| CRISTO RAUL.ORG ' | 
|  | THE UNIVERSAL HISTORY OF CHRISTIANITY |  | 
| FROM JUSTINIAN TO LUTHER. AD 518-1517CHAPTER VI.
              CATHOLICISM AND NATIONALISM IN THE NINTH CENTURY
          
           THE empire of Charlemagne had included the countries
          which are now called France, Switzerland, Belgium, Holland, together with part
          of northern Spain and more than half of Italy. And the conquest of Saxony
          carried the Frankish frontier quite up to the Elbe and the country of the
          Slavonic Wends. Charlemagne died in 814 and his immediate descendants had not
          the requisite ability for holding together countries inhabited by such
          different races. In 83o the empire was tottering. By 888 Italy had been severed
          from Frankish rule. One considerable stretch of territory round Besançon formed
          Burgundy, and another included the strongly Latinized country of Provence, both
          separated from northern France. Burgundy itself became divided into two
          distinct kingdoms. The rest of Charlemagne's territory broke up naturally into
          Western Francia and Eastern Francia, that is, France on the one hand, and on
          the other hand a great part of Germany, of which Mainz was nearly the centre.
           In the western kingdom the language was a corrupted
          Latin, the Romance which was the forerunner of French. In the eastern kingdom a
          Teutonic language was spoken, the forerunner of German. The oaths taken at
          Strasbourg in 842 by the kings Louis the German and Charles the Bald, grandsons
          of Charlemagne, have been preserved, and form a precious monument of the two
          languages as they were spoken in the ninth century. From that time forward the
          idea of one great international empire recedes into the background and is
          replaced by an increased attachment to race and country.
           The crumbling of the Empire and the extension of the
          Christian faith among the Teutonic races had profound results which can be seen
          at the end of the Middle Ages and lasted until the most recent times. The words
          'Ultramontanism', 'Gallicanism', and 'Anglicanism' are modern enough, but they
          all represent principles and policies which were actively supported in the
          seventh, eighth, and ninth centuries. There was the attempt to bring all
          Christendom under the immediate power of the Pope; there was the wide growth of
          racial or, more strictly speaking, territorial Churches, under powerful
          archbishops, and there remained in the British Isles forms of an independent
          Catholicism, stunted in some directions, highly developed in others, and
          isolated from the rest of the Christian world. With this exception and that of
          southern Italy and part of Spain, the whole of the Christian West was both
          Catholic and touched by Frankish influence. It was also Roman in doctrine and
          culture. But in government and discipline it was greatly affected by its
          surroundings, and it was impossible that questions of government should be
          severed from the questions as to who had the right to govern—Pope or episcopate
          or civil ruler.
           When the Merovingian and Carolingian monarchs, and, we
          may add, the kings in England, allied themselves with the Church, they expected
          that the Church would help them. This expectation was strengthened by their
          knowledge that the Church owned vast and increasing landed estates. The Church
          had become a great landlord, and the clergy were better educated than the laity
          and possessed the requisite skill for deriving profit from their estates. The
          clergy had in principle to submit to the rules of civil justice, pay taxes, and
          provide military support. If they were exempted, it was due to royal favor. And
          no bishoprics, abbeys, and parishes could exist in troublous times without
          state protection. The Church needed the king and the king needed some of the
          wealth and intelligence of the Church.
           Meanwhile the spread of Christianity among the
          non-Germanic races gave to the emperors, men of German race, fresh
          opportunities for the increase of their power, both ecclesiastical and civil.
          They endeavored to unite these newly converted peoples under the rule of German
          metropolitans. Thus the archbishopric of Hamburg-Bremen was founded for the
          Scandinavians and the people of the Baltic provinces, that of Magdeburg for
          the Poles and northern Slays, that of Salzburg for the southern Slays and
          Avars. The union within the imperial Frankish Church and its union with the
          Lombard, Anglo-Saxon, and other Churches was a very real one, but it could not
          extinguish national aspirations and preferences. The Churches were both
          national and Catholic.
           But Rome on her part was striving to consolidate a
          greater and a closer union. If the principles of St. Leo and St. Gregory the
          Great were to be maintained and developed, the whole Church must be highly
          centralized in the hands of the Pope and the national elements strictly
          subordinated to the Roman. Archbishops and bishops were to derive all their
          authority from the Pope; bishops were to be judged by him alone or by his
          delegates; councils were to be destitute of validity unless they had his
          sanction. Such was the ideal. It was an ideal which in practice was modified or
          abandoned. But it was destined to revive and to become eventually accepted by
          millions of Christian people. Its triumph was in no small degree caused by the
          notorious literary work known as the False Decretals, although the principles
          of the work had been maintained before the book appeared.
           These False Decretals were published about 85o and
          probably written at Reims or Tours. The author, who assumed the name of
          Isidorus Mercator, rearranged a collection of papal decretals and canons of
          councils, and mixed them with fabrications which he put forward under the names
          of early bishops of Rome. The constant idea which underlies this strange
          collection is the absolute and universal supremacy of the Pope and the freedom
          of the bishops from the civil power, and what was equally important, from the
          arbitrary control of their archbishops or metropolitans. In this way the unity
          of the Church was to be secured in spite of the dissolution of the Empire, and
          the Pope was to exercise over the whole Christian world the office of guardian
          which had been exercised by the local Church in each Christian kingdom. This
          amazing document was quickly regarded as authentic and furnished the papacy
          with a valuable weapon of defence and aggression. The
          moment for using it, and the man, were both at hand.
           In Nicholas I (858-867) Rome had a pontiff of unusual
          force of character and strong convictions, and for a short time it seemed that
          the papacy would exercise all the influence that it had enjoyed in the days of
          Gregory the Great, and even extend it. He found himself in direct conflict with
          opposition from the highest quarters in Church and State, and maintained his
          ground with unflinching determination. Lothair II, the king from which Lotharingia, now Lorraine, takes its name, repudiated his
          wife, Theutberga, in order to marry his mistress,
          Waldrada. He tried to justify his conduct by bringing the gravest accusations
          against his wife. The charge was unproved, but the king's action was supported
          by councils held at Aix-la-Chapelle and Metz and by the Archbishops of Cologne
          and Trier. Nicholas summoned the case to Rome, condemned his own envoys for
          their weakness at Metz, and turned a deaf car to the prayers of Lothair and
          even to the representations of Theutberga, which he
          suspected to have been extorted by force. Waldrada was dismissed and Lothair
          had to be content with his injured spouse. In this affair, with which the
          monarchs Louis II, Louis the German, and Charles the Bald were all more or less
          concerned, the Pope acted as the supreme judge of the Christian world. And his
          success must be reckoned as one of the greatest triumphs ever won by papal
          firmness and diplomacy.
           Nicholas I was equally drastic in his dealings with
          John, Archbishop of Ravenna, who had seized properties belonging to other
          persons, both clerical and lay, and defied the Pope's authority. Nicholas went
          to Ravenna, heard the complaints of the people, and ordered that their goods
          should be restored.
           
           Hincmar, who became Archbishop of Reims in 844, was
          for nearly forty years afterwards a tower of strength for the religion of his
          country. He had been an austere monk of the abbey of Saint-Denis, and as
          archbishop he was still austere, a vigilant shepherd of his flock. He built a
          cathedral and a hospital, and founded an excellent school of calligraphy. With
          his deans, archdeacons, and regular synods he tried to sweep away abuses, and
          his courageous opposition to the royal adulterer, Lothair II, was a noble protest
          on behalf of Christian morality. His 'Life of St. Remigius' covered Reims with
          legendary glories and prepared the way for the future coronation of the kings
          of France in a later and more lovely cathedral church. In opposing the False
          Decretals and in objecting to the appointment of the Archbishop of Sens as
          Primate of the Gauls and Vicar Apostolic of the Pope, Hincmar showed a
          justifiable zeal for the rights of metropolitans. But he was not more
          scrupulous in defending the claims of Reims than others were in defending the
          claims of Rome; and though he has been compared with the Bossuet of a later
          age, his sense of justice was not united with Bossuet's sense of truth.
           The case of Hincmar serves to remind us that the power
          of the metropolitans, though seriously threatened by the policy and claims of
          Nicholas I, was at this period important and in some cases increasing. The
          organization of the Church was being steadily completed, a network of
          bishoprics was spreading in every direction, and these bishoprics were grouped
          in a federation of provinces, each under its own metropolitan. When a see
          became vacant, clergy and people asked the king for his consent to the nomination
          of a new bishop. Then a neighboring bishop, representing both the king and the
          metropolitan, arrived on the scene. Prayers and fasts were appointed, canons,
          archdeacons, representatives of the parochial clergy and the monks, with
          notable laymen, elected a new bishop, the crowd of laity giving their consent
          by acclamation. The bishop-elect then appeared before the king, who entrusted
          him with the administration of the goods of the Church if he were satisfied
          with the election. The people and the king being in agreement, the bishop-elect
          was examined by the bishops of the province convoked by the metropolitan. His
          character and his belief were narrowly scrutinized. If the result was
          satisfactory, he read a formula that contained the Creed, promised to obey his
          metropolitan, and was then consecrated by him. If the result was
          unsatisfactory, the metropolitan claimed the right to appoint a new bishop of
          his own choice.
           It was perhaps inevitable that the king should
          sometimes encroach upon the rights of others, and in 818 the hierarchy tried to
          obtain from Charlemagne's son and successor, Louis the Pious, a formal
          declaration of the rights of the clergy and the people in the election of their
          bishops. Another difficulty arose in connection with the fact that the
          bishop-elect had to take an oath of fidelity to the king when the king
          entrusted him with the temporal property of his see. Had the king only the
          right to protect, or also the right to dispose of, this ecclesiastical
          property? The question had hardly become a thorny question as yet, but it was
          destined to grow into one of serious magnitude in the eleventh century, and it
          left its mark upon the Church of England at the period of the Reformation.
               In addition to questions concerned with the Roman
          primacy, the ninth century witnessed theological discussions of great interest
          and importance.
           Paschasius Radbertus was for a time Abbot of Corbie near
          Amiens about 85o and died there about 870. He had an extensive knowledge of
          Greek theology as well as of the prevalent Augustinianism. He wrote
          commentaries on St. Matthew and the Lamentations of Jeremiah. But his most
          famous work was a treatise 'On the Body and the Blood of the Lord'. Paschasius repeats the teaching of St. Chrysostom to the
          effect that the centre of the sacrificial worship of
          Christians is in heaven, and he teaches that when the bread and wine are made
          to be the body and blood of Christ by the power of the Lord and of the Holy
          Ghost, they are uplifted to the heavenly sphere, offered by Christ as His own
          sacrifice, and given by Him to the communicants as supernatural food. While he
          maintains the spiritual character of the presence of Christ, he insists that
          the sacramental body of Christ is the very body born of Mary, and that when the
          bread and wine are consecrated they are wholly and substantially converted into
          the body and blood of Christ.
           The doctrine that the Eucharist is the same body as
          that which was born of the Virgin and suffered on the Cross, was opposed by
          Rabanus Maurus, who became Archbishop of Mainz in 847. But the difference
          between the two writers does not appear to be very deep. Rabanus Maurus held,
          like Paschasius, that the elements are really and
          spiritually changed into Christ's flesh and blood, but he desired to emphasize
          the difference between a natural and a supernatural presence, and supposed that
          the language of Paschasius did not do justice to that
          difference.
           Ratramnus (d. 868), a monk of Corbie like Paschasius,
          was also deeply involved in the Eucharistic controversy. His 'Book on the Body
          and Blood of the Lord' is of special interest to English students. It was
          certainly read in England in the tenth century, as it is reproduced in the
          teaching of Elfric, who became Abbot of Eynsham near
          Oxford in 1005. It was highly esteemed by Ridley and therefore had no little
          influence upon the course of the Reformation in this country. It is not easily
          understood, and cannot be definitely claimed for the side of Calvin, still less
          of Zwingli. But Ratramnus unquestionably teaches that
          the substances of bread and wine are after consecration what they were before,
          and that the body and blood of Christ are not present in such a way that they
          can be discerned by the bodily senses, but 'faith receives what it believes',
          and this is 'the substance of eternal life' and 'the power of the divine Word'.
           Another controversy which also foreshadowed those of
          the sixteenth century was the dispute about predestination. Gottschalk, a monk
          of Orbais, reminds us of Luther. He was of a violent
          disposition and felt ill at ease under the yoke of monastic life. He was an
          ardent student of St. Augustine, and embraced his sternest teaching with regard
          to the weakness of the human will, to the efficacy of grace, and to
          predestination. Like the continental reformers, Luther, Calvin, and Zwingli, he
          went beyond St. Augustine by teaching that God has predestined some men to
          damnation. A council held at Kiersy in 849 declared him to be an incorrigible
          heretic and condemned him to be publicly beaten. He was shut up in a monastery
          and Hincmar tried to persuade him to recant. He continued to write to his
          friends, and the controversy became more serious than ever. At last Pope
          Nicholas I took up the case and summoned Hincmar, who had written against
          Gottschalk, to a council at Metz, 863. Hincmar did not appear and nothing came
          of the Pope's action. Gottschalk remained inflexible, and was imprisoned in the
          monastery of Hautvillers in the diocese of Reims. He
          died about 868 and was denied the sacraments and even burial in consecrated
          ground.
           John Scotus Erigena, an Irishman, was the most
          audacious and original thinker of the ninth century. At the request of Hincmar
          he wrote a tract 'On Predestination' to refute the views of Gottschalk. In this
          tract he maintained that God could not predestinate anything that is evil,
          since evil is only the negation of good and therefore lies outside the
          knowledge of God; otherwise God would be the cause of evil. This embarrassing
          theory was condemned as 'Scots porridge' at a council of Valence in 855. The next
          proof of his activity was the translation of the works of Dionysius the
          Areopagite into Latin at the request of King Charles the Bald. His most
          important work was not a translation but a work of five books entitled 'On the
          Division of Nature'. It is an attempt to erect a gigantic philosophic system of
          a Neoplatonic type. The vague and fervent teaching of Dionysius is put into a
          cool and definite form with the help of Aristotle. God transcends all human
          conceptions and categories to such a degree that whatever quality may be
          asserted of Him may also be denied. The Persons of the Trinity are relative
          names and the interpretation of the doctrine of the Trinity is to the effect
          that the Father wills, the Son creates, the Spirit makes perfect. Our soul
          reproduces the Trinity. Creation is a necessary revelation of God, the world
          proceeding from God through His creative ideas. The accounts of the Creation
          and the Fall in Genesis are allegorical. But we see God revealed in creation,
          the Father in the being of all things, the Son or Word in the realm of ideas,
          and the Spirit in the life which gives individuality and at the last draws all
          things back to the divine unity. Erigena finds it very difficult to explain the
          fact of sin. He holds that it is the result of a man thinking that something is
          good which is not really good, but he excludes it from God's knowledge on the
          ground that with God to know is to be. If God knew evil, He would be evil. He
          teaches that at last even the devils will be saved, and all things will rest in
          God, deified with a knowledge of God which is identical with resumption into
          the divine essence. This mixture of Platonism and Christianity avowedly placed
          reason above authority in religion, reason being God thinking in man, and
          religion one phase of that rational life which is God. For a long time these
          theories were tolerated, but in 1225 his books 'On the Division of Nature' were
          suppressed by Pope Honorius III. According to William of Malmesbury, John came
          to England at the invitation of King Alfred, but there is no evidence to
          substantiate the tradition. He died about 882, having introduced to the West
          the mystical and theosophical learning of the East.
               The age of the Emperor Louis the Pious and Pope
          Nicholas I witnessed a fine attempt to bring the Gospel to the races of
          Scandinavia.
           Charlemagne had not entertained the idea of
          introducing Christianity among the Danes, and in 814 the only two churches
          which existed in Holstein were at Meldorf and Hamburg. But in 822 Ebo,
          Archbishop of Reims, after receiving full authority from Louis the Pious and
          Pope Paschal I, proceeded to Mansterdorf near Itzehoe to act as ambassador and legate. The next year he
          returned home with a few young Jutes to be educated as teachers of their own
          countrymen. Shortly afterwards Harald, who claimed the Danish kingdom, was hard
          pressed by his foes and determined to seek the aid of the Franks and to
          renounce all connection with paganism. In 826 he arrived with his wife and
          child at Mainz, where he was met by Louis and received baptism with much
          attendant pomp. Soon after his return he was followed by Ansgar, a young
          Frankish monk, who had been educated at the monastery of Old Corbie and was
          made superior of the monastery of New Corbie in 822. He was accompanied on his
          missionary journey by a brother monk named Autbert. They founded a school on
          the frontiers of Slesvig, bought and educated Danish slave youths, and preached
          in the neighboring country. The next year Harald was driven out of the country
          and took refuge in the territory of Louis. The two missionaries also left their
          mission and Autbert died at Corbie. Ansgar, however, went with several
          companions to Sweden and arrived there after being plundered by Norse pirates.
          He was well received by King Bjorn, and a church and school were built at
          Birca. He went back to the Frankish coast to secure a better basis for his
          work, which was rendered easier by the peace made between the emperor and the
          Danes in 831. In 834 Louis and Pope Gregory IV appointed Ansgar Archbishop of
          Hamburg and endowed the new see with the revenues of the rich abbey of Turholt in Flanders. Ansgar, who was to devote himself to
          work in the North, built a cathedral and a monastery, bought Danish boys to
          educate for the ministry, and sent Gauzbert and other
          missionaries to the Swedes.
           Then disaster followed disaster. Louis the Pious died
          in 840, Harald apostatized, the pagan Swedes drove out Gauzbert and his companions, and in 845 the Norse fell upon Hamburg and obliterated
          church, monastery, and library. To crown all these misfortunes, Charles the
          Bald, the son of Louis, seized the abbey of Turholt and presented it to a favorite. Ansgar was now a homeless beggar, and when he
          asked shelter from Leuterich, Bishop of Bremen, he
          was turned from the door. But he was not without friends. A nobleman's widow
          gave him a lodging, and when Leuterich died, in 846,
          King Louis the German, grandson of Charlemagne, appointed him to the bishopric
          of Bremen, which Pope Nicholas I united with that of Hamburg and made
          independent of Cologne. The attempts made to gather together the fragments of
          the Swedish mission, broken up by Gauzbert's expulsion, failed until Ansgar went to Sweden himself and continued to work
          there until his death, in 865. He had in the meantime gained a hearing for
          Christianity in Denmark, being on good terms first with King Honk and
          afterwards with his successor, Honk the Younger. The outward results of his
          labor were not very great. He left a church in Slesvig and Ripen (Ribe), and
          one at Birca, gained some adherents among the nobles and trading classes, and
          trained a few young Danes for the priesthood. Norway remained untouched, and
          though his work was continued by his disciple and biographer Rimbert, it was
          before long shattered by the raids of the vikings. In the next century Archbishop
          Unni of Bremen (d. 936) resumed mission work in Denmark and Sweden, and
          definite progress was made under the English priests who arrived there early in
          the eleventh century. The story of the spread of Christianity in Scandinavia is
          a story of many perils and vicissitudes; and though St. Ansgar effected little,
          and never won the crown of martyrdom which he desired, his hard and
          self-sacrificing life is one of the many beacon-fires of a troubled age.
           The growing intellectual life of the Western nations,
          and their growing national consciousness, lead us to reflect upon certain
          contrasts between Eastern and Western Christendom in the period before their
          disruption in 1054.
           For a long time in the Eastern world the Gospel was
          first preached among civilized nations. Most of the early missionaries spoke
          Greek. But it was never probable that the Egyptians, Syrians, and Armenians
          would be completely Hellenized, for they had a national culture of their own,
          and the great majority of them left the Orthodox Church to go their own way.
          The conversion of the semi-barbarous Slavs changed the situation. It sounded
          the knell of a Greek numerical predominance, but it prepared for the extension
          of Greek worship and Greek theology. Oriental Christian belief, persecuted and
          crushed as it is today, remains in a condition similar to that which it
          occupied when the Russians became Christian. Since that great event such
          protests as have been made against the Patriarch of Constantinople have seldom
          been made against his doctrine. The heretics made their protests long before
          the eleventh century; whereas the orthodox accept his doctrine even if they
          dislike his methods. The Bulgarian in Sofia and the Arab Christian in Damascus
          have little love for Greek politicians, but they do not dispute with the Greek
          patriarch about creeds and catechisms.
           If we turn to the West, we observe that in the fourth
          century, when the Egyptians, Syrians, and a large proportion of the Armenians
          were still orthodox as well as civilized, almost the only Teutonic Christians
          were both heretical and semi-barbarous. And when these races, from about AD 500
          onwards, began to accept Catholic Christianity, the organization of the Church
          was complete, and the nets of that organization were so widely flung that they
          all were caught in its meshes. In some cases the different tribes were
          scattered over districts where Roman cities were still the centers of Christian
          life, where bishops and people spoke a debased Latin, and where the better
          educated could read Cicero and the Vulgate. The Latin language proved a
          powerful connecting link between different peoples. The Romance of France and
          the dialects spoken in Germany were far behind English as a language of culture
          in the eighth century. There was therefore all the more need for a common
          continental language, and this language could only be Latin, which was used in
          both church and school.
           This unity of organization and culture under the
          authority of Rome became menaced when the kings of the newly converted races
          became Catholic. So long as they remained Arian or heathen, they might be
          indifferent towards the internal affairs of the Church and the spiritual claims
          of bishops and popes over their subjects. But when they became Catholics, they
          regarded themselves as 'the Lord's anointed', and wished to limit the influence
          of the Pope in their respective dominions. A well-known instance in the seventh
          century is the opposition of King Egfrid and his Witan to the Pope's division
          of the dioceses in the north of England. The national feeling was also
          stimulated by vigorous bishops like Hincmar, men who governed dioceses
          incomparably larger than the primitive dioceses of Italy and Greece, and often
          occupied a leading place in the councils of the realm.
           In the eighth century this tendency towards
          decentralization began to be checked by the pressure of a new bond of unity.
           The protection exercised over the Church by Pepin 'the
          Short', Charlemagne, and Louis the Pious seemed likely to secure a union
          between Church and State similar to that which had existed in the days of
          Constantine and Theodosius, the Church being at one with herself and yet
          dependent upon the emperor. The dependence might even have caused the Church to
          lose her balance. For Rome was not what Rome had been. The rise of the northern
          nations and the spread of Islam along the shores of the Mediterranean left Rome
          almost on the circumference of Christian civilization. In 846 a band of Saracen
          pirates landed on the right bank of the Tiber, and, although they were unable
          to break through the walls of Rome, they sacked the basilica of St. Peter and
          appear to have escaped unmolested with their valuable spoils. At the end of the
          ninth century Rome appeared to be sinking into the condition of a merely
          provincial Church. With the fall of the Carolingian dynasty the Church once
          more began to vary in accordance with national characteristics.
           The result of the Carolingian settlement was
          nevertheless profound. The Emperor secured the right of intervening in papal
          elections, a right which was exercised in 1903 when the Emperor Francis Joseph
          of Austria intervened at the time of the election of Pope Pius X. On the other
          hand, the Pope crowned the Emperor, and in the Middle Ages it was naturally
          believed that the imperial crown could only be granted by the Pope. The chief
          of bishops and the chief of kings came to be the two pivots on which the history
          of Europe turned.
               The worship and discipline of the Church were also
          affected. The primitive Roman Apostles’ Creed, modified in countries to the
          north of Rome, was adopted by the Roman Church in this modified form before AD
          700, and was promulgated throughout the West by Boniface and other Benedictine
          missionaries. The old Latin mass books of Gaul were supplanted by the Roman
          rite of St. Gregory, though the old rite of Spain still lingers at Toledo. On
          the other hand, the Roman rite, austere, dignified, and biblical, soon absorbed
          an abundance of northern elements and lost much of its simplicity. From remote ages
          the Roman has been conservative in worship. In heathen days he preserved more
          faithfully than other Aryans the rites of prehistoric times; and within the
          Christian, as within the pagan period, it has usually happened that everything
          that is least primitive in Roman worship has been gradually imported into Rome
          from other and distant regions.
           The process of blending different rites had the
          approval of Charlemagne himself. He had, it has been well said, 'the ruler's
          instinct'. He had the wisdom to see that the purely Roman missal would seem
          severe to more sensitive and emotional natures. He therefore promptly caused it
          to be enriched with a supplement of additions selected from the liturgical
          books already in use in France. It is probable, and more than probable, that
          Alcuin was the compiler of this supplement to the Gregorian missal, and that an
          Englishman was therefore in a large measure responsible for the richness and
          exuberance of the medieval and modern Roman rite. The process did not end with
          Charlemagne. During the ninth century the study of sacred rites became a
          fashionable pursuit in France. Not only Charlemagne himself, but his son also,
          Louis the Pious, and his grandson, Charles the Bald, were deeply interested in
          this branch of theological science. Liturgiology was the pastime of emperors.
             CHAPTER
        VII.
            THE SLAVS AND THEIR MISSIONS
            
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