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10,000 infantry 7,000 cavalry, plus 3,000 infantry and 2,000 cavalry on arrival 24 guns
Casualties and losses
3,400 dead and 1,600 wounded or missing
Probably about the same as Swedish casualties[1]
A military conflict infobox (sometimes referred to as a warbox) may be used to summarize information about a particular military conflict (a battle, campaign, war, or group of related wars) in a standard manner.
Information summarized in an infobox should follow the general guidance for writing a lead section. It should not "make claims" or present material not covered by the article. As with a lead section, there is some discretion in citing information in an infobox. The same guidance should be applied to an infobox as given for citations in a lead section. Information in an infobox must conform with verifiability, point-of-view and other policies.
Information in the infobox should not be "controversial". Refer the reader to an appropriate section in the article or leave the parameter blank rather than make an unsubstantiated or doubtful claim.
Note: When using parameters, avoid the ambiguous abbreviation "N/A", and instead use "unknown" or "none". All subjective or qualitative judgements and numerical quantities or statistics must be cited to a reliable source (see WP:MILMOS#CITE).
conflict – the name of the conflict being described (e.g. "Battle of Lützen" or "World War I").
width – optional – the width of the infobox, e.g. "400px"; defaults to: "315px".
partof – optional – the larger conflict containing the event described in the article. For battles or campaigns, this should be the war during which the event takes place; for particularly large wars, this may include a theatre (e.g. "the Eastern Front of World War II"). For wars, the parameter may be used to link to a larger group of wars (e.g. the Italian War of 1521–26 to the Italian Wars). It may be necessary to insert "the" before the name of the war for proper grammar.
image – optional – an image for the warbox. Given in the form Example.jpg
caption – optional – the text to be placed below the image.
date – optional – the date of the conflict described. Convention is to give the actual date for battles and the years for wars, but this does not always apply.
place – the location of the conflict. For conflicts covering a wide area, a general description (e.g. "France", or "Europe", or "Worldwide") may be used.
coordinates – optional – the location of the structure, given as a coordinate pair by using {{coord}} with display=inline,title. Used to display the geographic location of the conflict and the location on a map added with the map_type parameter.
map_type – optional – the base map to be used for the location map, e.g. "Scotland"; see {{location map}} for more details.
map_relief – optional – "yes" if the location map is a relief map; see {{location map}} for more details.
map_size – optional – width of the location map in pixels (px), e.g. "150"; defaults to: "220".
map_mark – optional – the name of a file to use as the location map marker, e.g. Green_pog.svg; defaults to: "Red_pog.svg".
map_marksize – optional – width of the location map marker in pixels (px), e.g. "10"; defaults to: "8".
map_caption – optional – caption displayed below the location map; defaults to "Location within {{{map_type}}}", e.g. "Location within Scotland".
map_label – optional – the label placed next to the marker on the location map.
territory – optional – any changes in territorial control as a result of the conflict; this should not be used for overly lengthy descriptions of the peace settlement.
action – optional – In case of Coup d'État, short description of modus operandi, e.g. "...marched over the city...", "...dissolving the Congress of the Republic...", "...take the government hostage ...", "...put the country under military control ...", etc.
result – optional – this parameter may use one of two standard terms: "X victory" or "Inconclusive". The term used is for the "immediate" outcome of the "subject" conflict and should reflect what the sources say. In cases where the standard terms do not accurately describe the outcome, a link or note should be made to the section of the article where the result is discussed in detail (such as "See the Aftermath section"). Such a note can also be used in conjunction with the standard terms but should not be used to conceal an ambiguity in the "immediate" result. Do not introduce non-standard terms like "decisive", "marginal" or "tactical", or contradictory statements like "decisive tactical victory but strategic defeat". Omit this parameter altogether rather than engage in speculation about which side won or by how much.
status – optional – for ongoing conflicts, the current status of the conflict. This should not be used if a final result (above) is provided.
combatants_header – optional – sets the header text for the combatants section. Default is "Belligerents". In case of Coup d'État, use "Government-Insurgents "
combatant1/combatant2/combatant3 – optional – the parties participating in the conflict. This is most commonly the countries whose forces took part in the conflict; however, larger groups (such as alliances or international organizations) or smaller ones (such as particular units, formations, or groups) may be indicated if doing so improves reader understanding. When there is a large number of participants, it may be better to list only the three or four major groups on each side of the conflict, and to describe the rest in the body of the article. The combatant3 field may be used if a conflict has three distinct "sides", and should be left blank on other articles. Combatants should be listed in order of importance to the conflict, be it in terms of military contribution, political clout, or a recognized chain of command. If differing metrics can support alternative lists, then ordering is left to the editors of the particular article. The practice of writing in a "Supported by" subheading is deprecated (see discussion).
combatant1a/combatant2a/combatant3a – optional – in cases where the parties significantly changed over the course of the conflict, these subsidiary fields may be used to provide additional rows for the combatantN fields (above).
combatant1b/combatant2b/combatant3b – optional – additional row, as above.
combatant1c/combatant2c/combatant3c – optional – additional row, as above.
combatant1d/combatant2d/combatant3d – optional – additional row, as above.
combatant1e/combatant2e/combatant3e – optional – additional row, as above.
commander1/commander2/commander3 – optional – the commanders of the military forces involved. For battles, this should include military commanders (and other officers as necessary). For wars, only prominent or notable leaders should be listed, with an upper limit of about seven per combatant column recommended. Ranks and position titles should be omitted. The {{KIA}} and {{POW}} templates may be included immediately after the names of commanders who were killed in action or surrendered and were taken prisoner, respectively. The commander3 field can only be used if the combatant3 field is set.
commander1a/commander2a/commander3a – optional – in cases where the commanders significantly changed over the course of the conflict, these subsidiary fields may be used to provide additional rows for the commanderN fields (above).
commander1b/commander2b/commander3b – optional – additional row, as above.
commander1c/commander2c/commander3c – optional – additional row, as above.
commander1d/commander2d/commander3d – optional – additional row, as above.
commander1e/commander2e/commander3e – optional – additional row, as above.
units1/units2/units3 – optional – the units or formations involved. If a large number of distinct formations is present, it may be better to reference an order of battle in the body of the article than to include the entire list in this field. The units3 field can only be used if the combatant3 field is set.
strength1/strength2 – optional – the numerical strength of the units involved.
polstrength1/polstrength2 – optional – In case of Coup d'Etat, political organizations that supported the government (1) respective the insurgents (2).
milstrength1/milstrength2 – optional – In case of Coup d'Etat, military units that supported the government (1) respective the insurgents (2).
strength3 – optional – if combatant3 is set, this is a third strength field identical to the two above; if it is not set, this is an alternate combined field for use where only the total participation in a conflict is known.
casualties1/casualties2 – optional – casualties suffered (including: dead, wounded, missing, captured and civilian deaths) and equipment losses. Note that this section of the infobox is headed "Casualties and losses". Terms such as "dead" (or "killed"), "wounded", or "captured" should be used in place of abbreviations such as "KIA" or "POW". Where equipment losses are reported, this should be confined to major or significant types of equipment broadly categorized such as: tanks, guns (artillery pieces), aircraft, destroyers etc.
casualties3 – optional – if combatant3 is set, this is a third casualty field identical to the two above; if it is not set, this is an alternate combined field for use where only the total casualties of a conflict are known, or where civilian casualties cannot be directly attributed to either side.
notes – optional – optional field for further notes; this should only be used in exceptional circumstances.
campaignbox – optional – optional field for appending a campaignbox template to the bottom of the infobox, which allows both boxes to float as a single element (useful if there are subsequent left floating images, which would otherwise not be able to float above the campaign box); the template must be specified in the format {{Campaignbox XYZ}}.
Campaignboxes
One common type of navigational template in articles concerning conflicts, wars and related topics is the campaignbox template, intended to provide context and convenient navigation among articles on the battles in a campaign, front, theater or war (or, more rarely, among several campaigns or wars).
If the article includes an infobox, the campaignbox/es are usually placed immediately after it (i.e. just below it). If available, as with infoboxes such as {{Infobox military conflict}}, use the infobox's |campaignbox= parameter:
{{Infobox military conflict
...
}}
{{Campaignbox XXXX}}
or
{{Infobox military conflict
...
| campaignbox = {{campaignbox XXXX}}
}}
Articles may include multiple campaignboxes; typically, these are stacked under the infobox. The most common scenario occurs when two levels of campaignboxes are present – for example, an article about a battle can include both a campaignbox listing the battle itself and an "enclosing" campaignbox listing the campaign, theater or war during which the battle took place. Similarly, an article about a war can include both a campaignbox listing the war (among a series of wars) and a campaignbox for the war itself, listing the battles that took place during it.
Existing campaignboxes may be viewed through the Campaignbox template category to which campaignboxes are added automatically. If a new campaignbox becomes necessary, it should be named Template:Campaignbox XXXX (where XXXX is the (shortened) name of the campaign) and should use {{Campaignbox}} thus:
{{Campaignbox| name =| title =| battles =| notes =}}
The name by which Wikipedia refers to the template, i.e. "Template:Campaignbox XXXX". This can be produced by using {{subst:PAGENAME}}.
title
The name of the campaign or war, which, if an article about the campaign or war exists, should link to it. Dates should not be indicated unless needed for clarity. Note that long links may cause alignment problems; see the troubleshooting guide for more information.
battles
A chronological list of battles and operations in the campaign, linked as [[Battle of YYYY|YYYY]]. A convenient and accessible way to separate the items in the list is to add | listclass = hlist and then use the standard * (asterisk)-based listing format.
notes
(optional) Any explanatory notes needed to clarify the list. This option should be used sparingly.
(raw_name)
(optional; deprecated) This parameter overrides the use of the title in determining the template name and exists for the sake of backward compatibility. When creating a new campaignbox, both title and name should be specified as above and this parameter omitted.
The following optional parameters are passed on to the templates {{Military navigation}} or {{Navbox}} used to create campaignboxes and so can affect their styling. See these two templates' documentation pages for further details.
state
To set whether the campaignbox appears fully visible or collapsed (to titlebar only) when it is first presented by a page.
bodyclass
CSS styling to affect the whole template.
listclass
CSS styling to affect the list of battles, operations, etc. (e.g. to affect |battles=).
The use of special formatting (such as bolding or changes in font size) in the list of battles – particularly to mark battles as "important" – is generally discouraged; while there are a few cases where such approaches may be both helpful to the reader and sufficiently well-sourced that they do not constitute original research, they are usually both unnecessary and potentially confusing. Similarly, dividing the list of battles into multiple blocks by inserting heading-like separations should be exceptional; if such a division is felt to be needed, a better solution may be to split the one campaignbox into two or more.
This infobox may be used to describe a particular planned or executed military operation or attack. For operations that resulted in combat, it can be used as an auxiliary template to the {{infobox military conflict}}, if necessary; for other types of operations, including those that were planned but never executed, it may be used alone. In the case of conflicts that consisted of multiple independent operations, multiple copies of the box may be used on a single article.
{{Infobox military operation|name = Case Blue
|scope = Strategic offensive
|planned_by =''[[Wehrmacht]]''|objective = Capture of [[Caucasus]] oil fields
|executed = Began {{start date|1942|06|28|df=y}}|executed_by =[[Army Group South]]}}
Note: When using parameters, avoid the ambiguous abbreviation "N/A", and instead use "unknown" or "none". All subjective or qualitative judgements and numerical quantities or statistics must be cited to a reliable source (see WP:MILMOS#CITE).
name – the name of the operational plan; names in multiple languages may be provided.
subtitle – alternative name of the conflict being described.
partof – optional – the larger conflict containing the event described in the article.
image – optional – an image for the warbox. Given in the form File:Example.jpg
caption – optional – the text to be placed below the image.
location – optional – the location of the operation.
coordinates – optional – the coordinates for the location above, given as {{coord}} with |display=inline,title. Used to display the geographic location of the conflict and the location on a map added with the map_type parameter. If coordinates for several locations are given, consider if hany shall have the title display.
map_type – optional – the base map to be used for the location map, e.g. "Scotland"; see {{location map}} for more details.
map_size – optional – width of the location map in pixels (px), e.g. "150"; defaults to: "220".
map_caption – optional – caption displayed below the location map; defaults to "Location within {{{map_type}}}", e.g. "Location within Scotland".
map_label – optional – the label placed next to the marker on the location map.
scope – optional – the scope of the operation, such as "Strategic", "Operational", or "Tactical".
type – optional – as an alternative to the scope field above, the type of operation, such as "Suicide attack" or "Ambush".
planned – optional – the date(s) on which the plan was developed.
planned_by – optional – the person or group responsible for developing the plan.
commanded_by – optional – the person commanding the operation.
leader(s) – optional – person(s) leading or that lead the operation.
objective – optional – the objective(s) of the operation.
target – optional – as an alternative to the objective field above, the target(s) of the operation.
date – optional – the date(s), if any, on which the operation was executed. use {{Start date}} (and {{End date}} if required)
time – optional – the time, if any, at which the operation was executed.
time-begin and time-end – optional – as an alternative to the time field above, the start and end times, respectively.
timezone – optional – the timezone of the location of the operation; UTC+X, UTC-X, or UTC (i.e. offset from UTC) is preferred.
executed_by – optional – the people, groups, units, or formations responsible for executing the operation.
outcome – optional – the outcome of the operation from the perspective of the planners with a very brief summary of defence if appropriate.
casualties – optional – any casualties occurring during the execution of the operation.
fatalities – optional – as an alternative to the casualties field above, the number of fatalities occurring during the execution of the operation.
injuries – optional – as an alternative to the casualties field above, the number of injuries occurring during the execution of the operation.
The HTML mark-up produced by this template includes an hCalendar microformat that makes event details readily parsable by computer programs. This aids tasks such as the cataloguing of articles and maintenance of databases. For more information about the use of microformats on Wikipedia, please visit the Microformat WikiProject.
The HTML markup produced by this template includes an hCalendar microformat, which makes the event details parsable by computers, either acting automatically to catalogue article across Wikipedia, or via a browser tool operated by a person, to (for example) add the subject to a calendar or diary application. Within the hCalendar is a Geo microformat, which additionally makes the coordinates (latitude & longitude) parsable, so that they can be, say, looked up on a map, or downloaded to a GPS unit. For more information about the use of microformats on Wikipedia, please see the microformat project.
Geo is produced by calling {{coord}}, and uses HTML classes:
geo
latitude
longitude
Please do not rename or remove these classes nor collapse nested elements which use them. Also, when giving coordinates, please don't be overly precise.
The larger conflict containing the event described in the article.
Page name
optional
Image
image
An image for the warbox given in the form Example.jpg.
File
optional
Image size
image_size
The size of the image
String
optional
Alt
alt
Alternative textual description of the image
String
optional
Caption
caption
The text to be placed below the image.
String
optional
Date
date
The date of the conflict described. Convention is to give the actual date for battles and the years for wars, but this does not always apply.
String
optional
Place
place
The location of the conflict.
String
required
Coordinates
coordinates
The location of the structure, given as a coordinate pair by using {{coord}} with display=inline,title.
String
optional
Map Type
map_type
The base map to be used for the location map, e.g. "Scotland"; see {{location map}} for more details.
String
optional
Map Relief
map_relief
"yes" if the location map is a relief map.
String
optional
Map Size
map_size
Width of the location map in pixels (px).
Default
220
Number
optional
Map Marker
map_mark
File to use as the location map marker.
Default
red_pog.svg
String
optional
Map Marker Size
map_marksize
Width of the location map marker in pixels (px).
Default
8
Number
optional
Map Caption
map_caption
Caption displayed below the location map.
Default
Location within {{{map_type}}}
String
optional
Map Label
map_label
The label placed next to the marker on the location map.
Line
optional
Territory
territory
Any changes in territorial control as a result of the conflict; this should not be used for overly lengthy descriptions of the peace settlement.
String
optional
Result
result
This parameter may use one of two standard terms: "X victory" or "Inconclusive". The term used is for the "immediate" outcome of the "subject" conflict and should reflect what the sources say. In cases where the standard terms do not accurately describe the outcome, a link or note should be made to the section of the article where the result is discussed in detail (such as "See the Aftermath section"). Such a note can also be used in conjunction with the standard terms but should not be used to conceal an ambiguity in the "immediate" result. Do not introduce non-standard terms like "decisive", "marginal" or "tactical", or contradictory statements like "decisive tactical victory but strategic defeat". Omit this parameter altogether rather than engage in speculation about which side won or by how much.
String
optional
Status
status
For ongoing conflicts, the current status of the conflict.
Line
optional
"Combatants" Header Text
combatants_header
Sets the header text for the combatants section.
Default
Belligerents
Line
optional
Combatant 1
combatant1
A party participating in the conflict.
String
optional
Combatant 2
combatant2
A party participating in the conflict.
String
optional
Combatant 3
combatant3
A party participating in the conflict. (only if the conflict has three distinct "sides")
String
optional
Combatant 1a
combatant1a
In cases where the parties significantly changed over the course of the conflict, this field may be used to provide additional rows for the Combatant 1 field.
String
optional
Combatant 2a
combatant2a
In cases where the parties significantly changed over the course of the conflict, this field may be used to provide additional rows for the Combatant 2 field.
String
optional
Combatant 3a
combatant3a
In cases where the parties significantly changed over the course of the conflict, this field may be used to provide additional rows for the Combatant 3 field.
String
optional
Combatant 1b
combatant1b
In cases where the parties significantly changed over the course of the conflict, this field may be used to provide additional rows for the Combatant 1 field.
String
optional
Combatant 2b
combatant2b
In cases where the parties significantly changed over the course of the conflict, this field may be used to provide additional rows for the Combatant 2 field.
String
optional
Combatant 3b
combatant3b
In cases where the parties significantly changed over the course of the conflict, this field may be used to provide additional rows for the Combatant 3 field.
String
optional
Combatant 1c
combatant1c
In cases where the parties significantly changed over the course of the conflict, this field may be used to provide additional rows for the Combatant 1 field.
String
optional
Combatant 2c
combatant2c
In cases where the parties significantly changed over the course of the conflict, this field may be used to provide additional rows for the Combatant 2 field.
String
optional
Combatant 3c
combatant3c
In cases where the parties significantly changed over the course of the conflict, this field may be used to provide additional rows for the Combatant 3 field.
String
optional
Combatant 1d
combatant1d
In cases where the parties significantly changed over the course of the conflict, this field may be used to provide additional rows for the Combatant 1 field.
String
optional
Combatant 2d
combatant2d
In cases where the parties significantly changed over the course of the conflict, this field may be used to provide additional rows for the Combatant 2 field.
String
optional
Combatant 3d
combatant3d
In cases where the parties significantly changed over the course of the conflict, this field may be used to provide additional rows for the Combatant 3 field.
String
optional
Commander of Combatant 1
commander1
The commanders of the military forces of Combatant (1) involved.
String
optional
Commander of Combatant 2
commander2
The commanders of the military forces of Combatant 2 involved.
String
optional
Commander of Combatant 3
commander3
The commanders of the military forces of Combatant 3 involved.
String
optional
Units of Combatant 1
units1
The units or formations of Combatant 1 involved. If a large number of distinct formations is present, it may be better to reference an order of battle in the body of the article than to include the entire list in this field.
String
optional
Units of Combatant 2
units2
The units or formations of Combatant 2 involved. If a large number of distinct formations is present, it may be better to reference an order of battle in the body of the article than to include the entire list in this field.
String
optional
Units of Combatant 3
units3
The units or formations of Combatant 3 involved. If a large number of distinct formations is present, it may be better to reference an order of battle in the body of the article than to include the entire list in this field.
String
optional
Strength of Combatant 1
strength1
The numerical strength of Combatant 1.
String
optional
Strength of Combatant 2
strength2
The numerical strength of Combatant 2.
String
optional
Strength of Combatant 3
strength3
If Combatant 3 is set, this field is for the numerical strength of Combatant 3. If Combatant 3 is not set, this is an alternate combined field for use where only the total participation in a conflict is known.
String
optional
Casualties of Combatant 1
casualties1
Casualties suffered by Combatant 1 (including: dead, wounded, missing, captured and civilian deaths) and equipment losses. Terms such as "dead" (or "killed"), "wounded", or "captured" should be used in place of abbreviations such as "KIA" or "POW". Where equipment losses are reported, this should be confined to major or significant types of equipment broadly categorized such as: tanks, guns (artillery pieces), aircraft, destroyers etc.
String
optional
Casualties of Combatant 2
casualties2
Casualties suffered by Combatant 2 (including: dead, wounded, missing, captured and civilian deaths) and equipment losses. Terms such as "dead" (or "killed"), "wounded", or "captured" should be used in place of abbreviations such as "KIA" or "POW". Where equipment losses are reported, this should be confined to major or significant types of equipment broadly categorized such as: tanks, guns (artillery pieces), aircraft, destroyers etc.
String
optional
Casualties of Combatant 3
casualties3
If Combatant 3 is set, this field is for the casualties suffered by Combatant 3, (including: dead, wounded, missing, captured and civilian deaths) and equipment losses. Terms such as "dead" (or "killed"), "wounded", or "captured" should be used in place of abbreviations such as "KIA" or "POW". Where equipment losses are reported, this should be confined to major or significant types of equipment broadly categorized such as: tanks, guns (artillery pieces), aircraft, destroyers etc. If combatant3 is not set, this is an alternate combined field for use where only the total casualties of a conflict are known, or where civilian casualties cannot be directly attributed to either side.
String
optional
Notes
notes
Optional field for further notes; this should only be used in exceptional circumstances.
String
optional
Campaignbox
campaignbox
Optional field for appending a campaignbox template to the bottom of the infobox, which allows both boxes to float as a single element (useful if there are subsequent left floating images, which would otherwise not be able to float above the campaign box); the template must be specified in the format {{Campaignbox XYZ}}.