• Kazunaru, Miyake (Japanese fashion designer)

    Issey Miyake was a Japanese fashion designer who was known for combining Eastern and Western elements in his work. He also had a popular line of fragrances that included L’Eau d’Issey. Miyake studied graphic design at Tokyo’s Tama Art University, and after graduation he moved in 1965 to Paris,

  • Kazvīn (Iran)

    Qazvīn, city, capital of Qazvīn province, north-central Iran. The city sits in a wide, fertile plain at the southern foot of the Elburz Mountains. Originally called Shad Shāhpūr, it was founded by the Sāsānian king Shāpūr I about 250 ce. It flourished in early Muslim times (7th century), serving as

  • Kazym (river, Russia)

    Ob River: Physiography: …(Bolshaya) Ob, which receives the Kazym and Kunovat rivers from the right, and the Little (Malaya) Ob, which receives the Northern (Severnaya) Sosva, the Vogulka, and the Synya rivers from the left. These main channels are reunited below Shuryshkary into a single stream that is up to 12 miles (19…

  • Kāʾūs I (Seljuq sultan)

    Anatolia: Seljuq expansion: …sons and successors, ʿIzz al-Dīn Kāʾūs I (1211–20) and ʿAlāʾ al-Dīn Kay-Qubādh I (1220–37), the Anatolian Seljuqs achieved the zenith of their power. Ghiyās̄ al-Dīn Kay-Khusraw I reunified the Seljuq state and began to expand at the expense of what was left of the Byzantine Empire in the west and…

  • Kāʾūsīyeh dynasty (Iranian dynasty)

    Kāʾūsīyeh dynasty, (ad 665–c. 1006), branch of the Bāvand dynasty, which ruled in Ṭabaristān (now Māzandarān, northern Iran). The origins and early history of the Kāʾūsīyeh branch are obscure. Its founder and the founder of the main dynasty was a certain Bāv (ruled 665–680). The dynasty was centred

  • Kaʿb (Arab poet)

    Islamic arts: Age of the caliphs: …followed: a famous ode by Kaʿb, the son of Zuhayr, is different from pre-Islamic poetry only insofar as it ends in praise of the Prophet, imploring his forgiveness, instead of eulogizing some Bedouin leader. Muhammad’s rather mediocre eulogist, Ḥassān ibn Thābit (died c. 659), also slavishly repeated the traditional patterns…

  • Kaʿbah (shrine, Mecca, Saudi Arabia)

    Kaaba, shrine located near the center of the Great Mosque in Mecca, Saudi Arabia, and considered by Muslims everywhere to be the most sacred spot on Earth. Muslims orient themselves toward this small shrine during the five daily prayers, bury their dead facing its meridian, and cherish the ambition

  • Kaʿbe-ye Zardusht (building, Iran)

    ancient Iran: Wars of Shāpūr I: …Achaemenian building known as the Kaʿbe-ye Zardusht (“Kaaba of Zoroaster”). The text is in three languages, Sāsānian Pahlavi (Middle Persian), Parthian, and Greek. Besides the narrative of the military operations, the inscription provides a description of the Persian empire of the time and an inventory of the Zoroastrian religious foundations…

  • Kaʿbeh-ye Zardusht (building, Iran)

    ancient Iran: Wars of Shāpūr I: …Achaemenian building known as the Kaʿbe-ye Zardusht (“Kaaba of Zoroaster”). The text is in three languages, Sāsānian Pahlavi (Middle Persian), Parthian, and Greek. Besides the narrative of the military operations, the inscription provides a description of the Persian empire of the time and an inventory of the Zoroastrian religious foundations…

  • Kaʿiulani (heir apparent to the Hawaiian throne)

    Kaʿiulani was the final heir apparent to the Hawaiian throne. Princess Kaʿiulani was the only child of Scottish businessman Archibald Scott Cleghorn and Princess Miriam Likelike. Likelike was the sister of King Kalakaua and of the future queen Liliuokalani, both of whom were childless, making it

  • KB (computer science)

    expert system: …relies on two components: a knowledge base and an inference engine. A knowledge base is an organized collection of facts about the system’s domain. An inference engine interprets and evaluates the facts in the knowledge base in order to provide an answer. Typical tasks for expert systems involve classification, diagnosis,…

  • KB-11 (Russian organization)

    Yuly Borisovich Khariton: …KB-11, Arzamas-16, and currently the All-Russian Scientific Research Institute of Experimental Physics, which was responsible for designing the first Soviet fission and thermonuclear bombs.

  • KBL (political organization, Philippines)

    Philippines: Political process: …Nacionalista and Liberal parties, Marcos’s New Society Movement (Kilusan Bagong Lipunan; KBL), an organization created from elements of the Nacionalista Party and other supporters, emerged as predominant. Organized political opposition was revived for legislative elections held in 1978, and, since the downfall of Marcos, partisan politics has returned to its…

  • KBO (astronomy)

    Kuiper belt: …may represent the transition from Kuiper belt objects [KBOs] to short-period comets.) Although its existence had been assumed for decades, the Kuiper belt remained undetected until the 1990s, when the prerequisite large telescopes and sensitive light detectors became available.

  • KBR (American business organization)

    Halliburton: Cheney, KBR, and Deepwater Horizon: Dick Cheney, who served as U.S. secretary of defense in the administration of George H.W. Bush (1989–93), became chairman and chief executive of Halliburton Co. in 1995. He continued the program of expansion by acquisition. His most notable purchase was Dresser…

  • KC-135 Stratotanker (aircraft)

    Boeing 707: … subsequently ordered 29 jet tanker KC-135s (the military model). Boeing continued developing the passenger version of the Dash 80, and in 1955 Pan American World Airways (Pan Am) ordered 20 Boeing 707s. At the same time, however, it also ordered 25 Douglas DC-8s, a similar jet airliner being developed by…

  • KCA (Kenyan political organization)

    Kenya: Political movements: …the first one being the Young Kikuyu Association (later the East African Association), established in 1921, with Harry Thuku as its first president. The group, which received most of its support from young men and was not supported by most of the older chiefs, demanded African representation in the legislature…

  • KCIA (government organization, South Korea)

    intelligence: South Korea: The agency, renamed the National Intelligence Service in 1999, collects and coordinates national security intelligence. The Defense Security Command of the Ministry of National Defense and the National Intelligence Service are responsible for the collection of national security intelligence, particularly with regard to the threat from North Korea. The…

  • KCNJ1 (gene)

    Bartter syndrome: Types of Bartter syndrome: …by mutation of the gene KCNJ1 (potassium inwardly rectifying channel, subfamily J, member 1). These genes play fundamental roles in maintaining physiological homeostasis of sodium and potassium concentrations.

  • KDF-Wagen (automobile)

    automotive industry: Europe after World War II: …most emphasis centring on the Volkswagen. At the end of the war the Volkswagen factory and the city of Wolfsburg were in ruins. Restored to production, in a little more than a decade the plant was producing one-half of West Germany’s motor vehicles and had established a strong position in…

  • KDH (political party, Slovakia)

    Slovakia: Political process: …a Democratic Slovakia, and the Christian Democratic Movement.

  • KDKA (radio station, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States)

    Pennsylvania: Media and publishing: …world’s first commercial radio station, KDKA, began broadcasting in Pittsburgh in 1920.

  • KDNP (political party, Hungary)

    Hungary: Political process: …Free Democrats, Independent Smallholders’ Party, Christian Democratic People’s Party, Federation of Young Democrats (Fiatal Demokraták Szövetsége; Fidesz), and Hungarian Socialist Party—the latter being the party of reformed ex-communists. The same six parties were returned to Parliament in 1994, and for the following decade most of them remained represented in the…

  • KDP (political party, Iraq)

    Mustafa al-Barzani: He also founded the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP), which was to remain the most powerful group in Kurdish politics for decades.

  • KDPG (chemical compound)

    metabolism: The phosphogluconate pathway: …loses water, forming the compound 2-keto-3-deoxy-6-phosphogluconate (KDPG).

  • Ke Ga, Point (headland, Vietnam)

    Point Ke Ga, the easternmost point of Vietnam, lying along the South China Sea. The promontory, rising to 2,316 feet (706 m) above the sea, lies southeast of Tuy Hoa and is a continuation of a massive southwest-northeast–trending granite spur of the Annamese Cordillera. Ke Ga is also the name of

  • Ke$ha (American singer)

    Auto-Tune: Impact on the music industry: The American singer Kesha’s electro-pop albums Animal (2010) and Warrior (2012) made heavy use of Auto-Tune on vocals and melodies. In particular, her breakthrough single “TiK ToK,” featured on Animal, consists of rapping, obvious Auto-Tune, and ludicrous one-liners.

  • Ke‘kuhikuhiipu‘uoneonaali‘iokohala Kenao, Edith (Native Hawaiian teacher, dancer, chanter, and composer)

    Edith Kanaka‘ole dedicated her life to the preservation of Hawaiian language and culture. A Native Hawaiian herself, Aunty Edith (as she was often called) ensured the continuation of Hawaiian traditions in her roles as teacher, dancer, chanter, and composer. She performed her chants and hulas for

  • ke-yi (Chinese Buddhism)

    geyi, in Chinese Buddhism, the practice of borrowing from Daoist and other philosophical texts phrases with which to explain their own ideas. According to tradition, geyi was first used by Zhu Faya, a student of many religions of the 4th century ce, as he came to understand Buddhism. The technique

  • kea (bird)

    kea, New Zealand parrot species of the subfamily Nestorinae. See

  • Kéa (island, Greece)

    Kéa, westernmost of the Cyclades (Modern Greek: Kykládes) group of Greek islands in the Aegean Sea. It constitutes a dímos (municipality) in the South Aegean (Nótio Aigaío) periféreia (region). Kéa lies about 13 miles (21 km) east of the southern tip of Attica (Attikí). With an area of 50.4 square

  • Keach, Stacey (American actor)

    Frank Perry: …written by Pete Hamill, starred Stacy Keach, Harris Yulin, and Faye Dunaway. Next was Play It As It Lays (1972), an adaptation of a novel by Joan Didion, who cowrote the script with her husband, John Gregory Dunne. The dramedy featured Tuesday Weld as an actress who suffers a nervous…

  • keaki (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,…

  • Kean College (university, Union, New Jersey, United States)

    Kean University, public, coeducational institution of higher learning in Union, New Jersey, U.S. The university comprises schools of Business, Government and Technology; Education; Liberal Arts; and Natural Sciences, Nursing and Mathematics. Master’s degree programs are available in education,

  • Kean University (university, Union, New Jersey, United States)

    Kean University, public, coeducational institution of higher learning in Union, New Jersey, U.S. The university comprises schools of Business, Government and Technology; Education; Liberal Arts; and Natural Sciences, Nursing and Mathematics. Master’s degree programs are available in education,

  • Kean, Charles (British actor)

    Charles Kean was an English actor-manager best known for his revivals of Shakespearean plays. The son of the famed actor Edmund Kean, he was educated at Eton and made his debut as Young Norval in Douglas in London in 1827. He toured the provinces extensively but first won general acceptance during

  • Kean, Charles John (British actor)

    Charles Kean was an English actor-manager best known for his revivals of Shakespearean plays. The son of the famed actor Edmund Kean, he was educated at Eton and made his debut as Young Norval in Douglas in London in 1827. He toured the provinces extensively but first won general acceptance during

  • Kean, Edmund (British actor)

    Edmund Kean was one of the greatest of English tragic actors, a turbulent genius noted as much for his megalomania and ungovernable behaviour as for his portrayals of villains in Shakespearean plays. Though no official record of his birth exists, it has been well established that he was born out of

  • Kean, Ellen (British actress)

    Ellen Kean was one of the finest English actresses of her day and the wife of the actor Charles Kean, with whom she performed. Ellen was born of English parents and first appeared at Covent Garden, London, in 1823 as Olivia in William Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night. She then performed at Bath

  • Kean, Thomas (American politician)

    9-11 Commission: Former New Jersey governor Thomas Kean and former congressman Lee Hamilton subsequently agreed to chair and vice-chair the commission, which was composed of five Republicans and five Democrats. A staff of experts led by Philip Zelikow prepared the report after interviewing 1,200 individuals and studying thousands of classified and…

  • Keane, Bob (American record producer)

    Ritchie Valens: …came to the attention of Bob Keane, owner of Del-Fi records, who produced the sessions at Gold Star Recording Studios that resulted in Valens’s hits.

  • Keane, Molly (Irish author)

    Molly Keane was an Anglo-Irish novelist and playwright whose subject was the leisure class of her native Ireland. Born into the Anglo-Irish gentry (the daughter of an estate owner and the poet Moira O’Neill), Keane was educated by a governess. She began to publish novels while in her 20s, under the

  • Keaney, Frank W. (American basketball coach)

    basketball: U.S. high school and college basketball: Frank W. Keaney, coach at the University of Rhode Island from 1921 to 1948, is credited with introducing the concept of “fast break” basketball, in which the offensive team rushes the ball upcourt hoping to get a good shot before the defense can get set.…

  • Keanu (film by Atencio [2016])

    Tiffany Haddish: …gang member in the comedy Keanu, the feature film debut of comedians Jordan Peele and Keegan-Michael Key. The following year she gave her breakout performance in Girls Trip, in which she costarred with (and stole the show from) Regina Hall, Queen Latifah, and Jada Pinkett Smith. In the wake of…

  • Kearney (Nebraska, United States)

    Kearney, city, seat (1874) of Buffalo county, south-central Nebraska, U.S. It lies on the north bank of the Platte River, about 130 miles (210 km) west of Lincoln. Pawnee Indians were early inhabitants of the area. The city was founded in 1871 at the junction of the Burlington and Missouri River

  • Kearney, Philip (United States Army officer)

    Second Battle of Bull Run: The first day: Phil Kearny and Brig. Gen. Isaac Stevens, drove the Confederate left out of its position; a Confederate counterattack, led by Brig. Gen. Jubal Early, dislodged the Union soldiers with a bayonet charge.

  • Kearns, Doris Helen (American historian)

    Doris Kearns Goodwin is an American author and historian known for her highly regarded presidential studies. In 1964 Kearns received a bachelor’s degree from Colby College, Waterville, Maine, and in 1968 she earned a doctorate in government from Harvard University, where she later taught

  • Kearny, Stephen Watts (United States military officer)

    Stephen Watts Kearny was a U.S. Army officer who conquered New Mexico and helped win California during the Mexican War (1846–48). After serving in the War of 1812, Kearny spent most of the next 30 years on frontier duty. At the beginning of the Mexican War, he was ordered to lead an expedition from

  • Kearsarge (ship)

    Alabama claims: …being sunk by the USS Kearsarge off Cherbourg, Fr. (June 1864).

  • Keate Award (British-South African history)

    South Africa: The decline of the African states: …and Boers in 1871 (the Keate Award), Colonial Secretary Lord Carnarvon’s more determined federation plan of 1875, Shepstone’s invasion of the Transvaal in 1877, and the British invasions of Zululand and Pediland in 1879. British troops also took part in an 1879 campaign that crushed Pedi military power in the…

  • Keate, Robert W. (British colonial agent)

    South Africa: Diamonds and confederation: …special hearing in October 1871, Robert W. Keate (then lieutenant governor of Natal) found in favor of Waterboer, but the British persuaded him to request protection against his Boer rivals, and the area was annexed as Griqualand West.

  • Keating Five (United States history)

    Charles H. Keating: In 1987 the so-called Keating Five—Alan Cranston, Dennis DeConcini, John Glenn, John McCain, and Donald Riegle—duly intervened on Keating’s behalf with the director of the federal agency that oversaw the operation of the country’s savings and loans. Keating was apparently so sure that he would benefit from his influence…

  • Keating, Charles H. (American businessman)

    Charles H. Keating was an American businessman best known for his role in the savings and loan crisis of the 1980s and ’90s, which resulted in the closure of about half of all savings and loan associations in the United States and the bankruptcy of the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation

  • Keating, Charles Humphrey (American businessman)

    Charles H. Keating was an American businessman best known for his role in the savings and loan crisis of the 1980s and ’90s, which resulted in the closure of about half of all savings and loan associations in the United States and the bankruptcy of the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation

  • Keating, Geoffrey (Irish writer)

    Celtic literature: Late period: Geoffrey Keating produced the first historical (as opposed to annalistic) work in his Foras Feasa ar Éirinn (written c. 1640; History of Ireland) as well as some fine verse in both old and new meters and two spiritual treatises.

  • Keating, Paul (prime minister of Australia)

    Paul Keating is a politician who was the leader of the Australian Labor Party and prime minister of Australia from December 1991 to March 1996. Growing up in working-class Bankstown, a suburb of Sydney, Keating left school at age 14. He became involved in trade union activity and labour politics

  • Keating, Paul John (prime minister of Australia)

    Paul Keating is a politician who was the leader of the Australian Labor Party and prime minister of Australia from December 1991 to March 1996. Growing up in working-class Bankstown, a suburb of Sydney, Keating left school at age 14. He became involved in trade union activity and labour politics

  • Keating-Owen Act (United States [1916])

    Grace Abbott: …the employment of juveniles, the Keating-Owen Act (1916). This law was declared unconstitutional in 1918, but Abbott secured a continuation of its policy by having a child-labour clause inserted into all war-goods contracts between the federal government and private industry. In October 1919 Abbott returned to Illinois as director of…

  • keatite (mineral)

    silica mineral: Keatite: Keatite is a tetragonal form of silica known only from the laboratory, where it can be synthesized metastably in the presence of steam over a temperature range of 300 to 600 °C and a pressure range of 400 to 4,000 bars (standard atmospheric pressure…

  • Keaton, Buster (American actor)

    Buster Keaton was an American film comedian and director, known as the “Great Stone Face” of the silent screen. Keaton’s distinctive deadpan expression and imaginative, death-defying stunts set him apart as a virtuoso of visual comedy. His notable films include Sherlock, Jr. (1924), The General

  • Keaton, Diane (American actress and director)

    Diane Keaton is an American film actress and director who achieved fame in quirky comic roles prior to gaining respect as a dramatic actress. Keaton studied acting at Santa Ana College in California and at the Neighborhood Playhouse in New York. She appeared in summer stock in the mid-1960s and in

  • Keaton, Joseph Francis, IV (American actor)

    Buster Keaton was an American film comedian and director, known as the “Great Stone Face” of the silent screen. Keaton’s distinctive deadpan expression and imaginative, death-defying stunts set him apart as a virtuoso of visual comedy. His notable films include Sherlock, Jr. (1924), The General

  • Keaton, Michael (American actor)

    Michael Keaton is an American actor who began his career in mostly comedic roles but later found success in dramas. Keaton’s notable films included Mr. Mom (1983), Beetlejuice (1988), Batman (1989), Birdman or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance) (2014), and Spotlight (2015). Keaton studied speech

  • Keats, John (British poet)

    John Keats was an English Romantic lyric poet who devoted his short life to the perfection of a poetry marked by vivid imagery, great sensuous appeal, and an attempt to express a philosophy through classical legend. The son of a livery-stable manager, John Keats received relatively little formal

  • kebab (food)

    kebab, dish of Middle Eastern or Central Asian origin that typically combines small pieces of meat such as lamb or beef with vegetables on a skewer and is then grilled. Kebab derives from a Persian term for the dish that passed into both Arabic (as kabāb) and Turkish (as kebap). Kebabs are thought

  • Keban Dam (dam, Turkey)

    Murat River: Turkey’s largest dam, the Keban, west of Elâzığ, completed in 1974, is designed to provide electric power and aid flood control and the irrigation of additional cropland. Agriculture in the valley consists primarily of the cultivation of grains, fruits, vegetables, and cotton.

  • Kebar Dam (ancient dam, Persia)

    dam: Early dams of East Asia: In Persia (modern-day Iran) the Kebar Dam and the Kurit Dam represented the world’s first large-scale thin-arch dams. The Kebar and Kurit dams were built early in the 14th century by Il-Khanid Mongols; the Kebar Dam reached a height of 26 metres (85 feet), and the Kurit Dam, after successive…

  • Kebara (cave, Israel)

    Kebara, paleoanthropological site on Mount Carmel in northern Israel that has yielded a trove of Neanderthal bones and associated artifacts. The Kebara cave was occupied by humans and various other animals from the Middle Paleolithic Period (approximately 200,000 to 40,000 years ago) through the

  • Kebara 2 (human fossil)

    Kebara: …young adult skeleton (known as Kebara 2) that dates to about 60,000 years ago, and fragments of many more individuals. The infant and adult skeletons were clearly interred intentionally, although burial pits could not be discerned. Of the fragile fragmentary infant fossils, only their teeth indicate that they were Neanderthals.…

  • Kebbi (state, Nigeria)

    Kebbi, state, northwestern Nigeria. It was created in 1991 from the southwestern half of Sokoto state. Kebbi borders the countries of Niger to the west and Benin to the southwest, and it borders the Nigerian states of Sokoto and Zamfara to the north and east and Niger to the south. Kebbi’s area

  • Kebbi (historical kingdom, Africa)

    Yauri: Muhammadu Kanta, founder of the Kebbi kingdom to the north, conquered Yauri in the mid-16th century; and Yauri, although essentially independent after Kanta’s death (c. 1561), paid tribute to Kebbi until the mid-18th century. About 1810 King Albishir (Mohammadu dan Ayi), the Hausa ruler of Yauri, pledged allegiance to the…

  • Kebbi River (river, Nigeria)

    Sokoto River, river in northwestern Nigeria, rising just south of Funtua on the northern plateau. It flows northwestward in a wide arc for 200 miles (320 km) to Sokoto town, west of which the Rima River joins it in its lower course to its confluence with the Niger River east of Illo. The alluvial

  • Kebiishi (Japanese official)

    Kebiishi, body of police commissioners who constituted the only effective military force during Japan’s Heian period (ad 794–1185). The Kebiishi was the backbone of the administration during this time, and its decline about 1000 marked the beginning of the disintegration of central control over the

  • Keble College (college, England, United Kingdom)

    William Butterfield: His few secular works include Keble College, Oxford, mostly complete by 1876.

  • Keble, John (British priest and poet)

    John Keble was an Anglican priest, theologian, and poet who originated and helped lead the Oxford Movement (q.v.), which sought to revive in Anglicanism the High Church ideals of the later 17th-century church. Ordained in 1816, Keble was educated at the University of Oxford and served as a tutor

  • Kebne, Mount (mountain, Sweden)

    Norrbotten: …the highest point in Sweden, Mount Kebne (6,926 feet [2,111 meters]).

  • Kebnekaise (mountain range, Sweden)

    Kebnekaise, mountain range in the län (county) of Norrbotten, northern Sweden. It lies 25 miles (40 km) from the Norwegian border and about 103 miles (166 km) north of the Arctic Circle. The name is a Sami word meaning “kettle top.” One of its peaks, Mount Kebne (6,926 feet [2,111 metres]), is the

  • Kebnekaise, Mount (mountain, Sweden)

    Norrbotten: …the highest point in Sweden, Mount Kebne (6,926 feet [2,111 meters]).

  • Kebo Tengali (Indonesian chief minister)

    Kertanagara: Legacy: …Raganatha (Kebo Arema) and appointed Aragani, who could serve him delicious food every day. Aragani is also known as Kebo Tengali, though some scholars say these were two separate men. He drank palm wine and held orgies, which eventually led to his death—he was killed by his enemies during one…

  • kebob (food)

    kebab, dish of Middle Eastern or Central Asian origin that typically combines small pieces of meat such as lamb or beef with vegetables on a skewer and is then grilled. Kebab derives from a Persian term for the dish that passed into both Arabic (as kabāb) and Turkish (as kebap). Kebabs are thought

  • Kebra Negast (Ethiopian literary work)

    Ethiopia: The Zagwe and Solomonic dynasties: …early 14th century in the Kebra nagast (“Glory of the Kings”), a collection of legends that related the birth of Menilek I, associated Ethiopia with the Judeo-Christian tradition, and provided a basis for Ethiopian national unity through the Solomonic dynasty, Semitic culture, and the Amharic language. Well-armed ideologically, the Ethiopian…

  • Kebun Binatang Jakarta (zoo, Jakarta, Indonesia)

    Ragunan Zoological Gardens, zoo in Jakarta, Indonesia, that is one of the world’s notable collections of Southeast Asian flora and fauna. More than 3,500 specimens of approximately 450 animal species are exhibited on the 200-hectare (494-acre) park grounds. Among these are the orangutan, Sumatran

  • Kebun Binatang Ragunan (zoo, Jakarta, Indonesia)

    Ragunan Zoological Gardens, zoo in Jakarta, Indonesia, that is one of the world’s notable collections of Southeast Asian flora and fauna. More than 3,500 specimens of approximately 450 animal species are exhibited on the 200-hectare (494-acre) park grounds. Among these are the orangutan, Sumatran

  • Kebun Raya Indonesia (garden, Bogor, Indonesia)

    Indonesia Botanical Gardens, tropical garden in Bogor, West Java, Indonesia. It is renowned for its research on regional flora. The 215-acre (87-hectare) site was first used by the Dutch for introducing tropical plants from other parts of the world into the region. In 1817 it was converted into a

  • Kechiche, Abdellatif (Tunisian-French actor, film director and screenwriter)

    Léa Seydoux: International acclaim: Blue Is the Warmest Color: Directed by Abdellatif Kechiche, the three-hour coming-of-age film follows the relationship and breakup between the wide-eyed Adèle (Exarchopoulos) and the charismatic, more-experienced Emma (Seydoux). At Cannes, Kechiche, Seydoux, and Exarchopoulos were all awarded the Palme d’Or in recognition of their shared contributions (usually only the director receives…

  • Keck Graduate Institute of Applied Life Sciences (school, California, United States)

    Claremont Colleges: …(Claremont Graduate University and the Keck Graduate Institute of Applied Life Sciences). The campuses are adjacent to one another, and many facilities are shared, including the consortium’s main library, the Honnold/Mudd Library, which houses nearly two million volumes. The idea of creating a cluster of colleges at Claremont was developed…

  • Keck Observatory (observatory, Mauna Kea, Hawaii, United States)

    Keck Observatory, astronomical observatory located near the 4,200-metre (13,800-foot) summit of Mauna Kea, a dormant volcano on north-central Hawaii Island, Hawaii, U.S. Keck’s twin 10-metre (394-inch) telescopes, housed in separate domes, constitute the largest optical telescope system of the

  • Keck telescopes (telescopes, Mauna Kea, Hawaii, United States)

    Keck Observatory: …domes, constitute the largest optical telescope system of the burgeoning multi-observatory science reserve located on Mauna Kea.

  • Keckley, Elizabeth (American seamstress and author)

    Elizabeth Keckley was an American dressmaker, author, and philanthropist who purchased her and her son’s freedom from slavery and who later became the modiste for first lady Mary Todd Lincoln. Much of Keckley’s life is recorded in her memoir, Behind the Scenes; or, Thirty Years a Slave and Four

  • Keckly, Elizabeth (American seamstress and author)

    Elizabeth Keckley was an American dressmaker, author, and philanthropist who purchased her and her son’s freedom from slavery and who later became the modiste for first lady Mary Todd Lincoln. Much of Keckley’s life is recorded in her memoir, Behind the Scenes; or, Thirty Years a Slave and Four

  • Kecskemét (Hungary)

    Kecskemét, city of county status and seat of Bács-Kiskun megye (county), central Hungary. Long established as a centre for handicrafts and cattle raising, it has also grown in importance for its viticulture, vegetables, and fruit. It is surrounded by flat sandy farmland, often referred to as “the

  • Kedarnath Temple (Hindu temple, Uttarakhand, India)

    Uttarakhand: Pilgrimage centres: At Kedarnath, somewhat to the southeast of Gangotri at an elevation approaching 12,000 feet (3,500 meters), is a stone temple to Shiva that is considered to be more than 1,000 years old; a large statue of the bull Nandi, one of Shiva’s chief attendants, stands outside…

  • Kedazan (people)

    Kadazan, term embracing a number of peoples that together constitute the largest indigenous ethnic group in the state of Sabah, Malaysia, on the northeastern extremity of the island of Borneo. The Kadazan are grouped along the coastal plain from Kudat to Beaufort and in the hills around Tambunan.

  • Kede (people)

    Nupe: Zam, Batache (Bataci), and Kede (Kyedye) are the most important. The Kede and Batache are river people, subsisting primarily by fishing and trading; the other Nupe are farmers, who grow the staple crops millet, sorghum, yams, and rice. Commercial crops include rice, peanuts (groundnuts), cotton, and shea nuts. The…

  • kedesha (Mesopotamian religion)

    qedesha, in ancient societies and religions of the Middle East, a woman of special status. The exact function of the qedesha is unclear from the sources available, but it is known that the qedesha played a ritual role alongside priests and midwives. As with many classes of sacred status, the

  • kedeshah (Mesopotamian religion)

    qedesha, in ancient societies and religions of the Middle East, a woman of special status. The exact function of the qedesha is unclear from the sources available, but it is known that the qedesha played a ritual role alongside priests and midwives. As with many classes of sacred status, the

  • Kedge (missile)

    rocket and missile system: Air-to-surface: …the television-guided AS-10 Karen and AS-14 Kedge (the last with a range of about 25 miles). These missiles were fired from tactical fighters such as the MiG-27 Flogger and attack helicopters such as the Mi-24 Hind and Mi-28 Havoc.

  • Kediet Ijill (inselberg, Mauritania)

    Mauritania: Relief: …of which the highest is Mount Ijill at 3,002 feet (915 metres), an enormous block of hematite.

  • Kedir, Mohammed (Ethiopian athlete)

    Miruts Yifter: Yifter the Shifter: Mohammed Kedir, a fellow Ethiopian, was on the inside, while Ireland’s Eamonn Coghlan held the outside. Kedir, however, yielded to his teammate, and Yifter shifted one more time, exploding for a time of 27.2 seconds in the closing 200 metres to snare the gold medal…

  • Kediri (Indonesia)

    Kediri, city, East Java (Jawa Timur) propinsi (or provinsi; province), eastern Java, Indonesia. It is situated on the Brantas River at the foot of Mount Wilis, 65 miles (105 km) southwest of Surabaya. Kediri is the centre of a sugar industry and of trade in such agricultural products as coffee,