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{{short description|College of the University of Oxford}} {{Use British English|date=April 2018}} {{Use dmy dates|date=April 2018}} {{Infobox residential college | name = St Peter's College | university = [[University of Oxford]] | photo = St Peters College Oxford Linton house.jpg | caption = St Peter's College from New Inn Hall Street | scarf = {{scarf|{{cells|4|#060}}{{cells|2|#FC0}}{{cells|4|#060}}{{cells|2|#FC0}}{{cells|4|#060}}}} | latin_name = Collegium Sancti Petri Juxta Ballium | named_for = [[Saint Peter]] <br /> [[Church of St Peter-le-Bailey]] | previous_names = St Peter's Hall (1929–1961) | established = 1929 (attained full college status in 1961) | sister_college = None | master = [[Judith Buchanan]] | undergraduates = 381<ref>{{cite web |title=St Peter's College |url=https://www.ox.ac.uk/admissions/undergraduate/colleges/college-listing/st-peters-college |publisher=Oxford University |access-date=13 October 2023}}</ref> | graduates = 217 | location = [[New Inn Hall Street]] | coordinates = {{coord|51.752762|-1.260721|display=inline,title}} | location_map = Oxford (central) | shield = St-Peters College Oxford Coat Of Arms.svg | blazon = Per pale vert and argent, to the dexter two keys in saltire or surmounted by a triple towered castle argent masoned sable and on the sinister a cross gules surmounted by a mitre or between four martlets sable, the whole within a bordure or. | homepage = {{URL|https://www.spc.ox.ac.uk//}} | boat_club = [https://stpeterscollegeboatclub.com/ Boatclub] | full_name = The Master, Fellows and Scholars of the College of St. Peter le Bailey in the University of Oxford | motto_Latin = Dum Spiro Spero | motto_English = While I breathe, I hope }} '''St Peter's College''' is a [[Colleges of the University of Oxford|constituent college]] of the [[University of Oxford]]. Located on [[New Inn Hall Street]], [[Oxford]], United Kingdom, it occupies the site of two of the university's [[academic halls of the University of Oxford|medieval halls]] dating back to at least the 14th century. The modern college was founded by [[Francis James Chavasse]], former [[Bishop of Liverpool]], opened as St Peter's Hall in 1929, and achieved full collegiate status as St Peter's College in 1961. Founded as a men's college, it has been coeducational since 1979.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.spc.ox.ac.uk/about/college-history|title=College History {{!}} www.spc.ox.ac.uk|website=www.spc.ox.ac.uk|language=en|access-date=2018-05-04}}</ref> As of 2023, the college had an estimated [[financial endowment]] of £52.8 million.<ref name="stpeters">{{cite web |title=St Peter's College, University of Oxford : Annual Report & Financial Statements: For the year ended 31 July 2023 |url=https://www.spc.ox.ac.uk/asset/SPC_2022_23_Accounts.pdf |access-date=5 Nov 2024 |website=ox.ac.uk |page=12}}</ref> ==History== ===Medieval halls=== Although founded in its current form in the 20th century, St Peter's occupies a central Oxford location on the site of two of the university's medieval halls. The first Master of St Peter's called the acquisition of the site "a chance of ages".<ref name="collegewebsitehistory" /> The site was originally the location of Trilleck's Inn, later known as [[New Inn Hall]], and Rose Hall. Trillecks' Inn was founded in the 14th century by [[John Trilleck|Bishop Trilleck]] and, as New Inn Hall, merged into [[Balliol College, Oxford|Balliol College]] in 1887. Rose Hall was given to [[New College, Oxford|New College]] by William of Wykeham. New College finally sold the site to the rector of St Peter-le-Bailey in 1859 and 1868 as a site for a new church, now the college chapel.<ref name="VCH3">{{cite work |title=St Peter's Hall |url=https://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/oxon/vol3/pp336-338 |volume=3 |work=A History of the County of Oxford |editor=H E Salter and Mary D Lobel |access-date=18 July 2021|year=1954}}</ref> ===St Peter's Hall=== The history of the college in its present form began in 1923 when [[Francis James Chavasse]], former [[Bishop of Liverpool]], returned to Oxford. He was concerned at the rising cost of education in the older universities in Britain, and projected St Peter's as a college where promising students, who might otherwise be deterred by the costs of college life, could obtain an Oxford education.<ref name="times">{{cite journal|last=Chavasse|first=Christopher|title=St Peter's Hall, Oxford|journal=The Times|date=8 November 1930|page=8|url=https://www.thetimes.co.uk/tto/viewArticle.arc?articleId=ARCHIVE-The_Times-1930-11-08-08-014&pageId=ARCHIVE-The_Times-1930-11-08-08|access-date=29 August 2013}}</ref> After Francis James died in 1928, his son [[Christopher Chavasse]] launched a memorial appeal in his father's name to fund the project, raising £150,000 from donors including Ella Rowcroft to convert and build new buildings on the site.<ref name="collegewebsitehistory">{{cite web |url=https://www.spc.ox.ac.uk/college-history |access-date=18 July 2021 |title=College History |website=St Peter's College, Oxford}}</ref> St Peter's was licensed by the [[University of Oxford|university]] as a hostel that year and opened with 13 residents.<ref name="times" /> The following year, 1929, it was recognised as a [[permanent private hall]] and grew to 40 students. A later significant benefactor was [[William Morris, 1st Viscount Nuffield]], who would also found [[Nuffield College]].<ref name="collegewebsitehistory" /> The hall was sometimes nicknamed "Pot Hall".<ref>{{cite book |last1=Balsdon |first1=John Percy Vyvian Dacre |author-link=J. P. V. D. Balsdon |title=Oxford Life |date=1958 |publisher=Eyre & Spottiswoode |page=49 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=x6Dhytoy49EC}}</ref> During the [[Second World War]], St Peter's Hall became home to evacuated students from [[Westfield College]], a [[women's college]] of the [[University of London]], and its students were boarded out to other colleges.<ref name="collegewebsitehistory" /> ===St Peter's College=== In 1947, St Peter's was reclassified as a 'new foundation', and was finally recognised as a full college in 1961 with the granting of a [[royal charter]]. In 1979, St Peter's started admitting women and became [[co-educational]].<ref name="collegewebsitehistory" /> ==Buildings== St Peter's has a varied set of buildings, many of them much older than the college itself. The college has, in effect, adapted existing buildings to provide the collective facilities needed for college life, and built new ones to provide student accommodation.{{fact|date=March 2021}} ===Linton Quad=== [[File:UK-2014-Oxford-St Peter's College 02.jpg|thumb|View of Linton House from Linton Quad.]] Linton House, a [[Georgian architecture|Georgian]] rectory dating from 1797, stands on the east side of Linton Quad along New Inn Hall Street. It was originally built as the offices for the Oxford Canal Company and called Wyaston House. It was bought in 1878 by Canon Henry Linton who converted it to a [[rectory]] for the [[Church of St Peter-le-Bailey]]. Now known as Linton House, it serves as the porter's lodge (the entrance to the college) and is also home to the college library.<ref name="VCH3" /><ref name="he_linton">{{NHLE |num=1046616 |desc=ST PETER'S COLLEGE, LINTON HOUSE |access-date=18 July 2021}}</ref> On the south side of the quad stands the college chapel, the [[Church of St Peter-le-Bailey]]. Built in 1874 and incorporating some of the stone of an earlier church, it is the third church of that name on or close to the site since the 12th century.<ref name="VCH4">{{cite work |title=St Peter-le-Bailey |url=https://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/oxon/vol4/pp369-412 |chapter=Churches |volume=4 |work=A History of the County of Oxford |author=Eleanor Chance |author2=Christina Colvin |author3=Janet Cooper |author4=C J Day |author5=T G Hassall |author6=Mary Jessup |author7=Nesta Selwyn. |access-date=18 July 2021|year=1954}}</ref><ref name="he_chapel">{{NHLE |num=1369709 |desc=ST PETERS COLLEGE, CHAPEL (CHURCH OF ST PETER LE BAILEY) |access-date=18 July 2021}}</ref> Memorials to members of the [[Chavasse family]] in the chapel include Captain [[Noel Godfrey Chavasse|Noel Chavasse]]'s original grave cross, a large [[bas-relief]] of Bishop [[Francis James Chavasse|Francis Chavasse]] at prayer and the Chavasse memorial window.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.spc.ox.ac.uk/content/chavasse-family-papers |title=Chavasse Family Papers |website=St Peters College, Oxford |access-date=18 July 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141223060404/http://www.spc.ox.ac.uk/content/chavasse-family-papers |archive-date=23 December 2014}}</ref> The quad also includes the Latner building.{{fact|date=March 2021}} ===Hannington Quad=== [[File:St Peters College Oxford Hannington Hall 1.jpg|thumb|Hannington Hall, here viewed from New Inn Hall Street, is a surviving part of the [[New Inn Hall, Oxford|New Inn Hall]] buildings.]] In the Hannington Quad stands Hannington Hall. It dates from 1832 and is the only surviving part of New Inn Hall. The building was originally commissioned by [[John Cramer (priest)|John Cramer]], principal of New Inn Hall, as student accommodation and was designed by architect Thomas Greenshields. When New Inn Hall was absorbed by [[Balliol College, Oxford|Balliol]] in 1887 and most of New Inn Hall's buildings were demolished to make room for the Central Girls School building (now part of St Peter's Chavasse Quad), the Cramer building survived. It was bought by Reverend Talbot Rice, rector of St-Peter-le-Bailey, in 1897 and renamed after the Victorian missionary Bishop [[James Hannington]]. After the founding of St Peter's it was remodelled to function as the dining hall.<ref name="VCH3" /> The quad was formed by the construction of an accommodation block designed by Sir [[Herbert Baker]] and [[Fielding Dodd]] behind the older buildings.<ref>{{cite book |last=Tyack |first=Geoffrey |date=1998 |title=Oxford: An Architectural Guide |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=FsOx8eHkOC8C&pg=PA284 |publisher=[[Oxford University Press]] |page=284 |isbn=978-0-19-817423-3}}</ref> ===Chavasse Quad=== [[File:New Inn Hall Street Schools - line drawing by Leonard Stokes.png|thumb|Architect's drawing of the New Inn Hall Street schools by Leonard Stoke. The schools are now the Chavasse Building.]] The [[Cheney School|Central Girls' School]] to the South of the original site of the college was designed by [[Leonard Stokes]] and completed in 1901.<ref>{{cite book |last=Whiting |first=R. C. |date=1993 |title=Oxford: Studies in the History of a University Town Since 1800 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=leFRAQAAIAAJ&pg=PA74 |publisher=Manchester University Press |page=74 |isbn=978-0-7190-3057-4}}</ref> It was converted into the college's Chavasse Building between 1984 and 1986<ref>{{cite magazine |author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.--> |title=90 Years of St Peter's College |url=https://issuu.com/spcoxford/docs/st_peters_cross_keys_2019_e-version |magazine=Cross Keys |pages=11–12 |publisher=St Peter's College, Oxford |date=2019 |access-date=19 July 2020}}</ref> and provides living accommodation for students and seminar rooms. In 2018 the new Hubert Perrodo Building was completed offering further on-site accommodation and conference spaces.{{fact|date=March 2021}} The [[Middle Common Room]] (MCR) for postgraduates, and a music room are also located in the Pastry School in the quad's southwest corner. ===Mulberry Quad=== [[File:UK-2014-Oxford-St Peter's College 03.jpg|thumb|Morris building.]] The Mulberry Quad lies to the northwest of the Linton and provides for the direct access to the JCR. The Morris Building, currently student accommodation, was given by [[William Morris, 1st Viscount Nuffield|Lord Nuffield]] in memory of his mother, Emily Morris.<ref name="VCH3" /> The Matthews block houses the JCR as well as the student-run bar. The Dorfman Centre lies in the northwest corner of the quad. Mulberry Quad also provides access to Bulwarks Lane. === Castle Bailey Quad === The Castle Bailey Quad is St Peter's latest build, housing 54 undergraduate students across Damazer House (named after former Master, [[Mark Damazer]]) and Westfield House (named in honour of the women of Westfield College, London, who relocated to St Peter's during World War II). Other support facilities, including Fellow’s Rooms and an estates workshop and office, can be found on the ground floor.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Castle Bailey Quad |url=https://www.designengine.co.uk/projects/castle-hill-house/ |access-date=2024-11-05 |website=Design Engine Architects |language=en-GB}}</ref> Castle Bailey Quad was funded through almost 900 donors and alumni contributions of close to £14m. The quad was officially opened on 15 June 2024 by the then Chancellor, [[Chris Patten|The Rt Hon the Lord Patten of Barnes, KG, CH, PC.]]<ref>{{Cite web |title=Castle Hill House Project {{!}} St Peter's College Oxford |url=https://www.spc.ox.ac.uk/alumni/support-st-peters/castle-hill-house-project |access-date=2024-11-05 |website=www.spc.ox.ac.uk}}</ref> === Canal House === Canal House, the master's lodge, dates from the early 19th century.{{fact|date=March 2021}} ===Annexes=== St Peter's also has a few off-site accommodation blocks for students, a few minutes away from the main college site. [[St Thomas' Street, Oxford|St Thomas' Street]] and St George's Gate house undergraduates, while [[Paradise Street, Oxford|Paradise Street]] (which was officially opened in June 2008) houses postgraduates and fourth-year undergraduates.{{fact|date=March 2021}} ==Student life== [[File:St Peter's College Accom, Oxford.jpg|thumb|The on-site student accommodation includes these Neo-Georgian rooms, known as Besse Staircase after [[Antonin Besse]].]] The student-run [[Junior Common Room]] organises a wide variety of social events throughout the academic year, ranging from formal events to celebrate such things as [[Burns Night]] (complete with [[haggis]] and poetry) to creatively themed parties that run into the early hours of the morning. The college is one of the few to feature its own student-edited arts magazine, ''Misc'', which is published termly. The college also has a student-run college bar, which serves the Cross Keys cocktail.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.spc.ox.ac.uk/undergraduate-study |title=Undergraduate Study |author=<!--Not stated--> |website=St. Peter's College, Oxford |access-date=15 May 2020 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=https://thetab.com/uk/oxford/2017/01/31/st-peters-college-bar-best-oxford-27716 |title=The St. Peter's College bar is the best in Oxford |last=Marin |first=Matei |date=31 Jan 2017 |website=The Tab |access-date=15 May 2020 }}</ref> ===Sports=== The college has sports teams competing in rowing, cricket, football, hockey, rugby, and pool. It shares with Exeter and Hertford Colleges a sports field which has two cricket pitches and pavilions, two rugby and football pitches, a hockey pitch, tennis courts and a squash court.<ref>[http://www.spc.ox.ac.uk/video_full/8/sports.html Sports – St Peter's College, University of Oxford<!-- Bot generated title -->] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130509114300/http://www.spc.ox.ac.uk/video_full/8/sports.html |date=9 May 2013 }}</ref> The college boat club, [[St Peter's College Boat Club]], competes regularly. The club shares a boathouse with [[Somerville College Boat Club]], [[University College Boat Club (Oxford)|University College Boat Club]] and [[Wolfson College Boat Club (Oxford)|Wolfson College Boat Club]].{{fact|date=March 2021}} [[File:SPCBC-Women.webp|thumb|St Peter's College Boat Club competes in 2 main competitions annually: Torpids and Summer VIII's.]] ==Locomotive== Taking the original name of the college, [[GWR 6959 Class]] steam locomotive no. 7900 was built in 1949 for British Railways and named "Saint Peter's Hall" (no abbreviation). One of the brass nameplates from the now-scrapped locomotive survives in the college on the far wall of the college bar.{{fact|date=March 2021}} ==People associated with the college== ===Masters=== * [[Christopher Maude Chavasse]] (1929–1940) * [[Julian Thornton-Duesbery]] (1940–1944; first term) * [[Robert Wilmot Howard]] (1945–1955) * Julian Thornton-Duesbery (1955–1968; second term) * [[Alec Cairncross]] (1969–1978) * [[Gerald Aylmer]] (1979–1991) * [[John Barron (academic)|John Barron]] (1991–2003)<ref>{{cite web | title = Obituary | work = [[The Times]] | date = 29 August 2008 | url = http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/obituaries/article4628277.ece | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20100525012134/http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/obituaries/article4628277.ece | url-status = dead | archive-date = 25 May 2010 | access-date = 13 March 2010}}</ref> * [[Bernard Silverman]] (2003–2009) * [[Mark Damazer]] (2010–2019) * [[Judith Buchanan]] (from October 2019)<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.ox.ac.uk/news/2019-06-21-professor-judith-buchanan-elected-next-master-st-peter's-college |title=Professor Judith Buchanan elected next Master of St Peter's College |author=<!--Not stated--> |date=21 June 2019 |website=St Peter's College, Oxford |access-date=14 September 2019 }}</ref> ===Fellows=== {{see|Category:Fellows of St Peter's College, Oxford|List of Honorary Fellows of St Peter's College, Oxford}} ===Notable alumni=== {{see|Category:Alumni of St Peter's College, Oxford}} <gallery heights="150" class="center"> File:Mark Carney World Economic Forum 2013 (3).jpg|[[Mark Carney]], Prime Minister of [[Canada]], former Governor of the [[Bank of England]] File:Ken Loach.jpg|[[Ken Loach]], English film and television director File:Hugh fearnley whittingstall.jpg|[[Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall]], celebrity chef and television personality File:Paul Condon, Baron Condon, May 2009.jpg|[[Paul Condon, Baron Condon|Lord Condon]], former Commissioner of the Metropolitan Police File:Hugh Dancy at the 36th Toronto International Film Festival, September 2011 (02).jpg|[[Hugh Dancy]], actor and model File:Chief of the Defence Staff, General Sir Nicholas Houghton GCB, CBE, ADC Gen. MOD 45155682.jpg|[[Nick Houghton]], former Chief of Joint Operations, [[British Armed Forces]] File:F Perrodo.jpg|[[François Perrodo]], entrepreneur and president of the energy company [[Perenco]] <!-- [[WP:NFCC]] violation: File:Akufo Addo.jpg|[[Edward Akufo-Addo]], former President of the Republic of Ghana --> File:Spiker albert.jpg|[[Carl Albert]], former Speaker of the [[United States House of Representatives]] </gallery> * [[Chris Van Tulleken]], Infection Doctor, Academic, BBC broadcaster * [[Edward Akufo-Addo]], 2nd [[President of Ghana]] * [[Guy Arnold]], explorer, traveller, political commentator, Africa expert and writer * [[Wilbert Awdry]], creator of [[Thomas the Tank Engine]] * [[Simon Beaufoy]], writer of the screenplay for the films ''[[The Full Monty]]'' and ''[[Slumdog Millionaire]]'' * [[Graham Bell (biologist)|Graham Bell]], Canadian academic, writer and evolutionary biologist * [[Michael Blomquist]], American rower and former world champion * [[Kenneth Bloomfield]], [[Head of the Northern Ireland Civil Service]] and member of the [[Independent Commission for the Location of Victims' Remains]] * [[E. A. Boateng]], Ghanaian academic, first vice chancellor of the [[University of Cape Coast]] * [[Mike Carey (writer)|Mike Carey]], author * [[Kenneth Chan Ka-lok]], member of the [[Hong Kong Legislative Council]] * [[Paul Condon, Baron Condon]], [[Commissioner of the Metropolitan Police]] from 1993 to 2000 * [[Gordon Corera]], [[BBC]] security correspondent * [[Peter Dale (poet)|Peter Dale]], poet * [[Jamie Dalrymple]], Middlesex, Glamorgan and England cricketer * [[David Davies (football administrator)|David Davies]], football administrator * [[Jack Dormand]], later Baron Dormand of Easington, [[Labour Party (UK)|Labour]] [[Member of Parliament (UK)|MP]] for [[Easington (UK Parliament constituency)|Easington]], 1970–87 * [[Modjaben Dowuona]], first Registrar of the [[University of Ghana]]; [[Minister for Education (Ghana)|Minister for Education]] (1966–1969) * [[David Eastwood]], Vice-Chancellor of the [[University of Birmingham]] * [[Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall]], chef and TV presenter * [[Paul S. Fiddes]], former principal of [[Regent's Park College, Oxford]] * [[Matt Frei]], BBC Washington correspondent * [[Robert Gavron, Baron Gavron]], chairman of the [[Guardian Media Group]] and trustee of the [[Scott Trust]] * [[Geordie Greig]], editor of ''[[The Independent]]'' * [[Robert Hanson (financier)|Robert Hanson]], financier<ref>[http://www.yorkshirepost.co.uk/business/profile-robert-hanson-the-happy-family-man-steering-hanson-empire-into-new-territory-1-3230124 Profile – Robert Hanson] in ''[[The Yorkshire Post]]'' dated 29 March 2011. Retrieved 11 May 2017</ref> * [[Afua Hirsch]], author * [[Andy Hornby]], chief executive of [[Coral]], former chief executive of [[HBOS]] * [[Nick Houghton|General Sir Nicholas Houghton]], [[Chief of the Defence Staff (United Kingdom)|Chief of the Defence Staff]] * [[Rex Masterman Hunt]], Governor of the [[Falkland Islands]] * [[Martin Ivens]], editor of ''[[The Sunday Times]]'' * [[Kurt Jackson]], painter * [[Libby Lane]], [[Bishop of Derby]], first woman consecrated a bishop in the [[Church of England]], and current [[Visitor]] of the college<ref>{{Cite web |title=Trustees and Other Fellowships {{!}} St Peter's College Oxford |url=https://www.spc.ox.ac.uk/other-fellowships |access-date=2022-09-14 |website=www.spc.ox.ac.uk}}</ref> * [[Helen Lewis (journalist)|Helen Lewis]], ''[[New Statesman]]'' deputy editor * [[Richard Lloyd Parry]], Asia editor for ''[[The Times]]'' of London * [[David Moxon]], former [[archbishop of New Zealand]] * [[Oxford University Diplomatic Studies Programme#Notable alumni|Guillermo F. Pérez-Argüello]], Nicaraguan Ambassador, and former Director of Protocol and of his country's [[List of diplomatic training institutions|Jose de Marcoleta Diplomatic Academy]]. * [[John Pritchard (bishop)|John Pritchard]], Bishop of Oxford (2007–2014) * [[Paul Reeves]], former [[archbishop of New Zealand]] and [[Governor-General of New Zealand]] * [[Gareth Russell (author)|Gareth Russell]], author * [[Dominic Shellard]], vice-chancellor of [[De Montfort University]] * [[Jake Wallis Simons]], British journalist and novelist * [[Greg Stafford (politician)|Greg Stafford]], Member of Parliament for [[Farnham and Bordon]] 2024- * [[Mark Stanhope]], [[First Sea Lord]] and Chief of Naval Staff * [[Christopher Tambling]] (1964–2015), composer, organist and choirmaster * [[Jigyel Ugyen Wangchuck]], former heir to the throne of [[Bhutan]] * [[George Whipple III]], American lawyer and society reporter<ref>{{Cite web |title=George Whipple – Society Reporter |url=https://www.ny1.com/nyc/all-boroughs/on-air/2015/03/17/george-whipple |access-date=2022-06-06 |website=www.ny1.com |language=en}}</ref> * [[William Wickham (MP)|William Wickham]] (1831–1897), alumnus of New Inn Hall and MP for Petersfield * [[Daniel Woolf]], historian; principal and vice-chancellor (2009–2019) of [[Queen's University, Canada]] * [[Ben Wright (journalist)|Ben Wright]], [[BBC]] political correspondent ==References== {{Reflist|2}} ==External links== {{commons category|St Peter's College, Oxford}} * [http://www.spc.ox.ac.uk/ St Peter's College] – official website * [https://web.archive.org/web/20090623111011/http://www.spcmcr.co.uk/ St Peter's College Middle Common Room] {{University of Oxford}} {{Authority control}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Saint Peter's College, Oxford}} [[Category:St Peter's College, Oxford| ]] [[Category:Colleges of the University of Oxford]] [[Category:Educational institutions established in 1929]] [[Category:Buildings and structures of the University of Oxford]] [[Category:1929 establishments in England]]
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