21:1721:17, 26 February 2015diffhist+4
Margaret Thatcher
As a peer in her own right, she is properly referred to as "Baroness Thatcher." Calling her "Lady Thatcher" is too informal, and it doesn't follow the precedent used on other baroness' profiles.
15 February 2015
13:4513:45, 15 February 2015diffhist+13 m
Ramesseum
→History: Corrected the wiki link for Tuya so that it links to the article about Queen Tuya instead of the article about the geological formation known as a tuya.
16:4316:43, 10 January 2015diffhist+4
Margaret Thatcher
Calling her "Lady Thatcher" in this context isn't really correct. Her formal title was "Baroness Thatcher" and while "Lady" can be correct in social settings, an encyclopedia entry requires greater formality.
15:3015:30, 3 November 2013diffhist−92
Maat
I originally tagged this as "failed verification," but I think "citation needed" is more appropriate. The old citation of Russ VerSteeg's "Law in Ancient Egypt" doesn't support the claim.
18:0418:04, 25 August 2013diffhist−210
Maat
Calling The Book of the Dead a "spiritual text" is problematic. It's a book of spells to help the deceased survive in the Afterlife, not a moral handbook like the Bible. It certainly wasn't quoted in legislation.Tag: Visual edit
16 July 2013
15:0815:08, 16 July 2013diffhist−39
Medical Act 1983
This article was in the wrong category. The Medical Act 1983 wasn't passed under the Parliament Acts; you can tell just by looking at the enacting formula, which includes the standard reference to the "Lords Spiritual and Temporal."Tag: Visual edit