Wikipedia:WikiProject Philately: Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 22:20, 10 May 2017
This WikiProject is believed to be semi-active. Although activity is slower than it once was, anyone is welcome to participate in the project. Remove the
|Semi-active parameter from this template if activity resumes or if this tag was changed in error. If almost no activity occurs in this WikiProject, consider replacing this tag with {{WikiProject status|Inactive}} . |
PortalCheck out the Philately Portal which is up and running well. Please help by making suggestion for future Selected article nomination and Stamp of the month nomination sections. These two sections are now set up to rotate between the archived articles with the use of the "Random portal component" template. Add the portal and all the sub-pages you might be interested in on your watchlist. Featured articlePostage stamps of Ireland — promoted August 1, 2007 ScopeThis WikiProject aims primarily to present large numbers of articles relating to philately, postage stamps, postal history and postal systems. To understand the detail of our scope, see category:Philately and look at the sub-categories there. Note that a couple of the sub-categories are currently being reviewed as explained in the To-do box above. Promoting the projectTo promote this project a banner was developed as recommended by the WikiProject Council guide. {{WikiProject Philately |class= |importance= |attention= |needs-infobox= }}that produces this project banner.
Please use one of these templates on all postage stamps and postal history articles. StubsOur main aim is the creation of articles about philately. An article doesn't have to be perfect when it is first created. You can just begin with a stub and for that we have our own philately stub which is:
There is a suitable alternative for articles that are more relevant to postal systems than philately and this is:
New articlesNew articles with interesting or unusual facts should be suggested for the Did you know? box on the Main Page. Bot detected new articles The following report may contain some false positives. Only assess actual philatelic articles. Click on the "show" button to reveal the full report. This list was generated from these rules. Questions and feedback are always welcome! The search is being run daily with the most recent ~14 days of results. Note: Some articles may not be relevant to this project.
Rules | Match log | Results page (for watching) | Last updated: 2024-12-25 19:22 (UTC) Note: The list display can now be customized by each user. See List display personalization for details.
Updated articlesNewer articles at the bottom, please.
ParticipantsIf you are interested in helping or contributing, please add your username to the list, in alphabetical order, and give a brief description of your activity. Thanks and welcome. Active participants (in alphabetical order)
Inactive participants Lists editors who have not made any philatelic edits during the last nine months (per useractivity tool), who have added their names, or have asked to be added because they are currently inactive. If you become active again, please move your name to the active participants list above. If you retire from Wikipedia, please remove your name, if you remember.
StudiesCountry StudiesThis is the biggest task currently being undertaken by the project. Our aim is that each stamp-issuing entity, current or historic, should have either a main article or a postal history section within a major article about the entity, that describes both its postal history and its postage stamp issues. In practice, every issuer has a reference in the Category:Compendium of postage stamp issuers which forms the index for the country survey. The compendium references are all micro articles and many are complete in themselves, while others provide summary information and linkage to a main article elsewhere. As described in the To-do Box above, however, relatively few main articles have been written so far, but progress is being made. Current issuers should have a standalone main article that is xref'd from the country's main article, typically from a "miscellaneous topics" section or from a short postal history section. Alternatively, the postal history section can be expanded to contain all the necessary information. The latter approach should be considered for a small country, a former colony or a country that no longer exists as an independent nation: e.g., Abu Dhabi. Many issuers were foreign powers operating in another country either through a post office abroad or through military occupation; as these issues involve more than one country, it is recommended that they have independent articles and not a section in the article of one country or the other, but they should be xref'd as before. Entities which made only a small contribution to postal history need only a section in a general article about the entity, assuming that the entity itself has its own article. Otherwise, the reference in the Compendium may be sufficient. Be careful about redirecting historic entities to the present-day countries that replaced them as this can be fraught with difficulty in postal terms. For example, German East Africa had a postal history that was entirely independent of Tanganyika and Tanzania. A word about article titles. Depending on the actual coverage of the article, titles such as Postage stamps and postal history of X or Postage stamps of X or Postal history of X are generally used. For military occupations, a title such as Postal History of the German Occupation of Poland (1939-1945) could be appropriate, and for peacetime postal services of one country outside its own borders, a title such as Russian post offices in the Turkish Empire. In some cases, none of these will be appropriate and it is then best to stay close to the naming used by major catalogues like Stanley Gibbons Ltd. A postal history should note key dates and begin with the first introduction of a regular postal service, the introduction of postage stamps, etc. Any significant postage stamps or issues should be discussed, preferably with reference to information in the Gibbons catalogue. Any political or historical events that impacted the postal service should be mentioned. The length and depth of the survey will depend mainly on the country. Please conform to Wikipedia standards and provide suitable linkages as necessary. Illustrations will help the presentation and should ideally include images of covers, postmarks or stamps that are representative of a period. Common stamps are preferable to rarities as it is important to convey the idea of regular usage. Postmarks connecting a stamp to a specific place and time are a good idea. For examples of country studies completed to date, see Category:Postal history by country. The definitive index to all postal studies by issuer is the Compendium which contains references to all issuing entities in alphabetic order. These references are micro articles and many of them are complete in themselves, though most will contain a link to a main article elsewhere on the site. This work includes not just a reference to the main issuer in its commonly understood form but also ancillary references such as abbreviations on overprints or alternate names on inscriptions that may be the reader's reason for lookup. There is also a quick reference in three parts: List of entities that have issued postage stamps (A - E), List of entities that have issued postage stamps (F - L), and List of entities that have issued postage stamps (M - Z); plus List of postal services abroad which can be used to determine progress to date. See also category:Postal organisations for authorities such as the Royal Mail or Deutsche Post. Stamp issue articlesMany issues of stamps justify closer attention than is appropriate for the general survey: e.g., the Empire issue of Italy; the Prexies of USA; and the Yacht issue of the German Colonies. These articles should be in much greater depth with content primarily aimed at philatelists. They should be indexed via category:Postage stamps. Stamp articlesSome famous postage stamps such as the Penny Black, Inverted Jenny, etc. have justified creation of their own individual articles. Please see: category:Postage stamps. Most individual stamps do not justify construction of a main article but some may be worthy of mention in articles about their issuers. The most practical approach to this would be to include a separate sub-section about the individual stamp in the main article about its issuer or in an article about its own general issue (see above), if appropriate. However, there are several redlinks on the List of postage stamps that likely are notable enough to justify a standalone article. InfoboxAn infobox template, {{Infobox postage stamp}} (copyable mark-up, below), is available for use in articles about notable stamps. Template:Infobox postage stamp/blank Topical listsWP has great potential as an aid for topical collectors, as in List of people on stamps and Ships on stamps. Membership BannerThe project membership banner is displayed below. Please take a copy of this and display it on your user page.
UserboxThese two Userboxs are available for use on your Userpage by adding the code shown below.
The only other template currently in use is the active project banner at the top of this page and the discussion page. Assessment schemeArticle assessment is now being carried out using the Wikipedia 1.0 grading scheme for quality and importance ranking. For:
The key pages are:
Resources
Stamp imagesNote: Always confirm the copyright status of any stamp images, preferably before you upload. Freely licensed stamps can be uploaded to the commons but check the commons Public Domain stamp templates page first. If a stamp will be used in a stamp article and is still in copyright it may be uploaded to the en wiki under a fair use claim, so long as it meet all the on-free content criteria and has a fully filled out fair use rationale. We have a dedicated stamp fair-use template {{Stamp rationale}} you can use but please read the template instructions before use.
Useful to do listingsDid you know
Articles for deletion
Good article nominees
Articles to be split
MiscTools
APS ChapterAPA Writers Unit #30 is a chapter of the American Philatelic Society. |