• Sarcosuchus (fossil reptile genus)

    crocodile: Size range and diversity of structure: forms (such as Deinosuchus and Sarcosuchus) may have been between 10 and 12 meters (33 and 40 feet) long. In comparison, the smallest species, the smooth-fronted caiman (Paleosuchus) and the dwarf crocodile (Osteolaemus tetraspis), reach about 1.7 meters (about 6 feet) in length as adults.

  • Sarcosuchus imperator (fossil reptile)

    crurotarsan: Sarcosuchus imperator, which lived about 110 million years ago, was even larger, growing to 12.2 metres (40 feet) long and weighing about 7.2 tonnes (about 15,900 pounds).

  • sarcotesta (plant anatomy)

    gymnosperm: General features: …coat is known as the sarcotesta and consists of two layers. The sarcotesta is often brightly coloured in cycads, and the sarcotesta of Ginkgo seeds is foul-smelling when ripe. The seeds of some conifers have a thin winglike structure that may assist in the distribution of the seeds. The seeds…

  • sard and sardonyx (mineral)

    sard and sardonyx, translucent, light- to dark-brown varieties of the silica mineral chalcedony, historically two of the most widely used semiprecious stones. Sard and its close relative carnelian have been used in engraved jewelry for centuries. Sard (from Sardis, the ancient capital of Lydia) was

  • Sarda (fish)

    bonito, (genus Sarda), tunalike schooling fish of the tuna and mackerel family, Scombridae (order Perciformes). Bonitos are swift, predacious fishes found worldwide. They have striped backs and silvery bellies and grow to a length of about 75 cm (30 inches). Like tunas, they are streamlined, with a

  • Sarda australis (fish)

    bonito: … of the eastern Pacific, and S. australis of Australia and New Zealand.

  • Sarda Canal (canal, India)

    Sarda River: …is the source of the Sarda Canal (completed 1930), one of the longest irrigation canals in northern India.

  • Sarda chilensis (fish)

    bonito: orientalis of the Indo-Pacific, S. chilensis of the eastern Pacific, and S. australis of Australia and New Zealand.

  • Sarda chilensis chiliensis (fish subspecies)

    bonito: chilensis lineolata) and the Eastern Pacific bonito (S. chilensis chiliensis). The leaping bonito (Cybiosarda elegans) is a related Indo-Pacific food and sport fish. The oceanic bonito is the skipjack tuna (see tuna).

  • Sarda chilensis lineolata (fish subspecies)

    bonito: …two distinct geographic populations: the Pacific bonito (S. chilensis lineolata) and the Eastern Pacific bonito (S. chilensis chiliensis). The leaping bonito (Cybiosarda elegans) is a related Indo-Pacific food and sport fish. The oceanic bonito is the skipjack tuna (see tuna).

  • Sarda orientalis (fish)

    bonito: … of the Atlantic and Mediterranean, S. orientalis of the Indo-Pacific, S. chilensis of the eastern Pacific, and S. australis of Australia and New Zealand.

  • Sarda River (river, Asia)

    Sarda River, river of northern India and western Nepal. It rises as the Kali River in far northern Uttarakhand state in the Great Himalayas on the eastern slopes of the Nanda Devi massif. The river then flows generally south-southwest, where it constitutes the border between Uttarakhand state and

  • Sarda sarda (fish)

    bonito: sarda of the Atlantic and Mediterranean, S. orientalis of the Indo-Pacific, S. chilensis of the eastern Pacific, and S. australis of Australia and New Zealand.

  • sardana (dance)

    sardana, communal dance intimately bound up with Catalan national consciousness. It is danced by men and women who join hands alternately in a closed circle. As they dance to the music of the sardana cobla (orchestra)—typically composed of one flabiol (a fipple flute that calls the dancers

  • Sardanapallus (legendary king of Assyria)

    Sardanapalus, legendary king of Assyria. He apparently represents an amalgamation of the characters and tragic fates of three Assyrian rulers: Ashurbanipal (q.v.; ruled 668–627 bc); his brother, Shamash-shum-ukin; and the last Assyrian king, Sin-shar-ishkun. According to the Greek historian

  • Sardanapalus (legendary king of Assyria)

    Sardanapalus, legendary king of Assyria. He apparently represents an amalgamation of the characters and tragic fates of three Assyrian rulers: Ashurbanipal (q.v.; ruled 668–627 bc); his brother, Shamash-shum-ukin; and the last Assyrian king, Sin-shar-ishkun. According to the Greek historian

  • Sardanapalus (work by Byron)

    Lord Byron: Life and career: …the poetic dramas Marino Faliero, Sardanapalus, The Two Foscari, and Cain (all published in 1821); and a satire on the poet Robert Southey, The Vision of Judgment, which contains a devastating parody of that poet laureate’s fulsome eulogy of King George III.

  • sardar (Sikh leader)

    Sikhism: The 18th and 19th centuries: …the emergent misls and their sardars (chieftains) gradually established their authority over quite extensive areas.

  • Sardār Patel (Indian statesman)

    Vallabhbhai Patel was an Indian barrister and statesman who was one of the leaders of the Indian National Congress during the struggle for Indian independence. During the first three years of Indian independence after 1947, he served as deputy prime minister, minister of home affairs, minister of

  • Sardegna (island, Italy)

    Sardinia, island and regione (region) of Italy, second in size only to Sicily among the islands of the western Mediterranean. It lies 120 miles (200 km) west of the mainland of Italy, 7.5 miles (12 km) south of the neighbouring French island of Corsica, and 120 miles (200 km) north of the coast of

  • Sardes (Turkey)

    Sardis, ruined capital of ancient Lydia, about 50 miles (80 km) west of present İzmir, Turkey. Strategically located on a spur at the foot of Mount Tmolus (Boz Dağ), it commanded the central plain of the Hermus Valley and was the western terminus of the Persian royal road. Sardis was the capital of

  • Sardica, Council of (ancient ecclesiastical council)

    Council of Sardica, (342/343), an ecclesiastical council of the Christian Church held at Sardica, or Serdica (modern Sofia, Bulg.). It was convened by the joint emperors Constantius II (Eastern, sympathetic to the Arian party) and Constans I (Western, sympathetic to the Nicene party) to attempt a

  • Sardina pilchardus (fish)

    pilchard, a species of sardine (q.v.) found in Europe. It is the local name in Great Britain and

  • sardine (fish)

    sardine, any of certain food fishes of the herring family, Clupeidae, especially members of the genera Sardina, Sardinops, and Sardinella; the name sardine can also refer to the common herring (Clupea harengus) and to other small herrings or herringlike fishes when canned in oil. The European

  • Sardinella sagax melanosticta (fish)

    clupeiform: Migration: Japanese pilchards (Sardinella sagax melanosticta), for example, winter and spawn in the southern part of the Sea of Japan and on the Pacific side of the southern islands of Japan. In early summer they migrate to the northern end of the Tatar Strait and, in…

  • sardines (game)

    hide-and-seek: …all the rest, as in sardines, where the hider is joined by seekers surreptitiously as they find him (the name of the game coming from the crowded condition of the hiding place). Hide-and-seek appears to be equivalent to the game apodidraskinda, described by the 2nd-century Greek writer Julius Pollux. In…

  • Sardines (novel by Farah)

    Nuruddin Farah: …trilogy—Sweet and Sour Milk (1979), Sardines (1981), and Close Sesame (1983)—about life under a particularly African dictatorship, in which ideological slogans barely disguise an almost surreal society and human ties have been severed by dread and terror.

  • Sardinia (historical kingdom, Italy)

    Sardinia, kingdom of the house of Savoy from 1720, which was centred on the lands of Piedmont (in northwestern Italy) and Sardinia. In 1718, by the Treaty of London among the great powers, Victor Amadeus II, duke of Savoy and sovereign of Piedmont, was forced to yield Sicily to the Austrian

  • Sardinia (island, Italy)

    Sardinia, island and regione (region) of Italy, second in size only to Sicily among the islands of the western Mediterranean. It lies 120 miles (200 km) west of the mainland of Italy, 7.5 miles (12 km) south of the neighbouring French island of Corsica, and 120 miles (200 km) north of the coast of

  • Sardinia, Kingdom of (historical kingdom, Italy)

    Sardinia, kingdom of the house of Savoy from 1720, which was centred on the lands of Piedmont (in northwestern Italy) and Sardinia. In 1718, by the Treaty of London among the great powers, Victor Amadeus II, duke of Savoy and sovereign of Piedmont, was forced to yield Sicily to the Austrian

  • Sardinia-Piedmont (historical kingdom, Italy)

    Sardinia, kingdom of the house of Savoy from 1720, which was centred on the lands of Piedmont (in northwestern Italy) and Sardinia. In 1718, by the Treaty of London among the great powers, Victor Amadeus II, duke of Savoy and sovereign of Piedmont, was forced to yield Sicily to the Austrian

  • Sardinian language

    Sardinian language, Romance language spoken by the more than 1.5 million inhabitants of the central Mediterranean island of Sardinia. Of all the modern Romance languages (including French, Italian, Portuguese, Romanian, and Spanish), Sardinian is the most similar to Vulgar (non-Classical) Latin,

  • Sardinian script (writing system)

    Phoenician alphabet: …Cypro-Phoenician (10th–2nd century bce) and Sardinian (c. 9th century bce) varieties. A third variety of the colonial Phoenician script evolved into the Punic and neo-Punic alphabets of Carthage, which continued to be written until about the 3rd century ce. Punic was a monumental script and neo-Punic a cursive form.

  • Sardiñias-Montalbo, Sergio Eligio (Cuban boxer)

    Kid Chocolate was a Cuban professional boxer, world junior lightweight (130 pounds) champion from 1931 to 1933. (Read Gene Tunney’s 1929 Britannica essay on boxing.) Kid Chocolate officially turned professional in 1927 after winning all 100 of his recorded amateur bouts in Cuba, 86 by knockout;

  • Sardinops sagax (fish)

    clupeiform: Food ecology: The Pacific sardine (Sardinops sagax)—which inhabits vast areas on both sides of the North Pacific, the South Pacific coasts of South America and Australia, and the Indian Ocean coasts of Australia and Africa—is a good example of a widespread, highly migratory, and economically important species. (The…

  • sardion (mineral)

    sard and sardonyx, translucent, light- to dark-brown varieties of the silica mineral chalcedony, historically two of the most widely used semiprecious stones. Sard and its close relative carnelian have been used in engraved jewelry for centuries. Sard (from Sardis, the ancient capital of Lydia) was

  • Sardis (Turkey)

    Sardis, ruined capital of ancient Lydia, about 50 miles (80 km) west of present İzmir, Turkey. Strategically located on a spur at the foot of Mount Tmolus (Boz Dağ), it commanded the central plain of the Hermus Valley and was the western terminus of the Persian royal road. Sardis was the capital of

  • Sardis, Siege of (Turkish history [546 bce])

    The defeat of King Croesus of Lydia by Persian ruler Cyrus II, or Cyrus the Great, at Sardis in 546 bce was a major step forward in the rise of the Persian Empire. The victory was achieved against heavy odds through Cyrus’s calm resourcefulness, the discipline of his men, and a remarkable use of

  • Sardo

    Sardinian language, Romance language spoken by the more than 1.5 million inhabitants of the central Mediterranean island of Sardinia. Of all the modern Romance languages (including French, Italian, Portuguese, Romanian, and Spanish), Sardinian is the most similar to Vulgar (non-Classical) Latin,

  • sardonyx (mineral)

    sard and sardonyx: sardonyx, translucent, light- to dark-brown varieties of the silica mineral chalcedony, historically two of the most widely used semiprecious stones. Sard and its close relative carnelian have been used in engraved jewelry for centuries. Sard (from Sardis, the ancient capital of Lydia) was originally called…

  • Sardou, Victorien (French dramatist)

    Victorien Sardou was a playwright who, with Émile Augier and Alexandre Dumas fils, dominated the French stage in the late 19th century and is still remembered as a craftsman of bourgeois drama of a type belittled by George Bernard Shaw as “Sardoodledom.” His work Les Pattes de mouche (1860; A Scrap

  • sardsīr (region, Iran)

    Fārs: …plains and plateaus of the sardsīr (cold climate) region are other centres of cultivation, being watered by the Kūr and other rivers and springs. These plains form closed basins (with salty lakes) that merge into the interior deserts. Most ranges in the sardsīr and the transitional zone (elevation, 2,500–4,500 feet…

  • Sardu

    Sardinian language, Romance language spoken by the more than 1.5 million inhabitants of the central Mediterranean island of Sardinia. Of all the modern Romance languages (including French, Italian, Portuguese, Romanian, and Spanish), Sardinian is the most similar to Vulgar (non-Classical) Latin,

  • sardula (Indian art motif)

    vyala, popular motif in Indian art, consisting of a composite leonine creature with the head of a tiger, elephant, bird, or other animal, frequently shown in combat with humans or pouncing upon an elephant. Essentially a solar symbol, it represents—like the eagle seizing the serpent—the triumph of

  • Sarduri II (king of Urartu)

    Tiglath-pileser III: Military campaigns.: …next attacked the Urartian ruler Sarduri II and his neo-Hittite and Aramaean allies, whom he defeated in 743 bc. Advance westward was, however, barred by the capital of Arpad, which had to be besieged for three years—a technique now feasible to a standing army. The victory in 741 was far-reaching,…

  • Sarduy, Severo (Cuban writer)

    Severo Sarduy was a novelist, poet, critic, and essayist, one of the most daring and brilliant writers of the 20th century. Born in a working-class family of Spanish, African, and Chinese heritage, Sarduy was the top student in his high school. He went to Havana in the mid-1950s to study medicine.

  • SAREB (financial institution, Spain)

    Spain: The Rajoy administration: …de la Reestructuración Bancaria (SAREB) became operational in November 2012 with the stated mission of managing and disposing of up to €90 billion (about $120 billion) of nonperforming real-estate loans over a period of 15 years. In the months following SAREB’s creation, Spain’s nationalized and partially nationalized banks transferred…

  • saree (article of clothing)

    sari, principal outer garment of women of the Indian subcontinent, consisting of a piece of often brightly coloured, frequently embroidered, silk, cotton, or, in recent years, synthetic cloth five to seven yards long. It is worn wrapped around the body with the end left hanging or used over the

  • Sarego, Villa (house, Santa Sofia, Italy)

    Andrea Palladio: Visits to Rome and work in Vicenza: At the Villa Sarego (c. 1568–69) at Santa Sofia a similar inward-facing complex was also planned but not completed. This design differs from the normal villa in its two-story rusticated colonnade forming loggias to rooms arranged around three sides of a court. It is reminiscent of the…

  • Sarek National Park (national park, Norrbotten, Sweden)

    Sarek National Park, park in Norrbotten län (county), northwestern Sweden, encompassing most of the Sarek mountain range. It was established in 1909, with the setting aside of an area of 746 square miles (1,931 square km), and it adjoins two other national parks—Stora Sjöfallet on the north and

  • Sarek, Mount (mountain, Sweden)

    Sweden: Relief: …(2,111 metres) in elevation, and Mount Sarek (Sarektjåkkå), which rises 6,854 feet (2,089 metres), in the magnificent Sarek National Park.

  • Sarekat Islām (political party, Indonesia)

    Sarekat Islām, the first nationalist political party in Indonesia to gain wide popular support. Founded in 1912 the party originated as an association of those Muslim merchants who wanted to advance their economic interests in relation to Chinese merchants in Java, but the association became

  • Sarekat Islām Merah (political party, Indonesia)

    Sarekat Islām: …latter group set up the Sarekat Islām Merah (Red Islāmic Association), which later changed its name to the Sarekat Rakjat (People’s Association), to serve as the mass organization of the PKI. The split severely undermined the Sarekat Islām, which eventually declined into a secondary party.

  • Sarekat Rakjat (political party, Indonesia)

    Sarekat Islām: …latter group set up the Sarekat Islām Merah (Red Islāmic Association), which later changed its name to the Sarekat Rakjat (People’s Association), to serve as the mass organization of the PKI. The split severely undermined the Sarekat Islām, which eventually declined into a secondary party.

  • Sareks National Park (national park, Norrbotten, Sweden)

    Sarek National Park, park in Norrbotten län (county), northwestern Sweden, encompassing most of the Sarek mountain range. It was established in 1909, with the setting aside of an area of 746 square miles (1,931 square km), and it adjoins two other national parks—Stora Sjöfallet on the north and

  • Sarektjåkkå (mountain, Sweden)

    Sweden: Relief: …(2,111 metres) in elevation, and Mount Sarek (Sarektjåkkå), which rises 6,854 feet (2,089 metres), in the magnificent Sarek National Park.

  • Sarema (island, Estonia)

    Saaremaa, island, Estonia. It is the largest of the islands in the Muhu archipelago that divides the Baltic Sea from the Gulf of Riga. The island is low-lying and is composed largely of limestones and dolomites. Some of the places with poorer soils are characterized by the alvary—poor bushy

  • Sarez, Lake (lake, Tajikistan)

    Tajikistan: Drainage and soils: Lake Sarez was formed in 1911 during an earthquake, when a colossal landslide dammed the Murgab River. The Zeravshan Range contains Iskanderkul, which, like most of the country’s lakes, is of glacial origin.

  • Sarfatti, Margherita (Italian critic)

    Novecento movement: …20th-century) movement were the critic Margherita Sarfatti and seven artists: Anselmo Bucci, Leonardo Dudreville, Achille Funi, Gian Emilio Malerba, Piero Marussig, Ubaldo Oppi, and Mario Sironi. Under Sarfatti’s leadership, the group sought to renew Italian art by rejecting European avant-garde movements and embracing Italy’s artistic traditions.

  • Sarg, Tony (American puppeteer)

    Bil and Cora Baird: …under the noted American puppeteer Tony Sarg. He traveled on the road giving puppet performances and in the mid-1930s began producing his own independent puppet shows. He married Cora Eisenberg, who had acted under the name of Cora Burlar, in 1937. In the following years, they made their own puppets,…

  • Sargasso Sea (area, North Atlantic Ocean)

    Sargasso Sea, area of the North Atlantic Ocean, elliptical in shape and relatively still, that is strewn with free-floating seaweed of the genus Sargassum. It lies between the parallels 20° N and 35° N and the meridians 30° W and 70° W inside a clockwise-setting ocean-current system, of which the

  • Sargassum (genus of brown algae)

    Sargassum, genus of about 150 species of brown algae (family Sargassaceae) generally attached to rocks along coasts in temperate regions or occurring as pelagic (free-floating) algae in the open sea. The Sargasso Sea in the western Atlantic Ocean, which is often characterized by floating masses of

  • sargassum fish (fish)

    frogfish: The sargassum fish (Histrio histrio) is patterned very much like the sargassum weed in which it lives.

  • Sargassum fluitans (brown algae)

    Sargassum: …masses of Sargassum natans and S. fluitans, is named for the seaweed. Massive quantities of Sargassum sometimes wash ashore in the Caribbean and can have a negative impact on beach tourism, though the rotting algae do not pose a human health risk. An Asian species, S. muticum, is considered invasive…

  • Sargassum muticum (brown algae)

    Sargassum: An Asian species, S. muticum, is considered invasive in many areas outside its native range.

  • Sargassum natans (brown algae)

    Sargassum: …characterized by floating masses of Sargassum natans and S. fluitans, is named for the seaweed. Massive quantities of Sargassum sometimes wash ashore in the Caribbean and can have a negative impact on beach tourism, though the rotting algae do not pose a human health risk. An Asian species, S. muticum,…

  • sargassum weed (brown algae)

    Sargassum: …characterized by floating masses of Sargassum natans and S. fluitans, is named for the seaweed. Massive quantities of Sargassum sometimes wash ashore in the Caribbean and can have a negative impact on beach tourism, though the rotting algae do not pose a human health risk. An Asian species, S. muticum,…

  • Sargeant, Winthrop (American music critic)

    Winthrop Sargeant was an influential American music critic noted for his fine writing and conservative tastes. At age 18 Sargeant was the youngest player in the San Francisco Symphony Orchestra, and he went on to play with the New York Symphony (1926–28) and the New York Philharmonic Orchestra

  • sargenes (religious garment)

    religious dress: Later religious dress: …a kittel (also called a sargenes). This white garment, however, is worn not only by rabbis but also by other worshippers. The kittel emphasizes that Yom Kippur is an occasion not only of repentance but also of grace, for which festal wear is appropriate. Emphasis on the atoning aspect of…

  • Sargent Ice Field (ice field, Alaska, United States)

    Alaskan mountains: Physiography of the southern ranges: …heavily glaciated, resulting in the Sargent and Harding ice fields in the Kenai Mountains (on the Kenai Peninsula) and the Bagley Ice Field in the eastern Chugach Mountains. Numerous long and spectacular glaciers descend from the crests of those mountains. The St. Elias Mountains and the Kenai-Chugach mountain system have…

  • Sargent, Dick (American actor)

    Bewitched: …Darrin Stephens (Dick York, 1964–69; Dick Sargent, 1969–72), an advertising executive, struggle with their unorthodox marriage and with maintaining a facade of normalcy, lest Samantha’s supernatural powers become known to the outside world. Their lives are complicated by Samantha’s tampering, mortal-hating mother, Endora (Agnes Moorehead); a nosy neighbour, Gladys Kravitz…

  • Sargent, Dudley Allen (American college administrator)

    physical culture: Athletic clubs and sports: …not just the athletically inclined, Dudley Allen Sargent virtually founded the discipline of physical education. Luther Gulick, a student of Sargent and a devotee of Muscular Christianity, infused a sport and fitness component into the Young Men’s Christian Association (YMCA), founded in 1844. As director of the YMCA Training School…

  • Sargent, James (American locksmith)

    lock: Development of modern types.: …combat this type of crime, James Sargent of Rochester, N.Y., in 1873 devised a lock based on a principle patented earlier in Scotland, incorporating a clock that permitted the safe to be opened only at a preset time.

  • Sargent, John Singer (American painter)

    John Singer Sargent was an Italian-born American painter whose elegant portraits provide an enduring image of Edwardian Age society. The wealthy and privileged on both sides of the Atlantic Ocean came to his studio in London to be immortalized. Sargent was reared abroad and first saw the United

  • Sargent, Judith (American writer)

    Judith Sargent Stevens Murray was an American writer during the early republic, remembered largely for her essays and journalistic comment on contemporary public issues, especially women’s rights. Judith Sargent was the daughter of a wealthy shipowner and merchant and received an unusually good

  • Sargent, Sir Harold Malcolm Watts (British conductor)

    Sir Malcolm Sargent was an English conductor who, as Britain’s self-styled “ambassador of music,” toured throughout the world. Sargent earned his diploma from the Royal College of Organists at 16 and in his early 20s became England’s youngest doctor of music. His debut came in 1921, when he

  • Sargent, Sir John Philip (British statesman)

    Sir John Philip Sargent was a British statesman and educator who served as the principal educational adviser to the government of India from 1938 to 1948. Educated at St. Paul’s School and Oriel College, Oxford, Sargent was director of education for Southend-on-Sea (1927–31) and the county of Essex

  • Sargent, Sir Malcolm (British conductor)

    Sir Malcolm Sargent was an English conductor who, as Britain’s self-styled “ambassador of music,” toured throughout the world. Sargent earned his diploma from the Royal College of Organists at 16 and in his early 20s became England’s youngest doctor of music. His debut came in 1921, when he

  • Sargent, Thomas J. (American economist)

    Thomas J. Sargent is an American economist who, with Christopher A. Sims, was awarded the 2011 Nobel Prize for Economics. He and Sims were honoured for their independent but complementary research on how changes in macroeconomic indicators such as gross domestic product (GDP), inflation,

  • Sargent, Thomas John (American economist)

    Thomas J. Sargent is an American economist who, with Christopher A. Sims, was awarded the 2011 Nobel Prize for Economics. He and Sims were honoured for their independent but complementary research on how changes in macroeconomic indicators such as gross domestic product (GDP), inflation,

  • Sargeson, Frank (New Zealand writer)

    Frank Sargeson was a novelist and short-story writer whose ironic, stylistically diverse works made him the most widely known New Zealand literary figure of his day. Davey was born into a conservative Methodist family. His father was a businessman who eventually became the town clerk. Davey studied

  • Sargocentron (fish)

    squirrelfish, any of about 70 species of large-eyed, colourful, tropical reef fish of the family Holocentridae (order Beryciformes). Squirrelfish are edible fish found throughout the tropics. They have spiny fins and rough, prickly scales; some also have a sharp spine on each cheek. Most

  • Sargodha (Pakistan)

    Sargodha, city, Punjab province, Pakistan. The city is a grain and cash crop market connected by road with Lahore and Miānwāli and by rail with Faisalābād (formerly Lyallpur) and Lahore. Industries include textile, hosiery, flour, and oilseed mills, cotton gins, and chemical and soap factories.

  • Sargon (ruler of Mesopotamia)

    Sargon was an ancient Mesopotamian ruler who reigned around 2334–2279 bce. He was one of the earliest of the world’s great empire builders, conquering all of southern Mesopotamia as well as parts of Syria, Anatolia, and Elam (western Iran). He established the region’s first Semitic dynasty and was

  • Sargon I (king of Assyria)

    Sargon I was a ruler of Assyria during the old Akkadian period. Little is known in detail of Assyria during the time of Sargon, but clearly the Assyrian trading colony in Cappadocia, known from the tablets discovered at Kultepe, was then in its heyday. This information implies the ability of Sargon

  • Sargon II (king of Assyria)

    Sargon II was one of Assyria’s great kings (reigned 721–705 bce) during the last century of its history. He extended and consolidated the conquests of his presumed father, Tiglath-pileser III. Sargon is the Hebrew rendering (Isaiah 20:1) of Assyrian Sharru-kin, a throne name meaning “the king is

  • Sargon II, palace of (ancient palace, Dur Sharrukin, Iraq)

    history of Mesopotamia: Sargon II (721–705) and Marduk-apal-iddina of Babylonia: He erected his palace on a high terrace in the northeastern part of the city. The temples of the main gods, smaller in size, were built within the palatial rectangle, which was surrounded by a special wall. This arrangement enabled Sargon to supervise the priests better than had…

  • Sargon of Akkad (ruler of Mesopotamia)

    Sargon was an ancient Mesopotamian ruler who reigned around 2334–2279 bce. He was one of the earliest of the world’s great empire builders, conquering all of southern Mesopotamia as well as parts of Syria, Anatolia, and Elam (western Iran). He established the region’s first Semitic dynasty and was

  • sargramostim (biology)

    therapeutics: Hematopoietic growth factors: Another agent is sargramostim (granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor [GM-CSF]), which is used to increase the white blood cell count in patients with Hodgkin lymphoma or acute lymphoblastic leukemia who are undergoing autologous bone marrow transplantation.

  • Sargsyan, Serzh (president of Armenia)

    Armenia: Armenia at the turn of the century: Although then Prime Minister Serzh Sargsyan defeated Ter-Petrosyan in an election that international observers largely deemed free and fair, a number of sizable pro-opposition protests held in Yerevan criticized the integrity of the vote and the validity of the election’s outcome.

  • Sargur schist belt (geology)

    Asia: The Precambrian: The so-called Sargur schist belts within the Peninsular gneiss may be the oldest suture zones in the Indian subcontinent. In the Angaran platform the older (i.e., more than 3 billion years) gneiss-granulite basement shows a progressive development in time from ophiolites (pieces of former ocean floors) and…

  • Sarh (Chad)

    Sarh, city, southern Chad, north-central Africa, located on the Chari River. It is named for the dominant ethnic group, the Sara, and is the country’s third largest city. Its warm and seasonally wet climate permits the cultivation of cotton, Chad’s major export, in the locality. An economically

  • Sārī (Iran)

    Sārī, city, capital of Māzandarān province, northern Iran. Founded during the Sasanian period (224–651 ce), it became the capital of Tabarestan (7th–9th century) after the Arab conquest of the region. The city was ravaged by the Mongols in the 13th century and visited by the historian Mostowfi in

  • Sari (Ottoman sultan)

    Selim II was an Ottoman sultan from 1566, whose reign saw peace in Europe and Asia and the rise of the Ottomans to dominance in the Mediterranean but marked the beginning of the decline in the power of the sultans. He was unable to impose his authority over the Janissaries and was overruled by the

  • sari (article of clothing)

    sari, principal outer garment of women of the Indian subcontinent, consisting of a piece of often brightly coloured, frequently embroidered, silk, cotton, or, in recent years, synthetic cloth five to seven yards long. It is worn wrapped around the body with the end left hanging or used over the

  • Sari, Candi (temple, Indonesia)

    Southeast Asian arts: Post-Borobudur candis: …of the 9th century is Candi Sari. It is an outstanding architectural invention. From the outside it appears as a large rectangular three-storied block, with the main entrance piercing the centre of one of the longer sides. The third story stands above a substantial architrave with horizontal moldings and antefixes.…

  • Sarian, Martiros (Armenian painter)

    Martiros Saryan was a major Armenian painter of landscapes, still lifes, and portraits. Saryan received training in painting at the Moscow School of Painting, Sculpture, and Architecture (1897–1903) and then worked in the studios of the noted painters Konstantin Korovin and Valentin Serov. Soon

  • Sarıkamıs, Battle of (Turkish history)

    Armenian Genocide: Genocide: …back the Russians at the battle of Sarıkamış, only to suffer the worst Ottoman defeat of the war. Although poor generalship and harsh conditions were the main reasons for the loss, the Young Turk government sought to shift the blame to Armenian treachery. Armenian soldiers and other non-Muslims in the…

  • sarin (neurotoxin)

    sarin, synthetic organophosphate compound that is highly toxic to the nervous system. Exposure to sarin—which is colourless, odourless, and tasteless—can cause death within minutes. Sarin was developed in Germany in 1938 by the chemical and pharmaceutical company IG Farben, initially for use as a

  • sarinda (musical instrument)

    sarinda, folk fiddle of Afghanistan, Pakistan, and northern India. The deep wood shell has a skin belly up to its narrow waist but is open thereafter on both sides of the fretless fingerboard; the body is commonly shaped like a pouch or bag. The three melodic strings are gut or horsehair. Some