Academic literature on the topic 'Edward Bruce'

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Journal articles on the topic "Edward Bruce"

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Gruesser, John C., and William Seraile. "Bruce Grit: The Black Nationalist Writings of John Edward Bruce." African American Review 37, no. 2/3 (2003): 457. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/1512340.

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Barraclough, Bruce. "Commentary on the King Edward Inquiry: perspectives from the Chair, Australian Council for Safety and Quality in Health Care." Australian Health Review 26, no. 1 (2003): 26. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/ah030026.

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Humphreys, Robin P. "Edward Bruce Hendrick January 20, 1924 - August 17, 2001." Canadian Journal of Neurological Sciences / Journal Canadien des Sciences Neurologiques 29, no. 1 (2002): 100–101. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0317167100001827.

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GARRISON, ROSSER W. "Argia nataliae n. sp. from Colombia (Odonata: Coenagrionidae)." Zootaxa 4590, no. 4 (2019): 477. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4590.4.4.

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Argia nataliae n. sp. (Holotype ♂: COLOMBIA, Antioquia Department, Estación Cristalina, about. 28 km west of Puerto Berrio, ca. 6.41 N, 74.58 W, 16 ii 1917, Jesse Hunter & Edward Bruce Williamson leg., in University of Michigan [UMMZ]) is described and illustrated and compared with similar species.
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Frame, Robin. "Select documents XXXVII: The campaign against the Scots in Munster, 1317." Irish Historical Studies 24, no. 95 (1985): 361–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s002112140003426x.

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The document printed below has been preserved, somewhat unexpectedly among the series of Ministers’ Accounts in the Public Record Office, London. It is the account (or, more strictly. a record belonging to the process of auditing the account) of John Patrickschurch, clerk of wages on the expedition that Edmund Butler, the justiciar of Ireland, led in Munister between February and April 1317 against Robert and Edward Bruce and their Scottish army. The broad course of events during that critical period is well known. The Scots came south during February, approached Dublin, but, lacking the capacity to take it, continued south and west, ravaging the famine-stricken countryside. They eventually arrived at Castleconnell, by the Shannon just north of Limerick, apparently in the hope of benefiting from an alliance with the O'Briens of Thomond, one faction among whom had been in touch with them in Ulster The justiciar had moved south before the Bruces reached Dublin. He raised an army in Munster and proceeded to follow the Scots closely as they progressed through Tipperary. The royal army eventually encamped at Ludden, just south of Limerick. For some days the two forces confronted each other. Then Robert and Edward retreated. Their expectations of the O'Briens had proved vain; they were desperately short of supplies; and they may well have heard of the arrival of Roger Mortimer, the king's lieutenant, who had landed at Youghal, from where he set out on 11 April to join Butler and the army The document is of some interest for the light it can shed on military organisation and on the accounting procedures of the Irish exchequer But it is worth printing in full above all for the detailed information it contains about one of the darkest yet most decisive episodes of the Bruce invasion.
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CORNELL, DAVID. "A Kingdom Cleared of Castles: the Role of the Castle in the Campaigns of Robert Bruce." Scottish Historical Review 87, no. 2 (2008): 233–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/e0036924108000140.

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In 1314 the English-held castles of Roxburgh, Edinburgh and Stirling were seized and destroyed by Robert Bruce. This was the pinnacle of a policy by which Bruce systematically slighted the castles he seized in Scotland. The reign of Edward II has been seen as a period in which the military value of the castle was in decline and by analysing the role the castle played in the campaigns of Bruce it is possible to assess the importance a successful contemporary commander attached to the castle during this period. Bruce had first-hand experience of the castle at war and knew of its limitations. In 1306, however, he seized and garrisoned a number of castles preparing to use them for a specific purpose, but defeat in the field rendered them redundant. On his return in 1307 Bruce initiated a policy of destruction. Castles in the north of Scotland were slighted as they were the regional focus of the political power of his Scottish enemies, and militarily they were of little value to Bruce. In the Lowlands the first-rate castles of Scotland were destroyed precisely because they were so militarily powerful. Bruce recognised that these castles, used aggressively, were indispensable to the English war effort, and consequently he undertook a prolonged and expensive campaign to reduce them, a campaign which involved the tactic of both surprise assault and, more importantly, the set-piece siege. In 1314 the imminent English campaign led Bruce to launch an unprecedented offensive against the English-held castles of Roxburgh, Edinburgh and Stirling. These castles were subsequently slighted despite their inextricable association with the Scottish Crown. Bruce recognised that, unlike the English, he did not need to occupy castles in Scotland to fight the war. Although in Ireland a small number of castles were occupied, and Berwick was also garrisoned by Scottish troops, in northern England Bruce did not attempt to occupy English castles. Those which were seized were destroyed, an indication that Bruce never intended a conquest of Northumberland. Indeed Bruce never undertook a serious campaign aimed at the seizure of the first-rate castles of Northumberland despite their frequently perilous state. Instead he sought to gain political capital by threatening their loss and so placing enormous pressure on the English Crown. That the castle featured prominently in the campaigns of Bruce demonstrates it was not in decline. Bruce understood the continued military and political value of the castle, but he was able to exploit its inherent vulnerabilities in order to gain victory in war.
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Dallas, Mark. "Edward Friedman and Bruce Gilley, eds. Asia’s Giants: Comparing China and India." Journal of Chinese Political Science 15, no. 1 (2009): 119–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11366-009-9086-2.

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Harris, Robert L. "Ralph L. Crowder.John Edward Bruce: Politician, Journalist, and Self‐Trained Historian of the African Diaspora.:John Edward Bruce: Politician, Journalist, and Self‐Trained Historian of the African Diaspora." American Historical Review 111, no. 1 (2006): 210–11. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/ahr.111.1.210a.

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Melleuish, Gregory. "Bruce Smith, Edward Shann, W.K. Hancock: The Economic Critique of Democracy in Australia." Australian Journal of Political Science 44, no. 4 (2009): 579–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10361140903296529.

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Tan, Andrew T. H. "A Review of: “Bruce R. Pirnie and Edward O'Connell.Counterinsurgency in Iraq (2003–2006).”." Terrorism and Political Violence 22, no. 4 (2010): 658–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09546553.2010.508021.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Edward Bruce"

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Swart, Cornelius Johannes. "Apokaliptiek en Openbaring 'n kritiese evaluering van Malina en Pilch se "Social-Science Commentary on the Book of Revelation" /." Diss., Pretoria : [s.n.], 2006. http://upetd.up.ac.za/thesis/available/etd-07312007-152046/.

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Novota, Pavel. "Anglo-skotské zápolení od vyhlášení stoleté války po bitvu u Neville Crossu: perspektiva anglických úředních pramenů." Master's thesis, 2018. http://www.nusl.cz/ntk/nusl-373752.

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Why the term 'Anglo-Scottish Struggle' between 1337 and 1346? Why 'The Perspective of English Official Documents'? What influence did the so-called 'Hundred Year's War' have on the Anglo-Scottish relations in the first years of the war? What impact did the 'Scottish issue' have on the policy of the English king during the Anglo-French conflict? How did the perspective of English official documents differ from that of English chronicles or Scottish/French primary sources? What role did the rhetoric of these source play? How was it portrayed? The following thesis will try to analyse some of the aforementioned issues and will strive to prove that the Scottish kingdom had a profound impact on the English policy in multiple respects from the outset of the Hundred Years' War until the battle of Neville's Cross almost ten years later.
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Books on the topic "Edward Bruce"

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Newman, Roger Chatterton. Edward Bruce: A medieval tragedy. Ian Faulkner Publishing, 1992.

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Seraile, William. Bruce Grit: The Black nationalist writings of John Edward Bruce. University of Tennessee Press, 2003.

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Bruce Grit: The Black nationalist writings of John Edward Bruce. University of Tennessee Press, 2003.

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John Edward Bruce: Politician, journalist, and self-trained historian of the African diaspora. New York University Press, 2004.

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1917-, Minium Edward W., ed. Student study guide and workbook to accompany Statistical reasoning in psychology and education, third edition / Edward W. Minium, Bruce M. King, Gordon Bear. Wiley, 1993.

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Newman, Roger Chatterton. Edward Bruce (Ian Faulkner Publishing). Sutton Publishing Ltd, 1992.

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Final report of the independent counsel in re: Bruce Edward Babbitt. For sale by the U.S. G.P.O., Supt. of Docs, 2000.

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Phillips, J. R. S. Conclusion. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198223597.003.0011.

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CONTEMPORARY or near‐contemporary comments upon the character of the Earl of Pembroke ran the gamut from extravagant adulation to execration. Of those favourable to him the most balanced, surprisingly, is that of the Scottish author of The Bruce, who, in describing the English disaster at Bannockburn in 1314, could nevertheless refer to Pembroke in respectful terms despite his earlier leadership of invading English armies in the reign of Edward I....
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Feinstein, John. Caddy For Life: The Bruce Edwards Story. Thorndike Press, 2004.

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Feinstein, John. Caddy for Life: The Bruce Edwards Story. Back Bay Books, 2005.

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Book chapters on the topic "Edward Bruce"

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Pohl, John M. D. "Bruce Edward Byland, PhD: 1950–2008." In Bridging the Gaps: Integrating Archaeology and History in Oaxaca, Mexico; A Volume in Memory of Bruce E. Byland. University Press of Colorado, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.5876/9781607323297.c003.

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Mainer, Sergi. "Contrasting Kingly and Knightly Masculinities in Barbour’s Bruce." In Nine Centuries of Man. Edinburgh University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474403894.003.0007.

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The chapter examines the multiple representations, evolution and opposition of masculine constructions in John Barbour’s Brus (c.1375) which tells the story of Scotland’s First War of Independence. The two main heroes, Robert Bruce and James Douglas are shown to represent a fluid masculinity, adapting to the changing social and political circumstances of medieval Scotland. This is contrasted with the negative models of Edward I and Edward Bruce. The chapter discusses the results of the initial absence of proper leaders and male models, secondly the evolution of Bruce and Douglas into ideal king and knight, and finally the interactions of the male protagonists with women. Patriarchy is shown to operate not only in the power of men over women, but also in the authority that groups of men exercise over other groups according to social hierarchies.
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TAYLOR, BRUCE. "Peter Edward Lionel Russell 1913–2006." In Proceedings of the British Academy, Volume 172, Biographical Memoirs of Fellows, X. British Academy, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.5871/bacad/9780197264904.003.0013.

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Peter Russell was King Alfonso XIII Professor of Spanish Studies at the University of Oxford 1953–81. He was recruited into the secret service in the mid-1930s and was sent to Spain during the Civil War. On returning to Oxford, Russell joined Military Intelligence and among other duties was responsible for seeing that the Duke and Duchess of Windsor reached the Bahamas safely. He resumed his academic career after the war and quickly established himself as a scholar of exceptional range and dynamism. Influential publications included ‘Don Quixote as a funny book’ MLA 64 (1969), 312–26. Russell was elected a Fellow of the British Academy in 1977. Obituary by Bruce Taylor.
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Hall, Kim F. "“Intelligently organized resistance”: Shakespeare in the Diasporic Politics of John E. Bruce." In Teaching Social Justice Through Shakespeare. Edinburgh University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474455589.003.0008.

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In 1916 the black journalist and organizer John Edward Bruce outlined an approach for the study of Shakespeare aimed at racial uplift. This chapter situates Bruce’s inaugural address to “The Friends of Shakespeare,” a black organization for the study and performance of Shakespeare, in the wider U.S. context of migration, the rise of white nationalism, and pan-Africanist thought. An autodidact, Bruce advocated for a collaborative approach to studying Shakespeare’s works in their historical context and alongside works by black authors. Comparing Bruce’s collectivist and historicist strategies for using Shakespeare as a vehicle for racial uplift, with radical pedagogies described more recently by Joyce E. King and others, Hall argues that the study of Shakespeare, then as now, can equip students for “intelligently organized resistance.”
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Coleman, James J. "‘By the Imprudence of His Ancestors’: Commemorating Jacobitism and Mary Queen of Scots." In Remembering the Past in Nineteenth-Century Scotland. Edinburgh University Press, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9780748676903.003.0007.

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The Scottish national past was the story of the struggle for civil and religious liberty, reaching its glorious outcome at the Revolution of 1688. With their prologue in the proto-Presbyterian Culdees, collective memories of Scottish nationality ran from Wallace and Bruce, through Knox, to the Covenanters. At each stage in this memory, the heroes of Scotland’s past had overcome the threat posed by their antithesis, whether Edward I or Edward II, the Roman Catholic church, or the later Stuart kings. Both explicitly and implicitly, the narrative of civil and religious liberty framed the commemoration of the Scottish past in the nineteenth century, generating a collective sense of what it meant to be Scottish, explaining or justifying present attitudes and national mores. In a sense, the Glorious Revolution marked the end of Presbyterian history, the closure of a centuries-long struggle to achieve full and coherent Scottish nationality with a free nation and a secure Presbyterian church. It was for this reason that union was made possible. The Scots had proved their point, won their battle, and could give up their statehood, confident that Scottish nationality could never be undone.
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Coleman, James J. "‘Not Servile and Conquered, but Free and Independent’: Commemorating William Wallace and Robert the Bruce." In Remembering the Past in Nineteenth-Century Scotland. Edinburgh University Press, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9780748676903.003.0004.

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William Wallace is one of Scotland’s most enduring national heroes. Since the 1470s and the first appearance of Blind Harry’s epic poem, The Actes and Deidis of the Illustre and Vallyeant Campioun Schir William Wallace, Wallace has occupied a central place in the collective memory of the Scots, a position he continues to hold, thanks in part to the enormous success of the 1995 film Braveheart. One of the reasons for Wallace’s enduring appeal is the simplicity of his story. Born as a commoner, urged on by his love of liberty and need to free Scotland from the chains and slavery of an oppressive neighbour, Wallace rose through the ranks of society to become Guardian of Scotland. He went on to lead the Scots to victory over the armies of the tyrannical English king, Edward I, at Stirling Bridge. Whilst attempting to place Scotland’s hard-fought independence on a more secure footing, Wallace was defeated, betrayed, and taken to London for trial and execution. In essence, this was the hero’s journey: from relatively lowly stock to victory, martyrdom, and permanent, illustrious memory.
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Hoffnung-Garskof, Jesse E. "Endings." In Racial Migrations. Princeton University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.23943/princeton/9780691183534.003.0008.

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This concluding chapter presents three vignettes following the events of the previous chapter. It first places three “gentlemen of color” at a party at the Munro Hotel on Fourteenth Street in Manhattan in 1902. They were gathered by President Elect Tomás Estrada Palma. Given their long relationship with Estrada Palma, these men returning from New York were comparatively well positioned in Cuba's political competition, but even this advantage required further negotiation. The chapter also recalls another instance, in summer 1905. This was when Rafael Serra, a 47-year-old employee of the Cuban Postal Service, editor, and member of the Cuban House of Representatives, walked down the gangplank of the SS Vigilancia in New York City. Finally, the chapter offers yet another alternate ending, this time set at the elegant Maceo Hotel, where in fall 1905, shortly after Serra departed from New York. This episode involved the young Puerto Rican intellectual Arturo Schomburg, who organized a birthday party for an aging African American journalist named John Edward Bruce.
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Goetz, Andrew R., and Bruce A. Ralston. "Transportation Geography." In Geography in America at the Dawn of the 21st Century. Oxford University Press, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198233923.003.0026.

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Transportation geography is the study of the spatial aspects of transportation. It includes the location, structure, environment, and development of networks as well as the analysis and explanation of the interaction or movement of goods and people (Black 1989). In addition it encompasses the role and impacts—both spatial and aspatial—of transport in a broad sense including facilities, institutions, policies and operations in domestic and international contexts. It also provides an explicitly spatial perspective, or point of view, within the interdisciplinary study of transportation. There has been substantial progress in the development of the transportation geography subfield over the last ten years. In 1993, the Journal of Transport Geography was started in the UK, providing the subfield with its own eponymous journal. Several second editions of key textbooks were published, including The Geography of Transportation (Taaffe et al. 1996), The Geography of Urban Transportation (Hanson 1995), and Modern Transport Geography (Hoyle and Knowles 1998). The Transportation Geography Specialty Group (TGSG) instituted the Edward L. Ullman Award for scholarly contributions to the subfield; recipients have included Edward Taaffe, Harold Mayer, Howard Gauthier, William Garrison, William Black, James Vance, Susan Hanson, Morton O’Kelly, Bruce Ralston, Donald Janelle, Thomas Leinbach, Brian Slack, and Kingsley Haynes. The specialty group also began honoring students who have written the best doctoral dissertations and masters theses each year, and a TGSG web page was created. The University of Washington Department of Geography instituted the Douglas K. Fleming lecture series in transportation geography at AAG annual meetings. Finally, transport geographers have played prominent roles in a Geography and Regional Science Program organized joint National Science Foundation/European Science Foundation initiative on Social Change and Sustainable Transport (SCAST) (Leinbach and Smith 1997; Button and Nijkamp 1997). This initiative led to the development of the North American-based Sustainable Transportation Analysis and Research (STAR) network led by geographer William Black as a counterpart to the European-based Sustainable Transport in Europe and Links and Liaisons with America (STELLA) network. Together, these initiatives and research networks offer significant opportunities for geographers to contribute to a growing body of literature on the environmental, economic, and equity implications of transportation systems.
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Vasunia, Phiroze. "Virgil and the British Empire, 1760–1880." In Lineages of Empire. British Academy, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.5871/bacad/9780197264393.003.0004.

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This chapter reflects on the readings and uses of Virgil in British imperial contexts during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. The British interest in Virgil heightened during the middle of the eighteenth century, when Britain was establishing its Second Empire. In the age of Elizabeth I and Shakespeare, Virgil was often deployed by writers in different imperial situations. Writers such as Edward Gibbon turned to Virgil not because of a desire to promote monarchical imperialism but with the aim of evaluating the mechanism of the empire, to explore its limits and contradictions, and to question its durability. In Victoria’s reign, when the empire in India seemed to several Britons to be long lasting, many prominent figures highlighted the providential and prophetic interpretations of Virgil, and speculated about an empire that was divinely ordained and infinite. Among these prominent personages were Tennyson, Auden, Bryce, and so on. These themes of British Empire within the context of Virgil’s writings are examined from the time of Gibbon to the Victorians, in order to describe the interweaving relationships and patterns that link Virgil and the history of the empire.
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BALASSA, BELA. "China's Economic Reforms in a Comparative Perspective11The author prepared this paper following a visit to China on November 11–21, 1985. He is grateful for helpful discussions he had at the Institute of Economics and the Institute of World Economics and Politics in Beijing, at the University of Nankai in Tianjin, and at the Economic Research Center and the Institute of World Economy in Shanghai. The author further acknowledges the valuable comments made on the first draft of the paper by A. Doak Barnett, William Byrd, Dong Fureng, Nicholas Lardy, Dwight Perkins, Thomas Rawski, Bruce Reynolds, and Edward Schuh, as well as comments received at the Arden House Conference on Chinese Economic Reform on October 9–12, 1986. He alone is responsible for the contents of the paper, however, and they should not be interpreted to reflect the views of the World Bank." In Chinese Economic Reform. Elsevier, 1988. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/b978-0-12-587045-0.50013-7.

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