Wikipedia:WikiProject Missing encyclopedic articles/MadMax List/10
WikiProject Missing encyclopedic articles |
---|
|
Miscellaneous |
|
This is a missing topics list from
- Clifford L. Linedecker's Civil War, A to Z: The Complete Handbook to America's Bloodiest Conflict
- Who's Who in Military History by John Keegan and Andrew Wheatcroft
- Trevor N. Dupuy's The Harper Encyclopedia of Military Biography
- FirstWorldWar.com
Before removing, make sure blue link is article about topic. Red link may need redirect, otherwise create it if notable.
10
edit- African Repatriation
- Andrew Wills Gould
- Army Pay
- Average Age of Soldiers
- Baron Frederick von Fritsch
- Barton W. Mitchell - own article?
- Namozine Church
- Boy Soldiers in the American Civil War
- Cavalry Regiments in the American Civil War
- Chaplains in the American Civil War
- Charles Clancy
- Citadel Cannoneers
- Coffee Cooler
- Commissioned Officers in the American Civil War
- Confederacy Conscription
- Confederate Nicknames
- Confederate Prisoners of War
- Copperhead Regiment
- Copperheads in the American Civil War
- CSS Denbeigh
- D.C. Proclamation Bill
- David Buskirk
- David H. Todd
- Devil's Coffee Mill (see Machine Gun) - double check
- Devil's Den, Gettysburg skirmish
- Devil's Den, Mississippi guerilla stronghold
- Devine Retribution - referring to the North's reaction to the December 1861 fire in Charleston, South Carolina
- Dog Tent
- Drums in the American Civil War
- Dysentery in the American Civil War
- Edward Clark - dab, covered?
- Edward H. Stoughton
- Federal Military Telegraph System
- Flank - ?
- Foragers - ?
- Foreign-Born Soldiers, Confederacy - own article?
- Foreign-Born Soldiers, Union - own article?
- Fourth of July in Vicksburg, Mississippi
- Fractured Families
- Confederate occupation of Frankfort, Kentucky
- Rock of Chickamauga own article?
- George Washington (Brigadier General) (1806-9 - 1871) Brigadier General.
- Grudge - dab, covered?
- Revolving Turrets - own article?
- Hallucinations of Lieutenant General Richard S. Ewells
- Handguns in the American Civil War
- Haverlock
- Height and Weight of Soldiers
- Henry C. Thurston
- Henry Maury
- Henson G. Raines / Robinson Crusoe of the Civil War
- Highlanders -dab
- Home Guard in the American Civil War
- Horses and Mules
- Infantry Regiments
- J.B. Ferguson
- James Iredell Waddell (colonel), (1831–1914) Lt. Colonel - different person
- James Mason (diplomat) - Confederate emissary to England
- Battle Above the Clouds - can be own article?
- Jonathan Mayhew Wainwright - double check?
- La Manoeuvre Sur Les Derrieres
- Laird, Son & Company, Shipyard
- Land Mines
- Languages in the American Civil War ??
- Legal Tender Act - own article?
- Levy S. Carnine
- Liberia in the American Civil War
- Limbers dab all covered?
- Lincoln In-Laws
- Marking Flags
- Mary Gregg - widow of Confederate brigadier general John Gregg
- McClellan's Silent Army
- Meagher's Zouaves - double check?
- Spoils of Mexico - own article?
- Mexican-Americans, Confederacy
- Mexican-Americans, Union
- Generals, Confederacy - own article
- Minesweepers in the American Civil War
- Minott Ward (1821–1862) Brigadier General
- Cradle of the Confederacy; and Republic of Alabama
- Movable Repair Center Railroads
- Mystery of Special Order 191
- Napoleons ??
- Nuns in the American Civil War
- Parrott Guns
- Patrick Maloney - Irish-born private in the Union Army's "Iron Brigade" who captured James J. Archer at the Battle of Gettysburg, the first of Robert E. Lee's generals to become a prisoner-of-war, and was killed later that day
- Physicians in the American Civil War
- Picket (military) dab?
- Polecat (American Civil War) - Confederate nickname for Count Camille Armand Jules Marie de Polignac
- Polish Legion - dab not covered (see Wladimir Krzyzanowski)
- Poltroonery
- Porter's Balloon Ride - double check
- Privateers in the American Civil War
- Prolonge
- Quaker Warrior
- Rail Gun - dab?
- Railroads in the American Civil War
- Rebellonians
- Recruiting Abroad
- Recruitment Brokers
- Redlegs - common nickname for artillery men from the red stripe on their trousers (see Zouaves)
- Republic of Alabama
- Resplendent Surrender
- Rienzi (horse)
- Resignation of Robert E. Lee - own article?
- Sam Houston Jr., son of Sam Houston
- Scurvy in the American Civil War
- Sheridan's Women
- Shoddys
- Battle of Petersburg - double check?
- Signal Corps in the American Civil War
- Sinking of the CSS Merrimac - own article?
- Sinking of the USS Monitor - own article?
- Skirmishers in the American Civil War
- Skylark - one of J.E.B. Stuart's favorite horses
- Small Pickets
- Smith Percussion Carbine - own article?
- Sneak Thief double check?
- Soapsuds Brigade
- Soldier Vote
- South Uniforms
- Springfield Rifle Musket, Model 1861
- Stars and Bars - double check, own article?
- Starvation Parties
- Territories (American Civil War)
- Torpedoes (American Civil War)
- Traveller (American Civil War)
- Trenches (American Civil War)
- U.S. Hospital Railroad Car
- Union Conscription (see Draft Riots, Enrollment Act)
- Union Flags
- Union Nicknames
- Union Prisoners of War
- SS General Lyon
- SS General Sedgewick
- Wedge Tents
- Whitworth Rifles
- Wheat's Tiger Rifles - double check
- William Lugenbeal
- William Nelson - dab double check?
- William Pendleton - dab double check?
- Winchester, Virginia (American Civil War)
- Wire Entanglements - dab
- Women Soldiers (American Civil War)
- Father Thomas H. Mooney
- Silk Dress Balloon (see Hot Air Balloon)
- Sir Percy Wyndham - dab, double check
- the Other Abraham Lincoln
- the Four Apostles - four 6-pound artillery pieces used by Virginia Military Institute cadets, later transferred to the Rockridge Artillery under the command of William Nelson Pendleton
- the Great Escape - mass POW escape of Union Army soldiers led by Col. Thomas E. Rose
- the Widow Blakely
- the Dictator (see Rail Gun)
11
editNote: None of these remaining names are headwords in the 1996 edition, moreover none appear in the search two googlebooks verions snippet view 1976 edition and preview of 2002 edition. It is possible that the remainder of the 20th century people come from Who's Who in Twentieth Century Warfare.
Isoruku Yamamoto (1841-1897), Japan, not Isoroku Yamamoto (1884 - 1943) The 1996 version of K&W lists Isoruku Yamamoto (1884 - 1943) so I am taking this as a a typo of some sort, and creating a redirect.
13
edit- Georges Barre (1886-1970) - French general during World War II (1939-1945), see North Africa-Tunisia campaign (1942-1943)
- Jose Maria Barreiro (1793-1819) - Spanish general during Latin American Wars for Independence (1800-1825); see battle of Boyaca (1819)
- Edmund Just Victor Boichut (1864-1941) - French general during World War I (1914-1918) and Riffian Rebellion (1920-1926); see battles of the Marne, Ypres I (Ieper) (1914) and Verdun (1916)
- Benoit le Borgne, Count de Boigne (1751-1830) - Savoyard military adventurer during Russo-Turkish War (1768-1774), Second Mysore War (1780-1783) and Maratha (Mahratta) campaigns (1790-1793); see battles of Patan, Merta (1790) and Lakhairi (1793)
- Louis de Boisot, Lord de Ruart (d. 1576) - Flemish admiral in Dutch service during Eighty Years' War (1566-1648); see battle of Walcheren, relief of Leyden (1574) and battle of Zierikzee (1576)
- Louis Bonneau (1851-1938) - French general during Franco-Prussian War (1870-1871) and World War I (1914-1918); see battles of Saint-Privat, Noisseville (near Metz), siege of Metz (1870) and Mulhouse (1914)
- Count Maximilien de Hennin-Lietard Bossu / Count Maximilien de Hennin-Lietard Boussu / Maximilien de Hennin-Lietard, Count of Bossu / Maximilien de Hennin-Lietard, Count of Boussu (d. 1578) - Flemish general during Eighty Years' War (1567-1648); see battles of Delfshaven (suburb of Rotterdam) (1572), Haarlem Lake (Haarlemmer Meer Polder), Zuider Zee (IJsselmeer) (1573) and Rynemants (1578)
- Robert II de la Marck, Duke de Bouillon / "Robert the Young" / "Wild Boar of the Ardennes" (d. 1536) - French soldier during War of the Holy League (1510-1514) and First Hapsburg-Valois War (1521-1525); see battle of Novara (1513)
- Louis Bourquien (fl. c. 1800) - French military adventurer during American Revolutionary War (1775-1783) and Second Maratha War (1803-1805); see battle of Delhi (1803)
- Marquis Jacques de Castelnau (1620-1658) - Marshal of France during Thirty Years' War (1618-1648) and Franco-Spanish War (1635-1659); see battles of Freiburg (Lower Saxony) (1644); Allerheim (near Nordlingen) (1645); Rethel (1650); Arras (1654); Valenciennes (1656) and the Dunes (near Dunquerque) (1658)
- Youssef Chakkour (1928-) - Syrian general during Israeli War of Independence (1948-1949), Six Day War (1967) and October War (1973)
- Chang Ching (c. 1490-1555) - Chinese official and general
- Chang Shih-ch'eng (d. 1367) - Chinese rebel leader
- Chao Ch'un (fl. c. 1206) - Chinese military official
- Chao Ch'ung-kuo (137-52 B.C.) - Chinese general during Han-Hsiung-nu Wars (140-80) and Han-Tangut Wars (105-80)
- Chao Hsin (fl. c. 123 B.C.) - Hsiung-nu and Chinese general
- Chao P'o-nu (fl. c. 108-100 B.C.) - Chinese general
- Chao T'o (d. c. 167) - Chinese general
- Ch'en Yu (d. 205 B.C.) - Chinese general
- Chu Yung (d. 1449) - Chinese general
- Nicolo Dandolo (c. 1515-1570) - Venetian army officer and administrator during Ottoman-Venice War (1570-1573); see siege of Nicosia (1570)
- Friedrich L. von Dechow (d. 1776) - German officer in British service during American Revolutionary War (1775-1783); see battles of Fort Washington and Trenton (1776)
- Christain de Forbach Deux-Ponts / Christain de Forbach Deuxponts / Christian de Forbach, Count of Deux-Ponts / Christian de Forbach, Count of Deuxponts (1752-1813) - French general during American Revolutionary War (1775-1783), French Revolutionary Wars (1792-1800); Napoleonic Wars (1800-1815)
- Masataro Fukuda (1866-1932) - Japanese general during Sino-Japanese War (1894-1895) and Russo-Japanese War (1904-1905)
- Willis H. Hale (1893-1961) - American Air Force general during World War II (1941-1945); see battle of Midway (1942) and air campaign in Central Pacific (1942-1945)
- Han An-kuo (fl. 135-129 B.C.) - Chinese general during Han-Hsiung-nu Wars (140-80)
- Han Fu-ch'u (1890-1938) - Chinese warlord during Chinese Civil War (1920-1937) and Second Sino-Japanese War (1937-1945)
- Hashimoto Gun (1886-1963) - Japanese general during Second Sino-Japanese War (1937-1945); see North China operations (1937)
- Ho Kung-sun (fl. 129-103 B.C.) - Chinese general and statesman during Han-Hsiung-nu Wars (140-80)
- Hsiang T'ing-pi (d. 1620) - Chinese general during Ming-Manchu Wars (1618-1659)
- Hung Ta-ch'uan (1823-1852) - Chinese rebel general during Taiping Rebellion (1850-1864)
- Sadaaki Kagesa (1893-1948) - Japanese general during Second Sino-Japanese War (1937-1945) and World War II (1941-1945)
- Kameto Kuroshima (1893-1965) - Japanese admiral during World War II (1941-1945)
- Lin Feng-hsiang (d. 1855) - Chinese rebel general during Taiping Rebellion (1850-1864); see battles of Nanking (Nanjing), Kaifeng (1853); Tientsin (Tianjin) (1854)
- Lu Cheng-ts'ao (b. 1904), China
- Lucillianus (Lucillian) (d. 383) - Roman general during Persian War (337-350) and Roman Civil War (361)
- Kikuro Otani (1855-1923) - Japanese general during Sino-Japanese War (1894-1895), Russo-Japanese War (1904-1905) and Siberian expedition (1918-1922)
- Toshiatsu Sakamoto (1858-1941) - Japanese admiral during Sino-Japanese War (1894-1895); see battle of the Yalu (1894)
- Seizo Sakurai (1889-?) - Japanese general during World War II (1941-1945); see Burma campaign (1942); HA-GA (Arakan) (1944) and Sittang breakout (1945)
- Sato Kenryo (1895-1975) - Japanese general during Second Sino-Japanese War (1937-1945)
- Kojiro Sato (1862-1927) - Japanese general during Russo-Japanese War (1904-1905); see siege of Port Arthur (Lushan) (1904-1905).
- 'Abd al-'Aziz ibn-'Abd al-Rahman ibn Faisal ibn Turki 'abd Allah ibn Muhammad al Sa'ud ibn Sa'ud (c. 1880-1953) - Saudi Arabian ruler during conquest of the Najd (1900-1906); conquest of Western Arabia (1906-1919); conquest of the Hejaz (Al Hijaz) (1919-1925) and Saudi-Yemeni War (1934); see capture of Riyadh (Ar Riyad) (1902); Bukairiya (Al Bukayriyah) (1904); Raudhat al Muhanna (1906); Turabah (1919); Jiddah, Medina (Al Madinah) (1925)
- Seng-kuo-lin-ch'in (d. 1865) - Mongol general in Chinese service during Taiping Rebellion (1850-1864), Nien Rebellion (1853-1868), Arrow or Second Opium War (1858-1860) and Nien Rebellion (1862-1863).
- Kamezo Suetaka (1884-1955) - Japanese general during Russo-Japanese border clashes (1938-1939); Second Sino-Japanese War (1937-1945), see Battle of Changkufeng (1938).
- Sun Ch'uan-feng (1884-1935) - Chinese general and warlord during Chinese Revolution (1911), Chinese Civil War (1917-1926) and Northern Expedition (1926-1928), see battles of Nanchang, Yohai, Tehan and Huang-chia-pu (1927).
- Soroku Suzuki (1865-1940) - Japanese general during the First Sino-Japanese War (1894-1895), Boxer Rebellion (1900-1901), Russo-Japanese War (1904-1905) and Siberian expedition (1918-1922)
- Iyozo Tamura (1854-1903) - Japanese general during First Sino-Japanese War (1894-1895).
- Wang Yun-ch'u (1154-1214) - Chinese civil servant and general during the Sung-Chin Wars (1161-1216), see siege of Te-an (De'an) (1206)
14
editSee also
editReferences
edit- Linedecker, Clifford L., ed. Civil War A-Z: The Complete Handbook of America's Bloodiest Conflict. New York: Ballentine Books, 2002. ISBN 0-89141-878-4
- Keegan, John and Andrew Wheatcroft. Who's Who in Military History: From 1453 to the present day. New York: William Morrow & Co. Inc., 1976. ISBN 0-688-02956-6
- Dupuy, Trevor N. The Harper Encyclopedia of Military Biography. New York: HarperCollins Publishers Inc., 1992. ISBN 0-7858-0437-4