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         Roman Empire Daily Life:     more detail
  1. DAILY LIFE IN ANCIENT ROME: The People And The City At The Height Of The Roman Empire.
  2. Daily Life in Ancient Rome : The People and the City at the Height of the Empire by Jerome Carcopino, 1960-09-10
  3. The Aztecs of Mexico / The Etruscans: Authoritative Account of the People of Pre-Columbian Mexico and Pre-Roman Italy [2 Paperbacks] by G.C. Vaillant, M. Pallottino, 1950
  4. Roman life in the days of Cicero by Alfred John Church, 2009-06-30
  5. Romance of Roman Villas by Elizabeth W. Champney, 2010-02-13
  6. THE ATLAS OF ANCIENT AND CLASSICAL GEOGRAPHY by Samuel Butler, 2010-03-03
  7. THE ANCIENT BANNER by Anonymous, 2010-09-13
  8. THE ATLAS OF ANCIENT AND CLASSICAL GEOGRAPHY by Samuel Butler, 2010-09-13
  9. The Heart of Rome by F. Marion Crawford, 2010-03-27

61. WannaLearn: Daily Life In Ancient Rome : The People And The City At The Height O
The Ancient roman City; As the romans Do The Delights, Dramas, and daily daily Lifein Ancient Rome The People and the City at the Height of the empire.
http://www.wannalearn.com/Academic_Subjects/History/Ancient_History/0300000316.s
Daily Life in Ancient Rome : The People and the City at the Height of the Empire
A WannaLearn Recommended Instructional Book Pick
Paperback
December, 1960
Yale Univ Pr
ISBN: 0300000316 Daily Life in Ancient Rome : The People and the City at the Height of the Empire by Jerome Carcopino Henry T. Rowell E. O. Lorimer
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Comments from people who have read this book Rating: /5 - Rating: 5/5 - Daily Life in Ancient Rome A highly engaging, well thought-out book. The author dares to have an opinionvery refreshing. The upper classes were diminished by low birth rates and had to be augmented by people who, several generations ago, were slaves. Those of the upper classes who survived considered the burden of empire too great they simply could not provide the leadership or the administration necessary for such a great enterprise. Finally, the education system did not teach their upper-class students to wrestle with real-life problems, and completely avoided subjects like philosophy and science which could have given them the enthusiasm and the tools to beneficially modify their society. I sense the beginnings of some of the unfortunate Latin traits which followed the Iberians to South America.

62. Roman Ways And Roman Days
NonFiction 937 Co Describes daily life in ancient Rome, discussing family life,entertainment, schools Explores the history of the roman empire and the
http://www.kidspoint.org/columns2.asp?column_id=507&column_type=homework

63. Summer Bridges 2002 For Students
Rome. daily life in Ancient Rome. The roman empire in the First Century. romanBall Games. Colusseum of Rome. Voyage Back in Time Ancient Greece and Rome.
http://www.harvey152.org/SBstudents.htm
Summer Bridges 2002 Student Activities
Grade K Grade 1 Grade 2 Grade 3 ... Translate this page into Spanish
Animal Tracks
Animals
Track Match Game
Animal Games
Start with Matching Apes.
33 excellent games with sounds and movement.
Scroll down to where it says More Games.
Must have the latest version of Shockwave Flash Player.
Your Big Backyard
Animals You Can See at the Zoo
Hometown
Community Map
Sparky the Great Fire Dog
Community Helpers
Stories with Audio
Be sure to test your audio first.
Egypt
Making Patterns
Ancient Egypt Discovery Case
Daily Life in Ancient Egypt
The History of Ancient Egypt
...
Egypt's Golden Empire
Neferchichi's Tomb: Gods and Goddesses
Neferchichi's Tomb: Hieroglyphics
Egyptian Mad Libs
Ancient Egypt Jokes
Kid Pix Egyptian Ideas ...
Pyramids Crossword Puzzle to Print
TCR Connections (Password Required)
Rome
Daily Life in Ancient Rome
The Roman Empire in the First Century
Roman Ball Games
Colusseum of Rome ...
Toga Time
Word Search on Ancient Rome
Which Came First Game
Telling the Times
TCR Connections (Password Required)

64. History Links
Many Links to Ancient Rome. daily roman life. Ancient Rome Engineering. romanCity. Look Under Links on this page!! The roman empire. The roman Page. Rome.
http://home1.gte.net/res0caq5/gaines/current.htm
History Links General History Sites History/Social Studies for K-12 Teachers Huge resource site CIA World Fact Book Mr. Minarik's Virtual Classroom Great SOL Site World Religions World Religions Link Site Daily Life in Ancient Civilizations 1st Quarter Area of Study Egyptian Culture Life in Ancient Egypt Collapse of Civilizations Ancient Indus Valley ... Mesopotamia nd rd Quarter Area of Study Confucianism and the Chinese Scholastic System Roman Roads in the Mediterranean Region and Europe Technology in the Time of the Romans Roman Building Technology and Architecture ... Roman Bath Construct an Aqueduct Life in Ancient Rome Daily Life of Ancient Rome Many Links to Ancient Rome Daily Roman Life Ancient Rome Engineering Roman City Look Under Links on this page!! The Roman Empire The Roman Page Rome Chronology of Roman History ... Petra th Quarter Area of Study The Battle Of Hastings 1066 The Middle Byzantine Period The Black Death Eye Witness: Black Death ...
Medieval Castle Terms

65. Classics Department: Roman History
daily life in Rome. roman History. The roman empire is no more. A fittingplace to start, for anyone at all interested in roman history
http://www.uvm.edu/~classics/webresources/life/hist.html
Daily Life in Rome
Roman History
The Roman Empire is no more. A fitting place to start, for anyone at all interested in Roman history, is the end of the Roman Republic. From the praetorian guard auctioning off the position of emperor to the highest bidder to Caracalla attaining sole power in Rome and obliterating his brother Geta's name from mention, the final days of the Empire were eventful. The Severan emperors were those in control at the fitful end. Whether a blessing or a curse, history will always look apon the Arch of Severus and remember the fall of Rome. For a rather more in depth look, there is selections from Edward Gibbon's Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire . Originally a six-volume monstrosity (although good reading, all of it) this is an indexed list of selections from the work and is an excellent source of information as a starting point for readings from Gibbon's work. For a very brief history of Rome, there are many sources. From the founding of Rome in 510 BCE to the eventual fall in the era of the Severan Emperors, there is a lot of ground. See our page on Roman politics for more on the Severan Emperors and others.

66. WAC - Galleries - ROM
of the roman Republic into the roman empire, the number is a large group of sculptedroman portraits. exhibit shows artifacts used in daily life and decorative
http://www.rom.on.ca/art-design/europe/wacgalleries.html
western art culture research@rom WAC Galleries The Greek World
Early Italy and the Etruscans

Bronze Age and Iron Age Europe

Rome and the Provinces
...
The Samuel European Galleries

The Greek World
Early Italy and the Etruscans

This gallery looks at Italy from about 1200 to 300 B.C., before its unification by the Romans and displays weaponry, jewellery, ceramics, sculptures, and funerary monuments of the Etruscans, Samnites, and other indigenous peoples, and shows the strong commercial and artistic influence of Greece through Greek colonies in southern Italy and Sicily. Bronze Age and Iron Age Europe
The period from 2000 to 700 B.C. saw technological advances in the creation of metal implements and weapons, as well as the spread of farming and the development of trade amongst various areas. The artifacts are from Europe and the British Isles, and are predominantly metal weapons and tools, as well as Neolithic pottery. Also on exhibit are striking examples of Irish gold jewellery, and a spectacular bronze shield from the 8th century BC. Rome and the Provinces
This gallery explores the Roman Empire, covering the years 31 B.C. to about A.D. 500. With the expansion of the Roman Republic into the Roman Empire, the number of provinces increased. Artifacts from Romanized Britain, Syria and Palestine, and Egypt are featured, along with displays on Roman glass, ceramic, and metalworking technologies, and fine crafts. Other subjects include Roman coinage, trade-goods and trade-patterns, architecture, burial customs in the east and the west, and entertainment and gladiatorial games. Particularly striking is a large group of sculpted Roman portraits.

67. Pompeii Bibliography
1993 This is a guide to places in the roman empire. A roman Soldier by Giovanni CaselliPeter Bedrick Books This book lets you explore what daily life was like
http://www.harcourtschool.com/activity/pompeii/pompeiibib.html
Books about Pompeii and Ancient Rome Some books are correlated to selections, additional reading, or themes in Harcourt Brace products. "The Dog of Pompeii"
by Louis Untermeyer
in Teach Your Children Well
edited by Christine Allison
Delacorte Press, 1993
This short story about a blind boy and his dog in Pompeii at the time of the eruption of Vesuvius is almost a classic.
Pompeii: The Vanished City
by Time-Life Books
Time-Life Books, 1992
This book is one of a series that explores the worlds of the past using the finds of archaeologists and other scientists.
The Roman Empire and the Dark Ages by Giovanni Caselli Peter Bedrick Books, 1985 This book traces the history of the Roman Empire and the Dark Ages through a description of common objects, tools, clothes, dwellings, food, and day to day activities. Grade 6 Hidden Treasures, Theme: Turning Points (Additional Reading) Roman Places by Sarah Howarth Milbrook, 1993 This is a guide to places in the Roman Empire. Grade 6 Hidden Treasures

68. Ancient Rome
C. Julius Caesar Christian Catacombs of Rome daily life in Ancient Julius Caesar MaecenasMediterranean Basic Chronology roman empire Monuments Henebion Nero
http://www.kidskonnect.com/AncientRome/AncientRomeHome.html
A New Power Rises
A Roman History Timeline to Constantine
Ancient Europe

Ancient Rome
...
Who Were the Romans?
All rights reserved by

69. Classical Roman Resource Centers
Map Sites. Maps and Codices of the roman empire, Good small site. roman PlaceNames, Ancient Names and Their Modern Equivalents. roman daily life Sites.
http://www.romanempire.net/romepage/Links/classical_roman_resource_centers.htm

Home
Want to BE a Roman Gladiator? Legionary? Centurion? General? Senator? We've been living your dream for years! SITE INDEX
This site is best viewed at 1024x768 The Forum
Mos Maiorum

Roman Citizenship
Political Structure
...
Saturnalia
Wars
Pennsic War

Pennsic Video

Ragnarok
Links
Medieval Combat Organizations
Roman Provinces and Reenactors Historical Resource Links Ridley Scott's ... " Gladiator" Classical Roman Resource Centers Helpful New Roman Reference Links Roman Names Legion XXVI 's awesome Roman Names page A List of EVERY Roman Consul before 1995! Roman Law Historic Roman Law Resource Site Merchandise Brutus' Roman Merchandise Page - Tee shirts, totes, mugs, etc. For Fun Which "I, Claudius" character are you? University and or Educational Sites Lacus Curtius Bills Thayer's University of Kansas site: Thousands of links to Roman sites of every kind! NM's Development of Western Civilization Rome ! VERY comprehensive list of resource links.

70. BikeAbout Rider: Padraic Kennedy
Tunisia Topics Emperor Gordian I, roman Amphitheater November 8 of the Holy Wisdom,Justinian, daily life, Mosque of Ahmet/Blue Mosque, Ottoman empire March 78
http://www.bikeabout.org/resource/padraic.htm
Meet Padraic Kennedy
Padraic Send Padraic mail Padraic's Packing List
Padraic's Project
Cultural Literacy
Padraic's Dispatches
September 25, 1997
Topics: thoughts about the upcoming trip
September 26-27, 1997, Tangier, Morocco
Topics: tajine (food), mint tea, clothing, Phoenicians, money
September 28-29, 1997, Tetouan, Morocco
Topics: artisans, education, kasbah, Moors, history, djellabas, clothing
Topics: daily life, women in society
October 11, 1997, Melilla, Spain
Topics: tortilla con queso (food), Algeria, Melilla, border crossing
October 19-20, 1997, Tunis, Tunisia
Topics: brik (food), environment, Bizerte, wildlife, Utique (Utica), mosaics, Punic tombs
Topics: Phoenicians, Punic artifacts, El Haouaria, falconry, environment, vegetation
October 30, 1997, El Jem/El Djem, Tunisia
Topics: Emperor Gordian I, Roman Amphitheater
Topics: tajine (food), mosaics, art and artifacts, Punic artifacts, mosque
November 21, 1997, Giza, Egypt
Topics: fatta (food), Seven Wonders of the World, building Pyramids, history, Pharaohs, ancient religion, antiquities, daily life
November 26, 1997, Saqqara, Egypt

71. Romanresources.html
Rome (27 photographs), Ostia (40)and Pompeii (108) great site from John Hauser at Berkley. daily life Culture....... Pictures of History roman empire
http://www.tcd.ie/Classics/caiteachers/romanresources.html
Ancient Roman Resources Ancient Greek Resources Events History People ... Pictures of History - Roman Empire
Description
Rome (27 photographs), Ostia (40) and Pompeii (108) great site from John Hauser at Berkley. Rome: Architecture
Description
Period and Style for Designers - 116 great images of buildings, monuments, temples, tombs, furniture, everything .... Diotima: Roman Clothing
Description
Although under construction, this site already has 47 slides of examples of Roman dress. Ancient Roman Costume
Description
From drawings in Styles of Ornament by Alexander Speltz, 1904 and presented by The Costumers Manifesto, by Tara Maginnis, Ph.D. Ancient Baths Resource Site Description
Some very nice images, a glossary of terms, a bibliography and more from Garrett Fagan at Penn State Roman Ball Games Description
An interesting site..all about at least 5 different ball games..images of players, rules, diagrams....very informative site - Be the first to start a team at your school....Also at the same site Roman Board Games Romans at Work and Play Description: A wonderful overview of daily life from the lectures of Gerhard Rempel at Western New England College that could be called a Day in the Life of... read and learn. l

72. Römische Geschichte - Roman History - Teil 1
online; Rome Republic to empire - VROMA - Barbara F The romans - The BBC roman HistoryHomepage; The the Forum - history and religion - daily life - biographies;
http://www.lateinforum.de/altge2.htm
Alte Geschichte
Römische Geschichte - Roman History - Teil 1

73. WEMSK11 Daily Life
a. Jerome Carcopino, daily life in Ancient Rome, ed. with Bibliography and Notesby Society int he Last Century of the Western empire and roman Society in
http://orb.rhodes.edu/wemsk/dailylifewemsk.html
WEMSK11:Daily Life WEMSK 11 This WEMSK is out of place, but I will call it WEMSK11 anyway,
since the order does not particularly make any difference. The
reason I am doing this now is that I had a question on the
`interiors' of Medieval Life. How did they dress? How did they
raise their kids? What kinds of swords did they use? etc. etc.
What I did was just to pull down some of the books dealing with
daily life and here they are. I own all these except the new
edition of Hoops, so I have put my money where my mouth is. These
will help you out. Daily Life 1. Rome: a. Jerome Carcopino, Daily Life in Ancient Rome, ed. with
Bibliography and Notes by Henry T. Rowell; transl. from the French
by E. O. Lorimer (New Haven: Yale UP, 1992). A reprint of an often reprinted book, available in many different formats. Handy. b. Samuel Dill, Roman Society from Nero to Marcus Aurelius (New York: Meridian Books, 1958). Reprint of an old, but outstanding, book. See also his Roman Society int he Last Century of the Western Empire and Roman Society in Gaul in the Merovingian Age

74. World History Sites
Flags of the World http//www.crwflags.com/fotw/flags/iso3166.html. The roman empire.daily life in Ancient Rome http//members.aol.com/Donnclass/Romelife.html.
http://home.earthlink.net/~jkash/world.htm
World History Sites
Roman

Empire
Western
Religions
...
Discovery
Reports about Countries World Factbook - Facts, map, and flag of every country in the world
http://www.odci.gov/cia/publications/factbook/index.html

Atlapedia - Facts about many countries in the world
http://www.atlapedia.com/

Country Studies: The Library of Congress
http://lcweb2.loc.gov/frd/cs/
Countries of the World
http://www.infoplease.com/countries.html
Flags and Maps of the World http://www.plcmc.lib.nc.us/kids/mow/alpha.asp Flags of the World http://www.crwflags.com/fotw/flags/iso3166.html The Roman Empire Daily Life in Ancient Rome http://members.aol.com/Donnclass/Romelife.html Electronic Passport to Rome http://www.mrdowling.com/702rome.html History for Kids: Rome http://www.historyforkids.org/learn/romans/index.htm Learn about the Roman life and times. Includes a timeline. http://www.pbs.org/empires/romans/ Learn about the empire and its emperors. Includes maps. http://www.roman-empire.net/children/index.html Roman Ball Games http://www.personal.psu.edu/users/w/x/wxk116/romeball.html Pictures of the Roman empire http://HTTP.CS.Berkeley.EDU/~jhauser/pictures/history/Rome/index.html

75. MADDEN:Review Of Dupont
In the case of roman daily life both student and general reader alike have epigraphicand archaeological, is richer for the daily life of the empire than of
http://www.ucd.ie/~classics/95/Madden95.html
CLASSICS IRELAND
1995 Volume 2
University College Dublin, Ireland
Daily Life in Ancient Rome
Review by John Madden
University College
Galway DAILY LIFE IN ANCIENT ROME
by Florence Dupont. Transl. from the French by Christopher Woodall. Oxford, Cambridge, Mass: Blackwell, 1992. Pp.xii+314; 10 plates, 7 figs. Hb Pound19.99; pb Pound11.99. In the last hundred years and particularly in the last thirty there has been a steady growth of interest in daily life in the classical world. The progress of archaeology, the publication of new inscriptions, the stimulus of feminism, exciting TV documentaries, the increase in travel to classical lands and the growth of Classical Civilization courses (which for a change enable students to study daily life in a formal way) are among the reasons for this. In the case of Roman daily life both student and general reader alike have been well served with authoritative yet readable books on the subject: the works of Friedlaender (in translation), Dill, Warde Fowler, Tucker, Cowell, Paoli, Carcopino, Balsdon come immediately to mind, Carcopino's book in particular attaining the status of a classic and more than any other helping (in its Peregrine edition) to make daily life in Rome accessible to a wide public. However, since the evidence, literary, epigraphic and archaeological, is richer for the daily life of the Empire than of the Republic, these authors tended either to concentrate on the Empire alone (e.g. Tucker, Dill) or to dwell more on the Empire than on the Republic (e.g. Friedlaender, Paoli, Carcopino, Balsdon). W. Warde Fowler's

76. Links & Resources
http//www.dalton.org/groups/rome/ roman government also ecv_000.htm History oflate empire http//www time of Trajanincludes images, daily life, govt, etc
http://ghsjcl.hypermart.net/links.html
Roman Life: All topics of daily life, history, etc.: http://myron.sjsu.edu/romeweb/govt/govt.htm How to make a tunic, toga or stola: http://www.dl.ket.org/latin1/things/romanlife/makeit.htm Index for all sorts of ancient modes of dress/costumes: http://www.costumes.org/pages/romanlnx.htm Roman slavery:
http://www.ucd.ie/~classics/96/Madden96.html

http://www.fsmitha.com/h1/ch18.htm

Status of women in society:
http://www.uky.edu/ArtsSciences/Classics/wlgr/wlgr-index.html

Roman food and cooking:
http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~mjw/recipes/ethnic/historical/ant-rom-coll.html

http://www.novaroma.org/via_romana/names.html

Roman religion, festivals and holidays:
http://www.novaroma.org/religio_romana/index.html

Pompeii: http://http.cs.berkeley.edu/~jhauser/pictures/history/Rome/Pompeii/ Classical architecture: http://harpy.uccs.edu/roman/html/construct.html http://harpy.uccs.edu/roman/html/roman.html http://harpy.uccs.edu/greek/classgrkarch.html http://harpy.uccs.edu/greek/greekarchterms.html ... http://online-library.org/research/arch3.shtml Quid Novi Assignment: In this site see the SPQR Blues Virtual Herculaneum Cives Romani Web Ring, the Roman legions, episodes of

77. UNF Core I: Section 10: The Roman Empire
Augustus; Titus Conquering Jerusalem; Antoninus Pius; Expansion and empire; at Caesarea;roman Town, Beth Shean, Israel; roman Theatre, Beth daily life; roman Couple
http://www.unf.edu/classes/freshmancore/halsall/core1-10.htm
University of North Florida History Dept Freshman Core Page Halsall Homepage Section Contents Readings Discussion Search ... Movies UNF Core I:
Western Civilization to 1648 Section : The Roman Empire Introduction: This Section's Goals By the end of this section students should be able to:
  • Explain how Augustus was able to become a monarchical ruler but to preserve the forms of a Res publica. Identify the problems Augustus left his successors. Discuss the economic basis of Roman society and the problems that lead to for long term stability.
Text Multimedia

78. BUBL LINK: 937 Ancient History And Archaeology Of Rome And The Italian Peninsula
AD, with information about history, religion, and daily life, in addition Locationdenmark, europe Illustrated History of the roman empire Resource dedicated
http://link.bubl.ac.uk/ISC12211
BUBL LINK Catalogue of selected Internet resources Home Search Subject Menus A-Z ... About
937 Ancient history and archaeology of Rome and the Italian Peninsula
Titles Descriptions
  • Capitolium: Official Website of the Imperial Forums
  • Centre for Roman Studies Gateway to the Internet
  • Forum Romanum
  • Gaius Julius Caesar - A Biography ...
  • Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies
    All links checked August 2001 Comments: bubl@bubl.ac.uk
    Capitolium: Official Website of the Imperial Forums
    Information from the Age of the Emperors including the history of Rome, a map of the empire, Panem et Circenses, Rome and Christianity and the Emperors. Also includes details of the Imperial Forum Project for the Jubilee of 2000 and a virtual tour of life in Ancient Rome.
    Author: Municipality of Rome
    Subjects: roman history
    DeweyClass:
    ResourceType:
    documents
    Location: usa
    Centre for Roman Studies Gateway to the Internet
    A set of links to resources relating to the Roman world, including departments and societies, museums, and Roman-related news stories. Author: J Bodard, Reading University
  • 79. PT SS Gr. 9 Channel Surfing - Shenendehowa
    and there are links to the next two sites from the daily life Section. The roman empirehttp//www.romanempire.net/ The Illustrated History of the roman empire
    http://www.shenet.org/district/curriculum_and_learn/performancetasks/socialstudi
    Performance Task Resources
    Social Studies Grade 9: Channel Surfing the Early Civilizations
    Select to Jump Home Page Academic Departments Calendar Job Openings Cafeteria Menus Special Education Sports Staff Development Student Registration District Technology Transportation Search Select a School High School Middle Schools Arongen Elementary Chango Elementary Karigon Elementary Okte Elementary Orenda Elementary Skano Elementary Tesago Elementary Content... Curriculum and Learning Home Performance Tasks Secondary Search and Reference Sites Resources for Gr. 9 Channel Surfing the Early Civilizations Resources Resources TheHistoryNetWhere History Lives on the Web
    www.historynet.com World History: Attitude and Events, from Early Humanity to Yesterday
    http://www.fsmitha.com/ World History by History Link 101
    www.historylink101.com
    The cultures of Africa, China, Egypt, Greece, Mayan, Mesopotamia, Rome, Prehistory and Middle Ages are divided into categories of art, biographies, daily life, maps, pictures, research, and more. Exploring Ancient World Cultures
    http://eawc.evansville.edu/index.htm

    80. Ancient India - Daily Life
    AGE OF empireS daily life - 500 BC- 647 AD. The Gupta empire existed at aboutthe same time as the roman empire. It dominated northern India.
    http://www.crystalinks.com/indiadailylife.html
    Ancient India - Daily Life
    Indus Valley Civilization Daily Life - 3000-1500 BC In 1922, archaeologists found the remains of an ancient city called Harappa. They alsofound another city, located 400 miles southwest of Harappa, called Mohenjo-Daro. Other ancient cities from the same period, arranged in the same way, have been found since. Collectively, this civilization is referred to as the Indus Valley Civilization (sometimes, the Harappan civilization). This civilization existed from about 3000-2,500 BC to about 1500 BC, which means it existed at about the same time as the Egyptian and Sumerian civilizations. HOMES Houses were one or two stories high, made of baked brick, with flat roofs, and were just about identical. Each was built around a courtyard, with windows overlooking the courtyard. The outside walls had no windows. Each home had its own private drinking well and its own private bathroom. Clay pipes led from the bathrooms to sewers located under the streets. These sewers drained into nearly rivers and streams. CLOTHING Men and women dressed in colorful robes. Women wore jewelry of gold and precious stone, and even wore lipstick! Among the treasures found was a statue of a women wearing a bracelet. (Bracelets with similar designs are worn today in India.)

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