Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/2013-04-08/Featured content

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Featured content

Wikipedia loves poetry

Lie Kim Hok is the Chinese-Indonesian author of the 200-page poem Sair Tjerita Siti Akbari. The well-known poem, written in the Malay language, is the subject of a new featured article.

This Signpost "Featured content" report covers material promoted between 31 March and 6 April 2013.

Featured articles

Four featured articles were promoted this week.

English cricketer Arthur Shrewsbury, seen in the new featured article Leg before wicket.
  • Prince George of Denmark (nom) by DrKiernan. George (1653–1708) was the husband of Great Britain's Queen Anne. His marriage to her was arranged in the early 1680s under the aim of establishing an alliance between the English and Danish nations to contain Dutch maritime power. William of Orange, George's brother-in-law, disliked the treaty, mostly because he was married to Anne's elder sister, Mary.
  • Common Starling (nom) by Jimfbleak and Cwmhiraeth. This mid-sized passerine bird belonging to the Sturnidae family has around a dozen subspecies breeding across Europe and Western Asia. Also known as the European Starling, this species has been declining in numbers in parts of northern and western Europe since the last three decades, mostly thanks to the reduction of grassland invertebrates as food for growing chicks.
  • Sair Tjerita Siti Akbari (nom) by Crisco 1492. An 1884 Malay-language syair (poem) by Lie Kim Hok that was indirectly adapted from Raja Ali Haji's 1846 poem Sjair Abdoel Moeloek. The poem tells of a woman who passes as a man to free her husband from the Sultan of Hindustan, and was written over a period of several years and influenced by European literature. Siti Akbari had two reprints and a film adaptation in 1940.
  • Leg before wicket (nom) by Sarastro1. The leg before wicket is one of the ways in which a batsman can be dismissed in the sport of cricket. It first appeared in the laws in 1774, as batsmen began to use their pads to prevent the ball hitting their wicket. Following a number of failed proposals for reform, in 1935 the law was expanded, such that batsmen could be dismissed even if the ball pitched outside the line of off stump.

Featured pictures

Two featured pictures were promoted this week.

Rainy Season in the Tropics by American landscape painter Fredric Edwin Church