- Mahānāleśvara (temple, Menāl, India)
South Asian arts: Medieval temple architecture: North Indian style of central India: …the north in Rājasthān, the Mahānāleśvara temple at Menāl (c. 11th century), the Sun temple at Jhālrapātan (11th century), the Śiva temple at Rāmgarh (12th century), and the Ėṇḍeśvara temple (12th century) at Bījoliān are important examples. To the west, in Gujarāt, are temples at Limkheda and Sarnāl of the…
- Mahananda River (river, India-Bangladesh)
Mahananda River, river in northern India and Bangladesh. It rises in the Darjiling (Darjeeling) Hills in extreme northern West Bengal state. The river flows south through a rich agricultural area in Bihar state, enters West Bengal state, flows past Ingraj Bazar, and then continues southeastward
- Maḥane Yehuda (district, Jerusalem)
Jerusalem: City layout: …small synagogues and yeshivas; and Maḥane Yehuda, with its fruit and vegetable market, inhabited mainly by Jews of North African and Middle Eastern origin. Residential quarters established between World Wars I and II include Reḥavya in the center, Talpiyyot in the south, and Kiryat Moshe and Bet Ha-Kerem in the…
- mahangu (plant)
Pennisetum: Pearl millet (Pennisetum glaucum), an annual species, is cultivated in tropical areas for its edible grain. Several varieties of feathertop (P. villosum), native to Ethiopia, are cultivated as ornamentals for their arching form and feathery coloured flower clusters.
- Mahanidana Sutta (Buddhist work)
Sutta Pitaka: The Mahanidana Sutta (“Discourse on the Great Origin”) gives the fullest canonical treatment of the doctrine of dependent origination, or the chain of causation. The famous Mahaparinibbana Sutta (“Discourse on the Great Final Extinction”—i.e., the Buddha’s release from the round of rebirths), one of the oldest…
- mahant (religion)
Sikh Gurdwara Act: …the Sikh gurdwaras (temples) hereditary mahants (guardians), who in some cases had diverted temple revenues to private use.
- Mahanta, Prafulla Kumar (Indian politician)
Prafulla Kumar Mahanta is an Indian politician and government official, who was a longtime major force in the Assam People’s Council (Asom Gana Parishad; AGP), a regional political party in Assam state, northeastern India. He served two terms (1985–90 and 1996–2001) as chief minister (head of
- Mahanubhava (Brahmanical sect)
South Asian arts: Marathi: …two Brahminical sects arose, the Mahānubhāva and the Varakari Panth, both of which put forth vast quantities of literature. The latter sect was perhaps the more productive, for it became associated with bhakti, when that movement stirred Mahārāshtra in the early 14th century, and particularly with the popular cult of…
- Mahapadma (ruler of Magadha)
India: Magadhan ascendancy: …a century until ousted by Mahapadma Nanda. The Nandas are universally described as being of low origin, perhaps Sudras. Despite these rapid dynastic changes, Magadha retained its position of strength. The Nandas continued the earlier policy of expansion. They are proverbially connected with wealth, probably because they realized the importance…
- Mahāpadmapati (ruler of Magadha)
India: Magadhan ascendancy: …a century until ousted by Mahapadma Nanda. The Nandas are universally described as being of low origin, perhaps Sudras. Despite these rapid dynastic changes, Magadha retained its position of strength. The Nandas continued the earlier policy of expansion. They are proverbially connected with wealth, probably because they realized the importance…
- Mahaparinibbana-sutta (Buddhist literature)
Buddhism: Funeral rites: …ashes are told in the Mahaparinibbana-sutta (“Sutta on the Great Final Deliverance”). Early Chinese travelers such as Faxian described cremations of venerable monks. After cremation the ashes and bones of the monk were collected and a stupa built over them. That this custom was widely observed is evident from the…
- Mahaparinirvana-sutra (Buddhist literature)
Buddhism: Funeral rites: …ashes are told in the Mahaparinibbana-sutta (“Sutta on the Great Final Deliverance”). Early Chinese travelers such as Faxian described cremations of venerable monks. After cremation the ashes and bones of the monk were collected and a stupa built over them. That this custom was widely observed is evident from the…
- Mahaprabhu, Chaitanya (Bengali mystic)
Hare Krishna: Bhakti yoga’s founder, Chaitanya Mahaprabhu (1485–1534?), advocated the pursuit of mystical devotion through repetitive chanting, especially of the Hare Krishna mantra:
- Mahaprajapati (foster mother of the Buddha)
Buddha: Birth and early life: …reared by his mother’s sister, Mahaprajapati. As a young child, the prince was once left unattended during a festival. Later in the day he was discovered seated in meditation under a tree, whose shadow had remained motionless throughout the day to protect him from the sun.
- mahāpuruṣa (Indian religion)
mahāpuruṣa, in Hindu, Jaina, and Buddhist belief, an individual of extraordinary destiny, distinguished by certain physical traits or marks (lakṣanas). Such men are born to become either universal rulers (cakravartins) or great spiritual leaders (such as buddhas or the Jaina spiritual leaders, the
- Mahar (Indian caste)
Mahar, caste-cluster, or group of many endogamous castes, living chiefly in Maharashtra state, India, and in adjoining states. They mostly speak Marathi, the official language of Maharashtra. In the early 1980s the Mahar community was believed to constitute about 9 percent of the total population
- Maharaj Ji (Indian religious leader)
Elan Vital: …mission by his eight-year-old son Prem Pal Singh Rawat, who assumed the name Maharaj Ji, along with his father’s title, Perfect Master. A child prodigy, Rawat had been initiated into the mission at the age of six. He visited the West for the first time in 1971 and attracted many…
- Maharaj, Birju (Indian dancer)
Birju Maharaj was an Indian dancer, a master of the classical dance form kathak and a leading exponent of the Kalka-Bindadin gharana (community of musicians sharing a distinctive musical style) of Lucknow. Did You Know? The Lucknow gharana of kathak, developed during the reigns of Āṣaf al-Dawlah
- Maharaj, Brijmohan Nath Mishra (Indian dancer)
Birju Maharaj was an Indian dancer, a master of the classical dance form kathak and a leading exponent of the Kalka-Bindadin gharana (community of musicians sharing a distinctive musical style) of Lucknow. Did You Know? The Lucknow gharana of kathak, developed during the reigns of Āṣaf al-Dawlah
- mahārāja (Hindu title)
maharaja, (from mahat, “great,” and rājan, “king”), an administrative rank in India; generally speaking, a Hindu prince ranking above a raja. Used historically, maharaja refers specifically to a ruler of one of the principal native states of India. The feminine form is maharani (maharanee). The
- maharaja (Hindu title)
maharaja, (from mahat, “great,” and rājan, “king”), an administrative rank in India; generally speaking, a Hindu prince ranking above a raja. Used historically, maharaja refers specifically to a ruler of one of the principal native states of India. The feminine form is maharani (maharanee). The
- maharajah (Hindu title)
maharaja, (from mahat, “great,” and rājan, “king”), an administrative rank in India; generally speaking, a Hindu prince ranking above a raja. Used historically, maharaja refers specifically to a ruler of one of the principal native states of India. The feminine form is maharani (maharanee). The
- Maharaji (Indian religious leader)
Elan Vital: …mission by his eight-year-old son Prem Pal Singh Rawat, who assumed the name Maharaj Ji, along with his father’s title, Perfect Master. A child prodigy, Rawat had been initiated into the mission at the age of six. He visited the West for the first time in 1971 and attracted many…
- Maharashtra (state, India)
Maharashtra, state of India, occupying a substantial portion of the Deccan plateau in the western peninsular part of the subcontinent. Its shape roughly resembles a triangle, with the 450-mile (725-km) western coastline forming the base and its interior narrowing to a blunt apex some 500 miles (800
- Maharashtra Navnirman Sena (political party, India)
Bal Thackeray: …in 2006 formed the rival Maharashtra Navnirman Sena (“Maharashtra Reconstruction Army”) party. Uddhav continued to lead the party and in 2019 he became chief minister of Maharashtra. In 2022 the Shiv Sena split into two factions, one led by Uddhav Thackeray and the other by Eknath Shinde, a Shiv Sena…
- Maharashtrian theatre (Indian theatrical style)
South Asian arts: Modern theatre: The Maharashtrian theatre, founded in 1843 by Visnudas Bhave, a singer-composer-wood-carver in the court of the Raja of Sangli, was developed by powerful dramatists such as Khadilkar and Gadkari, who emphasized Maratha nationalism. The acting style in Maharashtrian theatre remained melodramatic, passionately arousing audiences to laughter…
- Mahārāṣṭrī language (language)
Indo-Aryan languages: Texts: 6th–7th century), Mahārāṣṭrī (‘[speech form] from the Mahārāshtra country’) is the Prākrit par excellence. It is the language of kāvyas (poetic works) such as the Rāvaṇavaha (“The Slaying of Rāvaṇa”; also called Setubandha, “The Building of the Bridge [to Laṅkā]”) from no later than the 6th century…
- Maharbal (Carthaginian military commander)
Maharbal, Carthaginian military commander who served as one of Hannibal’s lieutenants in the Second Punic War (218–201 bce) against Rome. He was a leader of Hannibal’s Numidian cavalry and pivotal to early Carthaginian successes in Italy. In his history of Rome, Livy introduces Maharbal as the son
- Maharero, Samuel (Herero chief)
German-Herero conflict of 1904–07: Conflict: …Herero chieftaincy under paramount leader Samuel Maharero. It is still unclear who fired the first shots, but by noon that day Herero fighters had laid siege to the German fort. In the following weeks, fighting rippled out across the central high grounds. Seeking to gain control of the situation, Maharero…
- Maharishi Dayanand (Hindu leader)
Dayananda Sarasvati was a Hindu ascetic and social reformer who was the founder (1875) of the Arya Samaj (Society of Aryans [Nobles]), a Hindu reform movement advocating a return to the temporal and spiritual authority of the Vedas, the earliest scriptures of India. Dayananda received the early
- Maharlika Highway (highway, Philippines)
Philippines: Transportation and telecommunications: …in the country is the Pan-Philippine Highway (also called the Maharlika Highway), a system of paved roads, bridges, and ferries that connects the islands of Luzon, Samar, Leyte, and Mindanao.
- mahasammata (Mauryan chieftain)
India: The concept of the state: …elect one among them (the mahasammata, or “great elect”) in whom they would invest authority to maintain law and order. Thus, the state came into being. Later theories retained the element of a contract between a ruler and the people. Brahmanic sources held that the gods appointed the ruler and…
- Mahasanghika (Buddhist school)
Mahāsaṅghika, (from Sanskrit mahāsaṅgha, “great order of monks”), early Buddhist school in India that, in its views of the nature of the Buddha, was a precursor of the Mahāyāna tradition. Its emergence about a century after the death of the Buddha (483 bc) represented the first major schism in the
- Mahāsaṅghika (Buddhist school)
Mahāsaṅghika, (from Sanskrit mahāsaṅgha, “great order of monks”), early Buddhist school in India that, in its views of the nature of the Buddha, was a precursor of the Mahāyāna tradition. Its emergence about a century after the death of the Buddha (483 bc) represented the first major schism in the
- Mahasarakham (Thailand)
Maha Sarakham, town, northeastern Thailand. Maha Sarakham is located at a road junction on a bend of the Chi River. Rice is widely grown in the surrounding region, particularly in shallow river valleys, and freshwater fishing is also important. Pop. (2000)
- Mahasarakhan (Thailand)
Maha Sarakham, town, northeastern Thailand. Maha Sarakham is located at a road junction on a bend of the Chi River. Rice is widely grown in the surrounding region, particularly in shallow river valleys, and freshwater fishing is also important. Pop. (2000)
- Mahasena (king of Sri Lanka)
Buddhism: Sri Lanka: …were openly supported by King Mahasena (276–303 ce). Under Mahasena’s son, Shri Meghavanna, the “tooth of the Buddha” was taken to the Abhayagiri, where it was subsequently maintained and venerated at the royal palladium.
- mahasiddha (Buddhism)
mahasiddha, in the Tantric, or esoteric, traditions of India and Tibet, a person who, by the practice of meditative disciplines, has attained siddha (miraculous powers); a great magician. Both the Shaivites (followers of Shiva) of Hindu India and the Tantric Buddhists of Tibet preserve legends of
- Mahāśrī (Japanese deity)
Japanese art: Painting: …an image of the deity Kichijōten (Mahashri), housed in Yakushi Temple. This work on hemp depicts in full polychromy a full-cheeked beauty in the high Tang style, which was characterized by slightly elongated, pleasantly rounded figures rendered with long curvilinear brushstrokes. A horizontal narrative scroll painting, Kako genzai inga kyō…
- Mahasthamaprapta (bodhisattva)
Mahasthamaprapta, in Mahayana Buddhism, a bodhisattva (“buddha-to-be”) who is most popular among the Pure Land sects. He is known as Daishizhi in China and Daiseishi in Japan. He is often depicted with the buddha Amitabha and the bodhisattva Avalokiteshvara. In Japanese temple banners representing
- Mahasthan (ancient city, Bangladesh)
Bogra: The site of Mahasthan (identified by inscriptions as Pundravardhana), capital of the Pundra dynasty, lies just north of the city; it dates from the time of the Mauryan empire (c. 321–185 bce) and flourished during the Gupta (early 4th to late 6th century ce) and Pala (late 8th–mid-12th…
- Mahathir bin Mohamad (prime minister of Malaysia)
Mahathir bin Mohamad is a Malaysian politician who served as prime minister of Malaysia (1981–2003; 2018–20), overseeing the country’s transition to an industrialized nation. Mahathir, the son of a schoolmaster, was born on July 10, 1925, although official records give his birth date as December
- Mahathir bin Mohamad, Datuk Seri (prime minister of Malaysia)
Mahathir bin Mohamad is a Malaysian politician who served as prime minister of Malaysia (1981–2003; 2018–20), overseeing the country’s transition to an industrialized nation. Mahathir, the son of a schoolmaster, was born on July 10, 1925, although official records give his birth date as December
- Mahathir bin Mohamed (prime minister of Malaysia)
Mahathir bin Mohamad is a Malaysian politician who served as prime minister of Malaysia (1981–2003; 2018–20), overseeing the country’s transition to an industrialized nation. Mahathir, the son of a schoolmaster, was born on July 10, 1925, although official records give his birth date as December
- Mahathir bin Muhammed (prime minister of Malaysia)
Mahathir bin Mohamad is a Malaysian politician who served as prime minister of Malaysia (1981–2003; 2018–20), overseeing the country’s transition to an industrialized nation. Mahathir, the son of a schoolmaster, was born on July 10, 1925, although official records give his birth date as December
- Mahatma Gandhi (work by Rolland)
Romain Rolland: …West in such works as Mahatma Gandhi (1924). Rolland’s vast correspondence with such figures as Albert Schweitzer, Albert Einstein, Bertrand Russell, and Rabindranath Tagore was published in the Cahiers Romain Rolland (1948). His posthumously published Mémoires (1956) and private journals bear witness to the exceptional integrity of a writer dominated…
- Mahatma Gandhi International Peace Centre (university, Huy, Belgium)
Dominique Pire: …Centre, later known as the University of Peace, for instructing youths in the principles and practice of peace. He was also the founder of the World Friendships (to promote better understanding between races) and the World Sponsorships (to aid African and Asian refugees). Pire’s Bâtir la paix (Building Peace) appeared…
- Mahault de Flandre (queen consort of England)
Matilda Of Flanders was the queen consort of William I the Conqueror, whom she married c. 1053. During William’s absences in England, the duchy of Normandy was under her regency, with the aid of their son, Robert Curthose (see Robert II [Normandy]), except when he was in rebellion against his
- Mahavaipulya-buddhavatamsaka-sutra (Buddhist text)
Avatamsaka-sutra, voluminous Mahayana Buddhist text that some consider the most sublime revelation of the Buddha’s teachings. Scholars value the text for its revelations about the evolution of thought from early Buddhism to fully developed Mahayana. The sutra speaks of the deeds of the Buddha and
- Mahāvairocana-sūtra (Buddhist text)
Mahāvairocana-sūtra, text of late Tantric Buddhism and a principal scripture of the large Japanese Buddhist sect known as Shingon (“True Word”). The text received a Chinese translation, under the title Ta-jih Ching, about ad 725, and its esoteric teachings were propagated a century later in Japan
- Mahavairochana (Buddha)
Vairochana, the supreme Buddha, as regarded by many Mahayana Buddhists of East Asia and of Tibet, Nepal, and Java. Some Buddhists regard Vairochana, or Mahavairochana, as a being separate from the five “self-born” Dhyani-Buddhas, one of whom is known as Vairochana. Among the Shingon sect of Japan,
- Mahāvaṃsa (historical chronicle)
Mahāvaṃsa, (Pāli: “Great Chronicle”), historical chronology of Ceylon (modern Sri Lanka), written in the 5th or 6th century, probably by the Buddhist monk Mahānāma. It deals more with the history of Buddhism and with dynastic succession in Ceylon than with the island’s political or social history
- Mahāvastu (Buddhist literature)
Mahāvastu, (Sanskrit: “Great Story”), important legendary life of the Buddha, produced as a late canonical work by the Mahāsaṅghika school of early Buddhism and presented as a historical introduction to the vinaya, the section of the canon dealing with monastic discipline. Its three sections treat
- Mahavihara (monastery, Sri Lanka)
Mahavihara, Buddhist monastery founded in the late 3rd century bce in Anuradhapura, the ancient capital of Ceylon (modern Sri Lanka). The monastery was built by the Sinhalese king Devanampiya Tissa not long after his conversion to Buddhism by the Indian monk Mahendra. Until about the 10th century,
- Mahavihara (Buddhist monastic centers)
Buddhism: Buddhism under the Guptas and Palas: …a new Buddhist institution, the Mahavihara (“Great Monastery”), which often functioned as a university. This institution enjoyed great success during the reign of the Pala kings. The most famous of these Mahaviharas, located at Nalanda, became a major centre for the study of Buddhist texts and the refinement of Buddhist…
- Mahāvihāravāsī (Buddhism)
Buddhism: Theravada: The Mahavihara (“Great Monastery”) school became dominant in Sri Lanka at the beginning of the 2nd millennium ce and gradually spread through mainland Southeast Asia. It was established in Myanmar in the late 11th century, in Thailand in the 13th and early 14th centuries, and in…
- Mahavira (Jaina teacher)
Mahavira was the last of the 24 Tirthankaras (“Ford-makers,” i.e., saviours who promulgated Jainism), and the reformer of the Jain monastic community. According to the traditions of the two main Jain sects, the Shvetambara (“White-robed”) and the Digambara (“Sky-clad,” i.e., naked), Mahavira became
- Mahāvīra (Jaina teacher)
Mahavira was the last of the 24 Tirthankaras (“Ford-makers,” i.e., saviours who promulgated Jainism), and the reformer of the Jain monastic community. According to the traditions of the two main Jain sects, the Shvetambara (“White-robed”) and the Digambara (“Sky-clad,” i.e., naked), Mahavira became
- Mahavira (Indian mathematician)
Mahavira was an Indian mathematician who made significant contributions to the development of algebra. All that is known about Mahavira’s life is that he was a Jain (he perhaps took his name to honour the great Jainism reformer Mahavira [c. 599–527 bce]) and that he wrote Ganitasarasangraha
- Mahāvīracharita (play by Bhavabhuti)
South Asian arts: The theatre: The Mahāvīracarita (“The Exploits of the Great Hero”) treats of Rāma’s battle with Rāvaṇa and the Uttararāmacarita (“The Later Deeds of Rāma”) treats of the life of Rāma after he has abandoned Sītā. Bhavabhūti lacks the elegance and grace of Kālidāsa but is more pensive—even brooding—than…
- Mahavishnu Orchestra (British jazz-rock group)
John McLaughlin: …name Mahavishnu and formed the Mahavishnu Orchestra in 1971. The Orchestra was initially a quintet noted for radically high volume levels, complex textures, and fast modal playing, especially by McLaughlin, in long passages of 16th-note scales and arpeggios, on a guitar with two parallel necks, one with 6 strings, the…
- Mahavorick, Anthony J. (American motivational speaker and businessman)
Tony Robbins is an American motivational speaker and “life coach” who created a multifaceted business empire by preaching a gospel of self-improvement. Robbins was born Anthony J. Mahavorick to a working-class family. In childhood he adopted the surname of a stepfather. During his youth he
- mahavrata (Jainism)
Jain vrata: The mahavratas, or five “great vows,” are undertaken for life only by ascetics and include vows of noninjury, abstention from lying and stealing, chastity, and renunciation of all possessions.
- mahavratin (Hindu ascetic)
Kapalika and Kalamukha: Both were designated as mahavratins (“observers of the great vows”), referring to a 12-year vow of rigorous self-abnegation that was purported to follow the sacrifice of a Brahman or other high-ranking person. The Kapalikas performed their vow in imitation of Shiva’s act of severing one of Brahma’s five heads,…
- Mahaweli (river, Sri Lanka)
Mahaweli Ganga, (Sinhalese: “Great Sandy River”), river, central and eastern Sri Lanka. At 208 miles (335 km) in length, it is Sri Lanka’s longest river. It rises on the Hatton Plateau on the western side of the island’s hill country, flows north through a tea- and rubber-growing region, and turns
- Mahaweli Ganga (river, Sri Lanka)
Mahaweli Ganga, (Sinhalese: “Great Sandy River”), river, central and eastern Sri Lanka. At 208 miles (335 km) in length, it is Sri Lanka’s longest river. It rises on the Hatton Plateau on the western side of the island’s hill country, flows north through a tea- and rubber-growing region, and turns
- Mahaweli River (river, Sri Lanka)
Mahaweli Ganga, (Sinhalese: “Great Sandy River”), river, central and eastern Sri Lanka. At 208 miles (335 km) in length, it is Sri Lanka’s longest river. It rises on the Hatton Plateau on the western side of the island’s hill country, flows north through a tea- and rubber-growing region, and turns
- mahayajna (Hinduism)
yajna: …continue to perform the mahayajnas, the five daily domestic offerings.
- Mahayana (Buddhism)
Mahayana, movement that arose within Indian Buddhism around the beginning of the Common Era and became by the 9th century the dominant influence on the Buddhist cultures of Central and East Asia, which it remains today. It spread at one point also to Southeast Asia, including Myanmar (Burma) and
- Mahayana-shraddhotpada-shastra (Buddhist text)
Mahayana-shraddhotpada-shastra, relatively brief but influential exposition of the fundamentals of Mahayana Buddhism. Though the work is said to be that of the Sanskrit poet Ashvaghosha, there are no extant Sanskrit copies of the text and no references to it in any texts or commentaries originating
- Mahāyoga (Buddhism)
Buddhism: Rnying-ma-pa: …and meditation on the mandala; Mahayoga, which involves meditation on the factors of human consciousness (skandhas) as divine forms; Anuyoga, which involves secret initiation into the presence of the god and his consort and meditation on “voidness” in order to destroy the illusory nature of things; and Atiyoga, which involves…
- Mahayogini (Hindu deity)
Hinduism: Tantric and Shakta views of nature, humanity, and the sacred: As Mahayogini (“Great Mistress of Yoga”), she produces, maintains, and reabsorbs the world. As the Eternal Mother, she is exalted in the Devimahatmya (“Glorification of the Goddess”) section of the Markandeya-purana (an important Shakta encyclopaedic text). In the Bengal cult of the goddess Kali, she demands…
- mahāyuga (Hinduism)
chronology: Eras based on astronomical speculation: …of the universe was the mahāyuga, consisting of 4,320,000 sidereal years. It was divided into four yugas, or stages, on the hypothesis of an original “order” (dharma) established in the first stage, the Kṛta Yuga, gradually decaying in the three others, the Tretā, Dvāpara, and Kali yugas. The respective durations…
- Maḥbarot Immanuel (work by Immanuel ben Solomon)
Immanuel Ben Solomon: …a rough narrative framework in Maḥbarot Immanuel (“The Compositions of Immanuel”), frequently published from 1491. The last section of this work consists of a vision of heaven and hell in the style of Dante, composed immediately after the latter’s death in 1321. As Manoello Giudeo (Immanuel the Jew), he was…
- Mahberet (work by Menahem ben Saruq)
Menahem ben Saruq: Menahem’s dictionary, the Maḥberet (from ḥaber, “to join”), despite its faults, did have many virtues and remained in use for many years. He established that Hebrew is a language with definite, discoverable rules, and he illustrated his principles with many elegantly phrased examples. His dictionary was an invaluable…
- Mahbubnagar (India)
Mahbubnagar, city, southwestern Telangana state, southern India. It is situated on the Golconda plateau, about 50 miles (80 km) southwest of Hyderabad. Mahbubnagar is on a main rail line between Hyderabad and Bengaluru (Bangalore) in Karnataka state to the south. It is also a road hub. Cotton
- mahdī (Islamic concept)
mahdī, in Islamic eschatology, a messianic deliverer who will fill earth with justice and equity, restore true religion, and usher in a short golden age lasting seven, eight, or nine years before the end of the world. The Qurʾān does not mention him. Several canonical compilations of Hadith
- Mahdi Army (Iraqi militia group)
Iraq War: Occupation and continued warfare: …such Shiʿi militia group, the Mahdi Army, formed by cleric Muqtadā al-Ṣadr in the summer of 2003, was particularly deadly in its battle against Sunnis and U.S. and Iraqi forces and was considered a major destabilizing force in the country.
- Mahdī, al- (Fāṭimid ruler)
Abū ʿAbd Allāh al-Shīʿī: …news of al-Shīʿī’s success reached ʿUbayd ʿAllāh al-Mahdī, the leader of the Ismāʿīlīs, at his headquarters at Salamiyya, ʿUbayd disguised himself as a merchant and traveled toward northwest Africa. He was captured and jailed by the Khārijī emir of Sijilmāssa but was then rescued by al-Shīʿī in August 909. In…
- Mahdī, al- (ʿAbbāsid caliph)
al-Muqannaʿ: …province against the ʿAbbāsid caliph al-Mahdī. Preaching a doctrine combining elements of Islam and Zoroastrianism, al-Muqannaʿ carried on warfare for about three years in the field and for two years longer in his fortress of Sanām before he was eventually defeated and committed suicide. He was the hero of the…
- Mahdī, al- (Sudanese religious leader)
al-Mahdī was the creator of a vast Islamic state extending from the Red Sea to Central Africa and founder of a movement that remained influential in Sudan a century later. As a youth he moved from orthodox religious study to a mystical interpretation of Islam. In 1881 he proclaimed his divine
- Mahdī, Sayyid ʿAbd al-Raḥmān al- (Sudanese leader)
Mahdist: …passed to the Mahdī’s son ʿAbd al-Raḥmān (d. 1959), who, in the face of Anglo-Egyptian rule, sought to make the Ansar into a religious and political force. In 1959 he was succeeded as imam of the Ansar by his son Siddiq (d. 1961), who in turn was succeeded by a…
- Mahdia (Tunisia)
Mahdia, town and fishing port located on Al-Sāḥil (Sahel), the coastal plain region in eastern Tunisia, about 125 miles (200 km) from Tunis. It lies on the narrow rocky peninsula of Cape Afrique (Cape Ifrīqīyā). The town owes its name to the mahdi (Arabic: mahdī, “the rightly guided one”) ʿUbayd
- Mahdist (followers of al-Mahdī)
Mahdist, (Arabic: “Helper”), follower of al-Mahdī (Muḥammad Aḥmad ibn al-Sayyid ʿAbd Allāh) or of his successor or descendants. Ansar is an old term applied to some of the companions of the prophet Muḥammad; it was revived for the followers and descendants of al-Mahdī, the Sudanese who in the late
- Mahdist movement (followers of al-Mahdī)
Mahdist, (Arabic: “Helper”), follower of al-Mahdī (Muḥammad Aḥmad ibn al-Sayyid ʿAbd Allāh) or of his successor or descendants. Ansar is an old term applied to some of the companions of the prophet Muḥammad; it was revived for the followers and descendants of al-Mahdī, the Sudanese who in the late
- Mahdīyah (followers of al-Mahdī)
Mahdist, (Arabic: “Helper”), follower of al-Mahdī (Muḥammad Aḥmad ibn al-Sayyid ʿAbd Allāh) or of his successor or descendants. Ansar is an old term applied to some of the companions of the prophet Muḥammad; it was revived for the followers and descendants of al-Mahdī, the Sudanese who in the late
- Mahdiyyah, al- (Tunisia)
Mahdia, town and fishing port located on Al-Sāḥil (Sahel), the coastal plain region in eastern Tunisia, about 125 miles (200 km) from Tunis. It lies on the narrow rocky peninsula of Cape Afrique (Cape Ifrīqīyā). The town owes its name to the mahdi (Arabic: mahdī, “the rightly guided one”) ʿUbayd
- Mahdiyyah, al- (Sudanese religious movement)
al-Mahdiyyah, religious movement in the Sudan (1881–98), established by Muḥammad Aḥmad ibn ʿAbd Allāh al-Mahdī with the aim to reform Islam. The movement, which succeeded in overcoming the unpopular ruling Turco-Egyptian regime in the Sudan, resulted in the establishment of a Mahdist state (1885).
- Mahé (island group, Seychelles)
Seychelles: Relief and climate: …two main island groups: the Mahé group of more than 40 central, mountainous granitic islands and a second group of more than 70 outer, flat, coralline islands. The islands of the Mahé group are rocky and typically have a narrow coastal strip and a central range of hills. The overall…
- Mahe (district, India)
Puducherry: Geography: The Mahe sector consists of two parts: the quaint picturesque town of Mahe, with its buildings situated on the left bank of the Mahe River close to its mouth; and the isolated tract known as Naluthrara, on the right bank, comprising the four villages of Chambara,…
- Mahe (India)
Mahe, town, part of Puducherry union territory but an enclave in northern Kerala state, southwestern India. Mahe lies on the Naluthara River along the Arabian Sea, northwest of Kozhikode (Calicut). Mahe was the scene of much fighting between British and French troops in the 18th and 19th centuries.
- Mahé Island (island, Seychelles)
Mahé Island, largest island of the Seychelles archipelago, Republic of Seychelles, in the western Indian Ocean. The island is 4 miles (6 km) wide and 16 miles (26 km) long. It is granitic in origin and mountainous; the highest peak is Morne Seychellois, which rises to 2,969 feet (905 metres) and
- Mahé, Bertrand François, Count de La Bourdonnais (French officer)
Bertrand-François Mahé count de la Bourdonnais was a French naval commander who played an important part in the struggle between the French and the British for control of India. La Bourdonnais entered the service of the French East India Company as a lieutenant at 19, was promoted to captain in
- Mahedia (Tunisia)
Mahdia, town and fishing port located on Al-Sāḥil (Sahel), the coastal plain region in eastern Tunisia, about 125 miles (200 km) from Tunis. It lies on the narrow rocky peninsula of Cape Afrique (Cape Ifrīqīyā). The town owes its name to the mahdi (Arabic: mahdī, “the rightly guided one”) ʿUbayd
- Mahendra (king of Nepal)
Mahendra was the king of Nepal from 1955 to 1972. Mahendra ascended the throne in 1955 upon the death of his father, King Tribhuvan. The new king came into conflict with his cabinet, which was dominated by a coalition of the Nepali Congress Party and the Ranas (a line of hereditary prime
- Mahendra (Buddhist missionary)
Mahendra was a propagator of Buddhism in Ceylon. Generally believed to be the son of the Indian emperor Aśoka, he is honoured in Sri Lanka as a founding missionary of that country’s majority religion. When Aśoka, a convert to Buddhism from Hinduism, sent Mahendra and Princess Saṅghamitthā as
- Mahendra Bir Bikram Shah Deva (king of Nepal)
Mahendra was the king of Nepal from 1955 to 1972. Mahendra ascended the throne in 1955 upon the death of his father, King Tribhuvan. The new king came into conflict with his cabinet, which was dominated by a coalition of the Nepali Congress Party and the Ranas (a line of hereditary prime
- Mahendrapala (Gurjara ruler)
Gurjara-Pratihara dynasty: Under Bhoja and his successor Mahendrapala (reigned c. 890–910), the Pratihara empire reached its peak of prosperity and power. The extent of its territory rivaled that of the Guptas and, in the time of Mahendrapala, reached from Gujarat and Kathiawar to northern Bengal, though much of it was loosely held…
- Mahendraparvata (Cambodia)
Jayavarman II: …(Siem Reap); and then at Mahendraparvata, in the region just north of the Tonle Sap (Great Lake), not far from Angkor, the next seat of the Khmer empire, which remained its capital for 600 years.
- Mahendravarman I (Pallava king)
Pallava dynasty: Mahendravarman I (reigned c. 600–630) contributed to the greatness of the Pallava dynasty. Some of the most ornate monuments at Mamallapuram, especially those dedicated to the Hindu god Shiva, were constructed under his rule (though born a Jain, Mahendravarman converted to Shaivism). He was a…