..........
Dil Araştırmaları
Dîvânü
Sayı: 15 Güz 2014, 39-51
ss. Lügati’t-Türk’te Geçen Her Kelime Türkçe Kökenli midir?
On the Term dáguān 達官 of Chinese
Sources on the Early Turkic History
(in View of the One Hypothesis of
İbrahim Kafesoğlu)
Vladimir Tishin*
1
Abstract: The article deals with the consideration of the
occurrences of the term dáguān 達官 in Chinese sources
of Tang period. The author examines the hypothesis of the
Turkish scholar İbrahim Kafesoğlu, linking the term with
the Old Turkic word toyğun in the meaning ‘members of the
national assembly’.
Key words: toy, kurultay, toyğun, Old Turkic, runic, Chinese,
transcription, etymology
Eski Türk Tarihî Hakkındaki Çince
Kaynaklarda Geçen dáguān 達官
Terimi Üzerine
Özet: Bu çalışmada Tang dönemindeki kaynaklarda
dáguān 達官 terimi incelenmiştir. Yazar, Türk âlimi İbrahim
Kafesoğlu’nun bir hipotezi olan bu terimi Eski Türkçede
‘millet meclisi üyesi’ anlamındaki toyğun kelimesine
bağlayan, fikri tartışmıştır.
Anahtar sözcükler: toy, kurultay, toyğun, Eski Türkçe, runik,
Çinçe, transkripsiyon, etimoloji
The first edition of the fundamental work on Turkic history of Pre-Islamic
period “Türk Millî Kültürü” of Prof. İbrahim Kafesoğlu was published in 1977,
since then has been reprinted several times (1982; 1984; 1997, etc.), and hasn’t
lost its importance until now. It’s hardly an exaggeration to say that the book has
become the handbook for many Turkish scholars of the following generations.
There were a lot of interesting ideas, was borrowed then into works of other
authors, including, moreover, also original but often questionable hypotheses
P.G., Department of the History of the Orient, The Institute of Oriental Studies of the Russian Academy of Sciences,
tihij-511@mail.ru........
*
39
Vladimir Tishin
based on weak arguments.
Among the similar ideas took hold in works of Turkish scholars it should
to be marked the assumption of the identity of the combination dáguān 達
官 mentioned in Chinese historical sources and the Old Turkic term toyğun
recorded in the Inscription of Kül Tegin, meant the members of the national
assembly (“Devlet meclisi” or “Millet meclisi”) (Kafesoğlu 1997: 260–263).
This statement can be found in the works of many Turkish authors now (Donuk
1988: 40 (note 318), 52; Taşağıl 2003a: 51, 96 (note 559); Taşağıl 2003b: 22;
Çayır, Şahin 2007: 1608–1609; Çakır 2007: 117; Seyitdanlıoğlu 2009: 5–6).
In his work İbrahim Kafesoğlu based on the following items.
Firstly, in different sources is mentioned such political institution as the
meeting (or congress) of the nobility in the Early Turkic states, later known as
toy, identical to kurultay (xuriltai) of Mongols.
Secondly, it is the etymologization of the Old Turkic term toyğun from
the nominal stem toy with addition of plural suffix +ğun, as a result, with the
meaning ‘toy üyesi’.
Thirdly, it is the interpretation of the combination of Chinese characters
dáguān 達官 as the transcription of the Turkic toyğun.
All these positions can be discussed if we turn to the source material
directly.
Firstly, it’s known according to Chinese sources that there were some
assemblies of Early Turkic people, but, in general, it’s impossible to say
something certain about the participants of these assemblies.
So, according the data on Eastern Turks, qaghan and guìrén 貴人
‘noblemen’ every year gathered to the sacrifice in the cave of their ancestors, and
“in the middle of the fifth decade of a month” qaghan “convoked other people”
(jí tārén 集他人) to the sacrifice to the Heaven, near the river (Zhou shu: juan 50:
6a. Cf.: Bichurin 1950: 230–231; Julien 1864: 335; Parker 1899: 122–123; Parker
1900a: 166; Pelliot 1929: 212, 213–214; Liu Mau-tsai 1958: 10; Liu Maotsai 2002:
22; Taşağıl 2003a: 98, 113; Koca 2002: 52). Western Turks had similar custom to
gather to the sacrifice, practicing it “in every fifth and every eighth month”, and
qaghan “every year sent an important dignitary (zhòngchén 重臣) to the cave was
the dwelling their ancestors to sacrifice” (Sui shu: juan 84: 19b. Cf.: Bichurin
1950: 279; Chavannes 1903: 15; Taşağıl 2003a: 107).
According the Chinese calendar system, fifth month is the period of late
May–June, the third and eighth ones are respectively periods of late March–
April and late August–September. In this case it’s not so principal. Second and
40
On the Term dáguān 達官 of Chinese Sources on the Early Turkic History (in View of the One Hypothesis of İbrahim Kafesoğlu)
third dates are clear, because they might to correspond to the beginning and end
of the summer nomadic-pastoral season, respectively, when it was the necessary
for nomad chiefs to gather to consider their outstanding, first of all, economic
activities and the distribution of pasture lands. Because Early Turks, traditionally
calculating the time based on the effects of vegetation cycle (Bazin 1974: 55–56,
66–67, 87–88, 90–93, 143), about 586 A.D. adopted the Chinese calendar (Bazin
1974: 141–156), there is shouldn’t be a significant difference between this two
time scales (Bazin 1974: 144). The meeting of all the people to sacrifice to the
Heaven may be related to some sort of a holiday. Similar meetings, were both
in May and September, are also known related to the Xiōngnú 匈奴 (Kychanov
1997: 32–33; Kychanov 2010: 39–40; Kradin 2001: 212–214; Ögel 2002: 874–
875). In this connection, it is interesting the fact of the opposition in different
Turkic languages of meanings ‘spring’/ ‘summer’ for the lexeme yaz (with the
meaning ‘summer’ in languages of South areas of Turkic world, where such
semantic shift has been determined by the transhumance practiced by local
nomads) (Bazin 1974: 52), may be just found in “Divān-ı luġāt it-Türk” of
Maḥmūd al-Kāšġarī in the sense ‘the first half of the year’ (SIGTYa 1997: 73).
Relating to the election of the qaghan in Chinese sources are mentioned
guórén 国人, literally ‘people of the state’ (Sui shu: juan 84: 4a. Cf.: Bichurin
1950: 234; Julien 1864: 354–355; Parker 1900b: 2; Chavannes 1903: 48; Tolstov
1938: 11; Tolstov 1948: 253 (dipnot 46); Liu Mau-tsai 1958: 44). In 594 to
the Chinese court was sent an emissary with gifts from all the chiefs of Turks
called in the source dàrén 大人, i.e. literally ‘great men’ (Sui shu: juan 84: 13b).
Originally: tūjué bùluò dàrén 突厥部落大人 ‘great men of Turkic race’ (Сf.:
Bichurin 1950: 239–240; Julien 1864: 509; Parker 1900с: 70; Liu Mau-tsai 1958:
56, 103; Liu Maotsai 2002: 55; Taşağıl 2003a: 52, 118). According to I. Ecsedy
these both bùluò dàrén 部落大人 and guìrén 貴人 should be considered as
leaders of different social units less than a tribe (Ecsedy 1977: 10).
The materials of Turkic folklore are able to provide contradictory data.
For example, in the Oğuz Kağan Destanı Oğuz Kağan had convoked to the toy
his retainers (nöker) and all his subject people (il kün), in contrast to the Kitab-i
Dedem Korkut, where only Oghuz nobles, beg’s, had been invited by khan to the
toy (See: Duymaz 2005: 42). In this regard, it is noteworthy that the primary for
the term tōy, as it may be seen basing on the Old Uygur and Xākāni materials, is
the meaning ‘camp’, in the sense of a set of tents, then the whole congregation
of the people in it (EDT: 566–567; TMN III: 354; VEWT: 484). Cf., however,
other etymology: < toy- < tod- ‘become satiated, full’ (TKBS II: 921. See also:
SIGTYa 1997: 309–310; SIGTYa 2006: 560).
But that hypothesis may be weakened in point of view of historical
phonetics: for the Old Turkic is known a just phonetic form tod-; only in more
41
Vladimir Tishin
later sources is the reflection of phoneme /d/ found in Old Turkic are realized as
/y/ (EDT: 451). In all Turkic languages the term toy is present in similar phonetic
form, and therefore would be hard to treat the nominal form toy in the connection
with the verb toy- are only its homonym. On the other hand, the form with the
long vowel needs to be explained.
Some scholars are convinced of the similarity of functions of the toy of
Turk and the xuriltai of Mongols, which were viewed by them as oldest public
institutions of these nations (Ceylan 1997: 2 ff.; Seyitdanlıoğlu 2009: 2 ff.), in
addition, it is often emphasized the difference between these institutions that
such meetings of Mongols were alleged purely aristocratic, while ones of Turks
were democratic (Ögel 2002: 884; Donuk 2011: 2–8).
But what was xuriltai? Originally “it was nor a diet (seym), nor a
parliament; it was the family council of clansmen, where they had to discuss
their accidental plans, and where had took a part only willing and interested
ones” (Vladimirtsov 2002: 375); later, in the period of united Mongol empire,
it had became the meeting of members of the royal family, their relatives and
nobility (Vladimirtsov 2002: 411–412). It probably should be discussed the
possibility of some social evolution in different cases in Turkic history, too.
Is it right, from a methodological point of view, in both cases to characterize
these institutions without the chronological dynamics? All conclusions should be
made not on the basis of mechanical extrapolations, but on the basis of concrete
historical evidences.
Secondly, all cases of the mention in Old Turkic sources of the term
toyğun are devoid of context, and, so, that fact makes it impossible to interpret
it thoroughly. There are, in addition, three different, in view of orthography,
forms. On the North-Eastern site of the Kül Tegin inscription it occurs in the
(KT NE). In other fragment there, on the South-Eastern site,
form toyğun
(KT SE). On
it is found being in its casal form tayğun-ïŋïzda
(KT
the South-Western site of same inscription it also can be read toyğut
SW), being the possible plural form (suffix +t).
V. Thomsen read the term as tajγun1 and interpreted it as a title adopted
from Chinese (‘les grands’), not associating with the occurring above tojγun
. According to him, that form originated from the Chin. tai [tài / dà 大]
‘grand’ with addition of the plural suffix -γun, -gün (Thomsen 1896: 120, 177
n. 84), cf.: “taygunlar”, “büyükler” (Aydın 2004: 79). But this point was objected
to by P. M. Melioranskiy, who had seen in both cases the reading тоiҕун,
1
42
Here and later using the terms from cited work we keep the original writing of authors.
On the Term dáguān 達官 of Chinese Sources on the Early Turkic History (in View of the One Hypothesis of İbrahim Kafesoğlu)
connecting them with the same name of a title (Melioranskiy 1899: 78, 136),
which, however, is also unlikely. W. Radloff had also read in both cases тоiҕун
(Radloff 1897: 155, 156; Radlov, Melioranskiy 1897: 30, 31). In the Glossary in
his work of 1897 he noted about туiҕун, тоiҕун ‘eine Würde’ (Radloff 1897:
176), and in his fundamental “Wörterbuch”, in 1905, he put туiҕун
‘eine
Würde’, too (Radloff VWTD III 2: 1424). Then, H. Namık (Orkun) had also
connected these two forms to each other, deriving them from the Chin. tai-kuan
[tài(/ dà)guān 大官] (Orkun 1994: 859, 868).
H. Vámbéry was the first to note that tujgun might be a form of tudun,
originated from the tud ‘merken, fühlen, wissen’ with suffix -gun, -gin. Because
in Chagatai Turkic it has been the lexeme tujgun ‘Falke’, in the similar meaning
this word was able to be used as a figurative expression with the meaning ‘Held’
(Vámbéry 1898: 85). But it is certainly wrong.
The writing form with the labial vowel, separately from the other form,
had been considered there by W. Bang (Bang 1898: 41), S. E. Malov. (Malov
1951: 431), L. Yu. Tuguševa (DTS: 572), T. Tekin (Tekin 1968: 386; Tekin 1998:
112; Tekin 2003: 256) and as it seems following him V. Rybatzki (Rybatzki
2006: 82). A. von Gabain translated the both variants as ‘Würdenträger (?)’
(Gabain 1950: 339, 343). Sir G. Clauson had considered tayğun / toyğun as a title
adopted from Chinese (EDT: 568) or Toyğun – as a personal name (EDT: 134).
V. Rybatzki (Rybatzki 2006: 348, 558–559) also follows the point of Chinese
origin of that title.
In this connection it may be rather interesting that fact, that the lexeme
tuygun being a part of names among the Sakha Turkic (Yakut) people has the
meaning ‘great’, ‘excellent’, compared by E. G. Pekarskiy with the Radloff’s
тyiҕун (Okladnikov 1947: 103–104). Cf. also: VEWT: 484, where Old Turkic
tojγun ‘Würdenträger’ is compared also with Sakha Turkic tujgun, tujugun
‘otlichnyi, prevoskhodnyi (byk, kon’)’, i.e. ‘great, excellent (bull, horse)’.
T. Tekin interpreted the form tayγun as plural. form of tay in ‘colts, young
horses; (fig.) sons’, i.e. the figurative expression using by qaghan to describe
his sons (Tekin 1968: 377, 121, 123). Cf. also: “tay (gibi olan oğul)larınız” < tay
“tay, at yavrusu” (Tekin 1998: 111, 52; Tekin 2003: 102). Cf. in “Divān” of
Maĥmūd al-Kāšġarī: tay ‘one- or two-years-old foal’ (MK III: 158; DTS: 527;
EDT: 568; MK/Dankoff III: 125; DLT: 858). Cf. also lexeme taj in personal
names (SIGTYa 1997: 646–647; SIGTYa 2006: 721). T. Gülensoy also noted
tayġun ‘oğullar’ (TKBS I: 522).
C. Kaya proposed a new reading ataygun with the translation ‘yavrular,
evlatlar, çocuklar’ (Kaya 1998; Aydın 2005: 48). M. Erdal has translated tayagun-uŋuz as ‘your colts’ (Erdal 2004: 160). But he has also noticed that it is
43
Vladimir Tishin
more correct to speak about the form of plural suffix +(A)gU+(n), but not +gUn
(Erdal 2004: 160 (note 276)). This remark matters much.
S. Tezcan interpreted the term in the meaning of ‘hunting bird, falcon’
(Tezcan 2010: 279–280). But the similar word is known only in forms with the
labial vowel.
(IB, IV. Cf.:
There is the form from the Irk Bitig in form toγan
Orkun 1994: 266, 866; Malov 1951: 80, 85, 431; DTS: 571; EDT: 470; Tekin
1993: 1, 3, [facsim.] 8; also see: VEWT: 483; SIGTYa 1997: 651; SIGTYa 2006:
703, presented toγan ~ tuγan for the personal names), and other, the form tojγan
in the later periods too, that is closer to the original < toy+gan (Erdal 1991: 90).
These forms are related to the different deriving stems (ESTYa 1980: 247–248.
Сf., however, an attempt of etymology from Proto-Altaic protoform: SIGTYa
1997: 169–170). It still should be discussed in future.
S. G. Klyashtorny had read in the Terkhin (Tariat) inscription the fragment:
…toquz-yüz-är bašï-toyqan uluγ-tarqan buquγ-bïŋa ‘…Regiment of the head of nine
hundred warriors, toygan (commander of the khan’s residence) Uluγ Tarqan
Buquγ’ (Terkh W, 8; Cf.: Kljaštornyi 1980: 91, 93; Klyashtorny 1982: 342,
344; Kljaštornyi 2006: 134, 137). Apparently, the same term was noted by E. I.
Kychanov as toykan with the similar meaning (Kychanov 1997: 291; Kychanov
2010: 330). T. Tekin gave in this case a reading *tuyqun as the original form
for tuyγun with the meaning ‘a kind of white falcon; have used attributive for
heroes and youths’ (Tekin 1983: 46, 49, 67). S. Gömeç believes Toygun-Taygun
of the Kül Tegin inscription is a title, might be compared with the personal name
Tokuzyüz Erbaşı Toykun Ulug Tarkan of Terkhin (Tariat) inscription (Gömeç
2000: 941). Cf.: Tokuz yüz er başı toykun ulug tarkan (Gömeç 1997: 75). Cf. also
the reading given by Akio Katayama: /////////////// # toquz jüz är bašï tuyqun uluš
tarqan buquγ bïŋa ‘/////// **** is Tuyqun Uluγ Tarqan Buquγ bïŋa, a leader of
nine hundred soldiers’ (Katayama 1999: 170, 172). V. Rybatzki citing this work,
however, noticed the writing toyqan (Rybatzki 2006: 425). In the new edition of
translation by S. G. Kljaštornyi is given the reading tujqan in the context ‘…the
head of nine hundred warriors Tujqan’, i.e. now it is a personal name in his view
(Kljaštornyi 2010: 38, 42).
This aspect needs to become the object of the special research. It is clear
that, most likely, in these texts, it should be told about some kind of title or
maybe personal name. But it is impossible to try to find there that etymology,
preferred by İ. Kafesoğlu.
Thirdly, as regard to the Turkic tayğun and Chinese dáguān 達官 in the
context of their correlation, there are also certain difficulties.
44
On the Term dáguān 達官 of Chinese Sources on the Early Turkic History (in View of the One Hypothesis of İbrahim Kafesoğlu)
The fact, the Chinese combination, as far as we know, is found in so-called
fragment “On ranks and titles [of Turks]” first mentioned in 197-th volume of
the historical work Tōng diǎn 通典 composed to 801 A.D. there is the phrase:
yòu wèi lǎo wèi gēlì gù yǒu gēlì dáguān 又謂老為哥利故有哥利達官 ‘Also it
is saying about old men [called] gēlì, then there are gēlì dáguān’ (Tong dian:
juan 197: 7a. Cf.: Liu Mau-tsai 1958: 498; Liu Maotsai 2002: 16; Taşağıl 2003a:
96; Zuev 1998: 154; Zuev 2002: 280). In another variant this phrase had been put
into Cè fǔ yuán guī 冊府元龜 (of 1013 A.D.): wèi lǎo wèi gēlì gùyǒu dáguān 謂
老為哥利故有達官 ‘It is saying about old men [called] gēlì, then there are
dáguān’ (Ce fu yuan gui: juan 962: 12b. Cf. translation of A. Taşağıl: ‘Yaşlı
olanlara “agabey ke-li” derler. Bunun için Ta-kuan vardır ki’ (Taşağıl 2003a:
114), and his commentary: “Aslı T’un Tien’deki gibi Ke-li olmalıdır” (Taşağıl
2003a: 114 (note 591)).
Already Liu Mau-tsai, commenting on the fragment of Tōng diǎn 通典,
had noted that dáguān 達官 might to be either an attempt of phonetic transcription
of the word tarkhan, like the dágān 達干, or only marked a high-ranking official
(Liu Mau-tsai 1958: 498; Liu Maotsai 2002: 16). E. G. Pulleyblank had written
that in the Tang period the Turkic title tarqan transcribed by Chinese as dágān 達
干 (< *dat-kan) or dáguān 達官 (< *dat-kwan) (Pulleyblank 1962: 257). Later
Yu. A. Zuev had determined the combination dáguān 達官 as the transcription
of the Turkic title tarqan (Zuev 1998: 155–156; Zuev 2002: 282).
It should be noted that W. Eberhard had wrote that dáguān 達官 (> t’ât
kwân) could not be a transcription of the form tarkan, but only tarkhan
(Eberhard 1945: 322–323). But İ. Kafesoğlu had mentioned this work only in
view of argumentation the point of the term dáguān 達官 had a wider meaning,
including dágān 達干 (< tarkan)’s among other members of toy. In addition, it
is thought important to state that according to the last variant of system of E. G.
Pulleyblank the reading dáguān 達官 is reconstructed for Early Middle Chinese
only as *dәjh kwan (Pulleyblank 1991: 299, 113). According the system of S.
A. Starostin2 for the Middle Chinese it should be reading *dât/ thât kwân. The
labialization shown by both these reconstructions of pronunciation of second
character creates some difficulties for understanding it as the transcription of
origin form /kan/.
In the “A Dictionary of Loan Words and Hybrid Words in Chinese”
scheduled by group Chinese linguists, for the word tarqan is given only the
transcription dágān 达干 (İnayet 2006: 83; İnayet 2008: 280). In Chinese texts
of period of Tang dynasty for the reproduction of the term tarqan had been using
the combination dágān 達干 (Hirth 1899: 6). It was of the main arguments
2 In this matter we relied on the database of the project “Tower of Babel”, on the site www.starling.rinet.ru.
45
Vladimir Tishin
of İ. Kafesoğlu that fact (Kafesoğlu 1997: 262–263 (note 269)), although
E. Chavannes had just noticed the emergence of the writing dáguān 達官 in
the same fragments of late-Tang sources, came from earlier sources (Chavannes
1904: 19 (n. 3)). Due to the work of A. Taşağıl had proper consistently transcribed
dáguān 達官 as ‘toygun’ and dágān 達干 as ‘tarkan’ it is the possibility for
the one important observation: are known in other sources such names as
Dōutǎ dágān 都塔達干 (Tou-t’a Tarkan) and Bùshī dágān 步失達干 (Pu-shih
Tarkan) (Taşağıl 1999: 73, 74) presented in the Tōng diǎn 通典 in forms Dōutǎ
dáguān 都塔達官 (Tou-t’a Ta-kuan (Toygun)) and Bùshī dáguān 步失達官
(Pu-shih Ta-kuan (Toygun)), respectively (Taşağıl 1999: 97. See: Tong dian:
juan 199: 1079а, in: Taşağıl 1999: [Belgeler] 13). Apparently, such substitution
of terms are reflected caused by subjective factors.
Most likely, there is no the necessary to look anything transcription
for the combination dáguān 達官. The first symbol dá 達 is characterized by
one of meanings as ‘wise, sophisticate, erudite’ (BKRS IV: 105); the second
one, guān 官, just means ‘officer; official (person); clerk; mandarin, the rank’,
‘position, title; rank’, etc. (BKRS II: 543). Cf., for example, other passage of the
Chinese source, listed the higher ranks of Turks, all determined as dàguān 大
官, i.e. literally ‘higher ranks’ (Tong dian: juan 197: 1b). Cf. also opinion of
E. I. Kychanov (Kychanov 1997: 102–103; Kychanov 2010: 123), according
to which, however, dàguān 大官 was compared with tarqans. Then the author
noticed the derivation of the Turkic word tarqan, mentioning it in the transcription
as dágān 達干, from the Chinese dàguān 大官 ‘great official’ (Kychanov 1997:
124; Kychanov 2010: 145). It seems to be misleading.
It may, therefore, be saying that old men (lǎo 老), called gēlì 哥利, which
had been correctly linked by Yu.A. Zuev (Zuev 1998: 155; Zuev 2002: 281–282)
with the Old Turkiс term qarï ‘old’ (DTS: 426; EDT: 644; Aydarov 1971: 121,
(T II E, 6 / 56), or casal qarï-p
(KČ W, 3)), that were
362), cf.: qarï
considered dáguān 達官, i.e. ‘wise officials’. So, later one of such wise old
men, famous Tonyukuk, being the advisor of qaghan (ajγučı) (Aydın 2008: 51),
and having some time a rank of a commander-in-chief, apa tarqan (> Chin. ābō
dágān 阿波達干) (Hirth 1899: 56), had played a critical role in the restoring of
the sovereignty of Turkic Qaghanate in the late 7th – early 8th centuries.
Abbreviations
BKRS II
BKRS IV
Ce fu yuan gui
DLT
DTS
46
Oshanin 1982
Oshanin 1984
Wáng Qīnruò 王欽若 2005
Maĥmūd al-Kāšġarī 2005
Nadelyaev etc. 1969
On the Term dáguān 達官 of Chinese Sources on the Early Turkic History (in View of the One Hypothesis of İbrahim Kafesoğlu)
EDT
ESTYA 1980
IB
KT NE
KT SE
KT SW
KČ W
MK III
MK/Dankoff III
Radloff VWTD III 2
SIGTYa 1997
SIGTYa 2006
Sui shu
T II E
Terkh W
TKBS
TMN III
Tong dian
Zhou shu
VEWT
Clauson 1972
Sevortyan 1980
Ïrq Bitig (Book of Omens)
Kül Tegin inscription, north-eastern site
Kül Tegin inscription, south-eastern site
Kül Tegin inscription, south-western site
Küli Čor inscription, western site
Atalay 1985
Mahmūd al-Kāšγarī 1985
Radlov 1905
Tenišev 1997
Tenišev, Dybo 2006
Wèi Zhēng 魏徴 2005
Tonyukuk inscription, eastern site of second monument
Terkhin (Tariat) inscription, western site
Gülensoy 2007
Doerfer 1967
Dù Yòu 杜佑 2005
Lìnghú Défēn 令狐德芬 2005
Räsänen 1969
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