• Santanachelys gaffneyi (fossil turtle)

    turtle: Origin and evolution: The oldest sea turtle (Santanachelys gaffneyi) is known from the mid-Cretaceous. It is a member of the Protostegidae, a likely sister group of modern leatherback sea turtles. S. gaffneyi had a streamlined shell of about 1.5 metres (5 feet) and forelimbs well along the evolutionary path to becoming flippers.

  • Santander (province, Spain)

    Cantabria, provincia (province) in Cantabria comunidad autónoma (autonomous community), northern Spain, bordering the Bay of Biscay. It is popularly known as La Montaña (“The Mountain”) for its highlands that increase in elevation toward the south. Principal towns in Cantabria include Santander,

  • Santander (Spain)

    Santander, port city, capital of Cantabria provincia (province) and comunidad autónoma (autonomous community), northern Spain. It is situated on the narrow coastline along the southern shore of Cape Mayor, a rocky peninsula extending eastward and sheltering Santander Bay (an inlet of the Bay of

  • Santander (autonomous area and region, Spain)

    Cantabria, comunidad autónoma (autonomous community) and historic region of Spain, coextensive with the northern Spanish provincia (province) of Cantabria. Cantabria is bounded by the Bay of Biscay to the north and by the autonomous communities of Basque Country to the east, Castile-León to the

  • Santander, Francisco de Paula (Colombian statesman and soldier)

    Francisco de Paula Santander was a soldier and statesman who fought beside Simón Bolívar in the war for South American independence and who served as president of the newly formed New Granada (Colombia) from 1833 until 1837. Santander left law school in 1810 to join the patriot army and was

  • Santángel, Luis de (Spanish treasurer)

    Native American: European populations and polities: …of income, the royal treasurer, Luis de Santángel, urged the monarchs to accept Columbus’s proposal to explore a western route to the East. Although Columbus did not find a route with which to sidestep Ottoman trade hegemony, his journey nonetheless opened the way to overseas wealth. Spain used American resources…

  • Santanilla Islands (islands, Caribbean Sea)

    Swan Islands, two islets (Greater and Lesser Swan) in the Caribbean Sea, 97 miles (156 km) north of Honduras. Discovered by Christopher Columbus on St. Anne’s feast day in 1502, they were named Islas Santa Ana. The islands, only 1.6 square miles (4 square km) in area, served as a pirate haunt from

  • Santarém (Portugal)

    Santarém, city and concelho (municipality), central Portugal. It lies along the Tagus (Tejo) River, 47 miles (76 km) northeast of Lisbon. The city originated as Scalabis (renamed Praesidium Julium by Julius Caesar) in Roman times. It served as an important fortress city in the course of the wars

  • Santarém (Brazil)

    Santarém, city, west-central Pará estado (state), northern Brazil. It is situated on the right bank of the Tapajós River, near its confluence with the Amazon River. Santarém was founded in 1661 as a Jesuit mission to a Tapajó Indian settlement (aldeia) and grew around a fort built by Pedro

  • Santareno, Bernardo (Portuguese poet, dramatist, and physician)

    Bernardo Santareno was a poet and dramatist, considered one of Portugal’s leading 20th-century playwrights. Santareno’s university studies at Coimbra were completed in medicine. Subsequently he pursued a dual career in Lisbon as a psychiatrist and writer. Santareno created a stage world reminiscent

  • Santaroga Barrier, The (novel by Herbert)

    Frank Herbert: … (1956), The Green Brain (1966), The Santaroga Barrier (1968), The Heaven Makers (1968), The God Makers (1972), and The Dosadi Experiment (1977).

  • Santat, Dan (American illustrator and author)

    Dan Santat is an American author and illustrator who is primarily known for his children’s books and graphic novels. He won the Caldecott Medal for most distinguished picture book in 2015 for his mixed-media illustrations in The Adventures of Beekle: The Unimaginary Friend (2014), which he also

  • Santayana, George (Spanish-American philosopher)

    George Santayana was a Spanish-American philosopher, poet, and humanist who made important contributions to aesthetics, speculative philosophy, and literary criticism. From 1912, he resided in Europe, chiefly in France and Italy. George Santayana was born in Madrid of Spanish parents. He never

  • Santee (people)

    Santee, a major group within the Sioux (q.v.) nation of North American Indians. Santee descendants numbered more than 3,200 individuals in the early 21st

  • Santee River (river, South Carolina, United States)

    Santee River, River, southeast-central South Carolina, U.S. The Santee flows southeast into the Atlantic Ocean after a course of 143 mi (230 km). It has been dammed to form the reservoir Lake Marion, which is connected by a navigable waterway, Lake Moultrie, and the Cooper River to Charleston. The

  • Santee-Wateree-Catawba river system (river system, United States)

    Santee-Wateree-Catawba river system, inland waterway 538 miles (866 km) long, in the southeastern United States, rising as the Catawba River in the Blue Ridge Mountains of western North Carolina. The Catawba flows east and then south into South Carolina to Great Falls, a distance of 220 miles (350

  • Santelli, Giorgio (Italian fencing master)

    Giorgio Santelli was a Hungarian-born Italian fencing master, thought by many to be the greatest American fencing coach of the 20th century. As a small child, Giorgio Santelli began taking fencing lessons from his father, the great Italian master Italo Santelli, who was one of the founders of the

  • Santelli, Italo (Italian fencing master)

    Giorgio Santelli: …father, the great Italian master Italo Santelli, who was one of the founders of the formidable Hungarian school of sabre fencing. By the time he was 25, Santelli had won the Austrian foil and sabre championships and the Hungarian sabre championship.

  • Santelli, Rick (American journalist)

    Tea Party movement: Origins of the Tea Party: …on February 19, 2009, when Rick Santelli, a commentator on the business-news network CNBC, referenced the Boston Tea Party (1773) in his response to Pres. Barack Obama’s mortgage relief plan. Speaking from the floor of the Chicago Mercantile Exchange, Santelli heatedly stated that the bailout would “subsidize the losers’ mortgages”…

  • Santer, Jacques (prime minister of Luxembourg)

    Jacques Santer is a Luxembourgian politician who served as prime minister of Luxembourg (1984–95) and president of the European Commission (1995–99). Santer graduated from the Athénée de Luxembourg, earned a certificate from the Paris Institute of Political Studies in 1959, and studied law at the

  • Santería (religion)

    Santería, the most common name given to a religious tradition of African origin that was developed in Cuba and then spread throughout Latin America and the United States. Santería was brought to Cuba by the people of the Yoruban nations of West Africa, who were enslaved in great numbers in the

  • Santhal (people)

    Santhal, ethnic group of eastern India, numbering well over five million at the turn of the 21st century. Their greatest concentration is in the states of Bihar, Jharkhand, West Bengal, and Orissa, in the eastern part of the country. Some 200,000 also live in Bangladesh and more than 10,000 in

  • Santhali language

    Santali language, a Munda language spoken primarily in the east-central Indian states of West Bengal, Jharkhand, and Orissa. At the turn of the 21st century there were approximately 6 million speakers of Santali, some 4.8 million of whom lived in India, more than 150,000 in Bangladesh, and about

  • śānti (Hinduism)

    Hinduism: Ethical and social doctrines: …from every evil also involved shanti, the observance of various customs regarding the avoidance of inauspicious occurrences. Ritual purity was the principal concern of the compilers of the manuals of dharma (religious law), which have contributed much to the special character of Hinduism. According to the authorities on dharma, ritual…

  • Santi Asoke (Buddhist organization)

    Buddhism: From Myanmar to the Mekong delta: Two late 20th-century Buddhist groups, Santi Asoke (founded 1975) and Dhammakaya, are especially interesting. Santi Asoke, a lay-oriented group that advocates stringent discipline, moral rectitude, and political reform, has been very much at odds with the established ecclesiastical hierarchy. The Dhammakaya group has been much more successful at gathering a…

  • Santi Giovanni e Paolo (church, Venice, Italy)

    Giovanni Battista Piazzetta: …Chapel of the Sacrament in Santi Giovanni e Paolo. The “Ecstasy of St. Francis,” perhaps his finest religious work, dates from about 1732, and some three years later he was commissioned to execute an “Assumption” for the elector of Cologne. The celebrated “Fortune Teller” is dated 1740. “The Pastoral” and…

  • Santi Giovanni e Paolo (church, Rome, Italy)

    Rome: The Caelian: The basilica of Santi Giovanni e Paolo, from the 5th century, stands in a piazza that has few buildings later than the Middle Ages. Alongside the church are the remains of the platform of the Temple of Claudius, dismantled partly by Nero, completely by Vespasian. The round church…

  • Santi Quattro Coronati (abbey, Rome, Italy)

    Rome: The Caelian: …abbey left in Rome stands Santi Quattro Coronati, today sheltering nuns. The basilica of Santi Giovanni e Paolo, from the 5th century, stands in a piazza that has few buildings later than the Middle Ages. Alongside the church are the remains of the platform of the Temple of Claudius, dismantled…

  • Santi, Raffaello (Italian painter and architect)

    Raphael was a master painter and architect of the Italian High Renaissance. Raphael is best known for his Madonnas and for his large figure compositions in the Vatican. His School of Athens in the Stanza della Segnatura, a room in Pope Julius II’s private apartments in the Vatican, is perhaps the

  • Santiago (national capital, Chile)

    Santiago, capital of Chile. It lies on the canalized Mapocho River, with views of high Andean peaks to the east. Santiago is the largest city in Chile and is also one of the most populous in Latin America. The city’s skyline, dotted with sleek modern skyscrapers, stands in contrast to its

  • Santiago (Dominican Republic)

    Santiago de los Caballeros, city, northern Dominican Republic. It is situated on the Yaque del Norte River, in the heart of the fertile Cibao Valley, and is known as the capital of the Cibao region. Santiago de los Caballeros is the country’s second largest city and is more traditional than the

  • Santiago (Guatemala)

    Antigua Guatemala, city, southwestern Guatemala, at an elevation of 5,029 feet (1,533 metres). Capital of the former captaincy general, Antigua Guatemala was once the most important seat of Spanish colonial government between Mexico City and Lima, Peru. Founded as Santiago de los Caballeros de

  • Santiago (island, Galápagos Islands, Ecuador)

    San Salvador Island, one of the Galapagos Islands, in the eastern Pacific Ocean about 600 miles (965 km) west of mainland Ecuador. Its relief is dominated by two volcanoes, the larger rising to 1,700 feet (520 m), that form the mass of the island’s area of 203 square miles (526 square km).

  • Santiago (Spain)

    Santiago de Compostela, city, A Coruña provincia (province), capital of the comunidad autonóma (autonomous community) of Galicia, northwestern Spain. It lies near the confluence of the Sar and Sarela rivers, 32 miles (51 km) southwest of A Coruña city. In 1985 UNESCO designated the city a World

  • Santiago (Panama)

    Santiago, city, western Panama. It is located in the Pacific lowlands north of Puerto Mutis, its port on the estuary of the San Pedro River (emptying into the Gulf of Montijo). One of the oldest settlements in Panama, the city flourished in the colonial era, and many fine old buildings remain. It

  • Santiago (island, Cabo Verde)

    Santiago, largest and most populous island of Cabo Verde, in the Atlantic Ocean, about 400 miles (640 km) off the West African coast. The land rises to its highest elevation at Antónia Peak, 4,566 feet (1,392 metres) above sea level. Santiago is Cabo Verde’s most agriculturally productive island.

  • santiago (dance)

    Morris dance: …as the moriscas (or moriscos), santiagos, and matachinas of the Mediterranean and Latin America, and the călușari of Romania. The wide distribution of such dances suggests an ancient Indo-European origin. A common feature of many of them is that of a group of dancing men attendant on a pagan god…

  • Santiago (region, Chile)

    Santiago, región metropolitana, central Chile, bordering Argentina on the east, Valparaíso region on the north and west, and O’Higgins region on the south. Santiago, created a province in 1826 and a metropolitan region in 1974, is divided into the provinces of Santiago, Chacabuco, Cordillera,

  • Santiago de Compostela (Spain)

    Santiago de Compostela, city, A Coruña provincia (province), capital of the comunidad autonóma (autonomous community) of Galicia, northwestern Spain. It lies near the confluence of the Sar and Sarela rivers, 32 miles (51 km) southwest of A Coruña city. In 1985 UNESCO designated the city a World

  • Santiago de Compostela, Cathedral of (cathedral, Santiago de Compostela, Spain)

    Santiago de Compostela: In 1078 the present cathedral was begun by order of Alfonso VI of Leon and Castile. This Romanesque building, located at the east end of the Plaza del Obradoiro, has a Baroque west facade (the Obradoiro) built (1738–50) by Fernando Casas y Novoa. An outstanding feature of the interior…

  • Santiago de Compostela, Route of (pilgrimage route, Europe)

    Santiago de Compostela: The Camino de Santiago, designated a World Heritage site in 1993, was a series of roads through France and Spain that converged on the city; the route was traveled each year throughout the Middle Ages by thousands of pilgrims. The city remained a site of pilgrimage…

  • Santiago de Cuba (Cuba)

    Santiago de Cuba, city, eastern Cuba. The second largest city in the country, it nestles in a valley of the Sierra Maestra that is pierced by a pouch-shaped bay on the Caribbean Sea. The bay’s entrance, cutting into high bluffs that rise from the sea, is nearly invisible offshore. The chief bluff,

  • Santiago de Cuba, Battle of (Spanish-American War)

    Battle of Santiago de Cuba, concluding naval engagement of the Spanish-American War, fought on July 3, 1898, near Santiago de Cuba, Cuba. The battle sealed the U.S. victory over the Spaniards. On May 19, 1898, a month after the outbreak of hostilities between the two powers, a Spanish fleet under

  • Santiago de Guayaquil (Ecuador)

    Guayaquil, largest city and chief port of Ecuador. It is situated on the west bank of the Guayas River, 45 miles (72 km) upstream from the Gulf of Guayaquil of the Pacific Ocean. The original Spanish settlement was founded in the 1530s at the mouth of the Babahoyo River, just east of the present

  • Santiago de la Vega (Jamaica)

    Spanish Town, city, southeast-central Jamaica. It is situated along the Rio Cobre, some 10 miles (16 km) west of Kingston. Probably laid out by Diego Columbus (c. 1523), it was originally called Santiago de la Vega (St. James of the Plain), and it was Jamaica’s capital from 1692 until 1872. It is

  • Santiago de León de Caracas (national capital, Venezuela)

    Caracas, city, capital of Venezuela, and one of the principal cities of South America. It is Venezuela’s largest urban agglomeration and the country’s primary centre of industry, commerce, education, and culture. Founded in 1567 as Santiago de León de Caracas, the city grew slowly until the 1940s,

  • Santiago de los Caballeros (Dominican Republic)

    Santiago de los Caballeros, city, northern Dominican Republic. It is situated on the Yaque del Norte River, in the heart of the fertile Cibao Valley, and is known as the capital of the Cibao region. Santiago de los Caballeros is the country’s second largest city and is more traditional than the

  • Santiago de los Caballeros de Guatemala (Guatemala)

    Antigua Guatemala, city, southwestern Guatemala, at an elevation of 5,029 feet (1,533 metres). Capital of the former captaincy general, Antigua Guatemala was once the most important seat of Spanish colonial government between Mexico City and Lima, Peru. Founded as Santiago de los Caballeros de

  • Santiago de Querétaro (Mexico)

    Querétaro, city, capital of Querétaro estado (state), central Mexico. Situated on the Mexican Plateau at an elevation of about 6,100 feet (1,860 meters) above sea level, it is some 130 miles (210 km) northwest of Mexico City. Querétaro is considered an excellent example of a Spanish colonial city;

  • Santiago de Surco (district, Peru)

    Santiago de Surco, distrito (district), southeastern Lima–Callao metropolitan area, Peru. Created in about 1824 (reorganized 1893 and 1929), it stretches eastward from the Surco River to the foothills of the Andes and is bisected from north to south by the Pan-American Highway. The surrounding area

  • Santiago del Estero (Argentina)

    Santiago del Estero, city, capital of Santiago del Estero provincia (province), northwestern Argentina, and the oldest continuous settlement in the country. It was founded in 1553 by Spaniards coming from Peru, led by Francisco de Aguirre, and it was moved slightly south in 1556 to its present

  • Santiago del Estero (province, Argentina)

    Santiago del Estero, provincia (province), north-central Argentina. It is located mostly at the southwestern margins of the vast Gran Chaco lowland plains, but it also extends onto the piedmont of the Andes Mountains in the far west. The city of Santiago del Estero, on the west-central border, is

  • Santiago del Nuevo Extremo (national capital, Chile)

    Santiago, capital of Chile. It lies on the canalized Mapocho River, with views of high Andean peaks to the east. Santiago is the largest city in Chile and is also one of the most populous in Latin America. The city’s skyline, dotted with sleek modern skyscrapers, stands in contrast to its

  • Santiago Island (island, Galápagos Islands, Ecuador)

    San Salvador Island, one of the Galapagos Islands, in the eastern Pacific Ocean about 600 miles (965 km) west of mainland Ecuador. Its relief is dominated by two volcanoes, the larger rising to 1,700 feet (520 m), that form the mass of the island’s area of 203 square miles (526 square km).

  • Santiago Mountains (mountains, Texas, United States)

    Santiago Mountains, segment of the southern Rocky Mountains that extends southeastward for about 35 miles (56 km) across southwestern Texas, U.S. The highest point, Santiago Peak (6,535 feet [1,992 metres]), was used as a lookout by the Apache, and remnants of an old Apache campsite are still

  • Santiago Peak (mountain, California, United States)

    Santa Ana Mountains: …to their highest point at Santiago Peak, an elevation of 5,687 feet (1,733 metres). They lie within a division of Cleveland National Forest. The western part of the mountains contains Limestone Canyon and Whiting Ranch Wilderness Park, and on the eastern edge is Glen Ivy Hot Springs.

  • Santiago Peak (mountain, Texas, United States)

    Santiago Mountains: The highest point, Santiago Peak (6,535 feet [1,992 metres]), was used as a lookout by the Apache, and remnants of an old Apache campsite are still present at the top. The mountains include the northern tip of Big Bend National Park near Persimmon Gap, which was once used…

  • Santiago River (river, Mexico)

    Río Grande de Santiago, river in Jalisco and Nayarit states, west-central Mexico. It flows out of Lake Chapala near Ocotlán and is an extension of the Lerma River, which enters the lake near La Barca. The Santiago flows generally northward and westward through the Sierra Madre Occidental, receiving

  • Santiago Rodríguez (Dominican Republic)

    Santiago Rodríguez, city, northwestern Dominican Republic, on the northern slopes of the Cordillera Central. The city serves as a commercial centre for the region, dealing principally in tobacco, beeswax, timber, and hides. It can be reached by secondary highway from Mao and Dajabón. Pop. (2002)

  • Santiago School of Architecture (school, Santiago, Chile)

    Latin American architecture: Architecture of the new independent republics, c. 1810–70: In Chile the Santiago School of Architecture was founded in 1849 by the Frenchman François Brunet de Baines. In both the school’s pedagogy and its architecture, Brunet introduced to Santiago the influence of the French Beaux-Arts eclectic historicism. He then began to work for the government and designed…

  • Santiago, Joey (musician)

    Pixies: ), Joey Santiago (b. June 10, 1965, Manila, Philippines), Kim Deal (b. June 10, 1961, Dayton, Ohio, U.S.), and David Lovering (b. December 6, 1961, Burlington, Massachusetts, U.S.).

  • Santiago, Orden de (Spanish military and religious order)

    Order of Santiago, Christian military-religious order of knights founded about 1160 in Spain for the purpose of fighting Spanish Muslims and of protecting pilgrims on their way to the shrine of St. James in Santiago de Compostela (a series of routes that became known as the Camino de Santiago;

  • Santiago, Order of (Spanish military and religious order)

    Order of Santiago, Christian military-religious order of knights founded about 1160 in Spain for the purpose of fighting Spanish Muslims and of protecting pilgrims on their way to the shrine of St. James in Santiago de Compostela (a series of routes that became known as the Camino de Santiago;

  • Santiago, Río (river, Mexico)

    Río Grande de Santiago, river in Jalisco and Nayarit states, west-central Mexico. It flows out of Lake Chapala near Ocotlán and is an extension of the Lerma River, which enters the lake near La Barca. The Santiago flows generally northward and westward through the Sierra Madre Occidental, receiving

  • Santiago, Río Grande de (river, Mexico)

    Río Grande de Santiago, river in Jalisco and Nayarit states, west-central Mexico. It flows out of Lake Chapala near Ocotlán and is an extension of the Lerma River, which enters the lake near La Barca. The Santiago flows generally northward and westward through the Sierra Madre Occidental, receiving

  • Śāntideva (Buddhist scholar)

    Buddhism: Madhyamika (Sanlun/Sanron): …the Madhyamika Karika, and by Shantideva (c. 650–750), whose Shiksa-samuccaya (“Summary of Training”) and Bodhicharyavatara (“The Coming of the Bodhisattva Way of Life”) are among the most popular Mahayana literary works.

  • Santillana, Iñigo López de Mendoza, marqués de (Spanish poet)

    Iñigo López de Mendoza, marquis de Santillana was a Spanish poet and Humanist who was one of the great literary and political figures of his time. As lord of the vast Mendoza estates, he led the nobles in a war against King John II of Castile and in expeditions against the Muslims; he also

  • Śantiniketan (former town, India)

    Shantiniketan, former town, north-central West Bengal state, northeastern India. It is now part of the town of Bolpur. Shantiniketan (Sanskrit: “The Abode of Peace”) began as Shantiniketan Ashram, a meditation centre founded and endowed in 1863 by Maharishi Debendranath, the father of the

  • Santipur (India)

    Santipur, city, eastern West Bengal state, northeastern India. It lies just north of the Hugli (Hooghly) River about 55 miles (90 km) north of Kolkata (Calcutta). Santipur was the centre of large factories (trading stations) under the British East India Company, and Santipur handwoven muslins had a

  • Śāntirakṣita (Indian teacher)

    Śāntirakṣita was an Indian Buddhist teacher and saint who was instrumental in the development of Tibetan Buddhism. Invited to Tibet by King Thī-srong-detsan (ruled 740–786), Śāntirakṣita was forced to flee to Nepal after adherents of the nativistic Bon religion blamed him for the outbreak of an

  • Säntis (mountain, Switzerland)

    Switzerland: Precipitation: …(1,300 mm), while precipitation at Säntis, at an elevation of 8,202 feet (2,500 metres) but only some 12 miles (20 km) away, is more than 110 inches (2,800 mm). The average annual precipitation of three-fourths of the country exceeds 40 inches (1,000 mm), varying amounts of which fall as snow.…

  • Santissima Annunziata (church, Florence, Italy)

    Andrea del Sarto: …the church and convent of SS. Annunziata (for which he executed frescoes in 1509–14 [in the Chiostro dei Voti] and 1525 [in the Chiostro Grande]), and he moved to a workshop near it in or about 1511. There, for five or six years, he shared the experiences and sometimes commissions…

  • Santissimo Sacramento Chapel (chapel, Rome, Italy)

    Gian Lorenzo Bernini: Later years of Gian Lorenzo Bernini: …years: the altar of the Santissimo Sacramento Chapel (1673–74). The pliant, human adoration of the angels contrasts with the timeless architecture of the bronze tabernacle that they flank and typifies Bernini’s late style. In his last years he seems to have found the inexorable laws of architecture a consoling antithesis…

  • Santo (Vanuatu)

    Espiritu Santo: …on the south coast near Luganville, the second largest town of Vanuatu, which has a deepwater port and an airport. Luganville was an important Allied military base during World War II. Exports include copra, coffee, cacao, canned meat, and tuna. Tourism gained importance in the late 20th century; divers are…

  • Santo (island, Vanuatu)

    Espiritu Santo, largest (1,420 square miles [3,677 square km]) and westernmost island of Vanuatu, in the southwestern Pacific Ocean. Volcanic in origin, it has a mountain range running along its west coast; Tabwémasana rises to 6,165 feet (1,879 meters), the highest point in Vanuatu. The island is

  • Santo André (Brazil)

    Santo André, city, southeastern São Paulo estado (state), Brazil. It lies along the Tamanduatei River at 2,438 feet (743 metres) above sea level. Santo André is part of the São Paulo metropolitan area. The original colonial settlement became a town in 1553 and a municipal seat in 1889. The city’s

  • Santo Antão Island (island, Cabo Verde)

    Santo Antão Island, northwesternmost island of Cape Verde in the Atlantic Ocean, about 400 miles (640 km) off the western African coast. It rises to Tope de Coroa (6,493 feet [1,979 metres]). Coffee, bananas, oranges, sugarcane, tobacco, and cinchona are cultivated on the island, and livestock are

  • Santo Antônio de Piracicaba (Brazil)

    Piracicaba, city, in the highlands of east-central São Paulo estado (state), southeastern Brazil. It lies at 1,772 feet (540 metres) above sea level on the Tietê River. Formerly called Santo Antônio de Piracicaba and Vila Nova da Constituição, the settlement was given town status in 1821 and made

  • Santo Antônio, Cachoeira de (waterfall, Brazil)

    Madeira River: …to the Cachoeira (falls) de Santo Antônio 807 miles (1,300 km) upstream, the first of 19 waterfalls or rapids that block further passage, near the town of Pôrto Velho, Brazil. The Madeira-Mamoré Railway, which extended for 228 miles (367 km) between Pôrto Velho and Guajará-Mirim, circumvented the falls and rapids…

  • Santo Domingo (island, West Indies)

    Hispaniola, second largest island of the West Indies, lying within the Greater Antilles, in the Caribbean Sea. It is divided politically into the Republic of Haiti (west) and the Dominican Republic (east). The island’s area is 29,418 square miles (76,192 square km); its greatest length is nearly

  • Santo Domingo (national capital, Dominican Republic)

    Santo Domingo, capital of the Dominican Republic. It is situated on the southeast coast of the island of Hispaniola, at the mouth of the Ozama River, and is the oldest permanent city established by Europeans in the Western Hemisphere. The city is also the seat of the oldest Roman Catholic

  • Santo Domingo de la Calzada (church, Spain)

    Damián Forment: …last work, the altar at Santo Domingo de la Calzada (1537–40), has a Renaissance frame, but the figures have become even more twisted and elongated. His work was an important influence on later Spanish sculptors and shows very clearly the transition from the Gothic to the Mannerist style.

  • Santo Domingo de Silos (painting by Bermejo)

    Bartolomé Bermejo: …to paint the altarpiece of Santo Domingo de Silos for the church in Daroca. Although Bermejo’s contract stipulated that he would face excommunication if he did not complete the work on time, he arranged an appendix to the contract that would allow another artist to finish it for him. He…

  • Santo Domingo el Antiguo (church, Toledo, Spain)

    El Greco: Middle years: …in the conventual church of Santo Domingo el Antiguo at Toledo (1577–79). Never before had the artist had a commission of such importance and scope. Even the architectural design of the altar frames, reminiscent of the style of the Venetian architect Palladio, was prepared by El Greco. The painting for…

  • Santo Domingo, Autonomous University of (university, Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic)

    Dominican Republic: Education: The Autonomous University of Santo Domingo, founded in 1538, is the oldest institution of higher education in the New World. It was originally affiliated with the Roman Catholic church, but in the early 19th century its religious ties were severed; the university was reorganized in 1914,…

  • Santo Domingo, Battle of (Napoleonic Wars)

    Battle of Santo Domingo, British naval victory over a French flotilla during the Napoleonic Wars, fought in the waters off the southern coast of what is now the Dominican Republic, in the Caribbean, on February 6. 1806. Although unwilling after the Battle of Trafalgar (1805) to face Britain in a

  • Santo Domingo, church of (church, Cuzco, Peru)

    Cuzco: The church of Santo Domingo, consecrated in 1654, incorporates the foundations and several walls of the Koricancha (Coricancha), a Quechua name meaning “Golden Enclosure,” or “Golden Garden”; the site was dedicated to Viracocha, the creator deity, and Inti, the sun god, and is also known as…

  • Santo Domingo, María de (Spanish mystic)

    illuminati: Early illuminati: …style her as a “pre-Alumbrado”—was María de Santo Domingo, who came to be known as La Beata de Piedrahita. She was a labourer’s daughter, born in Aldeanueva, south of Salamanca, about 1485. She joined the Dominican order as a teenager and soon achieved renown as a prophet and mystic who…

  • Santō Kyōden (Japanese author)

    Japan: The maturity of Edo culture: …various forms; representative authors are Santō Kyōden in the sharebon (genre novel), Jippensha Ikku in the kokkeibon (comic novel), and Takizawa Bakin in the yomihon (regular novel). They examined in detail such things as the townspeople’s way of life, customs, conceptions of beauty, and ways of thinking. Ikku is best…

  • Santo Spirito (church, Florence, Italy)

    Filippo Brunelleschi: Architectural career: Brunelleschi’s Church of Santo Spirito in Florence was designed either in 1428 or 1434. Work on the church was begun in 1436 and proceeded through the 1480s. A basilican church with a centrally planned eastern end, Santo Spirito is ringed by semicircular chapels opening off the dome-vaulted side…

  • Santo Tomás de Castilla (Guatemala)

    Santo Tomás de Castilla, port, northeastern Guatemala. It lies on Amatique Bay off the Gulf of Honduras and is administratively a part of Puerto Barrios. Santo Tomás was settled originally by Belgians in the 19th century; although the name was changed officially to Matías de Gálvez in 1958, the

  • Santo Tomás grottoes (grottoes, Paraguarí, Paraguay)

    Paraguarí: Santo Tomás grottoes, on a nearby hill, are noted for their hieroglyphic inscriptions, presumably the work of early indigenous peoples. One long cavern is the object of a Good Friday pilgrimage. Paraguarí is accessible by railway or highway from Asunción, Villarrica, and Encarnación. Pop. (2002)…

  • Santo Tomás, Cave of (cavern, Cuba)

    Cuba: Relief: …notably the 16-mile- (26-km-) long Cave of Santo Tomás in the Sierra Quemado of western Cuba. The main island is surrounded by a submerged platform covering an additional 30,000 square miles (78,000 square km).

  • Santo Tomé (church, Toledo, Spain)

    Toledo: …Santiago del Arrabal, and of Santo Tomé. The last has a fine tower and a chapel containing the painting Burial of the Conde de Orgaz by El Greco.

  • Santo Tomé de Guayana (Venezuela)

    Ciudad Guayana, city and industrial port complex, northeastern Bolívar estado (state), Venezuela, at the confluence of the Caroní and Orinoco rivers in the Guiana Highlands. Taking its name from the Guiana (Guayana) region, the traditional designation of Bolívar state, it was founded by the state

  • Santobello v. New York (law case)

    plea bargaining: History of plea bargaining in the United States: …specified in plea bargains (Santobello v. New York). In 1978 the Court held in Bordenkircher v. Hayes that prosecutors may threaten to bring additional charges against defendants who refuse to bargain as long as those charges are valid.

  • Santokh Singh (Sikh writer)

    Sikhism: Devotional and other works: …and the influential works of Santokh Singh (1787–1853), which were published in the first half of the 19th century. Santokh Singh’s first contribution, completed in 1823, was Gur Nanak Prakash (“The Splendour of Guru Nanak”; also known as the Nanak Prakash), which treated the life of Guru Nanak and relied…

  • Santokhi, Chandrikapersad (president of Suriname)

    Suriname: Suriname since independence: …coalition and its presidential candidate, Chandrikapersad Santokhi), enough to allow it to govern as a majority party without a coalition partner and setting the stage for Bouterse’s reelection as president. He was inaugurated into a second five-year term in August.

  • Santolea (Spain)

    Western painting: Mesolithic: …carefully executed archer found at Santolea: he is dressed in painstakingly portrayed finery and is flanked by two other figures. This emphasis on man is new, but even more significant is the element of cooperation as part of a group whose social cohesion in warfare, hunting, or ritual was probably…

  • Santomé, Battle of (Dominican history)

    San Juan: The Battle of Santomé (1844), which achieved Dominican independence, was also fought nearby; it is commemorated by a monument. In addition to cattle, the economic activities of the city focus on the production of rice, coffee, corn (maize), fruit, and potatoes. Pop. (2002) urban area, 70,969;…