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New featured articles

Brigadier Robert Nimmo in 1945
Silver coin minted in Ibn al-Ash'ath's name
SMS Friedrich Carl in 1912
Robert Nimmo (Peacemaker67)
Lieutenant General Nimmo was a senior Australian Army officer who served in both world wars and later with the British Commonwealth Occupation Force in Japan, as General Officer Commanding (GOC) Northern Command in Australia, and finally as the chief military observer of the United Nations Military Observer Group in India and Pakistan from 1950 until his death in 1966. In this last role, he was responsible for monitoring the 800-kilometre (500 mi)-long ceasefire line between the Indian and Pakistani armed forces, and proved so successful that, in 1964, the UN Secretariat described him as "by far the most successful United Nations observer".
Thomas Hardy (Royal Navy officer, died 1732) (Pickersgill-Cunliffe)
Rear-Admiral Hardy joined the Royal Navy sometime before 1688 and saw action in the Battles of Barfleur and La Hougue in 1692. In 1702 he took command of HMS Pembroke. After fighting in the Battle of Cádiz, he discovered the location of the Franco-Spanish fleet, leading to the Battle of Vigo Bay. In August 1707, while escorting a convoy to Lisbon, Hardy's squadron met that of René Duguay-Trouin, chasing him until dusk and then returning to the convoy. Returning to England, Hardy was court martialled for not fully engaging Duguay-Trouin, but was acquitted and returned to the Mediterranean in 1708 to see further combat. He was promoted to rear-admiral in 1711. In 1715 he was second-in-command of the Baltic Fleet during in the Great Northern War. He was dismissed in 1716, possibly because of Jacobite sympathies.
Eric Harrison (RAAF officer) (Ian Rose)
Three years after his last visit to these pages, Ian brings another Australian aviator to FA. Eric Harrison made the country's first military flight, in March 1914, and helped lay the basis for the Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF). Along with Henry Petre, he established Australia's first air base at Point Cook, Victoria, and its inaugural training unit, the Central Flying School. During World War I, Harrison was in charge of instructing pilots of the Australian Flying Corps. He joined the RAAF as a founding member in 1921, and spent much of his subsequent career in technical services and air accident investigation. Promoted to group captain in 1935, he served until his sudden death at the end of World War II. Harrison's technical abilities and long association with military flying in Australia earned him the title of "Father of the RAAF" for many years, until the mantle was assumed by Air Marshal Sir Richard Williams.
Ibn al-Ash'ath (Cplakidas)
Another in a series by Cplakidas focusing on early Muslim history, this article details the life and times of Abd al-Rahman ibn Muhammad ibn al-Ash'ath. A distinguished Arab nobleman and general under the early Umayyad Caliphate, he was most notable for leading a failed rebellion against the Umayyad viceroy of the east, al-Hajjaj ibn Yusuf, in 700–703. According to Cplakidas' nomination statement, "His story is essentially the story of the Iraqi Arabs under the Umayyads, and especially during the governorship of al-Hajjaj ibn Yusuf".
Northolt siege (HJ Mitchell)
Another of Harry's works on siege actions in the British Isles, this article concerns a hostage situation in London in 1985. According to Harry's nomination statement, it is "mostly remembered today as the first time a police officer from a dedicated armed unit shot a suspect. Up until that point, most suspects cornered by armed police either surrendered or shot themselves. It marked a turning point from the Dixon of Dock Green image of an entirely unarmed police force (which was always a myth) towards the use of more professional teams of specialist armed officers to deal with armed criminality." The protagonist had already fatally stabbed his sister-in-law before taking her daughter and his own daughter hostage; he was shot twice during the action but both he and the girls survived; he was sentenced to life imprisonment.
SMS Friedrich Carl (Parsecboy)
After a hiatus of 18 months, PB returns to the FA lists with another in his series on German warships. Friedrich Carl was an armoured cruiser built in the early 1900s for the German Imperial Navy. Commissioned in 1903, she was a part of the main German battleship force until she was placed in reserve in 1909. Friedrich Carl was recommissioned upon the outbreak of war in 1914, and operated in the Baltic Sea until November that year, when she struck two Russian mines and sank; all but seven or eight members of her crew survived.


New featured topics

SMS Fürst Bismarck, the first armored cruiser of Germany, during a visit to the US, c. 1910–15
Armored cruisers of Germany (Parsecboy)
Germany commissioned nine armored cruisers between 1900 and 1909, all serving during World War I; three survived the war to be broken up for scrap in 1919–21. This Good Topic was promoted to a Featured Topic with the elevation of SMS Friedrich Carl to Featured Article status.


New featured pictures

New A-class articles

A depiction of Sayf al-Dawla and his court
Coin depicting Constantine (right) and Basil I
Sayf al-Dawla (Cplakidas)
The subject of this article is one of the most famous medieval Arab warriors, a figure both illustrious and tragic. Growing up during the collapse of the Abbasid empire in the early 10th century, Sayf al-Dawla carved out for himself a principality in northern Syria and Upper Mesopotamia, challenged a resurgent Byzantium for over twenty years, established a splendid court that gathered some of the foremost scholars of his time, and finally ended his days in illness and defeat. Cplakidas noted that the article article is of some significance for them as it was during process of researching this fascinating figure that they became seriously involved with early Islamic history, which now takes up most of their time on Wikipedia.
Battle of Helena (Hog Farm)
The Battle of Helena was fought on July 4, 1863, near Helena, Arkansas, as part of the American Civil War. Union troops had captured the city in July 1862, and had been using it as a base of operations. Over 7,500 Confederate troops attempted to capture Helena in hopes of relieving some of the pressure on the Confederate army besieged in Vicksburg, Mississippi. Despite being outnumbered, the 4,100 Union troops defeated the Confederates poorly coordinated attacks and inflicted heavy casualties. Union troops subsequently used Helena as a waypoint for their successful campaign to capture Little Rock, Arkansas.
Constantine (son of Basil I) (Iazyges)
Constantine was a junior Byzantine emperor, alongside Basil I as the senior emperor, from January 868 to 3 September 879. Constantine was the intended heir of Basil and as such received much attention from him and accompanied him on military campaigns, including one in Syria, for which he shared a triumph. In comparison, his younger brother, Leo VI, was made co-emperor merely to secure the imperial lineage and bolster legitimacy. However, Constantine died of fever on 3 September 879, before his father. After his death, Leo became the primary heir, and another brother, Alexander, was raised to co-emperor.
Soviet cruiser Admiral Isachenkov (Simongraham)
Admiral Isachenkov was a Project 1134A Berkut A (NATO reporting name 'Kresta II'-class) large anti-submarine ship of the Soviet Navy. The seventh ship of the class, the vessel was launched in 1972 and served during the Cold War with the Northern Fleet, often operating in the Atlantic Ocean but also travelling to various ports in the Mediterranean Sea. The ship acted as flagship for the Minister of Defence, Marshal of the Soviet Union Andrei Grechko, during the exercise Okean-75 in 1975 and operated alongside the newly launched aircraft carrier Kiev in 1977 and 1978. Admiral Isachenkov was decommissioned in 1992.


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