| Bahadur Shah II ... Baillou, Guillaume de |
| | - Bahadur Shah II
- the last Mughal emperor of India (reigned 1837-58). He was a poet, musician, and calligrapher, ... [3 Related Articles]
- Bahadur Shah, Sultan
- (from the article "Mumbai") A Portuguese attempt to conquer Mahim failed in 1507, but in 1534 Sultan Bahadur Shah, ...
- Bahadurpur, Battle of
- (Feb. 24, 1658), conflict that helped decide the war of succession among the sons of ... [1 Related Articles]
- Bahah, al-
- town, southwestern Saudi Arabia. The town is situated on a mountainous plateau at an elevation ...
- Bahamas Telecommunications Co.
- (from the article "Bahamas, The") A spokesman reaffirmed in July that the government remained committed to privatizing the Bahamas Telecommunications ...
- Bahamas Turks and Caicos, Operation
- (from the article "Bahamas, The") The U.S. emphasized in a statement in May that it was not scaling down its ...
- Bahamas, College of The
- (from the article "Bahamas, The") The College of The Bahamas, established in 1974 in Nassau, offers associate and bachelor's degrees ...
- Bahamas, flag of The
- horizontally striped aquamarine-yellow-aquamarine national flag with a black triangle at the hoist. It has a ...
- Bahamas, The
- archipelago and state on the northwestern edge of the West Indies. Formerly a British colony, ... [21 Related Articles]
- Bahamasair
- (from the article "Bahamas, The") ...policy, since both parties were committed to the free market, foreign investment, and fiscal prudence. ...
- Bahar, Muhammad Taqi
- poet who is considered to be one of the greatest poets of early 20th-century Iran. [1 Related Articles]
- Baharampur
- town, central West Bengal state, northeastern India, just east of the Bhagirathi River. Baharampur was ...
- Bahau
- (from the article "Dayak") Various subgroups of the Dayak have been distinguished, although lines of demarcation are difficult to ...
- Bahawalnagar
- town, east-central Punjab province, Pakistan. The town lies just east of the Sutlej River. It ...
- Bahawalpur
- city, southeastern Punjab province, Pakistan. The nawabs of Bahawalpur originally came from Sindh; they formed ... [1 Related Articles]
- Bahayi Efendi
- (from the article "Turkish literature") The ulema, however, continued to produce poets, the most illustrious of whom was the
- Bahcall, John N.
- American astrophysicist (b. Dec. 30, 1934, Shreveport, La.-d. Aug. 17, 2005, New York, N.Y.), made ...
- Bahia
- estado (state) of eastern Brazil. It is bounded on the northwest by Piaui state, north ... [1 Related Articles]
- Bahia Blanca
- city and major port of Argentina, located near Blanca Bay of the Atlantic Ocean in ... [1 Related Articles]
- Bahinemo
- (from the article "art and architecture, Oceanic") The Bahinemo west of the Alamblak carved opposed-hook objects with no head or leg. They ...
- Bahlul Lodi
- (from the article "India") ...preserve their kingdom intact. The last Sayyid ruler, 'Ala' al-Din 'Alam Shah (reigned 1445-51), peacefully ...
- Bahman Shah, 'Ala'-al-Din
- (from the article "India") ...Muhammad ibn Tughluq that began in Daulatabad in 1345 culminated in the foundation of the ...
- Bahmani Sultanate
- Muslim state (1347-1518) in the Deccan in India. The sultanate was founded in 1347 by ... [2 Related Articles]
- Bahnar
- (from the article "Vietnam") ...(Rhade), Jarai, Chru, and Roglai-speak Austronesian languages, linking them to the Cham, Malay, and Indonesian ...
- Bahnar language
- (from the article "Austroasiatic languages") ...or r) as minor vowels. Major syllables are composed of one or two initial consonants, ...
- Bahnaric languages
- branch of the Mon-Khmer family of languages, itself a part of the Austroasiatic stock. The ...
- Bahnhofstrasse
- (from the article "Switzerland") Visitors to Switzerland go there to eat, but more go to shop, especially along Zurich's ...
- Bahonar, Mohammad Javad
- Iranian politician who was prime minister of the Islamic Republic of Iran in 1981. In ... [1 Related Articles]
- Bahr al-'Arab
- intermittent river of southwestern Sudan, rising northeast of the Tondou (Bongo) Massif, near the border ...
- Bahr al-Ahmar, Al-
- muhafazah (governorate) of Egypt, comprising much of the Eastern Desert (also called Arabian Desert) east ...
- Bahr al-Ghazal
- river, The Sudan, chief western affluent of the Nile River. It is 445 miles (716 ... [1 Related Articles]
- Bahr al-Ghazal
- (from the article "Lado Enclave") ...Gondoroko in 1870 as governor of the equatorial provinces that any attempt to control the ...
- Bahr al-Jabal
- that section of the Nile River between Nimule near the Uganda border and Malakal in ... [4 Related Articles]
- Bahr as-Salam
- (from the article "Nile River") ...It rises in Ethiopia at heights of 6,000 to 10,000 feet above sea level, not ...
- Bahr az-Zaraf
- river, an arm of the Nile River in as-Sudd region of south-central Sudan. It is ... [1 Related Articles]
- Bahr, George
- German architect who is best known for his design of the Baroque Dresden Frauenkirche (1722-43; ...
- Bahr, Hermann
- Austrian author and playwright who championed (successively) naturalism, Romanticism, and Symbolism. [2 Related Articles]
- Bahraich
- city, east-central Uttar Pradesh state, northern India, located on a tributary of the Ghaghara River ...
- Bahrain
- small Arab state situated in a bay on the southwestern coast of the Persian Gulf. ... [23 Related Articles]
- Bahrain and Kuwait, Bank of
- (from the article "Kuwait") ...specialized banks operating in the areas of savings and credit, industrial loans, and real estate. ...
- Bahrain Island
- (from the article "Mesopotamia, history of") ...onward) and on the Orontes of northern Syria at Al-'Atshanah (ancient Alalakh; England, 1937-39 and ...
- Bahrain Petroleum Corporation
- (from the article "'Awali") municipality in the state and emirate of Bahrain, on central Bahrain island, in the Persian ...
- Bahrain, flag of
- national flag consisting of a red field (background) with a white, serrated strip at the ...
- Bahrain, history of
- (from the article "Bahrain") This discussion focuses on Bahrain since the 19th century. For a treatment of earlier periods ...
- Bahrain, Qala'at al-
- (from the article "Dilmun") Barbar, the remains of an ancient temple (largely built of limestone) situated on al-Bahrain, and ...
- Bahram
- (foaled 1932), English racehorse (Thoroughbred), winner in 1935 of the British Triple Crown and never ...
- Bahram I
- Sasanian king (reigned 273-276). [5 Related Articles]
- Bahram II
- Sasanian king (reigned 276-293), the son and successor of Bahram I. [3 Related Articles]
- Bahram III
- (from the article "Sasanian kings*") ...youngest son of an earlier king, Shapur I. On the death of Bahram II (293), ...
- Bahram IV
- Sasanian king (reigned 388-399).
- Bahram V
- Sasanian king (reigned 420-438). He was celebrated in literature, art, and folklore for his chivalry, ... [4 Related Articles]
- Bahram VI Chubin
- Sasanian king (reigned 590-591). A general and head of the house of Mihran at Rayy ... [4 Related Articles]
- Bahrdt, Carl Friedrich
- German Enlightenment writer, radical theologian, philosopher, and adventurer, best-known for his book Neuesten Offenbarungen Gottes ...
- Bahri period
- (from the article "Mamluk") Historians have traditionally broken the era of Mamluk rule into two periods-one covering 1250-1382, the ...
- baht
- monetary unit of Thailand. Each baht is subdivided into 100 satang. The Bank of Thailand ...
- Bahubali
- According to the traditions of the Indian religion Jainism, the son of the first Tirthankara ...
- Bahujan Samaj Party
- (from the article "India") ...provincial legislative elections in northern Uttar Pradesh state. Upsetting predictions that no party would come ...
- Bahurupee group
- (from the article "South Asian arts") ...Sisir's style has been refined by actor-director Sombhu Mitra and his actress wife Tripti, who ...
- Bahuti, al-
- teacher and the last major exponent in Egypt of the Hanbali school of Islamic law.
- Bahya ben Joseph ibn Pakuda
- dayyan-i.e., judge of a rabbinical court-in Muslim Spain and author of a highly influential and ... [2 Related Articles]
- Bai
- people of northwestern Yunnan province, southwest China. Minjia is the Chinese (Pinyin) name for them; ... [1 Related Articles]
- Bai Feng-yan
- (from the article "sanxian") ...by powerful, resonant rolls and chords and large glissandos. It is popular in theatrical accompaniment, ...
- Bai Juyi
- Chinese poet of the Tang dynasty (618-907) who used his elegantly simple verse to protest ... [5 Related Articles]
- Bai River
- (from the article "Chaobai River") river in Hebei province and Beijing and Tianjin municipalities, northern China. The Chaobai originates in ...
- Baia Mare
- city, capital of Maramures judet (county), northwestern Romania. It is situated in the Sasar River ... [1 Related Articles]
- Baiae
- ancient city of Campania, Italy, located on the west coast of the Gulf of Puteoli ...
- Baic languages
- (from the article "Tibeto-Burman languages") ...Thesaurus project, directed by James Matisoff (the author of this article) at the University of ...
- Baicheng
- city, northwestern Jilin sheng (province), northeastern China. The region was originally a ...
- Baidoa
- (from the article "Somalia") ...Union (ICU), an Islamic fundamentalist movement, had seized control of much of the country, including ...
- Baie-Comeau
- town, regional county municipality (RCM) of Cote-Nord region, east-central Quebec province, Canada. It lies on ...
- Baier, Kurt
- (from the article "Rationalism") ...were receiving renewed attention in the mid-20th century. Prominent among these developments has been the ...
- Baiera
- (from the article "ginkgophyte") There is one type of ginkgophyte leaf in the fossil record that is generally regarded ...
- Baif, Jean-Antoine de
- most learned of the seven French poets who constituted the group known as La Pleiade. [4 Related Articles]
- baihua
- vernacular style of Chinese that was adopted as a written language in a movement to ... [7 Related Articles]
- baiji
- (from the article "conservation") ...with some success, and the alala (or Hawaiian crow, Corvus hawaiiensis), which ...
- Baijini
- (from the article "Northern Territory") Arnhem Land legends speak of the "Baijini," seafaring people who came from the northwest long ...
- Baikal cod
- (from the article "scorpaeniform") The two members of the family Comephoridae, called Baikal cods (Comephorus baicalensis and C. dybowskii), ...
- Baikal Mountains
- (from the article "Asia") ...may have separated Angara from the North American platform. Orogenic activity, which initiated the evolution ...
- Baikal Rift Zone
- (from the article "mountain") ...is actively occurring. The eastward displacement of crustal blocks along major strike-slip faults also seems ...
- Baikal seal
- (from the article "seal") The Baikal seal (Phoca sibirica) of Lake Baikal in Siberia, Russia, is ...
- Baikal, Lake
- lake located in the southern part of eastern Siberia within the republic of Buryatia and ... [13 Related Articles]
- Baikal-Amur Magistral
- (from the article "Siberia") ...of oil and gas pipelines was built between the new fields and the Urals, and ...
- Baikalides
- (from the article "Asia") The Altaids constitute a large and complex tectonic collage that accreted around the Angaran platform ...
- Baikalsky Nature Reserve
- natural area set aside for research in the natural sciences, on the southern shore of ...
- Baikiaea
- (from the article "Zambezi River") ...is predominant on the alluvial flats of the low-lying river valleys and is highly susceptible ...
- Baikie, William Balfour
- explorer and philologist whose travels into Nigeria helped open up the country to British trade. [2 Related Articles]
- Baikonur
- former Soviet and current Russian space centre in south-central Kazakhstan. Baikonur was a Soviet code ... [2 Related Articles]
- bail
- (from the article "cricket") ...a game in which country boys bowled at a tree stump or at the hurdle ...
- bail
- procedure by which a judge or magistrate sets at liberty one who has been arrested ... [1 Related Articles]
- Baildon, John
- (from the article "calligraphy") ...in England, A Booke Containing Divers Sortes of Hands (1570; this title also translates Cresci's), ...
- baile
- (from the article "flamenco") After the mid-19th century, flamenco song was usually accompanied by guitar music and a
- bailee
- (from the article "bailment") in Anglo-American property law, delivery of specific goods by one person, called the bailor, to ...
- bailey
- (from the article "castle") ...built in France in the 10th century often included a high mound encircled by a ...
- Bailey bridge
- (from the article "Bailey, Sir Donald Coleman") British engineer who invented the Bailey bridge, which was of great military value in World ...
- Bailey, Alice A.
- (from the article "New Age movement") Blavatsky's successor, Annie Besant, predicted the coming of a messiah, or world saviour, who she ...
- Bailey, Ann
- American scout, a colourful figure in fact and legend during the decades surrounding the American ...
- Bailey, Anna Warner
- American patriot, the subject of heroic tales of the Revolutionary War and early America.
- Bailey, Buster
- (from the article "jazz") ...to determine when their playing turned from embellished rags to improvisatory jazz. Musicians confirmed the ...
- Bailey, David
- British photographer known for his advertising, celebrity, and fashion photographs.
- Bailey, Derek
- British guitarist (b. Jan. 29, 1930, Sheffield, Eng.-d. Dec. 25, 2005, London, Eng.), was the ... [1 Related Articles]
- Bailey, Donovan
- At the 1996 Olympic Games in Atlanta, Ga., Canadian sprinter Donovan Bailey won the 100-m ...
- Bailey, Florence Augusta Merriam
- American ornithologist and author of popular field guides.
- Bailey, Gamaliel
- journalist and a leader of the abolition movement prior to the American Civil War.
- Bailey, Hackaliah
- (from the article "circus") The second elephant on American shores, Old Bet, was even more popular and is credited ...
- Bailey, Hannah Clark Johnston
- U.S. reformer who was a leading advocate of the peace movement in the late 19th ...
- Bailey, James A
- U.S. impresario credited with the great success of the Barnum & Bailey Circus. [2 Related Articles]
- Bailey, Jeremiah
- (from the article "reaper") ...but modern machines include harvesters, combines, and binders, which also perform other harvesting operations. A ...
- Bailey, Jerry
- When the 2003 Thoroughbred racing Eclipse Awards were handed out on Jan. 26, 2004, Jerry ... [1 Related Articles]
- Bailey, Liberty Hyde
- botanist whose systematic study of cultivated plants transformed U.S. horticulture from a craft to an ...
- Bailey, Mildred
- American singer known for her light soprano voice, clear articulation, and jazz phrasing. As a ... [1 Related Articles]
- Bailey, Nathan
- (from the article "dictionary") ...earlier lexicographers. As a result, it served the reasonable needs of ordinary users of the ...
- Bailey, Pearl
- American entertainer notable for her sultry singing and mischievous humour. [1 Related Articles]
- Bailey, Samuel
- English economist and philosopher remembered for his argument that value is a relationship and implies ...
- Bailey, Sir Donald Coleman
- British engineer who invented the Bailey bridge, which was of great military value in World ...
- Bailey, William Shreve
- (from the article "Newport") ...the first ship to reach Jamestown, Virginia, in 1607. The only antislavery newspaper (
- Bailie, Kim
- South African-born aerospace engineer earned a global reputation as a designer of missile bodies. After ...
- bailiff
- a minor court official with police authority to protect the court while in session and ... [4 Related Articles]
- Baillet, Adrien
- (from the article "Descartes, Rene") ...who began the process of turning Descartes into a saint by cutting, adding to, and ...
- Baillie, Charles
- (from the article "Ridolfi, Roberto") Ridolfi's plot was exposed in April 1571 when his messenger, Charles Baillie, was arrested at ...
- Baillie, Joanna
- poet and prolific dramatist whose plays, mainly in verse, were highly praised at a period ...
- Baillie, Lady Grizel
- Scottish poet remembered for her simple and sorrowful songs.
- Baillie, Matthew
- Scottish pathologist whose Morbid Anatomy of Some of the Most Important Parts of the Human ...
- Baillie, Robert
- Presbyterian minister and theological scholar who led the movement in Scotland to reject (1637) the ...
- Baillie, Robert
- Scottish Presbyterian executed for allegedly conspiring to assassinate King Charles II of Great Britain. The ...
- Baillon, Andre
- Belgian novelist whose ironic and clear-eyed works signaled a change in the direction of Belgian ...
- Baillou, Guillaume de
- physician, founder of modern epidemiology, who revived Hippocratic medical practice in Renaissance Europe. Dean of ...
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