- Vahl’s boxwood (plant)
boxwood: Vahl’s boxwood (B. vahlii), which occurs in just two locations in Puerto Rico, is considered to be a critically endangered species. The Malawi endemic B. nyasica is also endangered.
- Vahliales (plant order)
angiosperm: Annotated classification: Order Vahliales Family: Vahliaceae. Campanulids The following 7 orders. Order Apiales Families: Apiaceae, Araliaceae, Griseliniaceae, Myodocarpaceae, Pennantiaceae,
- Vahlika (Afghanistan)
Balkh, village in northern Afghanistan that was formerly Bactra, the capital of ancient Bactria. It lies 14 miles (22 km) west of the city of Mazār-e Sharīf and is situated along the Balkh River. A settlement existed at the site as early as 500 bce, and the town was captured by Alexander the Great
- Vahsūdān (Mosāferīd ruler)
Mosāferīd Dynasty: …Marzobān I (ruled 941–957) and Vahsūdān (ruled 941–957). Vahsūdān ruled over the fortresses of Ṭārom and Samīrān. Marzobān I expanded northward and westward and captured Azerbaijan and east Transcaucasia; these territories, however, were lost by the Mosāferīds by 984.
- Vahyazdata (Persian rebel)
Darius I: Ascent to monarchy: In Persia itself a certain Vahyazdata, who pretended to be Bardiya, gained considerable support. These risings, however, were spontaneous and uncoordinated, and, notwithstanding the small size of his army, Darius and his generals were able to suppress them one by one. In the Bīsitūn inscription he records that in 19…
- Vai (people)
Vai, people inhabiting northwestern Liberia and contiguous parts of Sierra Leone. Early Portuguese writers called them Gallinas (“chickens”), reputedly after a local wildfowl. Speaking a language of the Mande branch of the Niger-Congo family, the Vai have close cultural ties to the Mande peoples.
- Vai script (writing system)
Sierra Leone: Languages: The Vai script used in Liberia and Sierra Leone has the distinction of being one of the few indigenous scripts in Africa. Some of the local languages are written in European script, and a few, especially in the Muslim areas in the north, have been transcribed…
- Vaiaku (national seat of government, Tuvalu)
Vaiaku, village, de facto capital of Tuvalu, west-central Pacific Ocean. It is located on the islet of Fongafale, part of Funafuti Atoll, which is the official capital. Most major government offices, including those of the prime minister and cabinet, the High Court, and the unicameral Parliament,
- Vaibhashika (Buddhist school)
Sarvastivada, a school of early Buddhism. A fundamental concept in Buddhist metaphysics is the assumption of the existence of dharmas, cosmic factors and events that combine momentarily under the influence of a person’s past deeds to form a person’s life flux, which he considers his personality and
- Vaida-Voevod, Alexandru (prime minister of Romania)
Alexandru Vaida-Voevod was a politician who served three times as prime minister of Romania (1919–20, 1932, 1933) and was a leading spokesman for the union of Transylvania with the Old Kingdom (Moldavia and Walachia). A native of Hungarian-ruled Transylvania, Vaida-Voevod joined a small Romanian
- Vaigai River (river, India)
Vaigai River, river in Tamil Nadu state, southern India, flowing 150 miles (240 km) generally southeast. Rising in the Varushanad Hills of western Tamil Nadu, it initially flows northeast through the Kambam and Varushanad valleys. In its central reaches the Vaigai flows eastward into the Vaigai
- Vaihinger, Hans (German philosopher)
Hans Vaihinger was a German philosopher who, influenced by Arthur Schopenhauer and F.A. Lange, developed Kantianism in the direction of pragmatism by espousing a theory of “fictions” as the basis of what he called his “as if” philosophy. (See as if, philosophy of.) Vaihinger taught philosophy at
- Vaikhanasa (Hinduism)
Vaikhanasa, member of a South Indian minority group within Vaishnavism, a form of Hinduism characterized by devotion to the god Vishnu. Vaikhanasas were originally an early order of ascetics who, upon abandoning life in the forest, took to the management of temples. Vaikhanasas worship in
- Vaikhanasa Samhita (Hindu texts)
Indian philosophy: Vaishnava schools: …of Five Nights”) and the Vaikhanasa (“Relating to a Hermit or Ascetic”) are the most important. Though Vaishnava philosophers trace the Pancharatra works to Vedic origin, absolutists such as Shankara refused to acknowledge this claim. The main topics of the Pancharatra literature concern rituals and forms of image worship and…
- Vaikuṇtha Perumāl (temple, Kānchipuram, India)
South Asian arts: Medieval temple architecture: South Indian style of Tamil Nadu (7th–18th century): …temple at Kānchipuram is the Vaikuṇtha Perumāl (mid-8th century), which has an interesting arrangement of three sanctums, one above the other, encased within the body of the superstructure.
- Vail (Colorado, United States)
Vail, town and ski resort, Eagle county, west-central Colorado, U.S. It is located 100 miles (160 km) west of Denver. The town extends about 7 miles (11 km) through the Gore Creek valley in the Gore and Sawatch mountain ranges. Vail was founded by Peter Seibert and Earl Eaton, who, together with
- Vail Mountain (mountain, Colorado, United States)
Vail: The skiable terrain around Vail Mountain extends for 15 square miles (39 square km), making Vail the largest ski resort in North America. It was host to the World Alpine Ski Championships in 1999. The Colorado Ski Museum/Ski Hall of Fame contains artifacts and documents relating to the sport.…
- Vail, Alfred Lewis (American scientist and businessman)
Alfred Lewis Vail was an American telegraph pioneer and an associate and financial backer of Samuel F.B. Morse in the experimentation that made the telegraph a commercial reality. Shortly after Vail graduated from the University of the City of New York in 1836, he met Morse and became interested in
- Vail, Theodore Newton (American businessman)
Theodore Newton Vail was an American executive who twice headed the Bell Telephone Company at critical times and played a major role in establishing telephone services in the United States. After a highly successful career in the railway postal service, Vail was persuaded in 1878 to join Bell
- Vailala Madness (Melanesian religion)
Vailala Madness, cargo cult of the Papua area (now Papua New Guinea) that began in 1919. This movement was based on the revelations of local prophets that the ancestors were withholding European material goods from indigenous peoples. Cult doctrines included the iconoclastic destruction of old
- Vailima (government residence, Apia, Samoa)
Apia: …in Apia, and his home, Vailima, is now the residence of the head of state. Stevenson is buried at Mount Vaea, which rises to 1,500 feet (460 meters) on the town’s southern outskirts. The government holds title to the town land.
- Vaillande, Suzanne Théodore (American dancer)
Suzanne Théodore Vaillande Douvillier was a Franco-American dancer, mime, and probably the first woman choreographer in America. Suzanne Vaillande was apparently an illegitimate child. Little is known of her childhood beyond the conjecture that she may have studied dance in the ballet school of the
- Vaillant, Édouard-Marie (French politician)
Édouard-Marie Vaillant was a French revolutionary publicist and politician who was exiled for his role in the Paris Commune of 1871. After his return, he became an important member of the Socialist Party. Educated as an engineer, Vaillant subsequently studied medicine, first in Paris and later in
- Vaillant, François Le (French explorer)
Orange River: Study and exploration: …traveler; and the French explorer François Le Vaillant. They explored the river from its middle course to its mouth, and Gordon named it in honour of the Dutch house of Orange. Mission stations were established north of the Orange from the late 18th century. In 1813 John Campbell of the…
- vain oath (Judaism)
oath: …oaths are forbidden: (1) a vain oath, in which one attempts to do something that is impossible to accomplish, denies self-evident facts, or attempts to negate the fulfillment of a religious precept, and (2) a false oath, in which one uses the name of God to swear falsely, thus committing…
- Väinämöinen (Finnish mythology)
Väinämöinen, in Finnish folklore, a central figure of many ancient mythological songs and a culture hero to whom everything miraculous and wonderful is attributed. Väinämöinen is variously described as a deity who existed in the mythic past before the world’s creation (in which he took part), as an
- vainglory (deadly sin)
pride, in Roman Catholic theology, one of the seven deadly sins, considered by some to be the gravest of all sins. In the theological sense, pride is defined as an excessive love of one’s own excellence. As a deadly sin, pride is believed to generate other sins and further immoral behaviour and is
- Vaiont Dam (dam, Italy)
Vaiont Dam, disused concrete arch dam across the Vaiont River near Monte Toc in Italy. With a height of 262 metres (859 feet) and crest length of 190 metres (623 feet), it is one of the tallest dams in the world. Originally intended to help industrialize northern Italy, use of the dam was
- vaipulya (Buddhism)
aṅgā: The 12-fold Sanskrit system adds these categories:
- vair (heraldry)
heraldry: The field: …field with gold spots), or vair (alternating blue and white figures mimicking the fur of a species of squirrel). Two other colours appear occasionally in British heraldry, murrey (a tint between red and purple) and tenné (orange-tawny). Gold and silver may be represented by yellow and white.
- Vair, Guillaume du (French philosopher)
Guillaume du Vair was a highly influential French thinker and writer of the troubled period at the end of the 16th century. A lawyer by training, du Vair occupied high offices of state under Henry IV, having made his reputation with his eloquent and cogently argued orations. He first came to the
- vairāgin (Hindu ascetic)
vairagin, in Hinduism, a religious ascetic who worships principally one or another form of the god Vishnu. Vairagins generally wear white robes, in contrast to the ochre-coloured robes worn by Shaivite (devoted to the god Shiva) ascetics, and are also differentiated by their tilak (mark on the
- vairagin (Hindu ascetic)
vairagin, in Hinduism, a religious ascetic who worships principally one or another form of the god Vishnu. Vairagins generally wear white robes, in contrast to the ochre-coloured robes worn by Shaivite (devoted to the god Shiva) ascetics, and are also differentiated by their tilak (mark on the
- Vairochana (Buddha)
Vairochana, the supreme Buddha, as regarded by many Mahayana Buddhists of East Asia and of Tibet, Nepal, and Java. Some Buddhists regard Vairochana, or Mahavairochana, as a being separate from the five “self-born” Dhyani-Buddhas, one of whom is known as Vairochana. Among the Shingon sect of Japan,
- Väisälä, Yrjö (Finnish astronomer)
Yrjö Väisälä was a Finnish meteorologist and astronomer noted for developing meteorological measuring methods and instruments. After receiving his Ph.D. in 1922, Väisälä joined the faculty of the Geodetic Institute of Turku University (1925) and worked as an astronomer and surveyor, completing a
- Vaiśeṣika (Indian philosophy)
Vaisheshika, one of the six systems (darshans) of Indian philosophy, significant for its naturalism, a feature that is not characteristic of most Indian thought. The Sanskrit philosopher Kanada Kashyapa (2nd–3rd century ce?) expounded its theories and is credited with founding the school. Important
- Vaishakha (Buddhist festival)
Vesak, a festival of utmost significance in Buddhism, particularly in Theravada Buddhism, that commemorates the birth, enlightenment, and death of the Buddha. The holiday is observed on the full-moon day of the lunar month Vesakha, the fourth month of the lunar calendar, which falls in April, May,
- Vaishali (ancient city, India)
Vaishali, city of ancient India, north of Patna, northwestern Bihar state, on the Gandak River. In antiquity Vaishali was the capital of the Licchavi republic and was closely associated with the early histories of both Buddhism and Jainism. Roads connected it with Rajagriha to the south and
- Vaisheshika (Indian philosophy)
Vaisheshika, one of the six systems (darshans) of Indian philosophy, significant for its naturalism, a feature that is not characteristic of most Indian thought. The Sanskrit philosopher Kanada Kashyapa (2nd–3rd century ce?) expounded its theories and is credited with founding the school. Important
- Vaisheshika-sutras (work by Kaṇāda)
Indian philosophy: The Vaisheshika-sutras: The Vaisheshika-sutras were written by Kanada, a philosopher who flourished c. 2nd–4th centuries. The system owes its name to the fact that it admits ultimate particularities (vishesha). The metaphysics is, therefore, pluralistic.
- Vaishnava-Sahajiya (Hindu movement)
Vaishnava-Sahajiya, member of an esoteric Hindu movement centred in Bengal that sought religious experience through the world of the senses, specifically human sexual love. Sahaja (Sanskrit: “easy” or “natural”) as a system of worship was prevalent in the Tantric traditions common to both Hinduism
- Vaishnavi (Hindu deity)
Saptamatrika: …Shiva), Kaumari (wife of Kumara), Vaishnavi (wife of Vishnu), Varahi (wife of Varaha, or the boar, an avatar [incarnation] of Vishnu), Indrani (wife of Indra), and Chamunda, or Yami (wife of Yama). One text, the Varaha-purana, states that they number eight, including
- Vaishnavism (Hindu sect)
Vaishnavism, one of the major forms of modern Hinduism, characterized by devotion to the god Vishnu and his incarnations (avatars). A devotee of Vishnu is called a Vaishnava. The devotional Vaishnava literature that emerged in Sanskrit and in vernacular writings from the 10th through the 16th
- Vaishravana (Buddhist and Hindu mythology)
Kubera, in Hindu mythology, the king of the yakshas (nature spirits) and the god of wealth. He is associated with the earth, mountains, all treasures such as minerals and jewels that lie underground, and riches in general. According to most accounts, he first lived in Lanka (Sri Lanka), but his
- Vaishya (Hindu social class)
Vaishya, third highest in ritual status of the four varnas, or social classes, of Hindu India, traditionally described as commoners. Legend states that the varnas (or colours) sprang from Prajapati, a creator god—in order of status, the Brahman (white) from his head, the Kshatriya (red) from his
- Vaiṣṇava (Hindu sect)
Vaishnavism, one of the major forms of modern Hinduism, characterized by devotion to the god Vishnu and his incarnations (avatars). A devotee of Vishnu is called a Vaishnava. The devotional Vaishnava literature that emerged in Sanskrit and in vernacular writings from the 10th through the 16th
- Vaiṣṇavism (Hindu sect)
Vaishnavism, one of the major forms of modern Hinduism, characterized by devotion to the god Vishnu and his incarnations (avatars). A devotee of Vishnu is called a Vaishnava. The devotional Vaishnava literature that emerged in Sanskrit and in vernacular writings from the 10th through the 16th
- Vaiśravaṇa (Buddhist and Hindu mythology)
Kubera, in Hindu mythology, the king of the yakshas (nature spirits) and the god of wealth. He is associated with the earth, mountains, all treasures such as minerals and jewels that lie underground, and riches in general. According to most accounts, he first lived in Lanka (Sri Lanka), but his
- Vaisseau d’or, Le (poem by Nelligan)
Émile Nelligan: The best known are “Le Vaisseau d’or” (“The Ship of Gold”) and “La Romance du vin” (“The Song of Wine”).
- Vaisya (Hindu social class)
Vaishya, third highest in ritual status of the four varnas, or social classes, of Hindu India, traditionally described as commoners. Legend states that the varnas (or colours) sprang from Prajapati, a creator god—in order of status, the Brahman (white) from his head, the Kshatriya (red) from his
- Vaitarani (Hindu mythology)
death: The fate of the soul: …cow’s tail to cross the Vaitarani, a horrible river of blood and filth that marks the boundary of Yama’s kingdom. Throughout, it is sustained by further śrāddhas, during which friends on earth seek to provide it with shoes, umbrellas, clothing, and money. These they give to a Brahman, in the…
- Vaitown (Liberia)
Tubmanburg, city, western Liberia, western Africa. Located in the Bomi Hills, a former iron-mining district, it was long associated with the Liberian Mining Company (LMC; a subsidiary of Republic Steel Corporation), which closed down mining operations in the late 1970s. The firm, the first in
- vaj (musical instrument)
arched harp: …survives almost unchanged in the vaji, or Kafir harp, of Nūrestān in Afghanistan. This instrument’s neck pierces and then emerges from the skin belly; the strings run from the neck to the protruding end (in most harps they pass through the belly).
- Vajda, János (Hungarian poet)
Hungarian literature: Writers of the late 19th century: Another poet, János Vajda, bridged the gap between the romantic populism of Petőfi and fin-de-siècle decadence: a gloomy visionary, with equal propensity for self-pity and self-aggrandizement, he was nevertheless an important innovator in the field of metaphor and poetic imagery.
- Vajdahunyad (Romania)
Hunedoara, city, Hunedoara judeƫ (county), west-central Romania, in the eastern foothills of the iron-ore-bearing Poiana Ruscăi Mountains, 185 miles (300 km) northwest of Bucharest. The ore deposits at nearby Ghelari and Teliucu were known in Roman times. Hunedoara Castle, west of the city, was
- vaji (musical instrument)
arched harp: …survives almost unchanged in the vaji, or Kafir harp, of Nūrestān in Afghanistan. This instrument’s neck pierces and then emerges from the skin belly; the strings run from the neck to the protruding end (in most harps they pass through the belly).
- Vajiralongkorn (king of Thailand)
Vajiralongkorn is the 10th king of Thailand’s Chakri Dynasty. He formally accepted the throne on December 1, 2016, although his reign officially began following the death of his father, Bhumibol Adulyadej, on October 13, 2016. Vajiralongkorn’s coronation was held on May 4, 2019. Early in his reign,
- Vajirañāṇavarorasa (prince of Siam)
Vajirañāṇavarorasa was the prince-patriarch of Buddhism in Siam, who institutionalized Thai Buddhism, spread the faith in the countryside, and was his generation’s leading intellectual. Vajirañāṇa was a son of King Mongkut and spent, by his own account, a youth of profligate luxury. Early contact
- Vajiravudh (king of Siam)
Vajiravudh was the king of Siam from 1910 to 1925, noted for his progressive reforms and prolific writings. Vajiravudh was educated at the University of Oxford, where he read history and law; he also received military training at Sandhurst and served briefly with the British Army. Having been named
- Vajji (Indian tribal confederacy)
Vrijji, confederacy of the Licchavis and neighbouring peoples in Bihar, India, that existed from the 6th century bce to the 4th century ce. Its capital was at Vaishali (in modern Besarh). It was governed as an aristocratic republic. Gautama Buddha is said to have modeled the organizational
- Vajk (king of Hungary)
Stephen I ; canonized 1083; feast day August 16) was the first king of Hungary, who is considered to be the founder of the Hungarian state and one of the most-renowned figures in Hungarian history. Stephen was a member of the Árpád dynasty and son of the supreme Magyar chieftain Géza. He was born a
- Vajont Dam (dam, Italy)
Vaiont Dam, disused concrete arch dam across the Vaiont River near Monte Toc in Italy. With a height of 262 metres (859 feet) and crest length of 190 metres (623 feet), it is one of the tallest dams in the world. Originally intended to help industrialize northern Italy, use of the dam was
- Vajpayee, Atal Behari (prime minister of India)
Atal Bihari Vajpayee was the leader of the pro-Hindu Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and twice served as the prime minister of India (1996; 1998–2004). Vajpayee was first elected to parliament in 1957 as a member of the Bharatiya Jana Sangh (BJS), a forerunner of the BJP. In 1977 the BJS joined three
- Vajpayee, Atal Bihari (prime minister of India)
Atal Bihari Vajpayee was the leader of the pro-Hindu Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and twice served as the prime minister of India (1996; 1998–2004). Vajpayee was first elected to parliament in 1957 as a member of the Bharatiya Jana Sangh (BJS), a forerunner of the BJP. In 1977 the BJS joined three
- vajra (Buddhist ritual object)
vajra, five-pronged ritual object extensively employed in Tibetan Buddhist ceremonies. It is the symbol of the Vajrayāna school of Buddhism. Vajra, in Sanskrit, has both the meanings of “thunderbolt” and “diamond.” Like the thunderbolt, the vajra cleaves through ignorance. The thunderbolt was
- vajra-dhātu (Buddhist mandala)
Japanese art: Esoteric Buddhism: …which consisted of two parts—the kongō-kai (“diamond world”) and the taizō-kai (“womb world”)—that organized the Buddhist divinities and their relationships in a prescribed gridlike configuration. The deities or spiritual entities portrayed in these paired paintings represent, in the kongō-kai, the realm of transcendent, clear enlightenment and, in the taizō-kai, the…
- Vajrabhairava (Buddhist deity)
Yamāntaka, in northern Buddhism, one of the eight fierce protective deities. See
- Vajrabodhi (Buddhist monk)
Vajrabodhi, was an Indian Buddhist monk who helped transmit Buddhism to China. Vajrabodhi and his disciple Amoghavajra arrived in China in 720, where they produced two abridged translations of the Sarvatathagatatattvasamgraha (“Symposium of Truth of All the Buddhas”), also known as the
- Vajraccedika-sutra (Buddhist text)
Diamond Sutra, brief and very popular Mahayana Buddhist text widely used in East Asia and perhaps the best known of the 18 smaller “Wisdom” texts that together with their commentaries are known as the Prajnaparamita (“Perfection of Wisdom”). It takes the form of a dialogue in the presence of a
- Vajradakini (Buddhism)
Vajrayogini, in Vajrayana (Tantric Buddhism), female embodiment of the cognitive function leading to Buddhahood. Vajrayana emphasizes experience over speculation but uses the terms of speculative philosophical Buddhism in an imaginative way. This practice means that images taken from the ordinary
- Vajradhara (Buddhist deity)
Japanese art: Sculpture: The “secret” image of Shūkongōjin (733), a guardian deity, is secluded in a cordoned space behind the Fukūkenjaku Kannon and presented for viewing only once a year. A clay sculpture with its original gold leaf and polychromy largely intact, the thunderbolt-wielding deity is approximately life-size. Modeled on Chinese statues…
- vajradhātu (Buddhist mandala)
Japanese art: Esoteric Buddhism: …which consisted of two parts—the kongō-kai (“diamond world”) and the taizō-kai (“womb world”)—that organized the Buddhist divinities and their relationships in a prescribed gridlike configuration. The deities or spiritual entities portrayed in these paired paintings represent, in the kongō-kai, the realm of transcendent, clear enlightenment and, in the taizō-kai, the…
- Vajrahasta III (Ganga ruler)
Ganga dynasty: … from the 8th century, but Vajrahasta III, who assumed the title of Trikalingadhipat (ruler of the three Kalingas) in 1028, was probably the first to rule all three divisions of Kalinga. His son Rajaraja I waged war on the Cholas and the Eastern Chalukyas and strengthened the dynasty by marrying…
- Vajrapāṇi (Buddhist mythological figure)
Vajrapāṇi, in Mahāyāna Buddhist mythology, one of the celestial bodhisattvas (“Buddhas-to-be”), the manifestation of the self-born Buddha Akṣobhya. Vajrapāṇi (Sanskrit: Thunderbolt-Bearer) is believed to be the protector of the nāgas (half-man, half-serpent deities) and sometimes assumes the shape
- vajrasattva yoga (Buddhism)
Buddhism: Origins: …culmination of this process, called vajrasattva yoga, gives the initiate a diamond-like body beyond all duality. The four stages in the process are described in four different groups of tantras (the Kriya-tantra, Charya-tantra, Yoga-tantra, and Anuttarayoga-tantra) that are compared with the fourfold phases of courtship (the exchange of glances, a
- Vajravarahi (Buddhism)
Vajrayogini, in Vajrayana (Tantric Buddhism), female embodiment of the cognitive function leading to Buddhahood. Vajrayana emphasizes experience over speculation but uses the terms of speculative philosophical Buddhism in an imaginative way. This practice means that images taken from the ordinary
- Vajrayana (Buddhism)
Vajrayana, form of Tantric Buddhism that developed in India and neighbouring countries, notably Tibet. Vajrayana, in the history of Buddhism, marks the transition from Mahayana speculative thought to the enactment of Buddhist ideas in individual life. The term vajra (Sanskrit: “thunderbolt,” or
- Vajrayogini (Buddhism)
Vajrayogini, in Vajrayana (Tantric Buddhism), female embodiment of the cognitive function leading to Buddhahood. Vajrayana emphasizes experience over speculation but uses the terms of speculative philosophical Buddhism in an imaginative way. This practice means that images taken from the ordinary
- Vak Béla (king of Hungary)
Béla II was the king of Hungary (1131–41). He was the son of Prince Álmos, the younger brother of King Coloman (Hungarian: Kálmán). Álmos rose up against Coloman on several occasions. Coloman had Álmos and Béla blinded to secure the throne for his own son Stephen. When the latter assumed the throne
- Vakataka dynasty (Indian history)
Vakataka dynasty, Indian ruling house originating in the central Deccan in the mid-3rd century ce, the empire of which is believed to have extended from Malwa and Gujarat in the north to the Tungabhadra in the south and from the Arabian Sea in the west to the Bay of Bengal in the east. The
- vakf (Islam)
waqf, in Islamic law, a charitable endowment held in trust. In the formal process of establishing a waqf, the donor (waqīf) dedicates the assets (mawqūf) for a specific charitable purpose. Islamic jurists differ on the legal ownership of the assets once the endowment has been completed: many
- Vakh (river, Russia)
Ob River: Physiography: … (left), and the Tym and Vakh rivers (both right). Down to the Vasyugan confluence the river passes through the southern belt of the taiga, thereafter entering the middle belt. Below the Vakh confluence the middle Ob changes its course from northwesterly to westerly and receives more tributaries: the Tromyegan (right),…
- Vākhān (mountain corridor, Afghanistan)
Vākhān, a mountainous region and panhandle in the Pamir Mountains of extreme northeastern Afghanistan. From the demarcation of the Afghan frontier (1895–96), the panhandle formed a political buffer between Russian Turkistan, British India, and China. It is now bounded by Tajikistan (north), China
- Vākhān River (river, Afghanistan)
Panj River: … by the junction of the Vākhān River and the Pamir River along the border between eastern Afghanistan and Tajikistan. The climate of the Panj River valley is arid, averaging less than 8 inches (200 mm) of precipitation per year. Annual precipitation is much greater—more than 28 inches (700 mm)—in the…
- Vakhsh River (river, Tajikistan)
Tajikistan: Drainage and soils: …with their tributaries, notably the Vakhsh and Kofarnihon. The Amu Darya is formed by the confluence of the Panj and Vakhsh rivers; the Panj forms much of the republic’s southern boundary. Most of the rivers flow east to west and eventually drain into the Aral Sea basin. The rivers have…
- Vakhtang Gorgaslani (king of Georgia)
Georgia: Medieval Georgia: …in the person of King Vakhtang Gorgaslani (Gorgasal), a ruler of legendary valour who for a time reasserted Georgia’s national sovereignty. The Sāsānian monarch Khosrow I (reigned 531–579) abolished the Iberian monarchy, however. For the next three centuries, local authority was exercised by the magnates of each province, vassals successively…
- Vakhtang VI (Turkish ruler)
Georgia: Turkish and Persian domination: …most notable Mukhranian ruler was Vakhtang VI, regent of Kartli from 1703 to 1711 and then king, with intervals, until 1723. Vakhtang was an eminent lawgiver and introduced the printing press to Georgia; he had the Georgian annals edited by a commission of scholars. The collapse of the Ṣafavid dynasty…
- Vakhtangov, Yevgeny Bagrationovich (Russian theatrical director)
Yevgeny Bagrationovich Vakhtangov was a Russian theatrical director of the Moscow Art Theatre. A pupil of Konstantin Stanislavsky, Vakhtangov succeeded by the early 1920s in reconciling the naturalistic acting techniques of his master with the bold experiments of Vsevolod Y. Meyerhold. His
- väki (Finnish mythology)
väki, supernatural power believed by the Baltic Finns to reside in those natural sites, objects, and animals that for various reasons attracted popular attention and inspired strong emotional attachments. Väki was often conceived of as an impersonal power, akin to the Polynesian mana, but it also
- vakk (Scandinavian mythology)
voršud: The tõnni-vakk of the Estonians (also a Finno-Ugric people) was a similar object of worship. The vakkas, or “cases,” were kept by families and in some cases collectively by a village. They contained offerings to St. Antony, to whom sacrifices of sheep and oxen were made…
- Vakula the Smith (comic opera by Tchaikovsky)
Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky: Middle years: His next opera, Vakula the Smith (1874), later revised as Cherevichki (1885; The Little Shoes), was similarly judged. In his early operas the young composer experienced difficulty in striking a balance between creative fervour and his ability to assess critically the work in progress. However, his instrumental works…
- Vakyakara (Indian philosopher)
Indian philosophy: Ramanuja: …he followed the vrittikara Bodhayana, Vakyakara (to whom he referred but whose identity is not established except that he advocated a theory of real modification of brahman), Nathamuni (c. 1000), and his own teachers’ teacher Yamunacharya (c. 1050).
- Vakyapadiya (work by Bhartrihari)
Bhartrihari: …and poet-grammarian, author of the Vakyapadiya (“Words in a Sentence”), on the philosophy of language according to the shabdadvaita (“word nondualism”) school of Indian philosophy.
- Val, Philippe (French magazine editor)
Charlie Hebdo shooting: The response: …of Charlie Hebdo’s executive editor, Philippe Val, stating that it was only fundamentalists, not Muslims in general, who were being ridiculed in the cartoons. On November 2, 2011, the editorial offices of Charlie Hebdo were destroyed in a firebomb attack after the magazine announced a special edition under the name…
- Val-d’Oise (department, France)
Île-de-France: … encompassing the north-central départements of Val-d’Oise, Seine-et-Marne, Seine-Saint-Denis, Ville-de-Paris, Hauts-de-Seine, Val-de-Marne, Essonne, and Yvelines. Île-de-France is bounded by the régions of Hauts-de-France to the north, Grand Est
- Val-d’Or (Quebec, Canada)
Val-d’Or, city, Abitibi-Témiscamingue region, western Quebec province, Canada. Val-d’Or lies near Lakes Blouin, de Montigny, and Lemoine. Although its name means “valley of gold,” there is no valley in the vicinity. The town was founded by miners in 1934, and its economy depends chiefly on mining
- Val-de-Grâce, Church of (church, Paris, France)
François Mansart: Last years.: …convent and church of the Val-de-Grâce in Paris, which the sovereign had vowed to build if she bore a son. When the costs of laying the foundation exceeded the funds provided, Mansart was replaced by Jacques Lemercier, who more or less followed the original plans.
- Val-de-Marne (department, France)
Île-de-France: Ville-de-Paris, Hauts-de-Seine, Val-de-Marne, Essonne, and Yvelines. Île-de-France is bounded by the régions of Hauts-de-France to the north, Grand Est to the east, Bourgogne-Franche-Comté to the southeast, Centre to the south, and Normandy to the northwest. The capital is Paris
- Val-Saint-Lambert factory (factory, Belgium)
glassware: Belgium and the Netherlands: In Belgium the Val-Saint-Lambert factory was an important producer of heavily cut crystal throughout the period. It is also associated with layered work and was particularly prominent with original work of this nature around 1900. Later Charles Graffart designed for it wares made in a variety of techniques,…
- Vala or The Four Zoas (work by Blake)
William Blake: Death of Robert Blake: In the epic poem Vala or The Four Zoas (manuscript 1796?–1807?), he writes, “Urizen rose up from his couch / On wings of tenfold joy, clapping his hands,” and, in his poem Milton, plates 29 and 33 portray figures, labeled “William” and “Robert,” falling backward as a star plunges…