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         Korean Mythology:     more books (41)
  1. Greedy Princess / The Rabbit and the Tiger (Korean Folk Tales for Children, Vol 7) by Duance Vorhees, Mark Mueller, et all 1990-09-03
  2. Korean Folk & Fairy Tales by Suzannne Crowder Han, 1991-03
  3. The Son of the Cinnamon Tree/the Donkey's Egg (Korean Folk Tales for Children, Vol 10) (Korean Folk Tales for Children, Vol 10) by Duance Vorhees, Mark Mueller, 1990-09-03
  4. Long Long Time Ago: Korean Folk Tales
  5. SAMGUK YUSA (MEMORABILIA OF THE THREE KINGDOMS): An entry from Macmillan Reference USA's <i>Encyclopedia of Buddhism</i> by RICHARD D., II MCBRIDE, 2003
  6. Tiger, Burning Bright: More Myths Than Truths About Korean Tigers by Kathleen J. Crane Foundation, 1993-06-01
  7. Brave Hong Kil-Dong/the Man Who Bought the Shade of a Tree (Korean Folk Tales for Children, Vol 8) (Korean Folk Tales for Children, Vol 8) by Kim Yong-Kol, 1990-09-03
  8. Woodcutter and the Heavenly Maiden Korean (Korean Folk Tales for Children, Vol 1) (Korean Folk Tales for Children, Vol 1) by Duance Vorhees, Mark Mueller, et all 1990-09-03
  9. Snail Lady and The Magic Vase (Korean Folk Tales for Children, Vol 6) (Korean Folk Tales for Children, Vol 6) by Duance Vorhees, Mark Mueller, et all 1990-09-03
  10. The Faithful Daughter Shim Chong the Little Frog Who Never Listened (Korean Folk Tales for Children, Vol 9) (Korean Folk Tales for Children, Vol 9) by Duance Vorhees, Mark Mueller, et all 1990-09-03
  11. The Lazy Man and The Spring of Youth (Korean Folk Tales for Children, Vol. 3) (Korean Folk Tales for Children, Vol 3) by Duance Vorhees, Mark Mueller, 1990-09-03
  12. The Ogres' Magic Clubs/the Tiger and the Dried Persimmons (Korean Tolk Tales for Children, Vol 5) (Korean Tolk Tales for Children, Vol 5) (Korean Tolk Tales for Children, Vol 5) by Duance Vorhees, Mark Mueller, et all 1990-09-03
  13. Korean Folk Tales For Children by Duance Vorhees, 1990-10
  14. Korean Folk Tales; Imps, Ghosts, and Fairies.: Imps, Ghosts, and Fairies (Tut Books) by Pang Im, Yuk Yi, 1971-06

21. Korean Mythology
korean mythology. korean mythology consists of national legends folktales which come from the all over the Korean penninsula.
http://www.wikisearch.net/en/wikipedia/k/ko/korean_mythology.html
Main Page Also see:
Korean mythology
Korean mythology
Cosmology
It seems that out of an initial chaos the world was formed and a race of giants set up the stars In the heavens, and seperated them from a deepness of water. When their job was finished they fell into an eternal slumber and their bodies became the islands and mountains etc.. 7 Hwanins ruled a country in succession from 7193-3898 BCE their country spreading 50,000-li north to south and 20,000-li east to west comprising of twelve Dongyi nations. Bak-dal Nara, the first Dongyi state of Greater Mongolia stretching from the Stanovoy mountains in the Lake Baykal vicinity from the North to the Yangzi river in the south (including present Jiangsu, Shanghai, and Anhui) and the Russian Maritime Provinces in the East to Dunhuang in the west is established in 3898 BCE ruled by the first of 18 Hwanungs. Tangun the son of the last Huanung recorded in Korean memory Kuh-bul-dan established Korea in 2333BC. Some important mythological figures
  • Hanle-nim -The Heavenly Emperor, Ruler of Heaven and Earth.

22. KOREAN LITERATURE & FOLKTALE RESOURCES
korean mythology AND FOLKTALE RESOURCES. CREATION MYTHS. HOME PAGE OF KOREAN FOLKTALES. KOREAN FOLKLORE ONLINE ARCHIVE. korean mythology. korean mythology LINKS.
http://www.chlive.org/pbeck/eastlibrary/KOREANLITERATUR&FOLKTALERESOURCES.htm
KOREAN LITERATURE, MYTHOLOGY,
created by Peggy Beck Julie Nahatis. See also ONLINE RESOURCES for paid subscriptions. KOREAN LITERATURE RESOURCES THE CLOUD DREAM OF THE NINE, A KOREAN NOVEL, A STORY OF THE TIMES OF THE TANGS OF CHINA ABOUT 840 AD (ONLINEWRITTEN BY KIM MAN-CHOONG, TRANSLATED BY REV. JAMES S. GALE) KOREA JOURNAL KOREAN LITERATURE (ASIAN INFO) KOREAN LITERATURE TODAY: KOREAN LITERATURE IN TRANSLATION LITERATURE LINKS FROM YULDO.NET (ROBERT FOUSER) "THE OLD WELL" (WRITTEN BY OH JUNG HEE, TRANSLATED BY JUNG HA-YUN) "THE WOMAN NEXT DOOR" (WRIITEN BY HA SONG-NAN, TRANSLATED BY JANET HONG)
KOREAN MYTHOLOGY AND FOLKTALE RESOURCES
CREATION MYTHS HOME PAGE OF KOREAN FOLKTALES KOREAN FOLKLORE ONLINE ARCHIVE KOREAN MYTHOLOGY ...
Back to Cherry Hill HS East Home Page
© 2001-2003, PBeck, Cherry Hill, NJ 08003 USA

23. MYTHOLOGY
JAPANESE MYTHOLOGY FOLKTALE RESOURCES. korean mythology (SEE KOREAN LITERATURE FOLKTALE RESOURCES.). MAYAN MYTHOLOGY. CREATION MYTH. CREATION MYTHS.
http://www.chlive.org/pbeck/eastlibrary/MYTHOLOGY.htm
created by Peggy Beck
AFRICAN MYTHOLOGY
AFRICA: WONDERFUL TALES AFRICAN MYTHOLOGY AFRICAN MYTHOLOGY AFRICAN CREATION MYTHS ... MYTHS AND FABLES FROM AROUND THE WORLD (KIDS ZONE) THE ORISA, GODS OF WEST AFRICA WEST AFRICAN MYTHOLOGY: YORUBA AND FON WHAT DOES A CREATION MYTH DO? AFRICAN FOLKTALES ANANSI GOES FISHING, A TALE FROM WEST AFRICA (HEATHER FOREST) THE GIFT OF A COW TAIL SWITCH, A WEST AFRICAN TALE (HEATHER FOREST) ONE GOOD MEAL DESERVES ANOTHER, A TALE FROM WEST AFRICA (HEATHER FOREST) THE SKULL, A TALE FROM WEST AFRICA (HEATHER FOREST) WHY TURTLES LIVE IN WATER, A TALE FROM WEST AFRICA (HEATHER FOREST)
AMAZON MYTHOLOGY
AMAZON MYTHOLOGY ARTHURIAN LEGEND RESOURCES ASIAN MYTHOLOGY (SEE ALSO CHINESE MYTHOLOGY, EASTERN ASIAN MYTHOLOGY, JAPANESE MYTHOLOGY, KOREAN MYTHOLOGY, AND SOUTHEAST ASIAN MYTHOLOGY LINKS.) ASIA: WONDERFUL TALES CREATION MYTHS FROM AROUND THE WORLD MYTHSEARCH.COM AZTEC MYTHOLOGY (SEE ALSO AZTEC RESOURCES AZTEC MYTHOLOGY CREATION MYTHS GODS, HEROES, AND MYTH ... MYTHSEARCH.COM BABYLONIAN MYTHOLOGY BABYLONIAN CREATION MYTH
BRAZILIAN MYTHOLOGY LINKS
BULLFINCH'S MYTHOLOGY (Age of Fable- Greece and Rome; Age of Chivalry- King Arthur; Legends of Charlemagne or Romance of the Middle Ages)

24. Korean Mythology
korean mythology consists of national legends folktales which come from the all over the Korean peninsula. Considering the size
http://www.xasa.com/wiki/en/wikipedia/k/ko/korean_mythology.html

Korean mythology

Wikipedia
Korean mythology The original religion of Korea was a form of the Eurasian Shamanism Taoism . There has been a mass conversion to Christianity amongst the population since the Korean War. After the Korean War Koreans became embarrassed about their own mythology and though many figures are still alive in the consciousness of the general population, much of the oral tradition about the relationship between the mythological figures has been lost. While Tangun is still remembered as a semi-historical dynasty, much else regarding the family of Gods he descends from has been brushed away from the national consciousness. A prime example of this was during the 1988 Summer Olympic Games when there was a crack-down on the genuine local shamans out of embarrassment. There are now very few practitioners of the ancient Korean religions in Seoul and charlatans have quickly gobbled up the former shaman audience in the quest to exploit people seeking spirituality.
Cosmology
It seems that out of an initial chaos the world was formed and a race of giants set up the stars in the heavens, and separated them from a deepness of water. When their job was finished they fell into an eternal slumber and their bodies became the islands and mountains etc. 7 Hwanins ruled a country in succession from 7193-3898 BCE their country spreading 50,000-li north to south and 20,000-li east to west comprising of twelve Dongyi nations. Bak-dal Nara, the first Dongyi state of Greater Mongolia stretching from the Stanovoy mountains in the

25. Korea.net Directory
It provides grants and international exchange programs. korean mythology English Here are some of the classic collection of Korean children s literature.
http://www.korea.net/directory/List.asp?Category_id=a010

26. Korean Mythology
Article on korean mythology from WorldHistory.com, licensed from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Return Index korean mythology.
http://www.worldhistory.com/wiki/K/Korean-mythology.htm
World History (home) Encyclopedia Index Localities Companies Surnames ... This Week in History
Korean mythology
Korean mythology in the news Korean mythology The original religion of Korea was a form of the Eurasian Shamanism Taoism . There has been a mass conversion to Christianity amongst the population since the Korean War. After the Korean War Koreans became embarrassed about their own mythology and though many figures are still alive in the consciousness of the general population, much of the oral tradition about the relationship between the mythological figures has been lost. While Tangun is still remembered as a semi-historical dynasty, much else regarding the family of Gods he descends from has been brushed away from the national consciousness. A prime example of this was during the 1988 Summer Olympic Games when there was a crack-down on the genuine local shamans out of embarrassment. There are now very few practitioners of the ancient Korean religions in Seoul and charlatans have quickly gobbled up the former shaman audience in the quest to exploit people seeking spirituality.
Cosmology
It seems that out of an initial chaos the world was formed and a race of giants set up the stars in the heavens, and separated them from a deepness of water. When their job was finished they fell into an eternal slumber and their bodies became the islands and mountains etc.

27. Korean Mythology - Encyclopedia Article About Korean Mythology. Free Access, No
Definition of korean mythology in the Medical Dictionary and Thesaurus. Korean lookup. Provides search by definition of korean mythology.
http://medical-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/Korean mythology
Dictionaries: General Computing Medical Legal Encyclopedia
Korean mythology
Word: Word Starts with Ends with Definition Korean mythology The original religion of Korea Korea is a peninsula in eastern Asia where people have lived for the past 12,000 - 15,000 years. The country is located between China and Japan. It was once a large unified country that had governed territories in Manchuria as recently as 1908, and some territory in present-day Siberia. At one point, it was the centre for the very best silk in the world, as noted in ancient Chinese scripts. Korea was also known for having the world's best goldsmiths during the 7th-8th centuries. The publication technique of movable type was invented in Korea in 1232, long before Gutenberg introduced the concept in Europe. These types used Chinese characters and were initially mainly used to mass-produce Buddhist sutras.
Click the link for more information. was a form of the Eurasian Shamanism Shamanism refers to a variety of traditional beliefs and practices, that involve the ability to diagnose, cure, and sometimes cause illness because of a special relationship with, or control over, spirits. This tradition has existed all over the world since prehistoric times. The word shaman originated among the Siberian Tungus (Evenks) and literally means he (or she) who knows
Click the link for more information.

28. Korean Mythology - Encyclopedia Article About Korean Mythology. Free Access, No
Computer term of korean mythology in the Computing Dictionary and Thesaurus. Provides search by definition of korean mythology.
http://computing-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/Korean mythology
Dictionaries: General Computing Medical Legal Encyclopedia
Korean mythology
Word: Word Starts with Ends with Definition Korean mythology The original religion of Korea Korea is a peninsula in eastern Asia where people have lived for the past 12,000 - 15,000 years. The country is located between China and Japan. It was once a large unified country that had governed territories in Manchuria as recently as 1908, and some territory in present-day Siberia. At one point, it was the centre for the very best silk in the world, as noted in ancient Chinese scripts. Korea was also known for having the world's best goldsmiths during the 7th-8th centuries. The publication technique of movable type was invented in Korea in 1232, long before Gutenberg introduced the concept in Europe. These types used Chinese characters and were initially mainly used to mass-produce Buddhist sutras.
Click the link for more information. was a form of the Eurasian Shamanism Shamanism refers to a variety of traditional beliefs and practices, that involve the ability to diagnose, cure, and sometimes cause illness because of a special relationship with, or control over, spirits. This tradition has existed all over the world since prehistoric times. The word shaman originated among the Siberian Tungus (Evenks) and literally means he (or she) who knows
Click the link for more information.

29. Korean Mythology - Encyclopedia Article About Korean Mythology. Free Access, No
Definition of korean mythology in the Ledal Dictionary and Thesaurus. Provides examples from classic literature, search by definition of korean mythology.
http://legal-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/Korean mythology
Dictionaries: General Computing Medical Legal Encyclopedia
Korean mythology
Word: Word Starts with Ends with Definition Korean mythology The original religion of Korea Korea is a peninsula in eastern Asia where people have lived for the past 12,000 - 15,000 years. The country is located between China and Japan. It was once a large unified country that had governed territories in Manchuria as recently as 1908, and some territory in present-day Siberia. At one point, it was the centre for the very best silk in the world, as noted in ancient Chinese scripts. Korea was also known for having the world's best goldsmiths during the 7th-8th centuries. The publication technique of movable type was invented in Korea in 1232, long before Gutenberg introduced the concept in Europe. These types used Chinese characters and were initially mainly used to mass-produce Buddhist sutras.
Click the link for more information. was a form of the Eurasian Shamanism Shamanism refers to a variety of traditional beliefs and practices, that involve the ability to diagnose, cure, and sometimes cause illness because of a special relationship with, or control over, spirits. This tradition has existed all over the world since prehistoric times. The word shaman originated among the Siberian Tungus (Evenks) and literally means he (or she) who knows
Click the link for more information.

30. PowerSearch Results
MythologyKorean, Chinese, Japanese, Indonesian Mythology. Chinese Mythology. Chinese links. korean mythology. Myths and Legends of Ancient Korea.
http://www.imdb.com/List?tv=on&&keywords=korean-mythology

31. Korean Mythology
korean mythology. korean mythology consists of national legends folktales which come from the all over the Korean peninsula. Considering
http://www.sciencedaily.com/encyclopedia/korean_mythology
Match: sort by: relevance date
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Korean mythology
Korean mythology Korea was a form of the Eurasian Shamanism Taoism . There has been a mass conversion to Christianity amongst the population since the Korean War. After the Korean War Koreans became embarrassed about their own mythology and though many figures are still alive in the consciousness of the general population, much of the oral tradition about the relationship between the mythological figures has been lost. While Tangun is still remembered as a semi-historical dynasty, much else regarding the family of Gods he descends from has been brushed away from the national consciousness. A prime example of this was during the

32. Learn More About Korean Mythology In The Online Encyclopedia.
Visit the Online Encyclopedia and learn more and get your questions answered about korean mythology. see previous page. korean mythology.
http://www.onlineencyclopedia.org/k/ko/korean_mythology.html
You are here: Online Encyclopedia
Enter a phrase or search word in the box below. You can enter multiple phrases at a time by putting a comma between each word.(e.g. cat ,dog ,lion ) Press the search button to start your search. Hint: Play with putting spaces before and after your words to see the different results you get.
see previous page
Korean mythology
Korean mythology
Cosmology
It seems that out of an initial chaos the world was formed and a race of giants set up the stars In the heavens, and sperated them from a deepness of water. When their job was finished they fell into an eternal slumber and their bodies became the islands and mountains etc.. 7 Hwanins ruled a country in succession from 7193-3898 BCE their country spreading 50,000-li north to south and 20,000-li east to west comprising of twelve Dongyi nations. Bak-dal Nara, the first Dongyi state of Greater Mongolia stretching from the Stanovoy mountains in the Lake Baykal vicinity from the North to the Yangzi river in the south (including present Jiangsu, Shanghai, and Anhui) and the Russian Maritime Provinces in the East to Dunhuang in the west is established in 3898 BCE ruled by the first of 18 Hwanungs. Tangun the son of the last Huanung recorded in Korean memory Kuh-bul-dan established Korea in 2333BC. Some important mythological figures
  • Hanle-nim -The Heavenly Emperor, Ruler of Heaven and Earth.

33. January 2002 AGGMAN Geology
another culture. korean mythology asks you to imagine a mountain that is one mile high and made of solid granite. Once every thousand
http://www.aggman.com/0102_pages/0102carved.html
January 2002 Carved in Stone It's a Matter of Time By Bill Langer For the past few years this column has taken on issues of concern to the aggregate industry and has described how geology relates to those issues. While most folks who read this column probably have some knowledge of geology, it is a science with a history worth sharing. These next few articles will provide brief descriptions of some of the theories that have evolved into the science of geology. While ancient Greeks may have accepted the fact that Gaia created changes to the Earth rather rapidly, modern geology is based on a recognition that it is the passage of vast lengths of time that allow many changes to take place, changes that have been going on for something like 4.6 billion years. This concept can be demonstrated by the mythology of another culture. Korean mythology asks you to imagine a mountain that is one mile high and made of solid granite. Once every thousand years an angel flies down from heaven and brushes the summit of the mountain with her wings. Given long enough, the angel will erode the mountain down to sea level. That, as described in Korean mythology, is indeed a very long period of time. William H. Langer is a geologist with the Mineral Resources Team of the U.S. Geological Survey.

34. North Korea History | Lonely Planet World Guide
Scientists with slightly less respect for korean mythology believe Korea was first inhabited around 30,000 BC, when tribes from central and northern Asia
http://www.lonelyplanet.com/destinations/north_east_asia/north_korea/history.htm
home search help worldguide ... Postcards
North Korea
History
According to the Koreans, the first of their kin was born in 2333 BC. Scientists with slightly less respect for Korean mythology believe Korea was first inhabited around 30,000 BC, when tribes from central and northern Asia stumbled on the peninsula. Under constant pressure from China, these tribes banded together to found a kingdom in the 1st century AD. By 700 AD the Silla Kingdom of Korea was hitting its cultural stride, littering the country with palaces, pagodas and pleasure gardens and influencing the development of Japan's culture. But in the early 13th century the Mongols reached Korea and gave it their customary scorched-earth treatment. When the Mongol Empire collapsed, the Choson Dynasty took over and a Korean script was developed. In 1592 Japan invaded, followed by China - the Koreans were routed and the Chinese Manchu Dynasty moved in. Turning its back on the mean and nasty world, Korea closed its doors to outside influence until the early 20th century, thus presaging the events of the twentieth century. In 1904, Japan invaded, and formally annexed the peninsula in 1910. The Japanese, who hung on until the end of WWII, were harsh masters, and anti-Japanese sentiment is still strong in both North and South Korea. Much of the guerilla warfare conducted against the occupying Japanese took place in the northern provinces and Manchuria, and northerners are still proud of having carried a disproportionate burden in the struggle against Japan.

35. John Gittings, Korean Shamans Blame Christian Extremists For Raid On Royal Tomb
of the Tangun statues delivered a new shock it is being blamed on Christian extremists who oppose a campaign to reassert the beliefs of korean mythology in a
http://www.hartford-hwp.com/archives/55a/354.html
Documents menu
Korean shamans blame Christian extremists for raid on royal tomb
By John Gittings in Seoul, The Guardian, Thursday 15 July 1999
sunshine policy towards it with provocation. But the discovery in April that the tombs of the 15th-century king and his wife had been vandalised with the tools used by traditional shamans sent a shockwave throughout the country , according to the Korean Times. The tomb of Admiral Yi Sun-shin, the national hero who fought off Japanese invaders in the late 16th century, was also desecrated. A female mudang (shaman), Yang Sun-ja, confessed, saying she had planted the weapons in a ritual to cure herself of a severe headache after seeing Admiral Yi in her dreams. But the police said they suspected a deeper motive. plot to discredit shamanism Shamans worship kings and generals, she says. [Yang] must have committed her cruel crime under the influence of others. To stab a tomb means cutting the bloodline of the family and the nation. It is what the Japanese did to destroy our history when they occupied Korea. Korean shamanism is related to Siberian rites but has developed differently over the past 2,000 years. Its practitioners claim to communicate with natural or historical spirits through trances, and to effect cures, bring good luck and foresee the future.

36. The History Of Superstition In The Republic Of Korea
Decapitation of the Tangun statues is being blamed on Christian extremists who oppose a campaign to reassert the beliefs of korean mythology in a country where
http://www.hartford-hwp.com/archives/55a/index-afb.html
The history of superstition in
the Republic of Korea
Hartford Web Publishing is not the author of the documents in World History Archives
Monks charged over temple violence
BBC News, 24 December 1998. South Korean police have charged 28 people, most of them monks, after a day of pitched battles to oust members of the order from occupying a temple. The dissident monks took over the temple last month after ousting a rival faction in a bitter dispute over who manages South Korean Buddhist funds worth millions of dollars.
Korean TV airs controversial documentary
BBC News, Wednesday 12 May 1999. A South Korean television station has managed to broadcast a documentary previously forced off air by members of a Christian sect. It examined claims that sect leader Lee Jae-rok could cure illness. Mr Lee heads the 65,000-strong Manmin Chungang Sungkyol sect, a Protestant denomination whose name roughly translates as All Holiness Church.
Korean shamans blame Christian extremists for raid on royal tomb
By John Gittings in Seoul

37. RDfairytales
mythology, Greek heroic legend, Haitian mythology, Hindu mythology, Inca mythology, Japanese mythology, Judaic mythology, korean mythology, Latvian mythology
http://www.wsd.k12.ca.us/techresource/RDfairytales.html
Fairy Tales
Myths
Legends
Folk Tales Brothers Grimm
Lesson Plans Brothers Grimm (K-5, Literature)
K-2
http://school.discovery.com/lessonplans/programs/talesofthebrothersgrimm/index.html The Online Encyclopedia of Myths, Folklore, and Legends
Encyclopedia Mythica: Home

Excellent online resource for anything about myths, legends, and folklore. Creatures, objects (Excalibur, for example) people, etc. You may search for an article, enter a single word, several words, or a phrase. Features information on: Aboriginal mythology, African mythology, Arthurian legend, Aztec mythology, Celtic mythology, Chinese mythology, Egyptian mythology, Etruscan mythology, Folklore, Greek mythology, Greek heroic legend, Haitian mythology, Hindu mythology, Inca mythology, Japanese mythology, Judaic mythology, Korean mythology, Latvian mythology, Mayan mythology, Mesopotamian mythology, Native American mythology, Norse mythology, Persian mythology, Polynesian mythology, Roman mythology Brought to you by ABP1 - Fairytales - The Fisherman and his Wife - by the Brothers Grimm
The Fisherman and His Wife Presented by ABP1 - Bedtime Stories from the Brothers Grimm
On-Line Stories:
Hans In Luck, Bremen Town Musicians, The Dog and the Sparrow, The Fisherman's Wife, The Frog Prince

38. Corée Du Nord : Site(s) Web
Translate this page Signaler un lien brisé. korean mythology. The Encyclopedia Mythica. www.pantheon.org/areas/mythology/asia/korean. Signaler un lien brisé. Library of Congress.
http://www.quid.fr/monde.html?mode=detail&iso=kp&style=selweb&req=coree

39. Search Results
octavo. Subjects myths, mythology, structure of myth, proverbs, folktales, korean mythology, Japanese mythology, More Subjects ». DESCRIPTION Fine.
http://www.myownbookshop.com/SearchResults.aspx?SearchType=SubjectSearch&Subject

40. Myth
Judaic mythology; korean mythology; Latvian mythology; Mayan mythology; Mesopotamian mythology; Native American mythology; Norse mythology;
http://plymouthschools.com/Links/Academic_Education/Language_Arts/Myth.html
Resources fom Pantheon
Other Resources
Folklore

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