- Danšovský, Václav (Czech poet)
Otakar Březina was a poet who had a considerable influence on the development of 20th-century Czech poetry. Březina spent most of his life as a schoolmaster in Moravia. Although isolated from public life, he was well informed about the national and international literary movements that influenced
- Dansu Dansu Dansu (novel by Murakami Haruki)
Haruki Murakami: Works: …with Dansu Dansu Dansu (1988; Dance Dance Dance).
- dánta grádha (Gaelic literary genre)
Celtic literature: Bardic verse: …produce the enchanting poems called dánta grádha (“love poems”). A different departure from praise poetry was the crosánacht (from the Irish word crosán, meaning a jester or satirist), in which verse was frequently interspersed with humorous or satirical prose passages.
- Dante (Italian poet)
Dante was an Italian poet, prose writer, literary theorist, moral philosopher, and political thinker. He is best known for the monumental epic poem La commedia, later named La divina commedia (The Divine Comedy). Dante’s Divine Comedy, a landmark in Italian literature and among the greatest works
- Dante and Virgil in Hell (painting by Eugène Delacroix)
Eugène Delacroix: Development of mature style: …he exhibited his first masterpiece, Dante and Virgil in Hell, is one of the landmarks in the development of French 19th-century Romantic painting. Dante and Virgil in Hell was inspired by Dante’s Divine Comedy, but its tragic feeling and the powerful modeling of its figures are reminiscent of Michelangelo, and…
- Dante and Virgil in Hell (painting by Bouguereau)
Ten Depictions of Hell: Dante and Virgil in Hell (1850) by William-Adolphe Bouguereau: Here Bouguereau depicts a scene from the eighth circle of hell, Fraud. At the center, two naked men fight each other. One, identified as Gianni Schicchi, who was sent to hell for impersonating a recently deceased Florentine aristocrat, has a greenish tint to his skin, and the other, Capocchio,…
- Dante chair
scissors chair, chair supported by two crossed and curved supports either at the sides or at the back and front. Because of its basic simplicity, it is one of the oldest forms of chair or stool, with examples reaching back to the 2nd millennium bc. The seat, which was originally made of leather or
- Dante’s Convivio (poem by Dante)
aesthetics: Medieval aesthetics: 1304–07; The Banquet). In this piece, generally considered one of the first sustained works of literary criticism in the modern manner, the poet analyzes the four levels of meaning contained in his own poems.
- Dante’s Inferno (film by Lachman [1935])
Rudolph Maté: His first American film was Dante’s Inferno (1935), and he eventually shot more than 30 movies in Hollywood. He received Academy Award nominations for his work on Foreign Correspondent (1940), That Hamilton Woman (1941), The Pride of the Yankees (1942), Sahara (1943), and
- Dante’s View (mountain, United States)
Amargosa Range: Dante’s View, in the Black Mountains, rises to 5,475 feet (1,669 m) and provides a clear view of Death Valley and the Panamint Range, which lies beyond it.
- Dante, Piazza (marketplace, Naples, Italy)
Naples: Via Toledo: …into the Neoclassical hemicycle of Piazza Dante, Via Toledo resumes its route under other names, skirting the western flank of the National Archaeological Museum in its ascent toward Capodimonte.
- Danter, John (English printer)
history of publishing: England: …printed by a notorious pirate, John Danter, who also brought out, anonymously, a defective Romeo and Juliet (1597), largely from shorthand notes made during performance. Eighteen of the plays appeared in “good” and “bad” quartos before the great First Folio in 1623. A typical imprint of the time, of the…
- Dantès, Edmond (American film director)
John Hughes was an American film director, writer, and producer who in the 1980s established the modern American teen movie as a genre. Hughes successfully portrayed the reality of adolescent life while maintaining a funny and lighthearted tone. As a teen, Hughes moved with his family to Chicago,
- Dantès, Edmond (fictional character)
Edmond Dantès, fictional character, the hero of the novel The Count of Monte Cristo (1844–45) by Alexandre Dumas père. When Dantès is imprisoned as a young sailor because of the treachery of four acquaintances, he spends the rest of his life plotting and then carrying out plans for revenge against
- Danthonia (plant genus)
oat grass: …genera of grasses, Arrhenatherum and Danthonia (family Poaceae). Named for their similarity to true oats (Avena sativa), the plants generally feature long dense spikelets of seeds. Several species are grown as forage and pasture grasses.
- Danthonia spicata (plant)
oat grass: Poverty oat grass (D. spicata) is a grayish green mat-forming species that grows on dry poor soil in many parts of North America.
- Danticat, Edwidge (Haitian American author)
Edwidge Danticat is a Haitian American author whose works focus on the lives of women and their relationships. She also addresses issues of power, injustice, and poverty. By the time she was four years old, her mother and father had moved to the United States, leaving Danticat and her brother
- Dantidurga (Rāṣṭrakūṭa leader)
India: The Deccan: …a feudatory of the Calukyas, Dantidurga of the Rashtrakuta dynasty, rose to importance and established himself in place of the declining Calukya dynasty. The Eastern Calukyas, who had managed to avoid involvement in the conflict, survived longer and came into conflict with the Rashtrakutas. Another branch of the Calukyas established…
- Dantin, Louis (French-Canadian poet)
Eugène Seers was a French Canadian poet and critic who is regarded as the first major literary critic of Quebec. While a member of the religious order Congrégation de Très Saint-Sacrement, he wrote religious poetry, short stories, and critical articles, especially on the poetry of Émile Nelligan.
- Dantiscus, Johannes (Polish author and bishop)
Johannes Dantiscus was a Polish poet and diplomat who was among the first representatives in Poland of Renaissance humanism. Dantiscus wrote, in Latin, incidental verse, love poetry, and panegyrics (formal speeches of praise). A courtier to the Polish king Sigismund I, Dantiscus accompanied the
- Dantley, Adrian (American basketball player)
Utah Jazz: …Utah, the team traded for Adrian Dantley, who became the key figure in the Jazz’s ascent to the upper echelon of the Western Conference. In the 1983–84 season, Dantley led the Jazz to a 45–37 record and a division title. While the Jazz lost in the conference semifinals to the…
- Danton’s Death (play by Büchner)
Georg Büchner: His first play, Dantons Tod (1835; Danton’s Death), a drama of the French Revolution, is suffused with deep pessimism. Its protagonist, the revolutionary Danton, is shown as a man deeply distraught at the bloodshed he had helped unleash. Leonce und Lena (written 1836), a satire on the nebulous…
- Danton’s Death (opera by Einem)
Gottfried von Einem: …first opera, Dantons Tod (Danton’s Death), with a text by Blacher based on Georg Büchner’s play, was produced in 1947 at the Salzburg Festival. The opera Der Prozess (The Trial), a work inspired by Einem’s 1938 arrest and by Franz Kafka’s novel, was first performed in 1953. Einem composed…
- Danton, Georges (French revolutionary leader)
Georges Danton was a French Revolutionary leader and orator, often credited as the chief force in the overthrow of the monarchy and the establishment of the First French Republic (September 21, 1792). He later became the first president of the Committee of Public Safety, but his increasing
- Danton, Georges-Jacques (French revolutionary leader)
Georges Danton was a French Revolutionary leader and orator, often credited as the chief force in the overthrow of the monarchy and the establishment of the First French Republic (September 21, 1792). He later became the first president of the Committee of Public Safety, but his increasing
- Dantons Tod (opera by Einem)
Gottfried von Einem: …first opera, Dantons Tod (Danton’s Death), with a text by Blacher based on Georg Büchner’s play, was produced in 1947 at the Salzburg Festival. The opera Der Prozess (The Trial), a work inspired by Einem’s 1938 arrest and by Franz Kafka’s novel, was first performed in 1953. Einem composed…
- Dantons Tod (play by Büchner)
Georg Büchner: His first play, Dantons Tod (1835; Danton’s Death), a drama of the French Revolution, is suffused with deep pessimism. Its protagonist, the revolutionary Danton, is shown as a man deeply distraught at the bloodshed he had helped unleash. Leonce und Lena (written 1836), a satire on the nebulous…
- Dantu (China)
Zhenjiang, city and port, southern Jiangsu sheng (province), China, situated on the southern bank of the Yangtze River (Chang Jiang). It was capital of the province in 1928–49. Pop. (2002 est.) 536,137; (2007 est.) urban agglom., 854,000. Zhenjiang was the seat of feudal domains from the 8th
- Dantyszek, Jan (Polish author and bishop)
Johannes Dantiscus was a Polish poet and diplomat who was among the first representatives in Poland of Renaissance humanism. Dantiscus wrote, in Latin, incidental verse, love poetry, and panegyrics (formal speeches of praise). A courtier to the Polish king Sigismund I, Dantiscus accompanied the
- Dantzig, George (American mathematician)
George Dantzig was an American mathematician who devised the simplex method, an algorithm for solving problems that involve numerous conditions and variables, and in the process founded the field of linear programming. Dantzig earned a bachelor’s degree in mathematics and physics from the
- Dantzig, Tobias (American mathematician)
Tobias Dantzig was a Latvian-born American mathematician, best known for his science and mathematics books written for the general public. As a young man, Dantzig was caught distributing anti-tsarist political tracts and fled to Paris, where he studied mathematics under Henri Poincaré and met and
- Danu (Celtic goddess)
Danu, in Celtic religion, the earth-mother goddess or female principle, who was honoured under various names from eastern Europe to Ireland. The mythology that surrounded her was contradictory and confused; mother goddesses of earlier peoples were ultimately identified with her, as were many
- Danube Bend (area, Hungary)
Pest: Tourists flock to the Danube Bend, which stretches from Esztergom to Szentendre. Szentendre still reflects the influence of its Dalmatian Serb founders in its Mediterranean-style cityscape, Baroque buildings, and numerous museums—including the Hungarian Open Air Museum (an ethnographical village that re-creates aspects of historic Hungarian folklife); the museums featuring…
- Danube delta (region, Moldova-Romania)
Romania: Relief: …great swampy triangle of the Danube delta is a unique physiographic region covering some 2,000 square miles (5,180 square km), of which the majority is in Romania. The delta occupies the site of an ancient bay, which in prehistoric times became wholly or partially isolated from the sea by the…
- Danube Gorge (region, Austria)
Niederösterreich: …in the Danube Gorge (Wachau), in the southeast, and in the Vienna Basin. Later, the area was part of the Roman province of Noricum and of Charlemagne’s empire. The region was granted to the Bavarian Babenberg margraves in 976; the name Ostarichi (Eastern Region) dates from that period. A…
- Danube Hills (plateau, Germany)
Bavarian Forest: The Vorderer Forest, or Danube Hills, a rolling plateau situated to the southwest between the Danube and the Pfahl, seldom rises more than 3,300 feet (1,000 m) above sea level. Meadow, isolated farmsteads, and small hamlets dominate the landscape; only the higher and steeper slopes are…
- Danube River (river, Europe)
Danube River, river, the second longest in Europe after the Volga. It rises in the Black Forest mountains of western Germany and flows for some 1,770 miles (2,850 km) to its mouth on the Black Sea. Along its course it passes through 10 countries: Germany, Austria, Slovakia, Hungary, Croatia,
- Danube school (painting)
Danube school, a tradition of landscape painting that developed in the region of the Danube River valley in the early years of the 16th century. A number of painters are considered to have been members of the Danube school. Chief among them was the Regensburg master Albrecht Altdorfer (c.
- Danube Water Meadows Nature Reserve (reserve, Ukraine)
Ukraine: Plant and animal life: …on the Black Sea, the Danube Water Meadows Reserve protects the Danube River’s tidewater biota. Other reserves in Ukraine preserve segments of the forest-steppe woodland, the marshes and forests of the Polissya, and the mountains and rocky coast of Crimea.
- Danube-Black Sea Canal (canal, Europe)
Danube River: The economy: …scheme of connecting waterways—include the Danube–Black Sea Canal, which runs from Cernovadă, Romania, to the Black Sea and provides a more direct and easily navigable link, and the Main–Danube Canal, completed in 1992 to link the Danube to the Rhine and thus to the North Sea.
- Danubian Convention (convention, [1948])
Danube River: History: …was not reached until the Danubian Convention of 1948. The new convention provided for the Danubian countries alone to participate in a reconstituted Danube Commission; of those countries, only West Germany did not join the convention.
- Danubian culture (prehistory)
LBK culture, Neolithic culture that expanded over large areas of Europe north and west of the Danube River (from Slovakia to the Netherlands) about the 5th millennium bc. Farmers probably practiced a form of shifting cultivation on the loess soil. Emmer wheat and barley were grown, and domestic
- Danubian Lowland (basin, Europe)
Little Alfold, extensive basin occupying the northwestern part of Transdanubia in northwestern Hungary, and extending into Austria and Slovakia (where it is called Podunajská Lowland). It has an area of approximately 3,000 square miles (8,000 square km). It is bounded on the south and east by the
- Danubian Plain (region, Europe)
Bulgaria: North Bulgaria: …Mountains is the fertile, hilly Danubian Plain. The average elevation of the region is 584 feet (178 metres), and it covers some 12,200 square miles (31,600 square km). Several rivers cross the plain, flowing northward from the Balkans to join the Danube. The Balkan Mountains border the Danubian Plain on…
- Danubian principalities (historical area, Europe)
Crimean War: …the Russians, who occupied the Danubian principalities (modern Romania) on the Russo-Turkish border in July 1853. The British fleet was ordered to Constantinople (Istanbul) on September 23. On October 4 the Turks declared war on Russia and in the same month opened an offensive against the Russians in the Danubian…
- Danubyu (Myanmar)
Maha Bandula: …Myanmar, Maha Bandula marched to Danubyu, on the Irrawaddy River, where he established his headquarters in October 1824. In December he attempted, unsuccessfully, to encircle the British, who were entrenched in the neighbourhood of Yangon. When his headquarters fell to the British, he retreated to prepare for the defense of…
- Danvers (Massachusetts, United States)
Danvers, town (township), Essex county, eastern Massachusetts, U.S. It lies just northeast of Boston. Founded in the 1630s by Governor John Endecott, it was part of Salem and originally known as Salem Village (site of the witchcraft hysteria of 1692). Set off from Salem as a district in 1752, it
- Danvers, Carol (fictional character)
Captain Marvel: From Ms. Marvel to Captain Marvel and back: Carol Danvers made her first appearance in Marvel Super-Heroes no. 13 (March 1968), and she soon became embroiled in Mar-Vell’s adventures. After Danvers was abducted by a jealous Kree officer named Yon-Rogg, Mar-Vell flew to her rescue in Captain Marvel no. 18 (November 1969). During…
- Danville (Illinois, United States)
Danville, city, seat (1827) of Vermilion county, eastern Illinois, U.S. It lies on the junction of forks of the Vermilion River (there bridged) near the Indiana border, about 35 miles (55 km) east of Champaign. Early inhabitants of the area included Miami, Kickapoo, and Potawatomi Indians, and a
- Danville (Virginia, United States)
Danville, city, administratively independent of, but located in, Pittsylvania county, south-central Virginia, U.S. It lies along the Dan River, just north of the North Carolina border, 45 miles (72 km) northeast of Greensboro, North Carolina. The earliest settlement on the site was known as The
- Danville (Kentucky, United States)
Danville, city, seat of Boyle county, central Kentucky, U.S., in the Bluegrass region, 36 miles (58 km) southwest of Lexington. Located along the Old Wilderness Road, it was settled in about 1775 and named for Walker Daniel, who purchased the deed for the site (1784). It was capital of the Kentucky
- Danyang-Kunshan Grand Bridge (bridge, China)
bridge: Danyang-Kunshan Grand Bridge: The Danyang-Kunshan Grand Bridge, located between Shanghai and Nanjing in Jiangsu province, is a viaduct 164.8 km (102.4 miles) long on the Beijing-Shanghai High-Speed Railway. Opened in June 2011 at a cost of about $8.5 billion, it is the world’s longest bridge.…
- Danylo Romanovych (ruler of Galicia and Volhynia)
Daniel Romanovich was the ruler of the principalities of Galicia and Volhynia (now in Poland and Ukraine, respectively), who became one of the most powerful princes in east-central Europe. Son of Prince Roman Mstislavich, Daniel was only four years old when his father, who had united Galicia and
- danza (Puerto Rican dance)
Latin American dance: Puerto Rico: In the south the elegant danza was born in Ponce during the second half of the 19th century. Danza was the first national music and dance genre of Puerto Rico, and, like the Cuban danzón, it was a subtle expression of opposition to Spanish rule. As mentioned above, the closed…
- danza de la conquista (dance)
Latin American dance: Ritual contexts: …of Moors and Christians (la danza de Moros y Cristianos), which was performed at major religious festivals in medieval Spain. The dance was based on an older form of religious street theatre, autos sacramentales (“mystery plays”), portrayals of the competition of forces of good and evil. In the 8th…
- Danza de la muerte (Spanish literature)
Spanish literature: The 15th century: …anonymous 15th-century poem, the “Danza de la muerte” (“Dance of Death”), exemplifies a theme then popular with poets, painters, and composers across western Europe. Written with greater satiric force than other works that treated the dance of death theme, it introduced characters (e.g., a rabbi) not found in its…
- danza de los Moros (dance)
Latin American dance: Ritual contexts: …of Moors and Christians (la danza de Moros y Cristianos), which was performed at major religious festivals in medieval Spain. The dance was based on an older form of religious street theatre, autos sacramentales (“mystery plays”), portrayals of the competition of forces of good and evil. In the 8th…
- danza de los voladores (ritual dance)
juego de los voladores, (Spanish: “game of the fliers”), ritual dance of Mexico, possibly originating among the pre-Columbian Totonac and Huastec Indians of the region now occupied by Veracruz and Puebla states, where it is still danced. Although the costumes and music show Spanish influence, the
- danza de Moros y Cristianos (dance)
Latin American dance: Ritual contexts: …of Moors and Christians (la danza de Moros y Cristianos), which was performed at major religious festivals in medieval Spain. The dance was based on an older form of religious street theatre, autos sacramentales (“mystery plays”), portrayals of the competition of forces of good and evil. In the 8th…
- danza de Santiago (dance)
Latin American dance: Ritual contexts: …of Moors and Christians (la danza de Moros y Cristianos), which was performed at major religious festivals in medieval Spain. The dance was based on an older form of religious street theatre, autos sacramentales (“mystery plays”), portrayals of the competition of forces of good and evil. In the 8th…
- Danza delle ore (work by Ponchielli)
Dance of the Hours, musical episode from Act III, scene 2, of Amilcare Ponchielli’s opera La gioconda that is often performed as a stand-alone orchestral work. In its original context—as a balletic interlude to entertain a party—it (and the entire opera) premiered in Milan on April 8, 1876. The
- danza general de la muerte, La (Spanish poem)
dance of death: …Spanish masterpiece, the poem “La danza general de la muerte,” which was inspired by the verses at the Innocents and by several German poems. Late Renaissance literature contains references to the theme in varied contexts.
- Danza, Tony (American actor)
Josh Groban: …series The Good Cop opposite Tony Danza, who played his shady former police officer dad.
- danzante (Mesoamerican art)
pre-Columbian civilizations: Early Monte Albán: The reliefs are usually called danzantes, a name derived from the notion that they represent human figures in dance postures. Actually, almost all of the danzante sculptures show Olmecoid men in strange, rubbery postures as though they were swimming in honey. From their open mouths and closed eyes, it is…
- Danzi, Franz (German composer)
Franz Danzi was the most important member of a German family of musicians of Italian ancestry. Although Danzi was a prolific composer of operas, church music, lieder, symphonies, and concerti, it is for his chamber music, particularly for woodwind ensemble, that he is best known. Danzi studied the
- Danzi, Franz Ignaz (German composer)
Franz Danzi was the most important member of a German family of musicians of Italian ancestry. Although Danzi was a prolific composer of operas, church music, lieder, symphonies, and concerti, it is for his chamber music, particularly for woodwind ensemble, that he is best known. Danzi studied the
- Danzig (Poland)
Gdańsk, city, capital of Pomorskie województwo (province), northern Poland, situated at the mouth of the Vistula River on the Baltic Sea. An important cultural center, it contains schools of medicine, engineering, and fine arts; a maritime center; churches, museums, theaters, and gardens; and a
- Danzig trilogy (novels by Grass)
German literature: The late 1950s and the ’60s: …eventually became known as his Danzig trilogy, consisting of Die Blechtrommel (1959; The Tin Drum), Katz und Maus (1961; Cat and Mouse), and Hundejahre (1963; Dog Years). The trilogy presents a grotesquely imaginative retrospective on the Nazi period. The narrator of Die Blechtrommel is the dwarf Oskar Matzerath, who claims…
- Danzig, Gulf of (gulf, Baltic Sea)
Gulf of Gdańsk, southern inlet of the Baltic Sea, bordered by Poland on the west, south, and southeast and by Kaliningrad oblast (province) of Russia on the east. The gulf extends 40 miles (64 km) from north to south and 60 miles (97 km) from east to west and reaches its maximum depth, more than
- danzón (Cuban dance)
Latin American dance: Dances of national identity (1800–1940): …the habanera, milonga, maxixe, and danzón. Because pelvic movement was included, whether soft sways as in the Cuban danzón or body-to-body hip grinds and the enlacing of the legs as in the Brazilian maxixe, the early 20th-century couple dances were seen as both titillating and wicked.
- dao (Chinese philosophy)
dao, the fundamental concept of Chinese philosophy. Articulated in the classical thought of the Spring and Autumn and Warring States periods of the Zhou dynasty (1046–256 bce), dao exerted considerable influence over subsequent intellectual developments in China. The word for this concept, dao,
- Dao (people)
Mien, peoples of southern China and Southeast Asia. In the early 21st century they numbered some 2,700,000 in China, more than 350,000 in Vietnam, some 40,000 in Thailand, and approximately 20,000 in Laos. Several thousand Mien refugees from Laos have also settled in North America, Australia, and
- Dao Khung (Vietnamese philosopher)
Huynh Phu So was a Vietnamese philosopher, Buddhist reformer, and founder (1939) of the religion Phat Giao Hoa Hao, more simply known as Hoa Hao (q.v.), and an anti-French, anticommunist military and political activist. Frail and sickly in his youth, he was educated by a Buddhist monk and at the
- Dao Phu Quoc (island, Vietnam)
Phu Quoc Island, island in the Gulf of Thailand, belonging to Vietnam. Lying 7 miles (11 km) off the Cambodian coast south of Bok Koŭ (formerly Bokor) and 43 miles (69 km) west of the west coast of southern Vietnam, the partially forested island is almost 30 miles (48 km) long from north to south
- Dao Sheng (Chinese Buddhist monk)
Tao Sheng was an eminent Chinese Buddhist monk and scholar. Tao Sheng studied in the capital city of Chien-k’ang (Nanking) under Chu Fa-t’ai, spent seven years with Hui Yüan in the monastery at Lu-shan, and then went north to Ch’ang-an where, in association with Kumārajīva, he became one of the
- Dao shi xia shan (film by Chen Kaige [2015])
Chen Kaige: …Dao shi xia shan (2015; Monk Comes Down the Mountain) and Kûkai (2017; Legend of the Demon Cat), a fantasy set during the Tang dynasty. In addition, Chen codirected Chang jin hu (2021; The Battle at Lake Changjin), about a military campaign in the Korean War; hugely popular, the war…
- Dao Tan (Vietnamese writer)
Southeast Asian arts: The opera: …Hue, the playwright and scholar Dao Tan gathered 300 actors and with them wrote out texts of the standard repertory that previously had been preserved orally. He then had the texts published and distributed them to actors and troupe managers. In the 20th century there was a movement to loosen…
- dao yin (exercise and meditation technique)
qigong, (pronounced “chi-gong”) an ancient Chinese system of physical exercise and meditation that combines movement, breathing, and mental concentration. Qigong serves as the foundation for the closely related practice of tai chi chuan, which originated as a martial art before becoming popular as
- Dao’an (Chinese Buddhist monk)
Dao’an was a pioneer Chinese Buddhist monk who facilitated the assimilation of Buddhism in China through his work in translating Buddhist scriptures into Chinese. Dao’an’s work influenced Kumarajiva, the greatest translator of the Buddhist scriptures. In addition to his translations and
- Daochuo (Chinese Buddhist monk)
Daochuo was a Chinese Buddhist monk and advocate of the Pure Land doctrine. His predecessor Tanluan had preached that invocation of the name Amitabha (the celestial Buddha of Infinite Light) would allow even evil persons to gain access to the Western Paradise (Sukhavati). Daochuo argued that in
- Daodejing (Chinese literature)
Tao-te Ching, classic of Chinese philosophical literature. The name was first used during the Han dynasty (206 bce–220 ce). It had previously been called Laozi in the belief that it was written by Laozi, identified by the historian Sima Qian as a 6th-century-bce curator of the imperial Chinese
- Daoguang (emperor of Qing dynasty)
Daoguang was the reign name (nianhao) of the sixth emperor of the Qing dynasty of China, during whose reign (1820–50) attempts to prevent governmental decline met with little success. The monarch ascended the throne in 1820, assuming the reign name Daoguang in 1821. The imperial treasury had been
- Daoism (Chinese philosophy and religion)
Taoism, indigenous religio-philosophical tradition that has shaped Chinese life for more than 2,000 years. In the broadest sense, a Taoist attitude toward life can be seen in the accepting and yielding, the joyful and carefree sides of the Chinese character, an attitude that offsets and complements
- Daoist Canon (Daoist literature)
Daozang, a large, imperially sponsored collection of Daoist writings, very few of which have been translated into English. The original canon, printed by the Daoist emperors of the Song dynasty (960–1279 ce), comprised almost 5,000 volumes, but many of these were destroyed by imperial decree during
- Daoji (Chinese painter)
Shitao was a Chinese painter and theoretician who was, with Zhu Da, one of the most famous of the Individualist painters in the early Qing period. Like Zhu, Shitao was of the formerly imperial Ming line and became a Buddhist monk; but unlike Zhu he seems to have led a life typical of his class and
- Daonella (fossil mollusk)
Daonella, genus of extinct pelecypods (clams) useful as a guide, or index, fossil in Triassic rocks. The shell is characterized by a wide dorsal region and by fine radiating riblike lineations. The shell is circular in outline and may show fine growth
- Daoshangshe (Chinese literary society)
Hong Kong literature: The first modern literary society, Daoshangshe (1929; “Island Association”), consisted of members such as Lu Lun (Li Linfeng), Zhang Wenbing, and Xie Chengguang. They modeled themselves on modern mainland Chinese writers and realistically depicted lives in the lower economic classes.
- daoshi (Daoism)
China: Daoism of China: …a local Daoist master (daoshi), assisted by a council of wealthy Daoist laity. Under such circumstances, local Daoist masters could easily become leaders of independent sectarian movements. They could also, in times of unrest, use their charismatic power to play a leading part in local rebellions. In the early…
- daotai (Chinese official)
China: Later innovations: …form of circuit intendants (daotai), who were delegated from provincial agencies as functionally specialized intermediaries with prefectural administrations.
- Daoud (Algeria)
Aïn Beïda, town, northeastern Algeria. It is situated on a plateau at the eastern edge of the Sétif plains. The plateau, once occupied by a large lake, now has several shallow depressions containing saline lakes. Sheltered on the east by wooded hills, Aïn Beïda is in a grain-producing area
- Daoud, Kamel (Algerian writer)
Kamel Daoud is an Algerian writer and journalist who won the Prix Goncourt du Premier Roman for his novel Meursault, contre-enquête (2013; The Meursault Investigation). Daoud, the eldest of six children, was born into an Arabic-speaking Muslim family in Algeria. As a teenager he embraced the
- Daoxue (Chinese philosophy)
Lu Jiuyuan: …the Learning of Principle (lixue), often called the Cheng-Zhu school after its leading philosophers, Cheng Yi and Zhu Xi.
- Daozang (Daoist literature)
Daozang, a large, imperially sponsored collection of Daoist writings, very few of which have been translated into English. The original canon, printed by the Daoist emperors of the Song dynasty (960–1279 ce), comprised almost 5,000 volumes, but many of these were destroyed by imperial decree during
- Dapenkeng culture (ancient culture)
China: 4th and 3rd millennia bce: …coast and on Taiwan, the Dapenkeng corded-ware culture emerged during the 4th and 3rd millennia. This culture, with a fuller inventory of pot and tool types than had previously been seen in the area, developed in part from that of Fuguodun but may also have been influenced by cultures to…
- Dapha, Mount (mountain, India)
Purvachal: …peak in the region is Mount Dapha (in Arunachal Pradesh), with an elevation of 15,020 feet (4,578 metres). The major rivers are the Lohit, Burhi Dihang, Diyung, Kusiyara, Gumti, Kaladan, Manipur, Tixu, Nantaleik, and Naurya. The vegetation is diverse, ranging from tropical evergreen to temperate evergreen and coniferous, and includes…
- Daphnae (ancient city, Egypt)
Daphnae, ancient fortress town (Fortress of Penhase), situated near Qanṭarah in northeastern Egypt. Excavations by Sir Flinders Petrie in 1886 uncovered a massive fort and enclosure surrounded by a wall 40 feet (12 metres) thick, built by Psamtik I in the 7th century bce. A garrison of mercenaries,
- Daphnai (ancient city, Egypt)
Daphnae, ancient fortress town (Fortress of Penhase), situated near Qanṭarah in northeastern Egypt. Excavations by Sir Flinders Petrie in 1886 uncovered a massive fort and enclosure surrounded by a wall 40 feet (12 metres) thick, built by Psamtik I in the 7th century bce. A garrison of mercenaries,
- Daphne (ancient town, Turkey)
Antiochus IV Epiphanes: The revolt of Judas Maccabeus: …might to the world at Daphne, near Antioch, with a grand review of his army: 46,000 foot soldiers were on parade, among them a Macedonian phalanx of 20,000 men and 500 mercenaries equipped with Roman arms, followed by 8,500 horsemen and 306 armoured elephants.
- Daphne (Greek mythology)
Daphne, in Greek mythology, the personification of the laurel (Greek daphnē), a tree whose leaves, formed into garlands, were particularly associated with Apollo (q.v.). Traditionally, the special position of the laurel was connected with Apollo’s love for Daphne, the beautiful daughter of a river
- Daphne (plant genus)
Daphne, genus of about 50 species of flowering shrubs of the mezereum family (Thymelaeaceae) native to Eurasia but widely cultivated for their form and flower clusters. The most popular species include low-growing evergreen types that are often grown in borders and rock gardens in mild climates.