Temple Spots in Around Tokushima City Area

  • Idoji Temple
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    4.0
    45 Reviews
    Travel / Tourism
    Tokushima Pref. Tokushimashi Kokufuchouido Kitayashiki 80-1
    Idoji Temple, located to the west of Nakaakui Bridge, is the 17th temple of the Shikoku 88-temple Pilgrimage. It used to be named Myoshoji Temple but it came to be called “Ido (Well) Temple” because of the story that Kobo Daishi dug a well with his staff for the local people who were lacking water. The well itself remains as the “Omokage no Ido.” The seven Buddha Yakushi Nyorai—main temple idols—are located in the main hall and were said to have been made by Shotoku Taishi. Visitors can come and worship directly. The eleven-faced Kannon bodhisattva located in the Kannon hall is designated as an Important Cultural Property.

    アクセスがしやすい寺院でした。何度も参拝・遍路しているお馴染みの寺院です。開創1350年の古寺中の古寺名刹です。ネット上にも寺院の事については詳しく紹介されているので略。小さなお堂ですが、日限大師はいつ来ても面白い、目は相当弱っているものの、不思議に井戸にはちゃんと自分の姿が映っている。余り無駄に長生きはしたくないのですが・・・(不謹慎で申し訳ないが)。健康で好きなように行動出来るならいつまでも長...

  • Temple No. 5, Jizoji Temple
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    4.0
    33 Reviews
    Travel / Tourism
    Tokushima Pref. Itanogunitanochou Rakan Hayashihigashi 5
    The Jizo-ji Temple is an Omuro Shingon Buddhist Temple located in Itano Town, Itano District, Tokushima Prefecture. It is the fifth temple visited on the Shikoku 88-temple Pilgrimage; the temple’s formal name is Mujin-zan Shogo-in. The Jizo-ji Temple is renowned for the 500 Arhat statues in the Okuno-in Hall.The temple is said to have been founded in 821 by Kobo Daishi (Kukai) on the orders of the Saga Emperor; Kobo Daishi personally carved a statue of the Shogun Jizo bodhisattva (approximately 5 cm high) to be the temple’s main object of veneration. Subsequently, Jokan Shonin, the officiating monk for Kumano Gongen, carved a statue of the Enmei Jizo bodhisattva (approximately 80 cm high) from Kumano Gongen’s sacred tree, and the statue of the Shogun Jizo bodhisattva carved by Kobo Daishi was placed inside this new statue. The temple thrived under the patronage of devout warlords, until it was destroyed by the armies of Motochika Chosokabe. The buildings that the visitor sees today date from the Edo period, when the temple was rebuilt on the orders of the Hachisuka family (the lords of the Tokushima domain).

    弘法大師像をバックに仁王門から境内に進むと左手側が本堂となっていました。ゆったりした印象の平らな境内で、これなら急階段を上がる必要も無く参拝し易いと見受けられました。又、少し離れた奥の院には五百羅漢が祀られており、こちらは拝観料200円となっていました。

  • Tatsue-ji Temple
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    4.0
    33 Reviews
    Travel / Tourism
    Tokushima Pref. Komatsushimashi Tatsuechou Wakamatsu 13
    Tatsue-ji Temple is a Koyasan Shingon Buddhist temple in Tatsue Town, Komatsushima City, Tokushima Prefecture and is the 19th temple of the Shikoku 88-temple Pilgrimage. In 747 priest Gyoki carved a small statue of the Enmei Jizo as the principal image and built a pagoda for the Jizo to pray for smooth delivery for Empress Komyo. In 815 Kobo Daishi carved a large Jizo Buddha statue and put the principal image in its womb. Apart from many worshippers praying for an easy birth the temple is also famous as a “General Checkpoint of Shikoku” where wicked people were punished. The pictures on the ceiling in the main hall drawn when the temple was restored in 1977 are a must see. On the grounds there is the Kuro Kami Hall which is said to have remains of the hair pulled from women who were unfaithful to the morality.

    相当な古寺です。創建1300年に及ぼうかと云う名刹です。ここも又、四国の放火魔兼殺戮者の長曾我部何某とか云う文化財の破壊者によって焼失させられた寺院です。その後に再建されているので国宝とかはありません。気味が悪い伝説も残っているが、余り興味はありません。仁王門も多宝塔もなかなか立派な造りの堂塔です。ここにはどうでも良いと云うよりは、むしろ、あってはならないような余計な口コミページが沢山あります。ま...

  • Boyazan Hojuin Onzanji Temple
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    4.0
    30 Reviews
    Travel / Tourism
    Tokushima Pref. Komatsushimashi Tanochou Onzanjidani 40
    Boyazan Hojuin Onzanji on top of a small mountain located in a suburb of Komatsushima City, Tokushima Prefecture is a temple of the Koyasan Shingon sect, and the 18th temple of the Shikoku 88-temple Pilgrimage. It is said that Gyoki was established at the behest of the Syomu Emperor (724 to 749), and it is also known as the temple where Kobo daishi lifted the ban prohibiting women from visiting the temple for his mother. Tamayorigozen’s teihatsujo where the mother of Daishi cut and dedicated her hair to become a priest, Biranju, where the bishop wood is also a Prefectural Natural Monument, and a statue of Kobo daishi which he is said to have carved himself are must-sees in the precinct.

    なかなか良い遍路寺です、としか言いようがない程度の普通のありふれた寺院でした。縁起は1200年を超える由緒ある寺院。昔は女人禁制だったらしい。知名度の割には印象が薄い寺院でした。本堂や大師堂よりも十大弟子像の方が見応えがあった。この遍路寺は効能抜群の「摺袈裟」で有名です。

  • Kokubun-ji Temple
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    3.5
    27 Reviews
    Travel / Tourism
    Tokushima Pref. Tokushimashi Kokufuchou Yano 718-1
    The Kokubun-ji Temple is the 15th temple of the Shikoku 88-temple Pilgrimage. It is one of many Kokubun-ji (state-supported provincial temples) founded throughout Japan by Emperor Shomu in the 8th century. As a total of four Kokubun-ji temples were established in Shikoku, and as several of them are included in the Shikoku 88-temple Pilgrimage, this particular temple is known as the Awa Kokubun-ji Temple, to differentiate it from the others. The bodhisattva Gyoki personally carved a statue of the Yakushi Nyorai Buddha (Medicine Buddha) to serve as the main object of veneration at the Temple. The Temple originally belonged to the Hosso school of Buddhism (one of the Southern Schools), but changed allegiance to the Shingon school during the period in which Kobo Daishi was organizing the Shikoku 88-temple Pilgrimage route. The Awa Kokubun-ji Temple Garden has been designated as a National Place of Scenic Beauty and also as a Prefectural Historic Site.

    国分寺と云う名称の寺院で、印象に残っているものや素晴らしいと感じるものは凡そ全国にも皆無です。時の権力者が勅令で無理やり全国に一寺づつとして乱造させた寺院が国分寺なるものです。もっと地元に根差して、人々の崇敬を集約させた格好での創建でないと・・・そうでなくても豊かでない庶民の生活よりも寺院の乱造に精出すような為政者はどうか?と思う。数十の巨大寺院を権力で建造する余裕が国家としてあったなら、庶民にも...

  • Anrakuji Temple
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    4.0
    11 Reviews
    Travel / Tourism
    Tokushima Pref. Itanogunkamitachou Hikino Teranonishikita 8
    This guesthouse has a history of 400 years, starting when Kobo Daishi discovered hot springs in the area. It exists even today—now as the only “Ekiroji Temple” of the Shikoku 88-temple Pilgrimage. It is a rare set of hot spring/healing ruins. The main object of worship here is Yakushi Nyorai. It serves as a charming guesthouse for travelers who want to chat or see the Buddha statue and other items in an unusual place. It even appeared in a television drama as an overnight-stay hot spring.

    ここの鐘楼門、これはその形状が素晴らしい!ここの本堂は昭和の中期に再建された鉄筋コンクリート造りのもので色彩等が寺院らしく施されているので、寺院らしくは見えるが文化財としては全く見るべきものではありません。それよりも気になったのはこの遍路寺の「口コミページ」??これは一体何なのか??同じ名称の遍路寺が3つも、おまけに極めつけは安楽寺の多宝塔とか、安楽寺の宿坊とか・・・まじめに投稿されたものとは思い...

  • Tomei-zan, Dogaku-ji Temple
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    3.0
    13 Reviews
    Travel / Tourism
    Tokushima Pref. Myouzaigunishichou Ishi Jounouchi 605
    The Dogaku-ji Temple is a Zentsu-ji sect Shingon Buddhist temple in Ishii Town. The temple’s formal name is “Tomei-zan.” It is ranked second out of the 20 Fudasho Bangai (temples not included in the official list of the temples making up the Shikoku 88-temple Pilgrimage), and is the 11th temple visited of the 36 temples in the Shikoku Fudo Pilgrimage. The name “Dogaku-ji” (“Child’s Learning Temple”) relates to the fact that the monk Kobo Daishi studied calligraphy and other academic disciplines as child; praying at the temple was believed to bring academic success. Within the temple grounds there is a sacred spring which is reputed to have sprung forth from the ground when Kobo Daishi prayed for water to wash his ink-slab with; inside the head priest’s quarters there is a shoin-style garden (designed to be viewed from the shoin, or study) which is believed to have been created in the Muromachi period. The Dogaku-ji Temple is around 30 minutes’ walk from Ishii Station on the JR Tokushima Line.

    四国霊場の別格寺院として参拝しました。かなり辺鄙な場所にある別格寺院が多い中、通りから少し外れただけで車の乗入も問題ありませんでした。少々分かり辛い駐車場から境内に向かうと特徴的な山門が目に入り、その先は広い境内が広がっていました。以前、本堂が焼失したようでしたが、その形跡は無かったことから再建が完了した模様でした。

  • Joroku-ji Temple
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    4.0
    20 Reviews
    Travel / Tourism
    Tokushima Pref. Tokushimashi Jourokuchou Jouryou
    The Joroku-ji Temple is a Soto-school Buddhist temple located in Tokushima City. The temple’s honorific “mountain name” is Zuirin-zan; its full formal name is Zuirin-zan Jiun-in Joroku-ji; it is the 24th temple on the Awa-Chichibu Kannon Temples 34-temple Pilgrimage. According to the temple’s own traditions, the Joroku-ji Temple was founded in 650, making it a very ancient temple. Besides the Hon-do (main hall), there are many National Important Cultural Properties in the temple, including the Sanmon gate, the Kannon-do hall, and the Kyozo (Scripture House), and as a result the Jorouku-ji Temple has become known as the “Awa region’s Horyu-ji Temple” (the Horyu-ji Temple in Nara is famous for its antiquity and its many treasures). The bloodstained floorboards from the treacherous attack on Shingai Sanetsuna by Motochika Chosokabe in the temple in 1582 have been preserved as part of the ceiling of the Tokuun-in hall; dark patches that are believed to be the vestiges of the bloodstains from the victims’ hands and feet can still be seen today.

    ここは、阿波の法隆寺と呼ばれる程のお寺で観音堂には年季の入った像が拝めたりトイレの神様、血天井と見学出来ます。(血天井の注意書きは長い) 境内参拝料金=300円

  • Shosanji Temple
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    4.0
    2 Reviews
    Travel / Tourism
    Tokushima Pref. Myouzaigunkamiyamachou Shimobun Underground 318
    This temple of the Chisan sect of Shingon Buddhism is located in Kamiyama Town in Myozai County, Tokushima Prefecture, and it is the 12th temple of the Shikoku 88-temple Pilgrimage. It is known for its position near the difficult-to-reach eighth station of Mt. Shosanji, which has an altitude of 938 meters, but nowadays there is a roadway leading to it. According to temple legend, it was founded by a pilgrim in the Asuka period. Afterward, Kukai is said to have sealed an enormous snake that had been terrorizing the villagers in a rock cavern near the summit, after which he built the temple. A three-headed statue of Daikokuten (god of wealth), said to be Kukai himself, is enshrined inside the Sanmen (three-headed) Daikoku Hall. The temple grounds contain several large cedar trees said to be hundreds of years old, and the area has been designated a Natural Monument.

    境内正面に立つ本堂の左手に立つお堂に祀られているようでした。標準的な団参ツアーだと本堂と大師堂だけお詣りする為、他のお堂は素通りされる事が多いのですが、個人で参拝するとそれぞれのお堂を確認する事が出来ました。因みにおみくじの自販機はこのお堂前にありました。

  • Taisanji Temple
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    3.5
    8 Reviews
    Travel / Tourism
    Tokushima Pref. Itanogunkamitachou Kanyake Oyama 4
    This temple is the first of the Shikoku Bekkaku 20 Temples and the first of the Shikoku 36 Fudo Temples. Legend has it that Kanenaka, the lord of Shichijo Castle, prayed to the Taizan Kanzeon bodhisattva late at night for twenty-one days in a row to request “twice the strength of other men.” It is said that upon receiving strength unparalleled in the neighboring region, he carried a stone pagoda and a massive kagami mochi (a decorative rice cake) up from the foot of the mountain as an offering to give thanks for this gift. Based on this legend, the temple holds a well-known “chikara mochi” festival on the third Sunday of each January during which people carry large kagami mochi as a test of strength.

    四国八十八箇所の巡礼序に別格寺院にも参拝しました。地図やナビを確認しただけで急カーブの続く道路が目に入ったのですが、実際に車を走らせると想像以上で、対向車があれば行き違いに苦慮する程でした。山上近くの境内に到着すると意外にも大きな寺院で、時節柄にも関わらず多くの参拝者を集めていました。因みに「仁王門」前の駐車場に車を停めるとそこから境内まで延々と石段が続く為、体力に自信が無ければ上まで車で上がった...

  • Kakurinji Temple
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    5.0
    1 Reviews
    Travel / Tourism
    Tokushima Pref. Katsuragunkatsurachou Ikuna Washigao 14
    This is a Koyasan Shingon school temple in Katsuura-cho, Katsuura County in Tokushima Prefecture and is 20th temple of the 88 sacred places on the Shikoku Pilgrimage. It is located high on a mountain with a distant view of the mountains of Awaji and Wakayama as well as the Pacific Ocean and the front avenue is difficult to climb with a sharp slope called the Pilgrim Knock-down. The temple was built by Kobo Daishi in 798. It is said that he found a golden jizo bodhisattva protected by two white cranes in the forest which he placed inside a statue of the jizo bodhisattva that he made himself and this became the principal object of worship at the temple.

    四国遍路3泊4日旅の二日目は20番鶴林寺と21番太龍寺を参拝します。「一に焼山、二にお鶴、三に太龍」と言われる阿波の難所で山を上り下りします。本来の歩き遍路ですと19番立江寺が出発地となりますが公共交通と徒歩で巡る私は登山道入り口の生名まで徳島駅前7:25発のバスを利用しました。バスは交通渋滞で20分程遅れ9時に遍路道を上り始めます。最初は緩やかな坂ですが水吞大師あたりから急な山道となります。本堂...

  • Gecchozan Jigenji Temple
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    4.0
    10 Reviews
    Travel / Tourism
    Tokushima Pref. Katsuragunkamikatsuchou Masaki Kanjoudaki 18
    This temple, a place where the monk Kukai once trained, is the 20th temple on the 88 sacred places on the Shikoku Pilgrimage and the 3rd of the Shikoku Bekkaku 20 Temples. An ascetic practice known as Anazenjo designated as a Tokushima Prefectural Natural Monument is performed at the temple from March 1 to the end of November. Those who wish to try it can sign up at the temple’s office and will be guided by candle light through the limestone cave where Kukai once trained. As it involves passing through very narrow holes, we recommend checking whether you can perform the practice ahead of time.

    灌頂ケ滝とか穴禅定とか・・・枝葉末節が有名になり過ぎて・・・肝心のお寺そのものが・・・堂塔もそんなに古色豊かと云う訳でもないし・・・私は何も修行のために88か所や別格を遍路している訳ではないので・・・しんどいことや苦痛を売り物にしている寺院は現在では然程、魅力的とは私は思いません。色々なモノの考え方があるので別の感じの方もおられるでしょうが・・・。命かけて修行している訳ではないので・・・。ここはあ...

  • Kokugan-zan Henjo-in Dainichi-ji Temple (the 4th Temple of the Shikoku 88-temple Pilgrimage)
    Travel / Tourism
    Tokushima Pref. Itanogunitanochou Kurodani Iuchi 28
    The Kokugan-zan Henjo-in Dainichi-ji Temple is the 4th temple of the Shikoku 88-temple Pilgrimage. According to tradition, Kobo Daishi spent a considerable period meditating on the Temple site, and had a vision of the Dainichi-Nyorai Buddha; this led him to carve a statue of the Dainichi-Nyorai Buddha to serve as the main object of veneration for the Temple which he proceeded to have built. The Dainichi-ji Temple’s Sanmon (Main Gate) was constructed using an unusual design featuring a bell tower with round pillars above a gateway with square pillars. The cloister that links the Main Hall with the Daishi Hall is lined with wooden statues of the bodhisattva Kannon. This is said to be connected to the 33 Kannon Temples Pilgrimage.
  • Temple No. 3, Konsenji Temple
    Travel / Tourism
    Tokushima Pref. Itanogunitanochou Otera Kameyamashita 66
    The renowned monk Gyoki is said to have carved the main Buddha statue at this temple during the Tempyo era (729–749) on the orders of the Shomu Emperor, after which the temple was known as Konkomyoji. The name of the temple was changed to Konsen-ji (“Golden Spring Temple”) after Kobo Daishi visited the temple during the Konin era (810–824); during his visit, to relieve a drought that was affecting the area, Kobo Daishi dug a well, from which gushed forth a spring of golden-colored sacred water. Following a program of temple rebuilding initiated by the Kameyama Emperor (who had become a devout Buddhist), the formal name of the temple was changed to Kiko-zan (reflecting the Emperor’s name). In 1582, most of the temple buildings (excluding the Daishi-do hall) were burnt down by soldiers under the command of the warlord Motochika Chosokabe; the building that visitors see today date from after this destruction. The Konsen-ji is the third temple visited on the Shikoku 88-temple Pilgrimage. The temple is located around one kilometer from Itano Station on the JR Kotoku Line.
  • Temple No. 13, Dainichiji Temple
    Travel / Tourism
    Tokushima Pref. Tokushimashi Ichinomiyachou Nishichou 263
    Located in the Ichinomiya-cho district of Tokushima City, the Dainichi-ji Temple is the 13th temple visited on the Shikoku 88-temple Pilgrimage, and the fifth temple visited on the Shikoku 33 Kannon Temples Pilgrimage. The temple’s formal name is Oguri-san Kezo-in; the temple belongs to the Daikaku-ji school of the Shingon sect of Buddhism. The name Dainichi-ji derives from the story that, in 815, when Kukai was performing the homa fire ritual in Daishi-ga-mori, the Dainichi Nyorai Buddha appeared to him and told him that, as the place where he was standing was a sacred spot, he should build a temple there; Kukai therefore carved a statue of Dainichi Nyorai as the principal object of veneration for the new temple. During the Tensho era (1573–92), the temple buildings were entirely destroyed by the armies of Motochika Chosokabe. The temple was subsequently rebuilt on the orders of Mitsutaka Hachisuka, the third lord of the Tokushima han (domain). The Dainichi-ji Temple later became the betto-ji (Buddhist temple associated with a Shinto shrine) of the Ichinomiya Shrine, and during the Edo period it was the Ichinomiya Shrine that was visited as part of the 88-temple Pilgrimage, rather than the Dainichi-ji Temple. As a result of the state-ordered separation of Shintoism and Buddhism in the Meiji period, the statue of Kannon (the Goddess of Mercy) with eleven heads that had been venerated at the Ichonomiya Shrine was moved to the Dainichi-ji Temple and became the main object of veneration there, with Dainichi Nyorai playing an ancillary role.
  • Temple No. 14, Jorakuji Temple
    Travel / Tourism
    Tokushima Pref. Tokushimashi Kokufuchou Enmei 606
    The Joraku-ji Temple is a Koya-san Shingon Buddhist temple; its formal name is Seiju-zan Enmei-in. The Joraku-ji Temple is the 14th temple visited on the Shikoku 88-temple Pilgrimage; it is the only one of the 88 temples that is dedicated to the bodhisattva Maitreya. According to tradition, when Kobo Daishi was meditating in this area, he saw a vision of the Miroku-bosatsu (Bodhisattva Maitreya), accompanied by numerous other bodhisattvas, expounding Buddhist doctrine; Kobo Daishi carved a statue of Maitreya in sacred wood, built a temple, and set up the statue as the main object of veneration in the temple. The temple was subsequently expanded by Kobo Daishi’s disciples Shinzen Sojo and Kishin Shonin. During the Tensho era (1573–1592), the temple was burnt down by the armies of Motochika Chosokabe; it was rebuilt in 1659 on the orders of Hachisuka Mitsutaka, the lord of the Tokushima domain. Within the temple grounds, there is a stone Buddha statue ensconced in the branches of a huge araragi (Japanese Yew) tree, which is venerated as “Araragi-Daishi.”
  • Koyo-zan Senjuin Kannon-ji Temple
    Travel / Tourism
    Tokushima Pref. Tokushimashi Kokufuchou Kanonji 49-2
    The Koyo-zan Senjuin Kannon-ji Temple is a temple belonging to the Koya-san school of Shingon Buddhism that is located in the Kokufu-cho Tokushima City, Tokushima Prefecture; it is the 16th temple of the Shikoku 88-temple Pilgrimage. The Kannon-ji Temple was originally founded on the orders of Emperor Shomu. According to tradition, the Temple’s current name derives from the statue of the Buddhist deity Kannon with “One Thousand Arms” (Senju), flanked by warrior attendants, which is the main object of veneration in the Temple, and which was carved by Kobo Daishi. There are many legends relating to the mystical powers of the Kannon-ji Temple, more than for almost any other temple in Shikoku. Within the Temple precincts, there are many crutches etc. that were donated as offerings by people who had been healed after worshipping at the Temple. Sights that are particularly worth seeing include the two-tiered Japanese-style Shoro-mon (gate with bell tower), the Yonaki Jizo statue, praying at which was believed to help cure colic and other illnesses in children, a painting depicting a woman enveloped in flames as a punishment for maltreating her mother-in-law, etc.
  • Jifukuji Temple
    Travel / Tourism
    Tokushima Pref. Myouzaigunishichou Ishi Ishi 321
    This temple is famous for its wisteria flowers. Many tourists visit for the annual wisteria festival. Being one of the Six Awa Jizo Temples, many pilgrims visit these temples in Eastern Tokushima. The temple is also popular for offering Heart Sutra copying experiences which only take 10 minutes. The wisteria festival is held from mid-April to early May each year.
  • Ichinomiya Jinja
    Travel / Tourism
    Tokushima Tokushima-shi Ichinomiyacho Nishi -cho 244
  • Shokoku-ji Temple (Hoshi no Iwaya)
    Travel / Tourism
    Tokushima Katsuura-gun Katsuuracho Hoshitani Notao 126
    "The temple is located in Hoshitanodao, Katsuura-cho, Katsuura-gun, and is the inner sanctuary of Tatekue-ji Temple, the 19th temple of the 88 sacred places on Shikoku Island. The ""Hoshi no Iwaya"" is said to enshrine the evil star that Kobo Daishi sealed in stone."

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The southeastern corner of Shikoku is home to Tokushima prefecture, a region celebrated for its luscious nature and the nation’s favorite Awa Odori, an energetic dance to which an annual summer festival has been dedicated. Keeping the upbeat tempo, whirlpools excite the Naruto sea off Tokushima, while inland, dramatic cliffs line the Iya Valley, promising unrivaled views of vast and vibrant scenery.

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