- San Salvador Island (island, The Bahamas)
San Salvador Island, one of the islands of The Bahamas, in the West Indies. San Salvador is believed by many scholars to be the island of Guanahani, where Christopher Columbus made his first landing in the New World on October 12, 1492. Some scholars assert, however, that the island of Guanahani is
- San Salvador Kongo language
Kongo language: …are many dialects of Kongo; San Salvador Kongo, spoken in Congo (Kinshasa) and Angola, has more than 1.5 million speakers and is often listed as a separate language because it is not mutually intelligible with other Kongo dialects. There are more than seven million native speakers of Kongo, many of…
- San Salvatore, Basilica of (church, Spoleto, Italy)
Spoleto: …Gregorio Maggiore (12th century), and San Salvatore, an elaborately decorated monument, usually assigned to the 5th century but possibly dating from the late 8th. The town is supplied with water by an aqueduct that crosses a ravine on an arched bridge built in 1364.
- San Salvatore, Mount (mountain, Switzerland)
Lugano: …Italy; to the south is Mount San Salvatore (2,992 feet [912 metres]), and to the east is Mount Brè (3,035 feet [925 metres]). First mentioned in the 6th century, it was occupied in 1499 by the French and was taken in 1512 by the Swiss. The centre of Lugano canton…
- San Sebastián (Spain)
Donostia–San Sebastián, city, capital of Guipúzcoa provincia (province), northeastern Basque Country comunidad autónoma(autonomous community), north-central Spain. It is a fashionable seaside resort at the mouth of the canalized Urumea River on the Bay of Biscay, east of Bilbao and near the French
- San Sebastián de la Gomera (Spain)
Gomera, La: San Sebastián de la Gomera, on the east coast, is the chief port and capital. It has a sheltered roadstead and is backed by the steep cliffs of a wide ravine. It was the last stopping place of Christopher Columbus on his first transatlantic voyage,…
- San Sebastián, Pact of (Spain [1930])
Niceto Alcalá Zamora: …and Catalan left in the Pact of San Sebastián (August 1930). As leader of the revolutionary committee, he successfully demanded Alfonso’s abdication on the basis of the municipal elections of April 1931. Alfonso left Spain, and Alcalá Zamora went from prison to become prime minister. He resigned on Oct. 14,…
- San Sebastiano (church, Venice, Italy)
Paolo Veronese: The early years: …summons of the prior of S. Sebastiano in Venice, Veronese began the decoration of the church that was later to become his burial place. Whereas in the Palazzo Ducale he had often worked in collaboration with Zelotti, Veronese worked alone in S. Sebastiano. In the Story of Esther, depicted on…
- San Sebastiano, Basilica of (church, Rome, Italy)
catacomb: …the subterranean cemetery under the Basilica of San Sebastiano (located on the Appian Way near Rome), which was reputed to have been the temporary resting place of the bodies of Saints Peter and Paul in the last half of the 3rd century. By extension, the word came to refer to…
- San Severo (Italy)
San Severo, city and episcopal see, Puglia (Apulia) regione, east-central Italy. It lies in the north of the Puglia Tableland, just north of Foggia city. A flourishing market centre in the 12th century, it was owned by a succession of feudal rulers before passing to the Kingdom of Naples and, in
- San Simeon (California, United States)
San Simeon, village, San Luis Obispo county, southwestern California, U.S. It lies along the Pacific Ocean overlooking San Simeon Bay. Part of a Mexican land grant of 1840, Rancho Piedras Blancas was purchased by George Hearst, father of publisher William Randolph Hearst, in 1865. George Hearst
- San Simón, University of (university, Cochabamba, Bolivia)
Cochabamba: …the site of the Main University of San Simón (established in 1826) and has a museum, municipal library, cathedral, and government palace.
- San Simpliciano (church, Milan, Italy)
Milan: Cultural life: …Corso Garibaldi stands the Basilica San Simpliciano, which according to tradition was founded in the 4th century by St. Ambrose. Its apse contains the 15th-century fresco Coronation of the Virgin by Ambrogio Bergognone. Other notable churches in the central area include San Satiro, Sant’Eustorgio, San Lorenzo Maggiore, and San Babila.…
- San Stefano, Treaty of (Russia-Turkey [1878])
Treaty of San Stefano, (March 3 [February 19, Old Style], 1878), peace settlement imposed on the Ottoman government by Russia at the conclusion of the Russo-Turkish War of 1877–78. It provided for a new disposition of the European provinces of the Ottoman Empire that would have ended any effective
- San Telmo (area, Buenos Aires, Argentina)
Buenos Aires: City neighbourhoods: San Telmo, or Barrio Sur, south of the Plaza de Mayo, began to be restored and gentrified in the early 1990s after nearly a century of neglect and decay. By the later part of the decade the area had become trendy and bohemian. Its numerous…
- San Tomás de la Nueva Guayana de la Angostura (Venezuela)
Ciudad Bolívar, city, capital of Bolívar estado (state), southeastern Venezuela. It lies on a small hill on the south bank of the Orinoco River, opposite Soledad on the north. Its elevation ranges from 85 to 246 feet (26 to 75 metres) above sea level; the average annual temperature is in the
- San Valentín, Mount (mountain, Chile)
Chile: The Chilean Andes: …significant heights are still reached: Mount San Valentín is more than 12,000 feet high, and Mount Darwin in Tierra del Fuego reaches almost 8,000 feet. Reminders of the last ice age are the perfectly U-shaped glacial troughs, sharp-edged mountains, Andean lakes, and some 7,000 square miles of continental ice masses.…
- San Vicente (Spain)
Majorca: …of which are those of San Vicente in the north, whose type and carvings indicate a close relationship to those of southern France, near Arles. At Valldemosa is the monastery where the French writer George Sand stayed and the Polish composer Frédéric Chopin wrote some of his finest mazurkas and…
- San Vicente (Chile)
Concepción: …outport of Talcahuano, Huachipato, and San Vicente with Concepción. San Vicente is both a resort and a source of fresh and preserved seafood for Santiago, the nation’s capital, 260 miles (420 km) northeast. The Huachipato steel mill (operational since 1950), a petroleum refinery (1966), and the San Vicente chemical complex…
- San Vicente (El Salvador)
San Vicente, city, south-central El Salvador. It lies along the Accihuapa River at the northeastern foot of San Vicente Volcano (7,155 feet [2,181 metres]), in a region of hot springs and geysers. Founded in 1635, on the site of Tehuacán, an ancient Indian settlement, it has served as both the
- San Vincente de la Ciénaga (New Mexico, United States)
Silver City, town, seat (1874) of Grant county, southwestern New Mexico, U.S. It lies just east of the Continental Divide, at an altitude of 5,931 feet (1,808 meters) in the foothills of the Pinos Altos Range, on the edge of Gila National Forest (of which it is headquarters). It was established in
- San Vitale, Basilica of (church, Ravenna, Italy)
Church of San Vitale, church in Ravenna, Italy, that was built in the 6th century and is considered a masterpiece of Byzantine achitecture. It is especially noted for the colourful mosaics of Christian iconography that decorate the interior walls and ceilings. The church was begun by Bishop
- San Vitale, Church of (church, Ravenna, Italy)
Church of San Vitale, church in Ravenna, Italy, that was built in the 6th century and is considered a masterpiece of Byzantine achitecture. It is especially noted for the colourful mosaics of Christian iconography that decorate the interior walls and ceilings. The church was begun by Bishop
- San Zanipòlo (church, Venice, Italy)
Giovanni Battista Piazzetta: …Chapel of the Sacrament in Santi Giovanni e Paolo. The “Ecstasy of St. Francis,” perhaps his finest religious work, dates from about 1732, and some three years later he was commissioned to execute an “Assumption” for the elector of Cologne. The celebrated “Fortune Teller” is dated 1740. “The Pastoral” and…
- San Zeno Maggiore (church, Verona, Italy)
Verona: …outstanding churches include the Romanesque San Zeno Maggiore (originally 5th century, rebuilt 1117–1227), with a brick and marble facade, a celebrated marble porch, and a triptych by the 14th-century painter Andrea Mantegna, and the Gothic Sant’Anastasia (foundation 1290; completed 1422–81). The Romanesque-Gothic cathedral (rebuilt 15th century) contains an Assumption by…
- San, Saya (Myanmar leader)
Saya San was the leader of the anti-British rebellion of 1930–32 in Burma (Myanmar). Saya San was a native of Shwebo, a centre of nationalist-monarchist sentiment in north-central Burma that was the birthplace of the Konbaung (or Alaungpaya) dynasty, which controlled Myanmar from 1752 until the
- San-ch’ing (Taoist deities)
San-ch’ing, highest triad of deities in the generalized pantheon of sectarian religious Taoism. First in evidence during the T’ang dynasty, the triad represented a ranking of three deities associated with the three highest heavens (or “pure” realms) in the Taoist cosmology. Today the deities are
- San-ch’ung (Taiwan)
San-ch’ung, former municipality (shih, or shi), northern Taiwan. In 2010 it became a city district of the special municipality of New Taipei City, when the former T’ai-pei county was administratively reorganized. San-ch’ung lies in the northern part of Taiwan’s western coastal plain on the west
- san-hsien (musical instrument)
sanxian, any of a group of long-necked, fretless Chinese lutes. The instrument’s rounded rectangular resonator has a snakeskin front and back, and the curved-back pegbox at the end of the neck has lateral, or side, tuning pegs that adjust three silk or nylon strings. The sanxian is made in several
- San-kuan Pass (mountain pass, China)
Shaanxi: Relief and drainage: …cross the Qin Mountains: the Sanguan Pass south of Baoji, which leads to the Jialing River valley and thus into Sichuan; the Gaoguan Pass south of Xi’an, which leads to the Hanzhong Basin; and the Lantian Pass southeast of Xi’an, which affords a route to Nanyang in Henan and to…
- San-kuo (ancient kingdoms, China)
Three Kingdoms, (220–280 ce), trio of warring Chinese states—Wei, Shu-Han, and Wu—that followed the demise of the Han dynasty (206 bce–220 ce). In 25 ce, after a brief period of disruption, the great Han empire had been reconstituted as the Dong (Eastern) Han. However, by the end of the 2nd
- San-lun (Buddhism)
San-lun, school of Chinese Buddhism derived from the Indian Mādhyamika school. See
- San-men-hsia (gorge, China)
Sanmen Gorge, gorge enclosing one section of the Huang He (Yellow River) in western Henan province, eastern China. The gorge is the site of a large dam and hydroelectric installation. The gorge is some 20 miles (30 km) east of the city of Sanmenxia. At the gorge the Huang He narrows to flow between
- San-Min Chu-i (Chinese ideology)
Three Principles of the People, the ideological basis of the political program of the Chinese Nationalist leader Sun Yat-sen (1866–1925), championing the principles of nationalism, democracy, and socialism. The principles were originally formulated as slogans for Sun’s revolutionary student group,
- San-ming (China)
Sanming, city, west-central Fujian sheng (province), southeastern China. It lies along the Sha River, a southern tributary of the Min River, the valley of which provides the chief southwest-to-northeast route through central Fujian. Westward and southwestward routes fan out into the mountainous
- San-Pédro (Côte d’Ivoire)
San-Pédro, port town, southwestern Côte d’Ivoire (Ivory Coast). It is situated about 40 miles (65 km) southwest of Sassandra, on the Gulf of Guinea. Until the mid-1960s, San-Pédro was a tiny fishing village of fewer than 100 inhabitants, but, following the start of port construction there in 1968,
- San-tsang (Buddhist monk)
Xuanzang was a Buddhist monk and Chinese pilgrim to India who translated the sacred scriptures of Buddhism from Sanskrit into Chinese and founded in China the Buddhist Consciousness Only school. His fame rests mainly on the volume and diversity of his translations of the Buddhist sutras and on the
- Sana (national capital, Yemen)
Sanaa, city, capital of Yemen. It is situated at the western foot of Mount Nuqum, at an elevation of more than 7,200 feet (2,200 metres) above sea level, in the western part of the country. Sanaa has for many centuries been the chief economic, political, and religious centre of the Yemen Highlands.
- SANAA (Japanese architectural firm)
Kazuyo Sejima and Ryue Nishizawa: …founding partners of the firm SANAA (Sejima and Nishizawa and Associates), designed structures that were admired for their refined simplicity, spatial fluidity, and thoughtful integration into their surroundings. In 2010 they were awarded the Pritzker Prize, becoming only the second partnership to be so honoured. (The first was Jacques Herzog…
- Sanaa (national capital, Yemen)
Sanaa, city, capital of Yemen. It is situated at the western foot of Mount Nuqum, at an elevation of more than 7,200 feet (2,200 metres) above sea level, in the western part of the country. Sanaa has for many centuries been the chief economic, political, and religious centre of the Yemen Highlands.
- Sanaa, University of (university, Sanaa, Yemen)
Yemen: Education: The University of Sanaa (founded 1970), established largely with grants from Kuwait, is coeducational and comprises a variety of specialized colleges—e.g., those of agriculture, medicine, commerce, and law. The University of Aden (1975) offers a similar array of specialties. These two senior institutions of higher learning…
- SANAC (British-South African history)
South Africa: Milner and reconstruction: The South African Native Affairs Commission (SANAC) was appointed to provide comprehensive answers to “the native question.” Its report (1905) proposed territorial separation of Black and white landownership, systematic urban segregation by the creation of Black “locations,” the removal of Black “squatters” from white farms and…
- Sanada Yukitsura (Japanese official)
Sakuma Zōzan: …the most trusted councillors of Sanada Yukitsura, a member of the council of advisers to the shogun, the hereditary military dictator of Japan. His espousal of Japan’s adoption of Western technology, however, was at odds with the shogunate’s xenophobic attitudes, and he and Sanada were forced to resign.
- Sanaga River (river, Cameroon)
Sanaga River, stream located in central Cameroon. Its most important headstreams—the Agoua and the Djérem—meet to form the Sanaga about 56 miles (90 km) north-northwest of Bertoua. The river then flows about 325 miles (525 km) southwest across the central plateau past Nanga-Eboko, Monatélé, and
- Sanaka-sampradaya (Vaiṣṇava sect)
Indian philosophy: Nimbarka: …sect is known as the Sanaka-sampradaya of Vaishnavism. Nimbarka’s commentary of the Vedanta-sutras is known as Vedanta-parijata-saurabha and is commented on by Shrinivasa in his Vedanta-kaustubha. Of the three realities admitted—God, souls, and matter—God is the independent reality, self-conscious, controller of the other two, free from all defects, abode of…
- Sanakhte (king of Egypt)
ancient Egypt: The 3rd dynasty (c. 2592–c. 2544 bce): Its first king, Sanakhte, is attested in reliefs from Maghāra in Sinai. His successor, Djoser (Horus name Netjerykhet), was one of the outstanding kings of Egypt. His Step Pyramid at Ṣaqqārah is both the culmination of an epoch and—as the first large all-stone building, many times larger than…
- Sanana (island, Indonesia)
Sula: Taliabu (the largest), Mangole, and Sanana (or Sulabesi), and several smaller ones make up the chain. The area of this group is about 1,875 square miles (4,850 square km). Taliabu and Mangole are separated by the narrow Capalulu Strait and are mountainous, thickly forested, and thinly populated. Taliabu has mountains…
- Sanandaj (Iran)
Sanandaj, city, capital of Kordestan province, northwestern Iran. It is located at an elevation of 4,990 feet (1,521 metres) at the foot of Mount Abidar. The city was called Sisar, meaning “30 heads,” in the itineraries of Ibn Khuradādhbih and Qudāmeh. The population is mostly Kurdish. The city was
- Sanarelli, Giuseppe (Italian bacteriologist)
Walter Reed: In 1896 an Italian bacteriologist, Giuseppe Sanarelli, claimed that he had isolated from yellow-fever patients an organism he called Bacillus icteroides.
- Sanatan Sikh (Sikhism)
Sikhism: The 18th and 19th centuries: …to be known as the Sanatan (“Traditional”) Sikhs, whereas the radical Lahore branch was known as the Tat Khalsa.
- sanatana dharma (Hinduism)
sanatana dharma, in Hinduism, term used to denote the “eternal” or absolute set of duties or religiously ordained practices incumbent upon all Hindus, regardless of class, caste, or sect. Different texts give different lists of the duties, but in general sanatana dharma consists of virtues such as
- Sănătescu, Constantin (prime minister of Romania)
Constantin Sănătescu was a Romanian military officer and statesman who was the prime minister of Romania’s first liberation government following an antifascist coup of Aug. 23, 1944. From 1925 to 1928 Sănătescu was military attaché at Paris and London. Raised to the rank of general in 1935, he was
- Sanatruces (king of Parthia)
Sanatruces was the king of Parthia from 76/75 to 70/69 bc, who restored unity to his kingdom. Sanatruces may have been a son of Mithradates I (reigned 171–138), the Parthian king who had established the kingdom’s power. Following the death of King Mithradates II in 88 bc, dynastic struggles
- Ṣanawbarī, al- (Muslim poet)
Islamic arts: The new style: …by Mutanabbī’s colleague in Aleppo, al-Ṣanawbarī (died 945), a classic exponent of the descriptive style. This style in time reached Spain, where the superb garden and landscape poetry of Ibn Khafājah (died 1139) displayed an even higher degree of elegance and sensitivity than that of his Eastern predecessors.
- Sanāʾī (Persian poet)
Sanāʾī was a Persian poet, author of the first great mystical poem in the Persian language, whose verse had great influence on Persian and Muslim literature. Little is known of Sanāʾī’s early life. He was a resident of Ghazna and served for a time as poet at the court of the Ghaznavid sultans,
- Sanbation (legendary river)
Sambation, legendary “Sabbath River” beyond which the Ten Lost Tribes of Israel were exiled in 721 bc by Shalmaneser V, king of Assyria. Legends describe it as a roaring torrent (often not of water but of stones), the turbulence of which ceases only on the Sabbath, when Jews are not allowed to
- Sanborn, Franklin Benjamin (American journalist)
Franklin Benjamin Sanborn was an American journalist, biographer, and charity worker. A descendant of an old New England family (its progenitor first immigrating in 1632), Sanborn attended Phillips Exeter Academy and Harvard College (B.A., 1855). In 1855 he settled in Concord, Massachusetts, then
- Sancai tuhui (Chinese text)
China: Literature and scholarship: …herbal concoctions and their applications; Sancai tuhui (1607–09; “Assembled Pictures of the Three Realms”), a work on subjects such as architecture, tools, costumes, ceremonies, animals, and amusements; Wubeizhi (1621; “Treatise on Military Preparedness”), on weapons, fortifications, defense organization, and war tactics; and Tiangong kaiwu (1637; “Creations of Heaven and Human…
- sancai ware (pottery)
pottery: Provincial and export wares: …tile kilns also manufactured “three-coloured” (sancai) wares, perhaps originally a product of the Cizhou kilns. These were decorated with coloured glazes that were often kept from intermingling by threads of clay (cloisonné technique) or were used in conjunction with the pierced technique (fahua). Others have engraved designs under the…
- Sancar, Aziz (Turkish-American biochemist)
Aziz Sancar is a Turkish-American biochemist who contributed to mechanistic discoveries underlying a cellular process known as nucleotide excision repair, whereby cells correct errors in DNA that arise as a result of exposure to ultraviolet (UV) light or certain mutation-inducing chemicals. For his
- Sancerre (France)
Sancerre, town, Cher département, Centre région, central France. It lies on a hilltop overlooking the Loire River, about 26 miles (42 km) northeast of Bourges. From 1037 to 1152 the title of count of Sancerre was held by the counts of Champagne, and from 1152 to 1640 it had its own counts, who were
- Sanches, Francisco (Iberian-born French physician and philosopher)
Francisco Sanches was a physician and philosopher who espoused a “constructive skepticism” that rejected mathematical truths as unreal and Aristotle’s theory of knowledge as false. Sanches received a medical degree at Montpellier (1574) and taught philosophy at the University of Toulouse before
- Sánchez Cerén, Salvador (president of El Salvador)
El Salvador: El Salvador in the 21st century: …both the United States and Salvador Sánchez Cerén—Funes’s vice president, a former guerrilla commander, who had been elected president in March of that year.
- Sánchez Cerro, Luis M. (president of Peru)
Víctor Raúl Haya de la Torre: …threw its support behind Colonel Luis M. Sánchez Cerro. After a hotly disputed election, Sánchez Cerro was inaugurated, and Haya de la Torre was jailed until Sánchez Cerro was assassinated in 1933.
- Sánchez Coello, Alonso (Spanish painter)
Alonso Sánchez Coello was a painter who was one of the pioneers of the great tradition of Spanish portrait painting. The favourite portrait painter of King Philip II, he introduced into Spanish portraiture a specifically Spanish character that endured until Velázquez came to the court in the 1620s.
- Sánchez Cotán, Juan (Spanish painter)
Juan Sánchez Cotán was a painter who is considered one of the pioneers of Baroque realism in Spain. A profoundly religious man, he is best known for his still lifes, which in their visual harmony and illusion of depth convey a feeling of humility and mystic spirituality. A student of the famous
- Sánchez de Bustamante y Sirvén, Antonio (Cuban politician)
Antonio Sánchez de Bustamante y Sirvén was a lawyer, educator, Cuban politician, and international jurist who drew up the Bustamante Code dealing with international private law. Adopted by the sixth Pan-American Congress (Havana, 1928), which also elected him president, his code was ratified
- Sánchez de Lozada, Gonzalo (president of Bolivia)
Bolivia: Restoration of civilian government: In the 1993 presidential election, Sánchez de Lozada and the MNR won a plurality, and, in order to ensure his selection by Congress, he formed an alliance with the Solidarity and Civic Union (Unidad Cívica Solidaridad; UCS). Sánchez de Lozada soon initiated a privatization and capitalization program that brought huge…
- Sánchez Ferlosio, Rafael (Spanish author)
Spanish literature: The novel: Rafael Sánchez Ferlosio’s El Jarama (1956; “The Jarama”; Eng. trans. The One Day of the Week), masterfully utilizing pseudoscientific impassivity and cinematographic techniques, depicts the monotonous existence of urban youth via their aimless conversations and exposes postwar apathy. Other young writers who first emerged in…
- Sánchez Muñoz, Gil (antipope)
Clement (VIII) was an antipope from 1423 to 1429. Sánchez was chosen to succeed Antipope Benedict XIII. Refusing to recognize the Roman pope Martin V during the Western Schism, Benedict created his own cardinals, who, through the influence of King Alfonso V of Aragon, chose Sánchez at the castle of
- Sánchez Pizarro, Alejandro (Spanish singer-songwriter)
Alejandro Sanz is a Spanish guitarist and singer-songwriter who soared to international stardom in the late 20th century and remained popular into the 21st century with his flamenco-influenced popular music. Sanz was raised in Cádiz, a city in the Andalusia region of Spain. His father was a
- Sánchez, Beatriz (Chilean politician)
Chile: The second presidency of Sebastián Piñera (2018–22): ) Beatriz Sánchez of the Broad Front (Frente Amplio), a coalition of leftist political parties and grassroots organizations, finished a solid third with some 20 percent of the vote. Even more significant for the Broad Front than Sánchez’s strong showing, however, was the coalition’s performance in…
- Sanchez, Chava (Mexican boxer)
Salvador Sanchez was a Mexican professional boxer and the world featherweight (126 pounds) champion from 1980 to 1982. (Read Gene Tunney’s 1929 Britannica essay on boxing.) Sanchez began his professional boxing career in 1975. His only loss was a 10-round decision (a fight whose outcome is
- Sánchez, Cristina (bullfighter)
bullfighting: Performers: …young attractive bullfighters, such as Cristina Sánchez, who in 1996 became the first woman to have taken her alternativa in Europe and who made her debut as a full matador in Spain, are responsible for breathing new life into a supposedly moribund institution. However, others have long welcomed matadoras and…
- Sánchez, Eduardo (American director)
The Blair Witch Project: …directed by Daniel Myrick and Eduardo Sánchez, who used an authentic-looking website, an online message board, and other innovative strategies to convince audiences that The Blair Witch Project was a documentary about real people rather than a fictional film. Using footage shot by the actors, The Blair Witch Project tells…
- Sánchez, Florencio (Uruguayan author)
Uruguay: The arts: …among Latin American playwrights is Florencio Sánchez; his plays, written around the beginning of the 20th century and dealing with contemporary social problems, are still performed. From about the same period and somewhat later came the romantic poetry of Juan Zorrilla de San Martín, Juana de Ibarbourou, and Delmira Agustini…
- Sanchez, Francisco (Iberian-born French physician and philosopher)
Francisco Sanches was a physician and philosopher who espoused a “constructive skepticism” that rejected mathematical truths as unreal and Aristotle’s theory of knowledge as false. Sanches received a medical degree at Montpellier (1574) and taught philosophy at the University of Toulouse before
- Sánchez, Pedro (prime minister of Spain)
Spain: Economic recovery and Catalonian independence: …the corruption charges, PSOE leader Pedro Sánchez, with the support of Catalan and Basque nationalist parties, challenged his government. On June 1, 2018, Sánchez ousted Rajoy after a motion of no confidence was narrowly approved by the Spanish parliament. Rajoy was the first Spanish leader since the restoration of democracy…
- Sanchez, Salvador (Mexican boxer)
Salvador Sanchez was a Mexican professional boxer and the world featherweight (126 pounds) champion from 1980 to 1982. (Read Gene Tunney’s 1929 Britannica essay on boxing.) Sanchez began his professional boxing career in 1975. His only loss was a 10-round decision (a fight whose outcome is
- Sanchez, Sonia (American poet, playwright, and educator)
Sonia Sanchez is an American poet, playwright, and educator who was noted for her Black activism. Driver lost her mother as an infant, and her father moved the family to Harlem, New York City, when she was nine. She received a B.A. (1955) in political science from Hunter College in Manhattan and
- Sanchez, Sonia Benita (American poet, playwright, and educator)
Sonia Sanchez is an American poet, playwright, and educator who was noted for her Black activism. Driver lost her mother as an infant, and her father moved the family to Harlem, New York City, when she was nine. She received a B.A. (1955) in political science from Hunter College in Manhattan and
- Sanchi (historical site, India)
Sanchi, historic site, west-central Madhya Pradesh state, central India. It lies in an upland plateau region, just west of the Betwa River and about 5 miles (8 km) southwest of Vidisha. On a flat-topped sandstone hill that rises some 300 feet (90 metres) above the surrounding country stands India’s
- Sānchi sculpture (Indian art)
Sānchi sculpture, early Indian sculpture that embellished the 1st-century-bc gateways of the Buddhist relic mound called the Great Stupa (stupa No. 1) at Sānchi, Madhya Pradesh, which is one of the most magnificent monuments of its time. The region of Sānchi, however, like the great centres at
- Sancho Abarca (king of Pamplona [Navarre])
Sancho II Garcés was the king of Pamplona (Navarre) from 970, Count of Aragon, and a son of García I (or II). He was defeated by the Moors in 973 and 981 when allied with Castile and Leon. He then submitted to the caliphate, one of his daughters marrying the chief minister of Córdoba, Abū ʿĀmir
- Sancho el Bravo (king of Castile and Leon)
Sancho IV was the king of Castile and Leon from 1284 to 1295, the second son of Alfonso X. Though ambitious and ruthless, he was also an able politician and a cultivated man. In 1275 his elder brother, Fernando de la Cerda, was killed, leaving a son, Alfonso de la Cerda, heir to Alfonso X. Sancho,
- Sancho el Craso (king of Leon)
Sancho I was the king of the Spanish state of Leon from 956, a younger son of Ramiro II. After succeeding his brother, Ordoño II, Sancho was overthrown by a revolt of his nobles and replaced by his cousin Ordoño IV. Sancho sought help from the Umayyad caliph ʿAbd ar-Raḥmān III, who helped him
- Sancho el Deseado (king of Castile)
Sancho III was the king of Castile from 1157 to 1158, the elder son of the Spanish emperor Alfonso VII. His father’s will partitioned the realm between his two sons, Sancho III receiving Castile and Ferdinand II receiving Leon. After a military show of force, Sancho was able to reaffirm by treaty
- Sancho el Fuerte (king of Navarre)
Sancho VII was the king of Navarre (Pamplona) from 1194 to 1234, the son of Sancho VI. Sancho was a swashbuckling but enigmatic personality who offended the Holy See by his friendship with the Muslims; he was in Africa in the service of the Almohads (1198–c. 1200). His absence cost Navarre the
- Sancho el Fuerte (king of Castile)
Sancho II was the king of Castile from 1065 to 1072, the eldest son of Ferdinand I. He was allocated the kingdom of Castile in his father’s will, Leon and Galicia being given to his brothers. He refused to accept this division and dispossessed García of Galicia by force (1071). Alfonso VI of Leon,
- Sancho el Grande (king of Pamplona [Navarre])
Sancho III Garcés was the king of Pamplona (Navarre) from about 1000 to 1035, the son of García II (or III). Sancho established Navarrese hegemony over all the Christian states of Spain at a time when the caliphate of Córdoba was in a state of turmoil. Sancho was uninterested in a crusade against
- Sancho el Mayor (king of Pamplona [Navarre])
Sancho III Garcés was the king of Pamplona (Navarre) from about 1000 to 1035, the son of García II (or III). Sancho established Navarrese hegemony over all the Christian states of Spain at a time when the caliphate of Córdoba was in a state of turmoil. Sancho was uninterested in a crusade against
- Sancho el Sabio (king of Navarre)
Sancho VI was the king of Navarre (Pamplona) from 1150 and son of García IV (or V) the Restorer. Sancho was the first to be called king of Navarre; previous kings were known as kings of Pamplona. In 1151 Castile and Aragon signed at Tudillén a treaty for the partition of Navarre. By skilled
- Sancho García (count of Castile)
Sancho III Garcés: …to Munia, daughter of Count Sancho García (d. 1017) of Castile, Sancho secured his own acceptance as count when Sancho García’s son, the child Count García, was assassinated (1029). He then took up Castilian irredentist claims in eastern Leon and occupied the Leonese capital, where he was crowned (1034)—taking the…
- Sancho I (king of Leon)
Sancho I was the king of the Spanish state of Leon from 956, a younger son of Ramiro II. After succeeding his brother, Ordoño II, Sancho was overthrown by a revolt of his nobles and replaced by his cousin Ordoño IV. Sancho sought help from the Umayyad caliph ʿAbd ar-Raḥmān III, who helped him
- Sancho I (king of Portugal)
Sancho I was the second king of Portugal (1185–1211), son of Afonso I. Sancho’s reign was marked by a resettlement of the depopulated areas of his country, by the establishment of new towns, and by the rebuilding of frontier strongholds and castles. To facilitate his plans, he encouraged foreign
- Sancho I Garcés (king of Navarre)
Sancho I Garcés was the king of Pamplona (Navarre) from 905. He expanded his kingdom south of the Ebro River and maintained its independence in spite of the sack of his capital in 924 by the Umayyad caliph ʿAbd ar-Raḥmān III of
- Sancho II (king of Castile)
Sancho II was the king of Castile from 1065 to 1072, the eldest son of Ferdinand I. He was allocated the kingdom of Castile in his father’s will, Leon and Galicia being given to his brothers. He refused to accept this division and dispossessed García of Galicia by force (1071). Alfonso VI of Leon,
- Sancho II (king of Portugal)
Sancho II was the fourth king of Portugal, son of Afonso II and of Urraca, who was the daughter of Alfonso VIII of Castile. Factions were so fostered during Sancho’s minority that his later government was never anything more than a series of vain attempts to achieve political stability in the
- Sancho II Garcés (king of Pamplona [Navarre])
Sancho II Garcés was the king of Pamplona (Navarre) from 970, Count of Aragon, and a son of García I (or II). He was defeated by the Moors in 973 and 981 when allied with Castile and Leon. He then submitted to the caliphate, one of his daughters marrying the chief minister of Córdoba, Abū ʿĀmir
- Sancho III (king of Castile)
Sancho III was the king of Castile from 1157 to 1158, the elder son of the Spanish emperor Alfonso VII. His father’s will partitioned the realm between his two sons, Sancho III receiving Castile and Ferdinand II receiving Leon. After a military show of force, Sancho was able to reaffirm by treaty