258:| location = | type = | accreditation = | key_holdings = | collections = | collection_size = | visitors = | founder = | executive_director = | leader_type = | leader = | director = | president = | ceo = | chairperson = | curator = | architect = | historian = | owner = | publictransit = | car_park = | parking = | network = | website = <!-- {{URL|example.com}} --: -->
255:{{Infobox museum | name = | native_name = | native_name_lang = | logo = | logo_upright = | logo_alt = | logo_caption = | image = | image_upright = | alt = | caption = | map_type = | map_relief = | map_size = | map_caption = | coordinates = <!-- {{Coord}} --: -->
142:
892:
878:
865:
855:
845:
835:
825:
815:
645:
Board of directors, curator, partners, governance, body or authority responsible for management. Any funding arrangements can be mentioned. How the museum is owned or governed today, is it part of the national government, a non profit organisation, does it have a board of directors? Have there been
513:
One or more sections about aspects of design for which the museum is famous. These can be consolidated into a single section, or a series of top-level sections, or subsections, depending on the importance of design to the identity and use of the museu, and the relative importance of each component.
236:
The name of the article should be the current, formal title of the museum. Other accepted names can be indicated in the first sentence with bold text. If the article name differs from a listing the listing name should usually appear as one of those bolded alternative names. If there are multiple
385:
This section provides a narrative of the museum's history. This is particularly relevant for museums that were founded as such. Museums that are preserved buildings or vessels that had their own history before becoming a museum may have a number of historical sections first describing their
1733:
Avoid abbreviations. Although abbreviations for Street (St.), Road (Rd.), Saint (St.), and two-character state abbreviations are allowable on
Knowledge (XXG), given that place names are so crucial to this project, the articles will have a more professional look if most abbreviations are
315:
The introductory section should not have a section heading. It should introduce the article about the museum, serving as a concise overview of the article, establishing context, summarizing the most important points, and explaining why the subject is interesting or notable.
1022:
which uses a referenced map from various sources, is particularly nice for providing a wikipedia-ready coordinates item, ready for cutting and pasting. As far as i can tell, though, it does not allow you to look up a street address. But you may look up a street address in
534:
For example these elements should be elaborated upon or set into prose style within the body of this section... such as architect, architectural style, client, engineer, construction start date, completion date, cost budget, structural system, number of floors,
493:
If the museum is located in a restored residence or restored building, a separate section on their life and use of the building is appropriate. The section can be named after them, if it was a single family. Notable persons from the settlement if they satisfy
203:
Writing about the smallest of museums can be difficult due to the lack of source material, especially when compared with major museums. Some of the smallest museums may form part of a village, town, rural municipality, civil parish, county or council ward.
504:
If this is a short section, and not the central focus of the museum, it can be a subsection under "History". If the museum is primarily a depiction of the life of various early residents, there could be multiple sections here for each era of resident.
576:
This section can relate the size of the collection, its size relative to other collections of its kind, and highlight some key items in the collection along with providing some context for their significance. On the other hand, some museums, such as
589:
431:
History sections can easily become long with more detail than appropriate for a general overview. While there is no strict rule on how long a section may be, as a general rule of thumb, more than 10 paragraphs or the use of subsection headings
936:
If any links are deemed appropriate for this section, they should always be accompanied by an appropriate description of (a) what they are, (b) their justification, and (c) the date on which they were added in the form "Accessed: 7 July 2007"
1390:
Use the best sub-category, not the top most category - be as specific as possible. Add appropriate local geographical as well as museum categories, and check for local or museum templates as well to add to the footer of the article.
1438:
1862:
355:
Names of the museum should be given in each of the state or province / countries official languages dependent upon if it is a national, state or provincial museum. Pronunciation of the museum name should be in IPA as per
472:
This bit of history can often be included in the lead or history section. If there is controversy or a major story about the name, that can justify a subsection header or section on its own. It could also be titled as
207:
Small notable museums could have their own articles, but if there is no more than a couple of paragraphs that could be said about the museum it may be best practice to merge the museum article into the location article.
1866:
1007:{{coord|41|48|36|N|87|36|58|W|name=Abbott, Robert S., House}} or decimal coordinates, as in {{coord|37.34826|N|79.26495|W|name=Thomas Jefferson's Poplar House}}. For region codes, use either a two character
1456:
in
Knowledge (XXG)" to possibly locate an existing article with a different name about the building or place. The name on the list should match the officially used name with corrected spelling, as required
925:
A link to some of the official websites should be provided here, such as the official museum home page. Providing links to every commercial, educational, or other entity within the museum exhibits is
1710:
Using "with" as an additive link leads to wordy and awkward prose, e.g. "the museum has ten directors, with one being the exhibit curator" → "the town has ten directors; one is the exhibit curator"
1692:"Within" has a different meaning to "in". "Within" should only be used when emphasing that something is inside something, eg. "the museum is in the city", "the museum is within the city boundaries"
1858:
1654:
Rather than hyphens, en dashes should be used for ranges, eg. 5–10 years, and unspaced em dashes or spaced en dashes should be used for punctuation, eg. The building—now disused—was built in 1820.
668:
This material should all be mentioned briefly in the lead or history sections. For large museums, there may additionally be enough detail to have a separate section about how the museum is used.
184:
792:
When providing a reference, please note that the word or punctuation goes before the reference, with no space inbetween. Full stops should not appear after a reference (e.g., "this is a quote"
1757:
Avoid using overly formal words or wordy phrases, such as "circa", "utilise", "whilst", "upon", "commence", "the majority of", "whereas", "generate", "due to the fact that" and "prior to".
591:
is to provide paragraphs of prose explaining the collections, and a few paragraphs explaining the significance of a few key items. Pictures of key items are interspersed. For example,
1551:
to the talk page to include it in the museum wikiproject, as well as the regional city, country template to enlist the aid of other editors interested in articles of these wikiprojects.
1577:
Logical quotation should be used, i.e. final punctuation belongs outside the quote marks, unless the punctuation is part of the quote and the quote starts a WP sentence. For example –
1544:
DO give appropriate attribution, while using your own words. Please don't cut and paste from copyrighted sources. Copyright violation material is removed via robots and other editors.
80:
1701:
A hyphen shouldn't be placed after an -ly word if it is an adverb, e,g., widely used word; except if the -ly word could be mistaken for an adjective, e.g., friendly-looking man.
970:
Coordinates, usually in the infobox but sometimes added when there is no infobox, are directly useful to some readers to find a given location and provide data for region maps.
131:
94:
1381:
660:
If there are specific and notable future plans that don't fall under general operations, referencing published material about that development, this can have its own section.
73:
553:
Use and design of rooms in the museum interior. Plan or layout of rooms as related to exhibits, or historical architectural layout for original building use. May be named
192:
929:
appropriate for this section. Information about such entities should be written into the article, with links to
Knowledge (XXG) articles on notable entities. Remember,
740:
A brief alphabetical listing of other
Knowledge (XXG) articles that might be related to this museum. Links to external websites should not be placed in this section.
944:
External links used as a form of verification for facts found in the text of the article should be treated as normal references, e.g., cited by enclosing them in
59:
1028:
1707:"While" should only be used when emphasising that two events occur at the same time, or when emphasising contrast. It shouldn't be used as an additive link.
592:
949:
tags and conforming to the style of web-based references, which also includes a "Retrieval date" component. They should not be added to this section (see
38:
1049:, or other individual sister project templates, to link to some of wikipedia's sister project sites that might have pertinent information on the museum.
906:
A brief listing of books and external sources that are not directly cited within the article (under references), but might be of interest to the reader.
87:
1107:
66:
52:
428:
Most libraries will have books on local museum history. Be wary of loose interpretations, especially when using internet or promotional sources.
176:
This project page serves as a guideline for writing quality and standardised articles about museums. As you can see by browsing the diversity of
922:
should always be avoided. Always restrict external links to the WWW to the
External Links section, or within an appropriately tagged reference.
1633:
Blogs and personal websites are not reliable sources, unless written by the subject of the article or by an expert on the subject. (GA criteria)
1664:" (non-breaking space) should be typed between numbers and units, and other numerical/non-numerical components, e.g., "10 miles", "Boeing 747"
637:
How the museum is currently overseen and preserved, including information about its management and operations. Potential topics to include:
1874:
621:
If some of the collection is indoors and some outdoors, interpret this guideline loosely so as to group items appropriately in the article.
170:: The order and structure of sections is optional; history, design, and curatorial exhibits often come first, but all may vary case by case.
541:
Restoration, reconstructions, remodelled dates, alteration, expansion, modernisation, additions, wings, types of changes or upgrades, cost.
657:
Ongoing or notable preservation or regeneration efforts, and how the museum is handling them while providing some level of public access.
1508:, Dates should only be linked if they have an independent significance in the article. The same applies to dates in the footnotes. Dates
188:
1308:
1074:
296:
220:. Alternate headings are listed and referred to as "Optional headings" below. Section titles should generally not start with the word
1497:, avoid using lists wherever possible (particularly for "notable people" or "subdivisions"); consider using tables, diagrams or prose.
1441:
is required for a number of articles, especially common names for the local "Post Office" and train stations or churches. Make use of
1151:
957:
gives useful information about what should be entered and the order in which the separate components of a web-citation should appear.
750:
NOTE: Reference sections may follow a number of styles, including separate "Footnote" and "Further reading" sections; please refer to
629:
If the exterior grounds of the building is also designated and used for the museum, then describe their applicable use appropriately.
528:
524:
1745:
1548:
1537:
if necessary. Find the appropriate city, town, state, county article and add museum description and a citation to the article's
1437:
All the WIKILINKS in the museum article need to have their blue links checked, to make sure they are linked to unique articles.
495:
152:
114:
31:
17:
1593:
It is recommended not to specify the size of images. The sizes should be what readers have specified in their user preferences.
281:
954:
786:
242:
1018:
To get correct coordinates for a place, if you know it, you can use various satellite view systems. The
Geolocator tool, at
646:
changes in the owners, and what was the former owner/ status of the museum? Note any grants, or logos adopted by the museum
444:
template). Describe the minimum of what is required to understand where the museum and community has come from and let the
918:. Consequently, this section should only rarely be found in most articles. In particular, the use of links as described in
1286:
1085:
501:
Do not use a list format in this section. Please write this as prose, reference each person, and avoid the word "famous".
464:. This could include distance to a notable capital, city or town which made an impression upon the museum historically.
1330:
217:
1275:
1253:
1162:
1096:
1667:
Imperial measurements should be accompanied by the metric equivalent in brackets, and vice versa. If possible, use a
757:
456:
You may note here where the museum is located / how it came to be there, and any relevant connecting infrastructure,
238:
237:
places with the same name, the article should usually be entitled Name (City, State), or Name (City, Province). For
1337:
1235:
1118:
600:
761:
1748:, such as "beautiful", "famous", "popular", "well-known", "significant", "important" and "obvious". (GA criteria)
1359:
1319:
1217:
1206:
1140:
531:
for the main architectural points for this section whether the museum is housed in a modern or historic building.
1630:
References should be consistently formatted, eg. consistent author format, abbreviations for "page number", etc.
1555:
772:
Every article on
Knowledge (XXG) must provide reliable citations, and thus this section is mandatory per policy.
1264:
1242:
1184:
1129:
273:
701:
Other related points of interest, war memorials, plaques, monuments, natural landmarks can be mentioned here.
1677:
Sentences should not start with a numeral. The sentence should be recast or the number should be spelled out.
498:, and any notable births, and residents in the museum's early history can all be included where applicable.
1754:
Avoid vague words, such as "various", "many", "several", "long", "a number of", "just", "very" and "almost".
977:
596:
249:
1465:
264:
1297:
1228:
1195:
1422:
etc. etc. etc. Try to find as many appropriate ones as possible, without any redundant parent categories.
151:
for the structure of museum articles on
Knowledge (XXG), drawing on good current articles and updated by
1857:
The above is a compilation from a variety of wikipedia guideline sources on other wikiprojects (such as
1568:
Wikilinks should only be made if they are relevant to the context. Common words do not need wikilinking.
1370:
1348:
1173:
1713:
Beginning a sentence with "there", when "there" doesn't stand for anything, leads to wordy prose, e.g.
1449:
323:. Additionally, a couple of items should be included in the lead section for city articles, including:
107:
1724:
The words "current", "recent" & "to date" should be avoided as they become outdated. (GA criteria)
973:
Latitude and longitude should be present only once and linked to the mapping services by using either
654:
Economic impact, economic expenditures, publications, newsletters, educational, or research programs.
1473:
1469:
1043:
881:
157:
These recommendations aim to help writers include all relevant information, and to get an article to
1505:
1870:
1648:
Lists should only be included if they can't be made into prose or their own article. (GA criteria)
1487:
756:
List all sources used in building the article in this section. Instructions for doing this are at
717:(Optional heading. Alternately, simply: "In film" or "In literature" if only one is applicable.)
1674:
Whole numbers under 10 should be spelled out as words, except when in lists, tables or infoboxes.
1008:
1608:
An image caption should only end with a full-stop if it forms a complete sentence. (GA criteria)
608:
584:
There are a number of options for presenting the items on exhibit. The predominant style among
445:
437:
380:
1611:
Statements that are likely to be challenged and statistics need inline citations. (GA criteria)
801:
Don't let any wonderful museum articles go to deletion because of little, few or no references.
256:| former_name = | established = <!-- {{Start date|YYYY|MM|DD|df=y}} --: -->
1727:
Avoid using "not" unnecessarily, eg. "songs previously not heard" → "songs previously unheard"
895:
578:
1501:
1494:
1442:
919:
779:
765:
320:
225:
1741:, such as "it is believed that", "is widely regarded as", "some have claimed". (GA criteria)
1668:
1063:
868:
848:
615:
573:. Permanent, travelling or rotating, present and past collections can also be mentioned.
357:
177:
1445:
for an existing article with a different name from the title that is officially recognized.
930:
914:
External links should be added only rarely, and in accordance with the guidelines found in
751:
1623:
Web references preferably should include the language (if not
English) and format (if not
1584:
604:
581:
are more about the history of the location and the building(s) than about the contents.
1680:
Only the first word in a section heading needs a capital letter (except in proper nouns).
1620:
Web references need the author, publisher, publishing date and access date. (GA criteria)
1523:
1519:
950:
938:
915:
806:
585:
162:
158:
1689:"Last few years" has ambiguous meaning; "past few years" is preferable in some contexts.
1394:
Add as many other categories that fit. Some categories that are common for museums are:
986:
1751:
Avoid informal words, such as "carry out", "pub", "though", "tremendous" and "bigger".
1617:
Book references preferably should include the publisher, city of publication and ISBN.
1019:
1695:
Periods and spaces are needed after initials in people's names, e.g., P. G. Wodehouse
858:
441:
676:
Tours, celebrations, anniversaries, visitors per year could all be in this section.
195:
can benefit from the guidelines of projects dedicated to each of those categories.
828:
818:
370:
There should not be anything in the lead not mentioned in the rest of the article.
1704:"Century" doesn't need a capital, e.g., "15th century" rather than "15th Century"
1590:
External links that are not references belong only in the
External links section.
1738:
1686:
Ampersands should not be used (except when in a name, eg., Marks & Spencer)
1614:
Book references need the author, publishing date and page number. (GA criteria)
1012:
461:
345:
Notable unique characteristics and characteristics commonly associated with it
1468:
from the existing article name to the redlink on the list. In this way, the
618:. In this case, there is more detail on the collection in its own article.
474:
216:
General guidelines: references are a requirement of any article, preferably
155:. It could be used for non-museum 'collections' with minor modifications.
891:
877:
864:
854:
844:
834:
824:
814:
327:
Name of museum and location in city, state, county or province and country.
1639:
Inline citations belong immediately after punctuation marks. (GA criteria)
764:. Either title is acceptable for this section, but not both together (see
611:
each highlight several collections with their own sections in this style.
263:
As much information as possible should be included in the infobox, with a
1534:
838:
478:
387:
1596:
Text should not be sandwiched between two adjacent images. (GA criteria)
679:
Notes on transport infrastructure in and around the museum can include
457:
360:, though can also be in the main local language(s) if thought helpful.
544:
Above points as applied to additional buildings (outbuildings) on site
1657:
Page ranges in the footnotes, and sports scores should use en dashes.
1599:
Left-aligned images should not be placed at the start of subsections.
709:
Awards received by the museum, in its current form, or historically.
614:
An alternate technique is to present a tidy list of highlights, like
257:| dissolved = <!-- {{End date|YYYY|MM|DD|df=y}} --: -->
1554:
DO show off your newly created article, or 5X expanded articles at
721:
Any appearances in notable books, films, or television productions.
481:. If the museum has a nickname, another name or a name in another
1490:, do not use a "trivia", "miscellaneous" or "other facts" section.
737:
Do not list articles that have already been linked in the article.
1645:"Further info" links belong at the top of sections. (GA criteria)
1583:
Dates should not be linked unless there is "reason to do so" per
1624:
734:
Only list articles here that are directly related to the museum.
485:
regional or national language, this can also be presented here.
367:
The lead should adequately summarize the content of the article.
1452:
that appears on the list. From the resulting page, "search for
342:
Primary exhibits supporting the economy, visitors of the museum
136:
393:
Topics that can be covered include, but are not limited to:
1683:
Short sections and paragraphs are discouraged. (GA criteria)
1642:
Portal links belong in the "See also" section. (GA criteria)
1602:
All fair-use images need a fair use rationale. (GA criteria)
1571:
A word only needs to be wikilinked once within each section.
933:, and excessive lists of links on articles will be removed.
775:
Please use {{reflist}} for a standalone "Reference" section.
1636:
Dead web references should not be removed, unless replaced.
1024:
291:
For churches, synagogues or other religious buildings, use
692:
Are bicycling or walking significant transportation modes?
603:
follow this pattern. Due to their extensive collections,
351:
Avoid images in the lead section, use the infobox instead.
319:
This section should follow the guidelines specified under
228:), nor repeat the name used in the title of the article.
1730:
Avoid contractions, such as "can’t", "he's" or "they're".
689:
Intercity transit including Amtrak, buses, major airports
683:
Major highways, street layout (if notable or applicable)
306:
Combined infoboxes are sometimes possible and desirable.
132:
Knowledge (XXG):WikiProject Museums/Working with museums
180:, the suggestions on this page are merely guidelines.
120:
424:
religious, sports or military background if applicable
1651:
Lists within prose should be avoided. (GA criteria)
1522:, it is recommended that it first goes through the
1512:
be linked purely for the purpose of autoformatting.
1020:
http://tools.freeside.sk/geolocator/geolocator.html
1579:He said, "France is a country". "Paris is a city."
386:existence and use before their preservation. (Ex:
1760:Avoid phrases with redundant words, such as "is
1515:Avoid one-sentence paragraphs wherever possible.
1029:Knowledge (XXG):Obtaining geographic coordinates
1529:Avoid orphanage. Find the appropriate place in
1382:Knowledge (XXG) categories named after museums
348:Lead section must not exceed four paragraphs.
8:
1605:Images need succinct captions. (GA criteria)
1533:and correct spelling and/or format to cause
805:Some examples can be found in the following
436:indicate that it should be accompanied by a
593:Rice Northwest Museum of Rocks and Minerals
185:on the National Register of Historic Places
1574:Links within quotations should be avoided.
797:Smith J. (1234), Example book</ref: -->
789:to better organise and present references.
336:Brief note about historical roots/founding
941:gives some more information about this).
538:Inaugurated, Height, Diameter, Floor area
415:reasons for settlement/growth/development
199:When to create a new article for a museum
1470:Palmer-Perkins House (Boundary Increase)
1461:
412:occupying owners/transitions of owners
212:Article structure example for a museum
778:Try to avoid over-using citations in
276:(National Parks/Landmarks/etc.), use
7:
1715:There are ten exhibits in the museum
1518:If wishing to promote an article to
406:original inhabitants (if applicable)
130:This guideline is also discussed at
25:
1524:Knowledge (XXG) peer review process
650:Reports, preservation, future plans
496:Knowledge (XXG):Notability (people)
330:Contemporary owners, governing body
115:Knowledge (XXG):WikiProject Museums
18:Knowledge (XXG):WikiProject Museums
1378:
1367:
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1345:
1327:
1316:
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1093:
1082:
1071:
955:Knowledge (XXG):Citation templates
529:Template:Infobox Historic building
248:The common infobox for museums: {{
24:
1698:Compound adjectives need hyphens.
1060:
931:Knowledge (XXG) is not a linkfarm
1108:Museums by date of establishment
890:
876:
863:
853:
843:
833:
823:
813:
766:WP:CITE#How to present citations
525:Template:Infobox Modern building
409:original surrounding settlements
403:foundation, founding committees,
140:
1877:) adapted for use by WP Museums
1472:will be linked directly to the
961:Footer templates and categories
758:Knowledge (XXG):Citing sources
1:
1558:and be proud of your article.
951:WP:EL#References and citation
762:Knowledge (XXG):Verifiability
514:Potential topics to include:
421:events that shaped the museum
363:Two 'good article' criteria:
288:(the protected area infobox).
193:Culture and Arts institutions
1671:, eg. {{convert|5|mi|km|0}}.
1027:for further assistance. See
939:WP:EL#External links section
686:Mass transit (if applicable)
259:| embedded = }}
1721:. The same applies to "it".
1719:The museum has ten exhibits
1563:Grammar and style checklist
1894:
1804:donations", "still exists
1531:List of Museums in country
1309:Museums in popular culture
1075:Museums by populated place
787:approved citation template
697:Related points of interest
601:Indianapolis Museum of Art
448:article give the details.
378:
297:infobox religious building
105:
1152:Art museums and galleries
1812:includes others", "many
1427:General style guidelines
563:Interior and exhibitions
440:main article (using the
397:the origin of the museum
232:Article name and infobox
597:Kentucky Railway Museum
189:Architectural monuments
183:Museums which are also
1800:the towns", "received
282:Infobox Protected area
178:articles about museums
81:Requests for Expansion
1476:article, for example.
1053:TEMPLATES, CATEGORIES
754:for more information.
549:Interior and contents
339:Nicknames, if notable
1828:limit the chance", "
1784:part of", "the last
1474:Palmer-Perkins House
1287:Museum organizations
1086:Museums by continent
1011:country code, or an
730:(Optional heading.)
241:of museums, see the
95:Working with Museums
1824:records show", "to
1669:conversion template
1520:Good article status
1404:a subcategory of ]
1331:Museum publications
966:COORDINATE TEMPLATE
672:Visiting the museum
664:Use and recognition
468:Origins of the name
418:dominant activities
153:WikiProject Museums
1764:in", "the two are
1627:) e.g. |format=PDF
1539:points of interest
1462:Other useful links
1276:Museum informatics
1254:History of museums
1163:Museum collections
1097:Museums by country
1035:WIKI - SISTERLINKS
1009:ISO 3166-1 alpha-2
785:Consider using an
745:References / Notes
713:In popular culture
243:Naming conventions
135:
74:Requested Articles
1792:towns", "outside
1768:", "they brought
1338:Images of museums
1236:Fictional museums
1119:Museums by region
896:West Wycombe Park
807:featured articles
579:Kenilworth Castle
509:Design and layout
174:
173:
128:
102:
101:
1885:
1840:began", "joined
1796:the town", "all
1788:to form", "both
1780:to", "they were
1663:
1480:
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168:Section order
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60:Popular Pages
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1820:the town", "
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1739:weasel words
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1578:
1556:Did you know
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1371:Museum stubs
1349:Museum logos
1174:Museum crime
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1039:You may use
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1003:ISO3166-code
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964:
946:<ref: -->
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871:Constitution
870:
829:Bruce Castle
819:Belton House
804:
796:<ref: -->
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446:History of _
438:History of _
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381:History of _
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311:Lead section
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129:
45:
1547:DO add the
1535:Wikilinking
1454:the article
1448:Click on a
1443:piped links
1044:Sisterlinks
1025:Google maps
997:|type:city(
571:Exhibitions
567:Collections
400:development
1863:WP NRHP SG
1832:church", "
1662:
1510:should not
1506:WP:CONTEXT
1466:piped link
1459:Refer to:
1031:for tips.
1013:ISO 3166-2
999:population
633:Operations
483:recognised
462:topography
147:This is a
39:Assessment
1830:christian
1822:available
1814:different
1772:", "they
1488:WP:TRIVIA
1001:)_region:
559:Galleries
475:etymology
266:reference
121:WP:Museum
108:Shortcuts
88:Templates
46:Guideline
32:Main page
1850:the year
1842:together
1834:in order
1734:avoided.
1549:template
1541:section.
1450:red link
884:Missouri
839:Manzanar
726:See also
479:toponymy
452:Location
388:Manzanar
165:status.
67:Progress
1875:WP Arch
1859:WP NRHP
1808:", "it
1762:located
1502:WP:DATE
1495:WP:LIST
1064:Museums
920:WP:SPAM
886:(BB-63)
458:geology
375:History
321:WP:LEAD
226:WP:HEAD
53:Members
1873:, and
1852:2007".
1846:future
1836:to", "
1744:Avoid
1737:Avoid
1526:first.
752:WP:REF
705:Awards
641:Owners
599:, and
555:Design
1871:WP US
1867:WP UK
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