- Salamat (river, Africa)
Chari River: …by the Aouk, Kéita, and Salamat rivers, parallel streams that mingle in an immense floodplain. The Salamat, which rises in Darfur in Sudan, in its middle course is fed by the waters of Lake Iro. The river then divides into numerous branches that spread into a delta and end in…
- Salamaua (historical town, Papua New Guinea)
World War II: The Southwest and South Pacific, June–October 1943: …New Guinea toward Lae and Salamaua, while other Australian forces simultaneously advanced from Wau in the hinterland; and in the night of June 29–30, U.S. forces secured Nassau Bay as a base for further advances against the same positions.
- Salambo (work by Flaubert)
Salammbô, historical novel by Gustave Flaubert, published in 1862. Although the titular heroine is a fictional character, the novel’s setting of ancient Carthage and many characters are historically accurate, if highly romanticized. Set after the First Punic War (264–241 bce), Salammbô is the story
- Salameh, Ali Hassan (Palestinian terrorist)
Operation Wrath of God: …target in Lillehammer had been Ali Hassan Salameh, a Fatah and Black September operations chief known to Mossad as the “Red Prince.” The Wrath of God program was reactivated for a final mission in 1979, when the squad assassinated Salameh in Beirut with a car bomb placed along a route…
- salami (food)
salami, salted and air-dried (dry-cured) sausage that has been popular in Italy for millennia and is now enjoyed the world over. Its exact origins are unknown. The tradition of salting meat to preserve it is widely shared among numerous world cultures. Salami, which derives from the Italian word
- Salamís (island, Greece)
Salamis, island, town, and dímos (municipality), Attica (Modern Greek: Attikí) periféreia (region), eastern Greece. The island lies in the Saronikós Gulf of the Aegean Sea, west of the city of Piraeus. The town is a port on the west coast of the island. On the east, between the island and the
- Salamis (island, Greece)
Salamis, island, town, and dímos (municipality), Attica (Modern Greek: Attikí) periféreia (region), eastern Greece. The island lies in the Saronikós Gulf of the Aegean Sea, west of the city of Piraeus. The town is a port on the west coast of the island. On the east, between the island and the
- Salamis (ancient city, Cyprus)
Salamis, principal city of ancient Cyprus, located on the east coast of the island, north of modern Famagusta. According to the Homeric epics, Salamis was founded after the Trojan War by the archer Teucer, who came from the island of Salamis, off Attica. This literary tradition probably reflects
- Salamis (Greece)
Salamis: The town is a port on the west coast of the island. On the east, between the island and the mainland, are the straits in which the Greeks won a decisive naval victory over the Persians in 480 bce. Pop. (2001) town, 24,446; municipality, 34,975; (2011)…
- Salamis, Battle of (ancient Greece-Persia)
Battle of Salamis, (480 bc), battle in the Greco-Persian Wars in which a Greek fleet defeated much larger Persian naval forces in the straits at Salamis, between the island of Salamis and the Athenian port-city of Piraeus. By 480 the Persian king Xerxes and his army had overrun much of Greece, and
- Salammbô (work by Flaubert)
Salammbô, historical novel by Gustave Flaubert, published in 1862. Although the titular heroine is a fictional character, the novel’s setting of ancient Carthage and many characters are historically accurate, if highly romanticized. Set after the First Punic War (264–241 bce), Salammbô is the story
- Salan, Raoul (French general)
Raoul Salan was a French military officer who sought to prevent Algeria from gaining independence from France. In 1961–62 he led an organization of right-wing extremists, the Organisation de l’Armée Secrète (OAS; Secret Army Organization), in a campaign of terror against the government of Charles
- Salandra, Antonio (premier of Italy)
Antonio Salandra was an Italian statesman who was premier at the beginning of World War I (1914–16). Salandra was educated in law and taught public administration at the University of Rome before entering politics. A member of a wealthy family and a conservative, he rose to become minister of
- Salanter, Israel (Lithuanian rabbi)
Musar: Rabbi Israel Salanter, later Israel Lipkin, who initiated the movement as head of the yeshiva at Vilnius, thus drew a distinction between intellectual knowledge and personal behaviour.
- Salanx (fish)
icicle fish, (Salanx), any of several semitransparent fishes, family Salangidae, found in freshwaters and salt waters of eastern Asia and considered a delicacy by the Chinese. The numerous species are slender and troutlike in form, scaleless or finely scaled, and seldom more than 15 centimetres (6
- salar (geology)
playa, flat-bottom depression found in interior desert basins and adjacent to coasts within arid and semiarid regions, periodically covered by water that slowly filtrates into the ground water system or evaporates into the atmosphere, causing the deposition of salt, sand, and mud along the bottom
- Salar de Uyuni (salt flat, Bolivia)
Uyuni Salt Flat, arid windswept salt flat in southwestern Bolivia. It lies on the Altiplano, at 11,995 feet (3,656 metres) above sea level. The Uyuni Salt Flat is Bolivia’s largest salt-encrusted waste area (about 4,085 square miles [10,582 square km]) and is separated from the Coipasa Salt Flat, a
- Sālār Masʿūd, Sayyid (Afghan warrior-saint)
Bahraich: …was invaded in 1033 by Sayyid Sālār Masʿūd, an Afghan warrior-saint. It subsequently changed hands several times before becoming part of British India. Bahraich is a centre of trade (agricultural products and timber) with Nepal; there is also some sugar processing. The tomb of Sayyid Sālār Masʿūd, who died there…
- Salaria, Via (Roman road)
salt: History of use: …is the Via Salaria (Salt Route) over which Roman salt from Ostia was carried into other parts of Italy. Herodotus tells of a caravan route that united the salt oases of the Libyan Desert. The ancient trade between the Aegean and the Black Sea coast of southern Russia was…
- salary cap (economics)
baseball: Rise of the players: …bargaining agreement that included a salary cap (a limit on a team’s payroll), elimination of salary arbitration, and a revised free agency plan. The proposal was a dramatic shift from the previous contract and was promptly rejected by the players’ union. The negotiations that followed were inconclusive, and on August…
- Salas, Antonio (Ecuadorian artist)
Latin American art: Neoclassicism: In 1829 the Salas patriarch, Antonio, took time away from his usual subject matter (saints) to paint the bust of the liberator Simón Bolívar in sharp, linear detail against a neutral background. His son Rafael depicted the general Mariano Castillo standing in his gilt-braided black military uniform against…
- Salas, Rafael (Ecuadorian artist)
Latin American art: Neoclassicism: His son Rafael depicted the general Mariano Castillo standing in his gilt-braided black military uniform against a golden background. Rafael’s older half-brother, Ramón Salas, created a series of crisply linear watercolours depicting the common people of Ecuador, showing individuals such as an indigenous water carrier.
- Salas, Ramón (Ecuadorian artist)
Latin American art: Neoclassicism: Rafael’s older half-brother, Ramón Salas, created a series of crisply linear watercolours depicting the common people of Ecuador, showing individuals such as an indigenous water carrier.
- Salasaca (South American people)
Andes Mountains: The people of the Andes Mountains: …Cañaris in the south and Salasacas in the north. Agriculture (corn [maize], potatoes, broad beans) is the main occupation; some Indigenous peoples engage in ceramics and weaving.
- Salasco, armistice of (Italian history)
Italy: The Revolutions of 1848: By the terms of the Salasco armistice (August 9, 1848), the Piedmontese army abandoned Lombardy. In Piedmont the new constitution, the Statuto Albertino (Albertine Statute), remained in force, and democratic ideas survived.
- ṣalāt (Islam)
salat, the daily ritual prayer enjoined upon all Muslims as one of the five Pillars of Islam (arkān al-Islām). There is disagreement among Islamic scholars as to whether some passages about prayer in the Muslim sacred scripture, the Qurʾān, are actually references to the salat. Within Muhammad’s
- salat (Islam)
salat, the daily ritual prayer enjoined upon all Muslims as one of the five Pillars of Islam (arkān al-Islām). There is disagreement among Islamic scholars as to whether some passages about prayer in the Muslim sacred scripture, the Qurʾān, are actually references to the salat. Within Muhammad’s
- Salatiga (Indonesia)
Salatiga, kota (city), Central Java (Jawa Tengah) propinsi (or provinsi; province), Indonesia. The city lies 35 miles (56 km) north-northeast of Yogyakarta, at the foot of Mount Merbabu. At an elevation of 1,916 feet (584 metres), it is a well laid out city that stands in the midst of fruit- and
- Salavat (Russia)
Salavat, city, Bashkortostan, western Russia, on the Belaya (White) River. It was founded in 1948 as a major oil centre of the Volga-Urals oil field, and the city has a large refinery and petrochemical industry. Technical glass and machinery for the petroleum industry are also produced in Salavat.
- Salavin (work by Duhamel)
Georges Duhamel: The Salavin cycle describes the frustrations and perplexities of a “little man” of the 20th century trying to work out his own salvation with no religious faith to sustain him. In the Pasquier cycle, Duhamel relates the history of a French middle-class family from the 1880s…
- Salayar (island, Indonesia)
Selayar, largest of an island group off the southwestern tip of Celebes (Sulawesi), which is administered from Makassar as part of South Sulawesi propinsi (province), Indonesia. The other islands are Pasi, Bahuluang, Pulasi, and Tambulongang. All the islands are mountainous, but fertile lowlands
- Salazar Bridge (bridge, Lisbon, Portugal)
Lisbon: City site: …of the city, by the 25th of April Bridge. Just east of the bridge, the Tagus suddenly broadens into a bay 7 miles (11 km) wide called the Mar de Palha (“Sea of Straw”) because of the way that it shimmers in the sun. The widest part of the Tagus…
- Salazar de Frias, Alonso (Spanish inquisitor)
inquisition: Procedures and organization: In 1610 the Spanish inquisitor Alonso Salazar de Frias was sent by his superiors to review the evidence in a series of trials for witchcraft in northern Spain. When Salazar de Frias reported that he found insufficient evidence for conviction, and in spite of protests from two other fellow inquisitors,…
- Salazar y Palacios, Catalina de (wife of Cervantes)
Miguel de Cervantes: Civil servant and writer: Late in 1584 he married Catalina de Salazar y Palacios, 18 years his junior. She had a small property in the village of Esquivias in La Mancha. Little is known about their emotional relationship. There is no reason to suppose that the marriage did not settle down into an adequate…
- Salazar, António de Oliveira (prime minister of Portugal)
António de Oliveira Salazar was a Portuguese economist, who served as prime minister of Portugal for 36 years (1932–68). Salazar, the son of an estate manager at Santa Comba Dão, was educated at the seminary at Viseu and at the University of Coimbra. He graduated from there in law in 1914 and
- Salazar, Ken (American lawyer and politician)
Hispanic Americans: Hispanic activism: Ken Salazar, a Mexican American from Colorado, was a U.S. senator before serving as secretary of the interior in 2009–13. Sonia Sotomayor became the first Hispanic justice of the U.S. Supreme Court in 2009. In 2017 Catherine Cortez Masto of Nevada became the first Latina…
- Salazar, Kenneth Lee (American lawyer and politician)
Hispanic Americans: Hispanic activism: Ken Salazar, a Mexican American from Colorado, was a U.S. senator before serving as secretary of the interior in 2009–13. Sonia Sotomayor became the first Hispanic justice of the U.S. Supreme Court in 2009. In 2017 Catherine Cortez Masto of Nevada became the first Latina…
- salba chia (plant)
chia, (Salvia hispanica), species of flowering plant in the mint family (Lamiaceae), grown for its edible seeds. The plant is native to Mexico and Guatemala, where it was an important crop for pre-Columbian Aztecs and other Mesoamerican Indian cultures. Chia seeds are touted for their health
- Salbai, Treaty of (Great Britain-India [1782])
Maratha Wars: …until the conclusion of the Treaty of Salbai (May 1782); the sole British gain was the island of Salsette adjacent to Bombay (now Mumbai).
- Salcedas, Convent of the (museum, Coro, Venezuela)
Coro: The Convent of the Salcedas, built by 1620, was later used as a school; the convent was restored in 1978, and it now houses an ecclesiastical museum. Among other notable structures are the Arcaya House and the House of the Iron Windows, both 18th-century, and the…
- Salcedo (Dominican Republic)
Salcedo, city, northern Dominican Republic. It lies in the fertile Cibao Valley between the mountain chains of the Cordillera Central and the Cordillera Septentrional. Salcedo serves as a commercial centre for the agricultural hinterland, which yields principally cacao, coffee, and corn (maize). It
- salchow jump (figure skating)
Ulrich Salchow: Salchow originated the salchow jump, the easiest jump to perform. The skater takes off from the rear inside edge of one skate, makes one full turn in the air, and lands on the rear outside edge of the other skate.
- Salchow, Karl Emil Julius Ulrich (Swedish athlete)
Ulrich Salchow was a Swedish figure skater who established a record by winning 10 world championships for men (1901–05, 1907–11—he did not compete in 1906). At the 1908 Games in London, he won the first Olympic gold medal awarded for men’s figure skating. (Read Scott Hamilton’s Britannica entry on
- Salchow, Ulrich (Swedish athlete)
Ulrich Salchow was a Swedish figure skater who established a record by winning 10 world championships for men (1901–05, 1907–11—he did not compete in 1906). At the 1908 Games in London, he won the first Olympic gold medal awarded for men’s figure skating. (Read Scott Hamilton’s Britannica entry on
- Salcillo, Francisco (Spanish sculptor)
Francisco Salzillo was a sculptor, a prolific creator of figures for the Holy Week procession. He is considered by some authorities to be the greatest sculptor in 18th-century Spain and by others as merely an excellent folk artist. Growing up in provincial Murcia, he received his training from his
- Salcombe Regis (England, United Kingdom)
South Hams: …the branching Kingsbridge estuary are Salcombe, a holiday and residential town noted for sailing, and Kingsbridge, which has retail and tourist services. Area 342 square miles (887 square km). Pop. (2001) 81,849; (2011) 83,140.
- Saldae (Algeria)
Bejaïa, town, Mediterranean Sea port, northeastern Algeria. The town lies at the mouth of the Wadi Soummam. Sheltered by Mount Gouraya (2,165 feet [660 metres]) and Cape Carbon, it receives an annual average rainfall of 40 inches (1,000 mm) and is surrounded by a fertile plain. The older town,
- Saldana, Zoe (American actress)
Zoe Saldana is an American actress who found her greatest success performing in science-fiction and superhero movies. Saldana spent much of her childhood in Queens, New York. However, when she was nine years old, her father died in a car accident, and she moved with her family to the Dominican
- Saldanha Bay (harbour, South Africa)
Saldanha Bay, deep, essentially landlocked harbour of the Atlantic Ocean, situated on the southwest coast of South Africa. Named after the early 16th-century Portuguese navigator António de Saldanha, the bay is both larger and safer than Table Bay, which is located 65 miles (105 km) farther
- Saldanha, António de (Portuguese navigator)
Cape Town: History of Cape Town: …Mountain was the Portuguese navigator António de Saldanha. He encountered a few hundred indigenous inhabitants, a Khoe people whose economy was based on herding, hunting, and gathering. After Saldanha’s visit, European ships continued to put in at Table Bay to take on fresh water, meat, and other provisions. Survivors of…
- Saldanha, João Carlos de Saldanha, Duke de (Portuguese statesman)
João Carlos de Saldanha, duke de Saldanha was a Portuguese military officer and statesman who was prominent in Portugal’s turbulent politics for half a century. Saldanha joined the Portuguese army at an early age and fought in the Peninsular War (1808–14) in Portugal and Brazil. He was appointed
- Saldanha, João Carlos Gregório Domingues Vicente Francisco de Saldanha Oliveira e Daum, Duke de (Portuguese statesman)
João Carlos de Saldanha, duke de Saldanha was a Portuguese military officer and statesman who was prominent in Portugal’s turbulent politics for half a century. Saldanha joined the Portuguese army at an early age and fought in the Peninsular War (1808–14) in Portugal and Brazil. He was appointed
- Saldanhabaai (harbour, South Africa)
Saldanha Bay, deep, essentially landlocked harbour of the Atlantic Ocean, situated on the southwest coast of South Africa. Named after the early 16th-century Portuguese navigator António de Saldanha, the bay is both larger and safer than Table Bay, which is located 65 miles (105 km) farther
- Saldidae (insect)
shore bug, any of the more than 200 species of small dark coloured insects with white or yellow markings that constitute the family Saldidae (order Heteroptera). Shore bugs prey upon other insects near fresh water or saltwater. When disturbed, shore bugs fly short distances and then hide in
- Saldívar, Yolanda (American murderer)
Selena: Success as a solo artist and murder: …founder of her fan club, Yolanda Saldívar, who was suspected of embezzlement and whom Selena confronted about the improprieties. Selena died hours later in a hospital in Corpus Christi.
- Salduba (Spain)
Zaragoza, city, capital of Zaragoza provincia (province), in central Aragon comunidad autónoma (autonomous community), northeastern Spain. It lies on the south bank of the Ebro River (there bridged). Toward the end of the 1st century bce, the Celtiberian town of Salduba at the site was taken by the
- Salé (anthropological and archaeological site, Morocco)
Salé, site of paleoanthropological excavation near Rabat, Morocco, known for the 1971 discovery of a cranium belonging to the human genus (Homo). Tentatively dated to 400,000 years ago, the site contained a few animal fossils, but there were no associated stone tools. The cranium is small and
- Salé (Morocco)
Salé, old walled city on the Atlantic coast of Morocco, at the mouth of the Wadi Bou Regreg. The wadi separates Salé from Rabat, Morocco’s capital city, of which Salé has become a bedroom community. Salé was founded in the 10th century and reached its zenith as a medieval merchant port and
- Sale (England, United Kingdom)
Trafford: The administrative centre is at Sale.
- sale (law)
commercial transaction: Sale of goods: The sale is the most common commercial transaction. All the rights that the seller has in a specific object are transferred to the buyer in return for the latter’s paying the purchase price to the seller. The objects that may thus be…
- Sale (Victoria, Australia)
Sale, coastal city, southeastern Victoria, Australia. It lies along the Thomson River near the latter’s junction with the Macalister. Sale is the major regional centre for East Gippsland, an irrigated area of intensive farming and livestock raising. Founded in 1845, the settlement was named after
- sale (business)
property: “Sale,” the voluntary exchange of property for money, is the most common of these. A “donation,” or gift, is another voluntary form. Succession to property upon death of the previous owner is a central concept in nearly all property systems and falls into the category…
- Sale el sol (album by Shakira [2010])
Shakira: …appears on her breezily eclectic Sale el sol (2010), which earned a Latin Grammy for best female pop vocal album.
- Sale of Goods Act (United Kingdom [1893])
carriage of goods: Diversion and reconsignment; stoppage in transit: Indicatively, the British Sale of Goods Act of 1893, which codified the common-law rules, declares that the unpaid vendor may resume possession of the goods as long as they are in the course of transit and may retain them until payment or tender of the price. There are…
- Sale, Antoine de La (French writer)
Antoine de La Sale was a French writer chiefly remembered for his Petit Jehan de Saintré, a romance marked by a great gift for the observation of court manners and a keen sense of comic situation and dialogue. From 1400 to 1448 La Sale served the dukes of Anjou, Louis II, Louis III, and René, as
- Sale, Cornelius Calvin, Jr. (United States senator)
Robert C. Byrd was an American Democratic politician who served as a representative from West Virginia in the U.S. House of Representatives (1953–59) and as a U.S. senator from West Virginia (1959–2010). Byrd was the longest-serving member of the Senate and longest-serving member of Congress in
- Sale, George (British Orientalist)
Muhammad: Western perceptions: …illustrated by the British Orientalist George Sale’s (died 1736) translation of the Qurʾān into English (1734): even though its declared objective is polemical and the Qurʾān is dismissed as “so manifest a forgery,” Sale at least leaves it open whether Muhammad’s preaching sprang from genuine religious “enthusiasm” or “only a…
- Salé, Jamie (Canadian figure skater)
Jamie Salé is a Canadian pairs figure skater who, with her doubles partner David Pelletier, was awarded a gold medal at the 2002 Winter Games in Salt Lake City, Utah, after a judging scandal. They shared the gold with Yelena Berezhnaya and Anton Sikharulidze of Russia. (Read Scott Hamilton’s
- Salechard (Russia)
Salekhard, city and administrative centre of Yamalo-Nenets autonomous okrug (district), Russia. It lies on the Poluy River at its entrance to the Ob River. Salekhard was founded in 1595 and became a city in 1938. Fish canning and sawmilling reflect the regional economy. It is also a base for the
- Salée River (channel, Guadeloupe)
Guadeloupe: …by a narrow channel, the Salée River. Other islands in the group are Marie-Galante to the southeast, La Désirade to the east, and the Saintes Islands (Terre-de-Haut and Terre-de-Bas) to the south. Two French overseas collectivities—Saint-Barthélemy and Saint-Martin, the French-administered part
- Saleh (al-Qaeda terrorist)
Abdullah Ahmed Abdullah was an Egyptian militant Islamist and al-Qaeda strategist who was indicted by the United States for his role in the August 7, 1998, bombings of U.S. embassies in Tanzania and Kenya. According to the indictment, Abdullah had served as a member of al-Qaeda’s inner circle and
- Saleh, Ali Abdullah (president of Yemen)
Ali Abdullah Saleh was a Yemeni military officer and president of North Yemen (1978–1990) until its unification with the south, after which he served as president of reunified Yemen (1990–2012). His presidency ended after a yearlong popular uprising in Yemen (2011–12) forced him to step down. Saleh
- Salek, Mustafa Ould (Mauritanian head of state)
Moktar Ould Daddah: …d’état led by Lieutenant Colonel Mustafa Ould Salek.
- Salekhard (Russia)
Salekhard, city and administrative centre of Yamalo-Nenets autonomous okrug (district), Russia. It lies on the Poluy River at its entrance to the Ob River. Salekhard was founded in 1595 and became a city in 1938. Fish canning and sawmilling reflect the regional economy. It is also a base for the
- Salem (Ohio, United States)
Salem, city, Columbiana county, northeastern Ohio, U.S., 20 miles (32 km) southwest of Youngstown. It was settled in 1803 by Quakers from Salem, N.J., and was laid out in 1806. Before the American Civil War it was a station on the Underground Railroad for escaping slaves, and it was also the
- Salem (cigarette)
Alison Cooper: …the popular cigarette brands Kool, Salem, and Winston, and from Lorillard Inc., notably Maverick cigarettes and blu eCigs, the leading electronic cigarette sold in the United States. (The deal was part of a larger and more-complex transaction that included Reynolds buying Lorillard.) After receiving regulatory clearance, the deal was finalized…
- Salem (Oregon, United States)
Salem, capital of Oregon, U.S., and the seat (1849) of Marion county. It lies along the Willamette River, 43 miles (69 km) southwest of Portland. Methodist missionaries, led by Jason Lee, settled the site in 1840. Its Kalapuya Indian name, Chemeketa, meaning “place of rest,” was translated into the
- Salem (Kentucky, United States)
Bardstown, city, seat (1784) of Nelson county, in the outer Bluegrass region of central Kentucky, U.S., 39 miles (63 km) southeast of Louisville. Founded as Salem in 1778, it was later renamed to honour William Bard, one of the original landowners. During the American Civil War, it was occupied
- Salem (India)
Salem, city, north-central Tamil Nadu state, southern India. It is on the Tirumanimuttar River (a tributary of the Kaveri [Cauvery] River) near Attur Gap between the Kalrayan and Pachamalai hills. Archaeological remains show that the Salem region was occupied during the Neolithic Period. In
- Salem (New Jersey, United States)
Salem, city, seat (1694) of Salem county, southwestern New Jersey, U.S. It lies along the Salem River near the latter’s confluence with the Delaware River, 34 miles (55 km) southwest of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. It was established in 1675 by John Fenwick, an English Quaker. The Friends (Quakers)
- Salem (North Carolina, United States)
Winston-Salem, city, port of entry, and seat of Forsyth county, in the Piedmont region of North Carolina, U.S. With High Point and Greensboro it forms the Piedmont Triad metropolitan area. Winston-Salem was created in 1913 from two towns originally 1 mile (1.6 km) apart. Winston, founded in 1849 as
- Salem (county, New Jersey, United States)
Salem, county, southwestern New Jersey, U.S. It comprises a coastal lowland bounded by Delaware to the west (the Delaware River constituting the border), Oldmans Creek to the north, the Maurice River to the southeast, and Stow Creek to the southwest. The county is connected to Wilmington, Del., by
- Salem (Illinois, United States)
Salem, city, seat (1823) of Marion county, south-central Illinois, U.S. It lies about 70 miles (115 km) east of St. Louis, Missouri. It was first settled about 1811, soon after the devastating earthquake along the New Madrid Fault, and quickly became a stop on the stagecoach route from St. Louis to
- Salem (New Hampshire, United States)
Salem, town (township), Rockingham county, southeastern New Hampshire, U.S., just west of Haverhill, Massachusetts. The town includes the communities of Salem, Salem Depot, and North Salem. Originally a part of Haverhill, it was set off in 1725 and incorporated as Methuen. The final decision of the
- Salem (Missouri, United States)
Salem, city, seat (1851) of Dent county, southeast-central Missouri, U.S., situated in the Ozark Mountains between the Current and Meramec rivers. Established in 1845 on the site of an inn and trading post, it was named for Salem, North Carolina. The town was occupied by Union forces during the
- Salem (Massachusetts, United States)
Salem, city, Essex county, northeastern Massachusetts, U.S. It lies on Salem Bay Harbor (an inlet of Massachusetts Bay), 16 miles (26 km) northeast of Boston. Salem was incorporated as a town in 1626 by Roger Conant, who emigrated from Cape Ann, 14 miles (22 km) northeast. The first Congregational
- Salem Chapel (work by Oliphant)
Margaret Oliphant Oliphant: …attempts at social climbing, and Salem Chapel (1863), a young intelligent nonconformist minister’s trials with his narrow-minded congregation. The best of her Scottish novels are Passages in the Life of Mrs. Margaret Maitland (1849), Merkland (1851), and Kirsteen (1890). Other works include A Beleaguered City (1880) and A Little Pilgrim…
- Salem Oak (tree, Salem, New Jersey, United States)
Salem: …Ground in Salem has the Salem Oak—a tree 80 feet (25 metres) high that is said to be more than 500 years old—under which Fenwick signed a treaty with the Delaware Indians. The Alexander Grant House (1721) is now headquarters of the Salem County Historical Society. Fort Mott State Park,…
- Salem Town (Massachusetts, United States)
Salem, city, Essex county, northeastern Massachusetts, U.S. It lies on Salem Bay Harbor (an inlet of Massachusetts Bay), 16 miles (26 km) northeast of Boston. Salem was incorporated as a town in 1626 by Roger Conant, who emigrated from Cape Ann, 14 miles (22 km) northeast. The first Congregational
- Salem Village (Massachusetts, United States)
Danvers, town (township), Essex county, eastern Massachusetts, U.S. It lies just northeast of Boston. Founded in the 1630s by Governor John Endecott, it was part of Salem and originally known as Salem Village (site of the witchcraft hysteria of 1692). Set off from Salem as a district in 1752, it
- Salem witch trials (American history)
Salem witch trials, (June 1692–May 1693), in American history, a series of investigations and persecutions that caused 19 convicted “witches” to be hanged and many other suspects to be imprisoned in Salem Village in the Massachusetts Bay Colony (now Danvers, Massachusetts). The events in Salem in
- Salem, Mamdouh Muhammad (prime minister of Egypt)
Mamdouh Muhammad Salem was an Egyptian politician who served as prime minister of Egypt during Pres. Anwar el-Sādāt’s historic peace negotiations with Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin. (Read Britannica’s 1980 interview with Anwar Sadat.) Salem rose to the rank of general in the Alexandria
- salep (beverage)
Orchis: …to produce a drink called salep.
- saleplon (drug)
antianxiety drug: Other antianxiety drugs: Zolpidem and saleplon are antianxiety drugs that are GABA agonists, though structurally they are not benzodiazepines. The probability of developing dependence to these drugs is limited, even with repeated or prolonged use. They are used in the short-term treatment of insomnia.
- Salernitan Guide to Health (work by Salernitan school)
history of medicine: Salerno and the medical schools: …of composite authorship, was the Regimen Sanitatis Salernitanum (“Salernitan Guide to Health”). Written in verse, it appeared in numerous editions and was translated into many languages. Among its oft-quoted couplets is the following:
- Salernitano, Masuccio (Italian writer)
short story: Spreading popularity: In the 15th century Masuccio Salernitano’s collection of 50 stories, Il novellino (1475), attracted much attention. Though verbosity often substitutes for eloquence in Masuccio’s stories, they are witty and lively tales of lovers and clerics.
- Salerno (Italy)
Salerno, city, Campania regione (region), southern Italy. It lies west of the mouth of the Irno River on the Gulf of Salerno, southeast of Naples. The Roman colony of Salernum was founded there in 197 bce on the site of an earlier town, possibly Etruscan, called Irnthi. Part of the Lombard duchy of
- Salerno, Instituto Universitario di (university, Salerno, Italy)
University of Salerno, institution of higher learning in Salerno, Italy. Much of the historic interest of the university derives from an antecedent medical school in Salerno that was the earliest and one of the greatest medical schools of the Middle Ages. In fact, some scholars have called this
- Salerno, Universita Degli Studi di (university, Salerno, Italy)
University of Salerno, institution of higher learning in Salerno, Italy. Much of the historic interest of the university derives from an antecedent medical school in Salerno that was the earliest and one of the greatest medical schools of the Middle Ages. In fact, some scholars have called this
- Salerno, University of (university, Salerno, Italy)
University of Salerno, institution of higher learning in Salerno, Italy. Much of the historic interest of the university derives from an antecedent medical school in Salerno that was the earliest and one of the greatest medical schools of the Middle Ages. In fact, some scholars have called this