- Shinn, George (American businessman)
New Orleans Pelicans: …personal unpopularity of team owner George Shinn, who had lobbied for a new, more profitable, publicly funded arena soon after having had to defend himself on a sexual assault charge in a nationally televised civil trial (he was acquitted). Shinn moved the franchise to New Orleans in 2002 after his…
- shinney (sport)
shinty, game played outdoors with sticks and a small, hard ball in which two opposing teams attempt to hit the ball through their opponents’ goal (hail); it is similar to the Irish game of hurling and to field hockey. Shinty probably originated in chaotic mass games between Scottish Highland clans
- shinny (sport)
shinty, game played outdoors with sticks and a small, hard ball in which two opposing teams attempt to hit the ball through their opponents’ goal (hail); it is similar to the Irish game of hurling and to field hockey. Shinty probably originated in chaotic mass games between Scottish Highland clans
- Shino ware (Japanese ceramic ware)
Shino ware, glazed Japanese ceramic ware produced in Mino Province (in modern Gifu Prefecture), and perhaps the most typical variety of pottery produced during the Azuchi-Momoyama period (1574–1600). The name shino may possibly be derived from the name of Shino Soshun, a tea and incense master who
- Shinran (Japanese Buddhist philosopher)
Shinran was a Buddhist teacher recognized as the founder of the Jōdo Shinshū (True Pure Land School), which advocates that faith, recitation of the name of the buddha Amida (Amitabha), and birth in the paradise of the Pure Land. For centuries Jōdo Shinshū has been one of the largest schools of
- Shinron (work by Aizawa)
Aizawa Yasushi: Aizawa’s book Shinron (“New Proposals”), stressing the supremacy of the Japanese nation, remained influential well into the 20th century.
- Shinsaibashi-suji (street, Ōsaka, Japan)
Ōsaka-Kōbe metropolitan area: Street patterns: …to Midō-suji is the narrow Shinsaibashi-suji, the central shopping district. Dotombori, at the south end of Shinsaibashi-suji, is a crowded theatre and restaurant area.
- Shinsei (Japanese satellite)
Shinsei, first Japanese scientific satellite, launched on Sept. 28, 1971. Shinsei observed solar radio emissions, cosmic rays, and plasmas in Earth’s ionosphere. The 66-kg (145-pound) satellite was launched under the auspices of the Institute of Space and Astronautical Science, which was then part
- Shinsei (work by Shimazaki Tōson)
Shimazaki Tōson: Shinsei (1918–19; “New Life”) narrates the unsavoury affair of a writer with his niece in a manner that carries the confessional principle to embarrassing excesses.
- Shinsei taii (work by Katō Hiroyuki)
Danshaku Katō Hiroyuki: Meanwhile, through such books as Shinsei taii (1870; “General Theory of True Government Policy”) and Kokutai shinron (1874; “New Theory of the National Structure”), he introduced the Japanese public to European theories of government, democracy, and human rights.
- Shinseitō (political party, Japan)
Japan: Political developments: …New Party (JNP) and the Japan Renewal Party. These joined several former opposition parties to form a coalition government with Hosokawa Morihiro, leader of the JNP, as prime minister.
- Shinseki, Eric K. (United States general)
Eric K. Shinseki is a U.S. Army officer who was the first Asian American to achieve the rank of four-star general. He commanded North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) peacekeeping forces in Bosnia-Herzegovina (1997–98), served as army chief of staff (1999–2003), and was secretary of veterans
- Shinseki, Eric Ken (United States general)
Eric K. Shinseki is a U.S. Army officer who was the first Asian American to achieve the rank of four-star general. He commanded North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) peacekeeping forces in Bosnia-Herzegovina (1997–98), served as army chief of staff (1999–2003), and was secretary of veterans
- shinsen (Shintō offerings)
shinsen, in the Shintō religion of Japan, food offerings presented to the kami (god or sacred power). The dishes may vary according to the shrine, the deity honoured, and the occasion of worship, but they generally consist of rice, sake (rice wine), rice cake, fish, fowl, meat, seaweed, vegetables,
- Shinshintō (political organization, Japan)
Democratic Socialist Party: …the government, it joined the New Frontier Party (Shinshintō), a coalition of moderate political parties that disbanded in 1997. Many former members subsequently threw their support to the Democratic Party of Japan, which had been established in 1996 and became the leading opposition party.
- Shinshō (Japanese artist)
Ogata Kenzan was a Japanese potter and painter, brother to the artist Ogata Kōrin. He signed himself Kenzan, Shisui, Tōin, Shōkosai, Shuseidō, or Shinshō. Kenzan received a classical Chinese and Japanese education and pursued Zen Buddhism. At the age of 27 he began studying with the potter Ninsei
- Shinshō-in (Japanese Buddhist patriarch)
Rennyo was a Japanese Buddhist leader and eighth patriarch of the Hongan Temple in Kyōto. Rennyo furthered the Buddhist reform initiated by Shinran (13th century) that created the Jōdo Shinshū (“True Pure Land sect”) and inspired the Ikkō rebellions, 15th-century uprisings by militant,
- shinshoku (Shintō priest)
shinshoku, priest in the Shintō religion of Japan. The main function of the shinshoku is to officiate at all shrine ceremonies on behalf of and at the request of worshippers. He is not expected to lecture, preach, or act as spiritual leader to his parishioners; rather, his main role is to ensure
- Shinsō (Japanese artist)
Sōami was a Japanese painter, art critic, poet, landscape gardener, and master of the tea ceremony, incense ceremony, and flower arrangement who is an outstanding figure in the history of Japanese aesthetics. Sōami was the grandson and son of the painters and art connoisseurs Nōami and Geiami,
- Shinsui kyūyorei (Japanese history)
Japan: The growth of the northern problem: …of Firewood and Water (Shinsui kyūyorei). While attempting to preserve the iron law of seclusion to the bitter end, bakufu policy was thus inconsistent, driving foreign ships away at one point and treating them with leniency at others. And it proved to be utterly powerless when it was faced…
- shintai (Shintō)
shintai, (Japanese: “god-body”), in the Shintō religion of Japan, manifestation of the deity (kami), its symbol, or an object of worship in which it resides; also referred to as mitama-shiro (“the material object in which the divine soul resides”). The shintai may be a natural object in which the
- Shintaishi-shō (poetry collection)
Japanese literature: Western influences on poetry: The pioneer collection Shintaishi-shō (1882; “Selection of Poems in the New Style”) contained not only translations from English but also five original poems by the translators in the poetic genres of the foreign examples. The translators declared that although European poetry had greater variety than Japanese poetry—some poems…
- shinten (Shintō texts)
shinten, collectively, sacred texts of the Shintō religion of Japan. Although there is no single text that is accepted as authoritative by all schools of Shintō thought, some books are considered invaluable as records of ancient beliefs and ritual; they are generally grouped together as shinten.
- Shintō (religion)
Shintō, indigenous religious beliefs and practices of Japan. The word Shintō, which literally means “the way of kami” (generally sacred or divine power, specifically the various gods or deities), came into use in order to distinguish indigenous Japanese beliefs from Buddhism, which had been
- Shintō gobusho (Shintō text)
Ise Shintō: …in a five-volume apologia, the Shintō gobusho, which appeared in the 13th century.
- Shintō Shrines, Association of (religious organization, Japan)
jinja: …in Japan belong to the Jinja Honchō (Association of Shintō Shrines); its membership includes the majority of Japan’s 107,000,000 Shintō worshipers. Each shrine is managed by its own shrine committee, made up of priests and parishioners or their representatives.
- Shintōhō Motion Picture Company (Japanese company)
Shintōhō Motion Picture Company, Japanese motion-picture studio that was known for its production of war films and action pictures appealing to mass audiences. Formed in 1947, it was originally financed by the Tōhō Motion Picture Company. Within two years, after the motion picture
- shinty (sport)
shinty, game played outdoors with sticks and a small, hard ball in which two opposing teams attempt to hit the ball through their opponents’ goal (hail); it is similar to the Irish game of hurling and to field hockey. Shinty probably originated in chaotic mass games between Scottish Highland clans
- Shinwell, Emanuel, Baron Shinwell of Easington (British politician)
Emanuel Shinwell, Baron Shinwell of Easington was a Labour politician who served in the British Parliament for over half a century, battling both Conservatives and his own party for socialist principles. Shinwell left school at the age of 11 to become an apprentice tailor. In Glasgow, Scot., he
- Shiny Beast (Bat Chain Puller) (album by Captain Beefheart)
Captain Beefheart: …acclaim with Clear Spot (1972), Shiny Beast (Bat Chain Puller) (1978), Ice Cream for Crow (1982), and other albums, Beefheart never won a wide popular following; however, his music greatly influenced such groups as the Clash and Devo. In the early 1980s Beefheart, again using the name Don Van Vliet,…
- shiny guinea pig (rodent)
guinea pig: … south to northern Argentina; the shiny guinea pig (C. fulgida), inhabiting eastern Brazil; the montane guinea pig (C. tschudii), ranging from Peru to northern Chile and northwestern Argentina; the greater guinea pig (C. magna), occurring in southeastern Brazil and Uruguay; and the Moleques do Sul guinea pig (C. intermedia), which…
- shinzō (religious icon, Japan)
shinzō, in the Shintō religion of Japan, a representation either in painting or sculpture of a kami (god or sacred power). The Shintō religion did not have a tradition of iconic representation, but under the influence of Buddhism a few anthropomorphic images began to be created in the Heian period
- Shiogama (Japan)
Shiogama, city, eastern Miyagi ken (prefecture), northeastern Honshu, Japan. It is situated just northeast of Sendai, facing Matsushima Bay (an embayment of the Pacific Ocean). Long known for its production of salt, Shiogama became a prosperous temple town during the Tokugawa period (1603–1867).
- ship (watercraft)
ship, any large floating vessel capable of crossing open waters, as opposed to a boat, which is generally a smaller craft. The term formerly was applied to sailing vessels having three or more masts; in modern times it usually denotes a vessel of more than 500 tons of displacement. Submersible
- Ship Ahoy (film by Buzzell [1942])
Edward Buzzell: Ship Ahoy (1942)—which features an uncredited Frank Sinatra in one of his first films, singing with the Tommy Dorsey Orchestra—was well received, while Keep Your Powder Dry (1945), starring Lana Turner, Laraine Day, and Susan Peters as feuding Wacs, was not.
- ship building
ship construction, complex of activities concerned with the design and fabrication of all marine vehicles. Ship construction today is a complicated compound of art and science. In the great days of sail, vessels were designed and built on the basis of practical experience; ship construction was
- Ship Canal Company building (building, Manchester, England, United Kingdom)
Manchester: Architecture and the face of the city: The offices of the Ship Canal Company were given a Grecian colonnade perched high above street level, and the Town Hall, designed by Alfred Waterhouse, is regarded as perhaps the ultimate in Victorian Gothic fantasies.
- ship construction
ship construction, complex of activities concerned with the design and fabrication of all marine vehicles. Ship construction today is a complicated compound of art and science. In the great days of sail, vessels were designed and built on the basis of practical experience; ship construction was
- Ship Harbour (Nova Scotia, Canada)
Port Hawkesbury, town, Inverness county, northeastern Nova Scotia, Canada. It lies along the Strait of Canso, at the southern end of Cape Breton Island, 36 miles (58 km) east of Antigonish. Originally called Ship Harbour, the town was renamed in 1860, possibly for Charles Jenkinson, Baron
- ship money (historical English tax)
ship money, in British history, a nonparliamentary tax first levied in medieval times by the English crown on coastal cities and counties for naval defense in time of war. It required those being taxed to furnish a certain number of warships or to pay the ships’ equivalent in money. Its revival and
- Ship of Charles V (art object)
automaton: Automatons in the Renaissance: …most celebrated nefs is the “Ship of Charles V” (Musée de Cluny, Paris).
- Ship of Fools (novel by Porter)
Ship of Fools, novel by Katherine Anne Porter, published in 1962. Porter used as a framework Das Narrenschiff (1494; The Ship of Fools), by Sebastian Brant, a satire in which the world is likened to a ship whose passengers, fools and deranged people all, are sailing toward eternity. Porter’s novel
- Ship of Fools (film by Kramer [1965])
Stanley Kramer: Directing: Kramer returned to drama with Ship of Fools (1965), which was based on the Katherine Anne Porter novel. Though viewed by some as a soap opera, the Oscar-nominated film addressed important issues, notably anti-Semitism and the rise of Nazism, and it boasted a cast that included Vivien Leigh (in her…
- Ship of Fools, The (work by Barclay)
Sebastian Brant: …verse by Alexander Barclay (The Shyp of Folys of the Worlde) and another in prose by Henry Watson, and it gave rise to a whole school of fool’s literature. Yet Brant essentially looks backward; he is not a forerunner of the Reformation nor even a true humanist but rather…
- Ship of Fools, The (poem by Brant)
Das Narrenschiff, long poem by Sebastian Brant, published in 1494. It was published in English as The Ship of Fools. The work concerns the incidents on a ship carrying more than 100 people to Narragonia, the fools’ paradise, and is an unsparing, bitter, and sweeping satire, especially of the
- Ship of Fools, The (novel by Peri Rossi)
Cristina Peri Rossi: …nave de los locos (1984; The Ship of Fools), La última noche de Dostoievski (1992; Dostoevsky’s Last Night), Desastres íntimos (1997; Intimate Disasters), and El amor es una droga dura (1999; “Love Is a Strong Drug”).
- ship of the desert (mammal)
camel, (genus Camelus), any of three species of large ruminating hoofed mammals of arid Africa and Asia known for their ability to go for long periods without drinking. The Arabian camel, or dromedary (Camelus dromedarius), has one back hump, while the domesticated Bactrian camel (C. bactrianus)
- ship of the line (naval vessel)
ship of the line, type of sailing warship that formed the backbone of the Western world’s great navies from the mid-17th century through the mid-19th century, when it gave way to the steam-powered battleship. The ship of the line evolved from the galleon, a three- or four-masted vessel that had a
- ship of Theseus (philosophy)
ship of Theseus, in the history of Western philosophy, an ancient paradox regarding identity and change across time. Mentioned by Plutarch and later modified by Thomas Hobbes, the ship of Theseus has spawned a variety of theories of identity within modern and contemporary metaphysics. Discussions
- ship rat (rodent)
rat: …the Norway rat), and the house rat, R. rattus (also called the black rat, ship rat, or roof rat), live virtually everywhere that human populations have settled; the house rat is predominant in warmer climates, and the brown rat dominates in temperate regions, especially urban areas. Most likely originating in…
- Ship Rock (geological formation, New Mexico, United States)
Ship Rock, volcanic neck with radiating dikes located in the northwestern corner of New Mexico, U.S. The landmark stands 1,400 feet (420 metres) above the surrounding area and is the basis of local Navajo legends. Solidified in the vent of an ancient volcano, the more resistant rock of the neck is
- ship sloop (warship)
corvette, small, fast naval vessel ranking in size below a frigate. In the 18th and 19th centuries, corvettes were three-masted ships with square rigging similar to that of frigates and ships of the line, but they carried only about 20 guns on the top deck. Frequently serving as dispatchers among
- ship’s bell
ship’s bell, bell used as early as the 15th century to sound the time on board ship by striking each half hour of a watch. The mariner’s day is divided into six watches, each four hours long, except that the 4:00 to 8:00 pm watch may be “dogged”; that is, divided into the first and second
- Ship, The (album by Eno)
Brian Eno: …Eno’s own albums, the four-track The Ship (2016) meditated on the sinking of the Titanic and on World War I. In 2018 he released a box set of music commissioned for art pieces, Music for Installations. He collaborated with his brother, Roger Eno, on Mixing Colours (2020), a set of…
- ship-classification society (shipping)
ship: Ship classification: The leading classification society, operating in almost every country in the world, is Lloyd’s Register of Shipping, which began its work long before any national legislation existed for the performance of its purposes. The history of Lloyd’s Register of Shipping can be traced back to 1760. The…
- ship-of-the-line warfare (British naval formation)
ship-of-the-line warfare, columnar naval-battle formation developed by the British and Dutch in the mid-17th century whereby each ship followed in the wake of the ship ahead of it. This formation maximized the new firing power of the broadside (simultaneous discharge of all the guns arrayed on one
- ship-timber beetle (insect)
coleopteran: Annotated classification: Family Lymexylidae (ship-timber beetles) About 60 species; worldwide distribution; damage wood; examples Lymexylon, Hylecoetus. Superfamily Scarabaeoidea (Lamellicornia) Antennae 10-segmented with last 3 to 7 segments forming a lamellate (platelike) club; body stout; larvae without cerci (appendages at end of abdomen);
- shipbuilding
ship construction, complex of activities concerned with the design and fabrication of all marine vehicles. Ship construction today is a complicated compound of art and science. In the great days of sail, vessels were designed and built on the basis of practical experience; ship construction was
- Shipchenski Prokhod (mountain pass, Bulgaria)
Shipka Pass, pass in the Balkan Mountains, Bulgaria. Situated on the main road from Ruse on the Danube River through Stara Zagora to Edirne (Adrianople) in Turkey, it was a strategically important pass and was the scene of fierce fighting during the Russo-Turkish War (1877–78). The pass was
- Shipe, Catherine (American feminist and public official)
Catherine East was an American feminist and public official, a major formative influence on the women’s movement of the mid-20th century. East earned a degree in history at Marshall University in Huntington, West Virginia, in 1943. After 24 years in the career services division of the Civil Service
- Shipibo (people)
Shipibo, Panoan-speaking Indian group living on the upper Ucayali River near the headwaters of the Amazon, on the eastern slopes of the Peruvian high Andes Mountains. In the pre-Spanish period, the Shipibo were only minimally influenced by the Inca empire, despite the proximity of the Shipibo to
- Shipka Pass (mountain pass, Bulgaria)
Shipka Pass, pass in the Balkan Mountains, Bulgaria. Situated on the main road from Ruse on the Danube River through Stara Zagora to Edirne (Adrianople) in Turkey, it was a strategically important pass and was the scene of fierce fighting during the Russo-Turkish War (1877–78). The pass was
- Shipley, Jennifer (prime minister of New Zealand)
Jennifer Shipley is a New Zealand politician who was New Zealand’s first female prime minister (1997–99). After graduating from Christchurch Teachers’ College in 1972, Robson married Burton Shipley, a farmer, and began teaching at a primary school. Active in the community, she joined the National
- Shipley, Jenny (prime minister of New Zealand)
Jennifer Shipley is a New Zealand politician who was New Zealand’s first female prime minister (1997–99). After graduating from Christchurch Teachers’ College in 1972, Robson married Burton Shipley, a farmer, and began teaching at a primary school. Active in the community, she joined the National
- Shipman’s Tale, The (story by Chaucer)
The Shipman’s Tale, one of the 24 stories in The Canterbury Tales by Geoffrey Chaucer. It is based on an old French fabliau and resembles a story found in Giovanni Boccaccio’s Decameron. In the tale told by Chaucer’s Shipman, the wife of a rich merchant convinces a young monk that her husband
- Shipman, Harold (British physician and serial killer)
Harold Shipman was a British doctor and serial killer who murdered about 250 of his patients, according to an official inquiry into his crimes. Shipman’s murders raised troubling questions about the powers and responsibilities of the medical community in Britain and about the adequacy of procedures
- Shipman, Harold Frederick (British physician and serial killer)
Harold Shipman was a British doctor and serial killer who murdered about 250 of his patients, according to an official inquiry into his crimes. Shipman’s murders raised troubling questions about the powers and responsibilities of the medical community in Britain and about the adequacy of procedures
- Shippard, Sir Sidney Godolphin Alexander (British colonial official)
Sir Sidney Godolphin Alexander Shippard was a British colonial official in South Africa who served as administrator in the Bechuanaland Protectorate (now Botswana) from 1885 to 1895 and was closely associated with the empire builder Cecil Rhodes. The scion of a naval family, Shippard was educated
- Shippen, William, Jr. (American educator)
William Shippen, Jr. was the first systematic teacher of anatomy, surgery, and obstetrics in the United States. He was also one of the first to use dissected human bodies in the teaching of anatomy in America. Shippen graduated from the College of New Jersey (Princeton) in 1754, studied in London,
- shipping (water transportation)
shipping, the transporting of goods and passengers by water. Described as the backbone of global trade, maritime shipping is responsible for the transport of the majority of raw materials, components, and finished products that drive the economy. Efficient and relatively low-cost, transoceanic
- shipping (transportation of goods)
containerization: …a major element in ocean shipping, made possible by new ships specifically designed for container carrying. Large and fast, container ships carry containers above deck as well as below; and their cargoes are easily loaded and unloaded, making possible more frequent trips and minimum lost time in port. Port facilities…
- shipping fever (disease)
pasteurellosis, any bacterial disease caused by Pasteurella species. The name is sometimes used interchangeably with the so-called shipping fever, a specific type of pasteurellosis (caused by Pasteurella multocida) that commonly attacks cattle under stress, as during shipping. In this type of
- Shipping News, The (work by Proulx)
E. Annie Proulx: In The Shipping News (1993; film 2001), the protagonist Quoyle and his family, consisting of two young daughters and his aunt, leave the United States and settle in Newfoundland, Canada, after the accidental death of his unfaithful wife. The Shipping News was awarded both a Pulitzer…
- Shipping News, The (film by Hallström [2001])
E. Annie Proulx: In The Shipping News (1993; film 2001), the protagonist Quoyle and his family, consisting of two young daughters and his aunt, leave the United States and settle in Newfoundland, Canada, after the accidental death of his unfaithful wife. The Shipping News was awarded both a Pulitzer Prize and a National…
- shipping route (water transport)
shipping route, any of the lines of travel followed by merchant sea vessels. Many of the most important modern shipping routes are near-coastal or transoceanic, though several major rivers, including the Amazon and the Nile, are large enough for the navigation of shipping vessels and are
- Shippingport Atomic Power Station (nuclear power station, Beaver County, Pennsylvania, United States)
nuclear reactor: From production reactors to commercial power reactors: …build a civilian prototype at Shippingport, Pennsylvania. This reactor, the largest of the power-reactor prototypes, went online in 1957; it is often hailed as the first commercial-scale reactor in the United States.
- Shiprock (New Mexico, United States)
Shiprock, town, San Juan county, northwestern New Mexico, U.S. Lying on the vast Navajo reservation, the town, originally called Needles, was founded in 1903 as a centre of tribal government. It served as such until 1938, when the Navajo nation established its capital at Window Rock, Arizona. The
- shipworm (mollusk)
shipworm, any of the approximately 65 species of marine bivalve mollusks of the family Teredidae (Teredinidae). Shipworms are common in most oceans and seas and are important because of the destruction they cause in wooden ship hulls, wharves, and other submerged wooden structures. Only a small
- shipwreck
maritime law: Historical development: …case of plunder following a shipwreck: “I am indeed lord of the world, but the Law is the lord of the sea. This matter must be decided by the maritime law of the Rhodians, provided that no law of ours is opposed to it.” The second is a statement of…
- Shipwreck (missile)
rocket and missile system: Antiship: The SS-N-19 Shipwreck, a small, vertically launched, flip-out wing supersonic missile with a range of about 390 miles, appeared in the 1980s.
- Shipwrecked Sailor, The (Egyptian tale)
short story: From Egypt to India: …earliest surviving Egyptian tales, “The Shipwrecked Sailor” (c. 2000 bce), is clearly intended to be a consoling and inspiring story to reassure its aristocratic audience that apparent misfortune can in the end become good fortune. Also recorded during the 12th dynasty were the success story of the exile Sinuhe…
- shipyard
shipyard, shore establishment for building and repairing ships. The shipbuilding facilities of the ancient and medieval worlds reached a culmination in the arsenal of Venice, a shipyard in which a high degree of organization produced an assembly-line technique, with a ship’s fittings added to the
- Shipyard, The (work by Onetti)
Juan Carlos Onetti: …major novel, El astillero (1961; The Shipyard), an antihero named Larsen returns to Santa María to try to revive a useless and abandoned shipyard, ending his life in futility and unheroic defeat. The book has been viewed as an ironic allegory reflecting the decay and breakdown of Uruguayan society. The…
- Shiqaqi, Fathi al- (founder of the Palestinian Islamic Jihad)
Palestinian Islamic Jihad: Formation and ideology: …founders of the PIJ—most notably Fathi al-Shiqaqi—previously had been involved with the Muslim Brotherhood, an Islamist organization founded in Egypt, where Shiqaqi and other Palestinians had sought higher education. Shiqaqi and his associates were sympathetic to the Muslim Brotherhood’s Islamist outlook, but they believed that the revival of an Islamic…
- Shiqāyā peak, Al- (Kuwait)
Kuwait: Relief: …metres) above sea level at Al-Shiqāyā peak, in the western corner of the country. The Al-Zawr Escarpment, one of the main topographic features, borders the northwestern shore of Kuwait Bay and rises to a maximum elevation of 475 feet (145 metres). Elsewhere in coastal areas, large patches of salty marshland…
- Shiqi (China)
Zhongshan, city in southern Guangdong sheng (province), southern China. Located in the south-central part of the Pearl (Zhu) River Delta, Zhongshan has a network of waterways connecting it with all parts of the delta and is on an express highway running north to Guangzhou (Canton) and south to
- Shiquan He (river, Asia)
Indus River, great trans-Himalayan river of South Asia. It is one of the longest rivers in the world, with a length of some 2,000 miles (3,200 km). Its total drainage area is about 450,000 square miles (1,165,000 square km), of which 175,000 square miles (453,000 square km) lie in the ranges and
- Shir Ẕion (work by Sulzer)
Salomon Sulzer: An important publication was Shir Ẕion (1840–66; “Song of Zion”), a comprehensive collection of music for the Sabbath, festivals, and holy days, for cantor, choir, and congregational responses with optional organ accompaniment. The musical style was a compromise between traditional chant (for the cantor) and Protestant-like settings for choir;…
- Shīr ʿAlī Khān (emir of Afghanistan)
Shīr ʿAlī Khān was the emir of Afghanistan from 1863 to 1879 who tried with only limited success to maintain his nation’s equilibrium in the great power struggles between Russia in the north and British India in the south. The third son of Dōst Moḥammad Khān, Shīr ʿAlī succeeded to the throne upon
- Shira (volcano, Tanzania)
Kilimanjaro: Shira ridge (13,000 feet [3,962 metres]) is a remnant of an earlier crater. Below the saddle, Kilimanjaro slopes in a typical volcanic curve to the plains below, which lie at an elevation of about 3,300 feet (1,000 metres). The breathtaking snow-clad dome of Kibo contains…
- shirabyōshi (dancer-musicians)
Japanese music: Shintō music: In later times the Heian-originated shirabyōshi female dancer-musicians became important elements in the transfer of courtly and religious traditions into later theatrical forms. Although the influence of Shintō music in the Japanese music traditions is evident, the major source of religious musical influence is found elsewhere, in the Buddhist temples.
- Shirak Steppe (region, Armenia)
Armenia: Relief: Elevated volcanic plateaus (Lory, Shirak, and others), cut by deep river valleys, lie amid these ranges.
- Shirakaba (Japanese literary journal)
Shirakaba, humanistic literary journal (1910–23) founded by a loose association of writers, art critics, artists, and others—among them Shiga Naoya, Arishima Takeo, and Mushanokōji Saneatsu—who together had attended the elite Peers’ School (Gakushūin) in Tokyo. The members of this group, called
- Shirakawa (emperor of Japan)
Shirakawa was the 72nd emperor of Japan who abdicated the throne and then established a cloister government (insei) through which he could maintain his power unburdened by the exacting ceremonial and family duty required of the legitimate Japanese sovereign. He thus established a precedent that
- Shirakawa Hideki (Japanese chemist)
Shirakawa Hideki is a Japanese chemist who, with Alan G. MacDiarmid and Alan J. Heeger, won the Nobel Prize for Chemistry in 2000 for their discovery that certain plastics can be chemically altered to conduct electricity almost as readily as metals. Shirakawa earned a Ph.D. from the Tokyo Institute
- Shirakawa Masaaki (Japanese banker and economist)
Shirakawa Masaaki is a Japanese banker and economist who served (2008–13) as governor of the Bank of Japan (BOJ), the country’s central bank. Shirakawa joined the BOJ in 1972 after graduating with a bachelor’s degree in economics from the University of Tokyo. He later studied in the United States
- Shirakawa Tennō (emperor of Japan)
Shirakawa was the 72nd emperor of Japan who abdicated the throne and then established a cloister government (insei) through which he could maintain his power unburdened by the exacting ceremonial and family duty required of the legitimate Japanese sovereign. He thus established a precedent that
- Shirakawa, Go- (emperor of Japan)
Go-Shirakawa was the 77th emperor of Japan, during whose reign political power was transferred from the imperial court to the provincial warrior class. He ascended the throne in 1155, taking the reign name Go-Shirakawa, after the death of his brother, the emperor Konoe. When his father, the former
- Shirakskaya Step (region, Armenia)
Armenia: Relief: Elevated volcanic plateaus (Lory, Shirak, and others), cut by deep river valleys, lie amid these ranges.
- Shirane, Mount (mountain, Japan)
Japanese Alps: …the Akaishi Range and contains Mount Shirane (10,472 feet [3,192 m]).