- Badagry (Nigeria)
Badagry, town and lagoon port in Lagos state, southwestern Nigeria. It lies on the north bank of Porto Novo Creek, an inland waterway that connects the national capitals of Nigeria (Lagos) and Benin (Porto-Novo), and on a road that leads to Lagos, Ilaro, and Porto-Novo. Founded in the late 1720s by
- Badain Jaran (desert, China)
Alxa Plateau: …Desert in the south, the Badain Jaran (Baden Dzareng, or Batan Tsalang) in the west, and the Ulan Buh (Wulanbuhe) in the northeast.
- Badajoz (Spain)
Badajoz, city, capital of Badajoz provincia (province), in the Extremadura comunidad autónoma (autonomous community), southwestern Spain. Situated on the south bank of the Guadiana River near the Portuguese frontier, it occupies a low range of hills crowned by a ruined Moorish castle. It originated
- Badajoz (province, Spain)
Badajoz, provincia (province) in the Extremadura comunidad autónoma (autonomous community), extreme western Spain. Badajoz is bordered by Portugal to the west. Along with the province of Cáceres, Badajoz makes up the autonomous and historic region of Extremadura. The climate is characterized by
- Badajoz, Peace of (Spain-Portugal [1801])
Portugal: The French revolutionary and Napoleonic wars: By the Peace of Badajoz (June 1801), Portugal lost the town of Olivenza and paid an indemnity.
- Badajoz, Plan (Spanish government project)
Badajoz: …a project known as the Plan Badajoz, which raised the standard of living, productivity, and agriculture and intensified development and industrialization in the area. Irrigation was undertaken, using the waters of the Guadiana and Zújar, controlled by six dams. The plan provided for new agriculturally based industries, chiefly the production…
- Badajoz, Siege of (Napoleonic Wars [1812])
The Siege of Badajoz, which occurred from March 16 through April 6 in 1812, was one of the bloodiest engagements of the Napoleonic Wars. Of the many sieges that characterized the fighting in the Iberian Peninsula, Badajoz (a Spanish fortress on the southwestern border with Portugal) stands out for
- Badakhshān (historical region, Afghanistan)
Badakhshān, historic region of northeastern Afghanistan, roughly encompassing the northern spurs of the Hindu Kush and chiefly drained by the Kowkcheh River. Mountain glaciers and glacial lakes are found in the higher elevations of the region. The name Badakhshān first appears in Chinese writings
- Badal, Parkash Singh (Indian politician)
Parkash Singh Badal was an Indian politician and government official who rose to become president (1996–2008) of the Shiromani Akali Dal (SAD), a Sikh-focused regional political party in Punjab state, northwestern India. Badal served five terms as the chief minister of Punjab (1970–71, 1977–80,
- Badalona (Spain)
Badalona, city, Barcelona provincia (province), in the comunidad autónoma (autonomous community) of Catalonia, northeastern Spain. It is a northeastern industrial suburb of Barcelona, lying on the Mediterranean coast at the mouth of the Besós River. The city’s outstanding landmark is the
- Badami (India)
Badami, town, northern Karnataka state, southwestern India. It is situated in an upland region just west of the Malprabha River. The town was known as Vatapi in ancient times and was the first capital of the Chalukya kings. It is the site of important 6th- and 7th-century Brahmanical and Jain cave
- Badami, Anita Rau (Canadian author)
Canadian literature: Fiction: …among the Parsi community, while Anita Rau Badami’s novels Tamarind Mem (1996) and The Hero’s Walk (2000) portray the cross-cultural effect on Indian families in India and Canada.
- Badarakamaduitz (Armenian liturgy)
Armenian rite: …celebration of the liturgy; the Badarakamaduitz, the book of the sacrament, containing all the prayers used by the priest; the Giashotz, the book of midday, containing the Epistle and Gospel readings for each day; and the Z’amagirq, the book of hours, containing the prayers and psalms of the seven daily…
- Badarayana (Indian philosopher)
Indian philosophy: Relation to the Mimamsa-sutras: Badarayana approves of the Mimamsa view that the relation between words and their significations is eternal. There are, however, clear statements of difference: according to Jaimini, for example, the dispenser of the “fruits” of one’s actions is dharma, the law of righteousness itself, but for…
- Bādari (Indian philosopher)
Indian philosophy: The Purva-mimamsa-sutras and Shabara’s commentary: …Mimamsa authors, particularly of one Badari, to whom is attributed the view that the Vedic injunctions are meant to be obeyed without the expectation of benefits for oneself. According to Jaimini, Vedic injunctions do not merely prescribe actions but also recommend these actions as means to the attainment of desirable…
- Badārī, Al- (Egypt)
Egyptian art and architecture: Predynastic period: …culture has been identified at Al-Badārī in Upper Egypt.
- Badarian culture (ancient Egypt)
Badarian culture, Egyptian predynastic cultural phase, first discovered at Al-Badārī, its type site, on the east bank of the Nile River in Asyūṭ muḥāfaẓah (governorate), Upper Egypt. British excavations there during the 1920s revealed cemeteries dating to about 4000 bce. Although the Badarians
- Badawi (people)
Bedouin, Arabic-speaking nomadic peoples of the Middle Eastern deserts, especially of North Africa, the Arabian Peninsula, Egypt, Israel, Iraq, Syria, and Jordan. Most Bedouins are animal herders who migrate into the desert during the rainy winter season and move back toward the cultivated land in
- Badāʾūnī, ʿAbd al-Qādir (Indo-Persian historian)
ʿAbd al-Qādir Badāʾūnī was an Indo-Persian historian, one of the most important writers on the history of the Mughal period in India. As a young boy Badāʾūnī lived in Basāvar and studied at Sambhal and Āgra. In 1562 he moved to Badaun (hence his name) and then to Patiāla, where he entered the
- Badb (Celtic war goddess)
Macha, one of four female characters in Irish literature and mythology who are associated with themes of sovereignty and warfare. One Macha is recorded as a wife of Nemed, who led the third wave of invasions of Ireland. He cleared a plain that was named for her (Mag Macha; Irish: “Plain of Macha”).
- Badbury Rings (archaeological site, Dorset, England, United Kingdom)
East Dorset: The Badbury Rings 4 miles (6 km) northwest of the town are an ancient Iron Age fortification consisting of three concentric trenches that enclose a wooded hilltop. The Romans evidently used the rings as a juncture point for their road system. Area 137 square miles (355…
- Baddeck (Nova Scotia, Canada)
Baddeck, unincorporated village, seat of Victoria county, northeastern Nova Scotia, Canada. It lies in the centre of Cape Breton Island, on the north shore of Bras d’Or Lake. Baddeck was settled in the late 18th century, and its name probably derives from a Mi’kmaq term meaning “place at the
- Baddeley, Hermione (British actress)
A Christmas Carol: Cast:
- Baddeley, Robert (British actor)
Robert Baddeley was an actor chiefly remembered for his will, in which he bequeathed property to found a home for aged and impoverished actors and also money to provide wine and cake in the green room of Drury Lane Theatre on Twelfth Night, a ceremony that was still performed more than 200 years
- baddeleyite (mineral)
dating: Analysis of separated minerals: For example, the minerals baddeleyite, an oxide of zirconium (ZrO2), and zirconolite (CaZrTi2O7), have been shown to be widespread in small amounts in mafic igneous rocks (i.e., those composed primarily of one or more ferromagnesian, dark-coloured minerals). Here, a single uranium-lead isotopic analysis can provide an age more precise…
- Bade (people)
Bedde: Although Bade (Bedde, Bede) peoples settled in the vicinity of Tagali village near Gashua as early as the 14th century, they shortly thereafter came under the jurisdiction of a galadima (“governor”) of the Bornu kingdom based at nearby Nguru (see Kanem-Bornu). Not until the late 18th…
- BADEA (international finance)
Arab Bank for Economic Development in Africa, bank created by the Arab League summit conference in Algiers in November 1973 to finance development projects in Africa. In 1975 BADEA began operating by supplying African countries, excluding members of the Arab League, with technical assistance, which
- Baden (historical state, Germany)
Baden, former state on the east bank of the Rhine River in the southwestern corner of Germany, now the western part of the Baden-Württemberg Land (state) of Germany. The former Baden state comprised the eastern half of the Rhine River valley together with the adjoining mountains, especially the
- Baden (Austria)
Baden, spa, eastern Austria. It lies along the Schwechat River, at the eastern edge of the Wiener Forest, south of Vienna. Settled in prehistoric times, it was a Roman watering place, or aquae, and was recorded in 869 as the seat of a Frankish imperial palace. Chartered in 1480, it was destroyed by
- Baden (Switzerland)
Baden, town, Aargau canton, northern Switzerland, on the Limmat River, northwest of Zürich. The hot sulfur springs, mentioned as early as the 1st century ad by the Roman historian Tacitus, still attract large numbers of people. The town, founded by the Habsburgs in 1291, was conquered in 1415 (with
- Baden bei Wien (Austria)
Baden, spa, eastern Austria. It lies along the Schwechat River, at the eastern edge of the Wiener Forest, south of Vienna. Settled in prehistoric times, it was a Roman watering place, or aquae, and was recorded in 869 as the seat of a Frankish imperial palace. Chartered in 1480, it was destroyed by
- Baden Dzareng (desert, China)
Alxa Plateau: …Desert in the south, the Badain Jaran (Baden Dzareng, or Batan Tsalang) in the west, and the Ulan Buh (Wulanbuhe) in the northeast.
- Baden school (philosophy)
Kantianism: Axiological Neo-Kantianism: …as the Southwest German or Baden school. Its initiator was Wilhelm Windelband, esteemed for his “problems” approach to the history of philosophy. The scholar who systematized this position was his successor Heinrich Rickert, who had come from the tradition of Kuno Fischer. Drawing a parallel between the constraints that logic…
- Baden, Prinz Max von (German chancellor)
Maximilian, prince of Baden was the prince of Baden and chancellor of Germany, appointed on Oct. 3, 1918, because his humanitarian reputation made the emperor William II think him capable of bringing World War I expeditiously to an end. The son of the grand duke Frederick I’s brother Prince William
- Baden, Treaty of (European history)
treaties of Rastatt and Baden, (March 6 and Sept. 7, 1714), peace treaties between the Holy Roman emperor Charles VI and France that ended the emperor’s attempt to continue the War of the Spanish Succession (1700–14) after the other states had made peace in the Treaties of Utrecht (beginning in
- Baden-Baden (historical margravate, Germany)
Baden: …divided into the margravates of Baden-Baden in the south and Baden-Durlach in the north. Both margravates became Protestant during the Reformation, but Baden-Baden returned to Roman Catholicism in the 1570s. The dynastic rivalry between the two margravates further weakened them vis-à-vis neighbouring German states. Baden was terribly devastated during the…
- Baden-Baden (Germany)
Baden-Baden, city, Baden-Württemberg Land (state), southwestern Germany. It lies along the middle Oos River in the Black Forest (Schwarzwald). Baden-Baden is one of the world’s great spas. Its Roman baths (parts of which survive) were built in the reign of Caracalla (211–217 ce) for the garrison of
- Baden-Durlach (historical margravate, Germany)
Baden: …Baden-Baden in the south and Baden-Durlach in the north. Both margravates became Protestant during the Reformation, but Baden-Baden returned to Roman Catholicism in the 1570s. The dynastic rivalry between the two margravates further weakened them vis-à-vis neighbouring German states. Baden was terribly devastated during the Thirty Years’ War (1618–48), and…
- Baden-Powell of Gilwell, Robert Stephenson Smyth Baden-Powell, 1st Baron (British army officer)
Robert Baden-Powell, 1st Baron Baden-Powell was a British army officer who became a national hero for his 217-day defense of Mafeking (now Mahikeng) in the South African War of 1899–1902. He later became famous as the founder in 1908 of the Boy Scouts and as cofounder in 1910 of a parallel
- Baden-Powell, Agnes (British scouting leader)
Robert Baden-Powell, 1st Baron Baden-Powell: …year he and his sister Agnes Baden-Powell (1858–1945) founded the Girl Guides. His wife, Olave, Lady Baden-Powell (1889–1977), also did much to promote the Girl Guides. In 1916 he organized the Wolf Cubs in Great Britain (known as Cub Scouts in the United States) for boys under the age of…
- Baden-Powell, Olave (British scouting leader)
Robert Baden-Powell, 1st Baron Baden-Powell: His wife, Olave, Lady Baden-Powell (1889–1977), also did much to promote the Girl Guides. In 1916 he organized the Wolf Cubs in Great Britain (known as Cub Scouts in the United States) for boys under the age of 11. At the first international Boy Scout Jamboree (London,…
- Baden-Powell, Robert Baden-Powell, 1st Baron (British army officer)
Robert Baden-Powell, 1st Baron Baden-Powell was a British army officer who became a national hero for his 217-day defense of Mafeking (now Mahikeng) in the South African War of 1899–1902. He later became famous as the founder in 1908 of the Boy Scouts and as cofounder in 1910 of a parallel
- Baden-Powell, Sir Robert, 1st Baronet (British army officer)
Robert Baden-Powell, 1st Baron Baden-Powell was a British army officer who became a national hero for his 217-day defense of Mafeking (now Mahikeng) in the South African War of 1899–1902. He later became famous as the founder in 1908 of the Boy Scouts and as cofounder in 1910 of a parallel
- Baden-Württemberg (state, Germany)
Baden-Württemberg, Land (state) in southwestern Germany. Baden-Württemberg is bordered by the states of Rhineland-Palatinate to the northwest, Hessen to the north, and Bavaria to the east and by the countries of Switzerland to the south and France to the west. The state’s capital is Stuttgart. Area
- Badenhaim, ʿir nofesh (novel by Appelfeld)
Hebrew literature: Israeli literature: His Badenhaim, ʿir nofesh (Badenheim 1939), published in 1975, captures the ominous atmosphere of the approaching Holocaust sensed by a group of assimilated Jews vacationing at an Austrian resort. It describes social and spiritual disintegration, as do his novels Tor ha-peli ʾot (1978; The Age of Wonders) and Katerinah…
- Badenheim 1939 (novel by Appelfeld)
Hebrew literature: Israeli literature: His Badenhaim, ʿir nofesh (Badenheim 1939), published in 1975, captures the ominous atmosphere of the approaching Holocaust sensed by a group of assimilated Jews vacationing at an Austrian resort. It describes social and spiritual disintegration, as do his novels Tor ha-peli ʾot (1978; The Age of Wonders) and Katerinah…
- Badeni, Kasimir Felix, count of (Polish-Austrian statesman)
Kasimir Felix, count of Badeni was a Polish-born statesman in the Austrian service, who, as prime minister (1895–97) of the Austrian half of the Austro-Hungarian Dual Monarchy, sponsored policies to appease Slav nationalism within the empire but was defeated by German nationalist reaction. After
- Badeni, Kasimir Felix, Graf von (Polish-Austrian statesman)
Kasimir Felix, count of Badeni was a Polish-born statesman in the Austrian service, who, as prime minister (1895–97) of the Austrian half of the Austro-Hungarian Dual Monarchy, sponsored policies to appease Slav nationalism within the empire but was defeated by German nationalist reaction. After
- Badeni, Kazimierz Feliks, Hrabia (Polish-Austrian statesman)
Kasimir Felix, count of Badeni was a Polish-born statesman in the Austrian service, who, as prime minister (1895–97) of the Austrian half of the Austro-Hungarian Dual Monarchy, sponsored policies to appease Slav nationalism within the empire but was defeated by German nationalist reaction. After
- Bader, Joan Ruth (United States jurist)
Ruth Bader Ginsburg was an associate justice of the Supreme Court of the United States from 1993 to 2020. She was the second woman to serve on the Supreme Court. Joan Ruth Bader was the younger of the two children of Nathan Bader, a merchant, and Celia Bader. Her elder sister, Marilyn, died of
- Badfinger (Welsh rock group)
Harry Nilsson: Fame as songwriter and singer: …hit was his cover of Badfinger’s “Without You,” which appeared on his gold-selling album Nilsson Schmilsson (1971), produced by Richard Perry, who had won acclaim for his work with Barbra Streisand. “Without You” garnered Nilsson the Grammy for best pop male vocal performance. The album also featured the whimsically quirky…
- Badgastein (Austria)
Badgastein, town in the Gastein Valley of west-central Austria, on the Gasteiner Ache (river). Its radioactive thermal springs have been visited since the 13th century, and royal and other eminent patrons brought it world renown in the 19th century. Now one of Austria’s most important spas and
- Badgastein, Convention of (Prussian-Austrian treaty)
Convention of Gastein, agreement between Austria and Prussia reached on Aug. 20, 1865, after their seizure of the duchies of Schleswig and Holstein from Denmark in 1864; it temporarily postponed the final struggle between them for hegemony over Germany. The pact provided that both the emperor of
- badge (animal communication)
animal communication: Honesty and deceit: …designation of these patches as badges of status. Large badge size deters aggressive challenges by small-badged individuals. The cost of guaranteeing honesty of a large badge is aggressive retaliation from other large-badged individuals. The evolution of such signals must be accompanied by frequent testing of the honesty of other individuals…
- badge (heraldry)
heraldry: The badge: The badge is older than the heraldic system. Such a symbol identifying a person, a body, or an impersonal idea can be found from ancient times. The eagle of Rome was one of the state’s symbols and was the special device of the legions.…
- Badge (song by Clapton and Harrison)
Cream: …album, Goodbye (1969), featured “Badge,” which Clapton cowrote with George Harrison of the Beatles. The group’s lifespan was just under three years. At the tail end of the 1960s into the ’70s, the former members of Cream went on to establish other supergroups such as Blind Faith and Derek…
- Badger (aircraft)
Tu-16, one of the principal strategic bombers of the Soviet Union, designed by Andrei Nikolayevich Tupolev (1888–1972) and first flown in 1952. More than 2,000 of the mid-wing monoplanes were built. Powered by two turbojet engines, it had a maximum speed of 652 miles per hour (1,050 km per hour) at
- badger (mammal)
badger, common name for any of several stout carnivores, most of them members of the weasel family (Mustelidae), that are found in various parts of the world and are known for their burrowing ability. The species differ in size, habitat, and coloration, but all are nocturnal and possess anal scent
- badger skunk (mammal)
skunk: Some hog-nosed skunks (genus Conepatus) of North America can be larger than striped skunks, but those of Chile and Argentina, such as Humboldt’s hog-nosed skunk (C. humboldtii), are smaller. Adult Humboldt’s hog-nosed skunks reach 50 to 60 cm (19.7 to 23.6 inches) in length and weigh…
- Badger State (state, United States)
Wisconsin, constituent state of the United States of America. Wisconsin was admitted to the union as the 30th state on May 29, 1848. One of the north-central states, it is bounded by the western portion of Lake Superior and the Upper Peninsula of Michigan to the north and by Lake Michigan to the
- Badgers, The (work by Leonov)
Leonid Maksimovich Leonov: …epic first novel, Barsuki (The Badgers), which he followed with Vor (1927; The Thief), a pessimistic tale set in the Moscow criminal underworld.
- Badham, John (American director)
Saturday Night Fever: …Norman Wexler and directed by John Badham, was a critical and commercial success, propelling former television actor Travolta to superstardom and turning disco, previously an underground dance movement, into a mainstream cultural phenomenon. Its Bee Gees–produced soundtrack was just as popular, topping the Billboard 200 album chart for 24 consecutive…
- Badham, Mary (American actress)
To Kill a Mockingbird: …six-year-old “Scout” Finch (played by Mary Badham) during the Great Depression in the fictional town of Maycomb, Alabama. When her widowed father (Gregory Peck), a principled and respected attorney, defends a Black man falsely accused of raping a white woman, Scout and her brother witness the horrors of racism. They…
- Bādī II Abū Daqn (Funj king)
Funj Dynasty: Bādī II Abū Daqn (reigned 1644/45–1680) continued the Funj conquest by defeating the Shilluk and by raiding and later imposing tributary status on Takali, a Muslim hill state south of Kordofan. The plains of Kordofan proper did not fall to the Funj until the reign…
- Bādī IV Abū Shulūkh (Funj king)
Funj Dynasty: …Funj until the reign of Bādī IV Abū Shulūkh (reigned 1724–62). Expansion eastward was barred by Ethiopia, with which the Funj waged two wars, the first in 1618–19 and the second, in which the Funj under Bādī IV were victorious, in 1744.
- Badidae (fish)
labyrinth fish: …be placed in five families: Badidae, Anabantidae, Belontiidae, Helostomatidae, and Osphronemidae.
- Badile, Antonio (Italian painter)
Paolo Veronese: The early years: …apprenticed to a painter named Antonio Badile, whose daughter Elena he later married. From Badile Veronese derived a sound basic painting technique as well as a passion for paintings in which people and architecture were integrated. The style of his first known work, the Bevilacqua-Lazise Altarpiece, reflects Badile’s influence. Veronese…
- Badīn (Pakistan)
Badīn, town, southern Sindh province, southeastern Pakistan. The town, founded in 1750, lies in swampy deltaic land east of the Indus River. Rice is the major crop in the region. Badīn has a sugar mill and rice mills and is the terminus of the Hyderābād-Badīn railway. Exploitation of oil and
- Badings, Henk (Dutch composer)
Henk Badings was a Dutch composer, best known for his music featuring electronic sounds and the compositional use of tape recorders. Born to Dutch parents, Badings was orphaned and went from Java to the Netherlands in 1915. At his guardian’s insistence, he studied geology, but he turned to music
- Badiou, Alain (French philosopher)
Slavoj Žižek: Later writings: …spirit, the French Maoist philosopher Alain Badiou. An early intimation of their dialogue is to be found in Žižek’s book The Ticklish Subject: The Absent Centre of Political Ontology (1999), which was partly responsible for bringing Badiou to the attention of English-language readers and which also criticized the work of…
- Badisch-Sibirien (region, Germany)
Odenwald, wooded upland region in Germany, about 50 mi (80 km) long and 25 mi wide, situated mainly in Hesse Land (state) with small portions extending into the states of Bavaria and Baden-Württemberg. A popular tourist area, it extends between the Neckar and the Main rivers and overlooks the Rhine
- Badische Anilin- & Soda-Fabrik (German company)
BASF Aktiengesellschaft, (German: BASF Limited-liability Company), German chemical and plastics manufacturing company originally founded in 1865 and today operating in some 30 countries. The BASF Group produces oil and natural gas, chemicals, fertilizers, plastics, synthetic fibres, dyes and
- badiyah, al- (people)
Bedouin, Arabic-speaking nomadic peoples of the Middle Eastern deserts, especially of North Africa, the Arabian Peninsula, Egypt, Israel, Iraq, Syria, and Jordan. Most Bedouins are animal herders who migrate into the desert during the rainy winter season and move back toward the cultivated land in
- Bādiyat Al-Shām (desert, Middle East)
Syrian Desert, arid wasteland of southwestern Asia, extending northward from the Arabian Peninsula over much of northern Saudi Arabia, eastern Jordan, southern Syria, and western Iraq. Receiving on the average less than 5 inches (125 mm) of rainfall annually and largely covered by lava flows, it
- badīʿ (poetic technique)
Arabic literature: Panegyric: …subsumed under the heading of badīʿ (innovative use of figurative language), a development that rapidly became a primary focus of critical debate.
- Badīʿ al-Zamān (Islamic author)
al-Hamadhānī was an Arabic-language author famed for the introduction of the maqāmah (“assembly”) form in literature. Al-Hamadhānī achieved an early success through a public debate with Abū Bakr al-Khwarizmī, a leading savant, in Nīshāpūr. He subsequently traveled throughout the area occupied today
- Badīʿ al-Zamān Abū al-Faḍl Aḥmad ibn al-Ḥusayn al-Hamadhānī (Islamic author)
al-Hamadhānī was an Arabic-language author famed for the introduction of the maqāmah (“assembly”) form in literature. Al-Hamadhānī achieved an early success through a public debate with Abū Bakr al-Khwarizmī, a leading savant, in Nīshāpūr. He subsequently traveled throughout the area occupied today
- Badjava plateau (region, Indonesia)
Ngada: …volcano and inland on the Badjava plateau. Primarily of Proto-Malay stock, they speak a Malayo-Polynesian language of the Ambon-Timor group, and numbered 35,000–40,000 in 1954. Claiming they migrated from Java, the Ngada were formerly hunters. Today they practice both wet (learned from the Dutch) and dry cultivation of rice and…
- Badjo (people)
Sama, one of the largest and most diverse ethnolinguistic groups of insular Southeast Asia. The Sama live mainly in the southern half of the Sulu Archipelago, in the southwestern Philippines, although significant populations also live along the coasts of northeastern Borneo—primarily in the
- Badjok (people)
Chokwe, Bantu-speaking people who inhabit the southern part of Congo (Kinshasa) from the Kwango River to the Lualaba; northeastern Angola; and, since 1920, the northwestern corner of Zambia. They live in woodland savanna intersected with strips of rainforest along the rivers, swamps, and
- Badkhyz (desert region, Turkmenistan)
Karakum Desert: Physiography: …by the Garabil uplands and Badkhyz steppe region. In the south and southwest the desert runs along the foot of the Kopet-Dag Mountains, and in the west and northwest it borders the course of the ancient valley of the Uzboy River. It is divided into three parts: the elevated northern…
- Bādkonak-e sefīd (film by Panahi [1995])
Jafar Panahi: …film was Bādkonak-e sefīd (1995; The White Balloon), about a young girl who wants to buy a goldfish but loses her money down a sewer drain. The drama—which was written by Kiarostami—earned Panahi the Caméra d’Or, the prize for first-time directors, at the Cannes film festival. In Ayneh (1997; The…
- badland (geology)
badland, area cut and eroded by many deep, tortuous gullies with intervening saw-toothed divides. The gullies extend from main rivers back to tablelands about 150 m (500 feet) and higher. The gully bottoms increase in gradient from almost flat near the main rivers to nearly vertical at the edges of
- Badlanders, The (film by Daves [1958])
Delmer Daves: Westerns: The Badlanders is a clever western remake of the urban noir classic The Asphalt Jungle (1950); Alan Ladd and Borgnine portrayed robbers who do not dare turn their backs on each other. In 1959 Daves returned to Warner Brothers, and that year he directed the…
- Badlands (region, North Dakota, United States)
North Dakota: Relief: …and valleys that form the North Dakota Badlands, in the far western part of the state. The highest point in North Dakota is White Butte (3,506 feet [1,069 metres]), near the southwest corner of the state in the Badlands area.
- Badlands (region, South Dakota, United States)
Badlands, barren region covering some 2,000 square miles (5,200 square km) of southwestern South Dakota, U.S. It has an extremely rugged landscape almost devoid of vegetation. It was created by cloudbursts that cut deep gullies in poorly cemented bedrock; its extensive fossil deposits have yielded
- badlands (geology)
badland, area cut and eroded by many deep, tortuous gullies with intervening saw-toothed divides. The gullies extend from main rivers back to tablelands about 150 m (500 feet) and higher. The gully bottoms increase in gradient from almost flat near the main rivers to nearly vertical at the edges of
- Badlands (film by Malick [1973])
Terrence Malick: His own directorial debut, Badlands (1973), which he also scripted, starred Martin Sheen as a small-town hoodlum who persuades a naive teenage girl (played by Sissy Spacek) to run away with him as he embarks on a string of dispassionate murders. The film (one of several to be inspired…
- Badlands National Park (national park, South Dakota, United States)
Badlands National Park, rugged, eroded area of buttes, saw-toothed divides, and gullies in southwestern South Dakota, U.S. It was established as a national monument in 1939 and designated a national park in 1978. It lies in a semiarid high-plains region mostly between the Cheyenne and White rivers,
- Badme (Ethiopia)
Eritrea: Independent Eritrea: …centred around the hamlet of Badme, exploded into violence. Following two years of bloodshed, a peace was negotiated in December 2000, and the UN established a peacekeeping mission along the border in question. An international boundary commission agreed on a border demarcation in 2002, but Ethiopia rejected the decision and…
- badminton (sport)
badminton, court or lawn game played with lightweight rackets and a shuttlecock. The roots of the sport can be traced to the old game battledore and shuttlecock, which was played in ancient Greece, China, and India. The game was taken from India to England, where it was first played in
- Badminton (England, United Kingdom)
Badminton, village (parish), South Gloucestershire unitary authority, historic county of Gloucestershire, southwestern England. Badminton House, seat of the dukes of Beaufort, stands in a large park in the locality. The original manor of Badminton was acquired in 1608 from Nicholas Boteler (to
- Badminton World Federation (international sports organization)
badminton: Origin and development: …International Badminton Federation (now the Badminton World Federation [BWF]) was formed on July 5, 1934, as the sport’s world governing body, and its first world championships were held in 1977. A number of regional, national, and zonal badminton tournaments are held in several countries. The best known of these is…
- Badnur (India)
Betul, city, south-central Madhya Pradesh state, central India. It is situated in a plateau region south of the Satpura Range and just north of the Tapti River. Formerly called Badnur, Betul was constituted a municipality in 1867. The city is a major road junction and agricultural trade centre.
- Badoer, Villa (house, Italy)
Andrea Palladio: Visits to Rome and work in Vicenza: …Fanzolo [late 1550s]; and the Villa Badoer), the porch covers one major story and the attic, the entire structure being raised on a base that contains service areas and storage. In a third type the temple front covers the whole front of the house, as at the Villa Barbaro (c.…
- Badoglio, Pietro (Italian general and statesman)
Pietro Badoglio was a general and statesman during the dictatorship of Benito Mussolini (1922–43). In September 1943 he extricated Italy from World War II by arranging an armistice with the Allies. Badoglio entered the Italian army in 1890 as an artillery officer and fought in the Ethiopian
- badoh (plant)
Convolvulaceae: Major genera and species: The seeds of two species, Turbina corymbosa and Ipomoea violacea, are sources of hallucinogenic drugs of historical interest and contemporary concern.
- Bāḍolī (India)
South Asian arts: Medieval temple architecture: North Indian style of Rājasthān: …are the Ghaṭeśvara temple at Bāḍolī and the Ambik) M)t) temple at Jagat. The simple but beautiful Bāḍolī temple consists of a sanctum with a latina superstructure and an open hall with six pillars and two pilasters (columns that project a third of their width or less from the wall)…
- Badr ad-Din ibn Qadi Samawna (Ottoman theologian)
Bedreddin was an Ottoman theologian, jurist, and mystic whose social doctrines of communal ownership of property led to a large-scale popular uprising. A convert to Ṣūfism (Islāmic mysticism), in 1383 Bedreddin undertook the pilgrimage to Mecca, and, upon his return to Cairo, he was appointed tutor
- Badr ad-Dīn Luʾluʾ (Zangid ruler)
Zangid dynasty: The rise to power of Badr al-Dīn Luʾluʾ, a former slave, as regent for the last Zangid, Nāṣir al-Dīn Maḥmūd (reigned 1219–22), marked the end of the dynasty. Luʾluʾ ruled Mosul as atabeg from 1222 to 1259; soon afterward the city fell to the Mongols.