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Sanatorium

A sanatorium (from Latin sānāre 'to heal, make healthy'), also sanitarium or sanitorium,[1][2] is a historic name for a specialised hospital for the treatment of specific diseases, related ailments and convalescence. Sanatoriums are often in a healthy climate, usually in the countryside. The idea of healing was an important reason for the historical wave of establishments of sanatoriums, especially at the end of the 19th- and early 20th centuries. One sought, for instance, the healing of consumptives especially tuberculosis (before the discovery of antibiotics) or alcoholism, but also of more obscure addictions and longings of hysteria, masturbation, fatigue and emotional exhaustion. Facility operators were often charitable associations such as the Order of St. John and the newly founded social welfare insurance companies.

Brehmer sanatorium, photo before 1904, founded by German physician Hermann Brehmer in Görbersdorf, Silesia (now Sokołowsko, Poland). Brehmer established the first German sanatorium for the systematic open-air treatment of tuberculosis and is the first institution of its kind.
Hällnäs sanatorium, founded in 1926, was one of the largest sanatoriums in Sweden for the treatment of pulmonary tuberculosis.
A 1978 Finnish postage stamp, depicting the 1933 Paimio tuberculosis sanatorium, designed by Alvar Aalto.

Sanatoriums should not be confused with the Russian sanatoriums from the time of the Soviet Union, which were a type of sanatorium resort residence for workers.

History edit

Conception edit

The first suggestion of sanatoria in the modern sense was likely made by George Bodington, who opened a sanatorium in Sutton Coldfield in 1836 and later published his essay "On the Treatment and Cure of Pulmonary Consumption"[3] in 1840. His novel approach was dismissed as "very crude ideas and unsupported assertions" by reviewers in the Lancet,[4] and his sanatorium was converted to an asylum soon after. The rationale for sanatoria in the pre-antibiotic era was that a regimen of rest and good nutrition offered the best chance that the patient's immune system would "wall off" pockets of pulmonary TB infection.[5] In 1863, Hermann Brehmer opened the Brehmersche Heilanstalt für Lungenkranke in Görbersdorf (Sokołowsko), Silesia (now Poland), for the treatment of tuberculosis. Patients were exposed to plentiful amounts of high altitude, fresh air, and good nutrition.[6] Tuberculosis sanatoria became common throughout Europe from the late-19th century onward.

Early establishments edit

The Adirondack Cottage Sanitarium, established in Saranac Lake, New York, in 1885, was the first such establishment in North America. According to the Saskatchewan Lung Association, when the National Anti-Tuberculosis Association (Canada) was founded in 1904, its members, including renowned pioneer in the fight against tuberculosis Dr. R.G. Ferguson, believed that a distinction should be made between the health resorts with which people were familiar and the new tuberculosis treatment hospitals: "So they decided to use a new word which instead of being derived from the Latin noun sanitas, meaning health, would emphasize the need for scientific healing or treatment. Accordingly, they took the Latin verb root sano, meaning to heal, and adopted the new word sanatorium."[7]

Switzerland used to have many sanatoria, as health professionals believed that clean, cold mountain air was the best treatment for lung diseases. In Finland, a series of tuberculosis sanatoria were built throughout the country in isolated forest areas during the early 1900s. The most famous was the Paimio Sanatorium, completed in 1933 and designed by world-renowned architect Alvar Aalto. It had both sun-balconies and a rooftop terrace where the patients would lie all day either in beds or on specially designed chairs, the Paimio Chair.[8] In Portugal, the Heliantia Sanatorium in Valadares was used for the treatment of bone tuberculosis between the 1930s and 1960s.

In 20th-century United States edit

 
The Lima Tuberculosis Hospital in 1911.

In the early 20th century, tuberculosis sanatoria became common in the United States.[9] The first of several in Asheville, North Carolina was established by Dr. Horatio Page Gatchell in 1871, before the cause of tuberculosis (then called "phthisis" or "consumption") was even known. Fifty years earlier, Dr. J.F.E. Hardy had reportedly been cured in the "healing climate". Medical experts reported that at 2,200 feet (670 m) above sea level, air pressure was equal to that in blood vessels, and activities, scenery, and lack of stress also helped.[10] In the early 1900s, Arizona's sunshine and dry desert air attracted many people (called "lungers") who had tuberculosis, rheumatism, asthma, and numerous other diseases. Wealthier people chose to recuperate in exclusive TB resorts, while others used their savings to journey to Arizona and arrived penniless. TB camps in the desert were formed by pitching tents and building cabins. During the tuberculosis epidemic, cities in Arizona advertised the state as an ideal place for treating TB. Many sanatoria in Arizona were modeled after European away-from-city resorts of the time, boasting courtyards and individual rooms. Each sanatorium was equipped to take care of about 120 people.

The first sanatorium in the Pacific Northwest opened in Milwaukie Heights, Oregon, in 1905, followed closely by the first state-owned TB hospital in Salem, Oregon, in 1910. Oregon was the first state on the West Coast to enact legislation stating that the government was to supply proper housing for people with TB who could not receive adequate care at home.[11] The West Coast became a popular spot for sanatoriums.

The greatest area for sanatoria was in Tucson with over 12[quantify] hotel-style facilities in the city. By 1920, Tucson had 7,000 people who had come for treatment of tuberculosis. So many people came to the West that not enough housing was available. In 1910, tent cities began to pop up in different areas; one was described as a place of squalor and shunned by most citizens. Many of the infected slept in the open desert. The area adjacent to what was then central Phoenix, called Sunnyslope, was home to another large TB encampment. The residents primarily lived in tents pitched along the hillsides of the mountains that rise to the north of the city. Several sanatoria also opened in southern California in the early 20th century due to the dry, warm climate.[12]

The first tuberculosis sanatorium for blacks in the segregated South was the Piedmont Sanatorium in Burkeville, Virginia.[13] Waverly Hills Sanatorium, a Louisville, Kentucky, tuberculosis sanatorium, was founded in 1911. It has become a mecca for curiosity seekers who believe it is haunted.[14] Because of its dry climate, Colorado Springs was home to several sanatoria. A. G. Holley Hospital in Lantana, Florida, was the last remaining freestanding tuberculosis sanatorium in the United States until it closed on July 2, 2012.[15]

In 1907, Stannington Sanatorium was opened in the North East of England to treat tuberculosis in children. The sanatorium was opened using funds raised by a local charity, the Poor Children's Holiday Association, now the region's oldest children's charity, Children North East.[16] The largest U.S. tuberculosis sanatorium was located on the site of Chicago's present-day North Park Village. Chicago's Peterson Park fieldhouse housed the lab and morgue of Chicago's Municipal Tuberculosis Sanatorium.[17]

Discovery of antibiotics and decline edit

After 1943, when Albert Schatz, then a graduate student at Rutgers University, discovered streptomycin, an antibiotic and the first cure for tuberculosis, sanatoria began to close. As in the case of the Paimio Sanatorium, many were transformed into general hospitals. By the 1950s, tuberculosis was no longer a major public health threat; it was controlled by antibiotics rather than extended rest. Most sanatoria had been demolished years before.[citation needed]

Some, however, have been adapted for new medical roles. The Tambaram Sanatorium in south India is now a hospital for AIDS patients.[18] The state hospital in Sanatorium, Mississippi, is now a regional center for programs for treatment and occupational therapy associated with intellectual disability. In Japan in 2001, the Ministry of Welfare suggested changing the name of a leprosarium to a sanatorium.[citation needed]

In culture edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Sanatorium; US also sanitarium". Cambridge: Cambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary & Thesaurus; Cambridge University Press. Retrieved 2022-07-20.
  2. ^ "Sanitorium (British English)". Glasgow: Collins English Dictionary; HarperCollins Publishers. Retrieved 2022-07-20.
  3. ^ Bodington, George (1840). Dr. Lichfield.
  4. ^ Keers, Robert (July 1980). "The thorax: Two forgotten pioneers. James Carson and George Bodington". Thorax. 35 (7): 483–489. doi:10.1136/thx.35.7.483. PMC 471318. PMID 7001666.
  5. ^ Frith, John. "History of Tuberculosis. Part 2 – the Sanatoria and the Discoveries of the Tubercle Bacillus". Journal of Military and Veterans' Health. Retrieved May 12, 2017.
  6. ^ Mccarthy, O R (August 2001). "The Key to the Sanatoria". Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine. 94 (8): 413–417. doi:10.1177/014107680109400813. PMC 1281640. PMID 11461990.
  7. ^ . Archived from the original on December 15, 2004.
  8. ^ Göran Schildt, Alvar Aalto - A Life's Work - Architecture, Design and Art, Otava Publishing, Helsinki, 1994.
  9. ^ MARTINI, M.; GAZZANIGA, V.; BEHZADIFAR, M.; BRAGAZZI, N.L.; BARBERIS, I. (2018-12-15). "The history of tuberculosis: the social role of sanatoria for the treatment of tuberculosis in Italy between the end of the 19th century and the middle of the 20th". Journal of Preventive Medicine and Hygiene. 59 (4): E323–E327. doi:10.15167/2421-4248/jpmh2018.59.4.1103. ISSN 1121-2233. PMC 6319124. PMID 30656236.
  10. ^ Neufeld, Rob (April 7, 2019). "Visiting Our Past: Asheville was flush with a "Magic Mountain" high". Asheville Citizen-Times. Retrieved April 7, 2019.
  11. ^ "Housing the Victims of the Great White Plague The Oregon State Tuberculosis Hospital". OHSU. Retrieved May 9, 2018.
  12. ^ "The Sanatorium Movement in America". The White Plague in the City of Angels. University of Southern California. Retrieved May 12, 2017.
  13. ^ Sucre, Richard. . University of Virginia. Archived from the original on March 18, 2005. Retrieved May 13, 2017.
  14. ^ . Archived from the original on 5 November 2003. Retrieved 2007-10-01.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  15. ^ Sunland Hospital#A. G. Holley Hospital in Lantana
  16. ^ . Woodhorn Museum and Northumberland Archives. Archived from the original on March 20, 2014. Retrieved 28 October 2014.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  17. ^ Eng, Monica (March 2018). "Inside Chicago's Municipal Tuberculosis Sanitarium". WBEZ.
  18. ^ . Archived from the original on 30 August 2006. Retrieved 8 September 2019.
  19. ^ WB Gooderham (14 December 2011). "Winter reads: The Magic Mountain by Thomas Mann". The Guardian.
  20. ^ Ernest B. Gilman (2014). Yiddish Poetry and the Tuberculosis Sanatorium: 1900-1970. Syracuse University Press. pp. 34–39. ISBN 9780815653066. Retrieved 11 November 2018.

Further reading edit

  • Waverly Hills Sanatorium still source of local curiosity, Douglas Kleier, Jr., Louisville Cardinal Online, Oct. 21, 2003.
  • Adams, Annmarie; Schwartzman, Kevin; Theodore, David (2008). "Collapse and Expand: Architecture and Tuberculosis Therapy in Montreal, 1909, 1933, 1954". Technology and Culture. 49 (4): 908–942. doi:10.1353/tech.0.0172. JSTOR 40061618. PMID 19227960. S2CID 7674281. INIST 20977990.
  • Thomas Spees Carrington. Tuberculosis Hospital and Sanatorium Construction (New York, 1911).
  • Maitland, Leslie (1989). "The Design of Tuberculosis Sanatoria in Late Nineteenth Century Canada". Bulletin of the Society for the Study of Architecture in Canada. 14 (1): 5–13. hdl:10222/71570.
  • Topp, Leslie (1 December 1997). "An Architecture for Modern Nerves: Josef Hoffmann's Purkersdorf Sanatorium". Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians. 56 (4): 414–437. doi:10.2307/991312. JSTOR 991312.
  • Campbell, Margaret (1 October 2005). "What Tuberculosis did for Modernism: The Influence of a Curative Environment on Modernist Design and Architecture". Medical History. 49 (4): 463–488. doi:10.1017/s0025727300009169. PMC 1251640. PMID 16562331.

External links edit

  • "Sanatorium" . Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). 1911.
  • Bloomington's Kelso Sanitarium promised to cure all - Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois newspaper)

sanatorium, other, uses, disambiguation, sanatorium, from, latin, sānāre, heal, make, healthy, also, sanitarium, sanitorium, historic, name, specialised, hospital, treatment, specific, diseases, related, ailments, convalescence, often, healthy, climate, usuall. For other uses see Sanatorium disambiguation A sanatorium from Latin sanare to heal make healthy also sanitarium or sanitorium 1 2 is a historic name for a specialised hospital for the treatment of specific diseases related ailments and convalescence Sanatoriums are often in a healthy climate usually in the countryside The idea of healing was an important reason for the historical wave of establishments of sanatoriums especially at the end of the 19th and early 20th centuries One sought for instance the healing of consumptives especially tuberculosis before the discovery of antibiotics or alcoholism but also of more obscure addictions and longings of hysteria masturbation fatigue and emotional exhaustion Facility operators were often charitable associations such as the Order of St John and the newly founded social welfare insurance companies Brehmer sanatorium photo before 1904 founded by German physician Hermann Brehmer in Gorbersdorf Silesia now Sokolowsko Poland Brehmer established the first German sanatorium for the systematic open air treatment of tuberculosis and is the first institution of its kind Hallnas sanatorium founded in 1926 was one of the largest sanatoriums in Sweden for the treatment of pulmonary tuberculosis A 1978 Finnish postage stamp depicting the 1933 Paimio tuberculosis sanatorium designed by Alvar Aalto Sanatoriums should not be confused with the Russian sanatoriums from the time of the Soviet Union which were a type of sanatorium resort residence for workers Contents 1 History 1 1 Conception 1 2 Early establishments 1 3 In 20th century United States 1 4 Discovery of antibiotics and decline 2 In culture 3 See also 4 References 5 Further reading 6 External linksHistory editConception edit The first suggestion of sanatoria in the modern sense was likely made by George Bodington who opened a sanatorium in Sutton Coldfield in 1836 and later published his essay On the Treatment and Cure of Pulmonary Consumption 3 in 1840 His novel approach was dismissed as very crude ideas and unsupported assertions by reviewers in the Lancet 4 and his sanatorium was converted to an asylum soon after The rationale for sanatoria in the pre antibiotic era was that a regimen of rest and good nutrition offered the best chance that the patient s immune system would wall off pockets of pulmonary TB infection 5 In 1863 Hermann Brehmer opened the Brehmersche Heilanstalt fur Lungenkranke in Gorbersdorf Sokolowsko Silesia now Poland for the treatment of tuberculosis Patients were exposed to plentiful amounts of high altitude fresh air and good nutrition 6 Tuberculosis sanatoria became common throughout Europe from the late 19th century onward Early establishments edit The Adirondack Cottage Sanitarium established in Saranac Lake New York in 1885 was the first such establishment in North America According to the Saskatchewan Lung Association when the National Anti Tuberculosis Association Canada was founded in 1904 its members including renowned pioneer in the fight against tuberculosis Dr R G Ferguson believed that a distinction should be made between the health resorts with which people were familiar and the new tuberculosis treatment hospitals So they decided to use a new word which instead of being derived from the Latin noun sanitas meaning health would emphasize the need for scientific healing or treatment Accordingly they took the Latin verb root sano meaning to heal and adopted the new word sanatorium 7 Switzerland used to have many sanatoria as health professionals believed that clean cold mountain air was the best treatment for lung diseases In Finland a series of tuberculosis sanatoria were built throughout the country in isolated forest areas during the early 1900s The most famous was the Paimio Sanatorium completed in 1933 and designed by world renowned architect Alvar Aalto It had both sun balconies and a rooftop terrace where the patients would lie all day either in beds or on specially designed chairs the Paimio Chair 8 In Portugal the Heliantia Sanatorium in Valadares was used for the treatment of bone tuberculosis between the 1930s and 1960s In 20th century United States edit nbsp The Lima Tuberculosis Hospital in 1911 In the early 20th century tuberculosis sanatoria became common in the United States 9 The first of several in Asheville North Carolina was established by Dr Horatio Page Gatchell in 1871 before the cause of tuberculosis then called phthisis or consumption was even known Fifty years earlier Dr J F E Hardy had reportedly been cured in the healing climate Medical experts reported that at 2 200 feet 670 m above sea level air pressure was equal to that in blood vessels and activities scenery and lack of stress also helped 10 In the early 1900s Arizona s sunshine and dry desert air attracted many people called lungers who had tuberculosis rheumatism asthma and numerous other diseases Wealthier people chose to recuperate in exclusive TB resorts while others used their savings to journey to Arizona and arrived penniless TB camps in the desert were formed by pitching tents and building cabins During the tuberculosis epidemic cities in Arizona advertised the state as an ideal place for treating TB Many sanatoria in Arizona were modeled after European away from city resorts of the time boasting courtyards and individual rooms Each sanatorium was equipped to take care of about 120 people The first sanatorium in the Pacific Northwest opened in Milwaukie Heights Oregon in 1905 followed closely by the first state owned TB hospital in Salem Oregon in 1910 Oregon was the first state on the West Coast to enact legislation stating that the government was to supply proper housing for people with TB who could not receive adequate care at home 11 The West Coast became a popular spot for sanatoriums The greatest area for sanatoria was in Tucson with over 12 quantify hotel style facilities in the city By 1920 Tucson had 7 000 people who had come for treatment of tuberculosis So many people came to the West that not enough housing was available In 1910 tent cities began to pop up in different areas one was described as a place of squalor and shunned by most citizens Many of the infected slept in the open desert The area adjacent to what was then central Phoenix called Sunnyslope was home to another large TB encampment The residents primarily lived in tents pitched along the hillsides of the mountains that rise to the north of the city Several sanatoria also opened in southern California in the early 20th century due to the dry warm climate 12 The first tuberculosis sanatorium for blacks in the segregated South was the Piedmont Sanatorium in Burkeville Virginia 13 Waverly Hills Sanatorium a Louisville Kentucky tuberculosis sanatorium was founded in 1911 It has become a mecca for curiosity seekers who believe it is haunted 14 Because of its dry climate Colorado Springs was home to several sanatoria A G Holley Hospital in Lantana Florida was the last remaining freestanding tuberculosis sanatorium in the United States until it closed on July 2 2012 15 In 1907 Stannington Sanatorium was opened in the North East of England to treat tuberculosis in children The sanatorium was opened using funds raised by a local charity the Poor Children s Holiday Association now the region s oldest children s charity Children North East 16 The largest U S tuberculosis sanatorium was located on the site of Chicago s present day North Park Village Chicago s Peterson Park fieldhouse housed the lab and morgue of Chicago s Municipal Tuberculosis Sanatorium 17 Discovery of antibiotics and decline edit After 1943 when Albert Schatz then a graduate student at Rutgers University discovered streptomycin an antibiotic and the first cure for tuberculosis sanatoria began to close As in the case of the Paimio Sanatorium many were transformed into general hospitals By the 1950s tuberculosis was no longer a major public health threat it was controlled by antibiotics rather than extended rest Most sanatoria had been demolished years before citation needed Some however have been adapted for new medical roles The Tambaram Sanatorium in south India is now a hospital for AIDS patients 18 The state hospital in Sanatorium Mississippi is now a regional center for programs for treatment and occupational therapy associated with intellectual disability In Japan in 2001 the Ministry of Welfare suggested changing the name of a leprosarium to a sanatorium citation needed In culture editThe Magic Mountain the 1924 novel by the German writer and social critic Thomas Mann is set in a sanatorium 19 The Austrian American Jewish poet and artist Samuel Greenberg wrote three poems about his experiences in sanatoria including Wards Island Symphonique 20 The American heavy metal band Metallica has the song Welcome Home Sanitarium on their 1986 Master of Puppets studio album which had been in part inspired by One Flew Over the Cuckoo s Nest See also editSanatorium resort Battle Creek Sanitarium Michigan United States Leper colony List of sanatoria in the United StatesReferences edit Sanatorium US also sanitarium Cambridge Cambridge Advanced Learner s Dictionary amp Thesaurus Cambridge University Press Retrieved 2022 07 20 Sanitorium British English Glasgow Collins English Dictionary HarperCollins Publishers Retrieved 2022 07 20 Bodington George 1840 Dr Lichfield Keers Robert July 1980 The thorax Two forgotten pioneers James Carson and George Bodington Thorax 35 7 483 489 doi 10 1136 thx 35 7 483 PMC 471318 PMID 7001666 Frith John History of Tuberculosis Part 2 the Sanatoria and the Discoveries of the Tubercle Bacillus Journal of Military and Veterans Health Retrieved May 12 2017 Mccarthy O R August 2001 The Key to the Sanatoria Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine 94 8 413 417 doi 10 1177 014107680109400813 PMC 1281640 PMID 11461990 The Sanatorium Age Sanatorium vs Sanitarium An History of the Fight Against Tuberculosis in Canada Archived from the original on December 15 2004 Goran Schildt Alvar Aalto A Life s Work Architecture Design and Art Otava Publishing Helsinki 1994 MARTINI M GAZZANIGA V BEHZADIFAR M BRAGAZZI N L BARBERIS I 2018 12 15 The history of tuberculosis the social role of sanatoria for the treatment of tuberculosis in Italy between the end of the 19th century and the middle of the 20th Journal of Preventive Medicine and Hygiene 59 4 E323 E327 doi 10 15167 2421 4248 jpmh2018 59 4 1103 ISSN 1121 2233 PMC 6319124 PMID 30656236 Neufeld Rob April 7 2019 Visiting Our Past Asheville was flush with a Magic Mountain high Asheville Citizen Times Retrieved April 7 2019 Housing the Victims of the Great White Plague The Oregon State Tuberculosis Hospital OHSU Retrieved May 9 2018 The Sanatorium Movement in America The White Plague in the City of Angels University of Southern California Retrieved May 12 2017 Sucre Richard The Great White Plague The Culture of Death and the Tuberculosis Sanatorium University of Virginia Archived from the original on March 18 2005 Retrieved May 13 2017 Waverly Hills Sanatorium still source of local curiosity Louisville Cardinal 21 October 2003 Archived from the original on 5 November 2003 Retrieved 2007 10 01 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Sunland Hospital A G Holley Hospital in Lantana Voices of Stannington Sanatorium Woodhorn Museum and Northumberland Archives Archived from the original on March 20 2014 Retrieved 28 October 2014 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Eng Monica March 2018 Inside Chicago s Municipal Tuberculosis Sanitarium WBEZ Government Hospital of Thoracic Medicine Tambaram Sanatorium Chennai Archived from the original on 30 August 2006 Retrieved 8 September 2019 WB Gooderham 14 December 2011 Winter reads The Magic Mountain by Thomas Mann The Guardian Ernest B Gilman 2014 Yiddish Poetry and the Tuberculosis Sanatorium 1900 1970 Syracuse University Press pp 34 39 ISBN 9780815653066 Retrieved 11 November 2018 Further reading editWaverly Hills Sanatorium still source of local curiosity Douglas Kleier Jr Louisville Cardinal Online Oct 21 2003 Adams Annmarie Schwartzman Kevin Theodore David 2008 Collapse and Expand Architecture and Tuberculosis Therapy in Montreal 1909 1933 1954 Technology and Culture 49 4 908 942 doi 10 1353 tech 0 0172 JSTOR 40061618 PMID 19227960 S2CID 7674281 INIST 20977990 Thomas Spees Carrington Tuberculosis Hospital and Sanatorium Construction New York 1911 Maitland Leslie 1989 The Design of Tuberculosis Sanatoria in Late Nineteenth Century Canada Bulletin of the Society for the Study of Architecture in Canada 14 1 5 13 hdl 10222 71570 Topp Leslie 1 December 1997 An Architecture for Modern Nerves Josef Hoffmann s Purkersdorf Sanatorium Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians 56 4 414 437 doi 10 2307 991312 JSTOR 991312 Campbell Margaret 1 October 2005 What Tuberculosis did for Modernism The Influence of a Curative Environment on Modernist Design and Architecture Medical History 49 4 463 488 doi 10 1017 s0025727300009169 PMC 1251640 PMID 16562331 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sanatoriums Sanatorium Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed 1911 Bloomington s Kelso Sanitarium promised to cure all Pantagraph Bloomington Illinois newspaper Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sanatorium amp oldid 1193961436, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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