- Gurdjieff, Georgy (Armenian religious leader)
George Ivanovitch Gurdjieff was a Greco-Armenian mystic and philosopher who founded an influential quasi-religious movement. Details of Gurdjieff’s early life are uncertain, but he is thought to have spent his early adult years traveling in Egypt and other parts of the Middle East, India, and
- Gurdon Institute (research institute, Cambridge, United Kingdom)
John Gurdon: …Research Campaign Institute (later the Wellcome Trust/Cancer Research UK Gurdon Institute), a Cambridge-based institution that he cofounded in 1989 and that in 2004 was named for him. He directed the institute until 2001, after which he focused on research full-time.
- Gurdon, John (British biologist)
John Gurdon is a British developmental biologist who was the first to demonstrate that egg cells are able to reprogram differentiated (mature) cell nuclei, reverting them to a pluripotent state, in which they regain the capacity to become any type of cell. Gurdon’s work ultimately came to form the
- Gurdon, Sir John Bertrand (British biologist)
John Gurdon is a British developmental biologist who was the first to demonstrate that egg cells are able to reprogram differentiated (mature) cell nuclei, reverting them to a pluripotent state, in which they regain the capacity to become any type of cell. Gurdon’s work ultimately came to form the
- gurdwara (Sikh temple)
gurdwara, in Sikhism, a place of worship in India and overseas. The gurdwara contains—on a cot under a canopy—a copy of the Adi Granth (“First Volume”), the sacred scripture of Sikhism. It also serves as a meeting place for conducting business of the congregation and wedding and initiation
- Gurev (Kazakhstan)
Atyrau, city, western Kazakhstan. It is a port on the Ural (Zhayyq) River near its mouth on the Caspian Sea. Founded as a fishing settlement in the mid-17th century by the fishing entrepreneur Mikhail Guryev, it soon became a fort on the Ural fortified line manned by the Ural Cossacks. Fishing and
- Gurevich, Mikhail (Soviet engineer)
MiG: …by Artem Mikoyan (M) and Mikhail Gurevich (G). (The i in MiG is the Russian word meaning “and.”)
- Gurgān (Iran)
Gorgān, city, capital of Golestān province, north-central Iran. It is situated along a small tributary of the Qareh River, 23 miles (37 km) from the Caspian Sea. The city, in existence since Achaemenian times, long suffered from inroads of the Turkmen tribes who occupied the plain north of the
- Gurgaon (India)
Gurugram, city, southeastern Haryana state, northwestern India. It is situated between Delhi (northeast) and Rewari (southwest), to which it is connected by road and rail. Gurugram was traditionally an agricultural trade centre. By the last decades of the 20th century, however, manufacturing had
- Gurgī (archaeological site, India)
South Asian arts: Medieval temple architecture: North Indian style of central India: There must have existed at Gurgī a large number of temples, though all of them now are in total ruin. Judging from a colossal image of Śiva-Pārvatī and a huge entrance, which have somehow survived, the main temple must have been of very great size. Another important site is Amarkantak,…
- Gurgum (historical kingdom, Turkey)
Anatolia: The neo-Hittite states from c. 1180 to 700 bce: …743 Milid, Kummuhu, Arpad, and Gurgum still belonged to the Urartian sphere of influence, but in 740 Tiglath-pileser conquered Arpad, and a large group of princes, among them the kings of Kummuhu, Que, Carchemish (where a King Pisiris reigned), and Gurgum, offered their submission to the Assyrians. King Tutammu of…
- Guri Dam (dam, Venezuela)
Guri Dam, hydroelectric project and reservoir on the Caroní River, Bolívar State, eastern Venezuela, on the site of the former village of Guri (submerged by the reservoir), near the former mouth of the Guri River. The first stage of the facility was completed in 1969 as a 348-foot- (106-metre-)
- Guri Reservoir (reservoir, Venezuela)
Orinoco River: Physiography of the Orinoco: …bank after passing through the Guri Reservoir formed by Guri (Raúl Leoni) Dam, above Ciudad Guayana (also called Santo Tomé de Guayana). Farther upstream, on the Churún River (a tributary of the Caroní), are Angel Falls, the highest waterfall in the world (3,212 feet [979 metres]). Many lagoons, including the…
- Gurib-Fakim, Ameenah (president of Mauritius)
Mauritius: Leadership by Navin Ramgoolam, Anerood and Pravind Jugnauth, Ameenah Gurib-Fakim, and Prithvirajsing Roopun: …the country’s first female president, Ameenah Gurib-Fakim. She was sworn in to the primarily ceremonial post on June 5. Her tenure was cut short, however, when she was accused of having engaged in financial misconduct in 2018. She denied the allegations but nonetheless offered to resign, stepping down on March…
- Guriev (Kazakhstan)
Atyrau, city, western Kazakhstan. It is a port on the Ural (Zhayyq) River near its mouth on the Caspian Sea. Founded as a fishing settlement in the mid-17th century by the fishing entrepreneur Mikhail Guryev, it soon became a fort on the Ural fortified line manned by the Ural Cossacks. Fishing and
- Gurira, Danai (American actress)
Danai Gurira is a Zimbabwean American stage and screen actress and playwright. Although Gurira is perhaps best known for her roles in the television series The Walking Dead and the Marvel Cinematic Universe’s Black Panther movies, she is also an award-winning playwright whose works include In the
- Gurira, Danai Jekesai (American actress)
Danai Gurira is a Zimbabwean American stage and screen actress and playwright. Although Gurira is perhaps best known for her roles in the television series The Walking Dead and the Marvel Cinematic Universe’s Black Panther movies, she is also an award-winning playwright whose works include In the
- Gurjara (people)
India: The Guptas: …has been suggested that the Gurjaras, who gradually spread to various parts of northern India, may be identified with the Khazars, a Turkic people of Central Asia. The Huna invasion challenged the stability of the Gupta kingdom, even though the ultimate decline may have been caused by internal factors. A…
- Gurjara-Pratihara dynasty (Indian history)
Gurjara-Pratihara dynasty, either of two dynasties of medieval Hindu India. The line of Harichandra ruled in Mandor, Marwar (Jodhpur, Rajasthan), during the 6th to 9th centuries ce, generally with feudatory status. The line of Nagabhata ruled first at Ujjain and later at Kannauj during the 8th to
- Gurjev (Kazakhstan)
Atyrau, city, western Kazakhstan. It is a port on the Ural (Zhayyq) River near its mouth on the Caspian Sea. Founded as a fishing settlement in the mid-17th century by the fishing entrepreneur Mikhail Guryev, it soon became a fort on the Ural fortified line manned by the Ural Cossacks. Fishing and
- Gurkha (Nepal)
Gurkha, town, central Nepal. It is located on a hill overlooking the Himalayas. The town is famous for its shrine of Gorakhnath, the patron saint of the region. There is also a temple to the Hindu goddess Bhavani (Devi). The ancestral home of the ruling house of Nepal, Gurkha was seized in 1559 by
- Gurkha (people)
Gurkha, soldier from Nepal serving in either the British or Indian army. The term Gurkha refers to the region around the town of Gurkha, whose Shah dynasty (1559–2008) consolidated the modern state of Nepal through military conquest in the late 18th century. The dynasty continued to rule Nepal
- Gurkha (historical state, Nepal)
Nepal: Middle period: …of the principalities—Gorkha (also spelled Gurkha), ruled by the Shah family—began to assert a predominant role in the hills and even to pose a challenge to Nepal Valley. The Mallas, weakened by familial dissension and widespread social and economic discontent, were no match for the great Gorkha ruler Prithvi Narayan…
- Gurkha language
Nepali language, member of the Pahari subgroup of the Indo-Aryan group of the Indo-Iranian division of the Indo-European languages. Nepali is spoken by more than 17 million people, mostly in Nepal and neighbouring parts of India. Smaller speech communities exist in Bhutan, Brunei, and Myanmar.
- Gurkha War (British-Asian history)
China: Tibet and Nepal: …after 1801, had caused the Anglo-Nepalese War of 1814–16 and brought the Gurkhas under British influence. During the war the Gurkhas sent several missions to China in vain expectation of assistance. When political unrest flared up in Nepal after 1832, an anti-British clique seized power and sought assistance from China…
- Gurkhali language
Nepali language, member of the Pahari subgroup of the Indo-Aryan group of the Indo-Iranian division of the Indo-European languages. Nepali is spoken by more than 17 million people, mostly in Nepal and neighbouring parts of India. Smaller speech communities exist in Bhutan, Brunei, and Myanmar.
- Gurko, Vasily Iosifovich (Russian officer)
Vasily Iosifovich Gurko was a Russian cavalry officer and the last chief of the General Staff of tsarist Russia (October 1916–February 1917) and Russian commander in chief from March to June 1917. The son of Field Marshal Iosif Vladimirovich Gurko, Gurko graduated from the General Staff Academy and
- Gurley, Ralph Randolph (American abolitionist)
Ralph Randolph Gurley was for 50 years an administrator (secretary, then vice president, and finally director for life) and spokesman of the American Colonization Society, a group established to transfer freeborn blacks and emancipated slaves in the United States to overseas colonies or client
- Gurma (people)
Gurma, an ethnic group that is chiefly centred on the town of Fada N’Gourma in eastern Burkina Faso, although smaller numbers inhabit northern Togo, northern Benin, and southwestern Niger. They speak a language of the Gur branch of Niger-Congo languages. Like the closely related Mossi, Konkomba,
- Gurmanche (people)
Gurma, an ethnic group that is chiefly centred on the town of Fada N’Gourma in eastern Burkina Faso, although smaller numbers inhabit northern Togo, northern Benin, and southwestern Niger. They speak a language of the Gur branch of Niger-Congo languages. Like the closely related Mossi, Konkomba,
- Gurmat (religion)
Sikhism, religion and philosophy founded in the Punjab region of the Indian subcontinent in the late 15th century. Its members are known as Sikhs. The Sikhs call their faith Gurmat (Punjabi: “the Way of the Guru”). According to Sikh tradition, Sikhism was established by Guru Nanak (1469–1539) and
- gurmata (Sikhism)
Akal Takht: …carried unanimously; they then became gurmatas (decisions of the Guru) and were binding on all Sikhs. Both political and religious decisions were taken at Akal Takht meetings up until 1809, when Maharaja Ranjit Singh, the leader of the newly unified Sikh state, abolished political gurmatas and began to seek counsel…
- Gurmukhi alphabet
Gurmukhi alphabet, writing system developed by the Sikhs in India for their sacred literature. It seems to have been modified from the Lahnda script, which is used to write the Punjabi, Sindhi, and Lahnda (now considered to consist of Siraiki and Hindko) languages. Lahnda, Gurmukhi, and two other
- Gurnah, Abdulrazak (Tanzanian-born British author)
Abdulrazak Gurnah is a Tanzanian-born British author known for his novels about the effects of colonialism, the refugee experience, and displacement in the world. He won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 2021. Gurnah was born to a Muslim family of Yemeni descent in the Sultanate of Zanzibar, an
- gurnard (fish)
sea robin, any of the slim bottom-dwelling fish of the family Triglidae, found in warm and temperate seas of the world. Sea robins are elongated fish with armoured bony heads and two dorsal fins. Their pectoral fins are fan-shaped, with the bottom few rays each forming separate feelers. These
- gurnard, flying (marine fish)
flying gurnard, (family Dactylopteridae), any of a small group of marine fish comprising the family Dactylopteridae (order Scorpaeniformes). Flying gurnards are similar to the sea robins, or gurnards (family Triglidae, order Scorpaeniformes), and are sometimes considered as relatives of that group
- Gurney’s pitta (bird)
pitta: Gurney’s pitta (P. gurneyi)—a gorgeous 21-cm (8-inch) bird with a blue cap, black mask, yellow collar, black breast, buff wings, and turquoise tail—is today among the rarest birds in the world. Though once not uncommon from peninsular Thailand to the lowland forests of Myanmar, it…
- Gurney, Edmund (British psychologist)
music: The concept of dynamism: …spokesman, the 19th-century English psychologist Edmund Gurney (1847–88), for example, may incorporate formalist, symbolist, expressionist, and psychological elements, in varying proportions, to explain the phenomenon of music. Although some disagreements are more apparent than real because of the inherent problems of terminology and definition, diametrically opposing views are also held…
- Gurney, Elizabeth (British philanthropist)
Elizabeth Fry was a British Quaker philanthropist and one of the chief promoters of prison reform in Europe. She also helped to improve the British hospital system and the treatment of the insane. The daughter of a wealthy Quaker banker and merchant, she married (1800) Joseph Fry, a London
- Gurney, Ivor (British composer and poet)
English literature: The literature of World War I and the interwar period: …in service); Siegfried Sassoon and Ivor Gurney caught the mounting anger and sense of waste as the war continued; and Isaac Rosenberg (perhaps the most original of the war poets), Wilfred Owen, and Edmund Blunden not only caught the comradely compassion of the trenches but also addressed themselves to the…
- Gurney, Joseph John (British minister)
Society of Friends: The impact of evangelicalism: …the leading English evangelical Friend, Joseph John Gurney (one of the few systematic theologians ever produced in the Society of Friends), led to a further separation when the evangelical or “Gurneyite” New England Yearly Meeting disowned John Wilbur, an orthodox quietist Friend.
- Gurney, Oliver Robert (British archaeologist)
Anatolia: The Hittite empire to c. 1180 bce: Gurney summarizes the Egyptian text as follows:
- Gurney, Ronald W. (American physicist)
quantum mechanics: Tunneling: …by George Gamow and by Ronald W. Gurney and Edward Condon in 1928, the alpha particle is confined before the decay by a potential of the shape shown in Figure 1. For a given nuclear species, it is possible to measure the energy E of the emitted alpha particle and…
- Gurney, Sir Goldsworthy (British inventor)
Sir Goldsworthy Gurney was a prolific English inventor who built technically successful steam carriages a half century before the advent of the gasoline-powered automobile. Educated for a medical career, Gurney practiced as a surgeon in Wadebridge and London but soon turned his attention to solving
- Gurneyite (religious group)
Friends United Meeting: …of the orthodox Friends, the Gurneyites, adopted worship services with ministers presiding, gave more attention to creeds and scripture rather than concentrating on the Inner Light, and developed more active social and mission programs. A reaction to this movement was led by John Wilbur, a Friends minister who stressed traditional…
- Guro (people)
Guro, people of the Côte d’Ivoire (Ivory Coast), in the valley regions of the Bandama River; they speak a language of the Mande branch of the Niger-Congo family of African languages. The Guro came originally from the north and northwest, driven by Mande invasions in the second half of the 18th
- Guro, Elena Genrikhovna (Russian artist and writer)
Yelena Genrikhovna Guro was a Russian painter, graphic artist, book illustrator, poet, and prose writer who developed new theories of colour in painting. These theories were implemented by her husband, the painter Mikhail Matyushin, after her untimely death. In her work she unified two eras in the
- Guro, Yelena Genrikhovna (Russian artist and writer)
Yelena Genrikhovna Guro was a Russian painter, graphic artist, book illustrator, poet, and prose writer who developed new theories of colour in painting. These theories were implemented by her husband, the painter Mikhail Matyushin, after her untimely death. In her work she unified two eras in the
- Gurob (Egypt)
Sir Flinders Petrie: At Gurob he found numerous papyri and Aegean pottery that substantiated dates of ancient Greek civilizations, including the Mycenaean. At the Pyramid of Hawara he searched through the tomb of Pharaoh Amenemhet III to discover how grave robbers could have found the tomb’s opening and made…
- gurpurab (Sikh festival)
Sikhism: Rites and festivals: …of the main festivals are gurpurabs, or events commemorating important incidents in the lives of the Gurus, such as the birthdays of Nanak and Gobind Singh and the martyrdoms of Arjan and Tegh Bahadur. The remaining four are the installation of the Guru Granth Sahib, the New Year festival of…
- Gurr, Ted (American political scientist)
civil war: Economic causes of civil war: The American political scientist Ted Gurr, for example, highlighted inequality and how groups may resort to rebellion if they are dissatisfied with their current economic status relative to their aspirations. The literature on nationalist conflicts emphasized how both relatively poorer and wealthier groups are likely to rebel against the…
- Gurr, Ted Robert (American political scientist)
civil war: Economic causes of civil war: The American political scientist Ted Gurr, for example, highlighted inequality and how groups may resort to rebellion if they are dissatisfied with their current economic status relative to their aspirations. The literature on nationalist conflicts emphasized how both relatively poorer and wealthier groups are likely to rebel against the…
- Gurragcha, Jugderdemidiin (Mongolian cosmonaut)
Jugderdemidiin Gurragcha was the first Mongolian and second Asian to go into space. Gurragcha studied aerospace engineering at the Zhukovsky Military Engineering Academy in Ulan Bator (now Ulaanbaatar), graduating in 1977. He joined the Mongolian Air Force as an aeronautical engineer and rose to
- Gurrelieder (work by Schoenberg)
Arnold Schoenberg: Evolution from tonality of Arnold Schoenberg: On February 23, 1913, his Gurrelieder (begun in 1900) was first performed in Vienna. The gigantic cantata calls for unusually large vocal and orchestral forces. Along with Mahler’s Eighth Symphony (Symphony of a Thousand), the Gurrelieder represents the peak of the post-Romantic monumental style. Gurrelieder was received with wild enthusiasm…
- Gurs (concentration camp, France)
Gurs, large concentration camp near Pau, in southwestern France at the foot of the Pyrenees, that was used successively by independent France, Vichy France, and Nazi Germany. Gurs was built initially to house Republican refugees from the Spanish Civil War and later held refugees fleeing persecution
- Gürsel, Cemal (Turkish military leader)
Turkey: The military coup of 1960: …of the land forces, General Cemal Gürsel, demanded political reforms and resigned when his demands were refused. On May 27 the army acted; an almost bloodless coup was carried out by officers and cadets from the Istanbul and Ankara war colleges. The leaders established a 38-member National Unity Committee with…
- Gursky, Andreas (German photographer)
Andreas Gursky is a German photographer known for his monumental digitally manipulated photographs that examine consumer culture and the busyness of contemporary life. His unique compositional strategies result in dramatic images that walk the line between representation and abstraction. Gursky,
- Gurtu, Shobha (Indian singer)
Shobha Gurtu was a renowned singer of Indian classical music. Known for her rich earthy voice, distinctive vocal style, and mastery of various song genres, she was considered the “queen of thumri,” a light classical Hindustani style. Her mother, Menakabai Shirodkar, who was a professional dancer
- Guru (film by Ratnam [2007])
Mani Ratnam: His next film, the Tamil-language Guru (2007), was set in the 1950s and was based on the rise to fortune of tycoon Dhirubhai Ambani. The Hindi-language Raavan (2010) and its simultaneously shot Tamil version, Raavanan, were contemporary versions of the Ramayana. Ratnam’s later films included the romantic OK kanmani (2015;…
- Guru (Sikhism)
Guru, in Sikhism, any of the first 10 leaders of the Sikh religion of northern India. The Punjabi word sikh (“learner”) is related to the Sanskrit shishya (“disciple”), and all Sikhs are disciples of the Guru (spiritual guide, or teacher). The first Sikh Guru, Nanak, established the practice of
- guru (Hinduism)
guru, in Hinduism, a personal spiritual teacher or guide. From at least the mid-1st millennium bce, when the Upanishads (speculative commentaries on the Vedas, the revealed scriptures of Hinduism) were composed, India has stressed the importance of the tutorial method in religious instruction. In
- Guru Amar Das (Sikh Guru)
Guru Amar Das was the third Sikh Guru (1522–74), so named at the advanced age of 73. He is noted for his division of the Punjab into administrative districts and for encouraging missionary work to spread the Sikh faith. He was much revered for his wisdom and piety, and it was said that even the
- Guru Angad (Sikh Guru)
Guru Angad was the second Sikh Guru (1539–52) and standardizer of the Punjabi script, Gurmukhi, in which many parts of the Adi Granth, the sacred book of the Sikhs, are written. While on a pilgrimage to the shrine of a Hindu goddess, Angad met the founder of the Sikh religion, Guru Nanak, whom he
- Guru Arjan (Sikh Guru)
Guru Arjan was the Sikh religion’s fifth Guru (1581–1606) and its first martyr. One of the greatest of the Sikh Gurus, Arjan took over the leadership of the Sikh community from his father, Guru Ram Das, and successfully expanded it. He quickly completed the Harimandir, the Golden Temple, at
- Guru Arjun (Sikh Guru)
Guru Arjan was the Sikh religion’s fifth Guru (1581–1606) and its first martyr. One of the greatest of the Sikh Gurus, Arjan took over the leadership of the Sikh community from his father, Guru Ram Das, and successfully expanded it. He quickly completed the Harimandir, the Golden Temple, at
- Guru Gobind Singh (Sikh Guru)
Guru Gobind Singh was an Indian spiritual leader who is revered as the 10th and last of the human Sikh Gurus, known chiefly for his creation of the Khalsa (Punjabi: “the Pure”), a casteless order of Sikhs that embodies courage and commitment to Sikh ideals. Guru Gobind Singh was born Gobind Rai to
- Guru Granth Sahib (Sikh sacred scripture)
Adi Granth, the sacred scripture of Sikhism, a religion of India. It is a collection of nearly 6,000 hymns of the Sikh Gurus (religious leaders) and various early and medieval saints of different religions and castes. The Adi Granth is the central object of worship in all gurdwaras (Sikh temples)
- Guru Har Rai (Sikh Guru)
Guru Har Rai was the seventh Sikh Guru (1644–61). Guru Har Rai’s grandfather was Hargobind, the sixth Guru and a great military leader. Guru Har Rai traveled in the Malwa area, where he converted the local Brar tribes to Sikhism. He maintained the sizable order of standing troops that his
- Guru Hargobind (Sikh Guru)
Guru Hargobind was the sixth Sikh Guru (1606–44), who developed a strong Sikh army and gave the Sikh religion its military character, in accord with the instructions of his father, Guru Arjan, the first Sikh martyr, who had been executed on the order of the Mughal emperor Jahāngīr. Up to the time
- Guru Hari Krishen (Sikh Guru)
Guru Hari Krishen was the eighth Sikh Guru (1661–64), who was installed at five years of age and reigned for only three years. He is said to have possessed vast wisdom and to have amazed visiting Brahmans (Hindu priests) with his great knowledge of the Hindu scripture Bhagavadgita. Many wondrous
- Guru Lahina (Sikh Guru)
Guru Angad was the second Sikh Guru (1539–52) and standardizer of the Punjabi script, Gurmukhi, in which many parts of the Adi Granth, the sacred book of the Sikhs, are written. While on a pilgrimage to the shrine of a Hindu goddess, Angad met the founder of the Sikh religion, Guru Nanak, whom he
- Guru Lehna (Sikh Guru)
Guru Angad was the second Sikh Guru (1539–52) and standardizer of the Punjabi script, Gurmukhi, in which many parts of the Adi Granth, the sacred book of the Sikhs, are written. While on a pilgrimage to the shrine of a Hindu goddess, Angad met the founder of the Sikh religion, Guru Nanak, whom he
- Guru Nanak (founder of Sikhism)
Guru Nanak was an Indian spiritual teacher who is revered as the founder and the first Guru of Sikhism, a monotheistic religion that combines Hindu and Muslim influences. His teachings, expressed through devotional hymns commonly known as shabads, many of which still survive, stress liberation
- Guru Nanak Dev University (university, Amritsar, India)
Sikhism: The Punjabi suba: …by Guru Nanak University (now Guru Nanak Dev University) in Amritsar in 1969, founded to honor the quincentenary of the birth of Guru Nanak. (Another reason for the establishment of Guru Nanak University was that Punjabi University tended to favor the trading castes; Guru Nanak University, by contrast, favored the…
- Guru Peak (mountain, India)
Abu: …situated on the slopes of Mount Abu, an isolated massif in the Aravalli Range.
- Guru Ram Das (Sikh Guru)
Guru Ram Das was the fourth Sikh Guru (1574–81) and founder of Amritsar, the centre of Sikhism and the site of the Sikhs’ principal place of worship—the Harmandir Sahib, or Golden Temple. Guru Ram Das continued the missionary endeavour begun by his predecessor, Amar Das. On land given to him by the
- Guru Rimpoche (Buddhist mystic)
Padmasambhava was a legendary Indian Buddhist mystic who introduced Tantric Buddhism to Tibet and who is credited with establishing the first Buddhist monastery there. According to tradition, he was a native of Udyāna (now Swat, Pak.), an area famed for its magicians. Padmasambhava was a Tantrist
- Guru Tegh Bahādur (Sikh Guru)
Guru Tegh Bahādur was the ninth Sikh Guru (1664–75) and second Sikh martyr. He was also the father of the 10th Guru, Gobind Singh. After the eighth Guru, Hari Krishen, the “child Guru,” told his followers that his successor would be found in the village of Bakāla, a deputation went there and found
- Guru, Narayana (Hindu leader)
Narayana Guru was an Indian social reformer, poet, and Hindu sage who led a movement against the Hindu caste system. Guru believed that all people are equal and thus belong to just one caste, the caste of humankind. He expressed this idea in his famous saying, “One caste, one religion, one god for
- Guru, The (film by Ivory [1969])
Utpal Dutt: Films: Ivory (Shakespeare Wallah [1965] and The Guru [1969]).
- Gurugram (India)
Gurugram, city, southeastern Haryana state, northwestern India. It is situated between Delhi (northeast) and Rewari (southwest), to which it is connected by road and rail. Gurugram was traditionally an agricultural trade centre. By the last decades of the 20th century, however, manufacturing had
- Guruhuswa (historical kingdom, Africa)
Butua, former African kingdom in what is now southwestern Zimbabwe. Though called Guruhuswa in Shona tradition, the region was first mentioned in Portuguese records as Butua in 1512. The Togwa dynasty governed the kingdom until 1683, when it was conquered and absorbed by the changamire (or ruler)
- gurukul (Indian system of education)
boarding school: History of boarding schools across the world: …their guru (teacher) at a gurukul (literally, “house of the teacher”) and studied primarily religious teachings and traditional scriptures, as well as politics and science. Education was imparted by word of mouth, though manuscripts made of palm leaves were used in later periods. During the early centuries of the Common…
- gurukula (Indian system of education)
boarding school: History of boarding schools across the world: …their guru (teacher) at a gurukul (literally, “house of the teacher”) and studied primarily religious teachings and traditional scriptures, as well as politics and science. Education was imparted by word of mouth, though manuscripts made of palm leaves were used in later periods. During the early centuries of the Common…
- Guruḷugōmī (Sinhalese writer)
South Asian arts: Sinhalese literature: 10th century ad to 19th century: … (“Flood of the Ambrosia”), by Guruḷugōmī, which in 18 chapters purports to narrate the life of the Buddha, with specific emphasis on one of his nine virtues—his capacity to tame recalcitrant people or forces. In a similar vein is the literature of devotion and counsel, in which Buddhist virtues are…
- Gurung (people)
Gurung, people of Nepal living mainly on the southern flank of the Annapūrna mountain massif. Their numbers are estimated at about 200,000. The Gurung speak a language of the Tibeto-Burman family. Many are Lamaist Buddhists in religion, while others have adopted Hinduism. They make their living in
- Gurunsi (people)
Burkina Faso: Ethnic groups and languages: Other Gur-speaking peoples are the Gurunsi, the Senufo, the Bwa, and the Lobi.
- Gurwik-Górska, Maria (Polish artist)
Tamara de Lempicka was a 20th-century artist who created a unique painting style, often called “stylized cubism,” which appears to combine the monumentality of 16th-century Mannerism, the mechanical feel of Italian Futurism, and the exaggeration of contemporary fashion magazines. De Lempicka is
- Gurwik-Górska, Tamara (Polish artist)
Tamara de Lempicka was a 20th-century artist who created a unique painting style, often called “stylized cubism,” which appears to combine the monumentality of 16th-century Mannerism, the mechanical feel of Italian Futurism, and the exaggeration of contemporary fashion magazines. De Lempicka is
- Gurwitsch, Aron (Lithuanian-American philosopher)
phenomenology: In the United States: …student of human cognition, and Aron Gurwitsch, a Lithuanian-born philosopher. Schutz came early to phenomenology, developing a social science on a phenomenological basis. Gurwitsch, author of Théorie du champ de la conscience (1957; The Field of Consciousness), came to phenomenology through his study of the Gestalt psychologists Adhemar Gelb and…
- Guryev (Kazakhstan)
Atyrau, city, western Kazakhstan. It is a port on the Ural (Zhayyq) River near its mouth on the Caspian Sea. Founded as a fishing settlement in the mid-17th century by the fishing entrepreneur Mikhail Guryev, it soon became a fort on the Ural fortified line manned by the Ural Cossacks. Fishing and
- Guryul Ravine (geological formation, India)
Triassic Period: The Permian-Triassic boundary: …may prevail at the famous Guryul Ravine section in Kashmir. Studies on new sections in Tibet (Selong-Xishan) and China (Shangsi, Meishan) have not yet led to agreement on whether there is continuous sedimentation between the Permian and Triassic or a well-disguised unconformity. Tozer supports the latter view and, furthermore, believes…
- Gürzenich (building, Cologne, Germany)
Cologne: Architecture of Cologne: The Gürzenich, or Banquet Hall, of the merchants of the city (1441–47), reconstructed as a concert and festival hall, and the 16th-century Arsenal, which contains a historical museum, were both restored to their medieval form only on the outside.
- Gus Dur (president of Indonesia)
Abdurrahman Wahid was an Indonesian Muslim religious leader and politician who was president of Indonesia from 1999 to 2001. Wahid’s grandfathers were among the founders of the world’s largest Islamic organization, the 25-million-member Nahdatul Ulama (NU). Wahid studied the Qurʾān intensively at
- Gus’-Chrustal’nyj (Russia)
Gus-Khrustalny, city and centre of a rayon (sector), Vladimir oblast (province), western Russia, on the Gus River. The city has long been famous as a centre of the glass industry, from which it takes its name. Its products, which include cut glass and decorative objects, are exported worldwide.
- Gus-Khrustalny (Russia)
Gus-Khrustalny, city and centre of a rayon (sector), Vladimir oblast (province), western Russia, on the Gus River. The city has long been famous as a centre of the glass industry, from which it takes its name. Its products, which include cut glass and decorative objects, are exported worldwide.
- Gusanos, Los (novel by Sayles)
John Sayles: …Movie Matewan (1987), the novel Los Gusanos (1991), and Dillinger in Hollywood (2004), a collection of short stories. While searching for a publisher for A Moment in the Sun (2011), a sweeping historical novel set during the turn of the 20th century, Sayles traveled to the Philippines to make Amigo…
- Gusau (Nigeria)
Gusau, town, capital of Zamfara state, northwestern Nigeria, located on the Sokoto River. It grew after the arrival of the railway from Zaria, 110 miles (180 km) southeast, in 1927 and is now a major collecting point for cotton and peanuts (groundnuts) grown in the surrounding area. Although cotton
- guselkumab (drug)
psoriasis: (Remicade), etanercept (Enbrel), and guselkumab (Tremfya).
- Gusenbauer, Alfred (Austrian official)
Austria: Austria in the European Union: …formed a coalition government, with Alfred Gusenbauer of the Social Democrats as chancellor. However, the unpopularity of Gusenbauer, who was perceived as an ineffective leader, as well as disputes over social policy, soon weakened the coalition. It collapsed in July 2008 following the withdrawal of the People’s Party. Parliamentary elections…