A portal is an introductory page for a given topic. It complements the main article of the subject by introducing the reader to key articles, images, and categories that further describe the subject. Portals also help editors find related projects and things they can do to help improve Wikipedia in that area. Featured portals are in bold-italic.
Atlas
Africa
- Algeria • Democratic Republic of the Congo • Libya • Morocco • South Africa • Uganda • Western Sahara
North America
- Canada (Ontario (Eastern Ontario • Toronto) • Nunavut • Quebec (Montreal))
- United States (California (San Francisco Bay Area • California Central Valley) • Chicago • Cleveland • Florida • Las Vegas • New Hampshire • New York City • Oklahoma • Philadelphia • Puerto Rico • Texas (Houston) • Utah • Vermont • Virginia • Wisconsin)
Latin America and Caribbean
- Argentina • Brazil • Cuba • Colombia • Mexico • Panama • Peru • Puerto Rico • Uruguay • Venezuela
Asia
- Bangladesh • Cambodia • China (People's Republic of China, Republic of China, Hong Kong, Taiwan) • India (Goa, Gujarat, Hyderabad, Karnataka, Kerala, Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu, West Bengal) • Indonesia • Japan • Korea • Malaysia • Himalaya region • Pakistan • Philippines • Singapore • Sri Lanka • Thailand • Turkey
Europe
- Albania • Armenia • Azerbaijan • Belarus • Belgium • Bosnia and Herzegovina • Bulgaria • Denmark • Czech Republic (Prague) • Estonia • Finland • France • (Paris) • Germany • Greece • Hungary (Budapest) • Iceland • Ireland • Italy • Latvia • Lithuania • Republic of Macedonia • Moldova • Montenegro • Netherlands • Norway • Poland • Portugal • Romania (Bucharest) • Russia • Serbia • Slovakia • Slovenia • Spain (Galicia • Basque Country) • Sweden • Switzerland • Turkey • Ukraine • United Kingdom (England (Cornwall, London), Northern Ireland, Scotland, Wales)
Middle East
- Iran • Iraq • Israel • Jordan • Palestine • Saudi Arabia • Turkey
Oceania
- Australia • New Zealand
- Archaeology • Austria-Hungary • Classical Civilisation • Current events • Disasters • Egyptology • Germanic Culture • Heraldry and Vexillology • History of Science • Military of ancient Rome
- Ayyavazhi • Anarchism • Baha'i Faith • Bible • Buddhism • Christianity (Eastern Christianity) • Confucianism • Hinduism • Islam • Jainism • Judaism • Latter-day Saints • Mind and Brain • Occult • Philosophy of science • Saints •Shinto • Sikhism • Taoism • Zoroastrianism
Biography • Business and Economics • Education (Schools, University) • Ethnic groups (African American, Berbers, Indigenous peoples of North America) • Espionage • International organisations (European Union, United Nations, NATO) • Law (Human rights) • LGBT • Personal life • Politics (Communism, Fascism, India Government, U.S. Government, U.S. Presidency) • Psychology (Thinking) • Scouting • War (Military of the United States, United States Marine Corps, Military of Australia, Military history of France, American Civil War, Italian Wars) • Weapons of mass destruction
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