Wikipedia:List of infoboxes/Society
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Contents |
[edit] Food and drink
[edit] Beef
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Beef Cut: | Rib |
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Steak Type: | Rib Roast |
{{beefbox |name= |image= |caption= |beefcut= |steaktype= |footnotes= }}
[edit] Beer
See Wikipedia:WikiProject Beer and Wikipedia:WikiProject Beer/How to use the brewboxes
Bass Brewers Limited | |
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Location | Burton-on-Trent, Staffodshire United Kingdom |
Owner | Coors Brewing Company |
Year opened | 1777 |
Annual production | 8.5 million UK barrels |
Active Beers | |
Bass Export | English pale ale |
Bass Pale Ale | English pale ale |
No. 1 | English barley wine |
Our Finest Ale | English pale ale |
Worthington 1744 | English pale ale |
Worthington Creamflow Bitter | English bitter |
[edit] Cheese
See Wikipedia:WikiProject Cheeses
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Production Area | Southern France |
Milk | Ewe milk (whole) |
Pasteurized | No |
Texture | Semi-hard |
Fat content | approx. 36% |
Protein content | approx. 22% |
Dimensions/weight | 25cm x 10cm thick/2.5-3kg |
Aging time | approx. 3 months |
Certification | AOC |
[edit] Mixed drinks, drinkware, and cocktail garnishes
This drink is designated as an IBA Official Cocktail |
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Whiskey Sour | |
A typical whiskey sour in a non-standard glass.
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Type: | Cocktail |
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Primary alcohol by volume: | |
Served: | "On the rocks"; poured over ice |
Standard garnish: | ½ orange slice and maraschino cherry |
Standard drinkware: | Rocks glass |
IBA specified ingredients†: |
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Preparation: | Pour all ingredients into cocktail shaker filled with ice. Shake well. Strain in old fashioned or cobbler glass. If served "on the rocks", strain ingredients into old fashioned glass filled with ice. Garnish with half orange slice and maraschino cherry. |
This infobox is a consistently-formatted table that should be present on articles concerning notable alcoholic and non-alcoholic mixed drinks, including cocktails, as well as cocktail garnishes and drinkware. By providing readers a consistent table of similar information within all the page concerning these topics, they will be able to locate the pertinent information quickly and easily, without having to read through the entire article.
Detailed usage instructions are included on the template page.
--Powered by the Mixed Drinks and related Drinkware WikiProject
[edit] Whisky
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Also known as: | |||
Origin: | |||
Fragrance: | |||
Smoothness: | |||
Sweetness: | |||
Color: | |||
Complexity: | |||
Body and texture: | |||
Finish: | |||
Relative cost: | |||
Overall Rating: |
[edit] Wine
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Official name: |
Willamette Valley AVA |
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Appellation type: |
American Viticultural Area |
Year established: |
1984 |
Years of wine industry: |
1965– |
Sub-regions: | Dundee Hills AVA McMinnville AVA Ribbon Ridge AVA Yamhill-Carlton District AVA |
Climate region: |
I |
Total size (acres): | 5,200 sq. miles |
varietals produced: |
Pinot Noir and other |
No. of wineries: | 200 |
Comments: | All data as of 2005 |
See Wikipedia:WikiProject Wine for more info.
[edit] Organisations
[edit] Universities
See Wikipedia:WikiProject Universities
Lund University |
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![]() Latin: Universitas Lundensis
or Universitas Gothorum Carolina. Also the older Academia Carolina lundensis, or Academia Carolina conciliatrix. |
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Motto | Ad utrumque (Prepared for both) |
Established | 1666 |
Type | Public |
Rector | Prof. Göran Bexell |
Staff | 6,000 |
Undergraduates | 42,500 |
Postgraduates | 30,800 |
Doctoral students | 3,200 |
Location | Lund, Skåne, Sweden |
Campus | Both urban and rural. |
Affiliations | Universitas 21, EUA |
Website | http://www.lu.se/ |
{{Infobox_University |name = |native_name = |latin_name = |image = |motto = |established = |type = |endowment = |staff = |faculty = |president = |provost = |principal = |rector = |chancellor = |vice_chancellor = |dean = |head_label = |head = |students = |undergrad = |postgrad = |doctoral = |city = |state = |country = |campus = |free_label = |free = |colors = |colours = |mascot = |nickname = |affiliations = |website = }} |
[edit] High Schools
{{High School Infobox |name= |image= |headmaster= |principal= |motto= |established= |type= (Public/Private) |location= |enrollment= |campus= (Urban/Country) |colors= |nicknames= |conference= |website= |}} |
[edit] Corporations
See Wikipedia:Companies, Corporations and Economic Information
Type | {{{company_type}}} |
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Founded | {{{foundation}}} |
Location | {{{location}}} |
{{Infobox Company | company_name = | company_logo = | company_type = | foundation = | location = | key_people = | industry = | products = | revenue = | operating_income = | net_income = | num_employees = | parent = | subsid = | homepage = | footnotes = }}
[edit] Trade union
See Wikipedia:WikiProject Organized Labour
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Independent Self-governing Trade Union "Solidarity" | |
Niezależny Samorządny Związek Zawodowy "Solidarność" | |
Founded | September, 1980 |
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Members | 1.5 million |
Country | Poland |
Affiliation | National Federation |
{{Infobox Union |name= |members= |full_name= |native_name= |image= |founded= |country= |affiliation= |current= |head= |dissolved_date= |dissolved_state= |merged_into= |office= |people= |website= |footnotes= }} <!-- Include all unused fields for future use. See [[template:Infobox Union]] for usage. -->
[edit] Non-profit organisations
World Wide Fund for Nature | |
Founder | Sir Julian Huxley[1][2] Victor Stolan Max Nicholson Peter Scott Guy Mountfort |
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Type | Charitable trust |
Founded | September 11, 1961 Morges, Switzerland |
Headquarters | Avenue du Mont-Blanc 1196, Gland, Switzerland |
Key people | Sir Julian Huxley Dr Claude Martin HE Chief Emeka Anyaoku |
Area served | World wide |
Focus | Environmentalism |
Method | Lobbying, research, consultancy |
Revenue | $120,910,695 USD (2005)[3] |
Volunteers | Approx. 4,500 worldwide |
Website | wwf.org / panda.org |
{{Infobox Non-profit | Non-profit_name = | Non-profit_logo = | Non-profit_type = | founded_date = | founder = | location = <!-- this parameter modifies "Headquarters" --> | origins = | key_people = | area_served = | focus = | method = | revenue = | endowment = | num_volunteers = | num_employees = | num_members = | owner = | Non-profit_slogan = | homepage = | dissolved = | footnotes = }}
[edit] Military history
[edit] Military cemetery infobox
Railway Dugouts (Transport Farm) | |
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Commonwealth War Graves Commission | |
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Used for those deceased 1915–18 | |
Established | 1915 |
Location | Zillebeke, West Flanders, Belgium | near
Designed by | Sir Edwin Lutyens |
Total burials | 2463, of which 430 are unnamed |
Unknown burials |
2 |
Burials by nation | |
Allied Powers:
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Burials by war | |
World War I: 2463 | |
Statistics source: www.wo1.be and Battlefields 14-18 |
A military cemetery infobox may be used to summarize information about a single military cemetery. The infobox should be added using the {{Infobox Military Cemetery}} template, as shown below:
{{Infobox Military Cemetery |name= |body= |image= |caption= |use_dates= |established= |designer= |coordinates= |nearest_town= |total= |unknowns= |by_country= |by_war= |source= }}
- name – the formal name of the cemetery.
- body – the body responsible for administering the cemetery (e.g. the Commonwealth War Graves Commission).
- image – optional – an image of the cemetery. The image must be given in the form [[Image:Example.jpg|300px]]; in particular, the thumb attribute must not be selected.
- caption – optional – the text to be placed below the image.
- use_dates – the period during which the people interred at the cemetery died, given as a dash-separated pair of numbers (e.g. "1915–18"). This often corresponds to the dates of a particular conflict.
- established – the date when the cemetery was established or first used.
- designer – optional – the person or group that designed the layout of the cemetery.
- coordinates – the location of the cemetery, given as a coordinate pair by using
{{coor dms|dd|mm|ss|N|dd|mm|ss|E|}}
. - nearest_town – optional – in cases where the location is given as a coordinate pair, the town nearest to the cemetery.
- total – the total number of people buried in the cemetery.
- unknowns – optional – the number of unknown individuals buried in the cemetery.
- by_nation – optional – a breakdown of burials by nation (or sub-national entity, where appropriate). This is usually formatted as a bulleted list.
- by_war – optional – a breakdown of burials by the war during which the people were killed. This is usually formatted as a bulleted list.
- source – optional – a source for the statistics in the infobox.
[edit] Military conflict infobox
Battle of Lützen | |||||||
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Part of the Thirty Years' War | |||||||
![]() The Battle of Lützen by Carl Wahlbom shows the death of King Gustavus Adolphus on November 16, 1632. |
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Combatants | |||||||
Sweden, Protestant German states |
Holy Roman Empire, Catholic German states |
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Commanders | |||||||
Gustavus Adolphus †, Bernhard of Saxe-Weimar |
Albrecht von Wallenstein, Gottfried zu Pappenheim † |
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Strength | |||||||
12,800 infantry, 6,200 cavalry, 60 guns |
10,000 infantry, 7,000 cavalry, 24 guns |
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Casualties | |||||||
3,400 dead, 1,600 wounded or missing |
3,000–3,500 dead or wounded |
A military conflict infobox (sometimes referred to as a warbox) may be used to summarize information about a particular military conflict (a battle, campaign, war, or group of related wars) in a standard manner.
The infobox should be added using the {{Infobox Military Conflict}} template, as shown below:
{{Infobox Military Conflict |conflict= |partof= |image= |caption= |date= |place= |casus= |territory= |result= |combatant1= |combatant2= |combatant3= |commander1= |commander2= |commander3= |strength1= |strength2= |strength3= |casualties1= |casualties2= |casualties3= |notes= }}
- conflict – the name of the conflict being described (e.g. "Battle of Lützen" or "World War I").
- partof – optional – the larger conflict containing the event described in the article. For battles or campaigns, this should be the war during which the event takes place; for particularly large wars, this may include a theatre (e.g. "the Eastern Front of World War II"). For wars, the parameter may be used to link to a larger group of wars (e.g. the Italian War of 1521–26 to the Italian Wars). It may be necessary to insert "the" before the name of the war for proper grammar.
- image – optional – an image for the warbox. The image must be given in the form [[Image:Example.jpg|300px]]; in particular, the thumb attribute must not be selected.
- caption – optional – the text to be placed below the image.
- date – optional – the date of the conflict described. Convention is to give the actual date for battles and the years for wars, but this does not always apply.
- place – the location of the conflict. For conflicts covering a wide area, a general description (e.g. "France", or "Europe", or "Worldwide") may be used.
- casus – optional – the formal casus belli of a war. This field should not be used for battles, for the underlying causes of a war, or in cases where the casus belli is disputed and requires a lengthy explanation.
- territory – optional – any changes in territorial control as a result of the conflict; this should not be used for overly lengthy descriptions of the peace settlement.
- result – the outcome of the conflict (e.g. "French victory"). Modifiers such as "inconclusive" or "decisive" may be used as necessary.
- combatant1/combatant2/combatant3 – optional – the parties participating in the conflict. This is most commonly the countries whose forces took part in the conflict; however, larger groups (such as alliances or international organizations) or smaller ones (such as particular units, formations, or groups) may be indicated if doing so improves reader understanding. When there is a large number of participants, it may be better to list only the three or four major groups on each side of the conflict, and to describe the rest in the body of the article. The combatant3 field may be used if a conflict has three distinct "sides", and should be left blank on other articles.
- commander1/commander2/commander3 – optional – the commanders of the military forces involved. For battles, this should include army commanders (and other officers as necessary). For wars, only prominent or notable leaders should be listed. Ranks and titles should be omitted. The {{KIA}} and {{POW}} templates may be included immediately after the names of commanders who were killed in action or surrendered and were taken prisoner, respectively. The commander3 field can only be used if the combatant3 field is set.
- strength1/strength2/strength3 – optional – the numerical strength of the units involved. It is generally not useful to provide unit names without giving an indication of numbers. The strength3 field can only be used if the combatant3 field is set.
- casualties1/casualties2 – optional – casualties suffered, including dead, wounded, missing, captured, and civilian deaths. Terms such as "dead" (or "killed"), "wounded", or "captured" should be used in place of abbreviations such as "KIA" or "POW".
- casualties3 – optional – if combatant3 is set, this is a third casualty field identical to the two above; if it is not set, this is an alternate combined field for use where only the total casualties of a conflict are known, or where civilian casualties cannot be directly attributed to either side.
- notes – optional – optional field for further notes; this should only be used in exceptional circumstances.
[edit] Campaignboxes
Second Punic War |
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Saguntum – Lilybaeum – Ticinus – Trebia – Cissa – Lake Trasimene – Ebro River – Ager Falernus – Geronium – Cannae – 1st Nola – Dertosa – 2nd Nola – Cornus – 3rd Nola – Beneventum – 1st Tarentum – 1st Capua – Silarus – 1st Herdonia – Syracuse – Upper Baetis – 2nd Capua – 2nd Herdonia – Cartagena – Numistro – Asculum – Tarentum – Baecula – Grumentum – Metaurus – Ilipa – Crotona – Bagbrades – Cirta – Po Valley – Great Plains – Zama |
Punic Wars |
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First – Mercenary – Second – Third |
An infobox may optionally be followed by a campaignbox template, which provides quick navigation among the battles in a campaign, theatre, or war (or, more rarely, among several campaigns or wars).
The campaignbox should be included directly after the infobox template:
{{Infobox Military Conflict ... }} {{Campaignbox XXXX}}
For particular combinations of the relative sizes of the infobox and the lead section, the presence of a campaignbox may cause bunched up edit links.
Articles may include multiple campaignboxes (which are typically stacked following the infobox). The most common scenario occurs when two levels of campaignboxes are present; for example, an article about a battle can include both a campaignbox listing the battle itself and an "enclosing" campaignbox listing the campaign, theater, or war during which the battle took place. Similarly, an article about a war can include both a campaignbox listing the war (among a series of wars) and a campaignbox for the war itself, listing the battles that took place during it.
- Creating campaignboxes
Many campaignboxes have already been created; they are listed here. When creating new ones, please remember to add them to the list.
A campaignbox template should be named Template:Campaignbox XXXX, where XXXX is the name of the campaign (or a shortened form of it), and should use {{Campaign}}, as shown below:
{{Campaign |name= |battles= }}
- name – the name of the campaign or war, which should be linked to an article about the campaign if one exists. Dates should not be indicated unless needed for clarity.
- battles – a chronological, en-dash separated list of battles and operations in the campaign, linked as
[[Battle of YYYY|YYYY]]
; non-breaking spaces (
) should be used to ensure that multi-word names do not split over multiple lines.
For example:
{{Campaign |name= [[Italian War of 1542]] |battles= [[Siege of Nice|Nice]] – [[Battle of Ceresole|Ceresole]] – [[Battle of Serravalle|Serravalle]] – [[Siege of St. Dizier (1544)|St. Dizier]] – [[Siege of Boulogne|Boulogne]] – [[Battle of the Solent|Solent]] }}
The use of special formatting (such as bolding or changes in font size) in the list of battles—particularly to mark battles as "important"—is generally discouraged; while there are a few cases where such approaches may be both helpful to the reader and sufficiently well-sourced that they do not constitute original research, they are both unnecessary and confusing in most circumstances. Similarly, dividing the list of battles into multiple blocks by inserting heading-like separations is not recommended; if such a division is needed, it is usually best accomplished by splitting the template into two separate campaignboxes.
Articles other than those about military conflicts—such as those dealing with personnel or military units—may use the campaignbox formatting to create lists of battles or wars in which the subject participated. In this case, the box should be created by including {{Campaign}} directly in the article, without creating a separate template.
[edit] Military memorial infobox
Menin Gate Memorial to the Missing | |
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Commonwealth of Nations | |
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For missing soldiers of World War I | |
Unveiled | 24 July 1927 |
Location | Ieper, West Flanders, Belgium | near
Designer | Sir Reginald Blomfield |
To the armies of the British Empire who stood here from 1914 to 1918 and to those of their dead who have no known grave |
A military memorial infobox may be used to summarize information about a single military memorial. The infobox should be added using the {{Infobox Military Memorial}} template, as shown below:
{{Infobox Military Memorial |name= |country= |image= |caption= |commemorates= |unveiled= |coordinates= |nearest_town= |designer= |inscription= }}
- name – the formal name of the memorial.
- country – the country whose forces are being commemorated.
- image – optional – an image of the memorial. The image must be given in the form [[Image:Example.jpg|300px]]; in particular, the thumb attribute must not be selected.
- caption – optional – the text to be placed below the image.
- commemorates – the force, nationality, or type of dead being honored (e.g. "the British of all wars", "the missing of World War I", "the RAF dead of World War II").
- unveiled – the date when the memorial was officially unveiled or dedicated.
- designer – optional – the person or group that designed the memorial.
- coordinates – the location of the memorial, given as a coordinate pair by using
{{coor dms|dd|mm|ss|N|dd|mm|ss|E|}}
. - nearest_town – optional – in cases where the location is given as a coordinate pair, the town nearest to the memorial.
- inscription – optional – the main inscription on the memorial, if any.
[edit] Military person infobox
Clifford Carwood Lipton | |
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30 January 1920–16 December 2001 | |
![]() Carwood Lipton at Camp Toccoa, Georgia |
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Nickname | Lip |
Place of birth | Huntington, West Virginia |
Allegiance | United States of America |
Service/branch | United States Army |
Years of service | 1942–1945 |
Rank | Second Lieutenant |
Unit | Easy Company, 2nd Battalion, 101st Airborne Division, 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment |
Awards | Purple Heart (3OLC) Bronze Star (2OLC) World War II Victory Medal Presidential Unit Citation (2OLC) Orange Lanyard of the Royal Netherlands Army |
Other work | Glass Executive |
A military person infobox may be used to summarize information about an individual military person, such as a soldier or military leader.
The infobox should be added using the {{Infobox Military Person}} template, as shown below:
{{Infobox Military Person |name= |lived= |image= |caption= |nickname= |placeofbirth= |placeofdeath= |allegiance= |branch= |serviceyears= |rank= |unit= |commands= |battles= |awards= |relations= |laterwork= }}
- name – the full name of the person.
- lived – the dates of birth and death, usually separated with a dash. Only one should be indicated if only one is known, or if the person is still alive.
- image – optional – an image of the person. The image must be given in the form [[Image:Example.jpg|300px]]; in particular, the thumb attribute must not be selected.
- caption – optional – the text to be placed below the image.
- nickname – optional – nickname(s) by which the person was known.
- placeofbirth – optional – the person's birthplace.
- placeofdeath – optional – the place where the person died.
- allegiance – optional – the country or other power the person served. Multiple countries may be indicated together with the corresponding dates. This field should not be used to indicate a particular service branch, which is better indicated by the
branch
field (below). - branch – optional – the service branch (Army, Navy, etc.) the person was a part of; this should be left blank for people who were not part of a formal armed service, or who predate the establishment of formal service branches.
- serviceyears – optional – the years during which the person served.
- rank – optional – the highest rank achieved by the person. Unusual cases, such as this rank not being the last achieved, or the rank being awarded posthumously, may be noted. In cases where the person held different ranks in different armies, multiple ranks should be specified with a date and country note for each.
- unit – optional – for persons who are not notable as commanding officers, the unit (company, battalion, regiment, etc.) in which they served. This should be omitted if the commands are specified (as above).
- commands – optional – for persons who are notable as commanding officers, the units they commanded. Dates should be given if multiple notable commands were held.
- battles – optional – any notable battles or wars in which the person participated. This should be omitted if a campaignbox is used in conjunction with this template.
- awards – optional – any notable awards or decorations the person received.
- relations – optional – any notable relations; only reasonably close ones should be indicated—an exhaustive listing of an extensive family tree should be avoided here.
- laterwork – optional – the profession or positions held by the person after they left the military.
[edit] Military structure infobox
Maginot Line | |
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Eastern France | |
![]() The entrance to Ouvrage Schoenenbourg along the Maginot Line in Alsace. |
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Type | Defensive line |
Built | 1930–35 |
Construction materials |
Concrete, steel |
In use | 1935–69 |
Controlled by | France |
Battles/wars | Battle of France |
A military structure infobox may be used to summarize information about a military structure or facility, such as a fortification or military base.
The infobox should be added using the {{Infobox Military Structure}} template, as shown below:
{{Infobox Military Structure |name= |partof= |location= |coordinates= |image= |caption= |type= |code= |built= |builder= |materials= |height= |used= |demolished= |condition= |ownership= |controlledby= |garrison= |commanders= |occupants= |battles= |events= }}
- name – the name of the structure or facility.
- partof – optional – the larger structure or complex the given structure is part of, if any. For proper grammar, it may be necessary to insert "the" before the name used here.
- location – the geographical location of the structure.
- coordinates – optional – the location of the structure, given as a coordinate pair by using
{{coor dms|dd|mm|ss|N|dd|mm|ss|E|}}
. - image – optional – an image of the structure. The image must be given in the form [[Image:Example.jpg|300px]]; in particular, the thumb attribute must not be selected.
- caption – optional – the text to be placed below the image.
- type – optional – the general type of structure ("Castle", "Fortress", "Bunker", "Military base", "Wall", "Defensive line", etc.).
- code – optional – the location or facility code, such as the ILC or ILK code.
- built – the date when the structure was built (usually given in years).
- builder – optional – the person or group responsible for building the structure.
- materials – optional – the materials used to construct the structure.
- height – optional – where relevant (e.g. for towers), the height of the structure.
- used – the period during which the structure was in active military use, usually given in years.
- demolished – optional – the date when the structure was demolished, if applicable.
- condition – optional – the current condition of the structure.
- ownership – optional – the current owner of the structure, if relevant.
- controlledby – optional – the country or other power controlling the structure. Multiple powers may be indicated together with the corresponding dates.
- garrison – optional – the military forces garrisoning the structure. Specific units may be indicated if known; general numbers should be given otherwise.
- commanders – optional – any notable individuals that commanded the forces using this structure; the choice of which commanders qualify as notable is left to the editors of a particular article.
- occupants – optional – any notable occupants of the structure other than its commanders; as above, the choice of which occupants qualify as notable is left to the editors of a particular article.
- battles – optional – any notable battles (usually sieges) that took place in or are closely associated with the structure; as above, the choice of which battles qualify as notable is left to the article editors.
- events – optional – any notable non-battle events that took place in or are closely associated with the structure. As above, the choice of which events are notable is left to the article editors.
[edit] Military unit infobox
502nd Parachute Infantry Regiment | |
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502d PIR Coat Of Arms |
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Active | 1942–present |
Country | United States |
Branch | Army |
Type | Parachute infantry |
Part of | 101st Airborne Division |
Garrison/HQ | Fort Campbell |
Nickname | "Five-Oh-Deuce" or "The Deuce" |
Motto | Strike |
Battles/wars | Battle of Normandy, Operation Market Garden, Battle of the Bulge, Operation Iraqi Freedom |
Decorations | Presidential Unit Citation (5), Valorous Unit Award (5), Croix de Guerre |
Commanders | |
Notable commanders |
George V. H. Moseley, Jr., John H. Michaelis |
A military unit infobox may be used to summarize information about an individual military unit or formation, such as a regiment or division..
The infobox should be added using the {{Infobox Military Unit}} template, as shown below:
{{Infobox Military Unit |unit_name= |image= |caption= |dates= |country= |allegiance= |branch= |type= |role= |size= |command_structure= |garrison= |garrison_label= |nickname= |patron= |motto= |colors= |colors_label= |march= |mascot= |equipment= |equipment_label= |battles= |anniversaries= |decorations= |battle_honours= <!-- Commanders --> |commander1= |commander1_label= |commander2= |commander2_label= |commander3= |commander3_label= |notable_commanders= <!-- Insignia --> |identification_symbol= |identification_symbol_label= |identification_symbol_2= |identification_symbol_2_label= <!-- Aircraft --> |aircraft_attack= |aircraft_bomber= |aircraft_electronic= |aircraft_fighter= |aircraft_interceptor= |aircraft_patrol= |aircraft_recon= |aircraft_trainer= |aircraft_transport= }}
- unit_name – the formal name of the unit.
- image – optional – an image of the unit insignia (cap badges, tartan or colours), if available; other images may be used if this cannot be obtained. The image must be given in the form [[Image:Example.jpg|300px]]; in particular, the thumb attribute must not be selected.
- caption – optional – the text to be placed below the image.
- dates – the period (usually in years) when the unit was active; alternately, the dates may be indicated by using one—or both—of the separate start_date and end_date parameters.
- country – optional – if the unit is part of the armed forces of a sovereign state, the name of that state.
- allegiance – optional – used to indicate the allegiance of units which are not part of the regular armed forces of a sovereign state; can usually be omitted otherwise. In the case of National Guard or Naval Militia units, the State of origin should be indicated.
- branch – optional – the service branch, in militaries that have them; typically army, navy, air force, Army National Guard, etc.
- type – optional – the general type of unit, e.g., cavalry, infantry, artillery, etc. More specific types (airborne infantry, light cavalry, etc.) may be given as appropriate.
- role – optional – typical strategic or tactical use of unit, e.g., shock troop, special operations, mechanized infantry, ceremonial guard, etc.
- size – optional – the size of the unit; this may include both average and lifetime figures, and should indicate equipment (planes, tanks, cannon, etc.) where applicable. For U.S. units, this should only include Organic elements, not Assigned or Attached elements.
- command_structure – optional – the larger unit(s) of which the unit is a part. This should not be used to provide an exhaustive history of the unit, which is more appropriate in the article itself, for units existing over a long period. For complicated cases, using the auxiliary command structure box may be appropriate.
- garrison – optional – location of the unit's home base; this is generally applicable only to units in existence.
- garrison_label – optional – the label to use for the garrison field (above).
- nickname – optional – any commonly-used nicknames for the unit.
- patron – optional – the patron the unit was named after; this is only applicable in armed forces where units are named after individuals.
- motto – optional – the official unit motto (with translation, if necessary).
- colors – optional – the unit colors; this may refer to either the actual colors used on the uniform, or to the colours of the unit.
- colors_label – optional – the label to use for the colors field (above).
- march – optional – the tune(s) commonly or officially played when the unit ceremonially marches; there may be several.
- mascot – optional – any official or unofficial animal or character maintained by the unit.
- equipment – optional – for units strongly associated with specific equipment or vehicles, such as tanks, artillery, or aircraft, a brief list of the notable types used by the unit; if the number of entries is large, it is recommended that this field not be used, and that the full list be given in the article text instead.
- equipment_label – optional – the label to use for the equipment field (above).
- battles – optional – any notable battles or wars in which the unit participated. The decision of what constitutes a notable battle is left to the editors of the specific article.
- anniversaries – optional – any anniversaries that a unit celebrates.
- decorations – optional – any decorations (such as the Presidential Unit Citation) that the unit as a whole has received.
- battle_honours – optional – for units in countries that award some type of formal battle honours, the battle honours that the unit has received; while this may have some overlap with the battles field above, the two are not necessarily equivalent.
Commander parameters:
The infobox allows for up to three current commanders to be specified; the exact roles or titles of these individuals should be specified via the corresponding label parameters.
- commander1 – optional – a current commander of the unit; this can be the acting commander, the ceremonial commander, the chief of staff, or any other leader.
- commander1_label – optional – the label to use for the field above; for historical reasons, this defaults to "Current commander" if left blank.
- commander2 – optional – a second current commander of the unit; this can be the acting commander, the ceremonial commander, the chief of staff, or any other leader.
- commander2_label – optional – the label to use for the field above; for historical reasons, this defaults to "Ceremonial chief" if left blank.
- commander3 – optional – a third current commander of the unit; this can be the acting commander, the ceremonial commander, the chief of staff, or any other leader.
- commander3_label – optional – the label to use for the field above; for historical reasons, this defaults to "Colonel of the Regiment" if left blank.
- notable_commanders – optional – any notable former commanders of the unit; judgement of notability is left to individual article editors.
Insignia parameters:
- identification_symbol – optional – the unit's identification symbol (such as a patch, tartan, or tactical identification flash).
- identification_symbol_label – optional – the label to use for the identification symbol field (above).
- identification_symbol_2 – optional – another identification symbol.
- identification_symbol_2_label – optional – the label to use for the second identification symbol field (above).
Aircraft parameters:
- aircraft_attack – optional – for aviation units, the attack aircraft flown by the unit.
- aircraft_bomber – optional – for aviation units, the bomber aircraft flown by the unit.
- aircraft_electronic – optional – for aviation units, the electronic warfare aircraft flown by the unit.
- aircraft_fighter – optional – for aviation units, the fighter aircraft flown by the unit.
- aircraft_interceptor – optional – for aviation units, the interceptor aircraft flown by the unit.
- aircraft_patrol – optional – for aviation units, the patrol aircraft flown by the unit.
- aircraft_recon – optional – for aviation units, the reconnaissance aircraft flown by the unit.
- aircraft_trainer – optional – for aviation units, the trainer aircraft flown by the unit.
- aircraft_transport – optional – for aviation units, the transport aircraft flown by the unit.
Note that the various xyz_label
fields above are intended for overriding the default labels on these fields as needed for particular countries or services; in most cases, however, the default value is sufficient, and the fields need not be included.
[edit] Command structure box
12th Infantry Division (1941–43) | |
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Parent unit | XVII Corps |
Components | 17th Mechanized Regiment, 51st Light Infantry Regiment, 53rd Infantry Regiment, 107th Artillery Brigade |
A command structure box may be used to summarize information about an individual military unit's parent and subordinate units; it should generally be used in conjunction with {{Infobox Military Unit}}. If needed, multiple boxes may be used to show the unit's command structure during different periods.
The box should be added using the {{command structure}} template, as shown below:
{{command structure |name= |date= |parent= |subordinate= }}
- name – the name of the unit or formation.
- date – optional – the dates during which the given structure was in place.
- parent – optional – the unit's parent unit.
- name – optional – the unit's subordinate units.
[edit] Service record box
Combat service | |
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Part of | 7. Unterseebootsflottille (1938–41) |
Identification codes | M 18 837 (feldpost) |
Commanders | Günther Prien (1938–41) |
Operations | 10 patrols |
Victories | 30 ships (162,769 GRT) sunk, 1 warship (29,150 tons) sunk, 8 ships (62,751 GRT) damaged |
A service record box may be used to summarize information about an individual military unit's or ship's service history; it should generally be used in conjunction with the appropriate primary infobox. If needed, multiple boxes may be used to separate the service record for different periods; for example, a unit that fought in several wars may have separate boxes for each.
The box should be added using the {{service record}} template, as shown below:
{{service record |label= |partof= |codes= |commanders= |operations= |victories= |awards= }}
- label – optional – the label to use for the box; this defaults to "Service record" if left blank.
- partof – optional – the unit or formation of which the subject unit or ship was a part; multiple units may be listed with the corresponding dates.
- codes – optional – the identification codes carried by the unit or ship; these should generally be labeled according to what the code indicates.
- commanders – optional – the notable commanding officers for the period covered.
- operations – optional – the operations (such as battles, wars, campaigns, patrols, cruises, etc.) in which the subject unit or ship participated; these may be given as a list, or described in a more condensed form.
- victories – optional – the victories or successes in the subject's service history. For units, this may be battles won; for submarines or merchant raiders, the ships and tonnage sunk; and so forth.
- awards – optional – the awards, decorations, or other honors received by the subject unit or ship.
[edit] Currency
See Wikipedia:WikiProject Numismatics
Golden Dollar (United States) | |
Value: | 1.00 US dollars |
Mass: | 8.100 g |
Diameter: | 26.5 mm |
Thickness: | 2.00 mm |
Edge: | plain |
Composition: | 88.5% Cu, 6% Zn, 3.5% Mn, 2% Ni |
Obverse | |
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Design: | Sacagawea |
Designer: | Glenna Goodacre |
Design Date: | 2000 |
Reverse | |
Design: | Eagle in flight |
Designer: | Thomas D. Rogers |
Design Date: | 2000 |
[edit] Languages
See Wikipedia:WikiProject Languages
English | ||
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Pronunciation: | IPA: /ˈɪŋglɪʃ/ | |
Spoken in: | Australia, Canada, Ireland, New Zealand, United Kingdom, United States, Liberia, South Africa, and other countries (used as international language) |
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Total speakers: | First language: about 380 million Second language: 150–1,000 million |
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Ranking: | 3 or 4 as a native language (in a near tie with Spanish) and 2 in overall speakers | |
Genetic classification: | Indo-European Germanic West Germanic Anglo-Frisian Anglic English |
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Official status | ||
Official language of: | Australia, Canada, Ireland, New Zealand, United Kingdom (de facto), United States (de facto), Liberia, Belize, South Africa (one of several), India (one of several), most Commonwealth countries and the European Union. | |
Regulated by: | no official regulation | |
Language codes | ||
ISO 639-1: | en | |
ISO 639-2: | eng | |
ISO/DIS 639-3: | eng | |
is an official or de facto official language. |
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Note: This page may contain IPA phonetic symbols in Unicode. |
Afro-Asiatic | Niger-Congo | Nilo-Saharan | Khoisan | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Indo-European | Caucasian | Altaic | Uralic | Dravidian | Paleosiberian | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Austronesian | Austro-Asiatic | Sino-Tibetan | Hmong-Mien | Australian | Papuan | Tai-Kadai | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
American | Na-Dené | Eskimo-Aleut | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Creole | language isolate | sign language | constructed language |
[edit] Ethnic groups
See Wikipedia:WikiProject Ethnic Groups, Wikipedia:WikiProject Ethnic Groups Template
Cajuns |
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Image:No image yet.png |
Total population |
XXXX |
Regions with significant populations |
United States – Louisiana: XXXX |
Languages |
Cajun French, English. |
Religions |
Predominantly Roman Catholic |
Related ethnic groups |
French |
[edit] Religion
[edit] Saints
See Wikipedia:WikiProject Saints
Saint Maximilian Kolbe | |
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A prayer card showing St. Kolbe before Mary as the Immaculate Conception, with a prison camp depicted in the background. |
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Martyr | |
Born | 8 January 1894, Zduńska Wola, Poland |
Died | 14 August 1941, Auschwitz concentration camp, Poland |
Venerated in | Roman Catholic Church |
Beatified | 17 October 1971, St. Peter Basilica, Rome, Italy[4] by Pope Paul VI |
Canonized | 10 October 1982, Rome, Italy by Pope John Paul II |
Major shrine | Basilica of the Immaculate Mediatrix of Grace, Niepokalanów, Poland |
Feast | 14 August |
Patronage | 20th century, power workers, drug addiction, drug addicts, families, amateur radio |
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[edit] Religious leaders
- The following Infobox is implemented for:
- Popes (no official Wikiproject but many consistent editors) see: Template:Infobox Pope
- The Latter Day Saint movement Wikiproject see: Template:LDSInfobox
- The following WikiProjects could make use this Infobox: Buddhism, Jesus, Islam, Judaism
Name(see backgrounds at left) | |
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Birth name | Full Given Name |
Papacy began | July 4, 1776 |
Papacy ended | April 2, 2005 |
Predecessor | wikilink |
Successor | wikilink |
Born | May 18, 1320 Cesena, Italy |
Died | November 11, 1398 Valence, France |
Each religion will customize the items in the infobox, but the coloring and heading style would differentiate it as Religious subject matter. Contact User:Trödel if you want help creating and formatting an Infobox for a different religion/denomination.
The following color scheme is implemented for those religions underlined. For others it is a proposal only. (Colors for major world religions that adherents.com lists as having more than 5 million members (the top 13), and Christian denominations that have at least 10 million members have been suggested).
Color Scheme | Code | 256Color | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
African Traditional/Diasporic | FFBFFF | FFCCFF | ||
Agnostic/Atheist/Secular | E6B2B2 | FF9999 | ||
Baha'i | 80FF80 | 99FF99 | ||
Buddhism | FFCC33 | same | ||
Christianity | ||||
Anglican/Episcopalian | 87BBC8 | 99CCCC | ||
Apostolic/New Apostolic | CC99FF | same | ||
Baptists | 66CCFF | same | ||
Catholic | F7D79C | FFCC99 | ||
Evangelist | CC6666 | same | ||
Jehovah's Witnesses | 99CC99 | same | ||
Latter Day Saint | DCF0FF | CCFFFF | ||
Lutheran | 99FFCC | same | ||
Methodists | C6CB93 | CCCC99 | ||
Non-denominational | 339966 | same | ||
Orthodox | FFFFCC | same | ||
Pentecostal | FFC0C0 | FFCCCC | ||
Presbyterian | 99CCFF | same | ||
Seventh-day Adventists | E5E5E5 | CCCCCC | ||
Confucianism/Taoism (Chinese traditional) | DDA0DD | CC99CC | ||
Hinduism | orange | FFA500 | ||
Islam | ||||
Shi'ite | 66FFCC | same | ||
Sunni | CCFFCC | same | ||
Juche | 9999FF | same | ||
Judaism | CCCCFF | same | ||
Sikhism | E6E6B2 | FFFF99 | ||
Spiritism | FF99CC | same |
[edit] Philosopher
Western Philosophy 18th-century philosophy, |
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David Hume
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Name: | David Hume |
Birth: | April 26, 1711 (Edinburgh, Scotland) |
Death: | August 25, 1776 (Edinburgh, Scotland) |
School/tradition: | Empiricism, Scottish Enlightenment |
Main interests: | Metaphysics, Epistemology, Mind, Ethics, Politics, Aesthetics, Religion |
Notable ideas: | Problem of causation, Is-ought problem |
Influences: | Locke, Berkeley, Hutcheson, Newton |
Influenced: | Kant, Bentham, Darwin, Russell, T. H. Huxley, J. S. Mill |
[edit] Politics
[edit] Congressman
{{Template:Infobox Congressman}}
[edit] Senator
[edit] United States Congressional District
{{Template:Infobox U.S. congressional district}}