Wikidata:Property proposal/Service number

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Service number[edit]

Originally proposed at Wikidata:Property proposal/Person

   Not done
DescriptionService number given to the subject by a military organisation
Representsservice number (Q7455778)
Data typeString
Domainhuman (Q5)
Allowed values[^\s\/]+
ExampleDouglas Bader (Q348780) → 26151
SourceVarious external references and historic sources
See alsoUnited States Armed Forces service number (P2028)
Motivation

A military figure's service number is intended to be an identifier for them. It is usually part of the historical record, particularly for people killed in action and buried in military cemeteries, or who received military awards. In some contexts it can even be easier to identify a person from a number than a name.

We currently have United States Armed Forces service number (P2028), but this is very narrowly defined - it only applies to US personnel under the various 1918-1974 numbering schemes. The sheer range of different schemes used over the years make it impractical to create a lot of specific-use properties like this; a more generic property would be usable on all people, perhaps with a military branch (P241) qualifier where it is necessary to clarify which numbering system was used.

This proposal comes out of a discussion on project chat last month; ping @Pigsonthewing, Jura1, Hsarrazin, Richard Arthur Norton (1958- ): who commented there or on the P2028 proposal. Andrew Gray (talk) 23:18, 4 December 2017 (UTC)[reply]

Discussion
  • I would also prefer to repurpose P2028, but there was opposition to that... Regarding qualifiers, I think these would probably be advisable, though perhaps in some cases a "numbering system" property qualifier would be more appropriate than P241. Andrew Gray (talk) 21:50, 5 December 2017 (UTC)[reply]
  • The point is that it could be a generic service number property; we could use qualifiers to indicate what it was for (in this case, the RAF). And no, it is not a social security number of any kind. Andrew Gray (talk) 21:50, 5 December 2017 (UTC)[reply]
  • Actually, on some level it makes sense as the proposed property isn't using "external identifier" as propertytype. There is just a risk that it ends up including social security numbers.
    --- Jura 16:26, 13 December 2017 (UTC)[reply]