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Last revised 22:41, 14 April 2015 (UTC) (9 years ago) by WPPilot (refresh)
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Featured content

Au-delà de les Alpes, le chien lit de Sainte Bernard. Sous les pavés, les trimes d'argent! Mes enfants, suivez-moi!

Contribute  —   Share this By The Herald, Adam Cuerden, WPPilot, Xanthomelanoussprog
To the Alps, he said. Later he said, there shall be no Alps!!!
This Signpost "Featured content" report covers material promoted from 29 March through 4 April. Text may be adapted from the respective articles and lists; refer to their page histories for attribution.

Featured articles

Six featured articles were promoted this week.

The Sirens and Ulysses by William Etty
  • Paul Kruger (] by ]) Paul Kruger was a prominent Boer leader, and President of the South African Republic from 1883 to 1900. Kruger was born in 1825 to a long-established Boer family in the Cape Colony. His family took part in the Great Trek of 1836, moving northwards away from areas controlled by the British into Zulu lands. Bloody conflict with the Zulus prompted the family to move to the Transvaal. In accordance with Boer custom, at age 16 Kruger became an enfranchised burgher and farmer. Around 1850 Kruger developed a "warm relationship' with Andries Pretorius, who was fighting British expansion into the Orange River area. The fractious nature of Boer politics began to evolve into a unified national consciousness after the occupation of the Transvaal by the British in 1877. The First Boer War of 1880 ended in a peace treaty which gave independence to the South African Republic, with Kruger as elected President. Discovery of gold in 1886 led to a massive influx of "uitlanders', mostly British; the income of the republic was derived mainly from taxing these immigrants, but they were given only limited civic representation. The lack of a franchise for British immigrants was one of the factors leading to the Second Boer War. After the defeat of Boer forces in the war Kruger was dispatched to Lourenço Marques to prevent his capture. He died in 1904 in the Netherlands.
  • The Sirens and Ulysses (nominated by Iridescent) The Sirens and Ulysses is a painting by English artist William Etty "completed and exhibited at the Royal Academy of Arts in 1837". It depicts the Sirens as nude women, squatting next to piled male corpses in various stages of dissolution. They beckon to a passing brass boat, on which a massive Ulysses struggles against his bonds; the Sirens will lure him to his death if he were not leashed. Etty based the corpses on studies made by him in a mortuary; the lividity and bruising in the face of the right-hand stiff is rather curious. The artist used glue-size to bind the pigments- by Etty's own account he used too much and the paint hardened into an inflexible layer which cracked and flaked off. The problem was made worse by it being almost the size of two snooker tables; the painting flexed when moved. The Sirens and Ulysses failed to sell at the RA- it was then purchased sight unseen by a Manchester cotton merchant who quickly offloaded it on his brother, who then gave it to the Royal Manchester Institution. Considered by Etty to be his masterpiece he pressured the Institute to loan it for an exhibition in 1849, against their objections over possible damage. It was exhibited again in 1857 but afterwards its poor condition meant that it was kept in store. After over a century of unsuccessful attempts to repair the painting, it was restored by Manchester Art Gallery from 2003 to 2010 and is now again on public display.
  • Three-cent silver (] by ]) Buddy can you spare a trime? This US three cent coin was issued for circulation between 1851 and 1872; from 1848 so much gold flooded the Eastern US economy that its price relative to silver dropped to the point where it was profitable to export silver coins as bullion, get paid in gold and then send the gold to the Mint to be made into gold coins, which were then used to buy more silver coins.
  • Hermeneutic style (] by ]) The hermeneutic style is Latin written using recherché and plutinobibulous words. It was used by writers of the late Roman and early medieval periods- the second-century scrivener Apuleius is the first known to have used the style in his asininious metamorphics.
  • Ulysses S. Grant (] by ]) Hiram Ulysses Grant was the Commanding General of the Union Army during the American Civil War. He went on to be elected the 18th President in 1868 and served two terms. Hiram became "US Grant" when he was nominated by Congressman Hamer for West Point- Hamer wrote "Ulysses S. Grant" by mistake.
  • Edward II of England (nominated by Hchc2009 ) Edward II was King of England from 1307 to 1327. Born in 1284 he was the fourth son of Edward I; three had died before he was born and the fourth died when Edward was about three months old. Piers Gaveston became a member of Edward's household in 1300.
  • Of Human Feelings (] by ]) A 1979 album by jazz saxophonist Ornette Coleman, Of Human Feelings wasn't released until 1982, after a deal with a Japanese record company fell through. The album's jazz-funk numbers were recorded in one take, with no mixing or overdubbing, and represent a development of Coleman's harmolodics, in which all the musicians play "individual melodies in any key, and still sound coherent as a group". It received considerable critical praise, and is still regarded as a canonical jazz album.

Featured lists

Four featured lists were promoted this week.

2013 Pacific hurricane season summary map. It's "hurricane season"!
  • Charlotte Perkins Gilman before restoration Charlotte Perkins Gilman before restoration
  • After restoration (and cropping out that grey border), it became a featured picture. After restoration (and cropping out that grey border), it became a featured picture.

Featured pictures

Fourteen featured pictures were promoted this week.

File:Hayes 2014 hi-res-download 1.jpg
Poet Terrance Hayes.
M81 "in a land far far away". We are currently checking to see if this was ever a stop new Featured List "Star Trek's" journey.
The Japanese destroyer Yamakaze, as photographed through the periscope of the submarine that sunk her.
High quality red threads from Austrian saffron
That is distributing, I have just the prescription for you.....
Two weeks in this place, with no cel phone or internet connectivity and a case of fine Rhenish wine. Have a nice rest.
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In this issue15 April 2015 (all comments)
  • News and notes
  • In the media
  • Blog
  • Traffic report
  • Featured content
  • + Add a comment

    Discuss this story

    These comments are automatically transcluded from this article's talk page. To follow comments, add the page to your watchlist. If your comment has not appeared here, you can try purging the cache.@WPPilot:, @Xanthomelanoussprog:, @The Herald:, @Adam Cuerden:, great job this week, everyone. Gamaliel (talk) 15:48, 17 April 2015 (UTC)
    Merci to all my colleagues who really did it..-The Herald my strength 16:26, 17 April 2015 (UTC)
    I love the comparison between the pre-restoration image and the final FP. It makes you really appreciate the work and effort that the editor went to. Miyagawa (talk) 17:05, 17 April 2015 (UTC)

    Hmm

    Sorry, but the title is really bad. French is my native tongue, and I cannot make any sense out of the title.

    • Au-delà de les Alpes, le chien lit de Sainte Bernard : In French, the painting title is « Bonaparte franchissant le Grand-Saint-Bernard » (Napoleon gets through the Great St Bernard Pass)
    • Sous les pavés, les trimes d'argent! : Uther nonsense. It would translate in English to "Under the cobbles, the of money !"
    • Mes enfants, suivez-moi! : OK

    Cantons-de-l'Est (talk) 23:44, 17 April 2015 (UTC)

    Based on slogans from 1968. "La chienlit, c'est lui!" and "Sous les pavés, la plage!". "Le chien lit" is the Guardian newspaper's mistranslation (they thought it meant "dog bed"), and Napoleon passed through the St Bernard Pass, hence the dog-bed of the St Bernard. "Trime" is the nickname of the US silver three-cent piece. Xanthomelanoussprog (talk) 06:58, 18 April 2015 (UTC)

    Dates

    What's the intended definition of "promoted this week"? These were promoted on 29 March and 31 March. I think doing a diff on WP:FA for the date range you want to cover might be the best way to get the list; anything added was promoted in that time period. An article becomes an FA by being added to that page, so that's the most authoritative way to get a listing. Mike Christie (talk - contribs - library) 11:10, 18 April 2015 (UTC)

    • Mike, not sure I understand the question here. If you click on "promoted" next to the name you will see the nomination page. We are from what I understand about to launch a bot that will automate the process, but it is a good point and perhaps we might consider listing the dates these were promoted in the summary.. --talk→ WPPilot  12:32, 18 April 2015 (UTC)
      Well, it's not a big deal, but the date of the Signpost edition is 12 April, so I would have expected the list of "this week"'s featured articles to include articles promoted from 3-9 April, or 4-10 April, or something like that. There were several articles promoted on 6 April, so the week of coverage for this issue of the Signpost is apparently something like 30 March to 5 April, which is a full week behind the issue date. That's all I was commenting on. As I say, it's not a big issue. I don't know what method you're using to extract the list of article, but I think the history of WP:FA is probably best -- the coords include links to the promoted articles in the edit summaries, so it's easy to spot them. Mike Christie (talk - contribs - library) 13:50, 18 April 2015 (UTC)
    @Mike Christie: Noone ever notices the note at the top saying "This Signpost "Featured content" report covers material promoted from 29 March through 4 April." - I've done what I can to make it more prominent, but... Adam Cuerden 14:17, 18 April 2015 (UTC)
    Oops. My bad! Thanks for pointing that out. Mystery solved. Mike Christie (talk - contribs - library) 14:19, 18 April 2015 (UTC)
    @Mike Christie: I've been gradually making it more and more prominent, because this comes up a lot. I've added some bolding. I'm sure it won't be enough (I think people's eyes automatically skip over things placed where it is), but... Adam Cuerden 14:32, 18 April 2015 (UTC)
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