Wikipedia talk:Selected anniversaries/December 13
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Jack the Ripper Stalks His Victims is the first collection by British designer Alexander McQueen, produced for his master's degree in fashion at Central Saint Martins. Inspired by the victims of Jack the Ripper, and by Victorian-era fashion, erotica, and prostitution practices, the collection was presented on the runway at London Fashion Week on 16 March 1992. Editor Isabella Blow was fascinated by the runway show and insisted on purchasing the entire collection, and became McQueen's friend and muse. Jack the Ripper remains an object of critical analysis for its violent concept and styling. McQueen continued the narrative and aesthetic tendencies from Jack the Ripper, producing collections inspired by macabre aspects of history, art, and his own life. Items from Jack the Ripper, most notably a pink frock coat with a thorn print (pictured), have appeared in Alexander McQueen: Savage Beauty (2011 and 2015) and Isabella Blow: Fashion Galore! (2013). (Full article...)
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The 1981 event should probably point to Martial law in Poland. That is the article about the actual event, as opposed to Martial law, which describes what it is in general. --daranzt 15:47, 13 December 2006 (UTC)
Dartmouth
editIs not really Royally Chartered. The only two royally chartered colleges in the US are Columbia and William & Mary. Dartmouth's charter is signed by the governor, on behalf of the crown, but not by the crown. Savidan 21:23, 13 December 2010 (UTC)
- I'm sorry, I don't quite understand how we can qualify the statement in order to be accurate in the way that you mention. Can you suggest an alternative wording? howcheng {chat} 22:24, 13 December 2010 (UTC)
- Dartmouth, and the rest of December 13, is now off the Main Page. I presume it's unprotected, so you can fix it for next year. Art LaPella (talk) 00:52, 14 December 2010 (UTC)
2011 notes
edit- Swapped out: Council of Trent, Dartmouth College, 2001 Indian Parliament attack, Baiji
- Swapped in: Battle of Alton (first appearance), Ephraim McDowell (first appearance), Nanking Massacre (4th appearance, last in 2008, recovered from Ineligible), Wojciech Jaruzelski (6th appearance, last in 2009, recovered from Ineligible)
- Left in: 1960 Ethiopian coup attempt (2nd consecutive appearance, 2nd overall)
- Deliberately did not use Battle of Fredericksburg, despite its omission last year, to avoid having three war articles.
2012 notes
edit- Omitted: Battle of Alton; Ephraim McDowell; 1960 Ethiopian coup attempt; Wojciech Jaruzelski
- Included: Francis Drake (9th appearance, last in 2008); National Guard of the United States (first appearance); Battle of Fredericksburg (6th appearance, last in 2009; 150th anniversary); 2001 Indian Parliament attack (2nd appearance, last in 2010)
- Repeats: Nanking Massacre (2nd consecutive appearance, 5 total; 75th anniversary)
2013 notes
edit- Omitted: Francis Drake; National Guard of the United States; Battle of Fredericksburg; Nanking Massacre; 2001 Indian Parliament attack
- Included: Council of Trent (7th appearance, last in 2010); Ephraim McDowell (2nd appearance, last in 2011); 1960 Ethiopian coup attempt (3rd appearance, last in 2011); Attack on Derryard checkpoint (first appearance); 2011 Liège attack (first appearance)
—howcheng {chat} 05:14, 12 December 2013 (UTC)
Another suggestion is 13 December 1981 when General Jaruzelski declared martial law, suspended Solidarity and imprisoned many union leaders. I THINK THIS IS VERY IMPORTANT. -TrainSimFan
Arba'een
editArba'een is added. While Arba'een is always on the same day of the Islamic calendar, the date on the Gregorian calendar varies from year to year due to differences between the two calendars, since the Islamic calendar, the Hijri calendar (AH), is a lunar calendar and the Gregorian calendar is a solar calendar. Furthermore, the method used to determine when each Islamic month begins varies from country to country (see Islamic calendar). Arba'een this year, coincides with 13 December in many countries such as Iraq. Mhhossein (talk) 09:48, 10 December 2014 (UTC)
2014 notes
edit- Deleted: Ephraim McDowell (moved to December 25)
- Moved to Ineligible: National Guard of the United States (maintenance); Baiji (maintenance)
- Omitted: Malta (ineligible—maintenance); Council of Trent; 1960 Ethiopian coup attempt; Wojciech Jaruzelski; 2011 Liège attack
- Included: Battle of Alton (2nd appearance, last in 2011); Duke William (ship) (first appearance); Battle of Nanking/Nanking Massacre (Battle: 2nd appearance, Massacre: 6th appearance, last in 2012); 2001 Indian Parliament attack (3rd appearance, last in 2012)
- Repeats: Attack on Derryard checkpoint (2nd consecutive appearance, 2 total; 25th anniversary)
2015 notes
edit- Rescued from Ineligible (unused): Baiji
- Omitted: Battle of Alton; Duke William (ship); Battle of Nanking/Nanking Massacre; Attack on Derryard checkpoint
- Included: Council of Trent (8th appearance, last in 2013); Dartmouth College (5th appearance, last in 2010); 1960 Ethiopian coup attempt (4th appearance, last in 2013); Wojciech Jaruzelski (7th appearance, last in 2011)
- Repeats: 2001 Indian Parliament attack (2nd consecutive appearance, 4 total)
2016 notes
edit- Omitted: Council of Trent; Dartmouth College; Wojciech Jaruzelski; 2001 Indian Parliament attack
- Included: Francis Drake (10th appearance, last in 2012); Battle of Fredericksburg (7th appearance, last in 2012); Attack on Derryard checkpoint (3rd appearance, last in 2014); Baiji (2nd appearance, last in 2010; 10th anniversary)
- Repeats: 1960 Ethiopian coup attempt (2nd consecutive appearance, 5 total)
Edit war by Joseph
edit@Howcheng: Please notice that User:Sir Joseph is edit warring on this page. He has reverted all of my house keepings. --Mhhossein talk 19:29, 11 December 2017 (UTC)
- Reverting you is not edit warring. You are the one who didn't abide by BRD. Sir Joseph (talk) 20:05, 11 December 2017 (UTC)
- And you came to be wrong as Howcheng said, not Bold. --Mhhossein talk 07:13, 12 December 2017 (UTC)
- That's not how BRD works. And is there a reason why you are so aggressive with this entry? Sir Joseph (talk) 16:35, 12 December 2017 (UTC)
- And you came to be wrong as Howcheng said, not Bold. --Mhhossein talk 07:13, 12 December 2017 (UTC)
OK, let's cool it down here. Sir Joseph, this is standard operating procedure for OTD updates. We usually vet the articles 1-3 days in advance of their main page appearance. If we do it too late, then we get complaints that there wasn't enough time for editors to fix any problems, and if we do it too early, then basically you have to do it again later in case any changes were made. A few days ahead of time seems to be the optimal balance. As I said to you elsewhere, if you have an issue with specific article(s) (such as in this case), then please limit the scope of your revert so that other cleanup is not affected. Mhhossein the Jewish holidays are kind of a special case because WikiProject Judaism is fairly proactive in fixing issues when they are made aware of them. SJ specifically came to me about this article to let me know they were working on it, so we can let this get handled at WP:ERRORS if it's not done in time. Thanks. —howcheng {chat} 16:59, 12 December 2017 (UTC)
- OK, I'm OK with that. I do think however that some of the tagging is extremely nitpicky and overly aggressive. Our goal should be to have articles on the front page, not to exclude them. If there are glaring issues, then yes, it might not belong, but on the flip side, having articles on the page allow more people to edit and fix issues. Sir Joseph (talk) 17:02, 12 December 2017 (UTC)
- Thanks for the intervention Howcheng. Reverting all what I had done was sort of annoying edit. SJ could simply resolve the issues instead of these reverts. I do my best to to keep the main page clean. --Mhhossein talk 18:29, 12 December 2017 (UTC)
Hanukkah
editDear @Howcheng: Hanukkah is listed as eligible while it has some maintenance tags and needs to be refimproved in multiple areas. --Mhhossein talk 07:16, 12 December 2017 (UTC)
2017 notes
edit- Moved to Ineligible: Council of Trent (maintenance); Duke William (ship) (maintenance); 2001 Indian Parliament attack (maintenance)
- Omitted: Battle of Fredericksburg; 1960 Ethiopian coup attempt; Attack on Derryard checkpoint; Baiji (ineligible—maintenance)
- Included: Battle of Alton (3rd appearance, last in 2014); Dartmouth College (first appearance); Battle of Nanking (3rd appearance, last in 2014; 80th anniversary); 1982 North Yemen earthquake (first appearance); Samuel Johnson (first appearance); Emily Carr (first appearance); Taylor Swift (first appearance)
2018 notes
edit- Omitted: Dartmouth College; Battle of Nanking; 1982 North Yemen earthquake; Samuel Johnson; Emily Carr; Taylor Swift
- Included: Battle of Fredericksburg (8th appearance, last in 2016); An American in Paris (first appearance; 90th anniversary); 1960 Ethiopian coup attempt (6th appearance, last in 2016); 2001 Indian Parliament attack (5th appearance, last in 2015); Francesco Bianchini (first appearance); Ana Néri (first appearance); Dora Marsden (first appearance)
- Repeats: Battle of Alton (2nd consecutive appearance, 4 total; 375th anniversary)
2019 notes
edit- Omitted: Battle of Fredericksburg; An American in Paris; 1960 Ethiopian coup attempt; 2001 Indian Parliament attack; Francesco Bianchini; Ana Néri; Dora Marsden
- Included: Dartmouth College (7th appearance, last in 2017; 250th anniversary); Battle of Nanking (4th appearance, last in 2017); Attack on Derryard checkpoint (4th appearance, last in 2016; 30th anniversary); 2011 Liège attack (2nd appearance, last in 2013); Heinrich Heine (first appearance); Taylor Swift (2nd appearance, last in 2017; 30th birthday); Jill Craigie (first appearance)
- Repeats: Battle of Alton (3rd consecutive appearance, 5 total)
2020 notes
edit- New articles (ineligible): 1975 Spring Offensive (maintenance)
- Omitted: Battle of Alton; Dartmouth College; Battle of Nanking; Attack on Derryard checkpoint; 2011 Liège attack; Heinrich Heine; Jill Craigie
- Included: Battle of Fredericksburg (9th appearance, last in 2018); An American in Paris (2nd appearance, last in 2018); 1960 Ethiopian coup d'état attempt (7th appearance, last in 2018; 60th anniversary); 1982 North Yemen earthquake (2nd appearance, last in 2017); Paul Speratus (first appearance); Mary Todd Lincoln (first appearance); Dora Marsden (2nd appearance, last in 2018; 60th anniversary)
2021 notes
edit- Omitted: Battle of Fredericksburg; An American in Paris; 1960 Ethiopian coup d'état attempt; 1982 North Yemen earthquake; Paul Speratus; Mary Todd Lincoln; Dora Marsden
- Included: Battle of Alton (6th appearance, last in 2019); Dartmouth College (8th appearance, last in 2019); Martial law in Poland (2nd appearance, last in 2021; 40th anniversary; also appeared on July 22, but removed from there; rescued from Ineligible; blurb previously featured Wojciech Jaruzelski, which remains ineligible, and is making its 8th appearance, last in 2015); 2001 Indian Parliament attack (6th appearance, last in 2018; 20th anniversary); 2011 Liège attack (3rd appearance, last in 2019; 10th anniversary); Pope Callixtus II (first appearance); Emily Carr (2nd appearance, last in 2017; 150th birthday); Hans-Joachim Marseille (first appearance)