- Khalīl al-Raḥmān, Al- (city, West Bank)
Hebron, city in the West Bank, situated in the southern Judaean Hills south-southwest of Jerusalem. Located about 3,050 feet (930 metres) above sea level, Hebron long benefited from its mountainous clime, which encouraged the cultivation of fruit trees and vineyards. In addition, its location at a
- Khalīl ibn Aḥmad, al- (Arab philologist)
al-Khalīl ibn Aḥmad was an Arab philologist who compiled the first Arabic dictionary and is credited with the formulation of the rules of Arabic prosody. When he moved to Basra, al-Khalīl left the Ṣufriyyah division of the Khārijites, which was popular in his native Oman. He lived simply and
- Khalīl, Al- (city, West Bank)
Hebron, city in the West Bank, situated in the southern Judaean Hills south-southwest of Jerusalem. Located about 3,050 feet (930 metres) above sea level, Hebron long benefited from its mountainous clime, which encouraged the cultivation of fruit trees and vineyards. In addition, its location at a
- Khalīl, al-Ashraf Ṣalāḥ ad-Dīn (sultan of Egypt)
al-Ashraf Ṣalāḥ ad-Dīn Khalīl was a Mamlūk sultan of Egypt who completed his father Qalāʾūn’s campaign to drive the Franks from Syria. He captured Acre (now ʿAkko, Israel) in the spring of 1291, and the remaining crusader fortresses were surrendered by the end of the year. He was murdered by his
- Khalil, Patrona (Turkish rebel)
Patrona Halil was a Turkish bath waiter, who, after a Turkish defeat by Persia, led a mob uprising (1730) that replaced the Ottoman sultan Ahmed III (ruled 1703–30) with Mahmud I (ruled 1730–54). This was the only Turkish rising not originating in the army. Patrona Halil was assassinated soon
- Khalili, Siminbar (Iranian poet)
Simin Behbahani was an Iranian poet who earned the sobriquet “the lioness of Iran” for eloquently challenging national authorities and expressing her steadfast opposition to oppression and violence in more than 600 poems. Prior to her birth, Khalili’s father, an editor and writer, was temporarily
- khāliṣah (Indian political unit)
India: Taxation and distribution of revenue resources: The khāliṣah, the territory whose revenues accrued directly to the sultan’s own treasury, was expanded significantly, enabling the sultan to pay a much larger number of his soldiers and cavalry troops in cash. Through these measures the sultan struck hard at all the others—his officials and…
- Khalistan (Sikh political ideology)
Khalistan, in Sikh political ideology, autonomous Sikh homeland. The declaration of the Khālsā by Gurū Gobind Singh in 1699 and the religio-political vision that came with it fired the Sikh imagination with the belief that it was their God-given right to rule the Punjab. In 1710, under the
- Khaljī dynasty (Indian dynasty)
Khaljī dynasty, (1290–1320), the second ruling dynasty of the Muslim sultanate of Delhi. The dynasty, whose founder Jalāl al-Dīn Fīrūz Khaljī had been the top military commander under the previous Mamluk dynasty, was responsible for making the Delhi sultanate into an imperial power by expanding its
- Khaljī, Ghiyāṣ-ud-Dīn ʿIwāz (Ghūrid leader)
India: Consolidation of the sultanate: …launched a successful campaign against Ghiyāth al-Dīn ʿIwāz Khaljī, one of Bhaktiyār Khaljī’s lieutenants, who had assumed sovereign authority in Lakhnauti (northern Bengal) and was encroaching on the province of Bihar. ʿIwāz Khaljī was defeated and slain in 1226, and in 1229 Iltutmish invaded Bengal and slew Balka, the last…
- Khaljī, Ghiyāth al-Dīn ʿIwāz (Ghūrid leader)
India: Consolidation of the sultanate: …launched a successful campaign against Ghiyāth al-Dīn ʿIwāz Khaljī, one of Bhaktiyār Khaljī’s lieutenants, who had assumed sovereign authority in Lakhnauti (northern Bengal) and was encroaching on the province of Bihar. ʿIwāz Khaljī was defeated and slain in 1226, and in 1229 Iltutmish invaded Bengal and slew Balka, the last…
- Khaljī, Ikhtiyār al-Dīn Muḥammad Bakhtiyār (Muslim general)
Deoghar: The Muslim invader Bakhtīyār Khaljī made Deoghar his capital in 1201 after the conquest of Bihar. It was constituted a municipality in 1869.
- Khaljī, Jalāl-al-Dīn Fīrūz (Khaljī sultan)
India: The Khaljīs of India: …struggle between the two factions, Jalāl al-Dīn Fīrūz Khaljī assumed the sultanate in 1290. During his short reign (1290–96), Jalāl al-Dīn suppressed a revolt by some of Balban’s officers, led an unsuccessful expedition against Ranthambhor, and defeated a substantial Mongol force on the banks of the Sind River in central…
- Khaljī, ʿAlāʾ-al-Dīn (Khaljī sultan of Delhi)
Gujarat: History of Gujarat: …defeated in about 1299 by ʿAlāʾ al-Dīn Khaljī, sultan of Delhi; Gujarat then came under Muslim rule. It was Aḥmed Shah, the first independent sultan of Gujarat, who founded Ahmedabad (1411). By the end of the 16th century, Gujarat was ruled by the Mughals. Their control of the region lasted…
- Khalk Maslahaty (Turkmen government)
Turkmenistan: Constitutional framework: A People’s Council (Khalk Maslahaty)—made up of the president, members of the parliament, regional representatives, chairmen of the high courts, the cabinet, and other officials—had the authority to call national referenda, plan economic and social policy, and declare war. Despite having significant de jure powers, this council largely…
- Khalkha (people)
Khalkha, largest group of the Mongol peoples, constituting more than 80 percent of the population of Mongolia. The Khalkha dialect is the official language of Mongolia. It is understood by 90 percent of the country’s population as well as by many Mongols elsewhere. Traditionally, the Khalkha were a
- Khalkha (language)
Mongol language: The Khalkha dialect constitutes the basis for the official language of Mongolia. The other dialects, the number and grouping of which are controversial, are spoken predominantly in China. With the closely related Buryat language, Mongol forms the eastern group of Mongolian languages.
- Khalkidhikí (peninsula, Greece)
Chalcidice, peninsula and a perifereiakí enótita (regional unit), Central Macedonia (Modern Greek: Kendrikí Makedonía) periféreia (region), northern Greece. It terminates in (east–west) the three fingerlike promontories of Kassándra, Sithonía, and Áyion Óros (Mount Athos). The promontories were
- Khalkís (Greece)
Chalcis, city and dímos (municipality) on the island of Euboea (Évvoia), periféreia (region) of Central Greece (Modern Greek: Stereá Elláda), western Greece. It lies at the narrowest point (measured only in yards) of the Euripus (Evrípos) channel, which separates Euboea from the Greek mainland and
- Khalmg Tangch (republic, Russia)
Kalmykiya, republic in southwestern Russia, lying northwest of the Caspian Sea and west of the lower Volga River. On the east it reaches the Caspian shore, and in the northeast it touches the Volga. Most of the republic lies in the vast lowland of the northern Caspian Depression, the greater part
- khalq (Islam)
kasb: …term kasb to avoid attributing khalq (creation) to anyone but God. His main concern was to maintain God’s total omnipotence and at the same time allow men a degree of responsibility for their actions. Al-Ashʿarī rejected the assertion of the Muʿtazilah theological school, of which he had been a member,…
- Khalq Party (political party, Afghanistan)
Afghanistan: Mohammad Zahir Shah (1933–73): …two factions, known as the People’s (Khalq) and Banner (Parcham) parties. Another was a conservative religious organization known as the Islamic Society (Jamʿiyyat-e Eslāmī), which was founded by a number of religiously minded individuals, including members of the University of Kabul faculty of religion, in 1971. The Islamists were highly…
- Khalsa (Sikhism)
Khalsa, the purified and reconstituted Sikh community instituted by Guru Gobind Singh on March 30, 1699 (Baisakhi Day; Khalsa Sikhs celebrate the birth of the order on April 13 of each year). His declaration had three dimensions: it redefined the concept of authority within the Sikh community; it
- Khālsā Samācār (periodical)
Bhai Vir Singh: …Singh founded the weekly paper Khālsā Samācār (“News of the Khalsa”) in Amritsar (1899), where it is still published. Among his novels are Kalgīdlur Camathār (1935), a novel on the life of the 17th-century gurū Gobind Singh, and Gurū Nānak Camathār, 2 vol. (1936; “Stories of Guru Nanak”), a biography…
- Khalwatīyah (Ṣūfī order)
Suhrawardīyah: The orthodox Khalwatīyah, also strictly disciplined, was founded in Iran by ʿUmar al-Khalwatī, then spread into Turkey and Egypt in many branches. The Ṣafawīyah, organized by Ṣafī od-Dīn, at Ardabīl, Iran, gave rise to the Iranian Ṣafavid dynasty (1502–1736) and several Turkish branches active against the Ottomans…
- Kham phiphaksa (novel by Chart Korbjitti)
Thai literature: …award-winning novel Kham phiphaksa (1982; The Judgment), in which a well-meaning rural school janitor is turned into a social outcast through the narrow-minded gossip and hypocrisy of the community in which he has grown up. By publishing his own works, Chart achieved a degree of financial independence that most writers…
- Kham Um (Vietnamese tribal chief)
Deo Van Tri was a fiercely independent tribal chief of Tai peoples in the Black River region of Tonkin (now northern Vietnam) who created a semiautonomous feudal kingdom and coexisted with the French, who ruled the rest of Vietnam. Deo Van Tri was the son of Deo Van Seng (or Deo Van Sanh), chief of
- Khama III (Ngwato chief)
Khama III was a Southern African Tswana (“Bechuana” in older variant orthography) chief of Bechuanaland who allied himself with British colonizers in the area. Khama was converted to Christianity in 1860, and, after more than a decade of dissension between his supporters and those loyal to his
- Khama the Good (Ngwato chief)
Khama III was a Southern African Tswana (“Bechuana” in older variant orthography) chief of Bechuanaland who allied himself with British colonizers in the area. Khama was converted to Christianity in 1860, and, after more than a decade of dissension between his supporters and those loyal to his
- Khama, Ian (president of Botswana)
Ian Khama is a retired military officer and politician who served as president of Botswana from 2008 to 2018. He previously served as vice president (1998–2008). For most of his political life he was affiliated with the Botswana Democratic Party (BDP), but in 2019 he left the party to support the
- Khama, Seretse Khama Ian (president of Botswana)
Ian Khama is a retired military officer and politician who served as president of Botswana from 2008 to 2018. He previously served as vice president (1998–2008). For most of his political life he was affiliated with the Botswana Democratic Party (BDP), but in 2019 he left the party to support the
- Khama, Sir Seretse (president of Botswana)
Sir Seretse Khama was the first president of Botswana (1966–80), after the former Bechuanaland protectorate gained independence from Great Britain. Seretse Khama was the grandson of Khama III the Good, who had allied his kingdom in Bechuanaland with British colonizers in the late 19th century.
- Khamag Mongol Uls (Mongol confederation)
Mongolia: Ethnography and early tribal history: …known in Mongol tradition as Khamag Mongol Uls (“Nation of All the Mongols”), which did not, however, include all of the population who spoke the Mongol language.
- Khamanelsk Ob (river, Russia)
Ob River: Physiography: …arms of which are the Khamanelsk Ob, which receives the Shchuchya from the left, and the Nadym Ob, which is the more considerable of the pair. At the base of the delta lies the Gulf of Ob, which is some 500 miles (800 km) long and has a width reaching…
- Khāmastāshar Māyo, Madīnat (Egypt)
Madīnat Khāmastāshar Māyo, residential town, Ḥulwān muḥāfaẓah (governorate), Egypt. The town is a suburb of the industrial town of Ḥulwān and is located in the Wadi Ḥawf 2 miles (3 km) north of Ḥulwān, on a desert tract of 15 square miles (39 square km). Constructed in the late 1970s, it is part of
- Khamba (people)
monasticism: Quasi-monastic: Among the Khamba (khams pa) of eastern Tibet, for example, men with minimal monastic initiation (lung) organized themselves as a military or police force to protect monastic territory and the unarmed higher-initiated clergy. They were conspicuous during Tibet’s confrontation with the Chinese communists from 1959 to 1965.
- Khambhat (India)
Khambhat, town, east-central Gujarat state, west-central India. It lies at the head of the Gulf of Khambhat (Cambay) and the mouth of the Mahi River. The town was mentioned in 1293 by the Venetian traveler Marco Polo, who referred to it as a busy port. It was still a prosperous port in the late
- Khambhat, Gulf of (gulf, India)
Gulf of Khambhat, trumpet-shaped gulf of the Arabian Sea, indenting northward the coast of Gujarat state, western India, between Mumbai (Bombay) and the Kathiawar Peninsula. It is 120 miles (190 km) wide at its mouth between Diu and Daman, but it rapidly narrows to 15 miles (24 km). The gulf
- Khambu (people)
Rai, a people indigenous to eastern Nepal, living west of the Arun River in the area drained by the Sun Kosi River, at elevations of 5,500–7,700 feet (1,700–2,300 m), and also in southwestern Bhutan. The most populous group of the Kiranti people, the Rai numbered about 635,000 at the turn of the
- Khambula, Battle of (South African history)
Battles of Isandlwana and Rorke’s Drift: …of the Zulu at the Battle of Kambula (Khambula) on March 29. On April 2 a British column under Chelmsford’s command inflicted a heavy defeat on the Zulu at Gingindlovu, where more than 1,000 Zulu were killed. Chelmsford’s troops then moved on Cetshwayo’s royal villages at Ulundi, where on July…
- Khamenei, Ali (rahbar of Iran)
Ali Khamenei is an Iranian cleric and politician who served as president of Iran (1981–89) and as that country’s rahbar, or leader, from 1989. A cleric of high institutional rank among the Twelver Shiʿah, Khamenei is generally addressed with the honorific ayatollah. Khamenei began his advanced
- Khamenei, Mojtaba (Iranian cleric and political figure)
Mojtaba Khamenei is the shadowy son of Ali Khamenei, Iran’s second leader (rahbar). He plays a commanding role in the Office of the Supreme Leader and outside of the public view. He is believed to be positioned as a potential successor to his father, especially after the death of Ebrahim Raisi,
- Khami Ruins National Monument (ruins, Zimbabwe)
Southern Africa: Torwa, Mutapa, and Rozwi: …Torwa, with its centre at Khami; in the north it was replaced by the Mutapa state. The new culture at Khami developed both the stone building techniques and the pottery styles found at Great Zimbabwe and seeded a number of smaller sites over a wide region of the southern and…
- Khamīs Mushayṭ (Saudi Arabia)
Khamīs Mushayṭ, city, southwestern Saudi Arabia. It is situated about 17 miles (27 km) northeast of Abhā. Khamīs Mushayṭ is located inland in a mountainous region with fertile soil. It is traditionally a commercial centre; the name Khamīs (“Thursday”) signified the Thursday market of the Mushayṭ
- Khammam (India)
Khammam, city, southeastern Telangana state, southern India. It lies on the Munneru River (a tributary of the Krishna River), south-southeast of Warangal. The city is a trade and commercial centre. A rail line connects it with Warangal and with Vijayawada in Andhra Pradesh to the southeast. Rice,
- Khampti (people)
Himalayas: People of the Himalayas: Tani, the Dafla, the Khampti, the Khowa, the Mishmi, the Momba, the Miri, and the Singpho. Linguistically, they are Tibeto-Burman. Each group has its homeland in a distinct river valley, and all practice shifting cultivation (i.e., they grow crops on a different tract of land each year).
- khamriyyah (Arabic poetic genre)
Arabic literature: Later genres: …that included, among other categories, khamriyyāt (wine poems), ṭardiyyāt (hunt poems), zuhdiyyāt (ascetic poems), and ghazal (love poems).
- Khams (region, China)
Khams, one of three historical regions of Central Asia (the other two being A-mdo and Dbus-Gtsang) into which Tibet was once divided. Between the 7th and 9th centuries ce, the Tibetan kingdom was extended until it reached the Tarim Basin to the north, China to the east, India and Nepal to the
- khams pa (people)
monasticism: Quasi-monastic: Among the Khamba (khams pa) of eastern Tibet, for example, men with minimal monastic initiation (lung) organized themselves as a military or police force to protect monastic territory and the unarmed higher-initiated clergy. They were conspicuous during Tibet’s confrontation with the Chinese communists from 1959 to 1965.
- khamsa (Persian and Turkish literature)
khamseh, in Persian and Turkish literature, a set of five long epic poems composed in rhyming couplet, or mas̄navī, form. Khamseh takes its name from the five great epic poems written by Neẓāmī (q.v.; d. 1209) and entitled Khamseh (“The Quintuplet”). The first of these five poems, all of which were
- Khamsah (work by Amīr Khosrow)
Amīr Khosrow: …in his life, and his Khamsah (“Pentalogy”), a group of five long idylls in emulation of the Khamseh of the celebrated Persian poet Neẓāmī (c. 1141–1209). Amīr Khosrow’s pentalogy deals with general themes famous in Islāmic literature. In addition to his poetry, he is known for a number of prose…
- khamseen (air current)
khamsin, hot, dry, dusty wind in North Africa and the Arabian Peninsula that blows from the south or southeast in late winter and early spring. It often reaches temperatures above 40° C (104° F), and it may blow continuously for three or four days at a time and then be followed by an inflow of much
- khamseh (Persian and Turkish literature)
khamseh, in Persian and Turkish literature, a set of five long epic poems composed in rhyming couplet, or mas̄navī, form. Khamseh takes its name from the five great epic poems written by Neẓāmī (q.v.; d. 1209) and entitled Khamseh (“The Quintuplet”). The first of these five poems, all of which were
- Khamseh (work by Neẓāmī)
khamseh: Khamseh takes its name from the five great epic poems written by Neẓāmī (q.v.; d. 1209) and entitled Khamseh (“The Quintuplet”). The first of these five poems, all of which were composed in the mas̄navī form, is the didactic work Makhzan ol-asrār (The Treasury of…
- Khamseh (work by Navāʾī)
Chagatai literature: His Khamseh demonstrates his centrality to the Chagatai literary tradition. It consists of a set of five masnawis: Khayrat ul-abrār (1483; “The Best of the Righteous”), Farhād u Shīrīn (1484; “Farhād and Shīrīn”), Leylī u Majnūn (1484; “Leylī and Majnūn”), Sebʿa-i seyyāra (1484; "The Seven Planets"),…
- Khamseh (work by Amīr Khosrow)
Amīr Khosrow: …in his life, and his Khamsah (“Pentalogy”), a group of five long idylls in emulation of the Khamseh of the celebrated Persian poet Neẓāmī (c. 1141–1209). Amīr Khosrow’s pentalogy deals with general themes famous in Islāmic literature. In addition to his poetry, he is known for a number of prose…
- khamsin (air current)
khamsin, hot, dry, dusty wind in North Africa and the Arabian Peninsula that blows from the south or southeast in late winter and early spring. It often reaches temperatures above 40° C (104° F), and it may blow continuously for three or four days at a time and then be followed by an inflow of much
- Khamsing Srinawk (Thai writer)
Thai literature: …exception during this period was Lao Khamhom (Khamsing Srinawk), whose subtle stories about country folk, first published in a collection called Fa bo kan (1959; The Politician and Other Stories), often carry a more subversive message than is immediately apparent. Although his output was small, with most of his best…
- Khamtai Siphandon (president of Laos)
Laos: The Lao People’s Democratic Republic: Khamtai Siphandon, a veteran revolutionary and (from 1991) prime minister, then moved from the premiership to the presidency. Although Khamtai oversaw further economic liberalization, he resisted political reforms. The LPRP continued to control the National Assembly, allowing few independents to contest elections. At the same…
- khān (architecture)
khan, type of inn once found in the Middle East and parts of North Africa and Central Asia that effectively functioned as a trading centre and hostel. A square courtyard was surrounded by rows of connected lodging rooms, usually on two levels and arcaded. Although some stable space was provided,
- khan (title)
khan, historically, the ruler or monarch of a Mongol tribe (ulus). At the time of Genghis Khan (early 13th century) a distinction was made between the title of khan and that of khākān, which was the title Genghis assumed as Great Khan, or supreme ruler of the Mongols. The term khan was subsequently
- khan (architecture)
khan, type of inn once found in the Middle East and parts of North Africa and Central Asia that effectively functioned as a trading centre and hostel. A square courtyard was surrounded by rows of connected lodging rooms, usually on two levels and arcaded. Although some stable space was provided,
- Khan Jahān Lodī (governor of the Deccan)
India: The Deccan problem: …of which was that of Khan Jahān Lodī, governor of the Deccan. Khan Jahān was recalled to court after failing to recover Balaghat from Ahmadnagar. However, he rose in rebellion and fled back to the Deccan. Shah Jahān followed, and in December 1629 he defeated Khan Jahān and drove him…
- Khan Niazi, Imran Ahmad (prime minister of Pakistan)
Imran Khan is an antiestablishment politician in Pakistan who in 2022 became the first prime minister (2018–22) to be removed by a parliamentary vote. He rose to fame as a cricket player who led Pakistan’s national team to a Cricket World Cup victory in 1992. He later entered politics as a critic
- Khan Sahib (Pakistani statesman)
Pakistan: Political decline and bureaucratic ascendancy: Khan Sahib, a former premier of the North-West Frontier Province, Mirza formed the Republican Party and made Khan Sahib the chief minister of the new province of West Pakistan. The Republican Party was assembled to represent the landed interests in West Pakistan, the basic source…
- Khan Tängiri Peak (mountain, Asia)
Khan Tängiri Peak, peak in the Tien Shan range of Central Asia, at the juncture of the boundaries between Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and the Uygur Autonomous Region of Xinjiang, China. Situated in a heavily glaciated mountain knot, the mountain rises to 22,949 feet (6,995 metres) and is the highest
- Khan Tängiri Shyngy (mountain, Asia)
Khan Tängiri Peak, peak in the Tien Shan range of Central Asia, at the juncture of the boundaries between Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and the Uygur Autonomous Region of Xinjiang, China. Situated in a heavily glaciated mountain knot, the mountain rises to 22,949 feet (6,995 metres) and is the highest
- Khan Tengri (mountain, Asia)
Khan Tängiri Peak, peak in the Tien Shan range of Central Asia, at the juncture of the boundaries between Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and the Uygur Autonomous Region of Xinjiang, China. Situated in a heavily glaciated mountain knot, the mountain rises to 22,949 feet (6,995 metres) and is the highest
- Khan, A. Q. (Pakistani scientist)
Abdul Qadeer Khan was a Pakistani engineer, a key figure in Pakistan’s nuclear weapons program who was also involved for decades in a black market of nuclear technology and know-how whereby uranium-enrichment centrifuges, nuclear warhead designs, missiles, and expertise were sold or traded to Iran,
- Khan, Aamir (Indian actor)
Aamir Khan is an Indian film actor who is known for his consistent performances. His insistence on a complete script before shooting and working on only one film at a time heralded a new professionalism in Bollywood. In a career spanning more than three decades, Khan has acted in a wide range of
- Khan, Abdal Qadir (Pakistani scientist)
Abdul Qadeer Khan was a Pakistani engineer, a key figure in Pakistan’s nuclear weapons program who was also involved for decades in a black market of nuclear technology and know-how whereby uranium-enrichment centrifuges, nuclear warhead designs, missiles, and expertise were sold or traded to Iran,
- Khan, Abdul Ghaffar (Pashtun leader)
Abdul Ghaffar Khan was the foremost 20th-century leader of the Pashtuns (Pakhtuns, or Pathans; a Muslim ethnic group of Pakistan and Afghanistan), who became a follower of Mahatma Gandhi and was called the “Frontier Gandhi.” Ghaffar Khan met Gandhi and entered politics in 1919 during agitation over
- Khan, Abdul Qadeer (Pakistani scientist)
Abdul Qadeer Khan was a Pakistani engineer, a key figure in Pakistan’s nuclear weapons program who was also involved for decades in a black market of nuclear technology and know-how whereby uranium-enrichment centrifuges, nuclear warhead designs, missiles, and expertise were sold or traded to Iran,
- Khan, Abdul Rashid Salim Salman (Indian actor, film producer, and television presenter)
Salman Khan is an Indian actor, film producer, and television host whose iconic roles, blockbuster hits, and mass appeal have earned him the status of a megastar in Bollywood. Over the years, he has become an inextricable part of popular culture in India. Khan, who started out as a model and actor
- Khan, Abdullah Jaffa Bey (American choreographer and director)
Robert Joffrey was an American dancer, choreographer, and director, founder of the Joffrey Ballet (1956). Joffrey’s father was an immigrant from Afghanistan, and his mother was Italian-born. He began studying tap dancing but soon turned to ballet with Mary Ann Wells, at whose school in Seattle he
- Khan, Agha Mohammad Yahya (president of Pakistan)
Yahya Khan was a professional soldier who became commander in chief of the Pakistani armed forces in 1966 and was president of Pakistan from 1969 to 1971. Yahya was born to a family that was descended from the elite soldier class of Nādir Shāh, the Persian ruler who conquered Delhi in the 18th
- Khan, Ali Akbar (Indian musician)
Ali Akbar Khan was a composer, virtuoso sarod player, and teacher, active in presenting classical Indian music to Western audiences. Khan’s music is rooted in the Hindustani (northern) tradition of Indian music (see also Hindustani music). Khan was trained by his father, the master Alauddin Khan,
- Khan, Bismillah (Indian musician)
Bismillah Khan was an Indian musician who played the shehnai, a ceremonial oboelike North Indian horn, with such expressive virtuosity that he became a leading Indian classical music artist. His name was indelibly linked with the woodwind instrument. Khan was born into a family of court musicians
- Khan, Chaka (American singer)
Chaka Khan is an American singer whose incredible vocal range and dynamic stage presence helped make her the “Queen of Funk.” She has sold some 70 million records, backed by such hits as “I Feel for You” and “Through the Fire” (both 1984). Yvette Stevens is the eldest of five children born to
- Khan, Ebrahim (Bangladeshi playwright)
South Asian arts: Bangladesh: Ebrahim Khan wrote Kamal Pasha (1926), a play about the Turkish liberator, a symbol of hope and reawakening, and Anwar Pasha, about the downfall of Anwar (Enver), who could not cope with the new historical forces.
- Khan, Fazlur (American engineer)
Fazlur Khan was a Bangladeshi American civil engineer known for his innovations in high-rise building construction. He is regarded as the “father of tubular designs” for his contributions. Khan initially attended the Bengal Engineering College at the University of Calcutta in what is now Kolkata,
- Khan, Fazlur Rahman (American engineer)
Fazlur Khan was a Bangladeshi American civil engineer known for his innovations in high-rise building construction. He is regarded as the “father of tubular designs” for his contributions. Khan initially attended the Bengal Engineering College at the University of Calcutta in what is now Kolkata,
- Khān, Hārūn Bughra (Turkic ruler)
Qarakhanid Dynasty: …999 Hārūn (or Ḥasan) Bughra Khān, grandson of the paramount tribal chief of the Qarluq confederation, occupied Bukhara, the Sāmānid capital. The Sāmānid domains were split up between the Ghaznavids, who gained Khorāsān and Afghanistan, and the Qarakhanids, who received Transoxania; the Oxus River thus became the boundary between the…
- Khan, Imran (prime minister of Pakistan)
Imran Khan is an antiestablishment politician in Pakistan who in 2022 became the first prime minister (2018–22) to be removed by a parliamentary vote. He rose to fame as a cricket player who led Pakistan’s national team to a Cricket World Cup victory in 1992. He later entered politics as a critic
- Khan, Jansher (Pakistani squash player)
Jansher Khan is a Pakistani squash player considered to be among the sport’s most illustrious figures. For many years the name Khan had been synonymous with success in the game of squash. Unlike his older rival, Jahangir Khan (no relation), Jansher did not emerge from a squash-playing dynasty. His
- Khan, Kamala (fictional character)
Captain Marvel: From Ms. Marvel to Captain Marvel and back: …Captain Marvel, Pakistani American teenager Kamala Khan was unveiled as the new Ms. Marvel in All-New Marvel Now! Point One no. 1 (January 2014). Writer G. Willow Wilson and artist Adrian Alphona revealed the character’s origins in Ms. Marvel no. 1 (February 2014). Khan’s powers, which included the ability to…
- Khan, Lina (British-born American legal scholar)
Lina Khan is a British-born American legal scholar who served as commissioner and chair of the U.S. Federal Trade Commission (FTC) from 2021. Nominated by Pres. Joe Biden in March as one of five commissioners of the FTC, she was confirmed on June 15 by a Senate vote of 69–28. Later that day Biden
- Khan, Michelle (Malaysian actress)
Michelle Yeoh is a Malaysian actress considered to be one of the greatest female action movie stars, especially known for performing her own frequently dangerous stunts. She also earned accolades for her acting, and in 2023 she became the first Asian performer to win the Academy Award for best
- Khan, Muhammad Yusuf (Indian actor)
Dilip Kumar was an Indian actor and one of the legendary stars of Bollywood. With his low-key, naturalistic acting style, he excelled in a wide range of roles. In addition to his acting, he was noted for his good looks, deep voice, and fine accent. He is regarded as a pioneer of method acting in
- Khan, Nusrat Fateh Ali (Pakistani singer)
Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan was a Pakistani singer who is considered one of the greatest performers of qawwali, a Sufi Muslim devotional music characterized by simple melodies, forceful rhythms, and energetic improvisations that encourage a state of euphoria in the listener. Nusrat’s father, Ustad Fateh
- Khan, Qamruddin (Indian musician)
Bismillah Khan was an Indian musician who played the shehnai, a ceremonial oboelike North Indian horn, with such expressive virtuosity that he became a leading Indian classical music artist. His name was indelibly linked with the woodwind instrument. Khan was born into a family of court musicians
- Khan, Sadiq (British politician)
Sadiq Khan is a British politician and attorney who was the first Muslim mayor of London (2016– ). Khan was the fifth of eight children born to Sunni Muslim parents who had arrived in Britain from Pakistan shortly before his birth. He grew up in a rented council-owned apartment; his father was a
- Khan, Salim Abdul Rashid (Indian screenwriting)
Salim-Javed:
- Khan, Salman (Indian actor, film producer, and television presenter)
Salman Khan is an Indian actor, film producer, and television host whose iconic roles, blockbuster hits, and mass appeal have earned him the status of a megastar in Bollywood. Over the years, he has become an inextricable part of popular culture in India. Khan, who started out as a model and actor
- Khan, Shah Rukh (Indian actor)
Shah Rukh Khan is an Indian actor known for his powerful screen presence and global appeal. Commonly known as SRK (an abbreviation of his full name), he is regarded as one of the icons of Indian cinema and an integral part of popular culture. His portrayal of the romantic hero in Bollywood films
- Khan, Shahrukh (Indian actor)
Shah Rukh Khan is an Indian actor known for his powerful screen presence and global appeal. Commonly known as SRK (an abbreviation of his full name), he is regarded as one of the icons of Indian cinema and an integral part of popular culture. His portrayal of the romantic hero in Bollywood films
- Khan, Ustad Allauddin (Indian musician)
Ravi Shankar: Early life and career: …sitar under the noted musician Ustad Allauddin Khan of the Maihar gharana (a gharana is a school of Indian classical music).
- Khan, Yahya (president of Pakistan)
Yahya Khan was a professional soldier who became commander in chief of the Pakistani armed forces in 1966 and was president of Pakistan from 1969 to 1971. Yahya was born to a family that was descended from the elite soldier class of Nādir Shāh, the Persian ruler who conquered Delhi in the 18th
- Khan-baliq (national capital, China)
Beijing, city, province-level shi (municipality), and capital of the People’s Republic of China. Few cities in the world have served for so long as the political headquarters and cultural centre of an area as immense as China. The city has been an integral part of China’s history over the past
- Khanal, Jhalanath (prime minister of Nepal)
Nepal: Fall of the monarchy: …office until fellow CPN (UML), Jhalanath Khanal, took over in February 2011. By August, Khanal’s government had collapsed, and the UCPN (M)’s Baburam Bhattarai had assumed the office. Negotiations in the assembly on a new constitution fared no better under Bhattarai, and in May 2012 the assembly was dissolved, and…