- Ziyārid dynasty (Iranian dynasty)
Zeyārid Dynasty, (927–c. 1090), Iranian dynasty that ruled in the Caspian provinces of Gurgān and Māzandarān. The founder of the dynasty was Mardāvīz ebn Zeyār (reigned 927–935), who took advantage of a rebellion in the Sāmānid army of Iran to seize power in northern Iran. He soon expanded his
- Ziye (work by Mao Dun)
Mao Dun: …six novels, including Ziye (1933; Midnight), which is commonly considered his representative work, and 16 collections of short stories and prose.
- Ziyolilar (literary movement)
Uzbek literature: The tsarist colonial period: …new generation of Turkic-speaking writers—the Ziyolilar (“Enlighteners”), who counted themselves as Jadid reformers—made major contributions to modern Uzbek literature. These writers include Mahmud Khoja Behbudi, Abdalrauf Fitrat, Abdullah Qadiri, Cholpán (Abdulhamid Sulayman Yunús), Munawwar Qari, and Mannan Ramiz. They were among those writers who at the turn of the 20th…
- Ziz (river, Morocco)
Atlas Mountains: Resources: …constructed across the Drâa and Ziz watercourses. In Algeria the Kabylie region has been developed with hydroelectric stations on the Agrioun and Djendjene wadis.
- Zizania (plant)
wild rice, (genus Zizania), genus of four species of coarse grasses of the family Poaceae, the grain of which is sometimes grown as a delicacy. Despite their name, the plants are not related to true rice (Oryza sativa). Wild rice grows naturally in shallow freshwater marshes and along the shores of
- Zizania aquatica (plant)
wild rice: Species: …cultivated varieties of wild rice, annual wild rice (Zizania aquatica) and northern wild rice (Z. palustris), are grown on a large scale in constructed paddies in Minnesota, Wisconsin, California, and parts of Canada. These cultivated plants have been bred to ripen simultaneously, allowing for their harvest with combines. The Ojibwa…
- Zizania latifolia (plant)
wild rice: Species: The single Asian species, Manchurian wild rice (Z. latifolia), is cultivated as a vegetable in eastern Asia but is not important as a grain crop.
- Zizania palustris (plant)
wild rice: Species: …wild rice (Zizania aquatica) and northern wild rice (Z. palustris), are grown on a large scale in constructed paddies in Minnesota, Wisconsin, California, and parts of Canada. These cultivated plants have been bred to ripen simultaneously, allowing for their harvest with combines. The Ojibwa people have long relied on manoomin…
- Žižek, Slavoj (Slovene philosopher and cultural theorist)
Slavoj Žižek is a Slovene philosopher and cultural theorist whose works address themes in psychoanalysis, politics, and popular culture. The broad compass of Žižek’s theorizing, his deliberately provocative style, and his tendency to leaven his works with humour made him a popular figure in the
- Zizhi tongjian (work by Sima Guang)
Sima Guang: …poet who compiled the monumental Zizhi tongjian (“Comprehensive Mirror for Aid in Government”), a general chronicle of Chinese history from 403 bce to 959 ce, considered one of the finest single historical works in Chinese. Known for his moral uprightness, he was learned in several disciplines and prominent in government.
- Ziziphus (tree)
jujube, either of two species of small spiny trees of the genus Ziziphus (family Rhamnaceae) and their fruit. Jujube fruits are eaten fresh, dried, boiled, stewed, and baked and are used to flavour tea. When made into glacé fruits by boiling in honey and sugar syrup, they resemble Persian dates and
- Ziziphus jujuba (tree)
jujube: Most are varieties of the common jujube (Z. jujuba), native to China, where they have been cultivated for more than 4,000 years. This species, 7.6 to 9 metres (25 to 30 feet) high, has alternate, three-veined, elliptical to ovate leaves 2.5 to 7.6 cm (1 to 3 inches) long. The…
- Ziziphus lotus (plant)
lotus: …the Greeks was the species Ziziphus lotus of the buckthorn family (Rhamnaceae), a bush native to southern Europe. It has large fruits containing a mealy substance that can be used for making bread and fermented drinks. In ancient times the fruits were an article of food among the poor, and…
- Ziziphus mauritiana (tree)
jujube: The Indian, or cottony, jujube (Z. mauritiana) differs from the common jujube in having leaves that are woolly beneath instead of smooth. The fruits are smaller and not so sweet.
- Žižka, Jan, Count (Bohemian leader)
Jan, Count Žižka was a military commander and national hero of Bohemia who led the victorious Hussite armies against the German king Sigismund, foreshadowing the revolution of military tactics two centuries later in his introduction of mobile artillery. Žižka grew up at the court of the German king
- Zizou (French football player)
Zinedine Zidane is a French football (soccer) player who led his country to victories in the 1998 World Cup and the 2000 European Championship. He later found success as a manager. After playing for the junior team US Saint-Henri, Zidane joined Cannes in 1989 and quickly became the focal point of
- Zlatica, Battle of (1443, Balkans)
Ottoman Empire: Mehmed I and Murad II: …finally defeated Hunyadi at the Battle of Zlatica (İzladi) in 1443, the increased influence of the Turkish notables at Murad’s court led the sultan to agree to the Peace of Edirne in 1444. By its terms Serbia regained its autonomy, Hungary kept Walachia and Belgrade, and the Ottomans promised to…
- Žlatoš, Stefan (Slovak scholar)
biblical literature: Slavic versions: A new Slovakian version by Stefan Žlatoš and Anton Jan Surjanský was issued at Trnava in 1946.
- Zlatoust (Russia)
Zlatoust, city, Chelyabinsk oblast (region), western Russia. It lies on both banks of the Ay River and on the Ufa-Chelyabinsk trunk railway, where river and rail cut through the Urenga Range of the Ural Mountains. In 1754 the Kosotur Iron and Copper Works were established there, and city status was
- Zlín (Czech Republic)
Zlín, city, south-central Czech Republic, on the Dřevnice River, near its confluence with the Morava River. Gottwaldov was created in 1948 through a merger of several communities surrounding Zlín, a 14th-century village that had grown rapidly after World War I. The consolidated town was named for
- złoty (Polish currency)
zloty, monetary unit of Poland. Each zloty (spelled złoty in Polish) is divided into 100 groszy. The National Bank of Poland has the exclusive right to issue currency in the country. Coins range from 1 groszy to 5 zlotys, and bills are issued in amounts varying between 10 and 200 zlotys. On the
- zloty (Polish currency)
zloty, monetary unit of Poland. Each zloty (spelled złoty in Polish) is divided into 100 groszy. The National Bank of Poland has the exclusive right to issue currency in the country. Coins range from 1 groszy to 5 zlotys, and bills are issued in amounts varying between 10 and 200 zlotys. On the
- ZMapp (medical treatment)
Ebola: Treatment: Another treatment under development was ZMapp, a mixture of three antibodies that bind to proteins on ebolaviruses. It was administered to infected individuals during the 2014–16 outbreak, though its effectiveness was unclear.
- Zmeskal, Kim (American gymnast)
Simone Biles: Senior career: …to accomplish that feat since Kim Zmeskal in 1992. At the 2015 world championships, she completed her hat trick of all-around titles. She also secured the balance beam and floor exercise titles, the bronze medal in vault, and a share of the team title. Those wins brought her career total…
- Żmichowska, Narcyza (Polish author)
Polish literature: Romanticism: A woman novelist, Narcyza Żmichowska (pseudonym Gabryella), produced Poganka (1846; “The Pagan”), a psychological allegory anticipating 20th-century sensibility in its subtle analysis of feeling. The dominant figure among prose writers was Józef Ignacy Kraszewski, whose output ran into hundreds of volumes of fiction, history, ethnography, criticism, and so…
- Żmudź (physical region, Europe)
Lithuania: Early history: Samogitia (Lithuanian: Žemaitija), lying between Prussia and Livonia, two lands already in the hands of the German Crusading knights, was a particular object of German expansion.
- Zmuri, Samuel (American entrepreneur)
Samuel Zemurray was the longtime president and financial director of United Fruit Company (name changed to United Brands Company in 1970), a preeminent developer of agriculture in 13 nations of the American tropics, responsible for introducing about 30 crops from the Eastern tropics. At 15 Zmuri
- Zmyrna (epic by Cinna)
Gaius Helvius Cinna: …wrote the mythological epic poem Zmyrna, about the incestuous love of Zmyrna for her father. He was a friend of the poet Catullus. The early Christian-era historians Suetonius, Valerius Maximus, Appian, and Dio Cassius all state that at Caesar’s funeral (44 bc) a certain Helvius Cinna was killed by mistake…
- Zn (chemical element)
zinc (Zn), chemical element, a low-melting metal of Group 12 (IIb, or zinc group) of the periodic table, that is essential to life and is one of the most widely used metals. Zinc is of considerable commercial importance. atomic number 30 atomic weight 65.39 melting point 420 °C (788 °F) boiling
- Znaim (Czech Republic)
Znojmo, city, south-central Czech Republic, on the Dyje River, southwest of Brno, near the Austrian border. It originated in the 11th century as a fortified residence and was the stronghold of the Přemyslid princes until the mid-13th century. Many medieval buildings, as well as houses of the
- Znaniecki, Florian (Polish sociologist)
Florian Znaniecki was a Polish-American sociologist whose theoretical and methodological work helped make sociology a distinct academic discipline. He was a pioneer in the field of empirical investigation and was noted as an authority on Polish peasant culture. Znaniecki’s earliest work was as a
- Zniewolony umysł (essays by Miłosz)
Czesław Miłosz: …of essays Zniewolony umysł (1953; The Captive Mind), in which he condemned the accommodation of many Polish intellectuals to communism. This theme is also present in his novel Zdobycie władzy (1955; The Seizure of Power). His poetic works are noted for their classical style and their preoccupation with philosophical and…
- Znojmo (Czech Republic)
Znojmo, city, south-central Czech Republic, on the Dyje River, southwest of Brno, near the Austrian border. It originated in the 11th century as a fortified residence and was the stronghold of the Přemyslid princes until the mid-13th century. Many medieval buildings, as well as houses of the
- ZNP (political organization, Tanzania)
Tanzania: British protectorate: …African population; 10 by the Zanzibar Nationalist Party (ZNP), representing mainly the Zanzibari Arabs; and 3 by the Zanzibar and Pemba People’s Party (ZPPP), an offshoot of the ZNP. The ZNP and the ZPPP combined to form a government with Mohammed Shamte Hamadi as chief minister.
- Znwbyā Bat Zabbai (queen of Palmyra)
Zenobia was the queen of the Roman colony of Palmyra, in present-day Syria, from 267 or 268 to 272. She conquered several of Rome’s eastern provinces before she was subjugated by the emperor Aurelian (ruled 270–275). Zenobia’s husband, Odaenathus, Rome’s client ruler of Palmyra, had by 267
- Zo (American basketball player)
Alonzo Mourning is an American professional basketball player who was notable for recovering from a kidney transplant to win a National Basketball Association (NBA) championship with the Miami Heat in 2006. Mourning—a centre 6 feet 10 inches (2.08 metres) tall—played collegiate basketball at
- ZOA (Jewish organization)
Stephen Samuel Wise: …year he helped found the Zionist Organization of America (ZOA), of which he served as president in 1936–38. He also helped found and led the permanent American Jewish Congress and the World Jewish Congress (1936). As a prominent member of the Democratic Party and an acquaintance of President Woodrow Wilson,…
- Zoan (ancient city, Egypt)
Tanis, ancient city in the Nile River delta, capital of the 14th nome (province) of Lower Egypt and, at one time, of the whole country. The city was important as one of the nearest ports to the Asiatic seaboard. With the decline of Egypt’s Asiatic empire in the late 20th dynasty, the capital was
- Zoantharia (invertebrate subclass)
cnidarian: Annotated classification: Subclass Zoantharia Sea anemones and corals. Six (or multiples of 6) tentacles (rarely branched). Mesenteries commonly arranged hexamerously. Solitary or colonial. Skeletons non-spicular calcareous, horny, or lacking. Usually 2 siphonoglyphs. Order Actiniaria Sea anemones. Solitary or clonal, never colonial; lacking skeleton; with or without basilar muscles.…
- zoanthid (invertebrate order)
zoanthid, any member of the order Zoanthidea, a group of about 300 species of marine animals of the class Anthozoa (phylum Cnidaria) characterized by a polyp (i.e., a cylindrical stalklike structure with a mouth and tentacles at the upper end and attached to a surface at the lower end). The
- Zoanthidea (invertebrate order)
zoanthid, any member of the order Zoanthidea, a group of about 300 species of marine animals of the class Anthozoa (phylum Cnidaria) characterized by a polyp (i.e., a cylindrical stalklike structure with a mouth and tentacles at the upper end and attached to a surface at the lower end). The
- Zoanthinaria (invertebrate order)
zoanthid, any member of the order Zoanthidea, a group of about 300 species of marine animals of the class Anthozoa (phylum Cnidaria) characterized by a polyp (i.e., a cylindrical stalklike structure with a mouth and tentacles at the upper end and attached to a surface at the lower end). The
- Zoarces viviparus (fish)
eelpout: …eggs; others, including the abundant European eelpout, or viviparous blenny (Zoarces viviparus), give birth to live young.
- Zoarcidae (fish, Zoarcidae family)
eelpout, any of more than 250 species of elongated marine fishes of the family Zoarcidae, found in cold waters and abundant in Arctic and Antarctic regions. Eelpouts are thick-lipped, eel-shaped fishes with the dorsal and anal fins connected around the end of the tail and with small pelvic fins
- Zoarcoidei (fish suborder)
perciform: Annotated classification: Suborder Zoarcoidei (northern blennies) Eel-like fishes; single pair of nostrils; dorsal and anal fins long-based and often joined to caudal fin; pelvic fins placed a little before pectoral fins, consisting of 1 spine and fewer than 4 rays; bottom-dwelling fishes usually of littoral zone, some supralittoral;…
- ZOB (Polish history)
Warsaw Ghetto Uprising: A newly formed group, the Jewish Fighting Organization (Żydowska Organizacja Bojowa; ŻOB), slowly took effective control of the ghetto.
- Zoback, Mark (American geophysicist)
New Madrid earthquakes of 1811–12: Possible causes of the New Madrid earthquakes: In 2001 American geophysicist Mark Zoback suggested that the earthquakes were caused by fault movement precipitated by the continued release of stress at the surface from the retreat of glaciers. He noted that the weight of the southern edge of the Laurentide Ice Sheet, which terminated in northern Illinois…
- Zobeir Pasha (African slaver)
Rābiḥ az-Zubayr: …the military service of az-Zubayr Pasha, a Sudanese prince. Rābiḥ was loyal and capable, and he rose to a position of command. When in 1878 az-Zubayr rebelled against the Egyptian administration of the Sudan, Rābiḥ gave him loyal support. Az-Zubayr, however, was defeated, and rather than surrender, as did…
- zōbō (Buddhism)
mappō: …“copied law” (Sanskrit pratirupadharma, Japanese zōbō); and the age of the “latter law,” or the “degeneration of the law” (Sanskrit pashchimadharma, Japanese mappō). A new period, in which the true faith will again flower, will be ushered in some time in the future by the bodhisattva (“buddha-to-be”) Maitreya (Japanese Miroku).
- Zobrest v. Catalina Foothills School District (law case)
Zobrest v. Catalina Foothills School District, case in which the U.S. Supreme Court on June 18, 1993, ruled (5–4) that under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA), a public school board was required to provide the on-site services of a sign-language interpreter to a
- Zócalo (plaza, Mexico City, Mexico)
Mexico City: City layout: …city is the enormous, concrete-covered Plaza de la Constitución, or Zócalo, the largest public square in Latin America. At its edges stand the Metropolitan Cathedral (north), National Palace (east), Municipal Palace, or city hall (south), and an antique line of arcaded shops (west). A few blocks to the west is…
- Zōchō (Hindu and Buddhist mythology)
lokapāla: Virūpākṣa (west).
- zodiac (astronomy and astrology)
zodiac, a belt around the sky extending 9° on either side of the ecliptic, the Sun’s apparent annual path, which contains 12 constellations or astrological signs. In astrology, the outcome of an event (most notably, someone’s birth) is affected by the zodiacal positions of the Sun, the Moon, and
- Zodiac (film by Fincher [2007])
David Fincher: …until Fincher’s next feature film, Zodiac (2007), which recounted the murders of the Zodiac killer and the ultimately futile attempt to capture him; it starred Jake Gyllenhaal, Robert Downey, Jr., and Mark Ruffalo. A marked departure from his previous films, Zodiac contains little of his signature dark colour palette, gloomy…
- Zodiac killer (American serial killer)
Zodiac killer, unidentified American serial killer who is believed to have murdered at least five people in northern California between 1968 and 1969. An earlier murder, the stabbing death of an 18-year-old college student in Riverside, California in 1966, is also sometimes attributed to the Zodiac
- Zodiac of Dandarah (Egyptian artifact)
astronomical map: The decans: The Zodiac of Dandarah illustrates the Egyptian decans and constellations, but since it incorporates the Babylonian zodiac as well, many stars must be doubly represented, and the stone can hardly be considered an accurate mapping of the heavens.
- Zodiac Suite (work by Williams)
Mary Lou Williams: …many large compositions, the 12-movement Zodiac Suite. The movement “Capricorn” was created for dancer Pearl Primus, who, like Williams, performed at Cafe Society. Dancer Katherine Dunham later choreographed a dance piece to the “Scorpio” movement. Williams moved to Europe in 1952 and performed in Paris and London. In 1954 she…
- zodiacal light (astronomy)
zodiacal light, band of light in the night sky, thought to be sunlight reflected from cometary dust concentrated in the plane of the zodiac, or ecliptic. The light is seen in the west after twilight and in the east before dawn, being easily visible in the tropics where the ecliptic is approximately
- zodiacal system (astronomy)
astronomical map: The ecliptic system: Celestial longitude and latitude are defined with respect to the ecliptic and ecliptic poles. Celestial longitude is measured eastward from the ascending intersection of the ecliptic with the equator, a position known as the “first point of Aries,” and the place of the…
- Zoë (Byzantine empress)
Zoe was a Byzantine empress, by marriage from 1028 and in her own right from 1042. The daughter of the emperor Constantine VIII, Zoe was married to the heir presumptive, Romanus III Argyrus, in 1028 and became empress consort upon his elevation to the throne the same year. She became self-assertive
- Zoe (Greek Orthodox religious association)
Zoe, in Eastern Orthodoxy, a semimonastic Greek association patterned on Western religious orders. Founded in 1907 by Eusebius Matthopoulos, Zoe (Greek: “Life”) brought together groups of more than 100 unmarried and highly disciplined members, bound by the monastic vows of poverty, chastity, and
- ZOE (automobile)
electric car: LEAF (2010) and the Renault ZOE (2012). Many of the world’s major car companies planned either to make mostly or only electric or hybrid cars or to stop developing new car models with internal-combustion engines by the 2030s.
- ZOE (nuclear reactor)
Frédéric and Irène Joliot-Curie: 15, 1948, of ZOE (zéro, oxyde d’uranium, eau lourde), the first French nuclear reactor, which, though only moderately powerful, marked the end of the Anglo-Saxon monopoly. In April 1950, however, during the climax of the cold war and anticommunism, Prime Minister Georges Bidault removed him without explanation from…
- Zoe (Byzantine empress)
Zoe was a Byzantine empress, by marriage from 1028 and in her own right from 1042. The daughter of the emperor Constantine VIII, Zoe was married to the heir presumptive, Romanus III Argyrus, in 1028 and became empress consort upon his elevation to the throne the same year. She became self-assertive
- ZOE (chemical compound)
bioceramics: Dental ceramics: …systems are zinc phosphate and zinc oxide-eugenol (ZOE). Zinc phosphate is typically used for permanent cementation, whereas ZOE is used for temporary cementation. Both can serve as insulating bases to protect tissues from heat or cold passing through highly conductive amalgam restorations. Polycarboxylate cements consist of ceramic powders (zinc oxide…
- Zoë Palaeologus (grand princess of Moscow)
Ivan III: Early life and reign: …of his ward and pupil, Zoë Palaeologus, niece of the last emperor of Byzantium. It took three years before Zoë, who, on entering Moscow, changed her name to Sofia (and perhaps her faith to Orthodoxy), was married to Ivan in the Kremlin.
- Zoe, Brotherhood of (Greek Orthodox religious association)
Zoe, in Eastern Orthodoxy, a semimonastic Greek association patterned on Western religious orders. Founded in 1907 by Eusebius Matthopoulos, Zoe (Greek: “Life”) brought together groups of more than 100 unmarried and highly disciplined members, bound by the monastic vows of poverty, chastity, and
- zoea (larva)
crustacean: Reproduction and life cycles: …and some thoracic limbs, the zoea uses its thoracic limbs for swimming, and the postlarval stages use the abdominal appendages. Most decapods omit the nauplius stage and hatch as zoeae, which may be heavily ornamented with spines. The crab zoea eventually changes into a megalops, which resembles a small crab…
- Zoellick, Robert B. (American politician)
Robert B. Zoellick is an American politician who was the 11th president of the World Bank (2007–12). Zoellick grew up in Naperville, Illinois, outside Chicago. He received a B.A. (1975) in history from Swarthmore College in Pennsylvania, a law degree (1979) from Harvard Law School, and a Master of
- Zoellick, Robert Bruce (American politician)
Robert B. Zoellick is an American politician who was the 11th president of the World Bank (2007–12). Zoellick grew up in Naperville, Illinois, outside Chicago. He received a B.A. (1975) in history from Swarthmore College in Pennsylvania, a law degree (1979) from Harvard Law School, and a Master of
- Zoetermeer (Netherlands)
Zoetermeer, gemeente (municipality), western Netherlands. Zoetermeer is located about 10 miles (16 km) north of Rotterdam and is situated on a polder created during the 17th century. There are a number of local light industries, and many services have relocated from nearby major cities. Oil and gas
- zoetrope (motion-picture device)
animation: Early history: …William George Horner invented the zoetrope, a rotating drum lined by a band of pictures that could be changed. The Frenchman Émile Reynaud in 1876 adapted the principle into a form that could be projected before a theatrical audience. Reynaud became not only animation’s first entrepreneur but, with his gorgeously…
- Zoetrope Studios (American company)
Francis Ford Coppola: The 1980s: …Hollywood General Studios, he established Zoetrope Studios, determined to employ the latest filmmaking technology and distribution techniques (including his vision of satellite-enabled distribution). His dream proved to be short-lived, however, as the studio’s first film—the Coppola-written and -directed One from the Heart (1982), an ultra-stylized romantic comedy—cost some $27 million…
- Zoey’s Extraordinary Playlist (American television series)
Mary Steenburgen: …cast member on the series Zoey’s Extraordinary Playlist (2020–21), and she appeared in the companion movie Zoey’s Extraordinary Christmas (2021). Her other film credits included the holiday comedy Happiest Season (2020) and Guillermo del Toro’s film noir Nightmare Alley (2021).
- Zoffani, Johann (English painter)
John Zoffany was a German-born portrait painter who in late 18th-century England made his reputation with paintings depicting episodes from contemporary theatre and with portraits and conversation pieces (i.e., paintings of groups of people in their customary surroundings). Zoffany, after studying
- Zoffany, John (English painter)
John Zoffany was a German-born portrait painter who in late 18th-century England made his reputation with paintings depicting episodes from contemporary theatre and with portraits and conversation pieces (i.e., paintings of groups of people in their customary surroundings). Zoffany, after studying
- Zog I (king of Albania)
Zog I was the president of Albania from 1925 to 1928 and king from 1928 to 1939. Though able to manipulate Albania’s internal affairs to his own advantage, he came to depend heavily on Benito Mussolini’s Italy and was eventually ousted by the Italian dictator on the eve of World War II. Siding with
- Zöggeler, Armin (Italian luger)
Armin Zöggeler is an Italian luger, winner of two Olympic gold medals (2002 and 2006). He was the first competitor to capture a medal in six consecutive Winter Games. Zöggeler broke onto the luge racing scene at age 15 in 1989; his 14th-place finish in an international competition was a sure sign
- zogoybi, al- (Naṣrid ruler)
Muḥammad XII was the last Naṣrid sultan of Granada, Spain. His reign (1482–92) was marked by incessant civil strife and the fall of Granada to Ferdinand and Isabella, the Roman Catholic rulers of Aragon and Castile. Instigated by his mother, a jealous wife, Boabdil rebelled against his father, the
- Zograf, Zahari (Bulgarian artist)
Bulgaria: The arts of Bulgaria: …secular and realist paintings of Zahari Zograph in the first half of the century and Hristo Tsokev in the second half. At the end of the 19th century and beginning of the 20th century, Bulgarian painters such as Anton Mitov and the Czech-born Ivan Mrkvichka produced memorable works, many of…
- Zograph, Zahari (Bulgarian artist)
Bulgaria: The arts of Bulgaria: …secular and realist paintings of Zahari Zograph in the first half of the century and Hristo Tsokev in the second half. At the end of the 19th century and beginning of the 20th century, Bulgarian painters such as Anton Mitov and the Czech-born Ivan Mrkvichka produced memorable works, many of…
- Zogu, Ahmed Bey (king of Albania)
Zog I was the president of Albania from 1925 to 1928 and king from 1928 to 1939. Though able to manipulate Albania’s internal affairs to his own advantage, he came to depend heavily on Benito Mussolini’s Italy and was eventually ousted by the Italian dictator on the eve of World War II. Siding with
- Zohar (Jewish literature)
Sefer ha-zohar, (Hebrew: “Book of Splendour”), 13th-century book, mostly in Aramaic, that is the classic text of esoteric Jewish mysticism, or Kabbala. Though esoteric mysticism was taught by Jews as early as the 1st century ad, the Zohar gave new life and impetus to mystical speculations through
- Zoharist sect (Jewish religion)
Jacob Frank: …the founder of the antirabbinical Frankist, or Zoharist, sect.
- Zoigê Marsh (marsh, China)
Zoigê Marsh, large marsh lying mostly in northern Sichuan province, west-central China. It occupies about 1,000 square miles (2,600 square km) of the eastern part of the Plateau of Tibet at an elevation of 11,800 feet (3,600 metres) above sea level and extends westward across the border of Sichuan
- zoisite (mineral)
zoisite, silicate mineral, calcium and aluminum silicate, Ca2Al3(SiO4)3OH, characteristic of regional metamorphism and of hydrothermal alteration of igneous rocks. A member of the epidote group of nesosilicates, zoisite occurs as white, green-brown, or gray crystals or masses in crystalline
- Zoji (pass, India)
Zoji, pass across the Himalayas in the Indian-administered union territory of Jammu and Kashmir, in the northern part of the Indian subcontinent. Situated at an elevation of 11,580 feet (3,529 metres), Zoji Pass carries the main route leading from Srinagar in the Vale of Kashmir eastward to Leh, in
- Zoji Pass (pass, India)
Zoji, pass across the Himalayas in the Indian-administered union territory of Jammu and Kashmir, in the northern part of the Indian subcontinent. Situated at an elevation of 11,580 feet (3,529 metres), Zoji Pass carries the main route leading from Srinagar in the Vale of Kashmir eastward to Leh, in
- zokor (rodent)
zokor, (genus Myospalax), any of seven north Asian species of subterranean rodents. Zokors are molelike animals that have chunky cylindrical bodies with short powerful limbs. Their feet are large and robust, and the long front claws are self-sharpening and very strong. The tiny eyes are very
- Zola Budd: Collision and Controversy
It was not medal-winning heroics that made Zola Budd a household name at the 1984 Olympics in Los Angeles. Rather, the 18-year-old Budd found herself in the unflattering glare of the spotlight after a collision with her idol—and rival—American Mary Decker (later Mary Decker Slaney). Earlier that
- Zola, Émile (French author)
Émile Zola was a French novelist, critic, and political activist who was the most prominent French novelist of the late 19th century. He was noted for his theories of naturalism, which underlie his monumental 20-novel series Les Rougon-Macquart, and for his intervention in the Dreyfus Affair
- Zola, Émile-Édouard-Charles-Antoine (French author)
Émile Zola was a French novelist, critic, and political activist who was the most prominent French novelist of the late 19th century. He was noted for his theories of naturalism, which underlie his monumental 20-novel series Les Rougon-Macquart, and for his intervention in the Dreyfus Affair
- Zola, Irving (American sociologist and activist)
disability studies: …led by activist and writer Irving Zola. Michael Oliver, a disabled sociologist, helped to push the movement into academia with his book Politics of Disablement: A Sociological Approach (1990), in which he analyzed how a social issue such as disability gets cast as an individual medicalized phenomenon.
- Żółkiewski, Stanisław (Polish general)
Poland: Sigismund III Vasa: …Klushino in 1610 by Hetman Stanisław Zółkiewski resulted in a Polish occupation of Moscow and the election by Moscow’s boyars of Sigismund’s son Władysław as tsar. Sigismund’s veto wasted this opportunity and instead left a residue of Russian hatred of Poland.
- Żółkowski, Alojzy Fortunat (Polish actor and writer)
Alojzy Fortunat Żółkowski was an actor, writer, translator, and head of a Polish theatrical family. Żółkowski was born into a noble family and served in the army during the revolt of 1794. He made his acting debut in Warsaw in 1798, toured the country for four years, and then joined the National
- Żółkowski, Alojzy Gonzaga (Polish actor and singer)
Alojzy Fortunat Żółkowski: …most notable being his son Alojzy Gonzaga Żółkowski (1814–89), a highly respected actor and opera singer who spent most of his career at the State Theatres of Warsaw; his rich baritone voice and brilliant acting technique made him a success in such varied roles as Dulcamara in Gaetano Donizetti’s L’elisir…
- Zolli (zoo, Basel, Switzerland)
Basel Zoological Garden, privately owned zoological garden in Basel, Switzerland, noted for its outstanding work in the breeding of the Indian rhinoceros and the pygmy hippopotamus. The zoo was founded in 1874 for the purpose of exhibiting local wildlife. (It opened with about 100 mammals and
- Zollinger, Albin (Swiss writer)
Albin Zollinger was a poet and novelist, the leading figure in the revival of Swiss poetry between World Wars I and II. Zollinger was a primary school teacher who lived in or near Zürich all his life except for four years (1903–07) in Argentina. Three-quarters of his work was written in the last 10
- Zollinger-Ellison syndrome (pathology)
peptic ulcer: …peptic ulcers results from the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome, an uncommon disease associated with a tumour of the duodenum or pancreas that causes an increase in gastric acid secretion. Cigarette smoking has been found to have an adverse effect on peptic ulcers, slowing healing and promoting recurrence. Complications of ulcers include bleeding,…
- Zöllner illusion (psychology)
illusion: Visual perceptual illusions: In the Zöllner illusion, the cross-hatching disturbs the perception of parallel lines. A figure seen touching converging lines, as in the Ponzo illusion, seems larger than another figure of the same size placed between the lines where they are farther apart. In a related experience, linear perspective…