- Satpura Range (hills, India)
Satpura Range, range of hills, part of the Deccan plateau, western India. The hills stretch for some 560 miles (900 km) across the widest part of peninsular India, through Maharashtra and Madhya Pradesh states. The range, the name of which means “Seven Folds,” forms the watershed between the
- satra (religious center, India)
Assam: Cultural life: …religious centers, such as the satra (seat of a religious head known as the satradhikar) and namghar (prayer hall). Satras, which are also centers of performing arts, have been looking after the religious and social well-being of the people since the 15th century. The first satra was founded in Majuli,…
- satrap (Persian provincial governor)
satrap, provincial governor in the Achaemenian Empire. The division of the empire into provinces (satrapies) was completed by Darius I (reigned 522–486 bc), who established 20 satrapies with their annual tribute. The satraps, appointed by the king, normally were members of the royal family or of
- Satrapi, Marjane (Iranian artist and writer)
Marjane Satrapi is an Iranian artist, director, and writer whose graphic novels explore the gaps and junctures between Iran and the West. She lives in Paris. Satrapi was born in Rasht, Iran, in 1969. An only child, she moved with her father, an engineer, and her mother, a clothing designer, to
- Satraps, Revolt of the (Persian history)
Ariobarzanes: …about 366, led the unsuccessful revolt of the satraps of western Anatolia against the Persian king Artaxerxes II (reigned 404–359/358 bc).
- Satsaṅg (Sikhism)
Satsaṅg, in Sikhism, “the assembly of true believers,” a practice that dates back to the first Gurū of the religion, Nānak. While not unique to Sikhism, the convention of gathering together and singing the compositions of the Gurū was understood in peculiarly Sikh terms, at first as a sign of
- Satsu-no-umi (lake, Japan)
Lake Chūzenji, lake, lying within Nikkō National Park, Tochigi ken (prefecture), north-central Honshu, Japan. It is situated at an elevation of 4,163 feet (1,269 metres) and has a surface area of about 4.6 square miles (11.8 square km). Lake Chūzenji is a resort site noted for its shrines,
- Satsuma (historical domain, Japan)
Satsuma, Japanese feudal domain (han) in southern Kyushu noted for its role in Japan’s modernization. Satsuma (part of modern-day Kagoshima prefecture) was ruled by the Shimazu family from the end of the 12th century to the Meiji Restoration in 1868. In 1609 the family had conquered the Ryukyu
- Satsuma pottery (Japan)
pottery: Stoneware and earthenware: …popular under the name of Satsuma and was copied avidly at Worcester and elsewhere (see below Japan: 19th and 20th centuries).
- Satsuma Rebellion (Japanese history)
education: The conservative reaction: Following the repression of the Satsuma Rebellion, a samurai uprising in 1877, Japan again forged ahead toward political unity, but there was an increasing trend of antigovernment protest from below, which was epitomized by the Movement for People’s Rights. Because of the Satsuma Rebellion, the government faced serious financial difficulties.…
- Satta, Salvatore (Italian author)
Italian literature: Fiction at the turn of the 21st century: ” The Sardinian Salvatore Satta, for example, was a professor of law whose considerable literary production—his best-known novel is Il giorno del giudizio (1979; The Day of Judgement)—was not revealed until after his death. Meanwhile, Stefano D’Arrigo was being supported by publisher Arnoldo Mondadori to compose his ambitious…
- Sattahip (Thailand)
Sattahip, port, south-central Thailand. It lies on the northern Gulf of Thailand coast, at the head of a small bay protected by Phra Island. It was developed as a naval base in 1920–23 and continued to serve predominantly military purposes in the 1970s. It is linked to Bangkok by river and by a
- Sattapanni (cave, Rajgir Hills, India)
Rajgir Hills: Sattapanni cave, which has been identified with a number of sites on Baibhar Hill and with the Sonbhandar cave at its foot, was the site of the first Buddhist synod (543 bce) to record the tenets of the faith. The Sonbhandar cave is now believed…
- Sattar, Abdus (president of Bangladesh)
Bangladesh: Bangladesh since independence: Meanwhile, the civilian vice president, Abdus Sattar, was confirmed as president by a nationwide election in 1981, but he was ill, and real power was exercised by Lieut. Gen. Hussein Mohammad Ershad and a National Security Council. On March 24, 1982, Ershad ejected Sattar and took over as chief martial-law…
- Sattasaī (poems compiled by Hāla)
South Asian arts: The short lyric: …Hāla under the name of Sattasaī (“The Seven Hundred”), tends to be simpler in imagery and in the emotion portrayed than their Sanskrit counterparts, but essential differences are difficult to pinpoint.
- sattva (Indian philosophy)
Samkhya: …expansiveness; and the highest is sattva (“goodness”), which is illumination, enlightening knowledge, and lightness. To these correspond personality types: to tamas, that of the ignorant and lazy person; to rajas, that of the impulsive and passionate person; and to sattva, that of the enlightened and serene person.
- Satu Mare (Romania)
Satu Mare, city, northwestern Romania. It lies on the northeastern fringe of the Great Hungarian Plain, on the right bank of the Someș River, 8 miles (13 km) east of the Hungarian border and 17 miles (27 km) south of the Ukrainian border. Legend indicates it was founded by boatmen carrying salt
- Satu Mare (county, Romania)
Satu Mare, județ (county), northwestern Romania. The county is bounded on the north by Ukraine and on the west by Hungary. It consists mostly of rolling hills and is drained northwestward by the Someș River and its tributaries. Satu Mare city is the county capital and has industries that produce
- Satul (Thailand)
Satun, town, southern Thailand, on the Malay Peninsula. Satun remains a small community at the end of a branch road; its shallow coastal waters are unsuitable for port development. The area in which Satun is situated was historically part of Kedah state (now in Malaysia). It includes several
- Satum (ceremonial prayer)
Nowruz: Practice of Nowruz: …commemorating the dead; and the Satum, prayers recited at funeral feasts. Throughout the day, Parsis greet one another with the rite of hamāzor, in which one’s right hand is passed between the palms of another. Words of greeting and good wishes are then exchanged.
- Satun (Thailand)
Satun, town, southern Thailand, on the Malay Peninsula. Satun remains a small community at the end of a branch road; its shallow coastal waters are unsuitable for port development. The area in which Satun is situated was historically part of Kedah state (now in Malaysia). It includes several
- satura (Latin literature)
Gaius Lucilius: …to the existing formless Latin satura (meaning “a mixed dish”) the distinctive character of critical comment that the word satire still implies.
- saturable control dimmer (electronics)
stagecraft: Dimmers: A saturable core dimmer uses a small DC current to magnetize an iron core through which AC current flows. As the level of magnetism increases, the conductivity of the core also increases; more AC load current is thus able to pass through it, and any lights…
- saturable-inductor compass
navigation: The gyromagnetic compass: In one such arrangement, a saturable-inductor compass (so named because of its use of materials that can be readily induced to carry a maximum magnetic flow, or magnetic saturation) is mounted on a gyroscope, but this is not always convenient from the point of view of size and weight.
- Saturae (work by Ennius)
Quintus Ennius: In the Saturae (Satires) Ennius developed the only literary genre that Rome could call its own. Four books in a variety of metres on diverse subjects, they were mostly concerned with practical wisdom, often driving home a lesson with the help of a fable. More philosophical was a…
- Saturae Menippeae (work by Varro)
Marcus Terentius Varro: …stature, best known for his Saturae Menippeae (“Menippean Satires”). He was a man of immense learning and a prolific author. Inspired by a deep patriotism, he intended his work, by its moral and educational quality, to further Roman greatness. Seeking to link Rome’s future with its glorious past, his works…
- saturated acid (chemical compound)
saturated fat, a fatty acid in which the hydrocarbon molecules have a hydrogen atom on every carbon and thus are fully hydrogenated. (By way of comparison, the hydrocarbon molecules of unsaturated fats have two carbons that share double or triple bonds and are therefore not completely saturated
- saturated compound (chemical compound)
hydrocarbon: Alkanes are described as saturated hydrocarbons, while alkenes, alkynes, and aromatic hydrocarbons are said to be unsaturated.
- saturated fat (chemical compound)
saturated fat, a fatty acid in which the hydrocarbon molecules have a hydrogen atom on every carbon and thus are fully hydrogenated. (By way of comparison, the hydrocarbon molecules of unsaturated fats have two carbons that share double or triple bonds and are therefore not completely saturated
- saturated fatty acid (chemical compound)
saturated fat, a fatty acid in which the hydrocarbon molecules have a hydrogen atom on every carbon and thus are fully hydrogenated. (By way of comparison, the hydrocarbon molecules of unsaturated fats have two carbons that share double or triple bonds and are therefore not completely saturated
- saturated hydrocarbon (chemical compound)
hydrocarbon: Alkanes are described as saturated hydrocarbons, while alkenes, alkynes, and aromatic hydrocarbons are said to be unsaturated.
- saturated rock (geology)
felsic and mafic rocks: …minerals and rocks as oversaturated, saturated, or undersaturated with respect to silica. Felsic rocks are commonly oversaturated and contain free quartz (SiO2), intermediate rocks contain little or no quartz or feldspathoids (undersaturated minerals), and mafic rocks may contain abundant feldspathoids. This broad grouping on the basis of mineralogy related to…
- saturation (color)
colour: The nature of colour: …precisely specified by its hue, saturation, and brightness—three attributes sufficient to distinguish it from all other possible perceived colours. The hue is that aspect of colour usually associated with terms such as red, orange, yellow, and so forth. Saturation (also known as chroma or tone) refers to relative purity. When…
- saturation (chemistry and physics)
saturation, any of several physical or chemical conditions defined by the existence of an equilibrium between pairs of opposing forces or of an exact balance of the rates of opposing processes. Common examples include the state of a solution left in contact with the pure undissolved solute until no
- saturation bombing (warfare)
carpet bombing, devastating bombing attack that seeks to destroy every part of a wide area. Some military strategists characterize “carpet bombing” as an emotional term that does not describe any actual military strategy. However, Article 51 of Geneva Protocol I prohibits bombardment that treats a
- saturation control (television)
television: Controls: If the saturation control is turned to the “off” position, no colour difference action will occur and the reproduction will appear in black and white. As the saturation control is advanced, the colour differences become more accentuated, and the colours become progressively more vivid.
- saturation deficit (meteorology)
saturation deficit, an index of humidity typically characterized by the difference between the saturation vapour pressure and the actual vapour pressure of a volume of air. The index has the particular utility of being proportional to the evaporation capability of the air. It is sometimes conveyed
- saturation horizon (oceanography)
ocean acidification: Physiological and ecological effects: …a boundary called the “saturation horizon.” Above this boundary there are enough carbonates present in the water to support coral communities. In midlatitude waters and in waters closer to the poles, many so-called cold-water coral communities are found at depths that range from 40 to 1,000 metres (about 130…
- saturation spectroscopy (physics)
spectroscopy: Techniques for obtaining Doppler-free spectra: … of France, is known as saturation spectroscopy (see Figure 2). Here an intense monochromatic beam of light is directed into the sample gas cell. If the frequency spread of the light is much less than the Doppler-broadened absorption line, only those atoms with a narrow velocity spread will be excited,…
- saturation vapour pressure (atmospheric science)
hydrosphere: Water vapour and precipitation: The equilibrium, or saturation, water vapour pressure of a saturated solution of sodium chloride is 22 percent lower than that of pure water. Precipitable water vapour has, on the average, a vapour pressure of 0.0025 atmosphere, which amounts to 15 percent of the saturation vapour pressure. The ratio…
- saturation, ion
radiation measurement: Ion chambers: …marks the onset of the ion-saturation region, where the current no longer depends on applied voltage; this is the region of operation normally chosen for ion chambers. Under these conditions the current measured in the external circuit is simply equal to the rate of formation of charges in the gas…
- saturation, magnetic (physics)
magnetism: Induced and permanent atomic magnetic dipoles: …field, the magnetization approaches a saturation value.
- Saturday (novel by McEwan)
Ian McEwan: Dalloway (1925) is evident in Saturday (2005), a vivid depiction of London on February 15, 2003, a day of mass demonstrations against the incipient war in Iraq. On Chesil Beach (2007; film 2017) describes the awkwardness felt by two virgins on their wedding night. Climate change is the subject of…
- Saturday (painting by Herrera)
Carmen Herrera: …an austere white field, and Saturday (1978), a jet-black canvas interrupted by a thick gold zigzag. She also demonstrated an interest in pushing beyond painting’s traditional structural limitations. Since her days in Paris, she had experimented with nonrectangular canvases, and she played with dimensionality in works such as Amarillo (1971),…
- Saturday (day of the week)
Saturday, seventh day of the week
- Saturday Big Tent Wedding Party, The (novel by McCall Smith)
Alexander McCall Smith: …for the Traditionally Built (2009), The Saturday Big Tent Wedding Party (2011), The Minor Adjustment Beauty Salon (2013), The Handsome Man’s De Luxe Café (2014), The Woman Who Walked in Sunshine (2015), The House of Unexpected Sisters (2017), To the Land of Long Lost Friends (2019), and The Joy and…
- Saturday Club (British radio program)
Rock and radio in the United Kingdom: …Broadcasting Corporation’s (BBC’s) Light Programme: Saturday Club and Sunday morning’s Easy Beat. Both were presented by the avuncular Brian Matthew and blighted by a bewilderingly broad musical base and an imbalance between studio sessions and recorded music. The restriction on records played was a result of the “needle time” agreement…
- Saturday Evening Post, The (American journal)
William Faulkner: The major novels: …popular—and well-paying—magazines as Collier’s and Saturday Evening Post. Greater, if more equivocal, prominence came with the financially successful publication of Sanctuary, a novel about the brutal rape of a Southern college student and its generally violent, sometimes comic, consequences. A serious work, despite Faulkner’s unfortunate declaration that it was written…
- Saturday Market (poetry by Mew)
Charlotte Mew: title, Saturday Market), was praised for its natural, direct language, including Wessex country dialect. The title poem and “Madeleine in Church”—in which a prostitute addresses the Virgin Mary—are noted for their then avant-garde conversational rhythms. The Rambling Sailor (1929), a posthumous collection of 32 previously uncollected…
- Saturday Night and Sunday Morning (novel by Sillitoe)
Alan Sillitoe: …on his first published novel, Saturday Night and Sunday Morning (1958; filmed 1960). It was an immediate success, telling the story of a rude and amoral young labourer for whom drink and sex on Saturday night provide the only relief from the oppression of the working life.
- Saturday Night and Sunday Morning (film by Reisz [1960])
Saturday Night and Sunday Morning, British film drama, released in 1960, that is one of the best of the Angry Young Men movies that emanated from England in the late 1950s and ’60s. In his first starring role, Albert Finney played a charismatic man who seems destined to follow in his parents’ and
- Saturday Night Fever (film by Badham [1977])
rock: Challenges to mainstream rock: …the success of the film Saturday Night Fever in 1977. By the early 1980s, however, disco settled back into its own world of clubs, deejays, and recording studios and its own crosscurrents from African American, Latin American, and gay subcultures. African American music developed in parallel to rock, drawing on…
- Saturday Night Fever (motion-picture soundtrack album)
the Bee Gees: …on the sound track album Saturday Night Fever (1977) would popularize and in many ways define. The recording earned several Grammy Awards, including album of the year. Besides writing their own hits, such as “Stayin’ Alive,” the brothers composed tracks for other artists on the album, which would eventually sell…
- Saturday Night Kid, The (film by Sutherland [1929])
Clara Bow: …lost), Dangerous Curves (1929), and The Saturday Night Kid (1929).
- Saturday Night Live (American television program)
Saturday Night Live (SNL), American sketch comedy and variety television series that has aired on Saturday nights on the National Broadcasting Company (NBC) network since 1975, becoming one of the longest-running programs in television. The series is a fixture of NBC programming and a landmark in
- Saturday Night Massacre (United States history)
United States: The Watergate scandal: This “Saturday night massacre” of Justice Department officials did not, however, stem the flow of damaging revelations, confessions, and indictments.
- Saturday Review (British magazine)
George Bernard Shaw: Early life and career: …by Frank Harris to the Saturday Review as theatre critic (1895–98); in that position he used all his wit and polemical powers in a campaign to displace the artificialities and hypocrisies of the Victorian stage with a theatre of vital ideas. He also began writing his own plays.
- Saturday Review (American magazine)
John Ciardi: …as poetry editor of the Saturday Review from 1956 to 1972. He felt that interaction between audience and author was crucial, and he generated continuous controversy with his critical reviews. He was a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the National Institute of Arts and Letters.
- Saturday Society (Finnish cultural organization)
Finnish literature: Literature in Swedish: …centred on the Lördagssällskapet (Saturday Society), a group of young men that counted among its members, in addition to Runeberg, Johan Vilhelm Snellman, Zacharias Topelius, and, as an occasional guest, Elias Lönnrot. Although writing in Swedish, members of the Saturday Society were conscious of creating a culture and a…
- Saturday’s Children (film by Sherman [1940])
Vincent Sherman: Early work: Saturday’s Children (1940) was a step up, a serious drama based on a Maxwell Anderson play; John Garfield and Anne Shirley starred as struggling newlyweds. Sherman explored various genres with his next films. The Man Who Talked Too Much (1940) was a courtroom drama, and…
- Saturday’s Children (play by Anderson)
Maxwell Anderson: Saturday’s Children (1927), about the marital problems of a young couple, was also very successful. Anderson’s prestige was increased by two ambitious historical dramas in verse—Elizabeth the Queen (1930) and Mary of Scotland (1933)—and by a success of a very different nature, his humorous Pulitzer…
- Satureia hortensis (herb)
savory: The most-common culinary species is summer savory (Satureja hortensis), an annual shrubby herb that grows well in warm climates. The square stems are covered with fine trichomes (plant hairs) and are sometimes tinged with purple. The linear gray-green leaves are arranged oppositely and are about 2.5 cm (1 inch) in…
- Satureia montana (herb)
savory: Winter savory, or dwarf savory (S. montana), is a smaller perennial subshrub that flowers in winter. It is used for culinary purposes almost interchangeably with the summer species.
- Satureja (plant)
savory, (genus Satureja), genus of about 30 species of aromatic herbs of the mint family (Lamiaceae). Savory is native to Eurasia and North Africa and is cultivated in many climates, particularly in France and Spain. The dried leaves and flowering tops of several species are used to flavour many
- Satureja hortensis (herb)
savory: The most-common culinary species is summer savory (Satureja hortensis), an annual shrubby herb that grows well in warm climates. The square stems are covered with fine trichomes (plant hairs) and are sometimes tinged with purple. The linear gray-green leaves are arranged oppositely and are about 2.5 cm (1 inch) in…
- Saturia–Manikganj Sadar tornado (tornado, Manikganj district, Bangladesh [1989])
Saturia–Manikganj Sadar tornado, catastrophic tornado that struck the Manikganj district of Bangladesh on April 26, 1989. Causing approximately 1,300 fatalities, it was likely the deadliest tornado in recorded history. The tornado struck at around 6:30 pm local time and moved east from the
- Saturiq (ancient city, Iran)
Takht-e Soleymān, ancient city and Zoroastrian temple complex of Iran’s Sāsānian dynasty, subsequently occupied by other groups, including the Mongol Il-Khanid dynasty. It is located in northwestern Iran in the southeastern highlands of Western Āz̄arbāyjān province, about 25 miles (40 km) northeast
- Saturn (planet)
Saturn, second largest planet of the solar system in mass and size and the sixth nearest planet in distance to the Sun. In the night sky Saturn is easily visible to the unaided eye as a non-twinkling point of light. When viewed through even a small telescope, the planet encircled by its magnificent
- Saturn (automobile)
materials science: Aluminum: …average automobile, and General Motors’ Saturn, with an aluminum engine block and cylinder heads. These vehicles and others took their place alongside the British Land Rover, which was built with all-aluminum body panels beginning in 1948—a choice dictated by a shortage of steel during World War II and continued by…
- Saturn (launch vehicle)
Saturn, in space exploration, any of a series of large two- and three-stage vehicles for launching spacecraft, developed by the United States beginning in 1958 in connection with the crewed Apollo Moon-landing program. Saturn I, the first U.S. rocket specifically developed for spaceflight, was a
- Saturn (Roman god)
Saturn, in Roman religion, the god of sowing or seed. The Romans equated him with the Greek agricultural deity Cronus. The remains of Saturn’s temple at Rome, eight columns of the pronaos (porch), still dominate the west end of the Forum at the foot of the Clivus Capitolinus. The temple goes back
- Saturn (painting by Francisco Goya)
Saturn, painting by Francisco Goya completed in 1821–23. In 1819 Goya bought a house south of Madrid called the Quinta del Sordo (“Villa of the deaf man”). A previous owner of the house was deaf, and the name remained apt as Goya himself had lost his hearing in his mid-40s. The artist painted
- Saturnalia (Roman festival)
Saturnalia, the most popular of Roman festivals. Dedicated to the Roman god Saturn, the festival’s influence continues to be felt throughout the Western world. Originally celebrated on December 17, Saturnalia was extended first to three and eventually to seven days. The date has been connected with
- Saturnalia (work by Macrobius)
Ambrosius Theodosius Macrobius: …most important work is the Saturnalia, the last known example of the long series of symposia headed by the Symposium of Plato.
- Saturnia pavonia (insect)
saturniid moth: Major species: …heavily scaled wings of the emperor moth (Saturnia pavonia), which occurs in temperate regions of Europe and Asia, are marked by transparent eyespots, which presumably serve a protective function in frightening predators. Larval forms feed on shrubs.
- Saturnia pyri (insect)
caterpillar: Caterpillars of the giant peacock moth (Saturnia pyri) send out ultrasonic warning chirps to deter predators. In some cases, those chirps occur just prior to or in conjunction with the release of pungent chemical deterrents. The masked birch caterpillar (Drepana arcuata) produces vibratory signals in order to defend…
- Saturnian metre (poetry)
Saturnian verse, the ancient Latin verse used mainly by Livius Andronicus and Gnaeus Naevius before the adoption of Greek verse forms by later Latin writers. Little is known about its origins or whether its rhythm was accentual or
- Saturnian verse (poetry)
Saturnian verse, the ancient Latin verse used mainly by Livius Andronicus and Gnaeus Naevius before the adoption of Greek verse forms by later Latin writers. Little is known about its origins or whether its rhythm was accentual or
- saturniid moth (insect)
saturniid moth, (family Saturniidae), family of about 1,500 species of moths, some of which spin thick, silken cocoons and are sometimes used to produce commercial silk. (Read Britannica’s essay “What’s the Differerence between Moths and Butterflies?”) Adults have stout, hairy bodies and broad
- Saturniidae (insect)
saturniid moth, (family Saturniidae), family of about 1,500 species of moths, some of which spin thick, silken cocoons and are sometimes used to produce commercial silk. (Read Britannica’s essay “What’s the Differerence between Moths and Butterflies?”) Adults have stout, hairy bodies and broad
- Saturninus (fictional character)
Titus Andronicus: The late emperor’s son Saturninus is supposed to marry Titus’s daughter Lavinia; however, when his brother Bassianus runs away with her instead, Saturninus marries Tamora. Saturninus and Tamora then plot revenge against Titus. Lavinia is raped and mutilated by Tamora’s sadistic sons Demetrius and Chiron, who cut off her…
- Saturninus of Antioch (Gnostic teacher)
gnosticism: Adversus haereses: …those of Simon Magus, Menander, Satornil (or Saturninus) of Antioch, Basilides, Carpocrates, Marcellina, Cerinthus, Cerdo, Marcion of Sinope, Tatian, and the Ebionites.
- Saturninus, Antonius (Roman general)
Domitian: …came with the revolt of Antonius Saturninus, governor of Upper Germany, on Jan. 1, 89. This was suppressed by the Lower German army, but a number of executions followed, and the law of majestas (treason) was later employed freely against senators. The years 93–96 were regarded as a period of…
- Saturninus, Lucius Appuleius (Roman politician)
Lucius Appuleius Saturninus was a Roman politician who, with Gaius Servilius Glaucia, opposed the Roman Senate from 103 to 100, at first with the cooperation of the prominent general Gaius Marius. Saturninus turned against the leaders of the Senate when, while serving as quaestor (financial
- satya (philosophy)
India: Gandhi’s strategy: He chose satya (“truth”) and ahimsa (nonviolence, or love) as the polar stars of his political movement; the former was the ancient Vedic concept of the real, embodying the very essence of existence itself, while the latter, according to Hindu (as well as Jain) scripture, was the…
- Satya Wacana Christian University (university, Salatiga, Indonesia)
Salatiga: The Satya Wacana Christian University, originally founded as a private Christian teacher-training college in 1956, is located there. Kopeng, a hill resort (4,593 feet [1,400 metres]), is about 9 miles (14 km) to the south of Salatiga. Pop. (2010) 170,332.
- Satyabhāma (Indian mythological character)
kuchipudi: …Bhama Kalapam, a story of Satyabhāma, the charming but jealous wife of the god Krishna. The dance performance begins with the sprinkling of holy water and the burning of incense. Other rituals are performed, the goddesses of learning, wealth, and energy are invoked, and the characters are introduced, together with…
- Satyagraha (work by Glass)
Philip Glass: Glass’s opera Satyagraha (1980) was a more authentically “operatic” portrayal of incidents from the early life of Mohandas K. Gandhi. In this work, the dronelike repetition of symmetrical sequences of chords attained a haunting and hypnotic power well attuned to the religio-spiritual themes of the libretto, adapted…
- satyagraha (philosophy)
satyagraha, concept introduced in the early 20th century by Mahatma Gandhi to designate a determined but nonviolent resistance to evil. Gandhi’s satyagraha became a major tool in the Indian struggle against British imperialism and has since been adopted by protest groups in other countries.
- Satyam shivam sundaram (film by Kapoor [1978])
Lata Mangeshkar: >Satyam shivam sundaram (1978), and Maine pyar kiya (1989). Notable among her concert performances was her wartime rendition of the poet Pradeep’s patriotic song “Ae mere watan ke logo,” which moved Indian Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru to tears.
- Satyārath Prakāsh (work by Dayanand)
Rajasthan: History of Rajasthan: Udaipur, Dayananda Sarasvati wrote his Satyarth Prakash (“The Light of Truth”); intended to restore Hinduism to its pristine purity, the work created a ferment in Rajputana. Important movements of thought also occurred among the Jain sadhus (holy men) and scholars. Ajmer was the centre of political activity, and nationalist leaders…
- Satyarthi, Kailash (Indian social reformer)
Kailash Satyarthi is an Indian social reformer who campaigned against child labor in India and elsewhere and advocated the universal right to education. In 2014 he was the corecipient of the Nobel Peace Prize, along with teenage Pakistani education advocate Malala Yousafzai, “for their struggle
- Satyasiddhi (Buddhist school)
pantheism: Buddhist doctrines: …as well as to the Satyasiddhi (“perfect attainment of truth”) group in Theravada Buddhism. Since the Void is also called the highest synthesis of all oppositions, the doctrine of the Void may be viewed as an instance of identity of opposites pantheism.
- Satyasiddhi-śāstra (Buddhist treatise)
Satyasiddhi-śāstra, (Sanskrit: True Attainment Treatise), treatise in 202 chapters on the doctrine of the void (śūnya). The work stands as a philosophical bridge between Hīnayāna, or Theravāda, Buddhism, the form predominant in Sri Lanka (Ceylon) and Southeast Asia, and Mahāyāna Buddhism, the
- Satyasiddhi-shastra (Buddhist treatise)
Satyasiddhi-śāstra, (Sanskrit: True Attainment Treatise), treatise in 202 chapters on the doctrine of the void (śūnya). The work stands as a philosophical bridge between Hīnayāna, or Theravāda, Buddhism, the form predominant in Sri Lanka (Ceylon) and Southeast Asia, and Mahāyāna Buddhism, the
- Satyavati (legendary Indian princess)
Vyasa: and the dasyu (aboriginal) princess Satyavati and grew up in forests, living with hermits who taught him the Vedas (ancient sacred literature of India). Thereafter he lived in the forests near the banks of the river Sarasvati, becoming a teacher and a priest, fathering a son and disciple, Shuka, and…
- Satyr Against Mankind (work by Wilmot)
satire: Literature: …all of humanity, as in Satyr Against Mankind (1675), by John Wilmot, 2nd earl of Rochester, from Erasmus’s attack on corruptions in the church to Jonathan Swift’s excoriation of all civilized institutions in Gulliver’s Travels. Its forms within the Western literary tradition are as varied as its victims: from an…
- Satyr Against Wit (work by Blackmore)
Sir Richard Blackmore: …also treated in his verse Satyr Against Wit (1700). These and other writings in prose provoked retorts from Alexander Pope and his friends and earned Blackmore his reputation as “father of the Bathos, and indeed the Homer of it.”
- Satyr and Silenus (Greek mythology)
Satyr and Silenus, in Greek mythology, creatures of the wild, part man and part beast, who in Classical times were closely associated with the god Dionysus. Their Italian counterparts were the Fauns (see Faunus). Satyrs and Sileni were at first represented as uncouth men, each with a horse’s tail
- satyr butterfly (insect)
satyr butterfly, (subfamily Satyrinae), any of a group of delicate butterflies in the family Nymphalidae (order Lepidoptera) that are abundant during summer months in the woods and grasslands of the United States and Europe. The adults are dull brown or grey, while the larvae possess small, forked