• Jiří z Poděbrad (king of Bohemia)

    George was the king of Bohemia from 1458. As head of the conservative Utraquist faction of Hussite Protestants, he established himself as a power when Bohemia was still under Habsburg rule, and he was thereafter unanimously elected king by the estates. A nationalist and Hussite king of a prosperous

  • Jirjā (Egypt)

    Jirjā, town, Sawhāj muḥāfaẓah (governorate), Upper Egypt. It is situated on the west bank of the Nile River, which encroached considerably on the town in the 18th and 19th centuries. In pharaonic times it was probably the town of This (Tny), ancestral home of the 1st dynasty (c. 2925–c. 2775 bce),

  • Jirobei (Japanese artist)

    Suzuki Harunobu was a Japanese artist of the Ukiyo-e movement (paintings and wood-block prints of the “floating world”), who established the art of nishiki-e, or polychrome prints. He created a fashion for pictures of lyrical scenes with figures of exquisite grace. It is believed that Harunobu

  • Jishi Mountains (mountains, China)

    Min Mountains: …far west are called the Amne Machin (Jishi Mountains), and those in the north are called the Xiqing Mountains. The central section of the range lying west of the Min River, which has an axis running from north to south, is known as the Qionglai Mountains. The easternmost section, which…

  • Jishū (Buddhist sect)

    Buddhism: Pure Land: …his school was called the Ji (“Times”) school, or Jishū.

  • JIT (business)

    just-in-time manufacturing (JIT), Production-control system, developed by Toyota Motor Corp. and imported to the West, that has revolutionized manufacturing methods in some industries. By relying on daily deliveries of most supplies, it eliminates waste due to overproduction and lowers warehousing

  • Jitney (play by Wilson)

    John Legend: …2017 Legend coproduced August Wilson’s Jitney on Broadway, and he received a Tony Award when the drama was named best play revival. The following year Legend played the title role in a well-received live telecast of the 1970 rock opera Jesus Christ Superstar. As a coproducer, he garnered a Creative…

  • jitō (Japanese history)

    jitō, in feudal Japan, land steward appointed by the central military government, or shogunate, whose duties involved levying taxes and maintaining peace within the manor. First appointed at the beginning of the 12th century, the jitō enforced the edicts of the shogunate and ensured that taxes were

  • jitterbug (dance)

    jitterbug, exuberant ballroom dance popular in the 1930s and ’40s, originating in the United States and spread internationally by U.S. armed forces during World War II. Its original freewheeling acrobatic swings and lifts were modified for more conservative ballroom versions. Couples did most

  • Jitterbug Perfume (novel by Robbins)

    Tom Robbins: …Still Life with Woodpecker (1980); Jitterbug Perfume (1984), which centers on a medieval king who lives for 1,000 years before becoming a janitor in Albert Einstein’s laboratory; Skinny Legs and All (1990), a fantastical novel that follows five inanimate objects on a journey to Jerusalem while exploring the Arab-Israeli conflict

  • Jiu Defile (pass, Romania)

    Surduc Pass, pass, southwestern Romania. The Jiu River flows through the pass between the Vâlcan (west) and the Parâng (east) mountains, in the Transylvanian Alps (Southern Carpathians). The pass connects the Petroşani Depression (upper Jiu Valley) with the Plain of Oltenia. A road and the

  • Jiu Pass (pass, Romania)

    Surduc Pass, pass, southwestern Romania. The Jiu River flows through the pass between the Vâlcan (west) and the Parâng (east) mountains, in the Transylvanian Alps (Southern Carpathians). The pass connects the Petroşani Depression (upper Jiu Valley) with the Plain of Oltenia. A road and the

  • Jiu River (river, Romania)

    Jiu River, river formed south of Petroșani, southwestern Romania, with the joining of two headstreams rising in the Vâlcan and Parâng mountains. It then flows south, cutting a wild, deep gorge, the Surduc Pass in the Transylvanian Alps (Southern Carpathians), before flowing onto the Danube Plain

  • Jiu Zhuji (Chinese monk)

    Ch’ang-ch’un was a Taoist monk and alchemist who journeyed from China across the heartland of Asia to visit Genghis Khan, the famed Mongol conqueror, at his encampment north of the Hindu Kush mountains. The narrative of Ch’ang-ch’un’s expedition, written by his disciple-companion Li Chih-chang,

  • Jiuguo (novel by Mo Yan)

    Mo Yan: …most satisfied with Jiuguo (1992; The Republic of Wine). The novel Fengru feitun (1995; Big Breasts and Wide Hips) caused some controversy, both for its sexual content and for its failure to depict class struggle according to the Chinese Communist Party line. Mo was forced by the PLA to write…

  • Jiuhua Mountains (mountain range, China)

    Huang Mountains: …in elevation, known as the Jiuhua Mountains, runs parallel to the main range to the north along the southern bank of the Yangtze River.

  • Jiujiang (China)

    Jiujiang, river port and city, northern Jiangxi sheng (province), southeastern China. It lies along the Yangtze River (Chang Jiang) to the west of its junction with Lake Poyang and the tributary system of the Gan River. Jiujiang is an important river port, although it does not have a good natural

  • Jiuling Mountains (mountains, China)

    Jiuling Mountains, range in northern Jiangxi province, China. The range runs southwest-northeast from east of Changsha in Hunan province to the valley of the Xiu River west of Lake Poyang, a distance of some 155 miles (250 km). It lies south of, and parallel to, the Mufu Mountains, from which it is

  • Jiuling Shan (mountains, China)

    Jiuling Mountains, range in northern Jiangxi province, China. The range runs southwest-northeast from east of Changsha in Hunan province to the valley of the Xiu River west of Lake Poyang, a distance of some 155 miles (250 km). It lies south of, and parallel to, the Mufu Mountains, from which it is

  • Jiulong (peninsula, Hong Kong, China)

    Kowloon Peninsula, part of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, southeastern China, that was returned to China with the handover of Hong Kong from the British in 1997. It constitutes the Chinese mainland portion of the Hong Kong region and is located north of Hong Kong Island and east of

  • Jiulong Jiang (river, China)

    Jiulong River, river in southeastern Fujian province, China. The river rises in the mountains northwest of Zhangzhou, draining a large interior basin above Zhangping. The Xinqiao River and the Yanshi River and their tributaries drain the northeast and the southwest of the basin, respectively. The

  • Jiulong River (river, China)

    Jiulong River, river in southeastern Fujian province, China. The river rises in the mountains northwest of Zhangzhou, draining a large interior basin above Zhangping. The Xinqiao River and the Yanshi River and their tributaries drain the northeast and the southwest of the basin, respectively. The

  • Jiulongshan Formation (rock deposit, China)

    Castorocauda: Castorocauda was found in the Jiulongshan Formation (which is also called the Haifanggou Formation) of China, which preserved a nearly complete skeleton and skull, along with carbonized impressions of the skin and hair. Like living mammals, it had integument with an undercoat and guard hairs. Although it was not directly…

  • Jiuquan (China)

    Jiuquan, city, western Gansu sheng (province), China. An important staging post on the ancient Silk Road to Central Asia, Jiuquan was founded in 111 bce as a military outpost. From 602 ce onward it was the seat of Suzhou prefecture, and under the Tang dynasty (618–907) it was given its present

  • Jiushi liuliu de ta (film by Hou Hsiao-hsien [1980])

    Hou Hsiao-hsien: …feature-length films in 1980 with Jiushi liuliu de ta (“Cute Girl”), a melodrama that bore little resemblance to the films he would make as his personal style developed. The segment Hou directed for the anthology film Er zi de da wan ou (1983; “The Sandwich Man”) displayed the first flowering…

  • jiuta (musical form)

    stringed instrument: Ensembles: In jiuta the koto plays the principal melody, and the other instruments simultaneously produce variants of it. A traditional Japanese saying picturesquely describes the music of this ensemble by likening the koto to the bone, the samisen (sangen) to the flesh, and the shakuhachi to the…

  • Jiuzhai River valley (valley, China)

    Sichuan: Cultural life: …Mount Emei area and the Jiuzhai River valley. Mount Emei, in the south-central Daxiang Mountains, is one of the four sacred mountains of Chinese Buddhism; it reaches an elevation of 10,167 feet (3,099 metres) at Wanfo Summit. The mountain and the Leshan Giant Buddha (carved into a hillside in the…

  • Jiuzhaigou valley (valley, China)

    Sichuan: Cultural life: …Mount Emei area and the Jiuzhai River valley. Mount Emei, in the south-central Daxiang Mountains, is one of the four sacred mountains of Chinese Buddhism; it reaches an elevation of 10,167 feet (3,099 metres) at Wanfo Summit. The mountain and the Leshan Giant Buddha (carved into a hillside in the…

  • Jiuzhang suan fa zuan lei (work by Yang Hui)

    Yang Hui: Yang’s Jiuzhang suan fa zuan lei (c. 1275; “Reclassification of the Mathematical Procedures in the Nine Chapters”)—a compilation and reclassification, with further explanations, of the problems from the Han dynasty classic and its commentaries, Jiuzhang suanshu (c. 100 bc–ad 50; Nine Chapters on the Mathematical Procedures)—contains…

  • Jiuzhang suanshu (Chinese mathematics)

    East Asian mathematics: The textual sources: …Chinese is Jiuzhang suanshu (The Nine Chapters on the Mathematical Art), which contains arithmetic, algebraic, and geometric algorithms, presented in relation to problems, some of which evoke the duties of the civil administration: surveying fields (areas), levying taxes according to various types of grains (ratios), determining wages for civil…

  • jiva (Indian philosophy and religion)

    jiva, in Indian philosophy and religion, and particularly in Jainism and Hinduism, a living sentient substance akin to an individual soul. In the Jain tradition, jivas are opposed to ajivas, or “nonliving substances.” Jivas are understood as being eternal and infinite in number and are not the same

  • jīva (Indian philosophy and religion)

    jiva, in Indian philosophy and religion, and particularly in Jainism and Hinduism, a living sentient substance akin to an individual soul. In the Jain tradition, jivas are opposed to ajivas, or “nonliving substances.” Jivas are understood as being eternal and infinite in number and are not the same

  • Jiva (Uzbekistan)

    Khiva, city, south-central Uzbekistan. It lies west of the Amu Darya (ancient Oxus River) on the Palvan Canal, and it is bounded on the south by the Karakum Desert and on the northeast by the Kyzylkum desert. A notorious slave market was centred there from the 17th to the 19th century. The city is

  • Jiva Gosvamin (Indian philosopher)

    Indian philosophy: Chaitanya: …particularly by Rupa Gosvamin and Jiva Gosvamin. Rupa is the author of two great works: Bhakti-rasamrita-sindhu (“The Ocean of the Nectar of the Essence of Bhakti”) and Ujjvalanilamani (“The Shining Blue Jewel”). Jiva’s main work is the great and voluminous Shatsamdarbha. These are the main sources of the philosophy of…

  • jivandan (Indian social movement)

    India: Economic planning and development: …to a cooperative system, and jivandan (“gift of life”), the giving of all one’s labor, the latter attracting volunteers as famous as the socialist J.P. (Jaya Prakash) Narayan, who was the inspiration for the foundation of the Janata (People’s) Party opposition coalition to the Congress Party in the mid-1970s. The…

  • Jívaro (people)

    Jívaro, South American Indian people living in the Montaña (the eastern slopes of the Andes), in Ecuador and Peru north of the Marañón River. They speak a language of the Jebero-Jivaroan group. No recent and accurate Jívaro census has been completed; population estimates ranged from 15,000 to

  • jive (dance step)

    jitterbug: …one in place), and the jive, in which dancers took a step to each side and then executed two “shuffles” (side step, almost close other foot, side step). Jitterbug music—also called jive, or jump—is in 44 time with syncopated rhythm.

  • Jiwaji University (university, Gwalior, India)

    Gwalior: The contemporary city: Gwalior is the seat of Jiwaji University (founded 1964) with several affiliated colleges in the city, including science, medical, and education schools. Nearby is the 16th-century tomb of the Indian singer Tansen. The city is still a music centre, with its own distinctive style and tradition.

  • Jiwāʾ, Al- (geographical region, Arabia)

    Arabia: The Rubʿ al-Khali: …oasis hamlets of Al-Jiwāʾ (Liwāʾ in the United Arab Emirates) lie among the dunes on the desert’s northeastern fringe. The largest dunes of the Rubʿ al-Khali are in the far east, where heights of more than 800 feet are reached and sand ridges extend for more than 30 miles,…

  • Jixi (China)

    Jixi, city in southeastern Heilongjiang sheng (province), China. Located on the upper Muleng River, a tributary of the Ussuri (Wusuli) River, it is in a mountainous area rich in timber and various minerals including coal, iron, graphite, fluorite, and limestone. Jixi is, however, predominantly a

  • Jiyangzi (China)

    Gyangzê, town, southern Tibet Autonomous Region, western China. It is situated on the Nianchu River some 53 miles (86 km) southeast of Xigazê and about halfway between Lhasa (capital of Tibet) and the town of Yadong (Xarsingma) on the frontiers with India and Bhutan. Gyangzê is an important route

  • Jiyū-Minshutō (political party, Japan)

    Liberal-Democratic Party of Japan (LDP), Japan’s largest political party, which has held power almost continuously since its formation in 1955. The party has generally worked closely with business interests and followed a pro-U.S. foreign policy. During nearly four decades of uninterrupted power

  • Jiyūtō (political party, Japan)

    Gotō Shōjirō: …political party, the Jiyūtō (Liberal Party), based on Rousseauist democratic doctrines. After the movement was discontinued briefly, Gotō reorganized it as a league calling for revision of Japan’s treaties with the West. Upon the promulgation of the constitution and co-optation of the party leaders, he joined the government in…

  • Jīzah, Ahrāmāt al- (pyramids, Egypt)

    Pyramids of Giza, three 4th-dynasty (c. 2575–c. 2465 bce) pyramids erected on a rocky plateau on the west bank of the Nile River near Al-Jīzah (Giza) in northern Egypt. In ancient times they were included among the Seven Wonders of the World. The ancient ruins of the Memphis area, including the

  • Jīzah, Al- (Egypt)

    Giza, city, capital of Al-Jīzah muḥāfaẓah (governorate) in Upper Egypt, located on the west bank of the Nile River just south-southwest of Cairo. It is a suburb of the national capital, with a distinctive character enriched by several archaeological and cultural sites. The district was settled in

  • Jīzah, Al- (governorate, Egypt)

    Al-Jīzah, muḥāfaẓah (governorate) of Upper Egypt, on the west bank of the Nile River, extending toward the southwest into the Western (Libyan) Desert as far as Al-Wādī Al-Jadīd governorate. It is bordered on the north by Al-Minūfiyyah governorate and on the south by Banī Suwayf and Al-Fayyūm

  • Jīzān (Saudi Arabia)

    Jīzān, town and port, southwestern Saudi Arabia, on the Red Sea opposite the Farasān Islands. Defined by the 1934 Treaty of Al-Ṭāʾif as belonging to Saudi Arabia, the town has been claimed by Yemen since the 1960s. Jīzān is the principal town of the Tihāmah coastal plain and the exporting and

  • Jizang (Buddhist monk)

    Chi-tsang was a Chinese Buddhist monk who systematized the teachings of the San-lun (“Three Treatises,” or Middle Doctrine) school of Māhāyana Buddhism in China and who is sometimes regarded as its founder. Chi-tsang was the son of a Parthian father and a Chinese mother, but his education and

  • Jízdní hlídka (work by Langer)

    František Langer: Of his later writing, only Jízdní hlídka (1935; “The Cavalry Watch”) compared with his earlier successes; it was based upon his experiences with the legion.

  • Jizera Mountains (mountains, Europe)

    Jizera Mountains, part of the Sudeten mountain ranges in northern Bohemia, Czech Republic, extending into Poland. It comprises a small group of peaks, though it has the highest point in the Czech Republic, at Jizera (3,681 feet [1,122 m]); Wysoka Kopa in Poland is slightly higher (3,698 feet [1,127

  • Jizera River (river, Czech Republic)

    Jizera River, tributary of the Elbe (Labe) River in northern Czech Republic. It rises at the southern base of Smrk Mountain on the Polish border, in the Giant (Krkonoše) Mountains, and flows generally south past Turnov and Mladá Boleslav. It reaches the Elbe northeast of Prague after a course of

  • Jizerské Hory (mountains, Europe)

    Jizera Mountains, part of the Sudeten mountain ranges in northern Bohemia, Czech Republic, extending into Poland. It comprises a small group of peaks, though it has the highest point in the Czech Republic, at Jizera (3,681 feet [1,122 m]); Wysoka Kopa in Poland is slightly higher (3,698 feet [1,127

  • Jizhi (Chinese archaeologist)

    Li Chi was an archaeologist chiefly responsible for establishing the historical authenticity of the semilegendary Shang dynasty of China. The exact dates of the Shang dynasty are uncertain; traditionally, they have been given as from c. 1766 to c. 1122 bce, but more recent archaeological evidence

  • Jizl-Ḥamḍ (river, Saudi Arabia)

    Arabian Desert: Physiography: …have intercepted them, including Wadi Jizl-Ḥamḍ in northern Hejaz and Wadi Ḥaḍramawt in the south.

  • Jizō (bodhisattva)

    Dizang, in Chinese Buddhism, bodhisattva (buddha-to-be) who is especially committed to delivering the dead from the torments of hell. His name is a translation of the Sanskrit Kshitigarbha (“Womb of the Earth”). Dizang seeks to deliver the souls of the dead from the punishments inflicted by the 10

  • jizya (Islamic tax)

    jizyah, historically, a tax (the term is often incorrectly translated as a “head tax” or “poll tax”) paid by non-Muslim populations to their Muslim rulers. The jizyah is described in the Qurʾān as a tax that is imposed on a certain erring faction from among the People of the Book (Ahl al-Kitāb;

  • jizyah (Islamic tax)

    jizyah, historically, a tax (the term is often incorrectly translated as a “head tax” or “poll tax”) paid by non-Muslim populations to their Muslim rulers. The jizyah is described in the Qurʾān as a tax that is imposed on a certain erring faction from among the People of the Book (Ahl al-Kitāb;

  • Jizzax (Uzbekistan)

    Jizzax, city, eastern Uzbekistan. The city is located in a small oasis irrigated by the Sanzar River, northeast of Samarkand. One of the most ancient settlements of Uzbekistan, it was situated on the trade routes to the Mediterranean near Tamerlane’s Gates, the only convenient passage through the

  • jj coupling (physics)

    spectroscopy: Total orbital angular momentum and total spin angular momentum: A coupling scheme known as jj coupling is sometimes applicable. In this scheme, each electron n is assigned an angular momentum j composed of its orbital angular momentum l and its spin s. The total angular momentum J is then the vector addition of j1 + j2 + j3 +…,…

  • JJK (Japanese manga series)

    Jujutsu Kaisen, Japanese manga series written and illustrated by pseudonymous creator Akutami Gege. Serialized in the manga magazine Weekly Shōnen Jump from 2018 to 2024, it follows high school student Itadori Yuji, who joins a secret society of sorcerers to combat supernatural curses after

  • Jk3 (antigen)

    Kidd blood group system: Jka, Jkb, and Jk3, all of which are encoded by a gene known as SLC14A1 (solute carrier family 14, member 1). The Jka antigen occurs in more than 90 percent of blacks, 75 percent of whites, and 70 percent of Asians. The Jkb antigen is found in about…

  • Jka (antigen)

    Kidd blood group system: …of three known antigens, designated Jka, Jkb, and Jk3, all of which are encoded by a gene known as SLC14A1 (solute carrier family 14, member 1). The Jka antigen occurs in more than 90 percent of blacks, 75 percent of whites, and 70 percent of Asians. The Jkb antigen is…

  • Jkb (antigen)

    Kidd blood group system: …three known antigens, designated Jka, Jkb, and Jk3, all of which are encoded by a gene known as SLC14A1 (solute carrier family 14, member 1). The Jka antigen occurs in more than 90 percent of blacks, 75 percent of whites, and 70 percent of Asians. The Jkb antigen is found…

  • JKNC (political party, India)

    Jammu and Kashmir National Conference (JKNC), regional political party in the union territory of Jammu and Kashmir, northwestern India. In October 1932 the All Jammu and Kashmir Muslim Conference, the precursor of the Jammu and Kashmir National Conference (JKNC), was founded at Srinagar by Sheikh

  • JLP (political party, Jamaica)

    Jamaica: Political process: …main political parties are the Jamaica Labour Party (JLP) and the People’s National Party (PNP), and between them they have dominated legislative elections since the country’s independence, to the virtual exclusion of any third party. The adversarial nature of Jamaican politics conceals broad agreement on constitutionalism, public education, and social…

  • JMM (political party, India)

    Jharkhand Mukti Morcha (JMM), regional political party of Jharkhand state, eastern India. It has had only a limited presence on the national political scene in New Delhi. The JMM was formed in 1973 as a movement to spearhead what would become a decades-long effort to establish a separate Jharkhand

  • JN-4 (airplane)

    Glenn Hammond Curtiss: The Curtiss JN-4 (“Jenny”) was the standard training and general-purpose aircraft in American military service during the years prior to the U.S. entry into World War I. The NC-4, a multiengine Curtiss flying boat, made the first flight across the Atlantic Ocean in 1919, opening the…

  • jñāna (Indian religion)

    jnana, in Hindu philosophy, a word with a range of meanings focusing on a cognitive event that proves not to be mistaken. In the religious realm it especially designates the sort of knowledge that is a total experience of its object, particularly the supreme being or reality. The cognitive

  • jnana (Indian religion)

    jnana, in Hindu philosophy, a word with a range of meanings focusing on a cognitive event that proves not to be mistaken. In the religious realm it especially designates the sort of knowledge that is a total experience of its object, particularly the supreme being or reality. The cognitive

  • jnana-marga (Hinduism)

    Hinduism: Dharma and the three paths: …ritual and social obligations; the jnana-marga (“path of knowledge”), the use of meditative concentration preceded by long and systematic ethical and contemplative training (Yoga) to gain a supraintellectual insight into one’s identity with brahman; and the bhakti-marga (“path of devotion”), love for a personal God. These ways are regarded as…

  • Jñāna-Mīmāmṣā (Hindu philosophy)

    Vedanta, one of the six systems (darshans) of Indian philosophy. The term Vedanta means in Sanskrit the “conclusion” (anta) of the Vedas, the earliest sacred literature of India. It applies to the Upanishads, which were elaborations of the Vedas, and to the school that arose out of the study

  • Jnanadeva (Indian poet)

    Jnanadeva was a mystical poet-saint of Maharashtra and composer of the Bhavarthadipika (popularly known as the Jnaneshvari), a translation and commentary in Marathi oral verse on the Bhagavadgita. Born into a family that had renounced society (sannyasi), Jnanadeva was considered an outcaste when

  • Jnaneshvara (Indian poet)

    Jnanadeva was a mystical poet-saint of Maharashtra and composer of the Bhavarthadipika (popularly known as the Jnaneshvari), a translation and commentary in Marathi oral verse on the Bhagavadgita. Born into a family that had renounced society (sannyasi), Jnanadeva was considered an outcaste when

  • Jnaneshvari (work by Jnanadeva)

    Indo-Aryan literature: Jnaneshvari, a Marathi verse commentary on the Bhagavadgita written by Jnaneshvara (Jnanadeva) in the late 13th century spread devotional movement through Maharashtra. As a result, it was reflected in the works of the poet-saints Namdev and Tukaram. In Rajasthan

  • Jnanpith Award (Indian literary award)

    Jnanpith Award, considered the highest literary award in India, given annually for the best creative literary output to writers in any of the 22 languages recognized by the Constitution of India and, from 2013, in the English language. The prize carries a cash award, a citation, and a bronze

  • Jñātṛka (people)

    India: Political systems: …those of the Koliyas, Moriyas, Jnatrikas, Shakyas, and Licchavis. The Jnatrikas and Shakyas are especially remembered as the tribes to which Mahavira (the founder of Jainism) and Gautama Buddha, respectively, belonged. The Licchavis eventually became extremely powerful.

  • JNP (political party, Japan)

    Hosokawa Morihiro: …of the reform political party Japan New Party (Nihon Shintō) and was the prime minister of Japan in 1993–94.

  • JNR (Japanese organization)

    Japan Railways Group, principal rail network of Japan, consisting of 12 corporations created by the privatization of the government-owned Japanese National Railways (JNR) in 1987. The first railroad in Japan, built by British engineers, opened in 1872, between Tokyo and Yokohama. After some initial

  • Jo Jo Dancer, Your Life Is Calling (film by Pryor [1986])

    Richard Pryor: …he starred in the autobiographical Jo Jo Dancer, Your Life Is Calling. His stand-up performances also were documented in comedy albums, for which he won five Grammy Awards. As a comedy writer, Pryor received an Emmy for the Lily Tomlin television special Lily (1973) and a Writers Guild Award as…

  • Jo Shui (river, China)

    Hei River, river rising in central Gansu province, China, and flowing into the western Alxa Plateau (Ala Shan Desert) in western Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region. The river is formed by a series of small glacier-fed rivers flowing north from the Nan and Qilian mountain ranges in Gansu, between

  • Jo’s Boys (novel by Alcott)

    Louisa May Alcott: …with Jo’s Boys (1871) and Jo’s Boys and How They Turned Out (1886). Little Women also inspired numerous movies, including the 1933 classic, starring Katharine Hepburn as Jo, and Greta Gerwig’s 2019 adaptation. Alcott also wrote other domestic narratives drawn from her early experiences: An Old-Fashioned Girl (1870);

  • Jo’s Boys and How They Turned Out (novel by Alcott)

    Louisa May Alcott: …with Jo’s Boys (1871) and Jo’s Boys and How They Turned Out (1886). Little Women also inspired numerous movies, including the 1933 classic, starring Katharine Hepburn as Jo, and Greta Gerwig’s 2019 adaptation. Alcott also wrote other domestic narratives drawn from her early experiences: An Old-Fashioned Girl (1870);

  • Jo, Sumi (South Korean opera singer)

    Sumi Jo is a South Korean soprano known for her light, expressive voice and her virtuosic performance of major coloratura roles of the operatic repertoire. Jo began studying music at an early age. She entered the music school of Seoul National University but left in her second year to attend the

  • Jo-block (engineering)

    Carl Edvard Johansson: Johansson’s blocks, known as “Jo-blocks,” were made of the highest quality steel and were fabricated to a precision that made them famous around the world. From 1925 to 1936 he worked in Dearborn, Mich., under exclusive contract to Henry Ford, who used his blocks and also sold them to…

  • Jo-erh-kai Chao-tse (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

  • jo-ha-kyū (music)

    Japanese music: Structural ideals: …the Japanese tripartite form is jo-ha-kyū—the introduction, the scatterings, and the rushing toward the end. A Western musician might wish to compare this with sonata form and its three parts (exposition, development, recapitulation). But the Western example relates to a complete event and involves the development of certain motives or…

  • Joab (biblical figure)

    Joab was a Jewish military commander under King David, who was his mother’s brother. He led the commando party that captured Jerusalem for David and as a reward was appointed commander in chief of the army. He played a leading part in many of David’s victories (e.g., against the Ammonites and the

  • Joachim Frederick (elector of Brandenburg)

    Joachim Frederick was the elector of Brandenburg (1598–1608), the eldest son of Elector John George. Joachim established the rule of primogeniture for the Hohenzollern electorate by a family agreement known as the Gera Bond (1598), which confirmed the practice begun by Albert III Achilles whereby

  • Joachim Friedrich (elector of Brandenburg)

    Joachim Frederick was the elector of Brandenburg (1598–1608), the eldest son of Elector John George. Joachim established the rule of primogeniture for the Hohenzollern electorate by a family agreement known as the Gera Bond (1598), which confirmed the practice begun by Albert III Achilles whereby

  • Joachim I Nestor (elector of Brandenburg)

    Joachim I Nestor was the elector of Brandenburg, an opponent of the Habsburg emperors, yet a devout Roman Catholic who prevented the spread of Protestantism in his lands during his lifetime. Joachim at first supported Francis I of France at the imperial election of 1519 and at one point even hoped

  • Joachim II Hektor (elector of Brandenburg)

    Joachim II Hektor was the elector of Brandenburg who, while supporting the Holy Roman emperor, tolerated the Reformation in his lands and resisted imperial efforts at re-Catholicization. The elder son of Joachim I, Joachim II was given the Old (Altmark) and Middle Marks of Brandenburg on his

  • Joachim Of Fiore (Italian theologian)

    Joachim Of Fiore was an Italian mystic, theologian, biblical commentator, philosopher of history, and founder of the monastic order of San Giovanni in Fiore. He developed a philosophy of history according to which history develops in three ages of increasing spirituality: the ages of the Father,

  • Joachim of Floris (Italian theologian)

    Joachim Of Fiore was an Italian mystic, theologian, biblical commentator, philosopher of history, and founder of the monastic order of San Giovanni in Fiore. He developed a philosophy of history according to which history develops in three ages of increasing spirituality: the ages of the Father,

  • Joachim, Al (American entertainer)

    Ritz Brothers: …the three were known as Al (Alfred; b. August 27, 1901, Newark, New Jersey, U.S.—d. December 22, 1965, New Orleans, Louisiana), Jimmy (b. October 23, 1904, Newark, New Jersey, U.S.—d. November 17, 1985, Los Angeles, California), and Harry (Herschel May; b. May 28, 1907, Newark, New Jersey, U.S.—d. March 29,…

  • Joachim, Alfred (American entertainer)

    Ritz Brothers: …the three were known as Al (Alfred; b. August 27, 1901, Newark, New Jersey, U.S.—d. December 22, 1965, New Orleans, Louisiana), Jimmy (b. October 23, 1904, Newark, New Jersey, U.S.—d. November 17, 1985, Los Angeles, California), and Harry (Herschel May; b. May 28, 1907, Newark, New Jersey, U.S.—d. March 29,…

  • Joachim, Harold Henry (British philosopher)

    truth: Coherence and pragmatist theories: Bradley and H.H. Joachim, who, like all idealists, rejected the existence of mind-independent facts against which the truth of beliefs could be determined (see also realism: realism and truth).

  • Joachim, Harry (American entertainer)

    Ritz Brothers: …1985, Los Angeles, California), and Harry (Herschel May; b. May 28, 1907, Newark, New Jersey, U.S.—d. March 29, 1986, San Diego, California).

  • Joachim, Herschel May (American entertainer)

    Ritz Brothers: …1985, Los Angeles, California), and Harry (Herschel May; b. May 28, 1907, Newark, New Jersey, U.S.—d. March 29, 1986, San Diego, California).

  • Joachim, Jimmy (American entertainer)

    Ritz Brothers: …22, 1965, New Orleans, Louisiana), Jimmy (b. October 23, 1904, Newark, New Jersey, U.S.—d. November 17, 1985, Los Angeles, California), and Harry (Herschel May; b. May 28, 1907, Newark, New Jersey, U.S.—d. March 29, 1986, San Diego, California).

  • Joachim, Joseph (Hungarian violinist)

    Joseph Joachim was a Hungarian violinist known for his masterful technique and his interpretations of works of Bach, Mozart, and Beethoven. Joachim first studied at Budapest, and at age seven he appeared with his teacher S. Serwaczyński. In 1844 he visited London, where he was sponsored by