Jump to content

Talk:Athanasios Rhousopoulos/GA1

Page contents not supported in other languages.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

GA Review

[edit]
GA toolbox
Reviewing

Article (edit | visual edit | history) · Article talk (edit | history) · Watch

Reviewer: Cerebellum (talk · contribs) 10:27, 7 November 2023 (UTC)[reply]


Hello, I'll be reviewing this article :) It could take up to a week. --Cerebellum (talk) 10:27, 7 November 2023 (UTC)[reply]

Hi - thanks for taking it on. Happy to wait or to work in stages: whatever's easiest. UndercoverClassicist T·C 10:47, 7 November 2023 (UTC)[reply]

No need to work in stages as there's not much work to be done! This is a lovely article.

  • Prose: Excellent prose! I was going to talk about Athens' versus Athens's but you already caught that.
  • References: Great formatting and citation density! I spot checked about 10 refs and came up with a couple minor comments, listed below.
  • Coverage: Absolutely, you have dug deep into the sources including foreign language and 19th century sources.
  • Neutral: Yes, a good example is the controversy with Schliemann where you present the dispute but note that from a modern perspective, Rhousopoulos was kind of right.
  • Stable: Yes.
  • Images: Looks great, you even have alt text for images. One pedantic tagging concern - non-US images are supposed to have two tags, one for the country of origin and one for the US. File:Athanasios Rousopoulos.JPG needs a US tag, and File:Archaeologiki Efimeris 1862 cover.jpg needs a country tag. File:Stefanos Koumanoudis.JPG is an example of what it should look like. This policy is located here.

Comments

[edit]
  • The Archaeological Society of Athens, a learned society founded in 1837 with significant responsibility for archaeological work and heritage management in Greece throughout the 19th century, had stagnated and all but disbanded between April 1854 and 1858, under pressure from its own financial troubles and a cholera outbreak that had killed its president, Georgios Gennadios. Quite a long sentence, could we break it up into two sentences?
In the works. UndercoverClassicist T·C 14:03, 10 November 2023 (UTC) Done. UndercoverClassicist T·C 16:09, 10 November 2023 (UTC)[reply]
  • Is there a particular reason why the currency equivalents are in 2021 pounds rather than 2023 pounds? And is it possible to provide currency equivalents for the drachma amounts? I see that you included Rhousopoulos' salary for comparison, which is helpful. I'm not sure if calculating the equivalents yourself would count as OR.
I don't think the inflation template goes beyond 2021. To be honest, I'm also not generally a fan of calculated equivalents, because the cost of living was so different: saying that 300 drachmas a month was "equivalent" to £10 (or whatever) misses the point that £10 went an awful lot further than it does today. My general policy, where it's possible, is to use only the equivalents (e.g. it's much more useful to read 'R. was fined three months' salary' than a fairly arbitrary conversion). UndercoverClassicist T·C 14:03, 10 November 2023 (UTC)[reply]
  • I love the section about the tiff in the Hanover newspapers, which you appear to have dug up straight from the original newspaper articles! A beautiful bit of historical color. Is there a reason you prefer Hannover instead of Hanover?
  • Why is this source commented out in "Early life and education"? <!--{{sfn|Galanakis|2008|p=297}}-->
  • For Whitley 2020, the link goes to The chapter "Homeric communities", I think it is supposed to go to "Homer in history".
In the works. UndercoverClassicist T·C 14:03, 10 November 2023 (UTC) I think that one was a rogue citation bot: the S2CID also goes to the same (wrong) place. Can't find Whitley in OA anywhere, so removed. UndercoverClassicist T·C 16:09, 10 November 2023 (UTC)[reply]
  • For ref #31, again I like that you went into the 19th-century sources. The google books version has "valuable note" instead of "very helpful note" on page 621, is your version different? Of course it means the same thing.
In the works. UndercoverClassicist T·C 14:03, 10 November 2023 (UTC) It may have, but as the meaning is so similar, it makes sense to harmonise with the edition to which we're linking. Changed. UndercoverClassicist T·C 16:09, 10 November 2023 (UTC)[reply]
  • described Rhousopoulos in 1846 as "antiquities-mad" (αρχαιομανής). I could not find this in Galanakis 2012a. I'm guessing it is in a different Galanakis 2012 article.
In the works. UndercoverClassicist T·C 14:03, 10 November 2023 (UTC) Yup - 2012d. Fixed. UndercoverClassicist T·C 16:09, 10 November 2023 (UTC)[reply]

@UndercoverClassicist: Review complete, just a few minor comments! Let me know what you think. Cerebellum (talk) 11:47, 10 November 2023 (UTC)[reply]

Thanks -- I've replied to the ones that I can do quickly; will get to the others later on. UndercoverClassicist T·C 14:03, 10 November 2023 (UTC)[reply]
All replied to now, I think. UndercoverClassicist T·C 16:09, 10 November 2023 (UTC)[reply]
Awesome :) Great job on this article, pass as GA. Cerebellum (talk) 04:31, 11 November 2023 (UTC)[reply]