The following discussions are requested to have community-wide attention:
Is the main source of the Besor stream in the northwestern Negev (Mount Boker) or in the Hebron Hills of the West Bank? Or should both sources be treated equally (i.e. there is no main source)? Closetside (talk) 22:20, 9 May 2025 (UTC) |
Talk:List of wars involving the Czech lands
Hi,
A discussion above: Talk:List of wars involving the Czech lands#1030 + 1051 German campaign against Hungary was not a victory The Holy Roman Empire, the Emperor Conrad II started a campaing against Kingdom of Hungary in 1030, Duchy of Bohemia and Bohemian Prince Bretislav I (Czech land) was part of that imperial campaign. The outcome was Holy Roman Empire defeat, and even Hungarians captured Vienna (Holy Roman Empire land). The article title: "List of wars involving Czech lands", Czech land/Bohemia was part of that campaign and Prince Bretislav I led an army in the campaign, Emperor Conrad II was his overlord. Czech98006 is making an edit war, claiming that it was not a defeat or it was just indecisive, even he removes the Holy Roman Empire participation, however it was a Holy Roman Empire campaign. 1 + 2 Strange, he removes the Holy Roman Empire, but he mentions the emperor... 3 I provided in the talk page several academic sources, Hungarian and German sources, while Czech98006 has claim whitout showing a proper source, or he has just a personal blog, even dates does not match there, he also has fringe claims, that Bretislav conquered huge part of Hungary 1030-1044, of course no any academic sources doest not know about that, and I do not understand then why the emperor lost his campaign. I asked many times to follow Wikipedia rulers, like no original research, use academic reliable sources Wikipedia:No original research + Wikipedia:Reliable sources + WP:SCHOLARSHIP I quoted many academic sources in talk page: 1 "On his way the emperor spen the night at the coister. He returned unvictorious and whitout an army, because the army, threatened by starvation, had been captured by the Hungarians at or near Vienna" Another one: 1 "Emperor Conrad marched with an army into Hungary and spent the night in the monastery of Niederaltaich on Sunday, June 21st (1030). But he returned from Hungary without an army and without having accomplished anything, because the army was threatened by hunger and was either taken captive by the Hungarians in Vienna or — and here opinions diverge — Vienna was taken by the Hungarians." Another one: 1 "Thus Conrad had to return in disgrace, without any achievements, and not only without an army, but also, so to speak, without a soldier. The fact that Bretislav's column managed to advance all the way to the Garam did not change this deplorable state of affairs much." Another one: 1 "Emperor Conrad II launched a campaign against Hungary in the year 1030...Conrad decided on war and allied himself with Bretislaus, Duke of Moravia, while Stephen formed an alliance with the Polish prince... In early July, Conrad’s army invaded Hungary between Moson and Sopron, while his ally Bretislaus advanced toward Pozsony, then—remaining on the left bank of the Danube—devastated the land as far as Esztergom. Stephen summoned the Hungarian nation to arms but did not confront Conrad directly....he evacuated and laid waste to the land along the enemy’s route of advance. This strategy alone was enough to repel the invaders. Soon, hunger struck the German army, followed by disease in the marshy regions around the Fertő Lake, forcing the emperor to retreat as far as Rába. At this point, Stephen's Hungarians launched their counterattack. Harassing and plundering the retreating forces, they quickly broke the German army’s cohesion, and the various units fled home in disorder. The Hungarians captured Vienna and the emperor “returned without an army, having accomplished nothing." All other relevant articles all consistent and sourced regarding that campaign:
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Shall we summarize the pardon in the WP:LEAD?
See diff and text: On January 20, 2025, President Biden granted Fauci a Federal pardon.[1][2] Thanks! Jtbobwaysf (talk) 10:23, 7 May 2025 (UTC) |
Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Military history
A debate has arisen regarding what is the proper definition for "tank battle" over on Talk:Operation Brevity#"Tank Battle"?. There appear to be two competing definitions up for selection. Which of the following definitions should be used when deciding whether to classify a military engagement on Wikipedia as a "tank battle"?
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According to the historian 'Abd al-Wahid al-Marrakushi, Abd al-Mu'min was born in Tagra near Tlemcen during the reign of Yusuf ibn Tashfin, [1] which is consistent with the historical events of that time, as the Almoravids took control of Tlemcen around the year 1081,[2] and The Almoravid Mosque of Algiers was built in 1097, one year after the birth of Abd al-Mu'min, which indicates that the Hammadid borders did not extend beyond Algiers and that's why I ask editors to decide between:
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There is ongoing disagreement among editors about which landmarks should be included in the lead image montage of the Perth article. This RFC seeks community input on how best to determine which landmarks are most appropriate or representative for inclusion. The dispute revolves around three landmarks:
Please indicate which option you support, and feel free to suggest modifications or alternative combinations. - PastelLilac (talk) 01:04, 28 April 2025 (UTC) |
Should the article refer to this attack as a militant attack or a terrorist attack?
Previous discussions Please discuss it throught policy based arguments. GrabUp - Talk 07:14, 27 April 2025 (UTC) |
Should the article, including the opening sentence of the lead section, state the Gaza Genocide in wikivoice as fact?:
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Should the lead of the article for the painter Ramon Casas label the subject "Catalan", rather than "Spanish"? While the question may appear minor, it is not, inasmuch as it is an example of low-level disputes that seem to occur regularly regarding Catalan/Spanish questions, e.g., the articles Empúries or Siege of Gerona. Bdushaw (talk) 10:37, 25 April 2025 (UTC) |
Should the "Interpretations; civil war in perspective" section (for reference copied above) be in or out? Hh1718 (talk) 09:29, 25 April 2025 (UTC) |
Talk:List of countries that have gained independence from the United Kingdom
Should the entry for the United States in the table note that the modern-day territory of the United States is much larger than the one it had at independence? Glide08 (talk) 14:31, 23 April 2025 (UTC) |
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