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Encyclopedia - Britannica Online Encyclopedia
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  • Yundum (The Gambia)
    town, western Gambia. Located 18 miles (30 km) southwest of Banjul, it is the site of a teacher-training college. The Gambia’s international airport, originally a World War II Allied airfield, adjoins Yundum to the east. The Abuko Nature Reserve, 4 miles (6 km) to the northeast, features birds, reptiles, and small mammals....
  • Yunfa (Gobir sultan)
    ...Bawa, the sultan of Gobir, from whom he won important concessions for the local Muslim community (including his own freedom to propagate Islam); he also appears to have taught the future sultan Yunfa....
  • Yung Vilne (Yiddish group)
    ...for her son. Grade studied at several yeshivas and was part of the pietistic movement known as Musar. At age 22, however, he gave up his religious studies to become a writer. A leading member of Yung Vilne (“Young Vilna”), a group of avant-garde Yiddish writers and artists, Grade began publishing poems in Yiddish periodicals. His first published book was the poetry collection......
  • Yung-an (China)
    city, west-central Fujian sheng (province), southeastern China. It is situated on the Sha River, a southern tributary of the Min River....
  • Yung-cheng (emperor of Qing dynasty)
    reign name (nianhao) of the third emperor (reigned 1722–35) of the Qing dynasty (1644–1911/12), during whose rule the administration was consolidated and power became concentrated in the emperor’s hands....
  • Yung-ho (Taiwan)
    shih (municipality), T’ai-pei hsien (county), northern Taiwan, 1 mi (1.6 km) south of Taipei city, in the northern part of the island’s western coastal plain. Situated on the east bank of Shuang Hsi (river), the city flourished in the early 18th century. It is a market centre for the tea and rice produced in the surrounding region. Glass and glass products, and small m...
  • Yung-li (emperor of Nan Ming dynasty)
    claimant to the Ming throne after the Manchu forces of Manchuria had captured the Ming capital at Beijing and established the Qing dynasty (1644–1911/12)....
  • Yung-lo (emperor of Ming dynasty)
    reign name (nianhao) of the third emperor (1402–24) of China’s Ming dynasty (1368–1644), which he raised to its greatest power. He moved the capital from Nanjing to Beijing, which was rebuilt with the Forbidden City....
  • “Yung-lo ta-tien” (Chinese encyclopaedia)
    Chinese compilation that was the world’s largest known encyclopaedia. Compiled during the Ming dynasty (1368–1644) by thousands of Chinese scholars under the direction of the Yongle emperor (reigned 1402–24), it was completed in 1408. The work contained 22,937 manuscript rolls, or chapters (including the index), in 11,095 volumes and was d...
  • Yung-lo Temple (temple, China)
    One school that flourished under Yüan official patronage was that of Buddhist and Taoist painting; important wall paintings were executed at the Yung-lo Temple in Shansi (now restored and moved to Jui-ch’eng). A number of royal patrons, including Kublai, the emperors Buyantu and Tog-temür, and Kublai’s great-granddaughter Sengge, built an Imperial collection of importan...
  • Yunga language (South American language)
    ...textiles and in gold, silver, and copper. Pottery types tended to be standardized, with quantity production, made in molds, and generally of a plain black ware. The Chimú language, known as Yunca (Yunga), Mochica, or Moche, now extinct, was very different and definitely distinct from that of the Inca....
  • Yungang caves (cave temples, China)
    series of magnificent Chinese Buddhist cave temples, created in the 5th century ce during the Six Dynasties period (220–598 ce). They are located about 10 miles (16 km) west of the city of Datong, near the northern border of Shanxi province (and the Great Wall...
  • Yungas (region, South America)
    humid, subtropical region in western Bolivia. (Yungas is an Aymara word meaning “Warm Lands.”) It occupies the eastern slopes of the Andean Cordillera Real and extends northeast and north of the cities of La Paz and Cochabamba. This rainy forested belt of rugged terrain (deep valleys and gorges separated by sharp ridges) has its counterparts in Colombia, Ecuador, a...
  • Yungay, Battle of (South American history)
    The Chileans, joined by Peruvians opposed to Santa Cruz, persisted in their fight until, under the command of Gen. Manuel Bulnes, they finally defeated the forces of the confederation at the Battle of Yungay (department of Ancash, Peru) on Jan. 20, 1839. This defeat caused the immediate dissolution of the confederation; Santa Cruz went into exile. Agustín Gamarra assumed the presidency......
  • Yunge, Di (Jewish-American literary group)
    American Yiddish poets in New York formed two innovative groups called Di Yunge (“The Young”) and Di Inzikhistn (“The Introspectivists”). Both groups began with the publication of journals—the former with Di yugend (1907–08; “The Youth”) and the latter with In zikh (1920; “I...
  • Yungui Plateau (plateau, China)
    highland region comprising the northern part of Yunnan province and the western part of Guizhou province, south-central China. Yunnan is more distinctly a plateau with areas of rolling uplands, precipitous folded and fault-block mountain ranges, and deep, river-cut gorges. About 6,000 feet (2,000 metres) in elevation, the Yunnan part has mou...
  • Yunjinghong (China)
    city, southern Yunnan sheng (province), southwestern China. It is situated in a rich basin on the west bank of the Mekong (Lancang) River, near the borders of Myanmar (Burma) and Laos. A military-civilian administration of Cheli Region was set up there during the Yuan dynasty (1206–1368). During...
  • Yunkwei Plateau (plateau, China)
    highland region comprising the northern part of Yunnan province and the western part of Guizhou province, south-central China. Yunnan is more distinctly a plateau with areas of rolling uplands, precipitous folded and fault-block mountain ranges, and deep, river-cut gorges. About 6,000 feet (2,000 metres) in elevation, the Yunnan part has mou...
  • yunluo (musical instrument)
    Chinese gong chime usually consisting of 10 gongs that are suspended in individual compartments on a wooden frame and beaten with sticks that have hard or soft tips. It may be carried by a handle or set on a table. Pairs of yunluo may be played by one or two performers. The instrument is tuned with seven pitches to the octave, and its trad...
  • Yunnan (province, China)
    sheng (province) of China. The fourth largest province of China, it is a mountain and plateau region on the country’s southwestern frontier. It is bounded by the Tibet Autonomous Region on the northwest, Szechwan on the north, and the Chuang Autonomous Region of Kwangsi and Kweichow Province on the east. To the south and southeast it adjoins Laos and Vietnam, and to the west...
  • Yunnan-Guizhou Gaoyuan (plateau, China)
    highland region comprising the northern part of Yunnan province and the western part of Guizhou province, south-central China. Yunnan is more distinctly a plateau with areas of rolling uplands, precipitous folded and fault-block mountain ranges, and deep, river-cut gorges. About 6,000 feet (2,000 metres) in elevation, the Yunnan part has mou...
  • Yunnan-Guizhou Plateau (plateau, China)
    highland region comprising the northern part of Yunnan province and the western part of Guizhou province, south-central China. Yunnan is more distinctly a plateau with areas of rolling uplands, precipitous folded and fault-block mountain ranges, and deep, river-cut gorges. About 6,000 feet (2,000 metres) in elevation, the Yunnan part has mou...
  • “Yunost” (work by Tolstoy)
    ...early 1860s experimented with new forms for expressing his moral and philosophical concerns. To Childhood he soon added Otrochestvo (1854; Boyhood) and Yunost (1857; Youth). A number of stories centre on a single semiautobiographical character, Dmitry Nekhlyudov, who later reappeared as the hero of Tolstoy’s novel Resurrection. In......
  • Yunus (Turkmen ruler)
    ...by Felekuddin Dündar, whose father, Ilyas, was a frontier ruler under the Seljuqs and who named it after his grandfather; Dündar governed the Hamid principality jointly with his brother Yunus, with two capitals, one at Eğridir and one at Antalya (Attalia). Dündar was defeated and killed (1324) by Demirtaş, the Il-Khanid governor of Anatolia. Eğridir was...
  • Yūnus al-Kātib (Arabian musician)
    ...of Islām. This is the 10th-century Kitāb al-Aghānī, or “Book of Songs,” by Abū al-Faraj al-Iṣbahānī. In the 8th century Yūnus al-Kātib, author of the first Arabic book of musical theory, compiled the first collection of songs. Other notable musicians of the period were Ibn Muḥriz, of Persi...
  • Yunus Emre (Turkish poet)
    poet and mystic who exercised a powerful influence on Turkish literature....
  • Yunus, Muhammad (Bangladeshi economist)
    Bangladeshi economist and founder of the Grameen Bank, an institution that provides microcredit (small loans to poor people possessing no collateral) to help its clients establish creditworthiness and financial self-sufficiency. In 2006 Yunus and Grameen received the Nobel Prize for Peace....
  • Yunyan (Chinese general and official)
    general and official during the middle years of the Qing dynasty. The scion of a noble family, Agui directed Chinese military expeditions that quelled uprisings in the western provinces of Sichuan and Gansu. He also conquered Ili and Chinese Turkistan, areas on China’s northwestern frontier that are today part of the Uygur Autonomous Region of Xinjiang. In addition, he he...
  • Yupiit (people)
    indigenous Arctic people traditionally residing in Siberia, Saint Lawrence Island and the Diomede Islands in the Bering Sea and Bering Strait, and Alaska. They are culturally related to the Chukchi and the Inuit, or Eastern Eskimo, of Canada and Greenland....
  • Yupik (people)
    indigenous Arctic people traditionally residing in Siberia, Saint Lawrence Island and the Diomede Islands in the Bering Sea and Bering Strait, and Alaska. They are culturally related to the Chukchi and the Inuit, or Eastern Eskimo, of Canada and Greenland....
  • Yupik language
    the western division of the Eskimo languages, spoken in southwestern Alaska and in Siberia....
  • yuppie (social group)
    ...mid-1970s the movement had waned, and by the 1980s hippies had given way to a new generation of young people who were intent on making careers for themselves in business and who came to be known as yuppies (young urban professionals). Nonetheless, hippies continued to have an influence on the wider culture, seen, for example, in more relaxed attitudes toward sex, in the new concern for the......
  • Yupuru, Río (river, South America)
    river that rises as the Caquetá River east of Pasto, Colombia, in the Colombian Cordillera Central. It meanders generally east-southeastward through the tropical rain forest of southeastern Colombia. After receiving the Apaporis River at the Brazilian border, it takes the name Japurá and flows eastward to join the stretch of the Amazon known as the Solimões River, above Tef...
  • Yurak (people)
    ethnolinguistic group inhabiting northwestern Russia, from the White Sea on the west to the base of the Taymyr Peninsula on the east and from the Sayan Mountains on the south to the Arctic Ocean on the north. At present the Nenets are the largest group speaking Samoyedic, a branch of the Uralic language family. Their name comes from the word nenets...
  • Yurak language
    ...family of Uralic languages (q.v.). There are five Samoyedic languages, which are divided into two subgroups—North Samoyedic and South Samoyedic. The North Samoyedic subgroup consists of Nenets (Yurak), Enets (Yenisey), and Nganasan (Tavgi). The South Samoyedic subgroup comprises Selkup and the practically extinct Kamas language. None of these languages was written before 1930, and...
  • Yurev, Roman (Russian noble)
    ...of Andrey Ivanovich Kobyla (Kambila), a Muscovite boyar who lived during the reign of the grand prince of Moscow Ivan I Kalita (reigned 1328–41), the Romanovs acquired their name from Roman Yurev (d. 1543), whose daughter Anastasiya Romanovna Zakharina-Yureva was the first wife of Ivan IV the Terrible (reigned as tsar 1547–84). Her brother Nikita’s children took the surname...
  • Yuro, Timi (American singer)
    American pop singer (b. Aug. 4, 1940, Chicago, Ill.—d. March 30, 2004, Las Vegas, Nev.), bridged musical genres with her husky, soulful voice. Her signature vocal style was influenced by early exposure to African American blues and gospel singers such as Dinah Washington. Though she was signed to Liberty Records in 1959, her career took two years to take off; she wowed label executives and ...
  • Yurok (people)
    North American Indians who lived in what is now California along the lower Klamath River and the Pacific coast. They spoke a Macro-Algonquian language and were culturally and linguistically related to the Wiyot. As their traditional territory lay on the border between divergent cultural and ecological areas, the Yurok combined the typical subsistence practices...
  • Yurok language
    ...“pot,” ŋadúŋdu-mal “pot-small.” Vowel harmony, a process whereby vowels change to resemble adjacent ones, is further attested in North America. Yurok in northwestern California, for example, has an unusual r vowel, comparable to the sound in English “bird”; when this occurs in a suffix, stem vowels change to agr...
  • yurt (shelter)
    tentlike Central Asian nomad’s dwelling, erected on wooden poles and covered with skin, felt, or handwoven textiles in bright colours. The interior is simply furnished with brightly coloured rugs (red often predominating) decorated with geometric or stylized animal patterns. The knotted pile rug, first known from a nomad burial at the foot of the Altai Mountains (5th–3rd century ...
  • yurta (shelter)
    tentlike Central Asian nomad’s dwelling, erected on wooden poles and covered with skin, felt, or handwoven textiles in bright colours. The interior is simply furnished with brightly coloured rugs (red often predominating) decorated with geometric or stylized animal patterns. The knotted pile rug, first known from a nomad burial at the foot of the Altai Mountains (5th–3rd century ...
  • Yuruá, Río (river, South America)
    river that rises in the highlands east of the Ucayali River in east-central Peru. It flows northward through Acre state, Brazil. Entering Amazonas state, Brazil, it meanders eastward and then east-northeastward, emptying into the stretch of the Amazon River known as the Solimões River, near Tamaniquá. The most winding river in the Amazon basin, the Juruá is calculated to excee...
  • Yurugu (Sudanese religion)
    ...elements), or even a dualistic opposition (as two opposed elements that function as principles in respect to the actual creation), is found in the Dogon (western Sudanese) notions about Nommo and Yurugu, already mentioned. A series of “words” refers to both principles; i.e., a series of realities and categories can be named that constitute the world in its functional......
  • Yürük rug
    floor covering handwoven by nomadic people in various parts of Anatolia. The Balıkesir Yürük rugs of western Anatolia have diagonal patterns and a maze of latch-hook motifs carried out in brick red and dark blue with touches of ivory. They may be reminiscent of and sometimes confused with Baluchi rugs....
  • Yurungkax River (river, Asia)
    The oasis of Hotan, the largest of these, includes Karakax (Moyu), to the northwest, and Luopu (Lop), to the east. The oasis is watered by the Karakax (Kalakashi) and Yurungkax (Yulongkashi) rivers, which flow from the high Kunlun Mountains to the south. They join in the north of the oasis to form the Hotan (Khotan) River, which discharges into the desert to the north. The rivers have their......
  • Yurupary (celebration)
    ...rites take a central position among other important ceremonies such as funerals and fertility rites. In the Guianas and the northwest Amazon region, the initiation of the boys is very complex. The Yurupary celebration inducts the boys into the secret society of mature men. Special rites are revealed to them; they are shown the sacred trumpets or the masks representing ancestral spirits. They......
  • Yury (Russian prince)
    The struggle began at the death of Vasily I, a son of Dmitry Donskoy, in 1425. The succession of his 10-year-old son Vasily II was challenged by his uncle Yury, prince of the important upper Volga commercial town of Galich. After many turns of fortune, Vasily II succeeded, with the help of Lithuanian and Tatar allies, in establishing his house permanently as the rulers of Muscovy....
  • Yury of Moscow (prince of Russia)
    ...Moscow for supremacy in northeastern Russia during the 14th and 15th centuries. In 1305 Yaroslav’s son Michael I was made grand prince of Vladimir (i.e., chief among the Russian princes). Yury of Moscow, however, gained the support of Öz Beg (Uzbek), khan (1313–41) of the Golden Horde, and in 1317 replaced Michael as grand prince. Michael refused to accept his loss a...
  • Yuryev (Estonia)
    old university city of Estonia, on the Emajogi River. The original settlement of Tarbatu dates from the 5th century; in 1030 the Russians built a fort there called Yuryev. From the 13th to the 16th century, the town was a prosperous member of the Hanseatic League. Then held in turn by Poles (1582–1600, 1603–25) and Swedes (1600–03, 1625–1704), it was finally annexed to ...
  • Yūsaki Kiyotsugu (Japanese author)
    Japanese actor, playwright, and musician who was one of the founders of nō drama....
  • Yuscarán (Honduras)
    town, southeastern Honduras. It lies at the eastern foot of the Montaña (ridge) de Monserrat near the Choluteca River, at an elevation of 3,379 feet (1,030 m). Founded between 1730 and 1740, when gold and silver were discovered in the area, Yuscarán was a prosperous mining centre during the colonial period. Mining halted in the 19th century but was resumed in the 1...
  • Yushchenko, Viktor (president of Ukraine)
    Ukrainian politician, who became president of Ukraine in 2005....
  • Yushchenko, Viktor Andriyovych (president of Ukraine)
    Ukrainian politician, who became president of Ukraine in 2005....
  • Yushin order (South Korean constitution)
    In December 1971, shortly after his inauguration to a third presidential term, Park declared a state of national emergency, and 10 months later (October 1972) he suspended the constitution and dissolved the legislature. A new constitution, which would permit the reelection of the president for an unlimited number of six-year terms, was promulgated in December, launching the Fourth Republic....
  • Yushitai (East Asian government)
    in traditional East Asia, governmental official charged primarily with the responsibility for scrutinizing and criticizing the conduct of officials and rulers....
  • Yūsof o-Zalīkhā (work by Jāmī)
    ...that in his old age the poet had spent some time in western Persia or even in Baghdad under the protection of the Būyids, but this assumption was based upon his presumed authorship of Yūsof o-Zalīkhā, an epic poem on the subject of Joseph and Potiphar’s wife, which, it later became known, was composed more than 100 years after Ferdowsī’s d...
  • Yust, Walter (American editor)
    American journalist and editor, editor in chief of all publications of the Encyclopædia Britannica from 1938 to 1960—longer than any of his predecessors....
  • Yūsuf (chapter of the Qurʾān)
    ...revelations were received, and its placement in the order of suras. This method of compilation allows for certain sections and narratives to be presented as unified wholes; for that reason, Yūsuf (the 12th sura, the Qurʾānic version of the Joseph narrative) has long been a favourite object of study by Western scholars. However, in the context of a history of Arabic......
  • Yūsuf ʿĀdil Khān (king of Bijāpur)
    ...victory”) and was an important community under the Yādava dynasty for more than a century until 1294, when it became a provincial capital of the Bahmanī. In 1489 with the advent of Yūsuf ʿĀdil Shāh, the first ʿĀdil Shāhī sultan, its dominions grew to include Goa, where a navy was maintained. Although defeated (1686) by...
  • Yusuf ʿĀdil Shāh (king of Bijāpur)
    ...victory”) and was an important community under the Yādava dynasty for more than a century until 1294, when it became a provincial capital of the Bahmanī. In 1489 with the advent of Yūsuf ʿĀdil Shāh, the first ʿĀdil Shāhī sultan, its dominions grew to include Goa, where a navy was maintained. Although defeated (1686) by...
  • Yūsuf Asʾar Yathʾar (Ḥimyarite king)
    About ad 523 Yūsuf Asʾar Yathʾar (nicknamed Dhū Nuwās by the Muslim tradition), a Ḥimyarite king of Jewish faith, persecuted and killed numerous monophysite Christians in Najrān on the northern frontier of Yemen. He also killed Byzantine merchants elsewhere in his kingdom. Outraged by the massacre and pressed by the Christian world to ...
  • Yūsuf Ashʾar Yathʾar (Ḥimyarite king)
    About ad 523 Yūsuf Asʾar Yathʾar (nicknamed Dhū Nuwās by the Muslim tradition), a Ḥimyarite king of Jewish faith, persecuted and killed numerous monophysite Christians in Najrān on the northern frontier of Yemen. He also killed Byzantine merchants elsewhere in his kingdom. Outraged by the massacre and pressed by the Christian world to ...
  • Yūsuf Buluggīn I ibn Zīrī (Zīrid ruler)
    ...Cairo, the new capital founded by Jawhar just to the north of the old city of al-Fusṭāṭ, in 972 or 973, leaving behind in North Africa as surrogate his lieutenant general Yusuf ibn Ziri. (The original North African dominion became a province called al-Maghrib, or “the West.”)...
  • Yūsuf I (Naṣrid ruler)
    ...of the Alhambra had been occupied by a citadel and possibly by a palace since the 11th century, but little of these earlier constructions has remained. In the 14th century two successive princes, Yūsuf I and Muḥammad V, transformed the hill into their official residence. Outside of a number of gates built like triumphal arches and several ruined forecourts, only three parts of......
  • Yūsuf ibn Tāshfīn (Almoravid ruler)
    Almoravid ruler who, during his reign from 1061 to 1106, expanded Almoravid land holdings from a small, insecurely held area in the Maghrib into a huge empire that included major portions of present-day Morocco and Algeria, Muslim Spain as far north as Fraga, and the islands of Majorca, Minorca, and Ibiza. A Berber by origin, Ibn Tāshufīn was an excellent general and a devoutly relig...
  • Yūsuf ibn Tāshufīn (Almoravid ruler)
    Almoravid ruler who, during his reign from 1061 to 1106, expanded Almoravid land holdings from a small, insecurely held area in the Maghrib into a huge empire that included major portions of present-day Morocco and Algeria, Muslim Spain as far north as Fraga, and the islands of Majorca, Minorca, and Ibiza. A Berber by origin, Ibn Tāshufīn was an excellent general and a devoutly relig...
  • Yusuf ibn Ziri (Zīrid ruler)
    ...Cairo, the new capital founded by Jawhar just to the north of the old city of al-Fusṭāṭ, in 972 or 973, leaving behind in North Africa as surrogate his lieutenant general Yusuf ibn Ziri. (The original North African dominion became a province called al-Maghrib, or “the West.”)...
  • Yūsuf Sayfā (Lebanese Druze leader)
    ...became locked in a seven-year struggle for supremacy, a struggle that was complicated by the fact that the Ottomans, the nominal rulers, allied themselves first with Fakhr ad-Dīn and then with Yūsuf Sayfā. Finally, with the defeat of Yūsuf Sayfā (1607), the Ottomans recognized Fakhr ad-Dīn’s authority....
  • Yūsufī, ʿAbd al-Raḥmān (prime minister of Morocco)
    ...1990s culminated in the election of the first opposition government in Morocco in more than 30 years. In 1997 opposition parties won the largest bloc of seats in the lower house, and in March 1998 Abderrahmane Youssoufi (ʿAbd al-Raḥmān Yūsufī), a leader of the Socialist Union of Popular Forces, was appointed as prime minister. Under pressure from human rights....
  • Yusupov, Feliks (prince of Russia)
    Several attempts were made to take the life of Rasputin and save Russia from further calamity, but none were successful until 1916. Then a group of extreme conservatives, including Prince Feliks Yusupov (husband of the tsar’s niece), Vladimir Mitrofanovich Purishkevich (a member of the Duma), and Grand Duke Dmitry Pavlovich (the tsar’s cousin), formed a conspiracy to eliminate Rasput...
  • Yutaka Fujima (Japanese actor)
    Japanese kabuki actor, one of the foremost interpreters of the classical kabuki plays, who specialized in female roles (all kabuki players are male)....
  • Yuting (Chinese warlord)
    Chinese soldier and later a warlord who dominated Manchuria (now Northeast China) and parts of North China between 1913 and 1928. He maintained his power with the tacit support of the Japanese; in return he granted them concessions in Manchuria....
  • Yuulngu (language group)
    ...between the Pama-Nyungan group, which covers 90 percent of the continent, and the residual non-Pama-Nyungan cluster, which stretches across northernmost Australia (except Queensland). The Yuulngu group is a separate Pama-Nyungan enclave, isolated from the main block by intervening non-Pama-Nyungan languages, as indicated on the map. In classifications published between 1950 and 1975,......
  • yuvaraja (Sri Lankan political history)
    The king was supported by an inner administrative hierarchy consisting of members of his family and influential nobles. The yuvaraja, the king’s chosen heir to the throne, was given responsible office. The army was the major prop of royal absolutism, and the senapati, or commander in chief, was the king’s clo...
  • Yuwen Huaji (Chinese general)
    ...of the northwest, the Tang had to contend with three principal rival forces: the Sui remnants commanded by Wang Shichong at Luoyang, the rebel Li Mi in Henan, the rebel Dou Jiande in Hebei, and Yuwen Huaji, who had assassinated the previous Sui emperor Yangdi and now led the remnants of the Sui’s southern armies. Wang Shichong set up a grandson of Yangdi at Luoyang as the new Sui emperor...
  • Yuwen Kai (Chinese architect)
    The architecture of the Sui was dominated by the great Yuwen Kai, who in nine months designed a vast capital city at Daxing that was six times the size of present-day Xi’an at the same site. Its palace had a rotating pavilion accommodating 200 guests. Painters came from throughout the country seeking patronage at the Sui court. The dynasty established a pattern of patronizing the arts that ...
  • Yuxiang Binhong (Chinese painter)
    painter and art theorist who, faced with the challenge of a new society in 20th-century China, incorporated fresh ideas into traditional Chinese painting....
  • Yuyuan Garden (garden, Shanghai, China)
    The old Chinese city houses the 16th-century Yuyuan Garden (Garden of the Mandarin Yu), an outstanding example of late Ming garden architecture, and the Temple of Confucius. Other points of attraction are the Longhua Pagoda of the Bei (Northern) Song dynasty, the Industrial Exhibition Hall, and the tomb and former residence of Lu Xun, a 20th-century revolutionary writer....
  • Yuzaki troupe (nō theatre)
    school of nō theatre (q.v.) known for its emphasis on beauty and elegance. The school was founded in the 14th century by Kan’ami (q.v.), who founded the Yūzaki-za (Yūzaki troupe), the precursor of the Kanze school. The second master, Zeami Motokiyo, completed the basic form of the art under the protection of the shogun Ashikaga Yoshimitsu....
  • Yuzaki-za (nō theatre)
    school of nō theatre (q.v.) known for its emphasis on beauty and elegance. The school was founded in the 14th century by Kan’ami (q.v.), who founded the Yūzaki-za (Yūzaki troupe), the precursor of the Kanze school. The second master, Zeami Motokiyo, completed the basic form of the art under the protection of the shogun Ashikaga Yoshimitsu....
  • yūzen-zome (dyeing process)
    Japanese painter credited with perfecting a rice-paste dyeing method that made possible the economical production of sumptuously decorated cloth. He gave his name to the process (yūzen-zome) by which elaborate designs and pictures were drawn on silk with a rice-paste coating. Later, yūzen came to denote the cloth produced in this way and also the kind of designs......
  • Yuzhnaya Osetiya (region, Georgia)
    region, north-central Georgia. South Ossetia occupies the southern slopes of the Greater Caucasus mountains. The region is populated largely (about two-thirds) by the Ossetes, a Caucasian people speaking an eastern Iranian language. (Many Ossetes also live in the neighbouring republic of North Ossetia-Alania in Russia, which occupies the nor...
  • Yuzhno Chu (ridge, Altai Mountains)
    As a result of these differential geologic forces, the highest ridges in the contemporary Altai—notably the Katun, North (Severo) Chu, and the South (Yuzhno) Chu—tower more than 13,000 feet (4,000 metres) in elevation, running latitudinally in the central and eastern portions of the sector of the system within the Altay republic. The Tabyn-Bogdo-Ola (Mongolian: Tavan Bogd Uul), the.....
  • Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk (Russia)
    city and administrative centre of Sakhalin oblast (province), far eastern Russia. It lies in the south of Sakhalin Island on the Susuya River, 26 miles (42 km) north of the port of Korsakov. Originally the Japanese settlement of Toyohara, Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk passed to the Soviet Union in 1945 and was given its present name in 1946. It is a communications hub, with railways that extend to Kors...
  • Yuzhny Bug (river, Ukraine)
    river, southwestern and south-central Ukraine. The Southern Buh is 492 miles (792 km) long and drains a basin of 24,610 square miles (63,740 square km). It rises in the Volyn-Podilsk Upland and flows east and southeast, first through a narrow valley with rapids and then across rolling steppe (largely under cultivation), to enter the Black Sea by a winding estuary 29 miles (47 km...
  • Yuzhny Island (island, Russia)
    Novaya Zemlya (“New Land”) consists of two large islands, Severny (northern) and Yuzhny (southern), aligned for 600 miles (1,000 km) in a southwest-northeast direction, plus several smaller islands. The two major islands are separated by a narrow strait, Matochkin Shar, only about 1 to 1.5 miles (1.6 to 2.4 km) wide. The most southerly point, the island of Kusova Zemlya, is......
  • Yuzivka (Ukraine)
    city, southeastern Ukraine, on the headwaters of the Kalmius River. In 1872 an ironworks was founded there by a Welshman, John Hughes (from whom the town’s pre-Revolutionary name Yuzivka was derived), to produce iron rails for the growing Russian rail network. Later steel rails were made. The plant used coal from the immediate vicinit...
  • Yūzonsha (Japanese organization)
    ...the University of Tokyo in 1911 and became an early associate of the other famous right-wing advocate of the period, Kita Ikki. Together they founded the influential nationalistic Yūzonsha (Society for the Preservation of the National Essence) in 1919. Through its magazine, Otakebi (“War Cry”), the Yūzonsha advocated the return of Japan to the simpler military...
  • Yuzovka (Ukraine)
    city, southeastern Ukraine, on the headwaters of the Kalmius River. In 1872 an ironworks was founded there by a Welshman, John Hughes (from whom the town’s pre-Revolutionary name Yuzivka was derived), to produce iron rails for the growing Russian rail network. Later steel rails were made. The plant used coal from the immediate vicinit...
  • Yūzū Nembutsu (Buddhist sect)
    Japanese Buddhist sect that stresses the permeating effect (yūzū) of nembutsu, the invocation of the name of the Buddha Amida (Amitabha). Thus, the belief was that not only the person who chants the name but all humanity benefits from the practice of ...
  • “Yuzuru” (opera by Ikuma Dan)
    ...Ships), deals with the opening of Japan to the West and reflects his knowledge of Wagnerian style. Attempts at nationalistic operas can be represented better by the work Yuzuru (1952; Twilight Crane) by Ikuma Dan. The plot is a Japanese folktale, and, although the musical style is a mixture of the music of Maurice Ravel and the late works of Giacomo Puccini, one finds as we...
  • Yvain (work by Chrétien de Troyes)
    ...Lancelot, an exaggerated but perhaps parodic treatment of the lover who is servile to the god of love and to his imperious mistress Guinevere, wife of his overlord Arthur; Yvain, a brilliant extravaganza, combining the theme of a widow’s too hasty marriage to her husband’s slayer with that of the new husband’s fall from grac...
  • Yvelines (department, 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 Picardy (Picardie) to the north, Champagne-Ardenne to the east, Burgundy (Bourgogne) to...
  • Yverdon (Switzerland)
    From 1800 to 1804 he directed an educational establishment in Burgdorf and from 1805 until 1825 a boarding school at Yverdon, near Neuchâtel. Both schools relied for funds on fee-paying pupils, though some poor children were taken in, and these institutes served as experimental bases for proving his method in its three branches—intellectual, moral, and physical, the latter including....
  • Yves de Chartres (French bishop)
    bishop of Chartres who was regarded as the most learned canonist of his age....
  • Yves-du-Manoir (stadium, Colombes, France)
    northwestern industrial suburb of Paris, Hauts-de-Seine département, Île-de-France région, France. It is known particularly for the Yves-du-Manoir sports stadium, built for the 1924 Olympic Games, which has 65,000 seats. Henrietta Maria of England died in 1669 on her estate outside the original village of Colombes. Industries include electronics and mechanical......
  • Ywa (Myanmar deity)
    ...prophet cults among the Karen hill peoples of Myanmar (Burma). In their mythology, the restoration of their lost Golden Book by their white younger brothers heralds the millennium. Ywa, a withdrawn high god whose offer of the book to their ancestors was ignored, would then return to deliver the Karen from oppression by the Burmans or the British. The cult was founded in the......
  • YWCA (Christian lay movement)
    nonsectarian Christian organization that aims “to advance the physical, social, intellectual, moral, and spiritual interests of young women.” The recreational, educational, and spiritual aspects of its program are symbolized in its insignia, a blue triangle the three sides of which stand for body, mind, and spirit. The YWCA and the Young Men’s Christian Association (YMCA) are ...
  • Yzdkrt I (Sāsānian king)
    king of the Sāsānian Empire (reigned 399–420)....
  • Yzdkrt II (Sāsānian king)
    king of the Sāsānian dynasty (reigned 438–457), the son and successor of Bahrām V....

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