fbpx
Wikipedia

Robert Saundby

Air Marshal Sir Robert Henry Magnus Spencer Saundby, KCB, KBE, MC, DFC, AFC, FRAeS, DL (26 April 1896 – 26 September 1971) was a senior Royal Air Force officer whose career spanned both the First and Second World Wars. He distinguished himself by gaining five victories during the First World War, and was present during the air battle when Lanoe Hawker was shot down and killed by Manfred von Richthofen, the "Red Baron". He is chiefly remembered for his role as Deputy Air Officer Commanding-on-Chief Bomber Command under Sir Arthur Harris during the latter part of the Second World War.[citation needed]

Sir Robert Saundby
Nickname(s)Sandy
Born(1896-04-26)26 April 1896
Birmingham, England
Died26 September 1971(1971-09-26) (aged 75)
Hamstead Marshall, England
AllegianceUnited Kingdom
Service/branchBritish Army (1914–18)
Royal Air Force (1918–46)
Years of service1914–1946
RankAir Marshal
Commands heldAden Flight
Battles/warsFirst World War
Second World War
AwardsKnight Commander of the Order of the Bath
Knight Commander of the Order of the British Empire
Military Cross
Distinguished Flying Cross
Air Force Cross
Mentioned in Despatches (4)
Officer of the Legion of Honour (France)
Commander of the Legion of Merit (United States)
Grand Officer of the Order of Leopold II (Belgium)
Croix de Guerre (Belgium)

Early life

Robert Henry Magnus Spencer Saundby was born on 26 April 1896 at 83A Edmund Street in Birmingham.[1][2] He was the son of Professor Robert Saundby FRCP and Edith Mary Saundby (née Spencer).[2][3]

Educated at King Edward VI School, Saundby left in 1913 and joined the Traffic Department of the London and North Western Railway.[3]

First World War

Saundby began the First World War serving in the British Army. On 15 June 1914 he was commissioned into the Royal Warwickshire Regiment, Territorial Force.[2][3][4]

An attack of cerebrospinal meningitis in February 1915 saw Saundby out of action for 8 months. It was not until 11 October that he was passed fit and on 23 October he applied to the Royal Flying Corps.[2]

It was January 1916 when Saundby was seconded to the Royal Flying Corps. Saundby's flying career began at Thetford in Norfolk as part of No. 12 Reserve Squadron on 28 February 1916. He flew solo just over a month later on 31 March and gained further experience flying with the squadron at Dover. Saundby then attended the Central Flying School (CFS) at Upavon. He saw further service with No. 40 Squadron at Gosport.[2][3][5] Of his experiences in this period, Saundby wrote -[5]

I have never found it necessary to modify the opinion which I formed at the time that, which the exception of the C.F.S. and one or two individuals, the standard of flying training was on the whole extremely bad. The instructor felt no responsibility for his pupils' flying and invariably explained away their crashes by reporting that they were hopeless idiots, better dead, of whom nothing could reasonably be expected.

— Robert Saundby

Saundby became a qualified pilot and joined Britain's first single-seater fighter squadron, No. 24 Squadron RFC, in its original complement[4] under famous Major Lanoe Hawker, flying the Airco DH2 on the Western Front.[6] His initial successes began on 31 July 1916; he drove down a Fokker Eindekker out of control, and was slightly wounded in the process.[citation needed]

On 17 November 1916 Saundby's brother, Second Lieutenant William Spencer Fitz-Robert Saundby, also of the Royal Flying Corp, was killed in action at 19 years of age. It was initially hoped he had been made a prisoner of war following a forced landing but it turned out not to be the case. He is remembered on the Arras Flying Services Memorial.[7][8]

Saundby transferred from No. 24 Squadron to No. 41 Squadron on 26 January 1917. On 4 March, while flying FE.8 Serial No. 6431, he shared a victory over an Albatros.[9] Following this win, he transferred to Home Defence in Britain. He had shot down 9 aircraft over the Western Front by this point.[2]

On 13 April 1917 Saundby was at Orford Ness RFC Experimental Station, England.[2] On 17 June 1917 he was flying one of three aircraft, one of 37 Squadron RFC and two others from the Experimental Station that intercepted the Zeppelin L48 (Imperial German Navy Designation LZ 95) after she got lost trying to bomb London. As a result of their attacks, L48 crashed near Theberton. The victory was shared among the three air crews.[1] Saundby not only became an ace with this win, he was awarded the Military Cross.[10] One of only two German survivors of the engagement, Otto Mieth, died in Iringa, Tanganyika in 1956. He had lived there since 1928 and had his own construction company.[11]

In the preface to Saundby's book Flying Colours (1919), Major General E. B. Ashmore wrote that Saundby was "one of a very gallant band of pilots who fought under the late Major Lanoe Hawker VC DSO during the Somme offensive of 1916."[2]

Interwar period

In 1919 Saundby received a permanent commission into the Royal Air Force (RAF). This period also saw him taking the sea plane course at Lee-on-Solent, studying at the RAF and Naval Cooperation School at Calshot and being awarded the Air Force Cross.[3]

Between 1919 and 1925, Robert Saundby moved slowly through the ranks of the newly formed RAF, while gaining experience of command. Between 1922 and 1925 he served as a Flight Commander in No. 45 Squadron, based at Almaza, Cairo.[2] Flying the Vickers Vernon transport aircraft. He flew as co-pilot for the then Squadron Leader Arthur Harris, when the latter developed a locally improvised bombing capability for the Vernon.[12]

April 1922 was Saundby's first flight to Baghdad. In February, March, November and December 1923 he participated in bombing operations.[2] This was a policy known as 'aerial policing'.[13] He moved on to become an instructor in Egypt with No. 4 Flying Training School at Abu Sueir, Egypt. However, this lasted for only two months when he was given command of the Aden Flight. This was due to a sudden illness affecting the sitting commander. Saudby initially disliked the posting but grew to appreciate the experience. It proved to be the only command of his career.[2]

Saundby's move towards the upper command ranks of the RAF was initiated when he joined No. 58 Squadron as a Flight Commander on 15 October 1926. With the squadron he flew the Vickers Virginia and Vickers Victoria aircraft at RAF Worthy Down.[2] His squadron commander was Wing Commander Arthur Harris, and the squadron concentrated on developing night bombing techniques such as target-marking in their 70 mph machines. The other squadron at Worthy Down at the time, No. 7, was commanded by Wing Commander Charles Portal, later to become Chief of Air Staff during the Second World War and the direct superior and sometimes opponent of Harris.[citation needed]

In 1927–28 Saundby attended the RAF Staff College before being posted to the Wessex bombing area staff. By this period he had logged over 2000 flying hours, however his flying career was drawing to a close as he rose into more staff positions.[2]

At the rank of wing commander, Saundby attended the Imperial Defence College in 1933. He also worked for two years at the RAF Staff College, Andover as an instructor.[3] In 1937, Saundby was appointed Deputy Director of Operations. From there he became Deputy Director (and subsequently Director) of Operational Requirements and Assistant Chief of Staff (Operational Requirements and Tactics). He held these posts between 1938 and 1940, also rising to Air Vice-Marshall in this period.[3]

Second World War

 
Air Marshal Arthur Harris studies a map of Germany with Air Vice Marshal Ronald Graham (left), the Air Officer Administration at BCHQ, and Air Vice Marshal Saundby (right), Harris's Senior Air Staff Officer.

By 1940, Saundby had become Senior Air Staff Officer (SASO), HQ Bomber Command. He served under Air Marshal Richard Peirse, and continued in this position when Peirse was replaced with Arthur Harris in February 1942.[citation needed]

February 1943 saw Saundby appointed to the post of deputy air officer commanding-in-chief.[2] He was an advocate for the strategy of attacking German military industries and the morale of the German population by bombing German industrial areas and cities. He was a key deputy for Harris throughout the remainder of the war. On behalf of Harris he selected 94 German towns which were "fitted" for carpet bombing and gave codenames to each of them known as 'Fish code'; for example Nuremberg was codenamed Grayling and Berlin was Whitebait. It is thought that he chose this coding because he was a keen fly fisherman.[14] He retired on medical grounds from the RAF on 22 March 1946.[citation needed]

The medical grounds for Saundby's retirement were the result of injuries (osteoarthritic lumbar spine and an osteoarthritic hip)[2] sustained in a crash 30 years previously.[15]

Saundby was awarded the Order of Leopold II with Palme and Croix de Guerre for services in the liberation of Belgium.[citation needed]

Retirement

Saundby devoted much of his retirement to his role as Vice-Chairman, Council of Territorial and Auxiliary Forces Association, for which he was appointed a Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath.[citation needed]

Saundby was the chair of the council of Royal Air Forces Association (as well as life vice-president), president of the Royal British Legion (metropolitan area) and in 1960 was appointed deputy-lieutenant for Berkshire.[3] Fly-fishing was a great passion and Saundby also became the president of the Piscatorial Society, editing their centenary publication The Book of the Piscatorial Society 1836–1936.[3]

Saundby was also a keen lepidopterist and a Fellow of the Royal Entomological Society. In retirement at Oxleas House in Burghclere he made light-trap records in his garden and entomologized the woods of West Berkshire. His work in this field saw him record 44 species of butterfly and 501 larger moths.[15] His collection was described as "a model of good arrangement and documentation", and was presented to the Natural History Museum in London.[15]

Saundby had many hobbies, and wrote several books on differing subjects including his role in the RAF during the war (Air Bombardment, The Story of its Development, How the Bomber and the Missile Brought the Third Dimension to Warfare) and Steam Engines (Early British Steam 1825–1925: The First 100 Years).[citation needed]

Saundby died on 26 September 1971 at Edgecombe Nursing Home, Hamstead Marshall in Berkshire. His ashes were scattered by the River Avon at Netheravon.[2]

Family

On 10 January 1931, Saundby married Joyce Mary Rees-Webbe. They met when she came with her father, Major Marmaduke Oswald Norman Rees-Webbe, on a fly-fishing trip. Together they had a son and two daughters.[2]

Influence on literature

Kurt Vonnegut quotes his foreword to David Irving's The Destruction of Dresden in his novel Slaughterhouse-Five.

Popular culture

Saundby appears in the wartime propaganda file Target for Tonight. Saundby was portrayed in the 1989 television drama Bomber Harris by Bernard Kay.[16]

References

  1. ^ a b Above the Trenches: A Complete Record of the Fighter Aces and Units of the British Empire Air Forces 1915–1920. p. 330.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Wynn, Humphrey (2004). "Saundby, Sir Robert Henry Magnus Spencer (1896–1971), air force officer". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/58056. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Air Marshal Sir Robert Saundby". The Times. No. 58283. 27 September 1971. p. 18.
  4. ^ a b Pusher Aces of World War 1. p. 39.
  5. ^ a b Broad, Graham (2017). One in a thousand : the life and death of Captain Eddie McKay, Royal Flying Corps. North York, Ontario, Canada. ISBN 9781487593414. OCLC 960840302.
  6. ^ "24 Squadron". www.theaerodrome.com. Retrieved 17 August 2010.
  7. ^ "Deaths". The Times. No. 41646. 27 November 1917. p. 2.
  8. ^ "Casualty". cwgc.org. Retrieved 18 July 2018.
  9. ^ Pusher Aces of World War 1. p. 64.
  10. ^ Pusher Aces of World War 1. pp. 83–84.
  11. ^ "Herr Otto Mieth". The Times. No. 53528. 11 May 1956. p. 13.
  12. ^ Johnson Brian & Cozens H. I. Bombers The Weapon of Total War London Methuen 1984 ISBN 0-423-00630-4 p38
  13. ^ Pruszewicz, Marek (7 October 2014). "The 1920s British air bombing campaign in Iraq". BBC News. Retrieved 19 July 2018.
  14. ^ Falconer, Jonathon (1998). The Bomber Command Handbook 1939–1945. Stroud: Sutton Publishing Limited. ISBN 0-7509-1819-5.
  15. ^ a b c Salmon, Michael A. (2000). The Aurelian legacy : British butterflies and their collectors. Marren, Peter., Harley, Basil. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 0520229630. OCLC 45903597.
  16. ^ Darlow, Michael (3 September 1989), Bomber Harris, John Thaw, Robert Hardy, Frederick Treves, retrieved 25 July 2018

Further reading

External links

  • Air of Authority – A History of RAF Organisation – Air Mshl Sir Robert Saundby

robert, saundby, marshal, robert, henry, magnus, spencer, saundby, fraes, april, 1896, september, 1971, senior, royal, force, officer, whose, career, spanned, both, first, second, world, wars, distinguished, himself, gaining, five, victories, during, first, wo. Air Marshal Sir Robert Henry Magnus Spencer Saundby KCB KBE MC DFC AFC FRAeS DL 26 April 1896 26 September 1971 was a senior Royal Air Force officer whose career spanned both the First and Second World Wars He distinguished himself by gaining five victories during the First World War and was present during the air battle when Lanoe Hawker was shot down and killed by Manfred von Richthofen the Red Baron He is chiefly remembered for his role as Deputy Air Officer Commanding on Chief Bomber Command under Sir Arthur Harris during the latter part of the Second World War citation needed Sir Robert SaundbyNickname s SandyBorn 1896 04 26 26 April 1896Birmingham EnglandDied26 September 1971 1971 09 26 aged 75 Hamstead Marshall EnglandAllegianceUnited KingdomService wbr branchBritish Army 1914 18 Royal Air Force 1918 46 Years of service1914 1946RankAir MarshalCommands heldAden FlightBattles warsFirst World WarSecond World WarAwardsKnight Commander of the Order of the BathKnight Commander of the Order of the British EmpireMilitary CrossDistinguished Flying CrossAir Force CrossMentioned in Despatches 4 Officer of the Legion of Honour France Commander of the Legion of Merit United States Grand Officer of the Order of Leopold II Belgium Croix de Guerre Belgium Contents 1 Early life 2 First World War 3 Interwar period 4 Second World War 5 Retirement 6 Family 7 Influence on literature 8 Popular culture 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksEarly life EditRobert Henry Magnus Spencer Saundby was born on 26 April 1896 at 83A Edmund Street in Birmingham 1 2 He was the son of Professor Robert Saundby FRCP and Edith Mary Saundby nee Spencer 2 3 Educated at King Edward VI School Saundby left in 1913 and joined the Traffic Department of the London and North Western Railway 3 First World War EditSaundby began the First World War serving in the British Army On 15 June 1914 he was commissioned into the Royal Warwickshire Regiment Territorial Force 2 3 4 An attack of cerebrospinal meningitis in February 1915 saw Saundby out of action for 8 months It was not until 11 October that he was passed fit and on 23 October he applied to the Royal Flying Corps 2 It was January 1916 when Saundby was seconded to the Royal Flying Corps Saundby s flying career began at Thetford in Norfolk as part of No 12 Reserve Squadron on 28 February 1916 He flew solo just over a month later on 31 March and gained further experience flying with the squadron at Dover Saundby then attended the Central Flying School CFS at Upavon He saw further service with No 40 Squadron at Gosport 2 3 5 Of his experiences in this period Saundby wrote 5 I have never found it necessary to modify the opinion which I formed at the time that which the exception of the C F S and one or two individuals the standard of flying training was on the whole extremely bad The instructor felt no responsibility for his pupils flying and invariably explained away their crashes by reporting that they were hopeless idiots better dead of whom nothing could reasonably be expected Robert Saundby Saundby became a qualified pilot and joined Britain s first single seater fighter squadron No 24 Squadron RFC in its original complement 4 under famous Major Lanoe Hawker flying the Airco DH2 on the Western Front 6 His initial successes began on 31 July 1916 he drove down a Fokker Eindekker out of control and was slightly wounded in the process citation needed On 17 November 1916 Saundby s brother Second Lieutenant William Spencer Fitz Robert Saundby also of the Royal Flying Corp was killed in action at 19 years of age It was initially hoped he had been made a prisoner of war following a forced landing but it turned out not to be the case He is remembered on the Arras Flying Services Memorial 7 8 Saundby transferred from No 24 Squadron to No 41 Squadron on 26 January 1917 On 4 March while flying FE 8 Serial No 6431 he shared a victory over an Albatros 9 Following this win he transferred to Home Defence in Britain He had shot down 9 aircraft over the Western Front by this point 2 On 13 April 1917 Saundby was at Orford Ness RFC Experimental Station England 2 On 17 June 1917 he was flying one of three aircraft one of 37 Squadron RFC and two others from the Experimental Station that intercepted the Zeppelin L48 Imperial German Navy Designation LZ 95 after she got lost trying to bomb London As a result of their attacks L48 crashed near Theberton The victory was shared among the three air crews 1 Saundby not only became an ace with this win he was awarded the Military Cross 10 One of only two German survivors of the engagement Otto Mieth died in Iringa Tanganyika in 1956 He had lived there since 1928 and had his own construction company 11 In the preface to Saundby s book Flying Colours 1919 Major General E B Ashmore wrote that Saundby was one of a very gallant band of pilots who fought under the late Major Lanoe Hawker VC DSO during the Somme offensive of 1916 2 Interwar period EditIn 1919 Saundby received a permanent commission into the Royal Air Force RAF This period also saw him taking the sea plane course at Lee on Solent studying at the RAF and Naval Cooperation School at Calshot and being awarded the Air Force Cross 3 Between 1919 and 1925 Robert Saundby moved slowly through the ranks of the newly formed RAF while gaining experience of command Between 1922 and 1925 he served as a Flight Commander in No 45 Squadron based at Almaza Cairo 2 Flying the Vickers Vernon transport aircraft He flew as co pilot for the then Squadron Leader Arthur Harris when the latter developed a locally improvised bombing capability for the Vernon 12 April 1922 was Saundby s first flight to Baghdad In February March November and December 1923 he participated in bombing operations 2 This was a policy known as aerial policing 13 He moved on to become an instructor in Egypt with No 4 Flying Training School at Abu Sueir Egypt However this lasted for only two months when he was given command of the Aden Flight This was due to a sudden illness affecting the sitting commander Saudby initially disliked the posting but grew to appreciate the experience It proved to be the only command of his career 2 Saundby s move towards the upper command ranks of the RAF was initiated when he joined No 58 Squadron as a Flight Commander on 15 October 1926 With the squadron he flew the Vickers Virginia and Vickers Victoria aircraft at RAF Worthy Down 2 His squadron commander was Wing Commander Arthur Harris and the squadron concentrated on developing night bombing techniques such as target marking in their 70 mph machines The other squadron at Worthy Down at the time No 7 was commanded by Wing Commander Charles Portal later to become Chief of Air Staff during the Second World War and the direct superior and sometimes opponent of Harris citation needed In 1927 28 Saundby attended the RAF Staff College before being posted to the Wessex bombing area staff By this period he had logged over 2000 flying hours however his flying career was drawing to a close as he rose into more staff positions 2 At the rank of wing commander Saundby attended the Imperial Defence College in 1933 He also worked for two years at the RAF Staff College Andover as an instructor 3 In 1937 Saundby was appointed Deputy Director of Operations From there he became Deputy Director and subsequently Director of Operational Requirements and Assistant Chief of Staff Operational Requirements and Tactics He held these posts between 1938 and 1940 also rising to Air Vice Marshall in this period 3 Second World War Edit Air Marshal Arthur Harris studies a map of Germany with Air Vice Marshal Ronald Graham left the Air Officer Administration at BCHQ and Air Vice Marshal Saundby right Harris s Senior Air Staff Officer By 1940 Saundby had become Senior Air Staff Officer SASO HQ Bomber Command He served under Air Marshal Richard Peirse and continued in this position when Peirse was replaced with Arthur Harris in February 1942 citation needed February 1943 saw Saundby appointed to the post of deputy air officer commanding in chief 2 He was an advocate for the strategy of attacking German military industries and the morale of the German population by bombing German industrial areas and cities He was a key deputy for Harris throughout the remainder of the war On behalf of Harris he selected 94 German towns which were fitted for carpet bombing and gave codenames to each of them known as Fish code for example Nuremberg was codenamed Grayling and Berlin was Whitebait It is thought that he chose this coding because he was a keen fly fisherman 14 He retired on medical grounds from the RAF on 22 March 1946 citation needed The medical grounds for Saundby s retirement were the result of injuries osteoarthritic lumbar spine and an osteoarthritic hip 2 sustained in a crash 30 years previously 15 Saundby was awarded the Order of Leopold II with Palme and Croix de Guerre for services in the liberation of Belgium citation needed Retirement EditSaundby devoted much of his retirement to his role as Vice Chairman Council of Territorial and Auxiliary Forces Association for which he was appointed a Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath citation needed Saundby was the chair of the council of Royal Air Forces Association as well as life vice president president of the Royal British Legion metropolitan area and in 1960 was appointed deputy lieutenant for Berkshire 3 Fly fishing was a great passion and Saundby also became the president of the Piscatorial Society editing their centenary publication The Book of the Piscatorial Society 1836 1936 3 Saundby was also a keen lepidopterist and a Fellow of the Royal Entomological Society In retirement at Oxleas House in Burghclere he made light trap records in his garden and entomologized the woods of West Berkshire His work in this field saw him record 44 species of butterfly and 501 larger moths 15 His collection was described as a model of good arrangement and documentation and was presented to the Natural History Museum in London 15 Saundby had many hobbies and wrote several books on differing subjects including his role in the RAF during the war Air Bombardment The Story of its Development How the Bomber and the Missile Brought the Third Dimension to Warfare and Steam Engines Early British Steam 1825 1925 The First 100 Years citation needed Saundby died on 26 September 1971 at Edgecombe Nursing Home Hamstead Marshall in Berkshire His ashes were scattered by the River Avon at Netheravon 2 Family EditOn 10 January 1931 Saundby married Joyce Mary Rees Webbe They met when she came with her father Major Marmaduke Oswald Norman Rees Webbe on a fly fishing trip Together they had a son and two daughters 2 Influence on literature EditKurt Vonnegut quotes his foreword to David Irving s The Destruction of Dresden in his novel Slaughterhouse Five Popular culture EditSaundby appears in the wartime propaganda file Target for Tonight Saundby was portrayed in the 1989 television drama Bomber Harris by Bernard Kay 16 References Edit a b Above the Trenches A Complete Record of the Fighter Aces and Units of the British Empire Air Forces 1915 1920 p 330 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Wynn Humphrey 2004 Saundby Sir Robert Henry Magnus Spencer 1896 1971 air force officer Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 58056 Subscription or UK public library membership required a b c d e f g h i Air Marshal Sir Robert Saundby The Times No 58283 27 September 1971 p 18 a b Pusher Aces of World War 1 p 39 a b Broad Graham 2017 One in a thousand the life and death of Captain Eddie McKay Royal Flying Corps North York Ontario Canada ISBN 9781487593414 OCLC 960840302 24 Squadron www theaerodrome com Retrieved 17 August 2010 Deaths The Times No 41646 27 November 1917 p 2 Casualty cwgc org Retrieved 18 July 2018 Pusher Aces of World War 1 p 64 Pusher Aces of World War 1 pp 83 84 Herr Otto Mieth The Times No 53528 11 May 1956 p 13 Johnson Brian amp Cozens H I Bombers The Weapon of Total War London Methuen 1984 ISBN 0 423 00630 4 p38 Pruszewicz Marek 7 October 2014 The 1920s British air bombing campaign in Iraq BBC News Retrieved 19 July 2018 Falconer Jonathon 1998 The Bomber Command Handbook 1939 1945 Stroud Sutton Publishing Limited ISBN 0 7509 1819 5 a b c Salmon Michael A 2000 The Aurelian legacy British butterflies and their collectors Marren Peter Harley Basil Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 0520229630 OCLC 45903597 Darlow Michael 3 September 1989 Bomber Harris John Thaw Robert Hardy Frederick Treves retrieved 25 July 2018Further reading EditAbove the Trenches A Complete Record of the Fighter Aces and Units of the British Empire Air Forces 1915 1920 Christopher F Shores Norman L R Franks Russell Guest Grub Street 1990 ISBN 0 948817 19 4 ISBN 978 0 948817 19 9 Pusher Aces of World War 1 Jon Guttman Harry Dempsey Osprey Pub Co 2009 ISBN 1 84603 417 5 ISBN 978 1 84603 417 6 External links EditAir of Authority A History of RAF Organisation Air Mshl Sir Robert Saundby Saundby s Fish codes for the 94 German towns fitted for carpet bombing against civil population List Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Robert Saundby amp oldid 1152721442, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.