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User:Slgrandson

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Unified login: Slgrandson is the unique login of this user for all public Wikimedia projects.
Slgrandson
— Wikipedian  —
Tanuki-avatar representation (by ZeroThePrizimix (talk · contribs))
Tanuki-avatar representation (by ZeroThePrizimix (talk · contribs))
Name
Reginald Routhwick
Born31 July 1986
Current locationDover, Florida
Education and employment
Primary schoolSt. Mary's Primary (S.M.P.), Roseau (1993–99)
High schoolSt. Mary's Academy (S.M.A.), Roseau (1999–2004)
CollegeDominica State College (2004–06; dropped out)
Hobbies, favourites and beliefs
Aliases
  • "Slgrandson" (Wikimedia)
  • "Routhwick" (Reddit/Miraheze)
  • "dcjc" (FurAffinity/Inkbunny/deviantART)
Interests
Userboxes
Constant Noble
FormerlyConstitution Books (until January 2019)
Company typePrivate
Industry
  • Publishing
  • Cartography
Genre
Founded2011 (officially launched in 2012)
Headquarters
Area served
Worldwide
OwnerReginald Routhwick (a.k.a Slgrandson)
Number of employees
1
Websiteconstantnoble.miraheze.org

Reginald Routhwick is the pen name of a Commonwealth of Dominica expatriate who contributes to Wikimedia as Slgrandson. Also known as Routhwick at Reddit, Miraheze, and Steemit/Hive.blog, and under his real-life initials across deviantART, FurAffinity, Inkbunny, IMDb, and elsewhere. Born in 1986, Routhwick is now based in Dover, Florida (after previously residing in his home suburb of Stock Farm, Roseau [until June 2005]; the Bronx of New York City [until August 2005]; and Waterbury, Connecticut [until January 2017]).

"Slgrandson"/"Routhwick" is among only a handful of Wikimedia members—and practically the only wiki aficionado—to hail from Dominica (out of a few dozen more from the Caribbean region). The "Slgrandson" alias honours one of his relatives through a contraction of the phrase "Sylvie Lewis' grandson" (the first two letters are her initials).

Routhwick runs the Constant Noble creative-venture label responsible for a conlang project called Tovasala, né Relformaide, as well as two forthcoming book projects (Unspooled and The Sevton Saga). Constant Noble also specialises in geofictional cartography, and (as Constitution Books) once dealt with public-domain reprints for the Amazon Kindle market during the early 2010s.

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Special pages

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Statistics (as of edit #10,000)

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Contributions
First edit February 23, 2005
(3:19 p.m. AST)
Contributions 10,000[nb 1]
Unique pages edited 6,135
Average edits/page 1.86
Edits by namespace
(Ties are broken in favour of the most recently-edited namespace.)
Namespace Edits Percentage
Articles 4205 42.09%
User talk 2765 27.67%
Wikipedia 1259 12.60%
Talk 834 8.35%
User 613 6.14%
Template 112 1.12%
File 94 0.94%
Wikipedia talk 33 0.33%
Template talk 23 0.23%
Category 23 0.23%
Portal 8 0.08%
Help 8 0.08%
MediaWiki talk 4 0.04%
File talk 3 0.03%
Help talk 3 0.03%
Portal talk 2 0.02%
Category talk 2 0.02%

Milestone edit: 139th support on WP:Requests for adminship/VernoWhitney (November 10, 2010)

Today's news

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ATR 72-500 Voepass in August 2023
The ATR 72 involved in the crash

Today's snapshot

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The Victorious Youth is a Greek bronze sculpture created between 300 and 100 BCE. It is currently displayed at the Getty Villa, a museum in Pacific Palisades, California. The sculpture was found in the summer of 1964 in the sea off Fano on the Adriatic coast of Italy, snagged in the nets of an Italian fishing trawler. In 1977, the J. Paul Getty Museum purchased the bronze. Bernard Ashmole, an archaeologist and art historian, was asked to inspect the sculpture by Munich art dealer Heinz Herzer; Ashmole and other scholars attributed it to Lysippos, a prolific sculptor of Classical Greek art. The research and conservation of the Victorious Youth dates from the 1980s to the 1990s and is based on studies in classical bronzes by ancient Mediterranean specialists in collaboration with the Getty Museum. Scholars have various theories as to the identity of the subject, the least controversial of which is that the figure was an ancient Olympic runner who held a victor's palm branch in his left arm. His right hand reaches to touch the winner's olive wreath on his head.

(Sculpture credit: attributed to Lysippos; photographed by the J. Paul Getty Museum)

  1. ^ From X!'s tool; tabulating the statistics below, this is actually nine edits short of the milestone. The number is based on the "Live edits" displayed on the page.