- Shaushshatar (Mitanni king)
history of Mesopotamia: The Hurrian and Mitanni kingdoms: …domain of the Mitanni king Saustatar (Saushatar) stretched from the Mediterranean all the way to the northern Zagros Mountains, in western Iran, including Alalakh, in northern Syria, as well as Nuzi, Kurrukhanni, and Arrapkha. The northern boundary dividing Mitanni from the Hittites and the other Hurrian states was never fixed,…
- Shavante (people)
Xavante, Brazilian Indian group speaking Xavante, a language of the Macro-Ge language family. The Xavante, who numbered about 10,000 in the early 21st century, live in the southeastern corner of Mato Grosso state, between the Rio das Mortes and the Araguaia River, in a region of upland savannah
- Shavers, Cheryl L. (American chemist and engineer)
Cheryl L. Shavers is an American chemist and engineer who sought to bring her knowledge of science and technology to the business world; from 1999 to 2001 she served as undersecretary of commerce for technology at the U.S. Department of Commerce. In addition, as a Black woman, she built a
- Shavers, Cheryl Lynn (American chemist and engineer)
Cheryl L. Shavers is an American chemist and engineer who sought to bring her knowledge of science and technology to the business world; from 1999 to 2001 she served as undersecretary of commerce for technology at the U.S. Department of Commerce. In addition, as a Black woman, she built a
- Shavers, Earnie (American boxer)
Jerry Quarry: …to beat Ron Lyle and Earnie Shavers, but he was knocked out by Frazier in five rounds. Following a defeat by Ken Norton in 1975, Quarry announced his retirement, but he was unable to resist the lure of the ring. He returned briefly in 1977 and in 1983—the same year…
- Shavgar (Kazakhstan)
Turkestan, city, southern Kazakhstan. It lies in the Syr Darya (ancient Jaxartes River) plain. Turkestan was an ancient centre of the caravan trade; it was known as Shavgar and later as Yasī. It became a religious centre called Khazret (Hazrat) because of the 12th-century Sufi (Muslim mystic) Ahmed
- shaving (grooming)
razor: shaving or cutting hair. Prehistoric cave drawings show that clam shells, shark’s teeth, and sharpened flints were used as shaving implements. Solid gold and copper razors have been found in Egyptian tombs of the 4th millennium bce. According to the Roman historian Livy, the razor…
- Shaving of Shagpat: An Arabian Entertainment, The (work by Meredith)
George Meredith: Beginnings as poet and novelist.: …prose, writing a fantasy entitled The Shaving of Shagpat: An Arabian Entertainment, published in 1855. Original in conception but imitative of The Arabian Nights in manner, it baffled most readers, who did not know whether to regard it as allegory or fairy tale. But the most perceptive of the critics,…
- Shavit (Israeli launch vehicle)
Shavit, Israeli launch vehicle. Shavit (Hebrew for “comet”) is a small three-stage solid-fueled rocket, first launched in 1988. It was based on the Jericho 2 ballistic missile. Because of its geographic location and hostile relations with surrounding countries, Israel must launch its vehicles to
- Shavshetsky (mountains, Georgia)
Ajaria: Geography: … in the north and the Shavshetsky in the south, rise from the Black Sea coastal lowlands to more than 9,200 feet (2,800 metres). Between the ranges lies the Ajaristskali River valley, which is closed at the eastern end by a third range, the Arsiyan Mountains. The coastal lowland area, which…
- Shavuot (Judaism)
Shavuot, (“Festival of the Weeks”), second of the three Pilgrim Festivals of the Jewish religious calendar. It was originally an agricultural festival, marking the beginning of the wheat harvest. During the Temple period, the first fruits of the harvest were brought to the Temple, and two loaves of
- Shavuoth (Judaism)
Shavuot, (“Festival of the Weeks”), second of the three Pilgrim Festivals of the Jewish religious calendar. It was originally an agricultural festival, marking the beginning of the wheat harvest. During the Temple period, the first fruits of the harvest were brought to the Temple, and two loaves of
- Shaw (neighborhood, Washington, District of Columbia, United States)
Washington, D.C.: Adams-Morgan and beyond: East of Adams-Morgan are the Shaw and U Street neighbourhoods, once known as “Black Broadway” and where Duke Ellington grew up and first played jazz. Farther east, LeDroit Park is the home of Howard University. LeDroit Park developed as a wealthy all-white enclave enclosed by a fence that was torn…
- Shaw alphabet
English language: Orthography: …for different purposes: (1) the Initial Teaching (Augmented Roman) Alphabet (ITA) of 44 letters used by some educationists in the 1970s and ’80s in the teaching of children under age seven; (2) the Shaw alphabet of 48 letters, designed in the implementation of the will of George Bernard Shaw; and…
- Shaw v. Reno (law case)
Shaw v. Reno, legal case in which the U.S. Supreme Court ruled (5–4) on June 28, 1993, that electoral districts whose boundaries cannot be adequately explained except as examples of racial gerrymandering, or efforts to segregate voters on the basis of race, can be challenged as potential violations
- Shaw’s Garden (garden, Saint Louis, Missouri, United States)
Missouri Botanical Garden, botanical garden in St. Louis, Mo., U.S. It is most notable for its Climatron, a geodesic-dome greenhouse in which 1,200 species of plants are grown under computer-controlled conditions simulating a rainforest. The 79-acre (32-hectare) garden also has the largest
- Shaw, Alfred P. (architect)
Merchandise Mart: History: …& White under chief architect Alfred P. Shaw. Construction began on Aug. 16, 1928, and the building opened on May 5, 1930. The Mart housed Field’s wholesale showrooms and manufacturing facilities and leased floor space to retail tenants. Amenities included restaurants, parking facilities, a bank, a post office, and a…
- Shaw, Anna Howard (American minister)
Anna Howard Shaw was an American minister, lecturer, and, with Susan B. Anthony, one of the chief leaders of the National American Woman Suffrage Association. Shaw moved with her parents to the United States from her native England in 1851. She grew up from 1859 on an isolated frontier farm near
- Shaw, Artie (American musician)
Artie Shaw was an American clarinetist and popular bandleader of the 1930s and ’40s. He was one of the few outstanding jazz musicians whose commitment to jazz was uncertain. Shaw began playing in high school and turned professional in 1925. The first signs of indecision became apparent in the early
- Shaw, Bernard (American journalist)
Bernard Shaw was an American television journalist and the first chief anchor for the Cable News Network (CNN). Shaw’s childhood heroes included newsman Edward R. Murrow, whose television broadcasts inspired Shaw to pursue a career in journalism. He became an avid reader of newspapers in his
- Shaw, C. H. (American machinist)
drilling machinery: Shaw, a Denver machinist, before 1890. Cuttings dropped out by gravity. This machine was called a stoper when it was used in Colorado and California mines. A pneumatic feed held the machine in place and fed the steel into the rock. These two developments, hammering…
- Shaw, Clifford (American psychologist)
criminology: Action research: …perhaps most successful example was Clifford Shaw’s Chicago Area Project, carried out during the 1920s and ’30s, which applied the ecological theories of University of Chicago sociologists Robert Park and Ernest Burgess in an attempt to motivate local residents to deal with the social problems of their neighbourhoods.
- Shaw, Frank L. (American politician)
Los Angeles: The 1920s and ’30s: …a recall movement against Mayor Frank L. Shaw and his close associates. Police misconduct and the mayor’s mishandling of public funds forced Shaw from office and led to the election of reform mayor Fletcher Bowron in 1938.
- Shaw, George Bernard (Irish dramatist and critic)
George Bernard Shaw was an Irish comic dramatist, literary critic, and socialist propagandist, winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1925. (Read George Bernard Shaw’s 1926 Britannica essay on socialism.) George Bernard Shaw was the third and youngest child (and only son) of George Carr Shaw
- Shaw, Helen (American fishing enthusiast)
fly-fishing: Modern fly-fishing: …of fly patterns in 1892; Helen Shaw introduced innovative fly-tying techniques during the 1940s and ’50s; and Joan Salvato Wulff was one of the world’s finest casters, setting many records in the 1950s and ’60s, as well as being a noted writer on the subject.
- Shaw, Henry Wheeler (American humorist)
Josh Billings was an American humorist whose philosophical comments in plain language were widely popular after the American Civil War through his newspaper pieces, books, and comic lectures. He employed the misspellings, fractured grammar, and hopeless logic then current among comic writers who
- Shaw, Irwin (American author)
Irwin Shaw was a prolific American playwright, screenwriter, and author of critically acclaimed short stories and best-selling novels. Shaw studied at Brooklyn College (B.A., 1934) and at age 21 began his career by writing the scripts of the popular Andy Gump and Dick Tracy radio shows. He wrote
- Shaw, Jane (American businesswoman)
Intel: Expansion and other developments: …2005, and four years later Jane Shaw replaced Barrett as chairman. She held the post until 2012, when she was succeeded by Andy Bryant. The following year Brian Krzanich became CEO. In 2019 chief financial officer Bob Swan became CEO, and Intel ranked 43 on the Fortune 500 list of…
- Shaw, Josephine (American social worker)
Josephine Shaw Lowell was an American charity worker and social reformer, an advocate of the doctrine that charity should not merely relieve suffering but that it should also rehabilitate the recipient. She was born to wealthy Bostonians who numbered among their friends such well-known figures as
- Shaw, Joshua (American inventor)
small arm: Percussion ignition: …caps (attributed to the Philadelphian Joshua Shaw in 1815) were becoming the accepted system for igniting firearm powder charges. A percussion cap was a truncated cone of metal (preferably copper) that contained a small amount of fulminate of mercury inside its crown, protected by foil and shellac. This cap was…
- Shaw, Lemuel (American jurist)
Lemuel Shaw was the chief justice of the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts (1830–60), who left an indelible mark on the law of that state and significantly contributed to the structure of American law. Shaw was educated at Harvard, studied law privately, was admitted to the bar in 1804 in New
- Shaw, Norman (British architect)
Norman Shaw was a British architect and urban designer important for his residential architecture and for his role in the English Domestic Revival movement. After an apprenticeship to William Burn, Shaw attended the architectural school of the Royal Academy of Arts in London. He subsequently
- Shaw, Patricia Campbell Hearst (American heiress)
Patty Hearst is an heiress of the William Randolph Hearst newspaper empire who was kidnapped in 1974 by leftist radicals called the Symbionese Liberation Army, whom she under duress joined in robbery and extortion. The third of five daughters of Randolph A. Hearst, she attended private schools in
- Shaw, Richard Norman (British architect)
Norman Shaw was a British architect and urban designer important for his residential architecture and for his role in the English Domestic Revival movement. After an apprenticeship to William Burn, Shaw attended the architectural school of the Royal Academy of Arts in London. He subsequently
- Shaw, Richard Norman (British architect)
Norman Shaw was a British architect and urban designer important for his residential architecture and for his role in the English Domestic Revival movement. After an apprenticeship to William Burn, Shaw attended the architectural school of the Royal Academy of Arts in London. He subsequently
- Shaw, Robert (American conductor)
Robert Shaw was an American choral and orchestral conductor. Shaw graduated in 1938 from Pomona College, Claremont, California, where he directed the Glee Club. In 1941 he founded the Collegiate Chorale in New York and led it until 1954. He was director of the choral departments of the Berkshire
- Shaw, Robert (British actor, novelist and playwright)
Robert Shaw was an English actor, novelist, and playwright who first garnered attention for his performances in Shakespearean plays before launching a successful film career. Shaw began his career with the Shakespeare Memorial Theatre, Stratford-upon-Avon, where he performed in Macbeth, Cymbeline,
- Shaw, Robert Gould (Union army officer)
Robert Gould Shaw was a Union army officer who commanded a prominent regiment of African American troops during the American Civil War. Shaw was born into an immensely wealthy Boston family. His merchant father retired from business to take up translating literature and moved his family to West
- Shaw, Robert Lawson (American conductor)
Robert Shaw was an American choral and orchestral conductor. Shaw graduated in 1938 from Pomona College, Claremont, California, where he directed the Glee Club. In 1941 he founded the Collegiate Chorale in New York and led it until 1954. He was director of the choral departments of the Berkshire
- Shaw, Sir Napier (British meteorologist)
Sir Napier Shaw was an English meteorologist whose introduction of the millibar, a unit of measurement of air pressure, and the tephigram, a graphical representation of the first law of thermodynamics as applied to Earth’s atmosphere, contributed to the development of modern meteorology. Shaw
- Shaw, Sir Walter (British official)
Palestine: The British mandate: …inquiry under the aegis of Sir Walter Shaw attributed the clashes to the fact that “the Arabs have come to see in Jewish immigration not only a menace to their livelihood but a possible overlord of the future.” A second royal commission, headed by Sir John Hope Simpson, issued a…
- Shaw, Sir William Napier (British meteorologist)
Sir Napier Shaw was an English meteorologist whose introduction of the millibar, a unit of measurement of air pressure, and the tephigram, a graphical representation of the first law of thermodynamics as applied to Earth’s atmosphere, contributed to the development of modern meteorology. Shaw
- Shaw, T. E. (British scholar and military officer)
T.E. Lawrence was a British archaeological scholar, military strategist, and author best known for his legendary war activities in the Middle East during World War I and for his account of those activities in The Seven Pillars of Wisdom (1926). Lawrence was the son of Sir Thomas Chapman and Sara
- Shaw, Warren Wilbur (American race–car driver)
Wilbur Shaw was an American automobile-racing driver who won the Indianapolis 500 three times—1937, 1939, and 1940—and was president of the Indianapolis Speedway (1945–54). He first entered the Memorial Day classic in 1927, when he finished fourth. He placed second in the race in 1933, 1935, and
- Shaw, Wilbur (American race–car driver)
Wilbur Shaw was an American automobile-racing driver who won the Indianapolis 500 three times—1937, 1939, and 1940—and was president of the Indianapolis Speedway (1945–54). He first entered the Memorial Day classic in 1927, when he finished fourth. He placed second in the race in 1933, 1935, and
- shawabty figure (statuette)
ushabti figure, any of the small statuettes made of wood, stone, or faience that are often found in large numbers in ancient Egyptian tombs. The figures range in height from approximately 4 to 20 inches (10 to 50 cm) and often hold hoes in their arms. Their purpose was to act as a magical
- shawarma (food)
shawarma, popular street food in the Middle East, which originated in Turkey and is made of spit-roasted layers of lamb, beef, or other meat that are sliced and often wrapped in or served with pita. Shawarma is similar to Greek gyros, though the former is seasoned with more spices and the latter
- Shawinigan Falls (waterfall, Canada)
Shawinigan Falls, waterfall on the Saint-Maurice River near Shawinigan, southern Quebec province, Can., about 19 miles (30 km) above Trois-Rivières city. The most powerful falls in the province, they have a drop of about 165 feet (50 m). A hydroelectric plant built at Shawinigan Falls in 1903 was
- Shawiya (people)
Shawiya, Berber ethnic and linguistic group of the Aurès Plateau region of the Atlas Mountains of northeastern Algeria. The Shawiya speak one of four major Algerian Amazigh languages. The Shawiya practice cereal agriculture in the uplands and pastoral nomadism and horticulture in the oases along
- Shawkat, Alia (American actress)
Alia Shawkat is an American actress best known for portraying Maeby Fünke on the cult-classic television sitcom Arrested Development (2003–06, 2013, and 2018–19) and Dory Sief on the dark comedy series Search Party (2016–22). Shawkat is the second child of Dina Burke, who works as a film producer,
- shawl (garment)
shawl, square, oblong, or triangular protective or ornamental article of dress worn, generally by women, over the shoulders, neck, or head. It has been a common article of clothing in most parts of the world since antiquity. The period from roughly 1800 up to the 1870s, when the fashion silhouette
- shawl period (fashion)
shawl: …was known as the “shawl period” because women in Europe and America wore shawls with almost all their clothing. At the beginning of that century, shawls were a necessity in a fashionable woman’s wardrobe because dresses were thin and décolleté; it was a sign of gentility to wear a…
- Shawl, The (novel by Ozick)
Cynthia Ozick: …The Cannibal Galaxy (1983) and The Shawl (1989). She often drew upon traditional Jewish mysticism to expand upon her themes. One of her recurring characters is Ruth Puttermesser. In 1997 Ozick published The Puttermesser Papers, a short novel consisting of narratives and false memories of the aging Puttermesser, who in…
- shawm (musical instrument)
shawm, (from Latin calamus, “reed”; Old French: chalemie), double-reed wind instrument of Middle Eastern origin, a precursor of the oboe. Like the oboe, it is conically bored; but its bore, bell, and finger holes are wider, and it has a wooden disk (called a pirouette, on European shawms) that
- Shawmut Peninsula (peninsula, Massachusetts, United States)
Boston: Area of the colonial town: The hilly Shawmut Peninsula, upon which Boston was settled, originally was almost completely surrounded by water. It was connected with mainland Roxbury to the south by a narrow neck of land along the line of present-day Washington Street. To the west of the neck were great reaches…
- Shawn, Edwin Myers (American dancer)
Ted Shawn was an innovative American modern dancer and cofounder of the Denishawn school and company. A former divinity student, Shawn was introduced to dance as therapy after an illness. Soon after beginning his dance career, he met and married Ruth St. Denis in 1914; together they founded
- Shawn, Ted (American dancer)
Ted Shawn was an innovative American modern dancer and cofounder of the Denishawn school and company. A former divinity student, Shawn was introduced to dance as therapy after an illness. Soon after beginning his dance career, he met and married Ruth St. Denis in 1914; together they founded
- Shawn, Wallace (American playwright and actor)
Wallace Shawn is an American playwright and character actor whose oft-surreal probing plays found favour in the British theatre and led some to call him the leading contemporary dramatist in the United States. Shawn was exposed to New York City’s literary culture from a young age, as his father,
- Shawn, William (American editor)
William Shawn was an American editor who headed The New Yorker (1952–87), shaping it into one of the most influential periodicals in the United States. Shawn left college after two years and briefly worked as a journalist and pianist before joining The New Yorker as a freelance writer (1933). In
- Shawnee (people)
Shawnee, an Algonquian-speaking North American Indian people who lived in the central Ohio River valley. Closely related in language and culture to the Fox, Kickapoo, and Sauk, the Shawnee were also influenced by a long association with the Seneca and Delaware. During the summer the Shawnee lived
- Shawnee (Oklahoma, United States)
Shawnee, city, seat (1907) of Pottawatomie county, central Oklahoma, U.S., on the North Canadian River, east-southeast of Oklahoma City. The first buildings on the town site were a log house built in 1881 by a Louisiana trapper and a Quaker mission built in 1885 to serve the Shawnee people for whom
- Shawnee (Kansas, United States)
Shawnee, city, Johnson county, northeastern Kansas, U.S. It is a southwestern suburb of Kansas City. The Shawnee Indians made their headquarters there in 1828, when it was known as Gum Springs. The nearby Shawnee Methodist Mission and Indian Manual Labor School (1839) served twice during 1854–56 as
- Shawnee National Forest (forest, Illinois, United States)
Illinois: Relief and drainage: Shawnee National Forest, the only large tract of federally administered land in Illinois, covers a great part of this region. Southern Illinois consists of gently sloping, open hills. Rolling hills in the northwestern corner include the state’s highest point, Charles Mound, which is 1,235 feet…
- Shawnee Sun (American newspaper)
Shawnee: …newspaper in Kansas (1835), the Shawnee Sun, was printed in the Shawnee language at the Baptist Mission, 2 miles (3 km) east. The first jail in Kansas was built in Shawnee in 1843. In 1855 Shawnee was designated the county seat, but in 1858 it lost that distinction to Olathe.…
- Shawnee-salad (plant)
waterleaf: 5-foot-) tall Virginia waterleaf (Hydrophyllum virginianum), with five- to seven-lobed leaves; it is also called Shawnee salad and John’s cabbage in reference to the edible tender young shoots. The large-leaved waterleaf (H. macrophyllum) is similar to the Virginia waterleaf but is rough and hairy and about 60…
- Shawneetown (Illinois, United States)
Shawneetown, city, seat (1812) of Gallatin county, southern Illinois, U.S. It lies about 10 miles (16 km) southwest of the confluence of the Wabash and Ohio rivers (there bridged to Kentucky). Ancient Native American burial mounds are located in the city, which was also the site of a Shawnee Indian
- Shawqī, Aḥmad (Egyptian poet)
Aḥmad Shawqī was known as the amīr al-shuʿarāʾ (“prince of poets”) of modern Arabic poetry and a pioneer of Arabic poetical drama. Shawqī, a member of a family attached to the khedivial court, was sent by the khedive to France to study at Montpellier and Paris universities. On his return the path
- Shawshank Redemption, The (film by Darabont [1994])
Morgan Freeman: …turn as a convict in The Shawshank Redemption (1994).
- Shawwāl (Islamic month)
Eid al-Fitr: …the first three days of Shawwāl, the 10th month of the Islamic calendar (though the Muslim use of a lunar calendar means that it may fall in any season of the year). As in Islam’s other holy festival, Eid al-Adha, it is distinguished by the performance of communal prayer (ṣalāt)…
- shay (carriage)
chaise, (French: “chair”), originally a closed, two-wheeled, one-passenger, one-horse carriage of French origin, adapted from the sedan chair. The carrying poles, or shafts, were attached to the horse’s harness in front and fixed to the axle in back. The body of the carriage was set in front of the
- Shay locomotive (steam engine)
Ephraim Shay: …American inventor of the so-called Shay type of geared steam locomotive, widely used in the Americas, Australia, and East Asia on logging and mining railroads and in other circumstances requiring relatively small locomotives to move heavy trains at low speeds over rough terrain.
- Shay, Ephraim (American inventor)
Ephraim Shay was an American inventor of the so-called Shay type of geared steam locomotive, widely used in the Americas, Australia, and East Asia on logging and mining railroads and in other circumstances requiring relatively small locomotives to move heavy trains at low speeds over rough terrain.
- Shaybānī, ash- (Islamic jurist)
Abū ʿAbd Allāh al-Shāfiʿī: …jurist of the Ḥanafī school, al-Shaybānī, he went to Al-Fusṭāṭ (now Cairo), where he remained until 810. Returning to Baghdad, he settled there as a teacher for several years. After some further travels, he returned to Egypt in 815/816 and remained there for the rest of his life. His tomb…
- Shaybānid dynasty (Central Asian dynasty)
Bukhara: …was conquered by the Uzbek Shaybānids, who from the mid-16th century made it the capital of their state, which became known as the khanate of Bukhara.
- shaykh (Arabic title)
sheikh, Arabic title of respect dating from pre-Islamic antiquity; it strictly means a venerable man of more than 50 years of age. The title sheikh is especially borne by heads of religious orders, heads of colleges, such as Al-Azhar University in Cairo, chiefs of tribes, and headmen of villages
- Shaykh Aḥmad ibn Zayn ad-Dīn ibn Ibrāhīm al-Aḥsāʾī (Muslim religious leader)
al-Aḥsāʾī was the founder of the heterodox Shīʿite Muslim Shaykhī sect of Iran. After spending his early years studying the Islāmic religion and traveling widely in Persia and the Middle East, al-Aḥsāʾī in 1808 settled in Yazd, Persia, where he taught religion. His interpretation of the Shīʿite
- Shaykh al-Akbar, ash- (Muslim mystic)
Ibn al-ʿArabī was a celebrated Muslim mystic-philosopher who gave the esoteric, mystical dimension of Islamic thought its first full-fledged philosophic expression. His major works are the monumental Al-Futūḥāt al-Makkiyyah (“The Meccan Revelations”) and Fuṣūṣ al-ḥikam (1229; “The Bezels of
- shaykh al-balad (Egyptian official)
Egypt: Mamluk power under the Ottomans: …the newly coined title of shaykh al-balad (“chief of the city”), which signified that he was recognized by the other beys as their chief. The Mamluks’ rise to power was climaxed by the careers of two emirs—ʿAlī Bey and Abū Dhahab—both of whom secured from the Sublime Porte (Ottoman government)…
- shaykh al-Islām (Arabic title)
mufti: …the mufti of Istanbul, the shaykh al-Islām (Turkish: şeyhülislâm), ranked as Islam’s foremost legal authority, theoretically presiding over the whole judicial and theological hierarchy. The development of civil codes in most Islamic countries, however, has tended to restrict the authority of muftis to cases involving personal status and religious custom,…
- shaykh al-jabal (Arabic title)
sheikh: Shaykh al-jabal (“the mountain chief”) was a popular term for the head of the Assassins and was mistranslated by the crusaders as “the old man of the mountain.” By far the most important title was shaykh al-islām, which by the 11th century was given to…
- Shaykh Luṭf Allāh, mosque of (mosque, Eṣfahān, Iran)
Islamic arts: Architecture: …sides were the small funerary mosque of Shaykh Luṭf Allāh (Sheikh Lotfollāh) and, facing it, the ʿAlī Qāpū, the “Lofty Gate,” the first unit of a succession of palaces and gardens that extended beyond the maydān, most of which have now disappeared except for the Chehel Sotūn (“Forty Columns”), a…
- Shaykh ʿAbd al-Qurnah (Egypt)
Western dance: Ancient Egyptian dance: A tomb painting from Shaykh ʿAbd al-Qurnah, now in the British Museum, shows dancers dressed only in rings and belts, apparently designed to heighten the appeal of their nudity. These figures probably were intended to entertain the dead as they had been entertained in life.
- Shaykh, Jabal Al- (mountain, Lebanon-Syria)
Mount Hermon, snowcapped ridge on the Lebanon-Syria border west of Damascus. It rises to 9,232 feet (2,814 metres) and is the highest point on the east coast of the Mediterranean Sea. It is sometimes considered the southernmost extension of the Anti-Lebanon range. At its foot rise the two major
- Shaykhī (Islamic sect)
al-Aḥsāʾī: …of the heterodox Shīʿite Muslim Shaykhī sect of Iran.
- Shayō (novel by Dazai Osamu)
The Setting Sun, novel by Dazai Osamu, published in 1947 as Shayō. It is a tragic, vividly painted story of life in postwar Japan. The narrator is Kazuko, a young woman born to gentility but now impoverished. Though she wears Western clothes, her outlook is Japanese; her life is static, and she
- Shāyqīyah (people)
Sudan: Ethnic groups: …the Jalayin tribe proper, the Shāyqiyyah, and the Rubtab. The Juhaynah, by contrast, traditionally consisted of nomadic tribes, although some of them have now become settled. Among the major tribes in the Juhaynah grouping are the Shukriyah, the Kababish, and the Baqqārah. All three of these tribes herd camels or…
- Shays’s Rebellion (United States history)
Shays’s Rebellion, (August 1786–February 1787), uprising in western Massachusetts in opposition to high taxes and stringent economic conditions. Armed bands forced the closing of several courts to prevent execution of foreclosures and debt processes. In September 1786 Daniel Shays and other local
- Shays, Daniel (United States officer)
Daniel Shays was an American officer (1775–80) in the American Revolution and a leader of Shays’s Rebellion (1786–87), an uprising in opposition to high taxes and stringent economic conditions. Born to parents of Irish descent, Shays grew up in humble circumstances. At the outbreak of the American
- shayṭān (Islamic mythology)
shaitan, in Islāmic myth, an unbelieving class of jinn (“spirits”); it is also the name of Iblīs, the devil, when he is performing demonic acts. In the system of evil jinn outlined by the Arab writer al-Jāḥiẓ, the shaitans are identified simply as unbelieving jinn. Folklore, however, describes them
- Shayṭān, ash- (Islam)
Iblīs, in Islam, the personal name of the Devil, possibly derived from the Greek diabolos. Iblīs, the counterpart of Satan in Christianity, is also referred to as ʿAduw Allāh ( “Enemy of God”), al-Aduw (“Enemy”), or, when he is portrayed as a tempter, al-Shayṭān (“Demon”). At the creation of
- Shazam (fictional character)
Captain Marvel, American comic strip superhero created by writer Stan Lee and artist Gene Colan for Marvel Comics. The character debuted in Marvel Super-Heroes no. 12 in December 1967. The role of Captain Marvel would be filled by many heroes over subsequent years, most notably by the Kree warrior
- Shazar, Zalman (president of Israel)
Zalman Shazar was an Israeli journalist, scholar, and politician who was the third president of Israel (1963–73). Shazar early became involved in the Zionist movement while a youth in Belarus. In 1905 he joined Po’alei Zion, a Zionist workers’ party, and was briefly imprisoned by tsarist
- Shāzilīyah (Sufi order)
Shādhilīyah, widespread brotherhood of Muslim mystics (Ṣūfīs), founded on the teachings of Abū al-Ḥasan ash-Shādhilī (d. 1258) in Alexandria. Shādhilī teachings stress five points: fear of God, living the sunna (practices) of the Prophet, disdain of mankind, fatalism, and turning to God in times of
- Shaʾare ora (work by Gikatilla)
Joseph Gikatilla: …by his next major work, Shaʿareʾora (“Gates of Light”), an account of Kabbalist symbolism.
- Shaʾul (king of Israel)
Saul was the first king of Israel (c. 1021–1000 bce). According to the biblical account found mainly in 1 Samuel, Saul was chosen king both by the judge Samuel and by public acclamation. Saul was similar to the charismatic judges who preceded him in the role of governing. His chief contribution,
- shāʿir (Arab poet)
shāʿir, (Arabic: “poet”), in Arabic literature, poet who in pre-Islāmic times was a tribal dignitary whose poetic utterances were deemed supernaturally inspired by such spirits as jinn and shaitans. As such, his word was needed to insure the success of certain tribal activities, particularly war,
- Shaʿnabī, Jabal Ash- (mountain, Tunisia)
Mount Ash-Shaʿnabī, mountain (5,066 feet [1,544 m]) that is the highest in Tunisia. It is part of a spur of the Tebéssa (Tabassah) Mountains, which are part of the Saharan Atlas Mountains. The mountain lies near the Algerian border, 6 miles (10 km) west-northwest of Al-Qaṣrayn
- Shaʿnabī, Mount Ash- (mountain, Tunisia)
Mount Ash-Shaʿnabī, mountain (5,066 feet [1,544 m]) that is the highest in Tunisia. It is part of a spur of the Tebéssa (Tabassah) Mountains, which are part of the Saharan Atlas Mountains. The mountain lies near the Algerian border, 6 miles (10 km) west-northwest of Al-Qaṣrayn
- Shaʿrānī, ash- (Islamic mystic)
ash-Shaʿrānī was an Egyptian scholar and mystic who founded an Islamic order of Ṣūfism. Throughout his life Shaʿrānī was influenced by the pattern of his education. His introduction and exposure to Islāmic learning were limited; his formal education was concerned with the ʿulūm al-wahb (“gifted
- Shaʿrāwī, Hudā (Egyptian feminist and nationalist)
Huda Sharawi was an Egyptian feminist and nationalist who established numerous organizations dedicated to women’s rights and is considered the founder of the women’s movement in Egypt. Sharawi was born into a prosperous family in the Egyptian city of Al-Minyā and was raised in Cairo. Her father,