- Kasumigaseki (district, Tokyo, Japan)
Tokyo-Yokohama Metropolitan Area: Centre and satellites: Kasumigaseki, immediately to the south of the palace, has been the bureaucratic centre of the city since shortly after it became the imperial capital. Located there and in neighbouring districts to the west are the main offices of the national government, including the National Diet…
- Kasumigaseki Building (building, Tokyo, Japan)
Tokyo-Yokohama Metropolitan Area: Building styles: …completion (1968) of the 36-story Kasumigaseki Building just south of the government ministries. Until then, aesthetic and engineering considerations had kept buildings to a maximum of about 10 stories, but there soon blossomed a number of high-rise structures, all purported by their builders to be earthquake-resistant. The largest cluster of…
- Kasungu (Malawi)
Kasungu, town, central Malawi. The economy of Kasungu depends mainly on tobacco production, and tourism in the city has developed with the opening of the nearly 914-square-mile (2,367-square-km) Kasungu National Park (1970). The town is situated near the farm where the country’s first president,
- Kasur (Pakistan)
Kasur, city, eastern Punjab province, Pakistan. It lies on the border of India about 30 miles (50 km) south of Lahore. Traditionally it is said to have been founded by Kusa, son of the legendary Hindu figure Rama. During the Mughal period it was settled by a Pashtun colony and in 1807 was captured
- Kasym Khan (Kazak ruler)
Kazakhstan: Kazakhstan to c. 1700 ce: …Burunduk Khan (ruled 1488–1509) and Kasym Khan (1509–18), the Kazakhs were the masters of virtually the entire steppe region, reportedly able to bring 200,000 horsemen into the field and feared by all their neighbours. The prevailing view is that the rule of Kasym Khan marked the beginning of an independent…
- kata (martial arts)
karate: Contests of form (kata) are also held, in which single competitors perform predetermined series of movements simulating defense and counterattack against several opponents. Performances are scored by a panel of judges, as in gymnastics.
- kata thermometer (measurement instrument)
anemometer: The kata thermometer is a heated-alcohol thermometer; the time it takes to cool is measured and used to determine air current. It is useful for measuring low speeds in studies of air circulation.
- Kata Tjuta (tors, Northern Territory, Australia)
Olgas, group of tors (isolated weathered rocks) in southwestern Northern Territory, Australia. The Olgas are a circular grouping of some 36 red conglomerate domes rising from the desert plains north of the Musgrave Ranges. They occupy an area of 11 square miles (28 square km) within Uluru–Kata
- Kataastaasan Kagalang-Galang Na Katipunan Nang Manga Anak Nang Bayan (Filipino nationalist organization)
Katipunan, (“Supreme Worshipful Association of the Sons of the People”), Filipino nationalist organization founded in 1892 to oppose Spanish rule. The organization numbered anywhere from 100,000 to 400,000 members. The Filipino nationalist Emilio Aguinaldo was the leader of this group, which
- katabasia (Greek Orthodox music)
troparion: …responsorial hymn (having soloist-chorus alternation); katabasia (from “to descend”) refers to the singing of an ode by left and right choirs descending from their stalls and singing in the middle of the church; theotokion, from Theotokos (Mother of God), is a type of hymn relating to the Virgin Mary; and…
- katabatic wind (meteorology)
katabatic wind, wind that blows down a slope because of gravity. It occurs at night, when the highlands radiate heat and are cooled. The air in contact with these highlands is thus also cooled, and it becomes denser than the air at the same elevation but away from the slope; it therefore begins to
- Kataev, Valentin (Soviet writer)
Valentin Katayev was a Soviet novelist and playwright whose lighthearted, satirical treatment of postrevolutionary social conditions rose above the generally uninspired official Soviet style. Katayev, whose father was a schoolteacher in Odessa, started writing and publishing his poetry at an early
- Kataev, Valentin Petrovich (Soviet writer)
Valentin Katayev was a Soviet novelist and playwright whose lighthearted, satirical treatment of postrevolutionary social conditions rose above the generally uninspired official Soviet style. Katayev, whose father was a schoolteacher in Odessa, started writing and publishing his poetry at an early
- Katagum (Nigeria)
Katagum, town and traditional emirate, Bauchi state, northern Nigeria, on the north bank of the Jamaare River (a tributary of the Hadejia). It was the seat of an emirate founded c. 1809 by Ibrahim Zakiyul Kalbi (also known as Malam [Scholar] Zaki), a warrior in the Fulani jihad (holy war) who in
- Katahdin, Mount (mountain, Maine, United States)
Mount Katahdin, highest point (5,268 feet [1,606 metres]) in Maine, U.S. It lies in Baxter State Park, 20 miles (32 km) northwest of Millinocket, in Piscataquis county, in the east-central part of the state. This rugged mountain consists of a group of summits of which the highest is Baxter Peak.
- Katainen, Jyrki (prime minister of Finland)
Finland: Domestic affairs: …government led by Prime Minister Jyrki Katainen (the head of the NCP) but only on the condition that collateral be introduced as a prerequisite for the Greek bailout. Although Finland negotiated collateral unilaterally with Greece, other EU countries refused to accept the plan, and in September 2011 Finland agreed to…
- katakana (Japanese script)
katakana, one of the two sets of syllabic Japanese script. Katakana is used to write scientific terms, official documents, and words borrowed from other languages. The other set, hiragana, is used to write native Japanese words in regular settings. The word katakana combines the words kata
- Katanga (province, Democratic Republic of the Congo)
Democratic Republic of the Congo: Relief: …ridges of the plateaus of Katanga (Shaba) province tower over the region; they include Kundelungu at 5,250 feet (1,600 metres), Mitumba at 4,920 feet (1,500 metres), and Hakansson at 3,610 feet (1,100 metres). The Katanga plateaus reach as far north as the Lukuga River and contain the Manika Plateau, the…
- Katanga (historical state, Africa)
Katanga, historical region in southeastern Democratic Republic of the Congo, bordering Lake Tanganyika to the east, Zambia to the south, and Angola to the west. The name Shaba, the region’s name during the Zairean period, comes from the Swahili word for copper, and the region’s mines yield most of
- Katanga River (river, Russia)
Podkamennaya Tunguska River, tributary of the Yenisey River in western Siberia, Irkutsk oblast (province), Russia. It has a total length of 1,159 miles (1,865 km) and a drainage basin of 96,100 square miles (249,000 square km). Known in its upper section as the Katanga, it rises on the Central
- Katangan Complex (geology)
Katangan Complex, major division of late Precambrian rocks (the Precambrian era began about 4.6 billion years ago and ended 542 million years ago) in central Africa, especially in Katanga province, Congo (Kinshasa). The Katangan Complex is a complicated array of diverse sedimentary and metamorphic
- Katanning (Western Australia, Australia)
Katanning, town, southwestern Western Australia. It is located approximately 95 miles (150 km) north of Albany and 155 miles (250 km) southeast of Perth in the state’s Great Southern region. Although sandalwood cutters had been in the area for some time, there was no permanent settlement until the
- Katanyan, Vasily (Russian literary historian)
Vasily Katanyan was a Soviet literary historian who was best known as an authority on the poet Vladimir Mayakovsky. Of Armenian origin, Katanyan grew up in Tiflis (now Tbilisi) before returning to Moscow, where he became a figure in a circle of notable writers and artists that included Mayakovsky
- Katanyan, Vasily Abgarovich (Russian literary historian)
Vasily Katanyan was a Soviet literary historian who was best known as an authority on the poet Vladimir Mayakovsky. Of Armenian origin, Katanyan grew up in Tiflis (now Tbilisi) before returning to Moscow, where he became a figure in a circle of notable writers and artists that included Mayakovsky
- katapayadi (mathematics)
Indian mathematics: Classical mathematical literature: …500 ce), was the so-called katapayadi system in which each of the 10 decimal digits was assigned to a set of consonants (beginning with the letters k, t, p, and y), while vowels had no numerical significance. This meant that numbers could be represented not only by normal-sounding syllables but…
- katar (weapon)
dagger: …by the Gurkhas, the Hindu katar with its flat triangular blade, and innumerable others.
- Katara pass (mountain pass, Greece)
Pindus Mountains: …the principal one is the Métsovo (Katára pass; 5,593 feet [1,705 metres]), a historic defile that carries the highway from the Epirus (Ípeiros) to Thessaly.
- katari-be (Japanese reciters)
epic: The epic in Japan: …times families of reciters (katari-be) whose duty was to hand down myths and legends by word of mouth and to narrate them during official ceremonies and banquets. After the introduction of Chinese letters, however, from the 4th century ce onward, these traditional tales were put in writing and the…
- katarimono (Japanese music)
stringed instrument: For accompaniment: …style of music known as katarimono; here the biwa is used only between verses for interludes and commentaries. A similar technique is in use among the minstrels of North Africa: the lute (gimbrī) is played only between verses of the story, as a descriptive comment.
- Katarina, Sankta (Swedish saint)
Saint Catherine of Sweden ; feast day March 24) was the daughter of St. Bridget of Sweden, whom she succeeded as superior of the Brigittines. Catherine was married to Egard Lydersson von Kyren, who died shortly after she left for Rome (1350) to join Bridget as her constant companion. She did not
- Katatsumori (film by Kawase [1994])
Naomi Kawase: Her second film, Katatsumori (1994), was a portrait of her grandmother, who had helped to rear Kawase. Turning to full-length features, Kawase directed as well as wrote the screenplay for Moe no suzaku, about family life in a remote Japanese village. Besides earning her the Caméra d’Or at…
- katauta (poetic form)
katauta, a Japanese poetic form that consists of 17 or 19 syllables arranged in three lines of either 5, 7, and 5 or 5, 7, and 7 syllables. The form was used for poems addressed to a lover, and a single katauta was considered incomplete or a half-poem. A pair of katautas of the 5,7,7 type were
- Katay Don Sasorith (prime minister of Laos)
Katay Don Sasorith was a Lao nationalist and author of eloquent resistance pamphlets in his youth, who later held many government posts, among them that of premier in 1954–56. Katay’s 33 years of government service began with a civil service post in the French administration of Laos from 1926 to
- Katayama Tetsu (prime minister of Japan)
Japan: Political trends: …cabinet headed by the Socialist Katayama Tetsu (1947–48). A similar fate confronted Ashida Hitoshi, who became prime minister for five months in 1948. Yoshida’s return to power in the fall of 1948 resulted in a more stable situation and ushered in the Yoshida era, which lasted until 1954. During those…
- Katayev, Valentin (Soviet writer)
Valentin Katayev was a Soviet novelist and playwright whose lighthearted, satirical treatment of postrevolutionary social conditions rose above the generally uninspired official Soviet style. Katayev, whose father was a schoolteacher in Odessa, started writing and publishing his poetry at an early
- Katayev, Valentin Petrovich (Soviet writer)
Valentin Katayev was a Soviet novelist and playwright whose lighthearted, satirical treatment of postrevolutionary social conditions rose above the generally uninspired official Soviet style. Katayev, whose father was a schoolteacher in Odessa, started writing and publishing his poetry at an early
- Katayev, Yevgeny Petrovich (Soviet humorist)
Ilf and Petrov: Petrov, the son of a teacher, began his career as a news-service correspondent, worked briefly as a criminal investigator, and went to Moscow in 1923, where he became a professional journalist. Initially, Ilf worked on the staff of Gudok (“The Whistle”), the central rail-workers’ newspaper,…
- Katchalski, Ephraim (president of Israel)
Ephraim Katzir was a Russian-born scientist and politician who was the fourth president of Israel (1973–78). Katzir moved with his family to Palestine when he was nine years old. After graduating from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, he became an assistant in the university’s department of
- katchi (housing)
Pakistan: Housing of Pakistan: …brick, cement, concrete, or timber; katchi (or kuchha [“ramshackle”]) houses, constructed of less-durable material (e.g., mud, bamboo, reeds, or thatch); and semi-pukka houses, which are a mix between the two. Housing stocks comprise an equal number of semi-pukka and katchi houses (about two-fifths each), and remaining houses (roughly one-fifth of…
- katchi abadi (shanty town housing)
Pakistan: Urban settlement: …makeshift communities known collectively as katchi abadis. Water supply and sewerage systems are inadequate, and in many areas residents have to share communal water taps. Inadequate urban transport is also a major problem.
- katcina (North American Indian religion)
kachina, in traditional religions of the Pueblo Indians of North America, any of more than 500 divine and ancestral spirit beings who interact with humans. Each Pueblo culture has distinct forms and variations of kachinas. Kachinas are believed to reside with the tribe for half of each year. They
- Kate (film by Nicolas-Troyan [2021])
Woody Harrelson: …appeared in the action thriller Kate.
- Kate (people)
Oceanic music and dance: Musical style and cultural context: …cultural context: the Monumbo, the Kate, the Watut, and the Kaluli. A more detailed discussion of Kate music illustrates the stylistic heterogeneity of the Kate, who live in the hinterland of the Huon Peninsula of northeastern Papua New Guinea and speak a non-Austronesian (Papuan) language, while some of their neighbours…
- Kate & Leopold (film by Mangold [2001])
Hugh Jackman: …Someone like You (2001) and Kate & Leopold (2001), before once again unsheathing Wolverine’s trademark razor claws in X2 (2003). Jackman made his Broadway debut in 2003 as singer-songwriter Peter Allen in the biographical musical The Boy from Oz. For American filmgoers who were unfamiliar with his work in Oklahoma!,…
- Kate Smith Evening Hour, The (American television program)
Kate Smith: …starred in the TV shows The Kate Smith Evening Hour (NBC, 1951–52) and The Kate Smith Show (CBS, 1960). She made her concert debut at Carnegie Hall in New York City in 1963. Smith wrote two volumes of autobiography, Living in a Great Big Way (1938) and Upon My Lips…
- Kate Smith Hour, The (American television program)
Kate Smith: …hosted a daytime television show, The Kate Smith Hour. She also starred in the TV shows The Kate Smith Evening Hour (NBC, 1951–52) and The Kate Smith Show (CBS, 1960). She made her concert debut at Carnegie Hall in New York City in 1963. Smith wrote two volumes of autobiography,…
- Kate Smith Show, The (American television program)
Kate Smith: …Evening Hour (NBC, 1951–52) and The Kate Smith Show (CBS, 1960). She made her concert debut at Carnegie Hall in New York City in 1963. Smith wrote two volumes of autobiography, Living in a Great Big Way (1938) and Upon My Lips a Song (1960) and in 1958 published her…
- Kate Smith Sings (American radio program)
Kate Smith: …her develop the radio show Kate Smith Sings (CBS, 1931–47), one of the most popular programs of the 1930s and early ’40s. On her first broadcast she adopted “When the Moon Comes over the Mountain” as her theme song (she had helped to write its lyrics). The song that she…
- Kate Smith Speaks (American radio program)
Kate Smith: …a daytime radio talk program, Kate Smith Speaks, to her schedule, and by the 1940s she was known as the “first lady of radio.” In 1939 U.S. Pres. Franklin D. Roosevelt introduced her to King George VI of England by saying, “This is Kate Smith. Miss Smith is America.” Of…
- Kate Vaiden (novel by Price)
Reynolds Price: …The Source of Light (1981); Kate Vaiden (1986), the orphaned heroine of which was based on the author’s own mother; and The Tongues of Angels (1990). He also wrote poetry, plays, translations from the Bible, and essays.
- Kateb Yacine (Algerian author)
Kateb Yacine was an Algerian poet, novelist, and playwright, one of North Africa’s most respected literary figures. Kateb was educated in French-colonial schools until 1945, when the bloody suppression of a popular uprising at Sétif both ended his education and provided him with material that would
- Kategoriai (work by Aristotle)
history of logic: Aristotle: …but not chronological order, are:
- Katehar (historical region, India)
Rohilkhand, low-lying alluvial region in northwestern Uttar Pradesh state, northern India. The Rohilkhand is part of the Upper Ganges (Ganga) Plain and has an area of about 10,000 square miles (25,000 square km). It is bounded by the frontiers of China and Nepal to the north and the Ganges River to
- Kater’s pendulum
pendulum: …special reversible compound pendulum called Kater’s pendulum is designed to measure the value of g, the acceleration of gravity.
- Kater, Henry (British physicist)
gravity: Absolute measurements: In 1817 the English physicist Henry Kater, building on the work of the German astronomer Friedrich Wilhelm Bessel, was the first to use a reversible pendulum to make absolute measurements of g. If the periods of swing of a rigid pendulum about two alternative points of support are the same,…
- Katerina (novel by Appelfeld)
Aharon Appelfeld: …The Immortal Bartfuss), Katerinah (1989; Katerina), Mesilat barzel (1991; “The Railway”), and Unto the Soul (1994). Beyond Despair: Three Lectures and a Conversation with Philip Roth was published in 1994.
- Katerina Ismaylova (opera by Shostakovich)
Dmitri Shostakovich: Early life and works: … (composed 1930–32; revised and retitled Katerina Izmaylova), marked a stylistic retreat. Yet even this more accessible musical language was too radical for the Soviet authorities.
- Katerina Izmaylova (opera by Shostakovich)
Dmitri Shostakovich: Early life and works: … (composed 1930–32; revised and retitled Katerina Izmaylova), marked a stylistic retreat. Yet even this more accessible musical language was too radical for the Soviet authorities.
- Katerynoslav (Ukraine)
Dnipro, city, south-central Ukraine. It lies along the Dnieper River, near its confluence with the Samara. The river was considerably widened by the construction of a dam about 50 miles (80 km) downstream. Founded in 1783 as Katerynoslav on the river’s north bank, the settlement was moved to its
- Kathā-saritsāgara (work by Somadeva)
Somadeva: Tawney, titled The Ocean of Story, was published in 1924–28. Somadeva wrote his monumental work during the two periods of Ananta’s interrupted rule, which ended in 1077.
- kathak (dance)
kathak, one of the main forms of classical dance-drama of India, other major ones being bharata natyam, kathakali, manipuri, kuchipudi, and odissi. Kathak is indigenous to northern India and developed under the influence of both Hindu and Muslim cultures. Kathak is characterized by intricate
- kathakali (dance)
kathakali, one of the main forms of classical dance-drama of India, other major ones being bharata natyam, kathak, manipuri, kuchipudi, and odissi. It is indigenous to southwestern India, particularly the state of Kerala, and is based on subject matter from the Ramayana, the Mahabharata, and
- Kathakata (religious recital)
West Bengal: Cultural life: The kathakata, a religious recital, is another traditional form of rural entertainment, based on folklore.
- Kathapurushan (film by Gopalakrishnan [1995])
Adoor Gopalakrishnan: Gopalakrishnan’s Kathapurushan (1995; “The Man of the Story”) examines the life of a communist activist from 1937 to 1980; it won the National Award for best film. In Shadow Kill, a hangman grapples with the knowledge that he executed an innocent man.
- Katharevousa
Katharevusa Greek language, a “purist” variety of modern Greek, which until 1976 was the official written language of Greece. Katharevusa was used in government and judiciary documents as well as in most newspapers and technical publications. In 1976 it was replaced by Demotic Greek as the official
- Katharevusa Greek language
Katharevusa Greek language, a “purist” variety of modern Greek, which until 1976 was the official written language of Greece. Katharevusa was used in government and judiciary documents as well as in most newspapers and technical publications. In 1976 it was replaced by Demotic Greek as the official
- Katharina (fictional character)
Katharina, the shrew of Shakespeare’s The Taming of the Shrew. The play revolves around Katharina’s transformation into the ideal
- Katharine (fictional character, “Henry VIII”)
Henry VIII: …the king’s reservations and Queen Katharine’s entreaties for justice and truth, Buckingham is convicted as a traitor on the basis of the false testimony of a dismissed servant. As he is taken away for execution, Buckingham conveys a prophetic warning to beware of false friends.
- Katharine (fictional character, “Love’s Labour’s Lost”)
Love’s Labour’s Lost: …three ladies (Rosaline, Maria, and Katharine), arrives on a diplomatic mission from the king of France and must therefore be admitted into Navarre’s park. The gentlemen soon discover that they are irresistibly attracted to the ladies. Their attempts at concealing their infatuations from one another are quickly exploded. Their next…
- Katharine, Queen (fictional character, “Henry VIII”)
Henry VIII: …the king’s reservations and Queen Katharine’s entreaties for justice and truth, Buckingham is convicted as a traitor on the basis of the false testimony of a dismissed servant. As he is taken away for execution, Buckingham conveys a prophetic warning to beware of false friends.
- katharsis (criticism)
catharsis, the purification or purgation of the emotions (especially pity and fear) primarily through art. In criticism, catharsis is a metaphor used by Aristotle in the Poetics to describe the effects of true tragedy on the spectator. The use is derived from the medical term katharsis (Greek:
- Kathavatthu (Buddhist text)
Moggaliputtatissa: …bce) and author of the Kathāvatthu (“Points of Controversy”). Included among the Pāli Abhidamma Piṭaka, the Kathāvatthu is a series of questions from a non-Theravāda point of view, with their implications refuted in the answers; the long first chapter debates the existence of a soul. Moggaliputtatissa is credited with ordaining…
- kathenotheism (religion)
polytheism: The nature of polytheism: …the 19th century the terms henotheism and kathenotheism were used to refer to the exalting of a particular god as exclusively the highest within the framework of a particular hymn or ritual—e.g., in the hymns of the Vedas (the ancient sacred texts of India). This process often consisted in loading…
- Katherine (Northern Territory, Australia)
Katherine, town, north-central Northern Territory, Australia. It lies along the Katherine River at the junction of the Victoria Highway and the Stuart Highway, approximately 170 miles (270 km) southeast of Darwin. The Katherine River was explored in 1862 by John McDouall Stuart, who named it for
- Katherine Gorge National Park (national park, Northern Territory, Australia)
Katherine: …National Park features the colourful Katherine Gorge, with walls of red and brown quartzite; it is located some 22 miles (35 km) northeast of the town. There are thermal springs in the town and at Mataranka, to the southeast. A Royal Australian Air Force base is located at Tindal, about…
- Katherine Group (English literary works)
Katherine Group, a group of five Middle English prose devotional works dating from c. 1180 to 1210. It consists of accounts of the lives of Saints Katherine, Margaret, and Juliana (found together in a single manuscript) and two treatises, “Hali Meidenhad” (“Holy Maidenhood”) and “Sawles Warde”
- Katherine Mansfield and Other Literary Portraits (work by Murry)
John Middleton Murry: …are studies of Mansfield (Katherine Mansfield and Other Literary Portraits, 1949) and Lawrence (Son of Woman, the Story of D.H. Lawrence, 1931), as well as several works on Keats. Murry’s autobiography, Between Two Worlds (1935), is strikingly revealing about his own life. A large selection of his letters to…
- Katherine Parr (queen of England)
Catherine Parr was the sixth and last wife of King Henry VIII of England (ruled 1509–47). Catherine was a daughter of Sir Thomas Parr of Kendall, an official of the royal household. She had been widowed twice—in marriages to Edward Borough (b. c. 1508–d. c. 1533) and to John Neville, Lord Latimer
- Katherine River (river, Northern Territory, Australia)
Katherine: It lies along the Katherine River at the junction of the Victoria Highway and the Stuart Highway, approximately 170 miles (270 km) southeast of Darwin.
- Katherine, Saint (Egyptian martyr)
St. Catherine of Alexandria ; feast day November 25) was one of the most popular early Christian martyrs and one of the Fourteen Holy Helpers (a group of Roman Catholic saints venerated for their power of intercession). She is the patron of philosophers and scholars and is believed to help protect
- Kathiawar Peninsula (peninsula, India)
Kathiawar Peninsula, peninsula in southwestern Gujarat state, west-central India. It is bounded by the Little Rann (marsh) of Kachchh (Kutch) to the north, the Gulf of Khambhat to the east, the Arabian Sea to the southwest, and the Gulf of Kachchh to the northwest. From the northeast an ancient
- kathina (Buddhist ceremony)
vassa: The lively kathina (“cloth”) ceremony, in which groups of laymen present gifts to the monks, takes place during the first month following the conclusion of vassa.
- Kathīrī (people)
Kathiri sultanate: The Kathīrī tribe dominated the Hadhramaut from about 1500 until the early 19th century, when the rising Quʿaiti sultanate challenged it. The British intervened on behalf of the latter, and the Kathīrī people were cut off from the seacoast under a treaty that was signed in…
- Kathiri sultanate (historical state, Yemen)
Kathiri sultanate, former semi-independent state in the southern Arabian Peninsula, in the inland Hadhramaut region now included in Yemen. The sultanate, with its capital at Saywūn (Sayʾūn), once extended from the Wadi Ḥaḍramawt, an intermittent stream, northward to the Rubʿ al-Khali, the vast
- Kathleen Mavourneen (film by Brabin [1919])
Theda Bara: (1917), Salome (1918), and Kathleen Mavourneen (1919). By the end of World War I, her popularity had declined. After an unsuccessful appearance on Broadway and an attempted Hollywood comeback, she retired from the screen in the late 1920s.
- Kathmandu (national capital, Nepal)
Kathmandu, capital of Nepal. It lies in a hilly region near the confluence of the Baghmati and Vishnumati rivers, at an elevation of 4,344 feet (1,324 metres) above sea level. It was founded in 723 by Raja Gunakamadeva. Its early name was Manju-Patan; the present name refers to a wooden temple
- Kathmandu Valley (valley, Nepal)
Himalayas: Geologic history: …Vale of Kashmir and the Kathmandu Valley of Nepal, lakes formed temporarily and then filled with Pleistocene deposits. After drying up some 200,000 years ago, the Kathmandu Valley rose at least 650 feet (200 metres), an indication of localized uplift within the Lesser Himalayas.
- Kathodi (people)
Rajasthan: Population composition: The Grasia and Kathodi also largely live in the south, mostly in the Mewar region. Sahariya communities are found in the southeast, and the Rabari, who traditionally are cattle breeders, live to the west of the Aravallis in west-central Rajasthan.
- katholikos (Greek religious title)
catholicos, (“universal” bishop), in Eastern Christian Churches, title of certain ecclesiastical superiors. In earlier times the designation had occasionally been used, like archimandrite and exarch, for a superior abbot; but the title eventually came to denote a bishop who, while head of a major
- Katholische Liga (Catholic military alliance)
Catholic League, a military alliance (1609–35) of the Catholic powers of Germany led by Maximilian I, duke of Bavaria, and designed to stem the growth of Protestantism in Germany. In alliance with the Habsburg emperors, the League’s forces, led by Johann Tserclaes, Graf von Tilly, played a key role
- katholou (philosophy)
Western philosophy: Philosophy: …transcendent Forms with something (katholou) corresponding to them that the human mind can grasp in individual things.
- Kathua (India)
Kathua, town, southwestern Jammu and Kashmir union territory, northern India. It is situated just west of the Ravi River and near the border with Punjab state, about 45 miles (72 km) southeast of Jammu. Kathua is a main population centre of a region bounded by Pakistan to the southwest, Punjab
- Kati Bihu (Indian culture)
Assam: Cultural life: The third Bihu festival, the Kati Bihu (in mid-October or November), is also called the Kangali Bihu (from kangali, meaning poor), because by this time of year the house of an ordinary family is without food grains, as the stock is usually consumed before the next harvest.
- Kati Thanda–Lake Eyre (lake, Australia)
Lake Eyre, great salt lake in central South Australia, with a total area of 4,281 square miles (11,088 square km). It lies in the southwestern corner of the Great Artesian Basin, a closed inland basin about 440,150 square miles (1,140,000 square km) in area that is drained only by intermittent
- Kati, Mahmud (African Muslim scholar)
Muḥammad I Askia: Organization of the Songhai empire: The chronicler Mahmud Kati, who accompanied Muḥammad, wrote in Taʾrīkh al-fattāsh that the jinn of Mecca had had Muḥammad named caliph and had told him what his rights were over the former vassal groups of the Sonnis. By the time he returned in 1497 or 1498, he…
- Katian Stage (stratigraphy)
Katian Stage, second of three internationally defined stages of the Upper Ordovician Series, encompassing all rocks deposited during the Katian Age (453 million to 445.2 million years ago) of the Ordovician Period. In 2006 the International Commission on Stratigraphy established the Global
- Kâtib Çelebî (Turkish historian)
Kâtip Çelebi was a Turkish historian, geographer, and bibliographer. Kâtip became an army clerk and took part in many campaigns in the east, meanwhile collecting material for his historical works. As a child he was taught the Qurʾān and Arabic grammar and calligraphy, but his later education was
- Kātib, al- (Muslim writer)
Arabic literature: The concept of adab: …epistle composition are associated with ʿAbd al-Ḥamīd, known as al-Kātib (“The Secretary”), who in the 8th century composed a work for the son of one of the Umayyad caliphs on the proper conduct of rulers.
- Katif, Al- (Saudi Arabia)
Qatif, town and oasis, Al-Sharqiyyah (Eastern) region, northeastern Saudi Arabia. It lies along the Persian Gulf, over Qatif petroleum field. Its population is predominantly Shiʿi Muslim, a fact which has led to some friction between the local population and the puritanical Wahhābī state,
- Katihar (India)
Katihar, city, eastern Bihar state, northeastern India. It is situated east of the Saura River, a tributary of the Ganges (Ganga) River, about 15 miles (25 km) north of the confluence of the two rivers. Katihar is a major road and rail junction with railway workshops and is engaged in agricultural