Talk:Pompey: Difference between revisions
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==Non-sequitur== |
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"''Hailing from an Italian provincial background, he earned the cognomen of Magnus — the Great ...''" This sentence is a non-sequitur and should be changed to make sense.[[User:Guernseykid|Guernseykid]] 21:10, 26 March 2006 (UTC) |
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In the section Pompey in the East, Pompey is referred to as a 'New Man'. Although there are definitional problems with the term 'New Man' doesn't it go a bit far to refer to someone whose father was a consul as a new man? Normally a new man who has no consular ancestors (definition 1) or someone who has no senatorial ancestors (definition 2). Neither of these apply to Pompey. What is true is that he wasn't part of a family as noble as the gens Licinia. Nevertheless, Licinius' main objection to the arrival of Pompey may well have been that he was losing his command! |
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==Lack of quality?== |
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While I think the quality of the article is somewhat lacking, I quickly edited the intro. Pompey was certainly not fighting to preserve the Republic; his invalidation of the tribunecian veto makes this clear. Like Caesar, he was fighting to establish himself as the master of the Roman world. |
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:I don't think I agree. He had plenty of chances to do what Caesar planned to do and what Sulla had done (after Spain, after Mithridates, etc.) and each time he disbanded his legions and laid down his imperium. He was interested in preserving his own dignitas and auctoritas, but he wasn't interested in overthrowing the republic. He was quite content to be first citizen and the biggest fish in the pond without re-drawing the pond the way Caesar seemed inclined to do. Keep in mind how many times the Senate went to Pompey, and how many times Pompey backed up the Senate. He was a Republican--a Republican of the Late Republic, to be sure, but certainly no odder a duck than the Gracchi or Sulla, and not a popular politician like Caesar.--[[User:CaesarGJ|CaesarGJ]] 07:57, 9 February 2006 (UTC) |
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::What we have here is a conflict of principle versus practicality. Both Caesar and his opponents described their aims as "the preservation of the Republic"; both Caesar and his opponents, in pursuing those aims, bent, stretched, subverted and finally broke the Roman Constitution. And that's what we should be reporting. [[User:Binabik80|Binabik80]] 18:41, 13 May 2006 (UTC) |
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:::What?! Pompey was a Republican? No. Pompey, like Caesar, was a PRAGMATIST. Like raising three legions to meet Sulla was legal? Please. As a matter of fact, Caesar never did anything blatantly 'subversive' until his alliance with Pompey (which wasn't ''technically'' illegal), who was ever the subverter (raising private armies to confront the Senate which opposed Sulla, fighting wars as a privatus -technically under a Dictator and so covered by that umbrella, but certainly not the SPIRIT of the law-, Consul without colleague, need I go on?). Pompey was a child who did whatever the Senate told him because he wanted in. He had an inferiority complex. Caesar, he only wanted his due as a Roman. But lesser men would not give it to him. And the constitution that you say was broken by him was barely functioning at all, people like Pompey had been rearranging the organs as suited them for decades. Caesar put it on life support; and when he was murdered, the plug finally fell out of the wall. Octavian, to continue the allegory, simply left the plug on the floor and watched the Republic finally die. All three men lusted for power, but i think Caesar was the only one who had any respect for what the Republic COULD be (as it certainly wasnt much, even by his own admission, at his time [..'without shape or meaning']). Pompey simply wanted in, and Octavian wanted the 'Republic' itself to be ''him''. --[[User:Cjcaesar|Cjcaesar]] 22:18, 29 September 2006 (UTC) |
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==English city of Portsmouth and its football team== |
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I think maybe this person means nickname -- I know that Portsmouth's football team is usually referred to as Pompey. But is it slang for something else? I think we need some etymology here, and probably should split this page and redirect Pompey the Great to Cn. Pompeius or pompey the Great... [[user:JHK|JHK]] |
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:The reason why Portsmouth is called Pompey is disputed. A quick web search found [[http://www.pompey.demon.co.uk/pompey.htm this page]], which discusses the matter. --[[user:Zundark|Zundark]], 2002 Mar 8 |
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==Pompey, Pompeius or ''Pompei''?== |
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Speaking of nicknames, how come Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus is "[[Pompey]]" but [[Marcus Licinius Crassus]] is not "Crassus"? -- [[User:Isis|isis]] 23 Aug 2002 |
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This name should be spelled Pompei not Pompey. This is an error that has been repeated for a couple of centuries. |
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:Nonsense. "Pompei" is just as wrong as "Pompey" as neither were the name he called himself. However "Pompey" has currency, as rightly or wrongly he's been known as that in English for centuries. Nobody ever calls him "Pompei". --[[User:Nicknack009|Nicknack009]] 18:28, 29 September 2005 (UTC) |
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::You would be surprised about English spelling - normalisation has only been around for the last one century or so - the old texts that we do read have themselves been normalised into current day spelling. Try reading some case law only 120 years old and you will immediately see that English by no means has set spelling. Indeed, it is conceivable that people could spell it pompey and pompei - with all understanding who they are referring to. much like today's 'organise' and 'organize' both parties having their own supporters. <small>—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[User:ToyotaPanasonic|ToyotaPanasonic]] ([[User talk:ToyotaPanasonic|talk]] • [[Special:Contributions/ToyotaPanasonic|contribs]]) 13:46, 21 September 2007 (UTC)</small><!-- Template:Unsigned --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot--> |
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It is essentially the same convention as Livius is called "Livy" and Plinius "Pliny". I am not a native speaker of English, but I would be baffled as to how to pronounce "Livi" or "Plini" in English and the same if not worse goes for "Pompei". [[User:Lucius Domitius|Lucius Domitius]] 01:37, 31 October 2005 (UTC) |
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:The convention in English is that, with anglicised Latin names, the final "-us" is dropped and, if preceded by an "i", the "i" is changed to "y" (which is, of course, why we call Marcus Antonius "[[Mark Antony]]"). It's a holdover from when Anglophones first became interested in studying ancient history in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, which is why we do it, roughly speaking, only to those Greeks and Romans in whom the Renaissance Anglophones were particularly interested—the Emperors, the great figures of the fall of the Republic, the historians who chronicled their exploits, the Apostles and the Church Fathers. |
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:Thus "Pompey" is the correct English form, but "Pompei" is certainly not. I would even argue that "Pompeius", if not quite incorrect in English, is at best nonstandard, like referring to the Emperor [[Trajan|Traianus]], the month of [[July|Julius]] or Saint [[John the Baptist|Ioannes]] the Baptist. [[User:Binabik80|Binabik80]] 18:59, 13 May 2006 (UTC) |
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::Pompii? I just undid an edit that changed the spelling to Pompii in a few places. It seemed very deliberate, and unlike vandalism. --[[User:Hurtstotouchfire|Hurtstotouchfire]] 02:34, 9 February 2007 (UTC) |
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==His second (illegal) triumph== |
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The article says: |
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:''Their branch of the Pompeii family was traditionally provincial, a strong bias in the eyes of the Roman elite.'' |
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Is this supposed to mean that the elite held a positive, negative, or some other kind of bias ''against'' the Pompeii family? -- [[User:Pde|Pde]] 00:13, 29 Sep 2003 (UTC) |
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And also: |
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:''Back in Rome, Pompey celebrated his second illegal triumph for the victories in Hispania.'' |
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Should this be ''legal'' triumph? -- [[User:Pde|Pde]] |
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Comments (late i know) on the above: |
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* the bias of aristocratic Romans was against everybody outside the traditional families |
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* yes, the triumph was illegal because Pompey was not a member of the senate |
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* [[User:Muriel Gottrop|Muriel Gottrop]] 10:26, 31 Oct 2003 (UTC) |
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===Reasons for its illegality=== |
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No, the illegality was because it wasn't a foreign enemy proper |
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: No, the illegality was because a) Pompey was underage to hold a triumph for both of his and b) he was not a member of the Senate, as Muriel Gottrop explains above. The "foreign enemy" business was essentially just brushed under the table.--[[User:CaesarGJ|CaesarGJ]] 07:16, 8 February 2006 (UTC) |
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::Modern sources cover this with the useful "extra-legal" and I've used this in the article. [[User:Haploidavey|Haploidavey]] ([[User talk:Haploidavey|talk]]) 22:56, 9 February 2010 (UTC) |
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==Pompey's picture== |
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About the picture: is this really Pompey? I dont think so... [[User:Muriel Gottrop|Muriel Gottrop]] 10:26, 31 Oct 2003 (UTC) |
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As far back as I can remember in my life this is the picture of Pompey the Great I have seen in any biographical article related to him in any source; if you know otherwise, please report it. [[User:Lucius Domitius|Lucius Domitius]] 01:37, 31 October 2005 (UTC) |
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==Marriage In Time== |
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== Theater == |
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106 BC September 29 — born in Picenum |
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83 BC — marriage to Aemilia Scaura(AKA Caesar's child Julia) |
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54 - BCJulia, died in childbirth. |
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Hi, I am new to wikipedia. I did not see any inclusion of Pompey's theater in this article. Is this something that would be good to include? -[[User:Sarahh317|Sarahh317]] ([[User talk:Sarahh317|talk]]) 12:30, 13 September 2019 (UTC) |
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Only 29 years of marriage. He must be really be sad. |
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:Sounds like a good idea to me. I had a crack at it. Added a section about the theatre and a link to the main article.-[[User:LuciusHistoricus|LuciusHistoricus]] ([[User talk:LuciusHistoricus|talk]]) 13:21, 15 September 2019 (UTC) |
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== Infobox == |
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Possibly not relevant (I assume you were making a joke?) but Aemilia Scaura is not Caesar's daughter Julia. They were different women. He was only married to Julia for 6 years. [[User:Tbarker|Tbarker]] 11:12, 22 January 2007 (UTC) |
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This article, along with several other articles about ancient Romans, was changed to use a different infobox, {{tl|infobox officeholder}}. In consequence, there's discussion about which infobox to use and how at [[Talk:Julius Caesar#Infobox]] and then at [[Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Classical Greece and Rome#Infoboxes for Roman office-holders]] as a more central location. [[User:NebY|NebY]] ([[User talk:NebY|talk]]) 19:47, 22 November 2022 (UTC) |
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==Conflict with information on selected anniversaries == |
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== Article length (and other) issues == |
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I will also post this on the main page discussion. Here it says "in the spring of 49 BC Caesar crossed the Rubicon and invaded Italy with his thirteenth legion", and the main page celebrates today as the anniversary (January 10th is not spring for 49 BC Italy, I assume), but specified the tenth legion. This information seems consistent with the [[Julius_Caesar]] entry. --[[User:Paraphelion|Paraphelion]] 02:27, 10 Jan 2005 (UTC) |
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As we seem to have started a discussion of sorts in the edit summaries, I thought it would be useful to open a thread on what this article needs, in terms of cutting and pruning (and whatever else), with a view to making a sort of to-do list. |
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*Dont forget that the Roman calendar, before the reformations of Caesar, was not in pace with seasons, so January could perfectly be spring. [[User:Muriel Gottrop|muriel@pt]] 12:52, 10 Jan 2005 (UTC) |
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Tagging in {{ping|User:T8612}} and {{ping|User:Robinvp11}}, who have been involved in the same 'conversation'. |
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== The reason for "Magnus"? == |
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For my money, the main 'problem' is in the military-history sections: they're both overly-long (especially as most are, in theory, only summaries of main articles) and more or less straightforwardly paraphrase the primary sources. The most obvious contenders for some work would seem to be: |
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The article states that Pompey recieved the [[cognomen]] "Magnus" for defeating pirates under Sulla. |
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* [[Pompey#Sertorian War|Sertorian War]] |
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:"''While he was thus engaged in settling the affairs of Sicily, he received a decree of the senate and a letter of Sulla ordering him to sail to Africa and wage war with all his might against Domitius. For Domitius had assembled there a much larger force than that with which Marius, no long time ago,13 had crossed from Africa into Italy and confounded the Roman state, making himself tyrant instead of exile. ''" - [[Plutarch]], ''Life of Pompey'', 11:1 |
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* [[Pompey#Civil war: failure and death|Civil War]] |
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* [[Pompey#Third Mithriditic War|Third Mithriditic War]] |
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The big 'missing link' is an article on [[Pompey's Campaign against the Pirates]], but as that section's currently much shorter than the others, I'm not sure it's a hugely urgent priority. |
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:"''On his return to Utica, a letter from Sulla was brought to him, in which he was commanded to send home the rest of his army, but to remain there himself with one legion, awaiting the arrival of the general who was to succeed him. Pompey himself gave no sign of the deep distress which these orders caused him, but his soldiers made their indignation manifest. When Pompey asked them to go home before him, they began to revile Sulla, declared they would not forsake their general, and insisted that he should not trust the tyrant. 2At first, then, Pompey tried what words could do to appease and mollify them; but when he was unable to persuade them, he came down from his tribunal and withdrew to his tent in tears. Then his soldiers seized him and set him again upon his tribunal, and a great part of the day was consumed in this way, they urging him to remain and keep his command, and he begging them to obey and not to raise a sedition. At last, when their clamours and entreaties increased, he swore p147 with an oath that he would kill himself if they used force with him, and even then they would hardly stop. |
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I agree with [[User:T8612]] that the lede is, for now, one of the better parts of the article, and that we'd be much better off focusing our efforts further down. [[User:UndercoverClassicist|UndercoverClassicist]] ([[User talk:UndercoverClassicist|talk]]) 17:59, 14 February 2023 (UTC) |
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:''Sulla's first tidings of the affair were that Pompey was in revolt, and he told his friends that it was evidently his fate, now that he was an old man, to have his contests with boys. This he said because Marius also, who was quite a young man, had given him very great trouble and involved him in the most extreme perils. 4But when he learned the truth, and perceived that everybody was sallying forth to welcome Pompey and accompany him home with marks of goodwill, he was eager to outdo them. So he went out and met him, and after giving him the warmest welcome, saluted him in a loud voice as "Magnus," or The Great, and ordered those who were by to give him this surname. ''", [[Plutarch]], ''Life of Pompey'', 13:1-4 |
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:The Lead may be "one of the better parts of the article", but that doesn't invalidate edits made to it. I haven't taken out anything that alters the sense (except for the claim made in the original that Pompey's war with Caesar necessarily led to the Empire). |
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At least according to Plutarch, he recieved it for military actions against Domitius. The actions against the [[cilician]] pirates was part of the [[Third Mithridatic War]] (75-63 BC), almost 10 years after the reign of [[Sulla]] (82-80 BC). - [[User:Vedexent|Vedexent]] 12:45, 9 March 2006 (UTC) |
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:I will make edits to the [[Pompey#Sertorian War|Sertorian War]] as a start; |
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===Became "Magnus" for his actions in the East???=== |
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:Ok - now '''both''' versions are in the article. Can anyone provide a ''reference'' for Pompey becoming "Magnus" for his actions in the East? - [[User:Vedexent|Vedexent]] 17:14, 19 March 2006 (UTC) |
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:"BCE" is commonly used by modern historians and I think we should standardise on that throughout the article. [[User:Robinvp11|Robinvp11]] ([[User talk:Robinvp11|talk]]) 19:05, 14 February 2023 (UTC) |
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:There is no source that I know of that credits Pompeius receiving the title of "Magnus" due to his exploits in the East in the 60's. Would someone please either provide a reference for this or remove it from the article. --[[User:M Drusus|M Drusus]] 17:17, 2 June 2006 (UTC) |
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::There's a Wikipedia policy on CE/AD ([[MOS:ERA]]): essentially, he encyclopaedia doesn't take a view either way, so you can use either one when writing a new article but shouldn't change an existing article from one to the other if it's already established. For what it's worth, I have a fairly strong preference towards BCE as well, and have used it whenever I've written an article. |
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::You're absolutely right that edits to the lead are, in principle, fine (there was a good one a few days ago which corrected the IPA) - I'm not trying to say that they shouldn't be made. My thinking was that you seemed to be looking to do something about the article's length issues: having come in and pointed out an edit that didn't help, it only seemed right to be constructive and suggest some that would. [[User:UndercoverClassicist|UndercoverClassicist]] ([[User talk:UndercoverClassicist|talk]]) 08:23, 15 February 2023 (UTC) |
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:::Having seen the recent edits to lead, the major issues discussed in my previous edit summary remain. I've restored the factual material cut out, while making some changes to address the problems raised (in particular, the term "student of Sulla" was neither clear nor particularly accurate - I've had a go at supplying something different, and I'm not sure that "ardent supporter of the Optimates" could claim any evidence for Pompey's genuine thoughts and feelings). |
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:::In the interests of giving a detailed explanation, here's my edit summary: |
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::::Lead reworked (largely reverted), with some of the positive recent changes built back in. Per [[MOS:LEAD]], the lead should be able to stand on its own as a mini-article, so cutting significant material like Pompey's status as nobility and his unorthodox ''cursus honorum'' is inappropriate. For an article of this length, [[MOS:LEAD]] advises 3-4 paragraphs, so it is already on the short side - cutting out factual material is not the right approach here. |
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:::There's a difference between concision and simple brevity: it's certainly good to make sure that the lead says what it needs to in the most concise way possible, but that is not the same as reducing the lead so that it says as little as possible. Most notably, any treatment of Pompey's involvement in the Crisis of the Republic needs to be clear that Caesar's Civil War was only the final step: the Republic was well into crisis by (at least) 81, when Pompey — a teenage general who effectively inherited an army — is going around threatening a barely-constitutional military strongman into giving him an extra-legal triumph. Caesar's civil war was still over three decades away at that point. |
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:::We're coming close to the [[3RR|Three-Revert Rule]] here, so I'd suggest that it would be wise to establish consensus for any major changes to the lead before making them. [[User:UndercoverClassicist|UndercoverClassicist]] ([[User talk:UndercoverClassicist|talk]]) 10:23, 15 February 2023 (UTC) |
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::::(a) "Most notably, any treatment of Pompey's involvement in the Crisis of the Republic needs to be clear that Caesar's Civil War was only the final step: the Republic was well into crisis by (at least) 81, when Pompey — a teenage general who effectively inherited an army — is going around threatening a barely-constitutional military strongman into giving him an extra-legal triumph. Caesar's civil war was still over three decades away at that point." |
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::::If this is your point (and I'm not disagreeing), then it is not clearly reflected in the current wording. Nor do I get any sense of what distinguishes Pompey from any number of ruthlessly ambitious thugs who sought to take advantage of the general instability of the late Roman Republic. |
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::::(b) Leads are also supposed to be accessible for the general reader, a point many editors miss because we tend to edit articles or periods we already know. Listing his triumphs, the wars he fought in etc - so what? The point (presumably) is he was a successful and experienced military strongman - why not simply say that? |
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::::(c) This is a problem throughout Wikipedia and it matters because 60% of Wikipedia users only ever look at the Lead. Yes, as someone who designs online and mobile learning for a living, '''shorter is better'''. But my main objections to the Lead are not length per se, but lack of clarity (see above), and pointless verbiage. |
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::::Why do I need to know as a key fact Pompey was referred to as a "teenage butcher?" Presumably because he was known as ruthless - not unusual for successful Roman politicians - so why not just say so? |
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::::Yes, we need to get the body of the article right but unless the Lead is both accessible and clear, its like building a house without a front door. |
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::::To summarise; ''The Lead as currently written both assumes expert knowledge, but also fails to clearly state what made Pompey different, and why he was so significant''.[[User:Robinvp11|Robinvp11]] ([[User talk:Robinvp11|talk]]) 15:20, 16 February 2023 (UTC) |
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::[[User:Robinvp11|@Robinvp11]] Do we have concensus on replacing all the BCs in this article with BCEs? I am willing to do it, but we need concensus. [[User:LuciusHistoricus|LuciusHistoricus]] ([[User talk:LuciusHistoricus|talk]]) 18:14, 4 August 2023 (UTC) |
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:::I don't think so [[User:Robinvp11|Robinvp11]] ([[User talk:Robinvp11|talk]]) 09:19, 6 August 2023 (UTC) |
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== 'Popular' references == |
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== Principal ancient authorities for the life of Pompey == |
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Bare lists of popular references are no longer welcome on Wikipedia, per the style guideline [[MOS:CULTURALREFS]]. In view of this, and the discussion above on article length, I'm challenging the section as without [[WP:RS]] and largely off-topic and will delete it next month. [[User:Sweetpool50|Sweetpool50]] ([[User talk:Sweetpool50|talk]]) 09:09, 19 March 2023 (UTC) |
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I did a re-read of Plutarch, and eliminated everything within the article that I had not previously read in an Encyclopedia Britannica, or that Plutarch himself did not mention. -- [[User:Black Sword|Black Sword]] 08:04, 8 July 2006 |
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:First of all, on talk pages, please sign your comment by typing four tildes (<nowiki>~~~~</nowiki>). Well, I just signed your previous comment for you, so don't worry now, (ha, ha). With that said, I only wanted to remark to all the wikipedians working here, that the '''principal ancient authorities for the life of Pompey''' are the biography of [[Plutarch]], the histories of [[Dio Cassius]], [[Appian]], and [[Velleius Paterculus]], the Civil War of [[Julius Caesar]], and the Letters and Orations of [[Cicero]]. A classic of modern scholarship is Wilhelm Drumann's ''Geschichte Roms'' (History of Rome), Königsberg 1834-1844. where his life is related at length. So... Plutarch is not the only source, after all. Happy editing! -- [[User:Pichote|Pichote]] 19:27, 28 July 2006 (UTC) |
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:: Shouldn't this information be somewhere in the article itself - the references or further reading, perhaps, or a separate section? And maybe we could link to those ancient sources that are available online, like Plutarch's biography. --[[User:Jim Henry|Jim Henry]] 20:47, 19 October 2006 (UTC) |
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:::I totally agree with Jim Henry. --[[User:Pichote|Pichote]] 07:26, 20 October 2006 (UTC) |
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== Era == |
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==Fairness of tone (Congratulations!)== |
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I would like to congratulate the wikipedian [[User:205.175.123.113|205.175.123.113]] on her/his recent edits. She/He was totally successful in bringing Pompey's article a much needed fairness of tone. Thanks! -- [[User:Pichote|Pichote]] 09:28, 29 July 2006 (UTC) |
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==Triumphal car?== |
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"...entered the city of Rome in his triumphal car, a simple eques,..." - what is this about? --[[User:222.152.100.245|222.152.100.245]] 10:58, 6 August 2006 (UTC) |
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There appears to be a dispute over whether the established era style used in this article ought to be changed from BC to BCE. As this threatens to become an edit war, one of the editors involved in the dispute brought it to the attention of WikiProject Classical Greece and Rome for outside assistance or opinions. [[WP:ERA]] says to {{tq|seek consensus on the talk page first (applying Wikipedia:Manual of Style § Retaining existing styles) by opening a discussion under a heading using the word era, and briefly stating why the style should be changed.}} Having been involved in several similar discussions before, I cannot think of an alternative, because this is a legitimate dispute between editors who have worked on this article. I'll summarize my own opinion below, so as not to confuse the discussion. [[User:P Aculeius|P Aculeius]] ([[User talk:P Aculeius|talk]]) 23:29, 30 April 2023 (UTC) |
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:The triumphal car was a special horse-drawn chariot in which a triumphator rode on the day of his triumph. At this time Pompey was an eques, which was a distinct social class, originally meaning a citizen who was wealthy enough to own his own horse, but by this time (the late Republic) meaning someone who owned a certain amount of property. The article says "simple" because an eques was a private citizen -- Pompey at this time was not yet a member of the Senate, and therefore not legally entitled to celebrate a triumph. [[User:Fumblebruschi|Fumblebruschi]] ([[User talk:Fumblebruschi|talk]]) 21:48, 27 October 2009 (UTC) |
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:{{red|Warning, wall of text follows!}} Per the above guideline, the established era should not be changed unless there is a consensus for doing so related to the content of this article. The Manual of Style specifies that both eras are acceptable generally speaking; for this reason I do not think we can accept at face value the argument that "all or nearly all modern historians" prefer "BCE/CE". If we followed that logic, then we would need to convert all history articles using "BC" or "AD" to "BCE" and "CE", and one of the most contentious issues in all of Wikipedia would suddenly be settled, to the great surprise of most editors. We cannot accept a blanket statement that BC/AD is unacceptable without involving the entire encyclopedia—and I very much doubt there would be a consensus for doing so. |
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==Death Date== |
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At the beginning of this article Pompey's birth and death dates are listed as September 29, 106 BC–September 28, 48 BC. Later, under "Civil War and assassination" it says "On September 29, his 58th birthday...(he was assassinated)" And under "Chronology..." it says "48 BC — led by Pompey, the conservatives lose the battle of Pharsalus; Pompey runs away to Egypt, where he is killed on September 29." |
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:I cannot see anything to do with Pompeius that would require a change of eras. This is a history topic, not a religious one, and there are no strong reasons for or against either era style related to the subject. The only reason I can see for doing so is the personal preference of the editor, and in general we do not change era styles for this reason, because that would encourage constant edit warring. The editor wishing to make the change has said that he has spent several days revising the article, and that therefore it has been substantially rewritten and can be in the style of his choosing. |
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Is there a mistake here, or is there debate over the date of death? [[User:131.104.138.214|131.104.138.214]] 19:23, 20 September 2007 (UTC) |
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:But this is a very substantial article on a major topic, and has had hundreds of editors over more than twenty years. I do not think that any quantity of rewriting or replacement of the text should give one editor the right to decide an issue as contentious as the era without a consensus from others. If nobody cared enough to contest it, then it could be allowed to pass, but clearly people do care, and contentious changes ought not to be made without achieving a consensus. That would need to be done here, before the change is implemented. |
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:Well they can't all be correct - I have never heard of a human being born accross three dates. And if there was a dispute as to the date of his death etc., certainly a note should be made about it. many people have edited the pages and this discrepancy has gone largely unnoticied till now. <small>—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[User:ToyotaPanasonic|ToyotaPanasonic]] ([[User talk:ToyotaPanasonic|talk]] • [[Special:Contributions/ToyotaPanasonic|contribs]]) 13:49, 21 September 2007 (UTC)</small><!-- Template:Unsigned --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot--> |
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::So, which day did he die? September 28 or September 29? /[[User:Ludde23|Ludde23]] <sup>[[User talk:Ludde23|Talk]] [[Special:Contributions/Ludde23|Contrib]]</sup> 10:26, 29 September 2008 (UTC) |
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:There is a tendency among some editors to use only the most recent sources available for any topic, and dismiss all others as hopelessly outdated. But this is not a valid position in the field of Roman history, except in the rare exceptions where new evidence has come to light. New interpretations may be perfectly reasonable, and may stand the test of time. Or they may not. Historical analysis is no more immune to social trends today than it was in the past. When it comes to Roman biography, the opinions of scholars from Roman times to the present are all worth describing, citing, and considering; excluding sources merely because they're old, as if writers living before the present weren't equally educated or entitled to their opinions, is absurd. |
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== Theatre of Pompey == |
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Is this mentioned in this article. I didn't see it when I scanned through it.--[[User:Amadscientist|Amadscientist]] ([[User talk:Amadscientist|talk]]) 11:20, 27 January 2008 (UTC) |
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:It is now. [[User:Haploidavey|Haploidavey]] ([[User talk:Haploidavey|talk]]) 22:58, 9 February 2010 (UTC) |
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:The idea that "BCE/CE" reflects an enlightened evolution of thought concerning bias in historical writing appears shallow and superficial to me; an era based on the date that Dionysius Exiguus calculated as the birth of Christ is no more offensive because it is labeled as such than it is when the abbreviation for it is replaced by letters that supposedly mean something else—although "Christian Era" and "Before the Christian Era" is also a common understanding of these abbreviations, alongside "common" era, so it's not even clear that changing the abbreviations actually removes the word "Christ". Does taking the steeple off the church or disguising a church as a bank change what it is? If the era is still based on the birth of Christ, then hiding that behind an innocuous phrase seems more insidious than simply acknowledging what it is in plain language. |
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Something not mentioned here and not in the [[Theatre of Pompey]] article either. I have read this and done some research on it but have yet to put anything together yet. The theatre seems to be a political gathering spot for Pompey's supporters, his patrons and those whom he paid for...or off. The Porticus Pompey, was in fact the beginnings of the imperial forums. Julius Caesar made sure he created one for himself AND built a theatre in a different location of the Campus martius. |
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:For the record, I'm not advocating keeping the established era out of religious zeal. I'm not a Christian, and never have been. I'm a secular Jew interested in history, particularly Roman history. Most extant historical writing uses BC and AD, and I never feel excluded or insulted by it. Historians have always written from their own perspective, and that hasn't changed. Those who wrote about this topic or other related topics weren't imposing a religious agenda by using the established era of their time, and I don't feel the need or the desire to have history rewritten to address an offense I don't feel. It's patronizing to take offense on the behalf of other people, and tell them how they ought to feel if they're not offended. My opinion isn't better than anyone else's, even if it takes more words to express. But for my part I prefer to keep the established style than impose something that I think is rather absurd and pointless. [[User:P Aculeius|P Aculeius]] ([[User talk:P Aculeius|talk]]) 00:05, 1 May 2023 (UTC) |
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The building of this theatre ond portico was to have a political effect on the City of Rome by every subseguent Ruler looking to rebuild the Government Basilica and relocate the forum for that leaders politcal supporters. All based on Pompeys ego and need to build big for himself and for his political followers. This is how Rome would be ruled all the way untill Constatine with the building of the largest Basilica in the city.--[[User:Amadscientist|Amadscientist]] ([[User talk:Amadscientist|talk]]) 01:08, 12 February 2010 (UTC) |
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: Having been one of the people who responded to the call on [[WT:CGR]], I want to note that I concur with P Aculeius with some reservations – the fourth paragraph – that aren't entirely relevant to this issue. [[User:Ifly6|Ifly6]] ([[User talk:Ifly6|talk]]) 03:18, 1 May 2023 (UTC) |
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:Ah, Pompey and his ego; everyone but a foil to his brilliance... What you say is most interesting. The article is, on the whole, still little more than a Plutarchian shrine to the Great lamented. Recent-ish research on the piracy business takes off some of the shine and I've added what seems proportionate for a balanced perspective on that particular sub-topic. I look forward to your doings here! [[User:Haploidavey|Haploidavey]] ([[User talk:Haploidavey|talk]]) 01:23, 12 February 2010 (UTC) |
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:: {{ping|Robinvp11|P Aculeius|Iazyges|NebY|ps=.}} (Pinging involved users.) Please don't restore your version of the article contra consensus. [[User:Ifly6|Ifly6]] ([[User talk:Ifly6|talk]]) 17:57, 2 May 2023 (UTC) |
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:Very much agree; BC/AD is by far the most widely used system, with the Muslim AH system forming the only other calendar that is actually broadly used, both based on religious events. If BCE/CE wanted to find a new Year 0 to form a Kelvin-esque neutral third dating system, there might be more use for it, but it's really just a retouching of being based on the birth of Jesus (ish). I personally use BC/AD, but don't have an issue with those who use BCE/CE so long as they abide by WP:ERA. With that, I very much stand by our usage of WP:ERA; that a primary author can pick whichever they like, and it should not be changed unless there is strong consensus for it. [[User:Iazyges|<span style="color:#838996">Iazyges</span>]] [[User talk:Iazyges|<span style="color:#838996">Consermonor</span>]] [[Special:Contributions/Iazyges|<span style="color:#838996">Opus meum</span>]] 04:24, 1 May 2023 (UTC) |
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==Tagging for citations== |
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::For what it's worth, as a long-time editor I am prepared to abide by the WP ruling. But on a personal level I always use B/CE in the articles I create. I find the concept AD ("in the year of our Lord") insulting to all those of other faiths for whom that is not true, as well as beside the point in contexts where Christian figures and ideology do not fit. If there is a growing scholarly preference for B/CE usage, it may be time for WP policy-makers to review the rule more sensitively. [[User:Sweetpool50|Sweetpool50]] ([[User talk:Sweetpool50|talk]]) 06:40, 1 May 2023 (UTC) |
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In accordance with the policy of improving Wikipedia's reliability and verifiability, I've tagged the article where citation is lacking, or where vagueness requires clarification. Both of these shortcomings apply to most of the article. At some time in the near future, I'll be working on the text but will be using my own reference resources, and replacing those not tied to the text by incline citations. Would any editors concerned please post here or on my talk page. Meanwhile, I've removed some of the more obviously "weasel" words and phrases. [[User:Haploidavey|Haploidavey]] ([[User talk:Haploidavey|talk]]) 14:36, 4 April 2009 (UTC) |
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:::Using CE in the articles you write is your prerogative, and I won't get in your way. However, almost no one understands AD to be "Anno Domini" anymore, to be honest. It simply is AD for them. And again, regardless of what it's called, it's based on the same thing. [[User:Iazyges|<span style="color:#838996">Iazyges</span>]] [[User talk:Iazyges|<span style="color:#838996">Consermonor</span>]] [[Special:Contributions/Iazyges|<span style="color:#838996">Opus meum</span>]] 07:10, 1 May 2023 (UTC) |
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:::That's why I made a point of saying that BC/AD don't offend me in the least. I understand what they mean, and I think most other people know too, but their use just isn't offensive. I find the drive to replace them with CE/BCE patronizing because they pretend to mean something else, even though they're based on the same thing—and I note that many people use or understand the "C" to mean "Christian" rather than "Common". Plus, calling it the "common" era implies that everyone agrees with it, including the very people who are supposedly excluded by counting years from the birth of Christ. That's also extremely patronizing. At least the older era style has the benefit of centuries of usage. It's become innocuous, unlike CE/BCE, used without any intention of using it to spread the gospel, as it were. I don't need people to decide what I'm offended by for me, and erase it wherever it occurs to spare me some imaginary trauma. As a historian, that's antithetical to all of my instincts and training. [[User:P Aculeius|P Aculeius]] ([[User talk:P Aculeius|talk]]) 14:15, 1 May 2023 (UTC) |
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:[[WP:ERA]] serves us well as a truce. Without it, there are passionate, forthright and principled editors who would remove every BCE/CE from every article they worked on and some who would seek out any other uses too, restricted only by the equally passionate, forthright and principled editors busily removing BC/AD. Thus also [[WP:ENGVAR]] for spelling and grammar, and [[MOS:METRIC]] for metric and imperial/US-customary units. In developing the latter, "source-based units" became anathema, especially after one editor was accused of changing a source for articles about UK footballers to justify giving their heights in metres rather than feet and inches. Likewise, [[WP:ERA]] doesn't allow for switching styles according to sources, leaves no room for [[WP:OWN]]ership by whoever's put in most work, and does not allow changes on general principles. |
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:Instead, [[WP:ERA]] requires {{tq|reasons specific to [the article's] content}} for any switching. I don't think we've seen any specific reasons for this article yet. [[User:NebY|NebY]] ([[User talk:NebY|talk]]) 19:55, 1 May 2023 (UTC) |
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::{{ping|Robinvp11}}, that's not how it works. You get to make your changes ''if'' you can gain a consensus by discussion. The burden is on you to convince others to change a stable era style, not the reverse. --[[User:Nicknack009|Nicknack009]] ([[User talk:Nicknack009|talk]]) 18:14, 2 May 2023 (UTC) |
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:::Getting consensus assumes this discussion is about logic, rather than emotion. That's presumably why you've (apparently) put far more effort into escalating and winning this relatively minor issue, rather than (say) making useful comments on the content. [[User:Robinvp11|Robinvp11]] ([[User talk:Robinvp11|talk]]) 18:28, 2 May 2023 (UTC) |
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The article reads well, but owes a great deal (in prose style, content and attitudes) to 19th cent scholarship. It needs revision with reference to modern scholarship. This would amount to a re-write. Would anyone visiting this page care to get rid of the cite-error message at the bottom of the article? Mea culpa, but I can't figure out why it's there. I'm wikignorant. [[User:Haploidavey|Haploidavey]] ([[User talk:Haploidavey|talk]]) 14:24, 6 April 2009 (UTC) |
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::This article was flagged as requiring extensive updating, including use of modern sources, and is effectively a rewrite. I've had zero comments on the content from any of the editors above. |
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:[http://en.wikipedia.org/enwiki/w/index.php?title=Pompey&diff=281996270&oldid=281995975 This] is the dif that causes the cite tag. Not entirely sure how to fix it. I'll take a stab at it, bit if this has an obvious fix that someone else can quickly put into effect, please do so. [[User:Hiberniantears|Hiberniantears]] ([[User talk:Hiberniantears|talk]]) 14:32, 6 April 2009 (UTC) |
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::Well... I made a mess of things, but eventually found that elusive open ref tag in the "external links" section, which I moved so that it is now above the notes and references sections. [[User:Hiberniantears|Hiberniantears]] ([[User talk:Hiberniantears|talk]]) 14:47, 6 April 2009 (UTC) |
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:::My homage is on your talk page! [[User:Haploidavey|Haploidavey]] ([[User talk:Haploidavey|talk]]) 15:04, 6 April 2009 (UTC) |
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::::Hello, I'm not sure why you removed the (for this article) age-old reference to Valerius Maximus, especially in view of your edit summary [http://en.wikipedia.org/enwiki/w/index.php?title=Pompey&diff=282252684&oldid=282247351]. Regardless of its relative importance (it may have been used for this occasion only, I don't know), the expression is there ("quod indemnati sub te adulescentulo carnifice occidissent", ''Facta et dicta memorabilia'' 6.2.8). [[User:Iblardi|Iblardi]] ([[User talk:Iblardi|talk]]) 05:54, 7 April 2009 (UTC) |
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::::: I've no Latin, and was unable to recognise the phrase in the Latin text. My thanks also on your talk page. [[User:Haploidavey|Haploidavey]] ([[User talk:Haploidavey|talk]]) 11:56, 7 April 2009 (UTC) I should of course have left the phrase in and asked for help - which you've given anyway. [[User:Haploidavey|Haploidavey]] ([[User talk:Haploidavey|talk]]) 12:20, 7 April 2009 (UTC) |
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::A lot of the text above frankly seems irrelevant. I personally don't care if people use BC or BCE '''but''' those who do use BCE include all modern historians, schools, news organisations like the BBC, other online encyclopedia such as the EB etc. Several of the sources quoted in this article (Beard and Holland among others) use BCE. And since a lot of our readers are from schools, our audience will too. |
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==Uncited and dubious material== |
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::The oft quoted [[WP:ERA]] specifically says you can use either. So far, the only rationalisation provided here for continuing to use BC is because people feel emotionally attached to it. Why would we update an article and not employ commonly used formats? And if the answer is "because we like BC", then just say that, save everyone hours of typing their detailed rationalisation of that simple truth. |
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Removed passage describing Pompey's curiosity regarding the Temple and his amazement at the absence of images therein (not relevant - was it a summary of Holland?). Also tagged the connection of Pompey (as ancestor via Pompeia) with M. Aurelius and Melania. Sources certainly required for both. [[User:Haploidavey|Haploidavey]] ([[User talk:Haploidavey|talk]]) 11:17, 24 October 2009 (UTC) |
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: |
::No worries - I've taken this page off my watch list and I'll make sure I avoid this period going forward.[[User:Robinvp11|Robinvp11]] ([[User talk:Robinvp11|talk]]) 18:28, 2 May 2023 (UTC) |
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== No talk of servile war == |
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<blockquote> |
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Pompey entered the [[Holy of Holies]]. He went to the [[Temple in Jerusalem|Temple]] to find out whether the Jews had no physical statue or image of their God in their most sacred place of worship. To Pompey, it was inconceivable to worship a God without portraying him in a type of likeness, like a statue. What Pompey saw was unlike anything he had seen on his travels to [[most sacred sites|sacred sites]]. He found no [[statue]], [[religious image]] or [[pictorial]] description of the [[Elohim|Hebrew God]]. Instead, he saw [[Torah]] scrolls and was thoroughly confused. {{Citation needed|date=September 2008}} |
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</blockquote> |
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::The above section has yet again been restored. Why? It ''still'' lacks the citation requested in September 2008. Evidently someone is very fond of the passage, but it's absurdly speculative and therefore offers no substance, reliability or verifiability to the article. [[User:Haploidavey|Haploidavey]] ([[User talk:Haploidavey|talk]]) 02:22, 2 April 2010 (UTC) |
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It’s mentioned he is elected consul in 70, 55, and 52, with very little supporting information for any of this. No talk of the Servile war either. [[Special:Contributions/2603:8001:5602:B943:A91B:853F:6FFF:602E|2603:8001:5602:B943:A91B:853F:6FFF:602E]] ([[User talk:2603:8001:5602:B943:A91B:853F:6FFF:602E|talk]]) 14:32, 23 July 2023 (UTC) |
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:::Thank you, Portillo, for your response. The modern religious tract you link to is definitely not a scholarly source. The passage you keep restoring is based on a work of imagination, devised to illustrate a theological point regarding monotheism; and its author is not well-informed. Rome was a cosmopolitan society, familiar with Judaism, Jews and a range of mystery religions - yes, even at this date. This image of Pompey gawping with amazement and religious bafflement at the Holy of Holies is frankly absurd. If you would like to know a little more on the topic of Roman-Jewish relations, try Mary E. Smallwood, ''The Jews under Roman rule: from Pompey to Diocletian: a study in political relations'', illustrated, Brill Publishers, 2001. ISBN 0-391-04155-X: partial preview here - (I've highlighted "exemption", but of course you can use any search terms you wish: [http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=jSYbpitEjggC&pg=PA2&lpg=PA2&dq=Jews+smallwood+actium+Parthia&source=bl&ots=VWsQGlsrv8&sig=1P-nIzMEdJTf6R0WrQTaT9aMrKo&hl=en&ei=VfooSsKeIZSDjAfBwpn3Cg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=5#v=onepage&q=exemption&f=false]. |
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:The article does discuss the consulships in 70, 55, and 52. It does discuss his activities during the Third Servile War. I'm not sure as to how the claim made here is at all factual. [[User:Ifly6|Ifly6]] ([[User talk:Ifly6|talk]]) 02:22, 24 July 2023 (UTC) |
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:::In view of the foregoing, I've removed the disputed material. ''Please don't restore it again''. In my opinion, Josephus says everything we need to know about the incident. This article still needs dedicated editing; as someone has said above, a lot of it's just a dump for Plutarch - a primary source, and a late one at that - and we need ''reputable'' secondary scholarship here. [[User:Haploidavey|Haploidavey]] ([[User talk:Haploidavey|talk]]) 13:17, 2 April 2010 (UTC) |
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== Sections on sources and a separate bibliography == |
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Whatever you say. [[User:Portillo|Portillo]] ([[User talk:Portillo|talk]]) 14:56, 2 April 2010 (UTC) |
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This doesn't seem entirely consistent with [[MOS:LAYOUT]] but regardless of whether it is consistent or not it's confusing. Some clean up of that might be desiderable. [[User:Ifly6|Ifly6]] ([[User talk:Ifly6|talk]]) 17:12, 4 August 2023 (UTC) |
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:I think it's worth keeping the citations in the "sources" section that are specifically about Pompey as "further reading" (i.e. sources that are relevant but not cited in text). Abbott, Brice, and Crawford seem a bit too general to keep and Van Ooteghem might be too old. I don't see any good reason for keeping the primary sources. "Julius Caesar. (1976)" deeply discomforts me and I'm not sure why we're advising readers to consult ''that particular'' edition. [[User:Furius|Furius]] ([[User talk:Furius|talk]]) 21:29, 4 August 2023 (UTC) |
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== Interface == |
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::I agree that a "Further reading" section could be introduced; it would not be the same, however, as "Sources" and "Bibliography" which is what is in the article at present. I'm not too troubled with {{tq|Julius Caesar 1976}} as if we quote translations we will have to select a specific one; but I think it should be anonymised in the way documented at [[WP:CGR/Guides/Primary sources]]. [[User:Ifly6|Ifly6]] ([[User talk:Ifly6|talk]]) 03:05, 5 August 2023 (UTC) |
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== Consulship error? == |
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Why does this Article have a different background layout than most other Articles I have seen? [[User:The Mysterious El Willstro|The Mysterious El Willstro]] ([[User talk:The Mysterious El Willstro|talk]]) 22:49, 6 June 2010 (UTC) |
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:Well, it did. Thanks, whoever corrected it! [[User:The Mysterious El Willstro|The Mysterious El Willstro]] ([[User talk:The Mysterious El Willstro|talk]]) 22:52, 6 June 2010 (UTC) |
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The Early life/career section says "He completed the traditional ''cursus honorum'', becoming consul in 89 BC," but later in the Sertorian War it says "Backed by his allies in the Senate, Pompey was appointed military commander in Spain with proconsular authority. This act was technically illegal as he had yet to hold public office, illustrating Pompey's preference for military glory, and disregard for traditional political constraints." |
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==Pompey in the east== |
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Which was it? Did he hold public office before this or not? |
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The article about his siege of Jerusalem should be more descriptive. The picture next to the article depicts Jews being killed by Romans. However, the article said nothing about this. In fact, it seemed like Pompey was tolerant, i.e. not destroying the temple items, respecting the religion. [[User:Starwarsgeek133|Starwarsgeek133]] ([[User talk:Starwarsgeek133|talk]]) 23:06, 29 September 2010 (UTC) |
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Edit: upon further inspection, the quote from the Early Life section actually refers to his father Strabo. I'm gonna tweak the punctuation to make that a little clearer. |
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:I can't see how you missed Josephus' account of the siege, its Jewish casualties and Pompey's visit to the Temple; it's quoted in the relevant section of the article. [[User:Haploidavey|Haploidavey]] ([[User talk:Haploidavey|talk]]) 23:31, 29 September 2010 (UTC) |
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[[User:TrendySpaghetti|TrendySpaghetti]] ([[User talk:TrendySpaghetti|talk]]) 21:57, 8 December 2023 (UTC) |
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== [[Draft:Assassination of Pompey]] == |
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::But...I read his account, and it said that Jews died, but he said no 'enormities' were done in the temple, unlike what the picture depicts. [[User:Starwarsgeek133|Starwarsgeek133]] ([[User talk:Starwarsgeek133|talk]]) 02:46, 1 October 2010 (UTC) |
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I've started this draft and anyone interested can collaborate. Let's get this done. [[User:Xoak|X]] ([[User talk:Xoak|talk]]) 18:04, 12 May 2024 (UTC) |
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:::I like the placing of [[Josephus]]' text next to [[Jean Fouquet|Fouquet's]] [[Illumination (manuscript)|illuminated]], very 15th-century-French interpretation of the same. The text explains the picture, the picture elaborates the text. Each adds something to the other. We're not shown a single episode but several, all in a single frame. When you read the picture with the text, the sequence is clear. First the slaughter, right up to the sanctuary (defined by its Cathedral-style altar rail). The area beyond the rail is unsullied. Would a revised, more explanatory caption help, d'you think? [[User:Haploidavey|Haploidavey]] ([[User talk:Haploidavey|talk]]) 16:05, 1 October 2010 (UTC) |
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:Hi X, thanks for putting this together. I think you are right more can be added on Pompey's assassination, but I am unsure if it merits its own article. It was a significant event, yet much of the content you provided is discussion of [[Caesar's civil war]] and also the [[Ptolemaic Kingdom]]. Perhaps a more lengthy treatment on the significance of Pompey's death on all those 2 pages and/or Pompey's page would be more fitting. [[User:The Madness of Joanna|The Madness of Joanna]] ([[User talk:The Madness of Joanna|talk]]) 18:21, 12 May 2024 (UTC) |
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::::Well, I figured it was just a Christian Renaissance representation of it. [[User:Starwarsgeek133|Starwarsgeek133]] ([[User talk:Starwarsgeek133|talk]]) 20:29, 1 October 2010 (UTC) |
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:If there is more to be said about his death, then I'd suggest first expanding [[Pompey#Death]] a little. That also allows you to avoid making definitive statements such as the current draft's "Ultimately, the decision to betray and assassinate Pompey was made by the regent Pothinus and other influential courtiers, as they sought to curry favor with Caesar and secure their own positions of power." It's temprting to say such things when decompressing the narrative, but ultimately that's unknown. [[User:NebY|NebY]] ([[User talk:NebY|talk]]) 19:12, 12 May 2024 (UTC) |
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::It probably is ultimately unknown, but this is Wikipedia and if X has [[WP:RS]] covered and is willing to [[WP:BOLD|be bold]] then such statements should be welcomed. [[User:The Madness of Joanna|The Madness of Joanna]] ([[User talk:The Madness of Joanna|talk]]) 20:05, 12 May 2024 (UTC) |
Latest revision as of 00:04, 29 September 2024
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Theater
[edit]Hi, I am new to wikipedia. I did not see any inclusion of Pompey's theater in this article. Is this something that would be good to include? -Sarahh317 (talk) 12:30, 13 September 2019 (UTC)
- Sounds like a good idea to me. I had a crack at it. Added a section about the theatre and a link to the main article.-LuciusHistoricus (talk) 13:21, 15 September 2019 (UTC)
Infobox
[edit]This article, along with several other articles about ancient Romans, was changed to use a different infobox, {{infobox officeholder}}. In consequence, there's discussion about which infobox to use and how at Talk:Julius Caesar#Infobox and then at Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Classical Greece and Rome#Infoboxes for Roman office-holders as a more central location. NebY (talk) 19:47, 22 November 2022 (UTC)
Article length (and other) issues
[edit]As we seem to have started a discussion of sorts in the edit summaries, I thought it would be useful to open a thread on what this article needs, in terms of cutting and pruning (and whatever else), with a view to making a sort of to-do list.
Tagging in @T8612: and @Robinvp11:, who have been involved in the same 'conversation'.
For my money, the main 'problem' is in the military-history sections: they're both overly-long (especially as most are, in theory, only summaries of main articles) and more or less straightforwardly paraphrase the primary sources. The most obvious contenders for some work would seem to be:
The big 'missing link' is an article on Pompey's Campaign against the Pirates, but as that section's currently much shorter than the others, I'm not sure it's a hugely urgent priority.
I agree with User:T8612 that the lede is, for now, one of the better parts of the article, and that we'd be much better off focusing our efforts further down. UndercoverClassicist (talk) 17:59, 14 February 2023 (UTC)
- The Lead may be "one of the better parts of the article", but that doesn't invalidate edits made to it. I haven't taken out anything that alters the sense (except for the claim made in the original that Pompey's war with Caesar necessarily led to the Empire).
- I will make edits to the Sertorian War as a start;
- "BCE" is commonly used by modern historians and I think we should standardise on that throughout the article. Robinvp11 (talk) 19:05, 14 February 2023 (UTC)
- There's a Wikipedia policy on CE/AD (MOS:ERA): essentially, he encyclopaedia doesn't take a view either way, so you can use either one when writing a new article but shouldn't change an existing article from one to the other if it's already established. For what it's worth, I have a fairly strong preference towards BCE as well, and have used it whenever I've written an article.
- You're absolutely right that edits to the lead are, in principle, fine (there was a good one a few days ago which corrected the IPA) - I'm not trying to say that they shouldn't be made. My thinking was that you seemed to be looking to do something about the article's length issues: having come in and pointed out an edit that didn't help, it only seemed right to be constructive and suggest some that would. UndercoverClassicist (talk) 08:23, 15 February 2023 (UTC)
- Having seen the recent edits to lead, the major issues discussed in my previous edit summary remain. I've restored the factual material cut out, while making some changes to address the problems raised (in particular, the term "student of Sulla" was neither clear nor particularly accurate - I've had a go at supplying something different, and I'm not sure that "ardent supporter of the Optimates" could claim any evidence for Pompey's genuine thoughts and feelings).
- In the interests of giving a detailed explanation, here's my edit summary:
- Lead reworked (largely reverted), with some of the positive recent changes built back in. Per MOS:LEAD, the lead should be able to stand on its own as a mini-article, so cutting significant material like Pompey's status as nobility and his unorthodox cursus honorum is inappropriate. For an article of this length, MOS:LEAD advises 3-4 paragraphs, so it is already on the short side - cutting out factual material is not the right approach here.
- There's a difference between concision and simple brevity: it's certainly good to make sure that the lead says what it needs to in the most concise way possible, but that is not the same as reducing the lead so that it says as little as possible. Most notably, any treatment of Pompey's involvement in the Crisis of the Republic needs to be clear that Caesar's Civil War was only the final step: the Republic was well into crisis by (at least) 81, when Pompey — a teenage general who effectively inherited an army — is going around threatening a barely-constitutional military strongman into giving him an extra-legal triumph. Caesar's civil war was still over three decades away at that point.
- We're coming close to the Three-Revert Rule here, so I'd suggest that it would be wise to establish consensus for any major changes to the lead before making them. UndercoverClassicist (talk) 10:23, 15 February 2023 (UTC)
- (a) "Most notably, any treatment of Pompey's involvement in the Crisis of the Republic needs to be clear that Caesar's Civil War was only the final step: the Republic was well into crisis by (at least) 81, when Pompey — a teenage general who effectively inherited an army — is going around threatening a barely-constitutional military strongman into giving him an extra-legal triumph. Caesar's civil war was still over three decades away at that point."
- If this is your point (and I'm not disagreeing), then it is not clearly reflected in the current wording. Nor do I get any sense of what distinguishes Pompey from any number of ruthlessly ambitious thugs who sought to take advantage of the general instability of the late Roman Republic.
- (b) Leads are also supposed to be accessible for the general reader, a point many editors miss because we tend to edit articles or periods we already know. Listing his triumphs, the wars he fought in etc - so what? The point (presumably) is he was a successful and experienced military strongman - why not simply say that?
- (c) This is a problem throughout Wikipedia and it matters because 60% of Wikipedia users only ever look at the Lead. Yes, as someone who designs online and mobile learning for a living, shorter is better. But my main objections to the Lead are not length per se, but lack of clarity (see above), and pointless verbiage.
- Why do I need to know as a key fact Pompey was referred to as a "teenage butcher?" Presumably because he was known as ruthless - not unusual for successful Roman politicians - so why not just say so?
- Yes, we need to get the body of the article right but unless the Lead is both accessible and clear, its like building a house without a front door.
- To summarise; The Lead as currently written both assumes expert knowledge, but also fails to clearly state what made Pompey different, and why he was so significant.Robinvp11 (talk) 15:20, 16 February 2023 (UTC)
- @Robinvp11 Do we have concensus on replacing all the BCs in this article with BCEs? I am willing to do it, but we need concensus. LuciusHistoricus (talk) 18:14, 4 August 2023 (UTC)
- I don't think so Robinvp11 (talk) 09:19, 6 August 2023 (UTC)
'Popular' references
[edit]Bare lists of popular references are no longer welcome on Wikipedia, per the style guideline MOS:CULTURALREFS. In view of this, and the discussion above on article length, I'm challenging the section as without WP:RS and largely off-topic and will delete it next month. Sweetpool50 (talk) 09:09, 19 March 2023 (UTC)
Era
[edit]There appears to be a dispute over whether the established era style used in this article ought to be changed from BC to BCE. As this threatens to become an edit war, one of the editors involved in the dispute brought it to the attention of WikiProject Classical Greece and Rome for outside assistance or opinions. WP:ERA says to seek consensus on the talk page first (applying Wikipedia:Manual of Style § Retaining existing styles) by opening a discussion under a heading using the word era, and briefly stating why the style should be changed.
Having been involved in several similar discussions before, I cannot think of an alternative, because this is a legitimate dispute between editors who have worked on this article. I'll summarize my own opinion below, so as not to confuse the discussion. P Aculeius (talk) 23:29, 30 April 2023 (UTC)
- Warning, wall of text follows! Per the above guideline, the established era should not be changed unless there is a consensus for doing so related to the content of this article. The Manual of Style specifies that both eras are acceptable generally speaking; for this reason I do not think we can accept at face value the argument that "all or nearly all modern historians" prefer "BCE/CE". If we followed that logic, then we would need to convert all history articles using "BC" or "AD" to "BCE" and "CE", and one of the most contentious issues in all of Wikipedia would suddenly be settled, to the great surprise of most editors. We cannot accept a blanket statement that BC/AD is unacceptable without involving the entire encyclopedia—and I very much doubt there would be a consensus for doing so.
- I cannot see anything to do with Pompeius that would require a change of eras. This is a history topic, not a religious one, and there are no strong reasons for or against either era style related to the subject. The only reason I can see for doing so is the personal preference of the editor, and in general we do not change era styles for this reason, because that would encourage constant edit warring. The editor wishing to make the change has said that he has spent several days revising the article, and that therefore it has been substantially rewritten and can be in the style of his choosing.
- But this is a very substantial article on a major topic, and has had hundreds of editors over more than twenty years. I do not think that any quantity of rewriting or replacement of the text should give one editor the right to decide an issue as contentious as the era without a consensus from others. If nobody cared enough to contest it, then it could be allowed to pass, but clearly people do care, and contentious changes ought not to be made without achieving a consensus. That would need to be done here, before the change is implemented.
- There is a tendency among some editors to use only the most recent sources available for any topic, and dismiss all others as hopelessly outdated. But this is not a valid position in the field of Roman history, except in the rare exceptions where new evidence has come to light. New interpretations may be perfectly reasonable, and may stand the test of time. Or they may not. Historical analysis is no more immune to social trends today than it was in the past. When it comes to Roman biography, the opinions of scholars from Roman times to the present are all worth describing, citing, and considering; excluding sources merely because they're old, as if writers living before the present weren't equally educated or entitled to their opinions, is absurd.
- The idea that "BCE/CE" reflects an enlightened evolution of thought concerning bias in historical writing appears shallow and superficial to me; an era based on the date that Dionysius Exiguus calculated as the birth of Christ is no more offensive because it is labeled as such than it is when the abbreviation for it is replaced by letters that supposedly mean something else—although "Christian Era" and "Before the Christian Era" is also a common understanding of these abbreviations, alongside "common" era, so it's not even clear that changing the abbreviations actually removes the word "Christ". Does taking the steeple off the church or disguising a church as a bank change what it is? If the era is still based on the birth of Christ, then hiding that behind an innocuous phrase seems more insidious than simply acknowledging what it is in plain language.
- For the record, I'm not advocating keeping the established era out of religious zeal. I'm not a Christian, and never have been. I'm a secular Jew interested in history, particularly Roman history. Most extant historical writing uses BC and AD, and I never feel excluded or insulted by it. Historians have always written from their own perspective, and that hasn't changed. Those who wrote about this topic or other related topics weren't imposing a religious agenda by using the established era of their time, and I don't feel the need or the desire to have history rewritten to address an offense I don't feel. It's patronizing to take offense on the behalf of other people, and tell them how they ought to feel if they're not offended. My opinion isn't better than anyone else's, even if it takes more words to express. But for my part I prefer to keep the established style than impose something that I think is rather absurd and pointless. P Aculeius (talk) 00:05, 1 May 2023 (UTC)
- Having been one of the people who responded to the call on WT:CGR, I want to note that I concur with P Aculeius with some reservations – the fourth paragraph – that aren't entirely relevant to this issue. Ifly6 (talk) 03:18, 1 May 2023 (UTC)
- @Robinvp11, P Aculeius, Iazyges, and NebY: (Pinging involved users.) Please don't restore your version of the article contra consensus. Ifly6 (talk) 17:57, 2 May 2023 (UTC)
- Very much agree; BC/AD is by far the most widely used system, with the Muslim AH system forming the only other calendar that is actually broadly used, both based on religious events. If BCE/CE wanted to find a new Year 0 to form a Kelvin-esque neutral third dating system, there might be more use for it, but it's really just a retouching of being based on the birth of Jesus (ish). I personally use BC/AD, but don't have an issue with those who use BCE/CE so long as they abide by WP:ERA. With that, I very much stand by our usage of WP:ERA; that a primary author can pick whichever they like, and it should not be changed unless there is strong consensus for it. Iazyges Consermonor Opus meum 04:24, 1 May 2023 (UTC)
- For what it's worth, as a long-time editor I am prepared to abide by the WP ruling. But on a personal level I always use B/CE in the articles I create. I find the concept AD ("in the year of our Lord") insulting to all those of other faiths for whom that is not true, as well as beside the point in contexts where Christian figures and ideology do not fit. If there is a growing scholarly preference for B/CE usage, it may be time for WP policy-makers to review the rule more sensitively. Sweetpool50 (talk) 06:40, 1 May 2023 (UTC)
- Using CE in the articles you write is your prerogative, and I won't get in your way. However, almost no one understands AD to be "Anno Domini" anymore, to be honest. It simply is AD for them. And again, regardless of what it's called, it's based on the same thing. Iazyges Consermonor Opus meum 07:10, 1 May 2023 (UTC)
- That's why I made a point of saying that BC/AD don't offend me in the least. I understand what they mean, and I think most other people know too, but their use just isn't offensive. I find the drive to replace them with CE/BCE patronizing because they pretend to mean something else, even though they're based on the same thing—and I note that many people use or understand the "C" to mean "Christian" rather than "Common". Plus, calling it the "common" era implies that everyone agrees with it, including the very people who are supposedly excluded by counting years from the birth of Christ. That's also extremely patronizing. At least the older era style has the benefit of centuries of usage. It's become innocuous, unlike CE/BCE, used without any intention of using it to spread the gospel, as it were. I don't need people to decide what I'm offended by for me, and erase it wherever it occurs to spare me some imaginary trauma. As a historian, that's antithetical to all of my instincts and training. P Aculeius (talk) 14:15, 1 May 2023 (UTC)
- For what it's worth, as a long-time editor I am prepared to abide by the WP ruling. But on a personal level I always use B/CE in the articles I create. I find the concept AD ("in the year of our Lord") insulting to all those of other faiths for whom that is not true, as well as beside the point in contexts where Christian figures and ideology do not fit. If there is a growing scholarly preference for B/CE usage, it may be time for WP policy-makers to review the rule more sensitively. Sweetpool50 (talk) 06:40, 1 May 2023 (UTC)
- WP:ERA serves us well as a truce. Without it, there are passionate, forthright and principled editors who would remove every BCE/CE from every article they worked on and some who would seek out any other uses too, restricted only by the equally passionate, forthright and principled editors busily removing BC/AD. Thus also WP:ENGVAR for spelling and grammar, and MOS:METRIC for metric and imperial/US-customary units. In developing the latter, "source-based units" became anathema, especially after one editor was accused of changing a source for articles about UK footballers to justify giving their heights in metres rather than feet and inches. Likewise, WP:ERA doesn't allow for switching styles according to sources, leaves no room for WP:OWNership by whoever's put in most work, and does not allow changes on general principles.
- Instead, WP:ERA requires
reasons specific to [the article's] content
for any switching. I don't think we've seen any specific reasons for this article yet. NebY (talk) 19:55, 1 May 2023 (UTC)- @Robinvp11:, that's not how it works. You get to make your changes if you can gain a consensus by discussion. The burden is on you to convince others to change a stable era style, not the reverse. --Nicknack009 (talk) 18:14, 2 May 2023 (UTC)
- Getting consensus assumes this discussion is about logic, rather than emotion. That's presumably why you've (apparently) put far more effort into escalating and winning this relatively minor issue, rather than (say) making useful comments on the content. Robinvp11 (talk) 18:28, 2 May 2023 (UTC)
- This article was flagged as requiring extensive updating, including use of modern sources, and is effectively a rewrite. I've had zero comments on the content from any of the editors above.
- A lot of the text above frankly seems irrelevant. I personally don't care if people use BC or BCE but those who do use BCE include all modern historians, schools, news organisations like the BBC, other online encyclopedia such as the EB etc. Several of the sources quoted in this article (Beard and Holland among others) use BCE. And since a lot of our readers are from schools, our audience will too.
- The oft quoted WP:ERA specifically says you can use either. So far, the only rationalisation provided here for continuing to use BC is because people feel emotionally attached to it. Why would we update an article and not employ commonly used formats? And if the answer is "because we like BC", then just say that, save everyone hours of typing their detailed rationalisation of that simple truth.
- No worries - I've taken this page off my watch list and I'll make sure I avoid this period going forward.Robinvp11 (talk) 18:28, 2 May 2023 (UTC)
No talk of servile war
[edit]It’s mentioned he is elected consul in 70, 55, and 52, with very little supporting information for any of this. No talk of the Servile war either. 2603:8001:5602:B943:A91B:853F:6FFF:602E (talk) 14:32, 23 July 2023 (UTC)
- The article does discuss the consulships in 70, 55, and 52. It does discuss his activities during the Third Servile War. I'm not sure as to how the claim made here is at all factual. Ifly6 (talk) 02:22, 24 July 2023 (UTC)
Sections on sources and a separate bibliography
[edit]This doesn't seem entirely consistent with MOS:LAYOUT but regardless of whether it is consistent or not it's confusing. Some clean up of that might be desiderable. Ifly6 (talk) 17:12, 4 August 2023 (UTC)
- I think it's worth keeping the citations in the "sources" section that are specifically about Pompey as "further reading" (i.e. sources that are relevant but not cited in text). Abbott, Brice, and Crawford seem a bit too general to keep and Van Ooteghem might be too old. I don't see any good reason for keeping the primary sources. "Julius Caesar. (1976)" deeply discomforts me and I'm not sure why we're advising readers to consult that particular edition. Furius (talk) 21:29, 4 August 2023 (UTC)
- I agree that a "Further reading" section could be introduced; it would not be the same, however, as "Sources" and "Bibliography" which is what is in the article at present. I'm not too troubled with
Julius Caesar 1976
as if we quote translations we will have to select a specific one; but I think it should be anonymised in the way documented at WP:CGR/Guides/Primary sources. Ifly6 (talk) 03:05, 5 August 2023 (UTC)
- I agree that a "Further reading" section could be introduced; it would not be the same, however, as "Sources" and "Bibliography" which is what is in the article at present. I'm not too troubled with
Consulship error?
[edit]The Early life/career section says "He completed the traditional cursus honorum, becoming consul in 89 BC," but later in the Sertorian War it says "Backed by his allies in the Senate, Pompey was appointed military commander in Spain with proconsular authority. This act was technically illegal as he had yet to hold public office, illustrating Pompey's preference for military glory, and disregard for traditional political constraints."
Which was it? Did he hold public office before this or not?
Edit: upon further inspection, the quote from the Early Life section actually refers to his father Strabo. I'm gonna tweak the punctuation to make that a little clearer.
TrendySpaghetti (talk) 21:57, 8 December 2023 (UTC)
I've started this draft and anyone interested can collaborate. Let's get this done. X (talk) 18:04, 12 May 2024 (UTC)
- Hi X, thanks for putting this together. I think you are right more can be added on Pompey's assassination, but I am unsure if it merits its own article. It was a significant event, yet much of the content you provided is discussion of Caesar's civil war and also the Ptolemaic Kingdom. Perhaps a more lengthy treatment on the significance of Pompey's death on all those 2 pages and/or Pompey's page would be more fitting. The Madness of Joanna (talk) 18:21, 12 May 2024 (UTC)
- If there is more to be said about his death, then I'd suggest first expanding Pompey#Death a little. That also allows you to avoid making definitive statements such as the current draft's "Ultimately, the decision to betray and assassinate Pompey was made by the regent Pothinus and other influential courtiers, as they sought to curry favor with Caesar and secure their own positions of power." It's temprting to say such things when decompressing the narrative, but ultimately that's unknown. NebY (talk) 19:12, 12 May 2024 (UTC)
- It probably is ultimately unknown, but this is Wikipedia and if X has WP:RS covered and is willing to be bold then such statements should be welcomed. The Madness of Joanna (talk) 20:05, 12 May 2024 (UTC)
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