- sitagliptin (drug)
antidiabetic drug: Pramlintide, exenatide, and sitagliptin: A drug called sitagliptin specifically inhibits DPP-4, thereby increasing levels of naturally produced incretins. Side effects associated with these drugs are often mild, although pramlintide can cause profound hypoglycemia in patients with type I diabetes.
- Sitakund (India)
Munger: …site and thermal springs of Sitakund. Pop. (2001) 188,050; (2011) 213,303.
- Sitamarhi (India)
Sitamarhi, town, northwestern Bihar state, northeastern India. It lies on the western bank of the Lakhandai River in the fertile Middle Ganges (Ganga) Plain. Sitamarhi is a station on the North Eastern Railway and is connected by roads with the nearby Nepal frontier. It is a commercial centre
- Sitanka (Miniconjou Lakota chief)
Wounded Knee: …around the Miniconjou Lakota chief Sitanka, also known as Big Foot. However, they surrendered quietly to pursuing troops of the 7th Cavalry on the night of December 28. Following an overnight encampment near Wounded Knee Creek, Sitanka’s group was surrounded and nearly disarmed when a scuffle broke out over a…
- Sitapur (India)
Sitapur, city, north-central Uttar Pradesh state, northern India. It is situated along the Sarayan River, about 50 miles (80 km) north-northwest of Lucknow. Sitapur was a military centre under the British and contains a cantonment (military installation). The city is located at the junction of
- sitar (musical instrument)
sitar, stringed instrument of the lute family that is popular in northern India, Pakistan, and Bangladesh. Typically measuring about 1.2 metres (4 feet) in length, the sitar has a deep pear-shaped gourd body; a long, wide, hollow wooden neck; both front and side tuning pegs; and 20 arched movable
- Sitatārā (Buddhist goddess)
Tara: The White Tara (Sanskrit: Sitatara; Tibetan: Sgrol-dkar) was incarnated as the Chinese princess. She symbolizes purity and is often represented standing at the right hand of her consort, Avalokiteshvara, or seated with legs crossed, holding a full-blown lotus. She is generally shown with a third eye.…
- sitatunga (mammal)
sitatunga, (Tragelaphus spekei), the most aquatic antelope, with elongated, splayed hooves and flexible foot joints that enable it to traverse boggy ground. Though common, even abundant, in African swamps and permanent marshes, the sitatunga is also one of the most secretive and least known of
- sitcom (broadcasting genre)
situation comedy, radio or television comedy series that involves a continuing cast of characters in a succession of episodes. Often the characters are markedly different types thrown together by circumstance and occupying a shared environment such as an apartment building or workplace. Sitcoms are
- site planning (landscaping)
garden and landscape design: Aspects of landscape architecture: …enjoyment,” landscape architecture also includes site planning, land planning, master planning, urban design, and environmental planning. Site planning involves plans for specific developments in which precise arrangements of buildings, roadways, utilities, landscape elements, topography, water features, and vegetation are shown. Land planning is for larger-scale developments involving subdivision into several…
- site value taxation (taxation)
property tax: Site-value taxation: The use of a land tax as the chief source of revenue has often been proposed. It was favoured by the Physiocrats in 18th-century France. Probably the best-known exponent was a 19th-century American, Henry George. His Progress and Poverty (1879) drew upon economic…
- site-directed mutagenesis (genetics)
Michael Smith: …of a technique called oligonucleotide-based site-directed mutagenesis. This technique enabled researchers to introduce specific mutations into genes and, thus, to the proteins that they encode. Using site-directed mutagenesis, scientists have been able to dissect the structure and function relationships involved in protein plaque formation in the pathophysiology of Alzheimer disease;…
- site-specific recombination (biology)
nucleic acid: Site-specific recombination: Site-specific recombination involves very short specific sequences that are recognized by proteins. Long DNA sequences such as viral genomes, drug-resistance elements, and regulatory sequences such as the mating type locus in yeast can be inserted, removed, or inverted, having profound regulatory effects. More…
- Sitek, David Andrew (American musician)
TV on the Radio: ), multi-instrumentalist David Andrew Sitek (b. September 6, 1972, Maryland), vocalist-guitarist Kyp Malone (in full David Kyp Joel Malone; b. February 27, 1973, Pennsylvania), drummer Jaleel Bunton (in full Jaleel Marcus Bunton; b. October 24, 1974, California), and bassist-keyboardist Gerard Smith (in full Gerard Anthony Smith; b.…
- siter (musical instrument)
Southeast Asian arts: Java: …xylophone (gambang), the zither (celempung) with 26 strings tuned in pairs, an end-blown flute (suling), and a 2-stringed lute (called a rebab by the Javanese), which leads the orchestra. In loud-sounding music, the soft-sounding instruments are not played, and the drum (kendang) leads the orchestra. The third group provides…
- Sitges, Declaration of (Colombian history)
Declaration of Sitges, agreement in 1957 by the rival Colombian political leaders Alberto Lleras Camargo of the Liberals and Laureano Gómez of the Conservatives to form a coalition National Front government to replace the dictatorial regime of Gustavo Rojas Pinilla. Lleras and Gómez, who had met in
- síthe (Irish folklore)
sídh, in Irish folklore, a hill or mound under which fairies live. The phrase aos sídhe or the plural sídhe on its own (sometimes anglicized as shee) can denote fairy folk collectively. See also
- Sithole, Ndabaningi (Zimbabwean leader)
Ndabaningi Sithole was a teacher, clergyman, and an intellectual leader of the black nationalist movement in Rhodesia, later Zimbabwe. Mission-educated, Sithole was a teacher before he studied theology in the United States (1955–58). On returning to Rhodesia, then a British colony, he was a
- Sithonia (promontory, Greece)
Chalcidice: fingerlike promontories of Kassándra, Sithonía, and Áyion Óros (Mount Athos). The promontories were once islands, and their isthmuses consequently are composed of loose sediments through which the Kassándra Canal was cut (1937). In antiquity, a canal was dug through the isthmus of Áyion Óros by the Persian king Xerxes…
- Sitifis (Algeria)
Sétif, town, northeastern Algeria, near the Wadi Bou Sellam. As ancient Sitifis, it became important when the Roman emperor Nerva established a veterans’ colony there in 97 ce. Sitifis became the chief town of the province of Mauretania Sitifensis (created 297 ce) and remained so under Byzantine
- Sitka (Alaska, United States)
Sitka, city and borough, southeastern Alaska, historically the most notable Alaskan settlement. U.S. Situated 95 miles (150 km) southwest of Juneau, on the western coast of Baranof Island in the Alexander Archipelago, it is the only city in southeastern Alaska that lies on the Pacific Ocean. The
- Sitka cypress (plant)
false cypress: The Nootka cypress, yellow cypress, or Alaska cedar (C. nootkatensis), also called yellow cedar, canoe cedar, Sitka cypress, and Alaska cypress, is a valuable timber tree of northwestern North America. Its pale yellow hard wood is used for boats, furniture, and paneling. Some varieties are cultivated…
- Sitka National Historical Park (park, Alaska, United States)
Sitka National Historical Park, historic site in southeastern Alaska, U.S., that preserves remnants of Native American and Russian occupation of the area. The park is situated in the city of Sitka on Baranof Island in the Gulf of Alaska. The site was named a federal park by Pres. Benjamin Harrison
- Sitoe, Bento (Mozambican author)
Mozambique: The arts: Bento Sitoe, the author of Zabela (1983), among other works, used Tsonga as the language of his writings. Since the 1990s new authors have emerged who address women’s experiences in Mozambican society, including Paulina Chiziane and Lília Momplé, whose novel Neighbours (1995) was later published…
- Sitophilus granarius (insect)
grain weevil, (species Sitophilus granarius), insect of the family Curculionidae (order Coleoptera), a common pest of stored grain. This small brown weevil is about 3 to 4 mm (0.1 inch) long. The female bores a hole in an individual cereal grain and implants an egg in it. The fleshy white larva
- Sitophilus oryzae (insect)
weevil: …grain weevil Sitophilus granarius, the rice weevil S. oryzae, and the boll weevil Anthonomus grandis).
- Sitotroga cerealella (insect)
gelechiid moth: The whitish larvae of the Angoumois grain moth (Sitotroga cerealella) attack both stored and growing grains, hollowing out the insides of kernels. The gray-coloured adult has blackish spots and a wingspan of about 12 mm (about 12 inch).
- Sitrah (Bahrain)
Sitrah, town, in the state and emirate of Bahrain, located on Sitrah island in the Persian Gulf. An oil port, Sitrah handles not only the entire petroleum production of Bahrain but is also an export centre for oil fields in northeastern Saudi Arabia. A submarine and land pipeline runs northwest
- Sitrah (island, Bahrain)
Sitrah: …island is also exported from Sitrah.
- Sitric Silkenbeard (king of Dublin)
Battle of Clontarf: The kingdoms of Dublin and Leinster: …Dublin upon its defeated king, Sitric Silkenbeard (also known as Sytrygg Oláfsson), and within a few years he elevated Máel Mórda mac Murchada to the kingship of Leinster. As was common in medieval Europe, these political relationships were accompanied (and partly created) by familial ties. Key to this nexus was…
- Sits Straight (Miniconjou Indian)
Wounded Knee Massacre: Massacre: A man named Sits Straight began to dance the Ghost Dance and attempted to rouse the other members of the band, claiming that bullets would not touch them if they donned their sacred ghost shirts. The soldiers grew tense as Sits Straight’s dance reached a frenzy. When a…
- Sitsilt family (English family)
Cecil Family, one of England’s most famous and politically influential families, represented by two branches, holding respectively the marquessates of Exeter and Salisbury, both descended from William Cecil, Lord Burghley, Elizabeth I’s lord treasurer. Burghley’s elder son, Thomas, was created Earl
- Sitta canadensis (bird)
nuthatch: …in North America are the red-breasted nuthatch (Sitta canadensis), a stubby, grayish, rufous-breasted, 10-gram (0.35-ounce) bird that often boldly approaches humans in northern conifer groves, and the white-breasted nuthatch (Sitta carolinensis), a grayish, black-capped, white-breasted, 21-gram (0.74-ounce) bird that often frequents feeders, where it relishes sunflower seeds and suet.
- Sitta carolinensis (bird)
nuthatch: …northern conifer groves, and the white-breasted nuthatch (Sitta carolinensis), a grayish, black-capped, white-breasted, 21-gram (0.74-ounce) bird that often frequents feeders, where it relishes sunflower seeds and suet.
- Sittang River (river, Myanmar)
Sittang River, river in east-central Myanmar (Burma), rising northeast of Yamethin on the edge of the Shan Plateau and flowing south for 260 miles (420 km) to empty into the Gulf of Martaban of the Andaman Sea. The broad Sittang River valley lies between the forested Pegu Mountains (west) and the
- Sittard (Netherlands)
Sittard, gemeente (municipality), southeastern Netherlands. Chartered in 1243, it was a domain of the dukes of Jülich from 1400 to 1794. It was then controlled by the French until 1814 and by the Belgians from 1830 to 1839. The municipality’s industries include the manufacture of chemicals,
- Sitte, Camillo (Austrian architect)
Camillo Sitte was an Austrian architect and town planner who propagated many ideas similar to those that the so-called Garden City advocate, Sir Ebenezer Howard, was advancing at the same time in England. Sir Raymond Unwin in England and Daniel Hudson Burnham in the United States were among the
- sittella (bird)
sittella, any of about two species of Australasian birds of the genus Daphoenositta, sometimes placed in the nuthatch family, Sittidae, but many classifications group them in their own family, Neosittidae. They resemble nuthatches in build—short-tailed and large-footed—and in behaviour, but they
- Sitten (Switzerland)
Sion, capital of Valais canton, southwestern Switzerland. It lies along the Rhône River, at the mouth of La Sionne River, southeast of Lake Geneva (Lac Léman). It originated as a Celtic and Roman settlement called Sedunum. Sion became the seat of a bishop in the late 6th century, and from 999 the
- Sitter, Willem de (Dutch mathematician and astronomer)
Willem de Sitter was a Dutch mathematician, astronomer, and cosmologist who developed theoretical models of the universe based on Albert Einstein’s general theory of relativity. De Sitter studied mathematics at the State University of Groningen and then joined the astronomical laboratory there,
- Sittewald, Philander von (German satirist)
Johann Michael Moscherosch was a German Lutheran satirist whose bitterly brilliant but partisan writings graphically describe life in a Germany ravaged by the Thirty Years’ War (1618–48). His satires, which at times are tedious, also show an overwhelming moral zeal added to a sense of mission.
- Sittidae (bird)
nuthatch, any of about 25 species of short-tailed, long-billed birds in the family Sittidae (order Passeriformes), known for their abilities to grip tree bark as they walk up, down, and around trunks and branches and to hang upside down on the underside of tree limbs as they forage for insects and
- (Sittin’ on) The Dock of the Bay (song by Redding and Cropper)
Otis Redding: …only number one hit: “(Sittin’ on) The Dock of the Bay” (1968), a bittersweet lament of indolence and love. The public mourned his passing by playing his records. During 1968 three other Redding songs—“The Happy Song (Dum Dum),” “Amen,” and “Papa’s Got a Brand New Bag”—hit the charts. He…
- Sitting Bull (Sioux chief)
Sitting Bull was a Lakota (Teton) chief under whom the Oceti Sakowin (Sioux) peoples united in their struggle against the encroachment of settlers on the northern Great Plains. As principal chief of the northern hunting Oceti Sakowin, he led forces against the U.S. Army at the Battles of the
- Sitting Pretty (film by Lang [1948])
Walter Lang: Films of the 1940s: Sitting Pretty (1948) was one of the year’s biggest comedy hits. Clifton Webb was nominated for an Oscar as the imperious Mr. Belvedere, an author doing research on life in suburbia. To that end he offers his services as a babysitter to a couple (Robert…
- sitting up (sport)
hunting: Hunting methods: Sitting up, usually in blinds, is the most popular method of hunting waterfowl, with or without calling. It is called flighting in Great Britain. Hunting by calling involves waiting in hiding and making imitative noises by voice or with a call mechanism to attract the…
- Sittingbourne (England, United Kingdom)
Swale: Sittingbourne, on the mainland, is the administrative centre.
- Sittius, Publius (Roman military officer)
Juba I: …Mauretania, and an Italian adventurer, Publius Sittius. Juba was defeated with the other adherents of Pompey at Thapsus, and his general in the west was killed by Sittius. Repulsed from Utica by Cato (Uticensis) and expelled from his temporary capital Zama by its inhabitants, Juba committed suicide.
- Sittler, Darryl (Canadian ice-hockey player)
Toronto Maple Leafs: …the All-Star play of centre Darryl Sittler and defenseman Börje Salming for most of that time. In the following decade, Toronto fell farther from contention, finishing no higher than third in its division and never getting past the second round of the playoffs over the course of the 1980s. In…
- Sittoung River (river, Myanmar)
Sittang River, river in east-central Myanmar (Burma), rising northeast of Yamethin on the edge of the Shan Plateau and flowing south for 260 miles (420 km) to empty into the Gulf of Martaban of the Andaman Sea. The broad Sittang River valley lies between the forested Pegu Mountains (west) and the
- Sittwe (Myanmar)
Sittwe, town, western Myanmar (Burma). It is the chief settlement of the Arakan region. Situated on the Bay of Bengal at the mouth of the Kaladan River, Sittwe occupies the eastern side of a hilly ridge affording shelter from the southwest monsoon. After the cession of Arakan to the British in
- situated approach
artificial intelligence, situated approach, method of achieving artificial intelligence (AI). Traditional AI has by and large attempted to build disembodied intelligences whose only interaction with the world has been indirect (CYC, for example). Nouvelle AI, on the other hand, attempts to build
- situation comedy (broadcasting genre)
situation comedy, radio or television comedy series that involves a continuing cast of characters in a succession of episodes. Often the characters are markedly different types thrown together by circumstance and occupying a shared environment such as an apartment building or workplace. Sitcoms are
- situation ethics
situation ethics, in ethics and theology, the position that moral decision making is contextual or dependent on a set of circumstances. Situation ethics holds that moral judgments must be made within the context of the entirety of a situation and that all normative features of a situation must be
- Situation in New Delhi, A (novel by Sahgal)
Nayantara Sahgal: …that is particularly evident in A Situation in New Delhi (1977) recurs in such Sahgal novels as Rich like Us (1985), which confronts civil disorder, corruption, and oppression while detailing the internal conflicts in a businessman’s family. Three of Sahgal’s later novels—Plans for Departure (1985), Mistaken Identity (1988), and Lesser…
- situation, comedy of (narrative genre)
comedy of intrigue, in dramatic literature, a comic form in which complicated conspiracies and stratagems dominate the plot. The complex plots and subplots of such comedies are often based on ridiculous and contrived situations with large doses of farcical humour. An example of comedy of intrigue
- situational collective violence
collective violence: Defining collective violence: …be divided into three categories:
- situational ethics
situation ethics, in ethics and theology, the position that moral decision making is contextual or dependent on a set of circumstances. Situation ethics holds that moral judgments must be made within the context of the entirety of a situation and that all normative features of a situation must be
- Situationism (cultural movement)
Western painting: Institutional critique, feminism, and conceptual art: 1968 and its aftermath: …politicized cultural movements: Lettrism and Situationism. The latter of these, founded in 1957, departed from the classical Marxist emphasis on the economic sphere to interrogate the very nature of everyday life. Apart from spawning some fascinating architectural projects, and the production by Asger Jorn (formerly a member of COBRA) of…
- Situationist International (international organization)
Situationist International (SI), group of artists, writers, and social critics (1957–72) that aimed to eliminate capitalism through the revolutionization of everyday life. Instead of focusing on traditional sites of economic and social change, such as the factory, the Situationist International
- Situations (work by Sartre)
Jean-Paul Sartre: Post-World War II work: …several volumes under the title Situations.
- situla (vessel)
ceremonial object: Objects used in rites of passage: …used in funeral rites include situlae, Roman and Egyptian bronze libation jars with a handle on the tops; Indian Brahmanic terra-cotta jars with perforated bases, which are broken after their use in the aqueous purification of the pyre; and cages containing birds (Buddhist Japan), sometimes eagles (ancient Rome), released near…
- Sitwell family (British family of writers)
Sitwell family, British family of writers. Edith Sitwell (1887–1964) attracted attention when she joined her brothers in a revolt against Georgian poetry. Her early work, which emphasizes the value of sound, includes Clowns’ Houses (1918) and Façade (1923), set to music by William Walton. Beginning
- Sitwell, Dame Edith (British poet)
Edith Sitwell was an English poet who first gained fame for her stylistic artifices but who emerged during World War II as a poet of emotional depth and profoundly human concerns. She was equally famed for her formidable personality, Elizabethan dress, and eccentric opinions. A member of a
- Sitwell, Edith (British poet)
Edith Sitwell was an English poet who first gained fame for her stylistic artifices but who emerged during World War II as a poet of emotional depth and profoundly human concerns. She was equally famed for her formidable personality, Elizabethan dress, and eccentric opinions. A member of a
- Sitwell, Fanny (friend of Stevenson)
Robert Louis Stevenson: Early life: …became a lifelong friend, and Fanny Sitwell (who later married Colvin). Sitwell, an older woman of charm and talent, drew the young man out and won his confidence. Soon Stevenson was deeply in love, and on his return to Edinburgh he wrote her a series of letters in which he…
- Sitwell, Francis Osbert Sacheverell (English writer)
Sir Osbert Sitwell, 5th Baronet was an English man of letters who became famous, with his sister Edith and brother Sacheverell, as a tilter at establishment windmills in literature and the arts. His best-known books are his prose memoirs. Sitwell wrote satirical and serious poetry (The Collected
- Sitwell, Sir Osbert, 5th Baronet (English writer)
Sir Osbert Sitwell, 5th Baronet was an English man of letters who became famous, with his sister Edith and brother Sacheverell, as a tilter at establishment windmills in literature and the arts. His best-known books are his prose memoirs. Sitwell wrote satirical and serious poetry (The Collected
- Sitwell, Sir Sacheverell, 6th Baronet (English poet)
Sir Sacheverell Sitwell, 6th Baronet was an English poet and critic, the younger brother of the poets and essayists Edith and Osbert Sitwell. He is best known for his books on art, architecture, and travel. Sitwell’s poetry—The People’s Palace (1918), The Thirteenth Caesar (1924), The Rio Grande
- SIU (nongovernmental organization)
Institute of World Affairs (IWA), nongovernmental organization (NGO) that develops educational and training programs in conflict analysis, conflict management, and postconflict peace building. It is headquartered in Vienna, Va. The IWA was founded in 1924 in Geneva by a group of English and
- Sium (plant)
water parsnip, any of several aromatic herbs of the genus Sium, especially S. latifolium, belonging to the parsley family (Apiaceae), distributed throughout the Northern Hemisphere and Africa. They grow in moist areas, and some species are even partially submerged. All are perennial herbs with
- Sium latifolium (plant)
water parsnip: …aromatic herbs of the genus Sium, especially S. latifolium, belonging to the parsley family (Apiaceae), distributed throughout the Northern Hemisphere and Africa. They grow in moist areas, and some species are even partially submerged. All are perennial herbs with divided leaves and clusters of white flowers. S. sisarum, known as…
- Sium sisarum (plant)
water parsnip: sisarum, known as skirret, is cultivated for its edible tuberous roots. The more common S. latifolium, however, is known to be poisonous to livestock.
- Siumut (political party, Greenland)
Greenland: Government and society: Among them are Siumut, a social democratic party that favours self-determination while maintaining close relations with Denmark; the Demokratiit party, created by a breakaway faction of Siumut; Atassut, a more conservative party that has supported Greenland’s historical relations with Denmark; and Inuit Ataqatigiit, which calls for full independence…
- Siuniq (region, Armenia)
Armenia: Settlement patterns: …of Shirak and in the Zangezur region has small hamlets that lie in secluded glens, on riverbanks, and near springs; in the plain, such settlements cluster around mountain streams and irrigation canals, amid orchards and vineyards.
- Siuri (India)
Siuri, town, central West Bengal state, northeastern India. It lies just south of the Mor River. Siuri is an important road and agricultural-trade centre. Its chief industries include rice milling, cotton and silk weaving, and furniture manufacture. The water-control-system barrage for the Mor
- Siuru (Estonian literary group)
Estonian literature: …Revolution of 1917 emerged the Siuru group (named after a bird in Finno-Ugrian mythology). These Neoromantic poets reacted against Suits’s emphasis on formalism. Their emotional intensity was well-illustrated by Henrik Visnapuu, who, with Marie Under, developed the lyrical potential of Estonian to the full. By the 1930s a renewal of…
- SIV (virus)
SIV, infectious agent of the genus Lentivirus in the family Retroviridae. The virus infects primates of the infraorder Simiiformes, which includes the so-called anthropoids—apes, monkeys, and humans. SIV is transmitted through contact with infected body fluids such as blood. It is widespread among
- Śiva (Hindu deity)
Shiva, one of the main deities of Hinduism, whom Shaivites worship as the supreme god. Among his common epithets are Shambhu (“Benign”), Shankara (“Beneficent”), Mahesha (“Great Lord”), and Mahadeva (“Great God”). Shiva is represented in a variety of forms: in a pacific mood with his consort
- Siva, Katherine (Native American scholar)
Katherine Siva Saubel was a Native American scholar and educator committed to preserving her Cahuilla culture and language and to promoting their fuller understanding by the larger public. Reared on the Palm Springs Reservation in California, Katherine Siva was taught by her parents from an early
- Śivaji (Indian king)
Shivaji was an individual who opposed the Mughal dynasty and founded the Maratha kingdom in 17th-century India. His kingdom’s security was based on religious toleration and on the functional integration of Brahmans, Marathas, and Prabhus. Shivaji was descended from a line of prominent nobles. India
- Śivājī Bhonsle (Indian king)
Shivaji was an individual who opposed the Mughal dynasty and founded the Maratha kingdom in 17th-century India. His kingdom’s security was based on religious toleration and on the functional integration of Brahmans, Marathas, and Prabhus. Shivaji was descended from a line of prominent nobles. India
- Sivaladapidae (fossil primate family)
adapiform: Evolution and classification: Asian sivaladapids remain poorly documented anatomically, especially in comparison with notharctines and adapids. The cheek teeth of larger sivaladapids, such as Sivaladapis and Guangxilemur, were clearly adapted for folivory, but those of smaller taxa such as Paukkaungia likely evolved for a diet primarily of fruits.
- Sivan (Jewish month)
Jewish religious year: Months and notable days: …Day of the Omer Counting) Sivan (May–June) 6, 7 Shavuot (Feast of Weeks, or Pentecost) Tammuz (June–July) 17 Shivaʾ ʾAsar be-Tammuz (Fast of Tammuz 17) Av (July–August) 9 Tisha be-Av (Fast of Av 9) Elul (August–September)
- Śivānanda, Swami (Hindu leader)
Hinduism: Other reform movements: In 1936 Swami Shivananda, who had been a physician, established an ashram and an organization called the Divine Life Society near the sacred site of Rishikesh in the Himalayas. This organization has numerous branches in India and some elsewhere. His movement teaches more or less orthodox Vedanta,…
- Sivapithecus (fossil primate genus)
Sivapithecus, fossil primate genus dating from the Miocene Epoch (23.7 to 5.3 million years ago) and thought to be the direct ancestor of the orangutan. Sivapithecus is closely related to Ramapithecus, and fossils of the two primates have often been recovered from the same deposits in the Siwālik
- Śivarātrī (Hindu festival)
Kathmandu: …Kathmandu include, in spring, the Shivaratri and the Machendra Jatra with its procession bearing the image of the god Machendra; in late summer, the Gai Jatra (festival of the cow); and, in early autumn, the Indra Jatra, during which the goddess Devi, represented by a young girl, is carried in…
- Sivaš (geographical region, Ukraine)
Syvash, (“Putrid Sea”), system of shallow inlets of the Sea of Azov that penetrate the northern and eastern coasts of the Crimean Peninsula, Ukraine. Syvash is an area of marshy inlets and coves on the western margin of the Sea of Azov, from which it is separated by the Arabat Spit, a sandbar
- Sivas (Turkey)
Sivas, city, central Turkey. It lies at an elevation of 4,183 feet (1,275 meters) in the broad valley of the Kızıl River. Although excavations at a mound known as Topraktepe indicate Hittite settlements in the locality, nothing is known of Sivas’s history prior to its emergence as the Roman city of
- Sivas Congress (Turkish history)
Associations for the Defense of Rights: At a second congress, in Sivas on September 4–11, the nationwide Association for the Defense of the Rights of Anatolia and Rumelia (Ottoman provinces in the Balkans) was formed, with a permanent representative committee under Mustafa Kemal.
- Sivasagar (India)
Sivasagar, town, eastern Assam state, northeastern India. Sivasagar lies on the Dikhu River, a tributary of the Brahmaputra River, about 30 miles (50 km) northeast of Jorhat. The Tai-speaking Ahom people came to the area from Yunnan province, China, in the 13th century. Sivasagar was the capital of
- Sivasamudram (island, India)
Kaveri River: …sacred islands of Srirangapatnam and Sivasamudram, 50 miles (80 km) apart. Around Sivasamudram are the scenic Sivasamudram Falls, comprising two series of rapids, Bhar Chukki and Gagana Chukki, plunging a total of 320 feet (100 metres) and reaching a width of 1,000 feet (300 metres) in the rainy season. The…
- Sivasamudram Falls (waterfall, India)
Kaveri River: Around Sivasamudram are the scenic Sivasamudram Falls, comprising two series of rapids, Bhar Chukki and Gagana Chukki, plunging a total of 320 feet (100 metres) and reaching a width of 1,000 feet (300 metres) in the rainy season. The falls supply hydroelectric power to Mysuru (Mysore), Bengaluru (Bangalore), and the…
- Sivash (geographical region, Ukraine)
Syvash, (“Putrid Sea”), system of shallow inlets of the Sea of Azov that penetrate the northern and eastern coasts of the Crimean Peninsula, Ukraine. Syvash is an area of marshy inlets and coves on the western margin of the Sea of Azov, from which it is separated by the Arabat Spit, a sandbar
- Siverskodonetske (Ukraine)
Syeverodonetsk, city, eastern Ukraine, in the valley of the Donets River. The city was founded in 1934 as the site of a new chemical complex, part of which was evacuated eastward during World War II. In 1951 and 1958 additional chemical industries were added, based on coke, and the complex has
- Siverskyy Donets (river, Europe)
Donets River, a tributary of the Don River, southwestern Russia and eastern Ukraine. The Donets is 650 miles (1,050 km) long and drains a basin of 39,000 square miles (100,000 square km). Rising in the Central Russian Upland, it flows southward past Belgorod, Russia; enters Ukraine and passes to
- Sivertsen, Cort (Norwegian naval officer)
Adelaer was a Norwegian-born seaman and naval officer, distinguished in both Venetian and Danish naval history. He entered the Dutch navy in 1639 as an adelborst (“cadet”) and served under Martin van Tromp but in 1642 moved into Venetian service, where he was known as Curzio Suffrido Adelborst. He
- Sivertsen, Cort (Norwegian naval officer)
Adelaer was a Norwegian-born seaman and naval officer, distinguished in both Venetian and Danish naval history. He entered the Dutch navy in 1639 as an adelborst (“cadet”) and served under Martin van Tromp but in 1642 moved into Venetian service, where he was known as Curzio Suffrido Adelborst. He
- Sivertsen, Curt (Norwegian naval officer)
Adelaer was a Norwegian-born seaman and naval officer, distinguished in both Venetian and Danish naval history. He entered the Dutch navy in 1639 as an adelborst (“cadet”) and served under Martin van Tromp but in 1642 moved into Venetian service, where he was known as Curzio Suffrido Adelborst. He
- SIVgor (virus)
SIV: Evolutionary origins: …2009 a virus known as SIVgor, so named because it infects gorillas, was discovered to be very closely related to a newly identified strain of HIV-1. This discovery indicated that SIV had been transmitted from gorillas to humans.