Results for 'Historical geography'

964 found
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  1. The historical geography of modernity.Derek Gregory - 1993 - In S. James & David Ley (eds.), Place/culture/representation. London ; New York: Routledge. pp. 272--313.
     
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  2.  35
    The Historical Geography of Asia Minor at the Time of Paul and Thecla.Angelo Di Berardino - 2017 - Augustinianum 57 (2):341-370.
    The Apostle Paul exercised his ministry in the Roman provinces of Galatia and Asia. An unknown presbyter of the second century wrote the Acts of Paul. An important part of this text consists of the Acts of Paul and Thecla. Although sometimes these Acts circulated as a separate text, they recount the vicissitudes of the virgin Thecla, native of the city of Iconium. The events take place mainly in the cities of Iconium of Licaonia and of Antioch of Pisidia, two (...)
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  3.  21
    The Historical Geography and Topography of Bihar.Joseph E. Schwartzberg & Mithila Sharan Pandey - 1965 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 85 (3):476.
  4.  16
    Historical Geography of the Bible: The Tribal Territories of Israel.Richard S. Hess & Zecharia Kallai - 1990 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 110 (2):335.
  5.  22
    Historical geographies of provincial science: themes in the setting and reception of the British Association for the Advancement of Science in Britain and Ireland, 1831–c.1939.Charles Withers, Rebekah Higgitt & Diarmid Finnegan - 2008 - British Journal for the History of Science 41 (3):385-415.
    The British Association for the Advancement of Science sought to promote the understanding of science in various ways, principally by having annual meetings in different towns and cities throughout Britain and Ireland. This paper considers how far the location of its meetings in different urban settings influenced the nature and reception of the association's activities in promoting science, from its foundation in 1831 to the later 1930s. Several themes concerning the production and reception of science – promoting, practising, writing and (...)
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  6.  52
    Historical geography Holger sonnabend (ed.): Mensch und landschaft in der antike: Lexikon der historischen geographie . Stuttgart and weimar: J. B. metzler, 1999. Pp. XII + 660, 112 ills. Cased, dm 98. isbn: 3-476-01285-. [REVIEW]Graham Shipley - 2000 - The Classical Review 50 (02):545-.
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  7.  54
    Time-space compression: historical geographies.Barney Warf - 2008 - New York: Routledge.
    This volume explores the multiple ways in which people experience time-space compression in varying historical and geographical circumstances.
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  8.  41
    Networks, narratives and territory in anthropological race classification: towards a more comprehensive historical geography of Europe’s culture.Richard McMahon - 2011 - History of the Human Sciences 24 (1):70-94.
    This article aims to integrate discourse analysis of politically instrumental imagined identity geographies with the relational and territorial geography of the communities of praxis and interpretation that produce them. My case study is the international community of nationalist scientists who classified Europe’s biological races in the 1820s—1940s. I draw on network analysis, relational geography, historical sociology and the historical turn to problematize empirically how spatial patterns of this community’s shifting disciplinary and political coalitions, communication networks and (...)
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  9. In)Digitizing Cáuigú historical geographies : technoscience as a postcolonial discourse.Mark H. Palmer - 2012 - In Alexander von Lünen & Charles Travis (eds.), History and GIS: epistemologies, considerations and reflections. Dordrecht: Springer.
     
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  10.  24
    Atlas of the Historical Geography of the United States. Charles O. Paullin, John K. Wright.Louis Karpinski - 1934 - Isis 22 (1):305-308.
  11. Down the telegraph road: A naive historical geography.Roger Lee - 1989 - In Derek Gregory & Rex Walford (eds.), Horizons in human geography. Totowa, N.J.: Barnes & Noble. pp. 152.
     
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  12. The Jewish People in the First Century: Historical Geography, Political History, Social, Cultural and Religious Life and Institutions.S. Safrai & M. Stern - 1974
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  13.  39
    The Sugar Cane Industry: An Historical Geography from Its Origins to 1914J. H. Galloway.Henk Aay - 1991 - Isis 82 (3):545-545.
  14. The Land of the Bible: A Historical Geography.Yohanan Aharoni, A. F. Rainey & Michael Avi-Yonah - 1967
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  15.  25
    Spatial Diffusion: An Historical Geography of Epidemics in an Island Community. By A. D. Cliff, P. Haggett, J. K. Ord and G. R. Versey. Pp. xi + 238. (Cambridge University Press, 1981.) £19.50. [REVIEW]R. Mansell Prothero - 1984 - Journal of Biosocial Science 16 (2):300-300.
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  16.  31
    The Land of the Bible; A Historical Geography.Matitiahu Tsevat, Yohanan Aharoni & A. F. Rainey - 1969 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 89 (1):172.
  17.  40
    Dragon's Brain Perfume: An Historical Geography of Camphor.Ch'en Kuo-Tung & R. A. Donkin - 2001 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 121 (4):662.
  18.  11
    New approaches to the Black sea littoral - (A.) coşkun (ed.) Ethnic constructs, Royal dynasties and historical geography around the Black sea littoral. With the assistance of Joanna porucznik and Germain payen. (Geographica historica 43.) pp. 381, ills, b/w & colour maps. Stuttgart: Franz Steiner, 2021. Paper, €66. Isbn: 978-3-515-12941-1. [REVIEW]Georgia Aristodemou - 2021 - The Classical Review 71 (2):437-440.
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  19.  39
    Middle School Geography Teachers’ Professional Development Centered around Historical Photographs.Cory Callahan - 2019 - Journal of Social Studies Research 43 (4):375-388.
    This paper describes three social studies teachers’ participation in an approximately 50-h, 13-month, Lesson Study-type professional development program called Beyond Words. The program centered around promoting teachers’ understanding of historical domain knowledge through experiences with innovative visual curriculum materials and sustained collaboration. This qualitative investigation answers: To what degree can Beyond Words help in-service geography teachers design and implement powerful instruction centered around historical photographs? Throughout Beyond Words the teachers demonstrated a spirit of open-mindedness and a willingness (...)
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  20.  28
    CHARLES W. J. WITHERS, Geography, Science and National Identity: Scotland since 1520. Cambridge Studies in Historical Geography, 33. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2001. Pp. xvii+310. ISBN 0-521-64202-7. £45.00. [REVIEW]M. D. Eddy - 2003 - British Journal for the History of Science 36 (1):87-127.
  21.  27
    Byzantium and the Arabs in Sixth Century, Vol. 2, Part 1: Toponymy, Monuments, Historical Geography and Frontier Studies. [REVIEW]Walter E. Kaegi & Irfan Shahid - 2003 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 123 (2):461.
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  22.  25
    Geographies of the Mind: Essays in Historical Geosophy in Honor of John Kirtland Wright. David Lowenthal, Martyn J. Bowden.John Leighly - 1977 - Isis 68 (2):309-310.
  23.  61
    Compendia Rerum Iudaicarum ad Novum Testamentum. Section One: The Jewish People in the First Century: Vols I-lI: Historical Geography, Political History, Social, Cultural and Religious Life and Institutions, edited by S. Safrai and M. Stern, in co-operation with D. Flusser and W. C. van Unnik. [REVIEW]Prosper Grech - 1978 - Augustinianum 18 (2):397-398.
  24.  39
    A School Atlas of Ancient History. Thirty-three maps and plans, printed in colours, with plans of cities in black and white, and notes on historical geography. W. and K. Johnston, 1912. 2s. net. [REVIEW] G. - 1915 - The Classical Review 29 (4):126-126.
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  25. Edited volumes-medical geography in historical perspective.Nicolaas A. Rupke - 2002 - History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences 24 (2):346-346.
     
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  26.  65
    (1 other version)Geography and moral philosophy: Some common ground.David M. Smith - 1998 - Philosophy and Geography 1 (1):7 – 33.
    There is an awakening of interest in links between geography and moral philosophy, or ethics. This paper reviews a range of issues where common ground might be found on this new disciplinary interface. These issues include the historical geography of moralities, the notion of moral geographies, inclusion and exclusion in the context of the bounding of spaces, and the moral significance of distance and proximity, as well as the more familiar concern with social justice. Environmental ethics provides (...)
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  27.  57
    Beating space and time: Historical gay sex and queer cultural geographies of masculinities.Daniel Marshall - 2015 - Angelaki 20 (1):33-51.
    :This article focuses on historical queer cultural geographies of masculinities and to do so it focuses on two cases/places. The first is an archival case/place: a partial assembly of documents of beats and their uses during and in the wake of Gay Liberation in Australia. The second is a literary case/place: Thomas Mann's Death in Venice, a canonical twentieth-century imbrication of male homosexuality and geography. This article will seek to rationalize the mobilization of these two asynchronous cases/places through (...)
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  28.  63
    Geographies of subjectivity, pan-Islam and muslim separatism: Muhammad Iqbal and selfhood.Javed Majeed - 2007 - Modern Intellectual History 4 (1):145-161.
    This essay focuses on the oppositional politics expressed in the historical geography of the Persian and Urdu poetry of Muhammad Iqbal (1877–1938), showing how it emerges from, and breaks with, Urdu and Persian travelogues and poetry of the nineteenth century. It explores the complex relationships between the politics of Muslim separatism in South Asia and European imperialist discourses. There are two defining tensions within this politics. The first is between territorial nationalism and the global imaginings of religious identity, (...)
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  29. A metrological and historical perspective on the stadion and its use in ancient geography.Claudio Narduzzi - 2025 - Archive for History of Exact Sciences 79 (1):1-36.
    The stadion is the unit of length by which distances are reported in ancient Greek geographical sources. The itinerary indications in stadia can be found in several texts, but no specific unit values are given in the ancient geographers’ surviving works. However, the notion of a vaguely quantified, non-metrological itinerary unit is contradicted by the presence, since Hellenistic times, of road marker stones bearing distance indications along major ancient roads. The key assumption in this study is that, whatever the unit (...)
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  30.  27
    Studies in the Historical and Cultural Geography and Ethnography of GujeratEtched Beads in IndiaStone Age Cultures of Bellary.David G. Mandelbaum, Hasmukh D. Sankalia, Moreshwar Gangadhar Dikshit & Bendapudi Subbarao - 1950 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 70 (4):324.
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  31.  18
    Postcolonial geography confounds latitudinal trends in observed aggression and violence.Paul Roscoe - 2017 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 40:e94.
    To support their hypothesis, the authors point to an inverse correlation between latitude and the incidence of civil conflict and crime. This observation cannot be accepted as evidence for the hypothesis, because of a weighty confounding variable: the historical geography of colonialism and its effects on the fragility of nations.
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  32.  3
    The geography of uncertainty.Alessandro Ricci - 2023 - New York, NY: Routledge.
    This book outlines the characteristics and implications of a potential geography of uncertainty. In doing so, it analyses this concept in reference to both the origins of uncertainty in Early Modern Age as well as the current geopolitical situation. The book adopts an interdisciplinary approach to uncertainty, drawing on global perspectives and literature to define its meanings and characteristics. In order to develop a thorough and precise understanding of the geography of uncertainty a broad perspective is adopted, that (...)
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  33.  12
    Transition in Knowledge of Chinese Geography in Early Modern Europe: A Historical Investigation on Maps of China.Jingdong Yu - 2019 - Cultura 16 (2):45-65.
    During the 17th and 18th centuries, European investigations into Chinese geography underwent a process of change: firstly, from the wild imagination of the classical era to a natural perspective of modern trade, then historical interpretations of religious missionaries to the scientific mapping conducted by sovereign nation-states. This process not only prompted new production of maps, but also disseminated a large amount of geographical knowledge about China in massive publications. This has enriched the geographical vision of Chinese civilization while (...)
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  34.  35
    Geography of Religion.Liudmyla O. Fylypovych - 1998 - Ukrainian Religious Studies 8:48-55.
    The geography of religions is one of the religious sciences, which is intended to study the spatial pattern of the process of the origin and distribution of different religions, to give a modern religious map of the world and statistical data on the spread of different religions, to predict the prospects of changing confessions in the territorial configuration of their activities. Within this science, the role of the natural factor in the emergence and distribution of religions of a certain (...)
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  35.  55
    Geography and revolution.David N. Livingstone & Charles W. J. Withers (eds.) - 2005 - Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
    A term with myriad associations, revolution is commonly understood in its intellectual, historical, and sociopolitical contexts. Until now, almost no attention has been paid to revolution and questions of geography. Geography and Revolution examines the ways that place and space matter in a variety of revolutionary situations. David N. Livingstone and Charles W. J. Withers assemble a set of essays that are themselves revolutionary in uncovering not only the geography of revolutions but the role of (...) in revolutions. Here, scientific revolutions—Copernican, Newtonian, and Darwinian—ordinarily thought of as placeless, are revealed to be rooted in specific sites and spaces. Technical revolutions—the advent of print, time-keeping, and photography—emerge as inventions that transformed the world's order without homogenizing it. Political revolutions—in France, England, Germany, and the United States—are notable for their debates on the nature of political institutions and national identity. Gathering insight from geographers, historians, and historians of science, Geography and Revolution is an invitation to take the where as seriously as the who and the when in examining the nature, shape, and location of revolutions. (shrink)
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  36.  21
    Cinquante ans de géographie de la Grèce, d'Elisée Reclus à Jules Sion (1883-1934).Michel Sivignon - 1999 - Bulletin de Correspondance Hellénique 123 (1):227-243.
    French geographers have been interested in the evolution of contemporary Greece since the beginnings of scientific geography at the end of the 19th century. They progressively distanced themselves from the traditional historical geography. Elisée Reclus is still over anxious to detect ancient Greece in contemporary descriptions. Paul Vidal de la Blache, who began his career as an epigraphist in Athens, became the founder of the French School of geography, without, however, Greece ever playing an important part (...)
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  37.  21
    NICOLAAS A. RUPKE , Medical Geography in Historical Perspective. Medical History, Supplement 20. London: Wellcome Trust Centre for the History of Medicine at UCL, 2000. Pp. xii+227. ISBN 0-85484-072-9. £32.00, $50.00. [REVIEW]Sean Quinlan - 2002 - British Journal for the History of Science 35 (4):475-485.
  38. The relations bwetween geography and history reconsidered.Leonard Guelke - 1997 - History and Theory 36 (2):191–234.
    The ideas of Sauer, Darby, Clark, and Meinig have had a formative influence on the making of modern Anglo-American historical geography. These scholars emphasized the spatial- and place-focused orientation of geography, contrasting it with history's concern with time, the past, and change. Historical geography was conceived as combining the spatial interests of geography with the temporal interest of history, creating a field concerned with changing spatial patterns and landscapes. This idea of historical (...) avoided issues in the philosophy of history by making the historical geographer a kind of spectator to external changes in the ways things were ordered and arranged on the face of the earth. This "natural history" view of historical geography failed to deal with history conceived as an autonomous mode of understanding in which the scholar's task is to understand human activity as an embodiment of thought. Historical geography is more adequately conceived as a Collingwoodian-type historical discipline, in which the task of the historical geographer is aimed at rethinking and displaying the thought of historical agents as their actions relate to the physical environment. The traditional subject matter of historical geography is not thereby redefined, but a change in the way geography is seen in its relation to history is necessitated. (shrink)
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  39.  7
    Five Classics of Fengshui: Chinese Spiritual Geography in Historical and Environmental Perspective.Michael John Paton - 2013 - Brill.
    In Five Classics of Fengshui Michael Paton traces the theoretical development of this form of spiritual geography through full translations of major texts: the Burial Classic of Qing Wu , Book of Burial , Yellow Emperor’s Classic of House Siting , Twenty Four Difficult Problems , and Water Dragon Classic.
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  40.  41
    Locating a geography of nursing: space, place and the progress of geographical thought.Gavin J. Andrews - 2003 - Nursing Philosophy 4 (3):231-248.
    Although traditionally, nursing research has paid little attention to geographical approaches, recent years have witnessed some initial research interest in the dynamic between nursing, space and place. Such research potentially represents the foundations of what may be termed a ‘geography of nursing’. Although, to date, some novel and valuable perspectives have been gained into the spatial features of nursing, no consideration has been given to the theoretical development of, and basis for, a geography of nursing. Furthermore, no consideration (...)
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  41.  25
    Utopian Geographies and the Early English Novel by Jason H. Pearl.Antonis Balasopoulos - 2016 - Utopian Studies 27 (3):640-645.
    Despite its relatively small size, Jason Pearl’s Utopian Geographies and the Early English Novel aspires to tell a big and quite compelling story. This story is framed by the transition, followed here with a particular focus on English literature, from utopias, travel-framed descriptions of avowedly better social, political, and cultural arrangements and institutions, to euchronias, visions of improved worlds made possible by the secular course of historical progress. As it turns out—at least that is the story Pearl wishes to (...)
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  42.  14
    The geography of meanings: psychoanalytic perspectives on place, space, land, and dislocation.Maria Teresa Savio Hooke & Salman Akhtar (eds.) - 2007 - London: International Psychoanalytical Association.
    This book is a multi-faceted attempt to understand the psychological mysteries of land, space, native cultures, changing eras, and geographical dislocation. It shows us that many remote and seemingly peaceful areas of the world have their own dark and silent pasts in which their original inhabitants were often brutally wiped out. Weaving history, geography, myth, philosophy, and psychoanalysis together, this book tries to understand why such atrocities were committed, how those subjected to these 'crimes' might have perceived them, and (...)
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  43. On the dialogue between humanism and historical materialism in geography.Andrew Sayer - 1989 - In Audrey Lynn Kobayashi & Suzanne Mackenzie (eds.), Remaking human geography. Boston: Unwin Hyman. pp. 206--226.
     
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  44.  16
    Remaking human geography.Audrey Lynn Kobayashi & Suzanne Mackenzie (eds.) - 1989 - Boston: Unwin Hyman.
    These essays are concerned with developing a dialogue between humanism and historical materialism in human geography, and to demonstrate the creative tension which emerges through the mediation of their different frames of reference.
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  45. Guide to Russian Reference Books. Vol. II. History Auxiliary Historical Sciences, Ethnography, and Geography.Karol Maichel & J. S. G. Simmons - 1965 - Studies in Soviet Thought 5 (1):103-104.
     
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  46.  73
    Geography as the eye of enlightenment historiography: Robert J. Mayhew.Robert J. Mayhew - 2010 - Modern Intellectual History 7 (3):611-627.
    Whilst Edward Gibbon's Memoirs of My Life comprise a notoriously complex document of autobiographical artifice, there is no reason to question the honesty of its revelation of his attitudes to geography and its relationship to the historian's craft. Writing of his boyhood before going up to Oxford, Gibbon commented that his vague and multifarious reading could not teach me to think, to write, or to act; and the only principle, that darted a ray of light into the indigested chaos, (...)
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  47. GEOGRAPHY, ASSIMILATION, AND DIALOGUE: Universalism and Particularism in Central-European Thought.H. G. Callaway - manuscript
    There are many advantages and disadvantages to central locations. These have shown themselves in the long course of European history. In times of peace, there are important economic and cultural advantages (to illustrate: the present area of the Czech Republic was the richest country in Europe between the two World Wars). There are cross-currents of trade and culture in central Europe of great advantage. For, cultural cross-currents represent a potential benefit in comprehension and cultural growth. But under threat of large-scale (...)
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  48.  61
    Negotiating nature: Colonial geographies and environmental politics in the Pacific northwest.David A. Rossiter - 2008 - Ethics, Place and Environment 11 (2):113 – 128.
    Noting tension between environmental and aboriginal politics in the Pacific Northwest of North America, this paper explores the historical-geographic constitution of both the Great Bear Rainforest conflict in British Columbia and the Makah whaling conflict in Washington State. By highlighting the uneven production of territoriality between each jurisdiction and tracing these differences though the historical-geographic imaginations of environmental activists and writers of letters to editors of metropolitan newspapers, the paper argues that situated geographies of colonialism inform interactions between (...)
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  49.  31
    Mapping science's imagined community: geography as a Republic of Letters, 1600–1800.Robert Mayhew - 2005 - British Journal for the History of Science 38 (1):73-92.
    This paper extends discussions of the sociology of the early modern scientific community by paying particular attention to the geography of that community. The paper approaches the issue in terms of the scientific community's self image as a Republic of Letters. Detailed analysis of patterns of citation in two British geography books is used to map the ‘imagined community’ of geographers from the late Renaissance to the age of Enlightenment. What were the geographical origins of authors cited in (...)
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  50.  21
    Mata Tirtha: a Sacred Geography.Deepak Shimkhada - 2019 - Journal of Dharma Studies 2 (1):31-39.
    Tucked away in the foothill of a mountain in the Kathmandu Valley, Mātā Tirtha defies the description of a sacred tirtha. It is neither situated between the confluences of two rivers nor is it dedicated to the God Viṣṇu, as are most of the tirthas in India. And yet, Mātā Tirtha continues to become popular within the valley among citizens of all faiths. What is unique about Mātā Tirtha? This paper sets out to trace its origins by examining its history, (...)
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