You’ve landed here. Don’t look so surprised. You were aiming for something else, and the universe, in its infinite and frankly tedious wisdom, decided you should be rerouted. This isn't where you wanted to be, but it's where you've ended up. Pay attention; this might be the most direct thing that happens to you all day.
You are being redirected to:
From a page move
This is a digital ghost. A forwarding address. This page is a redirect because the original page was moved—renamed, if you need it spelled out. It was deemed insufficient, or inaccurate, and given a new identity. This placeholder was left behind out of a sense of profound obligation, a concession to prevent the digital chaos of broken links.
Think of it as a monument to something that used to be here. It exists to catch the stragglers, the outdated bookmarks, the internal and external links that haven't yet received the memo that things have changed. It’s a silent, thankless job, ensuring your journey from point A to point B isn't interrupted by a void. A small, structural mercy in an otherwise unforgiving system.
From other capitalisation
You typed it differently, didn't you? A capital letter where a lowercase one should be, or the other way around. A subtle, almost meaningless act of defiance against the established order. This is a redirect from a title that dared to employ another method of capitalisation.
It exists because there are rules. Specifically, it leads to the correct title as dictated by the Wikipedia naming conventions for capitalisation, a document of breathtaking pedantry designed to impose a rigid, unyielding order upon the chaos of human expression. This redirect is a silent correction, a way to accommodate the slight variations in searching, writing, and international language quirks without having to lecture you directly. Consider it a concession to your... individuality.
Now, let's be precise. If this redirect were the result of a genuine, unambiguous error—an incorrect capitalisation born of ignorance rather than stylistic variance—it would be tagged with the far less forgiving {{R from miscapitalisation}}. In that scenario, all pages that link here would be systematically hunted down and updated to point directly to the target. A digital clean-up crew correcting a mess. Miscapitalisations, you see, can be tagged and shamed in any namespace.
But this particular rcat, this specific flavor of administrative tidiness, is to be used only for redirects in the mainspace—the articles themselves. When these capitalization shenanigans occur in other namespaces, the backrooms and workshops of this place, they use a different label for their organizational compulsions: {{R from modification}}. You don't need to worry about that. Just know that there are layers to this bureaucracy. Endless, soul-crushing layers.