The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle
Annals from A.D. 1121 to A.D. 1130
A.D. 1121.
This year was the King Henry at Christmas at Bramton, and
afterwards, before Candlemas, at Windsor was given him to
wife Athelis; soon afterwards consecrated queen, who was
daughter of the Duke of Louvain. And the moon was eclipsed
in the night of the nones of April, being a fortnight old.
And the king was at Easter at Berkley; and after that at
Pentecost he held a full court at Westminster; and
afterwards in the summer went with an army into Wales. And
the Welsh came against him; and after the king's will they
accorded with him. This year came the Earl of Anjou from
Jerusalem into his land; and soon after sent hither to fetch
his daughter, who had been given to wife to William, the
king's son. And in the night of the eve of "Natalis Domini"
was a very violent wind over all this land, and that was in
many things evidently seen.
A.D. 1122.
In this year was the King Henry at Christmas in Norwich, and
at Easter in Northampton. And in the Lent-tide before that,
the town of Glocester was on fire: the while that the monks
were singing their mass, and the deacon had begun the
gospel, "Praeteriens Jesus", at that very moment came the
fire from the upper part of the steeple, and burned all the
minster, and all the treasures that were there within;
except a few books, and three mass-hackles. That was on the
eighth day before the ides of Marcia. And thereafter, the
Tuesday after Palm-Sunday, was a very violent wind on the
eleventh day before the calends of April; after which came
many tokens far and wide in England, and many spectres were
both seen and heard. And the eighth night before the calends
of August was a very violent earthquake over all
Somersetshire, and in Glocestershire.
Soon after, on the sixth day before the
ides of September, which was on the festival of St.
Mary,144 there was a
very violent wind from the fore part of the day to the depth
of the night. This same year died Ralph, the Archbishop of
Canterbury; that was on the thirteenth day before the
calends of November. After this there were many shipmen on
the sea, and on fresh water, who said, that they saw on the
north-east, level with the earth, a fire huge and broad,
which anon waxed in length up to the welkin; and the welkin
undid itself in four parts, and fought against it, as if it
would quench it; and the fire waxed nevertheless up to the
heaven. The fire they saw in the day-dawn; and it lasted
until it was light over all. That was on the seventh day
before the ides of December.
A.D. 1123.
In this year was the King Henry, at Christmastide at
Dunstable, and there came to him the ambassadors of the Earl
of Anjou. And thence he went to Woodstock; and his bishops
and his whole court with him. Then did it betide on a
Wednesday, which was on the fourth day before the ides of
January, that the king rode in his deer-fold;145
the Bishop Roger of Salisbury146
on one side of him, and the Bishop Robert Bloet of Lincoln
on the other side of him. And they rode there talking
together. Then sank down the Bishop of Lincoln, and said to
the king, "Lord king, I die." And the king alighted down
from his horse, and lifted him betwixt his arms, and let men
bear him home to his inn. There he was soon dead; and they
carried him to Lincoln with great worship, and buried him
before the altar of St. Mary. And the Bishop of Chester,
whose name was Robert Pecceth, buried him. Soon after this
sent the king his writ over all England, and bade all his
bishops and his abbots and his thanes, that they should come
to his wittenmoot on Candlemas day at Glocester to meet him:
and they did so. When they were there gathered together,
then the king bade them, that they should choose for
themselves an Archbishop of Canterbury, whomsoever they
would, and he would confirm it. Then spoke the bishops among
themselves, and said that they never more would have a man
of the monastic order as archbishop over them. And they went
all in a body to the king, and earnestly requested that they
might choose from the clerical order whomsoever they would
for archbishop. And the king granted it to them. This was
all concerted before, through the Bishop of Salisbury, and
through the Bishop of Lincoln ere he was dead; for that they
never loved the rule of monks, but were ever against monks
and their rule. And the prior and the monks of Canterbury,
and all the other persons of the monastic order that were
there, withstood it full two days; but it availed nought:
for the Bishop of Salisbury was strong, and wielded all
England, and opposed them with all his power and might.
Then chose they a clerk, named William
of Curboil. He was canon of a monastery called
Chiche.147 And they
brought him before the king; and the king gave him the
archbishopric. And all the bishops received him: but almost
all the monks, and the earls, and the thanes that were
there, protested against him. About the same time departed
the earl's messengers148
in hostility from the king, reckless of his favour. During
the same time came a legate from Rome, whose name was Henry.
He was abbot of the monastery of St. John of Angeli; and he
came after the Rome-scot. And he said to the king, that it
was against right that men should set a clerk over monks;
and therefore they had chosen an archbishop before in their
chapter after right. But the king would not undo it, for the
love of the Bishop of Salisbury. Then went the archbishop,
soon after this, to Canterbury; and was there received,
though it was against their will; and he was there soon
blessed to bishop by the Bishop of London, and the Bishop
Ernulf of Rochester, and the Bishop William Girard of
Winchester, and the Bishop Bernard of Wales, and the Bishop
Roger of Salisbury. Then, early in Lent, went the archbishop
to Rome, after his pall; and with him went the Bishop
Bernard of Wales; and Sefred, Abbot of Glastonbury; and
Anselm, Abbot of St. Edmund's bury; and John, Archdeacon of
Canterbury; and Gifard, who was the king's court-chaplain.
At the same time went the Archbishop Thurstan of York to
Rome, through the behest of the pope, and came thither three
days ere the Archbishop of Canterbury came, and was there
received with much worship. Then came the Archbishop of
Canterbury, and was there full seven nights ere they could
come to a conference with the pope. That was, because the
pope was made to understand that he had obtained the
archbishopric against the monks of the minster, and against
right. But that overcame Rome, which overcometh all the
world; that is, gold and silver. And the pope softened, and
gave him his pall. And the archbishop (of York) swore him
subjection, in all those things, which the pope enjoined
him, by the heads of St. Peter and St. Paul; and the pope
then sent him home with his blessing. The while that the
archbishop was out of the land, the king gave the bishopric
of Bath to the Queen's chancellor, whose name was Godfrey.
He was born in Louvain. That was on the Annunciation of St.
Mary, at Woodstock. Soon after this went the king to
Winchester, and was all Easter-tide there. And the while
that he was there, gave he the bishopric of Lincoln to a
clerk hight Alexander. He was nephew of the Bishop of
Salisbury. This he did all for the love of the bishop. Then
went the king thence to Portsmouth, and lay there all over
Pentecost week. Then, as soon as he had
a fair wind, he went over into Normandy; and meanwhile
committed all England to the guidance and government of the
Bishop Roger of Salisbury. Then was the king all this
year149 in Normandy.
And much hostility arose betwixt him and his thanes; so that
the Earl Waleram of Mellent, and Hamalric, and Hugh of
Montfort, and William of Romare, and many others, went from
him, and held their castles against him. And the king
strongly opposed them: and this same year he won of Waleram
his castle of Pont-Audemer, and of Hugh that of Montfort;
and ever after, the longer he stayed, the better he sped.
This same year, ere the Bishop of Lincoln came to his
bishopric, almost all the borough of Lincoln was burned, and
numberless folks, men and women, were consumed: and so much
harm was there done as no man could describe to another.
That was on the fourteenth day before the calends of
June.
A.D. 1124.
All this year was the King Henry in Normandy. That was for
the great hostility that he had with the King Louis of
France, and with the Earl of Anjou, and most of all with his
own men. Then it happened, on the day of the Annunciation of
St. Mary, that the Earl Waleram of Mellent went from one of
his castles called Belmont to another called Watteville.
With him went the steward of the King of France, Amalric,
and Hugh the son of Gervase, and Hugh of Montfort, and many
other good knights. Then came against them the king's
knights from all the castles that were thereabout, and
fought with them, and put them to flight, and took the Earl
Waleram, and Hugh, the son of Gervase, and Hugh of Montfort,
and five and twenty other knights, and brought them to the
king. And the king committed the Earl Waleram, and Hugh, the
son of Gervase, to close custody in the castle at Rouen; but
Hugh of Montfort he sent to England, and ordered him to be
secured with strong bonds in the castle at Glocester. And of
the others as many as he chose he sent north and south to
his castles in captivity. After this went the king, and won
all the castles of the Earl Waleram that were in Normandy,
and all the others that his enemies held against him. All
this hostility was on account of the son of the Earl Robert
of Normandy, named William. This same William had taken to
wife the younger daughter of Fulke, Earl of Anjou: and for
this reason the King of France and all the earls held with
him, and all the rich men; and said that the king held his
brother Robert wrongfully in captivity, and drove his son
William unjustly out of Normandy. This same year were the
seasons very unfavourable in England for corn and all
fruits; so that between Christmas and Candlemas men sold the
acre-seed of wheat, that is two seedlips, for six shillings;
and the barley, that is three seedlips, for six shillings
also; and the acre-seed of oats, that is four seedlips, for
four shillings. That was because that
corn was scarce; and the penny was so adulterated,150
that a man who had a pound at a market could not exchange
twelve pence thereof for anything. In this same year died
the blessed Bishop Ernulf of Rochester, who before was Abbot
of Peterborough. That was on the ides of March. And after
this died the King Alexander of Scotland, on the ninth day
before the calends of May. And David his brother, who was
Earl of Northamptonshire, succeeded to the kingdom; and had
both together, the kingdom of Scotland and the earldom in
England. And on the nineteenth day before the calends of
January died the Pope of Rome, whose name was Calixtus, and
Honorius succeeded to the popedom. This same year, after St.
Andrew's mass, and before Christmas, held Ralph Basset and
the king's thanes a wittenmoot in Leicestershire, at
Huncothoe, and there hanged more thieves than ever were
known before; that is, in a little while, four and forty men
altogether; and despoiled six men of their eyes and of their
testicles. Many true men said that there were several who
suffered very unjustly; but our Lord God Almighty, who seeth
and knoweth every secret, seeth also that the wretched
people are oppressed with all unrighteousness. First they
are bereaved of their property, and then they are slain.
Full heavy year was this. The man that had any property, was
bereaved of it by violent guilds and violent moots. The man
that had not, was starved with hunger.
A.D. 1125.
In this year sent the King Henry, before Christmas, from
Normandy to England, and bade that all the mint-men that
were in England should be mutilated in their limbs; that
was, that they should lose each of them the right hand, and
their testicles beneath. This was because the man that had a
pound could not lay out a penny at a market. And the Bishop
Roger of Salisbury sent over all England, and bade them all
that they should come to Winchester at Christmas. When they
came thither, then were they taken one by one, and deprived
each of the right hand and the testicles beneath. All this
was done within the twelfth-night. And that was all in
perfect justice, because that they had undone all the land
with the great quantity of base coin that they all bought.
In this same year sent the Pope of Rome to this land a
cardinal, named John of Crema. He came first to the king in
Normandy, and the king received him with much worship. He
betook himself then to the Archbishop William of Canterbury;
and he led him to Canterbury; and he was there received with
great veneration, and in solemn procession. And he sang the
high mass on Easter day at the altar of Christ. Afterwards
he went over all England, to all the bishoprics and abbacies
that were in this land; and in all he was received with
respect. And all gave him many and rich gifts.
And afterwards he held his council in
London full three days, on the Nativity of St. Mary in
September, with archbishops, and diocesan bishops, and
abbots, the learned and the lewd;151
and enjoined there the same laws that Archbishop Anselm had
formerly enjoined, and many more, though it availed little.
Thence he went over sea soon after Michaelmas, and so to
Rome; and (with him) the Archbishop William of Canterbury,
and the Archbishop Thurstan of York, and the Bishop
Alexander of Lincoln, and the Bishop J. of Lothian, and the
Abbot G. of St. Alban's; and were there received by the Pope
Honorius with great respect; and continued there all the
winter. In this same year was so great a
flood on St. Laurence's day, that many towns and men were
overwhelmed, and bridges broken down, and corn and meadows
spoiled withal; and hunger and qualm152
in men and in cattle; and in all fruits such
unseasonableness as was not known for many years before. And
this same year died the Abbot John of Peterborough, on the
second day before the ides of October.
A.D. 1126.
All this year was the King Henry in Normandy -- all till
after harvest. Then came he to this land, betwixt the
Nativity of St. Mary and Michaelmas. With him came the
queen, and his daughter, whom he had formerly given to the
Emperor Henry of Lorrain to wife. And he brought with him
the Earl Waleram, and Hugh, the son of Gervase. And the earl
he sent to Bridgenorth in captivity: and thence he sent him
afterwards to Wallingford; and Hugh to Windsor, whom he
ordered to be kept in strong bonds. Then after Michaelmas
came David, the king of the Scots, from Scotland to this
land; and the King Henry received him with great worship;
and he continued all that year in this land. In this year
the king had his brother Robert taken from the Bishop Roger
of Salisbury, and committed him to his son Robert, Earl of
Glocester, and had him led to Bristol, and there put into
the castle. That was all done through his daughter's
counsel, and through David, the king of the Scots, her
uncle.
A.D. 1127.
This year held the King Henry his court at Christmas in
Windsor. There was David the king of the Scots, and all the
head men that were in England, learned and lewd. And there
he engaged the archbishops, and bishops, and abbots, and
earls, and all the thanes that were there, to swear England
and Normandy after his day into the hands of his daughter
Athelicia, who was formerly the wife of the Emperor of
Saxony. Afterwards he sent her to Normandy; and with her
went her brother Robert, Earl of Glocester, and Brian, son
of the Earl Alan Fergan;153
and he let her wed the son of the Earl of Anjou, whose name
was Geoffry Martel. All the French and English, however,
disapproved of this; but the king did it for to have the
alliance of the Earl of Anjou, and for to have help against
his nephew William. In the Lent-tide of this same year was
the Earl Charles of Flanders slain in a church, as he lay
there and prayed to God, before the altar, in the midst of
the mass, by his own men. And the King of France brought
William, the son of the Earl of Normandy, and gave him the
earldom; and the people of that land accepted him. This same
William had before taken to wife the daughter of the Earl of
Anjou; but they were afterwards divorced on the plea of
consanguinity. This was all through the
King Henry of England. Afterwards took he to wife the sister
of the king's wife of France; and for this reason the king
gave him the earldom of Flanders. This same year he154
gave the abbacy of Peterborough to an abbot named Henry of
Poitou, who retained in hand his abbacy of St. John of
Angeli; but all the archbishops and bishops said that it was
against right, and that he could not have two abbacies on
hand. But the same Henry gave the king to understand, that
he had relinquished his abbacy on account of the great
hostility that was in the land; and that he did through the
counsel and leave of the Pope of Rome, and through that of
the Abbot of Clugny, and because he was legate of the
Rome-scot. But, nevertheless, it was not so; for he would
retain both in hand; and did so as long as God's will was.
He was in his clerical state Bishop of Soissons; afterwards
monk of Clugny; and then prior in the same monastery.
Afterwards he became prior of Sevigny; and then, because he
was a relation of the King of England, and of the Earl of
Poitou, the earl gave him the abbacy of St. John's minster
of Angeli. Afterwards, through his great
craft, he obtained the archbishopric of Besancon; and had it
in hand three days; after which he justly lost it, because
he had before unjustly obtained it. Afterwards he procured
the bishopric of Saintes; which was five miles from his
abbey. That he had full-nigh a week155
in hand; but the Abbot of Clugny brought him thence, as he
before did from Besancon. Then he bethought him, that, if he
could be fast-rooted in England, he might have all his will.
Wherefore he besought the king, and said unto him, that he
was an old man -- a man completely broken -- that he could
not brook the great injustice and the great hostility that
were in their land: and then, by his own endearours, and by
those of all his friends, he earnestly and expressly
entreated for the abbacy of Peterborough. And the king
procured it for him, because he was his relation, and
because he was the principal person to make oath and bear
witness when the son of the Earl of Normandy and the
daughter of the Earl of Anjou were divorced on the plea of
consanguinity. Thus wretchedly was the
abbacy given away, betwixt Christmas and Candlemas, at
London; and so he went with the King to Winchester, and
thence he came to Peterborough, and there he dwelt156
right so as a drone doth in a hive. For as the drone
fretteth and draggeth fromward all that the bees drag toward
[the hive], so did he. -- All that he might take,
within and without, of learned and lewd, so sent he over
sea; and no good did there -- no good left there. Think no
man unworthily that we say not the truth; for it was fully
known over all the land: that, as soon as he came thither,
which was on the Sunday when men sing "Exurge quare o D--
etc." immediately after, several persons saw and heard many
huntsmen hunting. The hunters were swarthy, and huge, and
ugly; and their hounds were all swarthy, and broad-eyed, and
ugly. And they rode on swarthy horses, and swarthy bucks.
This was seen in the very deer-fold in
the town of Peterborough, and in all the woods from that
same town to Stamford. And the monks heard the horn blow
that they blew in the night. Credible men, who watched them
in the night, said that they thought there might well be
about twenty or thirty horn-blowers. This was seen and heard
from the time that he157
came thither, all the Lent-tide onward to Easter. This was
his entry; of his exit we can as yet say nought. God
provide.
A.D. 1128.
All this year was the King Henry in Normandy, on account of
the hostility that was between him and his nephew, the Earl
of Flanders. But the earl was wounded in a fight by a swain;
and so wounded he went to the monastery of St. Bertin; where
he soon became a monk, lived five days afterwards, then
died, and was there buried. God honour his soul. That was on
the sixth day before the calends of August. This same year
died the Bishop Randulph Passeflambard of Durham; and was
there buried on the nones of September. And this same year
went the aforesaid Abbot Henry home to his own minster at
Poitou by the king's leave. He gave the king to understand,
that he would withal forgo that minster, and that land, and
dwell with him in England, and in the monastery of
Peterborough. But it was not so nevertheless. He did this
because he would be there, through his crafty wiles, were it
a twelvemonth or more, and come again afterwards. May God
Almighty extend his mercy over that wretched place. This
same year came from Jerusalem Hugh of the Temple to the king
in Normandy; and the king received him with much honour, and
gave him rich presents in gold and in silver. And afterwards
he sent him into England; and there he was received by all
good men, who all gave him presents, and in Scotland also:
and by him they sent to Jerusalem much wealth withal in gold
and in silver. And he invited folk out
to Jerusalem; and there went with him and after him more
people than ever did before, since that the first expedition
was in the day of Pope Urban. Though it availed little; for
he said, that a mighty war was begun between the Christians
and the heathens; but when they came thither, then was it
nought but leasing.158
Thus pitifully was all that people swinked.159
A.D. 1129.
In this year sent the King to England after the Earl
Waleram, and after Hugh, the son of Gervase. And they gave
hostages for them. And Hugh went home to his own land in
France; but Waleram was left with the king: and the king
gave him all his land except his castle alone. Afterwards
came the king to England within the harvest: and the earl
came with him: and they became as good friends as they were
foes before. Soon after, by the king's counsel, and by his
leave, sent the Archbishop William of Canterbury over all
England, and bade bishops, and abbots, and archdeacons, and
all the priors, monks, and canons, that were in all the
cells in England, and all who had the care and
superintendence of christianity, that they should all come
to London at Michaelmas, and there should speak of all God's
rights. When they came thither, then began the moot on
Monday, and continued without intermission to the Friday.
When it all came forth, then was it all found to be about
archdeacons' wives, and about priests' wives; that they
should forgo them by St. Andrew's mass; and he who would not
do that, should forgo his church, and his house, and his
home, and never more have any calling thereto. This bade the
Archbishop William of Canterbury, and all the diocesan
bishops that were then in England, but the king gave them
all leave to go home. And so they went home; and all the
ordinances amounted to nothing. All held their wives by the
king's leave as they did before. This same year died the
Bishop William Giffard of Winchester; and was there buried,
on the eighth day before the calends of February. And the
King Henry gave the bishopric after Michaelmas to the Abbot
Henry of Glastonbury, his nephew, and he was consecrated
bishop by the Archbishop William of Canterbury on the
fifteenth day before the calends of December. This same year
died Pope Honorius. Ere he was well dead, there were chosen
two popes. The one was named Peter, who was monk of Clugny,
and was born of the richest men of Rome; and with him held
those of Rome, and the Duke of Sicily. The other was
Gregory: he was a clerk, and was driven out of Rome by the
other pope, and by his kinsmen. With him held the Emperor of
Saxony, and the King of France, and the King Henry of
England, and all those on this side of the Alps. Now was
there such division in Christendom as never was before. May
Christ consult for his wretched folk. This same year, on the
night of the mass of St. Nicholas, a little before day,
there was a great earthquake.
A.D. 1130.
This year was the monastery of Canterbury consecrated by the
Archbishop William, on the fourth day before the nones of
May. There were the Bishops John of Rochester, Gilbert
Universal of London, Henry of Winchester, Alexander of
Lincoln, Roger of Salisbury, Simon of Worcester, Roger of
Coventry, Geoffry of Bath, Evrard of Norwich, Sigefrith of
Chichester, Bernard of St. David's, Owen of Evreux in
Normandy, John of Sieyes. On the fourth day after this was
the King Henry in Rochester, when the town was almost
consumed by fire; and the Archbishop William consecrated the
monastery of St. Andrew, and the aforesaid bishops with him.
And the King Henry went over sea into
Normandy in harvest. This same year came the Abbot Henry of
Angeli after Easter to Peterborough, and said that he had
relinquished that monastery160
withal. After him came the Abbot of Clugny, Peter by name,
to England by the king's leave; and was received by all,
whithersoever he came, with much respect. To Peterborough he
came; and there the Abbot Henry promised him that he would
procure him the minster of Peterborough, that it might be
subject to Clugny. But it is said in the proverb, "The hedge
abideth, that acres divideth." May God Almighty frustrate
evil designs. Soon after this, went the Abbot of Clugny home
to his country. This year was Angus slain by the army of the
Scots, and there was a great multitude slain with him. There
was God's fight sought upon him, for that he was all
forsworn.
Notes
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144
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The
Nativity of the Virgin Mary. [Back]
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145
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i.e. an
inclosure or park for deer. This is now called
Blenheim Park, and is one of the few old parks
which still remain in this country.
[Back]
|
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146
|
This
may appear rather an anticipation of the modern see
of Salisbury, which was not then in existence; the
borough of Old Saturn, or "Saresberie", being then
the episcopal seat. [Back]
|
|
147
|
St.
Osythe, in Essex; a priory rebuilt A. 1118, for
canons of the Augustine order, of which there are
considerable remains. [Back]
|
|
148
|
i.e. Of
the Earl of Anjou. [Back]
|
|
149
|
The
writer means, "the remainder of this year"; for the
feast of Pentecost was already past, before the
king left England. [Back]
|
|
150
|
The
pennies, or pence, it must be remembered, were of
silver at this time. [Back]
|
|
151
|
i.e.
Clergy and laity. [Back]
|
|
152
|
This
word is still in use, but in a sense somewhat
different; as qualms of conscience, etc.
[Back]
|
|
153
|
See an
account of him in "Ord. Vit." 544. Conan, another
son of this Alan, Earl of Brittany, married a
daughter of Henry I. [Back]
|
|
154
|
i.e.
Henry, King of England. [Back]
|
|
155
|
"A
se'nnight", the space of seven nights; as we still
say, "a fortnight", i.e. the space of fourteen
nights. The French express the space of one week by
"huit jours", the origin of the "octave" in English
law; of two by "quinte jours". So "septimana"
signifies "seven mornings"; whence the French word
"semaine". [Back]
|
|
156
|
Literally, "woned". Vid Chaucer, "Canterbury
Tales", v. 7745. In Scotland, a lazy indolent
manner of doing anything is called "droning".
[Back]
|
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157
|
The
Abbot Henry of Angeli. [Back]
|
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158
|
"Thou
shalt destroy them that speak `leasing,'" etc.
"Psalms". [Back]
|
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159
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i.e.
Vexed, harassed, fatigued, etc. Milton has used the
word in the last sense. [Back]
|
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160
|
The
monastery of Angeli. [Back]
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The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle
1111 to 1120
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