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Guaimar IV of Salerno

Guaimar IV[1] (c. 1013 – 2, 3 or 4 June 1052) was Prince of Salerno (1027–1052),[2] Duke of Amalfi (1039–1052), Duke of Gaeta (1040–1041), and Prince of Capua (1038–1047) in Southern Italy over the period from 1027 to 1052. From 1041 to 1052 the Duke of Napoli (John V of Naples) was his vassal.[3] He was an important figure in the final phase of Byzantine authority in the Mezzogiorno and the commencement of Norman power. He was, according to Amatus of Montecassino, "more courageous than his father, more generous and more courteous; indeed he possessed all the qualities a layman should have—except that he took an excessive delight in women."[4]

The Principality of Salerno as it existed in early Guaimar's time. Guaimar extended his suzerainty over the Duchy of Amalfi and Principality of Capua and also over all of the purple-shaded lands belonging to Byzantium.

Early conquests Edit

He was born around the year 1013, the eldest son of Guaimar III of Salerno by Gaitelgrima, daughter of Duke Pandulf II of Benevento. His elder half-brother, the son of Porpora of Tabellaria, John (III) reigned as co-prince from 1015. When he died in 1018, Guaimar was made co-prince. In 1022, the Emperor Henry II campaigned in southern Italy against the Greeks and sent Pilgrim, Archbishop of Cologne, to attack Pandulf IV of Capua, nicknamed the "Wolf of the Abruzzi", and Guaimar of Salerno. Pandulf was captured and Guaimar submitted, sending the younger Guaimar as a hostage. The emperor remanded him to Pope Benedict VIII and he was released. The younger Guaimar succeeded his father in Salerno in 1027 (at the age of fourteen or sixteen, possibly under the regency of his mother during his brief minority). He embarked then on a lifelong quest to control the whole of the southern third of the Italian Peninsula.

In 1036, he received word that his uncle and erstwhile ally, Pandulf of Capua, had attempted to rape his niece, the daughter of his wife's sister and the Duke of Sorrento.[5] He then received the homage of the defecting Rainulf Drengot, formerly a vassal of Pandulf. Thus, Guaimar won the support of the Normans in the Mezzogiorno. In 1037, Guaimar made the politically savvy request of arbitration to both the Holy Roman and Byzantine emperors over the issue of Pandulf's unfitness to rule. Emperor Conrad II accepted the invitation and traveled south in Spring 1038. He demanded hostages from Pandulf. However, the hostages escaped and Capua was promptly besieged. Having taken that principality, he gave it to Guaimar (May),[6] who asked for a title of nobility for his new Norman vassal. This was granted and Rainulf officially became "Count of Aversa" and a vassal of Salerno.

Guaimar set out to take possession of his new principality immediately. On 15 August, he conquered Rocca Vandra and gave it to the abbey of Monte Cassino. Meanwhile, the Normans of Aversa pacified the valley of the Sangro. After Pandulf fled to Constantinople, Guaimar turned his attention to Amalfi. In April 1039, in support of the deposed and blinded Manso II, Guaimar forced the abdication and exile of John II and his mother, Maria, a sister of Pandulf. Guaimar installed himself as duke. Then in July, he conquered Sorrento, which had been conquered by Pandulf in 1034.[7] He gave it to his brother Guy with the title of duke. He also received the homage of the Duke of Naples, John V, who had brought the request for mediation to Constantinople in 1037.

In the north, he brought Comino, Aquino, Traetto (May 1039), Venafro (October 1040), Pontecorvo, and Sora under his rule. In June 1040, he took Gaeta, which had been conquered by Pandulf in 1032. After October 1041, Guaimar ceases to appear in the acts of Gaeta and it seems he was replaced by a popular usurper related to the old dynasty, Leo. By December 1042, however, Gaeta was in the hands of Rainulf, holding it from Guaimar.

Hauteville alliance & dominion over all continental southern Italy Edit

 
The "Principatus Salerni" reached the maximum extension under Guaimar IV, including: Principatus Salerni, Ducatus Apuliae et Calabriae, Ducatus Amalphitanus, Ducatus Neapolitanus, Ducatus Caietae, Principatus Capuae, Principatus Beneventi

Soon after, he became involved with the Hautevilles. The Byzantines, who had not responded to Guaimar's earlier request for help, were preparing an expedition under the great general Giorgio Maniace. Guaimar sent, at their request, a cohort of Lombard and Norman warriors, the first of which was one William, who, in Sicily, won the epithet "Iron Arm". In 1038, the Normans and Lombards returned in a rebellious state and quickly invaded Greek Apulia. In this, Guaimar supported them and, in 1042, they elected William Iron Arm as count and sought the approval of Guaimar, whom they acclaimed, in full opposition to any Byzantine claims, Duke of Apulia and Calabria (1043). Guaimar, in accordance with good feudal theory, granted them Melfi and the republican model on which it was set up. The feudal grounding was not so good in law, however. Guaimar was only duke by acclamation of the men he appointed as vassals and it was by the authority of the ducal title that he installed them in Melfi. This would cause him trouble later.

In 1041 the Duke of Napoli (John V) accepted to be a vassal of Guaimar IV. Under Guaimario IV the Principate of Salerno reached its zenit, controlling all continental southern Italy from Gaeta to the Messina Strait.[8] Furthermore, it was the first time in History (since the Gothic war) that the Bizantine empire was forced out of the Italian peninsula.

In 1044, he and the Iron Arm began to take Calabria and built a large castle at Squillace. In his later years, he had trouble retaining his possessions in the face of the Holy Roman Emperor and the Normans. Rainulf Drengot, who still held Aversa, originally from the Duke of Naples, died in 1045 and his county passed, against all protestation from Guaimar, to his nephew Asclettin. Later in that same year, Guaimar opposed the succession of Asclettin's cousin Rainulf Trincanocte, but again was overridden. These quarrels led the once-loyal Aversa to return its allegiance to Pandulf, lately returned from exile in Constantinople. War with Pandulf continued from 1042 to 1047. Guaimar secured his own position, however, by recognising William's brother Drogo shortly after William's death in 1046 and by giving him his sister Gaitelgrima in marriage.

Later reversals Edit

In 1047, however, Guaimar's life's work started to be undone. In that year Emperor Henry III came to demand homage from the dukes of the south. He returned Capua to Pandulf and took Aversa and Melfi directly under his suzerainty. Finally, he deprived Guaimar of his title over Apulia and Calabria, bringing to an end that troublesome feudal oddity. The emperor also besieged Benevento, where Empress Agnes was being held while the gates were shut to him. At that point, Daufer, the future Pope Victor III, brother of Pandulf III of Benevento, fled the city and sought the protection of Guaimar, who gave him refuge in La Trinità della Cava. Daufer's nephew Landulf personally traveled to Salerno to meet with Guaimar and negotiate the return of Daufer. Daufer was returned with the promise that his choice of a monastic vocation would be respected.

In 1048, Pandulf, once again prince of Capua, was at war with Guaimar. On the death in that year of Rainulf II of Aversa (Rainulf Trincanocte), his succeeding son Herman, an infant, required a regent. The first appointment, Bellebouche, was a failure. Richard Drengot, a cousin of Herman's, was then in a Melfitan prison for making war on Drogo. Guaimar soon procured his release and personally brought him to Aversa, where he was installed as regent, and later as count in his own right. Thus, Guaimar recaptured the allegiance of Aversa.

Assassination Edit

At a synod in Benevento in July 1051, Pope Leo IX besought Guaimar and Drogo to stop the Norman incursions on church lands. Soon Drogo was assassinated, probably by a Byzantine conspiracy. The next year, Guaimar too was assassinated in the harbour of his capital. The four assassins were the brothers of his wife Gemma. Guaimar's brother Pandulf of Capaccio was also killed, but Guy of Sorrento escaped while Guaimar's sister and niece were locked up. The brothers-in-law seized the city and elected Pandulf, eldest among them, prince. The date of Guaimar's assassination is given as 2 June in the Annales Beneventani, as 3 June in Amatus and as 4 June in the necrology of Monte Cassino.[9]

Guy fled to the Normans and soon the four conspirators were besieged in Salerno by a large Norman force and Guy's Sorrentine army. The assassins' families soon fell into their enemies' hands and they negotiated their release by releasing Gisulf, Guaimar's son and heir, to Guy. Guy accepted their surrender soon after, promising not to harm them. The Normans, however, who maintained they were not bound by Guy's oath, massacred the four brothers and thirty-six others, one for each stab wound found in Guaimar's body. Thus the Normans showed their loyalty to Guaimar even after his death.

Guaimar's legacy includes his dominion, either by conquest or otherwise, over Salerno, Amalfi, Gaeta, Naples, Sorrento, Apulia, Calabria, and Capua at one time or another. He was the last great Lombard prince of the south, but perhaps he is best known for his character, which the Lord Norwich sums up this way: "...without once breaking a promise or betraying a trust. Up to the day he died his honour and good faith had never once been called in question."[10] Peter Damian, a contemporary, in a tract written for Pope Nicholas II, held a different view: Guaimar "was killed by the sword because of his many acts of violence and tyrannical oppression".[9]

Family Edit

Guaimar married Gemma, a daughter of the Capuan Count Laidulf. They were married before 1032. They had six sons, five of whom outlived them, and at least four daughters.

In 1037, Guaimar had made his eldest son John co-prince as John IV, but John died in 1039. Guaimar was succeeded by his second son Gisulf II (co-prince since 1042), whom the Normans put under their protection. His third son was Landulf, Lord of Policastro. His fourth son Guy was an ally of Robert Guiscard. His fifth son was John, Abbot of Curte. His youngest son, Guaimar, co-ruled with his brother Gisulf.

Guaimar's eldest daughter was Sichelgaita, who married Robert Guiscard. His younger daughter was Gaitelgrima, whom he married to Drogo.[a][11] She brought with her a large dowry. She married twice more: to Robert, Count of Monte Sant'Angelo, and to a Count Alfred.[11] Humphrey, Drogo's brother and successor, is said to have married a daughter of Guaimar's, often assumed to be the widow of his brother, but this is impossible. Also, Jordan I of Capua is said to have married a woman named "Gatteclina", a sister of Sichelgaita.

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Historian Joanna Drell calls Gaitelgrima, Guaimar's eldest daughter[11]

References Edit

  1. ^ Also Waimar, Gaimar, Guaimaro, Guaimario, Guaimarius, or Weimarius. According to a revised genealogy by Huguette Taviana-Carozzi, he is sometimes numbered Guaimar V. Gravett, 132, calls him "the Iron Hand."
  2. ^ According to the Catalogum Principum Salerni, he ruled for 34 years and 17 days.
  3. ^ Guaimario IV (in Italian) [1]
  4. ^ Cestui Gamérie estoit plus vaillant que le père et plus liberal et courtois à donner, liquel estoit aorné de toutes les vertus que home sécular doit avoir fors de tant que moult se délictoit de avoir moult de fames.
  5. ^ The identity of this duke is unknown, but he must have been the local ruler displaced by Pandulf in 1034. He had previously repudiated his wife, Guaimar's sister-in-law.
  6. ^ Chalandon, 83. Guaimar consistently dated his reign in Capua from August or September, not May.
  7. ^ Chalandon, 86. The Catholic Encyclopedia gives a date of 1035 for Guaimar's conquest.
  8. ^ Norwich, John Julius. The Normans in the South 1016-1130. Third chapter
  9. ^ a b Amatus of Montecassino; Prescott N. Dunbar, trans.; Graham A. Loud, ed., The History of the Normans (Boydell Press, 2004), p. 96.
  10. ^ Norwich, 88.
  11. ^ a b c Drell 2002, p. 190.

Sources Edit

  • Drell, Joanna H. (2002). Kinship & Conquest: Family Strategies in the Principality of Salerno During the Norman Period, 1077-1194. Cornell University Press.
  • Gwatkin, H. M., Whitney, J. P. (ed) et al. The Cambridge Medieval History: Volume III. Cambridge University Press, 1926.
  • Norwich, John Julius. The Normans in the South 1016-1130. Longmans: London, 1967.
  • Caravale, Mario (ed). Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani: LX Grosso – Guglielmo da Forlì. Rome, 2003.
  • Chalandon, Ferdinand. Histoire de la domination normande en Italie et en Sicilie. Paris, 1907.
  • Gravett, Christopher, and Nicolle, David. The Normans: Warrior Knights and their Castles. Osprey Publishing: Oxford, 2006.
  • .
Regnal titles
Preceded by Prince of Salerno
1027–1052
Succeeded by
Preceded by Prince of Capua
1038–1047
Succeeded by
Duke of Gaeta
1040–1041
Succeeded by
Preceded by Duke of Amalfi
1039–1052
Succeeded by

guaimar, salerno, guaimar, 1013, june, 1052, prince, salerno, 1027, 1052, duke, amalfi, 1039, 1052, duke, gaeta, 1040, 1041, prince, capua, 1038, 1047, southern, italy, over, period, from, 1027, 1052, from, 1041, 1052, duke, napoli, john, naples, vassal, impor. Guaimar IV 1 c 1013 2 3 or 4 June 1052 was Prince of Salerno 1027 1052 2 Duke of Amalfi 1039 1052 Duke of Gaeta 1040 1041 and Prince of Capua 1038 1047 in Southern Italy over the period from 1027 to 1052 From 1041 to 1052 the Duke of Napoli John V of Naples was his vassal 3 He was an important figure in the final phase of Byzantine authority in the Mezzogiorno and the commencement of Norman power He was according to Amatus of Montecassino more courageous than his father more generous and more courteous indeed he possessed all the qualities a layman should have except that he took an excessive delight in women 4 The Principality of Salerno as it existed in early Guaimar s time Guaimar extended his suzerainty over the Duchy of Amalfi and Principality of Capua and also over all of the purple shaded lands belonging to Byzantium Contents 1 Early conquests 2 Hauteville alliance amp dominion over all continental southern Italy 3 Later reversals 4 Assassination 5 Family 6 Notes 7 References 8 SourcesEarly conquests EditHe was born around the year 1013 the eldest son of Guaimar III of Salerno by Gaitelgrima daughter of Duke Pandulf II of Benevento His elder half brother the son of Porpora of Tabellaria John III reigned as co prince from 1015 When he died in 1018 Guaimar was made co prince In 1022 the Emperor Henry II campaigned in southern Italy against the Greeks and sent Pilgrim Archbishop of Cologne to attack Pandulf IV of Capua nicknamed the Wolf of the Abruzzi and Guaimar of Salerno Pandulf was captured and Guaimar submitted sending the younger Guaimar as a hostage The emperor remanded him to Pope Benedict VIII and he was released The younger Guaimar succeeded his father in Salerno in 1027 at the age of fourteen or sixteen possibly under the regency of his mother during his brief minority He embarked then on a lifelong quest to control the whole of the southern third of the Italian Peninsula In 1036 he received word that his uncle and erstwhile ally Pandulf of Capua had attempted to rape his niece the daughter of his wife s sister and the Duke of Sorrento 5 He then received the homage of the defecting Rainulf Drengot formerly a vassal of Pandulf Thus Guaimar won the support of the Normans in the Mezzogiorno In 1037 Guaimar made the politically savvy request of arbitration to both the Holy Roman and Byzantine emperors over the issue of Pandulf s unfitness to rule Emperor Conrad II accepted the invitation and traveled south in Spring 1038 He demanded hostages from Pandulf However the hostages escaped and Capua was promptly besieged Having taken that principality he gave it to Guaimar May 6 who asked for a title of nobility for his new Norman vassal This was granted and Rainulf officially became Count of Aversa and a vassal of Salerno Guaimar set out to take possession of his new principality immediately On 15 August he conquered Rocca Vandra and gave it to the abbey of Monte Cassino Meanwhile the Normans of Aversa pacified the valley of the Sangro After Pandulf fled to Constantinople Guaimar turned his attention to Amalfi In April 1039 in support of the deposed and blinded Manso II Guaimar forced the abdication and exile of John II and his mother Maria a sister of Pandulf Guaimar installed himself as duke Then in July he conquered Sorrento which had been conquered by Pandulf in 1034 7 He gave it to his brother Guy with the title of duke He also received the homage of the Duke of Naples John V who had brought the request for mediation to Constantinople in 1037 In the north he brought Comino Aquino Traetto May 1039 Venafro October 1040 Pontecorvo and Sora under his rule In June 1040 he took Gaeta which had been conquered by Pandulf in 1032 After October 1041 Guaimar ceases to appear in the acts of Gaeta and it seems he was replaced by a popular usurper related to the old dynasty Leo By December 1042 however Gaeta was in the hands of Rainulf holding it from Guaimar Hauteville alliance amp dominion over all continental southern Italy Edit nbsp The Principatus Salerni reached the maximum extension under Guaimar IV including Principatus Salerni Ducatus Apuliae et Calabriae Ducatus Amalphitanus Ducatus Neapolitanus Ducatus Caietae Principatus Capuae Principatus BeneventiSoon after he became involved with the Hautevilles The Byzantines who had not responded to Guaimar s earlier request for help were preparing an expedition under the great general Giorgio Maniace Guaimar sent at their request a cohort of Lombard and Norman warriors the first of which was one William who in Sicily won the epithet Iron Arm In 1038 the Normans and Lombards returned in a rebellious state and quickly invaded Greek Apulia In this Guaimar supported them and in 1042 they elected William Iron Arm as count and sought the approval of Guaimar whom they acclaimed in full opposition to any Byzantine claims Duke of Apulia and Calabria 1043 Guaimar in accordance with good feudal theory granted them Melfi and the republican model on which it was set up The feudal grounding was not so good in law however Guaimar was only duke by acclamation of the men he appointed as vassals and it was by the authority of the ducal title that he installed them in Melfi This would cause him trouble later In 1041 the Duke of Napoli John V accepted to be a vassal of Guaimar IV Under Guaimario IV the Principate of Salerno reached its zenit controlling all continental southern Italy from Gaeta to the Messina Strait 8 Furthermore it was the first time in History since the Gothic war that the Bizantine empire was forced out of the Italian peninsula In 1044 he and the Iron Arm began to take Calabria and built a large castle at Squillace In his later years he had trouble retaining his possessions in the face of the Holy Roman Emperor and the Normans Rainulf Drengot who still held Aversa originally from the Duke of Naples died in 1045 and his county passed against all protestation from Guaimar to his nephew Asclettin Later in that same year Guaimar opposed the succession of Asclettin s cousin Rainulf Trincanocte but again was overridden These quarrels led the once loyal Aversa to return its allegiance to Pandulf lately returned from exile in Constantinople War with Pandulf continued from 1042 to 1047 Guaimar secured his own position however by recognising William s brother Drogo shortly after William s death in 1046 and by giving him his sister Gaitelgrima in marriage Later reversals EditIn 1047 however Guaimar s life s work started to be undone In that year Emperor Henry III came to demand homage from the dukes of the south He returned Capua to Pandulf and took Aversa and Melfi directly under his suzerainty Finally he deprived Guaimar of his title over Apulia and Calabria bringing to an end that troublesome feudal oddity The emperor also besieged Benevento where Empress Agnes was being held while the gates were shut to him At that point Daufer the future Pope Victor III brother of Pandulf III of Benevento fled the city and sought the protection of Guaimar who gave him refuge in La Trinita della Cava Daufer s nephew Landulf personally traveled to Salerno to meet with Guaimar and negotiate the return of Daufer Daufer was returned with the promise that his choice of a monastic vocation would be respected In 1048 Pandulf once again prince of Capua was at war with Guaimar On the death in that year of Rainulf II of Aversa Rainulf Trincanocte his succeeding son Herman an infant required a regent The first appointment Bellebouche was a failure Richard Drengot a cousin of Herman s was then in a Melfitan prison for making war on Drogo Guaimar soon procured his release and personally brought him to Aversa where he was installed as regent and later as count in his own right Thus Guaimar recaptured the allegiance of Aversa Assassination EditAt a synod in Benevento in July 1051 Pope Leo IX besought Guaimar and Drogo to stop the Norman incursions on church lands Soon Drogo was assassinated probably by a Byzantine conspiracy The next year Guaimar too was assassinated in the harbour of his capital The four assassins were the brothers of his wife Gemma Guaimar s brother Pandulf of Capaccio was also killed but Guy of Sorrento escaped while Guaimar s sister and niece were locked up The brothers in law seized the city and elected Pandulf eldest among them prince The date of Guaimar s assassination is given as 2 June in the Annales Beneventani as 3 June in Amatus and as 4 June in the necrology of Monte Cassino 9 Guy fled to the Normans and soon the four conspirators were besieged in Salerno by a large Norman force and Guy s Sorrentine army The assassins families soon fell into their enemies hands and they negotiated their release by releasing Gisulf Guaimar s son and heir to Guy Guy accepted their surrender soon after promising not to harm them The Normans however who maintained they were not bound by Guy s oath massacred the four brothers and thirty six others one for each stab wound found in Guaimar s body Thus the Normans showed their loyalty to Guaimar even after his death Guaimar s legacy includes his dominion either by conquest or otherwise over Salerno Amalfi Gaeta Naples Sorrento Apulia Calabria and Capua at one time or another He was the last great Lombard prince of the south but perhaps he is best known for his character which the Lord Norwich sums up this way without once breaking a promise or betraying a trust Up to the day he died his honour and good faith had never once been called in question 10 Peter Damian a contemporary in a tract written for Pope Nicholas II held a different view Guaimar was killed by the sword because of his many acts of violence and tyrannical oppression 9 Family EditGuaimar married Gemma a daughter of the Capuan Count Laidulf They were married before 1032 They had six sons five of whom outlived them and at least four daughters In 1037 Guaimar had made his eldest son John co prince as John IV but John died in 1039 Guaimar was succeeded by his second son Gisulf II co prince since 1042 whom the Normans put under their protection His third son was Landulf Lord of Policastro His fourth son Guy was an ally of Robert Guiscard His fifth son was John Abbot of Curte His youngest son Guaimar co ruled with his brother Gisulf Guaimar s eldest daughter was Sichelgaita who married Robert Guiscard His younger daughter was Gaitelgrima whom he married to Drogo a 11 She brought with her a large dowry She married twice more to Robert Count of Monte Sant Angelo and to a Count Alfred 11 Humphrey Drogo s brother and successor is said to have married a daughter of Guaimar s often assumed to be the widow of his brother but this is impossible Also Jordan I of Capua is said to have married a woman named Gatteclina a sister of Sichelgaita Notes Edit Historian Joanna Drell calls Gaitelgrima Guaimar s eldest daughter 11 References Edit Also Waimar Gaimar Guaimaro Guaimario Guaimarius or Weimarius According to a revised genealogy by Huguette Taviana Carozzi he is sometimes numbered Guaimar V Gravett 132 calls him the Iron Hand According to the Catalogum Principum Salerni he ruled for 34 years and 17 days Guaimario IV in Italian 1 Cestui Gamerie estoit plus vaillant que le pere et plus liberal et courtois a donner liquel estoit aorne de toutes les vertus que home secular doit avoir fors de tant que moult se delictoit de avoir moult de fames The identity of this duke is unknown but he must have been the local ruler displaced by Pandulf in 1034 He had previously repudiated his wife Guaimar s sister in law Chalandon 83 Guaimar consistently dated his reign in Capua from August or September not May Chalandon 86 The Catholic Encyclopedia gives a date of 1035 for Guaimar s conquest Norwich John Julius The Normans in the South 1016 1130 Third chapter a b Amatus of Montecassino Prescott N Dunbar trans Graham A Loud ed The History of the Normans Boydell Press 2004 p 96 Norwich 88 a b c Drell 2002 p 190 Sources EditDrell Joanna H 2002 Kinship amp Conquest Family Strategies in the Principality of Salerno During the Norman Period 1077 1194 Cornell University Press Gwatkin H M Whitney J P ed et al The Cambridge Medieval History Volume III Cambridge University Press 1926 Norwich John Julius The Normans in the South 1016 1130 Longmans London 1967 Caravale Mario ed Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani LX Grosso Guglielmo da Forli Rome 2003 Chalandon Ferdinand Histoire de la domination normande en Italie et en Sicilie Paris 1907 Gravett Christopher and Nicolle David The Normans Warrior Knights and their Castles Osprey Publishing Oxford 2006 History of the Norman World Regnal titlesPreceded byGuaimar III Prince of Salerno1027 1052 Succeeded byGisulf IIPreceded byPandulf IV Prince of Capua1038 1047 Succeeded byPandulf IVDuke of Gaeta1040 1041 Succeeded byLeo IIPreceded byJohn II Duke of Amalfi1039 1052 Succeeded byJohn II Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Guaimar IV of Salerno amp oldid 1180842811, wikipedia, wiki, book, 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