- Santa Clara (county, California, United States)
Silicon Valley: Explosive growth: …price of a home in Santa Clara county was more than twice the national median for major metropolitan areas.
- Santa Clara College (university, Santa Clara, California, United States)
Santa Clara University, private coeducational institution of higher learning in Santa Clara, California, U.S., affiliated with the Jesuit order of the Roman Catholic church. It offers a variety of undergraduate programs as well as graduate and professional degrees in law, business, engineering,
- Santa Clara University (university, Santa Clara, California, United States)
Santa Clara University, private coeducational institution of higher learning in Santa Clara, California, U.S., affiliated with the Jesuit order of the Roman Catholic church. It offers a variety of undergraduate programs as well as graduate and professional degrees in law, business, engineering,
- Santa Clara Valley (valley, California, United States)
San Jose: History: The Santa Clara Valley thus soon developed into a region of orchards and fruit processing.
- Santa Clarita (California, United States)
Santa Clarita, city, Los Angeles county, southern California, U.S. Situated along the Santa Clara River in the Santa Clarita valley between the San Gabriel and Santa Susana mountains, it lies 35 miles (55 km) northwest of central Los Angeles. It consists of several communities, including Canyon
- Santa Clarita Diet (American television series)
Drew Barrymore: …Olyphant in the Netflix series Santa Clarita Diet (2017–19), playing a realtor who becomes a zombie. In 2019 she was a judge on the TV series The World’s Best, an international talent show. The following year she began hosting The Drew Barrymore Show, a daytime talk show that aired on…
- Santa Claus (Indiana, United States)
Santa Claus, town, Spencer county, southwestern Indiana, U.S. It lies 38 miles (61 km) east-northeast of Evansville. Laid out in 1846, it was jocularly called Santa Claus after the preferred name, Santa Fe, was found to be that of another Indiana community (and because it was the Christmas season).
- Santa Claus (bishop of Myra)
St. Nicholas ; Western feast day December 6; Eastern feast day December 19) was one of the most popular minor saints commemorated in the Eastern and Western churches and now traditionally associated with the festival of Christmas. In many countries, children receive gifts on December 6, St.
- Santa Claus (legendary figure)
Santa Claus, legendary figure who is the traditional patron of Christmas in the United States and other countries, bringing gifts to children. His popular image is based on traditions associated with Saint Nicholas, a 4th-century Christian saint. Father Christmas fills the role in many European
- Santa Clause 3: The Escape Clause, The (film by Lembeck [2006])
Alan Arkin: His subsequent films included The Santa Clause 3: The Escape Clause (2006), the thriller Rendition (2007), the 2008 big-screen treatment of the 1965–70 TV series Get Smart, and the sentimental dog movie Marley & Me (2008). Arkin was nominated for another Oscar for his turn as the brash studio…
- Santa Coloma de Gramanet (Spain)
Santa Coloma de Gramenet, city, Barcelona provincia (province), in the comunidad autónoma (autonomous community) of Catalonia, northeastern Spain. The city, a northern industrial suburb of Barcelona, produces metallurgical goods, textiles, chemicals, bicycles, and paper. Nearby is the Torre
- Santa Coloma de Gramenet (Spain)
Santa Coloma de Gramenet, city, Barcelona provincia (province), in the comunidad autónoma (autonomous community) of Catalonia, northeastern Spain. The city, a northern industrial suburb of Barcelona, produces metallurgical goods, textiles, chemicals, bicycles, and paper. Nearby is the Torre
- Santa Costanza (church, Rome, Italy)
Western architecture: Second period, after 313 ce: The deconsecrated church of Santa Costanza in Rome, built between 337 and 350 for members of the imperial family, was a rotunda with an ambulatory or circular walkway separated from the central area by columns; the mausoleum of Centcelles (Tarragona) in Spain, likewise a rotunda, was probably the burial…
- Santa Croce (church, Florence, Italy)
Santa Croce, church of the Franciscans in Florence, one of the finest examples of Italian Gothic architecture. It was begun in 1294, possibly designed by Arnolfo di Cambio, and was finished in 1442, with the exception of the 19th-century Gothic Revival facade and campanile. On many of the interior
- Santa Croce in Gerusalemme (basilica, Rome, Italy)
Rome: Santa Croce in Gerusalemme: The Santa Croce in Gerusalemme (Holy Cross in Jerusalem) minor basilica was built into the palace in which St. Helena lived (317–322). About this time a hall of the palace was converted into a church, and two adjoining small rooms were…
- Santa Cruz (province, Argentina)
Santa Cruz, provincia (province), southern Argentina. It lies within the region of Patagonia and extends westward from the Atlantic Ocean to the cordilleras of the southern Andes Mountains on the frontier with Chile. It is sparsely inhabited. Río Gallegos, in the far south, is the provincial
- Santa Cruz (island, United States Virgin Islands)
Saint Croix, largest island of the U.S. Virgin Islands, in the eastern Caribbean Sea. It lies some 65 miles (105 km) southeast of Puerto Rico and 40 miles (65 km) south of St. Thomas. In the west some hills run parallel to the coast, culminating in Mount Eagle (1,088 feet [332 metres]) and Blue
- Santa Cruz (Bolivia)
Santa Cruz, city, east-central Bolivia. It is situated in the hot, tropical lowlands at an elevation of 1,365 feet (416 metres) above sea level. Founded by Spaniards from Paraguay in 1561 at what is now San José de Chiquitos, it was attacked repeatedly by Indians until 1595, when it was moved to
- Santa Cruz (district, Manila, Philippines)
Manila: Manufacturing: …and truck terminals), Binondo, and Santa Cruz. Heavy industries are located in the districts of Paco, Pandacan, and Santa Ana.
- Santa Cruz (California, United States)
Santa Cruz, city, seat (1850) of Santa Cruz county, west-central California, U.S. It lies on the north shore of Monterey Bay, at the foot of the Santa Cruz Mountains, and is about 80 miles (130 km) south of San Francisco. The area was first explored by the Spaniard Gaspar de Portolá (1769), who
- Santa Cruz (work by Frisch)
Max Frisch: Frisch’s play Santa Cruz (1947) established the central theme found throughout his subsequent works: the predicament of the complicated, skeptical individual in modern society. One of Frisch’s earliest dramas was the morality play Nun singen sie wieder (1946; Now They Sing Again), in which Surrealistic tableaux reveal…
- Santa Cruz citadel (fort, Oran, Algeria)
Oran: The contemporary city: …by the Turkish citadel of Santa Cruz, which was subsequently modified by the Spanish and the French. The Spanish quarter, with its narrow streets, contains the former Cathedral of Saint-Louis (rebuilt by the French in 1838), the Porte de Canastel (reconstructed in 1734), and the fountain in the Place Emerat…
- Santa Cruz de Barahona (Dominican Republic)
Barahona, city, southwestern Dominican Republic. It lies along Neiba Bay, off the Caribbean Sea, at the northeastern foot of the Baoruco Mountains. The gateway to the Dominican Republic’s lake district, Barahona is an important port and fishing centre. Sugarcane is grown in the surrounding alluvial
- Santa Cruz de la Sierra (Bolivia)
Santa Cruz, city, east-central Bolivia. It is situated in the hot, tropical lowlands at an elevation of 1,365 feet (416 metres) above sea level. Founded by Spaniards from Paraguay in 1561 at what is now San José de Chiquitos, it was attacked repeatedly by Indians until 1595, when it was moved to
- Santa Cruz de Tenerife (Spain)
Santa Cruz de Tenerife, port city, capital of the island of Tenerife and of Santa Cruz de Tenerife provincia (province), in the comunidad autónoma (autonomous community) of the Canary Islands, Spain. The city occupies a small plain between two usually waterless ravines. It was founded in 1494. The
- Santa Cruz de Tenerife (province, Spain)
Santa Cruz de Tenerife, provincia (province) in the comunidad autónoma (autonomous community) of the Canary Islands, Spain. It consists of the western members of the Canary Islands, specifically Tenerife, La Palma, La Gomera, and Ferro islands. The port city of Santa Cruz de Tenerife on the island
- Santa Cruz de Tenerife, Battle of (European history [1657])
Battle of Santa Cruz de Tenerife, (20 April 1657). In 1654, Oliver Cromwell, Lord Protector of the republican Commonwealth, declared war on Spain, unleashing English fleets to attack Spanish shipping and colonies in the Caribbean and Atlantic. In 1657, Admiral Robert Blake destroyed a Spanish
- Santa Cruz del Quiché (Guatemala)
Santa Cruz del Quiché, town, northwestern Guatemala. It lies in the southwestern Chuacús Mountains at an elevation of 6,631 feet (2,021 metres) above sea level. It was founded in 1539. The University of San Carlos of Guatemala and the Academy of Mayan Languages both have campuses in Santa Cruz del
- Santa Cruz del Seíbo (Dominican Republic)
El Seíbo, city, eastern Dominican Republic, on the Soco River. Founded in 1502, the city serves as a trading centre for the agricultural hinterland. The region yields cacao, coffee, sugarcane, and corn (maize), in addition to beeswax and medicinal plants. Cattle are also raised. The city lies on
- Santa Cruz Formation (rock unit, Argentina)
Miocene Epoch: In Argentina the Santa Cruz Formation of Middle Miocene time provides an excellent record of the unusual Miocene fauna of South America. Marsupial carnivores, aberrant endentates (mammals resembling anteaters, armadillos, and sloths), litopterns (hoofed mammals similar to horses and camels),
- Santa Cruz Island (island, Solomon Islands)
Santa Cruz Islands: The main islands are Nendö (also called Ndeni Island or Santa Cruz Island), Utupua, Vanikolo, and Tinakula. Nendö is 25 miles (40 km) long and 14 miles (22 km) wide, with heavily wooded slopes rising to 1,800 feet (550 metres). The Spanish navigator Álvaro de Mendaña de Neira tried…
- Santa Cruz Island (island, Pacific Ocean)
Santa Cruz Island, second largest of the Galapagos Islands, in the eastern Pacific Ocean about 600 miles (965 km) west of mainland Ecuador. It is roughly circular in shape, has a central volcanic crater that rises to 2,300 feet (700 metres), and covers an area of 389 square miles (1,007 square km).
- Santa Cruz Islands (islands, Solomon Islands)
Santa Cruz Islands, volcanic group of islands in the country of Solomon Islands, southwestern Pacific Ocean, 345 miles (555 km) east of Guadalcanal. The main islands are Nendö (also called Ndeni Island or Santa Cruz Island), Utupua, Vanikolo, and Tinakula. Nendö is 25 miles (40 km) long and 14
- Santa Cruz Islands, Battle of (World War II)
Battle of Guadalcanal: The Battles of the Eastern Solomons, Cape Esperance, and Santa Cruz: …weeks later the much larger Battle of Santa Cruz occurred against the backdrop of a major Japanese ground offensive on Guadalcanal. U.S. commanders were anticipating a Japanese attack, and Vice Adm. William (“Bull”) Halsey, who had succeeded Ghormley as commander of U.S. naval forces in the South Pacific on October…
- Santa Cruz Pumacallao, Basilio de (artist)
Cuzco school: …the late 17th-century indigenous painter Basilio de Santa Cruz Pumacallao. The Virgin of Belén, for example, reveals Santa Cruz’s use of dynamic composition and rich colouring.
- Santa Cruz River (river, Argentina)
Argentina: Drainage: Farther south the Santa Cruz River flows eastward out of the glacial Lake Argentino in the Andean foothills before reaching the Atlantic.
- Santa Cruz water lily (plant)
water lily: Major genera and species: …formerly Victoria regia) and the Santa Cruz water lily (V. cruziana) have upturned edges, giving each thickly veined leaf the appearance of a large shallow pan 60 to 180 cm (about 2 to 6 feet) across and accounting for its common name, water platter. The fragrant flowers of these species…
- Santa Cruz y Espejo, Francisco Javier Eugenio de (Spanish author)
Latin American literature: Early novels: Francisco Javier Eugenio de Santa Cruz y Espejo, son of a Quechua father and a Spanish mother, penned satirical novels, treatises on medical and religious matters, and legal papers. His novel El nuevo Luciano de Quito (written in 1779; “The New Lucian of Quito”) and…
- Santa Cruz, Álvaro de Bazán, Marqués de (Spanish naval commander)
Álvaro de Bazán, Marqués de Santa Cruz was the foremost Spanish naval commander of his day. He was prominent in many successful naval engagements in a century that saw Spain rise to the zenith of its power and was the first proponent and planner of the Spanish Armada, the fleet that was to attempt
- Santa Cruz, Andrés de (president of Bolivia)
Argentina: Foreign policies: General Andrés de Santa Cruz, who had established a confederation of Peru and Bolivia, supported opponents of Rosas in Argentina. Rosas in turn aided the influential governor of the northern province of Tucumán when that governor decided to go to war against Santa Cruz’s confederation. The…
- Santa Cruz, University of California at (university, Santa Cruz, California, United States)
California: Education of California: Irvine, Santa Cruz, and San Diego. The campuses at Santa Cruz and San Diego were established on variations of the Oxford University system of numerous small independent colleges sharing limited central facilities or services. The original campus at Berkeley was founded in 1855 and has remained…
- Santa Elena Peninsula (peninsula, Ecuador)
Santa Elena Peninsula, peninsula in western Ecuador that is the northernmost extension of the west-coast desert of South America. It is bounded by the Gulf of Guayaquil on the south and by Santa Elena Bay on the north. It is an arid region, but it has Ecuador’s important oil field at Ancón, as well
- Santa Eugenia de Riveira (Spain)
Ribeira, city, A Coruña provincia (province), in the comunidad autónoma (autonomous community) of Galicia, northwestern Spain. The city lies on the Arousa Inlet across the inlet from Vilagarcia de Arousa, in the coastal zone. Remains of Roman fortifications and of a Phoenician port, La Covasa,
- Santa Eulalia de Provenzana (Spain)
L’Hospitalet de Llobregat, city, Barcelona provincia (province), in the comunidad autónoma (autonomous community) of Catalonia, northeastern Spain. It is a southwestern industrial suburb of Barcelona city and extends from the Marina Mountains to the coastal delta of the Llobregat River. First known
- Santa Evita (work by Martínez)
Tomás Eloy Martínez: …novela de Perón (1985) and Santa Evita (1995); the latter was translated into 30 languages and sold more than 10 million copies. In 2002 Martínez was awarded the prestigious Alfaguara Prize for his novel El vuelo de la reina. His other novels include Sagrado (1969), La mano del amo (1991),…
- Santa Fe (New Mexico, United States)
Santa Fe, capital of New Mexico, U.S., and seat (1852) of Santa Fe county, in the north-central part of the state, on the Santa Fe River. It lies in the northern Rio Grande valley at 6,996 feet (2,132 metres) above sea level, at the foot of the Sangre de Cristo Mountains. A dry, invigorating
- Santa Fe (county, New Mexico, United States)
Santa Fe, county, a scenic area of northern New Mexico, U.S. The northeastern portion is in the Sangre de Cristo range of the Southern Rocky Mountains, featuring Santa Fe Baldy and Lake Peak, both more than 12,000 feet (3,650 metres) in elevation. At the mountains’ southern end is Glorieta Mesa, an
- Santa Fe (Argentina)
Santa Fe, city, capital of Santa Fe provincia (province), northeastern Argentina. It lies on a channel of the Paraná River, at the mouth of the Salado River, opposite the city of Paraná. It was founded in 1573 as Santa Fe de Vera Cruz at nearby Cayastá by Juan de Garay, lieutenant governor of
- Santa Fe (province, Argentina)
Santa Fe, provincia (province) of lowland plains, northeastern Argentina. It is bounded to the east by the Paraná River. Much of the province lies within the northern reaches of the Pampa, but in the subtropical northeast it has marshes, tall savannas, and clusters of woodland, and the subtropical
- Santa Fe Baldy (mountain, New Mexico, United States)
Santa Fe: …the Southern Rocky Mountains, featuring Santa Fe Baldy and Lake Peak, both more than 12,000 feet (3,650 metres) in elevation. At the mountains’ southern end is Glorieta Mesa, an area of hilly, grassy plains in the Basin and Range Province, with a landscape marked by colourful hills, mesas, and isolated…
- Santa Fé de Bacatá (national capital, Colombia)
Bogotá, capital of Colombia. It lies in central Colombia in a fertile upland basin 8,660 feet (2,640 metres) above sea level in the Cordillera Oriental of the Northern Andes Mountains. Bogotá occupies a sloping plain at the base of two mountains, Guadalupe and Monserrate, upon whose crests stand
- Santa Fé de Bogotá (national capital, Colombia)
Bogotá, capital of Colombia. It lies in central Colombia in a fertile upland basin 8,660 feet (2,640 metres) above sea level in the Cordillera Oriental of the Northern Andes Mountains. Bogotá occupies a sloping plain at the base of two mountains, Guadalupe and Monserrate, upon whose crests stand
- Santa Fe de Vera Cruz (Argentina)
Santa Fe, city, capital of Santa Fe provincia (province), northeastern Argentina. It lies on a channel of the Paraná River, at the mouth of the Salado River, opposite the city of Paraná. It was founded in 1573 as Santa Fe de Vera Cruz at nearby Cayastá by Juan de Garay, lieutenant governor of
- Santa Fe Independent School District v. Doe (law case)
Santa Fe Independent School District v. Doe, case in which the U.S. Supreme Court on June 19, 2000, ruled (6–3) that a Texas school board policy that allowed “student-led, student-initiated prayer” before varsity high-school football games was a violation of the First Amendment’s establishment
- Santa Fe Institute (research institute, Santa Fe, New Mexico, United States)
Murray Gell-Mann: In 1984 Gell-Mann cofounded the Santa Fe Institute, a nonprofit centre located in Santa Fe, New Mexico, that supports research concerning complex adaptive systems and emergent phenomena associated with complexity. In “Let’s Call It Plectics,” a 1995 article in the institute’s journal, Complexity, he coined the word plectics to describe…
- Santa Fe Island (island, Pacific Ocean)
Santa Fe Island, one of the Galápagos Islands, in the eastern Pacific Ocean, about 600 mi (965 km) west of Ecuador. Situated halfway between San Cristóbal and Santa Cruz islands, it is south of the vortex of the archipelago, is dotted with small volcanic cones, and has an area of 7 12 sq mi (19 sq
- Santa Fe Railway (American railway)
Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway Company, former railway that was one of the largest in the United States. Chartered in Kansas as the Atchison and Topeka Railroad Company in 1859, it later exercised great influence on the settlement of the southwestern United States. It was renamed the
- Santa Fe Trail (trail, United States)
Santa Fe Trail, in U.S. history, famed wagon trail from Independence, Missouri, to Santa Fe, New Mexico, an important commercial route (1821–80). Opened by William Becknell, a trader, the trail was used by merchant wagon caravans traveling in parallel columns, which, when Native Americans attacked,
- Santa Fe Trail (film by Curtiz [1940])
Michael Curtiz: The late 1930s and the 1940s: …of 1940, the misleadingly titled Santa Fe Trail, was a fanciful retelling of the story of abolitionist John Brown (Raymond Massey), with Flynn and Ronald Reagan along for the ride as Jeb Stuart and George Armstrong Custer, respectively.
- Santa Fede, Armata della (Italian history)
Italy: Collapse of the republics: Their Armata della Santa Fede (“Army of the Holy Faith”) was the most important peasant uprising in the history of modern Italy. Invoking God and king, they devastated the castles of the aristocracy and occupied communal lands that the local barons had usurped; they also killed…
- Santa Gertrudis (breed of cattle)
Santa Gertrudis, breed of beef cattle developed in the 20th century by the King Ranch in Texas. It originally resulted from crossing Brahman bulls of about seven-eighths pure breeding and purebred Shorthorn cows. Over a period of years beginning with first crosses in 1910, selective breeding was
- Santa Giulia (monastery, Brescia, Italy)
Italy: Socioeconomic developments in the countryside: …example, those of Bobbio and Santa Giulia at Brescia, whose estate records survive. They produced a sizable agricultural surplus, which the estates’ owners often sold in the cities (Santa Giulia, at least, had its own merchants). Not all estates, however, were organized this tightly; elsewhere demesnes, though common, tended to…
- Santa Giustina of Padua, Congregation of (religion)
Benedictine: …and became known as the Cassinese Congregation. There were similar reforms throughout Europe. These reforms were confronted by the turmoil of the Protestant Reformation in the 16th century. Within a few years (1525–60) the monasteries and nunneries disappeared almost entirely from northern Europe and suffered greatly in France and central…
- Santa Hermandad
Santa Hermandad, constabulary created in the late 15th century by the Catholic Monarchs (Ferdinand and Isabella) to maintain law and order throughout Spain. See
- Santa Isabel (island, Solomon Islands)
Santa Isabel, island, central Solomon Islands, southwestern Pacific Ocean, 50 miles (80 km) northwest of Guadalcanal. About 130 miles (209 km) long and 20 miles (32 km) across at its widest point, it has a mountainous backbone with Mount Marescot (4,000 feet [1,219 metres]) as its highest peak. A
- Santa Isabel (national capital, Equatorial Guinea)
Malabo, capital of Equatorial Guinea. It lies on the northern edge of the island of Bioko (or Fernando Po) on the rim of a sunken volcano. With an average temperature of 77 °F (25 °C) and an annual rainfall of 75 inches (1,900 mm), it has one of the more onerous climates in the Bight of Biafra
- Santa Isabel Peak (mountain, Equatorial Guinea)
Bioko: …with its highest point being Santa Isabel Peak (9,869 feet [3,008 meters]). Malabo, Equatorial Guinea’s capital and chief port, stands on the island near a crater breached by the sea.
- Santa language
Mongolian languages: …Monguor (Tu), Bao’an (Bonan), and Santa (Dongxiang) in the south—were isolated from the main body of Mongolian languages when the tide of Mongol conquest receded. These languages diverged from the main group of Mongolian dialects and to this day retain archaic features characteristic of Middle Mongolian that have been lost…
- Santa Lucía Hill (hill, Santiago, Chile)
Santiago: …River and by Huelén (renamed Santa Lucía) Hill to the east, which served as a lookout.
- Santa Lucia Range (mountains, California, United States)
Santa Lucia Range, segment of the Coast Ranges (see Pacific mountain system), west-central California, U.S. The rugged range extends southeastward for about 140 miles (225 km) from Carmel Bay to the Cuyama River in Monterey and San Luis Obispo counties. Lowest in the south, the range rises to 5,862
- Santa Luiza de Mossoró (Brazil)
Mossoró, city, northwestern Rio Grande do Norte estado (state), northeastern Brazil. It lies on the Apodi River, about 30 miles (50 km) from its mouth on the Atlantic coast, at 66 feet (20 metres) above sea level. Formerly known as Santa Luzia de Mossoró, it was given city status in 1870 and is now
- Santa Luzia Island (island, Atlantic Ocean)
Santa Luzia Island, island of Cape Verde, situated in the Atlantic Ocean about 400 miles (640 km) off the West African coast between the islands of São Nicolau and São Vicente. It has an area of 14 square miles (35 square km) and rises to an altitude of 1,296 feet (395 metres). The island is
- Santa Maria (Brazil)
Santa Maria, city, central Rio Grande do Sul estado (state), southern Brazil, lying in the Jacuí River valley at an elevation of 502 feet (153 metres). Founded in 1797, it was given city status in 1876. The community was once called Santa Maria da Bôca do Monte (“St. Mary of the Mountain’s Mouth”)
- Santa María (ship)
Santa María, Christopher Columbus’ flagship on his first voyage to America. About 117 feet (36 metres) long, the “Santa María” had a deck, three masts, and forecastle and sterncastle and was armed with bombards that fired granite balls. She performed well in the voyage but ran aground off Haiti on
- Santa Maria (island, Vanuatu)
Santa Maria, largest of the Banks Islands in Vanuatu, southwestern Pacific Ocean. The island, with an area of 132 square miles (342 square km), is rugged and rises to Garet, an active volcano (2,615 feet [797 metres]) that contains a lake in its caldera at 1,404 feet (428 metres). The volcano has
- Santa maria (tree)
South America: Tropical and subtropical rainforests: Characteristic trees are, among others, jacareúbas (Calophyllum brasiliense), which is a tall tree with hard reddish brown wood used for heavy construction, araparis (Macrolobium acaciaefolium), abiuranas (Lucuma species), piranheiras (Piranhea trifoliata), and louros-do-igapo (Nectandra amazonum). Undergrowth is dense.
- Santa Maria Capua Vetere (ancient city, Italy)
Capua, in ancient times, the chief city of the Campania region of Italy; it was located 16 miles (26 km) north of Neapolis (Naples) on the site of modern Santa Maria Capua Vetere. The nearby modern city of Capua was called Casilinum in antiquity. Ancient Capua was founded in c. 600 bce, probably by
- Santa Maria Capua Vetere (ancient city, Italy)
Capua, in ancient times, the chief city of the Campania region of Italy; it was located 16 miles (26 km) north of Neapolis (Naples) on the site of modern Santa Maria Capua Vetere. The nearby modern city of Capua was called Casilinum in antiquity. Ancient Capua was founded in c. 600 bce, probably by
- Santa Maria d’Aracoeli (church, Rome, Italy)
Rome: The Capitoline: The church of Santa Maria d’Aracoeli, built before the 6th century and remade in its present form in the 13th, is lined with columns rifled from Classical buildings. It is the home of “Il Bambino,” a wooden statue (originally a 15th-century statue; now a copy) of the Christ…
- Santa Maria da Bôca do Monte (Brazil)
Santa Maria, city, central Rio Grande do Sul estado (state), southern Brazil, lying in the Jacuí River valley at an elevation of 502 feet (153 metres). Founded in 1797, it was given city status in 1876. The community was once called Santa Maria da Bôca do Monte (“St. Mary of the Mountain’s Mouth”)
- Santa Maria da Vitória (abbey, Batalha, Portugal)
Batalha: …the great Dominican monastery of Santa Maria da Vitória, also known simply as the monastery of Batalha (“Battle”), which was designated a UNESCO World Heritage site in 1983.
- Santa Maria de Belém (parish, Lisbon, Portugal)
Belém, freguesia (parish) within the western limits of the city of Lisbon, Portugal. It is situated on the northern shore of the Tagus (Tejo) River estuary near its outlet to the Atlantic Ocean. A former royal residence, Belém (Bethlehem) is known for its Manueline (early 16th-century)
- Santa María de la Antigua (Spanish settlement, Panama)
Vasco Núñez de Balboa: Career in the New World: …they founded the town of Santa María de la Antigua, the first stable settlement on the continent, and began to acquire gold by barter or war with the local Indians. The colonists soon deposed Enciso, Ojeda’s second in command, and elected a town council; one of its two alcaldes, or…
- Santa María de la Antigua del Darian (Spanish settlement, Panama)
Vasco Núñez de Balboa: Career in the New World: …they founded the town of Santa María de la Antigua, the first stable settlement on the continent, and began to acquire gold by barter or war with the local Indians. The colonists soon deposed Enciso, Ojeda’s second in command, and elected a town council; one of its two alcaldes, or…
- Santa María de la Antigua del Darién (Spanish settlement, Panama)
Vasco Núñez de Balboa: Career in the New World: …they founded the town of Santa María de la Antigua, the first stable settlement on the continent, and began to acquire gold by barter or war with the local Indians. The colonists soon deposed Enciso, Ojeda’s second in command, and elected a town council; one of its two alcaldes, or…
- Santa María de la Encarnación (cathedral, Granada, Spain)
Granada: …stands the Gothic Cathedral of Santa María de la Encarnación (1523–1703), containing the Royal Chapel (Capilla Real) with the tomb of Ferdinand and Isabella and a display of heraldic decoration. The cathedral is profusely ornamented with jasper and coloured marble, and its interior contains many fine paintings and sculptures by…
- Santa María de la Sede, Catedral de (cathedral, Sevilla, Spain)
Catedral de Sevilla, cathedral in Sevilla, Spain, that, in addition to being the world’s third-largest church, is an excellent example of Gothic and Renaissance architecture and represents some seven centuries of history. Originally it was the site of a large mosque that was built in the 12th
- Santa María de Montserrat (monastery, Catalonia, Spain)
Montserrat: …and the Benedictine monastery of Santa María de Montserrat, which houses an ancient wooden statue of the Virgin and Child that was supposedly carved by St. Luke, taken to Spain by St. Peter, and hidden in a cave during the Moorish occupation. The statue was found in 880 and has…
- Santa María de Puerto Príncipe (Cuba)
Camagüey, city, capital of Camagüey provincia (province), east-central Cuba. It is situated on the San Pedro River, about 25 miles (40 km) southeast of Florida. The city was founded in 1514 as Santa María del Puerto del Príncipe (also called Puerto Príncipe), at the site of present-day Nuevitas,
- Santa Maria degli Angeli (church, Florence, Italy)
Western architecture: Early Renaissance in Italy (1401–95): …a central-plan church, that of Santa Maria degli Angeli (begun 1434) at Florence, which was never completed. It was very important because it was the first central-plan church of the Renaissance, the type of plan which dominates Renaissance thinking. The plan is an octagon on the interior and 16-sided on…
- Santa Maria dei Frari (church, Venice, Italy)
Santa Maria dei Frari, Franciscan church in Venice, originally built in the mid-13th century but rebuilt in Gothic style in the 15th century. This important example of Venetian Gothic ecclesiastical architecture (often referred to simply as the Frari) contains many masterpieces of Venetian
- Santa Maria dei Miracoli (church, Rome, Italy)
Rome: Piazza del Popolo: …oval plan and dome, while Santa Maria dei Miracoli, on the narrower plot toward the Tiber on the west, has a round dome. Carlo Rainaldi, the architect, turned both facades slightly inward to frame the welcoming parades that would proceed up the Corso between the two churches. One of the…
- Santa Maria dei Miracoli (church, Venice, Italy)
Pietro Lombardo: …sculptor for the Church of Santa Maria dei Miracoli (1481–89), which is considered one of the finest Renaissance buildings in Venice. In 1482 he executed the tomb of Dante in Ravenna and in 1485 began work on his most distinguished monument, the Zanetti tomb in the cathedral at Treviso, for…
- Santa Maria del Carmine, Church of (church, Pisa, Italy)
Masaccio: Early life and works: …sizable, multi-paneled altarpiece for the Church of Santa Maria del Carmine at Pisa in 1426. This important commission demonstrates his growing reputation outside Florence. Unfortunately, the Pisa altarpiece was dismantled in the 18th century and many of its parts lost, but 13 sections of it have been rediscovered and identified…
- Santa Maria del Carmine, Church of (church, Florence, Italy)
Florence: City layout: …Arno lies the modest Carmelite church of Santa Maria del Carmine, whose Brancacci Chapel displays some of the most powerful early 15th-century frescoes by Masaccio and Masolino (c. 1425–27). The frescoes have been restored to their former glory, bringing out colours and details that had long been obscured.
- Santa Maria del Fiore, Cathedral of (cathedral, Florence, Italy)
the Duomo, Roman Catholic church in Florence, Italy. When it was consecrated in 1436, it was the world’s largest church, able to accommodate 30,000 worshippers. Among the building’s significant features are its stained-glass windows; its ornate green, red, and white marble facade; its collection of
- Santa Maria del Popolo (church, Rome, Italy)
Rome: Piazza del Popolo: …church next to the gate, Santa Maria del Popolo, which stood for centuries before the piazza existed and gives its name to the area, was founded in 1227 to replace a 1099 chapel built over what was presumed to be the emperor Nero’s tomb. It was replaced in 1472–77 by…
- Santa Maria del Priorato (church, Rome, Italy)
Western architecture: Italy: In the church of Santa Maria del Priorato, Piranesi incorporated Classical references that were to greatly influence the succeeding generation of architects.
- Santa Maria del Rosario (church, Cento, Italy)
Cento: …built in the church of Santa Maria del Rosario for the 17th-century Baroque painter Guercino (G.F. Barbieri), who is represented in the local art gallery and was born in Cento. Several churches, notably the Santa Maria del Rosario, also contain the painter’s works. The town, which is overlooked by the…
- Santa Maria della Catena (church, Palermo, Italy)
Matteo Carnelivari: Thus, in the church of Santa Maria della Catena (“Saint Mary of the Chain”)—a work not unanimously attributed to Carnelivari—the traditional architectonic structure, based on a plan with a nave and two aisles and a raised Greek cross presbytery, has been refined and made lighter and airier by the complex…