• segregation (casting)

    metallurgy: Segregation: Different parts of a casting may have different compositions, stemming from the fact that the solid freezing out of a liquid has a different composition from the liquid with which it is in contact. (For example, when salt water is cooled until ice forms,…

  • segregation (sociology)

    segregation, separation of groups of people with differing characteristics, often taken to connote a condition of inequality. Racial segregation is one of many types of segregation, which can range from deliberate and systematic persecution through more subtle types of discrimination to

  • segregation, law of (genetics)

    heredity: Discovery and rediscovery of Mendel’s laws: …first law of Mendel, the law of segregation of unit genes. Equal numbers of gametes, ovules, or pollen grains are formed that contain the genes R and r. Now, if the gametes unite at random, then the F2 generation should contain about 14 white-flowered and 34 purple-flowered plants. The white-flowered

  • segregation, principle of (genetics)

    heredity: Discovery and rediscovery of Mendel’s laws: …first law of Mendel, the law of segregation of unit genes. Equal numbers of gametes, ovules, or pollen grains are formed that contain the genes R and r. Now, if the gametes unite at random, then the F2 generation should contain about 14 white-flowered and 34 purple-flowered plants. The white-flowered

  • segregation, racial

    racial segregation, the practice of restricting people to certain circumscribed areas of residence or to separate institutions (e.g., schools, churches) and facilities (parks, playgrounds, restaurants, restrooms) on the basis of race or alleged race. Racial segregation provides a means of

  • segregation, racial

    racial segregation, the practice of restricting people to certain circumscribed areas of residence or to separate institutions (e.g., schools, churches) and facilities (parks, playgrounds, restaurants, restrooms) on the basis of race or alleged race. Racial segregation provides a means of

  • segreto del bosco vecchio, Il (novel by Buzzati)

    Dino Buzzati: …“Barnabus of the Mountains”) and Il segreto del bosco vecchio (1935; “The Secret of the Ancient Wood”), introduced the Kafkaesque surrealism, symbolism, and absurdity that suffused all of his writing.

  • segreto di Luca, Il (work by Silone)

    Ignazio Silone: …Il segreto di Luca (1956; The Secret of Luca, 1958) show Silone’s continued concern with the needs of southern Italy and the complexities of social reform. In Uscita di sicurezza (1965; Emergency Exit, 1968), Silone describes his shifts from Socialism to Communism to Christianity. A play, L’avventura d’un povero cristiano…

  • segreto di Susanna, Il (opera by Wolf-Ferrari)

    Ermanno Wolf-Ferrari: …Il segreto di Susanna (1909; The Secret of Susanne), presented 18th-century styles orchestrated in the manner of the 20th century. Comic points in these operas are delicately underlined. In Sly (1927; based on the opening scenes of The Taming of the Shrew) and in his only tragic opera, I gioielli…

  • Segu (novel by Condé)

    Maryse Condé: …the best-selling novel Ségou (1984; Segu) and its sequel, Ségou II (1985; The Children of Segu). Set in historical Segou (now part of Mali), the books examine the violent impact of the slave trade, Islam, Christianity, and white colonization on a royal family during the period from 1797 to 1860.…

  • seguidilla (folk dance and verse form)

    seguidilla, Spanish folk dance with many regional variants; also, a verse form widely used in Spanish folk song. The dance is a courtship dance of proud demeanour, with small springing steps, light foot stamps, and varied ground patterns. The song consists of coplas—improvised verses of love or

  • seguidilla sevillana (dance)

    seguidilla: …is the seguidillas sevillanas, or sevillanas. Most typically the dance is preceded by an instrumental introduction and a sung section. In the sevillanas, and in some other seguidillas, the dancers stop suddenly (bien parado) at the end of each copla, resuming dancing only after an instrumental interlude. The steps of…

  • Séguier, Pierre (chancellor of France)

    Pierre Séguier was the chancellor of France under kings Louis XIII and Louis XIV, in the critical period during which monarchical power was consolidated. Séguier was born into a family that had held many legal posts, and he followed the same career. In 1612 he purchased the office of counselor in

  • Seguin (Texas, United States)

    Juan Seguín: The city of Seguín, located just outside of San Antonio, is named in his honour.

  • Séguin, Camille (French engineer)

    Marc Séguin, the Elder: With his brother Camille he studied the principles of the suspension bridge, at that time built with chain cables. Over the Rhône River at Tournon in 1824 the two brothers erected a bridge suspended from cables made of parallel wire strands, the first of a succession of such…

  • Séguin, Edouard (American psychiatrist)

    Edouard Séguin was a French-born American psychiatrist who pioneered modern educational methods for teaching the severely intellectually disabled. Born into a family of prominent physicians in Burgundy, Séguin was educated at the Collège d’Auxerre and at the Lycée St. Louis in Paris before studying

  • Seguín, Juan (Tejano revolutionary and politician)

    Juan Seguín was a Tejano (Texan of Hispanic descent) revolutionary and politician who helped establish the independence of Texas. After Mexico won independence from Spain in 1821, Stephen Austin—a friend of Seguín’s father—received Mexican approval to found settlements of English-speaking people in

  • Seguín, Juan Nepomuceno (Tejano revolutionary and politician)

    Juan Seguín was a Tejano (Texan of Hispanic descent) revolutionary and politician who helped establish the independence of Texas. After Mexico won independence from Spain in 1821, Stephen Austin—a friend of Seguín’s father—received Mexican approval to found settlements of English-speaking people in

  • Séguin, Marc, Aîné (French engineer)

    Marc Séguin, the Elder was a French engineer and inventor of the wire-cable suspension bridge and the tubular steam-engine boiler. A nephew of Joseph Montgolfier, the pioneer balloonist, Séguin developed an early interest in machinery, pursuing his studies informally but so successfully that by

  • Séguin, Marc, The Elder (French engineer)

    Marc Séguin, the Elder was a French engineer and inventor of the wire-cable suspension bridge and the tubular steam-engine boiler. A nephew of Joseph Montgolfier, the pioneer balloonist, Séguin developed an early interest in machinery, pursuing his studies informally but so successfully that by

  • Segundo tomo del ingenioso hidalgo Don Quijote de la Mancha (work by Fernández de Avellaneda)

    Alonso Fernández de Avellaneda: …the otherwise unknown author of Segundo tomo del ingenioso hidalgo Don Quijote de la Mancha (1614; “Second Book of the Ingenious Knight Don Quixote of La Mancha”), a fraudulent sequel to the first volume of Miguel de Cervantes’ Don Quixote (1605). In the 59th chapter of the second volume of…

  • Seguntang Hill (hill, Indonesia)

    Indonesia: The Malay kingdom of Srivijaya-Palembang: Shards found on nearby Seguntang Hill (Bukit Seguntang), on the other hand, span all these centuries. A piece of Romano-Indian rouletted ware, attributable to the early centuries ce, has been discovered in Palembang near the river; the same ware has been found in Java near Jakarta. Moreover, the sheer…

  • Ségur, Mme de (French author)

    children’s literature: History: To it, Mme de Ségur, in her enormously popular novels, added sentimentality, class snobbery, but also some liveliness and occasional fidelity to child nature. Her “Sophie” series (1850s and 60s), frowned on by modern critics, is still loved by obstinate little French girls. Sans Famille (1878), by…

  • Segura River (river, Spain)

    Segura River, river in southeastern Spain. It rises in the Segura Mountains in Jaén province and flows east through the driest region of the Iberian Peninsula to enter the Mediterranean Sea south of Alicante, a course of 202 miles (325 km). Much water is drawn off the Segura and its major

  • Segway HT (vehicle)

    Dean Kamen: …American inventor who created the Segway Human Transporter (Segway HT; later called the Segway Personal Transporter [Segway PT]), a motorized device that allowed passengers to travel at up to 20 km (12.5 miles) per hour.

  • Segway Human Transporter (vehicle)

    Dean Kamen: …American inventor who created the Segway Human Transporter (Segway HT; later called the Segway Personal Transporter [Segway PT]), a motorized device that allowed passengers to travel at up to 20 km (12.5 miles) per hour.

  • Segway Personal Transporter (vehicle)

    Dean Kamen: …American inventor who created the Segway Human Transporter (Segway HT; later called the Segway Personal Transporter [Segway PT]), a motorized device that allowed passengers to travel at up to 20 km (12.5 miles) per hour.

  • Segway PT (vehicle)

    Dean Kamen: …American inventor who created the Segway Human Transporter (Segway HT; later called the Segway Personal Transporter [Segway PT]), a motorized device that allowed passengers to travel at up to 20 km (12.5 miles) per hour.

  • Seherin von Prevorst. Eröffnungen über das innere Leben der Menschen und über das Hereinragen einer Geisterwelt in die unsere, Die (work by Kerner)

    Justinus Andreas Christian Kerner: …Geisterwelt in die unsere (1829; The Seer of Prevorst. Disclosures About the Inner Life of Men and the Projection of a Spiritworld into Ours).

  • Sehested, Hannibal (Danish statesman)

    Hannibal Sehested was a statesman who achieved partial autonomy for Norway under Denmark and who laid the basis for the modernization of Denmark’s administrative system. After foreign travels in 1629–32, Sehested was attached to the court of King Christian IV of Denmark and Norway. He was given

  • Sehgal, Tino (British-born artist)

    Tino Sehgal is a British-born artist who created installations that were known as “constructed situations.” Sehgal was raised in France and Germany. He studied political economy in Berlin and pursued dance at the Folkwang University of the Arts in Essen, Germany. He joined French experimental dance

  • Sehi (Chinese Buddhist monk)

    Faxian was a Buddhist monk whose pilgrimage to India in 402 initiated Sino-Indian relations and whose writings give important information about early Buddhism. After his return to China he translated into Chinese the many Sanskrit Buddhist texts he had brought back. Sehi, who later adopted the

  • Sehima (plant genus)

    savanna: Flora: …grass cover consisting mainly of Sehima and Dichanthium, the latter also referred to as bluestem.

  • Sehna knot (carpet-making)

    rug and carpet: Materials and technique: The Persian, or asymmetrical, knot is used principally in Iran, India, China, and Egypt. This knot was formerly known as the Senneh (Sehna) knot. The Spanish knot, used mainly in Spain, differs from the other two types in looping around only one warp yarn. After the…

  • Sehna rug

    Senneh rug, handwoven floor covering made by Kurds who live in or around the town of Senneh (now more properly Sanandaj) in western Iran. The pile rugs and kilims of Senneh are prized for their delicate pattern and colouring and for their fine weave. They are by far the most sophisticated of the

  • Sehnsucht der Veronika Voss, Der (film by Fassbinder [1982])

    Rainer Werner Fassbinder: …Sehnsucht der Veronika Voss (1982; Veronika Voss), based on the life of the German actress Sybille Schmitz—was well received. He also adapted Alfred Döblin’s novel Berlin Alexanderplatz for a 14-part television series in 1980 and later released all of the episodes as a feature film that ran nearly 16 hours.

  • Sehore (India)

    Sehore, city, western Madhya Pradesh state, central India. It is located on the northern edge of the Vindhya Range near the confluence of the Siwan and Latia rivers, about 20 miles (32 km) west of Bhopal. Sehore was a former British cantonment, and it served as the headquarters of the British

  • Sehorn, Marshall (American record producer)

    Allen Toussaint: When Toussaint and promotion man Marshall Sehorn set up Sea-Saint Studios in the mid-1960s, a new group of session musicians emerged, including Art Neville on organ, Leo Nocentelli on guitar, George Porter on bass, and Joseph Modeliste on drums. These musicians evolved a new variation of New Orleans’s famous “second…

  • Sehul, Mikael (regent of Ethiopia)

    Mikael Sehul was a nobleman who ruled Ethiopia for a period of 25 years as regent of a series of weak emperors. He brought to an end the ancient Solomonid dynasty of Ethiopia, which had ruled for 27 centuries, and began a long period of political unrest. In the reign of Iyoas (1755–69), son of the

  • Şehzade Mosque (mosque, Istanbul, Turkey)

    Islamic arts: Architecture: …the Selim Mosque (1522), the Şehzade külliye (1548), and the Süleyman külliye (after 1550). The Şehzade and Süleyman külliyes were built by Sinan, the greatest Ottoman architect, whose masterpiece is the Selim Mosque at Edirne, Turkey (1569–75). All those buildings exhibit total clarity and logic in

  • Sei Fuji v. State of California (law case)

    international law: International law and municipal law: In Sei Fujii v. State of California (1952), for example, the California Supreme Court held that the UN Charter was not self-executing because its relevant principles concerning human rights lacked the mandatory quality and certainty required to create justiciable rights for private persons upon its ratification;…

  • Sei personaggi in cerca d’autore (play by Pirandello)

    Six Characters in Search of an Author, play in three acts by Luigi Pirandello, produced and published in Italian in 1921 as Sei personaggi in cerca d’autore. Introducing Pirandello’s device of the “theatre within the theatre,” the play explores various levels of illusion and reality. It had a great

  • Sei Shōnagon (Japanese writer)

    Sei Shōnagon was a diarist, poet, and courtier whose witty, learned Pillow Book (Makura no sōshi) exhibits a brilliant and original Japanese prose style and is a masterpiece of classical Japanese literature. It is also the best source of information on Japanese court life in the Heian period

  • sei whale (mammal)

    sei whale, (Balaenoptera borealis), species of baleen whale capable of short bursts of speed that make it the swiftest of the rorquals. Usually attaining a length of about 13–15 metres (43–49 feet), this cetacean is bluish gray or blackish above with paler underparts and a relatively large

  • Sei-in (Japanese government)

    Dajōkan: …the various ministries; and a Central Chamber (Sei-in), which subsumed the powers of the other two chambers.

  • Seibert, Florence (American scientist)

    Florence Seibert was an American scientist, best known for her contributions to the tuberculin test and to safety measures for intravenous drug therapy. Seibert contracted polio at age three, but became an outstanding student, graduating at the top of her high-school class and winning a scholarship

  • Seibert, Florence Barbara (American scientist)

    Florence Seibert was an American scientist, best known for her contributions to the tuberculin test and to safety measures for intravenous drug therapy. Seibert contracted polio at age three, but became an outstanding student, graduating at the top of her high-school class and winning a scholarship

  • Seibou, Ali (military dictator of Niger)

    Niger: Independence and conflict: …in 1987) and then by Ali Seibou. Mahamane Ousmane of the Social Democratic Convention became president in the country’s first multiparty presidential elections in 1993. Meanwhile, a Tuareg rebellion that had begun in the northern part of the country in the early 1990s gained momentum until a cease-fire agreement in…

  • Seibu Lions (Japanese baseball team)

    Daisuke Matsuzaka: …who agreed to pay the Seibu Lions more than $51 million for the negotiating rights to Matsuzaka and then signed the pitcher to a six-year contract worth another $52 million.

  • seiche (water and meteorology)

    seiche, rhythmic oscillation of water in a lake or a partially enclosed coastal inlet, such as a bay, gulf, or harbour. A seiche may last from a few minutes to several hours or for as long as two days. The phenomenon was first observed and studied in Lake Geneva (Lac Léman), Switzerland, in the

  • Seichōno-ie (religion)

    Ōmoto: These include Seichōno-ie (Household of Growth) and Sekai Kyūsei-kyō (Religion of World Salvation), both founded by former disciples of Onisaburō. Ōmoto emphasizes the universal character of religion. It promotes the use of the international language Esperanto and sponsors an organization called ULBA (Universal Love and Brotherhood Association).

  • Seidan (work by Ogyū Sorai)

    Japan: Heterodox Confucian schools: In his work Seidan, for example, Sorai insisted that the main reason for the financial distress of the warrior class in both the bakufu and the domains was that warriors had moved to the cities, where they were at the mercy of a monetary economy. If they would…

  • seide (Sami religion)

    seide, in Sami religion, idols of wood or stone, either natural or slightly shaped by human hands, worshipped as possessing impersonal supernatural power or as actually being inhabited by a spirit with whom one could communicate. Seides were most commonly located in places where some feature of the

  • Seidel sum (optics)

    optics: Seidel sums: If a lens were perfect and the object were a single point of monochromatic light, then, as noted above, the light wave emerging from the lens would be a portion of a sphere centred about the ideal image point, lying in the paraxial…

  • Seider, Christopher (American patriot)

    Boston Massacre: The killing of Christopher Seider and the end of the rope: Early in 1770, with the effectiveness of the boycott uneven, colonial radicals, many of them members of the Sons of Liberty, began directing their ire against those businesses that had ignored the boycott. The radicals posted signs…

  • Seiemon (Japanese potter)

    Ninsei was a Japanese potter active in Kyōto during the Edo period between the Meireki (1655–57) and the Genroku (1688–1703) eras. He learned the art of ceramics by working at the Awata-guchi kiln in Kyōto and the Seto kiln in Mino. His patron, the prince of the Ninna Temple at Omuro Katamachi,

  • seif (sand dune)

    seif, a long, narrow sand dune or chain of dunes, generally oriented in a direction parallel to the prevailing wind or in a direction resulting from two or more winds blowing at acute angles to each other. The dune crest consists of a series of peaks and gaps, and the steep, or slip, face may

  • Seifert, Jaroslav (Czech author)

    Jaroslav Seifert was a poet and journalist who in 1984 became the first Czech to win the Nobel Prize for Literature. Seifert made a living as a journalist until 1950, but his first book of poetry, Město v slzách (“Town in Tears”), was published in 1920. His early proletarian poetry reflects his

  • Seiffert, Ernst (Austrian-British opera singer)

    Richard Tauber was an Austrian-born British tenor celebrated for his work in opera and, especially, operetta. Tauber was studying voice at Freiberg, Ger., at the time of his highly successful operatic debut, as Tamino in Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart’s The Magic Flute (Die Zauberflöte) at the Chemnitz

  • Seigenthaler, John, Sr. (American journalist)

    Wikipedia: Issues and controversies: In 2005 the American journalist John L. Seigenthaler, Jr., discovered that his Wikipedia biography falsely identified him as a potential conspirator in the assassinations of both John F. Kennedy and Robert F. Kennedy and that these malicious claims had survived Wikipedia’s community policing for 132 days. The author of this…

  • Seignelay, Jean-Baptiste Colbert, marquis de (French diplomat)

    Jean-Baptiste Colbert, marquis de Seignelay was the French secretary of state under Louis XIV. As the eldest son of the famous secretary of state of that name, Colbert was given the best possible tutors, who found him bright but lazy. In 1683 Colbert became head of the navy and performed

  • Seigner, Emmanuelle (French actress)

    Roman Polanski: …Polanski married the French actress Emmanuelle Seigner, who starred in his films Frantic (1988), Bitter Moon (1992), The Ninth Gate (1999), La Vénus à la fourrure (2013; Venus in Fur), and D’après une histoire vraie (2017; Based on a True Story).

  • seigneur (feudal lord)

    benefice: …Frankish sovereign or lord, the seigneur, leased an estate to a freeman on easy terms in beneficium (Latin: “for the benefit [of the tenant]”), and this came to be called a beneficium, a benefice. The lease normally came to an end on the death of the seigneur or of the…

  • seigneur, droit du (feudal law)

    droit du seigneur, (French: “right of the lord”), a feudal right said to have existed in medieval Europe giving the lord to whom it belonged the right to sleep the first night with the bride of any one of his vassals. The custom is paralleled in various primitive societies, but the evidence of its

  • seigneurie (European history)

    manorialism, political, economic, and social system by which the peasants of medieval Europe were rendered dependent on their land and on their lord. Its basic unit was the manor, a self-sufficient landed estate, or fief that was under the control of a lord who enjoyed a variety of rights over it

  • seigniorage (coinage)

    seigniorage, the charge over and above the expenses of coinage (making into coins) that is deducted from the bullion brought to a mint to be coined. From early times, coinage was the prerogative of kings, who prescribed the total charge and the part they were to receive as seigniorage. The

  • seignorial system (European history)

    manorialism, political, economic, and social system by which the peasants of medieval Europe were rendered dependent on their land and on their lord. Its basic unit was the manor, a self-sufficient landed estate, or fief that was under the control of a lord who enjoyed a variety of rights over it

  • seignorialism (European history)

    manorialism, political, economic, and social system by which the peasants of medieval Europe were rendered dependent on their land and on their lord. Its basic unit was the manor, a self-sufficient landed estate, or fief that was under the control of a lord who enjoyed a variety of rights over it

  • seika (Japanese floral art)

    Ko: Calling the arrangements seika rather than shōka, the Ko school retained the tall, narrow-mouthed type of vase used in the shōka arrangements of the Ikenobō school. The mood of the arrangements was known as nageire, a fresh and spontaneous style that adheres only loosely to the classical rules…

  • Seika ron (work by Ishida Baigan)

    Ishida Baigan: Ishida’s works include Seika ron (1774), an essay on family government espousing the Confucian view that a man who cannot govern his family cannot govern a nation. His disciples published Ishida sensei goroku (“The Sayings of Professor Ishida”) in 1806.

  • Seikan Tonneru (tunnel, Japan)

    Seikan Tunnel, undersea tunnel linking Japan’s main island of Honshu with the northern neighbouring island of Hokkaido. The Seikan Tunnel is the second longest tunnel in the world, after the Gotthard Base Tunnel in Switzerland. It is 53.8 km (33.4 miles) long, 23.3 km (14.3 miles) of which lie

  • Seikan Tunnel (tunnel, Japan)

    Seikan Tunnel, undersea tunnel linking Japan’s main island of Honshu with the northern neighbouring island of Hokkaido. The Seikan Tunnel is the second longest tunnel in the world, after the Gotthard Base Tunnel in Switzerland. It is 53.8 km (33.4 miles) long, 23.3 km (14.3 miles) of which lie

  • Seimas (Lithuanian legislature)

    Lithuania: Constitutional framework: …president and a legislature, the Seimas, under a parliamentary system. The Seimas consists of 141 members, who are elected to four-year terms. The prime minister, formally appointed by the president, oversees the country’s day-to-day affairs and is generally the leader of the Seimas’s majority party. The president is popularly elected…

  • Sein (sculpture by César)

    César: His sensational gigantic Sein was modeled on a cabaret dancer’s breast and molded in pink polyester resin. One of his more widely available works, reproduced in many sizes for commercial sale, was a representation of his thumb; Le Pouce, a 12-metre (40-foot) version, was erected in the Parisian…

  • Sein und Zeit (work by Heidegger)

    Being and Time, work by the German existentialist philosopher Martin Heidegger, first published in German (as Sein und Zeit) in 1927, that permanently altered the course of philosophy in continental Europe. Widely regarded as Heidegger’s masterpiece, Being and Time generated a level of excitement

  • Seine Basin (region, France)

    Paris Basin, geographic region of France, constituting the lowland area around Paris. Geologically it is the centre of a structural depression that extends between the ancient Armoricain Massif (west), the Massif Central (south), and the Vosges, Ardennes, and Rhineland (east). The area, which forms

  • seine net

    commercial fishing: Seines: The seine net has very long wings and towing warps (tow lines), with or without bags for the catch. With purse seines, pelagic fish are surrounded not only from the side but also from underneath, preventing them from escaping by diving downward. Purse seines can be…

  • Seine River (river, France)

    Seine River, river of France, after the Loire its longest. It rises 18 miles (30 kilometres) northwest of Dijon and flows in a northwesterly direction through Paris before emptying into the English Channel at Le Havre. The river is 485 miles (780 kilometres) long and with its tributaries drains an

  • Seine Series (geology)

    Seine Series, division of Precambrian rocks that occur in Ontario and northern Minnesota (the Precambrian began about 3.96 billion years ago and ended 540 million years ago). The Seine Series, named for prominent exposures studied along the Seine River, Ontario, forms a thick sequence of

  • Seine, Battle of the (English history)

    Henry V: The French wars: …medieval kings, and after the Battle of the Seine (August 1416), England’s naval mastery of the Channel was not seriously disputed. At home, Henry turned to the systematic financing of his projected invasion, partly through large-scale borrowing, partly through parliamentary taxation, the generosity of which reflects his success in arousing…

  • Seine-et-Marne (department, France)

    Île-de-France: …the north-central départements of Val-d’Oise, Seine-et-Marne, Seine-Saint-Denis, Ville-de-Paris, Hauts-de-Seine, Val-de-Marne, Essonne, and Yvelines. Île-de-France is bounded by the régions of Hauts-de-France to the north, Grand Est to the east,

  • Seine-Inférieure (department, France)

    Haute-Normandie: …northern départements of Eure and Seine-Maritime and encompassed the northeastern portion of historical Normandy.

  • Seine-Maritime (department, France)

    Haute-Normandie: …northern départements of Eure and Seine-Maritime and encompassed the northeastern portion of historical Normandy.

  • Seine-Saint-Denis (department, France)

    Île-de-France: of Val-d’Oise, Seine-et-Marne, Seine-Saint-Denis, Ville-de-Paris, Hauts-de-Seine, Val-de-Marne, Essonne, and Yvelines. Île-de-France is bounded by the régions of Hauts-de-France to the north, Grand Est to the east, Bourgogne-Franche-Comté to the southeast,

  • Seinen no wa (work by Noma)

    Noma Hiroshi: …multivolume work completed in 1971, Seinen no wa (“Ring of Youth”), which won the Tanizaki Prize in 1971. Other later works include the autobiographical Waga tō wa soko ni tatsu (1961; “My Tower Stands There”), Shinran (1973), and Sayama saiban (1976; “The Sayama Trial”). These works, while conveying a deepening…

  • seiner (fishing vessel)

    commercial fishing: Seiners: Seiners range in size from canoes, where the net is hauled by hand, to larger vessels with powerful net-handling equipment. This equipment generally consists of a power block mounted on a crane placed aft of the wheelhouse, as well as winches and drums for…

  • Seinfeld (American television series)

    Seinfeld, U.S. television situation comedy that was among the most popular programs of the 1990s. Revered by critics, Seinfeld aired for nine seasons (1989–98) on National Broadcasting Co. (NBC), serving as the linchpin of the network’s ‘‘must-see TV’’ Thursday night lineup. Set in Manhattan and

  • Seinfeld, Jerome (American comedian)

    Jerry Seinfeld is an American comedian whose television show Seinfeld (1989–98) was a landmark of American popular culture in the late 20th century. Ostensibly a “show about nothing,” the sitcom highlighted Seinfeld’s observational humor. Seinfeld’s interest in comedy was sparked at an early age

  • Seinfeld, Jerry (American comedian)

    Jerry Seinfeld is an American comedian whose television show Seinfeld (1989–98) was a landmark of American popular culture in the late 20th century. Ostensibly a “show about nothing,” the sitcom highlighted Seinfeld’s observational humor. Seinfeld’s interest in comedy was sparked at an early age

  • Seingalt, Jacques, Chevalier de (Italian adventurer)

    Giacomo Casanova was an ecclesiastic, writer, soldier, spy, and diplomatist, chiefly remembered as the prince of Italian adventurers and as the man who made the name Casanova synonymous with “libertine.” His autobiography, which perhaps exaggerates some of his escapades, is a splendid description

  • Seinte Resurreccion (French literature)

    French literature: Religious drama: Neither it nor the Seinte Resurreccion (c. 1200; “Resurrection of the Saviour”), certainly Anglo-Norman, shows the events preceding the Crucifixion, the matter of the Passion plays; these first appeared in the early 14th century in the Passion du Palatinus (“Passion of Palatinus”). Of relatively modest proportions, this contains diversified…

  • Seipel, Ignaz (chancellor of Austria)

    Ignaz Seipel was a Roman Catholic priest, twice chancellor of Austria (1922–24 and 1926–29), whose use of the Fascist paramilitary Heimwehr in his struggle against Austria’s Social Democrats led to a strengthening of Fascism in his country. Ordained in 1899, Seipel taught moral philosophy at the

  • Seis de Septiembre (county seat, Argentina)

    Morón, cabecera (county seat) and partido (county) of Gran (Greater) Buenos Aires, eastern Argentina. It lies west of the city of Buenos Aires, in Buenos Aires provincia (province). In the 16th century Morón served as a way station for travelers en route to the area that is now Chile and Peru. The

  • Seis del Solar (musical group)

    Rubén Blades: With Seis del Solar he recorded Buscando América, which was named a Top Ten album of 1984. At the height of his popularity, Blades took a break from his musical career to earn a master’s degree (1985) in international law from Harvard University. In 1987 he…

  • Seis problemas para Don Isidro Parodi (work by Borges and Bioy Casares)

    Adolfo Bioy Casares: …para Don Isidro Parodi (1942; Six Problems for Don Isidro Parodi) and Crónicas de Bustos Domecq (1967; Chronicles of Bustos Domecq), both of which satirize a variety of Argentine personalities. The two also edited Los mejores cuentos policiales (1943; “The Greatest Detective Stories”), a two-volume book of gaucho poetry (Poesía…

  • seisachtheia (ancient Greek law)

    land reform: Ancient reforms: …reform law, known as the seisachtheia, or “shaking-off the burdens,” cancelled all debts, freed the hektēmoroi, destroyed the horoi, and restored land to its constitutional holders. Solon also prohibited the mortgaging of land or of personal freedom on account of debt.

  • Seisenegger, Jakob (painter)

    Titian: Portraits: …copy of a portrait by Jakob Seisenegger, survives. Charles was so pleased with Titian’s work that in May 1533 he bestowed upon the artist the most extraordinary honor of knighthood. Thereafter, the Austrian-Spanish Habsburgs remained Titian’s most important patrons. Charles attempted to induce Titian to go to Spain in 1534…

  • Seishimaru (Buddhist priest)

    Hōnen was a Buddhist priest and the founder of the Pure Land (Jōdo) Buddhist sect of Japan. He was seminal in establishing Pure Land pietism as one of the central forms of Buddhism in Japan. Introduced as a student monk to Pure Land doctrines brought from China by Tendai priests, he stressed

  • Seisill family (English family)

    Cecil Family, one of England’s most famous and politically influential families, represented by two branches, holding respectively the marquessates of Exeter and Salisbury, both descended from William Cecil, Lord Burghley, Elizabeth I’s lord treasurer. Burghley’s elder son, Thomas, was created Earl

  • seisin (feudal law)

    seisin, in English feudal society, a term that came to mean a type of possession that gained credibility with the passage of time. Seisin was not ownership nor was it mere possession that could be established by the seizure of land. Seisin belonged to someone who used the land or exercised rights