• Jews’ College (college, London, United Kingdom)

    Nathan Marcus Adler: …the British Empire, who founded Jews’ College and the United Synagogue.

  • Jex-Blake, Sophia Louisa (British physician)

    Sophia Louisa Jex-Blake was a British physician who successfully sought legislation (1876) permitting women in Britain to receive the M.D. degree and a license to practice medicine and surgery. Through her efforts, a medical school for women was opened in London in 1874, and in 1886 she established

  • Jeż, Teodor Tomasz (Polish writer)

    Polish literature: Romanticism: Zygmunt Miłkowski (pseudonym Teodor Tomasz Jeż) wrote on a wide range of subjects, including folklore and the history of the Balkan countries. The literary criticism of Maurycy Mochnacki, a passionate advocate of Romanticism and the first Polish critic to link literature with Poland’s political progress,…

  • Jezabel (queen of Israel)

    Jezebel was the wife of King Ahab, who ruled the kingdom of Israel. By interfering with the exclusive worship of the Hebrew God, Yahweh, by disregarding the rights of the common people, and by defying the great prophets Elijah and Elisha, she provoked the internecine strife that enfeebled Israel

  • Jezebel (film by Wyler [1938])

    Jezebel, American drama film, released in 1938, that features Bette Davis opposite Henry Fonda in an opulent antebellum romance. Davis, in an Academy Award-winning performance, portrayed Julie Marsden, the strong-willed belle whose impertinent spoiled nature wreaks havoc on her relationship with

  • Jezebel (queen of Israel)

    Jezebel was the wife of King Ahab, who ruled the kingdom of Israel. By interfering with the exclusive worship of the Hebrew God, Yahweh, by disregarding the rights of the common people, and by defying the great prophets Elijah and Elisha, she provoked the internecine strife that enfeebled Israel

  • Jezreel (ancient city, Israel)

    Jezreel, (May God Give Seed), ancient city of Palestine, capital of the northern kingdom of Israel under King Ahab, located on a spur of Mt. Gilboa in Israel. King Saul was slain there in a battle with the Philistines. It was called Esdraelon in the book of Judith; to the crusaders it was Parvum

  • Jezreel (biblical figure)

    biblical literature: Hosea: …first, a son, is named Jezreel, to symbolize that the house of Jehu will suffer for the bloody atrocities committed in the Valley of Jezreel by the founder of the dynasty when he annihilated the house of Omri. The second, a daughter, is named Lo Ruḥama (Not pitied), to indicate…

  • Jezreel, Valley of (region, Israel)

    Plain of Esdraelon, lowland in northern Israel, dividing the hilly areas of Galilee in the north and Samaria (in the Israeli-occupied West Bank) in the south. Esdraelon is the Greek derivation of the Hebrew Yizreʿel, meaning “God will sow” or “May God make fruitful,” an allusion to the fertility of

  • Jezyk Polski

    Polish language, West Slavic language belonging to the Lekhitic subgroup and closely related to Czech, Slovak, and the Sorbian languages of eastern Germany; it is spoken by the majority of the present population of Poland. The modern literary language, written in the Roman (Latin) alphabet, dates

  • JFET (electronics)

    electronics: Using MOSFETs: Another type, the junction field-effect transistor, works in a similar fashion but is much less frequently used. The MOSFET consists of two regions: (1) the source (here shown connected to the silicon substrate) and (2) the drain of one conductivity type embedded in a body of the opposite…

  • JFK (film by Stone [1991])

    conspiracy theory: Effects of belief in conspiracy theories: …viewing the Oliver Stone movie JFK (1991) increased belief in a conspiracy to assassinate Kennedy and decreased belief in the official account that Lee Harvey Oswald acted alone. A further outcome was that, compared with people who were about to view the movie, those who had seen it expressed less…

  • JFK (president of United States)

    John F. Kennedy was the 35th president of the United States (1961–63), who faced a number of foreign crises, especially in Cuba and Berlin, but managed to secure such achievements as the Nuclear Test-Ban Treaty and the Alliance for Progress. He was assassinated while riding in a motorcade in

  • JFK Jr. (American publisher)

    John F. Kennedy, Jr. was an American publisher, lawyer, and member of the prominent Kennedy political family who was the son of U.S. Pres. John F. Kennedy and Jacqueline (née Bouvier) Kennedy (later Onassis). Born less than three weeks after his father, a U.S. senator of Massachusetts, had been

  • JGA (anatomy)

    renal system disease: Vascular disease: …in healthy individuals involves the juxtaglomerular apparatus (JGA) and the secretion of renin. Occasionally, following trauma or arising spontaneously as a result of vascular disease, one or the other of the main renal arteries becomes constricted (renal artery stenosis). The fall in blood pressure beyond the constriction leads to increased…

  • Jhabua (India)

    Jhabua, town, western Madhya Pradesh state, central India. It is situated on an upland plateau about 45 miles (72 km) northwest of Dhar. Jhabua was founded in the 16th century by a Banjari freebooter and served as the capital of Jhabua princely state. Today it is a local agricultural and timber

  • Jhabvala, Ruth Prawer (German-born American author)

    Ruth Prawer Jhabvala was a novelist and screenwriter, well known for her witty and insightful portrayals of contemporary Indian lives and, especially, for her 46 years as a pivotal member of Ismail Merchant and James Ivory’s filmmaking team. Jhabvala’s family was Jewish, and in 1939 they emigrated

  • Jhalawar (India)

    Jhalawar, town, far southeastern Rajasthan state, northwestern India. It is situated on an upland plateau just west of the Kali Sindh River, a tributary of the Chambal River, about 40 miles (64 km) southeast of Kota. The old town of Jhalrapatan (Patan) was founded as a cantonment (military

  • Jhalore (India)

    Jalor, town, southwestern Rajasthan state, northwestern India. It lies just south of the Sukri River, which is a tributary of the Luni River. Jalor was a medieval stronghold that served as the 12th-century capital of the Cauhan Rajputs (the warrior rulers of the historic region of Rajputana). It

  • Jhalrapatan (India)

    Jhalawar, town, far southeastern Rajasthan state, northwestern India. It is situated on an upland plateau just west of the Kali Sindh River, a tributary of the Chambal River, about 40 miles (64 km) southeast of Kota. The old town of Jhalrapatan (Patan) was founded as a cantonment (military

  • jhāna (Buddhism)

    dhyāna, in Indian philosophy, a stage in the process of meditation leading to Nirvāṇa. See Buddhist

  • Jhang Maghiāna (Pakistan)

    Jhang Sadar, city consisting of historical twin towns, headquarters of Jhang district, Faisalabad division, Punjab province, Pakistan, situated just east of the Chenab River. The city was first incorporated as an administrative unit under the British raj, combining the towns of Maghiana and Jhang.

  • Jhang Sadar (Pakistan)

    Jhang Sadar, city consisting of historical twin towns, headquarters of Jhang district, Faisalabad division, Punjab province, Pakistan, situated just east of the Chenab River. The city was first incorporated as an administrative unit under the British raj, combining the towns of Maghiana and Jhang.

  • Jhansi (India)

    Jhansi, city, southwestern Uttar Pradesh state, northern India. It lies in the western part of the upland Bundelkhand region, along the border with Madhya Pradesh state and just west of the Betwa River. The city, which is enclosed by a wall, expanded around a fort built in 1613 by the ruler of

  • Jharia (India)

    Jharia, coalfield and former town, northern Jharkhand state, eastern India. The coalfield lies in the Damodar River valley and covers about 110 square miles (280 square km). The bituminous coal produced there is suitable for coke (most of India’s coal comes from the Jharia and Raniganj fields in

  • Jharkhand (state, India)

    Jharkhand, state of India, located in the northeastern part of the country. Jharkhand is bordered by the states of Bihar to the north, West Bengal to the east, Odisha to the south, Chhattisgarh to the west, and Uttar Pradesh to the northwest. Its capital is Ranchi. Jharkhand, one of India’s newest

  • Jharkhand Liberation Front (political party, India)

    Jharkhand Mukti Morcha (JMM), regional political party of Jharkhand state, eastern India. It has had only a limited presence on the national political scene in New Delhi. The JMM was formed in 1973 as a movement to spearhead what would become a decades-long effort to establish a separate Jharkhand

  • Jharkhand Mukti Morcha (political party, India)

    Jharkhand Mukti Morcha (JMM), regional political party of Jharkhand state, eastern India. It has had only a limited presence on the national political scene in New Delhi. The JMM was formed in 1973 as a movement to spearhead what would become a decades-long effort to establish a separate Jharkhand

  • Jhelum (Pakistan)

    Jhelum, town, Punjab province, northeastern Pakistan. The town lies just west of the Jhelum River (there bridged by both road and rail) and is connected by rail and the Grand Trunk Road with Peshawar and Lahore. The old town, across the river, may have been Bucephala, founded by Alexander the Great

  • Jhelum River (river, Asia)

    Jhelum River, river of northwestern India and northern and eastern Pakistan. It constitutes the westernmost of the five rivers of the Punjab region that merge with the Indus River in eastern Pakistan. The Jhelum rises from a deep spring at Vernag, in western Jammu and Kashmir union territory, in

  • Jhelum, Battle of the (326 bce)

    Battle of the Hydaspes, (326 bce), the last great battle fought by Alexander the Great during his Asian campaign. Alexander’s army defeated the forces of the Indian king Porus (Paurava) in what is now northeastern Pakistan. Alexander’s superior tactics, including crossing a river in pouring rain to

  • Jhering, Rudolf von (German scholar)

    Rudolf von Jhering was a German legal scholar, sometimes called the father of sociological jurisprudence. He developed a philosophy of social utilitarianism that, in emphasizing the needs of society, differed from the individualist approach of the English utilitarian philosopher Jeremy Bentham.

  • Jherria (India)

    Jharia, coalfield and former town, northern Jharkhand state, eastern India. The coalfield lies in the Damodar River valley and covers about 110 square miles (280 square km). The bituminous coal produced there is suitable for coke (most of India’s coal comes from the Jharia and Raniganj fields in

  • Jhind (India)

    Jind, city, central Haryana state, northwestern India. It is located about 70 miles (110 km) northwest of Delhi. Jind is said to have been founded by the Pandavas of the Mahabharata epic, who built a temple around which the town of Jaintapuri (Jind) grew. It was formerly one of the princely

  • JHM (museum, Amsterdam, Netherlands)

    Joods Historisch Museum (JHM), museum in Amsterdam that displays artifacts, artwork, and other items associated with Jewish history, religion, and culture. The objects on view at the Joods Historisch Museum demonstrate the Jewish spiritual, cultural, and historical experience in the Netherlands and

  • Jhukar culture (Indian history)

    India: The Post-Urban Period in northwestern India: …phase is recognizable in the Jhukar culture at Chanhu-daro and other sites. There certain copper or bronze weapons and tools appear to be of “foreign” type and may be compared to examples from farther west (Iran and Central Asia); a different but parallel change is seen at Pirak, not far…

  • Jhuldabhaj (India)

    Barauni, town, central Bihar state, northeastern India. It lies north of the Ganges (Ganga) River and is part of the Begusarai urban agglomeration. The town merged with Phulwaria township in 1961. It has major highway, rail, and ferry connections and is an agricultural trade centre. Barauni is

  • jhum (agriculture)

    Arunachal Pradesh: Agriculture and forestry: …to practice shifting agriculture (jhum), whereby land is cleared by burning the vegetation, is cultivated for several years, and then is abandoned in favor of another site when the productivity of the soil declines. Rice, corn (maize), millet, and buckwheat are among the chief crops grown by that method.…

  • Jhumia Marma (people)

    Marma: One group, the Jhumia Marma, have long settled in this southeastern region of Bengal; the other group, the Rakhaing Marma, are recent immigrants, having come from Arakan toward the end of the 18th century, when their kingdom was conquered by the Burmese.

  • Jhunjhunun (India)

    Jhunjhunun, city, northeastern Rajasthan state, northwestern India. It is situated in the Rajasthan Steppe, a semiarid sandy plain, about 30 miles (48 km) southeast of Churu. Jhunjhunun is a local trade centre for wool, cattle, hides, and gram (chickpeas). The city’s major industries include a dye

  • Ji (Buddhist sect)

    Buddhism: Pure Land: …his school was called the Ji (“Times”) school, or Jishū.

  • Ji (emperor of Han dynasty)

    Gaozu was the founder and first emperor of the Han dynasty (206 bc–ad 220), under which the Chinese imperial system assumed most of the characteristics that it was to retain until it was overthrown in 1911/12. He reigned from 206 to 195 bc. His wife, the empress Gaohou (reigned 188–180 bc), became

  • JI (international agreement mechanism)

    carbon offset: Carbon-offsetting process: …offsets through a mechanism called joint implementation (JI), where one party develops an emission-reduction or emission-removal project in another country where emissions are limited. Parties can also obtain offsets through the Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) for projects in developing countries, where emissions are not otherwise limited.

  • Ji Fa (ruler of Zhou)

    Wuwang reign name (nianhao) of the was the founder and first ruler (1046–43 bc) of the Zhou dynasty (1046–256 bc). He was regarded by later Confucians as a wise king. Ji Fa succeeded his father, the famous Wenwang, as head of the semibarbaric state of Zhou, located on the western border of China.

  • Ji Kang (Chinese philosopher)

    Ji Kang was a Chinese Daoist philosopher, alchemist, and poet who was one of the most important members of the free-spirited, heavy-drinking Seven Sages of the Bamboo Grove, a coterie of poets and philosophers who scandalized Chinese society by their iconoclastic thoughts and actions. Of

  • Ji’an (China)

    Ji’an, city, west-central Jiangxi sheng (province), southeastern China. Ji’an is situated on the west bank of the Gan River, at the head of navigation for small steamboats from Nanchang. The city is a highway centre located on the north-south route up the Gan valley at the point where it is joined

  • Ji’an ware (Chinese whiteware)

    Chinese pottery: Late Song, Liao, and Jin dynasties: These Ji’an, or Kian, wares appear to be imitations of Ding, and there may be truth in the tradition that the kilns were set up by refugees from the north. The Yonghe kilns were unable to compete with Jingdezhen, however, and had ceased production by the…

  • Jia (novel by Ba Jin)

    Ba Jin: …was the novel Jia (1933; Family). It was the first volume of the autobiographical trilogy Jiliu (“Torrent”), which was completed in 1940 with the publication of the second and third volumes, Chun (“Spring”) and Qiu (“Autumn”). In the 1940s his writing became more pessimistic and less radical, and there was…

  • jia (bronze work)

    jia, type of ancient Chinese vessel used for holding or heating wine and for pouring wine into the ground during a memorial ceremony. The jia can either be a form of pottery or it can be bronze. It is a deep, cup-shaped vessel supported on three or four pointed, splayed legs. There is a vertical

  • jia (Chinese government unit)

    China: Social organization: …in Chinese society remained the jia (“family”), consisting of kin related by blood, marriage, or adoption that shared a common budget and common property. The Chinese family system was patrilineal; daughters married out, while sons brought in wives and shared the residence of their fathers. The head of the family,…

  • Jia Sidao (Chinese statesman)

    Jia Sidao was a Chinese statesman of the Nan (Southern) Song dynasty (1127–1279) who achieved great power over the throne after his sister became a concubine of the emperor Lizong (reigned 1224/25–1264). In charge of Mongol affairs, he followed a policy of placating these Central Asian tribes and

  • Jia Xian (Chinese mathematician and astronomer)

    Jia Xian was a mathematician and astronomer active at the beginning of the greatest period of traditional Chinese mathematics. Little is known about Jia’s life except that he held a relatively low military office during the reign (1022/23–1063/64) of Emperor Renzong of the Song dynasty. He was a

  • jiaguwen (pictographic script)

    jiaguwen, pictographic script found on oracle bones, it was widely used in divination in the Shang dynasty (c. 18th–12th century bc). Turtle carapaces and ox scapulae with inscriptions scratched into them were discovered about 1900 in the area of Xiaotun, a village in Henan province. In subsequent

  • Jiahuangdi (emperor of Xin dynasty)

    Wang Mang was the founder of the short-lived Xin dynasty (ad 9–25). He is known in Chinese history as Shehuangdi (the “Usurper Emperor”), because his reign (ad 9–23) and that of his successor interrupted the Liu family’s succession of China’s Han dynasty (206 bc–ad 220); as a result, the Han is

  • Jiajing (emperor of Ming dynasty)

    Jiajing was the reign name (nianhao) of the 11th emperor of the Ming dynasty (1368–1644), whose long reign (1521–66/67) added a degree of stability to the government but whose neglect of official duties ushered in an era of misrule. Notoriously cruel, Jiajing caused hundreds of officials who had

  • Jialing Jiang (river, China)

    Jialing River, river in central China. A tributary of the Yangtze River (Chang Jiang), with the largest drainage area of the Yangtze basin, it rises in the rugged western outliers of the Qin (Tsinling) Mountains in southern Gansu province. It flows south and east into far western Shaanxi province,

  • Jialing River (river, China)

    Jialing River, river in central China. A tributary of the Yangtze River (Chang Jiang), with the largest drainage area of the Yangtze basin, it rises in the rugged western outliers of the Qin (Tsinling) Mountains in southern Gansu province. It flows south and east into far western Shaanxi province,

  • Jiamusi (China)

    Jiamusi, city, northeastern Heilongjiang sheng (province), northeastern China. Jiamusi is situated on the lower reaches of the Sungari (Songhua) River and has good natural communications by river upstream to such cities as Harbin and Yilan, as well as with the Amur and Ussuri rivers during the

  • jian (Chinese bronze vessel)

    jian, type of ancient Chinese bronze vessel having a large, deep bowl with a heavy rim that is meant to contain water or ice. The jian, which has a simple silhouette, is supported upon a narrow ring base. It has two or four ring handles that freely hang from slightly modeled monster masks (taotie).

  • Jian dang wei ye (motion picture [2011])

    Chow Yun-Fat: …Jian dang wei ye (2011; Beginning of the Great Revival), which dramatized the events leading to the founding of the Chinese Communist Party, Chow took on the role of political leader Yuan Shikai. His later films included Tong que tai (2012; The Assassins), in which he portrayed Cao Cao, a…

  • Jian Jiang (Chinese painter)

    Hongren was the foremost painter of the Anhui (Xinan) school, a centre of painting in southeast China during the Qing period that was noted for its unusual land features, especially of Huang Shan (“Yellow Mountain”), which frequently appears in paintings of the school. Jiang Tao adopted his

  • Jian River (river, China)

    Fujian: Drainage: …largest of which is the Jian, which flows from its source near the Fujian-Zhejiang border. The Jian has its own subsystem of tributary streams that drain the famous Wuyi tea district. The second source stream of the Min, the Futun, is also called the Shaowu, for the chief city of…

  • Jian ware (Chinese stoneware)

    Jian ware, dark brown or blackish Chinese stoneware made for domestic use chiefly during the Song dynasty (960–1279) and into the early 14th century. Jian ware was made in Fujian province, first in kilns at Jian’an and later at Jianyang. The clay used for Jian ware was of a very hard, coarse grain.

  • Jian’an (China)

    pottery: Song dynasty (960–1279 ce): …the original place of manufacture, Jian’an, in Fujian province. Manufacture was later moved to nearby Jianyang, probably during the Yuan period. The glaze is very dark brown, approaching black, over a dark stoneware body, and it usually stops short of the base in a thick treacly roll.

  • jianai (Chinese philosophy)

    ren: Non-Confucian critiques: …instead for “universal love” (jianai). Despite the meaning of its name, jianai was not an overflowing of goodness or benevolence directed toward all but rather a starkly practical approach to other human beings, all of whom were to be treated as equals. Each person, even one’s own father or…

  • Jiancheng (Chinese prince)

    China: Early Tang (618–626): …army under the crown prince Jiancheng at the beginning of 623. The prolonged resistance in Hebei and the comparatively harsh Tang conquest of the region were the beginning of resistance and hostility in the northeast that continued to some degree throughout the Tang dynasty.

  • Jiang Bingzhi (Chinese author)

    Ding Ling was one of China’s most popular 20th-century authors. In her early career, Ding Ling initially wrote highly successful short stories centring on young, unconventional Chinese women. About 1930, with a distinct change in her artistic tendency, she became a major literary figure of the

  • Jiang Haicheng (Chinese poet)

    Ai Qing was a Chinese poet whose free verse was influential in the development of xinshi (“new poetry”). The son of a well-to-do landowner, Ai Qing was encouraged to learn Western languages. He studied painting in Paris from 1928 to 1932, and he developed an appreciation for Western literature.

  • Jiang Jie-shi (Chinese statesman)

    Chiang Kai-shek was a soldier and statesman, head of the Nationalist government in China from 1928 to 1949 and subsequently head of the Chinese Nationalist government in exile on Taiwan. Chiang was born into a moderately prosperous merchant and farmer family in the coastal province of Zhejiang. He

  • Jiang Jieshi (Chinese statesman)

    Chiang Kai-shek was a soldier and statesman, head of the Nationalist government in China from 1928 to 1949 and subsequently head of the Chinese Nationalist government in exile on Taiwan. Chiang was born into a moderately prosperous merchant and farmer family in the coastal province of Zhejiang. He

  • Jiang Jingguo (president of Taiwan)

    Chiang Ching-kuo was the son of Chiang Kai-shek (Jiang Jieshi), and his successor as leader of the Republic of China (Taiwan). His father’s death in 1975 was followed by a caretaker presidency until March 21, 1978, when Chiang Ching-kuo (Jiang Jingguo) was formally elected by the National Assembly

  • Jiang Kanghu (Chinese scholar)

    Jiang Kanghu was a Chinese scholar, teacher, and reformer who was a leading proponent of socialism in China in the early 20th century. Born into a scholar-official family, Jiang studied at home and briefly in Japan before returning to China in 1901 to take a position as head of the Zhili Northern

  • Jiang Qing (Chinese politician)

    Jiang Qing was the third wife of Chinese communist leader Mao Zedong and the most influential woman in the People’s Republic of China for a while until her downfall in 1976, after Mao’s death. As a member of the Gang of Four she was convicted in 1981 of “counter-revolutionary crimes” and

  • Jiang Tao (Chinese painter)

    Hongren was the foremost painter of the Anhui (Xinan) school, a centre of painting in southeast China during the Qing period that was noted for its unusual land features, especially of Huang Shan (“Yellow Mountain”), which frequently appears in paintings of the school. Jiang Tao adopted his

  • Jiang Wei (Chinese author)

    Ding Ling was one of China’s most popular 20th-century authors. In her early career, Ding Ling initially wrote highly successful short stories centring on young, unconventional Chinese women. About 1930, with a distinct change in her artistic tendency, she became a major literary figure of the

  • Jiang Zemin (Chinese politician)

    Jiang Zemin was a Chinese official who was general secretary of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP; 1989–2002) and president of China (1993–2003). Jiang joined the CCP in 1946 and graduated from Shanghai Jiao Tong University the following year with a degree in electrical engineering. He worked in

  • Jiang Zhitong (Chinese politician)

    Qiao Shi was a Chinese politician who rose to top leadership positions in the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) and for a time in the 1990s was one of the most powerful men in China. Raised in Shanghai, Jiang Zhitong changed his name after joining the CCP in 1940. A graduate of East China Associated

  • Jiang Ziya (Chinese mythological figure)

    Caishen: …Shang dynasty (12th century bce), Jiang Ziya, a supporter of the subsequent Zhou-dynasty clan, made a straw effigy of Zhao and, after 20 days of incantations, shot an arrow made of peach-tree wood through the heart of the image. At that moment Zhao became ill and died. Later, during a…

  • Jiang-Huai plain (region, China)

    Jiangsu: Drainage: …what Chinese geographers call the Yangtze (Jiang)-Huai plain, built by the alluvium of the two rivers. The centre of this plain is only 6.5 to 13 feet (2 to 4 metres) above sea level, while its periphery stands at about 16 to 33 feet (5 to 10 metres). It is…

  • Jiangbei (district, Chongqing, China)

    Chongqing: Suburban and outlying districts: …the municipality’s core districts, including Jiangbei, Nan’an, Shapingba, Jiulongpo, and Dadukou. These districts have developed into major shopping and commercial centres. Shapingba also has emerged as a regional cultural centre, home to several of the municipality’s major institutions of higher learning. Jiangbei district is a centre of automobile and machinery…

  • Jiangmen (China)

    Jiangmen, city in central Guangdong sheng (province), China. The city is situated on the west bank of the main channel of the Xi River, at the southwest corner of the Pearl (Zhu) River Delta, some 45 miles (70 km) from Guangzhou (Canton). It has excellent waterway communications and is the chief

  • Jiangnan (region, China)

    Jiangsu: Land: … (Chang Jiang) into two sections, Jiangnan (literally, “South of the River”) and Subei (“North [Jiang]su”). Jiangnan is fertile and well-watered, famed for its silk and handicrafts, and very densely populated and industrialized. The cities of Suzhou (Soochow), Nanjing, and Wuxi, as well as Shanghai, are all located in this region.…

  • Jiangnan Arsenal (Chinese history)

    Jiangnan Arsenal, in Shanghai, major Chinese centre during the 1860s and 1870s for the manufacture of modern arms and the study of Western technical literature and Western languages. It was opened in 1865 as part of China’s Self-Strengthening movement. Begun as an ironworks base with machinery

  • Jiangnan Binggongchang (Chinese history)

    Jiangnan Arsenal, in Shanghai, major Chinese centre during the 1860s and 1870s for the manufacture of modern arms and the study of Western technical literature and Western languages. It was opened in 1865 as part of China’s Self-Strengthening movement. Begun as an ironworks base with machinery

  • Jiangnan Canal (canal, China)

    Zhenjiang: History: …was the place where the Jiangnan Canal (which in turn was connected to the Grand Canal) joined the Yangtze, its importance was greatly increased. It became the chief collecting centre for tax grain from the rich Yangtze delta region; the grain was then shipped across the Yangtze and north via…

  • Jiangnan plain (region, China)

    Jiangsu: Drainage: The Jiangnan plain south of the Yangtze forms the principal part of the Yangtze delta, characterized by flatness and lying only 10 to 16 feet (3 to 5 metres) above sea level. It is crisscrossed by streams and canals and dotted with ponds and lakes, forming…

  • Jiangnan sizhu (Chinese music ensemble)

    sizhu: …most influential has been the Jiangnan sizhu, which in the 19th century became established south of the Yangtze River, especially in the cities of southeast Jiangsu and northern Zhejiang provinces. By the early part of the 20th century, Shanghai had become the centre of sizhu activities; the city’s elite organized…

  • Jiangshanian Stage (stratigraphy)

    Jiangshanian Stage, second of three stages of the Upper Cambrian (Furongian) Series, encompassing all rocks deposited during the Jiangshanian Age (approximately 494 million to 489.5 million years ago) of the Cambrian Period. In 2011 the International Commission on Stratigraphy (ICS) established the

  • Jiangsu (province, China)

    Jiangsu, sheng (province) on the east coast of China. It is bounded by the Yellow Sea to the east, Shanghai municipality to the southeast, and by the provinces of Zhejiang to the south, Anhui to the west, and Shandong to the north. The provincial capital is Nanjing, which was the southern capital

  • Jiangsu lowlands (region, China)

    Jiangsu: Drainage: The Jiangsu lowlands are floodplains formed by the alluvial deposits of the Yangtze, Huai, and (formerly) Huang rivers and their tributaries. Using the Yangtze and the old channel of the Huai as convenient landmarks, the area of these plains may be divided into three sections.

  • Jiangsusheng bowuguan (museum, Nanking, China)

    Kiangsu Provincial Museum, in Nanking, China, one of the outstanding provincial museums of China. It contains objects reflecting 5,000 years of Chinese culture. The prehistoric section contains objects found during excavations in 1954 and 1956 in Kiangsu Province, including polished stone tools,

  • Jiangxi (province, China)

    Jiangxi, sheng (province) of southeast-central China. It is bounded by the provinces of Hubei and Anhui to the north, Zhejiang and Fujian to the east, Guangdong to the south, and Hunan to the west. On the map its shape resembles an inverted pear. The port of Jiujiang, some 430 miles (690 km)

  • Jiangxi Soviet (Chinese history)

    Jiangxi Soviet, (1931–34), independent government established by the communist leader Mao Zedong and his comrade Zhu De in Jiangxi province in southeastern China. It was from this small state within a state that Mao gained the experience in guerrilla warfare and peasant organization that he later

  • Jiangxia (China)

    Hankou, large urban area and river port, east-central Hubei sheng (province), central China. Located on the left bank of the Han River at its confluence with the Yangtze River (Chang Jiang), it is the largest of the three former cities (the other two being Hanyang and Wuchang) now constituting the

  • Jiangzi (China)

    Gyangzê, town, southern Tibet Autonomous Region, western China. It is situated on the Nianchu River some 53 miles (86 km) southeast of Xigazê and about halfway between Lhasa (capital of Tibet) and the town of Yadong (Xarsingma) on the frontiers with India and Bhutan. Gyangzê is an important route

  • Jiankang (China)

    Nanjing, city, capital of Jiangsu sheng (province), east-central China. It is a port on the Yangtze River (Chang Jiang) and a major industrial and communications centre. Rich in history, it served seven times as the capital of regional empires, twice as the seat of revolutionary government, once

  • Jianming Buliedian Baike Quanshu (Chinese encyclopaedia)

    Concise Encyclopædia Britannica, 11-volume short-entry encyclopaedia in the Chinese language, published in Beijing in 1985–91 and believed to be the first joint venture by a socialist state and a privately owned Western publishing enterprise. The Concise Encyclopædia Britannica was published as a

  • Jianshe de wenxue geming (essay by Hu Shih)

    Chinese literature: May Fourth period: …a second article (1918), “Jianshe de wenxue geming” (“Constructive Literary Revolution”), in which he spelled out his formula for a “literary renaissance.”

  • Jianwen (emperor of Ming dynasty)

    Jianwen was the reign name (nianhao) of the second emperor of the Ming dynasty (1368–1644), under whose brief reign (1398–1402) a civil war nearly destroyed the newly founded dynasty. Succeeding to the throne in 1398, Jianwen continued the efforts of his predecessor to erase the Mongol legacies of

  • Jianye (China)

    Nanjing, city, capital of Jiangsu sheng (province), east-central China. It is a port on the Yangtze River (Chang Jiang) and a major industrial and communications centre. Rich in history, it served seven times as the capital of regional empires, twice as the seat of revolutionary government, once