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Hello.
Since this project is one of the parents of theGerman military history task force, does it's template also need to be listed on all German military related articles? It seems a bit redundant to me.Oberiko19:15, 5 July 2007 (UTC)
Is there any particular style and location for the navboxes used in articles on German Politicians?
Many seemed to be categorised under [[Category:German politicians|µ]] and this is where I have put the templates I have created. Others under [[Category:German navigational boxes]].
I have used the Navbox generic with the only one image, the coat of arms, which allows for ease of editing/updating, although this is not the only style which allows this.
Some politicians have many navboxes so a consistent look is needed. Edmund Stoiber has 6 boxes for example.
I also suggest that all templates which relate to offices (Minsters President,Federal Ministers etc) are categorised as [[Category:German politicians|µ]] and in [[Category:German navigational boxes]], the latter category may also allow use of a subcategory for each Land.bärlinerchat10:15, 16 July 2007 (UTC)
In{{Infobox German Location}} I have just set the geographical co-ordinates to display both within the infobox and on the title bar. This would have been done ages ago, but the coord template was having problems. Only when co-ordinates are in the title bar will they be picked up by other programs such as Google Earth. It doesn't work if the co-ordinates are placed within the article. Not sure how long until the Wikipedia layer on Google Earth refreshes itself, but soon all entries using this infobox will be displayed on Google Earth.
There is one problem. Various articles have manually added a separate co-ordinates template. This causes an ugly overlap at the title bar. So could you please delete these extra templates as you find them. There is no point having this separate template since the infobox requires the co-ordinates anyway. Thanks. -52 Pickup18:53, 19 July 2007 (UTC)
Currently when adding the coordinates in the infobox itself, I get an error that I am trying to add blacklisted link. SeeStelle for example. I have commented out the coordinates to be able to add the infobox there. Obviously I need help with this.Extrala18:44, 23 August 2007 (UTC)
Franks has been nominated for afeatured article review. Articles are typically reviewed for two weeks. Please leave your comments and help us to return the article tofeatured quality. If concerns are not addressed during the review period, articles are moved onto the Featured Article Removal Candidates list for a further period, where editors may declare "Keep" or "Remove" the article from featured status. The instructions for the review process arehere. Reviewers' concerns arehere.--Peter Andersen20:11, 20 July 2007 (UTC)
I have a suggestion of a section in German history i think is neglected; they are very little information of the German witch trials in the 16th and 17th century. I think it would be very interesting to read about this, and i've noticed that this area is very well covered in your own, German Wikipedia, but i cant read German. If anyone on this project is interested of this subject and knows more, i think it is a subject which deserves to be more represented here!--85.226.235.17414:37, 23 July 2007 (UTC)
Well, i don't really know enough to have any specific in mind, but they are some particular trials i've heard about, such as the trial of Trier in 1587-93, the trial of Fulda in 1603-05, and the one of Wurzburg in 1627, wich i understand to be very large trials, espesially the one in Trier, who where perhaps the largest in Germany and perhaps even Europe. I think it would be valuable information to know more of those. Except for articles of the great trials, one could also consider to complement with articles of individual alleged witches, such as the most representative of those who where convicted, or the most famous ones. --85.226.235.17418:08, 23 July 2007 (UTC)
I've just been reading a very interesting book about the important influence of the Jewish German bankerGerson von Bleichröder on Otto von Bismarck's administration of the German Empire. Bleichroder helped Bismarck finance Prussia's war against Austria in the 1860s when the German parliament did not support a war on their German neighbour, Bleichroder had a personal friendship with Bismarck despite Bismarck's earlier inhibitions and stereotypes of the Jewish community. Bleichroder also was key in negotiating with the French government in the Franco-Prussian war as well as funding militants in Austria and France to weaken them. In the this book, it describes how Bleichroder's backroom dealings and strong background presence in German political affairs was what fueled anti-Semitic suspicions and the paranoid stereotypical view by anti-Semites of Jews pulling the strings of Germany. Due to the anti-Semitism at the time in Germany, the German government almost left blank, Bleichroder's role, was an unknown figure with most of the credit of Germany's economic success and progress going to Bismarck. The book is calledGold and Iron byFritz Stern, which I am using to find more information about Bleichroder, but I hope that others can find multiple sources.User:R-41
A series of articles have recently been started covering the coats of arms of the 16 states. These articles are very bare (eg.Coat of arms of Bavaria) and could do with some work. Some of the corresponding articles on the German wiki are of a rather high standard (e.g.de:Bremer Wappen).
For anyone wishing to create such articles for towns, please name them in the standard way: "Coat of arms of (name)". The German Location infobox now looks for such articles and automatically creates a link under the CoA image (eg. seeMunich).
If one particular article could possibly be used to describe multiple coats of arms, then create a redirect with the standard name pointing to this article. For example,Coat of arms of Mainz redirects toWheel of Mainz (which could be used for many other locations) - creating this redirect then causes the creation of a link under the CoA image in theMainz article. -52 Pickup18:21, 23 July 2007 (UTC)
Zell, Upper Franconia has just officially been renamed fromZell toZell im Fichtelgebirge. Now I know we don't follow the all the official namings but should we do with this one?Agathoclea19:57, 27 July 2007 (UTC)
| Though this project is inactive, you can help with : Antoni Giedrys (random unreferencedBLP of the day for 28 Nov 2025 - provided byUser:AnomieBOT/RandomPage viaWP:RANDUNREF). |
North Sea is the current Article Creation and Improvement Drive collaboration. WikiProject Germany members may find that a relevant focus. I have refrained from rating the article pending the result of the collaboration. Perhaps a regular member of this project could find a place for the collaboration banner on the project page itself? __meco22:25, 27 July 2007 (UTC)
This project needs to be brought tohttp://de.wikipedia.org The German Wikipediaso that Germans With Foreign Language skills can help the Wikipedia Sites With which There Second languge skills are based Germans Know Germany best --Antiedman15:00, 28 July 2007 (UTC)
George I of Great Britain has been nominated for afeatured article review. Articles are typically reviewed for two weeks. Please leave your comments and help us to return the article tofeatured quality. If concerns are not addressed during the review period, articles are moved onto the Featured Article Removal Candidates list for a further period, where editors may declare "Keep" or "Remove" the article from featured status. The instructions for the review process arehere. Reviewers' concerns arehere.Epbr12321:10, 28 July 2007 (UTC)
Just so you know, I've been coppying the infoboxes and putting in stubs for German nuclear plants, and they could all use a lot of review. I've also tried to organize the media on the commons a bit better. SeeTemplate:DENPPlants for naviation. -Theanphibian(talk •contribs)21:57, 30 July 2007 (UTC)
If someone could find a German source for this early Bishop could you add it to the article? It's up for deletion here [[1]]Nick mallory13:57, 2 August 2007 (UTC)
I translated the French FA !!You may want to :
thanks !
NicDumZ~08:34, 6 August 2007 (UTC)
I've expanded the article on German actor "Ulrich Mühe" from a stub, and recently added the pronunciation of his name according to theInternational Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) and thePronunciation respelling key. However, I need a German speaker who is familiar with the IPA to confirm if it is correct. Please help if you can. Also, you may want to check the English translations of German film and TV series titles, as well as review the article and revise its rating in the {{WikiProject Germany}} tag. It's currently rated Start Class. Thanks. Cheers,Jacklee16:09, 6 August 2007 (UTC)
Hi, Laura, thanks for the advice. Yes, I don't think there is an adequate way to respell [ç] using just the English alphabet, so I'll add a footnote to say that the respelling is only a rough approximation. Thanks also to the other editors who have made improvements to the article, such as by correcting the English translations of some of the film and TV series titles in German (I've taken basic German lessons but am still far from being able to use German fluently, and so relied on my German-English dictionary andhttp://dictionary.reference.com/translator). Further improvements to the article are most welcome. Cheers,Jacklee23:18, 6 August 2007 (UTC)
I've recently updated the article with the English translations of Germanaudio-book titles thatUlrich Mühe was the narrator of, and would appreciate it if a German speaker would confirm if the translations are accurate (some of them look a bit weird to me!). Thanks. Cheers,Jacklee12:35, 9 August 2007 (UTC)
can someone assess the sources presented atRauteMusik.FM (they are in German). --Fredrick day22:12, 14 August 2007 (UTC)
Its seems that too many Wikipedia editors believe that the answer was or is 3.
As e.g. shown ontalk:West Germany national football team andWikipedia:Articles for deletion/West Germany national football team, or by the repeated use of phrases likeIn 1990, East Germany and West Germany unified into Germany, people insist that pre-1990 West Germany was very different from post-1990 Germany, and that an East/Westmerger of equals created something new. It seems that the continuity of the Federal Republic of Germany from 1949 to present, with changes of the number of states in 1952, 1957 and 1990, is either unknown to many, or is deliberately denied for reasons one can only speculate about. Attempts to belittle German successes according todivide and conquer are hard to overlook in some cases.
Regarding football, people tried to point out that it was the now-defunctWest Germany national football team that won three World Cups, not theGermany national football team, which has won only an European Championship in 1996. This problem was at least solved, but similar views are still promoted elsewhere on Wikipedia.
In Olympics, the results of German athletes are split fivefold under the codes GER, FRG, GDR, EUA, and SAA, with four teams appearing in theWinter Olympics medal count andSummer Olympics medal count (which are highly unofficial all-time counts not tallied by the IOC, thus OR). One can argue that the GDR team was something different from 1968 to 1988, but FRG, EUA and GER surely represent only one Germany, and not something else. Currently, there are
Many athletes were part of two of these teams, some possibly of three.
RegardingGerman nationality, was there one, two, or more between 1949 and 1990? Or before 1871, none at all? Did the first German travel into space in 1978, 1983 or 1992? Or was no German in space before 1990, only persons from
East Germany and
West Germany, asTimeline of astronauts by nationality suggests? -- Matthead discuß! O 01:47, 15 August 2007 (UTC)
More confusion: There isHistory of Germany since 1945 which a large sectionHistory_of_Germany_since_1945#West_Germany, as well as thePOV fork separate articleWest Germany ("common name used in English") which should be atFederal Republic of Germany (1949-1990), and merged/linked with the history article. I had already moved it, but it was moved back. SeeTalk:West Germany. -- Matthead discuß! O 23:12, 20 August 2007 (UTC)
I think articles dealing with claims and comments about versions of the Waffengesetz, especially the 1938 version, need some attention:
The history of the law itself is now atGerman Weapons Law, moved there fromNational Weapons Law.-- Matthead discuß! O 15:09, 16 August 2007 (UTC)
Does anybody know what the correct copyright status is of the various Notgeld notes issued following WWI? The images on the German Wikipedia seem to be tagged with generic PD tags but I'd like to know for sure, e.g. if they qualify as Amtliches Werk? In most cases these notes are signed by the local Gemeindevorsteher.
I have a couple of notes in my collection relating from theSchleswig Plebiscites and they would make nice illustrations on this article, but I don't wish to violate German law. Thanks in advance.ValentinianT /C09:30, 17 August 2007 (UTC)
20-Aug-2007: I've noticed, this weekend, the Table-of-Contents (TOC) "[hide]" option has been fixed to allow shrinking/hiding the TOC detail lines. This change will require reformatting thousands of articles to auto-reformat image/text placement, but we knew this day would come, and so it has. I have begun editing articles, with explanation "Allow HIDDEN Table of Contents.." noting, for each article, the changes to allow Hide/Show TOC. An easy fix is to stack the earlier right-side images/tables (as a series of "Image:" and table definitions) near the top of the article, depending on top paragraphs to provide filler text. The text-clipping glitch hasNOT been fixed [yet] for small-then-large image stacking; consequently, make stacked-images similar size or put narrow images after wider. Images much later in the article should auto-reformat fine, as is, without moving them. -Wikid7709:30, 20 August 2007 (UTC)
One of this project's good articles,Weimar Republic, has been nominated forreview of it's GA status. Anyone is welcome to contribute to the discussion.Drewcifer300019:49, 25 August 2007 (UTC)
Hi, some of the articles listed for a reassessment on the page weren't checked since June. It would be nice if some of you check those listed articles before we got a list from A like Aachen to Z like Zeppelin.--Gabriel-Royce21:07, 25 August 2007 (UTC)
Would anyone be willing to work with me on getting this article up tofeatured article status?? Having seen an episode of the British documentaryPolice, Camera, Action! about this region, I thought this was as good a reason as any to start trying to get the article up to this status.
Also, I am starting an article on theLandespolizei Schleswig-Holstein, if anyone can expand this for me that would be very helpful and I would appreciate that.
I'm worried this project might be becoming inactive, so I'm trying to get it started up again. Thanks, --SunStar Nettalk10:29, 27 August 2007 (UTC)
I think the growing number of articles with some kind of cleanup template on them is one of the biggest problems facing Wikipedia. Currently, there is a backlog to October 2005, so it takes almost two years to clean an article up. Over 26,000 articles or 1,3% of all articles are tagged for cleanup and as far as I'm aware this backlog is growing. And these figures only include those articles tagged with the basic cleanup template. If the same percentage applies to Germany-related articles, then there are over 200 articles within our scope that need cleanup, but I suppose there are a lot more, since there are also articles tagged with the copyedit template or one of the other 120 or so cleanup templates. The only solution I see to this is the WikiProjects cleaning up the articles in their scope. The Germany project has aCategory:Germany articles needing attention, which could be used for articles needing cleanup. Or we could create one or several categories, specifically for the various kind of "cleanups" that need to be done. What I think would be important is to add all Germany-related articles to one category and then getting to work. Maybe someone can get a bot to check every article with the Germany-banner, if it has any of the templates inCategory:Cleanup templates, and then add the articles to a certain category.--Carabinieri12:02, 30 August 2007 (UTC)
Please seeWikipedia talk:German-speaking Wikipedians' notice board#Categories.Olessi17:58, 30 August 2007 (UTC)
Renaming discussion started atWikipedia:Categories for discussion/Log/2007 October 13#Category:German natives of... byOlessi. -- Matthead discuß! O 07:54, 16 October 2007 (UTC)
This article is a translation of[2]Bernhard Hoop03:42, 5 September 2007 (UTC)
I've been putting a lot of work in to the article about theFree Association of German Trade Unions recently. I would like to nominate it to become a good article in the next few days, but I am worried that my slight sympathy for the organization might've influenced my writing. So I was wondering if someone could check on this and on whether it meets GA criteria in general.--Carabinieri04:45, 9 September 2007 (UTC)
Binck was a 16th century German illustrator and painter that worked in both Germany, Denmark and Sweden. He painted Gustav Vasa of Sweden and created illustrations for the first Danish bible (image:Christian den Tredjes våben - Binck 1550.png) Does anybody know how his first name is normally spelled in Germany? Scandinavian sources use both "Jacob" and "Jakob".ValentinianT /C22:01, 12 September 2007 (UTC)
User:Rex Germanus has moved the article toPotsdam Square citing it is the more commonly used name in English. I kinda doubt it (google-testing is highly inaccurate, but 993 hits for "Potsdam Square" vs. 2 million hits for "Potsdamer Platz" are a big difference), but has Rex has a certain temper when IP users doubt his edits I'd like to have a source that "Potsdam Square" is the predominantly used name for the place, or lacking that, support from established users to revert the move.84.145.229.2611:54, 24 September 2007 (UTC)
Most squares in Germany use platz as far as I know.Kingjeff15:30, 24 September 2007 (UTC)
I think it's the same in English. For some reason, using German words is a touchy subject forUser:Rex Germanus.Kingjeff15:59, 24 September 2007 (UTC)
Just for the record, after a recent block had been lifted with the sole purpose of defending himself on the (now closed)Community sanction noticeboard, the person in question made edits elsewhere and managed to get himself again onANI andRfAr. A siteban is now proposed by the admin that has blocked him for a month. -- Matthead discuß! O 03:59, 16 October 2007 (UTC)
According to theAnne Frank article she was German until she became stateless in 1941.--Boson06:16, 1 October 2007 (UTC)
There is a Request for Comment going on how to include theBeneš decrees in the article aboutSlovakia. Please add your comments if interested atTalk:Slovakia.Squash Racket17:59, 2 October 2007 (UTC)
Hello. Just wanted to give you a heads-up that as part of an article assessment drive forWikiProject Ships, I recently tagged the Kriegsmarine/Reichsmarine/Bundesmarine shipdisambiguation pages with the{{WikiProject Germany}} project banner as well as our normal{{WikiProject Ships}} and{{WPMILHIST}} banners. While I do not generally assess articles for projects of which I am not a member, the instructions atWikiProject Germany/Assessment were very clear and concise, so I went ahead and marked each of the dab pages as having a class ofDisambig and an importance ofNA. Please let me know if you have any questions, issues, or if I screwed it up. Thanks,Kralizec! (talk)03:38, 3 October 2007 (UTC)
There is "D’alemannisch Wikipedia" at "http://als.wikipedia.org/", but as a result ofWikipedia:User_categories_for_discussion/Archive/August_2007#Category:User_als_and_subcats and[3], many users of{{user als}} are now lost without any category, neitherCategory:User als-N,Category:User als,Category:User swg norCategory:User gsw. I seems the discussion will now continue atWT:UCFD. See also{{user gsw}} and{{user swg}}. -- Matthead discuß! O 14:49, 4 October 2007 (UTC)
ref:Roßla-Südharz andVerwaltungsgemeinschaft,here viaStolberg, Saxony-Anhalt
German transliterated names like Saxony-Anhalt are bad enough to cope with (to readers used to English phraseology) with outunnecessarily borrowingloan words and creating article titles withunusual unicode font containing words. Being the English wiki, such should be redirects if used ever.
It would be good if the project participants were chary of using glyphs such as 'ß' unless absolutely necessary in a name. Certainly, aless visually jarring (is this monitor acting up! One thinks for a moment!) rendition such as "Robla-Südharz" should be found. I believe that is still policy perWP:MOS, as well! (Not knowing the meaning or lingual impact of the character 'ß', I've resisted (A "desperate" fight, that! <g>) movingRoßla-Südharz boldly for now, but suggest modern Europe terms likeVerwaltungsgemeinschaft ("Collective Municipality", I infer) and such weird spellings be avoided.
On the other hand,Collective Municipality is a perfectly good article title and has enough scope that it should be given a clear English explanation, which is to say, an article. Perhaps that hypothetical article would clarify such nebulous references (to non-Europeans) such asAmt (country subdivision) by making the distinctions more plain. "Country subdivision" itself, like "subnational entity" is a new level of meaning to most (American, at least) people, and German related article phrasings need be chary of the social blind-spot.
I've done 'clarification edits' on quite a few German topic articles for such clarity, and will be glad to look over such and vett it should anyone care to have me review it. By the same reasoning, it would be good if a few of you were willing to vett some of the changes I make, as cross check needs back to de:wikipedia are something I can't do myself and I do visit a lot of German based articles updating links in1632 series.Any volunteers out there? (That second link worries me!) Best regards //FrankB17:43, 4 October 2007 (UTC)
{{redirectstohere|Roßla-Südharz}} above the article title -- which puts the German familiar form right out there on top where German readers will see it, leaving the English version for the article title. Trythat, you may like it! <g> I will grant you it will be a good thing for German keyboard coded readers to have both. But there is a vast difference between glyph friendly and proper English representation, as I hope this gets across.We are not really talking about glyphs here but about characters. The characters ßäöüÄÖÜ are all Latin characters and members of the Latin-1 character set. The Manual of Style does not, as I read it, prohibit their use. See, for instance, in the article you mentioned:Wikipedia:Naming conventions (use English)#Disputed issues:
There is disagreement over what article title to use when a native name uses the Latin alphabet with diacritics (or "accent marks") but general English usage omits the diacritics. A survey that ran from April 2005 to October 2005 ended with a result of 62–46 (57.4%–42.6%) in favor of diacritics, which was a majority but was not considered to be a consensus.There is disagreement as to whether German, Icelandic and Faroese names need transliteration for the characters ß, þ and ð.
Disagreement does not mean consensus, and the majority was, apparently, in favour of diacritics. --Boson22:13, 5 October 2007 (UTC)
You have only to use ss for ß and add an e to all the other Umlets if your computer doesn't have them or you are unable to find them.The meaning is exactly the same.For instance we live in Füssen,but in computer language,in a URL for instance,its spelt Fuessen.It seems silly to have an argument on such a small point when so much needs doing to improve the articles already in this section.—Precedingunsigned comment added byRosenthalenglish (talk •contribs)10:44, 6 October 2007 (UTC)
If we do use any transliteration for the ß, we use what older scholarly works use, which is "ss". Using a B or a β instead the ß is extremely unprofessional; the only place where this was done in the real world is in poorly translated computer manuals from the 1980s. If you think that redirects with B substituted for the ß should exist, you can go and create them. But the article titles should be correct as in German or follow mainstream English use (the last case where we debated this wasMeißen; as far as I can recall it was moved toMeissen as there is a lot of literature about this city as seat of a German bishop, and most of the older literature uses this spelling). Mainstream English use is moving towards use of diacritics and the ß though; part of a general worldwide trend to use native names instead of translated names. Hours of discussion have been spent on the topic here already, and there is a solid no consensus on what to do, so we usually follow the idea ofWP:ENGVAR and keep the spelling of a page's main author.Kusma (talk)06:26, 7 October 2007 (UTC)
I am pleased to announce that as of today,every city, town and municipality in Germany has an article in English Wikipedia! A big thank you to all contributors!
In the next phase of the subproject cities, we will improve the articles by adding infoboxes. Everyone is invited to help. SeeWikipedia:WikiProject Germany/Cities for instructions.MarkussepTalk18:51, 11 October 2007 (UTC)
--
Classification
The status Stadt was awarded by the souvereign in middle age. Today it is a decision of the Ministries of State.
In 1974 for instance the Ministry of State of Baden-Württemberg has awarded the status Stadt to the municipality ofMössingen. Before Mössingen got the status of a Stadt, it was a Landgemeinde (= rural municipality = village with a municipal council). Today Mössingen is a Stadtgemeinde (= urban municipality = municipality with the status of a Stadt) with a town council. In the state of Baden-Württemberg a municipality must have minimum a population of 4500 to apply for the status Stadt. But the minimum of population is not the only condition to get the status. So a municipality with a population more than 4500 does not automatically become a Stadt in Baden-Württemberg.
However, there are municipalities with a population less than 4500 people that got the status of a Stadt. Those municipalities have got the status in middle age, because of that the Ministry of State does not withdraw their status (historical Stadtrecht). Those towns are often located in rural areas, where there was no increase of population during the age of industrialization.
In Germany there is no distinction between a town or a city, both are called Stadt. However, Städte with a population ex 100,000 are regarded as cities. I think the British distinction of town and city is plausible, but the distinction in the U.S. is confusing (different from state to state). For instance the City ofMaza in North Dakota has only 5 residents. In my opinion this is ridiculous.
In Germany there is another classification of Stadt. There are types, that mark no special status:
--MaiusGermanicus (talk)17:27, 20 March 2008 (UTC)
Currently the German Wikipedia has a handful of editors who have decided that they want to get rid of interwikilink to articles on other wikipedias that they considersubstandard. After their vandalism ran into opposition by the larger community they resorted to hiding interwikilink using sockpuppets. When that failed they started makingWP:POINT edits likethis (That editor in question was actually recently blocked for his vandalism on dewiki). I will need some help in tracking down further attempts like this - The above user has made the same edits also as IP. If you come across any more please let me have the diffs - thanks.Agathoclea07:54, 29 October 2007 (UTC)
Shouldn'tCategory:Regierungsbezirk andCategory:Former Regierungsbezirk be retitled, as categories should be in plural form? ieCategory:Regierungsbezirke or,if translated,Category:Government regions of Germany.Olessi22:15, 29 October 2007 (UTC)