Εμφανίζονται 24 τίτλοι με αναζήτηση: Βιογραφίες στην ευρύτερη περιοχή: "ΚΑΒΑΛΑ Νομός ΕΛΛΑΔΑ" .
Androsthenes of Thasus, one of Alexander's admirals, sailed with Nearchus, and was also sent by Alexander to explore the coast of the Persian gulf (Strab. xvi.; Arrian, Anab. vii. 20). He wrote an account of this voyage, and also a Tes Indikes paraplous (Athen. iii.). Compare Marcian. Heracl.; Theophr. de Caus. Plant. ii. 5; Vossius, de Histor. Graec.
ΠΟΤΑΜΙΑ (Κωμόπολη) ΘΑΣΟΣ
Ο γλύπτης Πολύγνωτος Βαγής γεννήθηκε στις 14 Ιανουαρίου 1892 στην
Ποταμιά της Θάσου. Ο πατέρας
του Γεώργιος ήταν μαραγκός και η μητέρα του Αγγελική Υδραίου προερχόταν από γνωστή
οικογένεια της Υδρας.
Το 1911 μεταναστεύει στη Νέα
Υόρκη και το 1917 σπουδάζει για έξι μήνες στην Cooper Union γλυπτική. Το 1919
παίρνει την αμερικανική υπηκοότητα και τον Οκτώβριο του ίδιου χρόνου αρχίζει να
σπουδάζει γλυπτική στο Ινστιτούτο Καλών Τεχνών της Νέας
Υόρκης. Το 1923 η Harry Payne Whitney του παρέχει εργαστήριο στη Νέα
Υόρκη με υποτροφία του Whitney Museum Club.
(κείμενο: Νανά Ηλιάδου)
Το κείμενο (απόσπασμα) παρατίθεται το Δεκέμβριο 2003 από τουριστικό φυλλάδιο της Περιφέρειας
Ανατολικής Μακεδονίας- Θράκης.
Aglaophon, a painter, born in the island of Thasos, the father and instructor of Polygnotus (Suidas and Photius, s. v. Polugnotos; Anth. Gr. ix. 700). He had another son named Aristophon (Plat. Gorg.). As Polygnotus flourished before the 90th Ol. (Plin. H. N. xxxv. 9. s. 35), Aglaophon probably lived about Ol. 70. Quintilian (xii. 10.3) praises his paintings, which were distinguished by the simplicity of their colouring, as worthy of admiration on other grounds besides their antiquity. There was an Aglaophon who flourished in the 90th Ol., who were possessed of great wealth, according to Pliny (H. N. xxxv. 9. s. 36), and his statement is confirmed by a passage of Athenaeus (xii.), from which we learn that he painted two pictures, in one of which Olympias and Pythias, as the presiding geniuses of the Olylmpic and Pythian games, were represented crowning Alcibiades; in the other Nemea, the presiding deity of the Nemean games, held Alcibiades on her knees. Alcibiades could not have gained any victories much before Ol. 91 (B. C. 416). It is therefore exceedingly likely that this artist was the son of Aristophon, and grandson of the older Aglaophon, as among the Greeks the son generally bore the name not of his father but of his grandfather. Plutarch (Alcib. 16) says, that Aristophon was the author of the picture of Nemea and Alcibiades. He may perhaps have assisted his son. This Aglaophon was, according to some, the first who represented Victory with wings.
This text is from: A dictionary of Greek and Roman biography and mythology, 1873 (ed. William Smith). Cited Oct 2005 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks
Aristophon, a painter of some distinction, the son and pupil of Aglaophon, and the brother of Polygnotus. He was also probably the father of the younger Aglaophon, and born at Thasos. Some of his productions are mentioned by Pliny (xxxv. 11. s. 40), and Plutarch (de audiend. Poet. 3). It is probably through a mistake that Plutarch (Alcib. 16) makes him the author of a picture representing Alcibiades in the arms of Nemea.
. . . Aristophon the brother of Polygnotus, and by Plato reckoned as his equal, some well-known pictures are quoted in Pliny and Plutarch: of these a numerosa tabula is probably to be identified as the principal scene of an Iliupersis, in which Priamus, Helena and Peitho, Ulixes and Apate, and Deiphobus appear, possibly (as numerosa would seem to imply) as an excerpt from a large composition. Besides this, we have an Astypalaea grieving for her son Ancaeus, wounded by a boar (suggestive of Adonis and Aphrodite); a Philoctetes (probably the same which Pliny saw in the Pinacotheca of the Propylaea at Athens); and a picture commemorating the agonistic victories of Alcibiades. This last subject has given rise to much discussion; one author (Satyrus) makes of it two pictures, the one representing Olympias and Pythias crowning Alcibiades, the other Nemea sitting with Alcibiades in her lap. The other authority (Plutarch) names simply Nemea seated with Alcibiades in her arms, and adds that it caused quite a furore in Athens; but the elders took it ill, as savouring of tyrannia and lawlessness (paranomois). Klein explains the paranomois as referring to a psephisma of the Athenians forbidding any one from attaching to a female slave or hetaira the name of a Penteteris. The terms of the description make it clear that it was one picture. Satyrus says that the painting was Aglaophontos graphen; if this is so, we must imagine an Aglophon the second, for it is not possible that the father of Polygnotus could have lived so long. Probably either Satyrus or his quoter (Athenaeus) must have omitted the name of the son, and the quotation should run Aristophontos tou] Aglaophontos.
This extract is from: A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities (1890) (eds. William Smith, LLD, William Wayte, G. E. Marindin). Cited July 2004 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks
Aristomenes, a painter, born at Thasos is mentioned by Vitruvius (iii. Prooem. Β§ 2), but did not attain to any distinction.
Polygnotus (Polugnotos). A celebrated Greek painter of the island of Thasos. He worked chiefly in Athens, whither he had been invited by Cimon about B.C. 460, and where he received the citizenship. His most celebrated paintings were the "Capture of Troy" and the "Descent of Odysseus into Hades," in the hall erected by the Cnidians at Delphi. We possess a description of them in considerable detail by Pausanias (x. 25-31). Other celebrated paintings by him (though several of his contemporaries were associated with him in their execution) were to be seen in the Stoa Poecile, the "Capture of Troy" and the "Battle of Marathon" , and in the temples of the Dioscuri, and of Theseus at Athens. Though his works were only tinted outlines traced upon a coloured background, without shading and without any perspective, and sketched, as it were, in simple relief, all on the same plane, still his clear, rhythmical composition, the delicacy of his drawing, the impressiveness of his contours, and the nobility of his figures were highly celebrated.
This text is from: Harry Thurston Peck, Harpers Dictionary of Classical Antiquities. Cited Nov 2002 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks
Polygnotos. Innovative painter from Thasos during the Classical period, who spent
most of his life in Athens.
Aristotle used his work to illustrate what he ment by ethos, enhanced
state of mind. Pausanians writes about his paintings in Delphi.
Polygnotos preferred to paint characters and thoughtfulness: in Delphi
he painted the Greeks and the Trojans the day after the battle of Troy
and another work showed Odysseus visiting the underworld. He also painted mythological
scenes in the Stoa Poikile in Athens.
Polygnotos prefered to use colours like black, red, yellow ochra and
white, but also used shades inbetween by mixing the colours: for example, he painted
bodies that show through water and seethrough clothes.
He was also the first to try to show the background as a reality and
introduced landscapes as well as perspecitve.
Before Polygnotos painting was for decoration, now it became a cultural
factor. He founded the helladic school of art in Athens.
This text is cited Sept 2003 from the In2Greece URL below.
...With Polygnotus the history of Greek painting as an independent art may be
said to begin, and in this sense we may accept the statement of Theophrastus (ante)
that this artist was the inventor of painting. It is the period of the great reaction
at Athens succeeding to the Persian wars, and for the first time we hear of great
historical compositions, and of painters recognised as public characters. The
limited space of this article necessarily precludes anything like a general notice
of all the various productions of Greek painters incidentally mentioned in ancient
writers. With the exception, therefore, of occasionally mentioning works of extraordinary
celebrity, the notices of the various Greek painters of whom we have any satisfactory
knowledge will be restricted to those who, by the quality or peculiar character
of their works, have contributed towards the establishment of any of the various
styles of painting practised by the ancients. A fuller account of each artist
will be found under their respective names in the Dictionary of Greek and Roman
Biography.
The fame of Polygnotus is chiefly associated with Athens; he was born
at Thasos, and came of a family of Thasiote artists; his father Aglophon, and
his brother Aristophon, being both recorded as painters of note. Of the details
of his life we know very little; just as his great contemporary Pheidias started
life as a painter, so Polygnotus is spoken of as having had some experience in
sculpture: an association between the two arts which is clearly reflected in the
sculpture of the time. His period of activity seems to have lain between B.C.
475 and 430. Attracted to Athens among the artists whom Cimon was employing for
the reconstruction and adornment of the city, he won for himself the freedom of
that city, and a special honour from the Amphictyons, by his gratuitous work at
Athens and at Delphi. He became the leader of a school of painters who worked
on the same monuments, and probably much in the same manner, as himself; principal.
among these were Panaenus, a relation of Pheidias, and Micon, like his leader
both sculptor and painter, and, like him too, of Ionic origin.
Unfortunately, in many cases where these artists were employed conjointly,
we cannot always decide which subjects to assign to each of the respective masters.
In all probability, the earliest works which can with certainty be attributed
to Polygnotus were the large compositions with which he decorated the Lesche or
assembly hall of the Cnidians at Delphi, representing the Sack of Troy and the
Vision of Hades. These paintings are celebrated in an epigram of Simonides: now
we know that in B.C. 477 the poet went to Sicily, and that in B.C. 467 he died;
so that the paintings were probably executed at least before B.C. 470. Pausanias
devotes seven chapters (x. 25-31) to their description, and from this we can gather
a very fair idea of the general character of the compositions. The figures were
arranged in an extended form of frieze, but grouped on different levels, and lacking
that pictorial unity which a definitive background supplies in modern painting.
Each figure had the name written over it, and the wall was covered with distinct
groups, each telling its own story, but all contributing together to relate the
tale of the general composition. They were in fact painted histories, and each
group was no further connected with the contiguous groups, than that they all
tended to illustrate different facts of the same story. Intended as they were
for the decoration of architecture, they were subservient to tectonic laws; as
in sculpture in relief, what was not absolutely necessary to illustrate the principal
object was indicated merely by symbolism: thus, in default of more elaborate scenery,
locality was suggested rather than expressed,--a tree, a house, or a piece of
water representing what the knowledge of each spectator would easily supply for
himself.
If we consider the narrow limits thus imposed on Polygnotos by his
obedience to ancient laws and canons not yet broken through, we shall expect to
find his real claims to the advancement of art more set forth in the details of
his style and treatment of his subject; and this is precisely what is most noted
of him by ancient writers. While he inherits the strength and firmness of his
more archaic predecessors, he adds a breadth of style and an ?sthetic beauty which
is less external than inherent within the character of his subject. This is what
Aristotle means when he (Poet. c. 6) speaks of him as an agathos ethographos,,
an excellent delineator of [p. 408] moral character, and assigns to him in this
respect a complete superiority over Zeuxis; and again (ibid. c. 2), speaking of
imitation, when he remarks that it must be either superior, inferior, or equal
to its model, illustrating his point by the cases of three painters: Polygnotus,
he says, paints men better than they are, Pauson worse than they are, and Dionysius
as they are.
Pliny says (xxxv. § 58) that he was the first to paint women with
translucent drapery, and to decorate their heads with various coloured head-dresses;
but that his greatest contributions to painting were those of opening the mouth,
showing the teeth, and that he gave expression to the countenance by altering
its archaic stiffness. It is in these last characteristics that we see the revolution
brought about by Polygnotus; he endeavours, in the whole treatment of the body,
to impart an individual character; especially in the face, so that a poet of the
Anthology (Anth. Gr. iii. 147 B) might say of his Polyxena that in her eyelids
lay the whole of the Trojan war. It is probably more than a coincidence that in
his works we have the first glimpse of portrait painting in the modern sense.
The artist loved Elpinice, the sister of the great Cimon; and her portrait, as
Laodice, figured among the Trojan women represented by him in the Stoa.
With Polygnotus the art of Painting was in point of conception and
spiritual beauty at its zenith; but, unlike sculpture, it was as yet lacking in
technical power; as Woermann (p. 43) says, It truly entered into possession of
its full technical means in a later generation, when the arts of Greece were no
longer bent upon their ideal mission in the same high earnest as of old. The range
of colours was scanty;6 and though we hear of special local tints being applied
(e. g. the Eurynomus in the Nekyia coloured blue-black, like a carrion fly, as
Pausanias says), there is no suggestion of a transition of tones or of local light
and shade. Indeed, this is the more natural when we remember that no determinate
background was used, but probably the figures stood out on the white ground of
the wall.
If we wish to realise the spirit of Polygnotus' paintings, it is principally
to the sculptures of the time that we must look; and specially to the series of
reliefs upon the marble lekythi and sepulchral stelae, which breathe the same
qualities of pathos that underlay the paintings of this master, and the bloom
of which art falls just in his time. Possibly even the motives of these sculptures
may suggest the types which Polygnotus had created for his great picture of Hades.
The influence which his art exercised upon sculpture is best shown in the frieze
of the Graeco-Lycian monument of Gjolbaschi, where more than one motive (e. g.
the Slaying of the Suitors by Odysseus) is directly inspired by the painting of
the same subject. But as far as mere types are concerned, much is probably still
to be obtained from the study of vases. The gulf between art and handicraft is
widening, and the polychrome vase-paintings (on a white ground) are a last attempt
to keep pace with the greater art, but for the most part are not worthy of the
simple colouring of Polygnotus. On some red-figured vases, however, of the time
of Meidias,7 it is now shown that the scenes depicted have a close relationship
with the painter,--a fact borne out by the inscriptions which they bear, and which
are written in the Parian-Thasian, and not the Attic, alphabet. Dummler has collected
as many as six such instances, and more will doubtless be now identified.
For a list of the various works of Polygnotus and his contemporaries,
we must refer the reader to Overbeck's Schriftquellen. It is sufficient to say
here that their principal sphere seems to have been Athens, and the wealth of
Athenian local myths supplied them with the most varied and extensive themes.
It was a time when the luxuriance of Ionic art was taking a hold upon Athens,
not in painting alone, but in the whole range of Attic culture; and this movement
is continued in the greatest of the colleagues of Polygnotus, Micon and Panaenus.
This extract is from: A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities (1890) (eds. William Smith, LLD, William Wayte, G. E. Marindin). Cited July 2004 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks
ΦΙΛΙΠΠΟΙ (Αρχαία πόλη) ΚΑΒΑΛΑ
Marsyas, of Philippi, commonly called the Younger (ho neoteros), to distinguish
him from Marsyas of Pella, with whom he has frequently been confounded. The period
at which he flourished is uncertain: the earliest writers by whom he is cited
are Pliny and Athenaeus. The latter tells us that he was priest of Heracles. (Athen.
xi. p. 467, c.) The works of his which we find cited, are, 1. Makedonika, whether
a geographical or strictly historical treatise is uncertain; it contained at least
six books. (Harpocr. s. v. Lete.) 2. Archaiologia, in twelve books, mentioned
by Suidas; probably, as suggested by Geier, the same with the Attika attributed
by the lexicographer to the elder Marsyas. 3. Muthika, in seven books.
The two last works are erroneously attributed by Suidas, according
to our existing text, to a. third Marsyas, a native of Taba, but it has been satisfactorily
shown that this supposed historian is no other than the mythical founder of the
city of Taba (Steph. Byz. s. v. Tabai), and that the works ascribed to him belong
in fact to Marsyas of Philippi.
All the questions concerning both the elder and the younger Marsyas
are fully discussed, and the extant fragments of their works collected, by Geier,
Alexandri M. Historiar. Scriptores aetate suppares, Lips. 1844, pp. 318-340. (See
also Droysen, Hellenism. vol. i. pp. 679-682; Bernhardy, ad Suid. s. v. Marsuas.)
This text is from: A dictionary of Greek and Roman biography and mythology, 1873 (ed. William Smith). Cited Oct 2006 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks
ΘΑΣΟΣ (Αρχαία πόλη) ΘΑΣΟΣ
A native of Thasos and author of satyric dramas in the age of
Alcibiades who was his friend, and managed to get him freed from an accusation
that had been brought against him. A parody by this poet, entitled Gigantomachia,
was being presented when the news arrived of the defeat of Nicias in Sicily. This
Hegemon was called Phace (phake, "lentil"), conferred on him as a nickname.
He wrote also a comedy entitled Philinna.
This text is from: Harry Thurston Peck, Harpers Dictionary of Classical Antiquities. Cited Nov 2002 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks
Hegemon, of Thasos, was a comic poet of the old comedy at Athens, but was more celebrated for his parodies, of which kind of poetry he was, according to Aristotle, the inventor. He was nicknamed Phake, on account of his fondness for that kind of pulse. He lived in the time of the Peloponnesian war, and was contemporary with Cratinus when the latter was an old man, and with Alcibiades. His parody of the Gigantomachia was the piece to which the Athenians were listening, when the news was brought to them in the theatre of the destruction of the expedition to Sicily, and when, in order not to betray their feelings, they remained in the theatre to the end of the performance. The only comedy of his which is mentioned is the Philine, of which one fragment is preserved by Athenaeus, who also gives some amusing particulars respecting him. (Aristot. Poel. 2, and Hitter's note; Athen. i., b.; iii.; ix.; xv.; Meineke, Hist. Crit. Com. Graec.; Fabric. Bibl. Graec. ii.)
This text is from: A dictionary of Greek and Roman biography and mythology, 1873 (ed. William Smith). Cited Nov 2005 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks
ΚΑΒΑΛΑ (Πόλη) ΑΝΑΤΟΛΙΚΗ ΜΑΚΕΔΟΝΙΑ & ΘΡΑΚΗ
1910
Συνθέτης
Γεννήθηκε το 1939 στην Καβάλα από ευσεβείς γονείς, οι οποίοι από μικρή
ηλικία του εμφυτεύσανε την αγάπη για την Εκκλησία του Χριστού. Από τα παιδικά
του χρόνια εγκαταστάθηκε με την οικογένειά του στη Θεσσαλονίκη.
Την περίοδο των Γυμνασιακών του σπουδών άρχισε την ενασχόληση με τη
Βυζαντινή Μουσική, με πρώτο του δάσκαλο το θεωρητικό Αβραάμ Ευθυμιάδη στα φροντιστήρια
“Αγιος Δημήτριος”. Από το 1956 συνδέθηκε με το Μεγάλο Δάσκαλο, Αρχοντα
Πρωτοψάλτη, κ. Αθανάσιο, Καραμάνη, από τον οποίο μυήθηκε στο Πατριαρχικό ύφος.
Από το 1958 ψάλλει σε διάφορους Ναούς της Θεσσαλονίκης,
και από το 2002 είναι πρωτοψάλτης στον Ιερό Ναό Αγίου Γεωργίου Πανοράματος
Θεσσαλονίκης. Πήρε πτυχίο
το 1968 από το “Μακεδονικό Ωδείο Θεσσαλονίκης”,
έχοντας καθηγητές τους Δασκάλους Α. Καραμάνη και Χ. Ταλιαδώρο. Δίδαξε στο Δημοτικό
Ωδείο Θεσσαλονίκης και στη
Σχολή της Μητρόπολης Αρναίας.
Εκανε για πολύ καιρό εκπομπές σε κρατικό ραδιοφωνικό σταθμό της Θεσσαλονίκης.
Το 1990 σε διάστημα 8 μηνών προσεκλήθη δύο φορές να ψάλει στην Αμερική.
Εδώ και 22 χρόνια κυκλοφορούν 22 προσωπικές του κασέτες, και έχουν
διατεθεί αρκετές χιλιάδες αντίτυπα. Τα τελευταία χρόνια κυκλοφορούν επίσης κασέτες
και CD της Βυζαντινής Χορωδίας “Αγιος Ιωάννης ο Κουκουζέλης”, της
οποίας έχει την τιμή να είναι ιδρυτής και Χοράρχης.
Τον Ιανουάριο του 1994 ο κ. Δασκαλάκης τιμήθηκε με το χρυσό μετάλλιο
των Αγ. Κυρίλλου και Μεθοδίου από τον Παναγιότατο Μητροπολίτη Θεσσαλονίκης
κ.κ. Παντελεήμονα το Β΄για την προσφορά του στη Βυζαντινή Μουσική.
Τέλος, από τον Ιανουάριο του 2002 δημιούργησε Σχολή Βυζαντινής Μουσικής
στον Ιερό Ναό Αγίου Γεωργίου Πανοράματος,
όπου και είναι πρωτοψάλτης. Πίστη του είναι και αισιοδοξεί ότι οι νέοι, ταλαντούχοι
μαθητές του, θα συνεχίσουν να υπηρετούν τη Βυζαντινή Μουσική, εξασφαλίζοντας έτσι
τη διάδοχη κατάσταση.
Το κείμενο παρατίθεται τον Ιανουάριο 2004 από τουριστικό φυλλάδιο των: Δήμου
Πάτμου, Νομαρχίας
Δωδεκανήσου, Ι.Μ.
Θεολόγου και Υπουργείου
Αιγαίου (2003).
ΗΙΩΝ (Αρχαία πόλη) ΚΑΒΑΛΑ
Boges, the Persian governor of Eion in Thrace, when Xerxes invaded Greece in
B. C. 480. Boges continued to hold the place till B. C. 476, when it was besieged
by the Athenians under Cimon. Boges, finding that he was unable to defend the
town, and refusing to surrender it, killed his wife, children, and family, and
set fire to the place, in which he himself perished. (Herod. vii. 113, 107; Plut.
Cim. 7, who calls him Boutes; Paus. viii. 8.5, who calls him Boes; Polyaen. vii.
24, who calls him Borges; comp. Diod. xi. 60.)
This text is from: A dictionary of Greek and Roman biography and mythology, 1873 (ed. William Smith). Cited Oct 2005 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks
ΠΟΛΥΣΤΥΛΟ (Χωριό) ΚΑΒΑΛΑ
β' μισό 14ου αιώνα
Mεταξύ των ετών 1342-1343/44 διετέλεσε οινοχόος της αυτοκράτειρας
Αννας Παλαιολογίνας. O Iωάννης Aπόκαυκος τον τοποθέτησε ηγεμόνα στο Πολύστυλο
της Θράκης, φυλακίστηκε όμως από τους κατοίκους, οι οποίοι τον παρέδωσαν στον
Iωάννη ΣT΄ Kαντακουζηνό. O τελευταίος τον ελευθέρωσε και τον απέστειλε ως αντιπρόσωπό
του στην αυτοκράτειρα Αννα Παλαιολογίνα.
Το κείμενο παρατίθεται τον Απρίλιο 2003 από την ακόλουθη ιστοσελίδα του Thracian Electronic Thesaurus, του Δημοκρίτειου Πανεπιστημίου Θράκης.
ΦΙΛΙΠΠΟΙ (Αρχαία πόλη) ΚΑΒΑΛΑ
Flacus, Norbanus, C. Norbanus Flaccus. In B. C. 42 he and Decidius Saxa were sent
by Octavian and Antony with eight legions into Macedonia, and thence they proceeded
to Philippi to operate against Brutus and Cassius. They encamped in the neighbourhood
of Philippi, and occupied a position which prevented the republicans advancing
any further. By a stratagem of Brutus and Cassius, Norbanus was led to quit his
position, but he discovered his mistake in time to recover his former position.
The republicans advancing by another and longer road, Norbanus withdrew with his
army towards Amphipolis, and the republicans, without pursuing Norbanus, encamped
near Philippi. When Antony arrived, he was glad to find that Amphipolis was secured,
and having strengthened its garrison under Norbanus, he proceeded to Philippi.
In B. C. 38, C. Norbanus Flaccus was consul with App. Claudius Pulcher. The C.
Norbanus Flaccus, who was consul B. C. 24 with Octavian, was probably a son of
the one here spoken of. (Appian, B. C. iv. 87, 103, &c., 106, &c.; Dion Cass.
xxxviii. 43, xlvii. 35, xlix. 23, liii. 28; Plut. Brut. 38.)
This text is from: A dictionary of Greek and Roman biography and mythology, 1873 (ed. William Smith). Cited Nov 2005 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks
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