apparently was also a very religious sheikh (mystic leader, hence his name, Aşık, which means lover, given to an
- Alafroískïotos (work by Sikelianos)
Angelos Sikelianós: Sikelianós’ first important work, the Alafroískïotos (“The Light-Shadowed”), was published in 1909 and revealed his lyrical powers. It was followed by a group of outstanding lyrics. His next period was introduced by the philosophic poem Prólogos sti zoí (1917; “Prologue to Life”) and includes the long works Meter Theou (“Mother…
- Alagakonara (Sinhalese family)
Sri Lanka: Political changes: Meanwhile, the Alagakonara, a powerful Sinhalese family, attained a strong position at Rayigama, near the west coast; the Muslim traveler Ibn Baṭṭūṭah, who visited Sri Lanka in 1344, referred to one of the Alagakonaras as a sultan named Alkonar. In 1412 the capital was taken by Parakramabahu…
- Alaghez, Mount (mountain, Armenia)
Mount Aragats, mountain in Armenia, northwest of Yerevan and north of the Ararat Plain. The highest point in both Armenia and the Lesser Caucasus range (13,418 feet [4,090 m]), Aragats is a circular, shieldlike mountain composed of both lavas and tufas. A volcanic cone of recent geologic age lies
- Alagiyavanna Mahoṭṭāla (Sinhalese poet)
South Asian arts: Sinhalese literature: 10th century ad to 19th century: …exempla by the 17th-century poet Alagiyavanna Mohoṭṭāla.
- Alagna, Roberto (French opera singer)
Roberto Alagna is a French operatic lyric tenor who became known for both his vocal qualities and his flamboyant acting style. Alagna was born to Sicilian parents in a suburb of Paris and was discovered while he was singing for tips in a Paris pizzeria. Although he was mostly self-taught, his first
- Alagoas (state, Brazil)
Alagoas, estado (state) of northeastern Brazil. It is the second smallest of Brazil’s states and is an agricultural region in the early stages of industrialization. Situated on the northern bank of the São Francisco River, it is bounded on the north and west by the state of Pernambuco, on the east
- Alagoinhas (Brazil)
Alagoinhas, city, northeastern Bahia estado (state), northeastern Brazil, lying 35 miles (56 km) inland from the Atlantic coast at 607 feet (185 metres) above sea level. It was elevated to city rank in 1880, and its municipality is one of the largest orange-producing regions in the state. Bananas,
- Alagonakkara (king of Sri Lanka)
Zheng He: Naval expeditions: …the south—but encountered treachery from King Alagonakkara of Ceylon. Zheng defeated Alagonakkara’s forces and took the king back to Nanjing as a captive. In October 1409 Zheng He set out on his third voyage. This time, going beyond the seaports of India, he sailed to Hormuz on the Persian Gulf.…
- Alagöz, Mount (mountain, Armenia)
Mount Aragats, mountain in Armenia, northwest of Yerevan and north of the Ararat Plain. The highest point in both Armenia and the Lesser Caucasus range (13,418 feet [4,090 m]), Aragats is a circular, shieldlike mountain composed of both lavas and tufas. A volcanic cone of recent geologic age lies
- Alain (French philosopher)
Alain was a French philosopher whose work profoundly influenced several generations of readers. Graduating in philosophy, he taught at lycées in a number of towns, including Rouen, where he became involved in politics and began contributing a daily short article of 600 words to a Radical newspaper.
- Alain de Lille (French theologian)
Alain de Lille was a theologian and poet so celebrated for his varied learning that he was known as “the universal doctor.” Alain studied and taught at Paris, lived for some time at Montpellier, and later joined the Cistercians in Cîteaux. As a theologian, he shared in the mystic reaction of the
- Alain le Grand (French lord)
Albret Family: …grandson, Alain, was known as Alain le Grand (1440–1522). The surname refers not to his deeds but to the vast domains over which he ruled as one of the last feudal lords. A daughter, Charlotte (1480–1514), was married to Cesare Borgia. Alain’s son, Jean (d. 1516), became king of Navarre…
- Alain-Fournier (French author)
Alain-Fournier was a French writer whose only completed novel, Le Grand Meaulnes (1913; The Wanderer, or The Lost Domain), is a modern classic. Based on his happy childhood in a remote village in central France, Alain-Fournier’s novel reflects his longing for a lost world of delight. The hero, an
- Alais (France)
Alès, town, Gard département, Occitanie région, southeastern France. It lies along a bend of the Gardon d’Alès River, at the foot of the Cévennes mountains, north-northwest of Nîmes. The town’s name meant “industry” in the language of its 10th-century-bce Phoenician founders. Alestium was its Roman
- Alais, Peace of (French history)
Huguenot: …Huguenots were defeated, and the Peace of Alès was signed on June 28, 1629, whereby the Huguenots were allowed to retain their freedom of conscience but lost all their military advantages. No longer a political entity, the Huguenots became loyal subjects of the king. Their remaining rights under the Edict…
- Alajuela (Costa Rica)
Alajuela, city, northwestern Costa Rica. It lies in the Valle Central at an elevation of 3,141 feet (957 metres). Known in colonial days as Villahermosa, the town was active in support of independence from Spain in 1821; five years later it suffered from a plot to restore Spanish control over Costa
- Alajuela Lake (lake, Panama)
Panama Canal: The canal: …waters from Alajuela Lake (Lake Madden; formed by the Madden Dam), covers an area of 166 square miles (430 square km). The channel through the lake varies in depth from 46 to 85 feet (14 to 26 meters) and extends for about 23 miles (37 km) to Gamboa. Gaillard…
- Alajuela, Lago (lake, Panama)
Panama Canal: The canal: …waters from Alajuela Lake (Lake Madden; formed by the Madden Dam), covers an area of 166 square miles (430 square km). The channel through the lake varies in depth from 46 to 85 feet (14 to 26 meters) and extends for about 23 miles (37 km) to Gamboa. Gaillard…
- Alakaluf (people)
Alacaluf, South American Indian people, very few (about 10) in number, living on the eastern coast of Isla Wellington in southern Chile. Their culture closely resembles that of the extinct Chono (q.v.) to the north and the Yámana (q.v.) to the south. The Alacaluf environment is a wild and rugged
- alake (African official)
Ogun: …Ake, the residence of the alake (the traditional ruler of Egbaland), built in 1854 and noted for its collection of antiquities and relics; and the Centenary Hall, all in Abeokuta. There are teacher training colleges in the state and a university of agriculture at Abeokuta. Area 6,472 square miles (16,762…
- Alaknanda River (river, India)
Ganges River: Physiography: Its five headstreams—the Bhagirathi, the Alaknanda, the Mandakini, the Dhauliganga, and the Pindar—all rise in the mountainous region of northern Uttarakhand state. Of those, the two main headstreams are the Alaknanda (the longer of the two), which rises about 30 miles (50 km) north of the Himalayan peak of Nanda…
- Alaköl, Lake (lake, Kazakhstan)
Lake Alakol, salt lake in Kazakhstan, 110 miles (180 km) east of Lake Balqash, near the border with the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, China. Lake Alakol has a drainage basin of about 26,500 square miles (68,700 square km). The lake covers an area of 1,025 square miles, reaches a depth of about
- Alakol, Lake (lake, Kazakhstan)
Lake Alakol, salt lake in Kazakhstan, 110 miles (180 km) east of Lake Balqash, near the border with the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, China. Lake Alakol has a drainage basin of about 26,500 square miles (68,700 square km). The lake covers an area of 1,025 square miles, reaches a depth of about
- Alakol, Ozero (lake, Kazakhstan)
Lake Alakol, salt lake in Kazakhstan, 110 miles (180 km) east of Lake Balqash, near the border with the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, China. Lake Alakol has a drainage basin of about 26,500 square miles (68,700 square km). The lake covers an area of 1,025 square miles, reaches a depth of about
- ‘alalā (bird)
crow: moneduloides) and the ‘alalā, or Hawaiian crow (C. hawaiiensis)—use stick-type foraging tools to obtain food from small holes and crevices. Such sophisticated tool use is only practiced by a handful of animal species.
- Alalakh (ancient Syrian city, Turkey)
Alalakh, ancient Syrian city in the Orontes (Asi) valley, southern Turkey. Excavations (1936–49) by Sir Leonard Woolley uncovered numerous impressive buildings, including a massive structure known as the palace of Yarim-Lim, dating from c. 1780 bce, when Alalakh was the chief city of the district
- Alalkha (ancient Syrian city, Turkey)
Alalakh, ancient Syrian city in the Orontes (Asi) valley, southern Turkey. Excavations (1936–49) by Sir Leonard Woolley uncovered numerous impressive buildings, including a massive structure known as the palace of Yarim-Lim, dating from c. 1780 bce, when Alalakh was the chief city of the district
- Alalu (Anatolian god)
Teshub: …the pantheon after the gods Alalu, Anu, and Kumarbi had successively been deposed and banished to the netherworld. Another myth, the “Song of Ullikummi,” describes the struggle between Teshub and a stone monster that grew out of the sea. Teshub’s consort was Hebat (Queen of Heaven), and they had a…
- Alam al-Halfa, Battle of (European history)
World War II: Libya and Egypt, autumn 1941–summer 1942: …the southwest of the ridge ʿAlam al-Halfaʾ. Shortage of fuel on the German side and reinforced defense on the British, together with intensification of the British bombing, spelled the defeat of the offensive, and Rommel on September 2 decided to make a gradual withdrawal.
- Alam ara (film by Irani [1931])
Prithviraj Kapoor: …first sound film, Ardeshir Irani’s Alam ara (1931; “The Light of the World”), he demonstrated his greatest asset—a powerful, booming voice. Throughout the 1930s Kapoor played lead roles in Hindi films produced by the New Theatres, a studio based in Calcutta (now Kolkata). The 1932 film Rajrani Meera, directed by…
- ʿĀlam Shah, ʿAlāʾ-al-Dīn (Sayyid ruler)
India: The rise of regional states: The last Sayyid ruler, ʿAlāʾ al-Dīn ʿĀlam Shah (reigned 1445–51), peacefully surrendered Delhi to his nominal vassal, the Afghan Bahlūl Lodī (reigned 1451–89), and retired to the Badaun district, which he retained until his death in 1478. Before he moved to Delhi, Bahlūl Lodī had already carved out a…
- ʿĀlam, Shāh (Mughal emperor)
Treaties of Banaras: …result of the Mughal emperor Shah ʿĀlam’s cession of Allahabad and Kora to the warlike Marathas as the price of their support. Warren Hastings, the British governor, ceded Allahabad and Kora to Shujāʿ and promised to support him against the menacing Afghan Rohillas in return for cash payments. This move,…
- Alamán, Lucas (Mexican politician)
Lucas Alamán was a politician and historian, the leader of Mexican conservatives for nearly 30 years and the spokesman for a strong, centralized government that would support industrialization, educational expansion, and agricultural modernization. Living during a corrupt and brutal period of
- Alamance Battleground State Historic Site (historical site, North Carolina, United States)
Burlington: Nearby is the Alamance Battleground State Historic Site, where the Regulators, a group of dissident colonists, were defeated (May 16, 1771) by militia dispatched by the royal governor. Elon College (1889) is nearby. Inc. 1893. Pop. (2000) 44,917; Burlington Metro Area, 130,800; (2010) 49,963; Burlington Metro Area, 151,131.
- Alamani (people)
Alemanni, a Germanic people first mentioned in connection with the Roman attack on them in ad 213. In the following decades, their pressure on the Roman provinces became severe; they occupied the Agri Decumates c. 260, and late in the 5th century they expanded into Alsace and northern Switzerland,
- Alamanni (people)
Alemanni, a Germanic people first mentioned in connection with the Roman attack on them in ad 213. In the following decades, their pressure on the Roman provinces became severe; they occupied the Agri Decumates c. 260, and late in the 5th century they expanded into Alsace and northern Switzerland,
- Alamanni, Luigi (Italian author)
Italian literature: Poetry: …poet Virgil’s Georgics, and by Luigi Alamanni, in six books on agriculture and rustic life called La coltivazione (1546).
- ālambana-pratyaya (Buddhist philosophy)
pratyaya: …object as a cause (ālambana-pratyaya), since the object present in the preceding moment becomes the cause of the mental activity for functioning; and (4) the superior cause (adhipati-pratyaya), which refers to all causes, except those stated above, that are effective to produce a thing or not to hinder the…
- Alamblak (people)
Oceanic art and architecture: The Sepik River regions: …were figures carved by the Alamblak in the eastern Sepik Hills. The figures, known as yipwon, represent patron spirits of hunting and war. They are topped by a downcurved hook; directly beneath this is a human face, and below that is a vertical series of downcurved hooks. An oval element,…
- alambre (food)
alambre, a Mexican dish of chopped meats and vegetables, served with corn or flour tortillas. The most common meats used are beef, chicken, and pork, including bacon. Some regional variations, however, feature goat or chorizo. Other ingredients typically include onions, peppers, tomato, and cheese.
- Alameda (California, United States)
Alameda, city, Alameda county, California, U.S. It lies on a 6.5-mile- (11-km-) long by 1-mile- (1.6-km-) wide island in San Francisco Bay, across the Oakland Harbor Channel from Oakland, with which it is connected by bridges and underground tunnels. The site was originally a peninsula that was
- Alamein, Battles of El- (World War II)
Battles of El-Alamein, linked battles in World War II, fought from July 1–27 and October 23—November 11, 1942, pitting German and Italian against British, Australian, New Zealander, South African, and Indian forces in coastal central Egypt and resulting in a pivotal Allied victory. After the First
- Alamein, El- (Egypt)
El-Alamein, coastal town in northwestern Egypt, about 60 miles (100 km) west of Alexandria, that was the site of two major battles between British and Axis forces in 1942 during World War II. El-Alamein is the seaward (northern) end of a 40-mile-wide bottleneck that is flanked on the south by the
- ʿĀlamgīr (Mughal emperor)
Aurangzeb was the emperor of the Mughal Empire from 1658 to 1707, the last of the great Mughals. Under him, the Mughal Empire reached its greatest extent, although his policies helped lead to its dissolution. Aurangzeb was the third son of the emperor Shah Jahān and Mumtaz Mahal (for whom the Taj
- ʿĀlamgīr II (Mughal emperor)
ʿĀlamgīr II was a Mughal emperor of India who disgraced his reign (1754–59) by his weakness and his disregard for his subjects’ welfare. A son of the emperor Jahāndār Shah (reigned 1712–13), ʿĀlamgīr was always the puppet of more powerful men and was placed on the throne by the imperial vizier
- Ālamgīrpur (archaeological site, India)
India: Extent: …the Himalayan foothills, where at Alamgirpur, north of Delhi, the easternmost Harappan (or perhaps, more properly, Late Harappan) settlement has been discovered and partly excavated. If the area covered by these sites is compared with that of the Early Harappan settlements, it will be seen that there is an expansion…
- Alamillo Bridge (bridge, Seville, Spain)
Santiago Calatrava: Calatrava’s Alamillo Bridge (1987–92), built for this purpose, instantly received international attention. The dramatic structure’s central feature is a 466-foot (142-metre) pylon that inclines asymmetrically away from the river, supporting a span with more than a dozen pairs of cables. The dramatic image, resembling a harp,…
- alamiqui (mammal family)
solenodon, (family Solenodontidae), either species of large shrewlike mammal found only on the islands of Cuba and Hispaniola. Solenodons have a chunky body with short, stocky legs. Various skin glands give it a goatlike odour. The elongate head has very small eyes and tapers to a long, flexible
- Alamo (monument, San Antonio, Texas, United States)
Alamo, 18th-century Franciscan mission in San Antonio, Texas, U.S., that was the site of a historic resistance effort by a small group of determined fighters for Texan independence (1836) from Mexico. The building was originally the chapel of the Mission San Antonio de Valero, which had been
- Alamo (missile)
rocket and missile system: Air-to-air: The AA-10 Alamo, a medium-range missile similar to the Amos, apparently had passive radar guidance designed to home onto carrier-wave emissions from U.S. aircraft firing the semiactive radar-homing Sparrow. The AA-11 Archer was a short-range missile used in combination with the Amos and Alamo.
- Alamo Bowl (football game)
Texas: Sports and recreation: … in El Paso, and the Alamo Bowl in San Antonio.
- Alamo cottonwood (plant)
poplar: Common species: …Fremont, or Alamo, cottonwood (P. fremontii) is the tallest of the cottonwoods and is found throughout southwestern North America.
- Alamo, Battle of the (San Antonio, Texas, United States [1836])
Battle of the Alamo, battle during the Texas Revolution that occurred from February 23 to March 6, 1836, in San Antonio, Texas. It ended in a decisive victory for Mexican forces over “Texian” volunteers, who were annihilated. It also became a symbol of fierce resistance for the people of Texas and
- Alamo, The (film by Wayne [1960])
The Alamo, American epic film, released in 1960, that was John Wayne’s dream project about the Battle of the Alamo (1836). Frontier legend Davy Crockett (played by Wayne) and his men arrive in San Antonio, Texas, and volunteer to help defend the Alamo, a hopelessly outgunned mission-turned-fort
- Alamogordo (New Mexico, United States)
Alamogordo, city, seat (1899) of Otero county, southern New Mexico, U.S. It lies at the western base of the Sacramento Mountains and east of the Tularosa Basin. Founded by John A. and Charles B. Eddy in 1898 and named for its large cottonwood trees (Spanish: alamo “cottonwood,” gordo “fat”), it
- Alamosa (Colorado, United States)
Alamosa, city, seat (1913) of Alamosa county, southern Colorado, U.S. It lies along the Rio Grande in the San Luis Valley, on the western flank of the Sangre de Cristo Mountains. Founded as Garland City near the site of a small encampment outside the gates of Fort Garland (1858), a cavalry post
- Alamuddin, Amal (Lebanese-English lawyer)
George Clooney: Personal life: …he wed Lebanese English lawyer Amal Alamuddin. The couple had twins, Alexander and Ella, in 2017.
- Alamūt (ancient fortress, Iran)
Nizārī Ismāʿīliyyah: …captured the hill fortress of Alamūt near Kazvin, Iran. By the end of the 11th century, Ḥasan, as grand master or leader of the sect, commanded from this centre both a chain of strongholds all over Iran and Iraq and also a network of propagandists and agents in enemy camps…