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This is the discussion page for the vote at Talk:Gdansk/Vote |
This page is affected by the Gdańsk (Danzig) Vote. The following rules apply in the case of disputes:
The detailed vote results and the vote itself can be found on Talk:Gdansk/Vote. This vote has ended; please do not vote anymore. Comments and discussions can be added to Talk:Gdansk/Vote/discussion anytime. This template {{Gdansk-Vote-Notice}} can be added on the talk page of affected articles if necessary. |
We promise that to ourselves and to our friends and friends of our friends, that we, who are signed under it, will defend the worked solution with our words, deeds and actions, that we will consider compromise as our own, and we will act together, commonly against any person, vandal or misguided, who would try to violate it, but only with accordance to wikipedia rules and without violation of our consciences and feudal privileges(^w^w oops too much reading Polish treaties :))) ). We will act agaisnt such persons with all our might, all our anger and until such person, no matter who they will be, will either cease to violate compromise or join it. We promise ourselves, as equal with equals, free people with free people, that we won't abandon our compromise, we won't change it without agreement of anyone else, we will stand united and indivisible.
(Hundreds and hundreds of signatures follows):-)
Szopen 11:11, 15 Feb 2005 (UTC)
I would concur, although I generally think that the 1466-1793 period should be treated as a whole, unless Szopen would care to explain how Danzig/Gdansk's position changed after the union with Lithuania. john k 03:03, 16 Feb 2005 (UTC)
The Gdansk/Danzig naming problem is the core of a whole lot of other problems. Since so far there was no sucess in achieving a compromise (despite numerous attempts!), I believe a vote is needed for deciding the issue. The vote has not yet started and is in the discussion phase. The planned voting period is two weeks from Monday, February 21 0:00 to Monday, March 7 0:00. Constructive comments are welcome -- Chris 73 Talk 03:46, Feb 16, 2005 (UTC)
UoL (as a nickname for whole series of events, not for the act of union itself) affected whole Royal Prussia, not Danzig/Gdansk in particular (to answer John Kenney question). To gandsk, more important would be of course statuty karnkowskiego or whatever... Would you give me time to search for exact changes in status? Before Royal Prussia was autonomous province, after that it was just more voviodships of Poland. I think this affected status of Gdansk also.. Szopen 08:07, 17 Feb 2005 (UTC)
The Talk:Gdansk/Vote/Notice template can be put on the top of the talk pages of articles affected by the vote. This will increase exposure, and hopefully give more votes. After the voting period, the template text can be changed to summarize the results, which may also be helpful on various article talk pages. -- Chris 73 Talk 23:48, Feb 17, 2005 (UTC)
Hmm... Unfortunately right now all i found is exactly the same as previously: at Sejm of Lublin there was abolishing of authonomy of Royal Prussia (of which Danzig was formally part). I don't know how it affected DIRECTLY Gdansk/Danzig status (That it influenced Danzig INDIRECTLY, sicne it ceased to be part of autonomous province, is without doubt of course).Szopen 08:34, 18 Feb 2005 (UTC)
And a bit explanation why separate vote for biographies. It's simple: clearly German person articles would be visited most probably by Germans. Clearly Polish by Poles. I hope that would minimise revrt wars.Szopen 08:48, 18 Feb 2005 (UTC)
Vote proposals on cross-naming cover all history. This is awkward. Cross-Naming makes sense in pre-45 period, but is absurd for the contemporary articles like this one: List of cities in Poland. Therefore, the vote shuld cover only pre 45 period, or there shall be 2 separate votes.-- Mr. Wszedroik
I agree. Perhaps we should split up the vote. Chris, what do you think? john k 16:02, 20 Feb 2005 (UTC)
It should be called Danzig in all circumstances before 1945 I think, but there should usually also be a note in the text that hereby is meant the city which today is situated in Poland and in Polish is called Gdansk. The form of this note could in most cases easily be just "(Gdansk)". For the time after 1945, Gdansk should be satisfactory. Since the city name is usually in form of a link in Wikipedia, it is easy for anyone to click through to the article on Gdansk and read about the city's name in different languages there.
As for the List of cities in Poland, I think the present common name should be used. OTOH, there should also be room for a List of German names for places in Poland, don't you think? These links should have links to oneanother. John Anderson 11:34, 24 Feb 2005 (UTC)
All very sensible. How about List of German names for places in Central Europe, though? That way we could include Estonian, Latvian, Lithuanian, Czech, Slovak, Ukrainian, Hungarian, Romanian, Slovene, Croatian, and Serb cities that are often known by their German names as well as Polish. john k 16:27, 24 Feb 2005 (UTC)
I'm for it. Space Cadet 16:36, 24 Feb 2005 (UTC)
If Space Cadet and I agree on something, it must be a good idea! john k 17:40, 24 Feb 2005 (UTC)
It was recorded in wikipedia Danzig/Gdansk article earlier, but was removed. Therefore posted here: In 1224 the official city seal stated : Sigillum Burgensium Dantzike with a Hanse Kogge cogg, very similar to other Hanseatic city seals, especially Luebeck. Danzig remained officially in the Hanse and took part in the meetings until 1669. Language and laws of Hanse was German. For seal of Danzig see article: http://www.schulverein-kassel.de/Schulverein/9/9113.75.html
For Wappen- seals of Westprussia incl. Danzig and its relation to Poland see also: http://www.westpreussen-online.de/html/wappengeschichte.html
Danziger Willkür was the name given to the laws of the Hanse city of Danzig. In 1597 they were written as follows: Der See - und Handelsstadt Dantzig Rechte oder Willkuer 1597. In the year 1732 these laws were re-printed by Seelman in Danzig. After that they were several times reprinted at different locations. 20 Feb 2005
Pertaining to: Danzig History 1466-1793 1466 peace Second Treaty of Thorn and 1525 peace Prussian Tribut, both agreements were not authorized and not recognized by the popes nore the emperors, who continued holding supreme overlordship rights over Prussia. Neighboring Duchy of Pomerania was intergral part of Holy Roman Empire at least since 1181.
No, they were not. That doesn't matter. Emperor never hold power over Prussia, since it was always contested by olish kings. Anyway, the arguments you are presenting i saw many times for last five years or so. Szopen 09:30, 24 Feb 2005 (UTC)
Albert of Brandenburgs duties to emperor and pope http://66.102.7.104/search?q=cache:lqag5cL8YAAJ:department.monm.edu/history/urban/articles/State_of_the_grandmasters.htm+Casimir+IV+deutscher+orden&hl=en
With Reformation churches started keeping vital statistics of every burgher- Kirchenbuch - Taufen Heiraten Tote (birth marriage death). Danzig church records of inhabitants: http://www.familysearch.org/Eng/Library/fhlcatalog/printing/topicdetailsprint.asp?subject=352724&first=1 The books were filmed and can be seen at LDS Mormon Family History Centers.
I protest against a way the votes for Talk:Gdansk/Vote#VOTE:_Period_from_1466_to_1793 were countedexcluding 13 users on basis of little engagement in en:. As put on Talk:Gdansk/Vote#Poll_interpretation there were general consensus that they shouldn't, only johnK persistently refused to accept it. Also no limits of contribution required were agreed upon before so in many cases exclusion was arbitrary. Thus, result of this point of vote should be changed. -- Forseti 07:49, 4 Mar 2005 (UTC)
From User talk:Chris 73: On what basis was my vote not counted? What does "any user of Wikipedia in good standing may vote" mean? How do you distinguish those? I would like to see some Wikipedia rule about it. --Akumiszcza 12:10, 4 Mar 2005 (UTC)
Based on 1) no fixed rules about voting and 2) excluding some votes to the liking of persons, who also voted I believe the voting should be repeated (with fixed rules) if we don't want to have it boycotted. --Akumiszcza 13:10, 6 Mar 2005 (UTC)
Hmm... Doesn't anybody feel that excluding some votes based on no fixed rules is against the concept of free, open to everybody encyclopedia? It is the method prone to abuse. Am I alone here to think that every vote should be counted, as in each proper democratical voting? Please response, anybody... --Akumiszcza 13:31, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC)
Well, this should be obvious. Perhaps it isn't because the vote was conducted by non-neutral party and as the results are to their liking they see no need to worry about protests. -- Forseti 21:47, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC)
The general consensus is that votes can be taken by "members in good standing" of the en community. That is not to say that anyone doesn't value you putting up interwiki links. But the idea of a vote is to determine a consensus of the en community. You are, essentially, not a member of the en community (although you're welcome to join us, of course). It is not fair for en policies (especially en policies regarding usage, which is something that is fairly idiosyncratic to the English language) to be decided by people who are not really editors of en. john k 14:44, 12 Mar 2005 (UTC)
By idiosyncratic, I meant that usage in English is tricky, and there's no clear rules. Unless one is fairly fluent in it, I think it would be very hard to have any sense of what the actual English usage is. Contributors from other wikis may not have that much grasp of English (your English is obviously pretty good, so I'm not referring to you specifically, although I'd imagine that anybody not living in the English-speaking world would be at a disadvantage in terms of knowing English usage), so it seems counterproductive for them to be able to vote on a question of English usage. I agree with you that it would be good if the voting procedures page was more explicit about these kind of things. john k 16:10, 12 Mar 2005 (UTC)
Note that I have started to impose ([[Germanic language|German]]:Danzig) and {{Talk:Gdansk/Vote/Notice}} on pages that mention Gdansk. --JuntungWu 06:02, 19 Mar 2005 (UTC)
Why Germanic language? Is it Danzig in every germanic language? Gdabski 23:36, 5 Apr 2005 (UTC)
Please take a look at Template talk:Gdansk-Vote-Notice. Halibutt 12:06, May 18, 2005 (UTC)
I strongly oppose the use of multiple names for places such as Dresden, Gdansk, and such, on completely unrelated articles such as Bentley. If such double naming must occur, it should only occur where it is relevant - on the disputed articles themselves. Other articles should use the name which the disputed article carries. Opinions? — Dan | Talk 17:26, Jun 5, 2005 (UTC)
Is the wording of Talk:Gdansk/Vote going to be changed? I thought I saw it mentioned somewhere, don't know where any more. The problem section is this: For Gdansk and other locations that share a history between Germany and Poland, the first reference of one name in an article should also include a reference to other names, e.g. Danzig (now Gdańsk, Poland) or Gdańsk (Danzig). An English language reference that primarily uses this name should be provided on the talk page if a dispute arises. As can be seen at Talk:Dresden this is causing a problem:
These problems don't apply only to Dresden, but also to any location with a "shared history" between Poland and Germany, e.g. Talk:Brunswick, Talk:Mainz -- Saintswithin 07:47, 10 Jun 2005 (UTC) also Hanover, Kiel, Luge, Herrnhut, Lübeck, Cologne, Trier, Stuttgart, Munich, Koblenz, Potsdam, Nuremberg, Quedlinburg, Kamenz, Aachen and Zwickau seem to be caught up in the cross-naming. Saintswithin 07:58, 10 Jun 2005 (UTC)
I'm curious if the results of this vote could be applied to Czech towns with German heritage. Since the situation there is so similar to Gdansk, it would appear to be logical.
I've seen NoPuzzleStranger come out of the woodwork and start unilateral changes to formerly German towns like Budweis and Pilsen. He would single them out for some reason, but there are many other cities with similar history in former Czechoslovakia (including Prague) and it would be good if we had a consistent and generally accepted way of dealing with their German names. This would be good for both accuracy and consistency of Wikipedia, not to mention save a lot of time for everyone. Jbetak 16:46, 14 August 2005 (UTC)
Despite the fact that the article for Georg Foster contains the word 'Danzig', Witkacy (a good example of a chauvinist in my opinion) has deleted the tag for the third time (, , ) by now from Talk:Georg Forster for the simply reason that the template is a "useless template" in his opinion. The template has been added by Administrator Gabbe in March and this inclusion has never been challenged until now by Witkacy. Before that Witkacy had a revert war - in which he never stated why he reverted - with Cadorna (, , ). The dispute was over in which order Danzig and Gdansk should be named. None of them referred to the rule, which relevantly states that For Gdańsk, use the name Danzig between 1308 and 1945 and according to the wiki article Forster lived from November 26, 1754 until January 10, 1794, thus in that period. So when I reverted Witkacy in accordance to the rule, he simply deleted the rule from the talk page and reverted me in the article. Is it a case for Wikipedia:Vandalism in progress or what should be done in this case? Please help. NightBeAsT 14:29, 30 August 2005 (UTC)
Who would accept to revise the conditions in such a way that they would be more fool proof, since some in the polish nationalistic fringe have decided to be painful about it; something we could actually use as a guideline for areas which changed hands frequently and not as a way to cut a single quarrell. Snapdragonfly 19:50, 3 January 2006 (UTC)
I would suggest to make ELECTORAL VOTES as the entire issue of voting on GDANSK / DANZIG looks like the latest joke.
No wonder that with Wikipedia "Police" the encyclopedia is loosing it's credibility!
May be give the final control over Wikipedia to skin heads? There wouldn't be ever any discussion on majority of "non essential" issues!
http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/literature/laureates/1999/grass-bio.html
All Poland was taken by Germans in WW2. Prussia had Warsaw in 1795. Those two occupations should be excluded from the vote. Otherwise it will be legal to write Warschau(Warsaw). --Januszewicz 16:17, 9 September 2006 (UTC)
Can an admin please fix my old signature to remove the transclusion? (Change {{User:Anárion/sig}} to {{subst:User:Anárion/sig}}). Thanks. -- Jordi·✆ 08:03, 13 September 2006 (UTC)
As much as I’d like to express my feeling of appreciation for the input of so many editors in a survey from February, 2005, I do not recognize the moderator's interpretation of the final vote count at Talk:Gdansk/Vote, arbitrarily excluding 12 votes cast for the period from 1466 to 1793, thus switching the vote results. Such decision can only be seen as a successful attempt at vote fixing, performed in plain view. Please note: between 1466 and 1793, the community preference (without bias) in the above vote was Gdańsk.
This message can be added on talk pages of affected articles if necessary and as a supplement to Template:Gdansk-Vote-Notice. |
The above open letter was posted by --Poeticbent talk 20:21, 1 December 2007 (UTC)
First of all, the decision was based on a simple counting of votes. I do not know what it was like in 2005, but we certainly do not make decisions in this way now. Moreover, the differences are negligible (e.g. for the period 1466 to 1793, it is 10 votes), which clearly indicates that there is no prevailing opinion.
What's more, the usus in relation to other cities with a similar history is quite different. Making Danzig and other Polish cities (Szczecin, Wrocław etc.) with a partly German history into special cases. Without any logically identifiable justification. For example, why is Prague not referred to as "Prag" in topics concerning the period when it was inhabited mostly by German-speaking people and was part of the German states? What about Maribor/Marburg? Why do we not use the name "Kijów" for Kyiv when it was part of Poland, or even when it was mostly Polish-speaking (mid-18th century)? What about Lviv? There are many other examples.
For me, as someone who started editing English Wikipedia long after 2005, this balance is incomprehensible. Above all in relation to cities like Gdańsk, Toruń, Elbląg, which from 1454 almost until the end of the 18th century were part of the Polish state. On what basis do we use the German names to them for this period?
It seems to me that this topic has taken on a new significance with regard to decisions made in the last few years on Ukrainian place names (most notably WP:KYIV), which clearly indicate that the preferred place name also in a historical context is the modern Ukrainian version "Kyiv". Only "unambiguously historical topics" allow for the Kiev version. Why not apply an analogous rule to Gdańsk and other Polish cities with a similar history? ( Incidentally, I should note that WP:KYIV does not provide for names containing the form "Kijów" even for the period when the city was part of Poland, e.g. Kiev Voivodeship. This is a separate topic, but shows the imbalance I am talking about).
I hope that my proposal will be met with an open-minded approach and a willingness to have an informative discussion. Marcelus (talk) 21:17, 24 October 2023 (UTC)
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