User:Srice13/Sandbox

To Dos

 * Guat Presidents to update

José Rafael Carrera Turcios

Pedro de Aycinena y Piñol

Vicente Cerna Sandoval

Miguel García Granados Zavala

Justo Rufino Barrios Auyón

Alejandro M. Sinibaldi

Manuel Lisandro Barillas Bercián

José María Reina Barrios

Manuel José Estrada Cabrera

Carlos Herrera y Luna

José María Orellana Pinto

Lázaro Chacón González

José María Reina Andrade

Jorge Ubico y Castañeda

Juan Federico Ponce Vaides

Juan José Arévalo Bermejo

Jacobo Arbenz Guzmán

Carlos Enrique Díaz de León

Luis Arturo González López

Guillermo Flores Avendaño

José Miguel Ramón Ydígoras Fuentes

Alfredo Enrique Peralta Azurdia

Julio César Méndez Montenegro

Carlos Manuel Arana Osorio

Kjell Eugenio Laugerud García

Fernando Romeo Lucas García

José Efraín Ríos Montt

Óscar Humberto Mejía Victores

Marco Vinicio Cerezo Arévalo

Jorge Antonio Serrano Elías

Gustavo Adolfo Espina Salguero

Ramiro de León Carpio

Álvaro Enrique Arzú Irigoyen

Alfonso Antonio Portillo Cabrera

Óscar Berger Perdomo

Possibilities
Category:Succession templates

1. Use one of the following as appropriate (all currently redirect to Infobox Officeholder):
 * Infobox Chancellor
 * Infobox Governor General
 * Infobox President
 * Infobox Prime Minister
 * Infobox Vice President

2. Modify the sucession box to use the format being developed by WikiProject Succession Box Standardization e.g.


 * Template:s-start to start the wikibox
 * Template:s-bef to list predecessor
 * Template:s-ttl to show politcal office
 * Template:s-inc to show incumbent status
 * Template:s-aft to show successors
 * Template:s-non to show fields lacking predecessor and / or sucessor
 * Template:end to end the wikibox

3. Create / Update a Head of State Page for each country (e.g. President of the United States)

4. Create / Update List of x pages for each country (e.g. List of Presidents of the United States)

5. Create a navigation templates like Template:US Presidents

Latin American Wars of Independence
South American Wars of Independence

Possible Outlines
From War of the Spanish Succession
 * 1) Origins
 * 2) Beginning of the war
 * 3) Early fighting
 * 4) Blenheim to Malplaquet
 * 5) Final stages
 * 6) Result
 * 7) Notes
 * 8) References
 * 9) See also
 * 10) External links

From War of the League of Cambrai
 * 1) Prelude
 * 2) League of Cambrai (1508–10)
 * 3) Veneto-Papal alliance (1510–11)
 * 4) Holy League (1511–13)
 * 5) Franco-Venetian alliance (1513–16)
 * 6) Aftermath
 * 7) Notes
 * 8) References

From War of the Fifth Coalition Contents [hide]
 * 1) Background
 * 2) Third Coalition (1805)
 * 3) Fourth Coalition (1806–1807)
 * 4) French in Iberia (1807–1809)
 * 5) Austria stands alone
 * 6) War
 * 7) Austrian reforms
 * 8) Austrian preparations
 * 9) French preparations
 * 10) Austria strikes first
 * 11) Landshut Maneuver
 * 12) Aspern-Essling
 * 13) Wagram
 * 14) Other theaters
 * 15) Aftermath
 * 16) Notes
 * 17) References

From Polish-Soviet War
 * 1) Names and dates
 * 2) Prelude
 * 3) Course
 * 4) 1919
 * 5) Chaos in Eastern Europe
 * 6) First Polish-Soviet conflicts
 * 7) Diplomatic Front, Part 1: The alliances
 * 8) 1920
 * 9) Opposing forces
 * 10) The tide turns: Operation Kiev
 * 11) String of Soviet victories
 * 12) Diplomatic Front, Part 2: The political games
 * 13) The tide turns: Miracle at the Vistula
 * 14) Conclusion
 * 15) Aftermath
 * 16) List of battles
 * 17) Notes
 * 18) Bibliography
 * 19) Non-English
 * 20) Polish
 * 21) Russian
 * 22) External links

From Polish–Muscovite War (1605–1618)
 * 1) Names of the war
 * 2) Prelude to the war
 * 3) The First Dymitriad (1605-1606)
 * 4) The Second Dymitriad (1607-1609)
 * 5) Polish-Muscovite War (1609-1618)
 * 6) Polish victories (1609-1610)
 * 7) Poles in Moscow (1610)
 * 8) The war resumes (1611)
 * 9) A new respite (1612-1617)
 * 10) The final stage (1617-1618)
 * 11) Aftermath
 * 12) Modern legacy
 * 13) See also
 * 14) References
 * 15) Further reading
 * 16) External links

From Italian War of 1521
 * 1) Prelude
 * 2) Initial moves (1521–22)
 * 3) France at bay (1522–24)
 * 4) Pavia (1524–25)
 * 5) Madrid (1525–26)
 * 6) Notes
 * 7) References

From Algerian Civil War
 * 1) Liberalization: prelude to war
 * 2) Elections cancelled: a guerrilla war begins
 * 3) Failed negotiations and guerrilla infighting
 * 4) Politics resume, militias emerge
 * 5) Massacres and reconciliation
 * 6) GIA destroyed, GSPC continues
 * 7) Notes
 * 8) References
 * 9) External links

From Kengir uprising
 * 1) Background
 * 2) Gulag
 * 3) Kengir
 * 4) Thieves
 * 5) Stoolies
 * 6) Weaponry and organization
 * 7) The camp compound
 * 8) Seizing of the camp
 * 9) The new camp society
 * 10) Culture
 * 11) Government
 * 12) Propaganda
 * 13) Defense
 * 14) Technical Department
 * 15) Negotiations
 * 16) Sowing discord
 * 17) Suppression
 * 18) Prelude
 * 19) The raid
 * 20) Aftermath
 * 21) Significance
 * 22) See also
 * 23) Footnotes
 * 24) References

From History of Central Asia
 * 1) Prehistory
 * 2) External influences
 * 3) Return of indigenous rule
 * 4) Conquest of the steppes
 * 5) Foreign control of Turkestan
 * 6) Russia's campaigns
 * 7) Chinese influence
 * 8) Revolution and revolt
 * 9) Soviet and PRC domination
 * 10) Since 1991
 * 11) See also
 * 12) Notes
 * 13) References
 * 14) Further reading

From American Revolutionary War (not FA))
 * 1) Combatants before 1778
 * 2) Armies, militias, and mercenaries
 * 3) African-Americans and American Indians
 * 4) War in the north, 1775–1777
 * 5) Massachusetts
 * 6) Canada
 * 7) New York and New Jersey
 * 8) Saratoga and Philadelphia
 * 9) Saratoga campaign
 * 10) Philadelphia campaign
 * 11) An international war, 1778–1783
 * 12) Widening of the naval war
 * 13) West Indies and Gulf Coast
 * 14) India and the Netherlands
 * 15) Southern theater
 * 16) Northern and western theater
 * 17) Yorktown and the war's end
 * 18) Casualties
 * 19) Historical assessment
 * 20) See also
 * 21) Notes
 * 22) References
 * 23) Further reading
 * 24) External links

From American Revolution (not FA)
 * 1) Origins
 * 2) Taxation without representation
 * 3) Liberalism and republicanism
 * 4) Western land dispute
 * 5) Crises, 1772–1775
 * 6) Fighting begins at Lexington: 1775
 * 7) Patriots
 * 8) Loyalists and neutrals
 * 9) Class differences among the Patriots
 * 10) Women
 * 11) Creating new state constitutions
 * 12) Military history: expulsion of the British 1776
 * 13) Independence, 1776
 * 14) War
 * 15) British return: 1776-1777
 * 16) British attack the South, 1779-1781
 * 17) Peace treaty
 * 18) Aftermath of war
 * 19) Worldwide influence
 * 20) Interpretations
 * 21) National debt
 * 22) See also
 * 23) Bibliography
 * 24) Reference works
 * 25) Surveys
 * 26) Specialized studies
 * 27) Primary sources
 * 28) Plays and films about the American Revolution
 * 29) External links

Notable Documents

 * Cartagena Manifesto - A document composed by Bolívar that argues for the link between the Viceroyalty of New Granada and Venezuela, and dissects the causes of the fall of the first republic:
 * Laws were devised by philosophers striving for perfection, not dealing with practical realities.
 * The government did not reflect the internal potlitical reality: Internal strife should have been met with a strong hand.
 * The people were not prepared to vote (some were too ignorant to make an informed decision; some were too idealistic with their ballots, splittin the vote).
 * Treaty of San Mateo -

Simón Bolívar
Associates:

Ladies:
 * Maria Teresa - First Wife (Married May 26, 1802 in Madrid, Spain) until her death (January 22, 1803 in San Mateo)
 * Anita Lénoit - December 1812 in Salamina
 * Josefina Machado - August 1813 (in Caracas) to 1819: Possible influence on affairs of state?
 * Julia Cobier - Jamaica 1815
 * Manuela Sáenz - 1822 (in Quito) (moved her to Lima 1825) - 1830 (Death)
 * Manuela Madroño - April 1824 and (???) in Huaylas
 * Francisca Zubiaga de Gamarra - Wife of the Prefect of Cuzco. Nicknamed, "La Mariscala"(June 1825 in Cuzco)

Others

 * Pedro Briceño Mendez
 * José Bermudez
 * Anastasio Girardot
 * Francisco Itúrbide - Bolívar family friend, Minister of Finance in the Venezuelan Repblic.
 * Augustín Itúrbide
 * Santiago Mariño
 * Domingo Monteverde - Spanish es:Domingo Monteverde
 * Anotonio Nariño - Head of the Republic of Cundinamarca and student of Miranda.
 * Ambrosio O'Higgins
 * Bernardo O'Higgins
 * Pedro Demetrio O'Higgins
 * Tomás O'Higgins
 * William O'Higgins
 * Daniel Florence O'Leary
 * José Antonio Páez - Llanero leader (from - to)
 * Antonio Ricuarte
 * Francisco de Paula Santander
 * Carlos Soublette
 * Antonio José de Sucre
 * José Bernardo de Tagle
 * Camilo Torres
 * Rafael Urdaneta

Notable Places

 * Carabobo
 * Cordillera Oriental
 * Cúcuta
 * San Mateo, Aragua - Location of Bolívar's inherited hacienda in Venezuela.
 * Venezuela