Misplaced Pages

:Misplaced Pages Signpost/2014-05-21/Featured content - Misplaced Pages

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
< Misplaced Pages:Misplaced Pages Signpost | 2014-05-21

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Godot13 (talk | contribs) at 03:20, 24 May 2014 (small change- "Institution" for "Institute" The whole set at once... wow...). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Revision as of 03:20, 24 May 2014 by Godot13 (talk | contribs) (small change- "Institution" for "Institute" The whole set at once... wow...)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
The Signpost
← Back to ContentsView Latest Issue

Featured content

Staggering number of featured articles

Contribute  —   Share this By Adam Cuerden
Palácio Nacional da Pena in Sintra, Portugal: a new featured picture
This Signpost "Featured content" report covers material promoted from 11 May through 17 May.

Featured articles

Thirteen featured articles were promoted this week.

Template:Listen/core
Problems playing this file? See media help.
Morchella rufobrunnea, the blushing morel, an edible fungus from the western United States.
The constellation Grus, seen here (in the upper left) in its first appearance in a celestial atlas.
The Russian battleship Poltava
  • Yellowhammer (nominated by Jimfbleak) A small, Eurasian bird, with males having a bright yellow head and underparts, it was once extremely common, inspiring works by Robert Burns, Beethoven and Messiaen, amongst others.
  • D. Djajakusuma (nominated by Crisco 1492) An Indonesian fiilmmaker who worked in a variety of genres, but specialised in realist or semi-realist films, usually with an educational message buried therein. He later promoted traditional Indonesian art forms, and is credited with saving the lenong theatre.
  • Morchella rufobrunnea (nominated by Sasata) An edible morel (a type of mushroom) from the west coast of the United States and Mexico, it was only officially described as its own species in 1998, before then being thought to be part of Morchella deliciosa.
  • Caelum (nominated by StringTheory11) We are lucky to have some very good astronomy authors working on the eighty-eight constellations, mainly the ones of the southern sky at the moment. Caelum, the chisel, was introduced in the 1750s as part of the early efforts to divide up the newly-documented (by Europeans) southern sky into constellations, with many implements of industry, science, and art suddenly appearing in the heavens.
  • Warlugulong (nominated by hamiltonstone) A giant painting by Australian aboriginal artist Clifford Possum Tjapaltjarri, considered "one of the most important 20th-century Australian paintings". It illustrates several "dreamings" (aboriginal legends), with the centre one telling the tale of Lungkata, the creator of the first bushfire.
  • Metalloid (nominated by Sandbh) This is one of those chemical terms that everyone thinks they've understood after studying it, but, as it is meant to cover things that have properties between metals and nonmetals, actually can be used to cover large swaths more than generally understood by some authors at some times. The article does a good job at explaining this ambiguity.
  • George Robey (nominated by Cassianto) An English music-hall singer, noted for his performance of the song "If You Were the Only Girl (In the World)" during the first World War, and for his portrayal of pantomime dames (a British Christmas tradition, related to the Victorian burlesque, which includes a certain amount of crossdressed parts).
  • Sultanate of Singora (nominated by Singora) A port city in southern Thailand, founded in 1605, and destroyed in 1680, and the predecessor of the modern town of Songkhla. Founded by a Persian, Dato Mogol, flourished during the reign of his son, who declared independence from the then-rulers of Thailand, the Ayutthaya Kingdom, and was eventually crushed in the reign of Dato's grandson.
  • A Contract with God (nominated by Curly Turkey) A collection of four comics by Will Eisner set around a New York tenement in the Bronx. Dealing with ambiguous morality and questions of faith, it is considered a masterpiece within the medium.
  • Grus (constellation) (nominated by Casliber) Another southern constellation, raised to featured status by another of our excellent astronomy team, Grus, the Crane, was actually divided off from Piscis Austrinus, an ancient constellation documented by Ptolemy. This was common at the time, although many such attempts to create constellations are now ignored, such as Frederici Honores, Noctua, or Triangulum Minus.
  • Russian battleship Poltava (1894) (nominated by Sturmvogel 66) One of the Imperial Russian Navy's three Petropavlovsk-class pre-dreadnought battleships, she was built in the Galernii Island shipyard between 1892 and 1894. She served in the Russo-Japanese War of 1904–05, where she fought in the Battle of Port Arthur, was damaged in the Battle of the Yellow Sea, and sunk during the Siege of Port Arthur in December 1904. Raised by the Japanese and rechristened the Tango after the war, she fought in World War I against the Germans at the Siege of Tsingtao. She was sold back to the Russians in 1916, upon which time she was renamed the Chesma. During the Russian Civil War she was captured by the British and used as a prison hulk, was abandoned, recaptured by the Russians in 1919, and was finally scrapped in 1924.
  • Æthelred, Lord of the Mercians (nominated by Dudley Miles) In the early 9th century, England was divided into several kingdoms, but these were almost all destroyed by the Vikings, and by the end of the century, Wessex was dominant under Alfred the Great. Æthelred cooperated with Alfred in fighting the Vikings, and accepted his lordship, an important step towards the unification of England in the 10th century.
  • Pather Panchali (nominated by Dwaipayan) A pioneering Bengali film from 1955 which tells the tale of a family lliving in poverty, the problems caused by this, and the small joys snatched anyway. Shot on a limited budget with amateur actors, it premièred at New York's Museum of Modern Art and met with an enthusiastic reception in Calcutta. It won an award at the 1956 Cannes Film Festival, and is considered a classic, appearing on numerous "best films" lists.

Featured pictures

Sixteen featured pictures were promoted this week.

In the Conservatory by Édouard Manet is a beautiful reproduction of the artwork at ridiculous resolution.
"An Interior" by Mary Ellen Best, an early-19th century Yorkshire painter of domestic life.

Featured topics

One featured topic was promoted this week.

The Featured Picture Set of United States Colonial Currency
← Previous "Featured content"Next "Featured content" →
S
In this issue21 May 2014 (all comments)
  • News and notes
  • Featured content
  • Traffic report
  • + Add a comment

    Discuss this story

    These comments are automatically transcluded from this article's talk page. To follow comments, add the page to your watchlist. If your comment has not appeared here, you can try purging the cache.This is a really, really good piece. Nice work, Adam. Ed  01:45, 24 May 2014 (UTC)
    Thank you! I do try! Adam Cuerden 02:01, 24 May 2014 (UTC)

    The image of a yellowhammer accompanies a sound file labelled "Beethoven's Piano Concerto"? Something's messed up. OhanaUnited 20:00, 25 May 2014 (UTC)

    Read the text below it. I haven't heard the Yellowhammer's call, so can't say, but it's a featured article, so I presume it's right. Adam Cuerden 23:12, 25 May 2014 (UTC)
    "The opening notes of Beethoven's 4th Piano Concerto may be based on the song of the yellowhammer." :-) Ed  17:59, 26 May 2014 (UTC)
    Oh, March 1776. Still, we were fighting the British at the time.— Vchimpanzee · talk · contributions · 20:25, 30 May 2014 (UTC)
    Want the latest Signpost delivered to your talk page each month? Home About Archives Newsroom Subscribe Suggestions Category: