- Sittard (Netherlands)
Sittard, gemeente (municipality), southeastern Netherlands. Chartered in 1243, it was a domain of the dukes of Jülich from 1400 to 1794. It was then controlled by the French until 1814 and by the Belgians from 1830 to 1839. The municipality’s industries include the manufacture of chemicals,
- Sitte, Camillo (Austrian architect)
Camillo Sitte was an Austrian architect and town planner who propagated many ideas similar to those that the so-called Garden City advocate, Sir Ebenezer Howard, was advancing at the same time in England. Sir Raymond Unwin in England and Daniel Hudson Burnham in the United States were among the
- sittella (bird)
sittella, any of about two species of Australasian birds of the genus Daphoenositta, sometimes placed in the nuthatch family, Sittidae, but many classifications group them in their own family, Neosittidae. They resemble nuthatches in build—short-tailed and large-footed—and in behaviour, but they
- Sitten (Switzerland)
Sion, capital of Valais canton, southwestern Switzerland. It lies along the Rhône River, at the mouth of La Sionne River, southeast of Lake Geneva (Lac Léman). It originated as a Celtic and Roman settlement called Sedunum. Sion became the seat of a bishop in the late 6th century, and from 999 the
- Sitter, Willem de (Dutch mathematician and astronomer)
Willem de Sitter was a Dutch mathematician, astronomer, and cosmologist who developed theoretical models of the universe based on Albert Einstein’s general theory of relativity. De Sitter studied mathematics at the State University of Groningen and then joined the astronomical laboratory there,
- Sittewald, Philander von (German satirist)
Johann Michael Moscherosch was a German Lutheran satirist whose bitterly brilliant but partisan writings graphically describe life in a Germany ravaged by the Thirty Years’ War (1618–48). His satires, which at times are tedious, also show an overwhelming moral zeal added to a sense of mission.
- Sittidae (bird)
nuthatch, any of about 25 species of short-tailed, long-billed birds in the family Sittidae (order Passeriformes), known for their abilities to grip tree bark as they walk up, down, and around trunks and branches and to hang upside down on the underside of tree limbs as they forage for insects and
- (Sittin’ on) The Dock of the Bay (song by Redding and Cropper)
Otis Redding: …only number one hit: “(Sittin’ on) The Dock of the Bay” (1968), a bittersweet lament of indolence and love. The public mourned his passing by playing his records. During 1968 three other Redding songs—“The Happy Song (Dum Dum),” “Amen,” and “Papa’s Got a Brand New Bag”—hit the charts. He…
- Sitting Bull (Sioux chief)
Sitting Bull was a Lakota (Teton) chief under whom the Oceti Sakowin (Sioux) peoples united in their struggle against the encroachment of settlers on the northern Great Plains. As principal chief of the northern hunting Oceti Sakowin, he led forces against the U.S. Army at the Battles of the
- Sitting in Limbo (song by Cliff)
Jimmy Cliff: …“Many Rivers to Cross,” “Sitting in Limbo,” and the title song—Cliff became reggae’s biggest star.
- Sitting Pretty (film by Lang [1948])
Walter Lang: Films of the 1940s: Sitting Pretty (1948) was one of the year’s biggest comedy hits. Clifton Webb was nominated for an Oscar as the imperious Mr. Belvedere, an author doing research on life in suburbia. To that end he offers his services as a babysitter to a couple (Robert…
- sitting up (sport)
hunting: Hunting methods: Sitting up, usually in blinds, is the most popular method of hunting waterfowl, with or without calling. It is called flighting in Great Britain. Hunting by calling involves waiting in hiding and making imitative noises by voice or with a call mechanism to attract the…
- Sittingbourne (England, United Kingdom)
Swale: Sittingbourne, on the mainland, is the administrative centre.
- Sittius, Publius (Roman military officer)
Juba I: …Mauretania, and an Italian adventurer, Publius Sittius. Juba was defeated with the other adherents of Pompey at Thapsus, and his general in the west was killed by Sittius. Repulsed from Utica by Cato (Uticensis) and expelled from his temporary capital Zama by its inhabitants, Juba committed suicide.
- Sittler, Darryl (Canadian ice-hockey player)
Toronto Maple Leafs: …the All-Star play of centre Darryl Sittler and defenseman Börje Salming for most of that time. In the following decade, Toronto fell farther from contention, finishing no higher than third in its division and never getting past the second round of the playoffs over the course of the 1980s. In…
- Sittoung River (river, Myanmar)
Sittang River, river in east-central Myanmar (Burma), rising northeast of Yamethin on the edge of the Shan Plateau and flowing south for 260 miles (420 km) to empty into the Gulf of Martaban of the Andaman Sea. The broad Sittang River valley lies between the forested Pegu Mountains (west) and the
- Sittwe (Myanmar)
Sittwe, town, western Myanmar (Burma). It is the chief settlement of the Arakan region. Situated on the Bay of Bengal at the mouth of the Kaladan River, Sittwe occupies the eastern side of a hilly ridge affording shelter from the southwest monsoon. After the cession of Arakan to the British in
- situated approach
artificial intelligence, situated approach, method of achieving artificial intelligence (AI). Traditional AI has by and large attempted to build disembodied intelligences whose only interaction with the world has been indirect (CYC, for example). Nouvelle AI, on the other hand, attempts to build
- situation comedy (broadcasting genre)
situation comedy, radio or television comedy series that involves a continuing cast of characters in a succession of episodes. Often the characters are markedly different types thrown together by circumstance and occupying a shared environment such as an apartment building or workplace. Sitcoms are
- situation ethics
situation ethics, in ethics and theology, the position that moral decision making is contextual or dependent on a set of circumstances. Situation ethics holds that moral judgments must be made within the context of the entirety of a situation and that all normative features of a situation must be
- Situation in New Delhi, A (novel by Sahgal)
Nayantara Sahgal: …that is particularly evident in A Situation in New Delhi (1977) recurs in such Sahgal novels as Rich like Us (1985), which confronts civil disorder, corruption, and oppression while detailing the internal conflicts in a businessman’s family. Three of Sahgal’s later novels—Plans for Departure (1985), Mistaken Identity (1988), and Lesser…
- situation, comedy of (narrative genre)
comedy of intrigue, in dramatic literature, a comic form in which complicated conspiracies and stratagems dominate the plot. The complex plots and subplots of such comedies are often based on ridiculous and contrived situations with large doses of farcical humour. An example of comedy of intrigue
- situational collective violence
collective violence: Defining collective violence: …be divided into three categories:
- situational ethics
situation ethics, in ethics and theology, the position that moral decision making is contextual or dependent on a set of circumstances. Situation ethics holds that moral judgments must be made within the context of the entirety of a situation and that all normative features of a situation must be
- Situationism (cultural movement)
Western painting: Institutional critique, feminism, and conceptual art: 1968 and its aftermath: …politicized cultural movements: Lettrism and Situationism. The latter of these, founded in 1957, departed from the classical Marxist emphasis on the economic sphere to interrogate the very nature of everyday life. Apart from spawning some fascinating architectural projects, and the production by Asger Jorn (formerly a member of COBRA) of…
- Situationist International (international organization)
Situationist International (SI), group of artists, writers, and social critics (1957–72) that aimed to eliminate capitalism through the revolutionization of everyday life. Instead of focusing on traditional sites of economic and social change, such as the factory, the Situationist International
- Situations (work by Sartre)
Jean-Paul Sartre: Post-World War II work: …several volumes under the title Situations.
- situla (vessel)
ceremonial object: Objects used in rites of passage: …used in funeral rites include situlae, Roman and Egyptian bronze libation jars with a handle on the tops; Indian Brahmanic terra-cotta jars with perforated bases, which are broken after their use in the aqueous purification of the pyre; and cages containing birds (Buddhist Japan), sometimes eagles (ancient Rome), released near…
- Sitwell family (British family of writers)
Sitwell family, British family of writers. Edith Sitwell (1887–1964) attracted attention when she joined her brothers in a revolt against Georgian poetry. Her early work, which emphasizes the value of sound, includes Clowns’ Houses (1918) and Façade (1923), set to music by William Walton. Beginning
- Sitwell, Dame Edith (British poet)
Edith Sitwell was an English poet who first gained fame for her stylistic artifices but who emerged during World War II as a poet of emotional depth and profoundly human concerns. She was equally famed for her formidable personality, Elizabethan dress, and eccentric opinions. A member of a
- Sitwell, Edith (British poet)
Edith Sitwell was an English poet who first gained fame for her stylistic artifices but who emerged during World War II as a poet of emotional depth and profoundly human concerns. She was equally famed for her formidable personality, Elizabethan dress, and eccentric opinions. A member of a
- Sitwell, Fanny (friend of Stevenson)
Robert Louis Stevenson: Early life: …became a lifelong friend, and Fanny Sitwell (who later married Colvin). Sitwell, an older woman of charm and talent, drew the young man out and won his confidence. Soon Stevenson was deeply in love, and on his return to Edinburgh he wrote her a series of letters in which he…
- Sitwell, Francis Osbert Sacheverell (English writer)
Sir Osbert Sitwell, 5th Baronet was an English man of letters who became famous, with his sister Edith and brother Sacheverell, as a tilter at establishment windmills in literature and the arts. His best-known books are his prose memoirs. Sitwell wrote satirical and serious poetry (The Collected
- Sitwell, Sir Osbert, 5th Baronet (English writer)
Sir Osbert Sitwell, 5th Baronet was an English man of letters who became famous, with his sister Edith and brother Sacheverell, as a tilter at establishment windmills in literature and the arts. His best-known books are his prose memoirs. Sitwell wrote satirical and serious poetry (The Collected
- Sitwell, Sir Sacheverell, 6th Baronet (English poet)
Sir Sacheverell Sitwell, 6th Baronet was an English poet and critic, the younger brother of the poets and essayists Edith and Osbert Sitwell. He is best known for his books on art, architecture, and travel. Sitwell’s poetry—The People’s Palace (1918), The Thirteenth Caesar (1924), The Rio Grande
- SIU (nongovernmental organization)
Institute of World Affairs (IWA), nongovernmental organization (NGO) that develops educational and training programs in conflict analysis, conflict management, and postconflict peace building. It is headquartered in Vienna, Va. The IWA was founded in 1924 in Geneva by a group of English and
- Sium (plant)
water parsnip, any of several aromatic herbs of the genus Sium, especially S. latifolium, belonging to the parsley family (Apiaceae), distributed throughout the Northern Hemisphere and Africa. They grow in moist areas, and some species are even partially submerged. All are perennial herbs with
- Sium latifolium (plant)
water parsnip: …aromatic herbs of the genus Sium, especially S. latifolium, belonging to the parsley family (Apiaceae), distributed throughout the Northern Hemisphere and Africa. They grow in moist areas, and some species are even partially submerged. All are perennial herbs with divided leaves and clusters of white flowers. S. sisarum, known as…
- Sium sisarum (plant)
water parsnip: sisarum, known as skirret, is cultivated for its edible tuberous roots. The more common S. latifolium, however, is known to be poisonous to livestock.
- Siumut (political party, Greenland)
Greenland: Government and society: Among them are Siumut, a social democratic party that favours self-determination while maintaining close relations with Denmark; the Demokratiit party, created by a breakaway faction of Siumut; Atassut, a more conservative party that has supported Greenland’s historical relations with Denmark; and Inuit Ataqatigiit, which calls for full independence…
- Siuniq (region, Armenia)
Armenia: Settlement patterns: …of Shirak and in the Zangezur region has small hamlets that lie in secluded glens, on riverbanks, and near springs; in the plain, such settlements cluster around mountain streams and irrigation canals, amid orchards and vineyards.
- Siuri (India)
Siuri, town, central West Bengal state, northeastern India. It lies just south of the Mor River. Siuri is an important road and agricultural-trade centre. Its chief industries include rice milling, cotton and silk weaving, and furniture manufacture. The water-control-system barrage for the Mor
- Siuru (Estonian literary group)
Estonian literature: …Revolution of 1917 emerged the Siuru group (named after a bird in Finno-Ugrian mythology). These Neoromantic poets reacted against Suits’s emphasis on formalism. Their emotional intensity was well-illustrated by Henrik Visnapuu, who, with Marie Under, developed the lyrical potential of Estonian to the full. By the 1930s a renewal of…
- SIV (virus)
SIV, infectious agent of the genus Lentivirus in the family Retroviridae. The virus infects primates of the infraorder Simiiformes, which includes the so-called anthropoids—apes, monkeys, and humans. SIV is transmitted through contact with infected body fluids such as blood. It is widespread among
- Śiva (Hindu deity)
Shiva, one of the main deities of Hinduism, whom Shaivites worship as the supreme god. Among his common epithets are Shambhu (“Benign”), Shankara (“Beneficent”), Mahesha (“Great Lord”), and Mahadeva (“Great God”). Shiva is represented in a variety of forms: in a pacific mood with his consort
- Siva, Katherine (Native American scholar)
Katherine Siva Saubel was a Native American scholar and educator committed to preserving her Cahuilla culture and language and to promoting their fuller understanding by the larger public. Reared on the Palm Springs Reservation in California, Katherine Siva was taught by her parents from an early
- Śivaji (Indian king)
Shivaji opposed the Mughal dynasty and founded the Maratha kingdom in 17th-century India. His kingdom’s security was based on religious toleration and on the functional integration of Brahmans, Marathas, and Prabhus. Shivaji was descended from a line of prominent nobles. At the time of his birth,
- Śivājī Bhonsle (Indian king)
Shivaji opposed the Mughal dynasty and founded the Maratha kingdom in 17th-century India. His kingdom’s security was based on religious toleration and on the functional integration of Brahmans, Marathas, and Prabhus. Shivaji was descended from a line of prominent nobles. At the time of his birth,
- Sivaladapidae (fossil primate family)
adapiform: Evolution and classification: Asian sivaladapids remain poorly documented anatomically, especially in comparison with notharctines and adapids. The cheek teeth of larger sivaladapids, such as Sivaladapis and Guangxilemur, were clearly adapted for folivory, but those of smaller taxa such as Paukkaungia likely evolved for a diet primarily of fruits.
- Sivan (Jewish month)
Jewish religious year: Months and notable days: …Day of the Omer Counting) Sivan (May–June) 6, 7 Shavuot (Feast of Weeks, or Pentecost) Tammuz (June–July) 17 Shivaʾ ʾAsar be-Tammuz (Fast of Tammuz 17) Av (July–August) 9 Tisha be-Av (Fast of Av 9) Elul (August–September)
- Śivānanda, Swami (Hindu leader)
Hinduism: Other reform movements: In 1936 Swami Shivananda, who had been a physician, established an ashram and an organization called the Divine Life Society near the sacred site of Rishikesh in the Himalayas. This organization has numerous branches in India and some elsewhere. His movement teaches more or less orthodox Vedanta,…
- Sivapithecus (fossil primate genus)
Sivapithecus, fossil primate genus dating from the Miocene Epoch (23.7 to 5.3 million years ago) and thought to be the direct ancestor of the orangutan. Sivapithecus is closely related to Ramapithecus, and fossils of the two primates have often been recovered from the same deposits in the Siwālik
- Śivarātrī (Hindu festival)
Kathmandu: …Kathmandu include, in spring, the Shivaratri and the Machendra Jatra with its procession bearing the image of the god Machendra; in late summer, the Gai Jatra (festival of the cow); and, in early autumn, the Indra Jatra, during which the goddess Devi, represented by a young girl, is carried in…
- Sivaš (geographical region, Ukraine)
Syvash, (“Putrid Sea”), system of shallow inlets of the Sea of Azov that penetrate the northern and eastern coasts of the Crimean Peninsula, Ukraine. Syvash is separated from the Sea of Azov by the Arabat Spit, a sandbar measuring from 900 feet to 5 miles (270 m to 8 km) in width. Syvash covers an
- Sivas (Turkey)
Sivas, city, central Turkey. It lies at an elevation of 4,183 feet (1,275 meters) in the broad valley of the Kızıl River. Although excavations at a mound known as Topraktepe indicate Hittite settlements in the locality, nothing is known of Sivas’s history prior to its emergence as the Roman city of
- Sivas Congress (Turkish history)
Associations for the Defense of Rights: At a second congress, in Sivas on September 4–11, the nationwide Association for the Defense of the Rights of Anatolia and Rumelia (Ottoman provinces in the Balkans) was formed, with a permanent representative committee under Mustafa Kemal.
- Sivasagar (India)
Sivasagar, town, eastern Assam state, northeastern India. Sivasagar lies on the Dikhu River, a tributary of the Brahmaputra River, about 30 miles (50 km) northeast of Jorhat. The Tai-speaking Ahom people came to the area from Yunnan province, China, in the 13th century. Sivasagar was the capital of
- Sivasamudram (island, India)
Kaveri River: …sacred islands of Srirangapatnam and Sivasamudram, 50 miles (80 km) apart. Around Sivasamudram are the scenic Sivasamudram Falls, comprising two series of rapids, Bhar Chukki and Gagana Chukki, plunging a total of 320 feet (100 metres) and reaching a width of 1,000 feet (300 metres) in the rainy season. The…
- Sivasamudram Falls (waterfall, India)
Kaveri River: Around Sivasamudram are the scenic Sivasamudram Falls, comprising two series of rapids, Bhar Chukki and Gagana Chukki, plunging a total of 320 feet (100 metres) and reaching a width of 1,000 feet (300 metres) in the rainy season. The falls supply hydroelectric power to Mysuru (Mysore), Bengaluru (Bangalore), and the…
- Sivash (geographical region, Ukraine)
Syvash, (“Putrid Sea”), system of shallow inlets of the Sea of Azov that penetrate the northern and eastern coasts of the Crimean Peninsula, Ukraine. Syvash is separated from the Sea of Azov by the Arabat Spit, a sandbar measuring from 900 feet to 5 miles (270 m to 8 km) in width. Syvash covers an
- Siverskodonetske (Ukraine)
Syeverodonetsk, city, eastern Ukraine, in the valley of the Donets River. The city was founded in 1934 as the site of a new chemical complex, part of which was evacuated eastward during World War II. In 1951 and 1958 additional chemical industries were added, based on coke, and the complex has
- Siverskyy Donets (river, Europe)
Donets River, a tributary of the Don River, southwestern Russia and eastern Ukraine. The Donets is 650 miles (1,050 km) long and drains a basin of 39,000 square miles (100,000 square km). Rising in the Central Russian Upland, it flows southward past Belgorod, Russia; enters Ukraine and passes to
- Sivertsen, Cort (Norwegian naval officer)
Adelaer was a Norwegian-born seaman and naval officer, distinguished in both Venetian and Danish naval history. He entered the Dutch navy in 1639 as an adelborst (“cadet”) and served under Martin van Tromp but in 1642 moved into Venetian service, where he was known as Curzio Suffrido Adelborst. He
- Sivertsen, Cort (Norwegian naval officer)
Adelaer was a Norwegian-born seaman and naval officer, distinguished in both Venetian and Danish naval history. He entered the Dutch navy in 1639 as an adelborst (“cadet”) and served under Martin van Tromp but in 1642 moved into Venetian service, where he was known as Curzio Suffrido Adelborst. He
- Sivertsen, Curt (Norwegian naval officer)
Adelaer was a Norwegian-born seaman and naval officer, distinguished in both Venetian and Danish naval history. He entered the Dutch navy in 1639 as an adelborst (“cadet”) and served under Martin van Tromp but in 1642 moved into Venetian service, where he was known as Curzio Suffrido Adelborst. He
- SIVgor (virus)
SIV: Evolutionary origins: …2009 a virus known as SIVgor, so named because it infects gorillas, was discovered to be very closely related to a newly identified strain of HIV-1. This discovery indicated that SIV had been transmitted from gorillas to humans.
- SIVmac239 (virus)
SIV: SIV vaccines: with either SIVmac251, SIVsmE660, or SIVmac239, which share key features with HIV-1, the predominant human virus. In the 1990s, studies in macaques revealed that vaccines made from specific strains of live attenuated SIV could provide near-complete protection against infection with those strains. However, the development of preventative SIV vaccines that…
- SIVmac251 (virus)
SIV: SIV vaccines: …using macaques infected with either SIVmac251, SIVsmE660, or SIVmac239, which share key features with HIV-1, the predominant human virus. In the 1990s, studies in macaques revealed that vaccines made from specific strains of live attenuated SIV could provide near-complete protection against infection with those strains. However, the development of preventative…
- SIVsmE660 (virus)
SIV: SIV vaccines: infected with either SIVmac251, SIVsmE660, or SIVmac239, which share key features with HIV-1, the predominant human virus. In the 1990s, studies in macaques revealed that vaccines made from specific strains of live attenuated SIV could provide near-complete protection against infection with those strains. However, the development of preventative SIV…
- Śiwa (Hindu deity)
Shiva, one of the main deities of Hinduism, whom Shaivites worship as the supreme god. Among his common epithets are Shambhu (“Benign”), Shankara (“Beneficent”), Mahesha (“Great Lord”), and Mahadeva (“Great God”). Shiva is represented in a variety of forms: in a pacific mood with his consort
- Siwa Oasis (oasis, Egypt)
Siwa Oasis, oasis in Maṭrūḥ muḥāfaẓah (governorate), western Egypt. It lies near the Libyan frontier, 350 miles (560 km) west-southwest of Cairo. The oasis is 6 miles (10 km) long by 4–5 miles (6–8 km) wide and has about 200 springs. Two rock outcrops provide the sites of the old walled settlements
- Siwah Lake Tidal Power Station (tidal power station, South Korea)
tidal power: Electricity generation potential: …in the world is the Sihwa Lake Tidal Power Station in South Korea, which generates 254 MW of electricity. A tidal barrage power station at La Rance in France has been operating since the 1960s, with 240 MW of capacity; its typical output is 0.5 terawatt-hour per year. Larger electricity…
- Siwalik Hills (mountains, Asia)
Siwalik Range, sub-Himalayan range of the northern Indian subcontinent. It extends west-northwestward for more than 1,000 miles (1,600 km) from the Tista River in Sikkim state, northeastern India, through Nepal, across northwestern India, and into northern Pakistan. Though only 10 miles (16 km)
- Siwalik Range (mountains, Asia)
Siwalik Range, sub-Himalayan range of the northern Indian subcontinent. It extends west-northwestward for more than 1,000 miles (1,600 km) from the Tista River in Sikkim state, northeastern India, through Nepal, across northwestern India, and into northern Pakistan. Though only 10 miles (16 km)
- Siwālik Series (geology)
Himalayas: Geologic history: The formations of the Siwalik Series were overthrust and folded, and in between the Lesser Himalayas downwarped to shape the midlands. Now barred from flowing due south, most minor rivers ran east or west through structural weaknesses in the midlands until they could break through the new southern barrier…
- Siwan (India)
Siwan, city, northwestern Bihar state, northeastern India. It lies on the eastern bank of the Daha River about 40 miles (65 km) northwest of Chapra. The city’s name is derived from savayana (Sanskrit: “bier”); according to legend, the bier of the Buddha, during its journey to Kusinara (now Kasia,
- Siwar al-Dahab, ʿAbd al-Raḥmān (Sudanese general)
Sudan: Nimeiri’s overthrow and its aftermath: ʿAbd al-Raḥmān Siwar al-Dahab. Although the new military government held elections in 1986 that returned Ṣādiq al-Mahdī as prime minister, the next three years were characterized by political instability, indecisive leadership, party manipulations resulting in short-lived coalitions, and abortive attempts to reach a peaceful settlement…
- Siward (earl of Northumbria)
Macbeth: In 1046 Siward, earl of Northumbria, unsuccessfully attempted to dethrone Macbeth in favour of Malcolm (afterward King Malcolm III Canmore), eldest son of Duncan I. By 1050 Macbeth felt secure enough to leave Scotland for a pilgrimage to Rome. But in 1054 he was apparently forced by…
- Siwertz, Per Sigfrid (Swedish author)
Sigfrid Siwertz was a Swedish writer best known for the novel Selambs (1920; Downstream) and for his short stories. Siwertz studied at the University of Uppsala and the Collège de France in Paris. His early works display the decadence and pessimism typical of turn-of-the-century Swedish literature.
- Siwertz, Sigfrid (Swedish author)
Sigfrid Siwertz was a Swedish writer best known for the novel Selambs (1920; Downstream) and for his short stories. Siwertz studied at the University of Uppsala and the Collège de France in Paris. His early works display the decadence and pessimism typical of turn-of-the-century Swedish literature.
- six (number)
number symbolism: 6: By a wonderful conjunction of mathematical coincidences, 6 is both the sum (1 + 2 + 3) and the product (1 × 2 × 3) of the first three numbers. It is therefore considered “perfect.” In mathematics, a perfect number is one that equals…
- Six (magazine by Kawakubo)
Rei Kawakubo: …she launched her own magazine, Six, a biannual large-format publication that displayed her seasonal collections. Intended as a reference to the sixth sense, Six was as much a contemporary art and ideas journal as a fashion magazine. Most issues contained no words, only illustrations, art, and photography, including that of…
- Six Acts (British law)
United Kingdom: The political situation: The Six Acts of 1819, associated with Henry Addington, Viscount Sidmouth, the home secretary, were designed to reduce disturbances and to check the extension of radical propaganda and organization. They provoked sharp criticism even from the more moderate Whigs as well as from the radicals, and…
- Six Ancient Kilns of Japan (Japanese history)
Japanese pottery: Kamakura and Muromachi periods (1192–1573): …more important known as the Six Ancient Kilns of Japan. These were Seto; Tokoname (also in Aichi prefecture), which may have exceeded Seto in the size of its production; Bizen (Okayama prefecture), which produced an excellent unglazed stoneware from the Heian period to the 20th century; Tamba (Kyōto prefecture);
- Six Articles, Act of (British history)
Thomas Cranmer: Archbishop of Canterbury: …far from comfortable after the Act of Six Articles (1539), which attacked those advocating marriage of the clergy and those denying transubstantiation, and Cromwell’s fall in 1540.
- Six Bookes of a Commonweale, The (work by Bodin)
history of Europe: Political, economic, and social background: …able to write, in his Six Books of the Commonweal, that the king of France had absolute sovereignty because he alone in the kingdom had the power to give law unto all of his subjects in general and to every one of them in particular.
- Six Books Concerning the Revolutions of the Heavenly Orbs (work by Copernicus)
Aristarchus of Samos: In his manuscript of Six Books Concerning the Revolutions of the Heavenly Orbs (1543), Copernicus cited Aristarchus as an ancient authority who had espoused the motion of Earth. However, Copernicus later crossed out this reference, and Aristarchus’s theory was not mentioned in the published book.
- Six Books of Instructions for Baptismal Candidates (work by Nicetas)
Nicetas of Remesiana: …his principal doctrinal work, the Competentibus ad baptismum instructionis libelli sex (“Six Books of Instructions for Baptismal Candidates”). The lengthy excerpts from this catechetical series, particularly “On the Meaning of Faith,” “On the Power of the Holy Spirit,” and the “Commentary on the Apostolic-Nicene Creed,” indicate that Nicetas stressed the…
- Six Books of Politics or Political Instruction (work by Lipsius)
Stoicism: Revival of Stoicism in modern times: …civilis doctrinae libri sex (1589; Six Books of Politics or Political Instruction) were widely known in many editions and translations. His defense of Stoic doctrine in Manuductio ad Stoicam Philosophiam (1604; Digest of Stoic Philosophy) and Physiologia Stoicorum (1604; Physics of the Stoics) provided the basis for the considerable Stoic…
- Six Characters in Search of an Author (play by Pirandello)
Six Characters in Search of an Author, play in three acts by Luigi Pirandello, produced and published in Italian in 1921 as Sei personaggi in cerca d’autore. Introducing Pirandello’s device of the “theatre within the theatre,” the play explores various levels of illusion and reality. It had a great
- Six Characters in Search of an Author (opera by Weisgall)
Hugo Weisgall: …completed his first full-length opera, Six Characters in Search of an Author, an adaptation of Luigi Pirandello’s play by that name. His next opera, Purgatory (1958), based on a poem by William Butler Yeats, marked his first attempt at 12-tone composition, an atonal musical style that characterized much of his…
- Six Colonies of New Zealand, The (work by Fox)
Sir William Fox: …leading up to the constitution, The Six Colonies of New Zealand, was published in 1851.
- Six Dance Lessons in Six Weeks (film by Seidelman [2014])
Gena Rowlands: …younger daughter, Zoe Cassavetes), and Six Dance Lessons in Six Weeks (2014).
- Six Degrees of Kevin Bacon (parlour game)
Kevin Bacon: Six Degrees of Kevin Bacon: …1990s) gave rise to the Six Degrees of Kevin Bacon, the game created by a group of students at Albright College in Reading, Pennsylvania, in 1994. Based on the concept of six degrees of separation—the idea that any human being is six or fewer social connections removed from any other…
- Six Degrees of Separation (play by Guare)
American literature: The Off-Broadway ascendancy: …and fresh social drama in Six Degrees of Separation (1990); and Ntozake Shange, whose “choreopoem” For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide/When the Rainbow Is Enuf moved to Broadway in 1976. Other well-received women playwrights included Marsha Norman, Beth Henley, Tina Howe, and
- Six Degrees of Separation (film by Schepisi [1993])
John Guare: …1993 adaptation of his play Six Degrees of Separation.
- Six Dynasties (Chinese history)
Six Dynasties, (ad 220–589), in China, the period between the end of the Han dynasty in ad 220 and the final conquest of South China (589) by the Sui (established in 581 in North China). The name is derived from the six successive dynasties of South China that had their capitals at Jianye (later
- Six Edicts (French history)
Anne-Robert-Jacques Turgot, baron de l’Aulne: Ministry: He introduced his Six Edicts in 1776. Four of them (suppressing certain dues and offices) were of no great importance, and the fifth (suppressing the guilds of Paris) encountered no serious opposition. It was against the sixth edict, that abolishing the corvée, that his enemies, who defended privilege,…
- Six Feet Under (American television series)
Six Feet Under, highly praised American television drama that aired on HBO for five seasons (2001–05) and won numerous awards, including nine Emmy Awards and three Golden Globe Awards. Created by Alan Ball, who won an Academy Award for his screenplay for American Beauty (1999), Six Feet Under
- Six Flags Magic Mountain (park, Valencia, Santa Clarita, California, United States)
Santa Clarita: …the largest single employer is Six Flags Magic Mountain amusement park, which opened in 1971. The city is the seat of the California Institute of the Arts (1961) and several other colleges. The William S. Hart Ranch and Museum contains art and exhibits with western themes. Castaic Lake is a…