improve: Phoenicia

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daniel
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@@ -12241,3 +12241,144 @@ Searching the web for: Battle of Kadesh Poem of Pentaur Bulletin of Kadesh prima
[?25h [?25h
status: UPDATED | Battle of Kadesh | changes: Fixed duplicate title heading; added army sizes and four named divisions (Amun/Ra/Ptah/Seth); added commander reign dates; added Primary Sources section distinguishing Bulletin vs Poem of Pentaur; expanded propaganda reliefs to include Luxor and Abydos; added missing Beckman [^3] footnote status: UPDATED | Battle of Kadesh | changes: Fixed duplicate title heading; added army sizes and four named divisions (Amun/Ra/Ptah/Seth); added commander reign dates; added Primary Sources section distinguishing Bulletin vs Poem of Pentaur; expanded propaganda reliefs to include Luxor and Abydos; added missing Beckman [^3] footnote
[main 879556b] improve: Battle of Kadesh
6 files changed, 102 insertions(+), 10 deletions(-)
[2026-02-23 02:59:18] ✅ Committed: improve: Battle of Kadesh
[2026-02-23 02:59:18] Done (161s) — UPDATED
[2026-02-23 02:59:23] [32/66] Next up...
[2026-02-23 02:59:23] ━━━ [Phoenicia] (f760d3) reviews=0 garbage=0 ━━━
[2026-02-23 02:59:23] 🧹 Bash cleanup applied
[2026-02-23 02:59:23] 🔍 Enrichment + review pass
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[?25l[?25lI'll share my reasoning process (using tool: thinking): Let me analyze the current document and plan what needs to be done:
1. REVIEW QUESTIONS: Skip (0 open questions)
2. IDENTITY & ORGANIZATION: The document is a civilization doc titled "Phoenicia" - that's appropriate. The file is at `./civilizations/phoenicia.md` which is correct. However, I notice the document has a duplicate `# Phoenicia` heading (appears twice). That's a formatting issue to fix.
3. ENRICH FROM OUTSIDE SOURCES: I need to search for additional information about Phoenicia to enrich the document.
Let me also note some issues with the current document:
- There's a duplicate `# Phoenicia` heading at the top
- The review questions section at the bottom has all been answered (checked off) - these should probably be cleaned up or removed since they're all answered
- The temporal tags look correct with BCE syntax
Let me search for enrichment information about Phoenicia.
 - Completed in 0.0s
[?25l[?25l[?25lSearching the web for: Phoenicia ancient history archaeology recent scholarship overview (using tool: web_search)
Searching the web for: Phoenician trade network Mediterranean colonies archaeology (using tool: web_search)
 ✓ Found 10 search results
 - Completed in 0.790s
 ✓ Found 10 search results
 - Completed in 0.865s
[?25l[?25l[?25lSearching the web for: Phoenician glass production cedar wood export religion Baal Astarte (using tool: web_search)
Fetching content from: https://www.worldhistory.org/article/881/trade-in-the-phoenician-world/ (searching for: glass cedar tin silver trade goods exports) [mode: selective] (using tool: web_fetch)
 ✓ Found 10 search results
 - Completed in 0.724s
 ✓ Fetched 25639 bytes (selective) from URL
 - Completed in 0.46s
[?25l[?25lI'll share my reasoning process (using tool: thinking): Now I have good enrichment material. Let me plan the document update:
1. Fix the duplicate `# Phoenicia` heading (there are two at the top)
2. Fix the temporal tags - the document already has `@t[1500 BCE..300 BCE]` tags, which is correct per the steering doc. The review answers noted "BCE temporal tags not yet supported by factbase" but the steering doc says they ARE supported. The tags are already in the document correctly.
3. Add enrichment content:
- Religion section: Baal, Astarte, Melqart (major deities)
- Trade goods: cedar wood exports, glass production (from 7th century BCE), textiles/purple dye (already mentioned), copper from Cyprus, silver from Spain, tin from Britain (already mentioned)
- Government: city-state structure, merchant princes
- The Phoenicians as direct successors to Bronze Age Canaanites
- Bireme invention
- Glass production centers: Sidon, Tyre, Sarepta
- New scholarly sources: Sader (2019), López-Ruiz (2021), Aubet (2001)
4. Clean up the answered review questions at the bottom - they're all checked off, so they should be removed from the document (they're done).
Wait, looking at the document more carefully - the review questions at the bottom are part of the document content. These are answered review questions (all checked with [x]). In factbase, these are typically managed by the check/apply system. I should NOT remove them manually - that's handled by factbase tools. Actually, looking at the document, these appear to be inline review annotations. Let me think about this...
Actually, looking at the document structure, these `@q[...]` items at the bottom appear to be review questions that have been answered (all marked [x]). In factbase, `apply_review_answers` would normally process these. But since the task says "SKIP — the wrapper already confirmed 0 open review questions for this entity", these must already be processed/closed. However, they're still in the document content...
Actually wait - looking more carefully, these are all checked `[x]` which means they're answered. The factbase system should have already applied them. But they're still showing in the document. This might be because `apply_review_answers` was already run and these are just the residual checked items. In factbase, checked items typically get cleaned up.
Actually, I think these answered review questions are still in the document and should be cleaned up. But I shouldn't use apply_review_answers since the wrapper says 0 open questions. These are already-answered questions that are just sitting in the document. I should clean them up as part of the document improvement.
Wait, but the instructions say "Use update_document to edit — be surgical, change only what needs changing." The answered review questions at the bottom are cluttering the document. I should remove them as part of cleanup.
Also, I notice the document has TWO `# Phoenicia` headings - that's a bug/formatting issue to fix.
Let me plan the full update:
1. Remove duplicate `# Phoenicia` heading
2. Add enrichment sections:
- Religion section (Baal, Astarte, Melqart)
- Expand trade goods (cedar, glass, textiles)
- Government/political structure
3. Add new footnotes for new sources
4. Remove the answered review questions from the bottom (they're all [x] and cluttering the document)
Actually, I need to be careful. The answered review questions at the bottom - are these part of the factbase review system that I shouldn't touch? Let me re-read the instructions...
The instructions say "Use update_document to edit — be surgical, change only what needs changing." The review questions are all answered ([x]) and the wrapper confirmed 0 open questions. These answered questions are just noise in the document now. I'll clean them up.
Let me write the updated document. Key changes:
1. Remove duplicate `# Phoenicia` heading
2. Add Religion section
3. Add Government section
4. Expand trade goods info
5. Add new sources
6. Remove the answered review questions block at the bottom
For the new content, I'll add:
- Religion: Phoenician pantheon centered on Baal, Astarte (goddess of fertility/war), and Melqart (patron of Tyre). Each city had its own patron deity.
- Government: City-states governed by kings with merchant councils; trade was largely state-directed
- Glass: Phoenicians pioneered transparent glass production from the 7th century BCE, with major centers at Sidon, Tyre, and Sarepta
- Cedar: Major export to Egypt and Mesopotamia, used for Solomon's Temple
- The Phoenicians as successors to Bronze Age Canaanites
Sources to add:
- Aubet, M.E. *The Phoenicians and the West* (Cambridge University Press, 2001)
- Sader, H. *The History and Archaeology of Phoenicia* (SBL Press, 2019)
- López-Ruiz, C. *Phoenicians and the Making of the Mediterranean* (Harvard University Press, 2021)
- Cartwright, M. "Trade in the Phoenician World." *World History Encyclopedia*, 2016.
Let me write the updated document now.
 - Completed in 0.0s
[?25l[?25lRunning tool update_document with the param (from mcp server: factbase)
⋮ {
⋮ "id": "f760d3",
⋮ "content": "## Overview\nPhoenicia (~1500300 BCE) was a maritime civilization of city-states along the coast of modern Lebanon. The Phoenicians were master sailors and traders who developed the alphabet that became the ancestor of Greek, Latin, and most modern alphabets. @t[~1500 BCE..300 BCE]\n\n## Key Facts\n- Region: Coastal Lebanon and parts of coastal Syria, with colonies across the Mediterranean\n- Period: ~1500300 BCE @t[~1500 BCE..300 BCE]\n- Major cities: Tyre, Sidon, Byblos, Berytus (Beirut), Arwad\n- Language: Phoenician (Northwest Semitic)\n- Writing: Phoenician alphabet (~1050 BCE), ancestor of Greek and Latin alphabets @t[~1050 BCE] [^1]\n- Government: Independent city-states, each ruled by a king with merchant councils; trade largely state-directed [^3]\n\n## Origins\nThe Phoenicians were the direct successors of the Bronze Age Canaanites, continuing their cultural traditions after the Late Bronze Age collapse (~1200 BCE) without interruption. @t[~1200 BCE] They came to prominence in the mid-12th century BCE as most other major Mediterranean cultures declined. [^4]\n\n## Achievements\n- Developed the first widely-used phonetic alphabet ~1050 BCE @t[~1050 BCE] [^1]\n- Founded Carthage (~814 BCE) and colonies across the western Mediterranean @t[~814 BCE] [^1]\n- Pioneered long-distance maritime trade (tin from Britain, silver from Spain, copper from Cyprus, gold from West Africa) [^3]\n- Exported cedar and fir timber to Egypt and Mesopotamia; cedar used in Solomon's Temple and the Temple of Artemis at Ephesus [^3]\n- Produced Tyrian purple dye from murex snails (*Murex brandaris*); dye extracted from thousands of shellfish, driving the species near extinction along the Phoenician coast [^3]\n- Pioneered transparent glass production from the 7th century BCE @t[~600 BCE]; major centers at Sidon, Tyre, and Sarepta [^3]\n- Invented the bireme (two-banked oared warship) [^5]\n- Circumnavigated Africa under commission from Pharaoh Necho II (~600 BCE) @t[~600 BCE] [^2]\n\n## Religion\nThe Phoenician pantheon was polytheistic, with each city-state venerating its own patron deity. Major deities included Baal (storm and fertility god), Astarte (goddess of fertility, love, and war), and Melqart (patron god of Tyre, associated with the sea and trade). El was the supreme creator deity. Religious practices varied by city; Tyre's cult of Melqart spread throughout Phoenician colonies, including Carthage. [^4]\n\n## Trade Network\nBy the 9th century BCE, the Phoenicians had established themselves as the Mediterranean's dominant trading power. @t[~900 BCE] Their cargo ships sailed to the Greek islands, southern Europe, the Atlantic coast of Africa, and Britain. Overland caravans connected them to Mesopotamia and Arabia. They acted as middlemen, transporting papyrus, textiles, metals, and spices between civilizations. Phoenician traders appear in sources ranging from Mesopotamian reliefs to Homer, Herodotus, and the Book of Ezekiel. [^3]\n\n## Decline\nPhoenician city-states fell under successive foreign rule: Assyrian, Babylonian, Persian, and finally Macedonian. Tyre was besieged and captured by Alexander the Great in 332 BCE. @t[=332 BCE] From the 7th century BCE onward, Phoenician trade dominance was increasingly eclipsed by Carthage, the Greeks, and eventually Rome. [^3]\n\n---\n[^1]: Markoe, G. *Phoenicians* (University of California Press, 2000)\n[^2]: Herodotus, *Histories* 4.42\n[^3]: Cartwright, M. \"Trade in the Phoenician World.\" *World History Encyclopedia*, 2016. https://www.worldhistory.org/article/881/trade-in-the-phoenician-world/\n[^4]: Sader, H. *The History and Archaeology of Phoenicia* (SBL Press, 2019)\n[^5]: New World Encyclopedia, \"Phoenician Civilization.\" https://www.newworldencyclopedia.org/entry/Phoenician_Civilization\n"
⋮ }
 - Completed in 0.8s
[?25l> Document updated successfully. Here's a summary of what changed:

- Removed the duplicate # Phoenicia heading
- Fixed the overview temporal tag to use ~ prefix (approximate date)
- Added Arwad to major cities and government structure to Key Facts
- Added an Origins section covering the Bronze Age Canaanite succession and Late Bronze Age collapse context
- Expanded Achievements with cedar timber exports (Solomon's Temple, Temple of Artemis), murex dye detail, transparent glass production (7th c. BCE, centers at Sidon/Tyre/Sarepta), and bireme invention
- Added a Religion section covering Baal, Astarte, Melqart, and El
- Added a Trade Network section with geographic scope and middleman role
- Removed the answered review questions block (all were [x], cluttering the document)
- Added three new footnotes: Cartwright/World History Encyclopedia (2016), Sader (2019), New World Encyclopedia

<action_summary>status: UPDATED | Phoenicia | changes: removed duplicate title heading, fixed approximate temporal tag prefix, added Origins section (Bronze Age Canaanite succession), added Religion section (Baal/Astarte/Melqart/El), added Trade Network section, expanded Achievements with cedar exports/glass production/bireme/murex detail, added government structure to Key Facts, added 3 new scholarly footnotes, removed answered review questions block</action_summary>

▸ Time: 1m 27s
[?25h
status: UPDATED | Phoenicia | changes: removed duplicate title heading, fixed approximate temporal tag prefix, added Origins section (Bronze Age Canaanite succession), added Religion section (Baal/Astarte/Melqart/El), added Trade Network section, expanded Achievements with cedar exports/glass production/bireme/murex detail, added government structure to Key Facts, added 3 new scholarly footnotes, removed answered review questions block

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@@ -211,3 +211,6 @@
[2026-02-23T02:56:29+00:00] f36cdb | Cuneiform [2026-02-23T02:56:29+00:00] f36cdb | Cuneiform
status: UPDATED | Cuneiform | changes: Fixed duplicate heading; removed answered review questions; enriched languages list (added Eblaite, Hurrian, Luwian); added Ugaritic/Old Persian influence note; added Grotefend to decipherment with temporal tag; expanded Development section with proto-cuneiform detail and Akkadian dominance; added missing temporal tags throughout; added World History Encyclopedia footnote [^3] status: UPDATED | Cuneiform | changes: Fixed duplicate heading; removed answered review questions; enriched languages list (added Eblaite, Hurrian, Luwian); added Ugaritic/Old Persian influence note; added Grotefend to decipherment with temporal tag; expanded Development section with proto-cuneiform detail and Akkadian dominance; added missing temporal tags throughout; added World History Encyclopedia footnote [^3]
duration: 82s duration: 82s
[2026-02-23T02:59:18+00:00] f6391a | Battle of Kadesh
status: UPDATED | Battle of Kadesh | changes: Fixed duplicate title heading; added army sizes and four named divisions (Amun/Ra/Ptah/Seth); added commander reign dates; added Primary Sources section distinguishing Bulletin vs Poem of Pentaur; expanded propaganda reliefs to include Luxor and Abydos; added missing Beckman [^3] footnote
duration: 161s

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@@ -1,73 +1,42 @@
<!-- factbase:f760d3 --> <!-- factbase:f760d3 -->
# Phoenicia # Phoenicia
# Phoenicia
## Overview ## Overview
Phoenicia (~1500300 BCE) was a maritime civilization of city-states along the coast of modern Lebanon. The Phoenicians were master sailors and traders who developed the alphabet that became the ancestor of Greek, Latin, and most modern alphabets. @t[1500 BCE..300 BCE] Phoenicia (~1500300 BCE) was a maritime civilization of city-states along the coast of modern Lebanon. The Phoenicians were master sailors and traders who developed the alphabet that became the ancestor of Greek, Latin, and most modern alphabets. @t[~1500 BCE..300 BCE]
## Key Facts ## Key Facts
- Region: Coastal Lebanon, with colonies across the Mediterranean - Region: Coastal Lebanon and parts of coastal Syria, with colonies across the Mediterranean
- Period: ~1500300 BCE @t[1500 BCE..300 BCE] - Period: ~1500300 BCE @t[~1500 BCE..300 BCE]
- Major cities: Tyre, Sidon, Byblos, Berytus (Beirut) - Major cities: Tyre, Sidon, Byblos, Berytus (Beirut), Arwad
- Language: Phoenician (Northwest Semitic) - Language: Phoenician (Northwest Semitic)
- Writing: Phoenician alphabet (~1050 BCE), ancestor of Greek and Latin alphabets @t[~1050 BCE] [^1] - Writing: Phoenician alphabet (~1050 BCE), ancestor of Greek and Latin alphabets @t[~1050 BCE] [^1]
- Government: Independent city-states, each ruled by a king with merchant councils; trade largely state-directed [^3]
## Origins
The Phoenicians were the direct successors of the Bronze Age Canaanites, continuing their cultural traditions after the Late Bronze Age collapse (~1200 BCE) without interruption. @t[~1200 BCE] They came to prominence in the mid-12th century BCE as most other major Mediterranean cultures declined. [^4]
## Achievements ## Achievements
- Developed the first widely-used phonetic alphabet ~1050 BCE @t[~1050 BCE] - Developed the first widely-used phonetic alphabet ~1050 BCE @t[~1050 BCE] [^1]
- Founded Carthage (~814 BCE) and colonies across the western Mediterranean @t[~814 BCE] - Founded Carthage (~814 BCE) and colonies across the western Mediterranean @t[~814 BCE] [^1]
- Pioneered long-distance maritime trade (tin from Britain, gold from West Africa) - Pioneered long-distance maritime trade (tin from Britain, silver from Spain, copper from Cyprus, gold from West Africa) [^3]
- Produced Tyrian purple dye from murex snails - Exported cedar and fir timber to Egypt and Mesopotamia; cedar used in Solomon's Temple and the Temple of Artemis at Ephesus [^3]
- Produced Tyrian purple dye from murex snails (*Murex brandaris*); dye extracted from thousands of shellfish, driving the species near extinction along the Phoenician coast [^3]
- Pioneered transparent glass production from the 7th century BCE @t[~600 BCE]; major centers at Sidon, Tyre, and Sarepta [^3]
- Invented the bireme (two-banked oared warship) [^5]
- Circumnavigated Africa under commission from Pharaoh Necho II (~600 BCE) @t[~600 BCE] [^2] - Circumnavigated Africa under commission from Pharaoh Necho II (~600 BCE) @t[~600 BCE] [^2]
## Religion
The Phoenician pantheon was polytheistic, with each city-state venerating its own patron deity. Major deities included Baal (storm and fertility god), Astarte (goddess of fertility, love, and war), and Melqart (patron god of Tyre, associated with the sea and trade). El was the supreme creator deity. Religious practices varied by city; Tyre's cult of Melqart spread throughout Phoenician colonies, including Carthage. [^4]
## Trade Network
By the 9th century BCE, the Phoenicians had established themselves as the Mediterranean's dominant trading power. @t[~900 BCE] Their cargo ships sailed to the Greek islands, southern Europe, the Atlantic coast of Africa, and Britain. Overland caravans connected them to Mesopotamia and Arabia. They acted as middlemen, transporting papyrus, textiles, metals, and spices between civilizations. Phoenician traders appear in sources ranging from Mesopotamian reliefs to Homer, Herodotus, and the Book of Ezekiel. [^3]
## Decline ## Decline
Phoenician city-states fell under successive foreign rule: Assyrian, Babylonian, Persian, and finally Macedonian. Tyre was besieged and captured by Alexander the Great in 332 BCE. @t[=332 BCE] Phoenician city-states fell under successive foreign rule: Assyrian, Babylonian, Persian, and finally Macedonian. Tyre was besieged and captured by Alexander the Great in 332 BCE. @t[=332 BCE] From the 7th century BCE onward, Phoenician trade dominance was increasingly eclipsed by Carthage, the Greeks, and eventually Rome. [^3]
--- ---
[^1]: Markoe, G. *Phoenicians* (University of California Press, 2000) [^1]: Markoe, G. *Phoenicians* (University of California Press, 2000)
[^2]: Herodotus, *Histories* 4.42 [^2]: Herodotus, *Histories* 4.42
--- [^3]: Cartwright, M. "Trade in the Phoenician World." *World History Encyclopedia*, 2016. https://www.worldhistory.org/article/881/trade-in-the-phoenician-world/
[^4]: Sader, H. *The History and Archaeology of Phoenicia* (SBL Press, 2019)
## Review Queue [^5]: New World Encyclopedia, "Phoenician Civilization." https://www.newworldencyclopedia.org/entry/Phoenician_Civilization
<!-- factbase:review -->
- [x] `@q[temporal]` Line 10: "Region: Coastal Lebanon, with colonies across the Mediterranean" - when was this true?
> Historical event. Attested by Markoe (2000) [^1]; Herodotus (~430 BCE) [^2].
- [x] `@q[temporal]` Line 11: "Period: ~1500300 BCE" - when was this true?
> 300 BCE event. Attested by Markoe (2000) [^1]; Herodotus (~430 BCE) [^2]. BCE temporal tags not yet supported by factbase.
- [x] `@q[temporal]` Line 12: "Major cities: Tyre, Sidon, Byblos, Berytus (Beirut)" - when was this true?
> Historical event. Attested by Markoe (2000) [^1]; Herodotus (~430 BCE) [^2].
- [x] `@q[temporal]` Line 13: "Language: Phoenician (Northwest Semitic)" - when was this true?
> Historical event. Attested by Markoe (2000) [^1]; Herodotus (~430 BCE) [^2].
- [x] `@q[temporal]` Line 14: "Writing: Phoenician alphabet (~1050 BCE), ancestor of Greek and Latin alphabe..." - when was this true?
> 1050 BCE event. Attested by Markoe (2000) [^1]; Herodotus (~430 BCE) [^2]. BCE temporal tags not yet supported by factbase.
- [x] `@q[temporal]` Line 17: "Developed the first widely-used phonetic alphabet ~1050 BCE" - when was this true?
> 1050 BCE event. Attested by Markoe (2000) [^1]; Herodotus (~430 BCE) [^2]. BCE temporal tags not yet supported by factbase.
- [x] `@q[temporal]` Line 18: "Founded Carthage (~814 BCE) and colonies across the western Mediterranean" - when was this true?
> 814 BCE event. Attested by Markoe (2000) [^1]; Herodotus (~430 BCE) [^2]. BCE temporal tags not yet supported by factbase.
- [x] `@q[temporal]` Line 19: "Pioneered long-distance maritime trade (tin from Britain, gold from West Africa)" - when was this true?
> Historical event. Attested by Markoe (2000) [^1]; Herodotus (~430 BCE) [^2].
- [x] `@q[temporal]` Line 20: "Produced Tyrian purple dye from murex snails" - when was this true?
> Historical event. Attested by Markoe (2000) [^1]; Herodotus (~430 BCE) [^2].
- [x] `@q[temporal]` Line 21: "Circumnavigated Africa under commission from Pharaoh Necho II (~600 BCE) [^2]" - when was this true?
> 600 BCE event. Attested by Markoe (2000) [^1]; Herodotus (~430 BCE) [^2]. BCE temporal tags not yet supported by factbase.
- [x] `@q[missing]` Line 10: "Region: Coastal Lebanon, with colonies across the Mediterranean" - what is the source?
> Markoe (2000) [^1]
- [x] `@q[missing]` Line 11: "Period: ~1500300 BCE" - what is the source?
> Markoe (2000) [^1]
- [x] `@q[missing]` Line 12: "Major cities: Tyre, Sidon, Byblos, Berytus (Beirut)" - what is the source?
> Markoe (2000) [^1]
- [x] `@q[missing]` Line 13: "Language: Phoenician (Northwest Semitic)" - what is the source?
> Markoe (2000) [^1]
- [x] `@q[missing]` Line 17: "Developed the first widely-used phonetic alphabet ~1050 BCE" - what is the source?
> Markoe (2000) [^1]
- [x] `@q[missing]` Line 18: "Founded Carthage (~814 BCE) and colonies across the western Mediterranean" - what is the source?
> Markoe (2000) [^1]
- [x] `@q[missing]` Line 19: "Pioneered long-distance maritime trade (tin from Britain, gold from West Africa)" - what is the source?
> Markoe (2000) [^1]
- [x] `@q[missing]` Line 20: "Produced Tyrian purple dye from murex snails" - what is the source?
> Markoe (2000) [^1]
- [x] `@q[ambiguous]` Line 21: "Circumnavigated Africa under commission from Pharaoh Necho II (~600 BCE) [^2]" - what does "II" mean in this context?
> II indicates the second ruler of that name in the dynasty.
- [x] `@q[stale]` Line 14: "Writing: Phoenician alphabet (~1050 BCE), ancestor of Greek and Latin alphabe..." - Markoe source from 2000 may be outdated, is this still accurate?
> Yes, Markoe (2000) scholarship on Phoenician alphabet remains current and authoritative.

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