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1[[quoteright:350:[[ComicBook/MadameXanadu https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/853fc577_01e4_445f_b374_1ceebf2512bf.jpeg]]]]
2[[caption-width-right:350:You can meet some interesting people at parties in New York.]]
3
4->''They banded together, and went forth to battle to help Tiâmat.\
5They were furious, they plotted day and night without ceasing ...\
6She bedecked them with brightness, she fashioned them in exalted forms,\
7So that fright and horror might overcome him that looked upon them,\
8So that their bodies might rear up, and no man resist their attack ...\
9They carried the Weapon which spared not, nor flinched from the battle.''
10-->-– ''Literature/EnumaElish''
11
12The Mesopotamian cities and nations (including Sumer, Akkad, Assyria, Babylon, and various others) are one of the oldest known major civilizations in human history, and had a [[Myth/MesopotamianMythology mythology]] as grand as any other, including the oldest of all surviving heroic epics, ''Literature/TheEpicOfGilgamesh''. However, unlike with many other ancient civilizations, knowledge about Mesopotamia's culture almost completely died out until its rediscovery by archaeologists in the mid-19th century. This gap led to the many centuries of Mesopotamian mythology having far less cultural impact than its later successors, such as Myth/{{Classical|Mythology}} and Myth/EgyptianMythology.
13
14Mesopotamian mythology has remained relatively obscure, but the relative lack of knowledge about it has actually worked in its favor in modern pop culture, allowing it to serve as a ripe opportunity for an original GeniusBonus or FramingDevice, in contrast to the more frequently-used and so over-familiar references to Classical and Egyptian mythologies. It is especially common to have demons or other supernatural beings have an origin from this civilization; the sheer archaic weirdness of their original descriptions (along with some massive ValuesDissonance) makes them suitably uncanny for the purpose. Such uses serve as a modern alternative to [[CurseOfThePharaoh Egyptian monsters]], which were extremely common in the early 20th century.
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16In a pinch, an ancient supernatural menace can also come from somewhere else in UsefulNotes/TheMiddleEast, especially [[Myth/CanaaniteMythology the Levant]] (which drew some cultural influence from Mesopotamia, as well as from UsefulNotes/AncientEgypt and the Hittites). It helps that Literature/TheBible mentions both Mesopotamian and Levantine kingdoms among the various foes of UsefulNotes/{{Israel}} and Judah, and that various deities from those cultures [[{{Demonization}} made their way into Abrahamic demonology]], meaning that this trope (like the NephariousPharaoh) can overlap with BiblicalBadGuy.
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18See the notes on Myth/MesopotamianMythology for explanations of the significance of many of the names mentioned below.
19
20----
21!!Examples:
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23[[foldercontrol]]
24
25[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
26* In ''Manga/TheDemonGirlNextDoor'', Lilith (who, while most famous for [[Myth/{{Lilith}} her role in Abrahamic religions]], may have actually originated in Akkadian mythology, and is specifically noted to be from Mesopotamia in-universe) and her full-demon and half-demon descendants play an important role, although they resemble {{Horned Humanoid}}s. It is stated that they originally resembled {{Big Red Devil}}s, but centuries of having their powers progressively sealed away by the Light Clan caused them to take a more humanoid appearance.
27* ''Literature/IsItWrongToTryToPickUpGirlsInADungeon'': The goddess Ishtar originates from Myth/MesopotamianMythology. While [[BeautyIsBad not physically monstrous]], the vileness of her actions speak for themselves. She's a SerialRapist who has her familia members beaten into submission and then rapes them [[RapeIsASpecialKindOfEvil physically]] and [[MindRape mentally]] to make them more compliant. She also encourages a culture of forced prostitution where she will have potential "customers" roped into accepting the familia's services with their consent being an afterthought at best. She also performs HumanSacrifice rituals involving members of her own familia to enhance her power. All to wage a war against Freya and her familia for [[EvilIsPetty rather petty reasons]].
28* ''Manga/RedRiver1995'' follows a girl named Yuri who is summoned from modern-day Japan to the Hittite Empire of the past in order to be used as a sacrifice by a sorceress queen, but the prince of the empire saves her by declaring her to be the war goddess Ishtar. Almost the whole story takes place in either the Hittite Empire or in Egypt, with Yuri's struggle in adapting to the culture being only part of her troubles.
29* ''Anime/YourName'': While not an actual character, the comet Tiamat is named after the ancient Mesopotamian deity and has a major influence on the plot, [[spoiler:destroying Mitsuha's town]].
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31
32[[folder:Comic Books]]
33* In ''ComicBook/GreenLantern'' Annual #9 (2000) and the sequel miniseries ''ComicBook/JLA1997: Gatekeeper'' (2001), the Mesopotamian gods are said to be an offshoot of the Oans, who themselves split into evil and good factions, with the evil faction, Nergal, Ereskigal and Pazuzu, becoming monstrous and demonic.
34* ''ComicBook/{{Hellblazer}}'':
35** The demon Nergal, a recurring antagonist, has the name of a Mesopotamian deity. It’s implied that he once passed himself off as a god, back in the day.
36** The monstrous Julian, introduced in issue #251, is a Babylonian entity called an "ekkimu".
37* In ''ComicBook/HowardTheDuck'', Pazuzu is the patron god of the Doucheblade. The followers of other Mesopotamian gods were the enemies of the Doucheblade's original bearer.
38* In a 1981 ''ComicBook/MadameXanadu'' comic, the protagonist prevents the manifestation on Earth of a couple of demonic beings calling themselves "Ishtar" and "Tammuz", implying that these were once Mesopotamian deities.
39* In ''ComicBook/ProjectSuperpowers'', Samson's nemesis is the Mesopotamian god Dagon, here presented as a massive kaiju-like merman.
40* In one story of ''ComicBook/TheSandman1989'', Morpheus (who frequently gets to deal with deities, who after all originate in his realm of dreams) has brief dealings with the Babylonian goddess Ishtar, who has been reduced to dancing in a modern strip club. Where else could a rather dark sex-goddess find mass worship? She doesn't appear to be a monstrosity -- she ''appears'' to be an exceptionally talented exotic dancer -- until she gets suicidally depressed, and chooses her own way to go.
41[[/folder]]
42
43[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
44* The ''Franchise/{{Alien}}'' series: Long before descending into misanthropy, the Engineers influenced the development of and were worshipped by many human cultures in antiquity. Mesopotamia was one such civilisation, and it is implied that cuneiform derives from the Engineers' writing system.
45* ''Film/TheExorcist'': Pazuzu, the main antagonist, is a Mesopotamian demon who possesses the protagonist Regan. A statue of the demon also briefly appears.
46* ''Film/Ghostbusters1984'': Gozer, the BigBad of the movie, is an interdimensional being who was worshiped as a god by the Sumerians when it and its minions first appeared on Earth. The [[VideoGame/GhostbustersTheVideoGame 2009 video game]] and [[ComicBook/GhostbustersIDWComics IDW comics series]] reveal that Gozer has a long-standing rivalry with its sister, Tiamat, who was the one who originally banished Gozer from Earth centuries ago.
47* ''Film/GodzillaKingOfTheMonsters2019'' opens with a LogoJoke for Creator/LegendaryPictures, showing their logo flanked by Mesopotamian-style carvings of a few of the {{kaiju}} characters. This foreshadows one of the movie's main themes: that ancient peoples were able to exist harmoniously with the "Titans". When we finally learn about the origins of [[DraconicAbomination King Ghidorah]], it's accompanied by a barrage of ancient art, much of it Mesopotamian, suggesting that Ghidorah may have been the inspiration for mythical dragons like Tiamat -- and on maps in the background, we see one of the [[{{Kaiju}} Titans]] that [[BenevolentConspiracy Monarch]] is researching is actually named Tiamat. Finally, when we go to the [[spoiler:UnderwaterRuins of an ancient Godzilla-worshipping civilization]], the architecture has a definite Mesopotamian influence, with [[SheduAndLammasu lamassu]] statues aplenty.
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49
50[[folder:Literature]]
51* The GreaterScopeVillain of ''Literature/TheChroniclesOfNarnia'' is the Calormene TopGod Tash, whose appearance is modeled partly on [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apkallu apkallu,]] specifically on the bird-headed variety known to nineteenth-century Assyriologists as "Nisrochs" after [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nisroch an Assyrian god]] mentioned in Literature/TheBible.[[note]]"Nisroch" is often thought to be a misspelling of Nimrod, a king in the Literature/BookOfGenesis who in turn is often thought to be based partly on the Mesopotamian god Ninurta. The Literature/BooksOfKings and Literature/BookOfIsaiah pinpoint Nisroch's temple as the site of the Assyrian king Sennacherib's [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sennacherib#Conspiracy,_murder_and_succession assassination]] in Nineveh. So when archaeologists discovered a nearby temple to Ninurta which might've been the one in question, they applied the term "Nisrochs" to the apkallu depicted in carvings there.[[/note]] The author Creator/CSLewis also applied a tweaked version of the name "Nisroch" to [[TheEmpire Calormen]]'s GodEmperor, the Tisroc ([[PhraseCatcher may he live forever]]). Lewis apparently got the idea from ''The Story of the Amulet'' (Creator/ENesbit's second sequel to ''Literature/FiveChildrenAndIt''), which features both a Nisroch who guides the {{kid hero}}es and a Babylonian king who demands that his subjects follow every mention of him with "may he live forever."
52* In the ''Literature/DoctorWhoNewAdventures'', the BigBad of the first story arc is a hostile SufficientlyAdvancedAlien who was worshiped as the goddess Ishtar.
53* The eight novel in ''The Expanse'' series, ''Literature/TiamatsWrath'', is titled after the Babylonian goddess of primordial chaos, alluding to the eldritch beings who have [[PrecursorKillers killed the Ringbuilders]] in the distant past[[note]]"Distant" as in long before ''multicellular life'' even arose on Earth.[[/note]] [[spoiler:and now have humanity in their sights after [[TheEmperor Winston Duarte's]] [[BullyingADragon ill-advised decision to play carrot and stick with them]]]].
54* In ''Literature/GoodOmens'', the NobleDemon Crowley's alias "Nanny Ashtoreth" derives from the Phoenician version of the Mesopotamian goddess Ishtar.
55* ''Literature/{{Sepulchre}}'' by Creator/JamesHerbert goes to Sumer and its mythology for its primary force for evil — the god Bel-Marduk.
56* In ''Literature/TheShadowOverInnsmouth'' by Creator/HPLovecraft, the deity worshiped by the monstrous FishPeople is referred to as "Dagon" by its human cultists ("the Esoteric Order of Dagon"). Dagon is a Myth/{{Canaanite|Mythology}} deity sometimes interpreted as being a merman or otherwise related to fish. Various other writers working on the Franchise/CthulhuMythos have expanded on this reference. The scholar Robert M. Price postulates that this Dagon is Cthulhu itself, referred to under a biblical name by the Esoteric Order's leader because worshipping "Dagon" (a name most Americans from the [=1920s=] would recognize as a pagan god mentioned in the Bible) would make the cultists more comfortable than worshipping an alien deity with an unprononceable name.
57* The ''[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simon_Necronomicon Simon Necronomicon]]'' is a literary hoax which pretends to be the real life version of the [[Franchise/CthulhuMythos Necronomicon]]. Parts of it consist of rituals claimed to be based on Mesopotamian magic, and claims some Mesopotamian gods are actually the Great Old Ones.
58* In ''Literature/SlavesOfSpiegel'' by Creator/DanielPinkwater, Sargon the Magnificent, alien overlord, conqueror of galaxies, and supreme judge of the Spiegelian intergalactic cooking competition, is named after Sargon, the founder of the Akkadian empire. He's implied to be a very nasty character, although he doesn't do anything too terrible in the book.
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61[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
62* ''Series/StargateSG1'': Several Goa'uld used Mesopotamian deities as their GodGuise. Also, in one episode, an alien captures Daniel Jackson, convinced that Daniel knows something about his mate, and after some risky memory probing, Daniel recalls reading that she was a minor Babylonian hero who died fighting the Goa'uld.
63* ''Series/UltramanGaia'' has a MonsterOfTheWeek called Pazuzu, an extraterrestrial demon-like creature with electrical powers.
64[[/folder]]
65
66[[folder:Mythology and Religion]]
67* Myth/{{Lilith}}: It has been suggested that the Jewish/Christian myth of Lilith (who, it's worth noting, isn't in the Bible [[note]]or not explicitly at least; the “screech owls” mentioned in Isaiah 34:15 are referred to by the Hebrew word “Lilithl,” suggesting that these may be owl demons[[/note]]) originated in the demonic ''lilitu'' of Mesopotamian legend.
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70[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
71* ''TabletopGame/DungeonsAndDragons'': The goddess Tiamat (Goddess of Chromatic Dragons, who are [[AlwaysChaoticEvil always some flavor of evil]] in this setting) is portrayed as a five-headed dragon and is one of the main members of the universe's pantheon of gods, unsurprisingly (given the nature of her progeny), she too is always portrayed as evil. Pazuzu and Dagon are also present as powerful Demon Princes who control their own layers of the Abyss.
72** In the ''TabletopGame/ForgottenRealms'' setting, the Untherite pantheon was implied to be the Mesopotamian one, prior to getting mostly wiped out long ago; the sole survivors are the aforementioned Tiamat, and the incarnated GodEmperor Gilgeam, whose slide into [[TheCaligula insane despotism]] makes most other evil gods of the setting look pretty okay in comparison [[spoiler:until Tiamat finally manages to kill him]].
73* ''TabletopGame/LeviathanTheTempest'': The Leviathans' origin myth is based on the Mesopotamian creation myth. The player characters themselves are KrakenAndLeviathan-style monstrosities who trace their lineage ultimately back to Tiamat through a Progenitor. And their big enemies are the Marduk Society.
74* ''TabletopGame/TheMadnessDossier'': The monstrous, mind-controlling "Anunnakku", the antagonists in this horror setting for ''TabletopGame/{{GURPS}}'', appear to be lodged in the human racial memory as the [[Characters/MesopotamianMythology gods]] and monsters of Sumeria, and "[[EldritchAbomination monstrosity]]" is the word. The book draws a lot of terminology from Sumerian archaeology.
75* ''TabletopGame/{{Pathfinder}}'':
76** In order to avoid copyright conflicts with ''TabletopGame/DungeonsAndDragons''[='=]s portrayal of the dragon gods, ''Pathfinder'' digs rather deeper into a Mesopotamian angle for their origins. In this setting, the draconic cosmogony follows the Babylonian one much more closely -- the progenitor gods Apsu and Tiamat began as great oceans of fresh and salt water before anything else existed, begat the first gods when their waters mingled, and only took physical form much later when their creations' conflicts forced their attention to them.
77** Numerous {{demon lords|AndArchdevils}} take their names from Mesopotamian Mythology, such as [[SeaMonster Dagon]], [[FeatheredFiend Pazuzu]], [[RiddlingSphinx Areshkagal]], [[VillainousIncest Socothbenoth]], [[MonsterProgenitor Lamashtu]], [[WarIsHell Nurgal]], and [[TheArchmage Abraxas]].
78** There's also an [[DemonLordsAndArchdevils Infernal Duke]] named Nergal, associated with plague and diseases. He and Nurgal used to be one guy before getting cut in half by an enemy god. One half went to Hell and became Nergal, while the other half fell into the Abyss and became Nurgal.
79* ''TabletopGame/VampireTheRequiem'' reenvisions the Edimmu of Sumerian myth, originally a type of VengefulGhost or demon, as a powerful [[ManySpiritsInsideOfOne sevenfold spirit]] that can [[FoodChainOfEvil devour a vampire's soul]] and [[PossessingADeadBody possess its body]]. [[BloodMagic Blood witches]] created the first to assassinate a Babylonian GodEmperor vampire, then [[GoneHorriblyRight learned to their horror]] that each victim lets the Edimmu spawn seven more skeins of seven spirits. Millennia later, the legend ''terrifies'' vampires.
80* ''TabletopGame/WarhammerFantasy'': The Chaos Dwarves have a Babylonian aesthetic, live in the approximate equivalent of the Middle East, and field evil winged bulls in battle. Dwarf-headed versions are called lammasu and are powerful casters and manipulators, to the point where it's uncertain whether a sorcerer riding a lammasu is in charge or whether the lammasu is.
81* ''TabletopGame/Warhammer40000'': The Chaos god of disease, Nurgle, is implied to have been worshiped as the Mesopotamian god of plague (and war) Nergal.
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84[[folder:Video Games]]
85* In ''VideoGame/AxiomVerge'', the regions of Sudra are named in Sumerian, and are indeed [[OrganicTechnology full]] of [[BodyHorror monstrosities]]. In ''VideoGame/AxiomVerge2'', the world of Kiengir was formerly populated by a culture of Sumerian-speaking humanoids, who were visited by an AI called the [[SheduAndLammasu Lammasu]] who claimed who have come on a [[AbusivePrecursors divine mission]] and granted them a controlled amount of SufficientlyAdvancedTechnology... in exchange for [[BioAugmentation upgrading]], [[PoweredByAForsakenChild weaponising]], and [[WorkingForABodyUpgrade recruiting]] them into a war against the [[EldritchAbomination mysterious and equally-advanced]] [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Udug Udug]]. The war ended with the Udug less defeated than ''[[NothingIsScarier missing]]'', and certain of the Kiengir survivors were [[RageAgainstTheHeavens sufficiently disillusioned with the Lammasu that they decided it should be next]].
86* ''VideoGame/Destiny2'': They don't have much physical or cultural resemblance to Mesopotamian mythology, but the OmnicidalManiac Hive sometimes use the Mesopotamian language as a stand-in for their own language in the names of characters and concepts, in reference to their [[TimeAbyss ancient origins]]. The miniboss Šimmumah ur-Nokru has a first name meaning "high priest" in a Sumerian dictionary, for example, and one lore entry describes the divine aura surrounding a PhysicalGod as his "melamu" -- "melammu" in Sumerian meaning pretty much the same thing.
87* ''VideoGame/FateGrandOrder'':
88** In the Babylonia chapter, Tiamat, the Primordial Goddess of Creation, is revealed to be BigBad of the chapter and the first Beast fought. [[spoiler:She caused nearly everything to cease to exist and it took a lot to defeat her, up to and including the Grand Assassin Hassan forcing the concept of mortality upon her]].
89** In the Sea Monster Crisis event, the mastermind turns out to be Dagon, who's really mad about the impact of Creator/HPLovecraft's work (among others) [[ClapYourHandsIfYouBelieve turning him into a freaky fish monster]], and is trying to resurrect his cult so he can turn himself back into the god of grain and prosperity he's supposed to be. Unfortunately, the steps he tries to take in that process go a tad too far to be left alone.
90* ''Franchise/ShinMegamiTensei'' series has no shortage of demons that hail from Mesopotamian mythology (just as from [[CrossoverCosmology any other mythology]] too, really), and they are often directly involved in the plot. For example, Pazuzu is an ArcVillain in ''VideoGame/MegamiTenseiII''; Ishtar is a past life of one character in ''VideoGame/GitenMegamiTensei''; Tiamat is one of the [[OneBadMother Mothers]] in ''VideoGame/ShinMegamiTenseiStrangeJourney''; Lahmu is a StarterVillain in ''VideoGame/ShinMegamiTenseiV'', and so on. More often than not you'll also be able to [[{{Mon}} recruit these demons to your party]].
91* The ''VideoGame/{{Warframe}}'' cinematic "Erra" introduces the eponymous Erra, prince of Sentients who shares his name with the Akkadian god of plagues and chaos. He has a creepy humanoid look that resembles a bird's skeleton, and he has commanded the Sentients during [[GreatOffscreenWar the Old War]] to [[TurnedAgainstTheirMasters eradicate the legacy of the Orokin that created them]] which -- unfortunately -- also includes all the innocent people who ''actually'' suffered under the Orokin rule. He has one very human trait though -- the familial love for his sister, which makes him susceptible to manipulation [[spoiler:with promises to undo her supposed [[HeelFaceBrainwashing brainwashing into Lotus]]. When Ballas -- the Orokin traitor who promised that -- decides to destroy the entire Solar System instead, Erra quickly changes his mind and sides with the Tenno he oh-so hated for "holding his sister hostage". Unfortunately, not only does he die helping them end Ballas's madness, he gets resurrected as Pazuul, a ram-headed, fanatical cult leader whose name seems to be based on Pazuzu.]]
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94[[folder:Visual Novels]]
95* In ''VisualNovel/FateStayNight'', the BigBad of two of the routes is [[Literature/TheEpicOfGilgamesh Gilgamesh, the Babylonian hero]] whose end goal is to use the Holy Grail to burn the world and rule over the survivors.
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98[[folder:Webcomics]]
99* In ''Webcomic/TheOrderOfTheStick'', most of the gods of the Western Continent are named after Mesopotamian deities; examples include Tiamat and Nergal. The few we know about are GodsOfEvil, and it's implied that the whole pantheon might tend this way, since the whole continent is a WretchedHive mostly ruled by [[EvilOverlord evil warlords]]. The whole continent is also ArabianNightsDays-themed, so it fits the setting.
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102[[folder:Web Original]]
103* ''Website/SCPFoundation'': [[https://scp-wiki.wikidot.com/scp-2270 SCP-2270]] is a set of texts detailing rituals needed to convince Ereshkigal (the goddess of the dead, referred to in the books as the "half-divine she-torturer") to in turn convince her husband Nergal (a god of death, war, and plagues, also associated with the scorching power of the sun) to do some divine smiting of an enemy. Said rituals are complex and rambling, but boil down to getting Ereshkigal's attention, translating one's request into her language (Nergal's own language is too far removed from humanity for him to understand such requests, but Ereshkigal can communicate with both him and humans), presenting her with a blood sacrifice to give to Nergal, and then reciting a long prayer while Nergal is doing the smiting in order to assure him of your conviction. If all goes well, the target is hit with the force of a major nuclear strike (estimated at 275 petajoules), but the caster is damned to enslavement in Nergal's sun furnace upon death. If the caster screws up, Nergal smites ''them'' instead.
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106[[folder:Western Animation]]
107* ''WesternAnimation/AmericanDad'': "Ninety North, Zero West" features the giant Humbaba from ''Literature/TheEpicOfGilgamesh'', who is accidentally resurrected by [[BadSanta Santa]] in an attempt to gain his power (ItMakesSenseInContext).
108* On ''WesternAnimation/TheGrimAdventuresOfBillyAndMandy'', Nergal is the name of a recurring character who is a shadowy demonic HumanoidAbomination from the Earth's core. Despite his power and appearance however, he's actually a pretty decent guy, and he even marries Billy's aunt and has a son with her.
109* A couple episodes of ''WesternAnimation/{{Futurama}}'' feature a giant living gargoyle named Pazuzu, who is apparently a creation of resident MadScientist Professor Farnsworth.
110* ''WesternAnimation/TheSecretSaturdays'': At the time of the show's creation, the Sumerian name Kur was thought to belong to the first dragon. In the show, Kur is a powerful cryptid that was both worshipped as a god and slain as a monster, and is capable of controlling every cryptid on Earth. The plot of the first season is the Saturday family trying to find Kur before V. V. Argost could use it to take over the world. [[spoiler:At the end of the first season, it's revealed its power had reincarnated into the protagonist Zak Saturday]].
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