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Sena dynasty

The Sena dynasty was a Hindu dynasty during the early medieval period on the Indian subcontinent, that ruled from Bengal through the 11th and 12th centuries.[3] The empire at its peak covered much of the north-eastern region of the Indian subcontinent. The rulers of the Sena Dynasty traced their origin to the south Indian region of Karnataka.[4]

Sena Empire
1070 CE–1230 CE
Coat of Arms of Sena dynasty during Laxmana Sena's reign
Copperplate (left) and digitalised (right)
Map of the Sena Empire.[1]
CapitalGauda, Bikrampur, Nabadwip, Lakhnauti, Chandrabhoga Gadhi, Balirajgarh, Vijaynagar
Common languagesSanskrit, Bengali
Religion
Hinduism
GovernmentMonarchy
Maharaja (King) 
• 1070–1095 CE
Samanta Sena
• 1095–1096 CE
Hemanta Sena
• 1096–1159 CE
Vijaya Sena
• 1159-1179 CE
Ballala Sena
• 1179-1204 CE
Lakshmana Sena
• 1204-1225 CE
Vishvarupa Sena
• 1225–1230 CE
Keshava Sena
• 
Surya Sena[2]
• 
Narayana Sena[2]
• 
Laksmana Sena ।।[2]
Historical eraMiddle Kingdoms of India
• Established
1070 CE
• Disestablished
1230 CE

The dynasty's founder was Samanta Sena. After him came Hemanta Sena, who usurped power and styled himself king in 1095 AD. His successor Vijaya Sena (ruled from 1096 AD to 1159 AD) helped lay the foundations of the dynasty and had an unusually long reign of over 60 years. Ballala Sena conquered Gaur from the Pala, became the ruler of the Bengal Delta, and made Nadia the capital as well. Ballala Sena married Ramadevi a princess of the Western Chalukya Empire which indicates that the Sena rulers maintained close social contact with south India.[5] Lakshmana Sena succeeded Ballala Sena in 1179, ruled Bengal for approximately 20 years, and expanded the Sena Empire to Odisha, Bihar and probably to Varanasi. In 1203–1204 AD, Bakhtiyar Khalji, a general under the Ghurid Empire, attacked and captured the capital City of Nadia. The detailed account of this invasion is given in Tabaqat-i-Nasiri.[6]

Origins edit

Deopara Prashasti described the founder of Sena dynasty Samanthasena, as a migrant Brahmaksatriya from Karnataka.[7] The epithet 'Brahma-Kshatriya' suggests that Senas were Brahmins by caste who took the profession of arms and became Kshatriyas.[8] The Sena kings were also probably Baidyas, according to historian P.N. Chopra.[9]

The Senas entered into the service of Palas as sāmantas in Rāḍha, probably under Samantasena.[10][11] With the decline of the Pālas, their territory had expanded to include Vaṅga and a part of Varendra by the end of Vijayasena's reign.[11] The Palas were ousted in totality, and their entire territory annexed sometime after 1165.[11]

Inscription of Keshava Sena edit

A copperplate was found in the Adilpur or Edilpur pargana of Faridpur District in 1838 A.D. and was acquired by the Asiatic Society of Bengal, but now the copperplate is missing from the collection. An account of the copperplate was published in the Dacca Review and Epigraphic Indica. The copperplate inscription is written in Sanskrit and in Ganda character, and dated 3rd jyaistha of 1136 samvat, or 1079 A.D. In the Asiatic Society's proceeding for January 1838, an account of the copperplate states that three villages were given to a Brahman in the third year of Keshava Sena. The grant was given with the landlord rights, which include the power of punishing the Chandrabhandas or Sundarbans, a tribe that lived in the forest.[12] The land was granted in the village of Leliya in the Kumaratalaka mandala, which is situated in shatata-padamavati-visaya. The copperplate of Keshava Sena records that the king Vallala Sena carried away, from the enemies, the goddesses of fortune on palanquins (Shivaka), which elephant tusk staff supported; and also states that Vallala Sena's son, Lakshmana Sena (1179–1205), erected pillars of victory and sacrificial posts at Varanasi, Allahabad, and Adon Coast of the South Sea. The copperplate also describes the villages with smooth fields growing excellent paddy, the dancing and music in ancient Bengal, and ladies adorned with blooming flowers. The Edilpur copperplate of Keshava Sena records that the king made a grant in favour of Nitipathaka Isvaradeva Sarman for the inside of the subha-varsha.

Society edit

The Sena rulers consolidated the caste system in Bengal.[13]

Architecture edit

The Sena dynasty is famous for building Hindu temples and monasteries, which include the renowned Dhakeshwari Temple in what is now Dhaka, Bangladesh.

In Kashmir, the dynasty also likely built a temple knows as Sankara Gaureshwara.[14]

 
A sculpture of the Hindu deity Vishnu from the Sena period.

Coinage edit

In the political history of Bengal, Sena dynasty was a mighty ruling dynasty in power. Various currency names have been regularly mentioned in the Sena writings, such as Purana, Dharan, Dramma. These terms were used to mean a silver coin weighing 32 ratis (56.6 grains) or a karshapan weighing scale. The term Kapardaka Purana is seen as a medium of exchange in the writings of the Sena kings and other contemporary kings. Karpadak means cow; And 'Purana' is definitely a kind of silver coin. The conjunction ‘kapardaka-purana’ refers to a medium of exchange whose quality is equal to that of a purana or silver coin (56.6 grains), but which is actually calculated by the proportional denominator. The table found in the traditional arithmetic of Bengal contained 1260 cowries instead of one silver coin (Purana or Dramma). That is, the ratio of Purana and Kapardaka is 1: 1280. Reliable evidence of the widespread use of cowrie in early medieval Bengal has been found in excavations at Paharpur and Kalgang (Bihar near Bhagalpur). Early medieval Bengal saw the scarcity of precious coins and the widespread circulation of cowries. Scholars have long sought to explain the virtual limitations of coins at this time [15]

Decline edit

Downfall of Sena dynasty was destined under the rule of weak rulers of this dynasty. This dynasty started declining during the rule of Lakshmanasena who was the last significant Sena king. His two sons Visvarupasena and Kesavasena ruled in succession after him.[18] As Lakshmansena was on the throne in 1205 A. D., his two sons may be regarded as having ruled till at least 1230 A.D.[19] However it was learnt from Tabaqat-i-Nasiri that the descendants of Lakshmansena ruled in Bengal (Bang) till at least 1245 A.D. or 1260 A.D.[19]

Legacy edit

The Senas and their descendants merged into the Kayastha caste-group, heralding them as the neo-Kshatriyas of Bengal — hence, Abul Fazl would write that Bengal had always been ruled by Kayasthas.[20][21] The actual caste-status of Senas — notwithstanding the anachronism — remain contested in popular memory: premodern Baidya genealogies claim the Senas as their own which are agreed upon by some Brahmin genealogies but rejected by Kayastha ones.[22][23][24][25]

Family tree edit

Literature edit

 
Art of the Senas, 11th century.

The Sena rulers were also great patrons of literature. During the Pala dynasty and the Sena dynasty, major growth in Bengali was witnessed.[citation needed] Among the poets at the court of Lakshmana Sena were:

  • Govardhana
  • Sarana
  • Jayadeva
  • Umapati
  • Dhoyi/Dhoyin[26]

See also edit

References edit

 
Vishnu, Sena period, 11th century, Benares Hindu University Museum.
  1. ^ Schwartzberg, Joseph E. (1978). A Historical Atlas of South Asia. Oxford University Press, Digital South Asia Library. p. 147, Map "f".
  2. ^ a b c Raj Kumar (2003). Essays on Medieval India. Discovery Publishing House. p. 340. ISBN 9788171416837.
  3. ^ For a map of their territory, see: Schwartzberg, Joseph E. (1978). A Historical atlas of South Asia. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. p. 147, map XIV.3 (f). ISBN 0226742210.
  4. ^ The History of the Bengali Language by Bijay Chandra Mazumdar, p. 50.
  5. ^ Land of Two Rivers: A History of Bengal from the Mahabharata to Mujib by Nitish K. Sengupta, p. 51.
  6. ^ MAJUMDAR, R. C. THE HISTORY OF BENGAL, VOLUME -I. p. 223.
  7. ^ Sen, Sailendra Nath (1999). Ancient Indian History and Civilization. New Age International. p. 287. ISBN 978-81-224-1198-0.
  8. ^ MAJUMDAR, R. C. (1971). HISTORY OF ANCIENT BENGAL. G. BHARADWAJ , CALCUTTA.
  9. ^ Chopra, Pran Nath (1982). Religions and Communities of India. East-West Publications. p. 78. ISBN 978-0-85692-081-3. The Sena kings were probably Baidyas. The evidence of inscriptions shows that a dynasty of Baidya kings ruled over at least a part of Bengal from 1010 AD to 1200 AD. The most famous of these kings is Ballal Sena
  10. ^ Sen, Sailendra (2013). A Textbook of Medieval Indian History. Primus Books. pp. 35–36. ISBN 978-9-38060-734-4.
  11. ^ a b c Furui, Ryosuke (2 July 2019). "6: Towards Brahmanical Systematisation: c. 1100–1250 AD". Land and Society in Early South Asia: Eastern India 400–1250 AD. Routledge. p. 188. ISBN 978-1-000-08480-1.
  12. ^ Hunter, William Wilson (1875), "A statistical account of Bengal, Volume 1", Google Books, Edinburgh: Murry and Gibbs, retrieved 3 October 2009
  13. ^ Siddiq 2015, p. 35.
  14. ^ Mitra, Rajendralala (1865). "On the Sena Rajas of Bengal". Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal. Asiatic Society of Bengal. 34 part 1 (3): 141–142.
  15. ^ "Coins". Banglapedia.
  16. ^ Schwartzberg, Joseph E. (1978). A Historical atlas of South Asia. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. p. 37, 147. ISBN 0226742210.
  17. ^ Eaton, Richard M. (25 July 2019). India in the Persianate Age: 1000-1765. Penguin UK. p. 38. ISBN 978-0-14-196655-7.
  18. ^ Majumdar 1943, p. 225.
  19. ^ a b Majumdar 1943, p. 227.
  20. ^ Andre Wink (1991). Al-Hind, the Making of the Indo-Islamic World, Volume 1. Brill Academic Publishers. p. 269. ISBN 978-90-04-09509-0. Retrieved 3 September 2011.
  21. ^ Eaton, Richard Maxwell (1996). The Rise of Islam and the Bengal Frontier, 1204–1760. University of California Press. pp. 102–103. ISBN 978-0-52020-507-9.
  22. ^ Majumdar, R. C.; Ganguly, D. C.; Hazra, R. C. (1943). Majumdar, R. C. (ed.). History Of Bengal. The University of Dacca. pp. 571, 589–591.
  23. ^ Chatterjee, Kumkum (1 October 2010). "Scribal elites in Sultanate and Mughal Bengal". The Indian Economic & Social History Review. 47 (4): 445–472. doi:10.1177/001946461004700402. ISSN 0019-4646. S2CID 143802267.
  24. ^ Chatterjee, Kumkum (1 September 2005). "Communities, Kings and Chronicles: The Kulagranthas of Bengal". Studies in History. 21 (2): 173–213. doi:10.1177/025764300502100203. ISSN 0257-6430. S2CID 144413665.
  25. ^ Sircar, Dineschandra (1971). Studies in the Religious Life of Ancient and Medieval India. Motilal Banarsidass Publ. ISBN 978-81-208-2790-5. It may be added that the Senas themselves came to be regarded as Vaidyas in the Vaidya Kula-pañjikās.
  26. ^ R. C. Majumdar, ed. (1943). The History of Bengal. Vol. I. Lohanipur: N. V. Publications. p. 363.

Sources

  • Early History of India 3rd and revised edition by Vincent A Smith
  • Siddiq, Mohammad Yusuf (2015), Epigraphy and Islamic Culture:Inscriptions of the Early Muslim Rulers of Bengal (1205–1494), Routledge Contemporary South Asia Series
  • Majumdar, R. C (1943). History Of Bengal Vol.1.

External links edit

Preceded by Bengal dynasty Succeeded by

sena, dynasty, hindu, dynasty, during, early, medieval, period, indian, subcontinent, that, ruled, from, bengal, through, 11th, 12th, centuries, empire, peak, covered, much, north, eastern, region, indian, subcontinent, rulers, sena, dynasty, traced, their, or. The Sena dynasty was a Hindu dynasty during the early medieval period on the Indian subcontinent that ruled from Bengal through the 11th and 12th centuries 3 The empire at its peak covered much of the north eastern region of the Indian subcontinent The rulers of the Sena Dynasty traced their origin to the south Indian region of Karnataka 4 Sena Empire1070 CE 1230 CECoat of Arms of Sena dynasty during Laxmana Sena s reignCopperplate left and digitalised right Map of the Sena Empire 1 CapitalGauda Bikrampur Nabadwip Lakhnauti Chandrabhoga Gadhi Balirajgarh VijaynagarCommon languagesSanskrit BengaliReligionHinduismGovernmentMonarchyMaharaja King 1070 1095 CESamanta Sena 1095 1096 CEHemanta Sena 1096 1159 CEVijaya Sena 1159 1179 CEBallala Sena 1179 1204 CELakshmana Sena 1204 1225 CEVishvarupa Sena 1225 1230 CEKeshava Sena Surya Sena 2 Narayana Sena 2 Laksmana Sena 2 Historical eraMiddle Kingdoms of India Established1070 CE Disestablished1230 CEPreceded by Succeeded byPala EmpireVarman Dynasty Bengal Samatata Deva dynastyKhalji dynasty of BengalThe dynasty s founder was Samanta Sena After him came Hemanta Sena who usurped power and styled himself king in 1095 AD His successor Vijaya Sena ruled from 1096 AD to 1159 AD helped lay the foundations of the dynasty and had an unusually long reign of over 60 years Ballala Sena conquered Gaur from the Pala became the ruler of the Bengal Delta and made Nadia the capital as well Ballala Sena married Ramadevi a princess of the Western Chalukya Empire which indicates that the Sena rulers maintained close social contact with south India 5 Lakshmana Sena succeeded Ballala Sena in 1179 ruled Bengal for approximately 20 years and expanded the Sena Empire to Odisha Bihar and probably to Varanasi In 1203 1204 AD Bakhtiyar Khalji a general under the Ghurid Empire attacked and captured the capital City of Nadia The detailed account of this invasion is given in Tabaqat i Nasiri 6 Contents 1 Origins 2 Inscription of Keshava Sena 3 Society 4 Architecture 5 Coinage 6 Decline 7 Legacy 8 Family tree 9 Literature 10 See also 11 References 12 External linksOrigins editDeopara Prashasti described the founder of Sena dynasty Samanthasena as a migrant Brahmaksatriya from Karnataka 7 The epithet Brahma Kshatriya suggests that Senas were Brahmins by caste who took the profession of arms and became Kshatriyas 8 The Sena kings were also probably Baidyas according to historian P N Chopra 9 The Senas entered into the service of Palas as samantas in Raḍha probably under Samantasena 10 11 With the decline of the Palas their territory had expanded to include Vaṅga and a part of Varendra by the end of Vijayasena s reign 11 The Palas were ousted in totality and their entire territory annexed sometime after 1165 11 Inscription of Keshava Sena editA copperplate was found in the Adilpur or Edilpur pargana of Faridpur District in 1838 A D and was acquired by the Asiatic Society of Bengal but now the copperplate is missing from the collection An account of the copperplate was published in the Dacca Review and Epigraphic Indica The copperplate inscription is written in Sanskrit and in Ganda character and dated 3rd jyaistha of 1136 samvat or 1079 A D In the Asiatic Society s proceeding for January 1838 an account of the copperplate states that three villages were given to a Brahman in the third year of Keshava Sena The grant was given with the landlord rights which include the power of punishing the Chandrabhandas or Sundarbans a tribe that lived in the forest 12 The land was granted in the village of Leliya in the Kumaratalaka mandala which is situated in shatata padamavati visaya The copperplate of Keshava Sena records that the king Vallala Sena carried away from the enemies the goddesses of fortune on palanquins Shivaka which elephant tusk staff supported and also states that Vallala Sena s son Lakshmana Sena 1179 1205 erected pillars of victory and sacrificial posts at Varanasi Allahabad and Adon Coast of the South Sea The copperplate also describes the villages with smooth fields growing excellent paddy the dancing and music in ancient Bengal and ladies adorned with blooming flowers The Edilpur copperplate of Keshava Sena records that the king made a grant in favour of Nitipathaka Isvaradeva Sarman for the inside of the subha varsha Society editThe Sena rulers consolidated the caste system in Bengal 13 Architecture editThe Sena dynasty is famous for building Hindu temples and monasteries which include the renowned Dhakeshwari Temple in what is now Dhaka Bangladesh In Kashmir the dynasty also likely built a temple knows as Sankara Gaureshwara 14 nbsp A sculpture of the Hindu deity Vishnu from the Sena period Coinage editIn the political history of Bengal Sena dynasty was a mighty ruling dynasty in power Various currency names have been regularly mentioned in the Sena writings such as Purana Dharan Dramma These terms were used to mean a silver coin weighing 32 ratis 56 6 grains or a karshapan weighing scale The term Kapardaka Purana is seen as a medium of exchange in the writings of the Sena kings and other contemporary kings Karpadak means cow And Purana is definitely a kind of silver coin The conjunction kapardaka purana refers to a medium of exchange whose quality is equal to that of a purana or silver coin 56 6 grains but which is actually calculated by the proportional denominator The table found in the traditional arithmetic of Bengal contained 1260 cowries instead of one silver coin Purana or Dramma That is the ratio of Purana and Kapardaka is 1 1280 Reliable evidence of the widespread use of cowrie in early medieval Bengal has been found in excavations at Paharpur and Kalgang Bihar near Bhagalpur Early medieval Bengal saw the scarcity of precious coins and the widespread circulation of cowries Scholars have long sought to explain the virtual limitations of coins at this time 15 Decline edit nbsp South Asia1175 CEKARAKHANIDKHANATEQARA KHITAIGHURIDEMPIREKUMAONCHAULUKYASCHAHAMANASLATEGHAZNAVIDSPARAMARASWESTERNCHALUKYASKAKATIYASSHILA HARASCHOLASCHERASPANDYASKADAMBASHOYSALASGAHADAVALASGUHILASKACHCHAPA GHATASCHANDELASKALACHURIS TRIPURI KALACHURIS RATNAPURA SENASCHEROSNAGVANSISKAMARUPASEASTERNGANGASGUGEMARYULLOHA RASSOOMRAEMIRATEMAKRANSULTANATE class notpageimage Main South Asian polities in 1175 on the eve of the Ghurid Empire invasion of the subcontinent 16 17 Downfall of Sena dynasty was destined under the rule of weak rulers of this dynasty This dynasty started declining during the rule of Lakshmanasena who was the last significant Sena king His two sons Visvarupasena and Kesavasena ruled in succession after him 18 As Lakshmansena was on the throne in 1205 A D his two sons may be regarded as having ruled till at least 1230 A D 19 However it was learnt from Tabaqat i Nasiri that the descendants of Lakshmansena ruled in Bengal Bang till at least 1245 A D or 1260 A D 19 Legacy editThe Senas and their descendants merged into the Kayastha caste group heralding them as the neo Kshatriyas of Bengal hence Abul Fazl would write that Bengal had always been ruled by Kayasthas 20 21 The actual caste status of Senas notwithstanding the anachronism remain contested in popular memory premodern Baidya genealogies claim the Senas as their own which are agreed upon by some Brahmin genealogies but rejected by Kayastha ones 22 23 24 25 Family tree editSena dynastyHemantaSena 1 r 1070 1096VijayaSena 2 r 1096 1160BallalaSena 3 r 1160 1179LakshmanaSena 4 r 1179 1206VishvarupaSena 5 r 1206 1225KeshavaSena 6 r 1225 1230Literature edit nbsp Art of the Senas 11th century The Sena rulers were also great patrons of literature During the Pala dynasty and the Sena dynasty major growth in Bengali was witnessed citation needed Among the poets at the court of Lakshmana Sena were Govardhana Sarana Jayadeva Umapati Dhoyi Dhoyin 26 See also editDhakeshwari Mata Temple Kumortuli History of Bengal History of India Edilpur CopperplateReferences edit nbsp Vishnu Sena period 11th century Benares Hindu University Museum Schwartzberg Joseph E 1978 A Historical Atlas of South Asia Oxford University Press Digital South Asia Library p 147 Map f a b c Raj Kumar 2003 Essays on Medieval India Discovery Publishing House p 340 ISBN 9788171416837 For a map of their territory see Schwartzberg Joseph E 1978 A Historical atlas of South Asia Chicago University of Chicago Press p 147 map XIV 3 f ISBN 0226742210 The History of the Bengali Language by Bijay Chandra Mazumdar p 50 Land of Two Rivers A History of Bengal from the Mahabharata to Mujib by Nitish K Sengupta p 51 MAJUMDAR R C THE HISTORY OF BENGAL VOLUME I p 223 Sen Sailendra Nath 1999 Ancient Indian History and Civilization New Age International p 287 ISBN 978 81 224 1198 0 MAJUMDAR R C 1971 HISTORY OF ANCIENT BENGAL G BHARADWAJ CALCUTTA Chopra Pran Nath 1982 Religions and Communities of India East West Publications p 78 ISBN 978 0 85692 081 3 The Sena kings were probably Baidyas The evidence of inscriptions shows that a dynasty of Baidya kings ruled over at least a part of Bengal from 1010 AD to 1200 AD The most famous of these kings is Ballal Sena Sen Sailendra 2013 A Textbook of Medieval Indian History Primus Books pp 35 36 ISBN 978 9 38060 734 4 a b c Furui Ryosuke 2 July 2019 6 Towards Brahmanical Systematisation c 1100 1250 AD Land and Society in Early South Asia Eastern India 400 1250 AD Routledge p 188 ISBN 978 1 000 08480 1 Hunter William Wilson 1875 A statistical account of Bengal Volume 1 Google Books Edinburgh Murry and Gibbs retrieved 3 October 2009 Siddiq 2015 p 35 Mitra Rajendralala 1865 On the Sena Rajas of Bengal Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal Asiatic Society of Bengal 34 part 1 3 141 142 Coins Banglapedia Schwartzberg Joseph E 1978 A Historical atlas of South Asia Chicago University of Chicago Press p 37 147 ISBN 0226742210 Eaton Richard M 25 July 2019 India in the Persianate Age 1000 1765 Penguin UK p 38 ISBN 978 0 14 196655 7 Majumdar 1943 p 225 a b Majumdar 1943 p 227 Andre Wink 1991 Al Hind the Making of the Indo Islamic World Volume 1 Brill Academic Publishers p 269 ISBN 978 90 04 09509 0 Retrieved 3 September 2011 Eaton Richard Maxwell 1996 The Rise of Islam and the Bengal Frontier 1204 1760 University of California Press pp 102 103 ISBN 978 0 52020 507 9 Majumdar R C Ganguly D C Hazra R C 1943 Majumdar R C ed History Of Bengal The University of Dacca pp 571 589 591 Chatterjee Kumkum 1 October 2010 Scribal elites in Sultanate and Mughal Bengal The Indian Economic amp Social History Review 47 4 445 472 doi 10 1177 001946461004700402 ISSN 0019 4646 S2CID 143802267 Chatterjee Kumkum 1 September 2005 Communities Kings and Chronicles The Kulagranthas of Bengal Studies in History 21 2 173 213 doi 10 1177 025764300502100203 ISSN 0257 6430 S2CID 144413665 Sircar Dineschandra 1971 Studies in the Religious Life of Ancient and Medieval India Motilal Banarsidass Publ ISBN 978 81 208 2790 5 It may be added that the Senas themselves came to be regarded as Vaidyas in the Vaidya Kula panjikas R C Majumdar ed 1943 The History of Bengal Vol I Lohanipur N V Publications p 363 Sources Early History of India 3rd and revised edition by Vincent A Smith Siddiq Mohammad Yusuf 2015 Epigraphy and Islamic Culture Inscriptions of the Early Muslim Rulers of Bengal 1205 1494 Routledge Contemporary South Asia Series Majumdar R C 1943 History Of Bengal Vol 1 External links editChowdhury AM 2012 Sena Dynasty In Islam Sirajul Jamal Ahmed A eds Banglapedia National Encyclopedia of Bangladesh Second ed Asiatic Society of Bangladesh Preceded byPala dynasty Bengal dynasty Succeeded byDeva dynastyKhalji dynasty Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sena dynasty amp oldid 1201999012, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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