User:PBS/Notes


 * General Treaty Merge into Bonn–Paris conventions

Frequent access

 * Template talk:Source-attribution
 * Category:Wikipedia articles incorporating citation to the NSRW


 * BCWs copyright issues
 * paragraph symbol ¶ and section sign § ¶  §
 * HTML Codes for punctuation and other characters & = &#38;#38; (or &#38;amp;), Non-breaking apace = &amp;nbsp; and ( [ = &#38;#91;  and ] = &#38;#93; ) and = = &#38;#61;
 * HTML special characters "light smiley face": &#9786; = &#38;#9786; "dark smiley face": &#9787; &#38;#9787; "sunburst": &#9788; = &#38;#9788;


 * Manual of Style/Lead section to do
 * User talk:Plastikspork/Archive 9 to do


 * Press coverage In the news Press coverage 2021


 * sigma/editorinteract.py Check out edit patters by two or more users (between interaction)
 * WikiBlame is an online browser-based tool for searching the revision history of a MediaWiki based wiki for a text string to identify the author of a particular change to the page. See http://wikipedia.ramselehof.de/wikiblame.php

Revision link

Format citation tools

 * See also Wikimedia Labs/Toolserver replacements
 * Wikipedia Reflinks dispenser Reflinks or fengtools/reflinks change bare URLs into cite web
 * Linkrot
 * Google book tool Converts bare url into cite book format
 * yadkard similar to the book tool
 * User:Citation bot available as a gadget
 * The citoid node.js service generates citation data given a URL, DOI, PMID, or PMCID.
 * ProveIt GT is a gadget that makes it easy to find, edit, add and cite references when editing Wikipedia articles.
 * Help:Citation Style 1 -- another list
 * ProveIt is a gadget that makes it easy to find, edit, add, and cite references when editing Wikipedia articles.
 * ProveIt is a gadget that makes it easy to find, edit, add, and cite references when editing Wikipedia articles.

Fix a citation so it does not go dead
List of web archives on Wikipedia
 * https://archive.org/web/ -- Wayback machine will archive a link if it has not got a copy of it already
 * http://www.webcitation.org -- is an on-demand archiving system for webreferences (cited webpages and websites, or other kinds of Internet-accessible digital objects),

Edit tools & scripts

 * See also Wikimedia Labs/Toolserver replacements
 * WP:AWB
 * User:Joeytje50/JWB
 * Twinkle available as a gadget
 * Huggle anti-vanal optomised editor
 * Tools
 * Tools/Browser integration
 * Tools/Navigation popups
 * Tools/Greasemonkey user scripts
 * Gadget Special:Preferences
 * Scripts Category:Wikipedia scripts WikiProject User scripts
 * AutoEd
 * User:Cacycle/wikEd available as a gadget
 * User:GregU/dashes.js
 * CatScan2 (catscan2.php) manual Catscan2 searches recursively categories with subcategories to overlap with other categories, templates, etc.
 * catscan_rewrite.php example for two templates on one page CathEncy Catholic
 * demonstration of how useful these tool are.


 * User:Ucucha/HarvErrors
 * User:TheJJJunk/Automatic Referencing Assistant
 * User:Equazcion/OneClickArchiver
 * User:Frietjes/findargdups Duplicate arguments

Need to check the following edits
PBS-AWB need checking:
 * 07:47, 18 March 2017 Zula
 * 237 pages
 * 20:30, 18 April 2017 History of encyclopedias
 * In total there were just under 240 articles changed.


 * 08:32, 26 December 2016 George Darwin
 * 236 pages
 * 16:35 16:35, 5 March 2017 Isle of Bute

Database tools
Google Ngram Viewer - Google Books
 * Pageview statistics
 * example database tool by magnus.

To do soon

 * check the family section of Sir Oliver Cromwell 22:32, 8 January 2019 (UTC)
 * Fix Template:Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae ✅ April 2017
 * Periods in English history ✅ February 2019‎  -- did something similar with some other boxes see Template:History of England
 * Missing DNB articles

Category:Wikipedia articles incorporating a citation from the 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica check periodically

Problems with EB1911 turned into Cite EB1911 without checking. 1 month in 2010 but was much longer.
 * Problem with NWS in external links. see Mulhouse


 * EB1911 --> cite EB911 in 2014 9 July 2014
 * Category:Articles incorporating Cite DNB template an ndash in the wstitle parameter




 * List_of_sources_for_the_Crusades numbered ref tags
 * Waterloo campaign
 * "Abigail Adams, Mrs. Smith, Mrs. Shaw, Mrs. Cranch, Elizabeth Clay" in The Women of the American Revolution by Elizabeth F. Ellet (1849)

https://refill.toolforge.org/
 * Robert Craigie (Royal Navy officer)
 * James Paterson Bower

Accounts
See initial request Global steward request, Global user contributions, Global account information

Seaches for wikisource

 * — Any Dictionary
 * — Any Encyclopedia
 * — Any Encyclopeadia
 * — Any Dictionary
 * — Any Encyclopedia
 * — Any Encyclopeadia

Projects

 * Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Encyclopaedia Britannica
 * Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Dictionary of National Biography
 * Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Military history, WP:MILHIST
 * WikiProject Genealogy

Some useful links to the Wikipedia:WikiProject areas I am interested in
 * 100,000 feature-quality articles. WP:BURDEN was added to WP:V in on 30 August 2005 by SV.
 * Village pump (policy)


 * WikiProject International law


 * WikiProject History
 * WikiProject Military history
 * New articles (Battles)


 * WikiProject Genealogy


 * WikiProject Missing encyclopedic articles
 * WikiProject Dictionary of National Biography
 * 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica
 * WikiProject Missing encyclopedic articles/1911 verification
 * WikiProject Wikisource


 * WikiProject Timelines
 * List of themed timelines
 * WikiProject Wikipedia Awards


 * User:Cyde/Ref converter

Pages statistics

 * Statistics About page view statistics
 * Pageview statistics Wikipedia article traffic statistics took

Categories

 * Categorization

Mass messages
contact/notify lots of users using Mass message senders Mass message sender is a user group that allows users to send messages to multiple users at once. Further user documentation can be found at MassMessage and mw:Help:Extension:MassMessage.

Users with  user right can send a message using Special:MassMessage.

See also User:PBS/MessageList

Maintenance templates

 * Manual of Style (self-references to avoid)
 * 01:05, 6 April 2006 User:Shanes/Why tags are evil
 * 10 February 2007 Wikipedia talk:Maintenance/Archive 1
 * 11 April 2007 Category talk:Wikipedia maintenance templates redirects to the one above.


 * 30 May 2009 Wikipedia talk:Orphan/Archive 1
 * 30 May 2009 Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Orphanage/Archive 2 (redirects to the one above)
 * 14 April 2010 Wikipedia talk:Orphan


 * 24 October 2010 Wikipedia talk:Perennial proposals


 * Template:New page An example of a maintenance template that displays all the worst characteristics of maintenance templates.

Two bad ones (from History of North Rhine-Westphalia): lead too short Duplication

WP:Orphan Perennial proposals Village pump (proposals)/Archive 108

Attribution removed

 * https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Andronikos_I_Komnenos&type=revision&diff=665008143&oldid=664076929 -- a real problem. 81%
 * https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Andronikos_II_Palaiologos&type=revision&diff=665015343&oldid=662100256 2%
 * https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=And%C3%BAjar&type=revision&diff=665009384&oldid=665009300 20%
 * https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Angle&type=revision&diff=665277028&oldid=665153627 60%
 * https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Aniline&type=revision&diff=666112889&oldid=665647448 55%
 * Annan, Dumfries and Galloway 25%
 * https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Annuity_%28European%29&type=revision&diff=667230106&oldid=660351737 98%


 * https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Michelson%E2%80%93Morley_experiment&type=revision&diff=502942073&oldid=502820288 18 July 2012
 * https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Badrinath_Temple&type=revision&diff=692226398&oldid=689493180 2%
 * https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Ancient_borough&type=revision&diff=697442755&oldid=693799753 99%

Article with author but different ref tag pairs used: "Pazhou"

PD Templates



 * https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Module:String#replace

See Module talk:Citation/CS1

See Module:Template_wrapper

List of EB1911 to Cite EB1911

Help:Magic_words m:Help:Magic words Lua




 * Help talk:Template/Archive 3 *mw:Help:Parser functions in templates and mw:Help:Extension:ParserFunctions
 * Help desk/Archives/2013 May 8

See User talk:Diego Grez, User talk:Mr Stephen, User talk:Bob Burkhardt User talk:Slowking4


 * WikiProject Wikisource see also Category:Wikisource link templates
 * WikiProject Wikisource/Citation Uniformity
 * Bot requests Bots/Requests for approval
 * mw:Help:Extension:ParserFunctions mw:Help:Parser functions in templates
 * Template messages/Sources of articles
 * Abbotsford House an example of how to link in PD sources not used in the text
 * Abraxas an example of how to link in PD sources not used in the text
 * Abraxas an example of how to link in PD sources not used in the text

List of PD Templates

 * WikiProject Wikisource/Citation Uniformity


 * A catalogue of notable Middle Templars, with brief biographical notices


 * — this needs work to bring it in line with other similar templates


 * Encyclopedia Americana (1920). —   —  Americana converted to take parameters but Cite American takes long= not short=
 * ''The Biographical Dictionary of America (1906) —
 * ''The Cyclopædia of American Biography (1918) —  Needs a corresponding  also uses long= instead of short=
 * New American Cyclopedia (1879) — — and the more recent
 * The American Cyclopædia (1879) —
 * Appletons' Cyclopædia of American Biography (1891) —   Some work needs more see John Endecott
 * Encyclopaedia Biblica (1899–1903).  —
 * Encyclopædia Britannica
 * Ninth Edition ((1875–1889) – ,
 * Eleventh Edition (1911) —   Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Encyclopaedia Britannica {{Wikisource1911Enc Citation| → {{Cite EB1911|W1EC=1|wstitle=
 * Twelfth Edition (1922) — {{tlx|Cite EB1922}} {{tlx|EB1922}} {{tlx|EB1922 poster}} Britannica 1922
 * Bryan's Dictionary of Painters and Engravers (1886) — {{tlx|Bryan (3rd edition)}} {{tlx|Cite Bryan}} {{tlx|Bryan poster}}
 * {{tlx|Bryan (1903 edition)}}
 * ''Catholic Encyclopedia (1913) — {{tlx|CE1913}} {{tl|Cite CE1913}} {{tl|CE1913 poster}} Category:Catholic Encyclopedia templates
 * Dictionary of Christian Biography and Literature to the End of the Sixth Century (3rd ed.).'' {{tlx|DCBL}} {{tl|Cite DCBL}} {{tl|DCBL poster}}
 * Collier's New Encyclopedia (1921) — {{tlx|Cite Collier's|Abbotsford|noicon=x}} {{tlx|Collier's}} {{tlx|Collier's poster}}
 * ''Dictionary of National Biography (1885–1900) — {{tlx|DNB}} {{tlx|Cite DNB}} {{tlx|DNB poster}} also {{tlx|DNBfirst}}
 * Index and Epitome {{tlx|DNBIE}}
 * {{tlx|DNB12}} {{tlx|Cite DNB12}} {{tlx|DNB12 poster}}
 * {{tlx|DNBFooter}}
 * {{tlx|Cite ODNB}} {{tlx|ODNBref}}
 * Easton's Bible Dictionary, New and revised ed.. (1897) — {{tlx|Eastons}} {{tlx|Cite Eastons}} {{tlx|Eastons poster}}
 * ''The Grocer's Encyclopedia (1911) — {{tlx|Grocers}} {{tlx|cite Grocers}} {{tlx|Grocers poster}} — Category:Wikipedia articles incorporating text from Grocer's Encyclopedia
 * Eminent Chinese of the Ch'ing Period (ECCP) is a biographical dictionary published in 1943 - {{tlx|ECCP}} {{tlx|Cite ECCP}}
 * Jewish Encyclopedia {{tlx|Jewish Encyclopedia}}, {{tlx|Cite Jewish Encyclopedia}}, {{tlx|Jewish Encyclopedia poster}}
 * Popular Science Monthly (1884) — {{tlx|Cite PSM}} {{tlx|PSM poster}} These two {{tlx|WsPSM}} and {{tlx|WsPSM2}} needs merging into {{tlx|Cite PSM}}
 * Complete Encyclopaedia of Music (1880) — {{tlx|CEM}} {{tlx|Cite CEM}} {{tlx|CEM poster}}
 * A Dictionary of Music and Musicians (1900) — {{tlx|cite Grove1900}} {{tlx|Grove1900}} {{tlx|Grove1900 poster}} see also Category:Grove templates
 * ''A Naval Biographical Dictionary (1849) — {{tlx|Cite NBD1849}} {{tlx|NBD1849}} {{tlx|NBD1849 poster}}
 * ''The Nuttall Encyclopædia (1907) — {{tlx|Nuttall}} {{tlx|Cite Nuttall|Abbotsford|noicon=x|first_letter=A}} {{tlx|Nuttall poster}} — Still needs work to intergrate Nuttall and Cite Nuttall
 * The New Students Reference Work (1914) — {{tlx|NSRW}} {{tlx|Cite NSRW}} {{tlx|NSRW poster}}
 * Harpers Dictionary of Classical Antiquities — {{tlx|HDCA}}''   {{tlx|Cite HDCA}} {{tlx|HDCA poster}}
 * Dictionary of Indian Biography (1906) by Charles Edward Buckland, {{tlx|DIB}}
 * The Indian Biographical Dictionary (1915) — {{tlx|IBD1915}} {{tlx|Cite IBD1915}} {{tlx|IBD1915 poster}}
 * The New International Encyclopedia (1905) — {{tlx|NIE}} {{tlx|Cite NIE}} {{tlx|NIE poster}}
 * Royal Naval Biography (1823–1835) — {{tlx|Cite RNB1823}} {{tlx|RNB1823}} {{tlx|RNB1823 poster}}
 * {{tlx|A Short Biographical Dictionary of English Literature}} (1910) — {{tlx|Cite SBDEL}} Needs more work {{tlx|SBDEL poster}}
 * New Schaff–Herzog Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge — {{tlx|Schaff-Herzog}} {{tlx|Cite Schaff-Herzog}} {{tlx|Schaff-Herzog poster}}
 * Smith's Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography'' (1854–1857) — {{tlx|Cite DGRG}} {{tlx|DGRG poster}} (was {{tlx|SmithDGRG}})  --still needs work to expand the parameters in DGRA and documentation)
 * Smith's Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology (1870) — {{tlx|DGRBM}} {{tlx|Cite DGRBM}} {{tlx|DGRBM poster}} (was {{tl|SmithDGRBM}})
 * Webster's Dictionary (1913) — {{tlx|WD1913}} {{tlx|Cite WD1913}} {{tlx|WD1913 poster}} — Category:Wikipedia articles incorporating text from the 1913 Webster's Dictionary
 * Cyclopædia, or an Universal Dictionary of Arts and Sciences (1728) — {{tlx|Cyclopaedia 1728}} {{tl|Cite Cyclopaedia 1728}} {{tlx|Cyclopaedia 1728 poster}}


 * Foreign Language
 * French Dictionnaire Bouillet ((1878)) — {{tlx|Bouillet}} — parameter {{para|wstitle}} links to French Wikisource article
 * French ''Grand dictionnaire universel du XIXe siècle (1866–1877) — {{tlx|Cite LarousseXIXe}}
 * German Neue Deutsche Biographie — {{tlx|NDB}} {{tlx|Cite NDB}} {{tlx|NDB poster}}
 * Spanish Geographic Dictionary of the Republic of Chile 1899 — {{tlx|Diccionario Geográfico de la República de Chile entry}}, {{tlx|DGRC}} {{tlx|cite DGRC}} {{tlx|DGRC poster}}
 * Russian Russian Biographical Dictionary (1896–1918) — {{tlx|RBD}} — does not take any parameters (is just a banner)


 * Use page and other parameters to set url.
 * {{tlx|Cite Notitia Parliamentaria}} (1750) — This source will eventually be replaced with the History Of Parliament website
 * {{tlx|Bryan (3rd edition)}} (1886) – Bryan's Dictionary of Painters and Engravers — works out the url using volume and page
 * {{tlx|Bryan (1903 edition)}}
 * {{tlx|Newgenbio}} — A New General Biographical Dictionary — works out the url using volume and page
 * {{tlx|Cite LotEP}} — Lives of the Eminent Philosophers — if a name is given it links to the correct Book


 * Modern PD
 * Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships — {{tlx|DANFS}} {{tlx|cite DANFS}} {{tlx|DANFS poster}} — Modern PD licence


 * Other Modern
 * American National Biography (1999) — {{tlx|Cite ANB}} —  not wstitle option or attribution options. {{tlx|ANB}} {{tlx|ANB poster}}
 * Dictionary of American Biography — {{tlx|Cite DAB}} not wstitle option or attribution options. lots of work but only 250 entries  {{tlx|DAB}} {{tlx|DAB poster}}
 * Dictionary of Canadian Biography — {{tlx|Cite DCB}} — Links such as this: Dictionary of Canadian Biography need to be moved into the {{tlx|Cite DCB}}
 * English Heritage, National Heritage List for England — {{tlx|NHLE}}
 * Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy — {{tlx|Cite SEP}} — — takes an unusual parameter {{para|url-id}}
 * Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy. — {{tlx|Cite IEP}}— takes an unusual parameter {{para|url-id}}
 * {{tlx|Cite Grove}} – Grove Music Online or New Grove, 2nd ed., 2001 depending on whether an internet link is provided
 * {{tlx|Cite NewGrove1980}} – New Grove, 1st ed., 1980
 * {{tlx|Cite NewGrove2001}} – New Grove, 2nd ed., 2001
 * {{tlx|Cite NewGroveJazz2002}} – New Grove Dictionary of Jazz, 2nd ed., 2002
 * {{tlx|Cite Colledge2006}} and {{tlx|Cite Colledge2010}}


 * Also
 * {{tlx|Venn}} now called {{tlx|Acad}}


 * {{tlx|Rayment}}
 * {{tlx|Medieval Lands by Charles Cawley}}

Templates

 * stub bio-stub hist-stub sectstub npov NPOV-section controversial unsigned2
 * unreferencedsect unreferenced verify Unref-talk refimprove
 * Fact Failed verification, Verify credibility,Verify source, weasel-inline, who, POV-statement
 * redirects to to confirm it use
 * -- both inline
 * Navigational templates
 * Template messages
 * Maintenance
 * sprotected only show padlock:sprotected2
 * Template_messages/Cleanup
 * Template_messages/Cleanup
 * block
 * expand list
 * {{subst:Welcome-anon}} {{subst:welcome2}} {{subst:Welcome with spinning icon}}
 * main details
 * Template messages/Maintenance inuse
 * R from other capitalisation

Columns-list or Multicol or Div col if the list is lengthy.
 * Column lists


 * redirect to  — expanded in March
 * on I wrote by copying from de Wikipedia (April 2017}}
 * expanded in April 2017 -- users startpage
 * expanded in April 2017

Better source needed

 * Wayback Machine (http://alternativeto.net/software/wayback-machine/) see also User:H3llBot


 * Special:LinkSearch/thepeerage.com — External link search
 * OK if Lundy is used as source for WP:SAYWHEREYOUREADIT as Lndy normally cites a reliable source. Where he does (often citing a email exchange), then his site is unacceptable. The problem is following up the links and adding the reliable source takes time.


 * See Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Peerage and Baronetage/Archive 10 and Template_talk:Rayment and Rayment
 * See RS Medieval Lands by Charles Cawley website: Medieval Lands introduction v2.0. Updated 30 November 2010 Medieval Lands by Charles Cawley The project "involves extracting and analysing detailed information from primary sources, including contemporary chronicles, cartularies, necrologies and testaments." — The problem is Cawley uses a lot of primary sources and then draws inferences that if they were directly done by a Wikipedia editor would fail WP:PSTS and as an unrliable sources, it introduces this type of error into Wikipedia so WP:SAYWHEREYOUREADIT is often not appropriate on this site.
 * Reliable sources/Noticeboard/Archive 211
 * Genealogy.EU by Miroslav Marek Last updated: 17th March 2008 Genealogy.EU
 * David Beamish's Peerage Page
 * eg http://www.angelfire.com/realm/gotha/gotha/luynes.html
 * eg http://www.angelfire.com/realm/gotha/gotha/luynes.html

If the template calls better source etc it must have a date parameter passed into it and to set the place it in AutoWikiBrowser/Dated templates

Darryl Lundy's The Peerage
Thank you for creating the article John Clinton, 6th Lord Clinton on 14 November 2016‎. However it is clear that the contents came from Darryl Lund's website thepeerage.com.Lundy's website is not reliable (it is self published by a none expert), but you can use Lund's website as a source providing the information he provides is backed up by a Wikipedia reliable source (some of it isn't it comes from email correspondence and the like).

Unless you have access to his reliable sources, you can not cite his sources directly, instead you must cite his source and then the reliable source. This is explained in more detail in the section in the citations guideline linked to by WP:SAYWHEREYOUREADIT.

I have copied edited the article and added in the appropriate style of citations see this edit. If you have added information based on any of Lundy's pages to any other article and have not stated that the information came from his website, please add the appropriate additional citations as specified in WP:SAYWHEREYOUGOTIT.

Juliet Barker: medieval dates

 * Juliet Barker in her Agincourt: The King, the Campaign, the Battle has a few paragraphs on how difficult it is to date things of this period accurately. First the year is given from the start of a kings reign rather than (in the year of our Lord). Secondly the day is given in two ways one is by saints days (or as an offset from a saints day for example "two days after the feast of St. Andrew"), and the other by the Ides, so working out the dates in primary sources during middle ages is complicated. For example one English document may be dated from the start year of Henry V reign and the day as an offset from an ide, while a French document for the same day will use their King coronation year and then use a local saint's day to date an event that happened on the same day.

Don't collapse references
MOS:COLLAPSE, MOS:DONTHIDE

Ranges
Anchors: The section used to give not advise on year format for ranges. The alteration to being 4 digit intolerance started without an RfC by user:PL290. I have not objected because at the time I was not aware of the change and because the current wording it includes "usually" which allows wriggle room.
 * Date ranges
 * Other date ranges
 * Dates of birth and death
 * "and the range's end year is usually abbreviated to two digits:"

For a long time Wikipeida used full year in all dates because the year used to be linked to the year article, so people used 2015- 2016 probably because it was easier to type than 2015– 16 , but as it was widely used no one bothered with explicit rules. The policy of linking years was eventually abolished after a long and acrimonious abate which culminated in an RfC on the issue.

The reason for such abbreviations came about in old physical publications because each character in a physical book costs money (and also explains the use of standard Latin abbreviations like eg). The EB1911 saved pages in every volume by using such abbreviations and other tricks such as concatenating paragraphs unless it is absolutely necessary for reasons other than style.


 * I am drafting this section on 24 July 2016 and coincidently during the last week the British Government website has announced that it is banning the use of Latin abbreviations on its website (with several argument including they are confusing for some people):

Wikipedia is not a book we do not need to make such space savings (the argument advanced and widely accepted for not truncating the moth to the first three letters). Particularly when there are arguments the other way:
 * Confusion both for readers who are not familiar with such rules, and it is complicated for editors because the rules cover inconsistency on what to use: use four digits if it is a DOD, or the end of a sporting event, but not other events.
 * abbreviating dates makes electronic searches more difficult both for internal and external searches. Let me give you a simple example suppose that you want to know all the events that happened for a particular year. If the full year is added then that is a relatively simple to find the dates, eg: the DOD of a notable person or the end of a siege. Now if the search can be made using a regular expression then this information can also be found, but it presupposes that the person who wishes to do the search knows how to create a regular expression and that the search engine can accept such expressions, how often is that true?

The weight of advised on the guideline page was for full years on ranges up until this edit on However if one looks at the start of 2011 the advise is contradictory and supports both formats: It is only gradually that we have ended up in the current position where there is such a strong statement and as far as I can tell we have stumbled into this without any real justification for it.
 * diff
 * First edit of 2011

Linking to another language article
ill an acceptable way to link to another another language article in text eg:

(disambiguation)
disambig otheruses


 * ~dispenser/view/Dablinks, ~dispenser/view/Dab solver http://dispenser.homenet.org/~dispenser/view/Dab_solver
 * Redirect lower and uppercase etc R from other capitalisation
 * Disambiguation
 * Hatnotes
 * Links to disambiguating pages
 * Links to (disambiguation) pages
 * Summary style

Three-revert rule and other

 * Three-revert rule, WP:UP (Removal of comments, warnings), WP:DR (Dispute resolution:Talk to the other parties involved)
 * Tendentious editing
 * Third opinion
 * Requests for comment
 * Wikiquette alerts
 * Administrators' noticeboard
 * Requests for checkuser
 * Template_messages/User_talk_namespace warnings to users

deletes

 * Articles for deletion Redirects for deletion Speedy deletions
 * WP:NOTBROKEN Do not "fix" links to redirects that are not broken
 * Recreation Copying within Wikipedia: WP:ATTREQ and WP:RUD and thw section following RUD called "Userfication"

Guidelines

 * MERCILESS one of the five pillars: no editor owns an article and any contributions can and will be mercilessly edited and redistributed.
 * Signatures and Talk page guidelines: four tildes ( ~ )
 * Manual of Style
 * Words to avoid and Guidelines for controversial articles Also "RS must be sourced. ..."
 * Guide to writing better articles, The perfect article, Writing for the enemy, Neutral point of view/FAQ, Avoid weasel words, Avoid peacock terms.
 * Other Stuff Exists
 * Writing better articles
 * Capitals in military terms MOS entry
 * MOSQUOTE
 * Hatnotes
 * Do not include the full text of lengthy primary sources

Admin pages

 * rfa:PBS, List of administrators, List of Wikipedians by number of edits, List of Wikipedians by article count
 * The template Admin also list on its talk page other user templates which show user states, contributions block logs etc.
 * WikiProject edit counters
 * Administrator intervention against vandalism and Template messages/User talk namespace
 * Welcoming committee/Standard user greeting Welcoming committee/Welcome templates
 * Template:Protection templates
 * Requests for page protection
 * Requests for sysop attention
 * Administrators' noticeboard search
 * Changing username
 * Requested moves Cut and paste move repair holding pen
 * Duplicate articles
 * Polling is not a substitute for discussion How to hold a consensus vote
 * How to archive a talk page


 * Special:Log


 * Don't revert other admins enforcing ARbCom decisions.

-

-

-

-


 * Category:User block templates

Some sock-masters and others

 * User:Beeblebrox/The unblockables
 * Sockpuppet investigations Sockpuppet Uw-socksuspect SockBlock (admin) user6
 * Category:Sockpuppet templates
 * Wikimedia Labs/Toolserver replacements
 * sigma/editorinteract.py Check out edit patters by two or more users (between interaction)


 * user:G.-M. Cupertino
 * Here is an example of why this person is so dangerous. see this diff the date that user:G.-M. Cupertino used differed from the cited ODNB with no source given for the change.
 * user:Marquis de la Eirron
 * user:LouisPhilippeCharles
 * user:Klemen Kocjancic drive by tagging.
 * user talk:Ludvikus
 * user:Technophant as of March 2019 indef block lifted
 * User:202.142.140.117 Three troublesome children

While this talk page is unavailable to you, if wish to appeal the block you can use the Unblock Ticket Request System or email the Arbitration Committee as detailed at WP:BASC.

User:Cirt: User talk:PBS/Archive 12, Administrators' noticeboard/IncidentArchive644, External discussion, Off-wiki policy discussion, Correspondence off-wiki

Arbitration

 * Arbitration Committee discretionary sanctions 2013 review why "alerts" are a bad idea.
 * Arbitration/Active sanctions
 * Working group on ethnic and cultural edit wars/2008 report
 * Requests for arbitration/Macedonia Balkans warring.
 * Arbitration Committee/Discretionary sanctions
 * Requests for arbitration/Digwuren Eastern Europe. Requests for arbitration/Eastern Europe
 * Requests for arbitration/Palestine-Israel articles
 * Requests for arbitration/Great Irish Famine
 * Requests for arbitration/Armenia-Azerbaijan, Requests for arbitration/Armenia-Azerbaijan 2
 * General sanctions
 * Requests for arbitration/Date delinking
 * ARBMAC2 Administrator behaviour in content disputes and page names.
 * Requests for arbitration/Ireland article names WikiProject Ireland Collaboration

Polls

 * Naming policy poll -- There are cases when the official name of a location (generally cities) is different than what most English speakers call it.
 * Polltop

Mailing lists

 * http://mail.wikipedia.org/
 * 

Example farms and OR lists
examplefarm Section OR
 * Last stand
 * Ethnic cleansing

Copyright and plagiarism issues

 * See Thomas Strickland (cavalier) for an example of why attribution should be at the bottom of references.
 * A comment by me at Wikipedia talk:Close paraphrasing
 * Wikipedia Signpost/2009-04-13/Dispatches "Let's get serious about plagiarism"
 * WP:PLAGARISM
 * Copyright problems, Contributor copyright investigations and Spotting possible copyright violations


 * earwig tool. The tool will then search for its content elsewhere on the web and display a report if a similar webpage is found.
 * WikiBlame is an online browser-based tool for searching the revision history of a MediaWiki based wiki for a text string to identify the author of a particular change to the page. See http://wikipedia.ramselehof.de/wikiblame.php
 * the Duplicate Detector
 * User:D's Contributor copyright investigations/Instructions, tool


 * Copyright issues with Wikipedia Wikipedia talk:Reusing Wikipedia content and specifically Wikipedia talk:Reusing Wikipedia content/Archive 1 -- PBS (talk) 06:29, 27 March 2010 (UTC) See now Copyright problems and Mirrors and forks

In the conversations over WP:V you mentioned an example using EB1911. Over the last 48 hours I have been working on converting a simple template for a PD source into a more comprehensive one and then converting the instances of WaceBio into DCBL.

As a side issue I am going through the 2 dozen affected articles adding citations, as the original text carries non (it was added some years ago when the demand for citations was not as comprehensive as it is now). In doing this I have come across three basic types of copies: The first two would be stylistically stunted, but I think that the last two would be impossible to keep in their current format unless they were completely rewritten as if using standard copyright material -- a restriction I see harming the project.
 * Patriarch Macedonius II of Constantinople copy with a few minor changes;
 * Patriarch Fravitta of Constantinople close paraphrase;
 * Patriarch Euphemius of Constantinople copy and close paraphrase of two merged PD sources;
 * Patriarch Acacius of Constantinople copy and close paraphrase of three merged PD sources.

For the problems of plagiarism and intext attribution see Wikipedia_talk:Plagiarism/Archive 8 which includes links to other sections. -- PBS (talk) 12:52, 15 December 2012 (UTC)

Civility

 * Unblocks and enabling my comment on unblock and enabling removed
 * this comment by CM on my talk page about behaviour and women editors. -- PBS (talk) 02:36, 30 January 2012 (UTC)
 * Village pump (policy)/Archive 91
 * Arbitration/Requests/Case/Civility enforcement
 * Arbitration/Requests/Case/Article titles and capitalisation/Evidence has a comment by Eric Navel about a a new female editor left her several insulting and condescending messages.
 * Notification:  Is it OK to call other editors...
 * ANI process ... no longer think it fit for purpose
 * Competence is required
 * Wikipedia_Signpost/2014-12-10/In_the_media User:Beeblebrox/The unblockables


 * EC Californian snowflakes 1 July 2019
 * ClemRutter squaddies 5 July 2019

Reliable source notice board

 * Reliable sources/Noticeboard/Archive 115
 * Reliable sources/Noticeboard/Archive 115
 * Playing the Sovereignty Game: Understanding Japan's Territorial Disputes

Pinnacle islands

 * Discussed move started 20 June 2008, majority in favour, but no format request made
 * Requested move July 2007


 * Territorial Disputes among Japan, China and Taiwan Concerning the Senkaku Islands "the Pinnacle Islands/Senkaku Islands/Diao-yu-tai"
 * Google Search "Pinnacle islands" site:ac.uk

Citation improvements and Burden

 * 1066 and All That: A Memorable History of England, comprising all the parts you can remember, including 103 Good Things, 5 Bad Kings and 2 Genuine Dates -- From WP:AT Recognizability – The title is a name or description of the subject that someone familiar with, although not necessarily an expert in, the subject area will recognize.
 * Battle of Waterloo 2007 start and end
 * Synchronous motor; Unsourced Materia and RFC on unsourced material in previously-tagged article

Thoughts on some claims of disruption
What concerns me most is the attitude that is developing between some editors that to paraphrase the a quote in the terrorism article "On one point, at least, everyone agrees: terrorism [disruption] is a pejorative term. It is a word with intrinsically negative connotations that is generally applied to one's enemies and opponents, or [to those with whom one disagrees] and would otherwise prefer to ignore. `What is called terrorism [disruption]', Brian Jenkins has written, `thus seems to depend on one's point of view. Use of the term implies a moral judgement; and if one party can successfully attach the label terrorist [disruption] to its opponent, then it has indirectly persuaded others to adopt its moral viewpoint.' Hence the decision to call someone or label some organization `terrorist' [a string of edits disruptive] becomes almost unavoidably subjective, depending largely on whether one sympathizes with or opposes the person /group/cause concerned. If one identifies with the victim of the violence [disagrees with the edit], for example, then the act is terrorism [disruptive]. If, however, one identifies with the perpetrator, the violent act is regarded in a more sympathetic, if not positive (or, at the worst, an ambivalent) light; and it is not terrorism disruption."


 * WP:ASSERT
 * WP:MORALIZE let the facts speak for themselves.

Ancestry ahnentafel and notes

 * see Family trees
 * See Sir Thomas Green for how to place notes inside
 * See Henry Percy, 3rd Earl of Northumberland for a comprehensive example.

Notes on Ancestry trees and unreliable sources

 * See User talk:Spanish lullaby

There is a fundamental difference between a navigational list such as often appears in the footnotes of an article and an ancestry tree. A navigational list such as the "Regnal titles" at the end of this article contains a series of facts, each of which can be checked in the link provided. However in an ancestry tree there is information conveyed in the tree that is probably not available in of the individual articles. As an example: where is the source in any article that "Elisabetha Röhrig" is the great-great grandmother of Albert II, Prince of Monaco?

It is very easy to construct an ancestry tree from unreliable sources published on the internet. However it only takes one mistake for large parts of the tree to be incorrect. For example if a grandmother is recorded as the first wife rather the second wife (the correct mother), then a quarter of the tree will be inaccurate, even if all the other entries for every single person are correct. For this reason trees need accurate sourcing from reliable sources.

It is easy to find the parents of a child in the child's biography, but it is often difficult to find all the children of couple. However if some of the children are notable enough to have their own biography in a reliable source, this can lead to editors unwittingly adding WP:OR into an ancestry tree.

Let us suppose we are looking for the parents of a daughter X (the grandmother of the subject of an article). However X does not have a biography in a reliable source, but the father of X does (call him Y). In the biography of Y it names his wife (Z). The biography of Y states that Y and Z had a son (A) and four daughters, only 2 of which are named (B,C), but not the other two. Now it maybe that X is one of those two unnamed daughters, or it may be that X is the daughter of another marriage not included in the biography of Y. If one jumps to the conclusion that X is the daughter of Y and Z then this breaks the WP:NOR policy specifically a "synthesis of published material, because to conclude that the mother of Z is the grandmother of X is a synthesis.

Please list the sources you used to support the restoration of the ancestry tree of Albert II, Prince of Monaco, so we can discuss if they are adequate reliable sources.

Unsourced family templates
Category:Family tree templates Metawiki:Help:Tables § XHTML attributes
 * Template talk:Houston family tree, Template talk:Anushtiginid Dynasty family tree, Template talk:Nerva–Antonine family tree, Template:Brisker family tree, Template talk:Inglis family tree (example of wrong citation on parent), Template talk:Ancestors of Charles II of Spain conversations on adequate inline citations.Template:War of the Spanish Succession family tree was reverted by an IP address.

The number of sources needed is often much smaller that appears to be the case initially as a reliable genealogical source will often span many generations. See for example Charles I of England where one source covers the whole tree. Even where that is not the case in the example Henry Percy, 3rd Earl of Northumberland all thirty entries are covered by just 8 citations.

A tree like Template talk:Ancestors of Charles II of Spain not need a citation on every node depicting the relationship with everyone to whom they are connected. As a parent can have many children, it is often simpler just to include a verification of parents in the child node as biographies usually include parents even if they do not include all the children. So in the case of Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor (1500–58) a citation confirming his parents is sufficient (and if that citation includes mention of his spouse -- Isabella of Portugal) then one citation has covered all the information necessary. If no mention of his spouse is to be found (in that citation) then that relationship will be covered in the citation in the node Philip II of Spain. These citations can be added to the articles if they also do not carry citations for these facts.




 * Template:Periodic table (32 columns, compact)
 * AVATAR (MUD)
 * Kohler family of Wisconsin

{{navbox |titlestyle = background:none |name = Charles Kanaina family tree |title = Charles Kanaina family tree |state={{{state |collapsed }}} |list1 = {{unreferenced section|date=April 2015}}

|titlestyle = background: white |belowstyle = background: white {{unreferenced section|date=April 2015}}

|list2style=text-align: left |list2=Notes: {{notelist-lr}}

See Template:Ancestors of Charles II of Spain {{red|for a template that has a header with  options}}: {{chart top|{{navbar|Ancestors of Charles II of Spain|mini=1}} Ancestors of Charles II of Spain}}

Three templates that were sidebars and causing problems

 * Template:Latin kings of Alba Longa family tree — Now defaults to navbar but can also present as a sidebar
 * Template:House of Brutus — Now defaults to navbar but can also present as a sidebar
 * Template:Six Islamic Prophets — Now defaults to sidbar but can also present as a navbar


 * Template:Latter Day Saint movement
 * Template:LDS sects/left
 * Template:Ender's Game chronology

Reflist more than one in an article
see HELP:MULTIREF

Unacknowledged internal copying and problems with citations

 * See Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Catholicism/Archive 2013

copyright questions

 * https://tools.wmflabs.org/xtools/pages/index.php?name=Aetheling1125&lang=en&wiki=wikipedia&namespace=0&redirects=noredirects&getall=1


 * https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Michael_Fulford&oldid=35669265
 * http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/ancient/archaeology/city_dead_01.shtml


 * http://wbo.llgc.org.uk/en/s-WYNN-GWY-1300.html
 * Sir John Wynn, 5th Baronet
 * Wynn, John (DNB00)

Search using insource:

 * see also 
 * insource:/1911enc/

{{search link|insource:/\{\{ahnentafel-/i|ahnentafel}} I tried a whitespace  but it does not seem to work for   so I have used    as an alternative xx
 * {{search link|insource:/\{\{ahnentafel-/i|ahnentafel}} -- 7,570 now in 2021 0
 * {{search link|insource:/\[^\{]*\{\{ahnentafel-/i|center followed by ahnentafel}} -- 4,180 now in 2021  0
 * {{search link|insource:/\[^\{]*\{\{ahnentafel-compact5/i|center followed by ahnentafel-compact5}} -- 4,085 (so that means about 100 compact 2,3,4) now in 2021 0
 * {{search link|insource:/\{\{chart\/start/i|chart/start}} -- 238
 * {{search link|insource:/\[^\{]*\{\{chart\/start/i|center followed by chart/start}} --200
 * {{search link|}}

insource:/DNB\{{!}}[^\}]*\wstitle=[^\(]*\([^\–]*–[^–]*\) *[^\{{!}}\}]/ xx
 * {{search link|insource:/\{\{(citation{{!}}cite (book{{!}}wikisource{{!}}dictionary{{!}}encyclopedia))[^\}]*{{=}}Dictionary of National Biography/}}


 * {{search link|insource:/\{\{(citation{{!}}cite (book{{!}}wikisource{{!}}dictionary{{!}}encyclopedia))[^\}]*en.wikisource.org/wiki/1911_Encyclopædia_Britannica/}}


 * {{search link|insource:/1911encyclopedia/}}


 * {{search link|insource:/\/en.wikisource.org\/wiki\/Royal_Naval_Biography/}}
 * {{search link|insource:/Page:Royal_Naval_Biography/}}
 * {{search link|insource:/\/en.wikisource.org\/wiki\/A_Naval_Biographical_Dictionary/}}
 * {{search link|insource:/Page:A_Naval_Biographical_Dictionary/}}
 * {{search link|insource:/ref>[^<]*\[\[s:A Naval Biographical Dictionary/}}
 * {{search link|insource:/ref>[^<]*\[\[s:Royal Naval Biography/}}


 * {{search link|insource:/wikisource[^\}]*Royal Naval Biography/}}
 * {{search link|query=insource:/(RNB1823{{!}}NBD1849) *\{{!}} *wstitle=Index/}}

Nathan Bedford Forrest

 * Cromwell's raid into Oxford, Blucher steamroller Battle of Haynau (26 May 1813), cavalry raid Battle of Altenburg (28 September 1813)

"Both armies were very indifferently supplied with information, as both were without any reliable regular cavalry capable of piercing the screen of outposts with which each endeavoured to conceal his disposition, and Napoleon, operating in a most unfriendly country, suffered more in this respect than his adversaries." 

"This led the latter to push on without due regard to tactical precautions, and Blücher took advantage of their carelessness when at Haynau (May 26), with some twenty squadrons of Landwehr cavalry, he surprised, rode over and almost destroyed Maison's division. The material loss inflicted on the French was not very great, but its effect in raising the moral of the raw Prussian cavalry and increasing their confidence in their old commander was enormous."

Should or ought to — 2012 Men's rights controversy
As was shown in the great move debate of 2012 over the article now titled "Men's rights movement"


 * Talk:Men's rights movement/Archive 12
 * ANI
 * Wikipedia talk:Requested moves/Archive 25

Citation style

 * Footnote3 and Requests for arbitration/Climate change dispute 2 disputes over citations.
 * WP:CITE 17:01, 25 April 2006
 * 4 May 2006 Just prior to SV
 * Revision as of 23:42, 4 May 2006 SV "Editors should not switch from one citation system to another without checking on the talk page that there are no objections."
 * Revision as of 00:59, 5 August 2006 SV:
 * "Citation templates are neither required nor recommended, though they may be used at the discretion of individual editors."


 * end of 2006 what it looked like at the end of the year

11:05, 5 August 2006

Semicolon at the start of a line must end in a colon
MOS:DLIST and also MOS:PSEUDOHEAD

MOS:COMPASS and WP:SEASON

 * MOS:COMPASS South East England
 * MOS:SEASON in the southern and northern hemispheres.

This and that
These templates should not be used by involved parties to end a discussion over the objections of other editors


 * Let the facts speak for themselves WP:MORALISE
 * Wikimedia Commons
 * Annexation and the Abyssinia Crisis
 * Encyclopédie first named contributors and enlightenment bias
 * elliptical sentences. Adverb Clause : The Elliptical Clause
 * /wikipedia_s_battle_over_very_short_articles
 * Arthur Capell, 1st Baron Capell of Hadham was mangled and the attribution was removed.
 * Babrius


 * Gebhard Leberecht von Blücher needs fixing
 * Georg Ludwig von Wahlen-Jürgass s:de:ADB:Wahlen-Jürgaß, Georg Ludwig von


 * Wikimedia feedback
 * Mass message senders send a message, inform many users
 * Federalist No. 69 -- military administrative and operational command.
 * novel narrative or historical interpretation Removed December 2007. Original research that creates primary sources is not allowed
 * comment on Article titles sentence in the MOS and Wikipedia talk:Manual of Style/Archive 132

Sorites paradox (beard paradox), Ship of Theseus


 * Frederick Cavendish Ponsonby wounded seven times at the Battle of Waterloo and survived
 * Category:Massacres during the Wars of the Three Kingdoms
 * Civil War massacres Holt Castle, Hopton Castle, St Bertoline's Church, Barthomley, (
 * List of 18 massacres:


 * {T} Wikipedia citation tool for Google Books
 * August 2006 talk templates cite additions
 * Wikipedia talk:Manual of Style/Archive 117
 * KING EDWARD'S SCHOOL CHRONICLE MARCH 1961 pages 8,27,28,30,31
 * Abbreviations in Medieval Genealogy
 * WDYDINWD
 * Plagiarism
 * Frederick Gustavus Burnaby a Victorian celebrity
 * to date
 * Logical Fallacies
 * Wikipedia should not be inventing a neologism in English.
 * WikiProject Countering systemic bias
 * Welcoming new users ...
 * NicDumZ:uses a useful bot that fixes numeric references
 * Talk:Hugo Sperrle in April interbellum
 * Village pump
 * Wikipedia talk:Reusing Wikipedia content, m:talk:Communications committee and Press coverage, Wikipedia talk:Citing_sources/Archive 23(17 July 2008)


 * Polish–Teutonic War (1431–1435)
 * Neutral point of view Describing points of view Neutral point of view/FAQ
 * Wikipedia_talk:Reliable_sources/archive11 (food for thought)
 * Verifiability WP:RM Cite your sources
 * wiki is not paper
 * Policy Library
 * Manual of Style WP:UE WP:NC
 * Google test WP:AFD
 * Avoid instruction creep


 * Lists
 * Lists in Wikipedia
 * Listcruft
 * Searching


 * Ownership of articles
 * Conflict resolution
 * Requests for comment
 * User:GTBacchus/A recurring problem


 * Wikiquette
 * Civility
 * Brilliant prose


 * Researching with Wikipedia


 * Current polls
 * Utilities Category:Wikipedia and Community Portal
 * Pages needing attention
 * Peer review
 * Boilerplate text
 * IRC channel
 * Mailing lists
 * Criteria for inclusion of biographies


 * Silly Things
 * Lamest edit wars


 * a watchlist click "related changes" in the toolbox


 * Template_messages templates for articles needing things
 * policies: WP:3RR WP:AGF WP:V WP:NPA WP:RPA WP:BALLS WP:IAR WP:CITE also WP:WQA.


 * Manual of Style (headings)
 * Wikipedia talk:Template standardisation/article


 * Cohesion (linguistics)
 * The Charms of Wikipedia, Creating, Destroying, and Restoring Value in Wikipedia.
 * Treaty and League of Nations statment
 * 1938 draft treaty
 * Air War College
 * Christopher Vincenzi *Crown Powers, Subjects and Citizens (Küchenmeister habeas corpus 1946) ex parte Küchenmeister [1947] I K.B. 41 Some Legal Aspects of the Berlin Crisis
 * United Nations War Crimes Commission, Law reports of trials of war criminals: United Nations War Crimes Commission, Wm. S. Hein (1997)


 * A social history of English Rugby Union by Tony Collins 85
 * The erotic muse: American bawdy songs by Ed Cray 368

<!-- Guy Fawkes Footnotes p 27 of "International law and armed conflict: United Kingdom Association for Social.

.." by Anthony Bradney. (killed to wounded ratio)

Categories for deletion/Log/2005 May 14 Cavaliers and Roundheads CHAPTER ONE - NEGATIONISM IN GENERAL

Angolo American pre-war statements on bombing
Chamberlin can be linked in with some of the pre-war statements of the US government which are at R.J. Rummel's web site [Was World War II American Urban Bombing Democide?] NB Rummel says that domocide uses today's international law not contemporary international law. I think his analysis of whether it was a crime at the time is faulty because the treaty he sites was never adopted in legally binding form. The League of nations resolution was just that, it was not a treaty so not legally binding, but a request to draw up a treaty "means of undertaking the necessary work under conditions most likely to lead to as general an agreement as possible"

On Page 365 of "Dresden Tuesday 13 Feb 1945" by F Taylor, he states that the USAAF planned to use used 678.3 tones of HE and 400 tones of incendiaries, not all were dropped on Dresden but those that were, were in the same ratio. This he says was an unusual bomb mix because it was more like an RAF city busting mix instead of the usual USAAF precision mix. He also says that there is some confusion over the exact target of the USAAF

BTW I've been looking at the OED, trouble is it does not report on the pejorative use of the term. The closest is this one:
 * 1977 Time 30 May 4/3 The recent cluster of ‘revisionist’ books on Nazism, which would soften the frightening teachings of this maniacal movement.

And I know you will want to point out the quotes around the word revisionist.

Here is a reconstruction of the information I wish to add to this article using a different approach:
 * The term historical revisionism is used by people other than those such as David Irving who describe themselves as revisionist, to describe the process of Holocaust denial. In 2005 Raffi Berg for the BBC reported that Kate Taylor, of the anti-fascist publication Searchlight said "Holocaust revisionism is spreading, and not only among neo-Nazis," and also that Kay Andrews, of the UK Holocaust Educational Trust said "With the internet, you've got to be fairly well-educated to see through what revisionist websites are trying to do" and that she went on to say "So as a result kids put the Holocaust into a search engine, which comes up with all of this stuff, and at 14-years-old they are not mature enough to make that distinction between a denialist site and a more legitimate site." (Sources Richard Evans, Lying About Hitler: History, Holocaust, and the David Irving Trial,ISBN 0-465-02153-0. Page 145.  for Irving's self claim, The rest from one BBC, article)

Here is scientific style guide from the 12th International Conference on Electroanalysis, ESEAC 2008 which says "Paragraph text starts with indent tab (7 mm), whole text Times, italics 9 pt flush left, block. Compound numbering in Latin numerals bold italics VII. Arabic numbers in bold italics are possible too 6. Literature cited before punctuation in superscript1.(doc fmt)]

http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=RlsNti5_vnMC&pg=PA59&lpg=PA59&dq=revisionist+English+Civil+War&source=web&ots=pOz-GvfI65&sig=PnjWxGw-8W53g4S8rnl-NgwqJR4&hl=en&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=3&ct=result http://www.amazon.com/English-Civil-Arnold-Readers-History/dp/0340631732 "Revisionism" complicates early modern British history, as old certainties are abandoned, and as scholars and students are forced to confront the messiness of events. These two books offer an important revision of a key event in the civil wars, and attempt to assist students struggling through the dense forest of literature and recent historiography. http://www.casahistoria.net/historiography%20of%20the%20Civil%20War.pdf http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=RlsNti5_vnMC&pg=PA41&lpg=PA41&dq=revisionist+English+Civil+War+histography&source=web&ots=pOz-GvfNc3&sig=rFp3QfePNclPoCt7qmRsRFEdbrE&hl=en&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=9&ct=result http://www.blackwellpublishing.com/bookxml.asp?isbn=0631208097

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