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Interallied Memorial of Cointe

The Interallied Memorial at Cointe (in French: Mémorial Interallié) is a war memorial built after World War I in Liège, Belgium. The memorial is a complex consisting of the Sacré-Cœur church as a religious building and a cenotaph with a tower as a secular monument.

Interallied Memorial of Cointe
The Interallied Memorial Tower
LocationLiège, Belgium
DesignerJoseph Smolderen
Beginning dateSeptember 1928
Completion dateJuly 1937
Opening date20 July 1937
Dedicated toAllies of World War I
style: Neo-Byzantine, art deco

History edit

On 3 August 1914, Germany declared war on France and Belgium, and the following day German troops invaded Belgium to advance towards Paris, triggering the military campaign on the Western Front in World War I. The city of Liège, an important railway junction between Germany and France via Brussels, was the first in which the Belgian army resisted, aided by the city's belt of 12 forts. German troops attacked the city on 5 August, believing they would achieve an easy victory, but the Belgian defenders, though greatly outnumbered, held out heroically for 11 days, inflicting heavy losses on the invading forces.

In 1925, after the war, FIDAC (Inter-Allied Federation of Ex-Combatants) decided to build a monument dedicated to the memory of all those who lost their lives fighting on the side of the Allied forces.[1][2] The monument was supposed to be financed by public and private subscriptions in the Allied countries.[1]

Initially it was intended that the monument would be erected in Sarajevo, where the Assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand triggered World War I, but the Italian members of the FIDAC used their veto, as the Kingdom of Italy was at that time in conflict with the Kingdom of Yugoslavia over control of the Adriatic Sea.[3] Consequently, the FIDAC members agreed on Liège, as it had been the first city after the outbreak of war to be attacked and resist the enemy.[3]

 
The Sacré-Cœur Church, photographed from the top of the Interallied Memorial Tower

A Belgian committee chaired by Princess Jean de Merode (1874–1955), a person well known for her charitable works, was chosen to erect the monument. The committee searched for a suitable site for the monument and finally combined the project with that of a local association that wanted to build a church to commemorate the victims of the war. The association already had a plot of land on Cointe Hill for this purpose, but not the funds to build it.[3]

The design of the monument was entrusted to the Antwerp architect Joseph Smolderen,[2] and work began in September 1928. The religious edifice, completed first, was consecrated and dedicated to the Most Sacred Heart of Jesus (in French Sacré-Cœur) in 1936.[4] Its dome was made of 13 tons of copper sheet from Katanga, at that time a province of the Belgian Congo colony, then rolled in the "Cuivre et Zinc" factories in Chênée. The secular monument was inaugurated on 20 July 1937, in the presence of King Leopold III.

The Belgian State, which became the owner of the tower in 1949, carried out restoration work from 1962 onwards, especially as the whole memorial had been damaged by aerial bombardment during World War II.[1] The work was completed in 1968, and on 20 November King Baudouin I proceeded to a second inauguration.[1][2]

Since 1985, the tower and the church have been open to the public, but visits are only allowed three times a year: on Whit Sunday, on Walloon Heritage Days (in September) and on Belgian National Day.[4]

In the spring of 2007, the Belgian federal authority for buildings began renovation work on the interior and exterior of the site, planned over several years.[5][6]

The church was desecrated in 2010, and its owner, the parish association "Monument régional du Sacré Cœur", which no longer has the funds to maintain and rehabilitate it, has announced that it is looking for a buyer.[7][8] The building is in a visible state of disrepair.[8][9] In 2014, to mask the state of the building during the ceremonies commemorating the 100th anniversary of the outbreak of World War I, the Prime Minister's Chancellery commissioned a work by French graffiti artist Bonom (Vincent Glowinski), who painted a mural on the walls of the church depicting 100 doves of peace.[9][10]

On 24 January 2011, the Sacré-Cœur church was listed under code 62063-CLT-0430-01 and included in the list of the Walloon Region's immovable heritage.[11][12]

Since 2000, the Cointe tunnel, an infrastructure work on the A602 motorway, has been crossing under the site.

Description edit

The church houses various heritage items such as the statues of two saints, Saint Maurus and Saint Mortus, who is the patron saint of the Cointe district. The secular memorial houses several monuments and works donated by the Allied nations. A total of seven countries are represented, France, Greece, Italy, Poland, United Kingdom, Romania, Russia and Spain. Some of the monuments are located on the esplanade outside and others in the mausoleum at the base of the votive tower, in the crypt and its halls. The tower, built in Art Deco style is 75 metres high and ends at the top with a cylindrical canopy in successive recesses.[2]

The Cointe site is unique in Belgium, both in that it associates the secular and the religious within the same memorial, and in that it is a symbol of the collective homage paid to the country by the Allies in the First World War.[13]

Monuments edit

Numerous monuments and memorials donated by Allied nations are displayed in the tower mausoleum and on the adjoining esplanade. In 1937, when the memorial was inaugurated, there were only the French, Romanian, Spanish and Italian memorials.[9]

On the esplanade edit

  • Italy: "Statue of the Italian fantassin", dedicated to Italian infantrymen.
  • United Kingdom: "The Wall", erected "in memory of the brave British Armed Forces".[14]
  • Poland: "The Washed Stones", "in memory of Polish soldiers who fought for our freedom and yours".
  • Russia: Tragic composition "To the Russian and Soviet soldiers who fell during the First and Second World Wars".
  • Greece: Monument composed of a pyramid made of 114 helmets inspired by Spartan soldiers.[14][15] The monument was made on the initiative of Dimitris Avramopoulos, then Greek consul in Liège, and was officially inaugurated on 11 November 1988. Three of the helmets were stolen a few months after its inauguration, and another 12 in spring 2020. On the weekend of 16–17 January 2021, all the other helmets were stolen by unknown perpetrators, with police suspecting metal thieves. A metal panel of similar size to the original monument was placed on the site of the helmet pyramid, with the 114 helmets drawn on it.[15][16]

One side of the esplanade is enclosed by a stone wall inscribed "Aux défenseurs de Liège, les Nations alliées, 1914–1918" (in Defenders of Liège, the Allied Nations, 1914–1918).

Inside the tower edit

 
Romanian sarcophagus
  • France: Allegory "À la Belgique, la France reconnaissante" (in "To Belgium, grateful France"), including a message from French President Raymond Poincaré and King Albert I of Belgium.
  • Romania: Sarcophagus "Aux Héros" (in "To the Heroes"), an ensemble whose main element is a sarcophagus carved from a block of white Transylvanian marble, in the Romano-Byzantine style, and weighing 6 tons.
  • Spain: neutral country during the war, but which sent aid, hence the plaque inscribed "La Belgique se souvient de l'aide humanitaire du noble peuple espagnol" (Belgium remembers the humanitarian aid of the noble Spanish people).

Searchlight edit

Tests were carried out in November 2012 after a searchlight was installed at the top of the tower.[17] The searchlight, similar to the one installed on Eiffel Tower, was inaugurated on 4 August 2014, coinciding with the celebrations commemorating the 100th anniversary of the outbreak of World War I. The lighthouse operates a maximum of four hours a night, never after 01:00, and only on weekends and public holidays or during commemorative events.[18][19]

The searchlight was made by the Sky Light company, which developed a type of searchlight that operates with low energy consumption, based on the rotation of an optical block placed at the output of a xenon projector with a power of 2000 W, installed vertically, and which will only require an annual change of the lamp.[20][21]

Commemorating the First World War edit

On 4 August 2014, a major commemoration was held at the Interallied Memorial on the occasion of the centenary of the outbreak of the First World War. The official festivities were attended by numerous heads of state, as well as representatives of former combatants.[22]

Panorama edit

 
The city of Liège seen from the top of the Interallied Memorial tower in June 2006. On the left, Liège-Guillemins railway station, under construction at the time. At the top of the photo the Meuse river can be seen flowing through the central area, and on the horizon the tailings deposits of the former coal mines Sainte-Barbe, Batterie nouveau, Petite Bacnure, Bernalmont and Belle-Vue.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Ed.F. (6 June 2003). "Visites au Memorial Interallié de Cointe". dhnet.be (in French). DH. Retrieved 20 June 2021.
  2. ^ a b c d "Fiche n° 62063-INV-3003-01". Inventory of Immovable Cultural Heritage. Retrieved 20 June 2021.
  3. ^ a b c Karla Vanraepenbusch (6 November 2017). "Mémorial Interallié". encyclopedia.1914-1918-online.net (in French). International Encyclopedia of the First World War. Retrieved 20 June 2021.
  4. ^ a b "Le Mémorial Interalliés" (in French). Ardennes-étape. Retrieved 20 June 2021.
  5. ^ "Liège Mémorial interallié Cointe". regiedesbatiments.be (in French). The Building Authority. Retrieved 20 June 2021.
  6. ^ Gaston Lecocq (6 July 2006). "On va restaurer le site du Mémorial Interallié de Cointe". proxiliege.net (in French). Proxi-Liège. Retrieved 20 June 2021.
  7. ^ François Pottié (25 February 2019). "Préservation et réaffectation de l'église du Sacré cœur à Liège". francoispottie.be (in French). Webpage of local councillor François Pottié. Retrieved 20 June 2021.
  8. ^ a b Bechet Marc (9 September 2017). "L'église de Cointe en passe d'être vendue !". dhnet.be (in French). DH. Retrieved 20 June 2021.
  9. ^ a b c Claude Warzée (25 February 2014). "Le mémorial interallié de Cointe". histoiresdeliege.wordpress.com (in French). Histoires de Liège. Retrieved 20 June 2021.
  10. ^ "Liège: polémique autour de la fresque de l'église du monument Interallié". rtbf.be (in French). RTBF. 27 July 2014. Retrieved 20 June 2021.
  11. ^ "Le mémorial de Cointe à Liège inscrit au Patrimoine wallon". rtbf.be (in French). RTBF. 21 January 2011. Retrieved 20 June 2021.
  12. ^ "Protection du patrimoine" (PDF). docum1.wallonie.be (in French). Monitorul oficial al Belgiei. 4 April 2011. Retrieved 20 June 2021.
  13. ^ "Liège (Luik) (Cointe) | Monument interallié | Monument voor de intergeallieerden – Inter-allied War Memorial". bel-memorial.org (in French). BEL-MEMORIAL. Retrieved 20 June 2021.
  14. ^ a b "Monument Interallié". liegetourisme.be (in French). Official website of the Province of Liège. Retrieved 20 June 2021.
  15. ^ a b Martial Giot (18 January 2021). "Liège : tous les casques du monument grec du Mémorial Interallié de Cointe ont été volés". rtbf.be (in French). RTBF. Retrieved 20 June 2021.
  16. ^ Martial Giot (19 January 2021). "Vol du monument grec du Mémorial Interallié de Cointe : un nouvel exemple des méfaits des voleurs de métaux". rtbf.be (in French). RTBF. Retrieved 20 June 2021.
  17. ^ "Premier essai réussi pour le futur "phare de Liège"". rtbf.be (in French). RTBF. 22 November 2012. Retrieved 20 June 2021.
  18. ^ Martial Giot (5 August 2014). "Liège: le phare du monument Interallié a été inauguré". rtbf.be (in French). RTBF. Retrieved 20 June 2021.
  19. ^ "Projet de phare 2.0". pharedeliege.be (in French). Phare de Liège. Retrieved 20 June 2021.
  20. ^ Benjamin Hermann (20 February 2014). "Le phare de Liège consommera autant qu'un fer à repasser". lavenir.net (in French). L'Avenir. Retrieved 20 June 2021.
  21. ^ Alexandre Arène (3 November 2014). "Liège : le Mémorial interallié transformé en phare". filiere-3e.fr (in French). Filière 3e. Retrieved 20 June 2021.
  22. ^ "60 chefs d'État sont invités à Liège pour commémorer le centenaire de la guerre 14–18". sudinfo.be (in French). 1 August 2013. Retrieved 20 June 2021.

Bibliography edit

  • Barlet, Jacques; Hamal, Olivier; Mainil, Sébastien (2014). "Le mémorial interallié de Cointe à Liège" [The interallied memorial at Cointe in Liège]. Carnets du patrimoine (in French). 122. Institut du Patrimoine wallon: 52. ISBN 978-2-87522-132-2.

External links edit

  Media related to Mémorial Interallié de Cointe at Wikimedia Commons

  • (in French) Memorial Interallié on the Buildings Authority website
  • (in French) A. Gany. "Le mémorial interalliés de Cointe à Liège". clham.org. History of the creation of the memorial on the website of the Liége Centre for Military History and Archaeology (CLHAM)
  • (in French) Claude Warzée (25 February 2014). "Le mémorial interalliés de Cointe à Liège". histoiresdeliege.wordpress.com. Illustrated history of the memorial on the "Histoires de Liège" blog

50°37′11″N 5°34′10″E / 50.6198°N 5.5694°E / 50.6198; 5.5694

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The Interallied Memorial at Cointe in French Memorial Interallie is a war memorial built after World War I in Liege Belgium The memorial is a complex consisting of the Sacre Cœur church as a religious building and a cenotaph with a tower as a secular monument Interallied Memorial of CointeThe Interallied Memorial TowerLocationLiege BelgiumDesignerJoseph SmolderenBeginning dateSeptember 1928Completion dateJuly 1937Opening date20 July 1937Dedicated toAllies of World War Istyle Neo Byzantine art deco Contents 1 History 2 Description 3 Monuments 3 1 On the esplanade 3 2 Inside the tower 4 Searchlight 5 Commemorating the First World War 6 Panorama 7 References 8 Bibliography 9 External linksHistory editOn 3 August 1914 Germany declared war on France and Belgium and the following day German troops invaded Belgium to advance towards Paris triggering the military campaign on the Western Front in World War I The city of Liege an important railway junction between Germany and France via Brussels was the first in which the Belgian army resisted aided by the city s belt of 12 forts German troops attacked the city on 5 August believing they would achieve an easy victory but the Belgian defenders though greatly outnumbered held out heroically for 11 days inflicting heavy losses on the invading forces In 1925 after the war FIDAC Inter Allied Federation of Ex Combatants decided to build a monument dedicated to the memory of all those who lost their lives fighting on the side of the Allied forces 1 2 The monument was supposed to be financed by public and private subscriptions in the Allied countries 1 Initially it was intended that the monument would be erected in Sarajevo where the Assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand triggered World War I but the Italian members of the FIDAC used their veto as the Kingdom of Italy was at that time in conflict with the Kingdom of Yugoslavia over control of the Adriatic Sea 3 Consequently the FIDAC members agreed on Liege as it had been the first city after the outbreak of war to be attacked and resist the enemy 3 nbsp The Sacre Cœur Church photographed from the top of the Interallied Memorial Tower A Belgian committee chaired by Princess Jean de Merode 1874 1955 a person well known for her charitable works was chosen to erect the monument The committee searched for a suitable site for the monument and finally combined the project with that of a local association that wanted to build a church to commemorate the victims of the war The association already had a plot of land on Cointe Hill for this purpose but not the funds to build it 3 The design of the monument was entrusted to the Antwerp architect Joseph Smolderen 2 and work began in September 1928 The religious edifice completed first was consecrated and dedicated to the Most Sacred Heart of Jesus in French Sacre Cœur in 1936 4 Its dome was made of 13 tons of copper sheet from Katanga at that time a province of the Belgian Congo colony then rolled in the Cuivre et Zinc factories in Chenee The secular monument was inaugurated on 20 July 1937 in the presence of King Leopold III The Belgian State which became the owner of the tower in 1949 carried out restoration work from 1962 onwards especially as the whole memorial had been damaged by aerial bombardment during World War II 1 The work was completed in 1968 and on 20 November King Baudouin I proceeded to a second inauguration 1 2 Since 1985 the tower and the church have been open to the public but visits are only allowed three times a year on Whit Sunday on Walloon Heritage Days in September and on Belgian National Day 4 In the spring of 2007 the Belgian federal authority for buildings began renovation work on the interior and exterior of the site planned over several years 5 6 The church was desecrated in 2010 and its owner the parish association Monument regional du Sacre Cœur which no longer has the funds to maintain and rehabilitate it has announced that it is looking for a buyer 7 8 The building is in a visible state of disrepair 8 9 In 2014 to mask the state of the building during the ceremonies commemorating the 100th anniversary of the outbreak of World War I the Prime Minister s Chancellery commissioned a work by French graffiti artist Bonom Vincent Glowinski who painted a mural on the walls of the church depicting 100 doves of peace 9 10 On 24 January 2011 the Sacre Cœur church was listed under code 62063 CLT 0430 01 and included in the list of the Walloon Region s immovable heritage 11 12 Since 2000 the Cointe tunnel an infrastructure work on the A602 motorway has been crossing under the site Description editThe church houses various heritage items such as the statues of two saints Saint Maurus and Saint Mortus who is the patron saint of the Cointe district The secular memorial houses several monuments and works donated by the Allied nations A total of seven countries are represented France Greece Italy Poland United Kingdom Romania Russia and Spain Some of the monuments are located on the esplanade outside and others in the mausoleum at the base of the votive tower in the crypt and its halls The tower built in Art Deco style is 75 metres high and ends at the top with a cylindrical canopy in successive recesses 2 The Cointe site is unique in Belgium both in that it associates the secular and the religious within the same memorial and in that it is a symbol of the collective homage paid to the country by the Allies in the First World War 13 Monuments editNumerous monuments and memorials donated by Allied nations are displayed in the tower mausoleum and on the adjoining esplanade In 1937 when the memorial was inaugurated there were only the French Romanian Spanish and Italian memorials 9 On the esplanade edit Italy Statue of the Italian fantassin dedicated to Italian infantrymen United Kingdom The Wall erected in memory of the brave British Armed Forces 14 Poland The Washed Stones in memory of Polish soldiers who fought for our freedom and yours Russia Tragic composition To the Russian and Soviet soldiers who fell during the First and Second World Wars Greece Monument composed of a pyramid made of 114 helmets inspired by Spartan soldiers 14 15 The monument was made on the initiative of Dimitris Avramopoulos then Greek consul in Liege and was officially inaugurated on 11 November 1988 Three of the helmets were stolen a few months after its inauguration and another 12 in spring 2020 On the weekend of 16 17 January 2021 all the other helmets were stolen by unknown perpetrators with police suspecting metal thieves A metal panel of similar size to the original monument was placed on the site of the helmet pyramid with the 114 helmets drawn on it 15 16 One side of the esplanade is enclosed by a stone wall inscribed Aux defenseurs de Liege les Nations alliees 1914 1918 in Defenders of Liege the Allied Nations 1914 1918 nbsp The church and the tower nbsp British Monument nbsp Italian Monument nbsp Greek monument stolen in January 2021 nbsp Copy installed after the theft of the original Greek monument nbsp Polish Monument nbsp Russian Monument nbsp Monument to the defenders of Liege Inside the tower edit nbsp Romanian sarcophagus France Allegory A la Belgique la France reconnaissante in To Belgium grateful France including a message from French President Raymond Poincare and King Albert I of Belgium Romania Sarcophagus Aux Heros in To the Heroes an ensemble whose main element is a sarcophagus carved from a block of white Transylvanian marble in the Romano Byzantine style and weighing 6 tons Spain neutral country during the war but which sent aid hence the plaque inscribed La Belgique se souvient de l aide humanitaire du noble peuple espagnol Belgium remembers the humanitarian aid of the noble Spanish people Searchlight editTests were carried out in November 2012 after a searchlight was installed at the top of the tower 17 The searchlight similar to the one installed on Eiffel Tower was inaugurated on 4 August 2014 coinciding with the celebrations commemorating the 100th anniversary of the outbreak of World War I The lighthouse operates a maximum of four hours a night never after 01 00 and only on weekends and public holidays or during commemorative events 18 19 The searchlight was made by the Sky Light company which developed a type of searchlight that operates with low energy consumption based on the rotation of an optical block placed at the output of a xenon projector with a power of 2000 W installed vertically and which will only require an annual change of the lamp 20 21 Commemorating the First World War editOn 4 August 2014 a major commemoration was held at the Interallied Memorial on the occasion of the centenary of the outbreak of the First World War The official festivities were attended by numerous heads of state as well as representatives of former combatants 22 Panorama edit nbsp The city of Liege seen from the top of the Interallied Memorial tower in June 2006 On the left Liege Guillemins railway station under construction at the time At the top of the photo the Meuse river can be seen flowing through the central area and on the horizon the tailings deposits of the former coal mines Sainte Barbe Batterie nouveau Petite Bacnure Bernalmont and Belle Vue References edit a b c d Ed F 6 June 2003 Visites au Memorial Interallie de Cointe dhnet be in French DH Retrieved 20 June 2021 a b c d Fiche n 62063 INV 3003 01 Inventory of Immovable Cultural Heritage Retrieved 20 June 2021 a b c Karla Vanraepenbusch 6 November 2017 Memorial Interallie encyclopedia 1914 1918 online net in French International Encyclopedia of the First World War Retrieved 20 June 2021 a b Le Memorial Interallies in French Ardennes etape Retrieved 20 June 2021 Liege Memorial interallie Cointe regiedesbatiments be in French The Building Authority Retrieved 20 June 2021 Gaston Lecocq 6 July 2006 On va restaurer le site du Memorial Interallie de Cointe proxiliege net in French Proxi Liege Retrieved 20 June 2021 Francois Pottie 25 February 2019 Preservation et reaffectation de l eglise du Sacre cœur a Liege francoispottie be in French Webpage of local councillor Francois Pottie Retrieved 20 June 2021 a b Bechet Marc 9 September 2017 L eglise de Cointe en passe d etre vendue dhnet be in French DH Retrieved 20 June 2021 a b c Claude Warzee 25 February 2014 Le memorial interallie de Cointe histoiresdeliege wordpress com in French Histoires de Liege Retrieved 20 June 2021 Liege polemique autour de la fresque de l eglise du monument Interallie rtbf be in French RTBF 27 July 2014 Retrieved 20 June 2021 Le memorial de Cointe a Liege inscrit au Patrimoine wallon rtbf be in French RTBF 21 January 2011 Retrieved 20 June 2021 Protection du patrimoine PDF docum1 wallonie be in French Monitorul oficial al Belgiei 4 April 2011 Retrieved 20 June 2021 Liege Luik Cointe Monument interallie Monument voor de intergeallieerden Inter allied War Memorial bel memorial org in French BEL MEMORIAL Retrieved 20 June 2021 a b Monument Interallie liegetourisme be in French Official website of the Province of Liege Retrieved 20 June 2021 a b Martial Giot 18 January 2021 Liege tous les casques du monument grec du Memorial Interallie de Cointe ont ete voles rtbf be in French RTBF Retrieved 20 June 2021 Martial Giot 19 January 2021 Vol du monument grec du Memorial Interallie de Cointe un nouvel exemple des mefaits des voleurs de metaux rtbf be in French RTBF Retrieved 20 June 2021 Premier essai reussi pour le futur phare de Liege rtbf be in French RTBF 22 November 2012 Retrieved 20 June 2021 Martial Giot 5 August 2014 Liege le phare du monument Interallie a ete inaugure rtbf be in French RTBF Retrieved 20 June 2021 Projet de phare 2 0 pharedeliege be in French Phare de Liege Retrieved 20 June 2021 Benjamin Hermann 20 February 2014 Le phare de Liege consommera autant qu un fer a repasser lavenir net in French L Avenir Retrieved 20 June 2021 Alexandre Arene 3 November 2014 Liege le Memorial interallie transforme en phare filiere 3e fr in French Filiere 3e Retrieved 20 June 2021 60 chefs d Etat sont invites a Liege pour commemorer le centenaire de la guerre 14 18 sudinfo be in French 1 August 2013 Retrieved 20 June 2021 Bibliography editBarlet Jacques Hamal Olivier Mainil Sebastien 2014 Le memorial interallie de Cointe a Liege The interallied memorial at Cointe in Liege Carnets du patrimoine in French 122 Institut du Patrimoine wallon 52 ISBN 978 2 87522 132 2 External links edit nbsp Media related to Memorial Interallie de Cointe at Wikimedia Commons in French Memorial Interallie on the Buildings Authority website in French A Gany Le memorial interallies de Cointe a Liege clham org History of the creation of the memorial on the website of the Liege Centre for Military History and Archaeology CLHAM in French Claude Warzee 25 February 2014 Le memorial interallies de Cointe a Liege histoiresdeliege wordpress com Illustrated history of the memorial on the Histoires de Liege blog 50 37 11 N 5 34 10 E 50 6198 N 5 5694 E 50 6198 5 5694 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Interallied Memorial of Cointe amp oldid 1216673420, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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