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Alkahest

In Renaissance alchemy, alkahest was the theorized "universal solvent".[nb 1] It was supposed to be capable of dissolving any composite substance, including gold (then not considered an element), without altering or destroying its fundamental components.[1] By extracting from composite substances their fundamental virtues and properties, alchemists hoped to gain control of invaluable medical healing properties (see also azoth). For this reason the alkahest was earnestly sought. At the same time, its very existence was debated among alchemists and philosophers.

Image of Alchimia, the embodiment of alchemy. Woodcut published by Leonhard Thurneysser in 1574. Thurneysser was a student of Paracelsus.

The first, or one of the first, to mention the alkahest was the Swiss physician and alchemist Paracelsus.[2]

Etymology edit

There is no consensus on the origin and etymology of the word alkahest, as Paracelsus left no trace or history of the word. George Starkey argued it came from the German word al-gehest (all spirit).[3] Johann Rudolph Glauber posed that it could have come from the words alhali est, the German word al gar heis, or Al zu hees, meaning "very hot".[3] Anglo-Dutch alchemist and physician William Yworth (Cleidophorus Mystagogus) (died 1715) argued for its root originating from High Dutch.[4][3]

Other names edit

Jan Baptist van Helmont considered the alkahest to have never-ending reusability, calling it an "immortal".[5] He also used the term "maccabean fire" because of its similarities to the "thick water" in the deuterocanonical Book of Maccabees in the Old Testament.[5] Another name for the Alkahest termed by Helmont was ignis gehennae.[5] Other names include latex (or "clear water reduced to its minutest atoms"), and primum Ens Salum (or "salt exalted to its highest degree").[5]

History edit

16th century edit

Paracelsus edit

Among its many philosophical and spiritual preoccupations, Hermeticism also concerned itself with panaceas—remedies supposed to cure all diseases and prolong life indefinitely. Later, an emergent Latin alchemy, associated with European humanism, transmuted itself into a new, more modern medical and pharmaceutical philosophy, reformed by a better understanding of human physiology. Philippus Paracelsus (1493–1541), who gave his name to the early modern school of medical theory known as Paracelcism, first made mention of the alkahest as a chemical which could fortify the liver, and—in instances where the liver failed—could act as a substitute for its functions.[2]

Recipe edit

The recipe for the theorized alkahest was often kept secret, as many alchemical recipes were.[3] There were many alchemists attempting to obtain the universal solvent, and thus many recipes, some later rejected by their creators, have been found.[6] Paracelsus's own recipe for alkahest was made of caustic lime, alcohol, and carbonate of potash; however, his recipe was not intended to be a "universal solvent".[7][8]

17th century edit

Alkahest became very popular in the 17th and 18th centuries through Jan Baptist van Helmont. Its prevalence in the 17th and 18th centuries, despite its otherwise absurd and extreme qualities, was likely due to the popularity of alchemy at the time and the lack of an adequate alternative theory of chemistry.[7] During the 17th century, many alchemists were working on obtaining the alkahest, some of which were Johann Rudolf Glauber, George Starkey, Frederick Clod, Thomas Vaughan, Thomas Henshaw, Johann Brun, Robert Hamilton, Hugh Piatt, and Robert Child.[7] Those who followed and trained under Paracelsus did not think of the alkahest as van Helmont did, but slowly built upon the ideas posed by their teacher.[7]

Jan Baptist van Helmont edit

Alkahest as a universal solvent edit

Flemish chemist Jan Baptist van Helmont (1580–1644) expanded on the idea of the 'alkahest', believing it to be a universal solvent.[7] Helmont claimed that knowledge of the recipe was granted by God and was therefore known by few, and he had many dreams during which he believed he had been gifted the recipe, only to find them inadequate.[7][3] Given the difficulty of obtaining alkahest, Helmont suggested the use of other, inferior substances believed to be capable of similar tasks.[6] Volatile salt of tartar, also known as pyrotartaric acid or glutaric acid, was considered both a substitute for alkahest and a component of alkahest.[6][1] Helmont's writings also referred to a fourteenth century alchemical manuscript which discussed sal alkali (possibly caustic potash or lye) that was capable of dissolving many substances, and perhaps an ingredient in Helmont's alkahest.[7][8][9]

George Starkey edit

Colonial American alchemist George Starkey (1628–1665) described alkahest as a circulated salt that is neither acid nor alkali.[7][10] Moreover, Starkey believed that, because acid saline liquors are destroyed by alkalies and urinous spirits, they cannot be ingredients of the immortal alkahest.[6] He believed instead that non-acidic substances could be ingredients of the alkahest, some of these suspected substances being urinous spirits, spirit of alkalies, and sulphureous vegetable spirits.[6] In particular, Starkey believed that alkahest's secret ingredient laid within urine.[7][6]

Dissolving gold; removing sulphur from mercury; cure for urinary calculi edit

Starkey and his mentor Helmont (by their own report) used mercuric sulphide to dissolve gold, and informed Robert Boyle about it in a series of letters. The alkahest, according to Starkey, was able to remove sulphur from the natural mercury leaving a quicksilver resistant to corrosion.[6] Because of the supposed power of alkahest to break down substances into their occult qualities, it was sought after for its potential to cure incurable diseases at the time.[6] For example, the breaking down of Ludus could provide a cure for urinary calculi.[5]

Ladislaus Reti, a 20th-century historian of science, investigated alchemical recipes involving alkahest and found that no chemical was sufficient in breaking down the wide variety of materials Helmont supposed. Reti points out that in such recipes, an alcohol solution of potassium hydroxide could have been used instead.[3]

Johann Rudolf Glauber and nitric acid edit

German-Dutch alchemist and chemist Johann Rudolf Glauber (1604–1670) believed that the alkahest was a class of substances, rather than one, particular substance.[7] Glauber believed he had discovered alkahest after discovering that volatile niter (nitric acid) and fixed niter (potassium carbonate) were able to dissolve several substances.[6]

Frederick Clod edit

German "mystical chemist" Frederick Clod (or Clodius) (1625–after 1661) believed that mercury could convert salts into "ponderous liquor", which he believed was needed to make the alkahest.[6]

Robert Boyle – corpuscular nature of alkahest edit

The theory of alkahest was conceived in terms of alchemy, Helmontian theories, and the physical theory of corpuscularianism.[7][11] According to Helmont and Anglo-Irish scientist Robert Boyle (1627–1691), the alkahest had a "microstructure", meaning it was composed of extremely small, homogeneous corpuscles.[7][6] This structure allowed the alkahest's corpuscles to move between the corpuscles of all other materials and mechanically separate them without altering their base materials or itself, conforming with the idea that it was infinitely reuseable.[7][6] It was these qualities which made the alkahest distinct from ordinary corrosives, which are altered by the substances they act upon and thus not infinitely reusable.[6]

Tobias Ludwig Kohlhans and Henry Oldenburg – alkahest in the lymphatic vessels edit

Tobias Ludwig Kohlhans (1624–1705) suggested in his dissertation of the spleen, that alkahest could be found in the liquid that had been discovered in the lymphatic vessels of animals.[5] In 1661, German-English scientist Henry Oldenburg (c. 1618–1677) made experimental connections between alkahest and this liquid.[5] Helmont, Oldenburg, and Goddard raised questions, however, about the lymph's "sweetly acidic" quality, the necessity of a hypothetical universal solvent to explain the acidity in empty animal lymphatic vessels, its ability to be generated within the body, and how it differed from other fluids or humours in the body.[5]

Johann Kunckel – the existence of alkahest is questioned edit

The German alchemist Johann Kunckel (1630–1703) and others at that time began to see the alkahest as merely fantasy and wishful thinking.[3] A potential problem involving alkahest—first posed by Kunckel—is that, if it dissolves everything, then it cannot be placed into a container because it would dissolve the container.[3] Starkey, however, specified that alkahest dissolved only composite materials into their constituent, elemental parts;[10] hence, a hypothetical container made of a pure element (say, lead) would not be dissolved by alkahest.

Herman Boerhaave – alkahest and the philosopher's stone edit

Paracelsus believed that alkahest was, in fact, the philosopher's stone. Dutch chemist and physician Herman Boerhaave (1668–1738), in his textbook Elementa Chymiae (1732), did not think alkahest was the philosopher's stone, but of greater importance and value than the stone.[5]

After the 18th century alkahest was taken less seriously over time.

Modern usages of the term edit

The old remark "spit is the universal solvent" satirizes the idea, suggesting that instead of a solvent that would easily dissolve anything, the only "real" solvent to anything is a great deal of hard work.

In modern times, water is sometimes called the universal solvent, because it can dissolve a large variety of substances, due to its chemical polarity and amphoterism.

Alkahest, Inc. is a biopharmaceutical subsidiary of Grifols which is developing products derived from blood plasma to reverse and inhibit aging.[12]

"Alkahestry" is the term used for a type of alchemy in the manga Fullmetal Alchemist.[13]

Notes edit

  1. ^ In modern times, water is sometimes called the universal solvent because it dissolves most substances but cannot significant dissolve nonpolar substances such as (famously) oil, but in this case, the phrase "universal solvent" is meant to a greater extent.

References edit

  1. ^ a b Panzarasa, Guido (2015). "Rediscovering pyrotartaric acid: a chemical interpretation of the volatile salt of tartar" (PDF). Bulletin for the History of Chemistry. 40: 1–8 – via IsisCB.
  2. ^ a b Paracelsus, Philippus Theophrastus (1572). Zwen Tractatus. I. De viribus membrorum spiritualium. II. De electro: Mit Erklärung ettlicher Wörter und Praeparationum. Jobin, Bernhard. p. 10.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h Alfonso-Goldfarb, Ana Maria; Ferraz, Marcia Helena Mendes; Rattansi, Piyo M. (2014). "Seventeenth-century 'treasure' found in royal society archives: The ludus helmontii and the stone disease". Notes & Records: The Royal Society Journal of the History of Science. 68 (3): 227–243. doi:10.1098/rsnr.2014.0010. PMC 4123661. PMID 25254277.
  4. ^ Cleidophorus Mystagogus, Trifertes Sagani, or Immortal Dissolvent, being a brief ... discourse of the matter and manner of preparing the Liquor Alkahest of Helmont, the Great Hilech of Paracelsus, the Sal Circulatum Minus of Ludovicus de Comit: or our Fiery Spirit of the Four Elements (William Pearson for Thomas Ballard, London 1705), (Google).
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i Alfonso-Goldfarb, Ana Maria; Ferraz, Márcia Helena Mendes; Rattansi, Piyo M. (2010). "Lost Royal Society Documents on 'Alkahest' (Universal Solvent) Rediscovered". Notes and Records of the Royal Society of London. 64 (4): 435–456. doi:10.1098/rsnr.2010.0074. ISSN 0035-9149. JSTOR 25802129. S2CID 191467935.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Newman, William R.; Principe, Lawrence M. (2002). Alchemy Tried in the Fire: Starkey, Boyle, and the Fate of Helmontian Chymistry. Chicago and London: The University of Chicago Press. pp. 138, 242–243, 249, 282, 286. ISBN 0-226-57711-2.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Porto, Paulo A. (2002). "" Summus atque felicissimus salium": the medical relevance of the liquor Alkahest". Bulletin of the History of Medicine. 76 (1): 1–29. doi:10.1353/bhm.2002.0038. ISSN 1086-3176. PMID 11875242. S2CID 34821645.
  8. ^ a b Stratford, Jordan; Kupperman, Jeffrey S. (2014). A Dictionary of Western Alchemy. Wheaton, Illinois: Quest Books. pp. 7, 79. ISBN 978-0835608978.
  9. ^ Leinhard, John. "No.1569 Alkahest". University of Houston. Retrieved 14 May 2014.
  10. ^ a b Philalethes, Eirenaeus. "The Secret of the Immortal Liquor Called Alkahest or Ignis-Aqua". Retrieved 14 May 2014.
  11. ^ Newman, William R. (1993). "The corpuscular theory of J.B. Van Helmont and its medieval sources". Vivarium. 31 (1): 161–191. doi:10.1163/156853493X00132. JSTOR 42569883.
  12. ^ Abbott, Alison (1 November 2017). "Infusions of young blood tested in patients with dementia". Nature. doi:10.1038/nature.2017.22930. Retrieved 18 July 2022.
  13. ^ https://gamerant.com/fullmetal-alchemist-what-is-alkahestry/

alkahest, alcahest, redirects, here, 1993, video, game, alcahest, video, game, renaissance, alchemy, alkahest, theorized, universal, solvent, supposed, capable, dissolving, composite, substance, including, gold, then, considered, element, without, altering, de. Alcahest redirects here For the 1993 video game see Alcahest video game In Renaissance alchemy alkahest was the theorized universal solvent nb 1 It was supposed to be capable of dissolving any composite substance including gold then not considered an element without altering or destroying its fundamental components 1 By extracting from composite substances their fundamental virtues and properties alchemists hoped to gain control of invaluable medical healing properties see also azoth For this reason the alkahest was earnestly sought At the same time its very existence was debated among alchemists and philosophers Image of Alchimia the embodiment of alchemy Woodcut published by Leonhard Thurneysser in 1574 Thurneysser was a student of Paracelsus The first or one of the first to mention the alkahest was the Swiss physician and alchemist Paracelsus 2 Contents 1 Etymology 1 1 Other names 2 History 2 1 16th century 2 1 1 Paracelsus 2 1 1 1 Recipe 2 2 17th century 2 2 1 Jan Baptist van Helmont 2 2 1 1 Alkahest as a universal solvent 2 2 2 George Starkey 2 2 2 1 Dissolving gold removing sulphur from mercury cure for urinary calculi 2 2 3 Johann Rudolf Glauber and nitric acid 2 2 4 Frederick Clod 2 2 5 Robert Boyle corpuscular nature of alkahest 2 2 6 Tobias Ludwig Kohlhans and Henry Oldenburg alkahest in the lymphatic vessels 2 2 7 Johann Kunckel the existence of alkahest is questioned 2 2 7 1 Herman Boerhaave alkahest and the philosopher s stone 3 Modern usages of the term 4 Notes 5 ReferencesEtymology editThere is no consensus on the origin and etymology of the word alkahest as Paracelsus left no trace or history of the word George Starkey argued it came from the German word al gehest all spirit 3 Johann Rudolph Glauber posed that it could have come from the words alhali est the German word al gar heis or Al zu hees meaning very hot 3 Anglo Dutch alchemist and physician William Yworth Cleidophorus Mystagogus died 1715 argued for its root originating from High Dutch 4 3 Other names edit Jan Baptist van Helmont considered the alkahest to have never ending reusability calling it an immortal 5 He also used the term maccabean fire because of its similarities to the thick water in the deuterocanonical Book of Maccabees in the Old Testament 5 Another name for the Alkahest termed by Helmont was ignis gehennae 5 Other names include latex or clear water reduced to its minutest atoms and primum Ens Salum or salt exalted to its highest degree 5 History edit16th century edit Paracelsus edit Among its many philosophical and spiritual preoccupations Hermeticism also concerned itself with panaceas remedies supposed to cure all diseases and prolong life indefinitely Later an emergent Latin alchemy associated with European humanism transmuted itself into a new more modern medical and pharmaceutical philosophy reformed by a better understanding of human physiology Philippus Paracelsus 1493 1541 who gave his name to the early modern school of medical theory known as Paracelcism first made mention of the alkahest as a chemical which could fortify the liver and in instances where the liver failed could act as a substitute for its functions 2 Recipe edit The recipe for the theorized alkahest was often kept secret as many alchemical recipes were 3 There were many alchemists attempting to obtain the universal solvent and thus many recipes some later rejected by their creators have been found 6 Paracelsus s own recipe for alkahest was made of caustic lime alcohol and carbonate of potash however his recipe was not intended to be a universal solvent 7 8 17th century edit Alkahest became very popular in the 17th and 18th centuries through Jan Baptist van Helmont Its prevalence in the 17th and 18th centuries despite its otherwise absurd and extreme qualities was likely due to the popularity of alchemy at the time and the lack of an adequate alternative theory of chemistry 7 During the 17th century many alchemists were working on obtaining the alkahest some of which were Johann Rudolf Glauber George Starkey Frederick Clod Thomas Vaughan Thomas Henshaw Johann Brun Robert Hamilton Hugh Piatt and Robert Child 7 Those who followed and trained under Paracelsus did not think of the alkahest as van Helmont did but slowly built upon the ideas posed by their teacher 7 Jan Baptist van Helmont edit Alkahest as a universal solvent edit Flemish chemist Jan Baptist van Helmont 1580 1644 expanded on the idea of the alkahest believing it to be a universal solvent 7 Helmont claimed that knowledge of the recipe was granted by God and was therefore known by few and he had many dreams during which he believed he had been gifted the recipe only to find them inadequate 7 3 Given the difficulty of obtaining alkahest Helmont suggested the use of other inferior substances believed to be capable of similar tasks 6 Volatile salt of tartar also known as pyrotartaric acid or glutaric acid was considered both a substitute for alkahest and a component of alkahest 6 1 Helmont s writings also referred to a fourteenth century alchemical manuscript which discussed sal alkali possibly caustic potash or lye that was capable of dissolving many substances and perhaps an ingredient in Helmont s alkahest 7 8 9 George Starkey edit Colonial American alchemist George Starkey 1628 1665 described alkahest as a circulated salt that is neither acid nor alkali 7 10 Moreover Starkey believed that because acid saline liquors are destroyed by alkalies and urinous spirits they cannot be ingredients of the immortal alkahest 6 He believed instead that non acidic substances could be ingredients of the alkahest some of these suspected substances being urinous spirits spirit of alkalies and sulphureous vegetable spirits 6 In particular Starkey believed that alkahest s secret ingredient laid within urine 7 6 Dissolving gold removing sulphur from mercury cure for urinary calculi edit Starkey and his mentor Helmont by their own report used mercuric sulphide to dissolve gold and informed Robert Boyle about it in a series of letters The alkahest according to Starkey was able to remove sulphur from the natural mercury leaving a quicksilver resistant to corrosion 6 Because of the supposed power of alkahest to break down substances into their occult qualities it was sought after for its potential to cure incurable diseases at the time 6 For example the breaking down of Ludus could provide a cure for urinary calculi 5 Ladislaus Reti a 20th century historian of science investigated alchemical recipes involving alkahest and found that no chemical was sufficient in breaking down the wide variety of materials Helmont supposed Reti points out that in such recipes an alcohol solution of potassium hydroxide could have been used instead 3 Johann Rudolf Glauber and nitric acid edit German Dutch alchemist and chemist Johann Rudolf Glauber 1604 1670 believed that the alkahest was a class of substances rather than one particular substance 7 Glauber believed he had discovered alkahest after discovering that volatile niter nitric acid and fixed niter potassium carbonate were able to dissolve several substances 6 Frederick Clod edit German mystical chemist Frederick Clod or Clodius 1625 after 1661 believed that mercury could convert salts into ponderous liquor which he believed was needed to make the alkahest 6 Robert Boyle corpuscular nature of alkahest edit The theory of alkahest was conceived in terms of alchemy Helmontian theories and the physical theory of corpuscularianism 7 11 According to Helmont and Anglo Irish scientist Robert Boyle 1627 1691 the alkahest had a microstructure meaning it was composed of extremely small homogeneous corpuscles 7 6 This structure allowed the alkahest s corpuscles to move between the corpuscles of all other materials and mechanically separate them without altering their base materials or itself conforming with the idea that it was infinitely reuseable 7 6 It was these qualities which made the alkahest distinct from ordinary corrosives which are altered by the substances they act upon and thus not infinitely reusable 6 Tobias Ludwig Kohlhans and Henry Oldenburg alkahest in the lymphatic vessels edit Tobias Ludwig Kohlhans 1624 1705 suggested in his dissertation of the spleen that alkahest could be found in the liquid that had been discovered in the lymphatic vessels of animals 5 In 1661 German English scientist Henry Oldenburg c 1618 1677 made experimental connections between alkahest and this liquid 5 Helmont Oldenburg and Goddard raised questions however about the lymph s sweetly acidic quality the necessity of a hypothetical universal solvent to explain the acidity in empty animal lymphatic vessels its ability to be generated within the body and how it differed from other fluids or humours in the body 5 Johann Kunckel the existence of alkahest is questioned edit The German alchemist Johann Kunckel 1630 1703 and others at that time began to see the alkahest as merely fantasy and wishful thinking 3 A potential problem involving alkahest first posed by Kunckel is that if it dissolves everything then it cannot be placed into a container because it would dissolve the container 3 Starkey however specified that alkahest dissolved only composite materials into their constituent elemental parts 10 hence a hypothetical container made of a pure element say lead would not be dissolved by alkahest Herman Boerhaave alkahest and the philosopher s stone edit Paracelsus believed that alkahest was in fact the philosopher s stone Dutch chemist and physician Herman Boerhaave 1668 1738 in his textbook Elementa Chymiae 1732 did not think alkahest was the philosopher s stone but of greater importance and value than the stone 5 After the 18th century alkahest was taken less seriously over time Modern usages of the term editThe old remark spit is the universal solvent satirizes the idea suggesting that instead of a solvent that would easily dissolve anything the only real solvent to anything is a great deal of hard work In modern times water is sometimes called the universal solvent because it can dissolve a large variety of substances due to its chemical polarity and amphoterism Alkahest Inc is a biopharmaceutical subsidiary of Grifols which is developing products derived from blood plasma to reverse and inhibit aging 12 Alkahestry is the term used for a type of alchemy in the manga Fullmetal Alchemist 13 Notes edit In modern times water is sometimes called the universal solvent because it dissolves most substances but cannot significant dissolve nonpolar substances such as famously oil but in this case the phrase universal solvent is meant to a greater extent References edit a b Panzarasa Guido 2015 Rediscovering pyrotartaric acid a chemical interpretation of the volatile salt of tartar PDF Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 40 1 8 via IsisCB a b Paracelsus Philippus Theophrastus 1572 Zwen Tractatus I De viribus membrorum spiritualium II De electro Mit Erklarung ettlicher Worter und Praeparationum Jobin Bernhard p 10 a b c d e f g h Alfonso Goldfarb Ana Maria Ferraz Marcia Helena Mendes Rattansi Piyo M 2014 Seventeenth century treasure found in royal society archives The ludus helmontii and the stone disease Notes amp Records The Royal Society Journal of the History of Science 68 3 227 243 doi 10 1098 rsnr 2014 0010 PMC 4123661 PMID 25254277 Cleidophorus Mystagogus Trifertes Sagani or Immortal Dissolvent being a brief discourse of the matter and manner of preparing the Liquor Alkahest of Helmont the Great Hilech of Paracelsus the Sal Circulatum Minus of Ludovicus de Comit or our Fiery Spirit of the Four Elements William Pearson for Thomas Ballard London 1705 Google a b c d e f g h i Alfonso Goldfarb Ana Maria Ferraz Marcia Helena Mendes Rattansi Piyo M 2010 Lost Royal Society Documents on Alkahest Universal Solvent Rediscovered Notes and Records of the Royal Society of London 64 4 435 456 doi 10 1098 rsnr 2010 0074 ISSN 0035 9149 JSTOR 25802129 S2CID 191467935 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Newman William R Principe Lawrence M 2002 Alchemy Tried in the Fire Starkey Boyle and the Fate of Helmontian Chymistry Chicago and London The University of Chicago Press pp 138 242 243 249 282 286 ISBN 0 226 57711 2 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Porto Paulo A 2002 Summus atque felicissimus salium the medical relevance of the liquor Alkahest Bulletin of the History of Medicine 76 1 1 29 doi 10 1353 bhm 2002 0038 ISSN 1086 3176 PMID 11875242 S2CID 34821645 a b Stratford Jordan Kupperman Jeffrey S 2014 A Dictionary of Western Alchemy Wheaton Illinois Quest Books pp 7 79 ISBN 978 0835608978 Leinhard John No 1569 Alkahest University of Houston Retrieved 14 May 2014 a b Philalethes Eirenaeus The Secret of the Immortal Liquor Called Alkahest or Ignis Aqua Retrieved 14 May 2014 Newman William R 1993 The corpuscular theory of J B Van Helmont and its medieval sources Vivarium 31 1 161 191 doi 10 1163 156853493X00132 JSTOR 42569883 Abbott Alison 1 November 2017 Infusions of young blood tested in patients with dementia Nature doi 10 1038 nature 2017 22930 Retrieved 18 July 2022 https gamerant com fullmetal alchemist what is alkahestry Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Alkahest amp oldid 1214864699, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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