- Mali River (river, Myanmar)
Mali River, river, rising in the hills near the northern border of Myanmar (Burma) and flowing about 200 miles (320 km) south to unite with the Nmai River and form the Irrawaddy River (q.v.). The Mali River is partially
- Mali, flag of
vertically striped green-yellow-red national flag. It has a width-to-length ratio of 2 to 3.Like other formerly French-controlled territories in West Africa, Mali chose for its national flag the popular colours green, yellow, and red, which later came to be known as the “pan-African colours.” The
- Mali, history of
history of Mali, a survey of the notable events and people in the history of Mali, a landlocked country of western Africa. Mali, which lies mostly in the Saharan and Sahelian regions, is largely flat and arid. The Niger River flows through its interior, functioning as the main trading and transport
- Malian National Folk Lore Troupe (African dance troupe)
African dance: Change and tradition: As members of the Malian National Folk Lore Troupe, they gain prestige as ambassadors for their country at international festivals. Radical changes continue as dancers travel to work in urban centres, where Western forms of entertainment on radio, film, and television have become part of life.
- Malian People’s Democratic Union (political party, Mali)
Mali: Constitutional framework: …enacted in 1979, made the Malian People’s Democratic Union (Union Démocratique du Peuple Malien; UDPM) the country’s sole legal party until 1991. In 1992 a third constitution was approved, providing for the separation of powers into three government branches, including a unicameral National Assembly as the legislative body. It also…
- Malibamatso River (river, South Africa)
Orange River: Physiography: …farther north is the lesser-known Malibamatso headwater, one site of the Lesotho Highland Project. The Lesotho headwaters flow over the turf soil that covers Drakensberg lava and cut through the lava to expose underlying sedimentary rocks; material eroded from these rocks contributes to heavy silt deposits farther down the river’s…
- Malibran, Maria (Spanish opera singer)
Maria Malibran was a Spanish mezzo-soprano of exceptional vocal range, power, and agility. María and her mezzo-soprano sister Pauline Viardot were first instructed by their father, the tenor Manuel García, and at five years of age María sang a child’s part in Ferdinando Paer’s Agnese in Naples. She
- Malibran, María García de (Spanish opera singer)
Maria Malibran was a Spanish mezzo-soprano of exceptional vocal range, power, and agility. María and her mezzo-soprano sister Pauline Viardot were first instructed by their father, the tenor Manuel García, and at five years of age María sang a child’s part in Ferdinando Paer’s Agnese in Naples. She
- Malibú (people)
Mompox, Indian people of what are now the northern Colombia lowlands who became extinct under Spanish rule. Culturally the Mompox were similar to their neighbours, such as the Cenú (q.v.); all such groups spoke languages of the Cariban family, but the Mompox language was not closely related to the
- malibu (surfboard)
surfing: History: Called “malibus,” for the California beach on which they were introduced, and weighing a mere 20 pounds (9 kg), these boards allowed surfers to “trim” (adjust their position and weight on the board to allow it to travel at the same speed as the breaking wave),…
- Malibu (California, United States)
Malibu, city and beach community in Los Angeles county, southern California, U.S. With 21 miles (34 km) of coastline, Malibu lies along the Pacific Coast Highway just west-northwest of Santa Monica. The region, originally inhabited by Chumash Indians, was visited in 1542 by the Spanish explorer
- Malibu Country (American television series)
Reba McEntire: Acting and later music: …similar role in another sitcom, Malibu Country (2012–13), which was set in California. She also starred in Happy’s Place (2024– ), playing a woman who inherits a bar. In addition, McEntire has guest roles on various TV series, and in 2019 she lent her voice to the animated film Spies…
- malic acid (chemical compound)
carboxylic acid: Polycarboxylic acids: Malic acid is found in many fruits, including apples; tartaric acid occurs in grapes; and citric acid is present in lemons, oranges, and other citrus fruits. The monopotassium salt of tartaric acid, commonly called cream of tartar, is obtained from wine casks, where it crystallizes…
- malic enzyme (enzyme)
metabolism: Growth of microorganisms on TCA cycle intermediates: …is catalyzed by the so-called malic enzyme; in reaction [55], malate is decarboxylated to pyruvate, with concomitant reduction of NADP+. The primary role of malic enzyme, however, may be to generate reduced NADP+ for biosynthesis rather than to form an intermediate of carbohydrate catabolism.
- Malice (film by Becker [1993])
Alec Baldwin: Stardom: Beetlejuice, The Hunt for Red October, and The Aviator: …might be a murderer in Malice (1993), Baldwin appeared in a series of little-seen films, including the civil rights drama Ghosts of Mississippi (1996); The Edge (1997), an adventure thriller written by Mamet; and Mercury Rising (1998), in which he starred opposite Bruce Willis. In 2004 Baldwin received an Academy…
- malice aforethought (law)
mens rea: …incapable of entertaining the “malice aforethought” requisite to a finding of murder. See also diminished responsibility.
- malicious damage (law)
collective behavior: Common misconceptions: …is much less looting and vandalism than is popularly supposed. Even among persons who converge from outside the community there is more petty pilfering for souvenirs than serious crime. Fourth, initially an altruistic selflessness is more prevalent than self-pity and self-serving activity. Frequently noted are dramatic instances of persons who…
- malicious software (computing)
malware, malicious computer program, or “malicious software,” such as viruses, trojans, spyware, and worms. Malware typically infects a personal computer (PC) through e-mail, Web sites, or attached hardware devices. Mobile malware, including spyware and ransomware, attacks smartphones and tablets,
- Malick, Terrence (American director)
Terrence Malick is an American filmmaker whose reclusive, sporadic career is marked by films that are celebrated for their poetic beauty. Malick was raised in Texas and Oklahoma and graduated with a degree in philosophy from Harvard University in 1965. After Harvard, he was a Rhodes scholar at
- Malick, Terrence Frederick (American director)
Terrence Malick is an American filmmaker whose reclusive, sporadic career is marked by films that are celebrated for their poetic beauty. Malick was raised in Texas and Oklahoma and graduated with a degree in philosophy from Harvard University in 1965. After Harvard, he was a Rhodes scholar at
- Malies (Italy)
Benevento, city and archiepiscopal see, Campania regione, southern Italy. The city lies on a ridge between the Calore and Sabato rivers, northeast of Naples. It originated as Malies, a town of the Oscans, or Samnites; later known as Maleventum, or Malventum, it was renamed Beneventum by the Romans.
- Malietoa Vainu’upo (Samoan leader)
Samoa: European influence: He made a convert of Malietoa Vainu’upo, who had just conquered all of Samoa, and the rest of the population soon followed suit. A foreign settlement had developed around Apia Harbour by the 1850s. Samoans began to resist, however, as more settlers arrived from the United States, Great Britain, and…
- malignancy (pathology)
tumour: …belong to tumours that are malignant. Such cells may be bizarre in form or may be arranged in a distorted manner. In more extreme cases, the cells of malignant tumours are described as primitive, or undifferentiated, because they have lost the appearance and functions of the particular type of (normal)…
- malignant hypertension (pathology)
cardiovascular disease: Hypertensive heart disease: …of hypertension occurs, often called malignant hypertension, that results in damage to small blood vessels throughout the body but particularly affecting the heart, brain, and kidneys.
- malignant hyperthermia (pathology)
anesthetic: General anesthetics: This potentially fatal response, called malignant hyperthermia, produces a very rapid rise in body temperature, oxygen utilization, and carbon dioxide production.
- malignant melanoma (pathology)
melanoma, a spreading and frequently recurring cancer of melanocytes, specialized skin cells that produce the protective skin-darkening pigment melanin. Since 2020, more than 325,000 new melanoma cases have been diagnosed worldwide each year. In the United States melanoma represents nearly 5
- malignant neoplasm (disease)
cancer, group of more than 100 distinct diseases characterized by the uncontrolled growth of abnormal cells in the body. Though cancer has been known since antiquity, some of the most significant advances in scientists’ understanding of it have been made since the middle of the 20th century. Those
- malignant nephrosclerosis (pathology)
nephrosclerosis: In malignant nephrosclerosis a similar process occurs but at a much faster rate. The disease may develop so rapidly that there is little time for gross kidney changes to occur. The surface of the kidney, however, is nearly always covered with large red blotches at points…
- malignant pustule (disease)
anthrax, acute, infectious, febrile disease of animals and humans caused by Bacillus anthracis, a bacterium that under certain conditions forms highly resistant spores capable of persisting and retaining their virulence for many years. Although anthrax most commonly affects grazing animals such as
- malignant software (computing)
malware, malicious computer program, or “malicious software,” such as viruses, trojans, spyware, and worms. Malware typically infects a personal computer (PC) through e-mail, Web sites, or attached hardware devices. Mobile malware, including spyware and ransomware, attacks smartphones and tablets,
- malignant tertian malaria (disease)
malaria: The course of the disease: Victims of this “malignant tertian” form of the disease may deteriorate rapidly from mild symptoms to coma and death unless they are diagnosed and treated promptly and properly. The greater virulence of P. falciparum is associated with its tendency to infect a large proportion of the red blood…
- malignant transformation (biology)
virus: Malignant transformation: A phenomenon analogous to bacterial cell lysogeny occurs in animal cells infected with certain viruses. These animal viruses do not generally cause disease immediately for certain animal cells. Instead, animal cells are persistently infected with such viruses, the DNA of which (provirus) is…
- malignant tumour (disease)
cancer, group of more than 100 distinct diseases characterized by the uncontrolled growth of abnormal cells in the body. Though cancer has been known since antiquity, some of the most significant advances in scientists’ understanding of it have been made since the middle of the 20th century. Those
- Malik Aḥmad Niẓām-al-Mulk (Bahmanī leader)
Ahmadnagar: It was conquered by Malik Aḥmad Niẓām Shah, founder of the Niẓām Shāhī dynasty, in 1490. The city was later taken by the Mughals, the Marathas, and the British. Chief among its historical sites are Aḥmad Niẓām Shah’s fort, in which Jawaharlal Nehru was imprisoned by the British in…
- Malik al-Kāmil, al- (Ayyūbid sultan)
al-Malik al-Kāmil was a sultan (from 1218) of the Ayyūbid line, who ruled Egypt, Palestine, and Syria during the Fifth and Sixth crusades. On his accession to the sultanate, al-Kāmil engaged the armies of the Fifth Crusade and eventually negotiated their withdrawal from Egypt in 1221. During this
- Malik al-Nāṣir Ṣalāḥ al-Dīn Yūsuf I, al- (Ayyūbid sultan)
Saladin was a Muslim sultan of Egypt, Syria, Yemen, and Palestine, founder of the Ayyūbid dynasty, and the most famous of Muslim heroes. In wars against the Christian Crusaders, he achieved great success with the capture of Jerusalem (October 2, 1187), ending its nearly nine decades of occupation
- Malik al-Ṣāliḥ Najm ad-Dīn Ayyūb, al- (Ayyūbid ruler of Egypt)
al-Ṣāliḥ Ayyūb was the last effective ruler (reigned 1240 and 1245–49) of the Ayyūbid dynasty in Egypt. Al-Ṣāliḥ’s campaign against the Crusader kingdom of Jerusalem in alliance with the Khwārezmians (1244) provoked the launching of the Seventh Crusade under Louis IX of France. Al-Ṣāliḥ died during
- Malik al-Ẓāhir Rukn al-Dīn Baybars al-Bunduqdārī, al- (Mamlūk sultan of Egypt and Syria)
Baybars I was the most eminent of the Mamlūk sultans of Egypt and Syria, which he ruled from 1260 to 1277. He is noted both for his military campaigns against Mongols and crusaders and for his internal administrative reforms. The Sirat Baybars, a folk account purporting to be his life story, is
- Malik al-Ẓāhir Rukn al-Dīn Baybars al-Bunduqdārī, al- (Mamlūk sultan of Egypt and Syria)
Baybars I was the most eminent of the Mamlūk sultans of Egypt and Syria, which he ruled from 1260 to 1277. He is noted both for his military campaigns against Mongols and crusaders and for his internal administrative reforms. The Sirat Baybars, a folk account purporting to be his life story, is
- Malik al-Ẓāhir Rukn al-Dīn Baybars al-Ṣāliḥ, al- (Mamlūk sultan of Egypt and Syria)
Baybars I was the most eminent of the Mamlūk sultans of Egypt and Syria, which he ruled from 1260 to 1277. He is noted both for his military campaigns against Mongols and crusaders and for his internal administrative reforms. The Sirat Baybars, a folk account purporting to be his life story, is
- Malik al-ʿAzīz (Ayyūbid ruler)
Bahāʾ al-Dīn: …Malik aẓ-Ẓāhir died, his son Malik al-ʿAzīz was a minor, and Bahāʾ al-Dīn had the chief power in the regency, using it for the patronage of learning. He lived in retirement after the abdication of Malik al-ʿAzīz. Bahāʾ al-Dīn’s most important work is his biography of Saladin, the best account…
- Malik an-Nāṣir Zayn ad-Dīn Abū as-Saʿādāt Faraj, al- (Mamlūk ruler of Egypt)
Faraj was the 26th Mamlūk ruler of Egypt and Syria; his reign was marked by a loss of internal control of the Mamlūk kingdom, whose rulers were descendants of slaves. Faraj was the victim of forces—including foreign invasion and domestic feuds—that he did not create and could not control. Faraj’s
- Malik an-Nāṣir, al- (Mamlūk sultan)
Mūsā I of Mali: Pilgrimage to Mecca: …the Mamlūk sultans, Al-Malik al-Nāṣir. The Black emperor’s great civility notwithstanding, the meeting between the two rulers might have ended in a serious diplomatic incident, for so absorbed was Mansa Mūsā in his religious observances that he was only with difficulty persuaded to pay a formal visit to the…
- Malik aẓ-Ẓāhir (Ayyūbid ruler)
Bahāʾ al-Dīn: …the friend of his son Malik aẓ-Ẓāhir, who appointed him judge of Aleppo. There he employed some of his wealth in the foundation of colleges. When Malik aẓ-Ẓāhir died, his son Malik al-ʿAzīz was a minor, and Bahāʾ al-Dīn had the chief power in the regency, using it for the…
- Malik B (American music artist)
the Roots: With the addition of rapper Malik B (Malik Abdul Basit) and bassist Hub (Leonard Hubbard), they began making a name for themselves in clubs in Philadelphia and New York City.
- Malik huwa al-malik, Al- (play by Wannūs)
Arabic literature: Modern Arabic drama: …of Mamlūk Jābir’s Head”) and Al-Malik huwa al-malik (1977; “The King’s the King”) continued his ongoing experiments with theatre dynamics through what he termed masraḥ al-tasyīs (“theatre of politicization”). Because Wannūs was such a crucially important figure, other Syrian and Lebanese dramatists of the latter half of the 20th century…
- Mālik ibn Anas (Muslim legal scholar)
Mālik ibn Anas was a Muslim legist who played an important role in formulating early Islamic legal doctrines. Few details are known about Mālik ibn Anas’ life, most of which was spent in the city of Medina. He became learned in Islamic law and attracted a considerable number of students, his
- Malik Nāʾib (Bahmanī leader)
India: Vizierate of Maḥmūd Gāwān: …the leader of the conspirators, Malik Nāʾib, was able to make himself regent for Muḥammad’s minor son, Shihāb al-Dīn Maḥmūd (reigned 1482–1518).
- Malik Verlag (German publishing house)
John Heartfield: …as the in-house designer for Malik Verlag, a publishing house founded and run by his brother. In early 1919 Malik Verlag published Jedermann sein eigner Fussball (“Everyone His Own Soccer Ball”), a four-page satirical broadside written and designed by the brothers that was quickly censored. They followed up with Die…
- Malik ʿAmbar of Ahmadnagar (Ḥabshī ruler)
Ḥabshī: …most famous of them was Malik ʿAmbar of Ahmadnagar, who defied the Mughals for many years. Ḥabshī in western India, the Sidis of Janjira, commanded the fleet of the Bijapur sultan and became independent chiefs. They defied the Marathas and in 1670 transferred their allegiance to the Mughal emperor Aurangzeb.…
- Malik, Adam (Indonesian statesman and president of UN)
Adam Malik was an Indonesian statesman and nationalist political leader. Malik was jailed by the Dutch in the 1930s for being a member of the nationalist group that sought independence for the Dutch East Indies. In 1937 he founded the Indonesian news agency Antara, which originally served as an
- Malik, Ayisha (British author)
Pride and Prejudice: Movies and other adaptations: …Is Not Obliged (2015) by Ayisha Malik, in which a 21st-century Muslim woman is intrigued by her sullen tattooed neighbor. These interpretations showed the universal and enduring appeal of Pride and Prejudice and its themes.
- Malik, Charles Habib (Lebanese philosopher and diplomat)
Universal Declaration of Human Rights: …playwright, philosopher, and diplomat; and Charles Habib Malik, a Lebanese philosopher and diplomat.
- Malik, Ribāṭ-i (caravansary, Iran)
Islamic arts: Characteristic architectural forms: …main trade routes, such as Ribāṭ-i Malik, built between Samarkand and Bukhara in Uzbekistan. The most spectacular caravansaries were built in the 13th century in Anatolia. Equally impressive, however, although less numerous, are the caravansaries erected in eastern Iran and northern Iraq. Bridges also were rebuilt and decorated like the…
- Malik, Zain Javadd (English singer)
One Direction: County Westmeath, Ireland) Zayn Malik (born January 12, 1993, Bradford, West Yorkshire, England) Liam Payne (born August 29, 1993, Wolverhampton, West Midlands, England—died October 16, 2024, Buenos Aires, Argentina)
- Malik, Zayn (English singer)
One Direction: County Westmeath, Ireland) Zayn Malik (born January 12, 1993, Bradford, West Yorkshire, England) Liam Payne (born August 29, 1993, Wolverhampton, West Midlands, England—died October 16, 2024, Buenos Aires, Argentina)
- Malik-Shāh (Seljuq sultan)
Malik-Shāh was the third and most famous of the Seljuq sultans. Malik-Shāh succeeded his father, Alp-Arslan, in 1072 under the tutelage of the great vizier Niẓām al-Mulk, who was the real manager of the empire until his death. Malik-Shāh had first to overcome a revolt of his uncle Qāwurd (Kavurd)
- Mālikī (Islamic law)
Mālikī, in Islam, one of the four Sunni schools of law, formerly the ancient school of Medina. Founded in the 8th century and based on the teachings of the imam Mālik ibn Anas, the Mālikīs stressed local Medinese community practice (ʿamal) as the lens through which to understand the legal
- Mālikī, Jawad al- (prime minister of Iraq)
Nouri al-Maliki is a politician who was the prime minister of Iraq from 2006 to 2014. Maliki’s grandfather was a prominent poet and briefly (1926) a government minister. Maliki earned a B.A. (1973) in Islamic studies at Uṣūl al-Dīn College in Baghdad and an M.A. (1992) in Arabic literature at Ṣalāḥ
- Maliki, Nouri al- (prime minister of Iraq)
Nouri al-Maliki is a politician who was the prime minister of Iraq from 2006 to 2014. Maliki’s grandfather was a prominent poet and briefly (1926) a government minister. Maliki earned a B.A. (1973) in Islamic studies at Uṣūl al-Dīn College in Baghdad and an M.A. (1992) in Arabic literature at Ṣalāḥ
- Mālikī, Nūrī al- (prime minister of Iraq)
Nouri al-Maliki is a politician who was the prime minister of Iraq from 2006 to 2014. Maliki’s grandfather was a prominent poet and briefly (1926) a government minister. Maliki earned a B.A. (1973) in Islamic studies at Uṣūl al-Dīn College in Baghdad and an M.A. (1992) in Arabic literature at Ṣalāḥ
- Mālikī, Nūrī Kāmil al- (prime minister of Iraq)
Nouri al-Maliki is a politician who was the prime minister of Iraq from 2006 to 2014. Maliki’s grandfather was a prominent poet and briefly (1926) a government minister. Maliki earned a B.A. (1973) in Islamic studies at Uṣūl al-Dīn College in Baghdad and an M.A. (1992) in Arabic literature at Ṣalāḥ
- Malikite school (Islamic law)
Mālikī, in Islam, one of the four Sunni schools of law, formerly the ancient school of Medina. Founded in the 8th century and based on the teachings of the imam Mālik ibn Anas, the Mālikīs stressed local Medinese community practice (ʿamal) as the lens through which to understand the legal
- Mālikīyah school (Islamic law)
Mālikī, in Islam, one of the four Sunni schools of law, formerly the ancient school of Medina. Founded in the 8th century and based on the teachings of the imam Mālik ibn Anas, the Mālikīs stressed local Medinese community practice (ʿamal) as the lens through which to understand the legal
- Mālikīyyah school (Islamic law)
Mālikī, in Islam, one of the four Sunni schools of law, formerly the ancient school of Medina. Founded in the 8th century and based on the teachings of the imam Mālik ibn Anas, the Mālikīs stressed local Medinese community practice (ʿamal) as the lens through which to understand the legal
- Maliku Island (island, India)
Lakshadweep: Relief, soils, and climate: …islands of the group, and Minicoy Island is the southernmost island. Almost all the inhabited islands are coral atolls. The higher eastern sides of the islands are the most suited for human habitation, while the low-lying lagoons on the western sides protect the inhabitants from the southwest monsoon. The soils…
- Malim Basa (Minangkabau leader)
Imam Bondjol was a Minangkabau religious leader and a key member of the Padri faction in the religious Padri War, which divided the Minangkabau people of Sumatra in the 19th century. When in about 1803 three pilgrims inspired by the ideas of the puritan Wahhābī sect returned from Mecca and launched
- Malimbus cassini (bird)
weaver: Cassin’s weaver (Malimbus cassini) of the lowland rain forests of central Africa builds a hanging nest of long palm-leaf strips that has a wide entrance extending down more than two feet. The red-billed weaver, or quelea (Quelea quelea), of the African savannas can sometimes become…
- Malina (novel by Bachmann)
German literature: The 1970s and ’80s: Ingeborg Bachmann’s novel Malina (1971) splits its autobiographical persona into a sensitive, feminine self and a masculine double who is a writer; the novel contains visionary and lyrical passages. Walter Kempowski’s series of novels beginning with Tadellöser & Wolff (1971) reached a wider audience by depicting the everyday…
- Malina, Frank J. (American physicist)
Theodore von Kármán: Work in the United States: …1940 von Kármán, together with Frank J. Malina, showed for the first time since the invention of the black-powder rocket in China in about the 10th century that it was possible to design a stable, long-duration, solid-propellant rocket engine. Shortly thereafter, the prototype of the famed jet-assisted takeoff (JATO) rocket…
- Malina, Judith (American theater director and actress)
The Living Theatre: …1947 by Julian Beck and Judith Malina. It is known for its innovative production of experimental drama, often on radical themes, and for its confrontations with tradition, authority, and sometimes audiences.
- Malinche (Mexican Native American princess)
Marina was a Mexican Native American princess, one of a group of enslaved women given as a peace offering to the Spanish conquistadors by the Tabascan people (1519). She became mistress, guide, and interpreter to Hernán Cortés during his conquest of Mexico. The success of his ventures was often
- Malinche, La (sculpture by Vilar)
Manuel Vilar: …Aztecs; and La Malinche (1852; La Malinche or Doña Marina), the first native woman of Mexico who converted to Christianity and who also served as Hernán Cortés’s translator.
- Malinche, Mount La (mountain, Mexico)
Tlaxcala: …metres) against the backdrop of La Malinche (Matlalcueyetl) volcano, which rises to an elevation 14,636 feet (4,461 metres) within a national park southeast of the capital. The state occupies roughly the same area as did a pre-Hispanic federation that refused to surrender to the Aztecs. Many Indians in the region…
- Malines (Belgium)
Mechelen, municipality, Flanders Region, north-central Belgium. It lies along the Dijle River, a few miles north-northeast of Brussels. St. Rumoldus (Rombold) was said to have come there in 756. In the Middle Ages it was called Machlina (Mechlinia) and belonged to the prince-bishops of Liège
- Malines, Great Council of (court, Low Countries)
history of the Low Countries: The Habsburgs: …court (then known as the Great Council of Malines) and set up within the duke’s council permanent commissions to discuss important political and financial questions.
- Malines, Parliament of (court, Low Countries)
history of the Low Countries: The Habsburgs: …court (then known as the Great Council of Malines) and set up within the duke’s council permanent commissions to discuss important political and financial questions.
- Malini, Hema (Indian actress)
Bollywood: Landmark films: …names of the 1970s—Bachchan, Dharmendra, Hema Malini, Sanjeev Kumar, Jaya Bhaduri—and made a star of Amjad Khan, whose portrayal of Gabbar Singh is among Bollywood’s most celebrated performances.
- Malini, Max (American magician)
magic: At the same time, Max Malini (1873–1942) traveled the globe giving impromptu performances in private settings for members of high society and nobility. In the United States, Harry Houdini specialized in a single aspect of the art, escapology—extrication from restraints such as handcuffs or straitjackets—to become magic’s most famous…
- Malinke (people)
Malinke, a West African people occupying parts of Guinea, Ivory Coast, Mali, Senegal, The Gambia, and Guinea-Bissau. They speak a Mandekan language of the Mande branch of the Niger-Congo family. The Malinke are divided into numerous independent groups dominated by a hereditary nobility, a feature
- Malinke empire (historical empire, Africa)
Mali, trading empire that flourished in western Africa from the 13th to the 16th century. The Mali empire developed from the state of Kangaba, on the upper Niger River east of the Fouta Djallon, and is said to have been founded before 1000 ce. The Malinke inhabitants of Kangaba acted as middlemen
- Malinke language
Guinea: Ethnic groups and languages: …while in Upper Guinea the Malinke (Maninkakan) language is the most widespread. The Forest Region contains the linguistic areas, from east to west, of Kpelle (Guerzé), Loma (Toma), and Kisi.
- Malino machine (textiles)
textile: Bonding: In the Malimo machine process, warp yarns are placed on top of filling yarns and stitched together by a third yarn. The Maliwatt machine interlaces a web of fibres with a sewing thread, giving the effect of parallel seams. The Malipol machine produces a one-sided pile fabric…
- Malinov, Alexander (Bulgarian official)
Bulgaria: World War I: …of the pro-German Radoslavov by Alexander Malinov, a leader of the parliamentary opposition, raised hopes for an end to the war, but instead frustration increased as Malinov yielded to Tsar Ferdinand’s determination to fight on.
- Malinovsky, Rodion Yakovlevich (Soviet military officer)
Rodion Yakovlevich Malinovsky was a Soviet marshal prominent in World War II. Malinovsky was drafted into the imperial army at the start of World War I and fought as a machine gunner throughout that conflict. Upon his return to Russia in 1919 he entered the Red Army, in which he fought against the
- Malinowski, Anna Valetta (American painter)
Bronisław Malinowski: Mature career: …1940 Malinowski married again, to Anna Valetta Hayman-Joyce, an artist who painted under the name Valetta Swann and who assisted him in his Mexican studies and was primarily responsible for the publication of his Scientific Theory of Culture (1944) and other posthumous works.
- Malinowski, Bronisław (Polish-born British anthropologist)
Bronisław Malinowski was one of the most important anthropologists of the 20th century who is widely recognized as a founder of social anthropology and principally associated with field studies of the peoples of Oceania. Malinowski was the son of Lucjan Malinowski, a professor of Slavic philology
- Malinowski, Bronisław Kaspar (Polish-born British anthropologist)
Bronisław Malinowski was one of the most important anthropologists of the 20th century who is widely recognized as a founder of social anthropology and principally associated with field studies of the peoples of Oceania. Malinowski was the son of Lucjan Malinowski, a professor of Slavic philology
- Malintzin (Mexican Native American princess)
Marina was a Mexican Native American princess, one of a group of enslaved women given as a peace offering to the Spanish conquistadors by the Tabascan people (1519). She became mistress, guide, and interpreter to Hernán Cortés during his conquest of Mexico. The success of his ventures was often
- Malipiero, Gian Francesco (Italian composer)
Gian Francesco Malipiero was a composer whose music represents a fusion of modern techniques with the stylistic qualities of early Italian music. Malipiero studied at the Vienna Conservatory and in Venice and Bologna, and subsequently he traveled to Paris, where he was influenced by the new music
- Malipol machine (textiles)
floor covering: Unconventional carpets: tufted, knitted, and bonded: A German Malipol machine uses knitting principles to bind pile to a backing fabric, although a later model uses unknitted weft threads instead of backing. Production rates for knitting are higher than for traditional looms but do not reach the high speeds of modern tufting. The quality…
- Malīr River (river, Pakistan)
Karachi: City site: The Malīr River, a seasonal stream, passes through the eastern part of the city, and the Layāri River, also seasonal, runs through the most densely populated northern section. Some ridges and isolated hills occur in the north and east; Mango Pīr, the highest elevation, is 585…
- Maliseet (people)
Malecite, North American Indians of the Algonquian language family who occupied the Saint John valley in what is now New Brunswick, Can., and the northeastern corner of what is now the U.S. state of Maine. Their language was closely related to that of the Passamaquoddy, and they were members of the
- Maliwatt machine (textiles)
textile: Bonding: The Maliwatt machine interlaces a web of fibres with a sewing thread, giving the effect of parallel seams. The Malipol machine produces a one-sided pile fabric by stitching loop pile through a backing fabric. A new British process makes double-sided terry fabric, called Terrytuft, by inserting…
- malka (plant)
cloudberry, (Rubus chamaemorus), creeping herbaceous plant, native to the Arctic and subarctic regions of the north temperate zone, and its edible raspberry-like fruit. Inuit and Sami peoples collect the sweet juicy fruits in autumn to freeze for winter food. In markets of northern Scandinavia,
- Malka, Tur (Israeli poet)
Uri Zvi Greenberg was a Hebrew and Yiddish poet whose strident, Expressionist verse exhorts the Jewish people to redeem their historical destiny; he warned of the impending Holocaust in such poems as “In malkhus fun tselem” (1922; “In the Kingdom of the Cross”). An adherent of the right-wing
- Malkhaid (historical site, India)
Manyakheta, site of a former city in Karnataka, India, about 85 miles (135 km) southwest of Hyderabad. The city was founded in the 9th century by the Rashtrakuta ruler Amoghavarsha I and became the capital of the dynasty. In 972 it was sacked by the Paramara ruler Siyaka. After the downfall of the
- Malkhed (historical site, India)
Manyakheta, site of a former city in Karnataka, India, about 85 miles (135 km) southwest of Hyderabad. The city was founded in the 9th century by the Rashtrakuta ruler Amoghavarsha I and became the capital of the dynasty. In 972 it was sacked by the Paramara ruler Siyaka. After the downfall of the
- Malkiel, Yakov (American linguist)
dictionary: Etymology: An American Romance scholar, Yakov Malkiel, presented the notion that words follow “trajectories”—by finding certain points in the history of a word, one can link up the developments in form and meaning. The austere treatment of some words consists in saying “derivation unknown,” and yet this sometimes causes interesting…
- Malkin, Evgeni (Russian hockey player)
Pittsburgh Penguins: …season Crosby and second-year star Evgeni Malkin led the Penguins to the Stanley Cup finals, which they lost to the Detroit Red Wings. The following season Malkin led the NHL in points while Crosby finished third. That year the Penguins finished fourth in the Atlantic Division but advanced again to…