• Japanese oyster (mollusk)

    oyster: gigas, of Japanese coastal waters, is among the largest oysters, attaining lengths of about 30 cm (1 foot). Like C. virginica, the Sydney rock oyster (Crassostrea commercialis) changes sex; born male, it changes to female later in life. It is the most economically important Australian edible oyster.

  • Japanese pagoda tree (plant)

    Japanese pagoda tree, (Styphnolobium japonicum), tree of the pea family (Fabaceae). Despite its name, the Japanese pagoda tree is native to China and was introduced to Japan, where it is commonly found on the grounds of Buddhist temples. The plant is important in traditional medicine, and its

  • Japanese performing arts

    Japanese performing arts, the varied and technically complex dance and theatre arts of Japan. Among the most important of these are Noh theatre or dance drama, Kabuki, and Bunraku. From prehistoric times, dances have served as an intermediary between humans and the gods in Japan. Kagura dances

  • Japanese period name (Japanese history)

    Reiwa period: …is enlisted to create a gengō, which is not revealed until the death of an emperor marks the close of the previous era. In December 2017, however, Akihito formally declared his intention to abdicate on April 30, 2019, at which time the Heisei period would come to a end. Because…

  • Japanese persimmon (plant)

    persimmon: The Japanese persimmon (Diospyros kaki), an important and extensively grown fruit in China and Japan, where it is known as kaki, was introduced into France and other Mediterranean countries in the 19th century and grown to a limited extent there. Introduced into the United States a…

  • Japanese philosophy

    Japanese philosophy, intellectual discourse developed by Japanese thinkers, scholars, and political and religious leaders who creatively combined indigenous philosophical and religious traditions with key concepts adopted and assimilated from nonnative traditions—first from greater East Asia and

  • Japanese pieris (plant)

    pieris: …mountain andromeda (Pieris floribunda), and Japanese pieris, or Japanese andromeda (P. japonica), are cultivated as ornamentals and have several horticultural varieties.

  • Japanese pilchard (fish)

    clupeiform: Migration: Japanese pilchards (Sardinella sagax melanosticta), for example, winter and spawn in the southern part of the Sea of Japan and on the Pacific side of the southern islands of Japan. In early summer they migrate to the northern end of the Tatar Strait and, in…

  • Japanese pinecone fish

    pinecone fish: The Japanese pinecone fish (M. japonicus) normally reaches a length of 13 cm (5 inches) and travels in schools near the ocean bottom. Although small, it is commercially important as a food fish and as a saltwater aquarium fish.

  • Japanese plum (plant and fruit)

    plum: domestica) and the Japanese plum (P. salicina) are grown commercially for their fruits, and a number of species, including the purple-leaf plum (P. cerasifera), are used as ornamental plants for their attractive flowers and leaves.

  • Japanese plum-yew (plant)

    plum-yew: The Japanese plum-yew, or cow’s tail pine (C. harringtonia), grows only in cultivation; it may reach 3 metres (about 10 feet). The Chinese plum-yew (C. fortunei) grows to 12 metres (40 feet) in the wild and up to 6 metres (20 feet) under cultivation.

  • Japanese pottery

    Japanese pottery, objects made in Japan from clay and hardened by fire: earthenware, stoneware, and porcelain. Japan is a well-wooded country, and wood has always been used there for domestic utensils of all kinds, either in a natural state or lacquered. Until recent times, pottery and porcelain

  • Japanese privet (plant)

    privet: Japanese privet (L. japonicum), about 4.7 m tall, has very glossy leaves. It also requires mild winters, as does the smaller leaved California privet (L. ovalifolium) from Japan, commonly grown as a hedge plant. All four species have variegated forms.

  • Japanese quail (bird)

    animal learning: Imprinting: Experiments with Japanese quail have shown that their sexual preferences as adults are influenced by the precise individuals to whom they are exposed at an earlier age. Their preferred mate is one like, but not too like, the individuals on whom they imprinted. The preference for some…

  • Japanese quince (plant)

    flowering quince: Major species: The Japanese quince (C. japonica) is popularly grown in bonsai and has provided several horticultural varieties with red, pink, or white flowers. The common flowering quince (C. speciosa), frequently used in informal hedges, bears red, pink, or white flowers and grows to about 2 metres (6.6…

  • Japanese raccoon dog (canine)

    raccoon dog, (Nyctereutes procyonoides), member of the dog family (Canidae) native to eastern Asia and introduced into Europe. Some authorities place it in the raccoon family, Procyonidae. It resembles the raccoon in having dark facial markings that contrast with its yellowish brown coat, but it

  • Japanese ragged-tooth shark (fish)

    crocodile shark, (Pseudocarcharias kamoharai), small open-ocean shark best known for its large eyes, long gill slits, and formidable teeth. The crocodile shark is the sole member of genus Pseudocarcharias in the family Pseudocarchariidae, order Lamniformes. It inhabits tropical and subtropical

  • Japanese raisin tree (plant and fruit)

    raisin tree, (species Hovenia dulcis), shrub or tree, of the buckthorn family (Rhamnaceae), native to East Asia and sometimes cultivated in other regions. It is so-named because the fruit resembles a raisin in size and colour. The plant grows to about 7.5 m (about 25 feet) in height and has

  • Japanese Red Army (terrorist organization)

    Japanese Red Army, militant Japanese organization that was formed in 1969 in the merger of two far-left factions. Beginning in 1970, the Red Army undertook several major terrorist operations, including the hijacking of several Japan Air Lines airplanes, a massacre at Tel Aviv’s Lod Airport (1972),

  • Japanese redwood (tree)

    Japanese cedar, (Cryptomeria japonica), a coniferous evergreen timber tree and only species of the genus Cryptomeria of the family Cupressaceae (sometimes classified in the so-called deciduous cypress family Taxodiaceae), native to eastern Asia. The tree may attain 45 metres (150 feet) or more in

  • Japanese religion

    Japanese religion, the religious beliefs and practices of the Japanese people. There is no single dominant religion in Japan. Instead, several religious and quasi-religious systems exist side by side. Shintō was traditionally intertwined with the functions of the Japanese state, while the broader

  • Japanese serow (mammal)

    serow: The Japanese serow (36–38 kg [79–84 pounds] and about 75 cm [30 inches] at shoulder height) is endemic to the Japanese islands of Honshu, Shikoku, and Kyushu. Once severely threatened because of overhunting and habitat loss, it was designated as a “special natural monument” in 1955.…

  • Japanese skimmia (plant)

    Rutaceae: …shrub of temperate regions, and Japanese skimmia (Skimmia japonica) and Chinese skimmia (S. reevesiana), which have attractive white flowers and red berries. Orange jessamine (Murraya paniculata) is native to Southeast Asia and is widely grown in the tropics as an ornamental. Perhaps the most unusual is the gas plant (Dictamnus…

  • Japanese snowball (plant)

    viburnum: macrocephalum variety sterile) and Japanese snowball (V. plicatum) are common snowball bushes with large balls of white to greenish white flowers. The 4.5-metre- (15-foot-) high black haw (V. prunifolium), of eastern North America, has plumlike leaves, small white flower clusters, and blue-black berries.

  • Japanese snowbell (plant)

    storax: japonicum (Japanese snowbell), native to East Asia and growing to about 9 metres (30 feet) tall; S. obassia (fragrant snowbell), native to Japan and growing to about 9 metres; S. americana, native to southeastern North America and growing from 1.8 to 2.7 metres (6 to 9…

  • Japanese spaniel (breed of dog)

    Japanese spaniel, breed of toy dog that originated in China and was introduced to Japan, where it was kept by royalty. The breed became known in the West when Commodore Matthew Perry returned from Japan in 1853 with several dogs that had been presented to him. The Japanese spaniel is a compact,

  • Japanese spider crab (crustacean)

    giant crab, (Macrocheira kaempferi), species of spider crab (q.v.) native to Pacific waters near Japan. It occurs at depths of 50 to 300 m (150 to 1,000 feet). The largest specimens may be up to 3.7 m or more from the tip of one outstretched claw to another. The body is about 37 cm (15 inches)

  • Japanese stewartia (plant)

    stewartia: Japanese stewartia (S. pseudocamellia), a tree that grows to a height of 15 metres (50 feet) and has reddish, peeling bark and large white flowers with conspicuous orange stamens in the centre. Silky camellia, or Virginia stewartia (S. malacodendron), a shrub up to 3.5 metres…

  • Japanese stone pine (tree)

    mountain ecosystem: Flora: Japanese stone pine (Pinus pumila), heathers, and grasses are particularly prominent. Like most other plants in this alpine vegetation, these plants have near relatives in the alpine areas of other mountainous, north temperate regions. The prostrate shrubs of the stone pine form dense, low thickets…

  • Japanese torreya (plant)

    Japanese torreya, (Torreya nucifera), an ornamental evergreen timber tree of the yew family (Taxaceae), native to the southern islands of Japan. Although it is the hardiest species of its genus and may be 10 to 25 metres (about 35 to 80 feet) tall, it assumes a shrubby form in less temperate areas.

  • Japanese Trade Union Confederation (labor organization, Japan)

    Japanese Trade Union Confederation (Rengō), largest national trade union in Japan. The federation was founded in 1989 and absorbed its predecessors—including the General Council of Trade Unions of Japan (Sōhyō), the Japanese Confederation of Labour (Dōmei), and others—and brought together both

  • Japanese Tragedy, A (film by Kinoshita)

    Kinoshita Keisuke: Nihon no higeki (1953; A Japanese Tragedy), a film examining the weakened Japanese family structure, is skillfully constructed by crosscutting between stories and by the effective incorporation of flashbacks. Narayama-bushi kō (1958; Ballad of Narayama) is praised for the technical excellence with which Kinoshita used colour and the wide…

  • Japanese umbrella pine (tree)

    umbrella pine, (Sciadopitys verticillata), coniferous evergreen tree endemic to Japan, the only member of the umbrella pine family (Sciadopityaceae). Historically, this genus was classified variously in Cupressaceae or the now-defunct Taxodiaceae, but subsequent studies confirmed its structural

  • Japanese varnish tree (tree group)

    varnish tree, any of various trees whose milky juice is used to make a varnish or lacquer. The term is applied particularly to an Asian tree (Toxicodendron vernicifluum), related to poison ivy, that is highly irritating to the skin. On being tapped, the tree exudes a thick, milky emulsion that was

  • Japanese War Bride (film by Vidor [1952])

    King Vidor: Later films: …Roman and Richard Todd, and Japanese War Bride (1952) were the sort of near B-films that would have been inconceivable for someone of his stature a decade earlier. Vidor had more success with Ruby Gentry (1952), a melodrama that starred Jones as a Southern vixen who marries a wealthy man…

  • Japanese wisteria (plant)

    wisteria: Cultivated species include Japanese wisteria (Wisteria floribunda), native to Japan and the hardiest member of the genus; American wisteria (W. frutescens), native to the southeastern United States; and Chinese wisteria (W. sinensis), native to China.

  • Japanese wood mouse (rodent)

    wood mouse: …day, and some, particularly the Japanese wood mouse (A. argenteus), are agile climbers. The long-tailed field mouse (A. sylvaticus) is one of the most intensively studied species in the genus. In Europe it ranges north to Scandinavia and east to Ukraine. This wood mouse is also found in North Africa…

  • Japanese writing system

    writing: Japanese writing: The Japanese came into contact with Chinese culture during the Chinese Han dynasty (206 bce–220 ce), and they began to write their own language in the 5th century ce, basing their writing system on the Chinese model. But the two languages are fundamentally…

  • Japanese yew (plant)

    Japanese yew, (Taxus cuspidata), an ornamental evergreen shrub or tree of the yew family (Taxaceae), native to Japan and widely cultivated in the Northern Hemisphere. Rising to a height of 16 metres (about 52 feet), it resembles the English yew but is hardier and faster-growing. Each leaf has two

  • Japanese zelkova (plant)

    Zelkova: The Japanese zelkova, or keaki (Z. serrata), up to 30 m (100 feet) tall and with sharply toothed deep green leaves, is an important timber tree and bonsai subject in Japan. It is widely planted elsewhere as a shade tree substitute for the disease-ravaged American elm,…

  • Japanism (art)

    Japanism, aesthetic cult that had a major impact on Impressionist painting. Japanism began in the mid-19th century, just after Japanese trade with the West was opened, and lasted for a generation in France and England. Japanism depended upon the careful study of imported works of Japanese art,

  • japanning (decorative art)

    japanning, in the decorative arts, process popular in 18th-century Europe for finishing and ornamenting wood, leather, tin, and papier-mâché in imitation of the celebrated lacquerwork of the Japanese. In modern industry, the term refers to the decoration and protection of the surfaces of metal

  • Japantown (community, San Francisco, California, United States)

    San Francisco: People of San Francisco: …of the Japanese community is Japantown (Nihonmachi), a few blocks east of Fillmore Street, now an ambitious commercial and cultural centre. Though the rising generation of Japanese Americans go to Japantown as visitors, bound for church services, social or cultural events (such as the annual cherry blossom festival), or to…

  • Japarov, Sadyr (president of Kyrgyzstan)

    Kyrgyzstan: Presidency of Sadyr Japarov: …detention, including Atambayev, Isakov, and Sadyr Japarov (Zhaparov), a former associate of Bakiyev imprisoned after his supporters took a government official hostage in 2013. On October 6 Prime Minister Kubatbek Boronov resigned amid the unrest, and on October 10 Japarov was selected to be prime minister by an extraordinary session…

  • Japazeus (American Indian chief)

    Jamestown Colony: Peace and the onset of the tobacco economy (1613–14): …colony and became acquainted with Japazeus, the chief of the Patawomeck tribe. The Patawomeck were located along the Potomac River, beyond Chief Powhatan’s empire. In March 1613 Argall chanced to learn that Powhatan’s daughter Pocahontas was staying with Japazeus. Argall resolved to kidnap her and ransom her for English prisoners…

  • Japelli, Giuseppe (Italian architect)

    Western architecture: Italy: …Carlo Felice, Genoa (1826–28); and Giuseppe Japelli’s meat market at Padua (1821) using the unfluted Paestum order all exemplify the continuing taste for Greek forms. Japelli was also the architect of the Pedrocchi Café, Padua (1816–42), which, with its Doric and Gothic exteriors and equally eclectic interiors is a remarkable…

  • Japheth (biblical figure)

    Japheth, one of the three sons of Noah in the Bible. According to the tradition of the “Priestly” source of the Pentateuch, Japheth is Noah’s third son, but the older Yahwist tradition (Genesis 9:20–27) represents him as the second son. The oracle of blessing (Genesis 9:27), “God enlarge Japheth,

  • Japicx, Gysbert (Dutch writer)

    Frisian literature: …is known today, began with Gysbert Japicx (also spelled Japiks; 1603–66) in the 17th century. Friesland’s incorporation into the Dutch Republic in 1581 threatened to reduce Frisian to a mere peasant dialect. Japicx, however, through his Friesche Rymlerye (1668; “Frisian Verse”) and other works proved the richness and versatility of…

  • Japiks, Gysbert (Dutch writer)

    Frisian literature: …is known today, began with Gysbert Japicx (also spelled Japiks; 1603–66) in the 17th century. Friesland’s incorporation into the Dutch Republic in 1581 threatened to reduce Frisian to a mere peasant dialect. Japicx, however, through his Friesche Rymlerye (1668; “Frisian Verse”) and other works proved the richness and versatility of…

  • Japjī (Sikh sacred scripture)

    Sikhism: The Adi Granth and the Dasam Granth: …rather than sung—the supremely beautiful Japji of Guru Nanak, which devout Sikhs may recite following an early-morning bathe. The culmination of its 38 stanzas describes the ascent of the spirit through five stages, finally reaching the realm of truth. The nine hymns of the Sodar (“Gate”) collection are sung by…

  • Japonica schistosomiasis (disease)

    schistosomiasis: Types and process of infection: …by closely related organisms: (1) Japonica, or Eastern, schistosomiasis is caused by Schistosoma japonicum, found in Japan, southern China, the Philippines, Thailand, and Indonesia. (2) Manson’s, or intestinal, schistosomiasis is caused by S. mansoni, found in Africa, the Middle East, the Caribbean, and northern South America. (3) Vesical, or urinary,

  • Japonism (art)

    Japanism, aesthetic cult that had a major impact on Impressionist painting. Japanism began in the mid-19th century, just after Japanese trade with the West was opened, and lasted for a generation in France and England. Japanism depended upon the careful study of imported works of Japanese art,

  • Japonisme (art)

    Japanism, aesthetic cult that had a major impact on Impressionist painting. Japanism began in the mid-19th century, just after Japanese trade with the West was opened, and lasted for a generation in France and England. Japanism depended upon the careful study of imported works of Japanese art,

  • Japurá River (river, South America)

    Japurá River, river that rises as the Caquetá River east of Pasto, Colombia, in the Colombian Cordillera Central. It meanders generally east-southeastward through the tropical rain forest of southeastern Colombia. After receiving the Apaporis River at the Brazilian border, it takes the name Japurá

  • japygid (arthropod family)

    dipluran: The family Japygidae is one of the largest of the group, with about 70 genera. The cerci of Japygidae are modified into hard pincers that are used to catch prey. Members of Parajapygidae also have pincerlike cerci but usually are phytophagous (plant-eating). Members of the family Campodeidae…

  • Japygidae (arthropod family)

    dipluran: The family Japygidae is one of the largest of the group, with about 70 genera. The cerci of Japygidae are modified into hard pincers that are used to catch prey. Members of Parajapygidae also have pincerlike cerci but usually are phytophagous (plant-eating). Members of the family Campodeidae…

  • jaquemart (clock and tower, Moulins, France)

    Moulins: …15th-century tower has a quaint jaquemart clock with automatons that strike the quarter-hours. The municipal library opposite contains the 12th-century Bible of Souvigny, a magnificent illuminated manuscript from Souvigny Priory, 7 miles (12 km) southeast of Moulins. Part of the ancient castle of the dukes of Bourbon currently serves as…

  • Jaques-Dalcroze, Émile (Swiss composer)

    Émile Jaques-Dalcroze was a Swiss music teacher and composer who originated the eurythmics system of musical instruction. In his youth Jaques-Dalcroze studied composition, and by 1892 he was professor of harmony at the Geneva Conservatory. Convinced that current methods of training professional

  • Jār Allāh (Persian scholar)

    Abu al-Qāsim Maḥmūd ibn ʿUmar al-Zamakhsharī was a Persian-born Arabic scholar whose chief work is Al-Kashshāf ʿan Ḥaqāʾiq at-Tanzīl (“The Discoverer of Revealed Truths”), his exhaustive linguistic commentary on the Qurʾān. As is true for most Muslim scholars of his era, little is known of his

  • jar method (horticulture)

    herbicide: Application: …are sometimes applied by the jar method, whereby the tops of weeds are bent over and immersed in jars of poisonous solution. The herbicide is drawn into the rest of the plant and into connecting plants, gradually killing the entire system. Wild morning glory, poison oak, and camel thorn are…

  • Jara Martínez, Víctor Lidio (Chilean musician)

    Víctor Jara was a Chilean folk singer, one of the pioneers of the nueva canción genre of politically charged popular songs. His political activism led to his torture and execution by the regime of the Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet. Jara was raised in poverty by a farmer father and a folk singer

  • Jara, Ana (Peruvian politician)

    Peru: The Ollanta Humala presidency (2011–16): …his presidency when Prime Minister Ana Jara was constitutionally forced to resign after being censured by the opposition-led Congress for allegedly failing to control the National Intelligence Directorate, which recently had been accused of domestic spying on opposition politicians, journalists, and members of the military, among others.

  • Jara, Víctor (Chilean musician)

    Víctor Jara was a Chilean folk singer, one of the pioneers of the nueva canción genre of politically charged popular songs. His political activism led to his torture and execution by the regime of the Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet. Jara was raised in poverty by a farmer father and a folk singer

  • jarabe (Mexican dance)

    jarabe, folk dance for couples, popular in central and southern Mexico, notably in Jalisco state. Derived in colonial times from Spanish popular music and such dances as the seguidillas and fandangos, it was also influenced by native Mexican couple dances imitating the courtship of doves. The

  • jarabe nacional

    Mexican hat dance, a popular Mexican folk dance, a form of jarabe

  • jarabe tapatío

    Mexican hat dance, a popular Mexican folk dance, a form of jarabe

  • Jarabub (oasis, Libya)

    Al-Jaghbūb, oasis, northeastern Libya, near the Egyptian border. Located at the northern edge of the Libyan Desert on ancient pilgrim and caravan routes, it was the centre for the Sanūsī religious order (1856–95) because of its isolation from Turkish and European influence. The sect founded there a

  • Jarai (people)

    Vietnam: Languages: …peoples—such as the Rade (Rhade), Jarai, Chru, and Roglai—speak Austronesian languages, linking them to the Cham, Malay, and Indonesian peoples; others—including the Bru, Pacoh, Katu, Cua, Hre, Rengao, Sedang

  • Jarai language

    Chamic languages: Of the nine Chamic languages, Jarai and Cham (including Western and Eastern) are the largest, with about 230,000 and 280,000 speakers respectively. Cham borrows heavily from Vietnamese and resembles both the Mon-Khmer and Malayo-Polynesian languages. The Chamic languages with fewer numbers of speakers than either Jarai or Cham are Rade,…

  • jarana (dance)

    jota: The jarana of Yucatán, danced with whirling scarves, is a Mexican derivative of the jota.

  • jararaca (snake)

    fer-de-lance: The jararaca, or yarará, is found chiefly in Brazil, where it is abundant in grassy regions. Its bite causes many deaths. It usually grows to about 1.2 metres (4 feet) and is olive-brown or grayish brown with darker brown blotches. In Argentina the name yarará also…

  • Jarash (historical site, Jordan)

    Western architecture: Second period, after 313 ce: At Jarash in Jordan the church of the Apostles and Martyrs (465) is a cross inscribed in a square, heralding a typically Byzantine plan of later centuries. Also at Jarash, the triple church dedicated to Saints Cosmas and Damian, to St. John the Baptist, and to…

  • Jarawa (people)

    Andaman Islands: …original inhabitants—including the Sentinalese, the Jarawa, the Onge, and a group of peoples collectively known as the Great Andamese—only the first three retain a traditional hunting-and-gathering way of life. The Andamans, situated on the ancient trade route between India and Myanmar (Burma), were visited by Lieut. Archibald Blair of the…

  • Jarbah (island, Tunisia)

    Jerba, island situated in the Gulf of Gabes on the Mediterranean Sea, located off the Tunisian mainland, to which it is connected by a causeway almost 4 miles (6 km) long. Jerba island is about 17 miles (27 km) long by 16 miles (26 km) wide and has an area of 197 square miles (510 square km). The

  • jarcha (Islamic literature)

    muwashshaḥ: The last AB, called kharjah, or markaz, is usually written in vernacular Arabic or in the Spanish Mozarabic dialect; it is normally rendered in the voice of a girl and expresses her longing for her absent lover. Such verses make it probable that the muwashshaḥ was influenced by some…

  • Jardim Botânico do Rio de Janeiro (garden, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil)

    Rio de Janeiro Botanical Garden, one of the great tropical botanical gardens and arboretums of the world. It was founded in 1808 by John, prince regent of the United Kingdom of Brazil and Portugal (later King John VI), for introducing and acclimatizing economically beneficial plants brought from

  • jardin anglais (garden)

    English garden, type of garden that developed in 18th-century England, originating as a revolt against the architectural garden, which relied on rectilinear patterns, sculpture, and the unnatural shaping of trees. The revolutionary character of the English garden lay in the fact that, whereas

  • jardin anglo-chinois (garden)

    English garden, type of garden that developed in 18th-century England, originating as a revolt against the architectural garden, which relied on rectilinear patterns, sculpture, and the unnatural shaping of trees. The revolutionary character of the English garden lay in the fact that, whereas

  • Jardín Botánico de la Universidad Central (garden, Caracas, Venezuela)

    Central University Botanical Garden, state-supported tropical garden occupying a 65-hectare (160-acre) site in Caracas, Venez. The garden has excellent collections of palms, cacti, aroids, bromeliads, pandanuses, and other groups of tropical plants of considerable botanical interest; also important

  • Jardin Botanique de Montréal (garden, Montreal, Quebec, Canada)

    Montreal Botanical Garden, botanical garden in Montreal founded in 1936 by Frère Marie-Victorin, one of the greatest of Canadian botanists. Spanning more than 75 hectares (185 acres), the Montreal Botanical Garden has approximately 20,000 plant species and cultivars under cultivation and maintains

  • Jardin Botanique National de Belgique (garden, Meise, Belgium)

    National Botanical Garden of Belgium, botanical garden consisting of the plant collections at Meise, on the outskirts of Brussels, Belgium. The garden has about 18,000 different species of plants. Originally founded in 1870 on a 17-acre (7-hectare) site in the heart of Brussels, the botanical

  • Jardin des Plantes (garden and museum, Paris, France)

    Jardin des Plantes, one of the world’s foremost botanical gardens, located in Paris. It was founded in 1626 as a royal garden of medicinal plants and was first opened to the public in 1650. Under the superintendence of G.-L.L. Buffon (1739–88) the garden was greatly expanded, and it developed into

  • Jardin du Carrousel (garden, Paris, France)

    Jacques Wirtz: …a contest to redesign the Carrousel Garden, which connected the Louvre Museum in Paris with the 63-acre (25-hectare) Tuileries Gardens, redesigned in 1664 by the celebrated French landscape architect André Le Nôtre.

  • Jardin, Karel Du (Dutch painter)

    Karel Dujardin was a Dutch Romanist painter and etcher, best known for his spirited representations of Italian peasants and shepherds with their animals. Dujardin was a son of the painter Guilliam Dujardin. After a trip to Italy, he worked in Amsterdam and The Hague from 1652 until 1674; after that

  • Jardine, Al (American musician)

    the Beach Boys:

  • Jardine, Alan (American musician)

    the Beach Boys:

  • Jardine, D. R. (British athlete)

    cricket: Test matches: …devised by the English captain, D.R. Jardine, and involved fast short-pitched deliveries bowled to the batsman’s body so that the batter would be hit on the upper body or head or, alternatively, would be caught out by one of the fielders on the leg side (the side behind the striker…

  • Jardinier de la Pompadour, Le (novel by Demolder)

    Eugène Demolder: His other important novel, Le Jardinier de la Pompadour (1904; “Madame de Pompadour’s Gardener”), is set in France; in this evocation of an elegant period, Demolder’s style and subject are in perfect harmony. His L’Espagne en auto (1906; “Spain by Auto”) is one of the earliest narratives of automobile…

  • Jaren (district, Nauru)

    Yaren, district, de facto capital of Nauru, southwestern Pacific Ocean. It is located on the southern coast of the island and is the site of the legislature and a number of government offices. Points of interest include Parliament House, completed in 1992, and relics of Japan’s occupation of Nauru

  • Jarés, Sierra de (mountains, Europe)

    Gerês Mountains, short range of mountains, less than 20 mi (32 km) long, with a maximum width of about 11 mi, reaching an elevation of nearly 5,000 ft (1,507 m). They run east-northeast from Portugal’s northwestern interior into Spanish Galicia. The area is known for its Roman ruins, including the

  • jargon (linguistics)

    jargon, in colonial history, an unstable rudimentary hybrid language used as a means of communication between persons having no other language in common. Although the term was long synonymous with pidgin—as can be seen by the use of jargon in the names of such pidgins as Chinook Jargon and Mobilian

  • jargon (gem)

    zircon: The name jargon, like zircon derived from Persian zargūn, applies to all other colours. A lovely blue stone may be made by heat treatment under reducing conditions.

  • Jarhead (film by Mendes [2005])

    Sam Mendes: He released the film Jarhead, a Gulf War drama, in 2005. Mendes’s next film project was an adaptation of the Richard Yates novel Revolutionary Road (2008) starring actress Kate Winslet, whom he had married in 2003 (divorced 2010). The drama centres on a free-spirited married couple, played by Winslet…

  • Jari River (river, Brazil)

    Jari River, river, northern Brazil, rising on the southern slopes of the Tumuc-Humac Mountains and flowing in a generally southeasterly direction for about 350 miles (560 km) to join the Amazon River at Bôca do Jari, opposite Grande de Gurupá Island. The Jari forms the border between Pará and Amapá

  • Jaricot, Pauline (French religious leader)

    Society for the Propagation of the Faith: …adopted the fund-raising methods of Pauline Jaricot, who had been collecting for missions since 1818 and who was later designated by Pope Leo XIII as the official founder of the society. In 1922 the headquarters of the society was moved from France, where it had been under the control of…

  • Jarīd (oasis, Tunisia)

    Tozeur, oasis in west-central Tunisia. It is located to the south of Tunisia’s steppe region in the jarīd (palm) country, which displays a colourful landscape marked by numerous chott (or shaṭṭ, salty lake) depressions and palm groves. The town is situated on the isthmus that separates the Chotts

  • Jarid, Chott El- (lake, Tunisia)

    Chott El-Jarid, large saline lake in southwestern Tunisia, occupying a salt-flat basin of about 1,900 square miles (4,900 square km). The lake is covered with water only in the lowest areas, except after periods of heavy rains. Together with Chott El-Fedjaj (Shaṭṭ Al-Fijāj) and Chott Al-Rharsa

  • Jarīd, Shaṭṭ Al- (lake, Tunisia)

    Chott El-Jarid, large saline lake in southwestern Tunisia, occupying a salt-flat basin of about 1,900 square miles (4,900 square km). The lake is covered with water only in the lowest areas, except after periods of heavy rains. Together with Chott El-Fedjaj (Shaṭṭ Al-Fijāj) and Chott Al-Rharsa

  • Jarīdah, al- (Egyptian newspaper)

    Aḥmad Luṭfī al-Sayyid: …editor in chief of Al-Jarīdah, a newspaper established to present the views of the Ummah Party, which represented the moderate wing of Egyptian nationalism. With the advent of World War I (1914–18), British authorities in Egypt imposed a rigid censorship, and Luṭfī resigned his position as editor of Al-Jarīdah.…

  • Jarillo-Herrero, Pablo (Spanish physicist)

    Pablo Jarillo-Herrero is a Spanish physicist known for his work in the field of twistronics, the study of how the properties of layers of two-dimensional materials change when one layer is rotated with respect to the other. Jarillo-Herrero received a bachelor’s degree in physics from the University