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Jiangshi

A jiāngshī (simplified Chinese: 僵尸; traditional Chinese: 殭屍; pinyin: jiāngshī; Jyutping: goeng1 si1), also known as a Chinese hopping vampire,[1] is a type of reanimated corpse in Chinese legends and folklore. It is typically depicted as a stiff corpse dressed in official garments from the Qing dynasty, and it moves around by hopping with its arms outstretched. It kills living creatures to absorb their qi, or "life force", usually at night, while during the day, it rests in a coffin or hides in dark places such as caves.[2] Jiangshi legends have inspired a genre of jiangshi films and literature in Hong Kong and East Asia. Although the pronunciation of jiangshi varies in different East Asian countries, all of them refer to the Chinese version of vampires.

Jiangshi
Two people dressed up as jiāngshī on Halloween in Osaka. Here, the Fulu is hanging from the back of the head, though typically Fulu hangs from the forehead.
Chinese name
Traditional Chinese殭屍
Simplified Chinese僵尸
Hanyu Pinyinjiāngshī
Literal meaningstiff corpse
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu Pinyinjiāngshī
Bopomofoㄐㄧㄤ ㄕ
Gwoyeu Romatzyhjiangshy
Wade–Gileschiang¹-shih¹
Yue: Cantonese
Yale Romanizationgēung sī
Jyutpinggoeng¹-si¹
Southern Min
Hokkien POJkhiong-si
Japanese name
Kanaキョンシー
Transcriptions
Romanizationkyonshī

Origins edit

The Qing dynasty scholar Ji Xiaolan mentioned in his book Yuewei Caotang Biji (閱微草堂筆記) (c. 1789 – 1798) (The Shadow Book of Ji Yun, Empress Wu Books, 2021) that the causes for a corpse to be reanimated can be classified in either of two categories: a recently deceased person returning to life, or a corpse that has been buried for a long time but does not decompose. Some causes are described below:

  • The use of supernatural arts to resurrect the dead.
  • Spirit possession of a dead body.
  • A corpse absorbs sufficient yang qi to return to life.
  • A person's body is governed by three huns and seven pos. The Qing dynasty scholar Yuan Mei wrote in his book Zi Bu Yu that "A person's hun is good but the po is evil, the hun is intelligent but the po is not so good". The hun leaves his/her body after death but their po remains and takes control of the body, so the dead person becomes a jiangshi.
  • The dead person is not buried even after a funeral has been held. The corpse comes to life after it is struck by a bolt of lightning, or when a pregnant cat (or a black cat in some tales) leaps across the coffin.
  • When a person's soul fails to leave their deceased body, due to improper death, suicide, or just wanting to cause trouble.[3][4]
  • A person injured by a jiangshi is infected with the "jiangshi virus" and gradually changes into a jiangshi over time, as seen in the Mr. Vampire films.

Appearance edit

 
Official uniform of a mandarin from Qing dynasty, which jiangshi are usually portrayed wearing

Generally, a jiangshi's appearance can range from unremarkable (as in the case of a recently deceased person) to horrifying (rotting flesh, rigor mortis, as with corpses that have been in a state of decay over a period). The Chinese character for "jiang" (殭/僵) in "jiangshi" literally means "hard" or "stiff". It is believed that the jiangshi are so stiff that they cannot bend their limbs or body, so they have to move around by hopping while keeping their arms stretched out for mobility.

Popular culture edit

In popular culture, such as in jiangshi movies, jiangshi have a standard appearance. They have a paper talisman (fulu, with a sealing spell) attached onto and hanging off the forehead in portrait orientation, and wear a uniform coat-like robe and round-top tall rimmed hat characteristic of a mandarin (Chinese official from during the Qing dynasty).

They have greenish-white skin. One theory is that this is derived from fungus or mould growing on corpses. They have long white hair all over its head[5] and may behave like animals.[6]

The influence of western vampire stories brought the blood-sucking aspect to the Chinese myth in more modern times in combination with the concept of the hungry ghost, though traditionally they feed solely on the qi of a living individual for sustenance and in order to grow more powerful.

Methods and items used to counter jiangshi edit

  • Mirrors: Li Shizhen's medical book Bencao Gangmu mentions, "A mirror is the essence of liquid metal. It is dark on the external but bright inside." (鏡乃金水之精,內明外暗。) Jiangshi are also said to be terrified of their own reflections.
  • Items made of wood from a peach tree: The Jingchu Suishi Ji (荊楚歲時記) mentioned, "Peach is the essence of the Five Elements. It can subjugate evil auras and deter evil spirits." (桃者,五行之精,能厭服邪氣,制御百鬼。)
  • A rooster's call: Yuan Mei's book Zi Bu Yu mentions, "Evil spirits withdraw when they hear a rooster's call" (鬼聞雞鳴即縮。), because the rooster's call usually occurs with the rise of the sun.
  • Jujube seeds: Zi Bu Yu mentions, "Nail seven jujube seeds into the acupuncture points on the back of a corpse." (棗核七枚,釘入屍脊背穴。)
  • Fire: Zi Bu Yu mentions, "When set on fire, the sound of crackling flames, blood rushes forth and bones cry." (放火燒之,嘖嘖之聲,血湧骨鳴。)
  • Hooves of a black donkey: Mentioned in Zhang Muye's fantasy novel Ghost Blows Out the Light
  • Vinegar: Mentioned by coroners in eastern Fujian.
  • Fulu (Taoist talisman), stuck on the forehead to immobilise them whilst it is firmly stuck on
  • Holding one's breath, which makes the jiangshi unable to find you.
  • Ba gua sign
  • I Ching
  • Tong Shu
  • Glutinous rice, rice chaff
  • Adzuki beans
  • Handbell
  • Thread stained with a concoction of black ink, chicken blood and burnt talisman
  • Blood of a black dog
  • Stonemason's awl
  • Axe
  • Broom
  • Dropping a bag of coins can cause the jiangshi to count the coins.

On eHow.com, there was a list of 5 methods:[1]

  • To subdue a hopping vampire the person must take a thin yellow piece of paper and write out a distinct spell in chicken's blood, which will then be attached to the vampire's forehead.
  • A person defending themselves against a hopping vampire/zombie can use an 8 sided mirror called Ba-qua mirror, which is often used in Feng Shui. The mirrors purpose is to reflect the light, which in turn scares the creature away.
  • A sword charged under the light of the moon made of Chinese coins can be used in an attack against the vampire.
  • To stop a hopping vampire (zombie) in its place, take a small amount of blood and place it on the creature's forehead.
  • To banish the hopping vampire, a person can throw sticky rice at the creature drawing out the evil in it.

Origin stories edit

A supposed source of the jiangshi stories came from the folk practice of "transporting a corpse over a thousand li" (traditional Chinese: 千里行屍; simplified Chinese: 千里行尸; pinyin: qiān lǐ xíng shī). The relatives of a person who died far away from home could not afford vehicles to have the deceased person's body transported home for burial, so they would hire a Taoist priest to conduct a ritual to reanimate the dead person and teach him/her to "hop" their way home. The priests would transport the corpses only at night and would ring bells to notify others in the vicinity of their presence because it was considered bad luck for a living person to set eyes upon a jiangshi. This practice, also called Xiangxi ganshi (traditional Chinese: 湘西趕屍; simplified Chinese: 湘西赶尸; pinyin: Xiāngxī gǎn shī; lit. 'driving corpses in Xiangxi'), was popular in Xiangxi, where many people left their hometown to work elsewhere.[7][8] After they died, their bodies were transported back to their hometown because it was believed that their souls would feel homesick if they were buried somewhere unfamiliar to them. The corpses would be arranged upright in single file and be tied to long bamboo rods on the sides, while two men (one at the front and one at the back) would carry the ends of the rods on their shoulders and walk. When the bamboo flexed up and down, the corpses appeared to be "hopping" in unison when viewed from a distance away.[9][10][11]

Two oral accounts of transporting corpses are included in Liao Yiwu's The Corpse Walker. One account describes how corpses would be transported by a two-man team. One would carry the corpse on his back with a large robe covering both of them and a mourning mask on top. The other man would walk ahead with a lantern and warn his companion about obstacles ahead of him. The lantern was used as a visual guide for the corpse carrier to follow since they could not see with the robe covering them. It is speculated in the accounts in the book that corpses would be carried at night to avoid contact with people and the cooler air would be more suitable to transporting bodies.[12]

Some[13] speculate that the stories about jiangshi were originally made up by smugglers who disguised their illegal activities as corpse transportation and wanted to scare off law enforcement officers.

Their modern visual depiction as horrific Qing officials may have been derived by the anti-Manchu or anti-Qing sentiments of the Han Chinese population during the Qing dynasty, as the officials were viewed as bloodthirsty creatures with little regard for humanity.[1]

It is also the conventional wisdom of feng shui in Chinese architecture that a threshold (traditional Chinese: 門檻; simplified Chinese: 门槛; pinyin: ménkǎn), a piece of wood approximately 15 cm (6 in) high, be installed along the width of the door at the bottom to prevent a jiangshi from entering the household.[14]

Literature edit

Similar practices edit

Archaeologists have found Revenant and what appear to be deviant burials dating back to 4500–3800 BC in Cyprus.[15] Those born as illegitimate children, with abnormalities, or on inauspicious days, or who were victims of murder, drowning, suicide, curses, or the Black Death were thought to have had the potential to be a vampire. A suspected vampire would be incinerated or dismembered to prevent their return. Other preventive methods included deep buried burial, prone burials, and tying, staking, or pinning corpses with stones.[15] These types of burials have been discovered in numerous locations, including Egypt, Greece, and Rome. Slavic folklore references vampires and preventions dating back to the 11th century with Drawsko, Poland being home to some of these burial sites and early discoveries of such practices. The three primary areas of focus upon burial to prevent vampirism were the mouth, the hands, and the feet, as the mouth is used for feeding, the hands are used for grasping victims, and the feet are used for movement.[16] Folklore and burial practices dealing with revenants can also be traced back to Norse mythology with draugr or draug(s) that closely resemble stories of jiangshis.[17] These draugr were also re-animated corpses that rose from their graves, and many of the various accounts report the draugr to be sighted far from its initial burial site.[17]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Lam, Stephanie (2009). "Hop on Pop: Jiangshi Films in a Transnational Context". CineAction (78): 46–51.
  2. ^ "Search Results – Mythical Creatures Guide".[dead link]
  3. ^ "充滿詭異色彩 文獻記載湘南恐怖僵屍村傳說" [Full of weird colors: documenting the legend of Shonan's horrible zombie village] (in Chinese). February 2, 2009. from the original on February 28, 2009. Retrieved February 21, 2021.
  4. ^ [The kid who fell in love with the toilet] (in Chinese). Archived from the original on August 13, 2011. Retrieved February 21, 2021.
  5. ^ de Groot, JJM (1892–1910). The Religious System of China. The Hague.
  6. ^ [Are there really zombies in the world?] (in Chinese). Archived from the original on February 18, 2009. Retrieved February 21, 2021.
  7. ^ . February 26, 2004. Archived from the original on 2012-02-27. Retrieved 2021-04-02.
  8. ^ . 2004-10-22. Archived from the original on 2008-05-14. Retrieved 2021-04-02.
  9. ^ 湘西赶尸骗局被揭穿 (in Chinese)[dead link]
  10. ^ (in Chinese)[dead link]
  11. ^ . September 14, 2009. Archived from the original on 2018-01-09. Retrieved 2021-04-02.
  12. ^ Liao, Yiwu. The Corpse Walker: Real Life Stories, China from the Bottom Up. New York: Pantheon Books, 2008. OCLC 233578030.
  13. ^ "湘西趕屍". liubowen.tripod.com. Retrieved 2024-03-30.
  14. ^ . Penny Blood Magazine. Archived from the original on 2007-11-21. Retrieved 2007-12-16.
  15. ^ a b Geggel, Laura (June 2015). "Ancient Greek burials prepared for zombie uprising". www.cbsnews.com.
  16. ^ Betsinger, Tracy K.; Scott, Amy B. (October 2010). "Governing from the Grave: Vampire Burials and Social Order in Post-medieval Poland". Cambridge Archaeological Journal. 24 (3): 467–476. doi:10.1017/S0959774314000754. ISSN 0959-7743.
  17. ^ a b Chadwick, N. K. (1946). "Norse Ghosts (A Study in the Draugr and the Haugbúi)". Folklore. 57 (2): 50–65. doi:10.1080/0015587X.1946.9717812. ISSN 0015-587X. JSTOR 1256952.

External links edit

  •   The dictionary definition of jiangshi at Wiktionary

jiangshi, literary, genre, fiction, confused, with, jianshi, gangsi, redirects, here, village, india, gangsi, india, jiāngshī, simplified, chinese, 僵尸, traditional, chinese, 殭屍, pinyin, jiāngshī, jyutping, goeng1, also, known, chinese, hopping, vampire, type, . For the literary genre see Jiangshi fiction Not to be confused with Jianshi Gangsi redirects here For the village in India see Gangsi India A jiangshi simplified Chinese 僵尸 traditional Chinese 殭屍 pinyin jiangshi Jyutping goeng1 si1 also known as a Chinese hopping vampire 1 is a type of reanimated corpse in Chinese legends and folklore It is typically depicted as a stiff corpse dressed in official garments from the Qing dynasty and it moves around by hopping with its arms outstretched It kills living creatures to absorb their qi or life force usually at night while during the day it rests in a coffin or hides in dark places such as caves 2 Jiangshi legends have inspired a genre of jiangshi films and literature in Hong Kong and East Asia Although the pronunciation of jiangshi varies in different East Asian countries all of them refer to the Chinese version of vampires JiangshiTwo people dressed up as jiangshi on Halloween in Osaka Here the Fulu is hanging from the back of the head though typically Fulu hangs from the forehead Chinese nameTraditional Chinese殭屍Simplified Chinese僵尸Hanyu PinyinjiangshiLiteral meaningstiff corpseTranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinjiangshiBopomofoㄐㄧㄤ ㄕGwoyeu RomatzyhjiangshyWade Gileschiang shih Yue CantoneseYale Romanizationgeung siJyutpinggoeng si Southern MinHokkien POJkhiong siJapanese nameKanaキョンシーTranscriptionsRomanizationkyonshi Contents 1 Origins 2 Appearance 2 1 Popular culture 3 Methods and items used to counter jiangshi 4 Origin stories 5 Literature 6 Similar practices 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksOrigins editThe Qing dynasty scholar Ji Xiaolan mentioned in his book Yuewei Caotang Biji 閱微草堂筆記 c 1789 1798 The Shadow Book of Ji Yun Empress Wu Books 2021 that the causes for a corpse to be reanimated can be classified in either of two categories a recently deceased person returning to life or a corpse that has been buried for a long time but does not decompose Some causes are described below The use of supernatural arts to resurrect the dead Spirit possession of a dead body A corpse absorbs sufficient yang qi to return to life A person s body is governed by three huns and seven pos The Qing dynasty scholar Yuan Mei wrote in his book Zi Bu Yu that A person s hun is good but the po is evil the hun is intelligent but the po is not so good The hun leaves his her body after death but their po remains and takes control of the body so the dead person becomes a jiangshi The dead person is not buried even after a funeral has been held The corpse comes to life after it is struck by a bolt of lightning or when a pregnant cat or a black cat in some tales leaps across the coffin When a person s soul fails to leave their deceased body due to improper death suicide or just wanting to cause trouble 3 4 A person injured by a jiangshi is infected with the jiangshi virus and gradually changes into a jiangshi over time as seen in the Mr Vampire films Appearance edit nbsp Official uniform of a mandarin from Qing dynasty which jiangshi are usually portrayed wearing Generally a jiangshi s appearance can range from unremarkable as in the case of a recently deceased person to horrifying rotting flesh rigor mortis as with corpses that have been in a state of decay over a period The Chinese character for jiang 殭 僵 in jiangshi literally means hard or stiff It is believed that the jiangshi are so stiff that they cannot bend their limbs or body so they have to move around by hopping while keeping their arms stretched out for mobility Popular culture edit In popular culture such as in jiangshi movies jiangshi have a standard appearance They have a paper talisman fulu with a sealing spell attached onto and hanging off the forehead in portrait orientation and wear a uniform coat like robe and round top tall rimmed hat characteristic of a mandarin Chinese official from during the Qing dynasty They have greenish white skin One theory is that this is derived from fungus or mould growing on corpses They have long white hair all over its head 5 and may behave like animals 6 The influence of western vampire stories brought the blood sucking aspect to the Chinese myth in more modern times in combination with the concept of the hungry ghost though traditionally they feed solely on the qi of a living individual for sustenance and in order to grow more powerful Methods and items used to counter jiangshi editMirrors Li Shizhen s medical book Bencao Gangmu mentions A mirror is the essence of liquid metal It is dark on the external but bright inside 鏡乃金水之精 內明外暗 Jiangshi are also said to be terrified of their own reflections Items made of wood from a peach tree The Jingchu Suishi Ji 荊楚歲時記 mentioned Peach is the essence of the Five Elements It can subjugate evil auras and deter evil spirits 桃者 五行之精 能厭服邪氣 制御百鬼 A rooster s call Yuan Mei s book Zi Bu Yu mentions Evil spirits withdraw when they hear a rooster s call 鬼聞雞鳴即縮 because the rooster s call usually occurs with the rise of the sun Jujube seeds Zi Bu Yu mentions Nail seven jujube seeds into the acupuncture points on the back of a corpse 棗核七枚 釘入屍脊背穴 Fire Zi Bu Yu mentions When set on fire the sound of crackling flames blood rushes forth and bones cry 放火燒之 嘖嘖之聲 血湧骨鳴 Hooves of a black donkey Mentioned in Zhang Muye s fantasy novel Ghost Blows Out the Light Vinegar Mentioned by coroners in eastern Fujian Fulu Taoist talisman stuck on the forehead to immobilise them whilst it is firmly stuck on Holding one s breath which makes the jiangshi unable to find you Ba gua sign I Ching Tong Shu Glutinous rice rice chaff Adzuki beans Handbell Thread stained with a concoction of black ink chicken blood and burnt talisman Blood of a black dog Stonemason s awl Axe Broom Dropping a bag of coins can cause the jiangshi to count the coins On eHow com there was a list of 5 methods 1 To subdue a hopping vampire the person must take a thin yellow piece of paper and write out a distinct spell in chicken s blood which will then be attached to the vampire s forehead A person defending themselves against a hopping vampire zombie can use an 8 sided mirror called Ba qua mirror which is often used in Feng Shui The mirrors purpose is to reflect the light which in turn scares the creature away A sword charged under the light of the moon made of Chinese coins can be used in an attack against the vampire To stop a hopping vampire zombie in its place take a small amount of blood and place it on the creature s forehead To banish the hopping vampire a person can throw sticky rice at the creature drawing out the evil in it Origin stories editA supposed source of the jiangshi stories came from the folk practice of transporting a corpse over a thousand li traditional Chinese 千里行屍 simplified Chinese 千里行尸 pinyin qian lǐ xing shi The relatives of a person who died far away from home could not afford vehicles to have the deceased person s body transported home for burial so they would hire a Taoist priest to conduct a ritual to reanimate the dead person and teach him her to hop their way home The priests would transport the corpses only at night and would ring bells to notify others in the vicinity of their presence because it was considered bad luck for a living person to set eyes upon a jiangshi This practice also called Xiangxi ganshi traditional Chinese 湘西趕屍 simplified Chinese 湘西赶尸 pinyin Xiangxi gǎn shi lit driving corpses in Xiangxi was popular in Xiangxi where many people left their hometown to work elsewhere 7 8 After they died their bodies were transported back to their hometown because it was believed that their souls would feel homesick if they were buried somewhere unfamiliar to them The corpses would be arranged upright in single file and be tied to long bamboo rods on the sides while two men one at the front and one at the back would carry the ends of the rods on their shoulders and walk When the bamboo flexed up and down the corpses appeared to be hopping in unison when viewed from a distance away 9 10 11 Two oral accounts of transporting corpses are included in Liao Yiwu s The Corpse Walker One account describes how corpses would be transported by a two man team One would carry the corpse on his back with a large robe covering both of them and a mourning mask on top The other man would walk ahead with a lantern and warn his companion about obstacles ahead of him The lantern was used as a visual guide for the corpse carrier to follow since they could not see with the robe covering them It is speculated in the accounts in the book that corpses would be carried at night to avoid contact with people and the cooler air would be more suitable to transporting bodies 12 Some 13 speculate that the stories about jiangshi were originally made up by smugglers who disguised their illegal activities as corpse transportation and wanted to scare off law enforcement officers Their modern visual depiction as horrific Qing officials may have been derived by the anti Manchu or anti Qing sentiments of the Han Chinese population during the Qing dynasty as the officials were viewed as bloodthirsty creatures with little regard for humanity 1 It is also the conventional wisdom of feng shui in Chinese architecture that a threshold traditional Chinese 門檻 simplified Chinese 门槛 pinyin menkǎn a piece of wood approximately 15 cm 6 in high be installed along the width of the door at the bottom to prevent a jiangshi from entering the household 14 Literature editMain article Jiangshi fictionSimilar practices editArchaeologists have found Revenant and what appear to be deviant burials dating back to 4500 3800 BC in Cyprus 15 Those born as illegitimate children with abnormalities or on inauspicious days or who were victims of murder drowning suicide curses or the Black Death were thought to have had the potential to be a vampire A suspected vampire would be incinerated or dismembered to prevent their return Other preventive methods included deep buried burial prone burials and tying staking or pinning corpses with stones 15 These types of burials have been discovered in numerous locations including Egypt Greece and Rome Slavic folklore references vampires and preventions dating back to the 11th century with Drawsko Poland being home to some of these burial sites and early discoveries of such practices The three primary areas of focus upon burial to prevent vampirism were the mouth the hands and the feet as the mouth is used for feeding the hands are used for grasping victims and the feet are used for movement 16 Folklore and burial practices dealing with revenants can also be traced back to Norse mythology with draugr or draug s that closely resemble stories of jiangshis 17 These draugr were also re animated corpses that rose from their graves and many of the various accounts report the draugr to be sighted far from its initial burial site 17 See also editChinese ghosts Chinese mythology Chupacabra Draugr Medieval revenant Undead Vetala Wight Yaoguai Yokai Vampire burial ZompireReferences edit a b c Lam Stephanie 2009 Hop on Pop Jiangshi Films in a Transnational Context CineAction 78 46 51 Search Results Mythical Creatures Guide dead link 充滿詭異色彩 文獻記載湘南恐怖僵屍村傳說 Full of weird colors documenting the legend of Shonan s horrible zombie village in Chinese February 2 2009 Archived from the original on February 28 2009 Retrieved February 21 2021 愛上廁所的小孩 The kid who fell in love with the toilet in Chinese Archived from the original on August 13 2011 Retrieved February 21 2021 de Groot JJM 1892 1910 The Religious System of China The Hague 世界上真的有僵尸吗 Are there really zombies in the world in Chinese Archived from the original on February 18 2009 Retrieved February 21 2021 湘西 赶尸 习俗 February 26 2004 Archived from the original on 2012 02 27 Retrieved 2021 04 02 神秘骇人的湘西 赶尸 揭秘 图 2004 10 22 Archived from the original on 2008 05 14 Retrieved 2021 04 02 湘西赶尸骗局被揭穿 in Chinese dead link 无法破译的湘西三邪 赶尸 放蛊 落花洞女 in Chinese dead link 湘西 赶尸匠 后人揭秘真相 图 September 14 2009 Archived from the original on 2018 01 09 Retrieved 2021 04 02 Liao Yiwu The Corpse Walker Real Life Stories China from the Bottom Up New York Pantheon Books 2008 OCLC 233578030 湘西趕屍 liubowen tripod com Retrieved 2024 03 30 Hopping Mad A Brief Look at Chinese Vampire Movies Penny Blood Magazine Archived from the original on 2007 11 21 Retrieved 2007 12 16 a b Geggel Laura June 2015 Ancient Greek burials prepared for zombie uprising www cbsnews com Betsinger Tracy K Scott Amy B October 2010 Governing from the Grave Vampire Burials and Social Order in Post medieval Poland Cambridge Archaeological Journal 24 3 467 476 doi 10 1017 S0959774314000754 ISSN 0959 7743 a b Chadwick N K 1946 Norse Ghosts A Study in the Draugr and the Haugbui Folklore 57 2 50 65 doi 10 1080 0015587X 1946 9717812 ISSN 0015 587X JSTOR 1256952 External links edit nbsp The dictionary definition of jiangshi at Wiktionary Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jiangshi amp oldid 1216561927, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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