Author
Sims, Harold H., 1912-2002
Author
Chase, Ernest Dudley, 1878-1966
Note
Color pictorial map, with decorative border and title cartouche. Shows vignettes of landmarks and buildings, the image of a blimp, steam boats, rivers and mountains. Includes inset vignettes of historic architecture. The map is decorated with a red, yellow and brown compass. Relief shown pictorially. The library has 2 other copies, #6798.000 and 5605.000. This copy is notable for the Nazi swastika in the top border.
Author
Hukkala, G.
Note
Color map, from the Detroit Times, Sunday, April 19, 1936. By G. Hukkala. with photographic image of Hitler in the center. Map shows the former colonial possessions of Germany scattered through Africa, Asia and the Pacific. At upper right is an inset map of Germany with the territory of Alsace Lorraine and a portion of Poland cross hatched. The subtitle continues "Has told world that Fatherland needs old colonies for expansion. Small map shows the pre-war Germany [ie pre World War I]. With his nation rearmed and the Rhineland reoccupied, worried Europe now fears Hitler will try to force restoration of rich colonial empire." A powerful summation of the forces that lead up to the outbreak of World War II, both in Europe and Asia.
Author
Roy, William
Note
This view of the map shows flap 3 of the battle with flaps 1 and 2 below it. It depicts the end of the battle.
Author
Roy, William
Note
This view of the map shows the beginning of the battle with both flaps 2 and 3 opened above it. Although this is the original printed map, we call it flap 1 to make the flap sequence clear. It depicts the beginning of the battle and the next few days following.
Author
Roy, William
Note
This view of the map shows flap 2 with flap 3 opened above it. both. It depicts the middle of the battle and the next few days following.
Author
[Hormes, Stephan, Peust, Silke]
Note
Color map with 3 insets, in German and English. Originally folded in cover 25 x 10. Produced by Kalimedia firm. Map showing wine regions, and districts, cities, towns, roads, international and administrative borders, population, rivers and mountains. Relief shown by shadings. Includes index, text and legend. Date estimated.
Author
[Hormes, Stephan, Peust, Silke]
Note
Color map of Germany, 84x60, folded to 21x8. Atlas of the 999 most unusual place names. Map showing major cities, towns, roads, rivers, and lakes. Includes index and text. Relief shown by shadings.
Author
Tulla, Johann Gottfried , 1770-1828
Note
Hand colored in outline map of Grand Duchy of Baden. First issued in 1812. Revised by J.G. Tulla in 1814. Engraved by F.X. Hutter. Published by C.F. Muller. Shows administrative boundaries, major cities, villages, roads, rivers, and mountains. Relief shown by hachures.
Author
Anonymous.
Note
Date Estimated. Covers period July 24, 1944 with the D-Day landings at Utah Beach, France, through April 15, 1945 with the called halt near Mittweida, Germany. Includes an artistic silhouette of armored troops.
Author
[Los Angeles Times, Owens, Charles H.]
Note
Color map, with views of horizon at upper panel. Shows lines of attack, major cities, roads, railroads, army bases, distances, etc. Relief shown pictorially. Includes historical notes and text.
Author
[Los Angeles Times, Owens, Charles H.]
Note
Color map, with views of horizon at upper panel. Shows lines of attack by air, major cities, roads, railroads, army bases, etc. Relief shown pictorially. Includes compass rose, historical notes and text.
Author
[Los Angeles Times, Owens, Charles H.]
Note
Color map, with views of horizon at upper panel and air attack in Germany. Shows major cities, buildings, roads, railroads, etc. Relief shown pictorially. Includes compass rose at lower left, historical notes and text :"Allied forces, as illustrated in Charles Owens's map, are driving at major German cities ..."
Author
[Los Angeles Times, Owens, Charles H.]
Note
Color map with detailed view of the shortest path to Berlin across the English Channel. Shows boundaries, major cities, battle fields, fortifications, canals, rivers, Hedgehog stronholds, battleships, war planes, etc. Includes views of battle fields on upper panel, notes and text.
Author
[Lubin, Eilhard (1565-1621), Geelkercken, Nicolaes van]
Note
Large and impressive outline colored copperplate engraving map of Pomerania on 12 sheets, 42x54 or smaller, by Eilhard Lubin, Professor at the University of Rostock. In 1610 he was asked by Philipp II, the Duke of Pomerania to create a large scale map of the geography and history of the duchy. In 1612 map was completed, it was decorated with 49 town views, and coat of arms of the noble families. In 1618 the Dutch engraver Nicolas van Geelkercken, engraved the copperplates in Amsterdam, and a small number of sheets were printed. The plates disappeared in the thirty years war and were rediscovered by the historian Johann Carl Conard Oelrichs in 1758. The map shows 49 town views on the border, the family tree of the house of Griffins, dukes of Pomerania, with 157 names and small portraits, a small family tree of the house of Rugen, 5 large portraits of living dukes of different parts of Pomerania, and on the lower middle left sheet probably the portrait of Lubin himself. The map shows towns and villages, landmarks, churches, forest, rivers and mountains. Relief is shown pictorially. Lubin's Pomerania remained the most accurate map of the region from its inception in 1618 until the Prussian topographical survey of the eighteenth century. The map is extraordinary in the way that it combines the "mapping" of the history of the ruling families with the mapping of the topography of Pomerania.
Author
[Lubin, Eilhard (1565-1621), Geelkercken, Nicolaes van]
Note
Large and impressive outline colored copperplate engraving map of Pomerania on 12 sheets, 42x54 or smaller, by Eilhard Lubin, Professor at the University of Rostock. In 1610 he was asked by Philipp II, the Duke of Pomerania to create a large scale map of the geography and history of the duchy. In 1612 map was completed, it was decorated with 49 town views, and coat of arms of the noble families. In 1618 the Dutch engraver Nicolas van Geelkercken, engraved the copperplates in Amsterdam, and a small number of sheets were printed. The plates disappeared in the thirty years war and were rediscovered by the historian Johann Carl Conard Oelrichs in 1758. The map shows 49 town views on the border, the family tree of the house of Griffins, dukes of Pomerania, with 157 names and small portraits, a small family tree of the house of Rugen, 5 large portraits of living dukes of different parts of Pomerania, and on the lower middle left sheet probably the portrait of Lubin himself. The map shows towns and villages, landmarks, churches, forest, rivers and mountains. Relief is shown pictorially. Lubin's Pomerania remained the most accurate map of the region from its inception in 1618 until the Prussian topographical survey of the eighteenth century. The map is extraordinary in the way that it combines the "mapping" of the history of the ruling families with the mapping of the topography of Pomerania.
Author
[Lubin, Eilhard (1565-1621), Geelkercken, Nicolaes van]
Note
Large and impressive outline colored copperplate engraving map of Pomerania on 12 sheets, 42x54 or smaller, by Eilhard Lubin, Professor at the University of Rostock. In 1610 he was asked by Philipp II, the Duke of Pomerania to create a large scale map of the geography and history of the duchy. In 1612 map was completed, it was decorated with 49 town views, and coat of arms of the noble families. In 1618 the Dutch engraver Nicolas van Geelkercken, engraved the copperplates in Amsterdam, and a small number of sheets were printed. The plates disappeared in the thirty years war and were rediscovered by the historian Johann Carl Conard Oelrichs in 1758. The map shows 49 town views on the border, the family tree of the house of Griffins, dukes of Pomerania, with 157 names and small portraits, a small family tree of the house of Rugen, 5 large portraits of living dukes of different parts of Pomerania, and on the lower middle left sheet probably the portrait of Lubin himself. The map shows towns and villages, landmarks, churches, forest, rivers and mountains. Relief is shown pictorially. Lubin's Pomerania remained the most accurate map of the region from its inception in 1618 until the Prussian topographical survey of the eighteenth century. The map is extraordinary in the way that it combines the "mapping" of the history of the ruling families with the mapping of the topography of Pomerania.
Author
[Lubin, Eilhard (1565-1621), Geelkercken, Nicolaes van]
Note
Large and impressive outline colored copperplate engraving map of Pomerania on 12 sheets, 42x54 or smaller, by Eilhard Lubin, Professor at the University of Rostock. In 1610 he was asked by Philipp II, the Duke of Pomerania to create a large scale map of the geography and history of the duchy. In 1612 map was completed, it was decorated with 49 town views, and coat of arms of the noble families. In 1618 the Dutch engraver Nicolas van Geelkercken, engraved the copperplates in Amsterdam, and a small number of sheets were printed. The plates disappeared in the thirty years war and were rediscovered by the historian Johann Carl Conard Oelrichs in 1758. The map shows 49 town views on the border, the family tree of the house of Griffins, dukes of Pomerania, with 157 names and small portraits, a small family tree of the house of Rugen, 5 large portraits of living dukes of different parts of Pomerania, and on the lower middle left sheet probably the portrait of Lubin himself. The map shows towns and villages, landmarks, churches, forest, rivers and mountains. Relief is shown pictorially. Lubin's Pomerania remained the most accurate map of the region from its inception in 1618 until the Prussian topographical survey of the eighteenth century. The map is extraordinary in the way that it combines the "mapping" of the history of the ruling families with the mapping of the topography of Pomerania.
Author
[Lubin, Eilhard (1565-1621), Geelkercken, Nicolaes van]
Note
Large and impressive outline colored copperplate engraving map of Pomerania on 12 sheets, 42x54 or smaller, by Eilhard Lubin, Professor at the University of Rostock. In 1610 he was asked by Philipp II, the Duke of Pomerania to create a large scale map of the geography and history of the duchy. In 1612 map was completed, it was decorated with 49 town views, and coat of arms of the noble families. In 1618 the Dutch engraver Nicolas van Geelkercken, engraved the copperplates in Amsterdam, and a small number of sheets were printed. The plates disappeared in the thirty years war and were rediscovered by the historian Johann Carl Conard Oelrichs in 1758. The map shows 49 town views on the border, the family tree of the house of Griffins, dukes of Pomerania, with 157 names and small portraits, a small family tree of the house of Rugen, 5 large portraits of living dukes of different parts of Pomerania, and on the lower middle left sheet probably the portrait of Lubin himself. The map shows towns and villages, landmarks, churches, forest, rivers and mountains. Relief is shown pictorially. Lubin's Pomerania remained the most accurate map of the region from its inception in 1618 until the Prussian topographical survey of the eighteenth century. The map is extraordinary in the way that it combines the "mapping" of the history of the ruling families with the mapping of the topography of Pomerania.
Author
[Lubin, Eilhard (1565-1621), Geelkercken, Nicolaes van]
Note
Large and impressive outline colored copperplate engraving map of Pomerania on 12 sheets, 42x54 or smaller, by Eilhard Lubin, Professor at the University of Rostock. In 1610 he was asked by Philipp II, the Duke of Pomerania to create a large scale map of the geography and history of the duchy. In 1612 map was completed, it was decorated with 49 town views, and coat of arms of the noble families. In 1618 the Dutch engraver Nicolas van Geelkercken, engraved the copperplates in Amsterdam, and a small number of sheets were printed. The plates disappeared in the thirty years war and were rediscovered by the historian Johann Carl Conard Oelrichs in 1758. The map shows 49 town views on the border, the family tree of the house of Griffins, dukes of Pomerania, with 157 names and small portraits, a small family tree of the house of Rugen, 5 large portraits of living dukes of different parts of Pomerania, and on the lower middle left sheet probably the portrait of Lubin himself. The map shows towns and villages, landmarks, churches, forest, rivers and mountains. Relief is shown pictorially. Lubin's Pomerania remained the most accurate map of the region from its inception in 1618 until the Prussian topographical survey of the eighteenth century. The map is extraordinary in the way that it combines the "mapping" of the history of the ruling families with the mapping of the topography of Pomerania.
Author
[Lubin, Eilhard (1565-1621), Geelkercken, Nicolaes van]
Note
Large and impressive outline colored copperplate engraving map of Pomerania on 12 sheets, 42x54 or smaller, by Eilhard Lubin, Professor at the University of Rostock. In 1610 he was asked by Philipp II, the Duke of Pomerania to create a large scale map of the geography and history of the duchy. In 1612 map was completed, it was decorated with 49 town views, and coat of arms of the noble families. In 1618 the Dutch engraver Nicolas van Geelkercken, engraved the copperplates in Amsterdam, and a small number of sheets were printed. The plates disappeared in the thirty years war and were rediscovered by the historian Johann Carl Conard Oelrichs in 1758. The map shows 49 town views on the border, the family tree of the house of Griffins, dukes of Pomerania, with 157 names and small portraits, a small family tree of the house of Rugen, 5 large portraits of living dukes of different parts of Pomerania, and on the lower middle left sheet probably the portrait of Lubin himself. The map shows towns and villages, landmarks, churches, forest, rivers and mountains. Relief is shown pictorially. Lubin's Pomerania remained the most accurate map of the region from its inception in 1618 until the Prussian topographical survey of the eighteenth century. The map is extraordinary in the way that it combines the "mapping" of the history of the ruling families with the mapping of the topography of Pomerania.
Author
[Lubin, Eilhard (1565-1621), Geelkercken, Nicolaes van]
Note
Large and impressive outline colored copperplate engraving map of Pomerania on 12 sheets, 42x54 or smaller, by Eilhard Lubin, Professor at the University of Rostock. In 1610 he was asked by Philipp II, the Duke of Pomerania to create a large scale map of the geography and history of the duchy. In 1612 map was completed, it was decorated with 49 town views, and coat of arms of the noble families. In 1618 the Dutch engraver Nicolas van Geelkercken, engraved the copperplates in Amsterdam, and a small number of sheets were printed. The plates disappeared in the thirty years war and were rediscovered by the historian Johann Carl Conard Oelrichs in 1758. The map shows 49 town views on the border, the family tree of the house of Griffins, dukes of Pomerania, with 157 names and small portraits, a small family tree of the house of Rugen, 5 large portraits of living dukes of different parts of Pomerania, and on the lower middle left sheet probably the portrait of Lubin himself. The map shows towns and villages, landmarks, churches, forest, rivers and mountains. Relief is shown pictorially. Lubin's Pomerania remained the most accurate map of the region from its inception in 1618 until the Prussian topographical survey of the eighteenth century. The map is extraordinary in the way that it combines the "mapping" of the history of the ruling families with the mapping of the topography of Pomerania.
Author
[Lubin, Eilhard (1565-1621), Geelkercken, Nicolaes van]
Note
Large and impressive outline colored copperplate engraving map of Pomerania on 12 sheets, 42x54 or smaller, by Eilhard Lubin, Professor at the University of Rostock. In 1610 he was asked by Philipp II, the Duke of Pomerania to create a large scale map of the geography and history of the duchy. In 1612 map was completed, it was decorated with 49 town views, and coat of arms of the noble families. In 1618 the Dutch engraver Nicolas van Geelkercken, engraved the copperplates in Amsterdam, and a small number of sheets were printed. The plates disappeared in the thirty years war and were rediscovered by the historian Johann Carl Conard Oelrichs in 1758. The map shows 49 town views on the border, the family tree of the house of Griffins, dukes of Pomerania, with 157 names and small portraits, a small family tree of the house of Rugen, 5 large portraits of living dukes of different parts of Pomerania, and on the lower middle left sheet probably the portrait of Lubin himself. The map shows towns and villages, landmarks, churches, forest, rivers and mountains. Relief is shown pictorially. Lubin's Pomerania remained the most accurate map of the region from its inception in 1618 until the Prussian topographical survey of the eighteenth century. The map is extraordinary in the way that it combines the "mapping" of the history of the ruling families with the mapping of the topography of Pomerania.
Author
[Lubin, Eilhard (1565-1621), Geelkercken, Nicolaes van]
Note
Large and impressive outline colored copperplate engraving map of Pomerania on 12 sheets, 42x54 or smaller, by Eilhard Lubin, Professor at the University of Rostock. In 1610 he was asked by Philipp II, the Duke of Pomerania to create a large scale map of the geography and history of the duchy. In 1612 map was completed, it was decorated with 49 town views, and coat of arms of the noble families. In 1618 the Dutch engraver Nicolas van Geelkercken, engraved the copperplates in Amsterdam, and a small number of sheets were printed. The plates disappeared in the thirty years war and were rediscovered by the historian Johann Carl Conard Oelrichs in 1758. The map shows 49 town views on the border, the family tree of the house of Griffins, dukes of Pomerania, with 157 names and small portraits, a small family tree of the house of Rugen, 5 large portraits of living dukes of different parts of Pomerania, and on the lower middle left sheet probably the portrait of Lubin himself. The map shows towns and villages, landmarks, churches, forest, rivers and mountains. Relief is shown pictorially. Lubin's Pomerania remained the most accurate map of the region from its inception in 1618 until the Prussian topographical survey of the eighteenth century. The map is extraordinary in the way that it combines the "mapping" of the history of the ruling families with the mapping of the topography of Pomerania.
Author
[Lubin, Eilhard (1565-1621), Geelkercken, Nicolaes van]
Note
Large and impressive outline colored copperplate engraving map of Pomerania on 12 sheets, 42x54 or smaller, by Eilhard Lubin, Professor at the University of Rostock. In 1610 he was asked by Philipp II, the Duke of Pomerania to create a large scale map of the geography and history of the duchy. In 1612 map was completed, it was decorated with 49 town views, and coat of arms of the noble families. In 1618 the Dutch engraver Nicolas van Geelkercken, engraved the copperplates in Amsterdam, and a small number of sheets were printed. The plates disappeared in the thirty years war and were rediscovered by the historian Johann Carl Conard Oelrichs in 1758. The map shows 49 town views on the border, the family tree of the house of Griffins, dukes of Pomerania, with 157 names and small portraits, a small family tree of the house of Rugen, 5 large portraits of living dukes of different parts of Pomerania, and on the lower middle left sheet probably the portrait of Lubin himself. The map shows towns and villages, landmarks, churches, forest, rivers and mountains. Relief is shown pictorially. Lubin's Pomerania remained the most accurate map of the region from its inception in 1618 until the Prussian topographical survey of the eighteenth century. The map is extraordinary in the way that it combines the "mapping" of the history of the ruling families with the mapping of the topography of Pomerania.
Author
[Lubin, Eilhard (1565-1621), Geelkercken, Nicolaes van]
Note
Large and impressive outline colored copperplate engraving map of Pomerania on 12 sheets, 42x54 or smaller, by Eilhard Lubin, Professor at the University of Rostock. In 1610 he was asked by Philipp II, the Duke of Pomerania to create a large scale map of the geography and history of the duchy. In 1612 map was completed, it was decorated with 49 town views, and coat of arms of the noble families. In 1618 the Dutch engraver Nicolas van Geelkercken, engraved the copperplates in Amsterdam, and a small number of sheets were printed. The plates disappeared in the thirty years war and were rediscovered by the historian Johann Carl Conard Oelrichs in 1758. The map shows 49 town views on the border, the family tree of the house of Griffins, dukes of Pomerania, with 157 names and small portraits, a small family tree of the house of Rugen, 5 large portraits of living dukes of different parts of Pomerania, and on the lower middle left sheet probably the portrait of Lubin himself. The map shows towns and villages, landmarks, churches, forest, rivers and mountains. Relief is shown pictorially. Lubin's Pomerania remained the most accurate map of the region from its inception in 1618 until the Prussian topographical survey of the eighteenth century. The map is extraordinary in the way that it combines the "mapping" of the history of the ruling families with the mapping of the topography of Pomerania.
Author
Atlanta Map
Note
Color map of occupation zones. Post WWII map of Germany, shows postal codes allied occupation zones in Germany from 1945 until 1949. Title and legend in English, German and Russian. Shows boundaries. includes legend and notes. Date estimated.
Author
[Gassdorf, Karl-Otto, Holzel , Fritz]
Note
Color pictorial map. Relief shown by shading, color, and pictorially. Showing major cities, towns, buildings, landmarks, roads, hiking regions, resorts, agriculture, mining, oil production, major broadcasting stations, forests, etc. Includes legend and compass oriented with the north to upper left margin.
Author
Haack, Herman
Note
Color map of East Germany, 115x79.5, folded into 30x21. Showing the economic production and industry during 1960s. List on the lower right corner identifies types of minerals and types of industries by pictorial symbols. Map shows industrial towns, railways, rivers, canals, ferries and international boundaries. Includes list of major cities.
Author
Sparks, Jenni
Note
Hand drawn colored pictorial map of Berlin, designed and produced from the mapping of the actual geography of the city. Jenni Sparks has collaborated with Evermade to create the definitive culture detailed map of Berlin. Covers as far north as Wedding and Volkspark Rehberg. The south covers all areas up to and including Viktoriapark, Treptower Park and Wilmersdorf. The east of the map goes as far as Friedrichshain, Pankow and Weisensee. The most western parts of the map are Charlottenburg Nord, Flughafen Berlin Tegel and Charlottenburg. Shows place names, landmarks, buildings, bars restaurants, street, bahnhofs, parks, etc. Date estimated.
Author
[Los Angeles Times, Eddy, Frederic]
Note
Color map. Published in Sunday February 4,1951 issue of Los Angeles Times. "This map by Frederic Eddy establishes the four occupation zones of Germany -American, French, British and Russia ..." Detail map shows rivers, canals, autobahn, and major cities. Highlights the political situation in Germany and surrounding countries. Informative texts provide overview of the geopolitical situation "Communist efforts to involve the United States in a major war in Korea, one which would force this country to make heavy military commitments in Asia at the expense of occupation forces in Europe. have a direct bearing on the tense situation in Germany ..." Relief shown pictorially.
Author
Los Angeles Times
Note
Color map, packed with information on battle fields and allied activities. Shows boundaries, major cities, railroads, and distances. Relief shown pictorially. Includes notes and text: "Germany has drawn a ring around in inner most possessions, the arc including Poland to the east, the top of Italy, and Alps to the south The Siegfried Line of West Wall to the west ..."
Author
Sundberg, Edwin L.
Note
Full color map, centerfold from issue of Sunday News, pages 6-7. Date estimated. Shows cities, landmarks, rivers, railroads, canals, planes, blimp, remilitarized zones, principal garrisons and fortifications, coal fields, mines . Includes legend, compass rose and text:" Remilitarization of the Rhineland by Germany, in violation of the Treaty of Versailles and the Locarno Pact, focused the eyes of the world on the Valley of the Rhine ..." Relief shown pictorially.
Author
Sundberg, Edwin L.
Note
Full color map, centerfold from issue of Sunday News, pages 6-7. Date estimated. Shows movement of the ships, the battle area "N.J. Ford ordered to "heave to" by German light cruiser Elbing around 2 P.M.", the greatest naval battle of modern times off Jutland Bank in the North Sea "Twenty years ago" in 1916, British and German fleets. Includes text with decorative compass rose at the top. Date estimated.
Author
[Dreyer, Ernst Adolf, Petner, Werner]
Note
Date estimated.
Author
[White, Harry D., United States. Army. Infantry Division, 79th.]
Note
Color pictorial map. Author names from signatures reproduced in cursive script inside lower right corner. Shows towns, river, and forests. Borders with large letters: Pont-A-Mousson, Luxembourg, Liege, Tongeren, Maastricht, Erkelenz, Hoensbroek, Lintfort, Rhine, Dinslaken, Walsum, Hamborn, Gelsenkrocken, Essen, Mulheim, Bochum, Herne, Recklinghausen, Dorstend. Includes notes and 3 colored vignettes, showing the troops, and civilians carrying colored flags of European countries.
Author
[White, Harry D., United States. Army. Infantry Division, 79th.]
Note
Color pictorial map. Author names from signatures reproduced in cursive script inside lower right corner. Shows towns, river, forests, along the route of the U.S. Army 79th Infantry Division as it moved from a rest area southwest of Luneville, France, participating in the Allied "Race to the Rhine". Borders with large letters: Montigny, Harbouey, Hattigny, Nitting, Phalsbourg, Savern, Brumath, Batzedorf, Weyersheim, Hagenau, Bischwilied, Drusenheim, Soufflenheim, Nederoedern, Sessenheim, Schebenhardt, Berg, Hatten, Rittedshoffen, Pont-A-Mousson. Includes notes, and color vignettes showing wrecked armored vehicles, troops fighting house, road sign reading 'Welcome to Germany..." and a small colored illustration of a female singer, a clown juggler, and piano player.
Author
Clegg, Ernest
Note
Printed on linen. One of Clegg's most interesting pictorial maps as well as being scarce, not in OCLC.
Author
Lerman
Note
Documents the accomplishments of the 7th Armored Division, U.S. Army, commanded by Major-General Robert Wilson Hasbrouck (1896-1985), including division statistics, such as number of prisoners taken, armament captured and destroyed, and number of awards.
Author
[Reichsbahnzentrale fuer den Deutschen Reiseverkehr, Riemer]
Note
Vignettes of landmark buildings, wildlife, industry, crops, activities, and statues.
Author
[Reichsbahnzentrale fuer den Deutschen Reiseverkehr, Riemer]
Note
Map 35 cm x 50 cm.
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