- Kurukh (people)
Oraon, aboriginal people of the Choṭa Nāgpur region in the state of Bihār, India. They call themselves Kurukh and speak a Dravidian language akin to Gondi and other tribal languages of central India. They once lived farther to the southwest on the Rohtās Plateau, but they were dislodged by other
- Kurukh language
Kurukh language, member of the North Dravidian subfamily of Dravidian languages. In the early 21st century, Kurukh was spoken by some 1.75 million people, predominantly in the Oraon tribes of the Chota Nagpur plateau of east-central India. Kurukh is also spoken in parts of Bangladesh. Lacking a
- Kuruksetra (India)
Kurukshetra, city, northeastern Haryana state, northwestern India. It is connected by road and rail with Delhi (south) and Amritsar (north). Kurukshetra’s urban area merges with Thanesar, an important Hindu pilgrimage centre. The city’s large reservoir is said to have been built by Raja Kuru, the
- Kurukshetra (India)
Kurukshetra, city, northeastern Haryana state, northwestern India. It is connected by road and rail with Delhi (south) and Amritsar (north). Kurukshetra’s urban area merges with Thanesar, an important Hindu pilgrimage centre. The city’s large reservoir is said to have been built by Raja Kuru, the
- Kuruman (South Africa)
Kuruman, town, Northern Cape province, South Africa. It is located in the northeastern corner of the province and is distantly southwest of Johannesburg. Originally a missionary station (1821), it later became an area of white settlement (town founded, 1885; incorporated, 1916). The town is chiefly
- Kurumba (people)
Kurumba, a people living in the Cardamom and Nīlgiri hills, west-central Tamil Nadu state, southern India. Originally pastoralists, the Kurumba were probably identical with or closely related to the Pallavas. With the decline of the Pallava dynasty in the 8th century, Kurumba forefathers dispersed
- Kurumba language
Dravidian languages: South Dravidian languages: Kota, Irula, and Kurumba—are spoken by Scheduled Tribes (officially recognized indigenous peoples) in the Nilgiri Hills of southwestern Tamil Nadu, near Karnataka. Badaga, a dialect of Kannada, is also spoken in the Nilgiri Hills.
- Kurume (Japan)
Kurume, city, southwestern Fukuoka ken (prefecture), northern Kyushu, Japan. It lies at the centre of the Tsukushi Plain, on the Chikugo River, just south of Tosu. Kurume was a castle town during the 17th century and a military centre from the late 19th century until World War II. The city is known
- Kurunda (ancient religion)
Anatolian religion: The pantheon: …the texts by the logogram KAL, to be read Kurunda or Tuwata, later Ruwata, Runda. The war god also appears, though his Hittite name is concealed behind the logogram ZABABA, the name of the Mesopotamian war god. His Hattian name was Wurunkatti, his Hurrian counterpart Hesui. His Hattian name meant…
- Kurunegala (Sri Lanka)
Kurunegala, town, west-central Sri Lanka. It is situated 25 miles (40 km) northwest of Kandy amid steep hills that were used as citadels during its early history. Kurunegala was the Sinhalese capital in the early 14th century, and later the town served as a way station between Kandy, the new
- Kurunta (Hittite ruler)
Anatolia: The Hittite empire to c. 1180 bce: Kurunta, another son of Muwatallis, was installed as Great King of a state centred on the city of Tarhuntassa, probably southwest of Konya, with equal status to the ruler of Carchemish; the city would have served as a base for operations farther west. This may…
- Kurvava Pesen (poem by Slaveykov)
Pencho Petkov Slaveykov: …known, his unfinished epic poem Kurvava Pesen (written 1911–12, published 1913; “Song of Blood”), which describes the sacrifices of the Bulgarian people in their struggle for independence. He continued to work on this poem for the rest of his career. Slaveykov was inspired especially by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Heinrich…
- Kurwa na Doto (work by Farsy)
Swahili literature: …Muhammed Saleh Farsy, whose novel Kurwa na Doto (1960; “Kurwa and Doto”) is a minor classic, and Muhammed Said Abdulla, whose first story of a series of detective adventures, Mzimu wa Watu wa Kale (1960; “Shrine of the Ancestors”), marked the beginning of a transition toward a Swahili fiction that…
- Kürwille (sociology)
Gemeinschaft and Gesellschaft: …the creation of Kürwille (rational will) and is typified by modern, cosmopolitan societies with their government bureaucracies and large industrial organizations. In the Gesellschaft, rational self-interest and calculating conduct act to weaken the traditional bonds of family, kinship, and religion that permeate the Gemeinschaft’s structure. In the Gesellschaft, human…
- Kuryłowicz, Jerzy (Polish linguist)
Jerzy Kuryłowicz was a Polish historical linguist who was one of the greatest 20th-century students of Indo-European languages. His identification of the source of the Hittite consonant ḫ in 1927 substantiated the existence of the laryngeals, Indo-European speech sounds postulated by the Swiss
- Kurys, Sophie (American baseball player)
All-American Girls Professional Baseball League: baseman Dorothy Kamenshek, second baseman Sophie Kurys, and pitcher Jean Faut. Televised major league baseball and lackadaisical promotion of AAGPBL games, however, led to the league’s demise in 1954.
- Kurz, Hermann (German writer)
Hermann Kurz was a German writer chiefly known for two powerful historical novels, Schillers Heimatjahre (1843; “Schiller’s Homeland Years”) and Der Sonnenwirt (1855; “The Proprietor of the Sun Inn”), both critical of the existing social order, and for his satirically humorous tales of Swabian life
- Kurz, Karl (physicist)
Heinrich Georg Barkhausen: In 1920 Barkhausen developed, with Karl Kurz, the Barkhausen-Kurz oscillator for ultrahigh frequencies (a forerunner of the microwave tube), which led to the understanding of the principle of velocity modulation. He is also known for experiments on shortwave radio transmissions.
- Kurz, Sebastian (Austrian politician)
Austria: Austria in the European Union: …Party, under telegenic new leader Sebastian Kurz, tacked hard right in the months prior to the election and embraced much of the Freedom Party’s anti-immigrant and anti-Muslim rhetoric. Kurz, who had served as foreign minister in the “grand coalition” government, revived the flagging fortunes of the mainstream conservative party, and…
- Kurzeme (historical region, Europe)
Courland, region on the Baltic seacoast, located south of the Western Dvina River and named after its inhabitants, the Latvian tribe of Curonians (Kurs, Cori, Cours; Latvian: Kursi). The duchy of Courland, formed in 1561, included this area as well as Semigallia (Zemgale), a region located east of
- Kurzeme (geographical region, Latvia)
Kurzeme, moraine region of western Latvia, roughly corresponding to the historic state of Courland (q.v.). Kurzeme is elevated slightly above the coastal plains of the Baltic Sea and the Gulf of Riga, which bound the moraine, and it rises to 604 feet (184 m) in the south. It is the source of many
- Kurzweil 250 (musical instrument)
electronic instrument: Sampling instruments; music workstations: …1984 Raymond Kurzweil introduced the Kurzweil 250, a keyboard-controlled instrument containing digitally encoded representations of grand piano, strings, and many other orchestral timbres. Both the Linn and the Kurzweil instruments were intended for composition as well as for performance, since they contained digital memories into which the musician could enter…
- Kurzweil, Ray (American computer scientist and futurist)
Ray Kurzweil is an American computer scientist and futurist who pioneered pattern-recognition technology and proselytized the inevitability of humanity’s merger with the technology it created. Kurzweil was raised in a secular Jewish family in Queens, New York. His parents fostered an early interest
- Kurzweil, Raymond (American computer scientist and futurist)
Ray Kurzweil is an American computer scientist and futurist who pioneered pattern-recognition technology and proselytized the inevitability of humanity’s merger with the technology it created. Kurzweil was raised in a secular Jewish family in Queens, New York. His parents fostered an early interest
- kus (measurement)
cubit, unit of linear measure used by many ancient and medieval peoples. It may have originated in Egypt about 3000 bc; it thereafter became ubiquitous in the ancient world. The cubit, generally taken as equal to 18 inches (457 mm), was based on the length of the arm from the elbow to the tip of
- kusa (grass)
ceremonial object: Plants and plant representations: …sacred plants, such as the kusha plant (a sacred grass used as fodder) of the Vedic sacrifice and the Brahmanic puja (ritual), are used in rituals such as the Zoroastrian sprinkling (bareshnum), or great purification, rite, in which the notion of fertility and prosperity is combined with their sacred characters…
- Kusadikika, a Country in the Sky (novel by Robert)
African literature: Swahili: …Kusadikika, nchi iliyo angani (1951; Kusadikika, a Country in the Sky), Adili na nduguze (1952; “Adili and His Brothers”), and Kufikirika (written in 1946, published posthumously in 1967). Adili and His Brothers is told largely by means of flashbacks. In Kusadikika a fantasy land is created. This largely didactic novel…
- Kusadikika, nchi iliyo angani (novel by Robert)
African literature: Swahili: …Kusadikika, nchi iliyo angani (1951; Kusadikika, a Country in the Sky), Adili na nduguze (1952; “Adili and His Brothers”), and Kufikirika (written in 1946, published posthumously in 1967). Adili and His Brothers is told largely by means of flashbacks. In Kusadikika a fantasy land is created. This largely didactic novel…
- Kusaie (island, Micronesia)
Kosrae, easternmost of the Caroline Islands, Federated States of Micronesia, western Pacific Ocean. Kosrae is volcanic in origin and hilly, rising to 2,064 feet (629 metres) at Mount Finkol (Crozier). Fertile and well-watered, Kosrae produces taro, oranges, breadfruit, and bananas and has valuable
- Kusajātaka (work by Alagiyavanna Mahoṭṭāla)
South Asian arts: Sinhalese literature: 10th century ad to 19th century: …notable of which is the Kusajātaka, 687 stanzas of epigrams and exempla by the 17th-century poet Alagiyavanna Mohoṭṭāla.
- Kusakabe Kimbei (Japanese photographer)
history of photography: Development of the daguerreotype: Marc Ferrez in Brazil, Kusakabe Kimbei in Japan, the (French-born) Bonfils family in Lebanon, and Kassian Céphas in Indonesia were among the international photographers who set up studios to supply portraits and views during this period.
- Kusama, Yayoi (Japanese artist)
Yayoi Kusama is a Japanese artist who is a self-described “obsessional artist,” known for her extensive use of polka dots and for her infinity installations. She employed painting, sculpture, performance art, and installations in a variety of styles, including Pop art and Minimalism. By her own
- kusamaki (tree)
yellowwood: …all native to New Zealand; kusamaki, or broad-leaved podocarpus (P. macrophyllus), of China and Japan; real yellowwood (P. latifolius), South African yellowwood (P. elongatus), and common yellowwood (P. falcatus) of southern Africa; plum-fir, or plum-fruited, yew (P. andinus) and willowleaf podocarpus, or
- Kusana art
Kushan art, art produced during the Kushan dynasty from about the late 1st to the 3rd century ce in an area that now includes parts of Central Asia, northern India, Pakistan, and Afghanistan. The Kushans fostered a mixed culture that is best illustrated by the variety of deities—Greco-Roman,
- Kusana dynasty (Asian dynasty)
Kushan dynasty, ruling line descended from the Yuezhi, a people that ruled over most of the northern Indian subcontinent, Afghanistan, and parts of Central Asia during the first three centuries of the Common Era. The Yuezhi conquered Bactria in the 2nd century bce and divided the country into five
- Kusanagi (Japanese mythology)
Kusanagi, (Japanese: “Grass-Mower”), in Japanese mythology, the miraculous sword that the sun goddess Amaterasu gave to her grandson Ninigi when he descended to earth to become ruler of Japan, thus establishing the divine link between the imperial house and the sun. The sword, along with the mirror
- Kusapura (Uttar Pradesh, India)
Sultanpur, city, central Uttar Pradesh state, northern India. It is located on the Gomati River, about 35 miles (55 km) south of Faizabad and 80 miles (130 km) southeast of Lucknow. Sultanpur has existed since ancient times. It was destroyed and rebuilt repeatedly before passing under the rule of
- Kusaylah (Awrāba Berber chief)
North Africa: From the Arab conquest to 1830: …prevailed on the Berber “king” Kusaylah to become Muslim. From his base in Tlemcen, Kusaylah dominated a confederation of the Awrāba tribes living between the western Aurès Mountains and the area of present-day Fès. Since Kusaylah’s profession of Islam implied his recognition of caliphal authority, it served as a basis…
- Kusch, Polykarp (American physicist)
Polykarp Kusch was a German-American physicist who, with Willis E. Lamb, Jr., was awarded the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1955 for his accurate determination that the magnetic moment of the electron is greater than its theoretical value, thus leading to reconsideration of and innovations in quantum
- kuse-mai (Japanese dance)
theatre: Japan: …combined the sarugaku elements with kuse-mai, a story dance that uses both movements and words. Soon dengaku elements were added, and the distinctive Nō style slowly emerged. Like the Zen ways of tea ceremony, ink drawing, and other arts, Nō suggests the essence of an event or an experience within…
- Kusevitsky, Sergey Aleksandrovich (American conductor)
Serge Koussevitzky was a Russian-born American conductor and publisher, a champion of modern music who commissioned and performed many important new works. Koussevitzky studied the double bass in Moscow, becoming a virtuoso, and in Russia, Germany, and England gave recitals at which he played his
- KUSF (American radio station)
KUSF and college radio: College radio stations—once considered little more than laboratories for students who had chosen broadcasting as an avocation—came to play an important gatekeeping role in the development of rock music beginning in the 1970s, in the aftermath of free-form FM rock radio and on the eve…
- KUSF and college radio
College radio stations—once considered little more than laboratories for students who had chosen broadcasting as an avocation—came to play an important gatekeeping role in the development of rock music beginning in the 1970s, in the aftermath of free-form FM rock radio and on the eve of the punk
- Kush (region and kingdoms of ancient Nubia, Africa)
Kush, the southern portion of the ancient region known as
- Kusha (Buddhism)
Kusha, Buddhist school of philosophy introduced into Japan from China during the Nara period (710–784). The school takes its name from its authoritative text, the Abidatsuma-kusha-ron(Sanskrit:Abhidharma-kośa; q.v.), by the 4th- or 5th-century Indian philosopher Vasubandhu. This text sets forth the
- kusha (grass)
ceremonial object: Plants and plant representations: …sacred plants, such as the kusha plant (a sacred grass used as fodder) of the Vedic sacrifice and the Brahmanic puja (ritual), are used in rituals such as the Zoroastrian sprinkling (bareshnum), or great purification, rite, in which the notion of fertility and prosperity is combined with their sacred characters…
- Kusha (Hindu mythology)
Sita: …birth to their two children, Kusha and Lava. After they reached maturity and were acknowledged by Rama to be his sons, she called upon her mother, Earth, to swallow her up.
- Kushān (people)
Central Asian arts: Kushān: The Kushāns replaced the Greeks in Bactria about 130 bce. They are thought to have been of Yüeh-chih stock with a strong admixture of Hephthalites, Śaka, and Tocharian. One branch of this group migrated to the Tarim Basin and founded a short-lived empire, while…
- Kushan art
Kushan art, art produced during the Kushan dynasty from about the late 1st to the 3rd century ce in an area that now includes parts of Central Asia, northern India, Pakistan, and Afghanistan. The Kushans fostered a mixed culture that is best illustrated by the variety of deities—Greco-Roman,
- Kushan dynasty (Asian dynasty)
Kushan dynasty, ruling line descended from the Yuezhi, a people that ruled over most of the northern Indian subcontinent, Afghanistan, and parts of Central Asia during the first three centuries of the Common Era. The Yuezhi conquered Bactria in the 2nd century bce and divided the country into five
- Kushān Pass (mountain pass, Asia)
Hindu Kush: Study and exploration: …Timur; the second was the Kushān Pass (slightly to the west of the present-day Sālang road tunnel), which Alexander crossed southward; and the third was the Kipchak Pass, used by Genghis Khan in the early 13th century and by Bābur in 1504.
- Kushana dynasty (Asian dynasty)
Kushan dynasty, ruling line descended from the Yuezhi, a people that ruled over most of the northern Indian subcontinent, Afghanistan, and parts of Central Asia during the first three centuries of the Common Era. The Yuezhi conquered Bactria in the 2nd century bce and divided the country into five
- Kushbhawanpur (Uttar Pradesh, India)
Sultanpur, city, central Uttar Pradesh state, northern India. It is located on the Gomati River, about 35 miles (55 km) south of Faizabad and 80 miles (130 km) southeast of Lucknow. Sultanpur has existed since ancient times. It was destroyed and rebuilt repeatedly before passing under the rule of
- Kushiro (Japan)
Kushiro, city, eastern Hokkaido, northern Japan. It is situated along both banks of the Kushiro River where that river empties into the Pacific Ocean. The city was first settled by 537 Japanese immigrants in 1870. The natural harbour of the river mouth has since been developed into the largest
- Kushite dynasty (ancient Egyptian history)
Kassala: …control of the 25th, or Kushite, Egyptian dynasty. The Kushites were later conquered by the kingdom of Aksum (Axum), and the people were largely Christianized. There were Muslim raids into the region during the Mamlūk dynasty of Egypt (reigned 1250–1517). The people were converted to Islam in the early 16th…
- Kushk River (river, Asia)
Kushk River, river in Afghanistan and Turkmenistan, formed by the confluence of two headstreams, the Āq Robāţ and the Galleh Chaghar, which rise in northwestern Afghanistan. The river flows northwestward, passing the town of Koshk-e Kohneh (Kushk), where it turns north and receives the waters of
- Kushka River (river, Asia)
Kushk River, river in Afghanistan and Turkmenistan, formed by the confluence of two headstreams, the Āq Robāţ and the Galleh Chaghar, which rise in northwestern Afghanistan. The river flows northwestward, passing the town of Koshk-e Kohneh (Kushk), where it turns north and receives the waters of
- Kushner, Jared (American businessman)
Steve Bannon: Association with Trump: …members, most notably senior adviser Jared Kushner (Trump’s son-in-law) and national security adviser H.R. McMaster. Criticism of Bannon from outside the administration grew louder after Trump responded slowly to and then blamed “both sides” for the death of a counterprotester at a demonstration by white nationalists, white supremacists, and neo-Nazis…
- Kushner, Tony (American dramatist)
Tony Kushner is an American dramatist who became one of the most highly acclaimed playwrights of his generation after the debut of his two-part play Angels in America (1990, 1991). Kushner grew up in Lake Charles, Louisiana, and attended Columbia University and New York University. His early plays
- Kushshar (ancient city, Turkey)
Anatolia: The Hittite occupation of Anatolia: …concerns two semilegendary kings of Kussara (Kushshar) named Pitkhanas and Anittas. The city called Kussara has yet to be identified, but the text gives an impressive list of cities that Pitkhanas had conquered, and among them appears the name of Nesa, which his son, Anittas, subsequently adopted as his capital.…
- Kushtia (Bangladesh)
Kushtia, city, west-central Bangladesh. It lies just south of the upper Padma River (Ganges [Ganga] River). The city is connected by rail with Saidpur and Kolkata (Calcutta; in India) and is a trade centre, containing cotton-textile and sugar mills and a pottery cottage industry. Kushtia has
- Kushuh (god)
Kushukh, the Hurrian moon god. In the Hurrian pantheon, Kushukh was regularly placed above the sun god, Shimegi; his consort was Niggal (the Sumero-Akkadian Ningal). His home was said to be the city of Kuzina (location unknown), and his cult was later adopted by the Hittites. As Lord of the Oath he
- Kushukh (god)
Kushukh, the Hurrian moon god. In the Hurrian pantheon, Kushukh was regularly placed above the sun god, Shimegi; his consort was Niggal (the Sumero-Akkadian Ningal). His home was said to be the city of Kuzina (location unknown), and his cult was later adopted by the Hittites. As Lord of the Oath he
- Kushva (Russia)
Kushva, city, Sverdlovsk oblast (region), western Russia, at the foot of Mount Blagodat. Founded in 1735 after the discovery of iron-ore deposits on the mountain, it became a town in 1926, and until the 1950s open-pit mines were still in operation. Ore extraction is now conducted underground, and
- Kusi ’Inka Yupanki (Inca emperor)
Pachacuti Inca Yupanqui was an Inca emperor (1438–71), an empire builder who, because he initiated the swift, far-ranging expansion of the Inca state, has been likened to Philip II of Macedonia. (Similarly, his son Topa Inca Yupanqui is regarded as a counterpart of Philip’s son Alexander III the
- Kusinska, Beata Maria (prime minister of Poland)
Beata Szydło is a Polish politician who became prime minister of Poland after the Law and Justice (Prawo i Sprawiedliwość; PiS) party won an absolute majority in the Sejm (legislature) in the October 2015 national election. Szydło served as prime minister until December 2017, when she was replaced
- Kusiyara (river, Asia)
Surma River: …the Surma (north) and the Kusiyara (south), which enter Bangladesh and turn southwest. The Surma flows past Sylhet in a rich tea-growing valley, while the Kusiyara subdivides into two more branches, both of which rejoin the Surma. At Bhairab Bazar, in east-central Bangladesh, the river enters the Old Brahmaputra and…
- Kuske, Kevin (German bobsledder)
André Lange: Sliding with longtime brakeman Kevin Kuske in the two-man, the duo’s split time slipped to fourth overall in the second heat, but the pair rallied, overtook the lead in the third heat, and did well enough in the fourth heat to win. In the four-man race, Lange, with teammates…
- Kuskerite (geology)
oil shale, any sedimentary rock containing various amounts of solid organic material that yields petroleum products, along with a variety of solid by-products, when subjected to pyrolysis—a treatment that consists of heating the rock to above 300 °C (about 575 °F) in the absence of oxygen. The
- Kuskokwim Mountains (mountains, Alaska, United States)
Alaskan mountains: Physiography of the central ranges: …several smaller groups, notably the Kuskokwim Mountains. Those ranges are somewhat lower and more rolling than the eastern highlands, with ridges trending southwest-northeast. Numerous isolated, nearly circular groups of mountains rise above the ridges. The bedrock includes tightly folded Paleozoic and Mesozoic sediments and volcanics and Cenozoic (i.e., formed in…
- Kuskokwim River (river, United States)
Alaskan mountains: Physiography of the central ranges: …systems, the Yukon and the Kuskokwim. The intricately dissected uplands are divided into three areas: the eastern highlands, the western highlands, and the Seward Peninsula. The great sweep of ranges extends south of the Yukon from the Canadian border to the Bering Sea; north of the river the ranges are…
- Kuskova, Yekaterina (Russian politician)
Yekaterina Kuskova was a Russian political figure and publicist who opposed the Bolshevik government. Becoming involved in radical activities in the mid-1890s, Kuskova wrote the Credo, a manifesto for the revisionist Marxist school called economism, earning the condemnation of Vladimir Lenin and
- Kuskova, Yekaterina Dmitriyevna (Russian politician)
Yekaterina Kuskova was a Russian political figure and publicist who opposed the Bolshevik government. Becoming involved in radical activities in the mid-1890s, Kuskova wrote the Credo, a manifesto for the revisionist Marxist school called economism, earning the condemnation of Vladimir Lenin and
- Kuskovo (estate, Russia)
Moscow: Outer Moscow: …side of the city is Kuskovo, once the estate of the Sheremetyev family, one of the wealthiest and most powerful families in Russia; its palace, built in the 1770s, houses a church, hermitage, and Baroque grotto. To the south is the Uzkoe mansion, formerly belonging to the Trubetskoy family; to…
- Kusnasosro (president of Indonesia)
Sukarno was the leader of the Indonesian independence movement and Indonesia’s first president (1949–66), who suppressed the country’s original parliamentary system in favour of an authoritarian “Guided Democracy” and who attempted to balance the Communists against the army leaders. He was deposed
- Kuspit, Donald (American art critic and historian)
Donald Kuspit is an American art critic and art historian widely regarded as the foremost practitioner of psychoanalytic art criticism. After receiving doctorates in philosophy (University of Frankfurt) and art history (University of Michigan), Kuspit began a career as an art critic in the 1970s,
- Kussara (ancient city, Turkey)
Anatolia: The Hittite occupation of Anatolia: …concerns two semilegendary kings of Kussara (Kushshar) named Pitkhanas and Anittas. The city called Kussara has yet to be identified, but the text gives an impressive list of cities that Pitkhanas had conquered, and among them appears the name of Nesa, which his son, Anittas, subsequently adopted as his capital.…
- Kustanai (Kazakhstan)
Qostanay, city, northern Kazakhstan, on the Tobyl River. Founded by Russian settlers from the Volga region in 1879, it became a centre of trade in the Steppe, particularly in grain, a role that was enhanced by the construction of a branch railway in 1913. Qostanay was made an administrative centre
- Kustanay (Kazakhstan)
Qostanay, city, northern Kazakhstan, on the Tobyl River. Founded by Russian settlers from the Volga region in 1879, it became a centre of trade in the Steppe, particularly in grain, a role that was enhanced by the construction of a branch railway in 1913. Qostanay was made an administrative centre
- Küstendil (Bulgaria)
Kyustendil, town, southwestern Bulgaria. It lies on the margin of a small alluvial basin in the Struma River valley at the foot of the Osogov Mountains. It was known in Roman times as Pautalia, or Ulpia Pautalia. Located on the site of a Thracian fortified settlement, it became an important town
- Kūstī (Sudan)
Kūstī, city, southern Sudan. It lies on the west bank of the White Nile River about 65 miles (105 km) south of Al-Duwaym. Its basic agricultural economy is augmented by light manufacturing. The Kosti bridge, 4 miles (6 km) upstream from Kūstī, provides a railway connection with Al-Ubayyiḍ to the
- kusti (religious dress)
ceremonial object: Objects used in rites of passage: …world, a sacred cord (Pahlavi kushti; Sanskrit yajnopavita) is the mark of initiation; in Iran and among the Parsis (Zoroastrians in India), the kushti is wound around the torso, and in India the yajnopavita is passed diagonally from shoulder to waist. Among the Parsis, including the women, the cord is…
- Kusturica, Emir (Bosnian-born Serbian director, screenwriter, actor, and producer)
Emir Kusturica is a Bosnian-born Serbian motion picture director, screenwriter, actor, and producer who was one of the most-distinguished European filmmakers since the mid-1980s, best known for surreal and naturalistic movies that express deep sympathies for people from the margins. Kusturica, who
- Kusumi Morikage (Japanese painter)
Kusumi Morikage was a Japanese painter of the early Tokugawa period (1603–1867) who excelled in painting farmers and common people. Little is known of Kusumi’s life, but a number of his paintings are extant, of which “Enjoying the Evening Cool Under a Gourd Trellis” and “Landscape Screen Depicting
- Kusunoki Masashige (Japanese warrior)
Kusunoki Masashige was one of the greatest military strategists in Japanese history. Kusunoki’s unselfish devotion and loyalty to the emperor have made him a legendary figure; after the imperial restoration of 1868, a splendid shrine was erected to him on the site of his death. The head of a small
- Kusuo, Kitamura (Japanese swimmer)
Los Angeles 1932 Olympic Games: Kitamura Kusuo, who won the gold medal in the 1,500-meter freestyle at age 14, became the youngest male swimmer ever to win an Olympic event. American women dominated in swimming, taking four of the five gold medals; Helene Madison won gold medals in the 100-…
- Kušva (Russia)
Kushva, city, Sverdlovsk oblast (region), western Russia, at the foot of Mount Blagodat. Founded in 1735 after the discovery of iron-ore deposits on the mountain, it became a town in 1926, and until the 1950s open-pit mines were still in operation. Ore extraction is now conducted underground, and
- kut (Korean ritual)
kut, trance ritual in Korean religion. See
- Kūt al-‘Amārah (Iraq)
Al-Kūt, city, capital of Wāsiṭ muḥāfaẓah (governorate), eastern Iraq. It lies along the Tigris River about 100 miles (160 km) southeast of Baghdad. A relatively new city, Al-Kūt serves as a river port and agricultural centre for nearby farms. It is best known as the site of a notable British defeat
- Kūt Barrage (dam, Iraq)
Al-Kūt: …the surrounding area, where the Kūt Barrage diverts river water into irrigation canals. Al-Kūt’s prosperity has always depended on the Tigris River’s course changes. Following a period of decline, the city revived when the present river system became established, making Al-Kūt a river port. Pop. (2002 est.) 380,000.
- Kūt, Al- (Iraq)
Al-Kūt, city, capital of Wāsiṭ muḥāfaẓah (governorate), eastern Iraq. It lies along the Tigris River about 100 miles (160 km) southeast of Baghdad. A relatively new city, Al-Kūt serves as a river port and agricultural centre for nearby farms. It is best known as the site of a notable British defeat
- Kutafya Tower (tower, Moscow, Russia)
Moscow: The Kremlin of Moscow: …bridge and outer barbican (the Kutafya Tower), and the Borovitskaya Tower—rise from the western wall.
- Kütahya (Turkey)
Kütahya, city, western Turkey. It lies along the Porsuk River, at the foot of a hill crowned by a ruined medieval castle. Kütahya, known as Cotyaeum in antiquity, lay on the great road from the Marmara region to the Mesopotamian plains; the town flourished and declined according to the changing
- Kütahya, Convention of (Turkish history)
Battle of Nizip: The Convention of Kütahya (1833) that had awarded the Ottomans’ Syrian provinces and Adana to Muḥammad ʿAlī was not satisfactory to either party, and a new war developed. The Ottoman army was decisively defeated at Nizip by Egyptian forces under Muḥammad ʿAlī’s son Ibrāhīm, and the…
- Kutai River (river, Indonesia)
Mahakam River, river of east-central Indonesian Borneo (Kalimantan). It rises in Borneo’s central mountain range and flows east-southeast through southern East Kalimantan province for about 400 miles (650 km) before emptying into Makassar Strait in a wide delta. The chief town along its course is
- Kutaisi (Georgia)
Kutaisi, city, west-central Georgia. It lies along the Rioni River where the latter emerges from the Caucasian foothills into a lowland. One of the oldest cities of Transcaucasia, it served at various periods as the capital of successive kingdoms in Georgia: Colchis, Iberia (Kartli), Abkhazia, and
- Kutāma (Berber tribe)
North Africa: The Fāṭimids and Zīrids: …Allāh al-Shīʿī, operated among the Kutāma of the Little Kabylia region in eastern Algeria from 901. The sedentary Kutāma were pious and unsophisticated Muslim Berbers living in small village communities. Aghlabid rule in the region was represented by fortified garrison posts manned by Arab troops, by whom the Kutāma were…
- Kutang I (mountain, Nepal)
Manāslu I, one of the world’s highest mountains (26,781 feet [8,163 m]); it lies in the Himalayas of north Nepal, 38 miles (61 km) north of the town of Gurkha. The summit of this snow- and glacier-covered peak was first reached on May 9 and 11, 1956, by two separate Japanese
- Kutani ware (Japanese porcelain)
Kutani ware, Japanese porcelain made in Kaga province (now in Ishikawa prefecture). The name “Old Kutani” refers to porcelain decorated with heavily applied overglaze enamels and produced in the Kaga mountain village of Kutani. The powerful Maeda family had established a kiln there by 1656. The
- Kutaradja (city, Indonesia)
Banda Aceh, kota (city), capital of the autonomous Aceh daerah istimewa (special district; with provincial status), Indonesia. It is located on the Aceh River at the northwestern tip of the island of Sumatra, facing the Andaman Sea. Banda Aceh is known as the “doorway to Mecca,” for historically it