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This is the central guideline for recent ]. Recent year articles (] to ]) are among the most heavily edited on Misplaced Pages. Since so many events happen in a year, not all events will be ] enough to merit inclusion on the page. Such events may be better placed in a ] on the specific event. That an event is important to an individual editor, or even to a particular society or nation, is insufficient ground for its inclusion. The event must have a demonstrated, international significance. The fact that other year articles may include events which break this set of guidelines is ] to do so for another event. | This is the central guideline for recent ]. Recent year articles (] to ]) are among the most heavily edited on Misplaced Pages. Since so many events happen in a year, not all events will be ] enough to merit inclusion on the page. Such events may be better placed in a ] on the specific event. That an event is important to an individual editor, or even to a particular society or nation, is insufficient ground for its inclusion. The event must have a demonstrated, international significance. The fact that other year articles may include events which break this set of guidelines is ] to do so for another event. | ||
Please note this guideline applies ''only'' to the main article on each year, and not to articles on individual events. | |||
==Consensus== | ==Consensus== |
Revision as of 02:58, 28 June 2017
For Misplaced Pages's essay about not putting too much weight on recent events, see WP:Recentism.This page documents an English Misplaced Pages editing guideline. Editors should generally follow it, though exceptions may apply. Substantive edits to this page should reflect consensus. When in doubt, discuss first on this guideline's talk page. | Shortcut |
This is the central guideline for recent year articles. Recent year articles (2002 to 2024) are among the most heavily edited on Misplaced Pages. Since so many events happen in a year, not all events will be notable enough to merit inclusion on the page. Such events may be better placed in a separate article on the specific event. That an event is important to an individual editor, or even to a particular society or nation, is insufficient ground for its inclusion. The event must have a demonstrated, international significance. The fact that other year articles may include events which break this set of guidelines is not a valid reason to do so for another event.
Please note this guideline applies only to the main article on each year, and not to articles on individual events.
Consensus
Any of the standards set below can be overruled by a consensus to ignore those standards in a given case.
Lead section
The lead section of a year article should be approximately two paragraphs in length (while the maximum for any article is four).
First paragraph
The first paragraph of a year article should be only a couple of sentences long, and should include the following information:
- The name of the year, in boldface Arabic numerals (e.g., 2009)
- The name of the year, in boldface Roman numerals. These numerals should be Wikilinked to the Roman numerals article (e.g., MMIX).
- The day on which the year began or will begin, written as either "common year starting on " or "common year that started on a ". The word "common" through the name of the day should constitute one or two Wikilinks (e.g., common year that started on a Thursday, common year that started on a Thursday). For purposes of sentence flow, the phrasing of the recent year article's text is slightly different from that of the Wikilinked article's title—the format of which is, "Common year starting on ". Therefore, the linked text will have to be piped to the actual link. A piped link is formatted thusly: ]. So, to recreate the example link above, one would type the following: ] or ] that ].
- If applicable, the fact that the year is ongoing
- The calendar in which the year occurs (e.g., the Gregorian calendar)
- The year's ordinal position in its:
- Calendar era. For purposes of neutrality and comprehensiveness, both the BCE/CE and the BC/AD systems should be noted, although the systems designate the same bifurcation of years.
- Millennium (e.g., the 3rd millennium)
- Century (e.g., the 21st century)
- Decade (e.g., the 2000s decade). Bear in mind that, in the Gregorian calendar, the first year of a CE/AD millennium or century always ends with a "1", because there was no year zero. However, the first year of a decade always ends with a "0", because decades are labelled nominally, in order to demarcate sets of similarly named years. (The names of years, themselves, are natural numbers that, relative to the transition between the calendar eras, reflect both an ordinal position and a cardinal length of time.)
Thus, the article for 2012 may begin as follows:
2012 (MMXII) is a leap year that started on a Sunday and is the current year. In the Gregorian calendar it is the 2012th year of the Common Era (CE) and Anno Domini (AD) designations, the 12th year of the 3rd millennium and of the 21st century and the 3rd of the 2010s decade.
Second paragraph
The second paragraph contains a bulleted list of formal and international designations the year has received. To be considered notable enough for inclusion, these designations must have their own Misplaced Pages articles (e.g., International Year of Planet Earth, European Year of Equal Opportunities for All). The lack of an article does not mean that a designation is insignificant, but rather that it does not demonstrably meet Misplaced Pages's general notability guidelines. The same editor(s) may create a designation's article, and then add that designation to the year article's second paragraph. However, it is incumbent upon this or these editor(s) to ensure that the created article is suitable for an encyclopedia and does not violate any of Misplaced Pages's policies.
Article body
Format
The body of a recent year article takes the format presented just below; the body's contents are subject to the inclusion and exclusion criteria that are set forth further down. Depending on whether a given year, or a given part of it, has arrived, or on other factors, some sections, subsections, or entries might not apply to that year's article. Double-brackets indicate that the contents must be Wikilinked.
==Events==
===January===
- January 1
- Past event.
- Same as above (S/A). (Wikilink all dates that begin an event/birth/death entry. Wikilink the central names or concepts in descriptions of events, assuming those names or concepts have articles on Misplaced Pages. If the event per se has an article, its entry does not have to be—but certainly may be—cited again on the year article. If the event does not have its own article but is deemed sufficient for inclusion, it must be externally sourced in the year article, especially if it refers to living people.)
- January 2 – S/A
- etc.
===February===
===etc.===
==Predicted and scheduled events==
===March===
- March 1 – Future event. (Misplaced Pages is not a crystal ball, and should not be making predictions of its own about the future. It should not make statistical extrapolations of unclear or unverifiable significance. The purpose of this section is to indicate the contents of current schedules or predictions of events that reliable, external sources have deemed potentially important.)
- March 2 – S/A
- etc.
===April===
===etc.===
==Births==
===January===
- January 1 – ], Nationality and very brief description (Do not Wikilink anything other than the date of birth and name. External sources are presumed to exist in the subject's own article, but may be duplicated in the year article to ensure that the latter article passes WP:BLP.)
- January 2 – S/A
- etc.
===February===
===etc.===
==Deaths==
===January===
- January 1 – ], Nationality and very brief description, (born ]) (Do not Wikilink anything other than the date of death, name, and year of birth. External sources are presumed to exist in the subject's own article, and their duplication on the year article is not strictly required.)
- January 2 – S/A
- etc.
===February===
===etc.===
==Awards==
===Nobel Prizes===
- Chemistry – ], ], etc.
- Economics – ], ], etc.
- Literature – ], ], etc.
- Peace – ], ], etc.
- Physics – ], ], etc.
- Physiology or Medicine – ], ], etc.
==In fiction==
===Computer and video games===
Set in
- ] (year of release) – optional note
- S/A
- etc.
===Film===
- ] (year of release) – optional note
- S/A
- etc.
===Television===
- ] (year of release) – optional note
- S/A
- etc.
===Books===
- ] (year of release) – optional note
- S/A
- etc.
==References==
{{reflist}}
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
Quality
The quality of included articles is not considered at all. Stubs and articles with one or more maintenance tags are permitted. This includes articles which fail basic Misplaced Pages policies such as WP:N, WP:V and WP:RS.
Events
Three-continent rule
New events added must receive independent news reporting from three continents on the event. This is a minimum requirement for inclusion. Events which are not cited at all, or are not Wikilinked to an article devoted to the event, may be removed.
Sports and other contests
Sporting events which are either annual or are not international (more than one continent) do not belong on the main year page, but on the year in sports page (e.g. 2009 in sports). Valid sporting events may include:
- FIFA World Cup
- Olympics
- Sporting events notable for major disasters such as human stampedes or terrorist attacks
Events which usually do not merit inclusion:
- Annual championships such as the World Series, Super Bowl, Stanley Cup, or NBA Championship
- Annual world or continental championships in any sport, such as European or African football tournaments
- Any other annual contest, such as Eurovision Song Contest or American Idol
- World records (unless especially notable, something akin to Roger Bannister breaking the four-minute mile)
Any event not covered above must gain a consensus for inclusion on the talk page before being added and may be better placed in the year's sports article.
Politics and legislation
National elections are not usually included unless they represent a significant change in the country (e.g., a nation's first election). Some elections gain international significance for other reasons and this can be demonstrated through several international news sources. Regular and ordinary shifts in power within the United Nations and European Union are also not sufficiently notable.
Most legislation passed in the year will not qualify unless it is of international significance.
Disasters, assassinations, and other crimes
Disasters of a global or near-global significance may be added. The importance of these disasters can be demonstrated through various international news sources. High death counts do not necessarily merit inclusion into the article. Likewise, assassinations or other similarly serious crimes can be listed if international relevance is demonstrated. Events such as suicide-murders, kidnappings, school shootings, etc. do not necessarily qualify unless especially significant.
Births
ShortcutBirths are only to be included if there are Misplaced Pages articles in English and at least nine non-English languages about the individual in question. Prince George of Cambridge, for example, has several non-English articles on him, listed on the left sidebar. This is a minimum requirement for unexplained inclusion. Although inclusion may then be automatic, it will not necessarily be permanent. Any entry may be contested by any editor who finds the entry undue; and, pending discussion, many names might not merit inclusion, even if they have enough non-English articles.
Deaths
ShortcutThe same criteria apply to deaths as to births, with the addition that the number of non-English Misplaced Pages articles is taken at the time of the person's death. Persons whose notability is due to circumstance rather than actual achievement (e.g. oldest person in the world or last surviving person of ) do not meet the basic requirement for inclusion. Heads of state or government (other than interim leaders) are clearly internationally notable and as such are eligible for inclusion regardless of how many articles they have.
In fiction
Film releases, Academy Awards, video game releases, and the like should always be added onto their topic pages (e.g., 2009 in video gaming, 2001 in film, 2006 in television) and never on the main years' pages. Films, games, etc. that are set in a given year—regardless of their release dates, provided that the release and setting are not so close in time as to coincide only trivially—should be added to a separate "In fiction" article for that year.
Pictures
Entries can be illustrated by pictures on the right-hand side. Layout should be kept in mind, so a new picture should not be included for a given month if it would cause some of the pictures in that month to extend vertically down the following month's section. Selection of images should be diverse, especially in the "Births" and "Deaths" section, avoiding overrepresentation of males, Westerners and entertainers. Do not use the {{Multiple image}} template, even for births/deaths on the same day – too many pictures are distracting and it is not a goal of Recent years pages to create comprehensive albums (those belong to Wikimedia Commons).
Category and edit notice
All articles within the scope of this guideline should be added to Category:Recent years and should have the same edit notice as other pages in the category.