Talk:Charles Ellis, 6th Baron Howard de Walden
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Corrections, anonymous user, 19/7/12
[edit]I have updated the page to reflect what it says on the Wikipedia page concerning British envoys to Belgium, and indeed any published work mentioning Lord Howard de Walden - that he served as British Minister to Brussels until 1868. Astounding as this may seem to the modern eye, he was out there for an incredibly long time, but this was hardly unusual by the standards of the day (the 2nd Lord Cowley and Lord Stratford de Redcliffe provided other good examples of diplomats with phenomenally long careers, who served into old age.) — Preceding unsigned comment added by 139.222.192.72 (talk) 12:44, 19 July 2012 (UTC)
Untitled
[edit]There is an accreditation to the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica at the bottom of the page. I am sorry all data that was included in the article that I put in was not from 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica but from my own research and books that I hold. I did not look at the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica or any other encyclopaedia when researching the information I put into the article. I am a genealogist and as such am very careful on copyright in this instance it was never an issue to be considered Laurie
- Hi Laurie. Three points about this. First, the Wikipedia has a policy of not including original research. We're just not geared to it in any way, and people providing it are often just using the Wikipedia as free webspace.
- As the policy states,
- 1. It's an obligation of Wikipedia to its readers that the information they read here be reliable and reputable, and so we rely only on credible or reputable published sources...
- 2. Credible sources provide readers with resources they may consult to pursue their own research. After all, there are people who turn to encyclopedias as a first step in research, not as a last step.
- 3. Relying on citable sources helps clarify what points of view are represented in an article, and thus helps us comply with our NPOV policy.
- 4. Relying on credible sources also may encourage new contributors. For example, if someone knows of an important source that the article has not drawn on, he or she may feel more confident in adding important material to the article.
- Your research may or may not be covered under this policy.
- Secondly, we ask people to cite their sources. This wasn't done, so when editing the article I had to do my own research (rather than just checking with your original sources) to confirm points that were not clear in the original article. And that leads to...
- Thirdly, whilst you may have used original research, I didn't when editing the article. I used the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica to check points and to collect some detail; therefore they really need crediting as a reference, so I did.
- I'm sorry if any of this wasn't clear to you, especially the point on original research, but also that any articles you write here are likely to be edited, rephrased and re-researched by others, that being the nature of an Open Content/Open Edit Wiki.
If you are going to credit the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica perhaps it would have been wiser to ask were my research came from and given credit to that. My research was gained from reading read the original records in the British Library in Euston Road London. That I presume is were the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica got its records from? Living in London we do have The LIbarey and Kew Record Centre at out disposal. Laurie
- I'll drop you a line on your talk page shortly with some useful links to policies and guidelines, but would encourage you contact me on my talk page (click "hello" in the signature that follows) if you have any questions about this article, my edits/editing or the Wikipedia in general. I'd hate to be the one to discourage you as we need you here at the 'pedia! Cheers ●REDVERS HELLO●EMAIL●DOINGS 20:07, 31 October 2005 (UTC)
- Genealogical information for British peers is probably (ultimately) derived from Burke's or Debrett's, even if it's been extruded through someone's genealogy file. A lot of this is online at thepeerage.com, for instance, so this probably isn't original research; but a citation would be nice. Choess 00:12, 2 November 2005 (UTC)
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