• Ashmat Shomron (work by Mapu)

    Abraham Mapu: …injustice in the Jewish ghetto; Ashmat Shomron (1865; “Guilt of Samaria”), a biblical epic about the hostility between Jerusalem and Samaria in the time of King Ahaz; and Ḥoze ḥezyonot (1869; “The Visionary”), an exposé of Ḥasidism, which was confiscated by religious authorities.

  • Ashmedai (Jewish legend)

    Asmodeus, in Jewish legend, the king of demons. According to the apocryphal book of Tobit, Asmodeus, smitten with love for Sarah, the daughter of Raguel, killed her seven successive husbands on their wedding nights. Following instructions given to him by the angel Raphael, Tobias overcame Asmodeus

  • Ashmolean Museum (museum, Oxford, England, United Kingdom)

    Ashmolean Museum, one of the four museums of the University of Oxford and the oldest public museum of art, archaeology, and natural history in Great Britain. It was established to house collections donated to the university in 1677 by Elias Ashmole, an antiquarian who had inherited the bulk of the

  • Ashmolean Museum of Art and Archaeology (museum, Oxford, England, United Kingdom)

    Ashmolean Museum, one of the four museums of the University of Oxford and the oldest public museum of art, archaeology, and natural history in Great Britain. It was established to house collections donated to the university in 1677 by Elias Ashmole, an antiquarian who had inherited the bulk of the

  • Ashmore and Cartier Islands (islands, Indian Ocean)

    Ashmore and Cartier Islands, external territory of Australia, in the Indian Ocean. The islands lie 200 miles (320 km) northwest of Western Australia state and some 105 miles (170 km) southwest of the island of Roti, Indonesia. The Ashmore Islands, comprising Middle, East, and West islands, are

  • Ashmore and Cartier Islands, Territory of (islands, Indian Ocean)

    Ashmore and Cartier Islands, external territory of Australia, in the Indian Ocean. The islands lie 200 miles (320 km) northwest of Western Australia state and some 105 miles (170 km) southwest of the island of Roti, Indonesia. The Ashmore Islands, comprising Middle, East, and West islands, are

  • Ashmun, Jehudi (American settler)

    Liberia: History of Liberia: They were followed shortly by Jehudi Ashmun, a white American, who became the real founder of Liberia. By the time Ashmun left in 1828 the territory had a government, a digest of laws for the settlers, and the beginnings of profitable foreign commerce. Other settlements were started along the St.…

  • Ashmūnayn, Al- (ancient city, Egypt)

    Hermopolis Magna, ancient town of Upper Egypt, located on the Nile River south of Al-Minyā in Al-Minyā muḥāfaẓah (governorate). It was known as Khmunu (“City of the Eight”) and was the capital of the Hare nome (province), the 15th nome of Upper Egypt. The great deity worshiped there was Thoth, god

  • Ashmyanskae Upland (region, Belarus)

    Belarus: Relief: …the main Belarusian Ridge, the Ashmyany Upland, consisting of terminal moraines from the same glacial period, lies between Minsk and Vilnius, in neighbouring Lithuania. The surfaces of its ridges tend to be flat or gently rolling and covered by light sandy podzolic soils; they are largely cleared of their original…

  • Ashmyany Upland (region, Belarus)

    Belarus: Relief: …the main Belarusian Ridge, the Ashmyany Upland, consisting of terminal moraines from the same glacial period, lies between Minsk and Vilnius, in neighbouring Lithuania. The surfaces of its ridges tend to be flat or gently rolling and covered by light sandy podzolic soils; they are largely cleared of their original…

  • Ashoka (emperor of India)

    Ashoka was the last major emperor of the Mauryan dynasty of India. His vigorous patronage of Buddhism during his reign (c. 265–238 bce; also given as c. 273–232 bce) furthered the expansion of that religion throughout India. Following his successful but bloody conquest of the Kalinga country on the

  • Ashoka inscriptions (Buddhism)

    rock edicts, narrative histories and announcements carved into cliff rock, onto pillars, and in caves throughout India by King Ashoka (reigned c. 265–238 bce), the most powerful emperor of the Mauryan dynasty and a highly influential promulgator of Indian Buddhism. Ashoka’s first years as king were

  • Ashokavadana (Buddhist work)

    India: Ashoka’s edicts: …Buddhist tradition—the Divyavadana and the Ashokavadana—where he is extolled as a Buddhist emperor par excellence whose sole ambition was the expansion of Buddhism. Most of these traditions were preserved outside India in Sri Lanka, Central Asia, and China. Even after the edicts were deciphered, it was believed that they corroborated…

  • ashoog (poet-musician)

    Turkish literature: Epic and the emergence of the âşik: …Turkish poet-musician known as the âşik, who emerged in the 16th century in Anatolia, Iran, and the southern Caucasus and eventually supplanted the ozan. The âşik (ashoog in Azerbaijani; from the Arabic ʿashiq, “lover” or “novice Sufi”) was a professional or semiprofessional performer, singing a variety of epic, didactic, mystical,…

  • Ashot Bagratuni the Carnivorous (prince of Armenia)

    Armenia: The Mamikonians and Bagratids: …Arabs’ choice in 806 of Ashot Bagratuni the Carnivorous to be prince of Armenia marked the establishment of his family as the chief power in the land. The governor Smbat Ablabas Bagratuni remained loyal to the caliph al-Mutawakkil when al-Mutawakkil sent his general Bughā al-Kabīr to bring the rebellious nakharars…

  • Ashot I the Great (king of Armenia)

    Bagratid Dynasty: The election of Smbat’s son Ashot I the Great, who had been accepted as “prince of princes” by the Arabs in 862, to be king of Armenia in 885 was recognized by both the caliph and the Byzantine emperor, and it was he who by his successful defense of his…

  • Ashot III the Merciful (king of Armenia)

    Armenia: The Mamikonians and Bagratids: Ashot III (the Merciful; 952–977) transferred his capital to Ani and began to make it into one of the architectural gems of the Middle Ages.

  • Ashqelon (Israel)

    Ashkelon, city on the coastal plain of Palestine, since 1948 in southwestern Israel. The modern city lies 12 miles (19 km) north of Gaza and 1.25 miles (2 km) east-northeast of the ancient city site. Because of its location on the Mediterranean coast, Ashkelon was traditionally the key to the

  • Ashraf (Afghani ruler)

    Afghan interlude: …death of the Afghan ruler Ashraf.

  • ashrāf (Islamic caste group)

    Islamic caste: …distinction is made between the ashrāf (Arabic, plural of shārīf, “nobleman”), who are supposedly descendants of Muslim Arab immigrants, and the non-ashrāf, who are Hindu converts. The ashrāf group is further divided into four subgroups: (1) Sayyids, originally a designation of descendants of Muhammad through his daughter Fāṭimah and son-in-law…

  • Ashraf dynasty (Turkmen dynasty)

    Eşref Dynasty, Turkmen dynasty (c. 1290–c. 1326) that ruled in Beyşehir, west of Konya in central Anatolia. The dynasty traced its origins to a Turkmen tribe that was settled by the Seljuqs of Anatolia on the western frontier. The family’s founder, Eşref oğlu Sayfeddin Süleyman I, was a Seljuq emir

  • ashram (Hindu retreat)

    ashrama: Ashrama, familiarly spelled ashram in English, has also come to denote a place removed from urban life, where spiritual and yogic disciplines are pursued. Ashrams are often associated with a central teaching figure, a guru, who is the object of adulation by the residents of the ashram. The…

  • ashrama (Hinduism)

    ashrama, in Hinduism, any of the four stages of life through which a Hindu ideally will pass. The stages are those of (1) the student (brahmacari), marked by chastity, devotion, and obedience to one’s teacher, (2) the householder (grihastha), requiring marriage, the begetting of children,

  • ʿAshrāwī, Ḥanān (Palestinian educator and diplomat)

    Hanan Ashrawi is a Palestinian educator, legislator, and spokeswoman for the Palestinian delegation to the Israeli-Palestinian peace talks in the early 1990s. Ashrawi was the youngest daughter of a prominent physician who was a founder of the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), and she grew up

  • Ashrawi, Hanan (Palestinian educator and diplomat)

    Hanan Ashrawi is a Palestinian educator, legislator, and spokeswoman for the Palestinian delegation to the Israeli-Palestinian peace talks in the early 1990s. Ashrawi was the youngest daughter of a prominent physician who was a founder of the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), and she grew up

  • Ashta Pradhan (Marathi council)

    Ashta Pradhan, administrative and advisory council set up by the Indian Hindu Maratha leader Shivaji (died 1680), which contributed to his successful military attacks on the Muslim Mughal Empire and to the good government of the territory over which he established his rule. The council’s senior

  • Ashtabula (Ohio, United States)

    Ashtabula, city, Ashtabula county, northeastern Ohio, U.S. It lies along Lake Erie, at the mouth of the Ashtabula River, about 54 miles (87 km) northeast of Cleveland. The site was settled in 1801; its name, of Algonquian origin, possibly means “river of many fish” and was applied to the township

  • Ashtadhyayi (work by Panini)

    Ashtadhyayi, Sanskrit treatise on grammar written in the 6th to 5th century bce by the Indian grammarian Panini. This work set the linguistic standards for Classical Sanskrit. It sums up in 4,000 sutras the science of phonetics and grammar that had evolved in the Vedic religion. Panini divided his

  • Ashtanga yoga

    Types of Yoga: Vinyasa/ashtanga: Ashtanga is in many ways a form of vinyasa, but it follows a set sequence of poses that does not change from class to class.

  • Ashtarkhanid dynasty (Asian history)

    history of Central Asia: The Uzbeks: …and even more under the Ashtarkhanids (also known as Astrakhanids, Tuquy-Timurids, or Janids) who succeeded them during the 1600s, Central Asia experienced a decline in prosperity compared with the preceding Timurid period, in part because of a marked reduction in the transcontinental caravan trade following the opening of new oceanic…

  • Ashtart (ancient deity)

    Astarte, great goddess of the ancient Middle East and chief deity of Tyre, Sidon, and Elat, important Mediterranean seaports. Hebrew scholars now feel that the goddess Ashtoreth mentioned so often in the Bible is a deliberate conflation of the Greek name Astarte and the Hebrew word boshet, “shame,”

  • Ashton, Catherine (British politician)

    Catherine Ashton is a British politician who served as leader of the House of Lords (2007–08), European Union (EU) trade commissioner (2008–09), and high representative for foreign affairs and security policy for the EU (2009–14). Ashton studied economics at Bedford College (now part of Royal

  • Ashton, Catherine, Baroness Ashton of Upholland (British politician)

    Catherine Ashton is a British politician who served as leader of the House of Lords (2007–08), European Union (EU) trade commissioner (2008–09), and high representative for foreign affairs and security policy for the EU (2009–14). Ashton studied economics at Bedford College (now part of Royal

  • Ashton, Kevin (British technologist)

    Internet of Things: The history of the Internet of Things: In 1997 British technologist Kevin Ashton, cofounder of the Auto-ID Center at MIT, began exploring a technology framework, radio-frequency identification (RFID), that would allow physical devices to connect via microchips and wireless signals, and it was in a speech in 1999 that Ashton coined the phrase “the Internet of…

  • Ashton, Sir Frederick (British choreographer)

    Sir Frederick Ashton was the principal choreographer and director of England’s Royal Ballet, the repertoire of which includes about 30 of his ballets. Ashton studied dancing in London under Léonide Massine, Nicholas Legat, and Marie Rambert, who encouraged his first choreographic efforts, The

  • Ashton, Sir Frederick William Mallandaine (British choreographer)

    Sir Frederick Ashton was the principal choreographer and director of England’s Royal Ballet, the repertoire of which includes about 30 of his ballets. Ashton studied dancing in London under Léonide Massine, Nicholas Legat, and Marie Rambert, who encouraged his first choreographic efforts, The

  • Ashton-under-Lyne (England, United Kingdom)

    Tameside: …the River Tame, such as Ashton-under-Lyne (the metropolitan borough’s administrative centre), Audenshaw, and Denton, are in the historic county of Lancashire, while those to the east, including Stalybridge, Dukinfield, and Hyde, belong to the historic county of Cheshire. The borough includes a section of the Pennines uplands, and immediately to…

  • Ashton-Warner, Sylvia (New Zealand writer)

    Sylvia Ashton-Warner was a New Zealand educator and writer of fiction, nonfiction, and poetry. In the field of education, she became known for her innovative work in adapting traditional British teaching methods to the special needs of Maori children. Her aim was peace and communication between two

  • Ashton-Warner, Sylvia Constance (New Zealand writer)

    Sylvia Ashton-Warner was a New Zealand educator and writer of fiction, nonfiction, and poetry. In the field of education, she became known for her innovative work in adapting traditional British teaching methods to the special needs of Maori children. Her aim was peace and communication between two

  • Ashtoreth (ancient deity)

    Astarte, great goddess of the ancient Middle East and chief deity of Tyre, Sidon, and Elat, important Mediterranean seaports. Hebrew scholars now feel that the goddess Ashtoreth mentioned so often in the Bible is a deliberate conflation of the Greek name Astarte and the Hebrew word boshet, “shame,”

  • Ashtori ha-Parḥi (Jewish topographer)

    Beit Sheʾan: …the Middle Ages the topographer Ashtori ha-Parḥi settled there and completed his work Kaftor wa-feraḥ, the first Hebrew book on the geography of Palestine (1322).

  • ashug (folk music)

    Armenia: Cultural life: …popular bards, or troubadours, called ashugh, arose; outstanding among them were Nahapet Kuchak and, especially, Aruthin Sayadian, called Sayat-Nova (d. 1795), whose love songs are still popular. In the 19th and early 20th centuries, Hakob Paronian and Ervand Otian were notable satirical novelists, and Grigor Zohrab wrote realist short stories.…

  • ashugh (folk music)

    Armenia: Cultural life: …popular bards, or troubadours, called ashugh, arose; outstanding among them were Nahapet Kuchak and, especially, Aruthin Sayadian, called Sayat-Nova (d. 1795), whose love songs are still popular. In the 19th and early 20th centuries, Hakob Paronian and Ervand Otian were notable satirical novelists, and Grigor Zohrab wrote realist short stories.…

  • Ashur (ancient city, Iraq)

    Ashur, ancient religious capital of Assyria, located on the west bank of the Tigris River in northern Iraq. The first scientific excavations there were conducted by a German expedition (1903–13) led by Walter Andrae. Ashur was a name applied to the city, to the country, and to the principal god of

  • Ashur (Mesopotamian deity)

    Ashur, in Mesopotamian religion, city god of Ashur and national god of Assyria. In the beginning he was perhaps only a local deity of the city that shared his name. From about 1800 bc onward, however, there appear to have been strong tendencies to identify him with the Sumerian Enlil (Akkadian:

  • ʿAshur ʿAli Zahiriy (Muslim educator)

    Uzbekistan: Education: …Sadriddin Ayniy in Bukhara, and ʿAshur ʿAli Zahiriy in Kokand (Qŭqon). They exerted a strong influence on education during the initial decades of the Soviet period, and their methods and aims have reemerged since independence.

  • ʿĀshūr, Nuʿmān (Egyptian dramatist)

    Arabic literature: Modern Arabic drama: …the 1950s and ’60s with Nuʿmān ʿĀshūr, who used a series of plays to present the Egyptian public with insightful analyses of its own class structure and values, a series of dramatists, among them Saʿd al-Dīn Wahbah, Maḥmūd Diyāb, and ʿAlī Sālim, penned in the colloquial dialect of Cairo dramatic…

  • Ashur-aha-iddina (king of Assyria)

    Esarhaddon was the king of Assyria from 680–669 bc, a descendant of Sargon II. He is best known for his conquest of Egypt in 671. Although he was a younger son, Esarhaddon had already been proclaimed successor to the throne by his father, Sennacherib, who had appointed him governor of Babylon some

  • Ashur-bel-kala (king of Assyria)

    history of Mesopotamia: Assyria between 1200 and 1000 bce: …sons reigned after Tiglath-pileser, including Ashur-bel-kala (c. 1074–c. 1057). Like his father, he fought in southern Armenia and against the Aramaeans with Babylonia as his ally. Disintegration of the empire could not be delayed, however. The grandson of Tiglath-pileser, Ashurnasirpal I (c. 1050–c. 1032), was sickly and unable to do…

  • Ashur-bel-nisheshu (king of Assyria)

    history of Mesopotamia: The rise of Assyria: …Babylonia about 1480, as did Ashur-bel-nisheshu about 1405. Ashur-nadin-ahhe II (c. 1392–c. 1383) was even able to obtain support from Egypt, which sent him a consignment of gold.

  • Ashur-da’in-apla (prince of Assyria)

    history of Mesopotamia: Shalmaneser III and Shamshi-Adad V of Assyria: …of Shalmaneser, the crown prince Ashur-da’in-apla led a rebellion. The old king appointed his younger son Shamshi-Adad as the new crown prince. Forced to flee to Babylonia, Shamshi-Adad V (823–811) finally managed to regain the kingship with the help of Marduk-zakir-shumi I under humiliating conditions. As king he campaigned with…

  • Ashur-dan I (king of Assyria)

    history of Mesopotamia: Assyria between 1200 and 1000 bce: …was consolidated and stabilized under Ashur-dan I (c. 1179–c. 1134) and Ashur-resh-ishi I (c. 1133–c. 1116). Several times forced to fight against Babylonia, the latter was even able to defend himself against an attack by Nebuchadrezzar I. According to the inscriptions, most of his building efforts were in Nineveh, rather…

  • Ashur-dan II (king of Assyria)

    history of Mesopotamia: Assyria and Babylonia until Ashurnasirpal II: Ashur-dan II (934–912) succeeded in suppressing the Aramaeans and the mountain people, in this way stabilizing the Assyrian boundaries. He reintroduced the use of the Assyrian dialect in his written records.

  • Ashur-dan III (king of Assyria)

    history of Mesopotamia: Adad-nirari III and his successors: The reign of Ashur-dan III (772–755) was shadowed by rebellions and by epidemics of plague. Of Ashur-nirari V (754–746) little is known.

  • Ashur-etel-ilani (king of Assyria)

    history of Mesopotamia: Decline of the Assyrian empire: Ashur-etel-ilani was appointed successor to the throne, but his twin brother Sin-shar-ishkun did not recognize him. The fight between them and their supporters forced the old king to withdraw to Harran, in 632 at the latest, perhaps ruling from there over the western part of…

  • Ashur-nadin-ahhe II (king of Assyria)

    history of Mesopotamia: The rise of Assyria: Ashur-nadin-ahhe II (c. 1392–c. 1383) was even able to obtain support from Egypt, which sent him a consignment of gold.

  • Ashur-nadin-shumi (prince of Assyria)

    history of Mesopotamia: Sennacherib of history of Mesopotamia: …him with Sennacherib’s oldest son, Ashur-nadin-shumi. The next few years were relatively peaceful. Sennacherib used this time to prepare a decisive attack against Elam, which time and again had supported Babylonian rebellions. The overland route to Elam had been cut off and fortified by the Elamites. Sennacherib had ships built…

  • Ashur-nirari V (king of Assyria)

    Tiglath-pileser III: Rise to power.: …rebellion against the weak king Ashur-nirari V, a son of Adad-nirari III, brought a new ruler, who was then governor of Calah, to power. This new ruler assumed the throne name of Tiglath-pileser in what may have been a deliberate reference to an illustrious forebear, Tiglath-pileser I (reigned c. 1115–c.…

  • Ashur-resh-ishi I (king of Assyria)

    history of Mesopotamia: Assyria between 1200 and 1000 bce: 1134) and Ashur-resh-ishi I (c. 1133–c. 1116). Several times forced to fight against Babylonia, the latter was even able to defend himself against an attack by Nebuchadrezzar I. According to the inscriptions, most of his building efforts were in Nineveh, rather than in the old capital of…

  • Ashur-uballit I (king of Assyria)

    Ashur-uballit I, (reigned c. 1365–30 bc), king of Assyria during Mesopotamia’s feudal age, who created the first Assyrian empire and initiated the Middle Assyrian period (14th to 12th century bc). With the help of the Hittites he destroyed the dominion of the Aryan Mitanni (a non-Semitic people

  • Ashur-uballit II (king of Assyria)

    history of Mesopotamia: Decline of the Assyrian empire: …the founder of the empire, Ashur-uballiṭ II (611–609 bce). Ashur-uballiṭ had to face both the Babylonians and the Medes. They conquered Harran in 610, without, however, destroying the city completely. In 609 the remaining Assyrian troops had to capitulate. With this event Assyria disappeared from history. The great empires that…

  • ʿĀshūrāʾ (Islamic holy day)

    ʿĀshūrāʾ, Muslim holy day observed on the 10th of Muḥarram, the first month of the Muslim calendar (Gregorian date variable). The term is derived from the Arabic word for the number ten. The word Muḥarram itself derives from the Arabic root ḥ-r-m, one of whose meanings is “forbidden” (ḥarām).

  • Ashurbanipal (king of Assyria)

    Ashurbanipal was the last of the great kings of Assyria (reigned 668 to 627 bce), who assembled in Nineveh the first systematically organized library in Mesopotamia and the ancient Middle East. The life of this vigorous ruler of an empire ranging initially from the Persian Gulf to Cilicia, Syria,

  • Ashurnasirpal I (king of Assyria)

    Ashurnasirpal I was the king of Assyria 1050–32 bc, when it was at a low ebb in power and prosperity caused by widespread famine and the pressure of western desert nomads, against whom Ashurnasirpal warred constantly. His father, Shamshi-Adad IV, a son of Tiglath-pileser I, was placed on the throne

  • Ashurnasirpal II (king of Assyria)

    Ashurnasirpal II was the king of Assyria from 883–859 bce, whose major accomplishment was the consolidation of the conquests of his father, Tukulti-Ninurta II, leading to the establishment of the New Assyrian empire. Although, by his own testimony, he was a brilliant general and administrator, he

  • Ashurnasirpal II, palace of (ancient palace, Calah, Iraq)

    Ashurnasirpal II: …in the ruins of his palace at Calah (now Nimrūd, Iraq).

  • Ashvaghosha (Indian philosopher and poet)

    Ashvaghosha was a philosopher and poet who is considered India’s greatest poet before Kalidasa (5th century) and the father of Sanskrit drama; he popularized the style of Sanskrit poetry known as kavya. Ashvaghosha was born a Brahman. Legend obscures the man, but it is known that he was an

  • Ashvaka (historical state, India)

    India: Location: …Vindhyas, on the Godavari River, Ashvaka continued to thrive.

  • Ashvalayana (Vedic teacher)

    Ashvalayana was the author of the Ashvalayana-shrauta-sutra, a Vedic manual of sacrificial ceremonies composed for the use of the class of priests called hotar, or hotri, whose main function was to invoke the gods. Belonging to the “forest tradition” of hermits and wandering holy men yet still a

  • Ashvalayana-shrauta-sutra (work by Ashvalayana)

    Ashvalayana: …was the author of the Ashvalayana-shrauta-sutra, a Vedic manual of sacrificial ceremonies composed for the use of the class of priests called hotar, or hotri, whose main function was to invoke the gods. Belonging to the “forest tradition” of hermits and wandering holy men yet still a member of the…

  • ashvamedha (Hinduism)

    ashvamedha, grandest of the Vedic religious rites of ancient India, performed by a king to celebrate his paramountcy. The ceremony is described in detail in various Vedic writings, particularly the Shatapatha Brahmana. An especially fine stallion was selected and was allowed to roam freely for a

  • Ashvin (Hindu deities)

    Hinduism: Theology: …perpetually beneficent gods are the Ashvins (horsemen), helpers and healers who often visit the needy. Almost otiose is the personified heaven, Dyaus, who most often appears as the sky or as day. As a person, he is coupled with Earth (as Dyava-Prithivi) as a father; Earth by herself is more…

  • ashwagandha (plant)

    Withania somnifera, evergreen shrub in the nightshade family (Solanaceae), native to India, North Africa, and the Middle East, that is used in traditional systems of medicine, particularly Ayurvedic medicine in India, where it is known as ashwagandha. A Sanskrit term, ashwagandha translates to

  • ashwamedha (Hinduism)

    ashvamedha, grandest of the Vedic religious rites of ancient India, performed by a king to celebrate his paramountcy. The ceremony is described in detail in various Vedic writings, particularly the Shatapatha Brahmana. An especially fine stallion was selected and was allowed to roam freely for a

  • Ashwander v. Tennessee Valley Authority (law case)

    Tennessee Valley Authority: …Court in the case of Ashwander v. Tennessee Valley Authority (1936) and in later decisions.

  • Ashwell, Lena (British actress)

    Lena Ashwell was a British actress and theatrical manager well known for her work in organizing entertainment for the troops at the front during World War I. In 1917, she was awarded the Order of the British Empire. Reared and educated in Canada, Ashwell studied music at Lausanne, Switz., and at

  • Ashwin (Indian cricketer)

    Ravichandran Ashwin is an Indian cricketer who is considered one of the best all-rounders to play for the country. A right-arm off-spin bowler and right-handed batter, he has taken more than 750 international wickets and scored six Test centuries. Ashwin rose to prominence in performances for his

  • Ashwin, Ravichandran (Indian cricketer)

    Ravichandran Ashwin is an Indian cricketer who is considered one of the best all-rounders to play for the country. A right-arm off-spin bowler and right-handed batter, he has taken more than 750 international wickets and scored six Test centuries. Ashwin rose to prominence in performances for his

  • ashy chinchilla rat (rodent)

    chinchilla rat: The ashy chinchilla rat (A. cinerea) lives only in the Altiplano, between 3,700 and 5,000 metres, from southeastern Peru to northern Chile and Argentina. A. vaccarum is known from rocky cliff faces at 1,880 metres above sea level in west-central Argentina.

  • Ashʿarī, Abū al-Ḥasan al- (Muslim theologian)

    Abū al-Ḥasan al-Ashʿarī was a Muslim Arab theologian noted for having integrated the rationalist methodology of the speculative theologians into the framework of orthodox Islām. In his Maqālāt al-Islāmīyīn (“Theological Opinions of the Muslims”), compiled during his early period, al-Ashʿari brought

  • Ashʿarīyah (Islam)

    Ashʿariyyah, in Islam, school of theology supporting the use of reason and speculative theology (kalām) to defend the faith. Followers of the school, which was founded by Abū al-Ḥasan al-Ashʿarī in the 10th century, attempted to demonstrate the existence and nature of God (Allāh) through rational

  • Ashʿariyyah (Islam)

    Ashʿariyyah, in Islam, school of theology supporting the use of reason and speculative theology (kalām) to defend the faith. Followers of the school, which was founded by Abū al-Ḥasan al-Ashʿarī in the 10th century, attempted to demonstrate the existence and nature of God (Allāh) through rational

  • Asi (people)

    history of Central Asia: Early eastern peoples: …Yuezhi confederacy, known as the Asi (Asiani), moved as far west as the Caucasus region, the remainder occupied the region between the Syr Darya and the Amu Darya before overrunning Bactria between 141 and 128 bce. After penetrating Sīstān and the Kābul River valley, they crossed the Indus and established…

  • Así en la paz como en la guerra (work by Cabrera Infante)

    Guillermo Cabrera Infante: …collection of short stories was Así en la paz como en la guerra (1960; “In Peace as in War”). But he acquired international renown with Tres tristes tigres (1964; Three Trapped Tigers), winner of the Bibliotheca Breve Prize given by the Spanish publisher Seix Barral. In the manner of James…

  • ʿĀṣī, Nahr al- (river, Asia)

    Orontes River, river in southwestern Asia, draining a large part of the northern Levant into the Mediterranean Sea. From its source in Al-Biqāʿ (Bekaa) Valley of central Lebanon, the river flows northward between the parallel ranges of the Lebanon and Anti-Lebanon mountains into Syria, where it has

  • Asia (continent)

    Asia, the world’s largest and most diverse continent. It occupies the eastern four-fifths of the giant Eurasian landmass. Asia is more a geographic term than a homogeneous continent, and the use of the term to describe such a vast area always carries the potential of obscuring the enormous

  • Asia (ancient Roman province)

    Asia, ancient Roman province, the first and westernmost Roman province in Asia Minor, stretching at its greatest extent from the Aegean coast in the west to a point beyond Philomelium (now Akşehır, Turkey) in the east and from the Sea of Marmara in the north to the strait between Rhodes and the

  • Asia Cup (cricket) (cricket tournament)

    Asia Cup (cricket), biennial international cricket tournament in which national teams from Asia compete for a continental championship. The first edition was played in 1984 following the inception of the Asian Cricket Conference, the precursor to the Asian Cricket Council (ACC), in 1983. Since 2016

  • Asia Minor (historical region, Asia)

    Anatolia, the peninsula of land that today constitutes the Asian portion of Turkey. Because of its location at the point where the continents of Asia and Europe meet, Anatolia was, from the beginnings of civilization, a crossroads for numerous peoples migrating or conquering from either continent.

  • Asia Minor Agreement (1916)

    Sykes-Picot Agreement, (May 1916), secret convention made during World War I between Great Britain and France, with the assent of imperial Russia, for the dismemberment of the Ottoman Empire. The agreement led to the division of Turkish-held Syria, Iraq, Lebanon, and Palestine into various French-

  • Asia Minor, religions of

    Anatolian religion, beliefs and practices of the ancient peoples and civilizations of Turkey and Armenia, including the Hittites, Hattians, Luwians, Hurrians, Assyrian colonists, Urartians, and Phrygians. For historical background, see Anatolia. Until comparatively recent times, the pre-Christian

  • Asia no junshin (recording by Puffy AmiYumi)

    Puffy AmiYumi: …released their first single, “Asia no junshin” (“True Asia”), which was a huge hit throughout Asia. The single was soon followed by their debut album, AmiYumi.

  • Asia polyglotta nebst Sprachatlas (work by Klaproth)

    Julius Heinrich Klaproth: …and explorer whose major work, Asia polyglotta nebst Sprachatlas (1823; “Asia Polyglotta with Language Atlas”), is one of the important early surveys of Oriental languages, notably the Caucasian languages, and is the only source of information on several extinct Caucasian languages.

  • Asia Society Museum (museum, New York City, New York, United States)

    Asia Society Museum, American museum in New York, N.Y., established in 1978 with a gift from the philanthropist John D. Rockefeller III, founder of the Asia Society (1956). The museum displays fine art and artifacts of Asian origin in order to forward the organization’s larger mission of furthering

  • Asia-Pacific (maritime region, Indian and Pacific oceans)

    Indo-Pacific, maritime region spanning the Indian and Pacific oceans that has become a significant focal point of geopolitical strategy and tension throughout the 21st century. The term has been widely adopted in policy discourse by the United States and its allies, including Australia, Japan,

  • Asia-Pacific Broadcasting Union (international association)

    broadcasting: International organizations: The Asia-Pacific Broadcasting Union, which was formally established in 1964 as a union of national broadcasting organizations in Asia and the Pacific, includes Japan, Australia, New Zealand, and the Philippines, as well as Iran, Turkey, Egypt, and most of the noncommunist countries of Asia; its headquarters…

  • Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (international organization)

    Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC), organization that seeks to promote free trade and economic cooperation throughout the Asia-Pacific region. Established in 1989 in response to the growing interdependence of Asia-Pacific economies and the advent of regional economic blocs (such as the

  • Āsīāb (archaeological site, Iran)

    ancient Iran: The Neolithic Period (New Stone Age): …such western Iranian sites as Āsīāb, Gūrān, Ganj Dareh (Ganj Darreh), and Ali Kosh. Similar developments in the Zagros Mountains, on the Iraqi side of the modern border, are also traceable at sites such as Karīm Shahīr and Zawi Chemi–Shanidar. This phase of early experimentation with sedentary life and domestication…

  • Asian American (people)

    alcohol consumption: United States: …Hispanics and 65 percent of Asians and Pacific Islanders abstained from alcohol consumption. As compared with urban populations, people in rural areas—who generally had fewer years of education, lower incomes, attended religious services more frequently, and belonged in larger proportions to fundamentalist Protestant denominations—also contained larger proportions of abstainers. In…

  • Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month (United States observance)

    Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month, monthlong commemoration of the history and achievements of Asian Americans, Native Hawaiians, and Pacific Islanders. Asian American and Pacific Islander (AAPI) Heritage Month (also sometimes called Asian American and Native Hawaiian/Pacific