• maguey (plant and fibre)

    maguey, any of several plants in the Agave genus (family Asparagaceae), especially A. americana, and the fibre obtained from its leaves. A. americana is shorter and stiffer than henequen, with physical properties similar to the hard leaf fibre cantala, and is used for rope and cordage. In South

  • magüey, gusanos de (food)

    Lepidoptera: Importance: …Megathymidae), known in Mexico as gusanos de magüey, are both consumed domestically and canned and exported for consumption as hors d’oeuvres. The South American cactus moth (Cactoblastis cactorum) has been highly beneficial in weed control, clearing more than 150 million ha (60 million acres) in Australia of alien prickly pear…

  • Magufuli, John (president of Tanzania)

    Tanzania: Challenges into the 21st century: …2015 it selected government minister John Magufuli, who had a reputation for being ethical and tough on corruption. Longtime CCM stalwart and former prime minister Lowassa left the party after Magufuli’s selection, angered at being passed over for the spot; he soon joined Chadema. Chadema, meanwhile, had worked to increase…

  • Maguindanao (people)

    Maguindanao, ethnolinguistic group living primarily in south-central Mindanao, the largest island in the southern Philippines. With a name meaning “people of the flood plain,” the Maguindanao are most heavily concentrated along the shores and in the flood lands of the Pulangi-Mindanao River basin,

  • Maguindanaon (people)

    Maguindanao, ethnolinguistic group living primarily in south-central Mindanao, the largest island in the southern Philippines. With a name meaning “people of the flood plain,” the Maguindanao are most heavily concentrated along the shores and in the flood lands of the Pulangi-Mindanao River basin,

  • Maguire, Gregory (American author)

    Gregory Maguire is an American fantasy novelist known for his Wicked Years series, which includes the best seller Wicked: The Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West (1995). That book was made into a blockbuster musical in 2003 and a film in 2024. Maguire’s mother died of complications from

  • Maguire, Gregory Peter (American author)

    Gregory Maguire is an American fantasy novelist known for his Wicked Years series, which includes the best seller Wicked: The Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West (1995). That book was made into a blockbuster musical in 2003 and a film in 2024. Maguire’s mother died of complications from

  • Maguire, Máiread (Northern Irish peace activist)

    Máiread Maguire is a Northern Irish peace activist who, with Betty Williams and Ciaran McKeown, founded the Peace People, a grassroots movement of both Roman Catholic and Protestant citizens dedicated to ending the sectarian strife in Northern Ireland. For their work, Maguire and Williams shared

  • Maguire, Martie (American musician)

    the Chicks: The group’s principal members include Martie Maguire (née Erwin; b. October 12, 1969, York, Pennsylvania, U.S.), Emily Robison (née Erwin; b. August 16, 1972, Pittsfield, Massachusetts, U.S.), and Natalie Maines (b. October 14, 1974, Lubbock, Texas, U.S.). Early members of the group included guitarist Robin Lynn Macy, who left in…

  • magupat (Zoroastrian priesthood)

    ancient Iran: Zoroastrianism: …its own mobed (“priest”; originally magupat, “chief priest”). At their head stood the mobedān mobed (“priest of priests”), who, in addition to his purely religious jurisdiction, appears, especially in later times, to have had a more or less decisive voice in the choice of a successor to the throne and…

  • Magura National Park (park, Poland)

    Podkarpackie: Geography: Magura National Park protects part of the Lower Beskid Mountains and contains the ruins of both a 9th-century castle and villages and Orthodox churches abandoned by the Ruthenians, or Lemks, an ethnic group that lived in the region for centuries prior to being deported at…

  • magus (Persian priesthood)

    magus, member of an ancient Persian clan specializing in cultic activities. The name is the Latinized form of magoi (e.g., in Herodotus 1:101), the ancient Greek transliteration of the Iranian original. From it the word magic is derived. It is disputed whether the magi were from the beginning

  • Magus, The (book by Fowles)

    John Fowles: He returned to fiction with The Magus (1965, rev. ed. 1977; filmed 1968). Set on a Greek island, the book centres on an English schoolteacher who struggles to discern between fantasy and reality after befriending a mysterious local man. The French Lieutenant’s Woman (1969; filmed 1981), arguably Fowles’s best-known work,…

  • Mağusa (Cyprus)

    Famagusta, major port in the Turkish Cypriot-administered portion of northern Cyprus. It lies on the island’s east coast in a bay between Capes Greco and Eloea and is about 37 miles (55 km) east of Nicosia. The port possesses the deepest harbor in Cyprus. Famagusta is a Frankish corruption of its

  • Maguzawa (people)

    Hausa: …minority of Hausa, known as Maguzawa, or Bunjawa, remained pagan.

  • Magway (Myanmar)

    Magwe, town, west-central Myanmar (Burma). The town is on the Irrawaddy River opposite Minbu. It is the site of Magwe College, affiliated to the Arts and Science University at Mandalay, and has an airfield. The surrounding area is part of the dry zone of Myanmar’s central basin between the

  • Magwe (Myanmar)

    Magwe, town, west-central Myanmar (Burma). The town is on the Irrawaddy River opposite Minbu. It is the site of Magwe College, affiliated to the Arts and Science University at Mandalay, and has an airfield. The surrounding area is part of the dry zone of Myanmar’s central basin between the

  • Magwitch, Abel (fictional character)

    Abel Magwitch, fictional character, an escaped convict who plays a major role in the growth and development of Pip, the protagonist in Charles Dickens’s novel Great Expectations

  • Magyar (people)

    Hungarian, member of a people speaking the Hungarian language of the Finno-Ugric family and living primarily in Hungary, but represented also by large minority populations in Romania, Croatia, Vojvodina (Yugoslavia), Slovakia, and Ukraine. Those in Romania, living mostly in the area of the former

  • Magyar Demokrata Fórum (political party, Hungary)

    Hungary: Political reforms: …the new parties was the Hungarian Democratic Forum, followed by Fidesz and the Alliance of Free Democrats. Soon several of the traditional political parties that had been destroyed or emasculated by the communists in the late 1940s also emerged, including the Independent Smallholders’ Party, the Social Democratic Party, the National…

  • Magyar Köztársaság

    Hungary, landlocked country of central Europe. The capital is Budapest. At the end of World War I, defeated Hungary lost 71 percent of its territory as a result of the Treaty of Trianon (1920). Since then, grappling with the loss of more than two-thirds of their territory and people, Hungarians

  • Magyar language

    Hungarian language, member of the Finno-Ugric group of the Uralic language family, spoken primarily in Hungary but also in Slovakia, Romania, and Yugoslavia, as well as in scattered groups elsewhere in the world. Hungarian belongs to the Ugric branch of Finno-Ugric, along with the Ob-Ugric

  • Magyar Museum (Hungarian publication)

    János Batsányi: …Batsányi became the editor of Magyar Museum and emerged as an eloquent advocate of social progress and Enlightenment ideals in Hungary. In his political poetry he voiced anti-royalist sentiments and advocated revolution and radical social change. He also wrote lyric poems, among which are many fine elegies. He was an…

  • Magyar Szocialista Párt (political party, Hungary)

    Hungarian Socialist Party (MSzP), left-wing Hungarian political party. Although the Hungarian Socialist Party (MSzP) was founded in 1989, its origins date to 1948, when the Hungarian Social Democratic Party merged into what was first called the Hungarian Workers’ Party and then, following the

  • Magyarization (social movement)

    Hungary: Social and economic developments: The Magyarization of the towns had proceeded at an astounding rate. Nearly all middle-class Jews and Germans and many middle-class Slovaks and Ruthenes had been Magyarized.

  • Magyarország

    Hungary, landlocked country of central Europe. The capital is Budapest. At the end of World War I, defeated Hungary lost 71 percent of its territory as a result of the Treaty of Trianon (1920). Since then, grappling with the loss of more than two-thirds of their territory and people, Hungarians

  • Magyarország 1514-ben (work by Eötvös)

    József, Baron Eötvös: …the 16th-century Hungarian peasant rebellion, Magyarország 1514-ben (1847; “Hungary in 1514”) mobilized public opinion against serfdom.

  • Magyarországi Református Egyház (Hungarian Protestant denomination)

    Reformed Church in Hungary, Reformed church that developed in Hungary during and after the 16th-century Protestant Reformation. The influence of the Reformation was felt early in Hungary. A synod at Erdod adopted the Lutheran Augsburg Confession in 1545, and by 1567 the Synod of Debrecen adopted

  • mah-jongg (game)

    mah-jongg, game of Chinese origin, played with tiles, or pais, that are similar in physical description to those used in dominoes but engraved with Chinese symbols and characters and divided into suits and honours. A fad in England, the United States, and Australia in the mid-1920s, the game was

  • Maha Bodhi Society (religious organization)

    Maha Bodhi Society, an organization that was established to encourage Buddhist studies in India and abroad. The society was founded in Ceylon (now Sri Lanka) in 1891 by Anagarika Dharmapala; one of its original goals was the restoration of the Mahabodhi temple at Buddh Gaya (Bihar state, India),

  • Maha Bodhi Temple (temple, Bodh Gaya, India)

    Mahabodhi Temple, one of the holiest sites of Buddhism, marking the spot of the Buddha’s Enlightenment (Bodhi). It is located in Bodh Gaya (in central Bihar state, northeastern India) on the banks of the Niranjana River. The Mahabodhi Temple is one of the oldest brick temples in India. The original

  • Maha chat (Thai literature)

    Thai literature: …includes religious works such as Maha chat (“The Great Birth”), later rewritten as Maha chat kham luang (“The Royal Version of the Great Birth”), the Thai version of the Vessantara jataka, which recounts the story of the future Buddha’s penultimate life on earth; Lilit phra Lo (“The Story of Prince…

  • Maha chat kham luang (Thai literature)

    Thai literature: …includes religious works such as Maha chat (“The Great Birth”), later rewritten as Maha chat kham luang (“The Royal Version of the Great Birth”), the Thai version of the Vessantara jataka, which recounts the story of the future Buddha’s penultimate life on earth; Lilit phra Lo (“The Story of Prince…

  • Maha Guru, Geschichte eines Gottes (work by Gutzkow)

    Karl Gutzkow: …attention with the publication of Maha Guru, Geschichte eines Gottes (1833; “Maha Guru, Story of a God”), a fantastic satirical romance. In 1835 he published Wally, die Zweiflerin (“Wally, the Doubter”), an attack on marriage, coloured by religious skepticism, that marked the beginning of the revolt of the Young Germany…

  • Maha Maya (mother of Gautama Buddha)

    Maha Maya, the mother of Gautama Buddha; she was the wife of Raja Shuddhodana. According to Buddhist legend, Maha Maya dreamed that a white elephant with six tusks entered her right side, which was interpreted to mean that she had conceived a child who would become either a world ruler or a buddha.

  • Maha Moggallana (disciple of the Buddha)

    Buddhism: Kings and yogis: Among the Buddha’s disciples, Maha Moggallana was especially known for his yogic attainments and magical powers. Notably, he traveled through various cosmic realms, bringing back to the Buddha reports of things that were transpiring in those worlds. In later Theravada accounts Maha Moggallana’s successor, the monk Phra Malai, visited…

  • Maha Nuwara (Sri Lanka)

    Kandy, city in the Central Highlands of Sri Lanka, at an elevation of 1,640 feet (500 metres). It lies on the Mahaweli River on the shore of an artificial lake that was constructed (1807) by the last Kandyan king, Sri Wickrama Rajasinha. Kanda, the word from which Kandy is derived, is a Sinhalese

  • Maha Sarakham (Thailand)

    Maha Sarakham, town, northeastern Thailand. Maha Sarakham is located at a road junction on a bend of the Chi River. Rice is widely grown in the surrounding region, particularly in shallow river valleys, and freshwater fishing is also important. Pop. (2000)

  • Maha Shivaratri (Hindu festival)

    Maha Shivaratri, the most important sectarian festival of the year for devotees of the Hindu god Shiva. The 14th day of the dark half (waning moon) of each lunar month is specially sacred to Shiva, but when it occurs in the month of Magha (January–February) and especially in the month of Phalguna

  • Maha Sila Viravong (Lao scholar)

    Lao literature: Modern Lao literature: …period include three children of Maha Sila Viravong, an important scholar of traditional Lao literature, history, and culture: Pakian Viravong, Duangdeuan Viravong, and Dara Viravong (pseudonyms Pa Nai, Dauk Ket, and Duang Champa, respectively). An equally important writer was Outhine Bounyavong, Maha Sila Viravong’s son-in-law, who remained a notable writer…

  • Maha Thammaracha (vassal ruler of Siam)

    Naresuan: …Siam and placed Naresuan’s father, Maha Thammaracha, on the throne as his vassal. The capital, Ayutthaya, was pillaged, thousands of Siamese were deported to Myanmar (Burma) as slaves, and Siam then suffered numerous invasions from Cambodia. At the age of 16 Naresuan was also made a vassal of Myanmar and…

  • Maha Vajiralongkorn Bodindradebayavarangkun (king of Thailand)

    Vajiralongkorn is the 10th king of Thailand’s Chakri Dynasty. He formally accepted the throne on December 1, 2016, although his reign officially began following the death of his father, Bhumibol Adulyadej, on October 13, 2016. Vajiralongkorn’s coronation was held on May 4, 2019. Early in his reign,

  • Mahā-aṭṭhakathā (Buddhist literature)

    Buddhism: Early noncanonical texts in Pali: …probably was part of the Maha-atthakatha, the commentarial literature that formed the basis of the works by Buddhaghosha and others. The accounts it contains are reflected in the Dipavamsa (Pali: “History of the Island”), which appears to be a poor redaction in Pali of an earlier Old Sinhalese version. The…

  • maha-ksatrapa (Indian political official)

    India: Central Asian rulers: …status came to be called maha-kshatrapa; they frequently issued inscriptions reflecting whatever era they chose to follow, and they minted their own coins, indicating a more independent status than is generally associated with governors. Imperial titles also were taken by the Indo-Greeks, such as basileus basileōn (“king of kings”), similar…

  • Maha-Vairocana (Buddha)

    Vairochana, the supreme Buddha, as regarded by many Mahayana Buddhists of East Asia and of Tibet, Nepal, and Java. Some Buddhists regard Vairochana, or Mahavairochana, as a being separate from the five “self-born” Dhyani-Buddhas, one of whom is known as Vairochana. Among the Shingon sect of Japan,

  • Mahābād (Iran)

    Mahābād, city, northwestern Iran. The city lies south of Lake Urmia in a fertile, narrow valley at an elevation of 4,272 feet (1,302 metres). There are a number of unexcavated tells, or mounds, on the plain of Mahābād in this part of the Azerbaijan region. The region was the centre of the

  • Mahabaleshwar (India)

    Mahabaleshwar, resort town, southwestern Maharashtra state, western India. It lies about 40 miles (64 km) southeast of Mumbai (Bombay) and is northwest of the town of Satara. At an elevation of 4,718 feet (1,438 metres) in the Sahyadri Hills of the Western Ghats, the town commands an excellent view

  • Mahabalipuram (historical town, India)

    Mamallapuram, historic town, northeast Tamil Nadu state, southeastern India. It lies along the Coromandel Coast of the Bay of Bengal 37 miles (60 km) south of Chennai (Madras). The town’s religious centre was founded by a 7th-century-ce Hindu Pallava king—Narasimhavarman, also known as Mamalla—for

  • Mahabandula (Myanmar general)

    Maha Bandula was a Myanmar general who fought against the British in the First Anglo-Burmese War (1824–26). In 1819 Maha Bandula served in the Myanmar army occupying Manipur, and two years later he commanded a second Myanmar force in the conquest of Assam. King Bagyidaw subsequently appointed him

  • Mahābat Khān (Mughal leader)

    India: Developments in the Deccan: …in 1622 and later of Mahābat Khan, the queen’s principal ally, who had been deputed to subdue the prince.

  • Mahabat Khan Mosque (mosque, Peshāwar, Pakistan)

    Peshawar: …the pure white mosque of Mahabat Khan (1630), a remarkable monument of Mughal architecture; Victoria memorial hall; and Government House. There are many parks, and the Chowk Yadgar and the town hall are other places of social and public assembly. Coffeehouses also are popular. Gardens and suburbs are outside the…

  • Mahābhārat Range (mountains, Nepal)

    Nepal: Relief: …14,000 feet, lie between the Mahābhārat Range and the Great Himalayas. The ridges of the Mahābhārat Range present a steep escarpment toward the south and a relatively gentle slope toward the north. To the north of the Mahābhārat Range, which encloses the valley of Kathmandu, are the more lofty ranges…

  • Mahabharata (Indian epic)

    Mahabharata, one of the two Sanskrit epic poems of ancient India (the other being the Ramayana). The Mahabharata is an important source of information on the development of Hinduism between 400 bce and 200 ce and is regarded by Hindus as both a text about dharma (Hindu moral law) and a history

  • Mahabhashya (work by Patanjali)

    Patanjali: …(separateness); and the second, the Mahabhashya (“Great Commentary”), which is both a defense of the grammarian Panini against his chief critic and detractor Katyayana and a refutation of some of Panini’s aphorisms.

  • Mahabodhi Society (religious organization)

    Maha Bodhi Society, an organization that was established to encourage Buddhist studies in India and abroad. The society was founded in Ceylon (now Sri Lanka) in 1891 by Anagarika Dharmapala; one of its original goals was the restoration of the Mahabodhi temple at Buddh Gaya (Bihar state, India),

  • Mahabodhi Temple (temple, Pagan, Myanmar)

    Pagan: …are the late 12th-century pyramidal Mahabodhi, built as a copy of the temple at the site of the Buddha’s enlightenment at Bodh Gaya, in India, and the Ananda Temple just beyond the east gate, founded in 1091 under King Kyanzittha. By the time the Thatpyinnyu Temple was built (1144), Mon…

  • Mahabodhi Temple (temple, Bodh Gaya, India)

    Mahabodhi Temple, one of the holiest sites of Buddhism, marking the spot of the Buddha’s Enlightenment (Bodhi). It is located in Bodh Gaya (in central Bihar state, northeastern India) on the banks of the Niranjana River. The Mahabodhi Temple is one of the oldest brick temples in India. The original

  • Mahadaji Sindhia (Maratha leader)

    India: Subordinate Maratha rulers: …during the long reign of Mahadaji Sindhia, which began after Panipat and continued to 1794, that the family’s fortunes were truly consolidated.

  • Mahadammayaza (king of Myanmar)

    Toungoo Dynasty: …half, until the death of Mahadammayaza (reigned 1733–52), but never again ruled all of Myanmar.

  • Mahadeo Hills (hills, India)

    Mahadeo Hills, sandstone hills located in the northern part of the Satpura Range, in southern Madhya Pradesh state, central India. The hills have small plateaus and steep scarps that were formed during the Carboniferous Period (about 360 million to 300 million years ago). The hills have a gentle

  • Mahādevā temple (building, Ittagi, India)

    South Asian arts: Medieval temple architecture: South Indian style of Karnataka: With the Mahādevā temple at Ittagi (c. 1112) the transition is complete, the extremely rich and profuse decoration characteristic of this shrine being found in all work that follows. Dating from the reign of the Hoysaḷa dynasty (c. 1141) is a twin Hoysaḷeśvara temple at Halebīd, the…

  • Mahadevi (Hindu poet-saint)

    Mahadevi was a Hindu poet-saint of the Karnataka region of India. Married to a local king against her will, Mahadevi subsequently left her husband and renounced the world. Legend has it that she wandered naked, singing songs of passionate love for her “true husband,” the god Shiva. Some of her

  • Mahadeviyakka (Hindu poet-saint)

    Mahadevi was a Hindu poet-saint of the Karnataka region of India. Married to a local king against her will, Mahadevi subsequently left her husband and renounced the world. Legend has it that she wandered naked, singing songs of passionate love for her “true husband,” the god Shiva. Some of her

  • Mahagonny (opera by Brecht and Weill)

    Mahagonny, opera in 20 scenes with music by Kurt Weill and text by Bertolt Brecht, published in 1929 and performed in German as Aufstieg und Fall der Stadt Mahagonny in 1930. The opera’s premiere in Leipzig was disrupted by Nazi sympathizers and others hostile to the Weimar Republic. Mahagonny is

  • Mahaica River (river, Guyana)

    Guyana: Drainage: …shorter rivers, including the Pomeroon, the Mahaica, the Mahaicony, and the Abary.

  • Mahaicony River (river, Guyana)

    Guyana: Drainage: including the Pomeroon, the Mahaica, the Mahaicony, and the Abary.

  • mahajan (Indian guild)

    Gujarat: Cultural life: …craft guilds known as the mahajans. Often coterminous with castes—and largely autonomous—the guilds have in the past solved disputes, acted as channels of philanthropy, and encouraged arts and other cultural activities.

  • Mahajana Eksath Peramuna (political party, Sri Lanka)

    S.W.R.D. Bandaranaike: …the Mahajana Eksath Peramuna (MEP; People’s United Front), a political alliance of four nationalist-socialist parties, which swept the election; he became prime minister on April 12, 1956.

  • mahājanapada (historical state, India)

    Uttar Pradesh: The Buddhist-Hindu period: …7th century bce, when 16 mahajanapadas (great states) in northern India were contending for supremacy. Of those, seven fell entirely within the present-day boundaries of Uttar Pradesh. From the 5th century bce to the 6th century ce, the region was mostly under the control of powers centred outside the modern…

  • Mahajanga (Madagascar)

    Mahajanga, town and major port, northwestern Madagascar. It lies on the island’s northwest coast, at the mouth of the Betsiboka River, whose estuary widens there into Bombetoka Bay. The town was the capital of the 18th-century kingdom of Boina. The French occupied Mahajanga in 1895 at the beginning

  • Mahākāla (Hindu deity)

    Hinduism: Myths of time and eternity: …in his destructive aspect as Mahakala and is extended to his consort, the goddess Kali, or Mahakali. The speculations on time reflect the doctrine of the eternal return in the philosophy of transmigration. The universe returns, just as a soul returns after death to be born again. In the oldest…

  • Mahākāla (Buddhist deity)

    Mahākāla, in Tibetan Buddhism, one of the eight fierce protective deities. See

  • Mahakam River (river, Indonesia)

    Mahakam River, river of east-central Indonesian Borneo (Kalimantan). It rises in Borneo’s central mountain range and flows east-southeast through southern East Kalimantan province for about 400 miles (650 km) before emptying into Makassar Strait in a wide delta. The chief town along its course is

  • mahākaṭhina (Buddhism)

    Buddhism: Vassa: …making and presentation of the mahakathina (“great robe”), a particularly meritorious gift that requires the cooperation of a number of people who, theoretically at least, must produce it—from spinning the thread to stitching the cloth—in a single day and night. The robe commemorates the act of the Buddha’s mother, who,…

  • mahākāvya (Bengali literature)

    South Asian arts: Bengali: …of the second genre, the mahākāvya (“great poem,” but not to be confused with the Sanskrit mahākāvya genre), are based mainly on the Sanskrit models of the Mahābhārata, Rāmāyaṇa, and Purāṇas. Kṛttibās Ojhā (late 14th century) stands at the beginning of this literature; he wrote a version of the Rāmāyaṇa…

  • mahakavya (Sanskrit literature)

    mahakavya, a particular form of the Sanskrit literary style known as kavya. It is a short epic similar to the epyllion and is characterized by elaborate figures of speech. In its classical form, a mahakavya consists of a variable number of comparatively short cantos, each composed in a metre

  • mahākāvya (Sanskrit literature)

    mahakavya, a particular form of the Sanskrit literary style known as kavya. It is a short epic similar to the epyllion and is characterized by elaborate figures of speech. In its classical form, a mahakavya consists of a variable number of comparatively short cantos, each composed in a metre

  • Mahal (film by Amrohi [1949])

    Madhubala: …in the supernatural suspense drama Mahal (1949), in which she acted opposite Ashok Kumar, made her a star.

  • Mahal, Taj (American musician)

    Taj Mahal is an American singer, guitarist, and songwriter who was one of the pioneers of what came to be called world music. He combined acoustic blues and other African American music with Caribbean and West African music and other genres to create a distinctive sound. Taj Mahal (the name came to

  • Mahalakh shevile ha-daʿat (work by Kimhi)

    Moses Kimhi: …of an influential Hebrew grammar, Mahalakh shevile ha-daʿat (“Journey on the Paths of Knowledge”).

  • Mahalanobis distance (statistics)

    P.C. Mahalanobis: …is now known as the Mahalanobis distance. He introduced innovative techniques for conducting large-scale sample surveys and calculated acreages and crop yields by using the method of random sampling. He devised a statistical method called fractile graphical analysis, which could be used to compare the socioeconomic conditions of different groups…

  • Mahalanobis, P.C. (Indian statistician)

    P.C. Mahalanobis was an Indian statistician who devised the Mahalanobis distance and was instrumental in formulating India’s strategy for industrialization in the Second Five-Year Plan (1956–61). Born to an academically oriented family, Mahalanobis pursued his early education in Calcutta (now

  • Mahalanobis, Prasanta Chandra (Indian statistician)

    P.C. Mahalanobis was an Indian statistician who devised the Mahalanobis distance and was instrumental in formulating India’s strategy for industrialization in the Second Five-Year Plan (1956–61). Born to an academically oriented family, Mahalanobis pursued his early education in Calcutta (now

  • Mahalapye (Botswana)

    Mahalapye, village, eastern Botswana. It lies midway along the rail line between Mahikeng, South Africa, and Bulawayo, Zimbabwe, and is 125 miles (200 km) northeast of Gaborone, the national capital. The name Mahalapye refers to an impala. The village is situated on a plateau with good pasturage,

  • Mahalla el-Kubra, Al- (Egypt)

    Al-Maḥallah al-Kubrā, city, in the central Nile River delta of Lower Egypt, eastern Al-Gharbīyah muḥāfaẓah (governorate). It lies just west of the Damietta Branch of the Nile. Because the names of a large number of Egyptian places were compounded with maḥallah (Arabic: “encampment”), exact

  • Maḥallah al-Kubrā, Al- (Egypt)

    Al-Maḥallah al-Kubrā, city, in the central Nile River delta of Lower Egypt, eastern Al-Gharbīyah muḥāfaẓah (governorate). It lies just west of the Damietta Branch of the Nile. Because the names of a large number of Egyptian places were compounded with maḥallah (Arabic: “encampment”), exact

  • Maḥallī, Jalāl al-Dīn al- (Egyptian writer)

    al-Suyūṭī: …of which was written by Jalāl al-Dīn al-Maḥallī. His Itqān fī ʿulūm al-Qurʾān (“Mastery in the Sciences of the Qurʾān”) is a well-known work on Qurʾānic exegesis. Among his works that have been translated into English is Taʾrīkh al-khulafāʾ (History of the Caliphs), as well as a work on cosmology,…

  • mahalwari system (Indian revenue system)

    mahalwari system, one of the three main revenue systems of land tenure in British India, the other two being the zamindar and ryotwari systems. The word mahalwari is derived from the Hindi mahal, meaning a house or, by extension, a district. For revenue purposes, the name was applied to any compact

  • Mahama, John (president of Ghana)

    John Mahama is a Ghanaian politician affiliated with the National Democratic Congress (NCD) political party who became vice president of Ghana in 2009. After the death of Pres. John Evans Atta Mills in July 2012, Mahama ascended to the presidency. He was elected president later that year and served

  • Mahama, John Dramani (president of Ghana)

    John Mahama is a Ghanaian politician affiliated with the National Democratic Congress (NCD) political party who became vice president of Ghana in 2009. After the death of Pres. John Evans Atta Mills in July 2012, Mahama ascended to the presidency. He was elected president later that year and served

  • Mahamana (Indian educator)

    Madan Mohan Malaviya was an Indian scholar, educational reformer, and a leader of the Indian nationalist movement. Malaviya was the son of Pandit Brij Nath, a noted Sanskrit scholar, and his early education took place at two Sanskrit pathshalas (traditional schools). After graduating from Muir

  • Mahamaya (mother of Gautama Buddha)

    Maha Maya, the mother of Gautama Buddha; she was the wife of Raja Shuddhodana. According to Buddhist legend, Maha Maya dreamed that a white elephant with six tusks entered her right side, which was interpreted to mean that she had conceived a child who would become either a world ruler or a buddha.

  • Mahamaya (Hindu goddess)

    Chandi, demon-destroying form of the Hindu goddess Shakti, particularly popular in eastern India. She is known by various names, such as Mahamaya (“Great Magic”) or Abhaya (“She Who Is Without Fear”). Her representation is similar to that of Durga, another form of Shakti. She is shown with either 8

  • mahamudra (Buddhist doctrine)

    mahamudra, in Vajrayana (Tantric) Buddhism, the final goal, the union of all apparent dualities. Mudra, in addition to its more usual meaning, has in Vajrayana Buddhism the esoteric meaning of “female partner,” which in turn symbolizes prajna (“wisdom”). The union of the Tantric initiate with his

  • Mahamuni (brass Buddha statue)

    Mahamuni, brass Buddha statue (12 feet high), one of the most sacred images in Myanmar (Burma) and believed to be of great antiquity. Located in the Mahamuni, or Arakan, pagoda south of the city of Mandalay, the statue was among the spoils of war brought from the Arakan Coast in 1784 by King

  • Mahamuni (pagoda, Myanmar)

    Mandalay: The Mahamuni, or Arakan, pagoda, south of the city, is often considered Mandalay’s most famous. Its brass Buddha (12 feet [3.7 metres] high), believed to be of great antiquity, is one of numerous spoils of war brought from the Arakan Coast in 1784 by King Bodawpaya.…

  • Mahan, Alfred Thayer (United States naval officer)

    Alfred Thayer Mahan was an American naval officer and historian who was a highly influential exponent of sea power in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Mahan was the son of a professor at the United States Military Academy at West Point, New York. He graduated from the United States Naval

  • Mahan, Larry (American cowboy)

    Larry Mahan was a professional American rodeo wrangler, the first to win five consecutive Rodeo Cowboys Association (RCA; later Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association, PRCA) all-around cowboy championships, from 1966 through 1970. His record was later surpassed by Tom R. Ferguson. In 1962 Mahan won

  • Mahana (film by Tamahori [2016])

    Witi Ihimaera: …the Gypsies (1994; filmed as The Patriarch [2016]). The Uncle’s Story (2000) relates the stories of two generations of gay Māori men. Contemporary characters are inserted into a Māori myth about warring birds in Sky Dancer (2003). The Trowenna Sea (2009), a fictionalized version of the story of a Māori…

  • Mahanadi River (river, India)

    Mahanadi River, great river in central India, rising in the hills of Chhattisgarh state and flowing eastward through Odisha state. The Mahanadi (Sanskrit maha, meaning “great,” and nadi, meaning “river”) follows a total course of 560 miles (900 km) and has an estimated drainage area of 51,000