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I don't see how "Absence of a need to disambiguate includes articles where the monarch is the primary topic for that name" is supposed to be enforced. I think arguing whether one monarch/country is the primary one is a recipe for drama, and it clearly hasn't worked in the past. The Nov.'23 RfC mainly looked at [[WP:CRITERIA]], and I wonder if that's wise. While those usually help to guide consensus, that doesn't seem to be the case here, so maybe we shouldn't try. [[User:Renerpho|Renerpho]] ([[User talk:Renerpho|talk]]) 23:37, 22 June 2024 (UTC)
I don't see how "Absence of a need to disambiguate includes articles where the monarch is the primary topic for that name" is supposed to be enforced. I think arguing whether one monarch/country is the primary one is a recipe for drama, and it clearly hasn't worked in the past. The Nov.'23 RfC mainly looked at [[WP:CRITERIA]], and I wonder if that's wise. While those usually help to guide consensus, that doesn't seem to be the case here, so maybe we shouldn't try. [[User:Renerpho|Renerpho]] ([[User talk:Renerpho|talk]]) 23:37, 22 June 2024 (UTC)
*I'm sympathetic to people who are just voting option 9, but I don't want that to result in every RM featuring an argument over whether the format proposed in option 1 or option 3 is more common, as my experience is that in many cases, they are equally common with many sources using both. A result of option 9 only will probably perpetuate the chaos rather than clarify anything. <span style="white-space: nowrap;">—[[User:Compassionate727|Compassionate727]]&nbsp;<sup>([[User talk:Compassionate727|T]]·[[Special:Contributions/Compassionate727|C]])</sup></span> 02:04, 23 June 2024 (UTC)
*I'm sympathetic to people who are just voting option 9, but I don't want that to result in every RM featuring an argument over whether the format proposed in option 1 or option 3 is more common, as my experience is that in many cases, they are equally common with many sources using both. A result of option 9 only will probably perpetuate the chaos rather than clarify anything. <span style="white-space: nowrap;">—[[User:Compassionate727|Compassionate727]]&nbsp;<sup>([[User talk:Compassionate727|T]]·[[Special:Contributions/Compassionate727|C]])</sup></span> 02:04, 23 June 2024 (UTC)

I don't know if this is too long for "Survey". But since it expresses the grounds of my opinion, let me lay it out here in full.

The norm of '''Monarch # of country''' (Option 3 above) was the norm on Wikipedia for the past two decades. Country name needs to be restored in article titles. It worked well on many grounds, e.g.
* (1) immediately '''recognizable''', informative and helpful to readers,
* (2) immediately identifies the '''topic as a monarch''' rather than numerous other uses of names & numerals, e.g. nobles generally (duke/count/earls are also known by numerals e.g. "Henry II"), or a pope ("Nicholas II") or bishop ("Bruno I"), or a cryptic surname ("Malcolm X") or a movie sequel ("Rocky III"), or a ship ("Mary II") or any other myriad of common uses for combinations of name & ordinal (e.g. in genealogical numbering, etc.) The term "of country" immediately clarifies that the article refers to a monarch.
* (3) ensures '''consistency''' of names both vertically (across time) and horizontally (across countries)
* (4) it does '''not prejudice''' one country over another, avoiding presumptions of national superiority (e.g. "George III of Great Britain" does not trump "George III of Georgia"). Puts all countries on a fair and equal footing, avoiding POV that this country is "more important" than that country.
* (5) it overcome the problem of '''nativist spelling'''. In some RSs monarch names are translated into English (e.g. Amadeus, Nicholas, John, Ladislaus, Elizabeth), in other RSs they are kept in native form (e.g. Amadeo, Nikolai, Juan, Wladyslaw, Isabel) and many readers come from non-English RSs which may use another name entirely (e.g. Niccolo, Giovanni, Ulaszlo). Which spelling Wikipedia article chooses tends to be a random crapshoot, and readers shouldn't have to guess editors' preferences. They shouldn't be forced to guess that "Ladislaus I" is the same person they read in a book as "Ulaszlo I". Adding the country "Ladislaus I of Hungary" clarifies and helps them find who they're looking for.
* (6) lets Wikipedia maintain its policy of '''avoiding honorifics''' in the article titles. In common usage, almost nobody uses "George III" or "Nicholas II" alone. When they want to refer to them, they almost always prefix the title to it, "King George III", or "Tsar Nicholas II" or "Queen Isabella I". Just like we refer to "[[Pope John Paul II]]" rather than "John Paul II", it should be "King George III", not merely "George III". The usage "...of country" avoids us having to include the honorific "King" (or "Tsar", "Duke" or "Prince" or whatever) in the title, by having the title implied already in the name of the kingdom/duchy/principality. The original norm "George III of Great Britain" functioned already as a concise version of what should be the proper article title "George III, King of Great Britain",
* (7) It serves a ''de facto'' '''surname'''. First names are extremely common, and ordinals are not particularly memorable. People might know a Tsar Nicholas of Russia was overthrown in a revolution, but not remember whether he is Nicholas I, II, III or IV. The country "of Russia" serves the effective function of surname, helping identify the person without relying completely on numeral memorization.
* (8) It remembers that the '''audience''' of Wikipedia is [[WP:GLOBAL]], and does not assume all our readers are deeply versed in European royal kitsch, and would instantly remember the country by name & number alone.

We need a consistent norm for sovereigns, applied equitably across countries, that is useful, helpful, improves recognizability and avoids toxic nationalist squabbles. The gain of including "of country" is great, the cost is negligible or none.

By contrast, the current post-RFC guidelines six months ago or so (which drop "of country", that is option 1 above) '''fails''' on all the counts above and is very costly to Wikipedia readers.
* (1) reduces recognizability and imposes hurdles on readers,
* (2) doesn't indicate that it refers to a monarch - is Nicholas II a pope or a king or a rocket?
* (3) introduces inconsistency in article titles, both within a country, and across countries.
* (4) introduces large country bias and POV nationalist/imperialist prejudices (Britain is more important than Georgia, France more important than Sweden, Russia is more important than Ukraine, etc.) and encourages distasteful nationalist squabbles
* (5) it assumes Wikipedia readers have multi-lingual capabilities, and can recognize different spellings from different languages,
* (6) it violates commonname where the shortened form almost always uses honorifics.
* (7) names & ordinals are not memorable on their own, making it a huge hurdle to non-Europeans or simply anybody not interested in royalist kitsch, who have not committed names & ordinals to memory.
* (8) Moreover, it imposes the additional huge information requirement that Wikipedia readers must be familiar not only with ''this'' monarch, but also with ALL other European royal lines, e.g. readers not only need to know Nicholas II is from Russia, they also need to know there ''isn't'' another Nicholas II existing out there in another country (i.e. readers must ''also'' know the dynastic lines of France, Sweden, Poland, Pomerania, etc.) A huge burden that far exceeds the normal familiarity requirements.
For these reasons, and more, I support '''Option 3''' ("Oliver X of Montenegro") as sufficiently concise, although wouldn't oppose '''Option 5''' ("Oliver X, King of Montenegro") or '''Option 4''' ("King Oliver X of Montenegro"). But I would strongly oppose Option 1 ("Oliver X"). Naturally, there should always be reservations for exceptions which can be argued on a case-by-case basis (per [[WP:COMMMONNAME]] etc.) But guidelines need to suggest a norm, and as far as norms are concerned, Option 3 is best.

Including "of country" has worked well for 20+ years, has a longer and wider consensus and more support in nearly all recent RMs that have tried to eliminate it since last November. [[User:Walrasiad|Walrasiad]] ([[User talk:Walrasiad|talk]]) 04:14, 23 June 2024 (UTC)


==Notifications==
==Notifications==

Revision as of 04:14, 23 June 2024

In the absence of a need to disambiguate, how should we title the articles of European imperial and royal monarchs?

  1. Louis XVI[a]
  2. King Louis XVI[b]
  3. Louis XVI of France[c]
  4. King Louis XVI of France[d]
  5. Louis XVI, King of France[e]
  6. Louis XVI (king of France)[f]
  7. Louis XVI (France)[g]
  8. Louis XVI, king of France[h]
  9. Use the common name; do not apply a consistent style

If you support multiple options, please rank your preferences to assist the closer in identifying consensus. 22:06, 22 June 2024 (UTC)

Clarifications:

  • Absence of a need to disambiguate includes articles where the monarch is the primary topic for that name.

The context for this discussion includes:

  1. A November 2023 RfC consensus instructing editors to disambiguate only if disambiguation is required.
  2. A May 2023 ArbCom case request that raised concerns about disruption in the topic area. This case lists a number of recent requested moves and move reviews.
  3. A village pump discussion drafting this RfC.

Survey

  • Option 1 per WP:CONCISE, WP:COMMONNAME and all the other well argued reason at the last RFC. If we don't need to add a disambiguater, we shouldn't. It isn't the job of a title to be a Short description of what's in the article. Cakelot1 ☞️ talk 23:27, 22 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
    Also support Option 9 as it seems the most inline with the normal naming policies. Cakelot1 ☞️ talk 23:31, 22 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
  • Option 9 per "there's no reason to make an exception here", but if there needs to be a guideline, then option 1 per conciseness. If there's no need to disambiguate, then there shouldn't be a disambiguator. And, if there is a need to disambiguate, options 3 or 5 make the most sense and fit WP:COMMONNAME and WP:NATURAL better than the others. Strong oppose 2 and 4 per MOS:HON. Chaotic Enby (talk · contribs) 23:42, 22 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
  • Option 1 or 9: As WP:Article titles indicates with the Energy example in the WP:PRECISION section, WP:CONCISE and WP:PRIMARYTOPIC has priority over WP:PRECISION. Even for cases where disambiguation comes up like Charles III, WP:PRIMARYTOPIC should still apply. StellarHalo (talk) 23:55, 22 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
  • Option 3, always title monarchs as "Name Number of Country" when first mentioned for clarity and consistency. Subsequent mentions can use "Name Number" or just "Name". JIP | Talk 00:04, 23 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
  • Option 9. WP:COMMONNAME comes first. Wikipedia editors should not invent a style that doesn’t exist and force application everywhere. SmokeyJoe (talk) 00:17, 23 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
  • I vote for Option 1 - I notice that when I look up a regnal name on Wikipedia, I am provided with additional information. For instance looking up Charles III, result: Charles III, King of the United Kingdom since 2022. I vote for Option 5 for the spouse of the monarch. ProfessorKaiFlai (talk) 00:08, 23 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
  • Option 9 I do not see any reason why monarchs should be exempt from one of the sites most basic rules. COMMONNAME reigns.★Trekker (talk) 00:24, 23 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
  • Option 3 Mentioning the name and the ordinal, and which country he/she ruled. I don't think mentioning the specific title of "emperor", "king", "duke", etc. is important, except in cases where disambiguation is needed. Dimadick (talk) 00:26, 23 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
  • Option 9 and 1. WP:COMMONNAME works just as well here as it does anywhere. In the absence of a need to disambiguate, use the shortest article title possible which clearly delineates the subject, and leave off any unnecessary titles, countries, and so on. Of course if necessary for disambiguation, use as needed, but no more than needed to make the article title unambiguous. Option 1 as well since there may be multiple names the individual is commonly known by; in such a case, use the shortest one with the least tacked on. Seraphimblade Talk to me 00:26, 23 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
  • Options 9 and 1. Really, it's just a question of WP:COMMONNAME. The current King of England isn't referred to as "Charles III of the United Kingdom and a bunch of Commonwealths" or whatever... he's just Charles III, and sources overwhelmingly call him that. I think the UK royalty is the one most people think about, even though there are other royal families, because it's the main such family in the English-speaking world, and thus why COMMONNAME will overwhelmingly favor UK monarchs to have the "just the name and number" title. LilianaUwU (talk / contributions) 00:50, 23 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
  • Option 1 and 9. I prefer the shortest one. However, WP:COMMONNAME should be used in some cases, especially if a monarch with that name is more well known than the others. MarioJump83 (talk) 00:51, 23 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
  • Top preference for Options 1 or 3. Option 1 is certainly the most WP:CONCISE option, and is sure to avoid WP:OVERPRECISION; conversely, the appeal of Option 3 is that this is an area where I feel like a bit of overprecision can actually be helpful to readers without sacrificing WP:NATURALness (see WP:USPLACE as a similar case). Another potential benefit for Option 3 is that it makes it easy to be WP:CONSISTENT with monarchs who do need to be disambiguated. Secondary preference for Options 9 or 5. Option 9 is straightforward and I agree with the logic behind it, but I don't think it will adequately resolve the underlying debate unless it's paired with another option that serves as the "baseline" recommendation. As for Option 5: I think including the specific title is generally unnecessary, but if we do choose to include it, I think 5 is the option that best retains its naturalness across different titles (e.g. Grand Dukes and such). Oppose 2, 4, 6, 7, 8. (I'm happy to provide explanations for my opposes if desired, but will hold off for now to avoid making this lengthy !vote any longer.) ModernDayTrilobite (talkcontribs) 01:41, 23 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
  • 9 as guide, and then if there isn't a common name 1 and the ones without the title seem more in the spirit of MOS:PEOPLETITLES, although obviously these are somewhat very defining titles. If this question evolves into how to disambiguate, then feel free to copy this over and put me down for 3 as concise and clear. CMD (talk) 01:46, 23 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
  • Option 1. Preemptive disambiguation should be avoided. This option also is supported by WP:CONCISE and even WP:PRECISE. The example the latter gives is apt here: "Usually, titles should unambiguously define the topical scope of the article, but should be no more precise than that. For instance, Saint Teresa of Calcutta is too precise, as Mother Teresa is precise enough to indicate exactly the same topic." Of course, there may be cases where a longer title is COMMONNAME, in which we should defer to that. ~~ Jessintime (talk) 02:18, 23 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
  • Option 1 or 9(where applicable) - No need to complicate things. Disambiguation only necessary if multiple Louis XVIs are commonly known, regardless of whether they exist. Stanley Bannerman (talk) 02:51, 23 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
  • Option 3 - For the sake of consistency. Primary topics and/or COMMONNAMEs can be redirects. Tad Lincoln (talk) 03:16, 23 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
  • Option 1 If no disambiguation is needed then option one is the best per WP:COMMONNAME, this especailly applies when monarchs 'rule' over several independent countries (eg. Charles III). Nford24 (PE121 Personnel Request Form) 03:25, 23 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
  • 3. I am mostly anti-9. I think a consistent style should be enforced within a line of succession (with the odd exception). This is equally true of non-European monarchs. I do not necessarily think that every European monarchy needs to be treated the same way. 3 is the most elegant (shortest, naturalest) method that can be applied consistently to all monarchs in a succession. I also note that no matter how famous or singular, e.g., Louis XIV is, you generally cannot introduce him in an article without saying or having said 'France' somewhere. There is nothing ugly or silly about "Louis XIV of France". It is wrong to regard "of France" as operating like a mere natural disambiguator. It makes more sense to see it as integral to making sense of the numeral. It is no more redundant than using full names of famous people (e.g., Einstein, Picasso, Leibniz). Srnec (talk) 03:47, 23 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Discussion

Which one covers "Name # of country"? GoodDay (talk) 22:10, 22 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]

3; I've updated the question to try to make it clearer. BilledMammal (talk) 22:21, 22 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]

So, the pings... why? If roads editors did the same thing, they'd be blocked for canvassing even if they followed the same logic of people who previously were in a related discussion. LilianaUwU (talk / contributions) 23:20, 22 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]

No, they wouldn't, since the pings are to everyone involved in prior discussion regardless of the opinions they expressed, not pings of a specific subset based on their opinion. Please actually read WP:CANVASS before citing it.  — SMcCandlish ¢ 😼  23:23, 22 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I don't think that it's canvassing - virtually all editors from prior discussions were notified, without regard for how they voted. It'd be canvassing if only those who voted in a certain way were. The Kip (contribs) 23:23, 22 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
If it isn't canvassing, then why is {{NOTAVOTE}} in the editnotice? LilianaUwU (talk / contributions) 23:38, 22 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Because it's a survey, not a !vote? Renerpho (talk) 23:40, 22 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Because this RfC is being held on a subpage of Wikipedia:Requests for comment, and that edit notice is added to all subpages of Wikipedia:Requests for comment. BilledMammal (talk) 23:44, 22 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Oh, I see. Carry on, then. LilianaUwU (talk / contributions) 00:46, 23 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
This many pings is pretty clearly not WP:CANVASSING. It'd be impossible to make this many partisan notifications. (And if you somehow managed to, that would suggest to me that the position you're notifying for is so popular that not notifying people would be a sort of reverse canvassing.) Loki (talk) 23:28, 22 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
(edit conflict) In addition to what SmcCandlish and The Kip said, a major part of this dispute is editors arguing that the consensus to switch from #3 to #1 doesn't reflect the consensus of the broader community, pointing to the numerical majorities at various requested moves. I proposed we address this concern by holding a broadly advertised RfC, notifying every editor involved in this dispute; the proposal was not objected to.
It also helps that I don't really have an opinion on this dispute; it's hard to canvass without knowing which side of the dispute you want to bolster. BilledMammal (talk) 23:31, 22 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Editors who have participated in previous discussions on the same topic (or closely related topics) I'm confused why this is a question. -- LCU ActivelyDisinterested «@» °∆t° 23:48, 22 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]

I don't see how "Absence of a need to disambiguate includes articles where the monarch is the primary topic for that name" is supposed to be enforced. I think arguing whether one monarch/country is the primary one is a recipe for drama, and it clearly hasn't worked in the past. The Nov.'23 RfC mainly looked at WP:CRITERIA, and I wonder if that's wise. While those usually help to guide consensus, that doesn't seem to be the case here, so maybe we shouldn't try. Renerpho (talk) 23:37, 22 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]

  • I'm sympathetic to people who are just voting option 9, but I don't want that to result in every RM featuring an argument over whether the format proposed in option 1 or option 3 is more common, as my experience is that in many cases, they are equally common with many sources using both. A result of option 9 only will probably perpetuate the chaos rather than clarify anything. Compassionate727 (T·C) 02:04, 23 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]

I don't know if this is too long for "Survey". But since it expresses the grounds of my opinion, let me lay it out here in full.

The norm of Monarch # of country (Option 3 above) was the norm on Wikipedia for the past two decades. Country name needs to be restored in article titles. It worked well on many grounds, e.g.

  • (1) immediately recognizable, informative and helpful to readers,
  • (2) immediately identifies the topic as a monarch rather than numerous other uses of names & numerals, e.g. nobles generally (duke/count/earls are also known by numerals e.g. "Henry II"), or a pope ("Nicholas II") or bishop ("Bruno I"), or a cryptic surname ("Malcolm X") or a movie sequel ("Rocky III"), or a ship ("Mary II") or any other myriad of common uses for combinations of name & ordinal (e.g. in genealogical numbering, etc.) The term "of country" immediately clarifies that the article refers to a monarch.
  • (3) ensures consistency of names both vertically (across time) and horizontally (across countries)
  • (4) it does not prejudice one country over another, avoiding presumptions of national superiority (e.g. "George III of Great Britain" does not trump "George III of Georgia"). Puts all countries on a fair and equal footing, avoiding POV that this country is "more important" than that country.
  • (5) it overcome the problem of nativist spelling. In some RSs monarch names are translated into English (e.g. Amadeus, Nicholas, John, Ladislaus, Elizabeth), in other RSs they are kept in native form (e.g. Amadeo, Nikolai, Juan, Wladyslaw, Isabel) and many readers come from non-English RSs which may use another name entirely (e.g. Niccolo, Giovanni, Ulaszlo). Which spelling Wikipedia article chooses tends to be a random crapshoot, and readers shouldn't have to guess editors' preferences. They shouldn't be forced to guess that "Ladislaus I" is the same person they read in a book as "Ulaszlo I". Adding the country "Ladislaus I of Hungary" clarifies and helps them find who they're looking for.
  • (6) lets Wikipedia maintain its policy of avoiding honorifics in the article titles. In common usage, almost nobody uses "George III" or "Nicholas II" alone. When they want to refer to them, they almost always prefix the title to it, "King George III", or "Tsar Nicholas II" or "Queen Isabella I". Just like we refer to "Pope John Paul II" rather than "John Paul II", it should be "King George III", not merely "George III". The usage "...of country" avoids us having to include the honorific "King" (or "Tsar", "Duke" or "Prince" or whatever) in the title, by having the title implied already in the name of the kingdom/duchy/principality. The original norm "George III of Great Britain" functioned already as a concise version of what should be the proper article title "George III, King of Great Britain",
  • (7) It serves a de facto surname. First names are extremely common, and ordinals are not particularly memorable. People might know a Tsar Nicholas of Russia was overthrown in a revolution, but not remember whether he is Nicholas I, II, III or IV. The country "of Russia" serves the effective function of surname, helping identify the person without relying completely on numeral memorization.
  • (8) It remembers that the audience of Wikipedia is WP:GLOBAL, and does not assume all our readers are deeply versed in European royal kitsch, and would instantly remember the country by name & number alone.

We need a consistent norm for sovereigns, applied equitably across countries, that is useful, helpful, improves recognizability and avoids toxic nationalist squabbles. The gain of including "of country" is great, the cost is negligible or none.

By contrast, the current post-RFC guidelines six months ago or so (which drop "of country", that is option 1 above) fails on all the counts above and is very costly to Wikipedia readers.

  • (1) reduces recognizability and imposes hurdles on readers,
  • (2) doesn't indicate that it refers to a monarch - is Nicholas II a pope or a king or a rocket?
  • (3) introduces inconsistency in article titles, both within a country, and across countries.
  • (4) introduces large country bias and POV nationalist/imperialist prejudices (Britain is more important than Georgia, France more important than Sweden, Russia is more important than Ukraine, etc.) and encourages distasteful nationalist squabbles
  • (5) it assumes Wikipedia readers have multi-lingual capabilities, and can recognize different spellings from different languages,
  • (6) it violates commonname where the shortened form almost always uses honorifics.
  • (7) names & ordinals are not memorable on their own, making it a huge hurdle to non-Europeans or simply anybody not interested in royalist kitsch, who have not committed names & ordinals to memory.
  • (8) Moreover, it imposes the additional huge information requirement that Wikipedia readers must be familiar not only with this monarch, but also with ALL other European royal lines, e.g. readers not only need to know Nicholas II is from Russia, they also need to know there isn't another Nicholas II existing out there in another country (i.e. readers must also know the dynastic lines of France, Sweden, Poland, Pomerania, etc.) A huge burden that far exceeds the normal familiarity requirements.

For these reasons, and more, I support Option 3 ("Oliver X of Montenegro") as sufficiently concise, although wouldn't oppose Option 5 ("Oliver X, King of Montenegro") or Option 4 ("King Oliver X of Montenegro"). But I would strongly oppose Option 1 ("Oliver X"). Naturally, there should always be reservations for exceptions which can be argued on a case-by-case basis (per WP:COMMMONNAME etc.) But guidelines need to suggest a norm, and as far as norms are concerned, Option 3 is best.

Including "of country" has worked well for 20+ years, has a longer and wider consensus and more support in nearly all recent RMs that have tried to eliminate it since last November. Walrasiad (talk) 04:14, 23 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Notifications

Jump to: Top Survey Discussion

Notifying all editors who took part in discussions within the past year on this topic. For this, I used the list of discussions provided at the ARBCOM request. BilledMammal (talk) 22:45, 22 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]

@123957a, 162 etc., A.D.Hope, AKTC3, ARandomName123, Aaron Liu, ActivelyDisinterested, Ad Orientem, Adam Cuerden, Adumbrativus, Aintabli, AirshipJungleman29, AjaxSmack, Alanscottwalker, AlbusWulfricDumbledore, Alpha3031, Amakuru, Anameofmyveryown, Andejons, Andrew Davidson, AndrewPeterT, Aoi, Aoidh, AusLondonder, Awesome Aasim, Azarctic, BB-PB, BD2412, Bakir123, Baqotun0023, Barkeep49, Bazonka, Bcorr, Bensci54, Bermicourt, BillClinternet, Billreid, Bilorv, Born2cycle, Bradv, Brightgalrs, C.Fred, CIN I&II, Cabayi, Cakelot1, CapnZapp, Carolina2k22, Celia Homeford, Certes, and Chaotic Enby: BilledMammal (talk) 22:45, 22 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Apologies if I pinged this group twice; there were server issues when I was making these edits and it was unclear whether the notifications went through. BilledMammal (talk) 22:45, 22 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I will note, as this might very well end up at ArbCom again and I can just hear the howls about INVOLVED, that I only partook in the case request and am surprised that BilledMammal decided to ping all the arbs from that discussion. Barkeep49 (talk) 23:53, 22 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
To hopefully help address any howls about INVOLVED, I did not limit my notifications to editors I consider INVOLVED and many are not.
I did consider removing the arbitrators, along with anyone else who only participated in the dispute in an administrative capacity (closers etc), but I decided it was better to ping everyone and let the editors decide for themselves whether to participate. BilledMammal (talk) 00:04, 23 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
@Charcoal feather, Chessrat, Chipmunkdavis, Cinderella157, CoatGuy2, Compassionate727, CookieMonster755, Cremastra, Crouch, Swale, Curbon7, D1551D3N7, DDMS123, Dan Wylie-Sears 2, Daniel, Daniel Quinlan, Darryl Kerrigan, Davidships, DeCausa, DeFacto, Deb, Desertarun, Dict Theo, Dimadick, Doomsday28, DrKay, Draken Bowser, Durchbruchmüller, DuxLoKi, Dylnuge, E James Bowman, EggRoll97, Ehrenkater, ElDubs, Eliasparras, Elme12, EmeraldRange, EmilySarah99, Emperor of Emperors, Epsilon.Prota, Estar8806, Extraordinary Writ, FOARP, Festucalex, Ficaia, Firefly, Frank Anchor, Freedom4U, Furius, GandalfXLD, and Gog the Mild: BilledMammal (talk) 22:46, 22 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
@GoodDay, GrandDukeMarcelo, Great Mercian, Guerillero, Hilst, History6042, HistoryFanOfItAll1999, HouseBlaster, Huwmanbeing, Iamawesomeautomatic, IlkkaP, InedibleHulk, Inops, J947, JIP, JM2023, JPxG, JackofOz, Jalapeño, Jarrod Baniqued, Jasp7676, JayBeeEll, Jayron32, Jessintime, Jfhutson, Jheald, Johnbod, Jonas1015119, Jtdirl, Jz4p, Jèrriais janne, Kahastok, Keivan.f, Khajidha, Killuminator, King of Hearts, Király-Seth, Kusma, Leevine65, Lepricavark, Levivich, Lil-unique1, LilianaUwU, LindsayH, LokiTheLiar, Mach61, Maddy from Celeste, MaeseLeon, Marbe166, and MarioJump83: BilledMammal (talk) 22:46, 22 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Please don’t ping me for this again. Great Mercian (talk) 01:24, 23 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
@Markbassett, MatJarosz, Mattdaviesfsic, Maxim, Miesianiacal, ModernDayTrilobite, Moonraker, Mr Serjeant Buzfuz, MrJ567, Nableezy, Natg 19, Necrothesp, Neveselbert, Nford24, NinjaRobotPirate, North8000, Ntnon, Nurg, , Old Naval Rooftops, Oroborvs, P Aculeius, Paine Ellsworth, Parsecboy, PatGallacher, Patar knight, Paul Vaurie, Peralien, Peter Isotalo, Peterkingiron, Plumber, Polyamorph, Primefac, PrincessJoey2024, ProfessorKaiFlai, QEDK, RFBailey, RR, RadioactiveBoulevardier, Randy Kryn, Reading Beans, Red Slash, Red-tailed hawk, RegentsPark, Remes, Renerpho, Resolute, ReyHahn, Reywas92, and Ribbet32: BilledMammal (talk) 22:46, 22 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
@RicLightning, Richard75, Robert McClenon, Robertus Pius, RodRabelo7, Rosbif73, Rosbif73, Rotideypoc41352, Rreagan007, SKAG123, SMcCandlish, Sahaib, SchroCat, ScottDavis, Scu ba, Sebbog13, Seltaeb Eht, Sennecaster, Seraphimblade, SergeWoodzing, Serial Number 54129, Shadow007, Shakescene, SilverLocust, SilverTiger12, Sira Aspera, Siroxo, SmokeyJoe, SnowFire, Soni, Spekkios, SpookiePuppy, SportingFlyer, Srnec, Ssilvers, Stanley Bannerman, StarTrekker, StellarHalo, StrawWord298944, Surtsicna, Svartner, Sveinkros, Tad Lincoln, The C of E, The Kip, The Land, The Vintage Feminist, TheRichic, Therealscorp1an, and Thesavagenorwegian: BilledMammal (talk) 22:46, 22 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
@Thinker78, ThinkingTwice, Thosbsamsgom, Thryduulf, Thurlow0391, Tim O'Doherty, Tim riley, TimothyBlue, ToBeFree, Tvx1, UmbrellaTheLeef, Voorts, Vpab15, WWGB, Walrasiad, Walt Yoder, Wanderin' Wolf, Wbm1058, Wehwalt, Wellington Bay, WhatamIdoing, Woko Sapien, Wpscatter, Yeehaw45, Yeoutie, Z1720, Zacwill, Usernamekiran, and Векочел: BilledMammal (talk) 22:46, 22 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Notes

  1. ^ Regnal name and nominals
    Name #
  2. ^ Title, regnal name, and nominals
    Title name #
  3. ^ Regnal name, nominals, and realm
    Name # of country
  4. ^ Title, regnal name, nominals, and realm
    Title name # of country
  5. ^ Regnal name, nominals, title, and realm
    Name #, title of country
  6. ^ Regnal name, nominals, title, and realm
    Name # (title of country)
  7. ^ Regnal name, nominals, and realm
    Name # (country)
  8. ^ Regnal name, nominals, title, and realm
    Name #, title of country