- Sarmistha (work by Datta)
Michael Madhusudan Datta: His first play, Sarmistha (1858), based on an episode of the ancient Sanskrit epic, the Mahābhārata, was well received. His poetical works are Tilottamasambhab (1860), a narrative poem on the story of Sunda and Upasunda; Meghnadbadh (1861), his most important composition, an epic on the Rāmāyaṇa theme; Brajangana…
- Sarmizegethusa (Dacia)
Trajan: Military campaigns of Trajan: …captured the Dacian capital of Sarmizegethusa (modern Varhély), which lay to the north of the Iron Gate in western Romania; Decebalus evaded capture by suicide. Trajan created a new province of Dacia north of the Danube within the curve of the Carpathian Mountains. This provided land for Roman settlers, opened…
- Sarnath (archaeological site, India)
Sarnath, archaeological site north of Varanasi, eastern Uttar Pradesh state, northern India. According to tradition, it was there that the Buddha began teaching his followers. Sarnath contains a stupa (shrine) called the Dhamek Stupa, which marks the place where the Buddha first taught. Sarnath is
- Sarnen (Switzerland)
Sarnen, capital of Obwalden Halbkanton (demicanton), central Switzerland, at the efflux of the Sarner River from the northern end of Lake Sarnen, southwest of Lucerne. In its town hall (1729–31), the Weisses Buch (“White Book”) contains the oldest chronicle extant (c. 1470) of the history of Swiss
- Sarney, José (president of Brazil)
Liberal Front Party: José Sarney, a cofounder of the PFL, was selected as Neves’s vice presidential candidate. The Neves-Sarney ticket won the balloting, but when Neves fell ill and died before taking office, Sarney became president; he served in the post until 1990. In 1987 the PFL withdrew…
- Śārṅgadeva (Indian music theorist)
South Asian arts: Further development of the grama-ragas: …Dance”), composed by the theorist Sharngadeva, is often said to be one of the most important landmarks in Indian music history. It was composed in the Deccan (south-central India) shortly before the conquest of this region by the Muslim invaders and thus gives an account of Indian music before the…
- Sarnia-Clearwater (Ontario, Canada)
Sarnia-Clearwater, city, seat of Lambton county, southeastern Ontario, east-central Canada, on the St. Clair River, at the southern end of Lake Huron, 55 miles (90 km) west of London. First visited by French explorers as early as 1627, its site was settled in 1807, and the present city was founded
- Sarno (Italy)
Sarno, town, Campania regione, southern Italy, at the foot of Saretto hill near the sources of the Sarno (ancient Sarnus) River, just northwest of Salerno. Near Sarno in ad 553, Teias, king of the Goths, was defeated and slain by the Byzantine general Narses. Malaria retarded the growth of the town
- Sarnoff, David (American entrepreneur and radio and television pioneer)
David Sarnoff was an American pioneer in the development of both radio and television broadcasting. As a boy in Russia, Sarnoff spent several years preparing for a career as a Jewish scholar of the Talmud. He immigrated with his family in 1900 and settled in New York City. While going to school, he
- saro (mammal)
saro, rare South American species of otter
- Saro-Wiwa, Ken (Nigerian author and activist)
Ken Saro-Wiwa was a Nigerian writer and activist, who spoke out forcefully against the Nigerian military regime and the Anglo-Dutch petroleum company Royal Dutch/Shell for causing environmental damage to the land of the Ogoni people in his native Rivers state. Saro-Wiwa was educated at Government
- Saro-Wiwa, Kenule Beeson (Nigerian author and activist)
Ken Saro-Wiwa was a Nigerian writer and activist, who spoke out forcefully against the Nigerian military regime and the Anglo-Dutch petroleum company Royal Dutch/Shell for causing environmental damage to the land of the Ogoni people in his native Rivers state. Saro-Wiwa was educated at Government
- sarod (musical instrument)
sarod, stringed musical instrument of the lute family that is common to the Hindustani music tradition of northern India, Pakistan, and Bangladesh. The modern classical sarod is about 100 cm (39 inches) long and has a slightly waisted wood body with a skin belly. The broad neck has a wide fretless
- saron (musical instrument)
percussion instrument: Idiophones: …of the gamelan are the saron, a trough metallophone depicted as early as about 800 ce on the Borobudur stupa (Buddhist monument), Java, and the frame metallophone gender, now usually supplied with tubular resonators, which has been known since the 12th century. Introduced to China by a Turkic people in…
- saron barung (musical instrument)
Southeast Asian arts: Java: …thick bronze slabs (saron demung, saron barung, saron panerus) on trough resonators playing the theme usually in regular note values without ornamentation. The second group consists of elaborating or panerusan instruments, which add ornaments to the main theme. In this group gongs in double rows (bonang panembang, bonang barung, bonang…
- Saron, Jean-Baptiste-Gaspard Bochart de (French scientist)
Jean-Baptiste-Gaspard Bochart de Saron was a French lawyer and natural scientist who became especially known for his contributions to astronomy. After studies at the Collège Louis-le-Grand, a part of the University of Paris, Saron became legal counselor to the Parlement of Paris in 1748, master of
- sarong (clothing)
sarong, principal silk, cotton, or synthetic-fabric garment worn in the Malay Archipelago and the Pacific islands. Brightly coloured fabric 4 or 5 yards (up to 4 12 m) long is wrapped around the lower part of the body and tucked in or tied at the waist, forming a draped dress or skirt varying in
- Saronic Gulf (gulf, Greece)
Saronikós Gulf, gulf of the Aegean Sea between Ákra (cape) Soúnion of the Attica (Modern Greek: Attikí) peninsula and Ákra Skíllaion of the Argolís peninsula of the Greek Peloponnese (Pelopónnisos). A maximum of 50 miles (80 km) long northwest-southeast and about 30 miles wide, it is linked on the
- Saronic Islands (islands, Greece)
Aegean Sea: …bridge at Chalcís); (5) the Saronic Islands west of the Cyclades, lying 5 to 50 miles (8 to 80 km) from Piraeus and including Salamís, Aegina (Aíyina), Póros, Hydra (Ídhra), and Spétsai; (6) the Dodecanese, a group of 13 islands transferred to Greece by Italy after World War II, the…
- Saronikós Gulf (gulf, Greece)
Saronikós Gulf, gulf of the Aegean Sea between Ákra (cape) Soúnion of the Attica (Modern Greek: Attikí) peninsula and Ákra Skíllaion of the Argolís peninsula of the Greek Peloponnese (Pelopónnisos). A maximum of 50 miles (80 km) long northwest-southeast and about 30 miles wide, it is linked on the
- Saronno (Italy)
amaretto: …the small Italian city of Saronno, in Lombardy, claim to have originated amaretto, its name derived from the Italian adjective amaro, meaning “bitter.” The Reina family’s recipe draws on a local innkeeper’s version of the drink. As legend has it, the innkeeper gave the liqueur to the Renaissance painter Bernardino…
- saros (astronomy)
saros, in astronomy, interval of 18 years 1113 days (1013 days when five leap years are included) after which the Earth, Sun, and Moon return to nearly the same relative positions and the cycle of lunar and solar eclipses begins to repeat itself; e.g., the solar eclipse of June 30, 1973, was
- Sarospatak (Hungary)
Borsod-Abaúj-Zemplén: Mezőkövesd, Ózd, Sárospatak, Szerencs, Sátoraljaújhely, Tiszaújváros, and Tokaj.
- Sarotherodon (fish genus)
tilapia: …divided into mouth-brooding genera (Sarotherodon and Oreochromis) and those that deposit eggs on the bottoms of ponds and lakes (Tilapia).
- Sarothura (bird)
crake: Pygmy crakes (Sarothrura species), about 14 cm (6 inches) long, are very secretive, inhabiting swampy African forests. Other New World crakes are the several species of Laterallus (including the black rail, L. jamaicensis) and several related genera.
- Sarouk carpet
Sarūk carpet, originally, floor covering handwoven in the village of Sārūq, north of Arāk (Solṭānābād) in western Iran; later, floor covering commercially produced mainly in Arāk but also in the weaving villages nearby for the U.S. market. The early carpets were of very good quality, with short
- Sarovsky, Svyatoy Serafim (Russian monk)
Saint Seraphim of Sarov ; canonized 1903; feast day January 2) was a Russian monk and mystic whose ascetic practice and counseling in cases of conscience won him the title starets (Russian: “spiritual teacher”). He is one of the most renowned monastic figures in Russian Orthodox history. He took
- Saroyan, William (American author)
William Saroyan was a U.S. writer who made his initial impact during the Depression with a deluge of brash, original, and irreverent stories celebrating the joy of living in spite of poverty, hunger, and insecurity. The son of an Armenian immigrant, Saroyan left school at 15 and educated himself by
- Sarpan (island, Northern Mariana Islands)
Rota, island, one of the Mariana Islands and part of the Northern Mariana Islands commonwealth of the United States, in the western Pacific Ocean. Rota is situated about 30 miles (50 km) northeast of Guam. Of volcanic formation, the island rises to 1,627 feet (496 metres). Under Japanese
- Sarpaneva, Timo (Finnish glass designer)
glassware: The Scandinavian countries: …designers were Tapio Wirkkala and Timo Sarpaneva working for the Iittala glassworks (see photograph), Kaj Franck for the Nuutajärvi glassworks (trading as Wärtsilä-Notsjö), and Helena Tynell and Nanny Still for Riihimäki. In the 1960s Timo Sarpaneva struck a new note with his sculptures formed from the charred inner surface of…
- Sarpedon (Greek mythology)
Sarpedon, in Greek legend, son of Zeus, the king of the gods, and Laodameia, the daughter of Bellerophon; he was a Lycian prince and a hero in the Trojan War. As recounted in Homer’s Iliad, Book XVI, Sarpedon fought with distinction on the side of the Trojans but was slain by the Greek warrior
- Sarpi, Paolo (Italian theologian)
Paolo Sarpi was an Italian patriot, scholar, and state theologian during Venice’s struggle with Pope Paul V. Between 1610 and 1618 he wrote his History of the Council of Trent, an important work decrying papal absolutism. Among Italians, he was an early advocate of the separation of church and
- Sarrabrucca (castle, Saarbrücken, Germany)
Saarbrücken: …the Frankish royal castle of Sarrabrucca, referring to a bridge across the river dating from Roman times. Its early rulers were the bishops of Metz and the counts of Saarbrücken. Chartered in 1321, it belonged to the counts of Nassau-Saarbrücken until it was occupied by the French in 1793. It…
- Sarracenia (plant)
carnivorous plant: Major families: …widely known and much-studied genus Sarracenia, of eastern North America. The sun pitchers, also known as marsh pitcher plants (genus Heliamphora), are native to a limited region in South America and consist of about 23 species. The cobra plant (Darlingtonia californica) is the only member of its genus and is…
- Sarracenia drummondii (plant)
pitcher plant: Sarraceniaceae: The crimson pitcher plant (S. leucophylla) has white trumpet-shaped pitchers with ruffled upright hoods and scarlet flowers. The yellow pitcher plant (S. flava) has bright yellow flowers and a long, green, trumpet-shaped leaf the lid of which is held upright. One species, the green pitcher plant…
- Sarracenia flava (plant)
pitcher plant: Sarraceniaceae: The yellow pitcher plant (S. flava) has bright yellow flowers and a long, green, trumpet-shaped leaf the lid of which is held upright. One species, the green pitcher plant (S. oreophila), is critically endangered and is found in limited areas of Alabama, Georgia, North Carolina, and…
- Sarracenia leucophylla (plant)
pitcher plant: Sarraceniaceae: The crimson pitcher plant (S. leucophylla) has white trumpet-shaped pitchers with ruffled upright hoods and scarlet flowers. The yellow pitcher plant (S. flava) has bright yellow flowers and a long, green, trumpet-shaped leaf the lid of which is held upright. One species, the green pitcher plant…
- Sarracenia oreophila (botany)
pitcher plant: Sarraceniaceae: One species, the green pitcher plant (S. oreophila), is critically endangered and is found in limited areas of Alabama, Georgia, North Carolina, and Tennessee.
- Sarracenia psittacina (plant)
pitcher plant: Sarraceniaceae: The parrot pitcher plant (S. psittacina) has small, fat, red-veined leaves that are topped by beaklike lids and bears dark red flowers. The sweet pitcher plant (S. rubra) produces dull red, violet-scented flowers. The crimson pitcher plant (S. leucophylla) has white trumpet-shaped pitchers with ruffled upright…
- Sarracenia purpurea (plant)
pitcher plant: Sarraceniaceae: The purple, or common, pitcher plant (S. purpurea) has heavily veined, green to reddish, flaring, juglike leaves that bear downward-pointing bristles to keep prey, including salamanders, from escaping. Its flowers are purple-red. The parrot pitcher plant (S. psittacina) has small, fat, red-veined leaves that are topped by beaklike…
- Sarracenia rubra (botany)
pitcher plant: Sarraceniaceae: The sweet pitcher plant (S. rubra) produces dull red, violet-scented flowers. The crimson pitcher plant (S. leucophylla) has white trumpet-shaped pitchers with ruffled upright hoods and scarlet flowers. The yellow pitcher plant (S. flava) has bright yellow flowers and a long, green, trumpet-shaped leaf the lid…
- Sarraceniaceae (plant family)
Sarraceniaceae, family of carnivorous pitcher plants in the order Ericales, native to North and South America. These low-growing perennial herbs are notable for their modified pitcherlike leaves, which serve as pitfall traps to ensnare and digest insects and other small prey. The family consists of
- Sarrail, Maurice (French general)
Druze revolt: …by the high commissioner, General Maurice Sarrail, and his arrest and detainment of several Druze leaders in July 1925 resulted in a full-fledged rebellion. Led by Sulṭān al-Aṭrash, the Druze defeated the French in August and by September were joined by Syrian nationalists from the People’s Party, who entreated their…
- Sarrāj (Muslim author)
Islamic arts: Philosophy: Averroës and Avicenna: …Arab and Persian areas (Sarrāj, Kalābādhī, Qushayrī, and, in Muslim India, al-Hujwīrī) are generally superior to those produced in western Muslim countries. Yet the greatest Islamic theosophist of all, Ibn al-ʿArabī (died 1240), was Spanish in origin and was educated in the Spanish tradition. His writings, in both poetry…
- Sarrasani (German circus)
circus: History: …of one German circus, the Sarrasani, which toured South America in 1923 and 1934 in order to evade inflation and political persecution at home. The circus in Britain also declined during the 1920s, although the circuses produced by Bertram Mills, a wealthy undertaker who had invented the glass hearse, were…
- Sarrasin, Jean-François (French author)
Jean-François Sarasin was a French author of elegant verse, best known for the mock epic Dulot vaincu (“Dulot Defeated”), for the epic fragments Rollon conquérant (“Roland in Conquest”) and La Guerre espagnole (“The Spanish War”), and for La Pompe funèbre de Voiture (“Voiture’s Funeral Pomp”).
- Sarraut, Albert (French statesman)
Albert Sarraut was a French Radical Socialist statesman most noted for his colonial policy and liberal rule as governor-general of Indochina. Sarraut was born into an important Radical family that owned the newspaper Dépêche de Toulouse. Educated at the lycée of Carcassonne and the law faculty of
- Sarraut, Albert-Pierre (French statesman)
Albert Sarraut was a French Radical Socialist statesman most noted for his colonial policy and liberal rule as governor-general of Indochina. Sarraut was born into an important Radical family that owned the newspaper Dépêche de Toulouse. Educated at the lycée of Carcassonne and the law faculty of
- Sarraute, Nathalie (French author)
Nathalie Sarraute was a French novelist and essayist, one of the earliest practitioners and a leading theorist of the nouveau roman, the French post-World War II “new novel,” or “antinovel,” a phrase applied by Jean-Paul Sartre to Sarraute’s Portrait d’un inconnu (1947; Portrait of a Man Unknown).
- Sarrazin, Jean-François (French author)
Jean-François Sarasin was a French author of elegant verse, best known for the mock epic Dulot vaincu (“Dulot Defeated”), for the epic fragments Rollon conquérant (“Roland in Conquest”) and La Guerre espagnole (“The Spanish War”), and for La Pompe funèbre de Voiture (“Voiture’s Funeral Pomp”).
- Sarre River (river, Europe)
Saar River, right-bank tributary of the Moselle (German Mosel) River. It flows for 153 mi (246 km) across northeastern France into Germany and drains an area of 2,800 sq mi (7,300 sq km). Rising at the foot of Donon (mountain) in the northern Vosges (mountains), the river flows generally northward
- Sarria, José (American drag performer and activist)
José Sarria was a Latino American drag performer and political activist who was the first openly gay person to run for public office in the United States. (He ran unsuccessfully for a seat on the San Francisco Board of Supervisors—the legislative body of the city and county—in 1961). Sarria was the
- Sarria, José Julio (American drag performer and activist)
José Sarria was a Latino American drag performer and political activist who was the first openly gay person to run for public office in the United States. (He ran unsuccessfully for a seat on the San Francisco Board of Supervisors—the legislative body of the city and county—in 1961). Sarria was the
- SARS (respiratory illness)
SARS, highly contagious respiratory illness characterized by a persistent fever, headache, and bodily discomfort, followed by a dry cough that may progress to great difficulty in breathing. SARS appeared in November 2002 in Guangdong province, China, where it was first diagnosed as an atypical
- SARS coronavirus (virus)
coronavirus: …known as SARS coronavirus (or Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus) causes a highly contagious respiratory disease that is characterized by symptoms of fever, cough, and muscle ache, often with progressive difficulty in breathing. The virus emerged in humans in 2002; it likely jumped to humans from an animal reservoir, believed…
- SARS-CoV-2 (virus)
coronavirus: The virus, later named severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), caused an illness known as COVID-19, which was similar to SARS and was characterized primarily by fever and respiratory symptoms. The virus was likewise highly contagious, spreading throughout regions of China, the United States, and…
- SARS-CoV-2 B.1.1.529 (virus variant)
Australia: The premiership of Scott Morrison (2018–22): …version of the virus: the Omicron variant, which resulted in record levels of infections and raised the number of COVID-19-related deaths in Australia to more than 2,700. Nevertheless, by February it too had abated, and Morrison announced that the country was ready to enter the final phase of the return…
- SARS-CoV-2 B.1.617.2 (virus variant)
Scott Morrison: Fortress Australia, the stroll out, and the 2022 election: …2021 of the highly transmissible Delta variant of the coronavirus quickly revealed the vulnerability of “Fortress Australia,” and Morrison shifted strategies, refocusing the government’s prevention efforts to vaccination, the slow pace of which (mocked as a “stroll out”) became the object of increasing criticism. In July Morrison presented a four-phase…
- Sarsa Dengel (emperor of Ethiopia)
Ethiopia: Challenge, revival, and decline (16th–19th century): …widely in Ethiopia that Emperor Sarsa Dengel (reigned 1563–97) limited his government to what are now Eritrea, the northern regions of Tigray and Gonder, and parts of Gojam, Shewa, and Welo, areas that included the bulk of the Christian Semitic-speaking agriculturalists. Meanwhile, the church had barely revived following the destruction…
- sarsaparilla (flavoring)
sarsaparilla, aromatic flavouring agent made from the roots of several tropical vines belonging to the Smilax genus of the family Smilacaceae . Once a popular tonic, sarsaparilla is now used to flavour and mask the taste of medicines. In combination with wintergreen and other flavours it is used in
- sarsapogenin (compound)
sarsaparilla: …crystalline glycoside, sarsaponin, which yields sarsapogenin on hydrolysis, have been isolated from the root. Sarsapogenin is related to steroids such as progesterone and is used in their synthesis.
- sarsen (stone)
Stonehenge: Speculation and excavation: …incomplete, many of its original sarsens and bluestones having been broken up and taken away, probably during Britain’s Roman and medieval periods. The ground within the monument also has been severely disturbed, not only by the removal of the stones but also by digging—to various degrees and ends—since the 16th…
- sarsen stone (stone)
Stonehenge: Speculation and excavation: …incomplete, many of its original sarsens and bluestones having been broken up and taken away, probably during Britain’s Roman and medieval periods. The ground within the monument also has been severely disturbed, not only by the removal of the stones but also by digging—to various degrees and ends—since the 16th…
- Sarsfield, Patrick (Irish Jacobite)
Patrick Sarsfield was a Jacobite soldier who played a leading role in the Irish Roman Catholic resistance (1689–91) to England’s King William III. Sarsfield remains a favourite hero of the Irish national tradition. His grandfather, Rory O’More, was a leader of an Irish Catholic uprising against the
- Sarsi (people)
Sarcee, North American Plains Indians of Athabaskan linguistic stock who lived in the 18th and 19th centuries near the upper Saskatchewan and Athabaska rivers in the present provinces of Alberta and Saskatchewan, Can. They probably moved southward to this region near the end of the 17th century
- sarsuela (Spanish musical play)
zarzuela, form of Spanish or Spanish-derived musical theatre in which the dramatic action is carried through an alternating combination of song and speech. Topics of the libretti (texts of the productions) vary widely, ranging from stories derived from Greco-Roman mythology to tales of modern-day
- Sarsuti (India)
Sirsa, city, extreme western Haryana state, northwestern India. It is situated on the edge of the Thar (Great Indian) Desert. Sirsa town and fort, known in antiquity as Sarsuti, are said to have been built by a Raja Saras (c. 250 ce). It was one of the most important 14th-century towns of northern
- sarswela (Spanish musical play)
zarzuela, form of Spanish or Spanish-derived musical theatre in which the dramatic action is carried through an alternating combination of song and speech. Topics of the libretti (texts of the productions) vary widely, ranging from stories derived from Greco-Roman mythology to tales of modern-day
- Sart (people)
Tajik, a Persian-speaking people of Central Asia located primarily in Tajikistan, Afghanistan, Uzbekistan, and China’s Xinjiang province. The Tajiks constitute more than four-fifths of the population of Tajikistan. In the 2010s there were more than 7.5 million Tajiks in Tajikistan and more than 1.5
- Sart Kalmyk (people)
Kalmyk: Another small group, called the Sart Kalmyk, live in Kyrgyzstan near the Chinese border. A few emigrated after World War II to the United States.
- Sartavu (Hindu deity)
Ayyappan, in Hinduism, a deity who is always celibate, generally depicted in a yogic posture, with a bell around his neck. His most prominent shrine is at Sabarimala, in the southern Indian state of Kerala, where he is most popular, though the neighboring states of Tamil Nadu and Karnataka also
- Sartawi, Issam (Palestinian leader)
ʿIsām Sartāwī was a Palestinian nationalist who, as one of the moderate leaders in the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), attracted much hostility from Palestinian extremists because he advocated coexistence with Israel. Trained as a medical doctor in Baghdad, Iraq, Sartāwī was conducting
- Sartāwī, ʿIsām (Palestinian leader)
ʿIsām Sartāwī was a Palestinian nationalist who, as one of the moderate leaders in the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), attracted much hostility from Palestinian extremists because he advocated coexistence with Israel. Trained as a medical doctor in Baghdad, Iraq, Sartāwī was conducting
- Sarthe (department, France)
Pays de la Loire: …the western départements of Mayenne, Sarthe, Maine-et-Loire, Vendée, and Loire-Atlantique. Pays de la Loire is bounded by the régions of Bourgogne-Franche-Comté to the northwest, Normandy to the north, Centre to the east, and Nouvelle-Aquitaine to the south. The Bay of Biscay
- Sarthe River (river, France)
Sarthe River, river, rising in the Perche hills north of Mortagne-au-Perche, Orne département, northwestern France. The Sarthe flows alternately west and south to a point near Angers, where it joins the Loire and Mayenne rivers to form the Maine, a tributary of the Loire. The Sarthe, flowing south
- Sarti, Giuseppe (Italian conductor)
Giuseppe Sarti was an Italian conductor and composer of liturgical music and more than 50 operas. After studying organ and composition at an early age with Giovanni Battista Martini in Bologna, Sarti became organist of the Faenza cathedral (1748) and director of the theatre there. His first opera,
- Sarto, Andrea del (Italian painter)
Andrea del Sarto was an Italian painter and draftsman whose works of exquisite composition and craftsmanship were instrumental in the development of Florentine Mannerism. His most striking among other well-known works is the series of frescoes on the life of St. John the Baptist in the Chiostro
- Sarto, Giuseppe Melchiorre (pope)
St. Pius X ; canonized May 29, 1954; feast day August 21) was an Italian pope from 1903 to 1914, whose staunch political and religious conservatism dominated the early 20th-century Roman Catholic Church. Ordained in 1858, he became a parish priest in the Italian region of Venetia. Pope Leo XIII
- Sarton, Eléanore Marie (American writer)
May Sarton was an American poet, novelist, and essayist whose works were informed by themes of love, mind-body conflict, creativity, lesbianism, and the trials of age and illness. Sarton’s family immigrated to Cambridge, Massachusetts, in 1916. She saw her first work in print in Poetry magazine in
- Sarton, George Alfred Leon (American scholar)
George Alfred Leon Sarton was a Belgian-born U.S. scholar and writer whose voluminous research and publications concerning the history of science did much to make the subject an independent discipline. A student of chemistry, celestial mechanics, and mathematics at the University of Ghent (Ph.D.
- Sarton, May (American writer)
May Sarton was an American poet, novelist, and essayist whose works were informed by themes of love, mind-body conflict, creativity, lesbianism, and the trials of age and illness. Sarton’s family immigrated to Cambridge, Massachusetts, in 1916. She saw her first work in print in Poetry magazine in
- Sartor Resartus (essay by Carlyle)
Sartor Resartus, humorous essay by Thomas Carlyle, ostensibly a learned treatise on the philosophy, the symbolism, and the influence of clothes, published serially in Fraser’s Magazine (November 1833–August 1834). Subtitled The Life and Opinions of Herr Teufelsdröckh (“Mr. Devil’s Dung”), Sartor
- Sartor, Johann (German theologian)
Johann Agricola was a Lutheran Reformer, friend of Martin Luther, and advocate of antinomianism, a view asserting that Christians are freed by grace from the need to obey the Ten Commandments. At Wittenberg, Agricola was persuaded by Luther to change his course of study from medicine to theology.
- Sartoris (novel by Faulkner)
Sartoris, novel by William Faulkner, published in 1929 as a shortened version of a novel that was eventually published in its entirety in 1973 under the original title Flags in the Dust. Disproportionate and sometimes emotionally overwrought, Faulkner’s third novel was the last of his apprentice
- sartorius muscle (anatomy)
sartorius muscle, (from the Latin sartor, “mender”), long, narrow, ribbonlike thigh muscle beginning at the front of the crest of the pelvic girdle, extending obliquely down the front and side of the thigh, and inserted at (attached to) the inner and upper portion of the tibia (shinbone). It
- Sartorius, Anna (German-American publisher and philanthropist)
Anna Sartorius Uhl Ottendorfer was a publisher and philanthropist who helped establish a major German-American newspaper and contributed liberally to German-American institutions. Anna Sartorius received a scanty education. About 1836 she immigrated to the United States and settled in New York
- Sartre, Jean-Paul (French philosopher and author)
Jean-Paul Sartre was a French philosopher, novelist, and playwright, best known as the leading exponent of existentialism in the 20th century. In 1964 he declined the Nobel Prize for Literature, which had been awarded to him “for his work which, rich in ideas and filled with the spirit of freedom
- Saruda-hiko (Japanese mythology)
Sarudahiko, in Japanese mythology, an earthly deity who offered himself as a guide to the divine grandchild Ninigi, when he descended to take charge of the earth. His brilliance while he waited on the crossroad was so great it reached up to heaven, and the goddess Amenouzume was sent down to
- Sarudahiko (Japanese mythology)
Sarudahiko, in Japanese mythology, an earthly deity who offered himself as a guide to the divine grandchild Ninigi, when he descended to take charge of the earth. His brilliance while he waited on the crossroad was so great it reached up to heaven, and the goddess Amenouzume was sent down to
- sarugaku (Japanese theater)
sarugaku, form of popular Japanese entertainment dating from at least the 11th century, which reached its high point by the 14th century. Originally, sarugaku involved mainly acrobatics, juggling, and mime. During the Heian period (794–1185) it was combined with drum dancing. Sarugaku helped give
- sarugaku-no-nō (Japanese drama)
Noh theatre, traditional Japanese theatrical form and one of the oldest extant theatrical forms in the world. Noh—its name derived from nō, meaning “talent” or “skill”—is unlike Western narrative drama. Rather than being actors or “representers” in the Western sense, Noh performers are simply
- Saruhan (Turkmen chief)
Saruhan Dynasty: The dynasty was founded by Saruhan, a tribal chief and frontier prince in the service of the Seljuqs of Anatolia who traced his descent to the Khwārezm-Shāhs of Central Asia; after its conquest of Manisa (1313), the dynasty’s principality extended its territories to the Aegean Sea. Surrounded by the Turkmen…
- Saruhan Dynasty (Turkmen dynasty)
Saruhan Dynasty, Turkmen dynasty (c. 1300–1410) that ruled in the Manisa region of western Anatolia. The dynasty was founded by Saruhan, a tribal chief and frontier prince in the service of the Seljuqs of Anatolia who traced his descent to the Khwārezm-Shāhs of Central Asia; after its conquest of
- Sārūja, Sūq (historic market, Damascus, Syria)
Damascus: Islamic city: A new northern quarter, Sūq Sārūja, emerged as a market area around the citadel. Owing to its proximity to the citadel, this area became the Mamlūks’ choice residential quarter in the 15th century.
- Sarūk carpet
Sarūk carpet, originally, floor covering handwoven in the village of Sārūq, north of Arāk (Solṭānābād) in western Iran; later, floor covering commercially produced mainly in Arāk but also in the weaving villages nearby for the U.S. market. The early carpets were of very good quality, with short
- Sarum chant (vocal music)
Sarum chant, liturgical chant of the Sarum Use, the medieval church rite centred at Salisbury, Eng. The name derives from the Latin name for Salisbury, Sarisberia. Gregorian chant was carried to England in 596 by Roman teachers who accompanied St. Augustine to Canterbury. A centre was established
- Sarum Use (medieval liturgy)
church year: Advent: …medieval service books, notably the Use of Sarum (Salisbury), extensively followed in England, with its Sunday before Advent. The coming of Christ in his Nativity was overlaid with a second theme, also stemming from Gallican churches, namely, his Second Coming at the end of time. This interweaving of the themes…
- Saruma (plant genus)
Aristolochiaceae: The related genus Saruma contains a single species, upright wild ginger (S. henryi), which is sometimes cultivated as an ornamental.
- Saruq, Menahem ben (Spanish-Jewish lexicographer)
Menahem ben Saruq was a Jewish lexicographer and poet who composed the first Hebrew-language dictionary, a lexicon of the Bible; earlier biblical dictionaries were written in Arabic and translated into Hebrew. After travelling to Córdoba, a city in Moorish Spain, Menahem became a protégé of Isaac,
- sarus (bird)
India: Birds: …birds in India include the Indian crane, commonly known as the sarus (Grus antigone); a large gray bird with crimson legs, the sarus stands as tall as a human. Bustards inhabit India’s grasslands. The great Indian bustard (Ardeotis nigriceps), now confined to central and western India, is an endangered species…