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Cleanup tagged articles with a reason field from February 2026

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Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva
president of Brazil from 2003 to 2011 and since 2023
Jacksonville
city in Duval County, and largest city in State of Florida, United States
Unification of Italy
creation of the politically and administratively integrated nation of Italy (1815–1871)
siege
thumb|upright=1.35|Depiction of 70 AD Siege of Jerusalem (70 CE)|siege of Jerusalem by [[Francesco Hayez, 1867]]
occultation
thumb|200px|In this July 1997 still frame captured from video, the bright star Aldebaran has just reappeared on the dark limb of the waning crescent moon in this predawn occultation.
carpooling
thumb|upright|A sign encouraging carpooling during the gas shortage resulting from the 1973 oil crisis
Ratnagiri
thumb|Bhagwati temple Ratnagiri (IAST:Ratnāgirī ; [ɾət̪n̪aːɡiɾiː]) is a port city on the Arabian Sea coast in Ratnagiri District in southwestern Maharashtra, India. The district is part of the Konkan division of Maharashtra. The city is known for the Hapus or Alphonso mangoes and is colloquially referred to as the Mango City. Ratnagiri is the birthplace of Indian independence activist Lokmanya Tilak. Thibaw, the last king of Burma, alongside his consort Supayalat and two infant daughters were exiled to a two-storied brick mansion in Ratnagiri. The building is now known as Thibaw Palace.
Ferdinand II of Naples
King of Naples
Stomiidae
Stomiidae is a family of deep-sea ray-finned fish, including the barbeled dragonfishes, that live in all oceans in a wide range of depths. They are quite small, ranging around long, and they exhibit a strong sexual dimorphism. These fish are apex predators and have enormous jaws filled with fang-like teeth; their specially adapted neurocranium and upper-jaw system allows them to open their jaws to more than 100 degrees. This ability allows them to consume extremely large prey, often 50% greater than their standard length.
Naso lituratus
species of fish
Henri Désiré Landru
sentenced to death in France
Daytona 500
auto race held annually in Daytona, Florida, United States
Endre Botka
Hungarian association football player
Usman Khawaja
Australian cricketer
Gypsy Vanner horse
horse breed
Alan Gua
mythical figure from The Secret History of the Mongols
José Mauro de baskonseloz
Brazilian writer (1920–1984)
Earconwald
Saint Erkenwald (also Earconwald), died 693, was a Saxon prince who served as Bishop of London between 675 and 693 and is the first post-Roman-period Bishop of London to begin the unbroken succession in the Saxon See of London. He is the eponymous subject of the poem St. Erkenwald, regarded as one of the most important poems in the foundations of English literature, and thought to be by the same author as Sir Gawain and the Green Knight. The poem is concerned with ecumenical and interfaith dynamics. He is regarded as the patron saint of London and was called Lundoniae maximum sanctus, 'the mos
Dor
2006 film by Nagesh Kukunoor
European balance of power
tenet in international relations
point bar
depositional feature of alluvium that accumulates on the inside bend of streams and rivers below the slip-off slope
Danny Kortchmar
American musician
Great Kurultáj
traditional event of peoples of Central Asian nomadic origins
Einstein family
notable European family
list of converts to Islam
Wikimedia list article
Allied Democratic Forces insurgency
Islamist insurgency in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Uganda
Rider deaths in motorcycle racing
Wikimedia list article
Bruce Springsteen & The E Street Band: Live in New York City
documentary film directed by Chris Hilson (2001)
Sam Hocevar
French software and video game developer
research paper mill
organisation that produces and sells fraudulent research manuscripts
autistic special interest
narrow and passionate interest experienced by autistic people that can spark positive feelings
feminism in Taiwan
history of the feminist movement in Taiwan
St Bibiana
sculpture by Gian Lorenzo Bernini
Cooper MacNeil
American racing driver
Qaidjoher Ezzuddin
Indian Imam
Monumental Clock of Pachuca
monument in Mexico
Goumangas
thumb|Goumang Goumang, also known as Jumang (), is an auxiliary god of the Fuxi family. The Classic of Mountains and Seas described his appearance as "having a human face and a bird's body, riding on two dragons". He is the god of wood and spring, in charge of life and health.
Verlag Herder
German publisher
Adam Barta
American singer