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BOY CRUSADERS:
A Story of the Days of Pouig IX.
BY
J. G. EDGAR,
AUTHOR OF ‘THE BOY PRINCES,’ ETC.
Gight Full Page Illustrations.
ae ah
PREFACH.
; aioe the many adventurous enterprises which
rendered the age of feudalism and chain-armour
memorable in history, none were more remarkable or
important than the ‘armed pilgrimages’ popularly known
as the Crusades; and, among the expeditions which the
warriors of medieval Europe undertook with the view of
rescuing the Holy Sepulchre from the Saracens, hardly
one is so interesting as that which had Louis IX. for its .
chief and Joinville for its chronicler.
In this volume I have related the adventures of two
striplings, who, after serving their apprenticeship to
chivalry in a feudal castle in the north of England, —
assumed the cross, embarked for the East, took part in
the crusade headed by the saint-King of France, and
participated in the glory and disaster which attended the
Christian army, after landing at Damietta—including
the carnage of Mansourah, and the massacre of Minieh.
In writing the ‘Boy Crusaders’ for juvenile readers,
my object has been—while endeavouring to give those,
for whose perusal the work is intended, as faithful a
picture as possible of the events which Joinville has |
recorded—to convey, at the same time, as clear an idea
as my limits would permit, of the career and character
of the renowned French monarch who, in peril and per-
plexity; in captivity and chains, so eminently signalised
his valour and his piety. IGE
CONTENTS.
teens ED At en A, gece
CHAPTER PAGE
I. A Frupan CasthE K : ; J
It. THe BrRotuHers In-ARMS 14
III. THe HERS oF tHE Es: Ecs . 21
IV. Sr. Louis —_. : : - : 28 .
V. TAKING THE CRoss baa an : 36
VI. EMBARKING FOR THE East 4}
VII. THE ARMED PILGRims ar CyPRUS 45
Vill. Kastwamp <2. 49
IX. An ApvENTURE . =. . 55
X. On THE LaDpER oF Lirkt 60
XI. THE VoyvaGE 68
XII. At DAMIETTA 74
XIII. INcursions | 82
XIV. A RENEGADE : 88
XV. CAPTURE CF A CARAVAN 96
XVI. A CouNciIL oF WAR 103
XVII. Fack To Facr 169 ©
XVIII. DELAY AND DANGER 113
XIX. THE CAPTIVE ; ‘ 119
XX. Passinc THE ACHMOUN 124
XXI. THE CARNAGE of MansouRaH 128
XXII. Tor BatTLE . ; ; 136
XXIII. How JoINVILLE KEPT THE BRIDGE 142
XXIV. THE First FRipay In LENT. i 150
XXV. MoRTIFICATIONS AND MISERIES 158
XXVI. THE MassacrkE or MiNIEH 165
XXVII. JoINnNvVILLE IN PERIL 173
XXVIII. News oF DISASTER 181
XXIX. A WounDED PILGRIM 185
XXX. Sr. Lovis 1n CHAINS 191
XXXI. Tur TRAGEDY OF PHARESCOUR 199
XXXII. PERILS AND SUSPENSE 204 —
XXXIII. AcrE 210
XXXIV. A RESCUE 214
XXXV. Mission To BAGDAD ; 222;
XXXVI. Tye Last oF THE CALIPHS . 229
XXXVII. A RECOGNITION 234
XXXVIII. Wor To THE CALIPH 240
XXXIX. In THE Lion’s MovutH ‘ 246
XL. Exp oF THE ARMED PILGRIMAGE . 253
XLY. A SuppEN DiscovERY 260
XLII. Homewaipd Bounp. 266
XLIII. A Royau VISIT é 272
XLIV. Tne Feast oF Kines . 279
THE BOY CRUSADERS,
——00:9300—
CHAPTER I.
A FEUDAL CASTLE.
T was the age of chain armour and tournaments —
of iron barons and barons’ wars—of pilgrims
and armed pilgrimages—of forests and forest out-
Jaws—when HenryeIII. reigned as King of Eng-
land, and the feudal system, though no longer ram-
pant, was still full of hfe and energy; when Louis
King of France, afterwards canonised as St. Louis,
undertook one of the last and most celebrated of
those expeditions known as the Crusades, and de-
scribed as ‘feudalism’s great adventure, and popular
wlory.’
At the time when Henry was King of England
and when Louis of France was about to embark for
the East, with the object of rescuing the Holy
Sepulchre from the Saracens, there stood on the very
verge of Northumberland a strong baronial edifice,
known as the Castle of Wark, occupying a circular
10 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
eminence, visible from a great distance, and command-
ing such an extensive view to the north as seemed to
ensure the garrison against any sudden inroad on the
part of the restless and refractory Scots. On the
north the foundations were washed by the waters of
the Tweed, here broad and deep; and on the south
were a little town, which had risen under the protection
of the castle, and,—stretching away towards the hills
of Cheviot,—an extensive park or chase, abounding
with wild cattle and deer and beasts of game. At
an earlier period this castle had been a possession
of the famous house of Espec; and, when in after
days it came into the hands of the Montacute Earls
of Salisbury, Edward III. was inspired within its
walls with that romantic admiration of the Countess
of Salisbury which resulted in the institution of the
Order of the Garter. During the fifth decade of the
‘thirteenth century, however, it was the chief seat of
Robert, Lord de Roos, a powerful Anglo-Norman
noble, whose father had been one of the barons of
Runnymede and one of the conservators of the Great
Charter.
Like most of the fortresses built by the Norman
conquerors of England, Wark consisted of a base-court,
a keep, and a barbican in front of the base-court. The
sides of the walls were fortified with innumerable
angles, towers, and buttresses, and surmounted with
strong battlements and hornworks. Tor greater secu-
rity the castle was encompassed, save towards the
Tweed, with a moat or deep ditch, filled with water,
aad fortified with strong palisades, and sharp stakes
set thick all around the walls. Over the moat, at the
THE MAIDENS WALK. 1
principal gate, was the drawbridge, which was almost
always raised, and the gate-house, a square building,
having strong towers at each corner. Over the en-
trance and within the square of the gate-house was
an arched vault, and over it was a chamber with
apertures, through which, on occasion of an assault,
the garrison, unseen the whilst, could watch the opera-
tions of the foe, and pour boiling water or melted lead
on the foremost assailants. On the west side were
the outworks, consisting of a platform with a trench
half a mile in length, and breastworks, and covered
ways, and mounds. The roofs of the building were
bordered with parapets, guard walks, and sentry
boxes.
But the whole space was not appropriated to works
intended to ensure the stronghold against the assault
of foes. Near the mound was the chapel dedicated
to St. Giles. Under the outer wall was a military
walk, five yards wide, and forty-eight yards in length.
Underneath the walls, on the brink of the river, wasa
beautiful terrace, called the Maiden’s Walk, where the
lady of the castle and her damsels, after their labours
at the loom, were wont to take air and exercise on a
summer evening, ere the vesper bell rang, and the
bat began to hunt the moth. Within the precincts
of the building was the tiltyard, a broad space en-
closed with rails, and covered with sawdust, where
young men of gentle blood, in the capacity of pages
and squires, acquired the chivalrous accomplishments
which the age prized so highly.
In fact, the castle of Wark, like most feudal castles
of that century, was a school of chivalry, whither
12 THE BOY. CRUSADERS.
the sons of nobles and knights were sent to serve
their apprenticeship as warriors, taught their duty to
God and the ladies, and trained to the skill in arms
which enabled them to compel the respect of one
sex and influence the hearts of the other.
First, on foot, they were taught to attack the pel,
an imaginary adversary, which was simply the stump
of a tree six feet in height; then, on horseback, they
were made to charge the quintain, a wooden figure
in the form of a Saracen, armed in mail and holding
a sabre in one hand and a shield in the other, and
so constructed to move on a pivot that, unless the
youth was dexterous enough to strike the face or
breast, it revolved rapidly, and dealt him a heavy
blow on the back as he was retiring. As the lads
became more expert they tilted at each other with
blunt lances, practised riding at the ring, and learned
to excel as equestrians by riding in a circle, vaulting
from their steeds in the course of their career, and
mounting again while they galloped.
At the same time they were trained to acquit
themselves with credit in those encounters celebrated
as combats at the barriers. At the sieges of cities,
during the middle ages, knights of the besieging
army were in the habit of going to the barriers,
or grated palisades of the fortress, and defying the
garrison to break a lance for the honour of their
ladies. Indeed, this was so fashionable, that an army
could hardly appear before a town without the siege
giving rise to a variety of such combats, which
were generally conducted with fairness on both —
sides. This mode of attack was early taught to the
THE TILTYARD. 1S
apprentice to chivalry, and assiduously practised by
all who were ambitious of knightly honour.
Nor did the exercises of the tiltyard end at this
stage. At the time of which I write, the name of
Richard Coeur de Lion was famous in Europe and
Asia; and his feats in arms were on every tongue.
One of his great exploits at the battle of Joppa was
especially the admiration of the brave. It seems
that, when the Crusaders were surrounded and
almost overwhelmed by the swarming host of
Saladin, Richard, who, up to that moment, had
neither given nor received a wound, suddenly sprang
on his charger, drew his sword, laid his lance in rest,
and with his sword in one hand, and his lance in
the other, spurred against the Saracens, striking
sparks from their helmets and armour, and inspiring
such terror that his foes were completely routed.
Naturally such an exploit made a strong impression
on the imagination of aspirants to warlike fame, and
the youth who had the dexterity and the equestrian
skill to imitate it in mimic fray was regarded with
admiration and envy.
Now our concern with Wark, and its tiltyard, is
simply this—that, within the castle, there were trained
in the exercises of chivalry, and qualified for its ho-
nours, two striplings, who, when St. Louis took the
Cross, and undertook a holy war, embarked for the
Kast, and figured, during a memorable expedition,
as the Boy Crusaders.
14
CHAPTER [.
THE BROTHERS-IN-ARMS.
N the last Wednesday of the month of July, in
the year 1248, the castle of Wark reposed in
the sunshine and warmth of a bright merry
summer’s day; and, the exercises in the tiltyard
being over for the morning, two of the apprentices
to chivalry, whose dress indicated that they had
attained the rank of squires, strolled slowly along
the green border of the Tweed. Neither of them
had passed the age of seventeen, but both were tall
and strong and handsome for their years; and both
had the fair hair, blue eyes, aquiline features, and
air of authority which distinguished the descendants
of the valiant Northmen who accompanied Rollo
when he left Norway, sailed up the Seine, and
seized on Neustria. But in one rather important
respect there was a remarkable difference. One had
a countenance which expressed gaiety of heart; the
other had a countenance which expressed sadness of
spirit. One bore the name of Guy Muschamp; the ©
other the still greater name of Walter Espec.
‘And so, good Walter, we are actually soldiers of
the Cross, and vowed to combat the Saracens,’ said
YOUTHFUL DREAMS. 15
Guy, as they walked along the grassy margin of the
river, which flowed tranquilly on, while the salmon
leaped in its silver tide, and the trouts glided like
silver darts through the clear stream, and the white
and brindled cows cooled their hoofs in the water;
‘and yet I know not how it comes to pass, good
Walter; but beshrew me if, at times, I do not fancy
that it is a dream of the night.’
‘In truth, brave Guy,’ replied the other, ‘I com-
prehend not how you can have any doubts on the
subject, when you see the sacred badge on our
shoulders, and when we have, even within the hour,
learned that the ships of the great Saxon earl, in
which we are to embark for the Holy Land, are now
riding at anchor before the town of Berwick.
‘You are right, good Walter, said Guy, quickly ;
‘and marry! worse than an infidel am I to havea
doubt; and yet when I think of all the marvels we
are likely to behold, I can scarce credit my good
fortune. Just imagine, Walter Espec, the pictu-
resque scenery —the palm-trees, the fig-trees, the
gardens with flowers, and vines, and citrons, and
pomegranates; the Saracenic castles, the long cara-
vans of camels, and the Eastern women veiled in
white, standing at fountains, and all the wonders
that palmers and pilgrims tell of! Oh! the adven-
ture appears so grand, that I now begin to dread
lest some mischance should come to prevent us
going.’
‘And I,’ observed Walter, calmly, ‘ have no dread ot
the kind; and I am, heart and soul, bent on the holy
euterprise ; albeit, I reck little of caravans of cameis,
16 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
cr veiled women. But my heart yearns ror that far
land ; for there it is that I am like to hear tidings of
him I have lost. Ah! credit me, brave Guy, that
you, and such as you, little know what it is to be
alone in this world, without kith or kindred, or
home, and how saddening is the thought, ever cross-
ing my mind, that one, near and dear, does live ; and
—and—’
He paused, bent his brow, clenched his hand, and
cast his eyes on the ground, as tears streamed down
his cheek.
‘Good Walter, dear Walter,’ said Guy, yielding to
sympathy till he was almost equally affected; ‘ droop
not, but be of good cheer. Forget not that we are
brothers-in-arms, that I am your friend, your true
and sworn friend; and I will aid your search. Nay,
I know what you are going to say; but you do me
wrong. I will not waste time in looking at the
camels and the veiled women, of whom palmer and
pilgrim tell; but I will go straightway with you to
the palace of the caliph; and, if he refuse to render
you justice, I will challenge him to mortal combat
on the spot. So again I say, be of good cheer.’
Walter Espec smiled mournfully. His enthu-
siasm was not, in reality, less than that of his com-
panion. But he had none of the gaiety, and little
of the buoyant spirit, which enabled Guy Muschamp
to make himself, at all times and seasons, a favourite
in castle hall and lady’s bower.
‘I fear me, brave Guy,’ said Walter, after a brict
silence, that the caliph is too great a potentate to be
dealt with as you would wish. But, come what may,
9
said Guy, “to the palace of the Caliph
you, Walter,â€
you justice, 1 will challenge him to mortalcombat on the
ghtway with
if he refuses to render
‘*T will go strai
and
spot
THE LOST BROTIER. 17
IT am sworn to laugh at danger in the performance
of a duty. My dreams, awake and asleep, are of
him who is lost; and I fantasied last night,’ added
he, lowering his voice, ‘ that my mother stood before
me, as I last saw her when living, and implored me,
in the name of St. Katherine, the patron saint of the
Especs, to fulfil my vow of rescuing her lost son
from captivity and from the enemies of Christ.’
‘Oh, fear not, doubt not, good Walter,’ cried Guy,
with enthusiasm; ‘it must, it shall, be done; and
then we can go and conquer a principality, like
Tancred, or Bohemund of Tarentum, or Count Ray-
mond of St. Giles, and other old heroes.’
‘Even the crown of Jerusalem may not be beyond
our grasp, if fortune favour us,’ said Walter, with a
calm smile.
‘Oh, fortune ever favours the brave,’ exclaimed
Guy; ‘and I hold that nothing is impossible to men
who are brave and ambitious; and no squire of your
years is braver or more ambitious than you, Walter,
or more expert in arms; albeit you never utter a
boast as to your own feats, while no one is more
ready to praise the actions of others.’
‘Even if I had anything to boast of,’ replied
Walter, ‘I should refrain from so doing; and therein
I should only be acting according to the maxims of
chivalry ; for you know we are admonished to be
dumb as to our own deeds, and eloquent in praise of
others; and, moreover, that if the squire is vain-
glorious, he is not worthy to become a knight, and |
that he who is silent as to the valour of others is a
thief and a robber.’
18 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
And thus conversing, the brothers-in-arms re-
turned to the castle, and entered the great hall,
which was so spacious and so high in the roof that
a man on horseback might have turned a spear in it
with all the ease imaginable. It was, indeed, a
stately apartment; the ceiling consisting of a smooth
vault of ashlar-work, the stones being curiously
joined and fitted together; and the walls and roof
decorated by some of those great painters who flou-
rished in England under the patronage of King
Henry and his fair and accomplished queen, Eleanor
of Provence. Here was represented the battle of
Hastings; there the siege of Jerusalem by the
Crusaders under Godfrey of Bouillon and Rotert
Curthose; here the battle of the Standard ; there the
signing of the Great Charter by King John, under
the oak of Runnymede. Around the hall might be
traced the armorial bearings of the lord of the castle
and the chief families with whom the lord of the
castle was allied by blood — the three water-budgets
of De Roos; the three Katherine-wheels of Espec;
the engrailed cross of De Vesci ; the seven blackbirds
of Merley; the lion argent of Dunbar in its field of
gules; and the ruddy lion of Scotland, ramping in
gold; while on the roof was depicted the castle itself,
with gates, and battlements, and pinnacles, and
towers; and there also, very conspicuous, was the
form of a rose, and around it was inscribed in
Gothic letters the legend—
He who doth secrets reveal,
Beneath my roof shall never live.
it was ten o’clock—in that age the hour of dinner
DINNER IN THE OLDEN TIMES, 19
-—when Walter Espec and Guy Muschamp entered
the great hall of the castle, and, the household
having assembled for that important meal, a huge
oaken table, which in shape resembled the letter
T, groaned under massive sirloins. Attended by
his jesters, the lord of the castle took his seat on
the dais, which was reserved for his family and his
guests of high rank; while the knights, squires,
pages, and retainers ranged themselves above and
below the salt, according to their claims to pre-
cedence; and hawks stood around on perches, and
hounds lay stretched on the rushy floor, waiting their
turn to be fed.
Much ceremony was of course observed. The sir-
loins were succeeded by fish and fowl, and dishes
curiously compounded; and, as was the fashion of
that feudal age, the dinner lasted three hours. But,
notwithstanding the pride and pomp exhibited, the
meal was by no means dull. The jesters and min-
strels did their work. During the intervals the
jesters exercised all their wit to divert the lord and
his friends; and the minstrels, in the gallery set
apart for their accommodation, discoursed flourishes
of music, borrowed from the Saracens and brought
from the East, for the gratification of the company,
or roused the aspirations of the youthful warriors
by some such spirit-stirring strain as the battle-hymn
of Rollo. | |
‘I marvel much, good Walter,’ said Guy Mus-
champ to his brother-in-arms, ‘I marvel much where
we are destined to dine this day next year.’
‘Beshrew me if I can even form a guess,’ replied
20 THE BOY CRUSADERS,
Walter Espec, thoughttully; ‘methinks no seer less
potent than the Knight of Ercildoune, whom the
vulgar call “True Thomas,†could on such a point
do aught to satisfy your curiosity.’ |
‘Mayhap at Acre or Jerusalem,’ suggested Guy,
after a pause.
‘By Holy Katherine,’ exclaimed Walter, ‘ere you
named Acre and Jerusalem, my imagination had
carried me to the palace of the caliph at Bagdad.’
21
CHAPTER UL
THE HEIRS OF THE ESPECS.
N the days when the Norman kings reigned in
England, the Especs were of high account
among the Anglo-Norman barons. Many were the
brave and pious men who bore the name; but the
bravest and most pious of them all was that Walter
Espec, a great noble of the north, who maintained
high feudal state at the castles of Wark, Helmsley,
and Kirkham, and who figured so conspicuously as
chief of the English at the battle of the Standard,
and harangued the soldiers before the battle from the
chariot from which the standard was displayed.
But not only as a warrior was Walter Espec known
to fame. As a benefactor to religion, his name was
held in honour and his memory regarded with venc-
ration. |
It seems that Walter Espec had, by his wife
Adeline, an only son, who was a youth of great pro-
mise, and much beloved by his parents. Nothing,
however, pleased him more than a swift horse; and
he was so bold a rider that he would not have feared
to mount Bucephalus, in spite of heels and horns.
Leaping into the saddJe one day, at the eastle of
B
22 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
Kirkham, and scorning the thought of danger, he
spurred his charger pond its strength, and, while
galloping towards Frithby, had a fall at the stone
cross, and was killed on the spot. Much afflicted at
his son’s death, Waiter Espec sent for his brother,
who was a priest ain] a ‘rectuc,
‘My son being, alas! eee: said he, ¢ . know not
who should be ray heir.
‘Brother mine,’ i the cient ‘your duty is
clear. Make Christ your heir.’
Now Walter Espec relished the advice, and prc-
ceeded to act on it forthwith. He founded three
religious houses, one at Warden, a second at Kirk-
ham, a third at Rievallé; and, having been a disciple
of Harding, and much attached to the Cistercian
order, he planted at each place a colony of monks, sent
him from beyond the sea by the great St. Bernard ;
and, having further signalised his piety by becoming
a monk in the abbey of Rievallé, he died, full of
years and honours, and was buried in that religious
house ; while his territorial possessions passed to the
Lord de Roos, as husband of his sister.
Nevertheless, the family of Espec was not yet
extinct. A branch still survived and flourished in
the north; and, as time passed over, a kinsman of
the great Walter won distinction in war, and, though
a knight of small estate, wedded a daughter of that
Anglo-Saxon race the Icinglas, once so great in Eng-
land, but of whom now almost everything is for-
cotten but the name. And this Espec, who had
lived as a soldicr, died a soldier’s death; falling
bravely with his feet to the foe, on that day in 1242
WALTER AND OSBERT. 23
when the English under King Henry fought against
such fearful odds, at the village of Saintonge. But
even now the Especs were not without representa-
tives; for, by his Anglo-Saxon spouse Algitha, the
Anglo-Norman warrior who fell in Gascony left
two sons, and of the two one was named Walter, the
other Osbert.
While Dame Algitha Espec lived, the young
specs scarcely felt the loss they had sustained in
the death of their father. Nothing, indeed, could
have been more exemplary than the care which the
Anglo-Saxon dame bestowed on her sons. In a con-
versation which Walter Espec held on the battle-
ments of the castle of Wark, with his brother-in-
arms Guy Muschamp, the heir of an Anglo-Norman -
baron of Northumberland, he lauded her excellence
as a woman, and her tenderness as a mother.
‘[ was in my tenth year,’ said Walter, ‘when my
father, atter having served King Henry as a knight
in Gascony, fell in battle; and, albeit my mother,
when she became a widow, was still fair and of fresh
ave, a widow she resolved to remain; and she adhered
firmly to her purpose. In truth, her mouth was so
accustomed to repeat the name of her dead hus-
band that it seemed as if his memory had _ pos-
session of her whole heart and soul; for whether
in praying or giving alms, and even in the most
ordinary acts of life, she continually pronounced his
name. |
‘My mother brought up my brother and myself
with the most tender care. Living at our castellated
house of Heckspeth, in the Wansbeck, and hard by
24 : THE BOY CRUSADERS,
the abbey of Newminster, she lived in great fear of
the Lord, and with an equal love for her neighbours,
especially such as were poor; and she prudently
managed us and our property. Scarcely had we
learned the first elements of letters, which she her-
self, being convent-bred, taught us, when, eager to
have us instructed, she confided us to a master
of grammar, who incited us to work, and taught
us to recite verses and compose them according to
rule.’
It was while the brothers Espec were studying
under this master of grammar, and indulging with
spirit and energy in the sports and recreations
fashionable among the boys of the thirteenth
century —such as playing with whirligigs and paper
windmills, and mimic engines of war, and trundling
hoops, and shooting with bows and arrows, and learn-
ing to swim on bladders, that Dame Algitha followed
her husband to a better world, and they found them-
selves orphans and unprotected. For both, however,
Providence raised up friends in the day of need.
Remembering what he owed to his connection with
the Especs, the Lord de Roos received Walter into his
castle of Wark, to be trained to arms; and another
kinsman, who was a prior in France, received Osbert
into his convent, to be reared asa monk. The orphans,
who had never before been separated, and who were
fondly attached, parted after many embraces, and
many tears ; and, with as little knowledge of the world
into which they were entering as fishes have of the
sea in which they swim, each went where destiny.
seemed to point the way.
CHIVALROUS EXERCISES. 25
On reaching the castle of Wark, Walter Espec felt
delighted with the novelty of the scene, and entered
with enthusiasm upon his duties as an aspirant to
the honours of chivalry. Besides learning to carve,
to sing, and to take part in that exciting sport which
has been described as ‘the image of war’—such as
hawking, and hunting the hare, the deer, the boar,
and the wolf —he ere long signalised himself in the
tiltyard by the facility which he displayed in ac-
quiring skill in arms, and in chivalrous exercises.
Indeed, whether in assailing the pel, or charging the
quintain on horseback, or riding at the ring, or in
the combat at the barriers, Walter had hardly a rival
among the youths of his own age; and, after being
advanced to the rank of squire, he crowned his
triumphs in the tiltyard by successfully charging on
horseback, @ la Coeur de Lion, with a sword in one
hand and a lance in the other.
But still Walter Espec was unhappy; and, even
when his dexterity and prowess in arms moved the
envy or admiration of his youthful compeers, his
heart was sad and his smile mournful.
And why was the brave boy so sad?
At the time when Walter was winning such repu-
tation at the castle of Wark, Jerusalem was sacked
by the Karismians. A cry of distress came from the
Christians in the East; and the warriors of the West
were implored to undertake a new crusade, to rescue
the Holy Sepulchre and save the kingdom founded
by Godfrey and the Baldwins. The warriors of the
West, however, showed no inclination te leave their
homes; and tle pope was lamenting the absence of
26 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
Christian zeal, when a boy went about France,
singing in his native tongue—
Jesus, Lord, repair our loss,
Restore to us thy blessed cross ;
and met with much sympathy from those of his
ownage. Multitudes of children crowded round him
as their leader, and followed his footsteps wherever
he went. Nothing could restrain their enthusiasm ;
and, assembling in crowds in the environs of Paris,
they prepared to cross Burgundy and make for
Marseilles.
‘And whither are you going, children?’ people
asked.
‘We are going to Jerusalem, to deliver the Holy
Sepulchre,’ answered they.
‘But how are you to get there?’ was the next
question.
‘Oh,’ replied they, ‘you seem not to know how it
has been prophesied that this year the drought will
be very great, that the sun will dissipate all the
waters, and that the abysses of the sea will be dry;
and that an easy road will lie open to us across the
bed of the Mediterranean.’
On reaching Marseilles, however, the young pil-
orims discovered that they had been deluded. Some
of them returned to their homes; but the majority
were not so fortunate. Many lost themselves in the
forests which then covered the country, and died
of hunger and fatigue; and the others became
objects of speculation to two merchants of Marseilles,
who carried on trade with the Saracens. Affecting.
to act from motives of piety, the two merchants
SOLD TO TIT SLAVE-DEALERS, 27
tempted the boy-pilgrims by offering to convey them,
without charge, to the Holy Land; and, the offer
having been joyfully accepted, seven vessels, with
children on board, sailed from Marseilles. But the
voyage was not prosperous. At the end of two days,
when the ships were off the isle of St. Peter, near
the rock of the Recluse, a tempest arose, and the
wind blew so violently that two of them went down
with all on board. The five others, however, wea-
thered the storm, and reached Bugia and Alexandria.
And now the young Crusaders discovered to their con-
sternation how they had been deceived and betrayed.
Without delay they were sold by the merchants to the
slave-dealers, and by the slave-dealers to the Saracens.
Forty of them were purchased for the caliph and
carried to Bagdad, where they were forced to abjure
Christianity, and brought up as slaves.
Now, among the boys who had yielded to the
prevailing excitement, and repaired to Marseilles to
embark for Syria, was Osbert Espec; and ever since
Walter received from his kinsman, the prior, intel-
ligence of his brother’s disappearance, and heard the
rumours of what had befallen the young pilgrims on
their arrival in the East, his memory had brooded
over the misfortune, and his imagination, which was
constantly at work, pictured Osbert in the caliph’s
prison, laden with chains, and forced to forswear the
God of his fathers; and the thought of his lost
brother was ever present to his mind. And there-
fore was Walter Espec’s heart sad, and therefore was
his smile mournful,
28
CHAPTER IV.
ST. LOUIS.
MONG the names of the European princes
associated with the history of the Holy War,
that of St. Louis is one of the most renowned.
Although flourishing in a century which produced
personages like I'rederick, Emperor of Germany, and
our first great Edward, who far excelled him in genius
and prowess—-as wise rulers in peace and mighty
chiefs in war—his saintliness, his patience in afflic-
tion, his respect for justice and the rights of his
neighbours, entitle him to a high place among the
men of the age which could boast of so many royal
heroes. In order to comprehend the crusade, of
which he was leader, it is necessary to refer briefly
to the character and career of the good and pious
king, who, in the midst of disaster and danger,
exhibited the courage of a hero and the resignation
of a martyr.
It was on the day of the Festival of St. Mark, in
the year 1215, that Blanche of Castille, wife of the
eighth Louis of France, gave birth, at Poissy, to an
heir to the crown, which Hugh Capet had, three
centuries earlier, taken from the feeble heir of
BLANCHE OF CASTILLE. 29
Charlemagne. On the death of his father, Louis,
then in his twelfth year, became King of France, at
a time when it recuired a man with a strong hand
to maintain the privileges of the crown against the
ereat nobles of the kingdom. Fortunately for the
young monarch Providence had blessed him with a
mother, who, whatever her faults and failings—and
chroniclers have not spared her reputation—brought
to the terrible task of governing in a feudal age a
high spirit and a strong will, and applied herself
earnestly to the duty of bringing up her son in the
way in which he should walk, and educating him in
such a manner as to prepare him for executing the
high functions which he was destined to fulfil.
While, with the aid of her chivalrous admirer, the
Count of Champagne, and the counsel of a cardinal-
legate—with whom, by-the-bye, she was accused of
being somewhat too familiar—Blanche of Castille
maintained the rights of the French monarchy against
the great vassals of France, she reared her son with
the utmost care. She entrusted his education to
excellent masters, appointed persons eminent for
piety to attend to his religious instruction, and
evinced profound anxiety that he should lead a
virtuous and holy life.
‘Rather,’ she once said, ‘would I see my son in
his grave, than learn that he had committed a mortal
sin.’
As time passed on, Blanche of Castille had the
gratification of finding that her toil and her anxiety
Were not in vain. Louis, indeed. was a model whom
other princes, in their teens, would have done well
30 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
to copy. His piety, and his eagerness to do what
was right and to avoid what was wrong, raised the
wonder of his contemporaries. He passed much of
his time in devotional exercises, and, when not
occupied with religious duties, ever conducted him-
self as if with a consciousness that the eye of his
Maker was upon him, and that he would one day
have to give a strict account of all his actions.
Every morning he went to hear prayers chanted, and
mass and the service of the day sung; every after-
noon he reclined on his couch, and listened while
one of his chaplains repeated prayers for the dead;
and every evening he heard complines.
Nevertheless, Louis did not, like such royal per-
sonages as our Henry VI., allow his religious exer-
cises so wholly to monopolise his time or attention
as to neglect the duties which devolved upon him as
king. The reverse was the case. After arriving at
manhood he convinced the world that he was well
qualified to lead men in war, and to govern them in
peace.
It happened that, in the year 1242, Henry King
of England, who was several years older than Louis,
became ambitious of regaining the continental ter-
ritory wrested from his father, John, by Philip
Augustus; and the Count de la Marche, growing
malecontent with the government of France, formed
a confederacy against the throne, and invited Henry
to conduct an army to the Continent. Everything
seemed so promising, and the confederacy so formid~
able, that Henry, unable to resist the temptation of »
recovering Normandy and Anjou, crossed the sea,
THE CONFEDERATES REPULSED. 3l
landed at Bordeaux, and prepared for hostilities,
At first, the contederates were contident of succeed-
ing in their ebjects; but, ere long, they discovered
that they had mistaken their position, and the
character of the prince whom they were defying.
In tact, Louis soon proved that he was no ‘ carpet
knight.’ Assembling an army, he buckled on his
mail, mounted his charger; and placing himself at
the head of his forces, marched to encounter his
enemies. Reaching the banks of the Charente, he
offered the confederates battle, near the bridge of
Taillebourg; but his challenge was not accepted.
By this time the confederates had lost faith in their
enterprise ; and while De la Marche was meditating a
reconciliation with Louis, Henry, accusing the count
of having deceived, and being about to betray, him,
retreated precipitately, and never drew rein till he
reached the village of Saintonge.
But Louis was unwilling to allow his royal foe to
escape so easily. Nor, indeed, could Henry without
reluctance fly from the peril he had provoked. At
all events, on reaching Saintonge, the English turned
to bay, and a battle began. But the odds were
overwhelming; and, though the Anglo-Norman barons
fought with characteristic courage, they were speedily
worsted, and under the necessity of making for
Bordeaux.
From the day on which this battle was fought, it
was no longer doubtful that Louis was quite able to
hold his own; and neither foreign kings nor conti-
nental counts cared to disturb his government or
deity his power. In fact, the fame of the King of
re
5
THE BOY CRUSADERS,
France became great throuchout Christendom, and
inspired the hopes of the Christians of the East.
Nor was it merely as a warrior that Louis sig-
nalised himself among his contemporaries. At the
time when he was attending, with exemplary regu-
larity, to his religious devotions, and keeping watch
over the security of his dominions, he was devoting
himself assiduously to his duties as sovereign and to
the administration of justice.
One day, when Louis was at the castle of Hieros,
in Provence, a Cordelier friar approached.
‘Sire,’ said the friar, ‘I have read of unbelieving
princes in the Bib!e and other good books; yet I
have never read of a kingdom of believers or un-
believers being ruined, but from want of justice
being duly administered. Now,’ continued the friar,
‘I perceive the king is going to France; let him
administer justice with care, that our Lord may
suffer him to enjoy his kingdom, and that it may
remain in peace and tranquillity all the days of his
life, and that God may not deprive him of it with
shame and dishonour.’ |
Louis listened attentively to the Cordelier, and the
friar’s words sank deep into his mind. From that
date he gave much attention to the administration of
justice, and took especial care to prevent the poor
being wronged by their more powerful neighbours.
On summer days, after hearing mass, he was in the
habit of repairing to the gardens of his palace, seat-
ing himself on a carpet, and lstening to such as
wished to appeal to him; at other times he went to
the wood of Vincennes, and there, sitting under an
IARGARET OF PROVENCE. 83
oak, listened to their statements with attention and
patience. No ceremony was allowed to keep the
poor man from the kine’s justice-seat.
‘Whoever has a complaint to make,’ Louis was
wont to say, ‘let him now make it ;’ and when there
were several who wished to be heard, he would add,
‘My friends, be silent for awhile, and your causes
shall be despatched one after another.’
When Louis was in his nineteenth year, Blanche
of Castille recognised the expediency of uniting him
to a princess worthy of sharing the French throne,
-and bethought her of the family of Raymond
Berenger, Count of Provence, one of the most ac-
complished men in Europe, and whose countess,
Beatrice of Savoy, was even more accomplished
than her husband; Raymond and Beatrice had four
daughters, ai! remarkable for their wit and beauty,
and all destined to be queens. Of these four daugh-
ters, the eldest, Margaret of Provence, who was then
thirteen, was selected as the bride of Louis; and,
about two years before her younger sister, Eleanor,
was conducted to England to be espoused by King
Henry, Margaret arrived in Paris, and began to
figure as Queen of France. :
The two princesses of Provence who had the for-
tune to form such high alliances found themselves in
very different positions. Eleanor did just as she
pleased, ruled her husband, and acted as if every-
thing in England had been created for her gratifi-
eation. Margaret’s situation, though more safe, was
much less pleasant. In her husband’s palace she could
not boast of being in the enjoyment even of personal
34 THE BOY CRUSADERS, ~
liberty. In fact, Queen Blanche was too fond of
power to allow that which she had acquired to be
needlessly imperilled; and, apprehensive that the -
young queen should gain too much influence with
the king, she deliberately kept the royal pair’sepa-
rate. Nothing, indeed, could exceed the domestic
tyranny under which they suffered. When Louis
and Margaret made royal progresses, Blanche of
Castille took care that her son and daughter-in-law
were lodged in separate houses. Even in cases of
sickness the queen-mother did not relent. On one
occasion, when Margaret was ill and in the utmost
danger, Louis stole to her chamber. While he was
there, Blanche entered, and he endeavoured to con-
ceal himself. Blanche, however, detected him, shook
her head, and forcibly pushed him out of the door.
‘ Be off, sir,’ said she, sternly ; ‘ you have no richt
here.’
‘Madam, madam,’ exclaimed Margaret, in despair,
‘will you not allow me to see my husband, either
when I am living, or when I am dying?’ and the
poor queen fainted away.
It was while the young saint-king and his fair
Provencal spouse were enduring this treatment at the
hands of the old queen-mother that events occurred
which fired Louis with the idea of undertaking a
crusade, and gave Margaret an excellent excuse for
escaping from the society of the despotic dowager
who had embittered her life, and almost broken her
heart.
One day, when Louis was recovering from the
effects of a fever, which had so thoroughly prostrated
RECOVERY OF LOUIS. 35
him, that at times his attendants believed he was
dead, he ordered a Cross to be stitched to his
garments. |
‘ How is this,’ asked Blanche of Castille, when she
came to visit her son on his sick bed.
‘Madam,’ whispered the attendants, ‘the king
has, out of gratitude for his recovery, taken the Cross,
and vowed to combat the infidel.’
‘Alas! alas! exclaimed Blanche, terrified, ‘I am
struck as fearfully as if I had seen him dead.’
36
CHAPTER V.
TAKING THE CROSS.
CENTURY anda half had elapsed since Peter the
Hermit roused Christendom to rescue the Holy
Sepulchre, and since Godfrey and the Baldwins
established the Christian kingdom of Jerusalem ; and
in the interval, many valiant warriors— including
Richard Coeur de Lion, and Fhilip Augustus, and
Frederick Barbarossa—had gone forth to fight in its
defence; and the orders of military monks—the
Knights of the Temple, the Knigbts of St. John, the
Knights of St. Katherine of Sinai, and the Teutonic
Knights, had risen to keep watch over the safety of
the Holy Sepulchre. But the kingdom of Jerusalem,
constantly exposed to rude shocks, far from prosper-
ing, was always in danger of ruin; and in 1244 the
Holy City, its capital, was taken and sacked by a wild
race, Without a country, known as the Karismians,
who, at the sultan’s instance, slaughtered the inhab-
itants, opened the tombs, burnt the bodies of heroes,
scattered the relics of saints and martyrs .to the
wind, and perpetrated such enormities as Jerusalem,
in her varying fortunes, had never before witnessed.
When this event occurred, the Christians of the
WAR IN CIIRISTEN DOM. 3?
East, more loudly than ever, implored the warriors
of Europe to come to their rescue. But, as it hap-
pened, most of the princes of Christendom were in
too much trouble at home to attend to the affairs of
Jerusalem. Baldwin Courtenay, Emperor of Constan-
tinople, was constantly threatened with expulsion
_by the Greeks; Frederick, Emperor of Germany,
was at war with the Pope; the King of Castille
was fighting with the Moors; the King of Poland
was fully occupied with the Tartars; the King of
Denmark had to defend his throne against his own
brother; the King of Sweden had to defend his
throne against the Tolekungers. As for Henry
King of England, he was already involved in those
disputes with the Anglo-Norman barons which ulti-
mately led to the Barons’ War. One kingdom alone
was at peace; and it was France, then ruled by
Louis [X., since celebrated as St. Louis, that Hesones
to the cry of distress.
At that time Louis King of France, then not
more than thirty, but already, as we have seen, noted
for piety and valour, was stretched on a bed of sick-
ness, and so utterly prostrate that, at times, as has
been related, he was thought to be dead. Never-
theless, he did recover; and, snatched as if by
miracle from the gates of death, he evinced his
eratitude to Heaven by ordering the Cross to be fixed
to his vestments, and vowing to undertake an expe-
dition for the rescue of the Holy Sepulchre.
The resolution of the saintly monarch was not
quite agreeable to his family or his subjects, any
more than to his mother, Blanche of Castille; and
é
THE BOY CRUSADERS,
0
Ge
many of lis lords made earnest efforts to divert.
him from his purpose. But remonstrance proved
unavailing, Clinging steadfastly to his resolution,
Louis summoned a Parliament at Paris, induced the
assembjed magnates to take tlie Cross, oceupied three
years with preparations on a great scale, and ulti-
mately, having repaired to St. Denis, and received
from the hands of the papal legate the famous
standard known as the oriflamme of France, em-
barked at Aigues Mortes, and sailed for Cyprus, with -
his queen, Margaret. of Provence, his brothers, the
Counts of Artois, Poictiers, and Anjou, and many
of the greatest lords of his kingdom.
Meanwhile, the barons of England were not. in-
different to what was- passing on the Continent.
Many of them, indeed, were desirous to take part in
the expedition. But King Henry not only forbade
them to assume the Cross, but would not allow a
crusade to be preached in his dominions. No gene-
ral movement was therefore made in England.
Nevertheless, William Lonysword, Eaal of Salisbury,
grandson of the second Henry and Rosamond Clifford,
determined on an ‘armed pilgrimage,’ and, in com-
pany with Lord Robert de Vere and others, vowed
to join the French Crusaders and combat the Saracens.
Hfenry, enraged at his mandate being disregarded,
seized Salisbury’s manors and castles; but the earl,
faithful to his vow, embarked, with De Vere as
his standard-bearer, and with two hundred Knelish
knights of noble name and danntless courage, sworn
to bring the standard hack with glory, o. dye it
with their hearts’ blood
BATDL PATRICK. 39
At the same time Patrick, Earl of March, the
most illustrious noble who sprang from the Anglo-
Saxon race, announced his intention of accompany-
ing King Louis to the East. Earl Patrick had seen
more than threescore years, and his hair was white,
and his limbs stiff; but his head was still as clear,
and his heart was still as courageous, as in the days
when he had dyed his lance in Celtic blood, van-
quished the great Somerled, and carried the Bastard
of Galloway in chains to Edinburgh; and, with
an earnest desire to couch against the enemies of
Christianity the lance which he had often couched
acainst the enemies of civilisation, he took the Cross,
sold his stud on the Leader Haughs to pay his
expenses, bade a last farewell to Euphemia Stewart,
his aged countess, received the pilgrim’s staff and
scrip from the Ab»ot of Melrose, and left his castle
to embark with his knights and kinsmen.
‘I was young, and now I am old,’ said Earl
Patrick, with enthusiasm. ‘In my youth I fought
with the foes of my race. In my old age I will
fare forth and combat the foes of my religion.’
It was under the banner of this aged hero that
Guy Muschamp and Walter Espec were about to
embark for the East; and, on the evening of the day
preceding that on which they were to set out, they
were conducted to the presence of the mother of the
lord of the castle, who was the daughter of a Scottish
king, that they might receive her blessing.
‘My children,’ said she, as they knelt before her,
and she laid her hands on their heads, ‘do not forget,
when among strangers and exposed to temptation,
At) THE LOY CRUSADERS.
the lessons of piety and chivalry which you have
learned within these walls. Fear God, and He will
support you in all dangers. Be frank and courteous,
but not servile, to the rich and powerful; kind and
helpful to the poor and afflicted. Beware of merit-
ing the reproaches of the brave; and ever bear in
mind that evil befalls him who proves false to his
promises to his God, his country, and his lady. Be
brave in war; in peace, loyal and true in thought and
word; and Heaven will bless you, and men will hold
your names in honour, and you will be dreaded in
battle and loved in hall.’
Next mornirg the brothers-in-arms rose betimes;
and, all preparations for their departure having been
previously made, they mounted at daybreak, and
leaving the castle of Wark, and riding through the
great park that lay around it, startling the deer and
the wild cattle as they went, took their way towards
Berwick, before which rode the ships destined to
convey them from their native shores.
CHAPTER VI.
EMBARKING FOR THE EAST.
T was Saturday; and the sun shone brightly on
pool and stream, and even lighted up the dingy
corners of walled cities, as the Earl of March pro-
ceeded on foot from the castle to the port of Berwick,
and embarked with his knights and kinsmen.
The event created much excitement in the town.
In fact, though the princes and nobles of Europe
were weary of enterprises that had ruined so many
great houses, the people still thought of the crusades
with interest, and talked of them with enthusiasm.
The very name of Palestine exercised a magical
influence on the European Christians of that gene-
ration. At the mention of the Holy Land, their
imagination conjured up the most picturesque
scenery; Saracenic castles stored with gold and
jewels; cities the names of which were recorded in
the sacred book which the poorest knew by picture ;
and they listened earnestly as palmer or pilgrim told
of Sharon with its roses without thorns; Lebanon
with its cedars and vines; and Carmel with its
solitary convent, and its summit covered with thyme,
and haunted by the eagle and the boar, till their
42 THE BOY vURUSADERS.
fancy pictured ‘a land flowing with milk and honey,’
by repairing to which sinners could secure pardon
without penance in this world, and happiness without
purgatory in the next.
Jt is not wonderful that, when such sentiments
prevailed, the embarkation of a great noble for the
Holy Land should have excited much interest; and,
as Guy Muschamp and Walter Espec took their way
from the castle to the port, crowded with ships, and
passed warehouses stored with merchandise, the Red
Iiall of the Flemings resounding with the noise of
artificers, the wealthy religious houses which kept
alive the flame of ancient learning, and dispensed be-
fitting charities, the streets presented a motley assem-
blage of seafaring men, monks, warriors, and soldiers ;
the wives and daughters of the burghers, all in
holiday attire, crowded the housetops or gazed
from the windows and balconies; and the burghers
themselves, leaving their booths and warehouses,
flocked to the port to gossip with each other, and to
witness the departure of the armed pilgrims.
‘Oh, good Walter,’ exclaimed Guy Muschamp,
whose spirit rose with the excitement, ‘is not this a
stirring scene? By St. John of Beverley, what rich
armour! what gallant ships! what stately churches!
And yet I would wager my basinet to a prentice’s
flat cap that it is not, for a moment, to be compared
to Acre.’ 7
‘I deem that it can hardly be,’ replied Walter,
calmly; ‘and, in truth, I am in no mood to look
upon lite with joyous emotions. But, brave Guy, I
am pleased to see you pleased; albeit, T own frankly
THE EMBARKATION. 43
that I should be more than human did IJ uot. some-
what envy you your gaiety.’
‘Be gay, good Walter,’
Walter shock his head. —
‘Vain would be the effort,’ he replied, sadly;
can only pray to God and Holy Katherine to grant
that I may return with a lighter heart.’
‘As for me, continued Guy, ‘I am ever gay—-gay
as the laik; gay in the morning, gay at eve. It is my
nature so to bee My mother is a Frenchwoman—a
kinswoman of the Lord of Joinville-—and scaice
knows what sadnees is. I inherit her spirit; and I
doubt not that, if I am slain by the wanes I shall
die laughing.’
With this conversation they reacheil the quay, just
as Earl Patrick was stepping on board his ship, the
‘Hilda,’ which, if less graceful and elegant than the
vessels of modern times, was imposing to look upon
Adorned with painting and gilding, it had armovial
bearings and badges embroidered on various paris;
banners of gay and brilliant colours floated from the
masts; and the sails of azure and purple shone with
work of gold. Armour elittered on deck; and martial
music was not wanting to give variety to the display.
Meanwhile, amidst the bustle and shouts of the
crew, the ports of the vessel were opened to allow
the horses of the armed pilgrims to enter; and, as
the ports were under water when the vessel was at
sea, they were caulked and stopped up as close as a
tun of wine. This operation over, and all the adven-
turers embarked, the skipper raised his hand for
sileice.
Ad THE BOY CRUSADERS.
‘My men, is your work done?’ cried he to his
people in the prow; ‘are you ready ?’
‘Yes, in truth, we are ready,’ answered the sea-
men. |
And now, the priests who accompanied Earl
Patrick having embarked, the captain made them
mount to the castle of the ship, and chant psalms
in praise of God, and to pray that He might be
pleased to grant a prosperous voyage; and they,
having ascended, sang the beautiful hymn of ‘ Veni,
Creator’ from beginning to end. While the priests
sang, the mariners set their sails, and the skipper
ordered them to haul up the anchor; and instantly
a breeze filled the sails, and the ships moved slowly
but proudly away from the shore.
45
CHAPTER VIL
THE ARMED PILGRIMS AT CYPRUS,
N°â€; with the very best grace did the King of
France come to the resolution of sailing for
Cyprus. Indeed, the safety of his army depended,
in some degree, on the route selected; and the
safest way to the Holy Land was understood to be
by Sicily. Unluckily, however, Sicily was subject
to the Emperor Frederick; and Frederick and his
dominions had been excommunicated by the Pope;
and Louis, with his peculiar notions, feared ‘to set
foot on a soil that was under the ban of the Church.
At Lyons, where he received the papal blessing, he
endeavoured to reconcile the Emperor and the Pope;
but his Holiness declined to listen to mediation ; and
the saint-king, yielding to conscientious scruples,
determined, without further hesitation, to sacrifice
his plan of passing through Sicily to Syria, and
announced his intention of proceeding by way of
Cyprus to Egypt.
At that time the King of Cyprus was Henry de Lu-
signan, to whose family Richard Coeur de Lion had,
in the twelfth century, given the throne, from which
he dragged the Emperor Isaac; and no sooner did
46 THE BOY ctkUSADERS.
Louis reach the port of Limisso, than Henry, accom-
panied by nobles and clergy, appeared to bid him
welcome. Nothing, indeed, could have exceeded the
enthusiasm with which the French Crusaders were
received; and when Louis was conducted with much
ceremony to Nicosia, aud entered that city, the capital
of the island, the pcpulace cheered loudly, and the
clergy met him, singing * Blessed is he that comes
in the name of the Lord.’
The glory of Nicosia has long since departed.
Situated in the centre of Cyprus, on the river Pedia,
in a low fertile plain, near the base of a range of
mountains that intersects the island, and surrounded
by walls, in the form of a hexagon, flanked with
bastions, the capital has many fine houses; but
these are mostly in ruins, and the inhabitants occupy
tenements reared of mud and brick, and rather
repulsive in appearance. At that time, however, the
state of Nicosia was very different. As the capital
of the Lusignans, the city exhibited the pomp and
pride of feudal chivalry, with much of the splen-
dour of oriental courts, and boasted of its palaces,
castles, churches, and convents, and chapelries, and
vardens, and vineyards, and pleasant places, and all
the luxuries likely to render medizeval life enviable.
_ Now, when Louis landed at Limisso, and entered
Nicosia, he had no intention of wintering in Cyprus.
In fact, the saint-king was all eagerness to push
forward and combat the Saracens. But circum-
stances proved stronger than his will. The Crusaders
were highly captivated with all that they saw and
heard. ‘The aspect of the island was enchanting ;
THE EFFECTS OF DISSIPATION, 47
the wine, which even Solomon has deigned to cele-
brate, was to their taste: the dark-eyed Greek
women, who perhaps knew that the island had
anciently been the favourite seat of Venus, and who,
in any case, enjoyed the reputation of being devoted
to the worship of the goddess, were doubtless fasci-
nating; and almost every one of the days that suc-
ceeded Louis's arrival was devoted to rejoicings and
feastings. Not unnaturally, but most unfortunately,
the Crusaders yielded to the fascinations of an
existence which at first they all enjoyed, heart
and soul; and with one accord they cried out, ‘ We
must tarry here till spring. Let us eat, drink, and
be merry.’ ,
Accordingly the Crusaders did winter in Cyprus;
and the consequences were most disastrous. Ener-
vated by luxury, they soon forgot their vows, and
rushed into every kind of extravagance and dissipa-
tion. Of course, their recklessness soon brought its
own punishment. As time passed on, and winter set
in, rain fell daily, and the intemperance, the strange
climate, and the weather soon did their work. By-
and-by, a pestilential disease made its appearance in
the camp of the pilgrims, and carried -ff thousands
of victims, including two hundred and “fty knights.
Moreover, there was much discord anJ dissension.
The Greek clergy and the Latin clergy began to
quarrel; the Templars and the Knights of St. John
began to fight; and the saint-king found his position
the very reverse of satisfactory or agreeabie.
By the time that the little fleet, on board of which
were Guy Muschamp and Walter Espec, reached
48 THE BOY CRUSADETS.
Cyprus, matters were not what they should have
been; and the wise and prudent shook their heads,
and predicted that an expedition conducted in
such a fashion was too likely to end in disaster and
ruin.
49
CHAPTER VIII.
EASTWARD.
r was July, as [ have intimated, when the ship
‘Hilda,’ which carried Walter Espec and Guy
Muschamp, left the shores of England; and, soon after
having lost sight of land, both began to experience
a little of that vague fear of ‘the blue above and the
blue below,’ which, in the thirteenth century, made
some of the boldest feudal warriors, when they em-
barked, invoke the protection of the saints in
Paradise.
‘On my faith, good Walter,’ remarked Guy, with
less than his wonted gaiety, for the ship was beginning
to toss, and he was beginning to feel rather sea sick,
‘fT cannot but think that the man is a great fool, who,
having wronged any of his neighbours, or having
any mortal sin on his conscience, puts himself in such
peril as this; for, when he goes to sleep at night, he
knows not if in the morning he may not find him-
self under the waves.’
‘May the saints preserve us from such a fate,’
replied Walter, thoughtfully; ‘yet I own I feel so
uneasy that [can hardly believe myself a descendant
of the kings of the north who made the ocean their
50 THE DOY CRUSADERS.
home, and called the tempest their servant, and
never felt so joyous as when they were treading the
pine plank, and giving the reins to their ereat sea
. horses.’
‘On my faith,’ said Guy, who was every moment
becoming more uncomfortable, *I cannot but marvel
much at the eccentricity of their tastes, and could
almost wish myself back to the castle of Wark.’
‘Nevertheless,’ replied Walter, ‘we must bear in
mind that, having taken the Cross and vowed to
combat the Saracens, it beseems us not, as Christians
and gentlemen, to look backward.’
At the time when this conversation took place, the
sea was comparatively calm, and the weather most
favourable; and the skipper, naturally overjoyed with
his good fortune in both respects, predicted a speedy
voyage. In this, however, he was in some measure
disappointed. Many circumstances occurred to retard
the progress of the Saxon Earl and his companions
towards Cyprus; and, what with prolonged calms, and
contrary winds, and foul weather, it was late in
autumn ere they neared the island where the King
of France and his chivalry had, for their misfortune,
resolved on passing the winter.
So far all was well, and the Boy Crusaders, now
recovered from their sickness, rejoiced in the antici-
pation of soon reaching Cyprus. But the dangers of
the voyage were not yet over, and one evening, about
vespers, while Walter and Guy were regaling their
imaginations with the prospect of being speedily in
the company of the warriors of France, the mariners
found that. they were unpleasantly close to a great
A PERILOUS MOUNTAIN. 51
mountain of Barbary. Not relishing their position
—for they had the fear of the Saracens of Barbary
before their eyes—the mariners pressed on, and
during the night made all the sail they could, and
flattered themselves that they had run at least fifty
leagues. But what was their surprise when day
broke, to find that they were still off the mountain
which they fancied they must have left behind. Great,
moreover, was their alarm as they thought of the
pivatical natives; and, albeit they laboured hard all
that day and all that night to make sail, when the
sun rose next morning—it was Saturday—-the moun-
tain, from which they were so anxious to escape, was
still near at hand. All on board expressed their
alarm on discovering that the mariners deemed their
position perilous; and the Earl, on learning how
matters stood, appeared on deck, and summoned the
master of the ship.
‘In wonder’s name, skipper,’ said he, sternly, ‘ how
happens this?’
‘In truth, my lord earl,’ replied the skipper,
much perplexed, ‘I cannot tell how it happens; but
this I know, that we all run great risk of our lives.’
‘In what way?’
‘From the Saracens of Barbary, who are cruel and
savage, and who are aS likely as not to come down in
swarms and attack us.’
The idea of captivity and chains occurred to every
one who listened, and even the Earl changed coun-
tenance. At that moment, however, one a the chap-
lains stepped forward. He was a discreet churchman,
and his words were ever treated with high respect.
52 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
‘My lord earl and gentlemen,’ said the chaplain;
‘I never remember any distress in our parish, either
from too much abundance or from want of rain, or
from any other plague, but that God delivered us
from it, and caused everything to happen as well as
could have been wished, when a procession had been
made three times with devotion on a Saturday.’ |
‘Wherefore,’ suggested the Earl, ‘ you would have
us do likewise, as deeming the ceremony likely to
deliver us from our peril ?’
‘Even so,’ continued the churchman. ‘I recom-
mend, noble Earl, that, as this day is Saturday, we
instantly commence walking in procession round the
masts of the ship.’
‘By all means,’ replied the Earl, ‘let us forth-
with walk in procession as you recommend. Worse
than foolish would it be on our parts to neglect such
a ceremony. A simple remedy, on my faith, for such
an evil.’
Accordingly, the skipper issued orders through
the ship; and all on board were assembled on deck,
and, headed by the priests, solemnly walked in pro-
cession round the masts, singing as they walked;
and, however it came to pass, the ceremony seemed
to have the effect which the chaplain had _prog-
nosticated. From that moment everything went
smoothly. Almost immediately afterwards they lost
sight of the mountain, and cast all fear of the Saracens
of Barbary to the winds; and ere long they had the
gratification of hearing the ery of ‘Land, and of
seeing before their eyes the far-famed island of
Cyprus.
CYPRUS. 53
It was latest autumn, however; and Cyprus did
not look by any means so bright and beautiful as the
Boy Crusaders had, during the voyage, anticipated.
Indeed, clouds rested over the range of mountains
that intersects the island lenethways. The rain had
fallen somewhat heavily, and the aspect of the place
was so decidedly dismal and disheartening, that, as
the two squires landed, their countenances expressed
much disappointment.
‘Now, by St. Jobn of Beverley,’ exclaimed Guy,
giving expression to his feelings, ‘I marvel much
that this lovely queen, Venus, of whom minstrels
have sung so much, should, when she doubtless had
her free choice as to a residence, have so highly
favoured this place.
‘Tastes differ,’ replied Walter, rather gloomi'y.
‘Certainly, had I my choice of a residence, I should
fix my abode elsewhere.’
‘But what have we here?’ cried Guy, as he
pointed to countless casks of wine piled high, one on
the other, and to huge heaps of wheat, barley, and
other grains, which the purveyors of King Louis had
some time before prepared for his grand enterprise.
‘ Beshrew me, if, at a distance, I did not imagine the
casks of wine to be houses, and the heaps of corn
mountains.’
‘Anyhow,’ observed Walter, ‘the sight of the
wine and the corn should give us comfort; for it is
clear that the King of France, however saintly, does
not forget that men have mouths, nor mean his
army to die of hunger or thirst.’
‘On my faith,’ said Guy, ‘I have a strong desire
D
54 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
to catch a glance of this miracle of saintliness. [
marvel if he rides about Cyprus on a Spanish steed,
magnificently harnessed, as chronicles tell of Richard
Ceur de Lion doing, dressed in a tunic of rose-
coloured satin, and a mantle of striped and silver
tissue, brocaded with half moons, and a_ scarlet
bonnet brocaded with gold, and wearing a Damascus
blade with a golden hilt in a silver sheath — oh,
what a fine figure the English king must have cut!’
‘ However,’ said Walter, ‘I fancy King Louis is
not quite so splendid in his appearance as Coeur de
Lion was. But we shall see him ere long.’
‘Ay,’ cried Guy; ‘we must have a peep at the
royal saint. Meanwhile, good Walter, one thing is
certain — that we are in Cyprus.’
CHAPTER IX.
AN ADVENTURE.
[’ was not the good fortune of all the warriors who
had taken the Cross to escape the perils of the
deep, and reach Cyprus in safety.
About a month after Guy Muschamp and Walter
Espec had reached Limisso, a tall ship bearing a
Crusader of noble name, who had left Constantinople
to combat the Saracens under the banner of St.
Denis, was sailing gallantly towards Cyprus, when
a violent storm arose, and threatened her with
destruction. ‘The wind blew fiercely; the sea ran
mountains Ingh; and, though the ship for a time ©
strugoled sturdily with the elements, she could
not resist her fate. Her cordage creaked, and her
timbers groaned dismally; and, as she was by turns
borne aloft on the waves crested with foam and
precipitated headlong into the gulphs that yawned
between, great was the terror, loud the wailing, and
frightful the turmoil. Im vain the mariners exerted
their strength and skill. No efforts on their part
could enable the vessel to .resist the fury of the
tempest. |
very minute matters became more desperate.
56 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
The sea, recently calm, seemed to boil from its very .
depths ; and the ship, incessantly tossed to and fro by
the roaring billows, appeared, every moment, on the
point of being engulphed. The skipper was lost in
consternation; the Crusaders gave way to despair;
and with death staring them in the-face they ceased
to hope for safety, and, kneeling, confessed to each
other, and prayed aloud that their sins might be
forgiven. At length, in spite of the efforts made by
the mariners to resist the winds and waves, the ship,
driven on the rocks near the island, filled with water,
went to pieces, leaving those on board to struggle as
they best might to escape a watery grave. The
struggle was vain. Many, indeed, caught hold of the
vessel’s timbers with a vague hope of reaching the
shore; but, unable to contend with the elements,
they, one after another, disappeared and sank to
rise no more.
Now this terrible shipwreck was not without
witnesses. On that part of the coast of Cyprus
where it occurred was a rude hamlet chiefly tenanted
by fishermen ; and men, women, and children crowded
the beach, uttering loud cries, and highly excited,
but unable to render any assistance. It seemed that
no boat could live in such a sea; and the fishermen
could only gaze mournfully on the heartrending
scene, as the waves sprang up and rapaciously
claimed their prey. :
It was while the sea, agitated by the gale, was
still running high; while the waves were leaping,
and tearing, and dashing against the rocks; and-
while flocks of sea birds wheeled and screamed over
A SPECK ON THE OCEAN. 57
4
the troubled waters, that a knight and two
squires, who, having been caught in the storm,
while riding towards Limisso, reined up, and not
without difficulty learned from the natives, whose
language they scarcely comprehended, the nature
and extent of the disaster. The knight was an
I’nglish Crusader, named Bisset, who had taken
service with King Louis; the squires were Walter
spec and Guy Muschamp. All three, as they
became aware of what had happened, crossed them-
selves and breathed a prayer for the souls of those
who had gone to their account.
“We may as well ride on,’ said Guy Muschamp,
who, like his companions, was very much affected;
‘all of them have perished, and are now beyond the
reach of human aid.’
‘Not all of them,’ exclaimed Walter Espec, sud-
denly, as he sprang from his horse, and, with out-
stretched arm, pointed to a white object which was
carried hither and thither by the waves.
‘By the might of Henry, sir squire, you are right,
cried the English knight, highly excited; ‘it is a
woman, as I live, and she is clinging to one of the
ship’s timbers.’
‘And she may yet be saved,’ said Walter, calmly;
‘and by the Holy Cross the attempt must be made,
if we are to escape the reproach of inhumanity and
cowardice.’ |
And now the men, women, and children on the
beach became much excited, and shouted loudly.
No one, however, volunteered to go to the rescue.
In fact, the aspect of the sea was so menacing and
58 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
terrible, that the boldest and hardiest of the sea-
faring men felt that an attempt could only end in
the destruction of those making it, and shook their
heads with a significance there was no misunder-
standing. ae
‘It seems,’ said the knight, mournfully, ‘ that th
business is desperate; and yet ——-’
‘And yet,’ said Walter, taking up the word as the
knight hesitated and paused, ‘it shall never be told
that a woman perished before my eyes, and that I
stood looking on, without making an effort to save
her.’.
‘He is mad,’ muttered the fishermen, as they
first eyed the English squire, and then exchanged
glances with each other, and shrugged their shoul-
ders.
But Walter Espec did not ponder or pause.
Throwing his bridle-rein to Guy Muschamp, whose
countenance expressed grave alarm, he quickly
divested himself of his mantle and the belt bearing
his sword, committed himself to the protection of
Hfoly Katherine, the patron saint of his house,
plunged into the water, and next moment was bat-
tling manfully with the waves. But everything was
against him, even the tide; and, in spite of his skill
as @ Swimmer, his efforts were at first abortive. But
it was not his nature to yield easily ; and, as he put
forth all his strength, and made a desperate struggle,
the affair began to wear another face.
‘Good Walter,’ murmured Guy, who stood, pale
as death, watching the swimmer. < Brave Walter!’ |
“Now, may our lady, the Virgin, aid and prosper
THE RESCUE. out 59
bim,’ exclaimed the knight. ‘ Never have I witnessed
a bolder attempt.’
As the knight spoke, a loud cheer burst from the
crowd; and then there was silence. Walter drew
nearer and nearer to the woman, for whose life he
was freely venturing his own. In another minute
he clutched her with one hand, turned towards the
shore, and, favoured by the tide, came sailing towards
the spot which the crowd occupied.
A dozen of the men dashed knee-deep into the
water to relieve Walter of his burden; and as they
did so, a dozen of the women stretched out their
hands, and received the still unconscious form of
her who had been rescued ; meanwhile the knight and
Guy Muschamp caught hold of Walter, who, fatigued
and overcome with his almost superhuman exertions,
~ would otherwise have fallen to the ground. How-
ever they laid him down carefully to rest; and, while
Guy stood watching over him, Bisset went to look to
the safety of the damsel who had been rescued.
‘Sir squire,’ said he, with enthusiasm, as he re-
turned, ‘you have done as noble a deed as it has ever
been my fate to witness, and the King of France shall
hear of it, as I am a living man; and,’ continued he, in
a whisper, ‘hearken! you may at the same time con-
eratulate yourself on having a the good luck to
save a woman well worth saving.’
‘What mean you, sir knight, asked Walter,
Lays
‘Simply this— that she is young, fair to behold,
and evidently of high lineage.’
60
CHAPTER X.
ON THE LADDER OF LIFE,
OUR days passed over, and Walter Espec, quite
recovered from the effects of his struggle with
the waves, and of the salt water he had involuntarily
imbibed during his perilous adventure on the coast
of Cyprus, was at Nicosia, and engaged in chivalrous
exercises, in the courtyard of the house occupied by
the Earl of March; when he was accosted by Bisset,
the English knight, who had been a witness of his
daring exploit, and requested to repair to the presence
of the King of France.
Walter was somewhat taken by surprise and startled
by the summons. Recovering his serenity, however,
as well as he could, he intimated his readiness; and
with the air befitting a Norman gentleman who had
existed from childhood in the consciousness that his
name was known to fame, and who did not forget
that he had noble blood of Icingla in his veins, he
accompanied the knight to the palace in which the
saint-king was lodged.
At that time, Louis, not much satisfied with him-
self for having consented to winter in Cyprus, though
little dreaming of the terrible misfortunes that awaited
THE LORD OF JOINVILLE. 61
his army in the land for which he was bound, was
seated at table and endeavouring to forget his cares,
while conversing familiarly with a young and noble-
looking personage of great strength and stature, with
a head of immense size, and a countenance beaming
with sagacity. In truth this was a very remarkable
personage. Ele was then known as John, Lord of
Joinville, and seneschal of Champagne; and he has
since been famous as the chronicler of the triumphs
and disasters of the Crusade in which he acted a
conspicuous part.
‘Seneschal,’ said Louis, addressing Joinville, ‘I
marvel much that you do not mix water with your
wine.’
‘In truth, sire,’ replied Joinville, half jocularly, «I
fear so to do; for physicians have told me I have go
large a head, and so cold a stomach, that: water might
prove most injurious.’
‘Nevertheless,’ said Louis, earnestly, ‘ be advised
by me, and do not allow yourself to be deceived.
If you do not drink water till you are in the decline
of lite, you will then increase any disorders you may
have.’
‘But, sire,’ asked Joinville, mnnocently, ‘ why
should I drink water then more than now ?’
‘Ah,’ answered Louis, ‘ simply because if you
take pure wine in your old age, you will be fre-
quently intoxicated; and verily it is a beastly thing
for an honourable man to make himself drunk.’
‘I acknowledge that it is very wrong, sire,’ said
Joinville; ‘but I am one of those who endeavour
to practise moderation in the. use of the wine-cup.’
62 | TIE BOY CRUSADERS.
‘And pray, seneschal,’ asked Louis, after a pause,
‘may I ask if you ever wash the feet of the poor ?’
‘Oh, sire, no,’ answered Joinville, not without
evincing surprise. ‘I hardly deem that it would —
become such a person as I am.’ |
‘In truth, seneschal,’ exclaimed Louis, ‘this is
very ill said. You ought not to think that unbe-
coming which He, who was their Lord and Master,
did for our example when He washed the feet of
His apostles. I doubt not you would very unwil-
lingly perform what the King of England does; for
on Holy Thursday he washes the feet of lepers.’ |
‘Oh, sire,’ cried Joinville, in a conclusive tone,
‘never will I wash the feet of such fellows.’
‘Now, seneschal,’ resumed Louis, still more se-
riously, ‘let me ask you another question. Whether
would you be a leper, or have committed a deadly
sin ?’ |
‘Sire,’ answered Joinville, frankly, ‘rather than
be a leper, I would have committed thirty deadly
sins.’
‘How could you make such an answer?’ said
Louis, reproachfully.
‘Sire,’ exclaimed Joinville, with decision, ‘if I
were to answer’ again, I should repeat the same
thing.’
‘Nevertheless,’ urged Louis, with earnestness,
‘you deceive yourself on the subject; for no leprosy
can be so awful as deadly sin, and the soul that is
guilty of such is like the devil in hell.’
It was when the conversation between the King
of France and the Lord of Joinville had reached
HE SAINT-KING, 63
this stage, that Walter Espec, guided by the English
knight, made his appearance, not without exhibiting
symptoms of agitation when he found himself face
to face with the monarch, who, of all the princes of
Christendom, enjoyed, at that period, the highest
reputation in Europe and the East.
But the appearance and aspect of Louis were not
such as to daunt or dismay.
Nothing could have been more plain and simple
han the dress worn by the royal chief of the crusaders.
Indeed it was plain and simple to affectation; and
the coat of camlet, the surcoat of tyretaine, the
mantle of black sandal, contrasted remarkably with
the splendid garments of princes who were his con-
temporaries, especially Henry, King of England,
who, like most of the Plantagenets, was given to
magnificence of attire, and generally regarded as by
far the greatest dandy in his dominions. Nor had
Louis been endowed by nature with the qualities
which please the eye and impress the imaginaticn.
His figure, itis true, was tall and well proportioned ;
but his face and features were not calculated to
dazzle. When compared with men of such noble
presence and regal air as our English Edwards and
Henrys, he was decidedly plain. He had the pecu-
liar face and slanting features which distinguished so
many of the descendants of Hugh Capet, and that
large long straight nose, which, instead of keeping
the Greek facial line, inclined forward, and hung
slightly over the short upper lip. Not even flattery
could have described the saint-king as a model of
inanly beauty. |
64 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
Now it happened that Walter Espec had never
before seen a king, and was prepared to behold
something very grand, like Coeur de Lion, with his
scarlet bonnet, his rose-coloured tunic, and his mantle
of striped silver tissue, and his Damascus blade |
with a golden hilt in a silver sheath. Naturally,
therefore, he was at the first glance somewhat dis-
appointed with the appearance of the monarch in
whose presence he stood. But as Louis turned upon
him a countenance which, albeit not beautiful, de-
noted energy and decision of character, and expressed
at once goodness and good-nature, and high moral
and intellectual superiority, the youth, whose in-
stincts were strong, felt that he was in the presence
of a nian who was worthy of reigning. |
‘Young gentleman,’ said Louis, mildly, as Walter
bent his knee, ‘it has come to my knowledge that
you have performed an action noble in itself, and
worthy of the praises of the valiant.’
‘Sire, replied Walter, colouring, and speaking
with less than his wonted confidence, ‘I scarce know
to what your highness is pleased to refer.’
‘Ah,’ said Louis, glancing towards the Lord of
Joinville, ‘I can hardly credit your words. But
such modesty is becoming in youth. However, I
mean that, four days since, as I learn, you saved a
noble demoiselle from the sea, at the most manifest
peril to your own life.’ |
Walter bowed in ceeded of the com-
pliment, but did not speak.
‘Not,’ continued Louis hastily, ‘not that you
sould therefore be vainglorious, or puffed up with
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performed an action
64.
orthy of the praises of the valiant.â€â€” p.
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elf,
noble in its
VALOUR AND PRUDENCE. 65
vanity, or think more highly of yourself than you
ought to think on account of your achievement,
however honourable; for I trust you know and feel
that, before our Maker, we are all but as potter’s clay.’
‘My lord,’ replied Walter, pausing in some per-
‘xity, ‘I would fain hope my ideas on the subject
-ever besuch as befit a Christian and a gentleman.’
Well, well,’ said Louis, hastily, ‘on that point I
meant not to express a doubt, and,’ added he, ‘seeing
that you give promise of being a preuhomme, I pray
€od. out of His goodness, that you may prove a
preuchomme as well as a preuhomme.’
‘Sire,’ said Walter, looking puzzled, ‘you must
pardon me when I confess that 1 comprehend not
clearly the distinction.’
‘Ah,’ replied Louis, smiling, and shaking his head
oravely, ‘the distinction is of much consequence;
for know that by preuhomme I mean a man who
is valiant and bold in person, whereas by preud-
homme I signify one who is prudent, discreet, and
who fears God, and has a good conscience.’
Walter bowed again; and, being at a loss for
words to answer, took refuge in silence. In fact, he
began to feel so awkward that he wished nothing so
fervently as that the interview would come to an
end; and Louis, after condescending to ask some
more. questions, and inculcate some more lessons,
dismissed him with words of encouragement, and
gifted him with an amulet in the form of a ring, |
which bore on it this inscription—
Who wears me shall perform exploits,
And with great joy return.
66 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
As Walter left the king’s presence to depart from
the palace, he turned to the knight who had been
his conductor.
‘On my faith, sir knight,’ said he laughing, but
rather nervously, ‘this reminds me more of the
adventures which in childhood I have heard related
by pilgrims and pedlars at the chimney-corner, than
aught I ever expected to meet with in the real
breathing busy world.’
‘Indeed,’ said bisset, quietly; ‘ methinks there is
nothing so very wondrous about the business. It
only seems to me that you have been born with luck
on your side—not my own case—and that you have,
without hazarding more than you are likely to do |
in the first battle with the Saracens, gained the
privilege of climbing some steps up the ladder that
leads to fortune and fame.’
‘And yet,’ observed Walter, as he laughed and
looked at the ring which Louis had bestowed on
him, ‘ beshrew me if I have had the courage to ask
either the rank or name of the demoiselle to whom
I had the fortune to render the service that has
made my existence known to this good and pious
king.’ |
‘By the might of Mary, exclaimed the knight,
‘there is no reason why you should remain in
ignorance who the demoiselle is, or what is her
name. She is kinswoman of John de Brienne, who,
in his day, figured as King of Jerusalem, and kins-
woman also of Baldwin de Courtenay, who now
reiens at Constantinople as Emperor of the Kast 5
ei her name is Adeline de Brienne,’
ON THE LADDER OF LIFE. 67
‘Holy Katherine,’ muttered Walter, again looking
closely at the inscription on the ring, as if for
evidence that the whole was not a dream, ‘I begin
to think that I must assuredly have been born with
luck on my side, as you say; and, with such luck on
my side, I need not even despair of finding the
brother I have lost.’
‘Credit me, at all events,’ said Bisset, looking
wise, ‘when I tell you that von have got upon the
ladder of life.’
68
CHAPTER XI.
THL VOYAGE.
T was the Saturday before Pentecost, in the year
1249, when the fleet of King Louis and the
armed pilgrims, consisting of no fewer than eighteen
hundred vessels, great and small, issued gallantly
from the port of Limisso, and steered towards
Kgypt.
At first nothing could have been more gay and
pleasant than the voyage of the Crusaders. It
seemed as if the whole sea, so far as the eye could
reach, was covered with cloth and with banners of
bright colours. Everything appeared promising.
The voyage, however, was not destined to prove
_ prosperous. Suddenly the wind, which had been
favourable, changed, and blew violently from the
coast of Egypt. Great confusion was the conse-
quence; and, though the Genoese mariners exerted
all their skill, the fleet was utterly dispersed.
Indeed, when King Louis, having put back, reached
Limisso, he found, to his horror, that not more than
two-thirds of the armed pilgrims remained in his
company. Concluding that his companions had
been drowned, the saintly monarch was grieved
WILLIAM LONGSWORD. 69
beyond measure, and on the point ot giving way to
despair.
It happened, however, that while Louis was
mourning over the mishap, William Longsword, Earl
of Salisbury, arrived at Cyprus with the English
Crusaders, and administered some degree of conso-
lation. In truth, Longsword was just the man to
explain all in the most satisfactory manner. Having
been accustomed from his youth to cross the narrow
seas, he felt none of that vague terror of the ocean
which made the French knights, when they embarked,
invoke the protection of the saints; and he expressed
his opinion that, in all probability, the missing vessels
were safe on the Syrian coast. But the indifference
which the earl showed for dangers at which the
French trembled had the effect of making him
many enemies, and arousing the natural jealousies
which afterwards proved so baneful to the expe-
dition.
It ought to be borne in mind, that at the period
of St. Louis’s crusade there existed no love between
the nobles of France and the nobles of England; and
it appears that the French were in the habit of
treating the English with some degree of scorn. Nor
was it unnatural that such should have been the case;
for, during half a century, in almost every struggle
between the kingdoms, the French had been victo-
rious. Philip Augustus, after holding his own against
Richard Coeur de Lion, had succeeded in driving
John from the continent; and Louis, when forced to
take the field against Henry, had pursued his royal
brother-in-law from the bridge of Taillebourg to the
E
70 THE BOY CRUSADERS,
gates of Bordeaux. Remembering such triumphs,
the French, who have in all ages~been vain and |
boastful, were continually vaunting about their
prowess, and repeating the story of some Englishman
having cut off the tail of Thomas 4 Becket’s horse,
and of Englishmen having ever after that outrage
been born with tails like horses.
Such being the state of affairs, the Earl of Salis-
bury did not inspire the French nobles with any
particular affection for him and his countrymen who
had arrived at Cyprus, when they heard him speak-
ing lightly of the dangers of the sea. In fact, the
French lords, who a few hours earlier had been sink-
ing under sea-sickness, trembling at the sound of
raging billows, and wishing themselves safely in
their own castles, cursed *‘ Longsword,’ as the worst
of * English tails.’
But the King of France did not share the malice
of his countrymen; and, much comforted by the
words of the English earl, he resolved on again
tempting the sea. Accordingly, on Monday morning,
he ordered the mariners to spread their sails to the
wind. The weather proving favourable, the fleet
made gallantly for the shores of Egypt; and on the
morning of Thursday, about sunrise, the watch on
deck of the vessel that led the van, shouted * Land!’
‘Surely, not yet,’ exclaimed several voices; but
the pilot to make certain ascended to the round-top
of the vessel.
‘Gentlemen,’ cried the pilot, it is all right. We
are before Damietta, so you have nothing to do but
to recommend yourselves to God.’
THE EMIR FAKREDDIN. 71
‘Hurrah!’ shouted the mariners; and from ship
to ship the tidings passed; and, as the words of the
pilot flew from deck to deck, a cry of joy burst
from thousands of lips. Great was the excitement
that prevailed; and the chiefs of the expedition
hastily arrayed themselves to go on board the king’s
ship and hold a council of war.
And now all eyes were turned towards the shore;
enl it seemed that the Crusaders were likely to en-
counter a desperate resistance in any attempt to
Jand. A fleet and formidable engines of war de-
fended the mouth of the Nile. A numerous army of
horse and foot appeared on the beach, as if bent on
contesting every inch of ground. At the head of this
mighty host, wearing armour of burnished gold,
figured the Emir Fakreddin, one of the foremost
of Saracen warriors. From the midst trumpets and
drums sounded a stern defiance to the armament of
the Christians. But, undaunted by the aspect of
affairs, the armed pilgrims steadily pursued their
course ; and ship after ship, moving calmly forward,
anchored within a mile of the shore.
Meanwhile, the pilgrims, princes, and nobles, had
reached the king’s ship; and Louis, leaning on his
sword, received them with satisfaction on his coun-
tenance.
‘Gentlemen,’ said he, ‘our voyage has not been
without its perils, but let us be thankful that we are
at length face to face with the enemies of Christ.’
‘Yes, sire,’ said the chiefs, ‘and it is therefore
expedient to form some plan of action.’
‘And, under the circumstances,’ added several, ‘ it
72 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
wil be prudent to await our comrades who have
been separated from us by the tempest.’ |
It soon appeared that among the chiefs there was
a general wish to await the coming of their missing
comrades; but the king was young, and the drums
and horns of the Saracens had so chafed his pride
that ke would not hear of delay.
‘We have not come hither,’ said he, excitedly, ‘ to
listen to the insults of our enemies; nor have we
any port in which to shelter from the wind. A
second tempest may disperse what remains of our
fleet. To-day God offers us a victory; another day
He may punish us for having neglected to conquer.’
‘Sire, be it as you will,’ replied the assembled
chiefs, not caring to debate the point with their
king.
And so, with much less deliberation than was
necessary under the circumstances, and without duly
considering the resources of the enemy whom they had
to combat, King Louis and the chief Crusaders re-
solved to disembark on the morrow and give battle.
Meantime a strict. watch was maintained, and several
swift vessels were despatched towards the mouth of
the Nile to observe the motions of the Saracens.
It happened that the Saracens, in spite of their
dauntless show, were by no means in the best mood
to make an obstinate resistance, nor were they in
any sanguine mood as to the result of their prepa-
rations. At such a crisis, the presence of the sultan
was necessary to sustain their spirits, and stimulate
their fanaticism. |
Now at that time Melikul Salih was Sultan of
MELIKUL SALIH. 73
Egypt; but he was not at Damietta, and his absence
caused much uncertainty and dismay among the
warriors assembled to defend his dominions. Meli-
kul Salih was then at Cairo; and almost every man
in Fakreddin’s army knew that Melikul Salih was
dying.
CHAPTER XIL
AT DAMIETTA.
BOUT a mile from the sea, on the northern bank
of the second mouth of the Nile, stood the
city of Damietta, with its mosques, and palaces, and
towers, and warehouses, defended on the river side
by a double rampart, and on the land side by a
triple wall. Fair and enchanting to the eye was the
locality in which it was situated ; and as the Crusaders
directed their gaze towards the groves of oranges
and citrons, loaded with flowers and fruit, the woods
of palms and sycamores, the thickets of jasmines
and odoriferous shrubs, the vast plains, with pools
and lakes well stocked with fish, the thousand canals
intersecting the land, and crowned with papyrus anc
reeds, they, feeling the influence of a rich climate
and a beautiful sky, could not find words sufficiently
strong to express their admiration and delight.
‘Now, good Walter,’ said Guy Muschamp, as the ©
brothers-in-arms, having ascended to the castle of
the ‘ Hilda,’ looked earnestly towards the shore,
‘who can deny that such a land is worth fighting to
conquer ?’ ,
‘On my faith,’ exclaimed Walter Espec, with en-
ASPECT OF DAMIETTA. 75
thusiasm, ‘it is so pleasant to the eye, that I could
aimost persuade myself I am looking upon that ter-
restrial paradise in which the father and mother
of mankind lived so happily before eating the fatal
apple.’
No wonder, when such was the aspect of the country
around Damietta, that the armed pilgrims were im-
patient to land.
And no time was lost; for, of all the armed pil-
erims, King Louis was perhaps the most eager to
encounter the enemies of his religion; and, soon
aiter daybreak, on the morning of I'riday, a signal
was given for the fleet to weigh anchor and draw
near to the shore.
Meanwhile the Saracens, under the Emir Fak-
reddin, were on the alert; and while a bell, that had
remained in the great mosque of Damietta ever
since John de Brienne seized the city in 1217, tolled
loudly to warn the inhabitants of the danger, the
Moslem warriors got under arms, and with cavalry
and infantry occupied the whole of that part of the
strand at which the Crusaders had resolved to dis-
embark.
But the armed pilgrims were nothing daunted by
the sight of the formidable preparations made to
oppose their landing. Getting into barques which
had been provided for the purpose, they prepared to
fight their way ashore, in defiance of all dangers.
Ranging themselves in two lines, with their lances in
their hands, and their horses by their sides, the
knights and nobles stood erect in their boats, while
in front, and on the wings of the armament, were
76 TIE BOY CRUSADERS.
placed crossbowmen to harass and keep off the foe.
Nor did Louis in that hour appear in any way un-
worthy to be the leader of brave men. Attended by
his brothers and his knights, the King of France,
arrayed in chain-mail, with his helmet on his brow,
his shield on his neck, and his lance in his hand,
figured prominently on the right of his array. By
his side stood the cardinal legate; and in front of
him was a boat in which the oriflamme, brought
from the abbey of St. Denis, was proudly dis-
played.
It was an exciting occasion, and the hearts of the
saint-king and his mailed comrades beat high as
the barques moved onward to the Egyptian strand.
The warriors, standing steady and silent as graven
images, gazed earnestly on their multitudinous foes.
For a time no attempt was made to oppose their
progress. No sooner, however, were they within
bowshot, than a shower of arrows and javelins rattled
against the mail of the Crusaders. For a moment
the ranks of the Christian warriors were shaken.
But the crossbowmen, without the delay of an
instant, retaliated with damaging effect; and while
their shafts carried death into the Saracen host, the
rowers redoubled their efforts to reach the shore,
and bring Christian and Moslem hand to hand and
foot to foot. |
Again the silence was unbroken, save by the
plashing of oars and the tumultuous shock of the
barques pressing on in disorder. Ere long, however,
there was a loud shout. The Lord of Joinville,
closely followed by Baldwin de Rheims, had reaehed-
THE ORIFLAMME LANDED. Va
the shore; and they were setting their men in battle
order, and covering themselves with their shields,
and presenting the points of their lances to check
the impetuosity of the enemy.
And now King Louis lost all patience; and deem-
ing it no time to stand on his regal dignity, he leaped
from his barge, and plunging up to his shoulders in
the water, struggled towards the shore. Inspired by
his example, the Crusaders threw themselves into the
sea In a body, and pressed eagerly onward, with cries
of ‘Montjoie! St. Deriis!’ Again the silence was
unbroken, save by the clash of mail, the noise of
a dense crowd of armed men struggling with the
waves, which were so elevated by the rush, that
they fell and broke at the feet of the Saracens. In
a few moments, however, the oriflamme was landed,
and the saint-king, with the salt water running off
his armour, was on his knees giving thanks to God
for having preserved him and his companions from
the perils of the deep.
‘And now, gentlemen,’ said Louis, as he rose and
looked excitedly around him, ‘let us forthwith
charge our enemies in the name of God.’ .
‘ Be patient, sire,’ replied the knights, interfering ;
‘it is better to await the landing of our comrades,
that we may fight with advantage.’
Louis allowed himself to be persuaded; and it
speedily appeared that caution was necessary; for,
while the Crusaders were still struggling ashore in
disorder, the Saracen cavalry came down upon them
with an impetuosity which convinced the French
that their adversaries were not to be despised. But
78 THE BOY CRUSADERS. 4
Joinville and Baldwin of Rheims rendercd their
comrades good service. Hastily closing their ranks,
they contrived not only to stay the rush, but to
present so impenetrable a front, that the Saracens
retired baffled to prepare for a fresh spring.
And again, with an enthusiastic energy which
would have struck terror into antagonists less bold,
the Saracens under Fakreddin charged down upon
the Crusaders; and then began, all along the coast,
a confused conflict which raged for hours—Chris-
tian and Moslem fighting hand to hand; while the
two fleets engaged at the mouth of the Nile; and
the Queen of France and the Countess of Anjou,
and other ladies of high rank, who remained on
board at a distance, awaited the issue of the contest
with terrible anxiety, and, with priests around them,
sang psalms and prayed fervently for the aid and
protection of the God of battles. At length the con-
flict came to an end. Both on the water and on the
land the Crusaders were victorious. The Saracen fleet,
alter getting decidedly the worst of the combat,
escaped up the Nile; and the Saracen soldiers, beaten
and dispersed, retired precipitately, and flying in
contusion towards Damietta, abandoned their camp,
and leit several of their emirs dead on the field.
After witnessing the flight of the Saracens, Louis
ordered his pavilion, which was of bright scarlet, to
be pitched on the ground where he had conquered,
and caused the clergy to sing the Te Deum. The
Crusaders then set up their tents around that of the
king, and passed the night in rejoicing over the.
victory they had won.
DAMIETTA ABANDONED. a9
Nexf, day the Crusaders had still stronger reason to
congratulate themselves on the good fortune which
nad attended their arms. At daybreak, looking
towards Damietta, they observed that columns of smoke
were rising from the bosom of the city, and that the
whole horizon was on fire. Without delay the King
of France sent one of his knights and a body of
cavalry to ascertain the cause; and, on reaching
Damietta, the knight found the gates open, and
learned on entering that the Saracens, after setting
fire to that part called the Fonde, which was a row
of shops and warehouses, had abandoned the city.
Returning to the camp at a gallop, while his men
remained to extinguish the fire, the knight announced
the glad tidings to the saint-king.
‘Sire,’ said he, ‘I bring good news; Damietta may
be taken possession of without striking a blow.’
It was not very easy, even after hearing all, to
credit this knight’s report; and Louis was somewhat
suspicious of a stratagem. However, he gave orders
for marching towards the gates, and moving slowly,
and with much caution, took possession. It was
clear that the city had been abandoned by its
defenders; and the king, the cardinal legate, and
the clergv, having formed in procession, walked to
the grand mosque, which was speedily converted
into a Christian church, and sang psalms of praise
and thankseiving.
And now the Crusaders, with Damietta in their
nossession, were indeed elate, and rather inclined to
magnify their successes; and the Queen of France
end the Countess of Anjou, and the other ladies
8&0 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
were brought ashore and lodged in the palaces of
the city; and five hundred knights were charged
with the duty of guarding the ramparts and towers;
and the warriors of the Cross, encamping in the plain
outside the gates, gave themselves up to dissipation,
and deluded themselves with the idea that no enter-
prise was too difficult for them to accomplish.
‘Now,’ said the French, as they quaffed the red
wine and rattled the dice-box, ‘we have only to
await the coming of our companions from the coast
of Syria, and of the Count of Poictiers, with the
arriére ban of France, to undertake the conquest of
Egypt.’
‘Ay, said others, ‘and then let the Saracens and
their sultan tremble.’
‘Nothing,’ echoed a third party, ‘can withstand
the warriors of France, when animated by the presence
and example of their king.’
‘I dislike all this boasting,’ remarked Bisset, the
English knight, to Walter Espec and Guy Muschamp,
‘and, albeit I wish not to be thought a prophet of
evil, I predict that it will end in mischief and
disaster.’
‘The saints forbid,’ exclaimed Guy, gaily. ‘For
my part I dread nothing but the thought of being
devoured by some of the crocodiles which, men say,
are hatched in the waters of the Nile.’
‘Nevertheless, mark my words,’ said Bisset, more
gravely than it was his wont to speak. «At present
the Frenchmen believe that, because they have plied
their swords with some effect, that henceforth the
Saracens will fly before their scabbards. Now they
ENGLISH TAILS. 8]
are all singing songs of triumph; ere long, if you
and I live, we'll hear them singing to a very different
tune.’
‘Ah, sir knight,’ said Walter, smiling, ‘you say
this from national jealousy, and because they call us
* Knelish tails.†’
‘* Knglish tails!††repeated Bisset, scornfully; «I
tell you, for your comfort, that when the hour of
real danger arrives, we “ English tails†are likely to
find our way so deep into the Saracens’ ranks, that
not a bragging Frenchman will venture to come nigh
the tails of our war-steeds.’
‘By St. John of Beverley,’ exclaimed Guy, laugh-
ing merrily, ‘I cannot but think that the French
and English Crusaders are already inclined to hate
each other much more than either French or English
hate the Saracens.’
CHAPTER XITI.
INCURSIONS.
ND what were the sultan and the Saracens
saying and doing while the Crusaders were
establishing themselves at Damietta, and delighting
their souls with visions of the conquest of Egypt ?
In order to ascertain we must, in imagination, pass
from the camp at Damietta to the palace of Cairo.
Melikul Salih was under the influence of a malady
which his physicians pronounced to be incurable.
On that point there was no mistake. Nevertheless,
when pigeons carried to Cairo intelligence of the
French king’s victory and Fakreddin’s defeat, the
sultan roused himself to energy, and, after having
sentenced fifty of the principal fugitives to execution,
and taken Fakreddin severely to task for allowing
his men to be vanquished, he caused himself to be
removed to Mansourah. On reaching that city,
Melikul Salih expended his remaining strength in
rallying his army and strengthening the fortifications,
and at the same time sent men to attack the Cru-
saders in their camp, to kill the Franks and cut off
their heads,—promising a golden besant for every
head brought to him. |
THE ARABS AND KARISMIANS. 83
The Arab cavalry of the Desert, and bands of
horsemen belonging to that wild nation known ag
the Karismians, were employed on this service; and
the Crusaders found themselves exposed to dangers
against which it seemed impossible to guard. As
wild animals prowl around the habitations of men on
the watch for prey, so around the Christian camp
prowled the Arabs and Karismians by day and by
night. If even at noon a soldier wandered from the
camp he was lost; and, in hours of darkness, sentinel
aiter sentinel disappeared, and knight after knight
was struck dead, as if by invisible hands. Every
morning the Crusaders had to listen to some new
tale of horror which made their blood run cold.
Ere the Arabs and Karismians had carried alarm
into the camp of the Crusaders, many of the warriors
of the West had begun to suffer from the climate of
Ikeypt; and among others who were prostrated, was
the old Earl of March. For a time he seemed likely
to fall a victim to the malady; but the natural vigour
of his constitution at length prevailed; and he had
clmost recovered, when a sudden inroad of the enemy
exposed him to a new peril.
It was the afternoon of an August day; and Earl
Patrick was arraying himself to ride into Damietta
to attend a council of war. His white charger stood
at the entrance of his pavilion, and there sat Walter
Espec, looking somewhat gloomy, as many of the
armed pilgrims were already doing, when Guy
Muschamp approached with a countenance from
which much of the habitual gaiety had vanished.
‘What tidings?’ asked Waiter, eagerly.
84 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
‘On my faith, good Walter,’ answered Guy, shaking
his head, ‘I now know of a truth that this Damietta
is not quite such a paradise as we fancied when
gazing at it from the sea.’
‘Serpents often lurk where flowers grow,’ said
Walter; ‘but what new tidings of mishap have
clouded your brow ?’
‘N othing less,’ replied Guy, ‘than that these foul
Saracens have been marvellously near us. No later
than last night they entered the camp, surprised the
watch of Lord Courtenay, and this morning his body
was found on the table; his head was gone.’
‘ By the saints!’ exclaimed Walter, ‘such warfare,
waged by invisible foes, may well daunt the bravest;
and albeit I trust much from the protection of the
Holy Katherine, yet I at times feel a vague dread of
being the next victim.’
At that moment, and almost ere Walter had
spoken, there arose loud and shrill cries, and then
loud shouts of alarm.
‘By good St. George!’ shouted Hugh Bisset, rush-
ing in, ‘ the Saracens are upon us; they are carrying
off the Lord Perron, and his brother the Lord Duval.
Arm, arm, brave squires. To the rescue! to the
rescue !’
As Bisset gave the alarm, the Earl of March came
forth. He was arrayed in chain-mail, and his helmet
was on his brow. 3
‘What, ho!’ cried the earl, with lofty indignation;
“do the sons of darkness, who worship Mahound and
Termagaunt, venture where my white lion ramps in -
his field of red? Out upon them! My axe and shield.’
A BRAVE OLD WARRTOR, 85
Monnting his white steed. the earl caused one of
the sides of his pavilion to be raised, and issuing
forth, spurred against the foe with shouts of ‘Let
him who loves me follow me! Holy Cross! Holy
Cross!’ Nor did the aged warrior confine his hostility
to words. Encountering the leader of the Saracens
face to face, he bravely commenced the attack, and,
after a brief conflict, with his heavy axe cleft the
infidel from the crown almost to the chest.
‘Pagan dog!’ exclaimed the earl, as the Saracen
felt lifeless to the ground; ‘I devote thine impure
soul to the powers of hell.’
But this achievement was the last which Earl
Patrick was destined to perform. As he spurred
forward to pursue his success, his steed became re-
fractory, and he was flung violently to the ground.
Ere his friends could come to his aid, the Saracens
gave him several blows with their clubs, and he
would have been killed on the spot but for the
arrival of Bisset, with Guy Muschamp and Walter
Espec, who, having mounted, now came with a rush
to the rescue. A sharp conflict then took place.
Guy, advancing as gaily as if he had been in the
tiltyard at Wark, gallantly unhorsed one Saracen
with the point of his lance. Walter, going more
gravely into the combat, killed another with his
falchion, at the use of which he was expert. After
much trouble the French lords were rescued ; and such
of the Saracens as had not fallen, fled, and galloped
along the banks of the Nile.
Meanwhile the squires and grooms of the Earl of
March raised him from the ground; and, supported
F
&6 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
by them, he contrived 10 reach his tent: but he was
much bruised, and so exhausted that he could not
muster voice to speak. When, however, surgeons
and physicians were called, they expressed themselves
hopefully, and, not comprehending his dangerous
state, bled him freely in the arm, and then adminis-
tering a composing draught, left him under the
charge of the squires.
As evening was falling, the Earl of Salisbury, after
a long conference with King Louis, during which the
unfortunate quarrel of the English and French Cru-
saders were discussed with a view of averting fatal
consequences, left the royal quarters, in company
with the Lord of Joinville.
ia or said Salisbury, ‘I would fain visit the
Karl of March; and I pray you to bear me com-
pany.’ :
‘Right cee replied Joinville; ‘for he is a
man of great valour and renown, and wise in council ;
and it were ill for our expedition if hig ees
should prove fatal.’
‘And how fares the earl?’ asked Salisbury, as they
reached the tent over which ramped that ancient
lion argent, so terrible on many a foughten field.
‘My lord,’ said Walter Espec, in a hushed voice,
as they came to the entrance, ‘the earl sleeps; so
pray tread softly, lest you should disturb his repose.’
They did so, and entering, found the earl lying on
his mantle of minever, which covered him.
‘He sleeps soundly,’ whispered Walter, looking up.
aes said Salisbury, anne ‘he sleeps the |
s:eep that knows no waking,’
ae
DEATH OF EARL PATRICK. 87
Walter stooped down, and perceived that Salis-
bury was right. The earl was dead.
‘May paradise be open to him,’ said Salisbury,
crossing himself with pious fervour.
‘Amen,’ said Joinville. ‘May his soul repose in
holy flowers.’
88
CHAPTER XIV.
A RENEGADE.
T was a sad day for Guy Muschamp and Walter
Espec, when they suddenly found themselves
deprived of the protection of the aged war-chief
under whose banner they had embarked for the East.
However, they were not long without patrons. Guy
attached himself to the Lord of Joinville, who was
his mother’s kinsman. Walter became squire to the
Karl of Salisbury, and in that capacity- joined the
Ienglish Crusaders. In fact, Longsword, having heard
from Joinville of Walter’s adventure at Cyprus, took
a decided liking to the young northern man, ex-
amined him as to his lineage, his parentage, and his
education, heard the sad story of his brother’s disap-
pearance, and spoke words of such kind encourage-
ment, that the tears started to Walter's eyes, and hig
brave heart was quite won.
One day, soon after entering Longsword’s service,
Walter was standing at the entrance of the tent
occupied by the chief of the English Crusaders, now
thinking somewhat sadly of the green fields and oak
forests of his native land, now longing to behold -
some of the wonders of the Nile, when a man of
BELTRAN, 89
forty or thereabouts, handsome and well-dressed as
a Frank, presented himself, and bowed low.
‘You are of the English nation?’ said he, in
French.
‘Yes,’ replied Walter, examining him with curi-
osity.
‘And you serve the great English lord, who is
called Longsword ?’
‘It is my pride to serve that famous warrior,
replied Walter, quietly.
‘And I would fain speak with him if you could
obtain me a hearing.’
Walter shook his head significantly.
‘ Before I can make such an attempt,’ said he, ¢ I
must learn who you are, and what you want.’
‘My name is Beltran. I am a Frank by birth,
but for nine years I have been an inhabitant of
Egypt.
‘Nine years!’ exclaimed Walter. ‘By the Holy
Cross, you must know the country well-nigh as in-
timately as the Lvyptians themselves.’
‘Much knowledge I do possess of the country,
and of the wonders it contains.’
‘Well,’ said Walter, ‘I will put your knowledge to
the test. Whence comes this river, the Nile, of
which so many stories are told? Is it true that it
takes its rise in the terrestrial paradise ?’
‘In truth,’ replied Beltran, ‘I would I could
answer your question to your satisfaction. It is the
report of the country that the Nile does come from
the terrestrial paradise. But nothing certain is
known on the subject. J have heard that the sultan
90 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
has attempted to jearn whence if, came, by sending —
experienced persons to follow the course ot it.’
‘Yes,’ said Walter, eageriy
‘ These persons, on their return,’ continued Beltran,
‘reported that they had followed the river till they
came to a large mountain of perpendicular rocks,
which it was impossible to climb, and over these
rocks fell the water. And it seemed to them that on
the top of this mountain were many trees; and they
saw strange wild beasts, such as lions, elephants, and
other sorts, which came to gaze at them. And, not
daring to advance further, they returned to the
sultan.’
‘And this is all that is known?’ said Walter.
‘Yes,’ replied Beltran. ‘Where the Nile enters
Egypt, it spreads in branches over the plain. One
of them flows to Damietta; a second to Alexandria ;
a third to Tunis; and a fourth to Rexi. About St.
Remy’s Day it expands itself into seven branches,
and thence flows over the plains. When the waters
retire, the labourers appear and till the ground with
ploughs without wheels, and then sow wheat, barley,
rice, and cumin, which succeed so well that nowhere
are finer crops.’
‘And whence,’ asked Walter, ‘comes this yearly
increase of water ?’
‘I cannot tell, except that it comes from God’s
mercy. Some say that this overflowing is caused by
heavy rains in Abyssinia; but many Arabs believe
that a drop of dew falls into the river, and causes
the inundation ; and some declare they have seen it
fall, like a star. ‘The nignt when it falls is called |
THE WATER OF THE NILE. Gl
the “drop-night.†But certain it is that, were it not
to happen, Egypt, from the great heat, would produes
nothing; for, being near the rising sun, it scarcely
ever rains, save at very long intervals.’
$Of a truth, observed Walter, ‘all this sounds
strange to English ears.’
‘Where the river enters Egypt,’ continued Beitran,
‘there are expert persons, who may be called the
fishermen of this stream, and who, in the evening,
cast their nets into the water, and in the morning
frequently find many spices in them, such as ginger,
cinnamon, rhubarb, cloves, lignum-aloes, and other
good things, which they sell by weight.’
‘ But how come the spices into the water ?’ enquired
Walter. |
‘Well, it is the belief of the country that they
come from the terrestrial paradise, and that the
wind blows them down from these fine trees, as,
in your forests, the wind blows down the old dry
wood. But such is mere surmise, albeit widely
credited.’ .
‘And the water of the Nile is deemed sweet to the
taste?’ said Walter.
* None in the world more sweet. The Arabs hold
that, if Mahomet had once tasted it, he would have
prayed that he might live for ever, so as unceasingly
to enjoy its sweetness.’
‘And yet it seems so turbid to the eye?’
‘True; but, when the natives drink of it, it is
clear as crystal. ‘Towards evening, crowds come down
to get water, and: especially women, who, on such
occasions, are decorated with all the ornaments they
99 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
possess. You must understand that they come in
companies, because it is not deemed decorous for a
woman to go aione. And marvellous it is to see
how they balance the water-pots on their head, and
walk gracefully up steep banks which even you—
agile as you may be—might have some difficulty in
clambering up without any burden. Then they put
into their vessels almonds or beans, which they shake
well; and on the morrow the water is wondrous clear,
and more refreshing than the daintiest wine.’
‘On my faith !’ said Walter, ¢ all this is so curious
that, were it a time of truce, I should be.tempted to
adventure up this river and behold some of the
strange things of which you tell. But here comes
my lord.’ And, as he spoke, the Earl of Salisbury
rode up, and, while Walter held the stirrup, dis-
mounted.
Immediately the stranger stepped forward, and,
humbling himself, with respect offered Salisbury
some lard in pots, and a variety of sweet-smelling
flowers.
‘I bring them to you, noble earl,’ said the man,
in French, ‘ because you are cousin of Prince Richard,
who is called Earl of Cornwall, and because you are
nephew of the Crusader whose memory is held in
most respect and dread by the Saracens,’
‘OF whom speak you?’ asked Salisbury, a little
surprised. |
‘I speak of King Richard of England,’ was the
reply; ‘for he performed such deeds when he was
in the Holy Land that the Saracens, when their.
horses are frightened at a bush ur a shadow, ery
BELTRAN’S ACCOUNT OF HIMSELF. 93
out, “ What! dost think King Richard is there?â€
In like manner, when their children cry, their
mothers say to them, “Hush, hush! or I will bring
King Richard of England to you.†’
‘On my faith!’ said the earl, looking more and
more surprised, ‘I cannot comprehend you; for,
albeit speaking French, and wearing the dress of
a Frank, you seem from your words to be an inha-
bitant of this country.’
‘It is true,’ replied the man, slowly. * You must
know that I am a Christian renegade.’
‘A Christian renegade!’ exclaimed Salisbury,
with pious horror. And then asked, ‘ But who are
you, and why became you a renegade?’
‘Well, it came to pass in this wise,’ answered the
man, frankly. ‘I was born in Poictiers, whence I
followed Richard, Earl of Cornwall, to the East, and
found my way to Egypt, where I have acquired some
wealth.’ |
‘But,’ demanded the earl, indignantly, ‘know
you not that if you were to die while leading your
present life, you would descend straight to hell, and
be for ever damned ?’
‘In truth,’ replied the man, ‘I know full well
that there is not a better religion than that of the
Christians. But what can Ido? Suppose I returned —
to it-and had to go back to France, I should assur-
edly suffer great poverty, and be continually re-
proached all my days, and be called “ Renegado!
renegado !�
‘Even with that prospect you ought not to hesi-
tate,’ said the earl; ‘for surely it would be much
94 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
better to suffer the scorn of the world than await
your sentence in the day of judgment, when your
evil deeds will be a manifest, and damnation will
follow. |
‘ Nevertheless, protested the renegade, ‘I had
rather live at my ease, as I am, like a rich man,
than become an object of contempt.’
‘I cannot brook your presence,’ said the earl,
erowing very indignant: ‘ oe begone; I can
have no more to say to you.’
‘ Be not over-hasty,’ said the renegade; ; ‘for be it
known to you, noble Earl, that I have that to tell
which it will profit you much to know.’
‘Speak, then,’ said the earl, hesitating, * but be
brief; for my patience is not so long as was my
father’s sword.’
‘It is of a rich caravan I would speak,’ said the
renegade, with a glance and a gesture of peculiar
significance.
‘Ah!’ exclaimed the ear], pricking up his ears, and
listening with evident interest.
“It is on its way to Alexandria, and will pass with-
in six leagues of Damietta within four days,’ said the
renegade. ‘And whoever can capture that caravan
may gain an immense booty.’
‘And how does this concern me ?’ asked the earl.
‘My lord,’ replied the renegade,’ I see not where-
fore you should not seize the prize as well as another.’
‘But how am I to trust your report? How am I to
know that your intent is not to betray me?’ ;
‘My lord,’ answered the renegade, ‘I am in your
power. I will answer for the truth of my story with
A SELFISH GUIDE. $5
my head; and, I promise you, I am as yet neither
so old nor so weary of life as to hazard it needlessly.’
‘One question further,’ said the earl, who was by
this time much excited with the prospect of a rich
booty. ‘Howam I, beingina strange country, to find
this caravan of which you speak ?’
‘I myself will be your guide,’ replied the renegade.
‘And wherefore do you hazard so much to put me
in possession of this prize, when, by doing so, you
expose yourself to the enmity of the Egyptians,
among whom you have cast your lot?’
‘Well, my lord,’ said the renegade, after a pause,
‘J will be frank. I expect my share of the spoil; and,
besides, I see very clearly that this army of pilgrims
is likely to conquer Egypt, in spite of all the resist-
ance sultans and emirs may make; and, at such a
time, I would fain have some powerful lord among
the conquerors to befriend me.’
‘Ha!’ exclaimed Longsword, smiling grimly, ‘IT am
now convinced.’
‘Of what, noble earl ?’
‘Hither that I must bave the caravan or your
bead.’
96
CHAPTER XV.
CAPTURE OF A CARAVAN,
\ HILE King Louis lay at Damietta, awaiting the
arrival of Crusaders from France and Syria, ere
venturing to march into Egypt, the utmost disorder
began to prevail in the camp. The armed pilgrims,
left to inactivity in a delightful climate, under a
bright sky, and surrounded by beautiful scenery,
appeared once more to forget the oaths they had
taken, and indulged in still worse riot and debauchery
than when they wintered in Cyprus. Gambling was
their daily occupation; and the rattle of the dice-box
was constantly heard through the camp. And men
with the Cross of Christ upon their shoulders had
the name of the devil continually on their tongues,
Nor was this the worst. Vice reigned all around in its
grossest form ; and the saint-king complained mourn-
fully to the Lord of Joinville, that, within a stone’s-
throw of his own pavilion, houses of infamous repute
were kept by his personal attendants.
At the same time, the jealousy between the French
and English grew more and more intense, and threat-
ened disastrous consequences. In vain did Louis -
exert his influence to restrain the insolence of his
THE INSOLENT PRINCE. 97
enuntrymen. The English were constantly reminded
ot their inferiority as a nation, and exposed to such
insults as it was difficult to brook. Bitter taunts and
insinuations of cowardice were unhesitatingly used to
mortity the island warriors; and men who had dis-
obeyed their king’s mandate, and forfeited lands and
living to combat the Saracens, were, day by day, driven
nearer the conclusion that they would ere long be
under the necessity of drawing their swords against
their fellow-soldiers of the Cross.
Of all the French Crusaders, however, none were so
foolishly insolent as Robert, Count of Artois, brother
of King Louis. From a boy the French prince had
been remarkable for the ferocity of his temper, and
had early signalised himself by throwing a cheese at
the face of his mother’s chivalrous admirer, Thibault
of Champagne. For some reason or other, the Count
of Artois conceived a strong aversion to the Earl of
Salisbury, and treated Longsword with the utmost
insolence. And, though the Earl only retaliated by
glances of cold contempt, it was known that his pa-
tience was wearing away, and it was feared that there
would yet be bloodshed.
‘By my father’s sword !’ said he, speaking partly to
himself, partly to Walter Espec, one day after return-
ing to his tent, ‘I fear me that my spirit will not
much longer brook the reproaches of that vain prince.
IXven this day, as he spoke, my hand stole to the hilt
of my sword; and I panted to — him to mortal
combat on the spot.’
‘My lord,’ replied Walter, gravely and cautiously,
©! perceived that, albeit striving to be calm, you felt
98 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
your ancestral blood boiling in your veins. And, in
truth, I marvel not that such should have been the -
case; and yet
‘And yet Well, speak freely. I listen.’
‘Well, my lord,’ continued Walter, ‘I was about
to say that it seemed to me the part of a wise man,
and one so renowned in arms, not to deign to answer
a fool according to his folly.’
‘Doubtless you are right,’ replied the earl. “And
sinful, I feel, and calculated to provoke God’s ven-
geance, would it be to draw the sword against one
marked with the Cross, and engaged, like ourselves, in
this holy war. Nevertheless, my patience may come
to an end, as the patience of better men has done in
such cases. However, a truce to such talk for the pre-
sent; and see that, at daybreak, this renegade is ready
to guide us on our expedition after the caravan; for I
am weary of inactivity, and eager for change of scene.’
Accordingly, preparations for the expedition were
made; and, next morning, Salisbury and his knights
dashed away from Damietta to intercept the caravan
that was reported to be on its way to Alexandria.
For a time they waited patiently at a place where it
was expected to pass. But this mode of spending
time was not much to the taste of men whose spirits
were raised by the novelty of everything around.
Panting for action, Longsword left Walter Espec
with a band of horse and Beltran the renegade to
keep watch, and, at the head of his knights, went
off in quest of adventure.
Hours passed; evening fell and deepened into -
night; and still neither the caravan nor the warriors
Ny
Hs Ny ‘
i
pm
i
\
=—_.
ret ee
Na
|
‘LT eannot but think,†said Walter, “our post is one of danger, if the guards of
this caravan are so numerous as reported. Nevertheless, it shall never be told that, for
fear of odds, I retreated from a post which I had been entrusted to maintain.â€â€”p. 99.
TIE CARAVAN APPHANTS. 99
who had determined to capture it made their ap-
pearance; and Walter and the renegade, for different
reasons, began to entertain considerable alarm. As
morning approached, however, one point was ex-
plained. In fact, a spy employed by Beltran reached
the rendezvous, with intelligence that the Earl’s in-
tention to attack the caravan having been suspected,
had caused the delay; but that, being aware that
he was out of the way, its guards were ‘preparing to
hasten forward at dawn of day, confidently hoping to
pass without being assailed, or to beat down any
opposition that might be offered to its progress.
‘On my faith,’ said Walter, as he learned how
matters were, ‘I cannot but think our post is one of
danger, if the guards of this caravan are so nume-
rous as reported. Nevertheless, it shall never be
told that, for fear of odds, I retreated from a post
which I had been entrusted to maintain.’ And he
proceeded to place his men in such a position that
they might elude the observation of the Saracens
till close at hand, and then rush out and take the
cuards of the caravan by surprise.
Meanwhile, day was breaking; and, in the distance,
Walter and his companions could descry the cara-
van, apparently guarded by a strong force; and
gradually the white turbans and green caftans and
long spears became more and more distinct. It
was clear that, in the event of Salisbury not return-
ing in time, Walter would have to fight against great
odds; and the return of the earl in time to aid him
now appeared so improbable that the squire ceased
even to hope for his banners, and resolved to take
1c0 Tix BOY CRUSADERS.
what fortune might be sent him. Suddenly, how-
ever, a sound—a whisper on the breeze, and the
heavy tread of horses—reached his ears; and, gazing
round, he descried a body of horsemen approaching
in the opposite direction from which the caravan came.
‘Now, may the saints be praised, and may we be
for ever grateful! exclaimed Walter, with a joyful
heart, as he closely examined the banner that ap-
proached ; ‘for here come my Lord of Salisbury and
his men of might.’
In a few minutes the Earl reached the spot, and,
rapidly comprehending the situation of affairs, pre-
pared for action. But there was hardly occasion to
strike a blow. No sooner did the English move
towards the caravan, and no sooner had the Saracens
an opportunity of judging what manner of men their
assailants were, than they halted in surprise, and
gave way to terror; and when the Earl, on his bay
charger, spurred forward, shouting his battle-cry,
they only waited long enough to discharge a shower
of arrows, and then fled like hares before the hounds.
Routed in every direction, they left the caravan to
its fate ; and the English, pausing from the fray, found
themselves in possession of oxen, buffaloes, camels,
mules, and asses, laden with gold and silver, and
silks and paintings.
‘And now for Damietta ! said Longsword; ‘ for this
is in truth a rich prize; and let us not risk the loss
of it by loitering on the way.’
And without waste of time — for a rescue was not
impossible -—. they secured their booty, and marched.
with what speed they could towards Damietta.
STORMING A CASTLE. LOL
‘Sir squire,’ said Lord Robert de Vere, riding up
to Walter Espec, whose conduct Longsword had com-
mended, ‘your position in the earl’s absence was
not quite so pleasant as a bed of roses.’
‘In truth, my lord,’ replied Walter, thoughtfully,
Snow that the danger is over, I cannot but deem
that you came just in time to save us from death or
captivity.’
‘And you marvelled that we tarried so long?’
‘Much,’ replied Walter; ‘and had given up all
hope of your return. However,’ added he, ‘I per-
ceive that your time was by no means wasted.’
‘You speak truly,’ said De Vere. ‘Never were
men more successful in an adventure. By accident,
we found ourselves hard by the castle of some
wealthy Saracen, and determined to seize it; so,
overcoming all resistance, we took it by storm, and
found therein much booty, and a bevy of Saracen
ladies; and, having given them to understand that
they were captives of our swords and lances, we are
carrying them to Damietta.’
‘On my faith!’ said Walter, laughing, ‘ Fortune
seems to bestow her favours liberally on the pilgrims
from England. No saying what great exploits my
Lord of Salisbury and his knights may yet perform !
One day we seize a castle and a caravan; another
day it may be a kingdom.’
‘ And yet,’ observed De Vere, the tone of his voice
suddenly changing as he spoke, ‘Iam seldom in soli-
tude without experiencing a vague feeling that cala-
mity is impending.’
Now this adventure, successful as it appeared,
G
102 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
involved the English Crusaders in serious troubles.
When Salisbury, on his bay charger, rode into
Damietta, with the captive Saracen ladies and the
captured caravan, the French were moved with envy,
and did not fail to express their sentiments in strong ©
language. Perhaps the English did not bear their
good fortune so meekly as they might have done. In
any case, the French grew more and more exas-
perated; and at length the quarrel reached such a
stage that the French, availing themselves of supe-
rior numbers, had recourse to violence, and forcibly
carried off part of the booty which, at great peril
and with some labour, Lengsword and his men had
won.
103
CHAPTER XVI.
A COUNCIL OF WAR.
N the morning after the return of the Earl of
Salisbury to Damietta, and the violent pro-
ceedings of the French Crusaders against the English
companions of their expedition, King Louis sum-
moned a council of war to deliberate on the measures
most likely to lead to the conquest of Egypt—the
grand object of the saintly monarch’s ambition.
By this time arrivals from various quarters had
swelled the army that, under the banner of St. Denis,
lay encamped at Damietta. Thither, under the
grand masters of their orders, had come the Tem-
plars and the Hospitallers, whose discipline and
knowledge of the East reudered them such potent
allies. Thither had come the Duke of Burgundy, who
had passed the winter in the Morea; and the Prince
of Achaia, who forgot the perils surrounding the
Latin empire of Constantinople, in his eagerness
“to combat the Moslem on the banks of the Nile;
thither, recovered from their fright, had come the
Crusaders whose vessels the storm had driven on the
Syrian coast; and thither, with the arriére ban of
France, Alphonse, Count of Poictiers—‘ one of that
104 THE BOY cuxUSADERS.
princely quaternion of brothers which came hither
at this voyage, and exceeded each other in some
quality —- Louis the holiest, Alphonse the subtlest,
Charles the stoutest, and Robert the proudest.’
No fewer than sixty thousand men—twenty thou-
sand of whom were cavalry-—-were now encamped
around the oriflamme; and with such an army, led
by such chiefs, the saint-king would have been more
than mortal if he had not flattered himself with the
hope of accomplishing something great, to be recorded
by chroniclers and celebrated by minstrels. |
And the princes and nobles assembled to hold a
council of war; and Louis, with his crown on his
brow, took his place to preside, with that serenc
dignity which distinguished him. But, ere the pro-
ceedings began, the Earl of Salisbury rose, and inti-
mated his desire to address the king on a subject of
great importance. Louis immediately signified con-
sent; and the earl, raising his hand to ensure
silence, proceeded with a calm but resolute air :—
‘Sire,’ said he, ‘I crave your pardon, and that of
the princes and noble warriors here assembled, for
trespassing upon their time. But I have that to
state which demands your attention and interference,
inasmuch as it nearly concerns the safety and welfare
and honour of the army of pilgrims, of which you
are the recognised chief. Sire,’ continued the earl,
‘however others may plead ignorance of the circum-
stances, you, at least, are fully informed and well
aware that, in taking the Cross, and coming from a
distant land to aid you in the recovery of the Holy»
Sepulchre, I made sacrifices of no ordinary kind.
INSULTS AND INJURIES. 105
My doing so exposed me to the wrath of King Henry,
my kinsman and liege lord, who took from me my
earldom and all my substance. This, however, he
did judicially, not im his anger, or any violence of
celf-will; and I do not blame him. But I came
hither with my countrymen, and we have fought as
faithfully for God’s cause as any man in your army.
Nevertheless we have been exposed to insults and
injuries which brave men cannot long tolerate. The
chief offender is your brother, the Count of Artois.
I lay my complaint before you, and I ask you to
judge between us. I promise to abide by your
decision, and, if I am found to be in the wrong, to
render every satisfaction for my fault. So help me
God, and good St. George !’
Louis listened with attention to the earl’s speech.
Indeed, the grandeur of Longsword’s aspect, and his
eloquence, so frank and so manly, produced a strong
impression both on the king and the assemblage,
and many of the French, notwithstanding their
prejudices, murmured approbation.
‘This English earl, said they, ‘speaks words of
truth and soberness, and he asks nothing more than
the justice that ought not to be denied to the meanest
man in the army of pilgrims.’
Louis, however, paused, and appeared to be in
extreme perplexity.
‘William Longsword,’ he said, at length, ‘you
have spoken boldly; and I do not deny that you
have spoken the truth. The Lord, who is ignorant
of nothing, is aware of the injuries you have suffered.
But what can I do? You know how serious an
106 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
aifair it would be for me to offend any of my nobles
in the position in which I now am, and it therefore
becomes you to exercise the patience becoming a
soldier of the Cross.’
And now the Count of Artois started up, his face
flushed and his limbs trembling with rage:
‘King,’ exclaimed he, in accents of menace, *‘ what
mean you by the words you have spoken? Do you
defend this Englishman and take part with him
against Frenchmen, who are of your own country
and kindred ?’
The countenance of Louis expressed more annoy-
ance than he was in the habit of exhibiting.
‘Now, Longsword,’ said he, turning with an im-
ploring look to the earl, ‘you see the position of
affairs, and how easily a quarrel might arise; and
God forbid it should occur in an army of Christians.
At such a crisis it is necessary to endure much for
the sake of Christendom.’
Sire,’ exclaimed Longsword, giving way to his
indignation, ‘if this is the only answer you can give
to my complaint, I advise you to call yourself no
longer a king; since you have no longer the privilege
of being obeyed, or of administering justice, or
punishing offenders.’ And rising with a dignity
which awed most of those present, he left the
council.
‘Frenchmen,’ said Louis, reproachfully, ‘why do
you persecute this man? What madness excites you?’
‘I do it,’ cried the Count of Artois, ‘because I
dislike the tailed English, and because I think the.
army of Crusaders would be well purged of them,’
ALEXANDRIA OR CAIRO. 107
But none present ventured to give the count the
support he seemed to expect; and the wise and
prudent bent their brows, and intimated their disap-
probation.
‘The matter is too serious to be lightly spoken of,’
said they, significantly ; ‘and this dispute is a sad
presage of future events; and well will it be if the
anger of the Most High is not provoked by such
offences.’
‘And now,’ said Louis, anxious to drop the sub-
ject, ‘let us to the business on which we assembled
to deliberate. Let us consult on the line of march,
and on the measures to be taken for completing the
conquest of Egypt.’
‘Sire,’ said John de Valery, a baron, whose pro-
bity and courage were the admiration of the army,
‘it seems to me that the best and safest policy is to
undertake the siege of Alexandria. That city has a
commodious port, where the fleet could find shelter,
and where munitions and provisions could be pro-
cured with facility. My voice, therefore, is for
marching to Alexandria.’ .
Many of those whose experience in war was
greatest—--among whom were the Master of the Temple
and the Master of the Hospital—echoed John de
Valery’s opinion.
‘For my part,’ said the Count of Artois, with his
characteristic rashness, ‘I dislike timid counse!s.
Why not at once attack Cairo, which is the capital
of Egypt? When you wish to kill the serpent,’
added he, ‘you ought always to endeavour to crush
his head. Then, I say, let us on to Cairo.’
108 TIE BOY CRUSADERS.
A warm and somewhat angry discussion ensued ;
and Louis, having given his opinion in favour of
marching to Cairo, the project was adopted: and it
was resolved to leave Queen Marearet, with the
Countesses of Artois, Poictiers, and Anjou, at
Damietta, to send the fleet with provisions and
engines of war up the Nile, and then to march with
banners displayed along the banks of the river.
‘Gentlemen,’ said Louis, as he dismissed the
council, ‘I feel assured that we shall have no reason
to repent adopting the bolder of the projects dis-
cussed this day; for, with an army of sixty thousand
men, and the blessing of God on our endeavours, I
see no reason to despair of accomplishing something
great against the enemies of Christ.’
‘Sire,’ replied John de Valery, ‘may God grant
that your hopes be realised.’
And the nobles and princes separated to make the
necessary preparations for marching to Cairo.
ittle did they foresee the terrible circumstances
under which many of them were to reach that city,
109
CHAPTER XVII.
FACE TO FACT.
HILE the Crusaders were preparing to leave
Damietta, march up the Nile, and attack
Cairo, Melikul Salih, after struggling desperately
with the great destroyer, yielded to his fate, and
breathed his last at Mansourah. The death of the
sultan was regarded by the emirs as most untimely;
for his son, Touran Chah, was then in Mesopotamia,
and they were apprehensive of the most serious
troubles. At this crisis, however, a woman, whose
great ability enabled her to comprehend the emer-
eency and to deal with it, suggested measures for
averting the ruin with which the empire of Egypt
was menaced.
Her name was Cheeger Eddour, and she is said to
have been an Armenian. She had originally been
brought to Cairo as merchandise, and purchased by
Melikul Salih as a slave. But her wit and beauty
won the sultan’s heart, and he became so enamoured >
that he elevated her to the position of favourite
sultana, and carried her about with him wherever he
went. One son whom she had by the sultan died
young. Nevertheless her influence daily increased ;
110 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
and the Arabian historians, while eloquent in praise
of her courage, agree in saying, that ‘no woman
surpassed her in beauty, and no man excelled her in
genius.’
No sooner did Melikul Salih depart this life, than
Chegger Eddour assembled the principal emirs at
Mansourah, and made them acknowledge Touran
Chah as sultan. Moreover, she impressed upon them
the necessity of concealing the death of her husband
till the arrival of his successor. The policy she re-
commended was adopted. Orders were still issued
in Melikul Salih’s name; the Mamelukes still
guarded the gates of the palace as if he had been
living; and prayers for his recovery were still offered
up in the mosques, where the Moslems worshipped.
All these precautions, which were the work of the
sultana, were skilfully taken, and for a time the
Saracens hoped that Melikul Salih might yet re-
cover from his malady, and save them from the foe
by whom they were threatened.
Ere long, however, suspicion was aroused, and it
became more and more difficult to conceal the truth.
Of itself this was sufficient to create consternation ;
but, at the same time, rumour brought to Mansourah
intelligence that the French, having left Damietta,
and marched in hostile array along the banks of the
Nile, had reached Pharescour; and the approach
of the Crusaders converted the consternation into
panic, which rapidly extended its influence to Cairo.
Every cheek grew pale; and the Egyptians exhibited
such anxiety and terror as had never before been.
felt in their cities.
ISLAMISM IN DANGER. 111
At this crisis, Fakreddin, to whom the sultana
had entrusted the command of the Egyptian army,
took measures to reanimate his countrymen with
courage and confidence, and called upon them to
hazard their lives freely for their religion.
‘In the name of God, and Mahomet his prophet,’
said the emir, ‘hasten, great and small—the cause of
God has need of your arms and of your wealth; the
Franks — Heaven curse them! —are arrived in our
country, with their standards and their swords. They
wish to obtain possession of our cities, and to ravage
our provinces. What Mussulman can refuse to
march against them, and avenge the glory of Is-
lamism ?’
But, at Cairo and Mansourah, the Egyptians only
answered with sighs and groans; and, at first,
Fakreddin’s appeal failed to produce the effect he
intended. The emir, however, was not dismayed,
Indeed, he showed a courage worthy of the fame he
had won by his military exploits, and gradually
rallied the more courageous of his countrymen
around him. Marching from Mansourah, he en-
camped at Djedilé, on the side of the canal known
as the Achmoun, whicb has a deep bed and steep
banks; and halted with the Nile on his left and the
city in his rear.
‘Here,’ said he, addressing his men, ‘I await the
invaders. Be brave; we will yet avenge Islamism ;
and on Sebastian’s-day I will dine in the scarlet tent
of the French king.’
Meanwhile, the Crusaders peated their march,
and they soon approached Mansourah. At _ this
i12 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
point, however, their progress was arrested by two
obstacles—the canal of Achmoun, and the army of
Takreddin.
‘Who is the leader of that army?’ asked Kine
JLouis, as he looked earnestly across the canal to
where the Saracens were encamped.
‘Sire,’ answered one of his knights, ‘it is Fak-
reddin, the emir, who fled from Damietta; but who,
nevertheless, as I learn, does not hesitate to boast
that it is his intention-to dine in your red tent on
St. Sebastian’s-day.’
‘Does the emir intend to dine in my tent on St.
Sebastian’s-day?’ said Louis, mildly; ‘ however, I will!
take good care to prevent him.’
‘In truth, sire,’ said the knight, smiling, ‘I hold
that you are much more likely to dine in the sultan’s
palace.’ |
‘Be that as it may,’ replied the king, ‘one thing
is certain. We and our foes are now-face to face.’
And so they were. Face to face, separated only
by the canal Achmoun, Christian and Moslem,
headed by the King of France and the Emir Fak-
reddin, lay encamped and awaiting a favourable
opportunity to fight, and to conquer or die for their
countries and salience
And it speedily appeared that face to face they
were for some time likely to remain.
413
CHAPTER XVIII.
DELAY AND DANGER.
T was January 1250, and King Louis, at the head
of the Crusaders, was still on the banks of the
Achmoun. But it was not from reluctance to pro-
secute their enterprise that the armed pilgrims sub-
mitted to delay. The aspect of the country through
Which they had passed on their way from Damietta
had not been such as to diminish their ambition to
be conquerors. It cannot be doubted that the fer-
tility of the land of the Pharaohs must have made
them more and more eager to become its masters.
In truth, there cannot be a more delightful sight
than Egypt at either of two seasons of the year.
Ascend some mountain in the month of July or
August, when the Nile has risen, and you behold a
vast sea, in which appear numerous towns and vil-
lages, with causeways leading from place to place,
the whole interspersed with groves and fruit-trees,
of which the tops are only visible, and bounded by
woods and mountains. But it is the peculiarity of
the Nile, unlike other rivers, which, in overflowing
lands, wash away and exhaust their vivific moisture,
that its waters serve to fatten and enrich the
114 TUE BOY GhUSADERS.
soil. Accordingly, ascend the same mountain in
January or February, when the waters have sub-
sided and the husbandman has done his work, and
the country is like one beautiful meadow, dotted
with flocks and herds, covered with crops of corn,
enamelled with flowers, and perfumed with the
blossoms of oranges and lemons.
Nor, considering the marvellous history of Egypt,
could the imaginations of the Crusaders be otherwise
than fascinated by the prospect of looking with their
own eyes on its cities, its pyramids, its obelisks, its
mummy pits, and all the relics of its ancient and
mysterious civilisation. Persians, Macedonians,
Romans, and Saracens, had come hither before them
as conquerors. But it may be doubted whether the
warriors of Cambyses, or Alexander, or the Cesars,
or Omar, felt a more thorough confidence in their
own prowess and destiny, than did the warriors who
marched from Damietta under the banner of St.
Denis.
It was certainly mortifying to men in so elate a
mood to have their progress arrested by a canal;
and, in fact, the French warriors seem to have been
startled out of their senses by its steep banks and
deep bed. At all events, they, instead of looking for a
ford, which was certainly the most natural way of -
getting over their difficulty, commenced the con-
struction of a causeway. 3
Now, Fakreddin no sooner setted that the Cru-
saders were at work, than he perceived his advantage,
and vowed that the causeway should never be com-
pleted; and, while workmen, protected by machines
GRENK FIRE. 113
of war and wooden castles, were occupied with its
construction, the Saracens spared no pains to retard
the operations. As fast as the Crusaders heaped up
the sand and stones, the Saracens dug away the
earth in front, thus removing the opposite bank to a
greater distance; and, moreover, they incessantly
showered arrows and javelins at the workmen.
Every day brought fresh annoyances; and every day
the Saracens became more audacious in their attacks.
Every night brought fresh surprises; and, in the
conflicts which took plase, the Crusaders had not
always the best of the struggle.
‘A large body of Turks,’ says Joinville, ‘made an
attack on the Count of Poictiers and me. But be
assured they were very well received. It was well for
them that they found their way back as they came;
but they left behind them great numbers of slain.’
‘One night the Turks brought an engine, called
by them la perriere, a terrible engine to do mischief,
and placed it opposite the chas-chateils, which Sir
Walter Curel and I were guarding. From this
engine they flung such quantities of Greek fire,
that it was the most horrible sight I ever witnessed.
When my companion, the good Sir Walter, saw this
shower of fire, he cried out, “ Gentlemen, we are all
Jost without remedy; for should they set fire to our
chas-chateils we must be burnt, and if we quit our
post we are for ever dishonoured; from which,
therefore, I conclude that no one can possibly save
us from this peril but God, our benignant creator.
I therefore advise all of you, whenever they throw
any of this Greek fire, to cast yourselves on your
116 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
hands and knees and cry for mercy to our Lord, in
whom alone resides all power.â€
‘As soon, therefore, as the Turks threw their fires,
we flung omcelee on our hands and knees as the
wise man had advised; and, this time, they fell
between our two cats, into a hole in front, which
our people had made to extinguish them; and they
were instantly put out by a man appointed for that
purpose.
‘Each time that our good king, St. Louis, heard
them make these discharges of fire, he cast himself
on the ground, and with extended arms, and eyes
turned to the heavens, cried with a loud voice to our
Lord, and shedding heavy tears, said —“ Good Lord
God, preserve thou me, and all thy people :†and, be-
lieve me, his sincere prayers were of great service to
us. Every time the fire fell near us he sent one of
his knights to know how we were, and if the fire had
hurt us. One of the discharges from the Turks fell
beside a chas-chateil, guarded by the men of the Lord
of Courtenay, struck the bank of the river in frontand
ran on the ground toward them, burning with flames.
One of the knights of his guard instantly came to me,
crying out, ** Help us, my lord, or we are burnt; for
there isa long train of Greek fire, which the Saracens
have discharged, that is running straight for our castle.â€
‘We immediately hastened thither, and good need
was there, for as the knight had said, so it was. We
extinguished the fire with much labour and difficulty ;
for the Saracens, in the meantime, kept up so brisk
a shooting from the opposite bank, that we were
covered with arrows and bolts,’
A MELON FLOATING IN TIIE WATER. 117
All this time Fakreddin was diligent in procuring
what intelligence he could as to the position and plans
of the Crusaders. This, however, was not an easy busi-
ness. Indeed, no intelligence on such subjects could
be obtained, save from captives, and the emir, there-
fore, offered a high reward for every Frank brought
to histent. Butthe Crusaders, taught by experience,
had become marvellously vigilant, and showed a
decided aversion to be captured. A Saracen, how-
ever, who was an expert swimmer, vowed not to ba
baffled, and performed an exploit, which Arabian
chroniclers, while omitting much more important
events, have carefully recorded.
It seeins that this Saracen, having determined to
carry a Christian as captive to Fakreddin’s tent, and
claim the reward, fell upon a somewhat whimsical
plan for accomplishing his object. Having scooped
out a melon, and thrust his head into the cavity, he
threw himself into the canal, and swam down the
stream in such a way that the melon appeared to float
in the water. The trick succeeded in attracting the
attention of the Crusaders, and as the melon was
passing that part of the bank where the Lord of
Joinville was encamped, there was much excite-
ment among his men.
‘Let us catch the melon,’ cried one.
‘Who is bold enough to make the attempt ?’ asked
another.
‘On my faith,’ said a squire, laughing, ‘I see no
danger to daunt the most timid.’
As he spoke, the squire, doffing his upper garments,
rushed into the water, and, striking out, grasped at
H
118 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
the melon. But the adventure did not end so plea-
santly as he had anticipated. Scarcely, indeed, had
he stretched forward his hand, when he found himself
seized by the Saracen, and dragged forcibly away in
the direction of the camp on the opposite bank.
At first the Crusaders could hardly believe their
eyes. But there was no mistake about it. Their
comrade was gone, and a prisoner in the hands of the
Saracens; and, as they considered what might be his
fate, they raised such shouts of alarm, that their lord
was attracted to the spot.
‘In St Denis’ name,’ said Joinville, after hearing
sufficient to be aware of what had occurred, ‘ tell me,
I pray you, who among my fellows has met with
this mishap ?’
‘In truth, my lord,’ replied one of the knights,
‘it is the English squire who took service with you
at Damietita.’
‘May the God of his fathers protect him :’ ex-
claimed Joinville, somewhat sadly ; ‘as matters ar e,
we can do nothing in his behalf.’
And who was the squire, who had entered the
service of Joinville at Damietta, and afterwards been
taken prisoner by the Saracens ?
It was one of the -brothers-in-arms. It was Guy
Muschamp.
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11J
CHAPTER XIX.
THE CAPTIVE.
T the time when Guy Muschamp was dragged
away as a captive to the camp of the Saracens
at Djedilé, the emir Fakreddin sat in his pavilion.
It was a marvellous tent, in the centre of the camp,
and formed so as to resemble a fortified city, being
divided into streets, flanked with towers, and fur-
nished with everything hkely to contribute to the
luxury of an oriental. In an apartment, ornamented
with gold and gems, the emir sat, face to face with a
dark-browed Saracen chief, and playing at chess. But
the game did not by any means monopolise the atten-
tion of the persons engaged in it; for the companion
of the emir was no less celebrated a person than
Bibars Bendocdar, the chief of the Mamelukes; and
between him and Fakreddin there was much discus-
sion as to the best mode of dealing with the enemies
who menaced the empire with ruin.
And who was Bibars Bendocdar? It is necessary
that we should learn, in order to comprehend the
events that were ere long to startle and terrify the
nations of Christendom.
At the time when Louis, King of France, undertook
120 THE BOY CRUSADETS.
his Crusade, it was the custom, when two eastern
potentates went to war, for the conqueror to sell the
subjects of the vanquished enemy as slaves; and
many of these, bought by merchants, were carried to
Egypt, and sold to the sultan, who had them trained
from boyhood to serve him as soldiers. Carefully
were these young captives reared; and, when their
beards began to grow, they were taught to draw the
bow and wield the sword. After becoming expert in
military exercises, they were admitted into that
famous body, which Saladin the Great had instituted,
and known as Mamelukes. Their privileges were
many. ‘They were highly favoured by the sultan,
wearing his emblazonments of pure gold, only adding
bars of vermilion, with birds or roses or griffins for
difference, and acting as his body-guard in time of
war, and watching over his safety while he slept.
It seems that Bibars Bendocdar was originally
brought to Egypt as a slave, and, in course of time,
enrolled as one of the Mamelukes. As such he rose
rapidly. His ambition was intense; and, being both
able and unscrupulous, he had no reason to despair
of his ambition being one day gratified. No position,
indeed, could be more favourabie to a man eager to
emerge from obscurity to eminence, than that which
he occupied ; and he not only succeeded in winning
the confidence of the sultan, but contrived to in-
sinuate himself into the good graces of the soldiers.
In truth, this with him was no difficult matter. He
had profoundiy studied human nature as it was ex-
hbited around him; and he comprehended, above all
tuings, the arts by which the hearts of fighting men
BIBARS BENDOCDAR. 121
are gained and retained, and the arts also by which
military adventurers elevate themselves to supremacy
in a state |
Besides, Bibars Bendocdar had other qualities
likely to render him a formidable foe or a dangerous
rival. He was skillful as a leader in war, courageous
in conflict, cruel in the hour of victory, and remark-
able for his penetration, sagacity, and activity.
Moreover, he professed great faith in the Mahometan
religion, and had great faith also in his own destiny.
Such was the man who now watched events with the
eagerness of a gambler, and who recognised, not
without satisfaction, the danger and disorder, from
the bosom of which a leader of courage and audacity
might, by rekindling enthusiasm and restoring order,
elevate himself to power. He was about to prove
himself one of the most formidable foes whom the
soldiers of the Cross had ever been under the neces-
sity of encountering.
Into the presence of the Emir Fakreddin and
Bibars Bendocdar young Guy Muschamp, drenched
and agitated, was carried. Alarmed as he well
might be, the squire exhibited a dauntless air and
presented a bold front. In fact, his demeanour was
such that the Saracen chiefs exchanged glances of
surprise.
‘Who are you?’ asked Fakreddin.
‘My name is Muschamp, and I am a subject of
the King of England.’
‘And what brought you to Egypt ?’
‘tT came to fight for the Holy Sepulchre.’
‘And,’ asked Bibars Bendocdar, sternly, ‘know
122 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
you not that passage in the Koran which says that _
they who make war unjustly shall perish ?’
‘Saracen,’ replied Guy, proudly, ‘an Anglo-Nor-
man gentleman does not regulate his conduct by the
Ixoran.’ Fag is
‘However,’ said Fakreddin, waving his hand, ¢ it
1s needful that you answer some questions as to the
army of Franks, and that you answer truly.’
‘Saracen,’ replied Guy, resolutely, ‘I will not
answer a question on the subject.’
‘Fool!’ exclaimed Bibars Bendocdar, impatiently ;
‘know you not your danger? Know you not that
Wwe can instantly order your head to be struck off ?’
‘ Doubtless,’ replied Guy. ‘ And, in that case, I die
the death of a martyr, and go straight to paradise.’
‘Infidel!’ cried Bibars, loudly; * you know not of
what you speak. You will have to account for your
faith to the angels Munkir and Nakir.’
‘Munkir and Nakir!’ exclaimed Guy, with an air
of perplexity; ‘ beshrew me if I ever before heard of
their names.’
© You will know them soon enough, if you act not
more discreetly,’ said Bibars; ‘for they are the two
angels who interrogate the dead the moment they
are in the grave, saying, “ Who is thy lord?†and,
‘Who is thy prophet ?â€â€™
‘On my faith, Saracen,’ said Guy, compassionately,
‘I marvel much that a man of your years can credit
such pagan fables.’
‘Dog! exclaimed Bibars. ‘This to my beard!
Ho! there, guards! Strike off this Christian’s head,
and cast his carcase to the fishes!’
UNEXPECTED FREEDON. 125
‘No,’ said Fakreddin, mildly, ‘it is well that he
should have time to reflect. Let him be kept as a
prisoner till the morrow. He will then be more
likely to answer the questions asked of him.’
Accordingly Guy Muschamp was led from the
presence of the Saracen chiefs and shut up in a
small apartment in the centre of I°akreddin’s tent.
The position was the reverse of pleasant; and he
almost gave himself up for lost. Next morning,
however, after he had eaten some food brought him
by the jailer, he was startled, first by a commotion
in the camp, and then by such a noise and tumult
as if all the fiends had come thither from the in-
fernal regions to fight their battles. Gradually,
through the din, the ear of Guy recognised the clash
of weapons and the rushing of steeds, and his sus-
pense was agonising. Jor a time he endeavoured to
make out what was occurring; but this was in vain.
At length the noise ceased; and Guy moved to the
door with the intention of making a desperate effort
to break it open. Somewhat to his surprise, he found
that it did not resist. In fact, the jailer was gone
and the camp deserted.
124
CHAPTER XX,
PASSING THE ACHMOUN.
ORE than six weeks had passed since the Cru-
saders found their progress arrested by the
Achmoun; and still the causeway by which they
had hoped to pass the canal was not constructed.
Indeed, the workmen had made very little progress
since the first week; and Louis was despairing cf
seeing the work brought to a completion, when,
much to his gratification, he learned that there was
a prospect of crossing the canal by the simplest of
all processes.
On the day when bie Muschamp was carried off
as a captive, the Constable of France was surprised
by a visit from a Bedouin, and demanded his busi-
ness. ‘The Bedouin thereupon offered, for five hun-
dred golden bezants, to point out a ford by which
the Crusaders might, without danger or difficulty,
cross in safety to the opposite bank. The constable
at once promised the required reward, in the event
of the information proving satisfactory; but it was
not till the money was told down that the Bedouin |
conducted him to the spot, and convinced him that
the ford was there. Giadly hastening to Louis, the
FOLLY AND PRESUMPTION. 125
constable revealed the means of extricating the
armed pilgrims from their embarrassment; and the
king, assembling the princes and nobles, decided on
leaving the Duke of Burgundy on the Damietta
side with a sufficient force to guard the camp; and
then, mustering their men and mounting their
horses, they at midnight marched along the bank of
the canal to the ford pointed out by the Bedouin,
and awaited the break of day to dash through the
water and move towards Mansourah.
It was the morning of Tuesday, the 8th of Feb-
ruary, 1250— Shrove Tuesday — when the armed
pilgrims, under the auspices of King Louis, halted
on the Damietta side of the Achmoun, and awaited
the signal to pass to that on which Mansourah was
situated. Everything so far had gone quite as
smoothly as could reasonably have been expected.
Some horsemen, indeed, rode too near the margin of
the canal, and, getting on soft and slippery ground,
they and their horses fell in and were drowned.
Among them was Sir John of Orleans, a valiant
knight, who bore the French banner. But this was
a slight misfortune compared with that which the
folly and presumption of one man was preparing for
that ill-starred host.
At all times, and under all circumstances, the
Count of Artois was one of the most unreasonable
of human beings; and at this moment, so important
to Louis, to France, to the Crusaders, and to the
Christian kingdom of Jerusalem, nothing would
satisfy his ambition but being the first to cross. Not
unaware of his brother’s failings, Louis protested ;
126 THE BOY CRUSADERS,
but the count persisted; and, promising to wait
with patience on the opposite bank for the main
army, he placed himself at the head of the van,
which was formed of the Templars, tle Hospitallers,
and the English Crusaders, and dashed into the
canal. ;
Now, at this moment the opposite bank was occu-
pied by several hundred Saracen horsemen, who
seemed prepared to oppose the landing of the Cru-
saders. No sooner, however, did the Saracens per-
ceive that the Crusaders were fording the canal
safely than they gave way, and fled towards the
camp of the Emir Fakreddin at Djedilé.
It was then that, in spite of all the warnings he
had received and all the promises he had made, the
Count of Artois gave way to the impetuosity that
was destined to lead to the ruin of the pilgrim army.
At the sight of the flying Saracens, he threw all
discretion to the winds, and, attended by his
governor, an old deaf knight, who held his rein,
pursued the fugitives towards the camp. In vain
the Grand Masters of the Temple and the Hospital
shouted out remonstrances. The count paid no
attention whatever; and the aged knight, who was
too deaf to hear a word, urged on the pursuit, cry-
ing loudly, ‘Hurrah! hurrah! Upon them! upon
them !’
I'he Saracens who occupied. the camp at Djedilé
were panic-stricken; and, supposing that the whole
French army was upon them, fled in confusion
towards Mansourah. But there was one man who
did not fly; and that man was Fakreddin. When
CEATIT OF FAKREDDIN 127
the camp was invaded, the emir was in his bath, and
having his beard coloured, after the custom of the
Orientals ; but he immediately roused himself, dressed
himself hastily, and, springing on horseback, en-
deavoured to rally his troops, and attempted to resist.
Inspired by Fakreddin’s example, the Saracens wl'o
had not fled offered a feeble resistance. But it was
unavailing, and they followed the fugitives streaming
towards Mansourah. Fakreddin, however, disdaining
either to fly or yield, continued to struggle bravely ;
until, left almost alone, he fell in the midst of his
foes, covered with wounds, and consoling himself, as
his breath went, that his end was glorious, that he
died a martyr for Islamism, and that he would be
conveyed to the banks of the celestial river.
‘By the head of St. Anthony!’ exclaimed the
Count of Artois, looking fiercely on Fakreddin’s
mangled corpse, ‘it was this emir who boasted that
he would dine in the red tent of my lord the king;
but now he will not grumble at a humbler resting-
place.’
‘My lord count,’ said Salisbury, gravely, ‘the
emir, had he been ten times a Saracen, was a brave
man; and let us merit the praises of the valiant hy
showing that we know how to honour the memory
of our enemies as weli as of our friends.’
‘Amen,’ said both the grand masters, in significant
accents.
128
CHAPTER XXI.
TIE CARNAGE OF MANSOURAIL
T was still early morning, and King Louis was
still on the Damietta side of the Achmoun,
when the Count of Artois, the Earl of Salisbury, and
the Grand Masters of the Temple and the Hospital
found themselves victors in the camp.
‘Now, gentlemen,’ said the Count of Artois, “let
us forward, and complete the rout of our foes while
affairs prosper in our hands and they are in dismay.
Speed will now avail more than strength; and the
fewer we are the greater will be the honour of a
victory. Forward then, and crush them at a blow!’
‘Forward!’ shouted the old deaf knight, who held
the count’s rein, ‘Hurrah! hurrah! Upon them!
upon them !’
But the count’s companions hesitated, and ex-
changed glances of alarm.
‘Nobie prince,’ said the Master of the Temple,
after a pause, ‘I give all praise to your valour; but
I entreat you to be advised, and not to act rashly.
Our men are weary; our horses are wounded; we
are few in number; and we must not overvalue our
victory, or suppose cur enemies are vanquished
RASH COUNSEL. 199
Lecause they have lost a handful of men. Let us,
therefcre, return to the king, that we ey, be
strenothened by his counsel ail aid.’
‘In truth,’ said the Grand Master of the Hospital,
‘we should be foolhardy to attempt aught rashly.
We are in a strange country; and our best instructors
are behind. Let us stay for our lantern and not go
forward in the dark.’
‘Ah? exclaimed the Count of Artois, swelling with
pride and anger, ‘this is ever the way with military
monks. But for the treachery of the Templars, and
the sedition of the Hospitallers, the Holy Land
would long since have been won.’
‘Noble count,’ said the Grand Master of the
Temple, reproachfully, ‘you do us grievous wrong,
Why should we take the habit of religion, and pass
our lives in a foreign land amid perils and fatigues ?
Is it, think you, to overthrow the Church and betray
the cause of Christ, that we abandon our homes
and kindred? However,’ added the Grand Master,
waxing wroth, ‘let us forward, in God’s name, and
try all together the fortunes of battle. Standard-
bearer, unfurl the banner of the Temple. Ha!
Beau-séant! Beau-séant !’
At this moment the Earl of Salisbury made an
effort to save his comrades from the destruction
on which they were about to rush.
‘My lord,’ said he, addressing the Count of Artois,
‘I implore you to listen to the wholesome counsel of
the grand masters. They have been long in this
country, and learned by experience the craft as well
as the strength of our foes. We, being strangers,
130 IE BOY CRUSADERS.
are ignorant of the perils; but we know that, as fax
as tke east is from the west, so far are our ways
different from the ways of the Orientals.’
‘Hearken to this Englishman!’ exclaimed the
count, scornfully. ‘What cowardice there is in these
English! But their timid counsel suits not us.
Happy should I be if the Christian army were
purged of the English tails!’
A flush of rage crimsoned the earl’s bronzed
cheek, and his eye flashed fire.
‘Now, by my father’s sword!’ cried he, striving to
be calm, though he literally quivered with indies
nation, ‘this passes human patience! Ilo! there,
Lord Robert de Vere, raise my banner; and you,
Count of Artois, lead on, and see if the danger of
death hinders us from following. The touchstone
must try which is gold and oe is brass; and I
swear, by good St. George, as I put on my helmet,
that the English knights whom you have taunted
with cowardice will this day penetrate farther in —
the ranks of our foes than any warrior of France—--
be he prince or paladin—will venture to do.’
And the dispute having thus been terminated, the
Count of Artois and his Crusaders put on their
helmets and mounted their horses. At that
moment the eye of Salisbury alighted on Walter
Espee; and his countenance, which had expressed
the most scornful indignation, suddenly changed,
and expressed something like pity.
‘Boy,’ said he, in a ioe kindly tone, ‘fall back
and wait for the French king, We are rushing on
certain death; and you are tao young to die.’
NOT TOO YOUNG TO DIRE. 151
‘Nay, my good lord,’ replied Walter, calmly. «A
man, whether young or old, can die but once: [
would rather fall fighting in the cause of our
Redeemer, and under your banner, than in a less
holy cause and in meaner company.’
As you will,’ said the earl. ‘It shall never be told
that I prevented knight or squire from dying the
death of a martyr.’
‘By the might of Mary! Master Espec,’ whispered
Bisset, the English knight, ‘were I your age, and
had my choice, certes, I should think twice ere
hazarding life against such odds. Wherefore should
you fall a victim to the madness of my Lord of
Artois, or the pride of my Lord of Salisbury ?’
‘On my faith, I know not,’ answered Walter,
smiling. ‘But this I do know, that a man can die
but once, and that a Christian warrior who falls with
the Cross on his shoulder is understood to win the
crown of martyrdom.’
‘Nevertheless, were I you, and of your years,’
argued Bisset, ‘I should little relish the notion of
being killed; for, as the Saracens say, when man
dies there is no hope of his living again; because, as
they add truly, man is not a water-melon when
once in the ground he cannot grow again.’
By this time French and Templars and Hospi-
tallers and English were mounted; and, without
further argument, they dashed towards Mansourah.
At first they enccuntered no obstacle; and, while
the inhabitants fled in terror along the road to
Cairo, the Count of Artois and his companions, after
destroying one of the gates, so as to secure eOTESS
152 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
if necessary, penetrated into the city, carrying all
before them ; and, reaching the palace of the sultan,
they commenced the work of pillage. But during
this process they were rudely interrupted; for Bibars
Bendocdar perceived the imprudence of which the
Crusaders had been guilty, and suddenly, at the
head of a Saracen army, appeared to give them
battle.
And now the Crusaders were in a fearful predica-
ment. Kre they had time to rally, they were fiercely
attacked. From the roofs and windows of the houses
around, the Saracens hurled stones, and poured
heated sand and boiling water. Before them were -
the Mamelukes, headed by Bibars Bendocdar, fiery
with fanaticism, and panting for blood. It was a
terrible situation even for brave men; and the very
bravest there felt a thrill of awe and terror.
‘ All is lost!’ said Salisbury, in a whisper.
‘The King of France may hear of our peril, and
come to our rescue, suggested Lord Robert de
Vere. :
‘No hope of succour,’ said Bisset, in a conclusive
tone. ‘But let us not droop. We can at least sell
our lives dearly.’
A brief and painful silence succeeded, while still
upon the Crusaders the Saracens hurled stones and
poured boiling water.
‘Englishmen and friends,’ at length said Salisbury,
raising his voice so as to be heard at a distance, ‘it
were vain at this moment to deny our peril. But
take courage, my brave companions; and let us not
faint in the hour of adversity. Everything, save
NO ROOM FOR RETREAT. 133
dishonour, may be borne by valiant men; and ad-
versity sheds a light upon the virtues of mankind,
as surely as prosperity casts over them a shade.
Ifere there is no room for retreat; for our enemics
chcompass us about; and to attempt to fly would -
be certain death. Be of good cheer, then, and let
the urgency of the case sharpen your valour and
nerve your arms. Brave men should either conquer
nobly, or die with glory; and martyrdom is a boon
which we should accept without reluctance. But,
before we fall, let us, while we live, do what. may
avenge our deaths; and, while giving thanks to God
that it is our lot to die as martyrs, let us, in our last
efforts of valour and despair, prove ourselves worthy
soldiers of the Cross.’
‘Earl William,’ said the Count of Artois, riding
up, and now conscious of his folly, ‘God fights
against us. Resistance is vain, but escape is possible.
Let us consult our safety, and fly while yet our
horses can carry us.’ |
‘Fly if you will!’ answered the earl, scornfully ;
‘but God forbid that any but liars should ever have
it in their power to tell that my father’s son fled
from the face of a Saracen.’
And now the heavens and the earth seemed to
resound with the noise of horns and enormous kettle-
drums; and, urged on by Bibars Bendocdar, the
Saracens rushed upon their enemies, The plight of
the Crusaders was desperate. But, few as they were
in comparison with the swarming foe, they fought
gallantly and well; and, though wounded and ex-
hausted, maintained the conflict for hours after the
| ; |
134 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
flight of the Count of Artois. But fearful in the
meantime was the carnage. Full fifteen hundred
knights had fallen; and of these, three hundred were
of the order of the Temple. Gradually the numbers
diminished, till there remained not a dozen of the
men who had that morning invaded Fakreddin’s camp;
and among these were the Earl of Salisbury, Lord
Robert de Vere, the Grand Masters of the Temple and
the Hospital, Bisset the English knight, and Walter
' Espec, still unwounded, and fighting as if he bore a
charmed life, and felt invulnerable to javelins or arrows.
But all possibility of continuing to resist was now
at an end, and every hope of succour had vanished.
Salisbury, resolved to sell his life dearly, faced the
Saracens with desperate valour, and used his battle-
axe with such effect that a hundred Saracens are
said to have fallen that day by his hand. At length
his horse was killed under him; and, after rising to
lis feet, and fighting for awhile with disdain, he fell
covered with wounds. Robert de Vere, already
bleeding and exhausted, no sooner saw Salisbury sink
than he wrapped the English standard round his
body, and lay down to die by the great earl’s side.
Bisset, Walter Espec, and the two grand masters,
found themselves surrounded by a host of foes, and
defending themselves desperately against every spe-
cies of assailant.
‘Alas!’ exclaimed the grand masters of the
Temple, ‘ we are clearly doomed.’
‘I would fain hope not,’ answered Bisset, reso-
lutely. ‘Our weapons are not willow-wands; we
can cut our way through the pagan rabble.’
BRAVERY OF THE FOUR SURVIVORS. 135
‘Shame upon usif we hesitate !†said Walter Espec.
And drawing close together, with a rush which
for a time bore down opposition, the four survivors
made a stern endeavour to reach the gate,—the axe
of Bisset and the swords of the military monks
doing terrible execution. Twice the Saracens formed
in a mass to prevent their reaching the only gate
which was not closed; as often Bisset, penetrating
singly into the Saracen ranks, dealt death and de-
struction to his foes, and opened the way for his
friends; till gradually, having by force of arm over-
thrown every obstacle in his path, he reached the
gate, and, followed by the Grand Master of the
Temple, dashed through the opening, with a shout
of defiance at his assailants.
But the Grand Master of the Hospital and Walter
I’spec had not such good fortune as the Templar
and the English knight. Bibars Bendocdar, enraged
at the rumour that some Christians were escaping
from the carnage, hastened to the open gate, and,
with his arrival, every chance vanished. Dragged
from his steed, the grand master was fain to sur-
render himself prisoner. Wounded by an arrow and
a javelin, but still struggling to fight his way out,
Walter spec cut down a Saracen soldier, and, rising
in his stirrups and shouting, ‘St. Katherine for
Espec!’ made a fierce thrust at Bendocdar. But next
moment he was felled to the ground; he felt that
his blood was flowing fast, and that horsemen were
riding over him; and then he lost all consciousness,
and lay prostrate and insensible among the dead and
the dying.
136
CHAPTER XXII.
THE BATTLE,
O sooner did Guy Muschamp find the door of his
prison opened, than he rushed out to ascertain
the cause of the tumult to which he was indebted for
liberty, and he discovered that the camp was deserted
and abandoned, save by the wounded and the slain.
Ifowever, he hastily donned his steel cap, possessed
himself of a short sword; and having with little
ditiiculty caught a stray horse, saddled and bridled,
he mounted, and rode forth with the idea of ee
the Crusaders, who by this time were disappearing
within the gates of Mansourah.
Fortunately, however, for Guy, he was not des-
tined to share the fate of his gallant countrymen
who fell victims to the vain folly of the Count of
Artois. Nevertheless, his danger was great. By
this time the Count of Brittany and a multitude of
warriors were riding towards Mansourah to aid the
Count of Artois; and, as the Saracens who came
out to oppose their progress rapidly spread over the
plain, Guy began to find his position somewhat
perilous, and to give himself up for lost. At that
iioment, however, his eye and his ear were attracted
CROSSING THE ACHMOUN. 137
by the gleaming of spears and the ringing of mail to
a ruined house; and, cantering thither, he found to
his joyful surprise, that the Lord of Joinville and his
knights had taken shelter there, to await the arrival
of the king, who was still engaged in passing the
main body of his army over the Achmoun.
Nor had they long to wait. As with breathless
anxiety they watched the Saracens, swarming like
bees from their hives, and covering the plain, Louis,
having at length crossed the canal, with sound of
trumpets and clarions, rode up at the head of his
cavalry, and, with a German sword in his hand,
halted on an eminence to survey the field. And neither
in air nor appearance did Louis, at that moment,
look unworthy of the part he was acting as chief of
the pilgrim army. His magnificent armour, his
gilded helmet, and his noble bearing, gave him the
appearance of being taller by the shoulders than
any of his companions. As he reined up his white
charger—the symbol of sovereignty—and, with the
oriflamme displayed before him, endeavoured calmly
to estimate the chances of the conflict, the Lord of
Joinville and his knights, surrounded as they were
with danger, could not but utter exclamations ex-
pressive of admiration.
‘By St. James,’ exclaimed Joinville, ‘I never in
my life saw a more handsome man under arms.’
‘Certes,’ replied one of the knights, ‘I could
almost believe that the angel of battles had come to
our aid.’ :
While the king was still surveying the combat, that
every moment became more fierce and sanguinary,
138 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
the Constable of France rode up to inform him of the
peril of the Count of Artois.
‘Sire,’ said the constable, ‘ your noble brother is
shut up in Mansourah; and, albeit he and his com-
rades hold out gallantly, they must perish ‘if not
aided forthwith.’
‘Well, constable,’ answered Louis, ‘on to the
rescue, in God’s name, and I will speedily follow.’
The constable, without more words, gave his horse
the spur, and dashed towards Mansourah, whither
the king and his knights also attempted to make
their way. But this was no easy matter. Every
moment the Saracens seemed to increase in numbers;
and the Crusaders, while struggling bravely not to
be overwhelmed by odds, were exposed to terrible
hazard. Louis soon found himself in the thick of
the fight and environed by foes. Nothing seemed to
remain to him but to sell his life dearly; and six
Saracens, rushing forward simultaneously, attempted
to seize his bridle, and take him captive. But, at
that moment, Louis—-gentle and saintly as was his
nature—used his German sword with a vigour and
effect, scarcely excelled by Richard Cceur de Lion at
Joppa, when he charged among the Mamelukes of
Saladin, or by Edward Longshanks at Kakhow, when
the sweep of his sword, and the rush of his grey
steed, struck terror into the heart of the host of
Bibars Bendocdar. Down before that short German
sword went turban and caftan; till the French
knights, aware of their king’s danger, spurred in to
his rescue, and, with 4 mighty effort, saved him from
captivity.
THE BATTLEFIELD, 139
And now another attempt was made to reach
Mansourah. But it was too late. All was over with
the brave band who had followed the Count of Artois
into the city; and every moment the aspect of affairs
became more menacing; for Bibars Bendocdar, elate
with his victory within the walls, issued from the
gate, animating his soldiers with the words—‘ God is
powerful,’ and hoping to deal with the French king,
as he had dealt with the French king’s brother.
Nor, at first, did it appear that the Crusaders could
escape utter defeat. Not aware what was occurring,
and suddenly attacked by a mighty force led by a
dauntless chief, they were pressed and whirled about
and separated from each other, and forced to en-
counter countless odds at every disadvantage. Yet
even in stich circumstances the warriors of France
maintained their high reputation for valour; and, as
the combat proceeded and became keener and
keener, many a strong Saracen went to his account.
On both sides, indeed, great was the display of
personal prowess and courage; but there was no
generalship. Amidst clouds of dust, and under a
glowing sun, Christian and Moslem fought hand to
hand, and steel to steel. Helmet and turban mingled
confusedly in the struggle; while banners rose and
fell, and knights were unhorsed, and saddles emptied.
From Mansourah to Achmoun, and from the Nile to
the ford pointed out by the Bedouin, the ground,
literally covered with combatants, shook with the
rush of their horses, and the sky was rent by the
opposing war-cries of ‘Islam! Islam!’ and ‘ Mont-
joie, St. Denis!’ What with the shouts of the living,
140 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
the shrieks of the dying, and the yells of the Sara-
cens, as they bore down on their adversaries like
hawks on their prey, all was bloodshed, confusion,
and clamour, and the carnage was such as few men,
who fought on that field and survived it, ever re-
membcred without a thrill of awe.
And as the day sped on and the battle continued
to rage all over the plain, and warriors fell in heaps
before and around him, Louis became painfully aware
that Mansourah could not be reached, and that the
Crusaders were no longer fighting to conquer the
Saracens but to save themselves. And there was con-
siderable danger of Bibars Bendocdar drawing near
to the Achmoun, and cutting off all communication
between the camp of the Duke of Bureundy, and the
Christian army struggling for existence on the plains
ot Mansourah. On becoming aware of the danger, the
king decided on falling back towards the canal, and,
with the oriflamme displayed, moved in that direction.
Unfortunate were the consequences. A report im-
mediately spread that the king was retreating because
the Saracens were everywhere victorious, and im-
mediately there was a panic, and several squadrons
disbanded and rushed towards the canal. A terrible
scene followed, and men and horses were drowned
while struggling in the water. Nothing could have
exceeded the disorder and dismay. Louis, indeed,
made strenuous efforts to restore confidence, but his -
voice was scarcely heard in the tumult; and he
must have rejoiced when night put an end to the
conflict, and when Bibars Bendocdar retired to
Mansouvah, with the determination to attack the
VICTORY OR DEFEAT? 141
Crusaders on another day, as the tiger draws back to
make a more terrible spring.
Repairing to Djedilé, Louis dismounted, and took
possession of the camp which, at daybreak, had been
occupied by the Emir Fakreddin; and when his red
tent was pitched there, the Prior of Rosnay presented
himself, and kissed the king’s hand.
‘Sire,’ said he, wishing to break the news gently,
‘I know not if you have heard tidings of your noble
brother, the Count of Artois ?’
‘T know all,’ answered Louis, mournfully.
‘Sire,’ said the prior, endeavouring to administer
consolation, ‘no King of France has ever reaped
such honour as you have done this day. You have
crossed a dangerous river ; you have gained a victory ;
you have put your enemies to flight; you have cap-
tured their engines of war; and now you are taking
possession of their camp.’
‘May God be praised for all that I have, with His
aid, been able to do in His cause,’ said Louis, with a
faltering voice, and tears rolling down his cheeks, as
he entered his pavilion.
‘On my faith, sir prior, said John de Valery, with
the tone of a man who has a presentiment of coming
calamity, ‘I marvel how you can speak of this day’s
work as a triumph of ourarms. Often have I fought
for victory; but this day I have feit too surely that I
was fighting not for victory but for life.’
‘In truth,’ said the Lord of Joinville, who had
joined them, ‘I would fain hope for better fortune in
the future; for, call this a victory if you will, such
another victory would be worse than a defeat.’
142
CHAPTER XXIII.
NOW JOINVILLE KEPT THE BRIDGE.
HEN the Constable of France informed King
Louis that the Count of Artois was in extreme
peril, and when Louis made an effort to go to the
rescue of his brother—the Lord of Joinville, having
previously left the ruined house, and joined the king,
endeavoured to keep in the royal warrior’s company.
But all efforts with this object proved vain. The
Saracens, raising clouds of dust and uttering fero-
cious yells as they advanced, came down upon the
Crusaders with a force that was irresistible. The
French were scattered in all directions; and Joinville
was separated from Louis some minutes before the
person of the saintly monarch was in such imminent
danger. But in the meantime the seneschal’s band
had been reduced to six persons, including Guy
Muschamp, who adhered with determination to
Joinville’s side; and between them and the king,
then struggling to save his liberty, intervened
thousands of Saracens.
‘Impossible for us to make our way through such —
a crowd,’ said Joinville; ‘much better, therefore, will
it be to wheel round and get on the other side of them.’
ALARMING POSITION. 143
Accordingly they wheeled round, and gained the
bank of the river, and began to descend. But at
this moment the aspect of the field became most
alarming to the armed pilgrims. The Crusaders and
Saracens met on the banks, and many of the French,
attempting to cross and form a junction with the
Duke of Burgundy, were drowned; and the river was
covered with lances, pikes, shields, and horses and
men struggling in vain to save themselves.
By this time the Lord of Joinville, heading his
knights, had reached a bridge on one of the roads to
Mansourah ; and on perceiving the miserable state of
the army he halted.
‘It is better,’ said he, after looking round, ‘to
remain where we are, and guard this bridge; for, if
we leave it, the Saracens may come and attack the
king on this side, and, if he is assaulted from two
quarters, he will surely be discomfited.’
Accordingly they posted themselves on the bridge
which was between the canal Achmoun and the
gates of Mansourah, and prepared to defend it
against the Saracens. But such was the danger, that
Joinville’s heart, brave as it was, beat with terror,
and he cried aloud for the protection of St. James.
‘Good Lord St. James,’ exclaimed he; ‘succour me,
I beseech thee, and come to my aid in this hour of
need.’
It seemed to him and his companions that his
prayer was answered. Almost as he uttered it, the
Count of Soissons, who was his kinsman, appeared
riding past the bridge; and Joinville hastened to
secure his company.
144 TIE BOY CRUSADERS.
‘Sir count,’ said he; ¢I beg you to remain with us
and guard this bridge; for, should it be lost, the
king will have his enemies upon him both in front
and rear.’
‘Willingly, seneschal,’ replied the count; and he
placed himself on Joinville’s right hand, while a
French knight who was with him took his station
on the left. |
While Joinville and his companions were seated
on their horses, prepared to keep the bridge at all
hazards against all comers, the Saracens made re-
peated efforts to drive them from their post. But
they remained firm as rocks. Trusting to accomplish
by stratagem what they could not do by force, the
Saracens attempted to lure them from the spot; and
one stalwart horseman, galloping suddenly forward,
felled one of the French knights with his battle-axe,
and then retreated to his own people, hoping that he
would be followed. But Joinville, who comprehended ~
the purpose, would not be decoyed, and resolutely
kept his ground, though annoyed and wounded by a
rabble of half-armed Saracens, who incessantly threw
darts, and large stones, and hard clods.
At length, however, the Saracens began to make
themselves much more formidable, and to discharge
Greek fire, which threatened to do much mischief,
and pressed forward with savage yells.
‘On my faith, we must take order with this
rabble,’ said the Count of Soissons, growing angry.
‘As you will,’ replied Joinville; and, without
further hesitation, they charged the crowd, put them
to flight, and resumed their post.
THE COUNT OF BRITTANY. 145
But no sooner did the Saracens perceive that the
immediate danger was over, than they turned round,
and, keeping at a safe distance, yelled out defiance.
‘Heed them not, seneschad,’ said the Count of
Soilssons, who, in the midst of peril, retained all
the gaiety of soul which distinguished the French
chevaliers from the thoughtful Saxon, and the
haughty and somewhat grim Norman. ‘ Heed them
not. Let this rascal canaille bawl and bray as the
please. By St Denis, you and I will live to
talk of this day’s exploits in the chambers of our
ladies.’ 3
‘May God and good St. James grant it,’ said
Joinville, gravely.
‘But who comes hither, and in such a plight ?’
asked the Count of Soissons, suddenly, as a Crusader,
mounted on a strong horse, came galloping from the
direction of Mansourah—his face wounded, blood
gushing from his mouth, the reins of his bridle cut,
and his hands resting, as if for support, on his
charger’s neck.
‘In truth,’ replied Joinville, after examining the
horseman, ‘it is the Count of Brittany ;’ as, closely
pursued by Saracens, the wounded warrior gained
the bridge, and ever and anon turned round and
shouted mockingly to his pursuers.
‘By St Denis,’ exclaimed the count, ‘one thing
is certain: he is not afraid of hig pursuers.’
And almost as the Count of Soissons spoke, the
Count of Brittany was followed by two warriors, who
made their way through the Saracens, literally
smiting to the earth all who came in their wav.
i36 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
. Nothing, it seemed, could resist their progress; and
their path was tracked with blood. On they came,
scorntully scattering their foes till they reached the
bridge, when reining up where the Lord of Joinville
was posted, they stopped to take breath, after their
almost superhuman exertions. One had in his hand
a battle-axe; the other a sword. The battle-axe was
stained red with gore; the sword was hacked till it
looked ‘like a saw of dark and purple tint.’ One
was Bisset, the English knight, the other was the
Grand Master of the Temple. The horses of both ©
were wounded all over; the helmets of both were
deeply dinted. Bisset’s mail was almost hacked
to pieces; the Templar’s vestments were torn to
rags, his cuirass pierced, and his eye and face
_, wounded and bleeding.
‘You bring tidings of woe?’ said the Count of
Soissons.
‘Woe, in truth,’ answered Bisset; for the grand
master could not even muster voice to speak; ‘ of all
who rode into Mansourah this morning, not a man,
save ourselves, lives to tell the tale.’
‘And what of the Count of Artois, sir knight?’
asked Joinville.
‘I know not,’ replied Bisset, briefly ; ‘ the count
disappeared early, and doubtless died with the com-
rades of his jeopardy.’
‘No,’ interrupted the Count of Brittany, faintly,
‘he was drowned while attempting to save himself
by flight. At least,’ added he, ‘so I have been told.’
And in truth, to this day it is somewhat uncertain
what became of Robert, Count of Artois, though the
ONE OF THE BROTHERS-IN-ARMS AMISSING. li?
most probable account is that, seeing all was lost, |
he turned his horse’s head, with a vague hope of
reaching the main body of the Crusaders, and, while
attempting to cross one of the branches of the Nile,
sank never more to rise.
It was about this time that King Louis had moved
towards the Achmoun; and the Constable of France,
with the king’s crossbowmen under his command,
just as the sun was setting came to the bridge which
had been so bravely defended.
‘Seneschal,’ said he, addressing Joinville, ‘you
and your comrades have behaved well in guarding
this bridge; and now, all danger being over in this
quarter, [ pray you to accompany the Lord John de
Valery to the king, who is about to go to his
pavilion.’
And Joinville went as the constable requested ;
and while his companions were pursuing their way
towards the king’s red pavilion —that pavilion in
which the Emir Fakreddin had boasted he would
dine on the day of St. Sebastian — Guy Muschamp
approached Bisset, the English knight, and entreated
his attention.
‘Sir knight,’ said he, ‘I would fain enquire if you
know what has befallen the English squire, by name
Walter Espec ?’
‘Boy,’ replied Bisset, ‘I know not what may have
befallen him; but, if I were to hazard a guess, I
should say that he died, and died bravely. I re-
member me that he fought to the last; and I hoped
that he was destined to escape, as I did; but I grieve
to say that he failed so to do.’
148 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
‘Alas! alas!' said Guy sadly, and he clasped his
hands, as if muttering a prayer for his comrade’s
soul; ‘ woe is me, that I should live to hear that my
brother-in-arms, the good Walter, has fallen.’
‘My brave youth,’ urged Bisset, kindly, as he
observed that the boy’s face was suffused with tears,
‘death has this day been the portion of many thou-
sands of valiant men; and, for your brother-in-armgs,
I can testify for your comfort that he fought to the
last with the courage of a hero, and I doubt not,
that he faced death with the courage of a martyr.’
‘And if we are to give the uit. which our fathers
did to the words of holy men,’ added Guy, solemnly,
‘the souls of all such as fall, fighting for the Cross,
are purified from sin, and admitted straight to Para-
cise.’
‘ By the mass, I have heard priests say so,’ replied
Bisset, after a pause, during which he eyed the boy
with evident surprise; ‘and mayhap,’ continued he,
‘in the days of Peter the Hermit, and Godfrey of
Bouillon, such was the case. But, credit me, in
our day, armed pilgrims are guilty of such flagrant
sins during their pilgrimage, and while decked with
the oo that I hardly deem them likely’ to get
access to Paradise on such easy terms.’
‘By St. John of Beverley,’ exclaimed the squire,
in great astonishment, ‘deem you that matters are
so much changes sir knight?’
‘So much go,’ answered Bisset, shaking his head,
‘that seeing, save myself, you are almost the only
Inglishman left in this army of pilgrims, I am free
to confess to you my opinion, that for aught we are
A KNIGHT’S REFLECTIONS. 149
likely to do for the Holy Sepulchre, we might as
well have stayed at home, and hunted, and hawked,
and held our neighbours at feud. On my life, I
have seen enough of this army to feel sure that
Blacas, the troubadour knight, is a wise man, when
on being asked whether he will go to the Holy Land,
answers, that he loves and is beloved, and that he
will remain at home with his ladye love.’
And already, forgetting his wounds, and _ his
bruises, his hair-breadth escape, and the terrible
scenes in which he had that day acted a part, the
knight, as he reached the tent of King Louis, and
prepared to dismount, half chanted, half sung, the
lines with which Blacas concludes his simple song :—
Je ferai ma pénitence,
Entre mer et Durance,
Aupres de son manoir,
CHAPTER XXIV.
THE FIRST FRIDAY IN LENT.
N the day when the city of Mansourah witnessed
the carnage of the Crusaders under the Count
of Artois, and a great battle shook the plain outside
the walls, the Egyptians experienced by turns fear
and hope, joy and sadness.
On the morning when the camp at Djédilé was
taken, and the Emir Fakreddin slain, a pigeon
carried intelligence of the disaster to Cairo; and
the Egyptian capital was immediately in conster-
nation. Believing that the days of Islamism were
numbered, and the empire of the sultan on the
verge of ruin, the inhabitants thought of nothing
but escape from the danger that impended. Many
departed for Upper Egypt, and sorrow reigned in
the city—the inhabitants bewailing their misfortunes,
and crying that the world was coming to anend. A -
second pigeon, however, carried thither tidings that
the Count of Artois was defeated and slain; and
Cairo became the scene of joy and rejoicing. Fear
vanished from every face; and the Saracens grate-
fully extolled the courage of the Mamelukes, and of
their chief, Bibars Bendocdar. :
THE NEW SULTAN, 151
At the same time, an arrival of great importance
took place at Mansourah. While the battle was
raging on the plain, Touran Chah, the new sultan,
reached the city, and was received with acclamations
by the populace. The emirs, however, regarded the
sultan with some suspicion. Unfortunately, Touran
Chah did not come alone; and the jealousy of the
emirs was aroused by the presence of the favourites
who accompained him from Mesopotamia. If the
heir of Saladin could have foreseen what a price he
was to pay for the happiness of having his favourites
with him, he would doubtless have been discreet
enough to leave them behind.
But, mm the meantime, it was necessary for the
satety and interests both of the sultan and the emirs,
that the Crusaders should be destroyed; and Bibars
Bendocdar was bent on pursuing his success. In
the first place, he made several attempts to recapture
the engines of war, and the French were repeatedly
roused to defend them at the point of the sword.
But these attacks led to a feeling of insecurity, and
King Louis deemed it prudent to construct a bridge
of wood over the Achmoun, so as to have the means
of communicating readily with the Duke of Bur-
gundy’ss camp. Who at that time could have
imagined the mischief of which this bridge was
subsequently to be the cause ?
Meanwhile Bibars Bendocdar was doing his best
to inflame the enthusiasm of the Mamelukes and
soldiers. Nor, with that object, was he above prac-
tising a little deception. A cuirass covered with
fleur-de-lis was publicly exhibited, and declared to
152 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
be that of the French king. Heralds proclaimed
that the Christian army, deptived of its chief, was
like a trunk without a head; and the enthusiasm of
the Saracens reached a high pitch. At length, the
soldiers began to clamour to be led against the
enemy, and Bibars Bendocdar fixed Friday, the 11th
of February, as the day on which he would lead
them to triumph.
It was the first Friday in Lent; and King Louis,
having received warning that an attack was medi-
tated, gave orders for fortifying the camp, and
preparing for a conflict. At daybreak, accordingly,
the Crusaders were under arms; and, in good time,
Bibars Bendocdar appeared on the plain, setting his
men in battle order. Placing his cavalry in the van,
the infantry behind, and a strong reserve in the rear,
the Maineluke chief extended his lines till his forces
seemed to cover the plain. Nor was he sorry to
observe that there was a prospect of a stern resist-
ance; for the difficulties of his situation increased
his importance in the eyes of his soldiers, and every
step he took in overcoming perils, from which others
shrank, brought him nearer to the object on which
his heart was set—that object being neither more
nor less than the throne of the sultans.
And now, noon having come, with horns and
kettle-drums sounding an onset, Bibars Bendocdar
advanced on the Crusaders, and attacked the Count
of Anjou, who was at the head of the camp on the
side towards the Nile. At first, the French cavalry
calmly abided the assauit; but they soon found
themselves exposed to a kind of attack which they
COURAGE OF AN ENGLISH KNIGHT. 153
had not anticipated. In fact, the Saracen infantry,
moving forward, overwhelmed the knights with
Greek fire, and threw them into confusion. Surcoats
and caparisons blazed, and the horses plunged, broke
from the control of their riders, and galloped to and
fro. While they were in disorder, Bibars Bendocdar,
at the head of the Mamelukes, penetrated within
the entrenchments, and the Count of Anjou found
himself surrounded by foes.
Ere this, King Louis, aware of his brother’s peril,
despatched Bisset, the English knight, with a mes-
sage assuring the count of speedy aid; but, ere the
Englishman reached the Count of Anjou, he met the
French cavalry flying in disarray. Bisset reined up,
and addressed the fugitives.
‘Christian warriors,’ said he, ‘I come from your
king to ask whither are you flying? See you not
that the horses of the unbelievers are swifter than
yours ?’
‘It is too true,’ replied the fugitives.
‘Come then,’ said Bisset, ‘follow me, and I will
show you what your king deems a safer road than
flight; and charging among the Mamelukes, in front
of the French cavalry, the English knight succeeded
in maintaining the conflict, which had commenced
so inauspiciously for the French.
And aid was at hand; for Louis did not forget his
promise of succour. Shouting his battle-cry, he
spurred, lance in rest, to his brother’s rescue, and,
precipitating himself with his knights on the Moslem
warriors, soon redeemed the disaster which had
marked the opening of the battle. Nor did the
154 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
saint-king exhibit the slightest dread of exposing his
royal person. With a shout of ‘ Montjoie, St. Denis!’
he charged into the midst of the foe—his banner
flying, and his sword flashing—and by his example
inspired the Crusaders with such courage that, after
a sanguinary combat, they succeeded in expelling the
Mamelukes from the camp, and driving back the
infantry that threw the Greek fire.
By this time the battle had become general, and
everywhere the Crusaders fought valiantly and well,
though they had not always the advantage. In fact,
Bibars Bendocdar, as a war chief, possessed such a
degree of skill in handling masses of fighting men as
neither Louis nor any of the Crusaders could boast
of; and the discipline of the Mamelukes was such as
to make them terrible foes to encounter.
Nevertheless the Crusaders held their ground, and
performed prodigies of valour. At one point the
warriors of Syria and Cyprus maintained their ground
against fearful odds; at a second, the knights of
Champagne and Flanders fought stoutly and well;
at a third, such of the Templars as had not fallen at
Mansourah, headed by their grand master who had
so narrowly escaped the carnage, exhibited the fine
spectacle of a handful of men baffling a multitude,
and, despite the showers of Greek fire and missiles
which fell so thick that the ground was literally
covered with arrows and javelins, kept the enemy at
bay.. Even when the grand master fell mortally
wounded, the Knights of the Temple continued to
siruggle ; and when their entrenchments failed, and
the Saracens rushed into the camp, the military
TO THE RESCUE! 15
monks closed their ranks and presented a front
against which the assailants continued for hours to
charge violently, but in vain. ,
But meanwhile the peril of the Count of Poictiers
had been great and alarming. Composed of infantry,
his division gave way before the rush of the Saracen
cavalry, and dispersed in consternation. Nor was
this the worst. The-count himself, while endeavour-
ing to rally his forces, was seized, and experienced
the mortification of finding himself dragged off ag a
prisoner. But there was succour at hand.
The Lord of Joinville and his knights were luckily
posted near the Count of Poictiers; but having all
been so severely wounded in the battle of Shrove
Tuesday as to be unable to bear their armour, they
could take no prominent part in the conflict raging
around them. No sooner, however, did they observe
the count’s predicament than they deemed themselves
bound to interfere at all hazards; and Guy Mus-
champ, riding to the place where the sutlerg and
workmen and women of the army were posted, urged
them to rouse themselves. |
‘Good people,’ cried the squire, ‘ the brave Count
of Poictiers is being carried into captivity. For our
Leader’s sake, succour the Count of Poictiers. To the
rescue ! to the rescue!’
Now the count was highly popular with the per-
sons to whom this appeal was addressed; and no
sooner did they learn the prince’s danger than they
displayed the utmost alacrity to aid him. Arming
themselves with axes, and clubs, and sticks, and any=
thing that came in their way, they rushed furiously
156 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
forward, and, led on by the English squire, made so
successful an attack that the Saracens were dispersed,
and the count was rescued and carried back in
triumph.
‘Young gentleman,’ said the count, gratefully, ‘I
owe you my liberty. I pray you, tell me to whom I
am so deeply indebted.’ |
‘ Noble count,’ replied Guy, after telling his name,
‘I am a squire of England; and, for the present, I
serve the Lord of Joinville.’
‘Ah,’ said the count, smiling, ‘ the seneschal must
give you tome; forI would fain have an opportunity
of proving how I can requite such good service.’
By this time Bibars Bendocdar perceived that he
was wasting his strength in vain, and sounded a re-
treat. But the Mameluke chief was not without his
consolation. He knew that he had ruined the enter-
prise of the Crusaders; that they were no longer in a
condition to attempt a march to Cairo; and that they:
knew not on which side to turn.
But when the Saracens retreated towards Damietta,
and the danger was over for the time being, the
Crusaders were inclined to talk of their successful
resistance as a victory; and the knights and barons
when summoned that evening to the king’s pavilion,
went thither with the airs of conquerors.
‘My lords and friends,’ said Louis, kindly; * we
have much cause to be grateful to God our Creator.
On Tuesday, aided by Him, we dislodged our enemies
from their quarters, of which we gained possession.
This day we have defended ourselves against them.
though taken at advantage; many of us being left
THANKSGIVING. 157
witbout arms or horses, while they were completely
armed and on horseback, and on their own ground.
And since you have all witnessed the grace which God
our Creator has of late shown to us, and continues to
do daily, I commend you all, as you are bounden to
do, to return Him due thanksgiving.’
158
CHAPTER XXV.
MORTIFICATIONS AND MISERIES.
O longer could the armed pilgrims, so recently
buoyed up with the hope of making themselves
famous as the conquerors of Egypt, delude their
imaginations with the project of advancing to Cairo.
‘It is necessary to retreat to Damietta,’ said the
wise and prudent. |
‘A retreat to Damietta in the face of the foe is
more than our pride can brook,’ exclaimed the
haughty and obstinate.
‘Let us remain at Djédilé, and trust to the course
of events,’ suggested the reckless and the irresolute.
At Djédilé, accordingly, the Crusaders remained ;
and ere long, their calamities began in earnest, and
daily increased in magnitude. First came disease;
then came famine; and death and despair soon did
more than the Saracens could with the utmost efforts
have hoped to accomplish.
It appears that, after the two battles fought on the
plains of Mansourah, the Crusaders had neglected to
bury the slain; and the bodies thrown confusedly into
the Achmoun, and floating on the water, stopped
before the wooden bridge, and infected the atmo-
GLOOMY PROSPECTS. 100
sphere. A contagious disease was the consequence;
and this, being increased by the abstinence during
Lent, wrought such havoc, that nothing was heard
in the camp but mourning and lamentation. Louis,
sad, but still not in despair, exerted himself to mitigate
the sufferings of his army. At length he also fell sick,
and, every day, affairs wore a gloomier aspect.
‘It seems,’ said Guy Muschamp, who lay prostrate
with sickness in the tent of the Lord of Joinville, ¢ it
seems that Heaven has abandoned the soldiers of the
Cross.’
‘Hem,’ replied Bisset, to whom this was addressed,
‘I see not why Heaven should be blamed for the evils
which men bring on themselves by their own folly.
I warned you at Damietta what would be the end
of all the boastings which were uttered hourly. A
haughty spirit goes before a fall. Trust me, we have
not yet seen the worst. By the might of Mary, we
armed pilgrims may yet find ourselves under a
necessity similar to that which made cannibals of the
soldiers of King Cambyses when he made war in
Egypt?
‘King Cambyses ?’ repeated Guy, enquirinely.
‘Ay, replied Bisset, ‘he was King of Persia, and
almost as great a monarch as Kine Louis; and
when he was in this country his provisions ran short,
At first his soldiers lived on herbs, roots, and leaves;
when they could not get even these, they ate their
horses and beasts of burden; and, when the horses
and beasts of burden were finished, they began
to devour one another; and every tenth man. on
whom the lot fell, was doomed to serve as a meal for
160 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
his companions. Marry, we are like to be in a similar
plight; for famine begins to stare us in the face!’
Guy grcaned aloud, and wondered why he had left,
England; and, at that time, indeed, the new and
terrible danger daunted every heart. Resolved to
cut off all communication between Damietta and the
camp of the Crusaders, the sultan ordered a number
of galleys to be transported overland, to form an
ambuscade; and many French vessels were inter-
cepted. For a time, Louis could not comprehend
how no arrivals took place, and felt the gravest.
alarm. Ere long, however, one vessel, belonging to
the Count of Flanders, escaped the vigilance of the
galleys, and brought tidings that the sultan’s flac
was displayed all along ihe Nile. The Crusaders
received this intelligence with horror; and, in a few
days, the evil of famine was added to that of pesti-
lence.
‘What is to be done now ?’ asked they, giving way
to despondency. |
‘It is quite clear,’ said Louis, ‘that, in order to
save ourselves, we must treat with our enemies.’
- “No time was lost. Philip de Montfort, a knight of
renown, was despatched as ambassador to the sultan,
and was led to cherish hopes of success. The sultan
not only expressed his readiness +o treat, but actually
nominated commissioners. At first everything went
smoothly, and the Saracens appeared reasonable in
their demands. But when the question of hostages
came-to be discussed, a difficulty arose.
‘I am empowered to offer the Counts of Poictiers
and Anjou as hostages,’ said De Montiort.
HOSTAGES REFUSED, 161
‘No,’ replied the Saracens, ‘the sultan requires
the King of France.’
‘You ought to know Frenchmen better,’ exclaimed
Geotfrey de Segrines, one of the commissioners ; ‘ they
would rather die than leave their king in pledge.’
After this, the negotiation was broken off; and the
French prepared to cross the Achmoun by the bridge,
and deliberate on the propriety of marching back to
Damietta. But even the passage of the bridge was
not effected without terrible danger and heavy loss.
No sooner did the Crusaders begin to move, than the
Saracens came down upon them, and made a furious
attack ; but Walter de Chatillon, a French baron of
great fame, led on his companions to the encounter,
and after being seconded by the Count of Anjou,
succeeded in repulsing the foe. The Crusaders, how-
ever, after remaining some days in their old camp,
found that they were a prey to the worst calamities,
and, no longer hesitating, decided on a day for return-
ing to Damietta.
Unfortunately for the armed pilgrims, their reso-
lution was no secret to the Saracens, and when
Touran Chah became aware of their intended move-
ment down the Nile, he devised measures to inter-
cept them. He himself harangued his soldiers,
distributed money and provisions, reinforced them
with Arabs attracted to his standard by the prospect
of booty, and ordered boats with troops on board to
descend the river, and join the fleet already there ;
while bodies of light horse were placed on all the
roads by which the Crusaders were likely to make
good their retreat.
162 THE BOY CRUSADERS,
Nevertheless, the Crusaders, finding their present
position desperate, persevered in their resolution,
and Tuesday, the 5th of April, was appointed for the
perilous enterprise. On the arrival of that day, the
sick, the wounded, the women, and the children,
were embarked on the Nile, and, at the same time,
several French nobles, and the papal legate, got on
board a vessel, No doubt seems to have existed that
Louis might have saved himself. Even the Arabian
historians admit that the French king might have
escaped, either in a boat or on horseback, if he would |
have abandoned his army. But, with characteristic —
generosity, he distinctly refused to separate his fate
from theirs. Anxious about his safety, the soldiers
ran along the bank, shouting to the boatmen not to
set sail till the king embarked. |
‘Wait for the king—wait for the king!’ cried they.
‘No,’ said Louis, his heart touched, but his reso-
Jution firm; ‘goon. I will share weal or woe with my
soldiers. Iam not such a niggard of life, that I grudge
to risk it in such company, and in such a cause.’
And now the boats began to descend the Nile;
and at the same time the Duke of Burgundy, having
broken up his camp, about nightfall commenced a
retreat towards Damietta. But at this stave, the
rench were guilty of a piece of negliyence that was
destined to cost them dear. The king had ordered |
the wooden bridge over the Achmoun to be destroyed.
In their agitation and haste, the French paid no
attention to the order. In vain Bisset, the English
knight, protested against such insane indifference to
a manifest peril.
THE WARNING REJECTED. 163
‘My masters,’ said he, bluntly, ‘we can hardly
be deemed otherwise than madmen, if we leave that
bridge standing as it is, to afford the Saracens a sate
passage over the canal, to attack us in the rear.’
‘Sir knight,’ replied the French drily, for they did
not relish an Eneglishman’s interference, ‘it is not
from that quarter that danger is most to be appre-
hended.’
‘ Nevertheless,’ urged Bisset.
‘We are wasting time to no purpose,’ said the
French; ‘and this day, time is more precious than
your counsel,’
‘As you will, my masters,’ replied Bisset; ‘ only
credit me, that if you leave that bridge behind you
to facilitate the operations of your enemies, you will
place your army in such a predicament, that neither
the craft of Alexander of Macedon, nor William the
Norman—could either come from their graves to
lead—-would avail to save it from destruction ere
reaching Damietta.’
And having administered this warning, Bisset
withdrew, with the consolation of aman who has done
at least his duty, and with.the air also of a man
much too reckless as to his personal safety to fear
much on his own account from the consequences of
the blunders and incapacity of others; then, arming
himself, he saddled his steed, girded on his sword,
hung his battle-axe at his saddle-bow, and went to
attend King Louis during the perilous enterprise of
marching through a country, with armed foes posted
at the turn of every road.
‘Hearken to that English tail,’ said the French
164 THE BOY CRUSADERS,
one to another, as Bisset withdrew; ‘ these islanders
are so timid, that they will next be afraid of their
own shadows.’
‘By the head of St. Keteccee said a knight, who
had been attached to the Count of Artois, ‘I hate
the tailed English so, that I would leave the bridge
as it is, if only to mortify one of them.’
169
CHAPTER XXVI.
THE MASSACRE OF MINIEH.
T was already dark when the pilgrim army com-
menced a perilous retreat to Damietta, and when
the King of France, surrounded by a band of brave
knights, undertook the duty of bringing up the rear
—on that occasion the post of honour.
But Louis was in no condition to occupy such a
position with advantage. He was not fully recovered
from his sickness, and so weak, that he could hardly
. bear the weight of his armour, or support himself on
his white charger. Neither helmet nor cuirass wore
he; nor had he any weapon save hissword; nor had
he sufficient strength to wield his sword to any
purpose in the event of a close encounter,
And, as it happened, the post of honour speedily
became the post of danger. As Bisset had predicted,
the Saracens lost not a minute in availing themselves
of the bridge that had been left standing. In an
incredibly brief space of time, they contrived to cross
the canal in such numbers, that the plain on the
Damietta side was covered with turbaned war-
riors, bent on the destruction of their foes; and, in
the darkness of the night, their cavalry charged
iD
166 THE BOY CRUSADERS,
constantly, and with deadly effect, on the retiring and
dispirited rear of the Crusaders.
Of course, the plight of Louis and his comrades
every hour became more deplorable. They fell into
disorder; they ran against and impeded each other;
and eries of anger and despair were mingled with
the neighing of horses, and the clash of arms.
Earnestly they prayed for day, that they might, at
least, ascertain their real position; but, when day
came, it brought no comfort. In fact, when the
rising sun revealed their diminished and diminishing
numbers, and the formidable force of enemies who
surrounded them—here a handful of men—there a
host—the very boldest of the Crusaders gave them-
selves up for lost, and a simultaneous cry of terror
and dismay bade from their scanty ranks. |
‘Gentlemen,’ said Louis, calm in the midst of peal
‘droop not. At the great battle of Antioch, Godfrey
of Eouillon, and his companions, had worse odds
than we.’
‘And they conquered,’ said Walter de Chatillon,
striving to banish apprehension, ‘and we may
conquer.’
‘Yes,’ replied Louis, ‘they had faith in God's
protection, and confidence in the holiness of their
cause; and it seemed to them that while the strugele
was well-nigh hopeless, the blessed martyrs—George,
Demetrius, and Theodore, came to aid them, and
assure them of victory.’
‘Ha,’ said Bisset, the English knight, as if speak-
ing to himself, ‘I have heard that some saw St.
George in tre air, with an army of white horses; but
GEOFFREY DE SEGRINES. 167
these did no doubt look through the spectacles of
fancy.’
Louis turned, bent his brow, and darted upon the
speaker a glance of keen reproach, which might have
found fuller expression in words. But there was
no time for argument or admonition; for at that
moment the Saracens made one of their fiery charges,
and though the French warriors defended themselves
and their king with heroism, they could not hope
that valour would ultimately save them. While
Chatillon and Bisset, now charging singly, now side by
side, did wonders in keeping a space clear around
the king and the royal standard, Geoffrey de Segrines,
adhering to the side of Louis, wielded his sword with
such effect that he drove off, one by one, the horsemen
who darted forth from the Saracen ranks.
‘In truth,’ said the brave Frenchman, when com-
plimented by Bisset on his exploits, ‘I know not how
it is; but to me, it seems that the danger of this day
has doubled my-strength.’
‘On my faith,’ replied Bisset, ‘I am at a loss
whether more to admire your valour or your vigi-
lance. Your care of your good king reminds me of
the watchful servant who carefully drives away the
flies from his master’s cup.’
But brief were the intervals allowed even for such
an exchange of sentiments. Now secure of victory,
and. stimulated by enthusiasm and fanaticism, the
Saracens grew bolder and more audacious in their
attacks. Urged on by their dervishes and imaums,
who had flocked to the host of Saracens to remind
them that they were fighting in the cause of the
168 THE BOY CRUSADERS,
prophet, they became more and more eager for
carnage and blood, and the Crusaders less and less
capable of a stubborn resistance. At length, on
reaching the little town of Minieh, the Crusaders
acknowledged that they could no longer continue the
retreat; and, halting, they drew up ina body outside
the town, with the ake resolution of eee till
they fell.
But by this time Louis was utterly exhausted ; and
Negrines, conducting him into the court, lifted him
from his steed, and carried him, ‘ weak as a child in
its mother’s lap,’ into a house, expecting every mo-
ment to be his last. Nor did the prospects of the
Crusaders outside improve in the king’s absence.
Alarming rumours, vaguely flying about the town,
reached their ears and depressed their hearts; and,
while they were still in panic and incertitude, the
Saracens made an onset with more than their former
ferocity. Soon all was confusion and carnage. It
seemed, indeed, that nothing but the hearts’ blood
of the Crusaders would satisfy the vindictive cravings
of their foes; and so utterly dispirited by adversity
and defeat, and pestilence, were knights formerly
renowned as brave among the bravest that they al-
lowed themselves, ates without resisting, to be
slaughtered in heaps.
Naturally, however, there were striking exceptions;
and none were more remarkable than Chatillon an
Bisset; who, when Louis was conducted into Munieh,
took up their post hard by an orange grove, and close
to awall at the entrance of the narrow street leading
to the house into which Segrines had carried the king.
DEATH OF CHATILLON, 169
Nothing could have exceeded Chatillon’s fiery
valour. At one moment. he rushed like lhghtnine
among the Saracens, scattered them, and cut them
down. Then after reining back to the wall to draw out
the arrows and darts that adhered to his cuirass, he re-
turned to the charge, rising in his stirrups, and shout-
ing—‘ Chatillon, knights—Chatillon to the rescue.’
Meanwhile Bisset exerted himself with no less
courage and prowess. Scorning his danger, and
scorning his foes, he charged among the Saracens,
with shouts -of—‘ Holy Cross, Holy Cross! Down with
the pagan dogs! Down with the slaves of Mahound
andTermagaunt!’ Nothing could resist the vehemence
of his attack. In vain were all attempts to drag him
from his steed. Before his mighty battle-axe the
Saracens seemed to shake and fall as corn before the
reaper.
At length Chatillon, mortally wounded, dropt from
his horse, and the Saracen who had wounded him
springing forward seized the French knight’s steed,
which was one sheet of blood and foam. Bisset cleft
the Saracen’s skull to the teeth, and laughed defiantly
as he avenged the fall of his comrade-in-arms.
But Bisset was now alone; and his situation was
so utterly desperate, that any ordinary man, even in
that feudal and fighting age, would have relinquished
all hope and yielded to fate. The English knight had
no inclination to do anything of the kind. Rapidly
his eye measured the ground; as rapidly his brain
calculated the chances of reaching the orange grove ;
and as rapidly he arrived at the conclusion that he
could cut his way through the crowd. No sooner
170 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
had he settled this than he wasted not a moment in
hesitation. Drawing back towards the wall, and
halting for a moment, with his face to his foes, to
breathe his panting steed, he once more, with battle-
axe in hand, charged forward upon his now recoiling
foes, but this time not to return. Nothing daunted by
the darts and arrows that flew around him, he deliber-
ately pursued the course which his eye had marked
out, literally felling to the earth all who attempted to
stop his progress, but skillfully avoiding foes whom
it was not necessary to encounter. Only a man of
the highest courage would have made such an
attempt: only a man of the strongest will would
have persevered.
Now Bisset had both courage and strength of will,
and in spite of all the chances against him, he did
reach the orange grove, and making his way through
it as well as he could, found himself in the verge of
a wood of palms and sycamores. But he himself was
wounded; his horse was bleeding in a dozen places;
and close behind him were three Saracens, well
mounted, and thirsting for his blood. It may seem
to the reader, that such being the circumstances,
Bisset might as well have fallen at Mansourah or
with Walter de Chatillon at the entrance to the
narrow street leading to the house to which the king
had been carried. But, certainly, that was by no
means his view of the case; for he was one of
those warriors who never despair; and he turned on
his pursuers like a lion at bay.
‘Surely,’ said he, speaking to himself, ‘wounded
and weary as I am, I should be but a poor Christian
BISSET HEWS HIS WAY. 171
knight if I could not deal with three pagan
dogs.’
And terrible, even to brave foes, was the ferocity
and fury with which Bisset turned upon the Sara-
cens. Mighty was the force with which he swung
a battle-axe, ponderous enough to have served as a
weapon to Coeur de Lion. Crushed by one swoop of
the axe fell the first of the pursuers—down, as it
again swung on high, fell the second, who a moment
earlier was uttering threats of vengeance. But the
English knight had no inclination to encounter the
third antagonist. His horse, as he felt, was sinking ;
he himself was weakened by loss of blood; and,
quick as thought, he turned towards the wood of
palms and sycamores.
But a new difficulty presented itself£ Between
Bisset and the wood was a very deep ditch which
at another time would have made him pause. Now,
however, he did not hesitate, even for an instant. He
touched his steed with the spur; he spoke as if im-
ploring the noble animal to make a last effort; and
the result was a gallant bound. But the effort was
too much. In exerting itself to scramble up the
opposite bank, the good steed broke its back; and
the knight, freeing his limbs from its corse, quickly
drew his dagger and relieved it from suffering.
The delay, however, had proved dangerous. Even
as he gained one bank of the ditch the Saracen was
at the other, and preparing to launch a javelin. One
moment only intervened between the Crusader and
death ; but that moment was not neglected. With
his remaining strength Bisset raised his battle-axe,
1Y2 THE BOY CRUSADERS,
whirled it with irresistible force, and, as the weapon
whizzed through the air, the Saracen dropped from
his horse and rolled into the ditch, the water of which
immediately became red with his blood.
Not a moment did Bisset now waste in getting under
cover of the wood. For full five minutes he neither
halted nor looked behind. At length he stopped
under a palm tree; and taking out one of those little
crosses which the Crusaders carried with them for
purposes of prayer, and which are now symbolised by
figures on the shield of many a Crusader’s descendant,
he knelt before it, and invoked the protection and aid
of God and the saints to shield him from danger and
restore him to the land of his fathers.
But almost ere the prayer was uttered, Bisset
started at the sound of footsteps; and as he turned
his head his brain reeled; and, after grasping at the
tree for support, he sank motionless on the ground.
173
CHAPTER XXVIII.
JOINVILLE IN PERIL.
HILE King Louis and the brave companions of
\ ‘his ill-starred retreat were seized as captives, or
mercilessly massacred by the Saracens at Minieh, the
sick and wounded Crusaders who embarked on the
Nile were not more fortunate. In order to understand
the extent of their dangers and sufferings, it is
necessary to refer to the chronicle of the good Lord
of Joinville—who, still suffering from disease, em-
barked with his knights and followers, including Guy
Muschamp, not yet recovered from the sickness by
which he had been prostrated.
Nor is it possible to peruse the seneschal’s simple
narrative without profound interest. In reading his
account of this disastrous expedition, we are trans-
ported, in imagination, to the thirteenth century,
and witness, with the mind’s eye, the scenes in which
he was an actor, and gradually come to feel as if we
were not reading a chronicle penned centuries ago,
but listening to a Crusader who, just returned from
the East, and seated on the dais of the czstle hall,
tells his story over the wine-cup to his kinsmen
and neighbours assembled at the festive board.
'74 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
It was evening; and Joinville, who was suffering
fearfully from the prevailing malady, perceiving that
everyone was preparing to depart towards Damietta,
withdrew to his galley, with his chaplain, and such of
his company, including Guy Muschamp, as had es-
caped the pestilence, and the swords of the Saracens ;
and no sooner did darkness descend over the hill,
than he commanded his captain to raise the anchor,
and float down the stream.
‘My lord,’ replied the man, ‘I dare not; for
between us and Damietta are the large galleys of the
Saracens, who would infallibly capture us.’
And at this moment a terrible spectacle arrested
Joinville’s attention. It happened that the king’s
seamen were waiting to take the sick and wounded on
board; but many of the sick and wounded were still
in the camp on the banks of the river. Suddenly,
by the light of fires which the sailors had lighted for
the comfort of the sick, Joinville saw the Saracens
enter the camp, and gratify their thirst for blood by
a general massacre. In great alarm, the king’s
seamen cut their cables; and while Joinville’s men
were raising their anchor, the huge galleys came
down upon them with such force, that he expected
every moment to be sunk. However he escaped this
danger, and made some way down the Nile. But it
speedily appeared that the Crusaders who had em-
barked on the river were not to be more fortunate in
their attempt to reach Damietta than were those who
remained on shore.
Joinville very soon discovered that he had scarcely
a chance of escape. During the night, a tempest
THE SARACENS SHOOT BOLTS, 175
arose; and the wind blowing with great force towards
Damietta drove the vessels of the Crusaders straight
in the way of the sultan’s fleet, and about break of
day they tound themselves close to the galleys of the
Saracens. Immediately on observing the Crusaders
approaching, the Saracens raised loud shouts, and
shot large bolts, and threw Greek fire in such quanti-
ties, that it seemed as if the stars were falling from
the heavens.
Great, of course, was the alarm of the Crusaders.
Joinville and his company, however, gained the
current, and endeavoured to push forward; but the
wind becoming more and more violent drove them
against the banks, and close to the Saracens, who,
having already taken several vessels, were murdering
the crews, and throwing the dead bodies into the
rivet.
On seeing what was taking place, and finding that
the Saracens began to shoot bolts at his galley,
Joinville, to protect himself, put on his armour. He
had hardly done so, when some of his people began
to shout in great consternation.
‘My lord, my lord,’ cried they, ‘ because the Sara-
cens menace us, our steersman is going to run us
ashore, where we shall all be murdered.’
At that moment Joinville was so faint that he
had seated himself, but instantly rising he drew his
sword and advanced.
‘Beware what you do,’ said he; ‘for I vow to slay
the first person who attempts to run us ashore.’
‘My lord,’ said the captain in a resolute tone, ‘it is
impossible to proceed; so you must make up your
m6 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
mind whether you will be landed on shore, or
stranded in the mud of the banks.’
‘Well,’ replied Joinville, ‘I choose rather to be
run on a mud bank than to be carried ashore, where
even now I sce our people being slaughtered.â€
But escape proved impossible. Almost as he
spoke, Joinville perceived four of the sultan’s galleys
making towards his barge; and, giving himself up
for lost, he took a little casket containing his jewels,
and threw it into the Nile. However, it turned out
that, though he could not save his liberty, there was
still a chance of saving his life.
‘My lord,’ said the mariner, ‘ you must permit me
to say you are the king’s cousin; if not, we are as
cood as murdered.’
‘Say what you please,’ replied Joinville.
And now Joinville met with a protector, whose
coming he attributed to the direct interposition of
heaven. ‘It was God,’ says he, ‘who then, asI verilv
believe, sent to my aid a Saracen, who was a subject
of the Emperor of Germany. He wore a pair of
coarse trowsers, and, swimming straight to me, he
came into my vessel and embraced my knees. “ My
lord,†he said, “if youdo not what I shall advise, you
are lost. In order to save yourself, you must leap
into the river, without being observed.†He had a
cord thrown to me, and I leaped into the river,
followed by the Saracen, who saved me, and conducted
me to a galley, wherein were fourteen score of men,
besides those who had boarded my vessel. But this
good Saracen held me fast in his arms.’ |
Shortly after, Joinville with the good Saracens
JOINVILLE A PRISONER. — 177
aid was landed, and the other Saracens rushed on
him to cut his throat, and he expected no better fate.
But the Saracen who had saved him would not quit
his hold.
‘He is the king’s cousin,’ shouted he; ‘the king’s
cousin.’
‘I had already,’ says Joinville, ‘felt the knife at
my throat, and cast myself on my knees; but, by
the hands of this good Saracen, God delivered me
from this peril; and I was led to the castle where
the Saracen chiefs had assembled.’
When Joinville was conducted with some of his
company, along with the spoils of his barge, into the
presence of the emirs, they took off his coat of mail;
and perceiving that he was very ill, they, from pity,
threw one of his scarlet coverlids lined with minever
over him, and gave hima white leathern girdle, with
which he girded the coverlid round him, and placed a
small cap on his head. Nevertheless, what with his
fright and his malady, he soon began to shake so
that his teeth chattered, and he complained of thirst.
On this the Saracens gave him some water in a
cup; but he no sooner put it to his lips, than the
water began to run back through his nostrils.
‘Having an imposthume in my throat,’ says he,
‘imagine what a wretched state I was in; and I
looked more to death than life.’
When Joinville’s attendants saw the water running
through his nostrils, they began to weep; and the
good Saracen who had saved him asked them why
they were so sorrowful.
‘ Because,’ they replied, ‘our lord is nearly dead.’
178 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
And thereupon the good Saracen, taking pity
on their distress, ran to tell the emirs; and one of
them coming, told Joinville to be of good cheer, for
he would bring a drink that should cure him in two
days. Under the influence of this beverage, the
seneschal ere long recovered; and when he was well,
he was sent for by the admiral, who commanded the
sultan’s galleys. | |
‘Are you, asked the admiral, ‘the king’s cousin,
as was reported ?’
‘No,’ answered Joinville, ‘I am not;’ and he in-
formed the admiral why it had been stated.
‘You were well advised,’ said the admiral ; § for
otherwise you would have been all murdered, and
cast into the river. Have you any acquaintance with
the Emperor Frederic, or are you of his lineage ?’
‘Truly,’ replied Joinville, ‘I have heard my mother
say that I am the emperor’s second cousin.’
‘Ah,’ said the admiral, ‘I rejoice to hear it; and
I love you all the better on that account.’
It appears that Joinville became quite friendly
with the admiral, and was treated by him with
kindness; and, on Sunday, when it was ordered that
all the Crusaders who had been taken prisoners on
the Nile should be brought to a castle on the banks,
Joinville was invited to go thither in the admiral’s
company. On that occasion, the seneschal had to
endure the horror of seeing his chaplain dragged
from the hold of his galley and instantly killed and
flung into the water; and scarcely was this over
When the chaplain’s clerk was dragged out of the
hold, so weak that he could hardly stand, felled on
THE GOOD SARACEN, 179
the head with a mortar, and cast after his master,
In this manner the Saracens dealt with all the
captives who were suffering from sickness.
Horrorstruck at such a destruction of human life,
Joinville, by means of the good Saracen who had
saved his life, informed them that they were doing
very wrong; but they treated the matter lightly.
‘We are only destroying men who are of no use,’
said they; ‘for they are much too ill with their
disorders to be of any service.’
Soon after witnessing this harrowing spectacle,
Joinville was requested by the Saracen admiral to
mount a palfrey; and they rode together, over a
bridge, to the place where the Crusaders were im-
prisoned, At the entrance of a large pavilion the
good Saracen, who had been Joinville’s preserver,
and had always followed him about, stopped, and
requested his attention.
‘Sir,’ said he, ‘you must excuse me, but I cannot
come further. I entreat you not to quit the hand
of this boy, otherwise the Saracens will kill him.’
‘Who is he?’ asked Joinville.
‘The boy’s name,’ replied the good Saracen, ‘is
Bartholomew de Bar, and he is son of the Lord
Montfaucon de Bar.’
And now conducted by the admiral, and leading
the little boy by the hand, Joinville entered the
pavilion, where the nobles and knights of France,
with more than ten thousand persons of inferior rank,
were confined in a court, large in extent, and sur-
rounded by walls of mud. From this court the
captive Christians were led forth, one at a time, and
180 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
asked if they would become renegades, yes or no,
He who answered ‘ Yes,’ was put aside; but he who
answered ‘ No,’ was instantly beheaded.
Such was the plight of the Christian warriors who
so recently had boasted of being about to conquer
Kgypt. Already thirty thousand of the Crusaders
had perished; and the survivors were so wretched, that
they almost envied their comrades who had gone
where the weary are at rest.
Now in the midst of all this suffering and anxiety,
what had become of Guy Muschamp? Had the gay -
young squire, who boasted that if killed by the
Saracens he would die laughing, been drowned in the
Nile, or was he a captive in that large court sur-
rounded by walls of mud? Neither. But as our
narrative proceeds, the reader will see that Guy
Muschamp’s fate was hardly less sad than the fate of
those who had found a watery grave, or of those who
were offered the simple choice of denying their God
or losing their lives,
lol
CHAPTER XXVIT.
NEWS OF DISASTER.
HILE Louis of France and his nobles and
knights were exposed to such danger at the
hands of their enemies, from whom they bad no reason
to expect forbearance, Queen Margaret remained at
Damietta, with her ladies, expecting to hear of battles
won and fortresses taken. At length, one morning
about sunrise, a strange and heart-rending cry re-
sounded through the city, and reached the ears of
the queen in her palace. What was it? was it fire ?
No. Another and another wail of agony. What could
it be? The approach of an enemy? No. It was
merely tidings of the massacre of Minieh!
Margaret of Provence summoned to her presence
Oliver de Thermes, whom King Louis had left at
Damietta in command of the garrison.
‘Sir knight,’ said the queen, ‘ what is all that noise
I hear ?’
The warrior hesitated.
‘Speak, sir,’ said Margaret, losing patience; ‘I
command you to tell me what has happened.’
‘Madam,’ replied the knight, ‘the news as yct is
but vague and uncertain.’
M
182 THE BOY {RUSADERS,
‘Answer me, directly,’ said the queen, speaking in
a tone of authority. ‘What of the King of France?
What of the warriors who marched from Damietta
under the banner of St. Denis ?’
‘Alas, madam,’ replied Sir Oliver, ‘I would fain
hope that the news is not true; but it certainly is
bruited about that the king is a captive, and that
the warriors of the Cross have fallen almost to a
man.’ |
Margaret did not answer; she did not even attempt —
to speak. Her colour went, she shuddered, tot-
tered, and would have fallen to the floor had not her
ladies rushed to her support. It was indeed a terrible
situation for that youthful matron, and—what made
matters more melancholy—she was about to become a
mother. )
And now Damietta was the scene of consternation
somewhat similar to that which pervaded Cairo, when
a pigeon carried thither intelligence of the victory
of the Count of Artois at Djédilé. . The ladies of the
Crusaders, the Countesses of Poictiers and Provence,
and the melowed Countess of Artois, among the
number, bewailed the fate of their lords; the queen
was afflicted to a terrible degree as i thought of
the king’s peril; and many people only felt concerned
about their own extreme peril, Of course much
selfishness was exhibited under the circumstances;
and the Pisans and Genoese set a bad example by
preparing to save themselves, and leave the city to
its fate. But, on hearing of their intention, the queen
ordered that the chief persons among them should
be brought to her preserice, and addressed them in
CCURAGE OF QUEEN MARGARET. 183
a way likely to convince them of the selfishness of
their conduct.
‘Gentlemen,’ said Margaret, rousing herself from
her prostration and raising her head; ‘as you love
God, do not leave this city; for if you do. you will
utterly ruin the king and his army, who are cap-
tives, and expose all within the walls to the ven-
geance of the Saracens.’
‘Madam,’ replied the Pisans and Genoese, utterly
unmoved by the royal lady’s distress, ‘we have no
provisions left, and we cannot consent to remain at
the risk of dying of hunger.’
‘Be under no such apprehension,’ said the queen
quickly; ‘you shall not die of hunger; I will cause
all the provisions in Damietta to be bought in the
kino’s name, and distributed forthwith.’
‘The Pisans and Genoese on hearing this assurance
consented to remain in Damietta; and, after an ex-
penditure of three hundred and sixty thousand livres,
Margaret provided for their subsistence. But the
men who were thus bribed to remain as a garrison
were not likely to make any very formidable resist-
ance in the event of an attack taking place; and
such an event was no longer improbable. Indeed
rumours, vague but most alarming, reached Damietta
that a Saracenic host was already on its way to capture
the city.
The rumour that the Moslems were actually coming
made the bravest men in Damictta quake, and inspired
_ the ladies who were in the city with absolute terror.
Even the courage of the queen, who had just given
birth to her son John, failed; and her faculties
184 THE BOY CRUSADERS,
well-nigh deserted her. One moment her imagination
conjured up visions of Saracens butchering her hus-
band ; at another she shrieked with terror at the idea
that the Saracens had taken the city and were
entering her chamber. Ever and anon she sank into
feverish sleep, and then, wakened by some fearful
dream, sprang up, shouting, ‘ Help! help! they are at
hand. I hear their lelies.’ |
It was while Margaret of Provence was in this
unhappy state of mind, that a French knight, who
was eighty years of age, but whose heart, in spite of
his four score of years, still overflowed with chivalry,
undertook the duty of guarding the door of her
chamber night and day.
you. Banish your fears.’
‘Sir knight,’ exclaimed the unhappy queen, throw-
ing herself on her knees before him, ‘I have a favour
to ask. Promise that you will grant my request.’
‘I swear, madam, that I will comply with your
wishes,’ oe the aged knight.
‘Well, then,’ said the queen; ‘what I have to
request is this, that if the Saracens should take the
city, you, by the faith you have pledged, will rather
cut off my head than suffer me to fall into pass
hands.’
‘Madam,’ replied the veteran chevalier, ‘I had
already resolved on doing what you have asked, in
case the worst should befall,’
CHAPTER XXIX,
A WOUNDED PILGRIM.
T was long ere Walter Espec, struck down wounded
and bleeding at Mansourah, recovered possession
of his faculties sufficiently to recall the scenes through
which he had passed or even to understand what was
taking place around him. As time passed over,
however, consciousness returned; and he one day
became aware that he was stretched on a bed in a
chamber somewhat luxuriously furnished, and tended
by a woman advanced in years, who wore a gown of
russet, and a wimple which gave her a conventual
appearance.
Walter raised his head, and was about to speak,
when she suddenly left the room, and the squire was
left to guess, as he best might, where and under whose
care hewas. He attempted to rise; but the effort was
in vain. He put his hand to his head; but he found
that his long locks of fair hair were gone. He tried
to remember how he had got there; but, try as he
might, his memory would not bring him farther down
the stream of time, than the hour in which he fell
at Mansourah. All the rest was a blank or a feverish
dream of being rowed on ariver by Saracen boatmen,
186 THE BOY CRUSADERS,
and left at the portal of a hcuse which he had never
seen before. Gradually recalling all his adventures
since he left the castle of Wark, he remembered and
felt his hand for the amulet with which he had been
gifted by King Louis when at Cyprus. The ring was
there, and as Walter thought of the inscription he
felt something like hope.
But Walter was still weak from loss of blood and.
the fever which had been the consequence of wounds
and exposure, and he soon sank into a slumber.
When he again awoke to consciousness the woman in
russet was standing near him, and conversing with a
damsel whom Walter did nct at first see, but whose
tones, sweet and soft, manifested a strong interest in
his recovery. |
‘He will yet live,’ said the woman in russet, ‘and
rejoice we in it; for he is a young man; and tosuch
life must needs be dear.’
‘He will live,’ repeated the girl, ‘and our lady be
praised therefor; for it is sweet to live.’
‘In truth, noble demoiselle,’ said the woman in
russet, ‘the youth owes much to your solicitude;
but for your anxiety on his behalf, I hardly think he
would have struggled through the fever. However, if
you will remain and watch him for a brief space, I will
attend to the commands of my lady the queen, and
hasten to relieve you. Nay, it misbeseems not noble
maiden to tend a wounded warrior, especially a soldier
of the Cross; and, credit me, he will give you little
trouble. He lies as quiet and calm as if he were in
his shroud.’ ,
With these words the woman in russet departed ;
WALTER ESPEC’S VISION, 187
and the damsel, treading so softly that her footstep
made not the slightest noise, moved about the room
in silent thought, now turning to gaze on the wounded
squire, now looking from the casement. Walter, now
fully awake, began to experience a strong feeling of
curiosity; and turning his head directed his gaze,
not without interest, towards his youthful nurse. She
was not more than sixteen, and still more beautiful
than young. She had features exquisitely lovely in
their delicacy and expression, deep blue eyes with
long dark fringes, and dark brown hair which, ac-
cording to the fashion of the period, was turned up
behind and enclosed in a caul of network. Her form
was already elegant in its proportions; but it inclined
to be taller, and gave promise of great perfection,
Her charms were set off by the mourning dress which
she wore, and by the robe called the quintise, which
was an upper tunic without sleeves, with bordered
vandyking and scalloping worked and notched in
various patterns, worn so long behind that it swept
the floor, but in front held up gracefully with one
hand so as not to impede the step.
Walter was charmed, and a little astonished as his
eye alighted on a face and form so fascinating; and,
in spite of his prostration and utter weakness, he
gazed on her with lively interest and some wonder.
‘Holy Katherine!’ exclaimed he to himself; ¢ what
a lovely vision. I marvel who she is, and where I
am ; and, as he thus soliloquised, the girl turned round,
and not without flutter and alarm perceived that he
was awake and watching her.
‘Noble demoiselle, heed me not;’ said Walter
188 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
earnestly, ‘but rather tell me, since, if I understand
aright, I owe my lite to you—how am [I ever suffi-
ciently to prove my gratitude ?’
‘Ah, sir squire,’ replied she, ‘ you err in supposing
the debt to be on your side. It is I who owe-you a
life, and not you who owe a life to me; and,’ added
she, struggling to repress tears, ‘my heart fills when
I remember how you did for me, albeit a stranger,
what, under the circumstances, no other being on
earth would have ventured to do.’
‘By Holy Katherine, noble demoiselle,’ said Walter,
wondering at her words; ‘I should in truth deem it
a high honour to have rendered such as you any
service. But that is a merit which I cannot claim;
for, until this hour, unless my memory deceives me,
I never saw your face.’
The countenance of the girl evinced disappointment,
and the tears started to her eyes.
‘Ah, sir, sir,’ said she, with agitation; ‘I am she
whom, on the coast of Cyprus, you saved from the
waves of the sea.’ }
Walter’s heart beat rather quick as he learned that
it was Adeline de Brienne who stood before him; for,
though her very face was unknown to him, her name
had strangely mixed up with many of his day-dreams ;
and it was not without confusion that, after a pause,
he continued the conversation.
‘Pardon my ignorance, noble demoiselle,’ said he,
‘and vouchsate, I pray you, to inform me where I
now am; for I own to you that I am somewhat
perplexed.’
‘You are in Damietia.’
ADELINE DE BRIENNE. 189
‘In Damietta!’ exclaimed Walter, astonished; ‘and
how came I to Damietta? My latest recollection is
having been struck from my steed at+Mansourah,
after my lord, the Earl of Salisbury, and all the
English warriors, had fallen before the weapons of
the Saracens; and how I come to be in Damietta is
more than I can guess.’
‘Mayhap; but I can tell you,’ said a frank hearty
voice; and, as Walter started at the sound, Bisset,
the English knight, stood before him; and Adeline
de Brienne, not without casting a kindly look behind,
vanished from the chamber.
‘Wonder upon wonders,’ cried Walter, as the knight
took his hand; ‘I am now more bewildered than
before. Am I in Damietta, and doI see you, and in
the body ?’
‘Even so,’ replied Bisset; ‘and for both cireum-
stances we are wholly indebted to Beltran, the Christian
renegade. He saved you from perishing at Mansou-
rah, and conveyed you down the Nile, and brought
you to the portal of this palace; and he came to me
when I was at Minieh under a tree, sinking with
fatigue, and in danger of bleeding to death; and he
found the means of conveying me hither also; so I
say that, were he ten times a renegade, he merits our
gratitude.’
‘Certes,’ said Walter, ‘and, methinks, also our
prayers that his heart may be turned from the error
of his ways, and that he may return to the faith which
Christians hold.’
‘Amen,’ replied Bisset.
* But tell me, sir knight,’ continued Walter, eagerly,
190 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
what has happened, since that dreadful day, to the
pugrim army ? and if you know aught of my brother-
in-arms, Guy Muschamp ?’
‘Sir squire,’ answered Bisset, sadly; ‘ for your first
question, I grieve to say, that has come to pass which
I too shrewdly predicted—all the boasting of the
French has ended in disaster—the king and _ his
nobles being prisoners, and most of the other pilgrims
slain or drowned; and, for your second, as to Guy
Muschamp, the English squire, who was a brave and
gallant youth, I own I entertain hardly a doubt that,
ere this, he is food for worms or fishes.’
Walter Espec uttered an exclamation of horror,
and, without another word, sank back on his piliow.
191
CHAPTER XXX.
ST. LOUIS IN CHAINS.
; HEN King Louis was led away by the faithful
Seorines, and when he was so exhausted that
he had to be lifted from his steed and carried into a
house, and when the Crusaders outside were in dis-
may and despair, Philip de Montfort entered the
chamber where the saintly monarch was, and pro-
poséd to renew negotiations with the Saracens.
‘Sire,’ said De Montfort, ‘I have just seen the
emir with whom I formerly treated; and, so it be
your good pleasure, I will seek him out, and demand
a cessation of hostilities,’ |
‘Go,’ replied Louis; ‘and, since it can no better
be, promise to submit to the conditions on which the
sultan formerly insisted.’
Accordingly De Montfort went; and the Saracens,
still fearing their foes, and remembering that the
French held Damietta, agreed to treat. A truce was,
indeed, on the point of being concluded. Montfort
had given the emir a ring; the emir had taken off
his turban, and their hands were about to meet;
when a Frenchman, named Marcel, rushed in and
spoiled all.
192 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
‘Seigneurs,’ said he, interrupting the conference,
‘noble knights of France, surrender yourselves all!
The king commands you by me. Do not cause him
to be put to death.’
On hearing this message, the emir withdrew his
~ hand, returned De Montfort’s ring. put on his turban,
and intimated that the negotiation was at an end.
‘God is powerful,’ said he, ‘and it is not customary
to treat with beaten enemies.’
And now it was that there ensued such a scene as
Minieh had never witnessed. Almost as the nego-
tiation ended, Louis was seized, violently handled
and put in chains. Both the Count of Poictiers and
the Count of Anjou were at the same time made
prisoners ; and the bulk of the warriors accompanying
the king had scarcely the choice between surrender
and death; for nothing, as has been said, but their
hearts’ blood would satisfy the vindictive cravings of
their foes; and, when the king’s captivity became
known, many of those who had formerly been most
intrepid, remained motionless and incapable of the
shihtest resistance.
About the time when King Louis was put in
chains, and when Bisset, the English knight, was
endeavouring to escape death or rather captivity, the
suitan arrived at Minieh, and, without any display
of generosity for the vanquished, took measures for
improving his victory to the utmost. The king and
his brothers who, like himself, were bound hand and
foot, were conducted in triumph to a boat of war.
The oriflamme—that banner so long the pride of
France —was now carried in mockery; the crosses
THE SAINT-KING IN CAPTIVITY. 193
and images, which the Crusaders had with them as
symbols of their religious faith, were trampled
scornfully under foot; and, with trumpets sounding
and kettle-drums clashing, the royal captives were
marched into Mansourah.
It was to the house of Fakreddin Ben Lokman,
the secretary of the sultan, that Louis was escorted ;
and, on arriving there, he was given into the custody
of the Kunuch Sahil. But, abandoned by fortune, and
in the power of his enemies, Louis was still himself.
In chains and captivity he exhibited the dignity of a
king and the resignation of a Christian, and his jailers
could not refrain from expressing their astonishment
at the serene patience with which he bore adversity.
Of all his property, he had only saved his book of
psalms; and daily, while consoling himself with re-
citing from its pages, he was inspired with strength
and resolution to bear his misfortunes, and to raise
his thoughts far above the malice of his foes.
Meanwhile, at the court of the sultan, everything
was not going smoothly. From the beginning, the
emirs and Mamelukes had looked with envy and
suspicion on the favourites brought by Touran Chah
from Mesopotamia; and such feelings had not died
away. Many of the favourites ere long were substi-
tuted for the ministers of the late sultan; and the
emirs and Mamelukes not only complained loudly of
this to Touran Chah, but reproached him bitterly for
the way in which he disposed of the spoil of the
Crusaders. |
‘ How is this?’ asked they ; ‘ you are bestowing the
spoils of the vanquished Franks, not on the men who
194 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
kave borne the burden of the war, but on men whose
sole merit consists in having come from the banks of
the Euphrates to the Nile.’
Now, the sultan’s favourites were not unaware of
the unfriend!y feeling with which they were regarded
by the Mameluke chiefs. Indeed, they saw all the
dangers of their position, and considered it politic,
under the circumstances, to reduce the influence of
the emirs and Mamelukes by bringing about a treaty
with the Crusaders.
‘In these people,’ said they to the sultan, * you
have enemies far more dangerous than the Christians,
Nothing will content them but reigning in your stead.
They never cease to boast of their victories, as if they
alone had conquered the Franks, and as if the God |
of Mahomet had not sent pestilence and famine to
aid you in triumphing. But hasten to terminate the
war, that you may strengthen your power within; and
then you will be able to reign in reality.’
As soon as ‘Touran Chah was convinced that the
emirs and Mamelukes entertained projects of ambi-
tion dangerous to his power, and that war was
favourable to their designs, he resolved to show the
chiefs how little he regarded their opinions; and,
without even consulting them, he sent some of his
favourites to the house of Lokman, and empowered
them to treat with Louis.
‘ King,’ said the ambassador, ‘I come from the
sultan, to inform you that he will restore you to
liberty, on condition that you surrender to him the
cities of Palestine now held by the Franks.’ |
‘The cities of Palestine are not mine to give,’
THE BERNICLES. 195
replied Louis, calmly; ‘and I cannot pretend to
dispose of them.’
‘But beware of rashly refusing to submit to the
eultan’s terms,’ said the ambassador; ‘for you know
not what may happen. He will send you to the
caliph at Bagdad, who will imprison you for life; or
he will cause you to be led throughout the East, to
exhibit to all Asia a Christian king reduced to
slavery.’
‘IT am the sultan’s prisoner,’ replied Louis, un-
moved, ‘and he can do with me what he pleases.’
On hearing this answer, the ambassadors intimated
their intention of employing personal violence; and,
one of them having stamped three times with his
foot, the Eunuch Sahil entered, followed by the
jailers, bearing that frightful instrument of torture,
known as ‘ the bernicles.’
Now this terrible engine was made of pieces of
wood pierced with holes, into which the legs of the
criminal were put; and the holes were at so great a
distance from each other, and could be forced ta so
great an extension, that the pain was about the most
horrible that could be produced. Moreover, the
holes being at various distances, the legs of the
victim could be inserted into those that extended
them to the greatest distance, and while the pain
inflicted was more than flesh and blood could bear,
means were, at the same time, used to break or dis-
locate all his small bones. It was an instrument of
punishment reserved for the worst of criminals; and
no torture was deemed so awful as that which it was
capable of inflicting.
196 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
‘What do you say to be put in this engine of
punishment?’ asked the ambassador, pointing signifi-
cantly to the bernicles.
‘I have already told you,’ replied Louis, unmoved,
‘that I am the sultan’s prisoner, and that he can do
with me as he pleases.’
In fact, the courage of Louis was proof against any
danger to his own person; and he held all the
menaces of his captors so cheap, that they scarcely
knew how to deal with him. At length, the sultan
determined to propose terms more likely to be ac-
ceptable to the saint-king, and again sent ambas-
sadors to his prison, with the object of bringing
about a treaty.
‘ King,’ said the ambassador, ‘ the sultan has sent
to ask how much money you will give for your
ransom, besides restoring Damietta?’
‘In truth,’ replied Louis, ‘ I scarcely know what
answer to make; but, if the sultan will be contented
with a reasonable sum, I will write to the queen to
pay it for myself and my army.’
‘ But wherefore write to the queen, who is but a
woman?’ asked the ambassador somewhat surprised.
‘She is my lady and companion,’ answered Louis,
even at that moment mindful of the principles of
chivalry ; ‘and it is only reasonable that her consent —
should be obtained.’
‘ Well,’ said the ambassador, ‘if the queen will
pay a million golden bezants, the sultan will set you
free.’
‘ However,’ said Louis, with dignity, ‘I must tell
you that, as King of France, I cannot be redeemed
THE RANSOM. 1S;
by money; but a million of bezants will be paid as
the ransom of my army, and Damietta given up in
exchange for my own freedom.’
After some negotiations the terms were agreed to;
and the sultan not only concluded the treaty joyfully,
but expressed his admiration of the nobility of spirit -
which Louis had displayed.
‘By my faith!’ said Touran Chah to the ambas-
sador, ‘this Frenchman is generous and noble, seeing
that he does not condescend to bargain about so large
a sum of money, but instantly complies with the first
demand. Go,’ added the sultan, ‘and tell him, from
me, that I make him a present of a fifth of the sum,
so that he will only have to pay four-fifths; and that
I will command all the principal nobles and his
creat officers to be embarked in four of my largest
galleys, and conducted safely to Damietta.’
It was Thursday before the Feast of Ascension;
and, while the King of France, and the Crusaders
were conveyed down the Nile in galleys, Touran Chah
travelled by land from Mansourah, in order to receive
Damietta, and perform the conditions of peace. On
reaching Pharescour, however, the sultan halted to
dine with his chiefs; and, while the other Crusaders
lay in their galleys on the river, the king and his
brethren were invited to land, and received into a
pavilion, where they had an interview with the sultan,
when Saturday was appointed for the payment of the
golden bezants and the surrender of Damietta. But
long ere Saturday a terrible tragedy was to occur,
and render Pharescour memorable as the scene of a
deed of violence, startling both to Asia and Europe.
N
198 TUE BOY CRUSADERS,
Already, while the sultan held his interview with the
King of France and the Counts of Poictiers and
Anjou, everything was prepared; and soon after
Touran Chah had left Louis and his brothers shut
up in the pavilion, they were roused by loud shouts
of distress and a mighty tumult; and, while they
breathlessly asked each other whether the French
captives were being massacred or Damietta taken by
storm, in rushed twenty Saracens, their swords red
and reeking with blood, and spots of blood on their
vestments and their faces, stamping, threatening
furiously, and uttering fierce cries,
199
CHAPTER XXXI,
THE TRAGEDY OF PHARESCOUR.
T Pharescour, on the margin of the Nile, the
Sultan of Egypt had a remarkable palace. It
appears to have heen constructed of wood, and
covered with cloth of brilliant colours, At the
entrance was a pavilion, where the emirs and chiefs
were in the habit of leaving their swords, when they
had audience of the sultan; and beyond this pavi-
lion was a handsome gateway which led to the great
hall where the sultan feasted; and adjoining the
great hall was a tower, by which the sultan ascended
to his private apartments.
Between the palace and the river was a spacious
lawn, in which there was a tower, to which the sultan
was wont to ascend when he wished to make obser-
vations on the surrounding country; and hard by
was an alley which led towards the margin of the
hill, and a summer-house formed of trellis-work and
covered with Indian linen, where he frequently re-
paired for the purpose of bathing.
The chroniclers of the period who write of the
crusade of St. Louis fully describe this palace. In-
deed, the- appearance of the place was strongly
ann THE BOY CRUSADERS,
impressed on the memory of the Crusaders. It was
there that Touran Chah, when on his way from Man-
sourah to Damietta, halted to receive the congratu-
lations of the Moslem chiefs on the victory that had
been achieved over the Franks; there, in their com-
pany, he celebrated his triumph bya grand banquet ;
and there was enacted the terribie tragedy that
exposed the surviving pilgrims to new dangers and
fresh trials. ,
By this time, indeed, the emirs and Mamelukes
had become so exasperated at the elevation of the
sultan’s favourite courtiers that they vowed ven-
geeance; and, in order to justify their project, they
ascribed to him the most sinister designs. It was
asserted that many of the emirs were doomed to die
on a certain day; and that, in the midst of a noc-
turnal orgy, Touran Chah had cut off the tops of
the flambeaux in his chamber, crying—‘ Thus shall
fly the heads of all the Mamelukes.’ In order to
avenge herself for the neglect to which she was
exposed under the new reign, Chegger Edour, the
sultana who had played so important a part in the
last days of Melikul Salih, exerted her eloquence to
stimulate the discontent; and the emirs and Mame-
lukes, having formed a conspiracy, only awaited a
convenient opportunity to complete their projects of
vengeance at a blow.
It was the day after his arrival at Pharescour, on
waich Touran Chah gave a banquet to the chiefs of
his army; and, as it happened, the company com-
prised the Mamelukes and the emirs who were, or
who deemed themselves, in danger. It would seem
A CONSPIRACY. 201
that everything went forward quietly and ceremo-
niously till the feast was ended, and the sultan rose
to ascend to his chamber. Not a moment, however,
was then lost. As soon as Touran Chah moved trom
table, Bibars Bendocdar, who carried the sultan’s
sword, struck the first blow, and instantly the others
rushed furiously upon their destined victim. Touran
Chah parried the blow of the Mameluke chief with
his hand; but the weapon. penetrated between two of
his fingers and cut up his arm.
‘ My lords,’ said he, taken by surprise; ‘I make
my complaint against this man, who has endeavoured
to kill me.’ .
‘Better that you should be slain: than live to
murder us, as you intend to do,’ cried all present,
with the exception of an envoy of the caliph, who
had arrived from Bagdad, and appeared much terri-
fied at the scene so suddenly presented.
Touran Chah looked round him in amazement ;
and, as he did so, he was seized with terror. How-
ever, the instinct of self-preservation did not desert
him. With a spring he bounded between the
motionless guards, escaped into the lawn, took refuge
in the tower, and looking from a window demanded
of the conspirators what they really wanted; but
they were not in a humour to spend time in talk.
‘Come down,’ cried they ; ‘you cannot escape us.’
“Assure me of safety, and I will willingly descend,’
said the sultan.
At this stage the envoy of the caliph, having
mounted his horse, came forward as if to interfere:
but the conspirators menaced him with instant death
202 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
if he did not return to his tent, and, still keenly
bent on completing their work of murder, ordered
the sultan to come down.
Touran Chah shook his head, as if declining the
invitation. |
‘Fool,’ cried the conspirators, scornfully, ‘ we have
the means of compelling you to descend, or to meeta
worse fate; and without further parley they com-
menced assailing the tower with Greek fire.
The Greek fire caught the cloth and timber, and
immediately the whole was in a blaze. Touran
Chah could no longer hesitate. One hope remained
to him, namely to rush towards the Nile, to throw
himself into the water, and to take refuge on board
one of the vessels that he saw anchored near the shore.
Accordingly he leaped from the blazing tower, with the
intention of rushing across the lawn. But the toils
were upon him. A nail having caught his mantle,
he, after remaining for a moment suspended, fell to
the ground. Instantly sabres and swords waved over
him; and he clung in a supplicating posture to
Octai, one of the captains of his guard; but Octai
repulsed him with contempt. Nevertheless, the con-
spirators hesitated; and they were still hesitating,
when Bibars Bendocdar, who was never troubled
either with fears or scruples, and who, indeed, had
struck the first blow, made a thrust go stern that
the sword remained sticking fast between the ribs of
the victim. Still resisting, however, the sultan con-
trived to drag himself to the Nile, with a hope of
reaching the galleys from which the captive Crusaders
witnessed the outrage; but some of the Mamelukes
TNE LAST OF THE LiOULITSS, £03
followed him into the water; and close to the galley
in which the Lord of Joinville was, the heir of
Saladin—the last of the Eioubites—died miserably.
It was now that the Mamelukes rushed into the
tent where Louis and his brothers were.
‘King,’ cried Octai, pointing to his bloody sword,
‘Touran Chah is no more. What will you give me
for having freed you from an enemy who meditated
your destruction as well as ours?’
Louis vouchsafed no reply.
‘What!’ cried the emir, furiously presenting the
point of his sword; ‘know you not that I am master
of your person? Make me a knight, or thou art a
dead man.’
‘Make thyself a Christian, and I will make thee a
knight,’ said Louis, calmly.
Rather cowed than otherwise with his reception,
and with the demeanour of the royal captive, Octai
retired ; and the French king and his brothers once
more breathed with as much freedom as men could
under the circumstances. But they were not long
left undisturbed. Scarcely had the Mameluke aspi-
rant for knighthood disappeared when the tent was
crowded with Saracens, who brandished their sabres
and threatened Louis with destruction.
‘Frenchman!’ cried they, addressing the king,
wildly and fiercely ; ‘art thou ignorant of thy danger,
or what may be the fate that awaits thee? Phares-
cour is not Mansourah, as events may convince thee
yet. Here thou mayest find a tomb instead of the
house of Lokman, and the two terrible angels,
Munkir and Nakir, instead of the Eunuch Sahil.’
204
CHAPTER XXXII.
PERILS AND SUSPENSE.
HE Saracen chiefs, after having dyed their sabres
in the blood of the sultan, did not confine their
menaces and violent demonstrations to the tent in
which the captive King of France was lodged. With
swords drawn and battle-axes on their shoulders,
thirty of them boarded the galley where Joinville
was with the Count of Brittany, Sir Baldwin d’Ebelin,
aud the Constable of Cyprus, and menaced them
with gestures and furious imprecations.
‘Il asked Sir Baldwin d’Ebelin,’ writes Joinville,
‘what they were saying; and he, understanding
Saracenic, replied that they were come to cut off our
heads, and shortly after I saw a large body of our
men on board confessing themselves to a monk of
La Trinité, who had accompanied the Count of
Flanders. Ino longer thought of any sin or evil I
had done, but that I was about to receive my death. |
In consequence, I fell on my knees at the feet of one
of them, and making the sign of the cross, said “ Thus
aied St. Agnes.†The Constable of Cyprus knelt
beside me, and confessed himself to me, and I gave
him such absolution as Gcd was pleased to grant me
IN THE HOLD. 205
the power of bestowing. But of all the things he
had said to me, when I rose up I could not remem-
ber one of them.’
‘We were confined in the hold of the galleys,’
continues the chronicler, ‘and laid heads and heels
together. We thought it had been so ordered be-
cause they were afraid of attacking us in a body, and
that they would destroy us one at a time. This
danger lasted the whole night. I had my feet right
on the face of the Count of Brittany, whose feet, in
return, were beside my face. On the morrow we
were taken out of the hold, and the emirs sent to
inform us that we might renew the treaties we had
made with the sultan.’
‘So far, all seemed well. But the danger was not
yet over, as the Crusaders were destined to feel. At
first the form of the oaths to be taken by the king
and the emirs presented much difficulty; and, even
when it was settled, the emirs in council gravely dis-
cussed the propriety of putting the French king and
his barons to death. Only one of them pleaded for
keeping faith ; and his voice would have been drowned
in the clamour, but fortunately he used an argu-
ment which appealed irresistibly to their cupidity.’
‘You may put these Franks to death if you will,’
said he; * but reflect ere doing so that dead men pay
no ransom.’
Nevertheless, it really seemed that after all the
Crusaders were doomed; and while they were on
board the galleys, and this discussion was proceeding,
an incident occurred which caused them to give
themselves up for lost.
206 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
‘One of the emirs that were against us,’ says
Joinville, ‘threatening we were to be slain, came to
the bank of the river, and shouted out in Saracen to
those who were on board our galley, and, taking off
his turban, made signs, and told them they were to
carry us back to Babylon. The anchors were instantly
raised, and we were carried a good league up the
river. This caused great grief to all of us, and
many tears fell from our eyes, for we now expected
nothing but death.’
And what in the meantime was taking place in
Damietta ?
Nothing in truth could have exceeded the anxiety
which prevailed within the walls of that city, when
thither were carried tidings of the assassination of the
Sultan of Egypt, and of the new danger to which the
King of France and the captive Crusaders were
exposed. |
The aspect of affairs was indeed menacing ; and it
was not till messengers from King Louis came to
announce that the treaty was to be maintained and
the city evacuated, that something like confidence
was restored. On the evening of Friday, Queen
Margaret, with the Countesses of Anjou, Poictiers,
and Artois, and the other ladies, went on board a
Genoese vessel. As night advanced, Oliver de
Thermes and all the Crusaders who had garrisoned
Damietta embarked on the Nile, and Geoffery de
Segrines, having brought the keys to the emirs, the
Saracens took possession. Next morning at day-
break the Moslem standards were floating over tower
and turret. But still King Louis was in the hands
EVACUATION OF DAMIETTA. 207
of his enemies, and still the emirs were debating
whether or not they ought to put him and the
companions of his captivity to death.
At the mouth of the Nile, a Genoese galley
awaited the king; and, while every eye was strained
towards the shore with an anxiety which was not
without cause, Walter Espec and Bisset, the English
knight, stood on deck in no enviable frame of mind.
‘I mislike all this delay,’ said Walter, more
agitated than he was wont toappear. ‘ What if, after
all, these emirs should prove false to their covenant?’
‘In truth,’ replied Bisset, ‘it would not amaze me
so much as many things that have come to pass of
Jate; and both the king and his nobles may yet find
to their cost that their hopes of freedom are dashed ;
for we all know the truth of the proverb as to there
being so much between the cup and the lip.’
At this moment they observed the galleys, on
board of which Joinville and other captive Crusaders
were, move up the Nile, and each uttered an ex-
clamation of horror.
‘Now may Holy Katherine be our aid,’ cried
Walter, ‘for our worst anticipations are like to be
realised.’
‘The saints forbid,’ replied Bisset; ‘and yet I am
not so hopeful as I might be, for I have long since
learned not to holloa till out of the wood.’
It was indeed a critical moment for Louis and his
nobles; but in the council of the emirs the milder
views ultimately prevailed, and Bisset and Walter
Espec observed with delight that the galleys which
had moved up the Nile were brought back towards
208 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
Damietta, and that Louis, attended by a multitude
of Saracens who watched his movements in silence,
was approaching. Immediately the Genoese galley
moved towards the shore, and Louis, having been
joined by the Count of Anjou and the Lord of
Joinville, stepped on board, while the other knights
and nobles hastened to embark in the vessels that
lay in wait for them. As soon as the king was on
board, Bisset made a signal; and, as he did so, eighty
archers with their crossbows strung appeared on
deck so suddenly that the crowd of Saracens who
had been pressing forward immediately dispersed in
alarm, and the galley moved from the shore. Ere long,
the Count of Poictiers, who had remained as a
hostage in Damietta till the ransom of the Crusaders
was paid, came on board; and, all being now in readi-
ness for leaving the place where he had experienced
so many misfortunes and so much misery, the saint-
king made a sign to the mariners, the sails were
given to the wind, and the fleet of the armed pilgrims
-——the wreck of a brilliant army—glided away towards
Syria. But thousands of the survivors still remained
in captivity, and, albeit Louis was conscientiously
bent on ransoming them, their prospect was gloomy,
and the thought of their unhappy plight clouded the
saint-kine’s brow.
And sad was the heart of Walter Espec, as he
recalled the day when he landed at Damietta side
by side with Guy Muschamp; and for the hundredth
time asked himself mournfully whether his brother-
in-arms had died for his faith, or whether a worse
fate had befallen him.
THE CRUSADERS QUIT EGYPT. 299
But why linger on the Egyptian shore amid scenes
suggestive of reminiscences so melancholy and _ so
dismal—reminiscences of misfortunes and calamities
and losses not to be repaired? Let us on to the
Syrian coast, and gladden our eyes with a sight of
the white walls of Acre, washed bv the blue waters
of the Mediterranean.
219
CHAPTER XXXITT.
ACRE.
A T the time when King Louis, sad but unsubdued,
A left Damietta and steered for the Syrian coast,
Acre, situated on a promontory at the foot of Mount
Carmel and washed by the blue waters of the Medi-
terranean, was a place of great strength, and re-
nowned throughout Christendom for riches and
splendour. For a long period previous to its destruc-
tion by the Mameluke Sultan—indeed, from the time
of the seizure of Jerusalem by Saladin the Great—
Acre was regarded as of higher importance than any
city in the Christian kingdom of which Jerusalem
had been the metropolis; and thither, when driven
from other towns which they had called their own
in the days of Godfrey and the Baldwins, most of
the Christians carried such wealth as they could
save from the grasp of sultans and emirs. Acre
had, in fact, come to be regarded as the capital of
the Kingdom of Jerusalem, and by far the finest of
the cities in Syria.
Naturally enough, a capital so wealthy was cathe
tempting to men bent on conquest. But Acre had
the advantage of being strongly fortified. On the
THE SPLENDOUR OF ACRE. 211
land side it was surrounded by a double wall, with
towers and battlements, and a broad and deep ditch,
which prevented access to its ramparts, and towards
the sea by a fortress at the entrance of the harbour,
by the castle of the Templars, and by a stronghold
known as ‘The King’s Tower ;’ and on the whole,
the fortifications were such that no foe, not even such
as Bibars Bendocdar, could have calculated on find-
ing the place an easy prey.
Nor could the aspect of the city seem otherwise
than strange and picturesque to such of the armed
pilgrims as landed with the saint-king beneath its
white walls, washed by the blue waters of the Medi-
terranean. The interior was chiefly occupied by the
houses of traders and artisans; but, between the two
ramparts that defended the city on the east, stood the
castles and palaces of the King of Cyprus, the
Prince of Antioch, the representatives of France and
Germany, and other men of high rank. The houses
were built of square stones, all rising to an equal
height; and most of them were surrounded with a
terrace; and inside they were luxurious and resplen-
dent, and lighted with windows of painted glass,
which modified the glare of the oriental sun. Even
the greatest kings in Europe could boast of nothing
to compare with the pictures and marbles and rich
furniture which the mansions of the magnates of
Acre presented to the eyes of the weary and despond-
ing Crusaders.
And Acre was not without busy life and striking
ceremonies to give variety to the scene. The port
was crowded with ships from Europe and Asia; the
212 THE BOY CRUSADERS,
warehouses were stored with merchandise; the
market-place was lively with bustle and excitement:
a
=
monks, sailors, pirates, pilorims, merchants, and war-
riors appeared in the streets; the squares and public
places were screened from the heat by silken cover-
ines; and there on certain days the magnates of the
city, wearing golden crowns and vestments glittering
with precious stones, walked to show themselves to
the people, attended by splendid trains composed of
men varying in language and mauners, but unfor-
tunately separated by jealousies and rivalries that
frequently led to riot and bloodshed.
Around Acre, the country was fertile and fair to the
eye of the gazer. Outside the walls were beautiful
gardens where the citizens were wont to repair for
recreation; and farther away groves and pleasure
houses, and scattered villages and orchards, gave
variety to the landscape. ,
Such was Acre when King Louis landed there with
his queen and the remains of his once brilliant army;
and when Walter Espec, penniless and pensive, but
still hoping to hear tidings of his lost brother, leapt
ashore with Bisset the English knight, and returned
thanks to heaven for having escaped from the power
of the Saracens and the perils of the sea.
‘Sir knight,’ said Walter, who was in a despond-
ing mood, ‘we have now, thanks be to God reached a
place of safety; and yet, beshrew me if my heart
does not fail me; for we are in a strange land, without
money, without horses, almost without raiment
befitting our rank,’ | |
‘In truth,’ replied the knight, ‘I own that our
HOPE. 213
plight is not enviable. But it is not desperate. Still
Jam in the service of King Louis, and have claims
which he cannot disregard ; and, credit me, a king’s
name is a tower of strength. As for you, for lack of
a more potent protector, attach yourself to me as
squire, and we can struggle together against adverse
fortune. So droop not, but take courage, my brave
Englishman ; and we will, with the aid of God and our
lady, so contrive to make the best of our circum-
stances as to turn matters to our advantage.’
214
CHAPTER XXXIV.
A RESCUE.
ALTER Espec, albeit since leaving England he
had enacted the part of squire to two of the
foremost earls in Christendom, was too much in need
of a protector not to accept Bisset’s offer with grati-
tude; and the English knight exercised his influence
with such effect that both of them were soon provided
with horses and raiment befitting their rank, and made
a creditable figure among the Crusaders who thronged
Acre. Indeed Walter, having now quite recovered
from his illness, attracted much notice, and won the
reputation of being one of the handsomest English-
men who had ever appeared in the Syrian city.
Nevertheless, Walter was gloomy and despondent.
All his enquiries after Osbert, his lost brother,
resulted in disappointment. Guy Muschamp he
regarded as one to be numbered with the dead; and
Adeline de Brienne, who since their unexpected
meeting at Damietta, where in days of dismay and
danger they had conversed on equal terms, was now,
as the grand-daughter of a King of Jerusalem, treated
as a princess, and moved in too high a sphere to be
approached by a simple squire. At first he was
VISIONS AND DREAMS 215
astonished to find that they were separated by so wide
a gulf, and the Espec pride made him almost dis-
dainful. Still, the fair demoiselle was present in all
his visions by day and his dreams by night; and
while consoling himself with building castles in the
air when he was to reside in baronial state with her
as his ‘lady and companion,’ he was under the
necessity of contenting himself in the meantime with
worshipping at a distance, as an Indian pays homage
to his star. Ere long, however, fortune, which had
ever been friendly to Walter, gave him an opportunity
of acquiring a new claim on Adeline’s gratitude.
It was about St. John the Baptist’s day, in the
year 1251, and the King of France, having under-
taken an expedition against the Saracens, was at
Joppa, while the queen and the ladies of the Crusade
remained at Acre, which was garrisoned by a large
body of infantry under the command of the Constable
of Jerusalem, and a small party of cavalry under
Bisset, whose courage and prowess still, in spite of
his recklessness, made him a favourite with the royal
saint. No danger, however, appeared to threaten the
city. The citizens were occupying themselves as usual 5
and some of the ladies had gone to walk in the
gardens outside the gate, when suddenly a body of
Saracens, who had marched from Joppa, presented
themselves before the walis, and sent to inform the
constable that if he did not give them fifty thousand
bezants by way of tribute, they would destroy the
gardens. The threat was alarming, but the constable
replied that he would give them nothing; and having
sent a young knight of Genoa to order them off, he
216 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
left the city and marched to the mount, where was
the churchyard of St. Nicholas, to defend the gardens;
while bowmen posted between them and the town
kept up a brisk discharge of arrows, and Bisset at
the head of a band of horsemen, attended by Walter
Espec, charged forward and skirmished with the
Saracens so as to retard their approach. Neverthe-
less, the Saracens continued to advance, and the
Christian magnates who had been walking in the
squares came to the battlements, and with anxiety on
their faces watched the feats of arms that were per-
formed, and especially those wrought by the young
knight of Genoa. |
Meanwhile Bisset and Walter Espec,while skirmish-
ing with the Saracens, skirted their lines and madea
circuit of the garden with the object of defending a
gate by which it was feared an entrance might be
effected. And in truth they found they had come
too late to prevent the evil that was apprehended.
Just as they approached their ears were hailed with
loud cries of ‘Help! help!’ and to their horror they
perceived that ten or twelve Saracens, well mounted,
were issuing from the garden, one of whom was
forcibly carrying off a lady without regard to her
screams or her struggles.
‘In the name of wonder!’ gaid Bisset, staring in
amaze, ‘ what is iuis I see?’
‘By Holy Katherine!’ exclaimed Walter wildly,
‘the pagan dogs are carrying off a lady, and she is
no other than Adeline de Brienne. To the rescue,
sir knight! to the rescue!’ |
‘ Hold,’ cried Bisset, ‘or you will ruin all, See
IN PURSUIT. OF
you not that their horses are swifter than ours, and
we must go cunningly to work? Patience, Walter,
patience. We must make a circuit and intercept
them, without their be sing aware that we are in
pursuit.’
Walter’s blood boiled: his head seemed about to
turn; and, in spite of the knight’s admonition, he
could hardly restrain his impetuosity as he saw the
Saracens making off with their prize. Bisset, how-
ever, was calm, but, as usual, resolute; and it was
not till he had posted part of his cavalry at the gate
to prevent further intrusions that, at the head of
half-a-dozen horsemen, he deliberately went in pur-
suit, and in such a direction that the Saracens had
no suspicions that they were pursued. Indeed, they
deemed themselves so secure that they gradually
slackened their pace, and at length halted while two
of their number rode back to ascertain the result of
the combat that was taking place before Acre.
And what was the state of affairs before the
city ?
‘As the Genoese knight was retiring with his body
of infantry,’ says Joinville, ‘a Saracen suddenly
moved by his courage came boldly up to him, and
said in his faracenic tongue that if ke pleased he
would tilt with him. The knight answered with
pride that he would receive him; but, when he was
on the point of beginning his course, he perceived on
his left hand eight or nine Saracens, who had halted
there to see the event of the tournament. The
knight, therefore, instead of directing his course
towards the Saracen who had offered to tilt with
218 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
him, made for this troop, and, striking one of them
with his lance, pierced his body through and killed
him on the spot. He then retreated to our men,
pursued by the other Saracens, one of whom gave
him a heavy blow on his helmet with a -battle-
axe. In return, the knight struck the Saracen go
severely on the head that he made his turban fly off.
Another Saracen thought to give the knight a mortal
blow with his Turkish blade, but he twisted his body
in such wise that it missed him, and the knight, by a
back-hand blow on the Saracen’s arm, made hig
sword fall to the ground, and then made a good
retreat with the infantry. These three famous actions
did the Genoese knight perform in the presence of
the constable, and before all the principal persons of
the town who were assembled on the battlements.’
Nevertheless, the Saracens advanced with ‘ fierce
faces threatening war,’ when suddenly a band of
those military monks who at the cry of battle armed
‘with faith within and steel without,’ and long white
mantles over their chain mail, spurred with lances
erect from the Castle of St. Katherine near the gate
of St. Anthony, and, interposing between the Saracens
and the city, formed a barrier that seemed impene-
trable. They were the knights of the Order of St.
Katherine of Mount Sinai, an Order instituted in
honovr of that saint in 1063, and bearing on their
snowy mantles the instruments by which she suffered
martyrdom—the half wheel armed with spikes and
traversed by a sword stained with blood.
The Saracens halted in surprise at the sight of the
Knights of St. Katherine, who were supposed at the
THE KNIGHTS OF ST. KATHERINE. 219
time to be at the Castle of Kakhow; and, as if to pro-
voke a conflict that they might have the satisfaction
of conquering, one of the warrior monks, who seemed
very young, at a signal from the marshal of the Order
left his companions, and spurring gallantly forward,
with marvellous skill unhorsed two of the Saracens
without breaking his lance. On this, the leader of
the Saracens, perceiving that the knight was alone,
rode forward to meet him; but the youth charged
him so fiercely that he was fain to retreat desperately
wounded, and then returned leisurely to his com-
rades.
After some hesitation the Saracens withdrew, and
the Knights of St. Katherine rode calmly back to
their castle.
And now let us follow Bisset and Walter Espec.
About the distance of a league from Acre is a
place which was then known as Passe-Poulain, where,
shaded by foliage, were many beautiful springs of
water, with which the sugar-canes were irrigated.
It was at Passe-Poulain that the Saracens who
carried off Adeline de Brienne halted to await
the report of their comrades, and, little thinking of
their danger, dismounted to quench their thirst and
rest their steeds; the Saracen who bad charge of
the damsel alone remaining on horseback, and tena-
ciously keeping hold of his prize.
Suddenly all of them started in surprise; for one
of the horses raised his head and neighed; and the
Saracens had scarcely ceased their conversation and
begun to listen, when, with loud shouts of ‘ Holy
cross!’ Bisset and his riders emerged from the foliage
220 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
and dashed in amongst them. Resistance was vain,
but the Saracens turned to bay, and a bloody fray,
in which Bisset’s axe did terrible execution, was the
consequence. Only one attempted to escape,—he
who had before him on his saddle the almost lifeless
form of Adeline de Brienne; and after him Walter
Espec, his sword drawn and his spur in his horse’s
flank, rode with furious shouts.
It was a keen chase, both flyer and pursuer
urging their steeds to the utmost; and under ordinary
circumstances the Saracen would have escaped; but,
hampered with his burden, and unable to exert hig
equestrian skill, he soon found that his pursuer was
gaining on him rapidly, and turned to take the chance
of an encounter. Tearful of hurting the damsel, but
perceiving that even this must be hazarded, Walter
met him in full course; and, exercising all his art in
arms to elude a blow fiercely aimed at him, he
dealt one on the Saracen’s turban, which stretched
the eastern warrior lifeless on the ground, and then
leaping from his steed, quick as thought caught the
form of the half-fainting maiden just as she was
falling.
Be of good cheer, noble demoiselle,’ said Walter.
‘You are saved.’
But Adeline de Brienne did not reply. She had
fainted ; and Walter, taking her in his strong arms,
bore her tenderly to one of the springs of water, and
was gradually bringing her back to consciousness
when Bisset and his riders, having routed the other
Saracens, came up in doubt as to the issue of the
chase, Having succeeded in restoring the damsel, they
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“ Be of good cheer, noble Demoiselle,†said Walter, ‘‘ you are saved.†—p. 220.
GOOD FORTUNE. 221
placed her on Walter’s steed, and, the squire leading
her rein, conducted her to Acre.
‘On my faith, sir squire,’ said Bisset with a smile
of peculiar significance, as Walter unbuckled his
armour, ‘I marvel at your good fortune in regard
to the noble demoiselle, and perceive that I was
right in saying that you had been born with luck on
your side. A few more such exploits, and you will be
known to fame.’
‘ At all events, sir knight,’ replied Walter, trying
not to appear too much elated, ‘ we can lay ourselves
down to rest to night with all the better conscience
that we have this day performed an action worthy
of minstrels’ praise.
‘ Marry,’ exclaimed Bisset seriously, ‘I look to de-
riving from this adventure some benefit more substan-
tial than a sound sleep or minstrels’ flattery ; and, to
speak truth, I am somewhat weary of this saint-king
and this purposeless Crusade, and would fain go to
aid the Emperor of Constantinople against the Greeks
and the Turks; and Baldwin de Courtenay could not
but accord a favourable reception to warriors who
had saved his kinswoman from the Saracens. What
thinkest thou of a movement. to Constantinorle ?’
Walter mused, but did not answer.
222
CHAPTER XXXV.
MISSION TO BAGDAD.
FTER the assassination of Touran Chah at
Pharescour, the Mamelukes were very much at
a loss on whom to bestow the crown so long worn by
the chiefs of this family of Saladin. - In their per-
plexity they elevated Chegger Edour to the throne,
and proclaimed her ‘Queen of the Mussulmen.’
But the affairs of the sultana did not go smoothly.
Moslems were aroused at the elevation of a woman
to sovereignty; and the Caliph of Bagdad, when
asked to send the rich robe which the caliphs were
in the habit of sending by way of investiture to the
Sultans of Egypt, demanded with indignation if a
man capable of reigning could no ionger be found.
Kvery day tlie confusion increased and the trouhles
multiplied.
In order to make matters more pleasant, the
sultana associated a Mameluke named Turcoman
with her in the government, and even condescended
so far as to unite herself with him in marriage.
But the aspect of affairs became gradually more
alarming, and Chegger Edour, yielding to the
prevailing discontent, abdicated in favour of her
VENGEANCE. 223
husband. Turcoman, however, found that his crown
was somewhat thorny; and at a critical period he
aroused the jealousy of his wife by aspiring to wed
an oriental princess.
The sultana vowed vengeance, and hastened to
execute it by causing Turcoman to be assassinated in
his bath. One night an emir, hastily summoned to
the palace, found Chegeer Edour seated on a couch
with her feet resting on the dead body of her
husband. The emir uttered an exclamation of horror ;
but she calmly stated that she had sent for him to
offer her hand and her crown. The emir fled in
terror, and next day the mother of the murdered
man had the sultana put to death by her slaves, and
caused her corpse to be thrown into a ditch.
A Mameluke named Koutouz was now elevated to
the throne, and signalised himself by a victory over
the Moguls or Tartars, hordes of wandering warriors
who were now making themselves terrible both to
Kurope and Asia. Unfortunately for Koutouz, how-
ever, he at that time renewed a truce with the
Christians of Syria, and raised the anger of his
soldiers to such a height that his death was decreed.
Accordingly, one day, when he had ridden out from
Sallhie to hunt, a Mameluke chief suddenly spurred
into the camp, his garments stained with blood.
‘I have slain the sultan,’ said he.
‘Well, then, reign in his stead,’ replied the by-
standers.
The Mameluke chief was Bibars Bendocdar; and,
having been proclaimed as successor to the man he
bad murdered, he ascended the throne, and, as sultan
22 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
of Egypt and Syria, began to govern with despotic
power.
Meanwhile, Louis was anxious to redeem from
captivity the Crusaders who had been left in Egypt,
and sent ambassadors to Cairo with the money that ~
had been agreed on as their ransom. But the am-
bassadors could hardly get a hearing. At length
they did obtain the release of four hundred of the
Christian prisoners, most of whom had paid their own
ransom; but when they pressed for the liberation of
the others, they were plainly told that the King of
France might deem himself fortunate that he had
regained his own liberty; and that if he gave more
trouble, he might expect the Mamelukes to besiege
him at Acre. On hearing this Louis was much per-
plexed, and consulted his nobles, especially the Lord
of Joinville. |
‘Sire,’ said Joinville, after some consideration, ‘ this
iS a serious question, and one not to be hastily dis-
posed of; for I remember that when I was on the
eve of leaving home, my cousin, the Seigneur de
Bollaincourt, said to me, “Now you are going be-
yond the seas, but take care how you return; no
knight, either rich or poor, can come back without
pani: it he leaves behind him, in the hands of the
Saracens, any of the common people who leave home
in his company.†Now,’ added the geneschal, «these
unhappy captives were in the service of the king, as
well as the service of God, and never can they escape
irom captivity if the king should abandon them.’
On hearing this Tepes was more perplexed than
ever. iy ee anxiety, however, he bethought him of
KIVAL CALIPHS. 225
the caliph, and resolved, great as was the distance,
to send ambassadors to Bagdad, where reigned Mus-
teazem the Miser, the thirty-seventh of his dynasty.
Now, albeit Moslems were in the habit of paying
great reverence to the caliph as the successor of
Mahomet, he exercised very little substantial power
over the fierce warriors who fought for Islamism.
Nor, indeed, had the history of the caliphate been
such as to add to the sacredness of the office, or to
increase the superstitious veneration with which it
was regarded. For several centuries, the East wit-
nessed the spectacle of rival caliphs, both professing
to be the representatives of the prophet, and each
claiming all the privileges attaching to the character.
The rivals were known as the Fatimites and the
Abassides. The Fatimites claimed the caliphate as
being the heirs of Ali, Mahomet’s son-in-law, and
established their throne at Cairo. The Abassides,
who were Mahomet’s male heirs, maintained their
state at Bagdad. At length, in 1170, the struggle.
for supremacy was terminated by Saladin the Great,
who killed the Caliph of Cairo with his mace, and
rendered the Caliph of Bagdad undisputed chief of
all Moslems; and, from that time, the Abassides,
though sunk in effeminacy, and much given to
sensual indulgences, continued to exercise their vague
privileges and their shadowy authority.
Nevertheless, King Louis, bent on obtaining the
relief of the captive Crusaders, despatched ambassa-
dors to Bagdad to treat with the caliph. The
ambassadors were a Templar, and Bisset the English
knight; and with them, in their train, went Walter
226 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
Espec, now, at length, hopeful of ascertaining some-
thing about his brother’s fate. |
It was not without encountering considerable dan-
ger, and having to endure much fatigue, that the
Templar and the English knight, under the guidance
of Beltran the renegade, who had opportunely ap-
peared at Acre, and whom Bisset had pressed into
‘he service, traversed the country; and, after many
days’ travel, drew nigh to the capital of the caliphate,
which had been built, in the eighth century, by Al
Mansour, one of the Abasside caliphs, out of the
ruins of Ctesiphon, and afterwards enlarged and
adorned by Haroun Alraschid, the great — of his
dynasty.
But the journey had not been without its novelty
and excitement; and Walter Espec was riding by the
side of Beltran the renegade, towards whom, in spite
of his prejudices as a Crusader, he felt the gratitude ’
due to a man who had saved his life, when he was
cut down at Mansourah. At present he was much
interested with the account given by the renegade of
the ostriches or camel- birds, and eager to learn how
they were hunted.
‘And so, good Beltran,’ said he, ‘ you have actually
hunted this bird, whose height is gigantic, whose cry
at a distance resembles the lion’s, and which is to be
found in parched and desolate tracts, deserted even
by antelopes and beasts of prey.’
‘In truth have I,’ replied Beltran.
‘I envy you,’ said Walter; ‘nothing would please
me more than such an enterprise.’ :
‘ Nevertheless,’ rejoined the renegade, ‘it is some-
HUNTING THE OSTRICH. 227
- what irksome, and requires much patience. But the
Arabs have a proverb, that patience is the price that
must be paid for all success, and act accordingly.
They have horses trained for the purpose; and, when
they first start the ostrich, they go off at an easy
gallop, so as to keep the bird in view, without going
so near as to alarm it. On discovering that it is pur-
sued, the ostrich begins to move away, gently at first,
but gradually increasing its speed, running with
wings extended, as if flying, and keeps doubling. It
generally takes two days to run one down; but the
hunter gets the best of the race at last; and, when
the ostrich finds itself exhausted and beaten, it
buries its head in the sand; and the hunters, coming
up, kill it with their clubs, taking care not to spoil
the feathers.’
‘On my faith,’ said Walter, ‘I do own that such a
pursuit would be irksome; and I hardly think that
my patience would brook so much delay.’
‘However,’ said Beltran, suddenly raising his hand
and pointing forward, ‘there lies before you the city
of the caliph.’
Bagdad, as the reader may be aware, is situated
on the Tigris, at the distance of two hundred miles
above the junction of that river with the Euphrates,
and the Tigris is here about six hundred feet in
breadth. The city, which is of an oblong shape, and
of which the streets are so narrow that not more than
two horsemen can ride abreast, is surrounded with a
high wall, flanked with towers, some of an immense
size, built by the early caliphs; and several old build-
ings remain to attest its ancient magnificence —
228 THE BOY CRUSADERS. -
such as the Gate of the Talisman, a lofty minaret,
built in 785; the tomb of Zobeida, the most beloved
of the wives of Haroun Alraschid; and the famous
Madressa College, founded in 1233 by the. Caliph
Mustenatser. | ;
No traces, however, are left of the palace so long
inhabited by the caliphs; nor does anything mark
the place where, though its glory was about to
depart, it still stood in all its pride, with the black
banner of the Abassides floating over its portals,
when the ambassadors of St. Louis reached Bagdad,
and craved an audience of the heir of the prophet.
It was a sight to impress even men accustomed to
the wealth and splendour of Acre; and they thanked
God for having conducted them in safety to a place
where there was a prospect of food and rest.
But Walter Espec was not thinking of such things; —
his whole mind was occupied with the question,
whether or not his lost brother was a captive within
these walls.
229
CHAPTER XXXVI.
THE LAST OF THE CALIPIS,
STONISHED as the Caliph Musteazem might
be at the audacity which prompted a Frankish
king to send ambassadors to the heir of the prophet,
he did not venture to decline receiving the message
of a prince who so recently had threatened the
empire of Egypt with destruction, and might have
the power of doing so again. Besides, Musteazem
was not in the most celestial humour with the
Mamelukes, who seemed inclined to defy his and
every other person’s authority; and, on hearing that
the result of all the disorders and revolutions had
been the elevation of Bibars Bendocdar to the throne
of Saladin, he remarked, in homely oriental phrase,
‘when the pot boils, the scum rises to the top.’
Above all, Musteazem was a miser, and covetous to
the last degree; and when it was explained to him by
his grand vizier, whom the Templar had already
bribed with a purse of gold, that the King of France
was liberal in money matters, and was ready to pay
handsomely for the ransom of his captive country-
men, the caliph’s ruling passion prevailed—his
avarice got the better of his dignity; ana, without
P
230 THE BOY GRUSADERS.
farther words, he consented to grant an audience to
the Franks.
Meanwhile, the ambassadors and their attendants
were admitted within the gates of the palace, and
conducted into an immense garden, there to wait
till suitable apaitinents were assigned them. And
this garden made them stare with wonder; its regal
magnificence was so surprising as to make them start
and stop simultaneously, and to make Bisset ex-
claim—
‘Of a truth, the lines of this pope of the infidels
have fallen in pleasant places. None of King Henry’s
palaces can boast of anything like this. Surely it
must be the terrestrial paradise.’
Now, this garden might well surprise the ambas-
sadors. In the centre was a kiosk of the richest
architecture, constructed entirely of marble and ala-
baster, with an arcade composed of countless marble
pilars. In the court was a marble reservoir,
surrounded with marble balustrades, which at cach
angle opened on a flight of stairs, guarded by lions
and crocodiles sculptured of white marble; and
alabaster baths with taps of gold. On one side of
the garden was a large aviary; on the other a huge
elephant, chained to a tree. The walks were set in
mosaic of coioured pebbles, in all kinds of fanciful
patterns; and around were groves, bowers, arbours,
and trellis-covered paths, with streams, fountains,
hedges of box and myrtle, flowers, cypresses, odori-
ferous plants, and trees groaning under the weight of
icmons, oranges, citrons, and fruit in great variety.
Jt was more like such a scene as magicians are sup-
TIE CALIPH, MAMELUKES, AND MOGULS. 231
posed to conjure up, than reality ; and the Crusaders
gazed for a while with silent admiration.
‘On my faith,’ said Bisset, at lenoth breaking the
silence, ‘this is marvellous to behold; and _ yet,
had I the ear of the pope of the infidels, I should
recommend an addition which would be to the
purpose. J mean such a statue of the goddess
Minerva as once stood in the great square of Con-
stantinople.’
‘ And wherefore?’
‘Because Minerva is the goddess who presides
over prudence and valour; and my eyes have de-
ceived me if, in this city, there is not a lack of both.
Marked you not, as we rode along, that the place
is well nigh without defences and fighting men;
and think you that, with such spoil in prospect, the
Mamelukes, not to mention the Moguls, would
hesitate about seizing it?’
‘You err,’ replied the Templar: ‘the caliph, as you
say, is the pope of the infidels, and the Mamelukes
hold everything he possesses as sacred.’
‘So did they last century,’ remarked Bisset, ele-
vating his shoulders ; ‘and yet Saladin killed a
caliph with his mace; and as for the Moguls, you
know they are almost Christians, and Father Rubru-
quis is now in Tartary, completing their conversion.
Beshrew me, sir Templar, if I deem not this caliph
foolhardy to run the risk of being attacked, without
fighting men to defend him.’
As the English knight spoke, an officer of the
caliph appeared to conduct the ambassadors to their
lodgings; and they, having refreshed themselves with
232 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
the bath, and with food, were invited by the grand
vizier to repair to the presence of the caliph.
It was not, however, without much ceremony, and
some mystery, that the Templar and the English
knight were admitted into the interior of a palace
within whose precincts no Christian, save as a cap-
tive, had ever before set foot. First, they were
euided through dark passages, guarded by armed
Ethiopians, and then into open courts so richly and
beautifully adorned, that they could not refrain from
expressing their admiration.
‘Certes,’ exclaimed Bisset, halting, ‘the caliph
must, of all princes, be the richest; and I should
not much marvel to hear that he had discovered the
philosopher’s stone, which turns everything into gold,
and of which my countryman, Roger Bacon, is said
to be in search. Nevertheless, he does not seem to
have studied the Roman poet, who tells us that
treasure is hardly worth having, unless it is properly
used.’
‘In truth, sir knight,’ said the Templar, ‘the
farther we go, the greater is the splendour and state.’
At length the ambassadors reached a magnificent
chamber, where the caliph awaited them. At first,
however, he was concealed from them by a curtain
wrought with pearls. But the grand vizier thrice
prostrated himself to the ground; and, as he did so,
the traverse was drawn aside, and the caliph appeared
arrayed in gorgeous robes, seated on a throne of
gold, and surrounded by his eunuchs, who seemed
both surprised and grieved to see Christians in that
place and presence.
DIGNITY UNDER A GLOVE. 233
And now the grand vizier kissed the caliph’s hand,
and, presenting the ambassadors, explained their
errand. A long conversation, which was carried on
chiefly by the Templar and the grand vizier, followed;
and the caliph having expressed his willingness to
treat, the grand vizier desired him, in token of his
good faith, to give the ambassadors his hand. Mus-
teazem, however, shook his head, to indicate that he
was not prepared to derogate so far from his dignity.
At length, after some persuasion, he consented to
give them his hand, gloved.
‘That will do,’ said the grand vizier.
‘I fear not,’ replied the Templar, hesitating,
‘Sir,’ said Bisset, addressing the caliph—for by
this time the English knight had recovered all his
reckless audacity, and felt quite as much at home as
if he had been in the palace of Westminster, and
speaking to the good King Henry—‘ truth makes no
holes to hide herself in; and princes, if they will
covenant, must deal fairly and openly. Give us,
therefore, your hand, if you mean to treat; we will
make no bargains with your glove.’
But the caliph, still unsatisfied, stood upon his
dignity, and refused to be persuaded. However, at
the instance of the grand vizier, he consented to
consider the subject, and promise the ambassadors
another audience on the morrow. But who can tell
what a day may bring forth? Ere the morrow, an
event occurred which raised more important ques-
tions than whether he could, without degradation,
give his ungloved hand to a Templar and an English
knight.
CHAPTER XXXVII.
A RECOGNITION.
YJHEN the Templar and the English knight left
the lodgings that had been assigned to them
in the palace of Bagdad to enter the presence of the
caliph, and were honoured with the audience de-
scribed, Walter Espec, excited by the novelty of his
situation, thinking of his lost brother, and bearing in
mind that he had a mission to accomplish, strolled,
heedless of rules or regulations, into the garden of
the palace, and took his way along one of the walks,
set in mosaic-coloured pebbles, towards the kiosk.
He had not proceeded far, however, when he per-
ceived, coming from the opposite direction, six youths,
apparently about his own age. All were so fettered
as to be impeded in their walking, and seemed to be
under the charge of an aged Saracen, who, in his
turban and flowing robes, looked a most venerable
personage.
‘Christian captives, as I live,’ muttered Walter,
compassionately.
Of the six youths, five paced moodily along, with
their eyes bent sadly on the ground; the sixth
neither seemed sad, nor had his eyes bent on the
THE BOY CRUSADERS AGAIN MERT. 235
ground, but held his head aloft with the air of one
whom circumstances could not depress; and Walter
felt his heart beat and his brain whirl, and stopped
suddenly, with an exclamation of surprise, as in this
youth he recognised an old acquaintance.
Immediately it appeared that the recognition was
mutual. Indeed, the captive no sooner observed
Walter than, disregarding the remonstrances of the
old Saracen, and forgetful for the moment of hig
chains, he broke away from his companions, and
hobbling, not without danger of a fall, fairly flung
himself into the Boy Crusader’s arms.
‘Oh, good Walter,’ exclaimed he, ‘ what a surprise!
The idea of your being here, and at a time when
they are-threatening to put me to death because
I will not embrace the filthy religion of their false
prophet. _ But, thanks to our lady the Virgin, I now
feel that I am saved.’
‘In truth, brave Guy,’ replied Walter, much af-
fected, ‘you are saved, if my efforts can save you.
I have mourned for you as for one dead; and I swear
by holy Katherine, who hath preserved me miracu-
lously through manifold dangers, that if I fail I
remain to share your fate, for weal or for woe. But
how came you hither ?’
‘By St. John of Beverley,’ answered Guy, ‘ not
with my own goodwill, as you may swear on the
Evangelists. [was dragged out of the galley of the
Lord of Joinville, and, with my hands chained be-
hind my back, I was, in that base, unworthy plight,
led captive to Cairo; and, when the Mamelukes
killed their sultan, and the sultana, that dark-eyed
236 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
woman, who outdoes Jezebel in wickedness, wished
to propitiate the caliph, she sent me and five other
Christian prisoners whom you see as a peace-offer-
ing. And so,’ added Guy, looking down at his fetters,
‘here you see me, an Anglo-Norman gentleman, of
great name, in captivity and chains, and threatened
with a cruel death; which, however, I would fain
escape; for, tempting as may be the prospect of the
crown of martyrdom, beshrew me, good Walter, if at
my age I deem not life too sweet to part with
willingly.’
And in spite of his fetters and his perilous plight,
Guy looked as blithe and gay as he was wont to do
in the tilt-yard of the castle of Wark.
‘By the Holy Cross,’ said Walter, gravely, ‘I can-
not pretend to make light of the business; and yet I
am not without hope; for a Templar, and Bisset, the
stout knight whom I now serve, have come from the
good King Louis as ambassadors to the caliph, and
they will not fail you. But credit this, at least, that
if the worst comes to the worst I will remain in this
place, and not leave it—save in your company—
tide what may.’
Guy was about to protest against Walter sacrific-
ing himself to friendship; but further conversation
was prevented by the approach of the aged Saracen ;
and Guy, however reluctant, was fain to rejoin the
companions of his captivity. Walter, however, fol-
lowed their steps, and watched their movements, till
they disappeared in a door contiguous to that part
of the palace in which the ambassadors were lodged
with their train. But, warned by Beltran, the rene-
GOLD AND CONQUEST, ae
-gade, that it would be prudent to confine himself to
the quarters assigned, he returned to his lodgings,
and there, musing over this unexpected meeting with
his brother-in-arms, awaited Bisset’s return,
At length the English knight appeared. But he
did not seem quite himself. The frank and joyous
expression which characterised him had deserted
his countenance, and he looked a changed man.
Haughty sternness sat on his brow; his eye-brows
were elevated; his eye glanced flame; his nostrils
breathed fire; and he clenched and opened his hand
excitedly, as if contemplating some ruthless deed, as
he strode into the apartment and seized Walter’s arm.
‘Sir knight,’ said Walter, amazed, and almost
terrified, ‘ what aileth thee?’
‘By the might of Mary!’ exclaimed the knight
hurriedly and sternly, ‘I have seen a sight that has
roused all the Norman within me, and made me
thirst for gold and pant for conquest.’
‘And what of the caliph?’ asked Walter.
‘Tush,’ answered the knight, contemptuously. ‘This
caliph is nobody, save as master of this palace and
city, and the treasure they contain. By my fathez’s
soul! the caitiff wretch is rolling in wealth. May the
saints grant me patience to think of it calmly! The
very throne of gold on which he sits would, if coined
into money, furnish forth an army, capable, under a
skilful and daring leader, of conquering kingdoms.
Oh, for five hundred brave men in mail, and the
cross on their shoulders! By the bones of Becket, I
should, ere morning, be lord of all;’ and, torturing
himself with the idea of such a prize escaping his
238 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
grasp, Bisset sunk into silence, and indulged in
reflection.
‘Sir knight,’ said Walter, after a long pause, ‘ I
have made a strange discovery. Guy Muschamp, the
English squire, my brother-in-arms, is a captive in
this palace, and in danger of death, because he will
not abandon his faith as a Christian. I have seen
him; I have spoken with him; I implore you to ob-
tain his release; for,’ added Walter, with tears in his
eyes, ‘I must tell you frankly, that otherwise I
must remain to share his fate.’
‘Fear not, boy,’ said Bisset, touched with the
squire’s emotion ; ‘I will see to his being ransomed.
In truth, I hardly think there will be much diffi-
culty; for this caliph is a miser—a mean, detestable
miser—and would sell anything for bezants—even
his soul, if he had not already pawned it to Satan,
through his brokers Mahound and Termagaunt.’
And, too much occupied with his dream of seizing
Bagdad, and carving out a kingdom with his sword,
the knight relapsed into silence, and scarcely moved
till evening fell.
It was just after sunset, and Bisset was rapt in
thought, and Walter Espec perplexing his soul about
Guy Muschamp, when suddenly they were aroused
by the voice of the Muezzin, who, according to the
custom of the Saracens, standing on the minaret of a
mosque hard by, solemnly proclaimed three times—
‘There is but one God, and Mahomet is his pro-
phet.’
Walter sprang up, quivering with pious horror,
and hastily crossed himself.
BROKEN S!.UMBERS, 239
‘Sir knight,’ said he, earnestly, «I feel that this
place is unholy.’
‘Mayhap, boy,’ replied the knight. «But patter
your prayers, and no evil will come nigh you. For
the rest, Bagdad would be holy enough were the
walls and towers manned by Christian warriors, and
the mosques converted into churches, and I king,
with the caliph’s treasures to go forth against the
Moslem, conquering and to conquer. Oh, credit me,
it is a glorious vision. But it cannot be realised.
Marry, I spoke too truly when I said that I was
born without luck on my side.’
Night fell; the moon rose; and the Crusaders,
after for a time looking out upon innumerable stars,
glorious in the blue depths of an Asian sky, saw
to the comfort and security of their attendants, and
then stretched themselves to rest— Walter laying
himself down at the door of the chamber which Bis-
set occupied. In spite of the knight’s agitation and
the squire’s anxiety, both soon sank into sleep. But
their repose was destined to be broken. About day-
break they were awakened by cries and tumult, that
filled the palace of the caliph. Gradually, the noise
increased, and was blended with strange cries, as of
warriors storming the city. Bisset and Walter lis-
tened with breathless attention, as yell after yell,
and whoop after whoop, intimated that some terrible
catastrophe had occurred ; and as they hearkened, the
Templar, who had occupied an adjoining apartment,
rushed in, calm, but pale as a ghost.
‘Gentlemen,’ said he, * we are dead men.â€
240
CHAPTER XXXVIII.
WOE TO THE CALIPH.
HAVE mentioned that, in the middle of the
thirteenth century, the Moguls, or Tartars, were
the terror of Asia and Europe. In considering their
energy and cruelty as warriors, is it wonderful that
their movements should have been regarded with
lively alarm? From the Yellow River to the banks
of the Danube they had marched, conquering and
slaughtering ; marking their way with devastation,
and making the two continents resound with the
tumult of war and the crash of empires.
Originally a number of hordes, inhabiting the
waste regions that lie between ancient Emaiis, Si-
beria, and China, and the sea of Kamschatka, the
Tartars formed several nations of hunters and_ shep-
herds, living under tents, with their families sub-
sisting on the produce of the chase and the flesh
of their flocks, and acknowledging one God, the
sovereign of heaven, but reserving their worship for
the genil, who, as they believed, followed their steps,
and watched over the safety of their families. They
moved from place to place, despising agriculture, and
not deigning to build. Even as late as the twelfth
TARTAR WARRIORS. 241
century, they had only one city— Karrakoroum—
situated on the Orgon, in the country subsequently
the residence of the Grand Lama. In short, they
looked upon all the world as their own, and, disliking
all neighbours and rivals, were frequently engaged
in war, which they deemed the sole occupation
worthy of their attention.
As warriors, the Tartars early proved themselves
most formidable. Their valour and discipline were
remarkable; and they had neither baggage nor pro-
visions to encumber their marches. While the skins
of sheep or bears served them for clothing, they made
a little hardened milk, diluted with water, suffice
them for food. On horseback, they were as much at
home as a sea king on the deck of his war-ship, and
their seat was so easy and firm, that they were in
the habit of eating, and even sleeping, without taking
the trouble to dismount. They fought with lance
and bow, reared machines of terrible power; and
all the stratagems of war were familiar to them.
They excelled in the art of fighting while flying;
and, with them, retreat was often the signal for
victory.
It was in the twelfth century that Gheniskhan was
elected by the Tartars as their ruler, and that, under
his leadership, they struck terror into the surround-
ing nations. Under Gheniskhan, the Tartars made
themselves masters of China, and the empire of
Karismia; and, during the reign of his son Octal,
they added Turkistan and India and Persia to their
conquests. Moreover, at that time, they turned their
eyes westward ; and, having crossed the Volga, they
242 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
overran Russia, ravaged Poland, desolated Hun-
gary, devastated the frontiers of Germany, and
caused such dread, that even England was agi-
tated with the danger that threatened all Christen-
dom.
About the year 1245, however, Mango, the grand-
son of Gheniskhan, professed a desire to embrace
Christianity; and Oulagon, the brother of Mango,
espoused a Christian woman; and, when King Louis
was wintering in Cyprus, ambassadors from Tartary
reached the island, with messages to the effect that
the great khan had been baptised, and that he would
readily aid the Crusaders in rescuing Jerusalem from
the Moslems. The saint-king received the ambas-
sadors with joy, entertained them hospitably, con-
ducted them to church, and, when they departed,
sent two monks with magnificent presents to the
great khan, and exhortations to hold fast the pro-
fession of his faith without wavering. Even when
the Tartars menaced Bagdad, an ambassador, des-
patched by King Lovis from Acre, was at the court
of the great khan. with the object of converting the
Tartars; and it appears clear that, however little
they might care for either faith, the Tartars, in the
struggle of Christian and Moslem in the East, were
ever ready to take the side of the Christian against
the Moslem.
Such being the state of affairs, Mango sent his
brother with an army to besiege Bagdad; and
Oulagon, raising his banner, marched towards the
city of the ea Now it happened that Musteazem,
being at once under the influence of the most egTe-
THE MISERLY CALIPH. 243
gious vanity and of the most sordid avarice, neither
believed in his danger, nor had the heart to expend
money to provide the means of defence, but devoted
to the hoarding of the jewels, gold, and treasures
with which his palace abounded, the whole time that
should have been employed in mustering armies and
preparing for war.
However, when the caliph learned that Oulagon
was approaching to attack Bagdad, he partially
awoke from his dream, and sent offers to treat.
Oulagon, who either suspected, or pretended to sus-
pect, a snare, thereupon proposed that a marriage
should take place between the children of the caliph
and the great khan, as the best way of preserving
peace; and Musteazem expressed his entire satisfac-
tion with the proposal.
The Tartar then requested the caliph to send sixty
of his chief men to treat of the marriage; and, when
this was complied with, he demanded sixty more,
that he might have full security for the fulfilment of
the treaty. Not doubting Oulagon’s good faith, Mus-
teazem did as he was asked to do; and the royal
Mogul smiled grimly.
‘Now,’ said Oulagon to his Tartars, ‘seeing that
we have in our hands six score of the caliph’s
chief counsellors and most wealthy subjects, I
cannot doubt that the remainder are very com-
mon sort of people, and not likely to offer much
resistance. My plans have been laid with such
secrecy and caution, that nothing is suspected.
I have only to appear before Bagdad, and take
possession.’ 3
244 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
And no time was wasted. In fact, Oulagon had
no motive for sparing the seat of the caliphate; and
no sooner did he get the six score of Musteazem’s
chief men into his hands, than he ordered them to be
beheaded, and prepared for an attack. Nor, as he
rightly anticipated, was there much danger of an
obstinate resistance. In fact, not only was the city
undefended by any regular force: it was’ divided
against itself. The citizens were formed into various
sects, all at daggers drawn, and much more earnest
in their conflicts with each other than in resolution
to repulse assailants.
It was early morning when the inhabitants of
Bagdad were aroused from their slumbers with loud
shouts of alarm, and cries that the Tartars were upon
them. Resistance was vain; and equally vain was any
hope of mercy. Having set up his machines of war,
Oulagon gave the word of command, and the Tartars
rushed to the assault with all the ferocity of their
nature. Entering the city sword in hand, Oulagon
gave it up to the fury of his soldiers. Carnage, and
all the horrors of war, followed; the gutters ran with
blood; and the caliph who, a few hours earlier, deemed
his person so sacred that he would not even consent
to touch the hand of a Frank, experienced such
rough treatment that he shrunk and shuddered and
sickened.
Oulagon, however, was in no mood to respect the
person of the head of the Moslem religion, No
allegiance did the grim Tartar owe to the heir of
Mahomet. Having seized Musteazem in his palace,
Oulagon, after severely reproaching him with medi-
THE CALIPH IN AN IRON CAGE. 245
tating treachery, caused him to be confined in an iron
cage; and, after keeping him in durance for some
time, came to add insult to injury.
But, ere relating what passed, it is necessary to
return to the Christian ambassadors.
243
CHAPTER XXXIX.
IN THE LION’S MOUTH.
T must be admitted that the position of the ambas-
sadors was not enviable; and, when the Templar
hastily stated that the Tartars were storming Bagdad,
even Bisset’s bold countenance fell, and his tongue
faltered.
‘I will not hide,’ said he, recovering himself, ‘ that
our doom looks dark; our heads are in the lion’s
mouth. But, as Christian warriors, we must trust in
God and the saints; and, as brave men, we must do
what we can to extricate ourselves.’
Without wasting more time in words, Bisset pro-
ceeded to buckle on his chain mail, while Walter
Espec also arrayed himself; and, while the knight
armed himself with his ponderous battle-axe, the
squire unsheathed his falchion; and both, resuming
their wonted air of dauntless courage, prepared, in
case of the worst, to sell their lives dearly. Mean-
while, the attendants of the ambassadors filled the
chamber, with alarm on their faces; and thither also
Guy Muschamp and his fellow captives found their
way, closely followed by the aged Saracen, who bowed
himself before Bisset and exclaimed —
THE FAITH OF THE AGED SARACEN. 247
‘in the name of God, save me!’
‘Save you, Saracen!’ said Bisset. ‘On my faith, I
cannot but think that the man will do well this day
who saves himself,’
‘ But,’ asked the Saracen, ‘do you not believe in a
God, born of a woman, who was crucified for the salva-
tion of the human race, and rose again the third day?’
‘ Assuredly, Saracen,’ replied Bisset, regarding his
questioner with a curious eye: ‘as certainly as I be-
lieve that I am now in the palace of the caliph, and
in greater danger than I pretend to relish.’
‘In that case,’ said the Saracen, ‘ place your hopes
in your God; for, if he was able to recall himself to
life, he will not want the power to deliver you from
the evils that now threaten you.’
‘On my faith,’ replied Bisset, a little surprised,
‘I must say that you speak the words of wisdom
were you twenty times an infidel; and, for my own
part, I would fain hope that God and the saints,
especially good St. George, will befriend us in our
jeopardy.’
Meanwhile the noise and tumult caused by the
Tartars, as they forced their way into Bagdad, drew
nearer, and shouts and shrieks were heard, which
left no doubt that they had entered the palace.
Bisset thereupon, grasping his battle-axe, took his
post. on one side of the door: the Templar, sword
in hand, stationed himself on the other. Neither
spoke, and such was the silence of those who were
likely to share their fate, that a pin might have
been heard to drop. But though the carnage was
going on around them, they were left undisturbed ;
248 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
and they pes a full hour in breathless sus-
pense.
At Jength a loud shout intimated that the Tartars
had penetrated to the garden; and Bisset, wishing
to bring matters to a crisis, stepped forward so as
to make himself visible, and then retreated to his
post. Immediately twenty of the fierce Mogul
warriors rushed towards the place, and with loud
shouts prepared for fresh carnage. But, when they
perceived the Templar and the English knight
guarding the door with the air of men who could
not fail to prove terrible antagonists, they hesitated,
paused, and seemed to think that it was necessary to
exercise caution.
Now, this delay was not without an important
result. In the leader of the Tartars, Bisset to his
astonishment saw a man whom he had met under
other circumstances, and instantly turned his dis-
covery to account.
‘Hold, hold, brave warrior!’ cried he, in a con-
ciliating tone. ‘With us you have no quarrel. We
are ambassadors who were sent hither by the King
of France to obtain the release of some captives, and
in you I recognise one of the barons of Tartary who
came to the court of the island of Cyprus, and to
whom I myself, as a knight in the Christian king’s
service, rendered what service I could. With us,
therefore, I repeat, you have no quarrel. Wherefore
should we dye our weapons in each other’s blood ?’
The Tartar remained motionless, and eyed the
knight keenly, and not without suspicion.
‘It may be as yousay,’ repliel he after some con-
OULAGON THE BRAVE. 249
sideration ; ‘and yet I know not how I am to credit
your words. Knowest thou that the Moslems have
a proverb which says, “ Hearken to a Frank, and
hear a fable? â€â€™
‘You do me wrong by your suspicions,’ exclaimed
Bisset. ‘On my honour as a Christian knight, I tell
you naught but the truth.’
‘Give me a token by which I may prove the
truth of what you say, suggested the Tartar. And
Bisset forthwith related several incidents that had
occurred during the residence of the Tartars at
Nicosia.
‘Enough,’ said the Tartar. ‘I now give credit to
the words you have spoken; therefore let there be peace
between thee and me, and between thy people and
my people. For the present I leave to take measures
for your security; and I will conduct you to the
presence of Oulagon the brave, brother of the great
khan, and grandson of him who received the title of
‘King of Kings†from a prophet who came down
from heaven on a white horse.’
The ambassadors now breathed freely; and the
attendants looked upon Bisset as almost more than
mortal; and the knight congratulated himself on
the prospect of getting his head out of the lion’s
den. It was not, however, till the morrow that the
Templar and the English knight were led to the
presence of Oulagon; a semi-savage warrior, with
those Tartar features which naturally looked harsh
to the eyes of men accustomed to the features of
Norman and Saxon, and short of stature, but thick-
set, compact of body, and of prodigious strength.
250 THE BOY- CRUSADERS.
Bisset was at: first by no means satisfied with Oulagon’s
look, but the Tartar mavifested every disposition tu
treat the ambassadors as friends.
‘The wrath of the King of Kings,’ said he, ‘is like
the fire of a conflagration, which the slightest wind
may light up, but which nothing but blood can
quench. But between the King of Kings and the
King of France there is peace and amity and good-
will. Wherefore, friend, say what you desire of me,
and your will shall be granted.’
‘Simply,’ replied Bisset, ‘permission to depart
with my comrade and our train, and six Christian
captives who have thrown themselves on our pro-
tection.’
‘Be it.as you will, Frank,’ said Oulagon. ‘ But not
till you have had fitting gifts; for this is the store-
house of the treasure of the world, and I would fain
send gifts to the King of France; nor would I like his
ambassadors to depart empty-handed.’
The knight and the Templar bowed.
‘ But,’ said Oulagon with a cunning leer, ‘ ere de-
parting you must visit the caliph in my company, that
you may relate to the King of the Franks howthe King
of Kings punishes men who are the enemies of both.’
And without delay the Tartar led the ambassadors
to the prison where he had on the previous day shut
up Musteazem in an iron cage, and where he had
since kept his captive without food.
‘Caliph,’ asked Oulagon approaching, ‘dost thou
hunger ?’
‘Yes,’ answered Musteazem indignantly. ‘I do
hunger, and not without cause.’ ,
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‘Ah, Caliph,†said Oulagon with bitter scorn, ‘‘ thou mayst now see thy great
fault; for if thou hadst given part of thy treasures, which thou lovest so dearly, thou
mightest have held out against me.â€â€”p. 201.
MUSTEAZEM THE MISER. 251
‘Then,’ said Oulagon, ‘thou shalt have that to eat
which above all things thy heart loveth.’ And the
Tartar ordered a large golden platter, filled with
jewels and precious stones, to he brought and set
before the captive.
‘Knowest thou these treasures, caliph?’ asked he
with an affectation of carelessness.
“Yes, answered Musteazem sharply, ‘I know
them, for they are mine own.’
* And dost thou dearly love thy treasures?’ asked
Oulagon.
‘Yes,’ replied Musteazem, simply and frankly.
‘Well, then,’ said Oulagon, ‘ since thou lovest thy
treasures so well, take of these jewels as many as
thou wilt, and appease thy hunger.’
‘They are not food to eat,’ replied Musteazem,
shaking his head with an air of great dejection.
‘Ah, caliph,’ said Oulagon with bitter scorn, ‘ thou
mayest now see thy great fault; for if thou hadst
given part of thy treasures, which thou lovest so
dearly, to subsidise soldiers for thy defence, thou
mightest have held out against me. But that
which thou didst prize most highly has failed thee in
the hour of need.’
And Oulagon withdrew with the Templar and the
English knight; and soon after this interview
Musteazem drew his last breath. But whether he
perished of hunger, or of indignant despair, or by
the violence of his conquerors, is not clearly ascer-
tained. In the midst of the tumult and disorder
which followed the sack of Bagdad, and the extinc-
tion of the caliphate, chroniclers neglected to record
259 | THE BOY CRUSADERS.
under what circumstances, and how, died the last of
the caliphs.
But, however that may have been, the ambassa-
dors next morning took their departure from Bagdad.
‘Now God and all the saints be praised!’ ex-
claimed Bisset: ‘ our neads are out of the lion’s
mouth,’
203
CHAPTER XI.
END OF THE ARMED PILGRIMAGE.
HE Templar and the English knight after a
variety of adventures reached Acre, having on
their way fallen in with Father Yves, whom King
Louis had sent on a mission to ‘ the Old Man of the
Mountains ’"—that remarkable personage to whose
behests kings bowed, and at whose name princes
trembled —and a knight of the noble House of
Coucy, who had come from Constantinople, and
whose accounts of the state of the Latin empire of
the East much increased Bisset’s desire to go and
offer his sword to the Emperor Baldwin de Courtenay,
then struggling desperately to maintain his throne
against Greeks and Turks.
On reaching Acre, however, the ambassadors found
that King Louis and the court were at Sajecte, and
without delay repaired thither to present the gifts
sent by Oulagon, and inform him of the unexpected
event which had frustrated the object of their mis-
sion. Louis was deeply grieved at the failure of his
attempt to open the prison doors of the unfortunate
captives, and with tears bewailed their unhappy fate.
But soon after this, the saint-king found that the
254 THE BOY CRUSADERS,
case was not desperate. The Sultan of Damascus
went to war with the Mamelukes, and both parties
craved the alliance of the French monarch. Louis,
therefore, sent John de Valence to Cairo once more
to demand the release of the captives, and this time
he obtained something like satisfaction. Two hun-
dred knights were immediately set at liberty, and
allowed to depart for Acre, which they reached in
safety.
At length, however, news came to King Louis, |
while he was at Sajecte, which compelled him to turn
his thoughts towards France, where he was much
wanted, and to deliberate on the expediency of re-
turning to his own kingdom.
When it was known in France that the king was a
prisoner in the hands of the Saracens, the utmost
excitement prevailed throughout the land; and sud-
denly among the pastoral population appeared a man
bearing a letter, to which he pretended to attach a
mysterious importance.
‘ This,’ said he, solemnly, ‘I have mes from
the mother of God; and it commands me to assemble
all the Christian shepherds and herdsmen, and to
march at their head to deliver the king. Follow
- me then, and fear not, for the battle is not to the
strong, but reserved for the weak and humble.’
It appears that this man’s eloquence, and the
mystery which he affected, fascinated the shepherds
and herdsmen of France, and they flocked to him in
multitudes; and his followers, having been joined by
outlaws and exiles, ere long formed a formidable
force, and caused much eee
DEATH OF QUEEN BLANCHE. 255
At first, indeed, the queen-mother, Blanche of
Castille, naturally anxious for her son’s release, fa-
voured the enterprise. But the priests, aware it
might be that the leaders of the movement had
ulterior objects in view, set their faces decidedly
against it, and the leaders of the shepherds retaliated
by stirring up the populace against the priests, and
by the massacre of several ecclesiastics. On hearing
this, Queen Blanche changed her policy, took part
against the shepherds, caused their leader to be
beheaded, and their army to be dispersed. More-
over, the populace, who had at first held the shep-
herds in high honour, began to suspect them of
imposture, and slaughtered them without mercy;
and all was still doubt and dismay and confusion,
when messengers brought to Sajecte news that Queen
Blanche had breathed her last.
Louis was profoundly affected when he heard of
his mother’s death, and mourned sadly for two or
three days, without speaking with any one. How-
ever, at the end of that time, he was visited by
the papal legate, and sent for the Lord of Joinville;
and Joinville, who was on the point of going into a
meadow to amuse himself with martial exercises,
entered into conversation.
‘ Ah, seneschal,’ began the king, mournfully, * I
have lost my mother.’
‘Well, sire,’ said Joinville, calmly, ‘I am not
surprised at such an event, seeing that she was no
longer young, and that to all of us death must come
some time; but, sire, I am surprised that so great a
prince should grieve so outrageously; for you know
256 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
that the wise man says, “ Whatever grief the valiant
man may suffer in his mind, he ought not to show it
on his countenance; for he that does so causes pain
to his friends and pleasure to his enemies.†’
‘ However, seneschal,’ said the legate, ‘the king is
much satisfied with the good and agreeable services
you have rendered him, and earnestly wishes for your
honour and advancement. He commands me to tell
you, as he knows it will give you pleasure at heart,
that he intends to embark for France on this side of
Easter.’
‘In truth, it does give me pleasure,’ said Joinville.
‘And I pray that the Lord may ever induce the king
to act in accordance with his will.’
And soon after Louis, with his queen and his
knights and nobles, returned to Acre, and made pre-
parations for his departure.
It happened that when John de Valence and his
associates went to Cairo, to treat for the release of
the French captives, and also for the remains of some
of the French warriors who fell at Mansourah, the
Saracens suddenly reminded him of the Earl of
Salisbury.
‘I wonder,’ said an emir, ‘ that you Christians, who
venerate the ashes of the dead, make no inquiry for
the bones of that most illustrious and noble-born
William, to whom you give the name of Longsword ;
whereas we, seeing that he was slain in battle and on
account of his illustrious qualities, have treated his
remains with all respect.’ |
On hearing this, the ambassadors were somewhat
confused.
A LESSON FROM THE SARACENS, 257
‘ How,’ asked they, one of another, * can we dis-
parage this man, because he was an Englishman,
when even the Saracens accord the honour due to
his nobility of soul r’
Accordingly, the Crusaders requested that Salis-
bury’s bones might be given to them; they carried
them to Acre, where they were laid, with much
respect, in the church of the Holy Cross.
It was on the afternoon of the day when the
burial took place that Bisset, who had been matur-
ing his project of repairing to Constantinople, entered
his lodgings, and took Walter Espec by one hand and
Guy Muschamp by the other.
‘ Boys,’ said he, ‘this crusade, as I foresaw, has
resulted in naught save disaster, and, as fighting
men, it behoves us to consider whither we are now
to carry our swords. For my part, I am resolved to
turn the gifts of the Tartar warrior into money, and
make without delay for Constantinople, and fight for
the Latin Emperor. Are you willing to accompany
me and share my fortunes, or must we part?’
‘ In truth, sir knight,’ replied Walter, frankly, ‘ I
sigh for the green fields and the oak forests of my
native land; and, therefore, I would fain embark with
the army of King Louis, and return to Europe.’
‘ As you will, sir squire,’ said Bisset, a little morti-
fied: ‘albeit, I cannot but deem that you are not moved
so much by the desire to visit your native land, as to
be near to a certain noble demoiselle, on whose grati-
tulle you have some claims. Well, on my life, I
blame you not; for at your age I might have felt as
you do, and, mayhap, lived to repent my delusion.
258 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
But, be it known to you that. as matters stand, the
Sultan of Damascus has intimated that he will
permit any of the pilgrims to visit Jerusalem. Now,
have you the courage—for courage will be needed—
to enter the Holy City, held as it is by fierce Saracens,
and kneel at the Holy Sepulchre ?’
‘ By Holy Katherine, sir knight!’ exclaimed Walter,
bluntly, ‘ you must hold me excused. Happy, indeed,
should I deem myself in the privilege of kneeling at
the Holy Sepulchre, even at the cost of much labour
and fatigue. But these are not the days of Godfrey
and the Baldwins; and I care not to trust to the tender
mercies of Bibars Bendocdar and his Mameluke myr-
midons. I will not needlessly put my head again
into the lion’s mouth.’
‘And what say you on the point, my gay and
puissant warrior?’ asked Bisset, turning to Guy
Muschamp. |
‘Oh,’ answered Guy, merrily, ‘as says the good
Walter, so say I, neither to Jerusalem nor to Constan-
tinople do I go. I have a father and mother and
kindred at home, whose faces I long to see. Where-
fore, I go to England, and to no other place.’
Walter Espec sighed, as he was in the habit of
doing, at the mention of kindred, and gave himself
up to painful reminiscences.
‘Sir knight,’ said he, addressing Bisset, after a long
silence, ‘deem you that my lost brother can be in the
hands of him who is known as the Old Man of the
Mountains ?’
‘ What!’ exclaimed Bisset, ‘ rearing as an assassin ?
The saints forefend |’
ANOTHER DREAM. 259
‘It is strange,’ said Walter, after a pause, ‘that I
have begun to hope better things; for, as I lay asleep
last night, methought I saw him in the flesh, and
that he looked high and brave, and that he told me
how the blessed Katherine had preserved him from
evil,’
‘ May your dream be realised ere we depart from
this holy land, good Walter!’ said Guy, with sym-
pathy.
‘Amen,’ added Bisset, earnestly. ‘ More unlikely
things have come to pass.’
_ And, in truth, such a result was not altogether im-
possible; for at that moment Walter Espec and
Osbert Espec were both within the walls of Acre.
But Walter was preparing to embark for Europe; and
Osbert was on the eve of setting out for the castle of
Kakhow, not to return for many days. But the stars
had decreed that they were to meet.
CHAPTER XLI.
A SUDDEN DISCOVERY.
T was evening, and shadows were closing over Acre.
But the scene thus presented was fair to behold.
The sky was richly coloured, the setting sun painted
the landscape in brilliant hues, the wind sighed
among the palms and lofty sycamores, and the waves
of the Mediterranean murmured against the white
walls and on the Syrian shore.
Walter Espec sat in the lodgings of Bisset, hard by
the palace occupied by the King of France, and he
was alone. Bisset had been summoned to attend the
king; Guy Muschamp had gone to visit his kinsman,
the Lord of Joinville; and Walter, left with his own
thoughts, was reclining on a couch, and resting his
head against a window, with his eyes fixed on the
citizens who passed before him, on their way to .
breathe the air in the gardens outside the walls,
when he was aroused by the tramp of cavalry, and
the approach of a body of warriors, whose white
mantles over their armour, and whole appearance,
indicated that they were military monks. Walter’s
curiosity was aroused, and he shouted to make
inquiries of a portly citizen who was passing at the
A GOSSIP. 261
moment, and who, as Walter kn
SOSSIp. :
‘ Good citizen,’ said he, * these are warrior monks,
and yet they neither wear the habit of the Templars
nor the Hospitallers. Canst tell me what knights
they be who come along so proudly ?’
‘ In faith can I, sir squire,’ answered the citizen;
‘and blithely will Ido so. These be the knights of
St. Katherine, of Mount Sinai; and they are brave
men in hours of danger; albeit, like other Orders,
overmuch given to amassing wealth, and more intent
on keeping it than keeping the vows of their Order.’
‘Thanks, good citizen,’ said Walter, laughing
heartily, as Crusaders generally did when reminded
of the faults of the military monks. ‘ And, to re-
quite your courtesy, I admonish you to speak ina
whisper when you say aught in dispraise of Tem-
plars or Hospitallers; for you must be a bolder man
than I pretend to be, if you fear not to provoke their
enmity.’
‘Gramercy for your warning, young squire,’ re-
plied the citizen, as, apparently much amused, and
chuckling to himself, he proceeded on his way; while
Walter, standing up, watched the warrior monks as
they passed the window,
Now, Walter Espec had of course heard of the
monks of St. Katherine, and especially what a stern
front they had presented on the day when the
Saracens threatened Acre, and carried off Adeline de
Brienne. Moreover, he was naturally somewhat in-
terested in an Order instituted in honour of the
tutelar saint of his Tlouse: but he had never before
262 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
seen them; and he looked ont with no inconsiderable
curiosity as, mounted on choice steeds, they came on
and swept along, with bronzed visages, athletic forms,
muscular limbs, and the air of men who believed im-
plicitly in their own superiority over their com-
peers, and desired nothing so much as foes to
conquer.
But suddenly Walter started in amazement, and
uttered a cry ; then remained for a moment silent, and
quivered with agitation; then seized his cap, and,
rushing from the house, hastened, with excitement on
his countenance and wildness in his manner, after the
warrior monks, not losing sight of them till they
disappeared within the gates of the castle of St.
Katherine, which they possessed in Acre, near the
gate of St. Anthony. Into this building he de-
manded to be admitted.
‘Two hours later, Walter Espec returned to his
lodgings, and found Guy Muschamp awaiting his
return, and impatient to tell him that everything
was arranged for embarking for France in the king’s
ship In company with the Lord of Joinville. But
observing that his friend’s countenance wore a look
of extraordinary elation, he, for the time being,
quite forgot the commuzication he had intended to
make, and eyed him with an Ep Presion. of keen
curiosity.
‘Good Walter,’ said he, quickly, and with interest,
‘you appear so excited that I cannot but presume
that something wonderful has befallen you since we
parted ?’
‘In truth, brave Guy. you guess aright,’ replied
i] mit HT
Se
Se eT
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RR |)
ae
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Wh
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=—.
Sacer peel pease eine ani Dive Paes
Suddenly Walter started in amazement, and uttered a cry; th n remained for a mo-
ment silent, and quivered with agitation; then seized his cap, and, rushing from
the house, hastened, with excitement on his courtenance and wildne:s in his manuer,
after the warrior monk.—p. 262. ,
THE LOST BROTHER. 263
Walter, taking his friend’s hand. <‘ Rejoice with me,
my brother-in-arms, for I have found him who was
lost.’
‘Found your brother! — found QOsbert Espec!?
exclaimed Guy, in surprise.
‘It is true as that [am a living man,’ replied Walter,
joyfully. ‘ When he reached Marseilles with the com-
panions of his pilgrimage, instead, like them, of going
back to die of hunger in the forests, or listening, like
them, to the temptations of the two rascal merchants
by whom they were ensnared, he embarked on board
the “ Christopher,†which was on the point of sailing
for Acre; and the skipper, having brought him ashore,
carried him to the house of a Northern knight, who
had long been fighting for the Cross. And this noble
walrior, being about to return to England, placed
bim under the protection of the Grand Master of the
Order of St. Katherine; and, when he was of a fitting
age, the grand master, to whom the name of Espec
was honourably known, made him take the vows of
the Order. And now, thanks to God and Holy
Katherine, he is in safety and honour, and rides
bravely as the bravest among his brethren, with his
white mantle over his chain mail.’
‘By St. John of Beverley!’ exclaimed Guy, in
surprise, ‘I much rejoice to hear that he was so
graciously protected by the saints in the hour of
danger, and that his fortune has been such as is
worthy of a Norman gentleman.’
‘ And what is more,’ said Walter, proudly, ‘it was
he who unhorsed the two Saracens with his lance
without breaking it, and who wounded their leader
264 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
on that day when they came hither to demand
tribute.’ |
‘A most worthy exploit, as 1t has been related to
me,’ replied Guy; ‘and one that does credit to his
strength and courage. But tell me, good Walter,
how rejoiced he was to see you after so long a sepa-
ration, and all your suffering on his account.’
A shade of disappointment appeared on Walter
Espec’s handsome countenance. After a pause, how-
ever, he replied — |
‘In faith, brave Guy, to be frank with you, I must
own that my brother, for whom I had so long
mourned, manifested less enthusiasm than I ex-
pected; and when I talked to him of our castellated
house of Heckspeth, on the Wansbeck, and of the
tombs of our ancestors in the Abbey of Newminster,
and even of my great namesake, the glory of our line,
I perceived right well that he cared for none of these
things. His heart and soul are in his Order, its
renown and influence; and all his hopes are for the
restoration of its glory. And nothing would serve
him but attempting to induce me to take the vows
of poverty and celibacy and obedience. But I
answered readily, that such vows were not to my
liking—that I despise not riches; that I rather love
noble demoiselles; and that I am by nature more
inclined to command than to obey; in short, that I
will neither be a warrior monk nor a monk in min-
ster. And so the great bell of the castle of St.
Katherine tolled, and we parted; and at daybreak
he mounts to ride to the castle of Kakhow, which the
knights of his Order hold.
IIOME IN THE DISTANCE, 265
‘And now, good Walter,’ said Guy, ‘having ful-
filled your mission, for such you deemed it, you will
return to England with a light heart.’
But Walter Espec only sighed, as his thoughts re-
verted to Adeline de Brienne and to the great gulf
that seemed to interpose between them.
td
cm
Ce
CHAPTER XLII.
HOMEWARD BOUND.
N the vigil of St. Mark, after Easter, the Cru-
saders having mustered at Acre, flocked on
board their ships and prepared to set sail for Europe.
On that day also the King of France, leaving
Geoffrey de Segrines with a hundred knights to aid
in the defence of what remained of the once grand
kingdom of Godfrey and the Baldwins, left the
palace which he had occupied, and, attended by the
papal legate, the Patriarch of Jerusalem, and the
Christian nobles and knights of Palestine, walked on
foot to the port, amid an immense crowd assembled
to witness his departure, who all, while lamenting
his departure, applauded him as the Father of the
Christians, and implored Heaven to shower blessings
on his head. *
‘This is the day of St. Mark, seneschal,’ said
Louis to Joinville, as they went on board; ‘and on
St. Mark’s-day was I born at Poissy.’
‘Sire,’ replied Joinville, ‘you may well say that
you have been born again on St. Mark’s-day; for you
are escaping from a pestilent land, where you have
remained so lone.’
A SANDBANK, 267
Bisset, the English knight, resolute to his purpose,
had taken fareweil of his companions, and embarked
for Constantinople, to wield his ponderous battle-axe
in the cause of Baldwin de Courtenay, whose empire
was falling to ruins. But Walter Espec and Guy
Muschamp were on board the king’s vessel, through
the influence of the Lord of Joinville; and there a!so
was Beltran the renegade, who, touched with
remorse, had abandoned his wealth in Egypt, and
was doing penance by labouring as a seaman.
At length the fleet weighed anchor and set sail,
with every prospect of a prosperous voyage. But, ere
long, a somewhat alarming accident occurred. On
Saturday, as the French approached Cyprus, about
vespers, the vessels were suddenly enveloped in a
thick fog, and the ship in which were the king and
queen struck on a sandbank, and was so damaged
that Louis was recommended to leave it without loss
of time. |
‘ Sire,’ said the skipper, ‘if you will believe me,
you must remove from this ship to another. We
well know that, since the keel has suffered so much
damage, all the ribs must be started, and should
there be a high wind, we fear she will be unable to
bear the sea without sinking.’
‘Now,’ said the king, ‘I put it to you on your
faith and loyalty, to tell me truly, if the ship were
your own, and full of merchandise, would you
cea
‘No!’ said the skipper; ‘for we would rather risk
our lives than lose a vessel worth forty or fiity
thousand livres.’
263 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
‘Why, then, do you advise me to qu.t it?’ asked
the king. 7
‘ Oh, sire,’ answered the skipper, ‘ we are different
sort of beings; for there is no sum, however great,
that could compensate for the loss of yourself and
the queen and your children; and we cannot advise
you to run such a risk.’
‘Ah,’ replied the king, ‘now that you have an-
swered, I will tell you what I think of the matter.
Suppose I quit this vessel, there are five hundred
persons on board, who will remain in Cyprus for fear
of the danger that may befall them should they stay
on board. Now,’ continued Louis, § there is not one
among them who is attached to his own person more
than I am myself; and, if we land, they will lose all
hope of returning to their own country. Therefore,
I declare I will rather expose myself, the queen, and
my children to some danger, under the providence of
God, than make such numbers of people suffer as are
now with me.’
The example which Louis set inspired the com-
panions of his voyage with courage; and the flect
having resumed its course, encountered, but survived,
a violent storm, took in water at Cyprus, and soon
alter came in sight of Lampedosa, an island which
was then uninhabited. And here a strange incident
occurred.
It happened ‘that King Louis and his company,
including Walter Espec and Guy Muschamp, landed,
and, same climbing among the rocks, discovered a
hermitage, with a handsome garden, planted with
olives, figs, vines, and many other fruit trees, and
THE RENEGADE TURNS HERMIT. 269
watered by a beautiful spring. On going to the
upper end of the garden, the king and his company
found an oratory, the roof of which was painted
white, with a red cross in the centre, and, in a cham-
ber more retired, two bodies laid toward the East,
with their hands on their breasts. Soon after the
king and his company, conversing about what they
had seen, returned on board their ship, and the
skipper was about to weigh anchor, when it was
discovered that one of the warriors who had gone
ashore was missing; and this caused much excite-
ment.
‘J think I can account for this,’ said the skipper.
© One of the sailors was desirous of turniug hermit,
and I doubt not he has seized so fair an opportunity.’
Walter Espec and Guy Muschamp exchanged
glances. It was Beltran the renegade, who had
thus devoted himself to solitude.
‘Well,’ said the king, on hearing this, ‘let three
sacks of biscuit be left on the shore; the man may
find them, and, if so, they will serve for sustenance.’
Soon after this an accident happened to one of the
squires on board the ship of one of the barons of
Provence, which, at the time, was about half a league
from that of the king. One morning, finding, as
he lay in bed, that the sea dashed into his eyes and
much annoyed him, he ordered the squire to stop
it up. Having in vain attempted to do so from the
inside, the squire went outside, and was endeavouring
to stop the hole, when his foot slipped and he fell
into the sea. The ship kept on her way without
the mariners being aware of what had happened,
270 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
and as the squire did not attempt to move, those
on board the king’s ship thought some piece of
furniture had tumbled overboard. On coming
nearer, however, they perceived that it was a human
being, and Walter and Guy, with some mariners,
lowered a boat, rowed to the rescue, and suc-
ceeded in saving him.
On being brought on board the king’s ship, the
squire related how he met with the accident, and —
was asked why he did not endeavour to save himself
by swimming.
‘In faith,’ answered the squire, ‘I had no occasion
so to do; for, as I fell into the sea, I cried, “Our
Lady of Valbert!†and she supported me by the
shoulders till I was rescued.’
‘In good sooth,’ remarked the Lord of Joinville,
on hearing this, ‘it is truly marvellous; and, to
perpetuate the memory of this miracle, I vow to
have it painted on the windows of my chapel at
Joinville, and also on the windows of the church
at Blecourt;’ and, on reaching home, the noble
seneschal kept his word.
And now the ships tilted over the oe and,
after a voyage of ten weeks, they reached the Port
of Hieros, in front of a castle which, in right of his
spouse, belonged to the king’s brother, the Count
of Anjou. Louis, however, was not inclined to land.
In vain the queen and his council advised him to
disembark.
‘No,’ said he, *I will not land till I can do so on
my own territory; I will not disembark till I arrive
at Aigues Mortes,’
MONTPELLIER. 271
Everybody looked extremely disappointed.
‘Seneschal,’ said Louis, turning to Joinville, ‘ what
is your opinion ?’
‘Sire,’ replied Joinville, ‘it seems to me that you
ought to land; for Madame de Bourbon, being once
in this very port, put again to sea to land at Aigues
Mortes, and she was tossed about for seven long
weeks before she could make that harbour.’
‘Seneschal,’ said the king, ‘you have persuaded
me.’ And goon after, to the joy of the queen and
all on board, Louis landed at Hieros, and with
Margaret and his children took up’ his residence
in the castle, to rest from his fatigues ere setting
out for his cwn dominions. Indeed, the saint-king
was so weak, that Joinville had to carry him in his
arms; and for some time he could hardly support
the weight of his armour, or remain on horseback.
But Louis had yet many years of life before him;
and after repairing for a time to recruit his health
at Montpellier, where then, as in alter ages, the
medical science eminently flourished, he in the
autumn arrived at Vincennes, and after prostrating
himself before the altar of St. Denis and restoring
the oriflamme to the abbot, he proceeded to Paris,
where he was received with profound respect. But
the saint-king bore on his brow traces of the sorrow
caused by the multiplied disasters of his expedition,
~ and still wore the symbol of salvation on bis shoulder,
as if to intimate that he was not yet done with the
Holy Land. |
CHAPTER XLII.
A ROYAL VISIT.
HE countenance of the King of France did not
belie his heart. He was sad, and much more
dejected than when he was in captivity and chains
at Mansourah, bullied by the Saracens, and threatened
with the bernicles. Nor was there any affectation
in his continuing to wear the cross on his shoulder;
as he proved, sixteen years later, when he undertook
his ill-fated expedition to Tunis, and died, on a bed
of ashes, amid the ruins of Carthage, looking up to
heaven, and exclaiming with his latest breath, ‘I
will enter into Thy house; I will worship in Thy
holy tabernacle !’
Meanwhile the saint-king appeared inconsolable,
and refused to be comforted. Even the affectionate
velcome accorded him by his people failed to dispel
his gloom or cheer his soul. Day and night he
brooded over his defeats and disasters, and sighed
dolefully as his memory recalled the humiliation
to which, in his person, the cause of Christianity
had been exposed at the hands of the Moslem.
Fortunately, at that time, Henry, King of Eneland,
being at Bordeaux, offered Louis a visit; and the
HENRY, KING OF ENGLAND. 273
- saintly monarch, rousing himself to welcome his
royal brother-in-law, made preparations for his
reception.. Moreover, when Henry’s approach was
announced, Louis mounted and went forth to meet
his guest; and, ere long, the King of England with
a magnificent train appeared in sight.
Henry was considerably older than Louis. Indeed,
be had now attained the age of forty-seven. But
his frame. was vigorous; he had always enjoyed
robust health; and, as he had taken life easily, time
and trouble had not wrought so much havoc on
him as on the French monarch. He was of the
middle height, and compactly built, and would have
been accounted handsome, but that one of his eyelids
lung down in such a way as to conceal part of the
eyeball, and rather spoiled a face which otherwise
would have been pleasant to look upon. But, such
as his person was, Henry did not neglect its adorn-
ment. He had all a Plantagenet’s love of splendour,
and the gorgeousness of his dress was such as to
excite the wonder of his contemporaries. By his
right hand rode his spouse, Eleanor of Provence,
sister of the Queen of France, no longer young,
but still preserving, in face and form, much of the
beauty and grace which, twenty years earlier, made
the name of the second daughter of Raymond
Berenger celebrated at the courts of Europe.
Behind the King and Queen of England, on a
black steed, which he bestrode with remarkable
grace, rode their son, Edward, taller by the head and
stoulders than other tall men, and already, though
not out of his teens, renowned as one of the bravest -
274 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
and handsomest princes in Christendom. With him
was his very juvenile wife, Eleanor of Castille, whom
he had recently espoused at Burgos, and brought over
the Pyrenees to Bordeaux, on his way to England.
But the procession did not stop here; for, as the
chronicler tells us, ‘the King of England had in his
own retinue a thousand handsome horses, ridden
by men of dignity and rank, besides waggons and
sumpter cattle, as well as a large number of choice
horses, so that the unusual novelty of the array
caused great astonishment to the Frenchâ€
The meeting of the two kings was all that could
have been desired by the most enthusiastic advocate
of the French alliance who could have been found
in England; and, ‘at sight of one another, they
rushed into each other’s arms, and after mutual
greeting, entered into conversation.’ Naturally
enough, the first subject on which they touched
was the crusade from which Louis had just returned ;
and the saint-king seemed relieved to meet with a
man to whom he could, without derogating from his
dignity, unbosom his griefs.
‘My friend,’ said Louis, mournfully, * you cannot
imagine how pleasant your voice is to my ears; lct
us enjoy ourselves in talking together, for never,
perhaps, shall we have such an opportunity. In truth,’
added he, as they rode on side by side towards Paris,
‘it 1s no easy matter to tell how much bitterness of
spirit I endured while on my pilgrimage through
love of Christ.’
‘I believe it, Louis, my cousin,’ said Henry
quickly.
THE SYMBOL OF THE CROSS. 275
‘And yet,’ continued Louis, ‘albeit everything
turned against me, I return thanks to the Most
High; for, on reflection, I rejoice more in the
patience which God granted me, than if the whole
world were to be made subject to my rule. And
yet, my friend, when I think of all my mishaps,
my heart saddens and my soul is heavy.’
‘Cousin,’ said Henry, kindly, ‘beware of casting
yourself into a life-wearying sorrow; for holy men
will tell you that it is the stepmother of souls, and
that it absorbs spiritual joy, and generates prejudice
to the Holy Spirit. Recall to your mind the patience
of Job, the endurance of Eustace.’ And Henry pro-
ceeded to relate much that he knew, and much that
he did not comprehend, of the history of both, and
how, in the end, God rewarded them.
‘My friend,’ said Louis, ‘if I were the only one
to suffer the trouble and disgrace, and if my sins
did not fall on the church universal, I could bear all
with equanimity; but, woe is me, through me the
whole of Christendom is enveloped in confusion and
shame.’
‘And, cousin,’ said Henry, ‘I perceive that you
still wear the symbol of the cross on your raiment.’
‘I do,’ replied Louis, ‘ because I have not concluded
my pilgrimage; I have only suspended it; therefore
bear I the sacred symbol. And you also, Henry,
you have taken the cross, and vowed to fight for the
~ Holy Sepulchre.’
‘Cousin,’ answered Henry, gravely, but frankly,
‘when I heard that you were a prisoner in the
hands of the Saracens, I did take the cross and vow
276 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
to go to the rescue; but now that, by God’s grace,
you are at liberty, I cannot but think that itis my
duty to remain at home and minister to the welfare
of my subjects.’
‘And yet, urged Louis, ‘we are told that he who
will not take up his cross and come with me, 1s not
worthy of me; and I know you, Henry, to be a man
who, albeit you are negligent in punishing Jews and
heretics, are distinguished for attention to the things
that belong to your eternal peace, and by your
devotion to the Lord.’
‘In truth, cousin,’ replied Henry, not sorry
perhaps, to leave the subject of the crusade, ‘I am
regular, at least, in my religious exercises; for it is
my custom, every day, to hear three masses, with
the notes, and, as [ wish to hear more, I assiduously
assist at the celebration of private masses; and when
the priest elevates the Host, I usually hold the ae
of the priest and kiss it.’
‘Nevertheless, my friend,’ remarked .Louis, ‘J
cannot but deem that the attention ought not always
to be devoted to the hearing of masses, but that we
ought to hear sermons as often as possible.’
‘Mayhap,’ said Henry. ‘And yet, by God’s help,
I would rather see a friend often than hear of him,
even although I should hear nothing spoken of him
but good.’
As the two kings conversed they entered Paris
side by side, and the sight which met the eyes of
the English might well, indeed, raise their admira-
tion. The city, with its squares and bridges and
churches and houses built of gypsum, was splendidly
A HEARTY WELCOME, . oie
_ decorated with bowers of leaves and flowers; many
of the mansions were three and four storeys in
height, and the windows were crowded with people
of both sexes, gaily dressed, and excited with the
spectacle. Everything wore a holiday guise; and the
citizens and the scholars of the University, especially
those of English birth, suspending their readings
and disputations, came forth in crowds, carrying
branches of trees, and attended by bands of music.
Everybody appeared eager to accord the royal guests
a hearty welcome; and Louis, after thanking the
scholars for showing his friends so much honour,
turned to Henry.
‘My friend,’ said he, ‘I place Paris at your dis-
posal. Where will you be pleased to take up your —
abode? There is my palace in the middle of the city ;
or, if you prefer taking up your residence at the Old
Temple, which is more roomy, it shall be so arranged.’
‘Verily,’ answered Henry, ‘I think I must choose
the Old Temple; for I hear it is roomy enough to
lodge an army, and my company, as you see, is
somewhat numerous; and there it is my purpose to
give a banquet on the morrow, and I trust that you
and your princes and nobles will honour it with
your presence.’
‘After which,’ said Louis, ‘you must come as
my guest to my palace. Nay, nay,’ continued he,
as Henry sought to excuse himself, ‘let it be so:
for it is proper for me to perform all the-duties of
courtesy and hospitality. In my own kingdom I
am lord,’ he added, with a smile; ‘and I will be
master in my own house.’
S
278 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
‘On my faith,’ said Walter Espec to Guy Mus-
champ, as gallantly the brothers-in-arms rode in
the train of the saint-king, ‘this is a great day for
England!’
‘In truth it is, replied Guy, gaily. ‘Methinks
there are Englishmen enough in Paris to take the
city.’
2:9
CHAPTER XLIV.
THE FEAST OF KINGS.
N the day after the arrival of Henry and his
queen in Paris, that marvellous banquet,
described as ‘the feast of kings,’ was given in the
great hall of the Old Temple; and a mighty enter-
tainment it appears to have been, if we are to judge
from the description of the chronicler, who tells us
that ‘never in times past was there ‘given such a
rich and splendid banquet, even in the time of
Esther, or of Arthur, or of Charles.’ Besides three
kings—those of Navarre, and France, and England,
with their queens—there were present eighteen
countesses, and twenty-five counts, and twe:ve
bishops; not to mention a host of noble knights
and ladies—knights illustrious for their valour, aud
ladies celebrated for their beauty.
As the guests were ranged according to their
rank, some difficulty arose as to who was to preside.
Henry requested Louis to assume the post of honour ;
but Louis protested.
‘It is more fitting,’ said he, ‘that the master of
the feast should occupy the chicf seat.’
Not so, my lord king, ureed Henry. ‘It is more
2380 THE BOY CI RUSADERS.
becoming and proper for you to sit in the middle;
seeing that you are my sovereign, and will be so,
for the reason is plain.’
‘Henry,’ replied Louis, in a low voice, ‘ would
that every one could obtain his right without injury.
But in your case, added he, alluding to Henry's
claims on Normandy and Anjou, ‘the pride of the
I’rench would never permit it. But enough of this.’
Now it happened that the great hall was, according
to the continental custom, hung around with as
many bucklers as the four walls would hold, and
among them was the shield of Coeur de Lion; and
when the feast was drawing to a close, the revaly
began to look around and examine them.
‘My lord,’ said the Count of Anjou, jocularly
addressing Henry, ‘ why have you invited the French
to dine with you in this house of all others? See,
there is the shield of the lion-hearted King Richard.
I marvel that your guests have been able to eat
vithout fear and trembling.’
Now this remark, uttered as it was in a tone of
irony, was calculated to excite unpleasant sensations,
and to recall disagreeable reminiscences; and Henry
looked mortified, and Prince Edward threw his
magnificent head disdainfully backward. But Louis, —
ever on the watch, hastened to soothe their rising ire.
‘Would to God, Henry!’ said he, earnestly, ‘ that
the twelve peers of France and the barons would
azree to my wishes. We should then be inseparable
friends,’ |
‘I believe it, Louis, my cousin,’ exclaimed Henry,
quickly.
SERVICES AND PERILS REWARDED. 281
‘I grieve, my Lord knows,’ continued Louis, ‘ that
our feelings of affection cannot be cemented on all
points; but I cannot bend the obstinacy of my
barons; and therefore I perceive plainly that you
will never recover your rights.’
‘Nay, the future is with God and his saints,’
said Henry; who, pacific as he was, by no means
relished the idea of the Plantagenets being per-
petually excluded from their inheritance. ‘ Mean-
while, cousin, there is peace between us, and let
not the feast flag.’
‘Henry,’ said Louis, pausing, as he approached a
painful subject, ‘it grieves me sore to think that, of
all the English who landed with me at Damietta,
few, indeed, escaped the carnage of Mansourah.
Nevertheless, I have brought home with me two
English squires, who are anxious to return to their
own country, and whom I would fain recommend
to your gracious protection.’
‘Cousin, said Henry, responding with readiness
and sympathy, ‘for your sake I will both protect and
honour them.’
Walter Espec and Guy Muschamp were imme-
diately summoned, and, marching up the great hall
between the tables, approached the two kings and
bent their knees. _
‘Both of them,’ explained Louis, mildly, ‘ have
rendered good services, and encountered great perils,
and undergone great sufferings for the cross. One
saved my brother, the Count of Poictiers, from
captivity; and the other saved my kinswoman,
Adeline de Brienne, from still worse evils.†And
282 THE BOY CRUSADERS.
the king looked towards the noble demoiselle, who, |
princess as she was, felt her heart beat rapidly, and
was under the necessity of making a strong effort
not to betray the interest which she felt in the
fortunes of the young warrior, with whose fate, she
had convinced herself, since the rescue at Posse-
Poulain, her own was strangely intermingled.
‘Wherefore,’ continued Louis, ‘I would fain, ere
parting with them, give them a token of my appre-_
ciation of their piety, and the courage they have
shown in hours of danger and disaster, as I have
already admonished them how to act towards their
God and their neighbour. Kneel.’
And as they obeyed, Louis gave each of them
three blows on the shoulder with the flat of his
weapon, mentioning the name of each, and repeating
the formula—-‘ In the name of God, of St. Michael,
and St. George, I dub thee knight. Rise up, Sir
Walter Espec, and Sir Guy Muschamp.’
And as Walter and Guy rose to their feet, blush-
ing with this new and unexpected honour, Louis
added—
‘And now you will accompany your king to
England, and lose no time in winning your spurs,
so as to justify me, in the eyes of men, for having
thus distinguished you.’
‘By St. George, cousin,’ said Henry, laughing, ‘I
fear me that their patience will be put to the test;
for at present I have not an uy against who
to lead such redoubted warriors.’
‘My lord and father,’ said Prince Edward, inter-
posing, ‘if the young knights will enter my service,
BROTHERS-IN-ANMS STILL 283
T will undertake to find them enough of work to keep
their swords from rusting.’
‘IT doubt it not, Edward,’ replied Henry, serious!y,
‘I doubt it not;’ and, turning to Louis, he added
by way of explanation, ‘I have gifted my son with
the principality of Wales, and recommended him to
employ his youth in bringing the natives to obe-
dience; and I know enough of the Welsh to be
aware that he has before him an arduous duty.
Now, young gentlemen,’ said he, addressing Guy and
Walter, ‘will you take service with the prince, and
go to war under his banner ?’
‘In truth, my lord,’ answered Walter, ‘ nothing
could be more to my mind than so to do.’
‘And what say you, most doughty warrior?’ said
Henry, looking towards the heir of the Muschamps.
‘My lord,’ replied Guy, cheerfully, ‘we are
brothers in arms; and, as says Walter, so say I.’
And when Henry and Queen Eleanor left Paris,
and took leave of Louis and his court at Chartres
to return to Bordeaux, Walter Espec and Guy
Muschamp rode off in Prince Edward’s train; Guy,
laughing as he thought how much his new dignity
would add to his importance when he reached his
father’s castle, and Walter, casting many a look
behind to catch a last glance of Adeline de Brienne.
And so ended the adventures of the Boy Crusaders,
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e7d271364f4cab91b727e9a0b41ca6bf
ba3adbd3d7c1123986f983ef7b66b19667405073
'2012-05-27T15:43:20-04:00'
describe
'40231' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFWE' 'sip-files00068thm.jpg'
ce9659165992834e57b5805c553c029e
3f5c14bcd7ec7cb79f1a1f5c76ba67284f517fc9
describe
'41255' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFWF' 'sip-files00088.pro'
76cee88cb419e66e4e726163a4244eb7
da4048ed50b141d3a339744a0c2a376a9fb596db
'2012-05-27T15:39:17-04:00'
describe
'237547' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFWG' 'sip-files00200.jpg'
fbf33b551f8c54abc91ac92278d88a8d
46895a1ddacab01616ae25b191b08ef8e0c9a88d
'2012-05-27T15:48:59-04:00'
describe
'13512640' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFWH' 'sip-files00042.tif'
b1b19742460e33aa8de926bec2805913
f402ae3b8450b2981d3f24afe2ebdf43599c8ddf
'2012-05-27T15:39:21-04:00'
describe
'12957132' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFWI' 'sip-files00247.tif'
a4f0f00be367d0b37c6f71b0ae4f9ff7
91a1168d6e84bb805fa7c349a617b33e42aa848d
'2012-05-27T15:46:47-04:00'
describe
'13513976' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFWJ' 'sip-files00091.tif'
9e3dcefc9fbfab178065c4f4d24552a2
68745dc2d1d1d26caf91a77ba551ae5fb8950845
describe
'12702164' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFWK' 'sip-files00147.tif'
b85ac373eb01d3a83dc9c12d4c9909a5
cab29f6d7b6f6a3bb40e8034473d8eb52fb5a447
'2012-05-27T15:47:07-04:00'
describe
'43311' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFWL' 'sip-files00252thm.jpg'
e26e2e564f5cdd469acf3e4ec99e4f20
d16597bf11909ec83107f2529194cd698d55e2c2
'2012-05-27T15:40:20-04:00'
describe
'99353' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFWM' 'sip-files00130.QC.jpg'
80c91eea31ecb15a90faac5b9a39d6b2
aec81b0b43f417afcc00c1ef8676fd37db4a3a63
'2012-05-27T15:49:29-04:00'
describe
'71098' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFWN' 'sip-files00097.QC.jpg'
7325374d4ec482b0db69c264370a9046
a5568f29f50cbc925ffad431380556c725dcb0b1
'2012-05-27T15:37:10-04:00'
describe
'13166568' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFWO' 'sip-files00039.tif'
1a7f53ac424ce889cb0c446ebba78781
61bba49fa1b039e87fee953277d91495fc555e86
'2012-05-27T15:39:13-04:00'
describe
'30116' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFWP' 'sip-files00262thm.jpg'
9842bd7c8c9c2d0fdc7286729641287b
aef18c9e2f597a48fa16cc273af1b2499e3faeb8
'2012-05-27T15:40:41-04:00'
describe
'13020248' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFWQ' 'sip-files00118.tif'
a2c471bd9827d4ed8e9dd78d7fc25eae
723aaa68421bb0c5f0e9ec00729705b782d04668
'2012-05-27T15:45:44-04:00'
describe
'1629542' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFWR' 'sip-files00148.jp2'
a74a755a7991200f9ebdae070ba65447
47cc6ac1808f9d3a5b18ac1944eb3fd6142351f8
'2012-05-27T15:39:47-04:00'
describe
'47771' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFWS' 'sip-files00224.pro'
87fc650f31454ae4427d9f612808e53d
989bd67a43d78fd7808b0450a226478a32da1eb1
'2012-05-27T15:39:07-04:00'
describe
'1687589' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFWT' 'sip-files00183.jp2'
e66948c18d0e73f6aa74a8f120447631
f2c19d98e8325d3afe95d15ef82acb58c8f7ebee
'2012-05-27T15:43:42-04:00'
describe
'86413' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFWU' 'sip-files00152.QC.jpg'
fc901c3828cdf7e42ea541ef735936cf
ff3700b903ab7ca63ae1a92290a48a7c81b1a7db
'2012-05-27T15:39:54-04:00'
describe
'40384' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFWV' 'sip-files00276thm.jpg'
578c815ef5bbde0884d4b6db168ca93d
d57e9b01d30ddf29d90b29bb9b238d364af3fc7d
'2012-05-27T15:37:51-04:00'
describe
'13165536' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFWW' 'sip-files00109.tif'
d7ba23119dca29ba8f28df1f6caa256e
e4a831589df8fafa173eaebf2686097bb2c88a4f
'2012-05-27T15:45:09-04:00'
describe
'13514472' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFWX' 'sip-files00190.tif'
0b95e3ecdd2f5e589eba9ae8a35d03e9
b72f66e18578de243538f16f9af2d4b053c91125
'2012-05-27T15:45:32-04:00'
describe
'1687594' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFWY' 'sip-files00173.jp2'
9695845ecc863643e0e83997bb54362b
5c4c9f5558dc7ddfd8dcd814ae28cfc021d47b17
describe
'13518264' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFWZ' 'sip-files00204.tif'
5c0b80bf1adc62f315b7ec84872826aa
78d2b9d04ce9443e78a712ac2e51e831d3605fb7
'2012-05-27T15:41:20-04:00'
describe
'12452908' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFXA' 'sip-files00265.tif'
0814ba8e8816d4a9fab532656c01d4a6
bff030e253159c98cb86a43e26618ecfedede5f4
'2012-05-27T15:45:40-04:00'
describe
'1817' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFXB' 'sip-files00271.txt'
676baecd040c6d056451dcac48f7bdef
7e47aa76c729649cd210ba794fe81e12785df591
'2012-05-27T15:45:36-04:00'
describe
'1704516' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFXC' 'sip-files00284.jp2'
714051bae581a0338b7a2fe7b08527c4
5149d68453e9037c403e3963310ebbdea1203dff
'2012-05-27T15:44:41-04:00'
describe
'171406' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFXD' 'sip-files00239.jpg'
0295cf6d5cd02b96c2fa6cd629053fae
e2610b850b2e57e6db9f699dbab3f08b58396c85
describe
'2813' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFXE' 'sip-files00008.txt'
4b25b9b02aa1f782e6f1c142f29fab8f
62c39b53b5f8bfd36193025ffe5b20f08bc99198
'2012-05-27T15:37:50-04:00'
describe
WARNING CODE 'Daitss::Anomaly' Invalid character
'13467200' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFXF' 'sip-files00140.tif'
05ce41b35c42e420730d83d005f15147
f9f799463f62ff98819d09044b0039748eba2adb
'2012-05-27T15:48:04-04:00'
describe
'31723' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFXG' 'sip-files00116.pro'
7f7ccc97d64c85987956be4ac1aa97fb
37922fcf153ef119536a06bfa179db58935301ad
'2012-05-27T15:37:09-04:00'
describe
'237534' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFXH' 'sip-files00060.jpg'
f683c2ea6270d2dc36ba0ed8bff0ba42
74febf06fed88ae7e349ab4a864fb333bde5713b
'2012-05-27T15:40:12-04:00'
describe
'1620' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFXI' 'sip-files00025.txt'
3cdb4d49762ff3db0b9f3405986beff6
40c3441312063862b0af7f96f38280ffc8197003
describe
'90292' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFXJ' 'sip-files00019.QC.jpg'
8e754d60eab50eb5d78752117252a4da
e8203f102f05b6d1e2702966ad932437cac37ce7
'2012-05-27T15:46:32-04:00'
describe
'1687584' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFXK' 'sip-files00119.jp2'
972b71c6de4f4a8173cf174d2bef860a
af192916555bc60d1f248dcf2489dfff4aa5c825
'2012-05-27T15:44:30-04:00'
describe
'238076' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFXL' 'sip-files00244.jpg'
dbee6c2f487580593cd5d11b2fab6db9
c37550e44e57d83a79b3ed297a4c9f8df3adfa42
'2012-05-27T15:40:52-04:00'
describe
'241045' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFXM' 'sip-files00071.jpg'
f15650b3eeb223cc276b267fa7a80723
46fe2a8ef3adf743cfd6754f2762c2119b9ac49c
'2012-05-27T15:41:16-04:00'
describe
'30955' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFXN' 'sip-files00142thm.jpg'
84b9d10204044742391a1bfb2246bf70
39697b27f9186005115ace0eb4b6bfeab72763ca
'2012-05-27T15:42:43-04:00'
describe
'42966' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFXO' 'sip-files00182.pro'
adae5e5825eff2719b1c332fdefd2316
ccbcac22cf7dbbdeda9fde0dfb110bb1897093fb
'2012-05-27T15:49:47-04:00'
describe
'44270' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFXP' 'sip-files00242.pro'
a975a17816aeab71b9569ed4e47ddbd7
69239070c04ec2ae5c949863a510e5086b318768
'2012-05-27T15:44:49-04:00'
describe
'214074' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFXQ' 'sip-files00095.jpg'
b62570e02d087db45c23d28dfe087183
568bdc269ef9bff9d5c3c8865237f3bfbd540e7c
'2012-05-27T15:49:34-04:00'
describe
'13200372' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFXR' 'sip-files00286.tif'
1a1c220ae49e28cf072d35b1e959a791
a86f0e4d26e167afbbdd4fd177ae908dfb234dbe
'2012-05-27T15:44:21-04:00'
describe
'41231' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFXS' 'sip-files00186thm.jpg'
ae8da5385ae93bbc51e84ab8ed0c6d11
3ee1454ef9d4bbcc7b86dd8c69ef2f99aec3d2a4
'2012-05-27T15:46:59-04:00'
describe
'13514908' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFXT' 'sip-files00103.tif'
7db66c58d52789960f9f712f25f3c384
148fee8f2674e67b70f5d5152f6e678faa58f116
'2012-05-27T15:42:33-04:00'
describe
'1673' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFXU' 'sip-files00172.txt'
0a957906f995a99f37bf5c32f10889f2
09d8b011030b302bf05fbd9b2a680daac70b67e3
'2012-05-27T15:48:44-04:00'
describe
'13191124' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFXV' 'sip-files00088.tif'
da6e1d8e1e0b1a09176e4167fa596b5e
d6c0acae691930a2f658bce55419a8e08724edbe
'2012-05-27T15:50:27-04:00'
describe
'241562' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFXW' 'sip-files00028.jpg'
d31e13eb4cc2f2377863aab91f3a08d7
dd804332ed2133db66591e5dc2ca2df9e264dac4
'2012-05-27T15:45:16-04:00'
describe
'48146' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFXX' 'sip-files00004thm.jpg'
2cc15dff926647795cceb3b9adbe4d93
56528ababf8a263f040ba983509df0d0f60a5d3b
'2012-05-27T15:44:44-04:00'
describe
'29355' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFXY' 'sip-files00173thm.jpg'
22da20c73afa774a126f5107124535d1
576eb8e552275a559ab270cb6f2a5d511059d32a
'2012-05-27T15:39:39-04:00'
describe
'30050' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFXZ' 'sip-files00239.pro'
f74a9bda72f440623ab16fbb9dbac84e
7eea50edea2b557055c68b3419658cf87ba2e3fd
'2012-05-27T15:41:49-04:00'
describe
'1580' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFYA' 'sip-files00147.txt'
e8ecd82eb5b00ed223e76b0624735cd8
4f20abbfba185698ee867154f0a39a5a2ddb2868
'2012-05-27T15:42:39-04:00'
describe
'112360' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFYB' 'sip-files00293.jpg'
a6b2bc3ed41cbbe1b19e9554ee78a30b
0ba8340b7ef168d0c082745b5f5ed914d61d39e2
'2012-05-27T15:38:19-04:00'
describe
'42894' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFYC' 'sip-files00164.pro'
53785ee0694f688b50878883122de8b9
e945da90dc9147606c570cb20feca5f9004d4a40
'2012-05-27T15:50:30-04:00'
describe
'42009' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFYD' 'sip-files00108.pro'
eb39a15a2f479d437311546ad479a5f5
7e88ebad802242f807783e044f7dd09dc2a02dc8
'2012-05-27T15:42:10-04:00'
describe
'250966' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFYE' 'sip-files00222.jpg'
da462174a41c96187b0a14e0dbd5aea0
ec7da8bee67e4af3d29a2cc1aac30a63d62a9758
'2012-05-27T15:37:27-04:00'
describe
'86668' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFYF' 'sip-files00219.QC.jpg'
60c5f30779a7bfa2dc3af30075a3893e
1096a3efc43b325cc37725fd545e3f25c3605e9e
'2012-05-27T15:39:27-04:00'
describe
'89513' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFYG' 'sip-files00156.QC.jpg'
5d37214b7df99fd3abfe1480dcf47c26
215cd454174bc51cc9b38eac218d828c09227298
'2012-05-27T15:41:25-04:00'
describe
'45218' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFYH' 'sip-files00012.pro'
fb5ede586a458c20d963fe795cb7d4d4
758abc8a6eab3a19a8b020a480b7a0f068504338
'2012-05-27T15:40:06-04:00'
describe
'247878' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFYI' 'sip-files00253.jpg'
3dd4342e92bd37f72bcf27b72fdf5c52
574b509870f084abbf6e8e3c3e663ec7fb9892b4
'2012-05-27T15:41:59-04:00'
describe
'77743' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFYJ' 'sip-files00005.jpg'
a0687d7c9fb7f38bbe42554054f67314
f6bb3c5b58d8653fa87e4e1e75ca8acb0e728f55
'2012-05-27T15:42:09-04:00'
describe
'29672' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFYK' 'sip-files00197thm.jpg'
71ce952e1c978daf52afd0b64762c394
093b1be4cb392af4a0f92d34bf1c00227b7f0170
'2012-05-27T15:45:45-04:00'
describe
'44438' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFYL' 'sip-files00040.pro'
1d66620f5785475b6d6bfaabef54c0ed
b1a26508a0ded568a581b429889aaaf8b851e7c3
'2012-05-27T15:41:38-04:00'
describe
'1634' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFYM' 'sip-files00276.txt'
624bda79a1834303cb63c31fd6da3ed1
534cf8f549f4940c2b647ce94fa8a2b11215604f
'2012-05-27T15:45:56-04:00'
describe
'44223' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFYN' 'sip-files00174.pro'
7d5be73a61bd5429bf9f0131d398084d
5739c0a0fa5e379812833630a76dedb1c20fe680
'2012-05-27T15:40:07-04:00'
describe
'1598' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFYO' 'sip-files00210.txt'
7f2ab8c61d1bc4aee54c4ab2f3606313
c06a808978032c1929025b9411a8013f7689a936
'2012-05-27T15:48:17-04:00'
describe
'1650' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFYP' 'sip-files00215.txt'
e9838604375b89b2fb1e7752c53ec842
a211170a45d2c90abc880c36bee63baf06b477d9
'2012-05-27T15:41:35-04:00'
describe
'40034' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFYQ' 'sip-files00201thm.jpg'
24d9db9b5afe9c3a003e59690de2bddc
72581de8fdb3339a3f1f634555ad1a06a7087878
'2012-05-27T15:48:26-04:00'
describe
'27993' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFYR' 'sip-files00111.pro'
bcfd19fcbf7824fc4f4981797c6790ec
db50c98b89948d2b2e8239f1c67f9566101f2113
'2012-05-27T15:36:37-04:00'
describe
'1613489' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFYS' 'sip-files00023.jp2'
0bc0492a9d0d0e248d3a5d2a3dcb18d3
56498cc5bad599e35bf41648155a7d85f3b96a95
'2012-05-27T15:40:38-04:00'
describe
'1687601' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFYT' 'sip-files00155.jp2'
fbd457d927c8d00ed8b8459796e247fb
7ac153487d5af5ba6ca44630f727dc40c61fade6
'2012-05-27T15:43:37-04:00'
describe
'1614102' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFYU' 'sip-files00161.jp2'
e229c0858b2c53b73ff96eba96b81e2f
28ce86e0c611c15018325635c50bdbea3cf9dea1
describe
'100439' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFYV' 'sip-files00148.QC.jpg'
bb5a0dcda018d377874ee23c79b26d7f
a59ec6376b1f9f5872d3667e6a61b6912480e674
'2012-05-27T15:41:14-04:00'
describe
'28309' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFYW' 'sip-files00110thm.jpg'
1a642c4767e433758b33432ed5d59d7e
177f070e6a6124a6f9b26bad6422b2997cbc5f02
describe
'31466' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFYX' 'sip-files00074thm.jpg'
f5003ba3cb4220905b8a66c438402d49
80123d3a18b726c0a8c47709b4d687ef8849c480
'2012-05-27T15:50:37-04:00'
describe
'93331' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFYY' 'sip-files00122.QC.jpg'
997bc3424e41a0a5a5914bb0b56ff784
554dba3e00632dcdcd7690ef440b434b3fa6c924
'2012-05-27T15:45:53-04:00'
describe
'1808356' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFYZ' 'sip-files00038.jp2'
ad149459ef5b03201b9aed4d39486b54
a83852a51c22c69fccd849873dc8a64b7ada7632
'2012-05-27T15:44:17-04:00'
describe
'222871' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFZA' 'sip-files00096.jpg'
c30e790fcd65172f3ec678fbe4560707
c93cf8e0212ff422b07b3ca2459ff3211a12a9de
describe
'1685' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFZB' 'sip-files00235.txt'
4908cf58a5d6438b96df7124c5acaaf2
5b20e03bb93e95a1051904ecd6fd56053af6c23a
'2012-05-27T15:49:46-04:00'
describe
'93951' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFZC' 'sip-files00201.QC.jpg'
82d987f5703a5bb773b8091f0a4ed5fb
d46703f6df428be0b31dfc0584a86e7c1b4c6f78
'2012-05-27T15:38:47-04:00'
describe
'42267' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFZD' 'sip-files00134.pro'
7a9395a994e4f94d0cd2092dbf18b28e
062a8feca64ab3682f4187a58140c7c6c6a0f1bc
'2012-05-27T15:46:36-04:00'
describe
'185065' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFZE' 'sip-files00008.jpg'
2975ed9d569ab42196db8117f3b045ec
c3a6869b64cd39fcd67abe01870646e04d74e0bf
describe
'185943' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFZF' 'sip-files00076.jpg'
e705a6c83c81b702ebf6e31ee6333afa
498ce45f9646fc60e35f4f00b237fc2d2c9bc23b
'2012-05-27T15:43:15-04:00'
describe
'242957' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFZG' 'sip-files00201.jpg'
4ca690de13668c4b08893e699c458e2b
6331f3a2e33e1f4d213f72037a1ef7c05ff95b20
'2012-05-27T15:39:31-04:00'
describe
'30546' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFZH' 'sip-files00086thm.jpg'
b56876de2d4535c7e393ae4a22081157
b89e8f6ea918bb7bc75307752ef0621c3d5d0e0d
describe
'1630' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFZI' 'sip-files00229.txt'
737c3c24259782c6f13702fbfe3897cd
793b70360c67ced0b968f62a0c6f21a9e46209f3
'2012-05-27T15:40:43-04:00'
describe
'1534' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFZJ' 'sip-files00192.txt'
ffdebc48b559d8c909751a37af885922
1d09d0a5936f1c5fc2f9ae71b08f716e66bc2e2c
'2012-05-27T15:45:51-04:00'
describe
'1826790' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFZK' 'sip-files00014.jp2'
30f7df68f3333aeb955eeb2f189db4ef
f58210403a337e00063f7703a45ddca5ea9d2c7c
'2012-05-27T15:41:43-04:00'
describe
'13514772' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFZL' 'sip-files00178.tif'
75f54f464208d510b5aea29e1d5bec68
b401068f039d3a2e8d961f91ead2ef63d4bc6fc0
'2012-05-27T15:48:25-04:00'
describe
'137845' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFZM' 'sip-files00194.jpg'
885eb3438cb03f301e1e10d0afc8507f
1bccd63f500f605d08a3dd9faf16e488cbaa85fc
describe
'29876' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFZN' 'sip-files00219thm.jpg'
062aeb65127b053941231cab795e1603
d6b0a34cd31e2eff9cf603bed2155bffb7d35043
'2012-05-27T15:45:47-04:00'
describe
'42882' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFZO' 'sip-files00130thm.jpg'
c66ef2133bcb73e90b5f8825d0b6080b
a6681eaf21de6e295695d5fecfa3d31e9f17e0a4
'2012-05-27T15:42:42-04:00'
describe
'1687592' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFZP' 'sip-files00074.jp2'
a990c6270e78b0c992f94cdbf2ad0d0f
348cf3d5d09036e041e1b9dfc70c0db6ac104121
describe
'34569' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFZQ' 'sip-files00008thm.jpg'
2ccebb45c04e08c3cf54dc11bf0f6ac9
223e65f1d67a9285c948adefbc9b95816292983e
'2012-05-27T15:42:17-04:00'
describe
'38952' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFZR' 'sip-files00018thm.jpg'
97484daa881c1dcb189b43d35f28d1cb
d2a415f970897ac06437bb6c9a23c278261c4fef
'2012-05-27T15:43:16-04:00'
describe
'55336' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFZS' 'sip-files00194.QC.jpg'
482bade1b390bd645f44f5f3675e2cea
86eff19bb12c0e58402ead266d6ca9343a17bd34
'2012-05-27T15:50:38-04:00'
describe
'1687608' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFZT' 'sip-files00045.jp2'
f87ac2e4dd8477bf88b2c0797819f90b
b7d3aa58a13fe5feb6c49c537c0378e6b646b786
'2012-05-27T15:45:08-04:00'
describe
'1687494' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFZU' 'sip-files00250.jp2'
bdb3b2820a3803a01581555a2a185905
04d96ba6d6eef971cfdf778359ccb8f9ce06338f
'2012-05-27T15:47:37-04:00'
describe
'42878' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFZV' 'sip-files00165.pro'
13a9b1c2aa3cae625c76ca1ce3c9d970
7fa15ba9aa3b07ab5b7dcc7de90c27ad645d0502
'2012-05-27T15:41:06-04:00'
describe
'237409' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFZW' 'sip-files00192.jpg'
7767fe4b9935477d27568ebec2c7ffd1
27ab9c67a379aa74d3472f4eb901414e58d1493e
'2012-05-27T15:49:12-04:00'
describe
'240073' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFZX' 'sip-files00287.jpg'
fab8de471060053e57eef47624b4c495
be644df2011902fdc5559b37e79f5b6d6a3081d3
'2012-05-27T15:45:38-04:00'
describe
'13511240' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFZY' 'sip-files00153.tif'
1255f0b11e114e2a24871112196bc911
bcd736c42ebf9a596f50c530c4ebb3b3c0615243
'2012-05-27T15:44:05-04:00'
describe
'1687593' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAFZZ' 'sip-files00222.jp2'
ea094c68cf4676571ebec727e8b1ccb1
0fe590133daddd1604570b6fabbf57769dd1cefe
'2012-05-27T15:46:00-04:00'
describe
'40517' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGAA' 'sip-files00058.pro'
466eaf7a82fa141a4a904fc750b437d3
bc2d9bfc44e9335fa9ba015fcbec2c3c2f7dd2b0
'2012-05-27T15:47:17-04:00'
describe
'1631058' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGAB' 'sip-files00081.jp2'
473b19f1844f0634747ac5340602b47f
5ce164e6169ea746b290c599db08f74cf74b7a6c
'2012-05-27T15:47:09-04:00'
describe
'1551' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGAC' 'sip-files00274.txt'
db820e2c1ad063d5c68ba666654825ea
662f188c436d5863bf1240e90df7b040e6857bfc
describe
'201996' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGAD' 'sip-files00226.jpg'
2aba6849cd5a590890695d2e9652e254
796fe659ee51fe189ae0131e56983cbc99858047
'2012-05-27T15:44:18-04:00'
describe
'1590' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGAE' 'sip-files00209.txt'
4e809ff8292a65e674fc95ec1610f6c1
763dd543cc9794614693e3b6beca3f1a380406a9
describe
'1687588' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGAF' 'sip-files00238.jp2'
9e74add42811549cfc204c02f37dce65
41ac430a5c0a608bd8d92d9ab9019db08c3ee25d
'2012-05-27T15:46:48-04:00'
describe
'89889' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGAG' 'sip-files00171.QC.jpg'
c946a91e1f119f4af6173702ad5c406b
a4ca329a34735bf25e38762e50a57d6dd599051b
'2012-05-27T15:44:24-04:00'
describe
'177880' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGAH' 'sip-files00097.jpg'
77fe9d671f8134856a5f3827e4451546
45131825a6e6b60cbb736518fee4b35947e09141
describe
'45102' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGAI' 'sip-files00230.pro'
e7d325df04987b4ca66ad1b28e730e4f
817e9e5873c602fc23d267996ef1a18d2f454790
'2012-05-27T15:48:14-04:00'
describe
'244043' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGAJ' 'sip-files00034.jpg'
04d1ea3abc559a77b6c741e567dc8d3a
6bcc46efe10d4da8cb46941444c865e6619a8a60
'2012-05-27T15:49:14-04:00'
describe
'13512948' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGAK' 'sip-files00239.tif'
24fe64cc65b1663b173fb68efee543d4
f044f0be5daaf6404f5a0da20dfd21fa9eba729a
'2012-05-27T15:39:28-04:00'
describe
'252999' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGAL' 'sip-files00261.jpg'
eb2432c4c3970fa45759eeb070bff7e6
4532db422c733dca03e2e54a48f8c901bdeaa172
'2012-05-27T15:49:43-04:00'
describe
'241316' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGAM' 'sip-files00280.jpg'
c95212a4e6dfdf62f33343b5d577fcc9
8afc6edcbe2b374fac36dcfcd860c5404b80a744
'2012-05-27T15:50:40-04:00'
describe
'89938' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGAN' 'sip-files00002.jpg'
e6fa60dad1fd1ebcd6ddf3ae2b5236c7
359f92cab1dd2c8f680a5db324cbc0dec15a6f57
'2012-05-27T15:41:02-04:00'
describe
'173078' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGAO' 'sip-files00279.jpg'
5cae2027c111f651c285213c83c97a37
d99bf31ab8bafadeeb428a0dba12c620b609aee2
'2012-05-27T15:38:35-04:00'
describe
'24529' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGAP' 'sip-files00239thm.jpg'
94a1f01631cc8afef0dd68e77971f1a2
c1b3b329d0767319b20526143e7bc044091dc92e
'2012-05-27T15:44:26-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGAQ' 'sip-files00163.jp2'
5ec60deb0fad5ecb0be90f96a55fa612
9ae826b8e4cbf8bca9b013ecadf685ea7ea027fa
'2012-05-27T15:47:05-04:00'
describe
'32592' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGAR' 'sip-files00076thm.jpg'
8d3e16ac68e9a35c850843a58b235b76
d719d70720b8b14f407068b270f297f324435ed5
describe
'1542261' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGAS' 'sip-files00013.jp2'
fea874d7422bf44d8d3d7055366a8a5a
038f527816aab416ecf27a593d54c1b3cb96d783
describe
'1097' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGAT' 'sip-files00097.txt'
e0f0fcdf7930f71edc862776194cd4d7
a66ee38134a463bb0830c9601d05c777dba4041d
'2012-05-27T15:40:56-04:00'
describe
'26294' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGAU' 'sip-files00121thm.jpg'
1247ff1a5a5e45639b3f3adbfdeb258a
0bb9e5c8f692090ac027e9fdc4f75de52308889f
'2012-05-27T15:42:31-04:00'
describe
'1687604' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGAV' 'sip-files00089.jp2'
30ceedb00ac547a8065c5fd9d2ed02fd
5a3b72da8adff0c505e3f7ed86d006d75f0f13b4
'2012-05-27T15:39:23-04:00'
describe
'14055592' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGAW' 'sip-files00277.tif'
a2d07dfb258835704698255c3331f05e
c2f3325e7393735739dea665760a6df983f5e3e5
'2012-05-27T15:42:27-04:00'
describe
'1162' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGAX' 'sip-files00154.txt'
b8434666357e7e7ebfb4a792d9b4ea20
50bce2bc14526214c1db86f3e95182c30dbc5d68
'2012-05-27T15:49:40-04:00'
describe
'41037' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGAY' 'sip-files00255.pro'
d379c4366ff67d48e161dafd1ea66113
a205627ef8a0db00b11dc742a1db97ed4ee1386b
'2012-05-27T15:41:15-04:00'
describe
'91707' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGAZ' 'sip-files00207.QC.jpg'
09315b31a22a8db9cf2767bda3a434aa
54d1d7cebe3f68903adac3d9941488313741955c
'2012-05-27T15:36:44-04:00'
describe
'229134' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGBA' 'sip-files00027.jpg'
f54b7773066af58bd219a272479bb7f5
cd37ba65a21a48821d2f059ec634a7a1db66cf18
'2012-05-27T15:46:14-04:00'
describe
'13514076' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGBB' 'sip-files00064.tif'
766acaf785cfd45cb8aeef280f476b89
793e889b57a12d652c1fee91c578393b6d4c51ae
'2012-05-27T15:37:06-04:00'
describe
'17326' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGBC' 'sip-files00291thm.jpg'
1b531e4b1b18b793d4fefedc7ab1fff1
7315d4598df828b400662c063df2a38647ba5058
'2012-05-27T15:46:07-04:00'
describe
'41682' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGBD' 'sip-files00209.pro'
0c7873b591360389e28b6d1b6f7dbcb2
070221eb419a67b5f00e75bf778e72695dd6e563
'2012-05-27T15:37:24-04:00'
describe
'1711' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGBE' 'sip-files00219.txt'
95ed0d60d236c984abb281fa9306d339
92e6fa14d969b9035c88a826cba991d4305dd382
'2012-05-27T15:37:05-04:00'
describe
'24864' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGBF' 'sip-files00098thm.jpg'
2f8c4ea65b3a39a0bb52497d906250d7
888908d928efc903ef6043ca8940573f76297215
'2012-05-27T15:36:38-04:00'
describe
'243684' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGBG' 'sip-files00257.jpg'
25025e1dee12ec6c681e25a822e0f53b
6084adaf9eabed47d7364dd97e07c6708bf0f386
'2012-05-27T15:45:12-04:00'
describe
'195743' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGBH' 'sip-files00218.jpg'
d99f50af7e57788c519524070a09544c
c78c3adaa3ab5fc8ab484fc0d83170d0336fcfc5
'2012-05-27T15:50:15-04:00'
describe
'84054' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGBI' 'sip-files00011.QC.jpg'
670530e9d49a7c3d8ec5592bce2ddcaf
94ef046871f6ed36986dc1481b29d45aff154716
'2012-05-27T15:48:16-04:00'
describe
'96664' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGBJ' 'sip-files00034.QC.jpg'
bfc6cba943cf89c98c46f2ca76c5307d
3caf4f15f33a3a4b81a4224c74dd35a1698baba8
'2012-05-27T15:46:26-04:00'
describe
'65655' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGBK' 'sip-files00279.QC.jpg'
10223afd293145b2f49ddf9fac31bc54
4c36010ee80dd10a02e63161ad72e82df0b38f57
'2012-05-27T15:44:23-04:00'
describe
'13512892' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGBL' 'sip-files00251.tif'
9c04d39faf90ce798f48d3207aaa6d65
94e67044da114237444a3378f7713799938aa5c6
describe
'1568412' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGBM' 'sip-files00221.jp2'
2618b9d6250e6b733a8d5b120dce6aa2
4ba1a839a66a02b1e4fbddf7db209de4c6b96a6c
'2012-05-27T15:36:51-04:00'
describe
'47305' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGBN' 'sip-files00028.pro'
7af216f2af1ca10427bab54d0b49e5a9
4cb37cb3d4137bcceb312e49a65c00095f88a401
'2012-05-27T15:39:26-04:00'
describe
'1173' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGBO' 'sip-files00132.txt'
ffb9668c9477ab4733691d1f107626b8
6a632abcf80f2cea694e0ae1b73486e3d09d12a6
'2012-05-27T15:42:57-04:00'
describe
'249050' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGBP' 'sip-files00232.jpg'
3ad67c8fcfc8b5bd729e78cc333f0b85
b29a783d1e591d7e8cb6e7a6f090ad01583e2e76
'2012-05-27T15:40:47-04:00'
describe
'13739764' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGBQ' 'sip-files00246.tif'
e217bf3719a08b5895900e9fcb8035c3
47f0deaf52982fd953ac3e575888ac9c3cff0d66
'2012-05-27T15:46:49-04:00'
describe
'254721' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGBR' 'sip-files00204.jpg'
d285436d8508a8332ab9363bfd04cdf4
a73ce02c2733a7cffca977e52a042f5778fc7f40
'2012-05-27T15:43:14-04:00'
describe
'40088' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGBS' 'sip-files00126.pro'
37ae7e5599f901e806c83bc18fc8ba2a
cdffe2340ade1dd8e3d3e16ee0abaeefe42344a7
'2012-05-27T15:41:54-04:00'
describe
'226925' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGBT' 'sip-files00262.jpg'
0d150cd9989d58acb07a8023c5f519af
71b3d672deea3e303f6c19f3150e9c03b5da01aa
'2012-05-27T15:44:07-04:00'
describe
'1616' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGBU' 'sip-files00198.txt'
a3dbc48403239845ecaad70276749a4e
776ea82be7d489c10342a5ac92b801b22d5f8fa9
'2012-05-27T15:43:35-04:00'
describe
'13524432' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGBV' 'sip-files00026.tif'
8e13ae0821c95efaa307a19f68ebfd75
96eb11f661aea509d206499913fe8f5c1913a034
'2012-05-27T15:41:11-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGBW' 'sip-files00168.jp2'
58a803cc898f1558f042fc008ba22a31
c63505ca566abfac468c2830e1a1e24a5b5b7b23
'2012-05-27T15:50:42-04:00'
describe
'1688' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGBX' 'sip-files00230.txt'
50e1f9753b435ca9a157e265d305d012
4c99d8f93c7a1aa5243ce7cc221960d3121642bc
'2012-05-27T15:46:02-04:00'
describe
'81536' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGBY' 'sip-files00238.QC.jpg'
741d0f7c68999f78bebd07664389281f
14e00697fe79e1fdc788e156f1ba82e77f8a2152
'2012-05-27T15:39:36-04:00'
describe
'13513984' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGBZ' 'sip-files00179.tif'
09a50cae8466611a0e5742c43659e762
ed742a9b357e39e90a800f0752f062742296891e
'2012-05-27T15:39:24-04:00'
describe
'1626' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGCA' 'sip-files00018.txt'
a1bfa7d241ca90eee364e6b1b6acdefb
ede6766463d7569ae9c56aa87937be20616e087d
'2012-05-27T15:40:27-04:00'
describe
Invalid character
'231266' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGCB' 'sip-files00143.jpg'
093e411de2dee551d0e509e43beb19dd
28921217ca1f49be52edec61627625ffd1ac0077
'2012-05-27T15:41:07-04:00'
describe
'41725' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGCC' 'sip-files00199.pro'
9d52fb505a4c8c5a28dcf3f9c14c461a
7d35eb9885791c43dd1dff83d6cf654d4b3506ec
'2012-05-27T15:41:23-04:00'
describe
'79916' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGCD' 'sip-files00267.QC.jpg'
b9218b3995913ef8f6d05c08fa5fe848
454bbaff7227e44119cce55d8658535c44264a03
'2012-05-27T15:46:18-04:00'
describe
'7522' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGCE' 'sip-files00075.pro'
d9ffd3dd534c1dfcd31512c171428dff
df736187802154d2c0ebe05c7bf3e3cd35b35929
'2012-05-27T15:37:25-04:00'
describe
'1574489' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGCF' 'sip-files00257.jp2'
af9c4294d6d5e96edcd24093e592eeeb
89d3dfd2453fd805ed82c1711be213467abf08a6
'2012-05-27T15:39:16-04:00'
describe
'12322996' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGCG' 'sip-files00005.tif'
bd281b31a13eda84fb39f5d229f74a01
36fb94150eef719ec95dc5c6933f86340498b652
'2012-05-27T15:40:30-04:00'
describe
'42639' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGCH' 'sip-files00190.pro'
9b0709b3fe6b6dcf33c3eeb86281561a
7860c58fc05acd1ad668df96291e4c693d28d1de
'2012-05-27T15:47:06-04:00'
describe
'233148' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGCI' 'sip-files00062.jpg'
ba77c61cc4bc4d15e00bddb99befdd34
7678c8ec8d8eb19a52d4ab008c8cd6c88a8996cc
'2012-05-27T15:43:18-04:00'
describe
'13512628' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGCJ' 'sip-files00169.tif'
2fceabb38d2a90eeae8f499e01313ba3
8a86621f6f86dd869209a5e8881c2fe68077ffb2
'2012-05-27T15:41:01-04:00'
describe
'1610' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGCK' 'sip-files00142.txt'
aa9d30e2b4fbb683fea93b9771bc9834
92109ec1fab4667639fb175463b389cb7948f4de
'2012-05-27T15:38:36-04:00'
describe
'41937' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGCL' 'sip-files00244.pro'
aa33c9c80233d6168a8b4f93703f3e1b
c85002432d43e4e02b6a654886617a87d543e462
'2012-05-27T15:48:07-04:00'
describe
'12820424' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGCM' 'sip-files00253.tif'
47cd82f12159b812a4596691fbd3a663
4b0f6f293cdb35363eb399f84ee33574b9620a8f
describe
'156733' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGCN' 'sip-files00105.jpg'
2a6d9f74937c51856bb797eb96d7112c
e72969f4cb613db320ec771e9ef7a8a5883e04b9
describe
'1687565' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGCO' 'sip-files00128.jp2'
c5dc52622b0e6b692cd8c69e413d5c52
c3d2f5e4fc6e4d2c7f9e2ba22316a5f5a2aa5289
'2012-05-27T15:47:44-04:00'
describe
'14610932' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGCP' 'sip-files00020.tif'
f4cc37f47494377c1188146ed52c7114
6f0fdbf8c9e27d3343fccaf5ba724491e4b5f2bc
'2012-05-27T15:46:25-04:00'
describe
'83657' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGCQ' 'sip-files00143.QC.jpg'
c094064534dc2aa575729eea7d661e37
6b3b3f7c682a819990966cdbd4e805c18f6495d5
describe
'77169' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGCR' 'sip-files00234.QC.jpg'
f6a06cd5d14474c145bc4d890fd6b66f
ce2d7a598be7b2e5f42212a3ee22fbef042343f9
'2012-05-27T15:41:40-04:00'
describe
'33572' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGCS' 'sip-files00234thm.jpg'
090efdefbcbef7fa2f571aba5110e5c0
77c377f035476668a5f695e0ac90e2a1e3cc132b
'2012-05-27T15:38:15-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGCT' 'sip-files00242.jp2'
c061ab8d2d0557429db8e5c7f219da16
3ada70db526489530e2154dad14113d6d01e3b59
'2012-05-27T15:39:08-04:00'
describe
'44653' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGCU' 'sip-files00118.pro'
03789df881712ad36a9c9e45f3ae6600
e2e14752d2b8de075b17dc829348af820edf4e50
'2012-05-27T15:36:50-04:00'
describe
'1743129' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGCV' 'sip-files00068.jp2'
8136e9403cd7c24b97767bdd4958825f
5e7fc15ad0ff42adf6f7a5736f25269faef4cd6d
'2012-05-27T15:48:32-04:00'
describe
'23653' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGCW' 'sip-files00009.pro'
ce8b74ea7addd2e3562a0144aaaff466
8ef59f9e6c337d1ea8467a28c734565c266a5faa
'2012-05-27T15:44:57-04:00'
describe
'1687607' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGCX' 'sip-files00042.jp2'
5ca880af72ff2c89e43839c9f84f2183
552174ebb224f48081abdb95c2a2e581533bef00
'2012-05-27T15:45:54-04:00'
describe
'43922' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGCY' 'sip-files00280.pro'
f77456ff4b881276bc31eec980ea580d
f659b03ff08b12b8ae355a35226563ca186e0799
'2012-05-27T15:41:13-04:00'
describe
'13003372' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGCZ' 'sip-files00192.tif'
68eb7a0e28b583bed9f0a42a4a1d531e
a58bc201e3b3617c12d8e72180e9ce175fe37ab7
describe
'1633270' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGDA' 'sip-files00130.jp2'
84089b1a4be74f6e731b2792200c4f48
4d27b2f55e695a8d8de6640212f5dc9be06a4719
'2012-05-27T15:48:13-04:00'
describe
'175575' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGDB' 'sip-files00286.jpg'
6400299757a8af31f106a95d6283032f
43fccfff33f2c455d9f4de6d180aa343682f1f92
'2012-05-27T15:49:42-04:00'
describe
'64666' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGDC' 'sip-files00116.QC.jpg'
d5839fe2c849cba02857e351cd3b1e73
16bbcb0b2c627d281d4abe67140d17e1471f8345
'2012-05-27T15:50:14-04:00'
describe
'1687585' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGDD' 'sip-files00121.jp2'
110e17a29cdcade3f13c55063193c468
9e2f545f71a820b90778b6f2006780a1f9cf795a
describe
'43046' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGDE' 'sip-files00212thm.jpg'
e05544276f551023d1df83af79bdbe29
b3d04d2c32a880ab4b840927d416d9482dd003ea
describe
'1831026' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGDF' 'sip-files00051.jp2'
9fc2b8c0f84baec02a6a4615107dd61b
4e283ab31aa2af8c9908d5d561c650256121190d
'2012-05-27T15:46:01-04:00'
describe
'13031040' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGDG' 'sip-files00213.tif'
911c6c4d6fde9613101e9425e382c2c2
4ba8e6f61d4459653bf29767abde583f8aaea103
'2012-05-27T15:39:53-04:00'
describe
'41025' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGDH' 'sip-files00038thm.jpg'
c65e3ce297fba6a9b7d8bb2dd6315cae
930c7bdf1cf467ecaae86ebe0eea511d6258b373
'2012-05-27T15:44:58-04:00'
describe
'1108' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGDI' 'sip-files00185.txt'
857eaca7467fdf8cac466a7075c3cd13
e5b4ddef2f8715118f421d51bb928d0f483b71b0
'2012-05-27T15:42:23-04:00'
describe
'1646' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGDJ' 'sip-files00051.txt'
fdd77f998d1e6ce72a20da790f09e728
5921ff810e8b0e664a59e1aee7ddeabbea85df18
'2012-05-27T15:46:30-04:00'
describe
'13960612' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGDK' 'sip-files00028.tif'
85077399a557e435f3544bbf9fba0dd5
55d1a922d64704a673e4458e721c33bcd68dbe92
'2012-05-27T15:43:59-04:00'
describe
'1687611' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGDL' 'sip-files00064.jp2'
cbf912004c1d0db6592ab30327d60708
c55fa12f33c1ebc7babe0b2c512802826f5d2067
describe
'78595' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGDM' 'sip-files00167.QC.jpg'
b751b93ec97d296a52d3ffa7e4078a35
b5e6707e40262b511572fc601697fc2e72cd5289
'2012-05-27T15:48:08-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGDN' 'sip-files00189.jp2'
47ef1d57448261be2e4ba421a2b64d45
1ec40f273b58df4b945c508f96a74b168c9e9446
'2012-05-27T15:49:21-04:00'
describe
'239803' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGDO' 'sip-files00030.jpg'
7d452a2d24f081fd1bbeb34d0319f8bb
1fa459acda5fd014e7fa70974e8f12c5c63d1620
'2012-05-27T15:38:14-04:00'
describe
'1687596' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGDP' 'sip-files00272.jp2'
1b2ee9526ca2f4d31fb837448ee92957
fb47c2044ca0b20b3545e93f710dabd8aa4d8ed6
'2012-05-27T15:48:27-04:00'
describe
'61624' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGDQ' 'sip-files00189.QC.jpg'
f4b7f2cd0069aa837579285d38a75ad3
92c4f0aa997df731aed4c56ad6df66ea898c67d9
'2012-05-27T15:38:56-04:00'
describe
'1669' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGDR' 'sip-files00040.txt'
fce6906e6bb72ebd86a6b93eab34a65f
e5cb69b09a6cd4bb68aa681d56e3b5e84fe033fb
'2012-05-27T15:45:31-04:00'
describe
'99955' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGDS' 'sip-files00102.QC.jpg'
9b715ac417fa2e7dc88ac74de9fb18b1
46f552ef29de70b6347c81dc3b64ce51ea2ff55e
'2012-05-27T15:38:39-04:00'
describe
'1687602' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGDT' 'sip-files00143.jp2'
028d56fc6b60bb7486b33a713a8970c3
8623d2f9e48fb07f6a29a8e2710230765ee5a285
'2012-05-27T15:49:49-04:00'
describe
'241057' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGDU' 'sip-files00228.jpg'
f1231b02e93419e2b1edc9d3ebffc900
d27bc3f08abbfceb245918db10eddaea458bc1ca
describe
'33041' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGDV' 'sip-files00214thm.jpg'
1f3fba111312c843bb3cda7b4678cea8
f4aae945405540959395d37d081f599f17225c79
'2012-05-27T15:36:40-04:00'
describe
'13512548' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGDW' 'sip-files00056.tif'
c183160303cd79c34ada1e3eeaa21688
991bb5dd83a7ac812f250842a11f959b7548af3e
'2012-05-27T15:39:34-04:00'
describe
'43900' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGDX' 'sip-files00178.pro'
57399c81798ef7c4ff10abc74b20840d
64ef6812419049ced1155020b2f24841e1542357
describe
'12753148' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGDY' 'sip-files00233.tif'
470c5cd43954722ce6cce5483af36236
b9c9e68afe063b68549ba9e2d882083121cfab6c
'2012-05-27T15:46:53-04:00'
describe
'7918932' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGDZ' 'sip-files00002.tif'
e5f0001d3c0f09ba4ddd8da2d9ea498f
ac93374b31dd411c6c58232cffab21b4ad3198bd
'2012-05-27T15:40:37-04:00'
describe
'1568' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGEA' 'sip-files00149.txt'
9b69e3f31ce49179fe540ee94e523643
3d1f9bc1559b2cdb59f5f0f65df3b3b44927ba46
'2012-05-27T15:46:17-04:00'
describe
'13514760' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGEB' 'sip-files00260.tif'
8731509a64e977de8f3eb94bde4a7951
b6389521cfa1d5d7d1f462aa8a7fd6c224768666
'2012-05-27T15:41:21-04:00'
describe
'1682168' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGEC' 'sip-files00102.jp2'
8bce31950a7f41d58f47a523cbf44eab
8b109baddb60b668516efdc6f4c4f7056e6c749d
describe
'26449' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGED' 'sip-files00250.QC.jpg'
01d6a2d2385019a98a1fb6b8769b4c41
89a055cd304d8df03c07c5e25490b6d974828db8
'2012-05-27T15:38:28-04:00'
describe
'1626587' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGEE' 'sip-files00207.jp2'
4da669473cd7aa10d4f4f0c473201da4
457d0cc2eca944a24441b1f4de80c8d2911ea2e2
'2012-05-27T15:49:18-04:00'
describe
'89922' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGEF' 'sip-files00188.QC.jpg'
a2a9bf94b088ea2b7f62e6c991244ad2
22d35591a8a71093a743e4bceb92b2fb292306a8
'2012-05-27T15:37:21-04:00'
describe
'1214' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGEG' 'sip-files00146.txt'
8cab69c5235c83c838b8a0a2b0bd8ec6
386512a5a09d95db61220ebd2e49e2e6fa0e4741
'2012-05-27T15:38:33-04:00'
describe
'13513944' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGEH' 'sip-files00143.tif'
0eea72e5c84628e5a5280e8938bd4859
bfd8b816d2fc4e69e1ad1e81bdc266f12b3c7d44
'2012-05-27T15:47:27-04:00'
describe
'138130' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGEI' 'sip-files00055.jpg'
55fd5a2d1f13e0500aca561e671e5207
c36c416651054ed7b347b2e61d30f4be61fc2eda
'2012-05-27T15:41:05-04:00'
describe
'12791980' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGEJ' 'sip-files00008.tif'
d1011b613dd265f08a0bdc91ce9ea198
15644cbb82e1cbe38a580a049f71d9230c7842ea
'2012-05-27T15:46:41-04:00'
describe
'1627126' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGEK' 'sip-files00263.jp2'
5a03336c105f8b26ec390efc8f0fa852
c1a559340770aca2c61428a983cac53404f3fc68
'2012-05-27T15:41:03-04:00'
describe
'94517' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGEL' 'sip-files00021.jpg'
ad99cea845f1430436c2f49567477223
c739d8b3b800b4f159b5c323afc33d1a14a94996
describe
'238208' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGEM' 'sip-files00078.jpg'
7a4c18cb096114a9277ff9850c979799
2c94c060b137b0e03fe9714e6caf07a0e4a22776
'2012-05-27T15:38:42-04:00'
describe
'29571' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGEN' 'sip-files00064thm.jpg'
2bd6f2b515706d9130a5aaa704620daa
cda23dfd3dd5bf342a3583ef563636845d069cfb
'2012-05-27T15:45:33-04:00'
describe
'231411' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGEO' 'sip-files00199.jpg'
e7b04074edf19fb930f2cc4759ceabd3
82dbb2a3fd25e1deac8918a7372554bfaea3ac72
'2012-05-27T15:40:22-04:00'
describe
'1629085' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGEP' 'sip-files00226.jp2'
a57398419bbe2a08a99ce05b3064286f
deb39669aecc06cde3934f657dac790d7aef43be
'2012-05-27T15:40:33-04:00'
describe
'59079' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGEQ' 'sip-files00265.QC.jpg'
07f4ed7eb6e02910545c16923309020e
7441f6b3664dbad08a8a2af1d60099eb9fd64ff4
'2012-05-27T15:38:12-04:00'
describe
'13803676' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGER' 'sip-files00046.tif'
c627f7523e85261b22246421acd6a79c
5754e2fb5f9a03203d747056d2f01e3d7c0e70d0
'2012-05-27T15:41:31-04:00'
describe
'1224' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGES' 'sip-files00121.txt'
a8669cded318b35f98b6d7b5faf30c13
5ef8f9eed736b02057798f4094396ba5f311eafe
'2012-05-27T15:47:48-04:00'
describe
'42147' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGET' 'sip-files00284.pro'
c7d0837a8d101c3c7f94122a6cb92c8b
3f1a5a41dacc9736ea19a92fdd64e6f648298f24
'2012-05-27T15:39:02-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGEU' 'sip-files00133.jp2'
065ad6e6b8bd488f808256c1c7e4f6f2
282ca3e966a2c62d1bdffbd1d901dc7549bc9e0f
'2012-05-27T15:36:39-04:00'
describe
'258786' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGEV' 'sip-files00039.jpg'
0bdc5fa732f51d7a4d68e854ff6b1fc4
72a389db28728f56a6f139047d65d0e76b03ccbd
'2012-05-27T15:46:44-04:00'
describe
'1714586' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGEW' 'sip-files00246.jp2'
b029e9f4072ada1025ee0248e122d6a4
72f756cc0be20f1acc7d8390b3f60ff167657dc0
'2012-05-27T15:49:33-04:00'
describe
'13080364' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGEX' 'sip-files00138.tif'
44c8bf1f692980ae2df8ffe9c0a168ad
ef11e2c516c23c8c845aea3cc4f4a5ca3f810c3c
'2012-05-27T15:43:30-04:00'
describe
'214850' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGEY' 'sip-files00167.jpg'
c081ccc3a7b82fc443836aaa6eb3dc87
07950faa00ebfc067beb5491c00b8f3697b28ec0
'2012-05-27T15:50:39-04:00'
describe
'40106' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGEZ' 'sip-files00099thm.jpg'
9324477ff9a057031db61a02a65f98e6
25bc83bec06cfdc2d0d3bd8104048a105e01408b
'2012-05-27T15:45:39-04:00'
describe
'1576' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGFA' 'sip-files00170.txt'
a229fcba19bd66eda8e8aba872370f27
6b181f7022856e76834a1c8b38973fe6fe7e0e65
'2012-05-27T15:42:44-04:00'
describe
'225541' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGFB' 'sip-files00015.jpg'
5b1399b0df0478206f707ff59e5fbf59
5ce285f2472c804ba6ab11673b8ce67ac2acfdbf
describe
'94354' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGFC' 'sip-files00280.QC.jpg'
3344c9ba4cd720a52e991de729ee9ab0
3f95fe3860787febb04425e4355d48dc29931766
'2012-05-27T15:44:15-04:00'
describe
'1811802' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGFD' 'sip-files00054.jp2'
d331038391ffe347b5eecea835690207
e73fb170106ba3c94dfa2c2bb8c8171fea356018
'2012-05-27T15:43:45-04:00'
describe
'44814' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGFE' 'sip-files00099.pro'
14b39a051bbf52055493799baf478cb8
a136aa250da2119f0cbe55b613a26657856dc561
'2012-05-27T15:37:28-04:00'
describe
'40929' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGFF' 'sip-files00243.pro'
f2d2c899fb6e6e2863cd59a41c51b24c
b7d505a32957c3f5464ebf832f4ffe0a23108812
describe
'14045160' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGFG' 'sip-files00018.tif'
c3ba7f9016d87d620c7fa1e1c93136d1
74a3fe01d8e96224c8e03d9dd8c8578f4f24e22a
'2012-05-27T15:41:32-04:00'
describe
'1687548' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGFH' 'sip-files00095.jp2'
d74e3378961201937c0fa6fb93e0c982
cf3eb7f05edf26b82106700ba4eb5fbd8593c5de
describe
'61334' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGFI' 'sip-files00008.pro'
5084b24a4ca96ad90f29c62e4b2c3673
7ece83e85bdcbe1d8502945a0c7ebc9a5784449a
'2012-05-27T15:46:09-04:00'
describe
'1584' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGFJ' 'sip-files00108.txt'
77d0e74812c13438534bcef7946a168a
cd1d7cdefa9bee80d42043035fefffbea3809256
'2012-05-27T15:47:35-04:00'
describe
'42779' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGFK' 'sip-files00117.pro'
dd33deda94ce8f482d79bf7cea30eb42
4dca6a80c9e9d75969fb14e7707958285c062657
'2012-05-27T15:45:49-04:00'
describe
'80916' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGFL' 'sip-files00211.QC.jpg'
30e9089b7f386ac6972f812d156d295d
0f06a93c9a9858d96b6751aa55e2b17a97aee71e
'2012-05-27T15:46:33-04:00'
describe
'38604' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGFM' 'sip-files00171thm.jpg'
b34c426f21508476d5b69c08d4561fda
53c59b370a9d26f0659d3575edb08835dc8f2f72
describe
'24077' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGFN' 'sip-files00177thm.jpg'
5cac88b2c7570687daf77763821129b9
982db64fbad43301e62a815578e42adf1e363bd8
'2012-05-27T15:44:33-04:00'
describe
'60383' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGFO' 'sip-files00056.QC.jpg'
80baa31327ff347df73c320648a4fd5a
1d60e499b9c6576d0a0612bb2a0dd55c8d2aaedf
'2012-05-27T15:40:28-04:00'
describe
'95094' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGFP' 'sip-files00244.QC.jpg'
8105e14b14b500422893e19b8e9f0c4e
b93b4acbbd798c9eb0f2e366b04a13c16bfd0d88
'2012-05-27T15:47:28-04:00'
describe
'1603' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGFQ' 'sip-files00270.txt'
cf729d678c0deb3281db019e6b25086b
7a498b3de439342251a55ab82f91930b12ab05d6
'2012-05-27T15:50:06-04:00'
describe
'29417' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGFR' 'sip-files00176thm.jpg'
6ea9b009bad1f9b4dcb8fb1f027bfb23
de0cbde4a756f40b3105af3092ee42be3c776f04
'2012-05-27T15:47:01-04:00'
describe
'41058' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGFS' 'sip-files00060thm.jpg'
e9466685b47fb3b3bad6fd714a72a652
2a6de9158af6498e80968f1d4510d449769f449e
'2012-05-27T15:47:19-04:00'
describe
'7799344' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGFT' 'sip-files00291.tif'
9d30c527924bef9458b8b0f97e0614b5
9cf93d274e60d5c8ac8116e0a714553621e959a3
'2012-05-27T15:38:23-04:00'
describe
'79058' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGFU' 'sip-files00095.QC.jpg'
eb4e5507b10525fcb2c615f4e30a09d5
b6f60f04b9c9a5570d585106d85a0a0edb105a43
'2012-05-27T15:42:36-04:00'
describe
'43249' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGFV' 'sip-files00204.pro'
d2273793e54c09782af0989b5ce607fc
04a85a9e4a563d479ce3598a90e7caa8a3b5bcf9
'2012-05-27T15:50:01-04:00'
describe
'43035' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGFW' 'sip-files00240.pro'
5b8d532144288248e74f8b7c39faad7b
a1664296d19987b3708efd02b694dbe661f69c9f
describe
'34138' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGFX' 'sip-files00061thm.jpg'
b1f55f302d9177268476c3e6ef8e3d11
9e22d11dfb41b30913ae3be4788a537053c6bf15
'2012-05-27T15:50:33-04:00'
describe
'21257' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGFY' 'sip-files00153.pro'
41f08aa7b7f745b5787c2520e5c1d03e
761244949bf26b49c644660d2b50ef671f2f529e
'2012-05-27T15:46:38-04:00'
describe
'97170' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGFZ' 'sip-files00147.QC.jpg'
3356d6e04ddbb90e8d2c438f684fa176
f85c9a5b2f224ac4cf330246b5bc4ce992e6fce2
describe
'1687606' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGGA' 'sip-files00010.jp2'
fe0da852220328548e4586b2a4de28f0
b666abab1e97a2871e8d7c29f0208b3cf262e66a
'2012-05-27T15:40:51-04:00'
describe
'785' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGGB' 'sip-files00055.txt'
b1be8c2fe755bfe88cb5f2ca361f4648
bc26dd5b6a2a864c697ddb6c01d679434b0e41bc
describe
'41978' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGGC' 'sip-files00264thm.jpg'
caf6e3ecc2e8c1f5054f6fb8aefaf8fc
d35c3c7444eb0ddd81fec0a1813a73e4ae4933fd
describe
'243085' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGGD' 'sip-files00092.jpg'
8673e299be00b5306fdc8b686c760942
3604f331d6acd08ac280b2f76c3562e25cb5c12d
'2012-05-27T15:39:44-04:00'
describe
'43847' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGGE' 'sip-files00215.pro'
eeaa6dde16dfaebb173aa32b784b7cc6
4c54cee9c631373efca0734549c4bf6fdf30c3ad
'2012-05-27T15:47:55-04:00'
describe
'8472' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGGF' 'sip-files00258.pro'
d6ea3a0eab5ea083de6ce142bb1c2868
f56108f57d0a2b906c1546040e1c1f4cc50411d8
'2012-05-27T15:39:32-04:00'
describe
'85273' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGGG' 'sip-files00260.QC.jpg'
372f4b17b41566197d5c558c91e1c9b1
e1137305b5aed88f3ed3fee8a0d963445a6fa15e
'2012-05-27T15:40:19-04:00'
describe
'550' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGGH' 'sip-files00217.txt'
e0c827cea63706477dc94497da2d8724
e2787e4d651eee252afd4ff3291126155fb639fe
'2012-05-27T15:36:52-04:00'
describe
'39785' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGGI' 'sip-files00278.pro'
a8907ff65c64fd008e18fdba06c93645
780c7ddb7f5d1b06397fa8efafec4b6db9b91743
describe
'1451420' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGGJ' 'sip-files00225.jp2'
d48e9f5998094bf65266a976b060903d
1df8ea72800027313209472a81e0f333c4cca83c
'2012-05-27T15:42:45-04:00'
describe
'1547' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGGK' 'sip-files00093.txt'
ec858c2cf0e167066377dd36be5dac2a
dec86438b8f5b7ffe6ff9b73d099378d5149bf9d
'2012-05-27T15:47:04-04:00'
describe
'38195' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGGL' 'sip-files00284thm.jpg'
107850b5ac9b48808562f63bead5d674
9ddd1d1ea2b5500b785b53c8cc883dcb25b3c2bc
'2012-05-27T15:49:20-04:00'
describe
'253372' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGGM' 'sip-files00043.jpg'
c3efb14199e5a61935de40f46d08ded3
bee1fab0889ca4b0851359e2c5788a41c7f5fc99
'2012-05-27T15:44:55-04:00'
describe
'30601' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGGN' 'sip-files00224thm.jpg'
619a6024f0efb1802d49333e5e6e40a3
a4a8a6c51cba9ba47ff8c89c2654e8e0b757eeff
'2012-05-27T15:44:11-04:00'
describe
'95061' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGGO' 'sip-files00036.jpg'
a851acffd1c48985e52519c116b3660d
9833ad16aaeee8a9c71763d0a466442722d59a4f
describe
'30319' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGGP' 'sip-files00050thm.jpg'
278faed367b29992d8d0f11e9918a243
92cfac466d2576684c5ce8395a053f3548bec702
describe
'228253' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGGQ' 'sip-files00288.jpg'
0979333ee59c6e17ba4b0a26fb16d105
b2ada65463a0d128c5a04d4721c369cef5fee685
'2012-05-27T15:41:36-04:00'
describe
'1687597' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGGR' 'sip-files00035.jp2'
6ef0a7f37f03545d7f557929d3cb6873
0ef702c958b966c5ed952d9782ec30386f705a03
'2012-05-27T15:48:11-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGGS' 'sip-files00280.txt'
6ed88bfa7ea281feb0319b34a4b51bfb
362c29b63f65c3ec7bb20fbc29fd04bc55aab2e7
'2012-05-27T15:41:04-04:00'
describe
'1642601' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGGT' 'sip-files00215.jp2'
b5f89812560366d1aeed534e64a559da
c06b6ff7d47e05f7ea9ce4d95e6114a9cac3417d
'2012-05-27T15:48:06-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGGU' 'sip-files00254.jp2'
17ae56b9cdb6361925446bc37a01c11f
57af49f6436fa7bae5441ef1398a4ce9715c6a05
'2012-05-27T15:38:10-04:00'
describe
'38643' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGGV' 'sip-files00027.pro'
ebc01a737327d862d39781df96e59534
186a7e216b61665ea3722dc5444fcd62add2189d
'2012-05-27T15:47:43-04:00'
describe
'13509784' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGGW' 'sip-files00080.tif'
fc10d84122c028c2aac1a2766f8d94a9
4308589b40d1bdbebddf0db5e83913522dd1f788
'2012-05-27T15:43:47-04:00'
describe
'47824' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGGX' 'sip-files00202.QC.jpg'
381aba0ad8663abd8e50cb701745951b
10e61f0eb1c39bb516c9355a5333a4d65872f9d6
describe
'31098' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGGY' 'sip-files00189.pro'
edc7616d7ff33a833e4d9e976bd6c5ae
fd75af6aa7a67f4596f1a80647291e3d60724665
'2012-05-27T15:44:27-04:00'
describe
'228894' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGGZ' 'sip-files00211.jpg'
0cb2664c1565e5d4a39d86ce584d9b14
aec7e0874a8dc2d633b607a8a472383573da41fa
describe
'30271' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGHA' 'sip-files00168.QC.jpg'
cd0544c2e918c98225046ffd86c92929
83c0bd507e8be7dfe14951ec75f884652bdce520
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGHB' 'sip-files00149.jp2'
a4c2ba8717af06f06eb74ed98c984b90
bd11137a135cba90cec69207d702409fc6e5cc8e
'2012-05-27T15:37:31-04:00'
describe
'242474' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGHC' 'sip-files00231.jpg'
038ef090406bcabdef93618f54b78813
97a5a47931038af0e6892f5bc11b285ed8543d19
'2012-05-27T15:37:58-04:00'
describe
'41405' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGHD' 'sip-files00287.pro'
8a65f76ea870725b2f43d639f7578af9
968a5f34e5764d632b9000dfa219560ff171887f
'2012-05-27T15:39:52-04:00'
describe
'13513960' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGHE' 'sip-files00155.tif'
741ca85f95012c9186e00114bae02f85
8d241cee9b4aa8a0a1adb0351bb0dc24993f6631
'2012-05-27T15:45:37-04:00'
describe
'1588' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGHF' 'sip-files00104.txt'
7daae0cd3197b5f09924961b27bd586f
a9268f43c2c4574392be78d8f3082057430edc81
'2012-05-27T15:43:19-04:00'
describe
'1722857' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGHG' 'sip-files00046.jp2'
fc04c31de946ed4037e7ee3322e5b1c5
f2d90ce83a2f1cfc9d3b03109aa34fddf4285e14
'2012-05-27T15:47:47-04:00'
describe
'42098' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGHH' 'sip-files00135.pro'
896779c253b446ec04f27d06a0ca0f61
554a97617673817b37554a20d4325fd3c09397b8
'2012-05-27T15:42:38-04:00'
describe
'241968' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGHI' 'sip-files00281.jpg'
efdf19af1f9929b5076d8b085b5a95c9
1e69a16d43c793db8372c1450222d2c3a6d94791
'2012-05-27T15:50:35-04:00'
describe
'194942' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGHJ' 'sip-files00266.jpg'
af75285e08eece5bf260f13e61eb9ebf
e2dc6083451403ca702bee9873a58af321a9f305
describe
'37984' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGHK' 'sip-files00278thm.jpg'
77f2c6c080c25ea9dd98189f6ed3b82f
bdd29f6b0d01f13ab4e09f8d2e8c88c89071b984
'2012-05-27T15:36:54-04:00'
describe
'1612596' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGHL' 'sip-files00049.jp2'
9806dd5dbe853ac574d605ad2689965e
5e8c788dfe10c95a4ed1a22f9f5b2b7462a3552b
describe
'44046' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGHM' 'sip-files00156.pro'
d24afa9d069ec030203bb3774f11e913
1189e281234c03e0314ab0c4f2c153dd32f21a2b
'2012-05-27T15:44:39-04:00'
describe
'13589704' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGHN' 'sip-files00200.tif'
025d4b58769be7d316dcf982c4705989
3d97e985c3c86c467d0dbd9ee01054c27fe31349
'2012-05-27T15:43:48-04:00'
describe
'14491548' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGHO' 'sip-files00038.tif'
32b41445def25a9f279097b8df9298c0
cb88215808186d0a163881a65231493871d457a6
'2012-05-27T15:42:35-04:00'
describe
'234262' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGHP' 'sip-files00082.jpg'
d3248ae0e8b7127eda0c690cc4e8ab2a
0137597db2c8219696e7b8a666a20b327f83e492
describe
'250128' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGHQ' 'sip-files00025.jpg'
6685baf7f60b6b3a0a90cf5fd3425eba
288f04a19d0cdb982d7bcf0d3efedea8b91f5505
'2012-05-27T15:47:20-04:00'
describe
'1702' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGHR' 'sip-files00242.txt'
0485f88b869f79b3d3eba6da27905ce4
a3d9097d52f6cb411a251bcbaf8acde0f335cba4
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGHS' 'sip-files00284.txt'
3880c60a7944bd7bacd5974914adebf1
52d4fbb9b60b9c809b928ff26cd50f933afaff84
describe
'234091' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGHT' 'sip-files00026.jpg'
a91379807c95eab9e2c5d6f4681754e4
766051a31a5e340ea28ae206860ca76f742b0524
describe
'1687550' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGHU' 'sip-files00078.jp2'
95c19d565e0d1468d375bfa01ad9757d
4bf99ac13bc8e855c3461be888a2a3b3db94053e
'2012-05-27T15:38:51-04:00'
describe
'43521' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGHV' 'sip-files00015.pro'
8c39f7191089521db1e84c10f465b9db
6e0577c391b7d3972e39a9d931ea38e935beda75
describe
'33150' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGHW' 'sip-files00037thm.jpg'
9b1d306167a7ff088c914a6a3cbcaa2a
af30fbdc0d0bbb7ebdfced04ea4a65d6bc1eb728
describe
'89384' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGHX' 'sip-files00282.QC.jpg'
9603386a2609b3460cbc3b45f9030f01
eed3a8a8418a7af2d6a6feff8d218883f0aad1d6
'2012-05-27T15:40:17-04:00'
describe
'89807' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGHY' 'sip-files00206.QC.jpg'
778d4741d61f3146b2fd3cf1fe268eed
60bffe85a32c63ab271ccb6613c76ee31336972e
'2012-05-27T15:37:37-04:00'
describe
'50204' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGHZ' 'sip-files00055.QC.jpg'
14c100c6aedb8e1e3311595c531a7482
3eefca7d9bd52bc0e3c419e3a25524689746051e
'2012-05-27T15:45:24-04:00'
describe
'42539' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGIA' 'sip-files00160.pro'
4c67ba3496c82dd88f29755a75f884e8
5fd791bd6e03c5fffd02939e44f46805c84c0adf
'2012-05-27T15:38:09-04:00'
describe
'13644872' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGIB' 'sip-files00198.tif'
6b5a9e527f9123e2c4ac4cd19915fcf4
b727d709d8bdd2eebd6647e2065b37d376fb4047
'2012-05-27T15:48:50-04:00'
describe
'1677595' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGIC' 'sip-files00232.jp2'
c6c61b3ecde60471dac31f2aae595be5
f2b21cfca2d56040cb8589909388104d539eab58
'2012-05-27T15:46:24-04:00'
describe
'1695777' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGID' 'sip-files00072.jp2'
b6cccc8e549eff6bd77a33714ad018ff
69dd0c4edaf6c23b5b6663d14389d05058b6990d
describe
'1687595' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGIE' 'sip-files00141.jp2'
e6f003e9b807e790944daeccc845894f
212a3a85ec2e4422c2a6115f72f8c647effb7d51
describe
'1188' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGIF' 'sip-files00259.txt'
ad0ee1110c8395377b602beb641edb2f
fee4c75fda6e454e39a61dbbccd436cc5205b6a7
'2012-05-27T15:47:25-04:00'
describe
'32037' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGIG' 'sip-files00121.pro'
383989bee647a0b6e1c0d2c325fc6493
36225f16863ec0c4f3e901679ee9cf9ac4052565
describe
'217246' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGIH' 'sip-files00007.jpg'
dadd271e56bad844ad1abbbba823b35a
552c83f3abc2d8d9fe38f4303f251fb5a1713105
'2012-05-27T15:42:48-04:00'
describe
'85097' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGII' 'sip-files00016.QC.jpg'
f5a0517ebc2227a86721de2109854826
3d1826fd44d354efeda910f4be96bb01e6d18abd
'2012-05-27T15:41:08-04:00'
describe
'93721' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGIJ' 'sip-files00062.QC.jpg'
ca94f8fff494db1243f478aaeaab9aea
d39a853c9acd9a3ff6c1c78ba702536d87a1d076
'2012-05-27T15:50:00-04:00'
describe
'222052' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGIK' 'sip-files00175.jpg'
50a49d793ab31dbac0faf1e77f82e998
4b5a2e776e3a217ab4c495e826058d5e3c73d223
'2012-05-27T15:47:33-04:00'
describe
'30222' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGIL' 'sip-files00078thm.jpg'
01c00b81bc21a0aef9348d76a602daba
eb4e5c473df6b8741d3d80506bb7202da10c74df
'2012-05-27T15:44:08-04:00'
describe
'20529' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGIM' 'sip-files00083.pro'
0832f28f63994b7916fd8e7f676b080b
19dffa3eb95d6483408d190b45819bafc9e5d15e
'2012-05-27T15:44:47-04:00'
describe
'32284' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGIN' 'sip-files00022thm.jpg'
250f4773f1ed84103be9b39f71b7f79d
01730eac87331995a8d2bf31181d9cdc061d0a18
'2012-05-27T15:41:33-04:00'
describe
'30736' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGIO' 'sip-files00214.pro'
596163dc1b5200fce4ab2efb10669a03
d37c280903a9eaff1f3d1b447ec9f192a7e72c6a
'2012-05-27T15:50:02-04:00'
describe
'1565' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGIP' 'sip-files00062.txt'
e44ff72214ed8487ef2870392e33c7c1
d645d70b2a982b70f1560e3530b597916ad7819b
describe
'13618760' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGIQ' 'sip-files00031.tif'
af61729f2593b3349c85a751b1924f16
0c4092fb1a29a2bbe8469d2dffcef41d1b6b7056
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGIR' 'sip-files00075.jp2'
dc9ab1e4ad4eb8fb0bb150f9e0022a86
c59f26886d3d9f2501cd11575c4e4140f96f0d54
describe
'40717' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGIS' 'sip-files00136.pro'
ba1ce175ab0a53a9f24250f8ab733b6f
4dd6c3830f3de3f900a9a068afa3d682d33921da
describe
'103587' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGIT' 'sip-files00220.QC.jpg'
ec923b4624add1bd7f5a8be02d1ed879
9f36651aa4c0035815fb1f029860648663c08c49
'2012-05-27T15:38:21-04:00'
describe
'1668' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGIU' 'sip-files00011.txt'
359817a7b348fd704dddf7c01e0c5e6e
ce3cc151d520916672cb3de45c61fe478d21baf9
'2012-05-27T15:42:30-04:00'
describe
'226916' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGIV' 'sip-files00141.jpg'
a7c91ac8d76e3dcc3d537f913d849fd9
596df51c29e973c5088153a1e2fb85a7f38e21a0
'2012-05-27T15:37:00-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGIW' 'sip-files00058.jp2'
11620cb70c9422c6222a71c7d7cdb8f0
c08532413e2de8ba9f21ccdbc79c8a961e59fcc0
describe
'66025' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGIX' 'sip-files00176.QC.jpg'
900496ec1b40178952277b42e4522b61
05e13b1e3ba5b17ad6bd8c0cd0114c62f0345c2b
'2012-05-27T15:49:30-04:00'
describe
'96767' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGIY' 'sip-files00081.QC.jpg'
b61a3eb3379143fe044f0fbcdc3e9124
e3d85fbba4003bdb7dbe29fbfabe3324f69cb6c7
'2012-05-27T15:42:19-04:00'
describe
'41228' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGIZ' 'sip-files00053.pro'
c22dee807d3e8e8537a4b9b6c4b5e9c3
850d7ad9699191f5ff1fd7cc17636843703f2af6
describe
'1625401' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGJA' 'sip-files00100.jp2'
871c275c07144aa360928eff45004e07
02073c087a5802234eaf3da585dce0a99e305027
'2012-05-27T15:38:17-04:00'
describe
'23568' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGJB' 'sip-files00189thm.jpg'
bea5e2c74f631824a9be9fd382956b76
5bc459e398dd7d69ac6b2ca64a5cabe3d0b946cc
'2012-05-27T15:47:58-04:00'
describe
'81355' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGJC' 'sip-files00243.QC.jpg'
634a8b17e61756aca181a46f4680b5e8
602b679e2bd2249c62251037eaea9fdcd5fed4db
'2012-05-27T15:37:43-04:00'
describe
'1747362' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGJD' 'sip-files00282.jp2'
4702fed3c706a9de7a7c9e352a55aeb8
bff09167c66bdb6da1d80142496d4d9706e60461
describe
'236559' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGJE' 'sip-files00268.jpg'
018cd8f4c385dfc013c4f466f930ea34
c1075a1f96e535a19ccb62e61f0a768e65128c15
'2012-05-27T15:37:49-04:00'
describe
'13514328' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGJF' 'sip-files00067.tif'
591c1429c82a9591c64cba769272402d
09c06c0663b1431c71c9cbdec820395b6438ad4b
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGJG' 'sip-files00249.jp2'
a854c81501e8eb85c0c76f2db9978ca5
32bafae8562eca2648507694805ae25624acb1af
'2012-05-27T15:46:27-04:00'
describe
'184880' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGJH' 'sip-files00084.jpg'
e13682520aa7e828325dbbb75993ca43
5940a7ee19602b1c0a4685ec6b298c5ef2aec68c
'2012-05-27T15:46:37-04:00'
describe
'1704173' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGJI' 'sip-files00063.jp2'
49681023c4392c66d3cf3b3ec8a37513
5fcc5f1259655f1f0e54581126dde0d00fa1cfd3
'2012-05-27T15:39:55-04:00'
describe
'29909' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGJJ' 'sip-files00237thm.jpg'
6ff161eb853a72d0b37d481ad0ebcb94
b49c570eceb4388090d48ef344b5534c605c79ff
describe
'33377' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGJK' 'sip-files00203thm.jpg'
2141184f48dd36105f076a3e243cc32f
29a649fa18bc4f4acb3e4c11c54c9b459e4958e5
'2012-05-27T15:42:51-04:00'
describe
'13237' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGJL' 'sip-files00272thm.jpg'
6559374c0118e868d74ce93ad49ce254
5b65fdd51db6cc9c87803a116b818553ca2236a6
describe
'1667' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGJM' 'sip-files00263.txt'
63c80b32b7333c92b1fa2c21fa8d2606
c2a5cc6218a1f1f7e94e2a295db8bb487db730c5
'2012-05-27T15:38:01-04:00'
describe
'24164' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGJN' 'sip-files00042thm.jpg'
a671489f7b26352e66aac71bf578cbb5
1bc9ce308ddd1dd02abb57478f4ce486454eeb64
describe
'12932192' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGJO' 'sip-files00023.tif'
deaab54f921c535037fbe79e7179a27d
8eb79fef75b0aea63cec7a0a503d2b287a865a65
'2012-05-27T15:50:18-04:00'
describe
'40642' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGJP' 'sip-files00117thm.jpg'
b589fa9aeabb4bc07bfe00b0ad89fb5b
6dd116b1ca6ecba250d01fb2f3ac3174f4d42eef
'2012-05-27T15:40:46-04:00'
describe
'75200' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGJQ' 'sip-files00292.QC.jpg'
9a360457fce2f01fff4b692dd86ea949
55448c538a212dfedb31253e13cf4611f52b7386
'2012-05-27T15:46:58-04:00'
describe
'40408' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGJR' 'sip-files00062thm.jpg'
e6dbd3db964d4edd87b05fd56b96002a
899d90dbf98018df6956413799654298b9bcf021
describe
'223383' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGJS' 'sip-files00013.jpg'
5c4d3dc2f82a85c5b9b688a3c899ddb1
62e4b3443e0be0a2e1a9b236e10fcfcfb5e91d4d
'2012-05-27T15:37:04-04:00'
describe
'1637' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGJT' 'sip-files00145.txt'
ab40154a470f23d9c5439524e1e33b2e
42c87f57b52be945b67d1241f99dee1f3e909273
describe
'1647058' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGJU' 'sip-files00203.jp2'
5810e05a5f8c56bcbc4a549b6d38e46e
6656c3f26a7b010fc1d13f30c390f23a6d15ad6a
'2012-05-27T15:49:51-04:00'
describe
'87558' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGJV' 'sip-files00174.QC.jpg'
cb116cadba1de69b5dd9c6d0eff184d4
13d257e8482ede4c0f4de85d133f4586235a1b89
describe
'42191' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGJW' 'sip-files00221.pro'
a7c13243fc443aa81705bdcdeed67dcd
e71e1d18e0d054731b323e9bf47844ffe618f5ec
describe
'1232' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGJX' 'sip-files00098.txt'
31f8a5948421023246df7f5c8488f9a6
46a46c2d7bae17efcc5516c32400d059b82c09c7
'2012-05-27T15:42:00-04:00'
describe
'1585' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGJY' 'sip-files00024.txt'
2befcb54fedfae26d0774232cd635e43
288396400f0919bbe0a2483db4a79fcdcd8e5e1d
describe
'13402184' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGJZ' 'sip-files00061.tif'
8a9095fd3b5e057e62b72745121d809d
213c234aaeb7e367dd1c5deecbabb3e69637471d
'2012-05-27T15:38:07-04:00'
describe
'1687528' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGKA' 'sip-files00166.jp2'
7cdf8ce14826b8ee343b438924d8a561
6512c4271c14eb1fd229cc1e518f0b615bc0d49c
describe
'13656880' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGKB' 'sip-files00063.tif'
22f8814ff09a3cd27327e454c9b1dc73
4b2b1d55debba59bb57b7a4ff8e692fc4b68b958
'2012-05-27T15:40:15-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGKC' 'sip-files00187.txt'
f0ce6aba4b2439249c6cd0e14c0c849a
631a767ef3ed7db2eea1f75b15f93f07970c9baa
'2012-05-27T15:47:21-04:00'
describe
'14634532' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGKD' 'sip-files00014.tif'
7c7ddebbc6952913b16d96953624c2e0
97946c4927927b1c7d51ea52227e5b181794e010
'2012-05-27T15:45:10-04:00'
describe
'20518' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGKE' 'sip-files00036thm.jpg'
84c5457662247f9bfa2cb9955e85376f
d9a7cfaa94585ee4c274951f62d9d979ab9db8c3
describe
'12572596' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGKF' 'sip-files00221.tif'
ce406d6f87e73cebd2261fea06bf7ebc
28a487fc10e1364a1153b511d9ab6b62c541a2b6
'2012-05-27T15:43:13-04:00'
describe
'44206' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGKG' 'sip-files00172.pro'
53a2ea4193875c543d759bf2281fb82c
69daee36fa420c5b0fb84ca0be5e0079b94d63a0
'2012-05-27T15:47:10-04:00'
describe
'1525889' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGKH' 'sip-files00101.jp2'
7fc85f8c78cec0d291201424a9aab83d
b3bfba83f6945ce812abd2f5104ce9dfd12e182c
'2012-05-27T15:45:29-04:00'
describe
'1742096' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGKI' 'sip-files00028.jp2'
ce64c317a0ab1da045cc7d8924dd1c17
fae7ffedc7aa5168cdc6fad8747959a44dffed8b
'2012-05-27T15:44:12-04:00'
describe
'76602' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGKJ' 'sip-files00093.QC.jpg'
b5b87b1e790c3844439d9d0e00122b94
4b3693fbec56c7ddb38fa12606e00098d2ac792e
'2012-05-27T15:44:59-04:00'
describe
'1583756' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGKK' 'sip-files00261.jp2'
ea16522cec9f680f2309a66d62d70af0
fb7e551cff6f26c0dc7a2b9e9b9a49f7b18ec9b0
'2012-05-27T15:48:56-04:00'
describe
'85102' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGKL' 'sip-files00223.QC.jpg'
c7ad2cef5dbd8354b1289983847a16b6
d145ff6c9606f08d02a81bdf59e79b6cc3983cc1
'2012-05-27T15:38:16-04:00'
describe
'39201' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGKM' 'sip-files00293.QC.jpg'
4a43ae25bd4716275440b783c37b30ba
89afd0667e5a011f07710cd2621f034ce89b12e3
'2012-05-27T15:40:48-04:00'
describe
'13932888' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGKN' 'sip-files00099.tif'
1875dc53855f8df554c5f1208138a0df
8d693a1ec2a1d9af87981c633310b7a0731f0c03
'2012-05-27T15:43:53-04:00'
describe
'1601851' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGKO' 'sip-files00270.jp2'
7c0fa25250a4c9e7c1acb1e1645b3610
0f3a1bb7447501331d79579fb10ba09b39684bad
'2012-05-27T15:47:24-04:00'
describe
'228504' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGKP' 'sip-files00073.jpg'
e18143f11123674bb7dd509761920fef
217b44d7762bf2a2868ac89097ac8e7eaf3f7504
describe
'1660' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGKQ' 'sip-files00085.txt'
7233f8906c542bdbf96725c896576dc4
c76383b3f74f46616065e1a1c95c02267d4d1355
'2012-05-27T15:50:22-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGKR' 'sip-files00129.jp2'
15f7ef7c2586814a3cb799bcb71011e4
be175c2540d4124d5dd07360824bb2c3919ddfb8
describe
'31314' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGKS' 'sip-files00222thm.jpg'
283bab08cc536668a6fbb157a56645b6
561f97f6834bbc9b9caca54a603c4d9f43bfebb7
'2012-05-27T15:43:05-04:00'
describe
'43160' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGKT' 'sip-files00071.pro'
ba0d6ae0f1429c60d3d967794bee96f6
3adae6e55f4c748c156a3d0f7fce41be5647340a
describe
'1687457' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGKU' 'sip-files00169.jp2'
89a5f8d793dd62f662807236409ec976
4e4cc1337369eee4dcb585ed2a869e4b2c37a026
'2012-05-27T15:47:14-04:00'
describe
'41429' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGKV' 'sip-files00062.pro'
cc9ce5785c4d548fdc05264960e71780
1ea6526cb23824049a3302b6c4a8f61f6a4e49c4
'2012-05-27T15:46:29-04:00'
describe
'47753' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGKW' 'sip-files00030.pro'
c27dbd69c58c2c46d62a9d33efa37970
2f6a3ca9b3141354bd7e9ac660a5be0f4812198d
'2012-05-27T15:41:53-04:00'
describe
'1249' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGKX' 'sip-files00169.txt'
df83eb2aafa45c207d00049517412845
94f64ec30b4c1e5d89501f11ca3adf59a26ce84b
'2012-05-27T15:45:35-04:00'
describe
'13514184' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGKY' 'sip-files00095.tif'
a002c0d19048145c9af3a39aca1b9f75
8f1cd256b2c695a114469760fb3c76275d49baf0
'2012-05-27T15:47:31-04:00'
describe
'236835' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGKZ' 'sip-files00255.jpg'
ca8ee727c9281148dfc9ddc036f5c002
4381128e17ae156946175c2e007c0276e6064c8a
'2012-05-27T15:48:35-04:00'
describe
'10907' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGLA' 'sip-files00006.jpg'
d396f4ff8201399ce24a10770aa87934
e677fcd9e86bf37061cdf60597be49549c682db5
'2012-05-27T15:48:51-04:00'
describe
'215267' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGLB' 'sip-files00135.jpg'
c0a191586aa344bddd5afa3af521a6a4
5286dca9c5412c5a14641e4291c925cb6174ef26
'2012-05-27T15:47:03-04:00'
describe
'31548' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGLC' 'sip-files00286thm.jpg'
12fb72ca65fed851b90ebf6137f728e2
ba01c5414e5674706d7a306f8fc9e77384f831be
'2012-05-27T15:44:25-04:00'
describe
'29442' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGLD' 'sip-files00013thm.jpg'
beed2bc495bef4b4f2e9b706f64e814e
1e0dba3fedee354cf78816c74ab8d17935cb93ba
'2012-05-27T15:43:29-04:00'
describe
'247412' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGLE' 'sip-files00186.jpg'
99c3777e30247185dc15849df39bcac1
6184ab86501b33da3737ee357b83f7c739ca83a5
'2012-05-27T15:36:47-04:00'
describe
'12325876' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGLF' 'sip-files00122.tif'
a64bce7475a064e7b00959f12bf76fe2
a5f743445c5f03f0def65b86c7bcfb09a3f1db3a
describe
'92786' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGLG' 'sip-files00088.QC.jpg'
7c7d75d45dc255bd42736972934dfed8
bb952d7bb61f4d6aa67168831c60294a76e38e5b
'2012-05-27T15:50:13-04:00'
describe
'13677636' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGLH' 'sip-files00040.tif'
b5eb0d218e62acd940f4328c256ea2f2
de3a439eed932e77161cef0642c78d5fd57e52e9
'2012-05-27T15:39:42-04:00'
describe
'166' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGLI' 'sip-files00002.txt'
d233000a7ae575c66cbd99ba8959caf8
84b6d91b81567552c82a1cd7a968a33df8ee0cbd
'2012-05-27T15:45:30-04:00'
describe
'9873' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGLJ' 'sip-files00269.pro'
09f984e6eaa5bc933c2fc244d6792ae7
339209cb0e3ad386f5b9837e85d1695df8730167
'2012-05-27T15:42:01-04:00'
describe
'219683' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGLK' 'sip-files00133.jpg'
33d569299edcd5e9c0b24d7ab97397ed
ba5f06d989cb900871ed864897fa5e2ec40c686a
'2012-05-27T15:42:03-04:00'
describe
'1756175' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGLL' 'sip-files00032.jp2'
e9afc8a366a2e940e95f4e40794865fd
78dfdd54e02250815a1bfbbe9ba7e196034c05db
describe
'23408' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGLM' 'sip-files00195thm.jpg'
438f8669a08a0d03963cb41784104a49
edf5b2324a1bbef24865fe80ee714bf78d20df2a
'2012-05-27T15:43:43-04:00'
describe
'12813024' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGLN' 'sip-files00115.tif'
c535de1dd4786e14628900ba07c34c4e
953701235aeb22384b5a879e349bf1a13f14acc5
'2012-05-27T15:37:23-04:00'
describe
'43364' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGLO' 'sip-files00031.pro'
e078feaa8e03fac0d26b21fae98481f4
740a9997734937241fd26ba196e018a682fa8699
'2012-05-27T15:42:24-04:00'
describe
'1624602' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGLP' 'sip-files00024.jp2'
06c75a909b0741a5e27e0cc16cd50770
dbd3c0a17df7ff9c8b434b8917ca9eabccc8fcef
'2012-05-27T15:39:51-04:00'
describe
'2493800' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGLQ' 'sip-files00293.tif'
8529e9e540f5fdda298270d62eecd76d
fd35c3d68ec15533733b4620e1a2130928739425
'2012-05-27T15:43:00-04:00'
describe
'12988112' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGLR' 'sip-files00258.tif'
ab873a8a9f05b6cde4647cca98f00f88
9919a0b2810be66db4281311335e9e8a60aaa903
'2012-05-27T15:38:46-04:00'
describe
'1649527' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGLS' 'sip-files00220.jp2'
cf0b3fbb5d08974ea0860665e0d0712e
6817ea6ea1143673948b2aa9ca3fc6725dd0d65a
describe
'1559' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGLT' 'sip-files00088.txt'
4c728c3a6d9ff42def0865d330c908ba
5b094fa7ff33ab104e0af52c9f0e9d18833b5f2d
describe
'42346' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGLU' 'sip-files00270.pro'
bc41e57606956609f601d4e93f3b2ffb
6ea306df0bc832c8573b32fde3563cf3b0aa96ee
describe
'13191160' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGLV' 'sip-files00223.tif'
bbd5bb02cc95c0ff0fb73de281cee684
9d41bf7adb86d0141547c369dc6f1573944bc555
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGLW' 'sip-files00241.jp2'
bc9617eb68e6cdfcfc8766ecea3753b5
6b1970fcfe9295dfef57285588926cebb7d9cf7d
'2012-05-27T15:41:37-04:00'
describe
'13586488' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGLX' 'sip-files00264.tif'
db8d2143a8177f854a10a25a7a32152d
7c873d34ba4ebe5049eaac9e99b9e17cefd2bd6b
describe
'80208' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGLY' 'sip-files00140.QC.jpg'
b1e902c37f323ed0d6887795be13a3ed
43e35097eb032ce7e23929b3b00511b690564e27
'2012-05-27T15:39:45-04:00'
describe
'1687451' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGLZ' 'sip-files00177.jp2'
56597cec1133b6c4cb008d5352b4f07f
b2e2e6ca6eb5472087cefe98e32c8443b7fda615
describe
'743' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGMA' 'sip-files00194.txt'
a0533fd78b62d0bff35060075b160009
1227ad4167c461a86735db6570eec5a7a099e343
describe
'97498' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGMB' 'sip-files00232.QC.jpg'
2ff95e7411c5d57895011dbf2b4d6d4e
da5c80ff34e11af7e937469c693e3c6f81ee8d8c
'2012-05-27T15:40:59-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGMC' 'sip-files00279.jp2'
cff0a7a6c8a89a90f9ac7f0a864f558b
ad5f714e387b72e9878b12888eb3f0e6b63f087d
'2012-05-27T15:44:02-04:00'
describe
'1753927' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGMD' 'sip-files00277.jp2'
95f9ad42ec61bacd0002d6e49c53b993
19cd01ca780daede8560978bc21c2e26eac9ffd9
'2012-05-27T15:45:48-04:00'
describe
'42307' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGME' 'sip-files00231.pro'
099eda6edbf70999e016f098221f1222
65665839955bfbff7181759dd6235cff37a2e635
describe
'1545' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGMF' 'sip-files00094.txt'
8f7f604e8aac65c114fea20749ba3b91
dfea18fc59c5d084466654704de2226f6e77a432
'2012-05-27T15:38:58-04:00'
describe
'1584593' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGMG' 'sip-files00147.jp2'
efb87429c872434b79290e5aa21f4bcd
46c82b22b6d77d7959175a70048ec66df6efadb6
'2012-05-27T15:50:17-04:00'
describe
'101682' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGMH' 'sip-files00253.QC.jpg'
882a72b8b2f7f7add39aeaa1c64cc0b0
64b269e746b93a155b1daa8973cfb8afed5e6e22
'2012-05-27T15:42:52-04:00'
describe
'13161840' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGMI' 'sip-files00216.tif'
e76138db70c86be06e9d567716f621a8
cfaf18a4923d207cc5d78bd526fe93709c064448
'2012-05-27T15:39:58-04:00'
describe
'1587' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGMJ' 'sip-files00228.txt'
280b487ec897ced84116c44498c18f00
c61a2376c452ee5daf9d31e611c22a2572fe041e
'2012-05-27T15:41:56-04:00'
describe
'42770' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGMK' 'sip-files00204thm.jpg'
579687fbae845ef0e4dbb0e453af606b
0baa0415e6945fbcfe75593a13473d20101b5fbc
describe
'1642605' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGML' 'sip-files00039.jp2'
f67a4ec1234ac09eb68ac54ad73260c5
7c2ab7005734fb21c27dfdfa9b501d84f9446dad
'2012-05-27T15:48:18-04:00'
describe
'38855' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGMM' 'sip-files00020thm.jpg'
7b7fc493570d4f536a47980581cf3665
90112bf1b630aba154c2572ebf40f7e61c1b6fd8
'2012-05-27T15:37:08-04:00'
describe
'78470' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGMN' 'sip-files00266.QC.jpg'
23ac539c277125b2a17bab6c8248ec3f
ccb4d0dce7f0021e368ea12670d817303342600c
'2012-05-27T15:37:32-04:00'
describe
'13514668' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGMO' 'sip-files00136.tif'
869d3487d120f2f27b9ac5f1e3a9ecc1
8558ebfb169db843efa9c290f72fe888ae652db8
'2012-05-27T15:44:42-04:00'
describe
'1363' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGMP' 'sip-files00290.txt'
3a8a07788482170616eccc97f6d73a11
3e12e22effc996931630caa8d7ce445482310bc9
'2012-05-27T15:49:26-04:00'
describe
'43330' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGMQ' 'sip-files00079.pro'
dfba7e02d742faaa8d27e6ac9e2a4ea9
f03870dd2a62733a9ed1731cfc8390200d007878
'2012-05-27T15:42:59-04:00'
describe
'99990' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGMR' 'sip-files00252.QC.jpg'
a611a0bf512914d81a1bdcda7145ebb1
3844e61f8793112b8a15b2733cdf6c23e3017003
describe
'18829' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGMS' 'sip-files00005thm.jpg'
a198aa3c01690aa562f141a5c05f5ec1
d351e47ce17a08f704f4fa43c4c2c12a6a9dc394
'2012-05-27T15:41:50-04:00'
describe
'81119' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGMT' 'sip-files00058.QC.jpg'
74267565277754b539b459186d1a108b
7b2443702aaf5074c4444cffb19cad9b6069379c
'2012-05-27T15:46:51-04:00'
describe
'42911' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGMU' 'sip-files00172thm.jpg'
1a5498289f3c2800257ab1ed4632f5e8
08b019ff73d39472df1ec10bbfb903e078a9e41b
describe
'1687610' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGMV' 'sip-files00026.jp2'
1f628de1dd4644dcc38f8c614119bfe6
790e02bf4a0b4b586ad5106b075805b321910260
'2012-05-27T15:50:36-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGMW' 'sip-files00231.txt'
fa53a0f33d985bf04a424f905a25e24a
f0cc45fc22652967218737327156c278fc4e172e
'2012-05-27T15:38:00-04:00'
describe
'1661' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGMX' 'sip-files00156.txt'
91186387092141f173fc5062d6351a5d
cc27e710beb2b02e2268a94e8332064b1cd53399
'2012-05-27T15:37:03-04:00'
describe
'11321' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGMY' 'sip-files00021.pro'
9e1b618f906c276ae2e0ceca8c2c3f7b
ba523cc53a8fbf824d65edffcbed8b3ff169d57b
'2012-05-27T15:37:46-04:00'
describe
'13514080' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGMZ' 'sip-files00133.tif'
ff248c9927976b438dd7d05921bca439
e4083a7ebefbf23303dc3dd4e5fd5457fcc53612
'2012-05-27T15:47:18-04:00'
describe
'220873' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGNA' 'sip-files00243.jpg'
28e3380260414970f3c4b5602dccb42c
865c89469052f2499159ceb671fdf0d34c788b85
describe
'6517' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGNB' 'sip-files00066.pro'
929c067be07373fbceba32b1c488ce95
719acb4085cb21f0dc0c8717e3b0f779fbf030ec
describe
'85514' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGNC' 'sip-files00078.QC.jpg'
593f2c135d1ed088439bf21dbb5b3e66
f2357c67ff1aa8a9c7543bcbd20fa474fe137c40
describe
'217126' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGND' 'sip-files00187.jpg'
beee7c6bb0f4117a3c2d62bcf7a29578
915c838fc96f4f379097af459629ce2e6e6675e9
'2012-05-27T15:50:08-04:00'
describe
'1687447' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGNE' 'sip-files00053.jp2'
0019d3d56ecdc5208fac50f2595f60d0
21d2b3ecde199919faa87e608d9bb0047db3d380
'2012-05-27T15:40:39-04:00'
describe
'28945' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGNF' 'sip-files00179thm.jpg'
a30b8059d9e9ecf64258528ea7fac50e
3da2cb12621494aa74373e5842b6cc669f378228
'2012-05-27T15:49:17-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGNG' 'sip-files00086.jp2'
73b971efa9e37bfb33b391a5e9e1f2ed
33a69cbb3c81ac3c6e7c3d992a6ccf00cf204519
'2012-05-27T15:43:03-04:00'
describe
'90875' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGNH' 'sip-files00209.QC.jpg'
63219df15ed32cde7fc01a1f4d0f6752
30e535fcb2aee597e02971fe5f208c421358f634
describe
'31172' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGNI' 'sip-files00127.pro'
570a3effbb39469a29d06d2adf035190
718994734efd9e557fc77698f3ce914a61b17543
'2012-05-27T15:42:29-04:00'
describe
'12215684' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGNJ' 'sip-files00269.tif'
7f88d15ca338a32f2117d0330525f573
28cca4cdd9a800f0fd5ea6e786a311aabee9b449
describe
'242723' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGNK' 'sip-files00170.jpg'
8e3f78273a972ea2d9b087827e1c1be0
380439fcb122736651a96411099171ad9def4f3d
'2012-05-27T15:48:39-04:00'
describe
'229036' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGNL' 'sip-files00011.jpg'
e9ef3711c295866f84b67c97fdc5d923
da6d38089f88b30bdb3d3a32a756bc6eb99de0ab
'2012-05-27T15:44:37-04:00'
describe
'76956' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGNM' 'sip-files00125.QC.jpg'
58c23ec77b8f4376113f7041f12cad59
918ad3b24ca46cca5e0b7143fec94665e919bef0
'2012-05-27T15:44:28-04:00'
describe
'44004' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGNN' 'sip-files00253thm.jpg'
f6a108b10cf61d58428935f842250b78
00b787cbf5bce1b9bd9cce146a905ad270a48a81
'2012-05-27T15:44:04-04:00'
describe
'331780' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGNO' 'sip-files00256.jpg'
a41e11d8d01f44a1fc434417cbf77e87
a84619bf67ad3c7f3c85a9e6d7ef2731776aca3a
'2012-05-27T15:49:52-04:00'
describe
'59460' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGNP' 'sip-files00195.QC.jpg'
027be4d1250c93f23bad73546ad31e67
c0c8f150caf4c078bd4413a333bdbb9a8ad866bd
'2012-05-27T15:42:15-04:00'
describe
'70370' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGNQ' 'sip-files00121.QC.jpg'
75bcf1cc0401861792e810e246c14d60
a5b446a012ceb76a6308c6e190e4ba4c7c17e543
describe
'13513116' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGNR' 'sip-files00132.tif'
45ac08a130fc03f727fcc823ff111547
baa13d3c1726a63b3007a7bba1c054d44e154255
'2012-05-27T15:43:07-04:00'
describe
'31656' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGNS' 'sip-files00206thm.jpg'
667a19e793bc61bd7f50a6f7c3827122
a23a8394b78d57785cf4aabac65f7395d8e86896
describe
'43062' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGNT' 'sip-files00064.pro'
4c5245d8b7771534e3083677d5236f33
093b4b1ddbd3fae58cc96ec5457f304c73dcfcef
'2012-05-27T15:49:31-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGNU' 'sip-files00111.jp2'
d76b00b4cff3605abc36c82ed38b3fad
de447bd71de6085700a7ef8ba7a4cefd3b92e26e
'2012-05-27T15:38:08-04:00'
describe
'1537' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGNV' 'sip-files00125.txt'
b555c6ca2572500addd9f3904fb20b77
3dea497eb7a44d53d6b854f847d75dd7d3ed68ea
'2012-05-27T15:39:11-04:00'
describe
'30032' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGNW' 'sip-files00243thm.jpg'
c42867505200740d9ff316742f677eff
6d1df735f41a6a7ab7e9e2709efc6d754c19d746
describe
'13513588' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGNX' 'sip-files00125.tif'
cbf8ef6b911a1d55c4ed7162c132185b
f89682d84bc9b7991fa37c7e0351f6cb2bf7bf69
'2012-05-27T15:41:47-04:00'
describe
'46034' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGNY' 'sip-files00124.pro'
12d8a65ebcd3cb8a6dd46c1f60a45052
adeeb61de5b016c532af26cc3ca4c22596608303
describe
'377' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGNZ' 'sip-files00017.txt'
6b985af482caf0c9a9379e501426dd11
ba03594850b911832c17d9d16c41fd4bffb99cfb
'2012-05-27T15:48:10-04:00'
describe
'14067544' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGOA' 'sip-files00126.tif'
62a1de897a25c5e9106cc1c31f0d6f7b
ffce14da91c8693c3651b80bdcd98c0123a5e034
'2012-05-27T15:47:41-04:00'
describe
'1695213' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGOB' 'sip-files00264.jp2'
2cfd9562e77f45eb871988349d6240fa
0332e9528f3d9ea354acbc2f8291bbfb768fa0d9
describe
'82577' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGOC' 'sip-files00085.QC.jpg'
189bf32ff5579f00f90741776ad14b6d
61d37eb73619a093ba7b2fa3f50e6725631720d2
'2012-05-27T15:41:39-04:00'
describe
'13416664' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGOD' 'sip-files00191.tif'
ed77250441a8b51af3c7f3c3ffc57120
9130a5acb6a9c42c6c5f032bd66910762503c5c4
describe
'42132' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGOE' 'sip-files00031thm.jpg'
5deb47757e4e34e0a3e0adeb972a3743
4348b4f5b9cfdebc17b4d3fae81d899ea0b12ae4
'2012-05-27T15:37:38-04:00'
describe
'415' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGOF' 'sip-files00285.txt'
d6fa30f47f4a4de599db7fcbb832b318
e20e1b74f3482bacb2bf1de55313e72c9c4dc8f9
'2012-05-27T15:45:42-04:00'
describe
'42814' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGOG' 'sip-files00261.pro'
45546f25f28f6b77992e9eabe88e3c0a
fcb821c8e99a2c117e0aeb197b690e4062bf3b7e
describe
'13515180' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGOH' 'sip-files00206.tif'
d957b67b16f3a7dcacc00a7a58d506ea
a732b57f84fdb7c1fc5f086357edf45803135618
'2012-05-27T15:41:00-04:00'
describe
'14314600' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGOI' 'sip-files00030.tif'
8062f04f2a85a54dfb2583314370f20d
10d635787a6a1d6c732363522dd3738c9aaa7d4a
'2012-05-27T15:37:16-04:00'
describe
'46228' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGOJ' 'sip-files00271.pro'
cb21488a981ce97c419b08f4e9017676
959dfc60a35b7efd2c7d393c53b0573281a3603e
'2012-05-27T15:44:52-04:00'
describe
'44003' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGOK' 'sip-files00263.pro'
3fa058031c3bc030c115df7dfcadcbdf
c87221ec03fd807b1b0152a807e54b5fb7ac82c7
describe
'43589' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGOL' 'sip-files00155.pro'
d01da578ba8a967f006d5ec8ca735f14
74d1c1fcde26438cd68cabff89c315e32c70ca9f
'2012-05-27T15:41:41-04:00'
describe
'26576' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGOM' 'sip-files00146thm.jpg'
d7021b3a983ea2ecc922ae62ba99b514
637dbc05f4b8fd2e06a7d4fa16b697a54f1aaedd
describe
'13514920' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGON' 'sip-files00010.tif'
69ef8775468664195ad8e9c422f25fc2
1e2f59fdda8bed247c860a7da6e24d63c1da15f6
'2012-05-27T15:49:59-04:00'
describe
'12695272' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGOO' 'sip-files00236.tif'
3afae74a93d065ac2ba8763486e1425d
86a0bc34d3128ddb09e8daf758e7b130dc0000bb
'2012-05-27T15:37:19-04:00'
describe
'1687514' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGOP' 'sip-files00056.jp2'
7e093de8fe5937adaabd004dabbe2a98
5d78d911c7f9a27a71c0a6356393c7d8866dfec6
describe
'92427' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGOQ' 'sip-files00287.QC.jpg'
82cd29a7e5a2487b3f5d3098ad25f74e
56dca067fe1375751df626cbfa6e00c1a8339564
describe
'296' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGOR' 'sip-files00250.txt'
aa3e6b98671cb1b16c33b4469f803bf5
17e6d956fbd2ca3f02762459738556a96bfc087a
'2012-05-27T15:42:58-04:00'
describe
'1611' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGOS' 'sip-files00183.txt'
9d1956c2cf4b2467ec1d205cf2ed7a43
4c5c1fe00ab0ddb332e9f1f917b17e1008b19b87
describe
'1581' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGOT' 'sip-files00207.txt'
5ed2eaed0e5c20a75fb50f48339c7b23
0708edbc869a77af6d8b0ca2f98ed345673fa5bd
'2012-05-27T15:46:20-04:00'
describe
'253795' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGOU' 'sip-files00023.jpg'
ec9a1c206c2d87f7aa7cd4c012ca54ca
5e40363f732f4e07cdca47ff921c02145e20c211
'2012-05-27T15:41:29-04:00'
describe
'12786224' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGOV' 'sip-files00252.tif'
d6e79f1c2270016eb93b3f570fca14ff
52da0a136f29d2404b91090ebb5704eb748936e2
'2012-05-27T15:49:38-04:00'
describe
'1175' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGOW' 'sip-files00050.txt'
4f81d00a9067e3dca462bb83111e376c
3066c56dd4216dce1eb00c231d5ec505b29732c7
describe
'45197' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGOX' 'sip-files00107.pro'
9e2b6390aa1b114c3866b2d2df513252
f4940a9b09be83f4b61ae36bef2835e6727872f1
describe
'96812' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGOY' 'sip-files00257.QC.jpg'
64a707351c63059cfd9278774ccde8eb
5051231e14c466a202391bbba8d5f05ed30d318d
'2012-05-27T15:48:00-04:00'
describe
'212005' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGOZ' 'sip-files00140.jpg'
8235cf7fcc2de957a07cb0db87b38aca
462ea12d50f640eadefdb0d182623f74606a437b
'2012-05-27T15:39:12-04:00'
describe
'171359' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGPA' 'sip-files00169.jpg'
6e5ef95315fb19665078d5e9fb30b00b
473e35a0d4841cc04e3526a5c50be6035b136b7c
describe
'28122' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGPB' 'sip-files00267thm.jpg'
6882d887275ef00bf35ee7d86683ec00
61c7828b6d99b1086d8891f85a0e5e7e710e817c
'2012-05-27T15:45:57-04:00'
describe
'29503' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGPC' 'sip-files00129thm.jpg'
8c974587a6a1836c0e011fafc4fd730c
ada928d9327a61cd3dda8851e207cf6c7ec9c35d
'2012-05-27T15:40:57-04:00'
describe
'42717' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGPD' 'sip-files00175.pro'
83ac6ecdda3c5e2db96a69b64a8688bb
1dbd68419ce6b594fc496f630df7b954e5818fba
describe
'31456' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGPE' 'sip-files00140.pro'
740f00e38deb31d03de05d8abcd047ea
1e824727785579d1e0ab7c410396d01f0f76b143
'2012-05-27T15:44:10-04:00'
describe
'13513868' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGPF' 'sip-files00281.tif'
d161e0b53488233fb58179ea88d3975e
0a6a3804a5c991d976c96fd503a63b298b2dadea
'2012-05-27T15:42:12-04:00'
describe
'43532' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGPG' 'sip-files00025.pro'
6662f84a89926d29b5b0e4afe1f0d9ad
c69024c80cb2a762e9113598aa1708f91cb9a5b4
describe
'1679904' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGPH' 'sip-files00276.jp2'
e1c97869b36cb856679688edc55b5973
8a56d1aed047b602030ef48bf45d6aaa53c13e4d
'2012-05-27T15:39:49-04:00'
describe
'94858' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGPI' 'sip-files00231.QC.jpg'
a46cec7f54c00624da9afb150954acd3
fe3c7e6ad07e30b3aaa97fbe40b83e076a10d78c
'2012-05-27T15:47:22-04:00'
describe
'224418' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGPJ' 'sip-files00278.jpg'
7dad5301ab85dc9e30841c585e4ca7a0
ed5468d5660d0fac5b0662a0ed0c0aae8af98b8e
'2012-05-27T15:37:22-04:00'
describe
'32730' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGPK' 'sip-files00066thm.jpg'
732c8b8b95fd6775600e99b80a7f289b
724d47691b9673ae515fdf686d40848ead5d54d6
describe
'13512528' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGPL' 'sip-files00195.tif'
80642a64be9cc150f22ec338d868fb23
e0bf53e1cbcba3fe7bd934a8ffd5ea54955e8e2e
'2012-05-27T15:47:11-04:00'
describe
'91468' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGPM' 'sip-files00069.jpg'
b6c068b322a0305e35e175244b053045
fdf1800d438a7947eee5d27a8992147ab6c6b256
'2012-05-27T15:50:32-04:00'
describe
'96880' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGPN' 'sip-files00025.QC.jpg'
3cd234d3681264d7926f19a1887285f8
b538e62929d02429115becfde0aa0d57d8dcf9d5
describe
'1544' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGPO' 'sip-files00136.txt'
24553e75a90411f3a4d3a7fb962536eb
fcef8989092c0aa165cd404b3540dda0061711c7
describe
'13200956' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGPP' 'sip-files00244.tif'
a264a4251752c745cfe94189bc35fcd7
c9495e0d4aec7e75a16a138be40644ea24082c3b
'2012-05-27T15:39:43-04:00'
describe
'1687569' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGPQ' 'sip-files00021.jp2'
d08a7a5ebac0d55fcf75f31ea5808f51
f54c9d24fd2d52bbdf6e48b6b0a3e76318dab9a0
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGPR' 'sip-files00091.jp2'
c9acf88186ac089defbbfa0fab541198
b909af197e5a4a790d0681e024294701a3be6a50
'2012-05-27T15:43:12-04:00'
describe
'1622' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGPS' 'sip-files00180.txt'
e31b589675465921744f7740d71dc186
5c4c896cab872dd4b27fc94f112691192786a681
describe
'105981' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGPT' 'sip-files00107.QC.jpg'
583b637728ce546adcc4aaf2ca78d844
35d0005dea58f771b835d67b51de54dba55b0b29
describe
'41827' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGPU' 'sip-files00267.pro'
bb53cd75c0a82caf6851a8d136296adf
20753d56d8caa2854e9a7fc43d4f775446c4da73
describe
'83515' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGPV' 'sip-files00271.QC.jpg'
f350abb9285292a3875d4acf2f7860cc
0e69fb99eda4e4200a7f2f7d43ced3c30d201e48
'2012-05-27T15:40:54-04:00'
describe
'88240' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGPW' 'sip-files00010.QC.jpg'
17012d255b4328d0876085ca07760b1e
288b1d792c37eb4239005a702b9fcc79b3146fbb
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGPX' 'sip-files00193.tif'
cec3ede959bb6bb44bd90c083ebef5d0
66e8ad9ca3782e47634dbd26e97a90f2aea2665a
'2012-05-27T15:37:02-04:00'
describe
'31698' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGPY' 'sip-files00112thm.jpg'
936e909f53b9fd1118102b93db3e0963
2df48f476ba9c59e239cb9a27fe11a7da66d572b
describe
'1177' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGPZ' 'sip-files00214.txt'
1a34e0ae9a8a0807feb5ab410c9ecc22
465a601a1ef4b6fbf6a687b47c5e295596ff2b12
'2012-05-27T15:40:18-04:00'
describe
'40453' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGQA' 'sip-files00157thm.jpg'
aee5cf9944331494e4c317a91d62fd5a
39058b93ae2b5c403f35a9b2b4f9717ce6c5fbc7
describe
'13514620' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGQB' 'sip-files00262.tif'
c1a979579d20e5e6726d13eacb49d73e
646a944eaf9c2655f150e9928783fc4d447dd534
'2012-05-27T15:45:18-04:00'
describe
'13237728' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGQC' 'sip-files00266.tif'
8587e6cd5a659f47f1531e817f839b42
5e058295b7f8dbed249a33d10a8612dcb5db3306
'2012-05-27T15:44:40-04:00'
describe
'16552' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGQD' 'sip-files00202.pro'
66a5f6664757e9c22a81edaa897b20c5
de435376116014d92f17df216233c78605ff0c55
'2012-05-27T15:38:20-04:00'
describe
'73857' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGQE' 'sip-files00214.QC.jpg'
27e39bd57634d5b2b52145a67bb3751d
c388afb5da8b290e98353ce4de0c0473cdbe69e7
describe
'13514720' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGQF' 'sip-files00053.tif'
f1a527b28fef4be88ba6b454ca13bbc6
1e2e8c4041e2abd426cde2a9a8dddfaaece2a67c
describe
'1691' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGQG' 'sip-files00102.txt'
5db00ad1fedcc292f0d5c4416e61eb78
a11058bf7e66d3986f784a387e164a070c947f7a
'2012-05-27T15:37:17-04:00'
describe
'65619' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGQH' 'sip-files00132.QC.jpg'
10056722de51163ea0aa120a937e5354
3bb234c8fbbbe4bc29ab4d47d18cd487a13deb5b
'2012-05-27T15:42:54-04:00'
describe
'230176' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGQI' 'sip-files00284.jpg'
d16cada9f315aacde72f4d4897251518
2f7af5cb3f4b7c960007941437cd303cc893c028
describe
'184802' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGQJ' 'sip-files00214.jpg'
2f25592ed0e8509574de34b44e32868b
f79e9a153348d981e3ff69aeb9e00e1e0192862f
describe
'84066' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGQK' 'sip-files00067.QC.jpg'
336d0414c5cf7084eb31954c52957176
c19e63fa945c4392a6c463a19d36295417228f4b
'2012-05-27T15:49:44-04:00'
describe
'1410' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGQL' 'sip-files00131.txt'
893b1fe16acf0fc1bac969578d85f2f5
1b74ce7b03bba0b4fbe5f8df56cfd4b4ed0e006c
'2012-05-27T15:38:13-04:00'
describe
'43941' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGQM' 'sip-files00032.pro'
769913c7e8b6c0f880c055b8e508c49f
d25240f4a0424d997bc59e6ed5a89bc9dadd5452
describe
'13065640' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGQN' 'sip-files00205.tif'
0553c4e0c7c497ea3bcb6469f6529cba
63d695a6b3bf073f6b5b1f60c70d8bc865fc7a26
'2012-05-27T15:48:20-04:00'
describe
'13020172' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGQO' 'sip-files00059.tif'
dd5dbf44588cb2ccd13eb12e80a906cd
f257e0f32343b9fad9cc16bca9e77e26fb96375c
'2012-05-27T15:43:51-04:00'
describe
'13036868' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGQP' 'sip-files00207.tif'
0bb5101eb02e599540b845c1a6f19061
032fe0b514fb76fe06bde611f0bb7479c5c2431a
describe
'30255' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGQQ' 'sip-files00223thm.jpg'
b3db665bfed5cda066ac0702ec7057ad
51c836ff3722900b55d3ef45d1c74f44782bfc80
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGQR' 'sip-files00197.jp2'
349b5c67a694baf7cfd7a091ea13e1b4
173f80152531b91adcac39d0c66b7901ec35400b
describe
'77382' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGQS' 'sip-files00226.QC.jpg'
bb1fd252ba41cb6df82a4fcad9c2848f
e0853bc2a6a8fafaf6d7fcbad563f352dd769767
'2012-05-27T15:49:41-04:00'
describe
'1171' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGQT' 'sip-files00070.txt'
8c696d11324b97b29a98c86ad6f6169b
8cfe76ea4d2210a424d32c3a90fb6415c08ac34a
'2012-05-27T15:46:42-04:00'
describe
'1593906' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGQU' 'sip-files00107.jp2'
07e3b9d7e622cd3db6ffe8d1d6502cda
df14001b5e34f290ff195b672b718c20e9b22718
'2012-05-27T15:45:52-04:00'
describe
'1685785' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGQV' 'sip-files00080.jp2'
62f52c29aa9c1302818c22a411dfc45e
8e789e65cd85af25a5a929d2b3bc993e0f718797
'2012-05-27T15:38:34-04:00'
describe
'1609' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGQW' 'sip-files00078.txt'
fa9d7a6b7c62243e604ec14751a81301
28f7c99273da5742c847d6a1429cc13617e490e1
describe
'1613411' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGQX' 'sip-files00194.jp2'
41f163647189304b34101b14ca0dad8e
213899854edb562310e00fdffb11a75cd85221f8
'2012-05-27T15:44:31-04:00'
describe
'1687575' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGQY' 'sip-files00292.jp2'
34142449bad3f4525febea48592cdee5
7d334e8bf9ea212450b3203f62aaa29d00a7ea47
describe
'13246' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGQZ' 'sip-files00075thm.jpg'
f8e12b447987004d444d19f985a016f3
efc2386ba55b4494b9c6f30704fbcade51bcf93c
describe
'1617713' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGRA' 'sip-files00259.jp2'
59af633f39dc5d42256be756c4456235
757b64f915203b0a4345a4146d6c6aaad5a78d04
'2012-05-27T15:43:46-04:00'
describe
'7972' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGRB' 'sip-files00225.pro'
b31283a919a7a7c1ac4f6681b242c1d4
94e9f103f0e5f4f533633866cada29c0e9294beb
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGRC' 'sip-files00107.txt'
f0d86b6a233535cf42ec10dab684a2ab
778962f465c68879bc1e60d9f866a4d7e9dcb3df
describe
'1645847' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGRD' 'sip-files00088.jp2'
f9f26bcb95c3f9e359c841b0bd654528
30605ee0f4e026f3138168f3ee26e80dbc48eddf
describe
'176075' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGRE' 'sip-files00042.jpg'
e1cf822ed31d93ec0e48d70f549d246d
1d2826b535947f35ae27aae884ea5a7296fe5f7c
describe
'42638' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGRF' 'sip-files00180thm.jpg'
aca60d5c26cb8476a2eb8a7d6124e0a1
5542422d48bdb8e6e25c381cedd1d2d858a5b6c5
'2012-05-27T15:45:11-04:00'
describe
'41373' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGRG' 'sip-files00104thm.jpg'
412e1f7bc4f2544b3844cf1f8081f540
613a0a0f35c8cc5a6ccedd323dd5367abf1838f9
describe
'230570' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGRH' 'sip-files00241.jpg'
37fd748d2dd95f89e268c7ad04ed38a8
7d71ad15699697bf0e5a40a3df40542d69e8dc4e
'2012-05-27T15:41:22-04:00'
describe
'259702' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGRI' 'sip-files00148.jpg'
84d94912a2ff11f89a293e6873acb965
e139fc57000894bef5bbd305502d5e0a9c105159
'2012-05-27T15:46:04-04:00'
describe
'13512992' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGRJ' 'sip-files00090.tif'
15c06116de7fb88f376bb2407a263121
de1c960afed8f3f23424fdb963fc67057eb9f6c6
describe
'32373' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGRK' 'sip-files00285.QC.jpg'
a5915f8218fb51d7151f1937bfb14783
a52877b511a4e81b06eb61de6e71a675f439bb9d
'2012-05-27T15:38:48-04:00'
describe
'11626836' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGRL' 'sip-files00225.tif'
fdf9f74cf37b400d46d2615fd4becba9
cdf68d30fe7857c04b610a845660493dcce3796a
'2012-05-27T15:49:13-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGRM' 'sip-files00148.txt'
9953a55cc67a36074fbbfe1073135755
ff5efc1d9763f508833c256eff7d5d83dcc7aafc
'2012-05-27T15:42:40-04:00'
describe
'1578' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGRN' 'sip-files00150.txt'
3963f0b69b16ea5f9c68286775e900bd
ea7f3e454344ec823b03c570f4c122b735284a4a
'2012-05-27T15:42:49-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGRO' 'sip-files00262.txt'
6cb6e2d47939d468d8f0e5106d6ed59f
e6019e9d23b369bc2eac28062cf7e67676c34af2
describe
'1687605' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGRP' 'sip-files00067.jp2'
987f2c924103e8be13fac64f0457888c
0a1e51f2b5485df944428926d49d9dbba1ae5417
describe
'1749287' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGRQ' 'sip-files00047.jp2'
cd8cbf7eaab73fcb5abee1608ac35fc9
2fe217389d21979dd08f492bc480fe1d910efcac
'2012-05-27T15:38:59-04:00'
describe
'93858' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGRR' 'sip-files00181.QC.jpg'
5165146449031404b8b3faf27b2f1a07
1a59e4c1741f16c3ebfc99f8801384a8c8836404
'2012-05-27T15:41:51-04:00'
describe
'93102' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGRS' 'sip-files00028.QC.jpg'
c4b58bfcacb1dade1b6169f0c9a5b0c9
385e6f5ca6a9475c60aefce2bfb3586fdd15fe99
'2012-05-27T15:42:37-04:00'
describe
'1687599' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGRT' 'sip-files00079.jp2'
d07c236a936ba4150bfd841c279beca9
2a6ebaae42b68b39729574dc4621000199a4fe39
'2012-05-27T15:40:26-04:00'
describe
'40173' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGRU' 'sip-files00200.pro'
64289f387c3521a9ae8129e09bf811b3
3aa44fe3ce9d1700dabdbdc28d0d88c605f23f0c
'2012-05-27T15:43:52-04:00'
describe
'13513688' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGRV' 'sip-files00159.tif'
e0df613a96f3f436be3b561ad3e94197
7495e18949ecc9844d0466656a1a34650dcd473d
'2012-05-27T15:46:15-04:00'
describe
'33932' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGRW' 'sip-files00227thm.jpg'
538d01bc36e063d77827a2ede406d2d6
c91be863d01066c83ffe3e046f69353e4354fca4
describe
'41431' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGRX' 'sip-files00167.pro'
9ce3f5279e2e9e0214baf57537e54073
6429a8164e32fce55e035f100e47dfadc0bad053
'2012-05-27T15:38:30-04:00'
describe
'63396' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGRY' 'sip-files00177.QC.jpg'
9883a625b483597854d6268e2ea3b93a
4db1aa2603895044cf17a59cc7267cbdbf4c9ecc
'2012-05-27T15:39:14-04:00'
describe
'32382' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGRZ' 'sip-files00037.pro'
30690d324678a30ea3b6056e4864642c
f1695ea806850f0e4dd39203e83bc275e36858ca
'2012-05-27T15:36:55-04:00'
describe
'37101' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGSA' 'sip-files00115thm.jpg'
106a3799fea1babffc210ea3ad401733
2ebd2b80359a3f7f7f76da101d4958ae9db0c027
'2012-05-27T15:41:48-04:00'
describe
'233271' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGSB' 'sip-files00289.jpg'
78c58f53401526366fa15eda906e8f4c
6365ae074f9dd8d8119021820dbd8244e79d7892
describe
'13018240' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGSC' 'sip-files00176.tif'
884bf8b250ffe0a34c030820550079ea
4300c620380dce54790fe49b803ac865f609eab2
describe
'1740705' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGSD' 'sip-files00120.jp2'
396a743db5e2dca58f688784ad80d985
97837e49285a74f114970f6d10f3d1c120fe82cf
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGSE' 'sip-files00094.tif'
86711b9caac29c7af5975ffa3bf171e8
e8306ea201b835aa5f9962756ad2f8bfeb4ccae2
'2012-05-27T15:44:14-04:00'
describe
'40636' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGSF' 'sip-files00072thm.jpg'
2d02726a1ce046ef96260c112123322c
20fe9f46ee610c1148289ddf395b87161735b46b
'2012-05-27T15:49:11-04:00'
describe
'13512492' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGSG' 'sip-files00116.tif'
273be5afcd693c573d43cc75ac1cf9a4
e28761470d79e9b390c0f7f793d55275d78cf269
'2012-05-27T15:44:56-04:00'
describe
'28532' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGSH' 'sip-files00163thm.jpg'
e92e4c44a678928becc9931ecb452acd
f7a50e3c7fbc70b89700d6a295bf2829adac44a6
'2012-05-27T15:39:06-04:00'
describe
'82353' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGSI' 'sip-files00141.QC.jpg'
3b67e806aa997f4b5f701014b3a0dc78
9c6c09e1452a09de7453f4c9d4980abe68071d42
'2012-05-27T15:49:05-04:00'
describe
'80033' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGSJ' 'sip-files00163.QC.jpg'
9df8b62ac0267a9b2fc7cfc688cfb142
fce55beba5b28cc776422ba56f73b4ddb96c7d2a
'2012-05-27T15:38:27-04:00'
describe
'1644' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGSK' 'sip-files00182.txt'
8b7ccbfc23290a998bae4a523b227643
c3f0e1aac358bf9c8e5a5f698bba5f8caddc1744
'2012-05-27T15:40:25-04:00'
describe
'43358' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGSL' 'sip-files00246.pro'
deb0ad529f3f05e77379a9fbf63ac6f3
25252dba76133007d3f153a4fe1c5401c862c088
describe
'252910' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGSM' 'sip-files00033.jpg'
063790d89f894b2a048936c9a1b238c4
040bf6e0afc03d9d57fa179fa1039e41fec12975
describe
'1538695' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGSN' 'sip-files00005.jp2'
4749b4a72091b7eed14020f1e36c729e
a239ccf35d44ce8c6bcd9ce40073da322c99ad6b
'2012-05-27T15:48:33-04:00'
describe
'42355' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGSO' 'sip-files00148.pro'
04397aaf93063dac7adb1bc4b000ba2a
d2f8b622a19a548fa2db868e864cb030866d134a
describe
'1736' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGSP' 'sip-files00191.txt'
438a185f8d17ed51fba8f7071f77380e
21fe78a3e87fbf6634d9d7bece97acf819cac829
'2012-05-27T15:44:38-04:00'
describe
'40801' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGSQ' 'sip-files00232thm.jpg'
f46aef22671f2db35ffb9233f594306e
04f719ac1a180ff5bedbacaf7cd2f0388a714f2a
'2012-05-27T15:44:29-04:00'
describe
'97587' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGSR' 'sip-files00048.QC.jpg'
e8294fbc4e2d0ee4c1bda9c2009f3f84
4433dbf45ff10d961c5ec0d522dfa18866bed310
describe
'95269' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGSS' 'sip-files00104.QC.jpg'
de74d4231e486c3f82bf28b377352e8e
cc4f2e1bd5d0da42cdcfe2b7d78fd43dc2101ea8
describe
'181365' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGST' 'sip-files00029.jpg'
d3ab5c37873d67f1f91893c5fcb2c2e3
b2a19bb38ef27ee0b4280f6e934c29bc2826cea7
describe
'83702' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGSU' 'sip-files00035.QC.jpg'
b71237183ec51eb0805670735990822c
868b4147632300a8eee39803ea552ca609086c85
'2012-05-27T15:46:19-04:00'
describe
'41651' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGSV' 'sip-files00147thm.jpg'
06e0d4f9f868fcab0b322f388498a8ea
6bf17fe026a5ba27b8b204ee468cce5224ae7de5
describe
'497' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGSW' 'sip-files00069.txt'
721849d07a80f6d0ba9f58f908094fd0
a4ce8034edbd9d3a5dcf3454a6c4770015e3ae83
'2012-05-27T15:46:34-04:00'
describe
'13514132' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGSX' 'sip-files00271.tif'
bf140ca94113559e27dd79592c598227
fa773b55d73eca66b1332dfdc722ab36f94b8392
'2012-05-27T15:42:08-04:00'
describe
'1613' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGSY' 'sip-files00134.txt'
ee27ecf3bbe5c4bf5da530d613b420f1
eff863852fdb278d12d604e08d475256448924d2
describe
'13018180' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGSZ' 'sip-files00100.tif'
0c15ff6051d32e3c01c84eca04031ab0
a34c8dad9f4b5cc5c49bac3ecaa96d6916f4a176
'2012-05-27T15:37:13-04:00'
describe
'1687582' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGTA' 'sip-files00187.jp2'
a09735ae8a39de15d00291dbadd5ca42
13b82cd8cb6d00721991d609f20fdda6373662a5
describe
'74439' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGTB' 'sip-files00259.QC.jpg'
f70b82474dbf26555a721c7a788a9446
ba6f18848662651a7961882517e2d3bb429a2f39
describe
'40992' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGTC' 'sip-files00130.pro'
14877c7d0044d20155680e24410c4406
409cf1c0e885794b8f587ed682ce64875282d035
'2012-05-27T15:48:54-04:00'
describe
'43691' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGTD' 'sip-files00085.pro'
b51918d08f8d45e421060c82bc9953c8
89d2509a8e6dc0abf4b6efb7cb7df1a22184891d
'2012-05-27T15:37:55-04:00'
describe
'27995' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGTE' 'sip-files00125thm.jpg'
d1b985882350cf93cc814cba28134a6c
6ad155c807cac63042d358f8d9ba35e683c9101c
describe
'12924424' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGTF' 'sip-files00194.tif'
df6303fd3e4916366d969f7bf7c57573
2492271a5bcf4ff124ff04a0890fa10211d96cfc
'2012-05-27T15:47:49-04:00'
describe
'13488180' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGTG' 'sip-files00201.tif'
530e0417788b436d5d8d6e9832cba69a
bb709869578dae82fac11de33b7b6f7302864a44
'2012-05-27T15:48:02-04:00'
describe
'13509972' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGTH' 'sip-files00168.tif'
3828a1c5a8e4b7491f9c4cc0476e19c1
0c14600744629559b3ec79fd9a576d09937c403d
'2012-05-27T15:38:11-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGTI' 'sip-files00152.jp2'
2e9df9d7d3076a6b9866a2f154244e4e
79d699a751f8b963ecc3cc54406eb2b806177c39
describe
'13225576' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGTJ' 'sip-files00180.tif'
ec8baeb10a9b3d7cd504403449e6abfe
0b1779316b3202d26815d29e76de9e83a8fc30bf
'2012-05-27T15:37:45-04:00'
describe
'40297' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGTK' 'sip-files00277thm.jpg'
3752d31e6b6b748ecfdf7437e214a9e6
9f5bb9acda4d35a3944e95d46d7548cc36233fd4
'2012-05-27T15:40:03-04:00'
describe
'40848' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGTL' 'sip-files00262.pro'
73e4eba79a03b599bcb32508a9188853
1937192396b2cedf7e3a9f95e958364cd1cb8f0d
describe
'1632' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGTM' 'sip-files00249.txt'
90a523b7e2f152146af23168f5155665
0df6c9cb4343398fe9d4568221acb0c2d0ceb3fd
describe
'13513268' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGTN' 'sip-files00290.tif'
3ec4d9568b5c29b5829dbadf43455706
25f33146481c130943ae2b6772aeeaa918c840f1
describe
'191825' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGTO' 'sip-files00061.jpg'
44de1f077a4960d146fa596e5b4cb565
46d3a5b382b548a806732554c2811fd74f7fbcc4
'2012-05-27T15:49:45-04:00'
describe
'251574' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGTP' 'sip-files00040.jpg'
8b506d70cd440df88424bbcfe3580588
d03c0cfb2fd8e206a07c64fff2ae4a26deacd81a
describe
'41879' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGTQ' 'sip-files00210.pro'
11ae321586bc15930c90378223de7fb0
d7db34202f111bb34af3e115004f188bb9e8f8d9
'2012-05-27T15:46:43-04:00'
describe
'91257' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGTR' 'sip-files00126.QC.jpg'
5e56b99331a5b3ebc799dcb0cc3a1dbb
4c55a7e8d8c9f0dc5bc63d63a7e39192f11836dd
'2012-05-27T15:39:05-04:00'
describe
'13237776' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGTS' 'sip-files00219.tif'
f8af7e5a2bca66e6bd791df1b9175e8b
afa0dd1985b44b027f17a2c0ae12ff64e7cd4ceb
describe
'83227' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGTT' 'sip-files00086.QC.jpg'
48aa053f0411cd0cb4865d44800aca06
8472b9d06e89a1056c7d3ddda258b05f7aa05b6f
'2012-05-27T15:49:48-04:00'
describe
'197384' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGTU' 'sip-files00121.jpg'
9e4f237192718b73cff7ce6bf5e1d5ce
a924c1d418757fdae12f1ace9e2d45131da7de45
'2012-05-27T15:37:07-04:00'
describe
'250373' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGTV' 'sip-files00165.jpg'
17cbabd01a5894b7403ab7d51c6011c4
9243e601c846e76cd6e9fa64f4086fcc3ef187ec
describe
'40516' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGTW' 'sip-files00231thm.jpg'
1fc80a81a9c128a0ff384e654a052a1a
483c1c0fe243f93e645b0b29041e534791fd423b
describe
'1653' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGTX' 'sip-files00043.txt'
b81fcbefa97919738f8b2fc08dae9f0b
9a8be398532dc202908097e8610ac39935bbd3f1
describe
'13514780' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGTY' 'sip-files00222.tif'
fd2bb69108081354d3ad1396888ade53
7f13b8aee3521519d97a0fd68f6d896b12b51e64
'2012-05-27T15:39:00-04:00'
describe
'42366' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGTZ' 'sip-files00142.pro'
11aaf63dad67671ec87561197396a581
bf9b674a2d09610718b6ea0c2610fda3d1e82e63
describe
'30584' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGUA' 'sip-files00182thm.jpg'
7f427408ca36da58a18708baaaba9b40
95d69fc3f7b043d5a082d66608cf8727c02472db
'2012-05-27T15:48:37-04:00'
describe
'13513284' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGUB' 'sip-files00131.tif'
e62a64530a7cc0ca5edc239e9294981c
07f13b47f4184070e2af67f84ab95bc22119a67d
describe
'242883' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGUC' 'sip-files00081.jpg'
7aed49e1975846daf8675bd0826c6551
44c4cf40d493745cd82c05c4a21b9dbe46f76192
'2012-05-27T15:37:48-04:00'
describe
'14579812' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGUD' 'sip-files00289.tif'
45486971aa84bb3dca733c550bc35645
6d260a4083e8a9b37d53a9df7770b2f9119d929b
'2012-05-27T15:50:04-04:00'
describe
'212767' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGUE' 'sip-files00110.jpg'
3c0e2695847e10a18b0f5020c48cd4d6
58b31c1f1a36e78ff0277f19cf02e0538e8d4bf5
describe
'13513600' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGUF' 'sip-files00149.tif'
7e19dfbc288e98676642bd9cb65b32c7
d31f731cd137b9dcff7d966c38ee8f9f0bca966c
'2012-05-27T15:43:50-04:00'
describe
'42088' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGUG' 'sip-files00187.pro'
8a626a4f173fd7df26b910ea54a2630b
ea2ab2a04523ff5be91a26888866eb9409193bb7
describe
'1601' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGUH' 'sip-files00186.txt'
f203f39582f2ac4bc4c3514cf9477756
a3e1028431473af342ad0948ce686134dec7a099
describe
'66233' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGUI' 'sip-files00090.QC.jpg'
1c623211e18bb553fa793ca7b7efb24e
7a1de1f80cfde1319b1a5bc80a3c188d957c894e
'2012-05-27T15:50:28-04:00'
describe
'26715' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGUJ' 'sip-files00105thm.jpg'
bebc76705731f20b506a5df7e6c38dac
169b04d9f6f9ae163364c682f9c1b2b469c228a6
describe
'41905' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGUK' 'sip-files00235thm.jpg'
cfd8505ee88e72dc3e00105379d0c935
6767794f597817f5e62452664e16e98cda831865
describe
'13273948' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGUL' 'sip-files00172.tif'
cc5c56212e3a30f6af4c2f2ca64d5002
bc9909920109e2a29f554e13ecad1288e6f749bf
'2012-05-27T15:38:54-04:00'
describe
'13514476' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGUM' 'sip-files00243.tif'
1bc0b48364144db93ad2bf9bf039f6c5
6eec063f82070c4726e95d829d4c88a9859d5415
'2012-05-27T15:38:40-04:00'
describe
'43175' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGUN' 'sip-files00020.pro'
793ec96733f06e7f87fd1eaabec5a188
54343918708bdd08f52727c675dca59c8f7600b5
describe
'87267' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGUO' 'sip-files00142.QC.jpg'
ff64d8396b81871e2dc4666f4ef4497a
ad95dd6f28f10b755ae527ee82ce7c95f978304f
describe
'256921' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGUP' 'sip-files00247.jpg'
0637528361e924bde8af860a8f57ad98
45fda7bd49385300da610e28686ee61aaf8cd816
'2012-05-27T15:38:03-04:00'
describe
'1836' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGUQ' 'sip-files00281.txt'
10a8f61d8e4de6cf5f4281a8923a1cc7
829d2c2786d6c16280832b9c9b63962135eac7a9
describe
'99429' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGUR' 'sip-files00040.QC.jpg'
13ba9bf0670efefb62616885954316df
56d125683e081dcb091fe38bdf3e6500dd202700
'2012-05-27T15:42:47-04:00'
describe
'209363' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGUS' 'sip-files00115.jpg'
4cb2689d3aa28cb967ac67dd8206c9dc
a725089a1e9c68b985fc82a459a2e6212f0e42ed
describe
'30622' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGUT' 'sip-files00029.pro'
8a2dee1dc91bf0d5583ac87e6d8175c9
047fb6525b0ee2f18d29d7da5f785868c2dc8380
describe
'92527' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGUU' 'sip-files00205.QC.jpg'
eafd1a8ff22feeab1ea8c97f6488f98d
587288697c0ce353e142d1a939564e735c6461ef
describe
'13514916' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGUV' 'sip-files00152.tif'
b38a7a47b0c2a7249d20328038dbc6dd
c7922fe5bfa79a443743881f59f8cd08986931e8
'2012-05-27T15:46:55-04:00'
describe
'40663' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGUW' 'sip-files00151.pro'
9fcfe735bf54a3fb96188ed5c8a4ff6f
05e9d7edb69f90aa603dd41e83c9f7118f76c667
describe
'232365' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGUX' 'sip-files00242.jpg'
2562f94b5d37b3c7f48a37d0ddbc94e0
60bd87fd5a37dd5cf810234af8b7e1f4e7c11660
describe
'1716582' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGUY' 'sip-files00112.jp2'
7223a9ebcaf19180369bac40f6258f32
2a4fbb9ad766e99c168963f76faebdf0a51c2d14
describe
'1736986' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGUZ' 'sip-files00288.jp2'
28c9658fdbe7f0b27d7eecd22b569b3d
f858cf9183ab818980c6fc0a01ed74e94e1b0aee
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGVA' 'sip-files00098.jp2'
be2235ab4f4475f85091efd8049597c7
8f5c43d2eaadd5106dc505e2dcb969be65a52784
'2012-05-27T15:45:04-04:00'
describe
'44377' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGVB' 'sip-files00201.pro'
3ebdb470b86ffad12a306bb346803a22
ac86ad4e4c99f7290be0a9d98102db265b895c95
'2012-05-27T15:47:46-04:00'
describe
'90664' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGVC' 'sip-files00222.QC.jpg'
9b4a13b55d8e5563324a1154d3115f6c
b242c8b112c36c04ba3a19f5be1d617fbf09f977
describe
'38356' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGVD' 'sip-files00282thm.jpg'
5e52028d1f6415a724e716c388e72ef4
61626fb06febb559de72a0d979cbb6b98071ab7f
'2012-05-27T15:46:35-04:00'
describe
'41436' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGVE' 'sip-files00254.pro'
f29b92f66d802d70effe7412075886c6
3d2f789b5dd03acaf11a50d4087d7b4ff5630c38
describe
'1347418' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGVF' 'sip-files00001.jp2'
8395f6793ae3096ce34689e794fb488b
653630a6d37d52c29c9a8af70c8bb2f3d7a73fda
'2012-05-27T15:44:01-04:00'
describe
'220153' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGVG' 'sip-files00159.jpg'
ea17ca5e846aa2d147f17f7e17dd28fd
5efc27c6254bab7c7f648a07b269560b22b6e11b
describe
'229777' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGVH' 'sip-files00171.jpg'
fe7b17f7551917c0274bc00ab1cad553
35fea5c064710455e827e226d08a7751b3e07a75
describe
'82259' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGVI' 'sip-files00139.QC.jpg'
e6761db24c17d9b97f7d99859dad1bf2
481895994403060a5e9feb655a3e8081f561ad25
describe
'41252' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGVJ' 'sip-files00289.pro'
d0a2cee8a0f7833e7294ce76af1130d7
bb56bb2a1a24d35e46414b6bd973a65b82244e0d
describe
'231584' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGVK' 'sip-files00068.jpg'
5f43badfc999ae5b83c2d4865a8dbf40
8febe93d393e10270100ddbfcbd55332b766eaf2
describe
'13538480' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGVL' 'sip-files00212.tif'
ee86ad18e39f86447302fbd387e3329e
7fa8987afe243e02dec932a062b16f49f9e7931d
'2012-05-27T15:41:10-04:00'
describe
'35063' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGVM' 'sip-files00001thm.jpg'
e7ce7b6110b2f2480642e4796dcf53bb
1d11d518ddc1a9d7d7a2303f90e4719033e4c0bf
describe
'1565897' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGVN' 'sip-files00105.jp2'
bb346b0ad7a3390616c29c5eac9e81c9
0541bf00edeb191d4c705d6212d15a183c4bc33c
describe
'25156' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGVO' 'sip-files00128thm.jpg'
ff1a605d228d1e29c14c1c363eae41f7
1e453b1cacaf48f4932e2cbba572e88a84e722fd
'2012-05-27T15:37:26-04:00'
describe
'13514128' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGVP' 'sip-files00129.tif'
2187832fb034883d2307d1138ee30998
be4d4e40bf4814ffa71f2010226a3653f06b04ae
'2012-05-27T15:49:03-04:00'
describe
'28127' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGVQ' 'sip-files00149thm.jpg'
4acbf16828dc1cc2e517fa2614c30f85
d7655b150fee5a3b2a835acd24429e9ad73bcc9f
describe
'1532' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGVR' 'sip-files00126.txt'
7fbd1334e5f530f113aa51745b22600d
d3aa04ce4a39c0d40c2cfddb59ea9651591014bf
'2012-05-27T15:41:46-04:00'
describe
'70991' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGVS' 'sip-files00290.QC.jpg'
7b1f761c64170f827f5b660f4871c524
4773f6d543494f8e740084429054bf69c6f048fe
describe
'13854308' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGVT' 'sip-files00037.tif'
056837676b5404707f0cb9be05338b90
e4d7c20c51352ef486c779a756628a4a331fe53a
describe
'13513052' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGVU' 'sip-files00128.tif'
83b49997d92c6a9f15c00b8a18373077
66fb79ce0050c29a7dd3a56b4ce4aa31d7248448
'2012-05-27T15:45:07-04:00'
describe
'13723480' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGVV' 'sip-files00123.tif'
c553ddb334dc3d88ab3328a70d9cdb95
ee2ac26eae2a62bb180da09ddce2ee60d3bebb84
describe
'1746232' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGVW' 'sip-files00029.jp2'
ed3ea06af2201124a892d99d2315f83b
d6444cfe003bb77c5d2d41b83b5211cdde834aa8
'2012-05-27T15:37:52-04:00'
describe
'1647' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGVX' 'sip-files00032.txt'
575e0f594696b028b96b8188d4f275e8
0551f9b6fc80f846a2b2e5918847ccba3d7e6658
'2012-05-27T15:48:23-04:00'
describe
Invalid character
'93705' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGVY' 'sip-files00255.QC.jpg'
128509a490e7c2aabfe3edb4505d5125
bdb2cf8e7f02066a1875e3f6f484f56a88f837da
describe
'13968972' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGVZ' 'sip-files00068.tif'
e96cd9f9c309dac2f3fefb43743550d8
21811a208d9ecb3af1c30b7d0aa98d7808157994
'2012-05-27T15:42:05-04:00'
describe
'155031' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGWA' 'sip-files00041.jpg'
65e69f7677979a241408ccae921b5257
e09ed94a495738be22a8b02f9c75e9e1f0c565b1
'2012-05-27T15:45:03-04:00'
describe
'1895' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGWB' 'sip-files00277.txt'
00821791ac5c86b878212379b210a70d
a25e4abc82ca6abffdbb9f7d4a5af32cb9af4da5
describe
'12924624' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGWC' 'sip-files00161.tif'
971cf4a4c2c73d38dfa07f7fd1794412
10cd9d0ee1a3e838a1420ce6b92753a0b24d915a
describe
'24175' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGWD' 'sip-files00106thm.jpg'
cd82581ba3ece334a6bb9e9a4da2cabd
9a990ac1748327eeffa50e6ec0ccc6a8c7d0bbbe
'2012-05-27T15:40:53-04:00'
describe
'13513824' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGWE' 'sip-files00135.tif'
f146ec6912d2056e8d50bd5d2f2f53af
9cee2d30b84e36927652be97ac7b06e57f5d495a
'2012-05-27T15:39:50-04:00'
describe
'14809852' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGWF' 'sip-files00229.tif'
d1b65191e303373e4f7b2e569d416d52
9091143e3a22ef39d9c59bb52d11f8e95af274b2
'2012-05-27T15:46:28-04:00'
describe
'248821' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGWG' 'sip-files00109.jpg'
21ffdbfdc40c6d99becbef48a043ea49
ef9dc4182a98925b1e465136b12970e2731deca8
describe
'250743' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGWH' 'sip-files00230.jpg'
97a48bd9ee2266d49f13d154bb3a5cbf
24f7060e98b56ecbf3248a57b20f2126a40f3439
'2012-05-27T15:45:15-04:00'
describe
'343' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGWI' 'sip-files00258.txt'
9a7dc510e1ff37e68ca0237e825564c9
23fd3594d8d24f0fe756a80ae5667e3b18657395
'2012-05-27T15:44:34-04:00'
describe
'88799' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGWJ' 'sip-files00017.QC.jpg'
70226780e0970cfd9325636062618b8e
fdcc54b060cd5525be1a994406ef6ef0097c8b09
'2012-05-27T15:46:50-04:00'
describe
'169868' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGWK' 'sip-files00176.jpg'
1220f25a55c497252e5f4bdc6c8d44e8
579fcf99afb9ca39bd4a0ff21295580c03e57492
'2012-05-27T15:47:57-04:00'
describe
'5440' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGWL' 'sip-files00005.pro'
ddc8ed59ee8053dad3bd98966c339990
3f3404ea1a8c14ce36f2f974432fcce82be19419
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGWM' 'sip-files00254.txt'
57953bd6d3aeb388bb975ebdc27ef3e3
674c9a8fb5adb133f0d745cdb04ea03c6721781a
describe
'29902' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGWN' 'sip-files00058thm.jpg'
52cfee3fb146f290f53f2075fd5c23ea
d2dbf86864ef4884104be3d696a8b09aeddbf0cc
describe
'13696756' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGWO' 'sip-files00245.tif'
8c9c519976c5f7c849c574b51a123ca4
5487a817ee66fb393472024d0ebe2a241829f576
'2012-05-27T15:39:59-04:00'
describe
'28398' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGWP' 'sip-files00159thm.jpg'
db01d8658f20bf91ae5bc85d0312a2cf
93cbc053f73a13d4949464db78e3e24bfc5c5c44
'2012-05-27T15:39:04-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGWQ' 'sip-files00020.txt'
f5a180d74ad87307deaca797102ecc1f
c5aaff3bf8fc8499fa7507f8e374b18cc040c84e
'2012-05-27T15:43:08-04:00'
describe
'95238' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGWR' 'sip-files00145.QC.jpg'
28f185b77e115e16d9852a7d7c81a2b8
dc8eee1cd2ddf54ebe179473b083d667d9cdb603
describe
'42959' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGWS' 'sip-files00223.pro'
8f3fe39643a61b143af725f925d3ed78
651c48978bf6235db1df89e8a043d6e2dee8a41d
describe
'1746334' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGWT' 'sip-files00077.jp2'
dd32eb6544dca28c6071b8271b0f557c
5672b1565c87e6b29ced682653be66c63fcdba41
describe
'43790' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGWU' 'sip-files00241.pro'
7ae7f994389d86712e75e19a314f1256
4bfcc66dacc3212cf8fde9538122647650feec72
'2012-05-27T15:43:27-04:00'
describe
'66302' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGWV' 'sip-files00258.jpg'
cc1cdb83c2352af41fe803ba5daab0b7
461ef3531c9093180889eaf05aaf64aae0ed498e
describe
'175495' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGWW' 'sip-files00177.jpg'
fc1d59fcea5c80b209acb39c30e5927e
7af0832be6c6ea84d444a1102ddb5347829a5773
'2012-05-27T15:49:28-04:00'
describe
'222911' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGWX' 'sip-files00188.jpg'
57b31a7781ce63c0114d67f9e3ac994a
1a1ed626c8a6d63fb31e9111cc5bce44c918087e
'2012-05-27T15:40:04-04:00'
describe
'1723124' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGWY' 'sip-files00044.jp2'
231fbc03c1de2429efc80817c0eed0f8
a36a92b70bad67959b3f822713dafd23188d3334
describe
'1555' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGWZ' 'sip-files00059.txt'
604e3ccd25b7f1a54da9f7b195058c64
302a3a27a0282105287ec7537a5956859425f7ae
'2012-05-27T15:39:18-04:00'
describe
'13940016' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGXA' 'sip-files00214.tif'
abcf7917b18f72f7f6bc66ede82164b0
1a3ad71bab7ab14b86d34cc695256d2d381174a6
'2012-05-27T15:46:39-04:00'
describe
'234797' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGXB' 'sip-files00019.jpg'
5205a90bdc31e2344910f1dca0c5f8fd
8c577701c228dc9ed01c1920968fc50366f22a4e
describe
'14518496' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGXC' 'sip-files00054.tif'
18995043ecb59e8a4f0e673b6cd76b9b
8d4f3ef6f6933bf24299e424f7857f992a9acaef
describe
'41855' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGXD' 'sip-files00035.pro'
b9c669687700ecac99a7e290d879f133
62e242e671d1bc19d72df81d7c07c36e4e2e095f
'2012-05-27T15:45:43-04:00'
describe
'31232' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGXE' 'sip-files00090.pro'
c126e29cc661f66b0a7732e9c0674fc6
d50238a11d9ccc4b0b75c60c86864bd1f2bb31ac
'2012-05-27T15:47:16-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGXF' 'sip-files00236.txt'
9e065e87780d0aaa1f64bfac4bc8a14f
8311ff5183cdea92c781841c3df9dc428297c22c
describe
'232059' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGXG' 'sip-files00207.jpg'
ec3927216a242260a3d0a1da46c1cc2f
eb6584318b53644780fa9a20b2e649e4f6566fde
describe
'42745' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGXH' 'sip-files00033thm.jpg'
a62356ec6780609862e5e769c88068d4
0f268fc619dbca5c4a2efb8a9736438b94a8c62b
'2012-05-27T15:42:41-04:00'
describe
'1203' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGXI' 'sip-files00140.txt'
a6637c8d4547df4219bf0c8e88895089
3efa8d1eafe836c9f7c1d32fb6eef80e1ebbe80d
'2012-05-27T15:45:59-04:00'
describe
'269849' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGXJ' 'sip-files00107.jpg'
d104d8cf5116fbcdc4b485885c714b02
332a6d5d2c84e7dbb9132955b3bc8c3f7f75711b
describe
'848' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGXK' 'sip-files00265.txt'
03af99746b802188c76411dc4f60ed20
6c233d7f814e49bc43f42916d2dabd13a7a3007e
'2012-05-27T15:48:53-04:00'
describe
'64019' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGXL' 'sip-files00169.QC.jpg'
3db0204b4368e0fe3b83c2bc54ea050e
d659d3d62da3f978fc62ec725faf5e67fc7249f1
describe
'43104' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGXM' 'sip-files00148thm.jpg'
12458628c9e8c0e73f6634ba998e2264
778651e6618b50ab1bb944694c929e41a09707d1
'2012-05-27T15:38:50-04:00'
describe
'68810' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGXN' 'sip-files00123.QC.jpg'
bed498d6ff8b397926670f77e96bd43d
9751225ea5c179e119c2f13703b68e449193470c
describe
'54609' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGXO' 'sip-files00009.QC.jpg'
9affe5d3858f28a760f1abdc1901ebc9
150b8d68607ce20aaa4bf1cad0f7aae078afe92c
describe
'13547132' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGXP' 'sip-files00268.tif'
8b15a9fe110cbcf6eeb4061f49ca2bb8
5fb78d3042904443628a4fe503f17950d34607e4
'2012-05-27T15:37:57-04:00'
describe
'40959' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGXQ' 'sip-files00063thm.jpg'
5d31cb53bc620ef0d50b429fc94de077
78936fc90d4cf38eabbe90395dbfaefe3f1b9474
describe
'1205' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGXR' 'sip-files00076.txt'
c2c3e61e37d743a500e41cfbb100a4e0
e78f7a0891d80a0a10b40045bf6c5c7de3cfc6c5
describe
'1764286' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGXS' 'sip-files00114.jp2'
e12cfdd6fdc18ac119a663604699a1a6
85f5a8bbb420907c361391d1177a70ffac5b5f23
describe
'76355' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGXT' 'sip-files00046.QC.jpg'
fa1fcfaaf5f1f92fedec2de85e638d3f
5d74865b2ed5633229f6dae5635699a9bbf551f6
describe
'1823293' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGXU' 'sip-files00020.jp2'
3c983ad4996af47f56d8e679b7e9652e
d6cfaa02f976ce355d5644a904e24095f78c41aa
'2012-05-27T15:40:58-04:00'
describe
'12884612' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGXV' 'sip-files00209.tif'
ef7dbce43f9d29598d8627052df4678f
3183bed6e708825e0a04f0bd75b9d1a9fd38bcfa
'2012-05-27T15:43:54-04:00'
describe
'12863628' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGXW' 'sip-files00097.tif'
27704d0b234ec89011ae1ebc6d9d0fa0
5e325b530038c92b0eb4ffb8a5e8ec374924d4ec
'2012-05-27T15:42:07-04:00'
describe
'92411' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGXX' 'sip-files00217.jpg'
ada65f0b380f42516b922d5a988a509a
8e7e06179925a571a03710339e4df8af912b8145
describe
'242163' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGXY' 'sip-files00191.jpg'
4287e3000a9a68216e17e724df5cf334
e898fe807f78fa43b4c6950f273665655c2f6d80
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGXZ' 'sip-files00130.txt'
4542f6b0d03fbb1ef2ef537d52aa50c1
3c5e691c49decf95ae6c7c5da6e9fb3865cc5daa
'2012-05-27T15:40:49-04:00'
describe
'12695' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGYA' 'sip-files00069.pro'
5852c61945e11787bd647feb4d318662
480cb50db591a20dea6802129bbc4796f983e000
'2012-05-27T15:37:01-04:00'
describe
'13509600' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGYB' 'sip-files00250.tif'
c9b236d827dd48923f32e5b15b63c0db
91f37822bfc129e4e4992edce9c0208da40f911c
'2012-05-27T15:38:31-04:00'
describe
'13590240' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGYC' 'sip-files00072.tif'
69e8557c96782c7a332217255ff81e35
007ea99c417b5531e085908c817f7f884ef28c92
'2012-05-27T15:48:19-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGYD' 'sip-files00079.txt'
0d192537afcc1ac810ba0409cc74cfef
8fc32b492f0770d0d78eefdabed96137fa485019
describe
'41412' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGYE' 'sip-files00170.pro'
e1cdda4e80f69a339d06ba3f94745485
f5ee1fd8de0de03f56096361c48309374eed40c1
'2012-05-27T15:50:31-04:00'
describe
'187862' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGYF' 'sip-files00127.jpg'
0977e75afb569053d65778fc0305312f
236ccc7c715c76772b05a33a0d264fadc7b1870f
'2012-05-27T15:46:22-04:00'
describe
'14137208' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGYG' 'sip-files00114.tif'
5c20c32324290b45000cd3503fb2542d
2d21ae1ca5c8d3c58672c348c9a33c6144d4e1ff
describe
'13513760' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGYH' 'sip-files00163.tif'
0f4fe8af7bde573bf67fb60d479db228
9568b9eb4f795b9586a2cec00581b373064f7bde
describe
'95149' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGYI' 'sip-files00030.QC.jpg'
0378bba1a5d5817ea82a05a008105fc3
1b9da94c621066073e51dee7a33b377b0df432de
describe
'228825' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGYJ' 'sip-files00085.jpg'
b014998eea33214cfbd28f133f24eb9a
5a554ca2948da95cb2aeaebcf2605e45de0b149e
'2012-05-27T15:39:30-04:00'
describe
'248605' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGYK' 'sip-files00210.jpg'
a6955d6b8aafe6c75fb21b7899098289
1dd3fb1e857fa2e16794a791046f22b693b390eb
'2012-05-27T15:38:55-04:00'
describe
'21680' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGYL' 'sip-files00265.pro'
4d33fb304f88648232d61d6be5dc3c70
003612f32e54797469a252127a0a53d06fd8240a
describe
'30522' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGYM' 'sip-files00154.pro'
bb795b624f4059d470715f660f7f6925
4cedd8f85cc0f8334ff5f0681b9c754c8597105e
describe
'28200' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGYN' 'sip-files00265thm.jpg'
c43d499788f6e26668da3c28e084911d
04268838a0d786cce39e58ec1e3493ad66ea505a
'2012-05-27T15:47:02-04:00'
describe
'338509' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGYO' 'sip-files00101.jpg'
8c792880eff9b148603cb26080d10cd1
74d10695000fbd12c06866d169ab118cead18b19
'2012-05-27T15:37:20-04:00'
describe
'1571' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGYP' 'sip-files00199.txt'
7ba10d01eab11b0c6f2eb5ac748fdee2
d7e2d620ebdae72d12b4ad654512efa65f9be7a4
describe
'29665' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGYQ' 'sip-files00096thm.jpg'
d2772fd65986965dd275c8e6da33cf70
6c3b0d685b0854ff650e06322976783878154849
describe
'934' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGYR' 'sip-files00009.txt'
a0e70b9d651db16d25f01393eb50a5e6
d25b296a3474c85191b13d2fec1c7a49934348d5
'2012-05-27T15:40:09-04:00'
describe
'30099' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGYS' 'sip-files00286.pro'
6a2d1be85411fe6ea271dc4ca137ceba
ddc856d30459f340aa15e925037014e24ca2abd5
describe
'1591' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGYT' 'sip-files00179.txt'
2868652c77b59c6171fac795fd99cc29
13daee3900ce52cb8546f08405598c4723a82055
'2012-05-27T15:43:33-04:00'
describe
'42454' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGYU' 'sip-files00065.pro'
c8a651ea3b4ac486c3e0e2c41f1024c4
d7f5c421077d2bc6863a186596b9b7f062960e90
'2012-05-27T15:48:05-04:00'
describe
'44532' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGYV' 'sip-files00158thm.jpg'
7d9cf4053c9cfc03b639bca3166fa442
3e58c54cd03a7a0fd892d2f8ddca1a3801db7f77
'2012-05-27T15:37:14-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGYW' 'sip-files00142.jp2'
da1e98fdc4357d7571f9f734885bd958
29dcb5ec575de49f237d831bbf759db331b03849
describe
'13512624' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGYX' 'sip-files00177.tif'
440354a7d58a59d66258918805005b37
82e534252ae1b8a69068605195f29c4e66fbbace
describe
'13514324' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGYY' 'sip-files00011.tif'
7f12acad0b0855a8555e63f815b11e9e
809ded6ce1aad0fbef7b5c134df0d49bd6999f44
'2012-05-27T15:46:13-04:00'
describe
'30919' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGYZ' 'sip-files00084.pro'
2f4f38d4dc3c4be77f969d401adbd593
c72addba40ad284392ac45f6bbd99a17025d8001
describe
'13091120' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGZA' 'sip-files00248.tif'
d253d3b2c52ead5d1e336f4c81b8f4bc
616af1e03cb9cc2b4c93023ca0fb83e0423a0c23
'2012-05-27T15:40:14-04:00'
describe
'1959' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGZB' 'sip-files00030.txt'
105a03724ee8862f55153753dabaaccb
935b6aad7e1abaf1a75fb08a919172692dd7ff62
'2012-05-27T15:41:44-04:00'
describe
'30195' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGZC' 'sip-files00227.pro'
54293bae79d9c3de860af5fdf93fd93d
07598df6866657a95247f1341c511c1217ce50e9
'2012-05-27T15:39:20-04:00'
describe
'33135' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGZD' 'sip-files00218thm.jpg'
7f130a50bea8bc7faf50ddf1030bb2cd
be58216418d474a3613adaf25adbde5448f3d98b
describe
'1656889' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGZE' 'sip-files00022.jp2'
1dd3929112e66871eed3cdeb530ce3e8
06bc373047405452fa450756d7e2e78bd8c67c3b
'2012-05-27T15:41:30-04:00'
describe
'43057' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGZF' 'sip-files00198.pro'
ef7321310fa8062eeacd3a14d57056d9
98d2bc8ab6857fe6d4ab6c68f2f9023d0c957aa8
'2012-05-27T15:47:36-04:00'
describe
'257376' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGZG' 'sip-files00080.jpg'
35b8deec7ef123306d805c9ff347ba45
5381e98465955cc0e0f31cc538786d0f883e4fff
describe
'1631059' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGZH' 'sip-files00196.jp2'
5cb79a032189d31f081a06bba1f0ba45
6c45ad03457636cab37a35c53be710e22a486a86
describe
'235362' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGZI' 'sip-files00104.jpg'
36ed06a52d25a68a2ac83e6c545784e8
29a68aca829d620ed1c748cf3b4c6baa643ed6fa
describe
'180726' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGZJ' 'sip-files00112.jpg'
127e8e10cd1bb1e2dd3ee4f52b4f6eb0
4f62a33d66759e51556ae7cc45cdc610eb4623ea
'2012-05-27T15:48:46-04:00'
describe
'13145656' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGZK' 'sip-files00154.tif'
155b9528e7cf4fc074a73324d0716f61
971797bfb0f258321f55aba7445bd294d71adb2c
'2012-05-27T15:46:12-04:00'
describe
'164145' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGZL' 'sip-files00184.jpg'
b99cccaaa6d07b93416a7d3a3241122e
dd0097fc99f069f2fb8c4675df96af5afdee4e66
'2012-05-27T15:49:19-04:00'
describe
'230184' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGZM' 'sip-files00044.jpg'
5ccd5ac796f8e505641537ab3f7c678d
6c496edef0f9c4f993372cdb480f50de5b6838b5
describe
'46104' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGZN' 'sip-files00281.pro'
49bf13ecd5f8ea4e2da6f0420c350a54
f0d6246b567e23cf4b1ad7f8ef8bb51483610318
'2012-05-27T15:49:35-04:00'
describe
'32024' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGZO' 'sip-files00234.pro'
66d9cd759b5eadb6b65860a3cf28f0c3
06b83f652f74d30e49b13a14ff8697863a1ae8a0
describe
'25167' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGZP' 'sip-files00176.pro'
02794a5cf86af61ef8f93349454aaa9d
0452b58a1180213312f86f9465933199f5fc0ac8
'2012-05-27T15:49:22-04:00'
describe
'42488' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGZQ' 'sip-files00247.pro'
8cdb5a2ad12fde5855d0aeca065d8349
3c4c47e95330d37bf98ca11aad5e6407af97b38a
'2012-05-27T15:37:44-04:00'
describe
'13510156' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGZR' 'sip-files00217.tif'
8f40aaee7c465c85a4202944dd7440ea
8c8cb0b5e1c17104734b3437e395a98cb33f6f80
'2012-05-27T15:47:15-04:00'
describe
'160647' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGZS' 'sip-files00056.jpg'
fcf831105b348b526a595eb09e933b6a
9a61ac94cf7eb74d3d97540d2815a48e2e4a4a2f
'2012-05-27T15:45:01-04:00'
describe
'34165' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGZT' 'sip-files00208thm.jpg'
e1baa36ba2b02937b9d85b1d56b60dca
731d4640e471aa0aa64d9485dd2087a5c51a205f
describe
'9599' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGZU' 'sip-files00285.pro'
9b033376beceb4cc5fa49148f1ec8582
cf9050173b9365836ea703213ab0d58aa487f9f8
'2012-05-27T15:46:21-04:00'
describe
'26572' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGZV' 'sip-files00131thm.jpg'
5b08217443811a43a726995cea405f59
a0333d5333c038b0f9913eef095afeefd8cdd0f3
'2012-05-27T15:42:20-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGZW' 'sip-files00252.txt'
4ab0152ec3ef53f0cf4d43c2a93a0617
3c7381b1b3bf4fdd932674719996667ef2b501f4
'2012-05-27T15:47:32-04:00'
describe
'40853' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGZX' 'sip-files00145thm.jpg'
fc42a82e3db9f6e411438e616a65d6f8
2d2664aa8a33c4ca2fb4a584223e8c6ac75ca6c7
describe
'31825' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGZY' 'sip-files00014thm.jpg'
31341c0342ec6a646eb8159bcf871c9d
c033f2c60e5834d2e57a61405a040824cffa48fa
describe
'1687523' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAGZZ' 'sip-files00131.jp2'
8e284bc0fc05154b3fe3ca4dc2613e6a
c8bb3b4187aef37cf421e3f3ddc4c23e1aff1c26
describe
'1219' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHAA' 'sip-files00245.txt'
4a1ee59b8bedcef6e600e8c011e89824
1b3ac1145d748891262680bcf69e4f081ccde110
'2012-05-27T15:49:36-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHAB' 'sip-files00119.txt'
c8a0974f76dddd7eccc61db61cd40aa1
dd646f2f175356dba75e6d2c2282c0fb5e7d772c
'2012-05-27T15:48:24-04:00'
describe
'13469500' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHAC' 'sip-files00027.tif'
1644626f527c9d123672f5c3ff691699
5ed6c3fb3c4d7270785ca623b1c5f03037d841d3
describe
'41604' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHAD' 'sip-files00024.pro'
038b69cce136f1b163d5532b8efe932e
cd16471c56c0ca2f7aeebdd0e30dbe1a92141b10
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHAE' 'sip-files00109.txt'
ac30483f478726fa56a0e743f2582883
ebce25eba15e6817513bb80a6b3d2ee6856070e3
'2012-05-27T15:42:55-04:00'
describe
'42764' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHAF' 'sip-files00016.pro'
8f1a2dcb277e293c1860938a7776dd61
08f90afb3a696504db4db207fee7ea5ed7a5f779
'2012-05-27T15:38:24-04:00'
describe
'41152' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHAG' 'sip-files00248.pro'
0f07f9f757f49e81898cddc70002e4ad
4880d29909a1370f659619a4f74ecf231f645da2
describe
'235211' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHAH' 'sip-files00136.jpg'
48f98b3975614e9032cbf094753264f2
cdbfc6c4ddd72b755075e31821769a0e35db8bc7
describe
'1808' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHAI' 'sip-files00052.txt'
f76c38e37c8dd2a6d6606bd584d35a97
4e2975517c7b4a12b3ca8b9d14ee6a904684d5f6
describe
'43688' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHAJ' 'sip-files00196thm.jpg'
a72bd13ecfd7030cc0a9ac6b07007cea
5e7f52343c211371a8e302a2fefb5c54b70e930a
'2012-05-27T15:45:46-04:00'
describe
'91110' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHAK' 'sip-files00291.jpg'
45ed745f6c055f790a3cd77f8f92c3b9
b17f48bda4d6e5fdff274b557e193b4332b44fc0
'2012-05-27T15:49:53-04:00'
describe
'44794' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHAL' 'sip-files00143.pro'
add779f99dd9f1cbecf8ee61ee45d41a
080ec721b4dd903da1ec4b0e7a3bc451053b7d12
describe
'12410356' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHAM' 'sip-files00228.tif'
42b8ea7c0b7a0f44d751f2b66e09b0ee
3f6576c05d3e33274c407538e1dc0e088d896f19
describe
'77587' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHAN' 'sip-files00193.QC.jpg'
2c5ba2719bb26c1b50d26ee878c682af
d4ecdf598a5d70d299efa9fde559afa8a7b5ce7a
describe
'37189' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHAO' 'sip-files00131.pro'
62071f62de742c77808ea57bf69461a4
69166654bbbf14612e7ab917612dcdebfdeda968
describe
'43606' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHAP' 'sip-files00065thm.jpg'
66aa21ac4889fc673c9883b255050e9b
c9c24b549c3407614bbd5b907f0b06a2d71d3fb3
'2012-05-27T15:47:50-04:00'
describe
'232425' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHAQ' 'sip-files00064.jpg'
dc1a8094f2476830710a597f6385a9c4
7f048301c301ffc45babfaf14c927eeb022842ea
'2012-05-27T15:50:25-04:00'
describe
'39226' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHAR' 'sip-files00063.pro'
2e6fae0e97c3faec059852c4ebe27081
f64bdca361a6b7855f52fcb56df04381ffa26473
describe
'1194' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHAS' 'sip-files00266.txt'
5e3c709c51cb7789a3e458ce02612763
e06354eed20bf7cf87efc2ec98481c7b138ba104
describe
'13514056' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHAT' 'sip-files00238.tif'
2d90c67a8bb8f60688b52300467cec92
1d01d953bc9f9985f98e74ab509c34cb122fae6e
'2012-05-27T15:46:45-04:00'
describe
'27257' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHAU' 'sip-files00041.pro'
86de9e3ec17bba85ba131d3ed89c24d3
9ac464197963bfc8a12c7cbbe80a6e7660d49300
'2012-05-27T15:48:03-04:00'
describe
'254043' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHAV' 'sip-files00130.jpg'
898b9584fa7263eebd6b2525925f4dd1
6586f5cb31820190d098558241b032c3dd4d794b
describe
'1681360' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHAW' 'sip-files00113.jp2'
1d7a495f57d4c00812f3898c7502f63d
1d1ffa335c5b72d22e78df8532f0bf393a70ab33
'2012-05-27T15:43:02-04:00'
describe
'41968' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHAX' 'sip-files00040thm.jpg'
7711244a059592e318f025805baed8df
34d2329c647fc5640002bc82ddefa48364ed5f73
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHAY' 'sip-files00175.jp2'
684fdc44fb72bc7f7666190ee88bcadb
e4f3b5ff2864e2358975c5b0801a7d82f5db1e6f
'2012-05-27T15:44:53-04:00'
describe
'40305' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHAZ' 'sip-files00086.pro'
6eaaadfded581ff1873102866a36c547
38efff160682a42dd602947c788b358d63384582
describe
'42619' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHBA' 'sip-files00160thm.jpg'
f225240744a6022306e2c0d7d4192177
a9680cd055f4407f80b32645769693c0b3c1a106
describe
'42790' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHBB' 'sip-files00238.pro'
d238973da28bc81c973d5b760a29c39b
bc007a839af5d8c7e63801dd40c60078a5fa36f1
describe
'13313548' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHBC' 'sip-files00065.tif'
929aa7f73bed8898a2815b8845ecf25a
0ac31f78f2df19f87434052fadbb5941addd0f8e
'2012-05-27T15:40:35-04:00'
describe
'32034' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHBD' 'sip-files00097thm.jpg'
0372d8c7ab7f75842ccea56ad1950446
ce8b69b080036095d098cc099d9724a01313ac0a
describe
'63641' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHBE' 'sip-files00111.QC.jpg'
de817b276390952ae639c2c3c7d84090
e590f1aa904163eb882c55b25383de4568b447ce
'2012-05-27T15:43:49-04:00'
describe
'1202' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHBF' 'sip-files00061.txt'
24868584a317d22455b39ab47c23e60d
4df3b32629dc79a8240961911c487ed2ddf8914f
'2012-05-27T15:48:28-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHBG' 'sip-files00213.txt'
28206dc103c7d34bfd9558cff36746bc
2be7b29bb8e0be6f71ddacef941b50be9592ab24
'2012-05-27T15:46:46-04:00'
describe
'29195' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHBH' 'sip-files00108thm.jpg'
f9b78275deecc56bf16a3d02b51da90d
dd8d0b91098ce9d4ad4a8b678039622b2c2d145c
describe
'40089' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHBI' 'sip-files00125.pro'
46269f3cf9e54cc490f51160190bc44e
fa804ccfb6ff935266d797eef290a3ba4fa39b12
describe
'91915' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHBJ' 'sip-files00277.QC.jpg'
fca7fb551cb7484d457fd0936f63dee0
90e238f0c22aaa82ceaf4b7dd245c4e4370ad1c9
'2012-05-27T15:48:09-04:00'
describe
'13514988' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHBK' 'sip-files00144.tif'
54eeef8150fa02dc83392d51b88f1b85
5f28744fd22db14a1cd24078b9d1248c365a4d13
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHBL' 'sip-files00264.txt'
66405af4508b6da7b8a536d6e934aa0b
cb600f8a4a4e6a9bf56f5c631c9b49ede728f443
describe
'43021' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHBM' 'sip-files00141.pro'
67fcf46ac69694db12db239396629ca2
b2a9b65d009b9864e49777550a193da6704689af
'2012-05-27T15:47:42-04:00'
describe
'92112' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHBN' 'sip-files00026.QC.jpg'
581f4398a411fa4def8d89db95d0c603
0fd94e5c5928955fce926219d5d6dbb4dc9e5130
describe
'13512592' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHBO' 'sip-files00184.tif'
c170a644a49373a2fd15188986c4cd2f
242dba5c485e009fed31a71e5971f32013e20547
'2012-05-27T15:40:32-04:00'
describe
'99949' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHBP' 'sip-files00124.QC.jpg'
4e0ffa788b3ccf1fcb1dec7b73c447e3
c1d47d3023d0e8212331e58173a93c3efecbbd2d
describe
'260004' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHBQ' 'sip-files00065.jpg'
3b8924ace1c75b50c06a39814df2ff12
836c3d8aee6466f10bc1a340b9c828a5160b2d26
describe
'30039' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHBR' 'sip-files00035thm.jpg'
5f25120c412f22fb3475bdc65f5043ad
c6858fc9d15acb772817f82bd77c64d45a587e10
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHBS' 'sip-files00110.jp2'
85df6304d80bd6a13b4cfebc89a68cd6
bba53dba6b0f5e3c9264428d2a6c5875fa28be56
describe
'1598793' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHBT' 'sip-files00115.jp2'
89eb8586d1386f14639b309641681062
108e368afc31076b42a5b686344da61c141ada8c
'2012-05-27T15:46:06-04:00'
describe
'1633281' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHBU' 'sip-files00248.jp2'
7fb28c0c54847a7862d4bb57e082f04d
fd8cb77f5b5f5493c773675b607ad8b085fac7df
'2012-05-27T15:42:25-04:00'
describe
'1692' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHBV' 'sip-files00012.txt'
ac1a23dcde071487d182f413f25ebdf7
7fb01e29749ed6b98c4e7bb792621f96d6a08c9a
'2012-05-27T15:40:08-04:00'
describe
'13151572' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHBW' 'sip-files00202.tif'
3c4c9c4fcf0633faa4fb559ce667e97a
bbd5f55c744f6af22f57352cc179b4817500fe66
'2012-05-27T15:40:42-04:00'
describe
'1501' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHBX' 'sip-files00063.txt'
583409ef9c96a462fa865853428de697
b92de5f6049ba6974a89689f5b564ae54dfaa4c0
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHBY' 'sip-files00218.txt'
6bcba383366b9ead6c8d8d2c0a550753
cce3ff651b1e79725ad05c2a424ff97d12df9152
'2012-05-27T15:49:01-04:00'
describe
'30552' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHBZ' 'sip-files00251.pro'
b1bdcbf04d5d557f2ab542a7cf306638
0077920903757a4303885bbd0898979beb0cb2e3
describe
'1755399' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHCA' 'sip-files00126.jp2'
5a41298bd0d093b15d312de1ee51467a
675807529f2aa010f34a899a9f8696e7ec0384a2
'2012-05-27T15:40:10-04:00'
describe
'1548257' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHCB' 'sip-files00228.jp2'
f140f8373a2d476ca0737c51e766ffc8
ef009529719a2e26e7417583f58c563b132668e9
describe
'1599' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHCC' 'sip-files00065.txt'
fc73c7e4fad19fcaa3e9f0c5ee590b5e
e3c38470306adcc772eb9157264c3269118a64b8
'2012-05-27T15:40:36-04:00'
describe
'1655' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHCD' 'sip-files00100.txt'
eae2d3ccd19c4e1b444f458407bc1d7c
73a0b4bdf1d09f4f44b899cde30c975fb26871aa
describe
'30624' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHCE' 'sip-files00260thm.jpg'
4da44a07deb786dec6a128e35917cbb3
2568720803c4db2448833ebf0ae57b0bb7e09f61
'2012-05-27T15:37:33-04:00'
describe
'40964' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHCF' 'sip-files00113thm.jpg'
e6febe11d6eb899a4c0098bfe45f2062
2013e23789235a7ede4e2d2c138c0313e28261f9
describe
'84639' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHCG' 'sip-files00164.QC.jpg'
5d3e53b081ea46bb84cc509aacabaedb
d975fa6f2094bb81ccc165dd9e74c5e1d961777f
describe
'43826' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHCH' 'sip-files00138thm.jpg'
13b029a8c0e84361987955d31d391276
28966fe8b308f7e38ecf449a4afb7367957409a5
describe
'1605' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHCI' 'sip-files00113.txt'
7ae0850ad760b7e768b374d0e27e24a3
d3551c40fd599b18d829b2f74c8e80efecaf8ce4
describe
'1154' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHCJ' 'sip-files00112.txt'
80bd43f054fff05d7b80c5135365d044
72867228f353664a74df7eb272260e14cc96dae3
describe
'16626' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHCK' 'sip-files00049thm.jpg'
92d5a0f771ab8a7a837ad53bccfee16b
4270ef9e8d8e47951781de34908213efa739bb47
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHCL' 'sip-files00159.jp2'
0eaf75bec15338356f8518375948b49a
6869406d73822acadf2e1803d141047e16d2f0da
'2012-05-27T15:50:24-04:00'
describe
'1626581' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHCM' 'sip-files00160.jp2'
ae83ba16cb0b6f34173a3f3180dc4e71
3e6d36871621559a7d44cca2c5f05b82517effa1
'2012-05-27T15:43:56-04:00'
describe
'1600423' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHCN' 'sip-files00234.jp2'
72c75aa776b1359f9a21695d44e44b85
e46394c5a6c37f7f505efa261e71a909a6bf23f2
describe
'1621' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHCO' 'sip-files00141.txt'
ffd861d928e2cf6869263c775826e49a
0c9f6938a3b3d5f9bded7190b2c9c9679e00a849
describe
'12857216' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHCP' 'sip-files00185.tif'
bbe52af94bbff2ee8509c8fcbb2dd390
226594ac3a8bcaab0bb1c5a1a302d3fa2902a722
describe
'1666' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHCQ' 'sip-files00138.txt'
4c17f0d863c70f97337a40146c45a01b
219ce84172ca49d898a7ba811c52e9e8c93097e0
'2012-05-27T15:48:01-04:00'
describe
'234877' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHCR' 'sip-files00016.jpg'
533235d65633f66f1fcf2b3057a9b47f
6ab24ea16874225da2c1e3c0e1fada98af21777a
'2012-05-27T15:43:22-04:00'
describe
'212093' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHCS' 'sip-files00093.jpg'
2196c84521a99178f35cd49b65f0fe3e
0a505f1d29c8f4d68635eca02b3af205a317a1d9
describe
'1642477' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHCT' 'sip-files00202.jp2'
e4c005b7f0687b34455b42ed8898ae5c
5dbbac035b14869ccc36104f3014eb9951287a1d
describe
'1612' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHCU' 'sip-files00117.txt'
20db422ccd607b87e8c2db20477f484e
4c1e5454adbc81203bf2574d76ba04e6af25a13a
describe
'13513740' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHCV' 'sip-files00167.tif'
cacb537e44d57ce98a809dce8a9d3dcd
d6f6e4f5fc62bf4efb315b22192936f64d91cc39
'2012-05-27T15:37:42-04:00'
describe
'12918272' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHCW' 'sip-files00145.tif'
dce4dca4e803b43df56cd4e9480bea10
8e7604944c2bd9b37205d7eae1c439f6a955da0a
describe
'31051' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHCX' 'sip-files00046.pro'
da09aa9c32e63bbd94970e021881618d
40d56f75885e223c6c1f15b07da33ddab6433eee
'2012-05-27T15:36:59-04:00'
describe
'1594' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHCY' 'sip-files00220.txt'
c3e20656d121c72678497882ac4e03db
36e504b672a9403b580228567bbd0136e4dba9b9
describe
'1706590' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHCZ' 'sip-files00040.jp2'
e8fee46822b03df87e90124b817da13f
03c4b9c2d31fd089a1d5b301dc248f6ef7ad90ef
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHDA' 'sip-files00129.txt'
bdc997b54312bedb8f24e05056532000
3c974c4314db728cac1d3160a8cee9f64c6fc7d7
'2012-05-27T15:41:24-04:00'
describe
'1858' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHDB' 'sip-files00028.txt'
7514625c5f081638b6fc9bd90358e07b
9fb6e35af08aab6dbe4094de1d3b1af4fa04adee
describe
'68258' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHDC' 'sip-files00161.jpg'
de0e48caf0d6ebaf7c4484e33a34fdbd
14e9a38254db63e358921b73b7b96b0bdb7cf35f
describe
'1592' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHDD' 'sip-files00074.txt'
def92eca285c17ce22461ae3156d7412
0c5a71e81228730d79d829eec382fd491d64a79c
describe
'1579578' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHDE' 'sip-files00060.jp2'
6e47fa534ae3a0b8c8cad25b95875055
e40242b30208da817bcaa627c233eeacadef58b1
describe
'1708095' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHDF' 'sip-files00025.jp2'
e79479dfe4fef0f061da4805367e24a4
620247305ffdee69ef9819b23b4545beb6222178
describe
'73707' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHDG' 'sip-files00008.QC.jpg'
bbcfe88541e01856879caa3327ad267d
c4c116938ecf4a6266a0cf3b993ba5e56bd2feaa
describe
'13211396' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHDH' 'sip-files00208.tif'
36368fc8f9b8a1f30f1f9b0d8099eecb
9477fe150892029e101c32f303b98ca9fd076d15
describe
'13092000' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHDI' 'sip-files00130.tif'
6b2b6e8236f9e523e42c18ec7786319c
0feedee6d223ec39e1d7cd5642520bd11e455864
describe
'1633342' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHDJ' 'sip-files00036.jp2'
07aae5c06e2959325cc9738bc24b8e3d
99fadcdbec817fa3797262aba9c60f0658d463f1
describe
'94743' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHDK' 'sip-files00246.QC.jpg'
2674205b88c6daa73fd2a8edcca74704
ae8b429f393b627806909fa3c7601d1adecc19c6
'2012-05-27T15:47:45-04:00'
describe
'1702017' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHDL' 'sip-files00076.jp2'
5b0d0e5823e138abb979d32fa073c020
b3183c14a835c6cceda1d81e88d7fb1533a0e902
describe
'235569' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHDM' 'sip-files00157.jpg'
b38dd189e7bb6024517f2699b26fc8a9
31a21da020d3628010934f57feafbccd21d8a18e
'2012-05-27T15:39:37-04:00'
describe
'638' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHDN' 'sip-files00202.txt'
29935268c4182125ee0ff94b92523ba3
fa6e9c9c67343e05c3c3bb7319b0a1722f6ffe82
'2012-05-27T15:47:23-04:00'
describe
'1771015' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHDO' 'sip-files00287.jp2'
587d2c3274ddb7508feb23f11abbfd98
79a4d0e8328b499db53a620be11adc33ad970bc5
describe
'1517315' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHDP' 'sip-files00003.jp2'
8a51e28abc5612bdc0e46db775045ed7
db88d8b64efbb9e6744a1c3cee81fb5a5da85311
describe
'88582' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHDQ' 'sip-files00288.QC.jpg'
70cda2c3d9276cff9bd6bb3e91bcfaca
64ef0abf7bb2de1135dfd0b7d1120c21b1d7ea53
describe
'90507' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHDR' 'sip-files00066.QC.jpg'
59ba2554c6b65d18d41d234a4c8759ba
9aa6fdbbb7d76a232491d4c55e7ad7b506755e7c
describe
'229252' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHDS' 'sip-files00190.jpg'
2cfbb43ad77c671f51fed26b20ecde68
2d00b0a819454e8a71c15b4c40f03e81ad17d66f
describe
'41944' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHDT' 'sip-files00067.pro'
c851618843b7463d8bf21059a6018f01
f3c956df0b7ee36e0f9f3467913154289828ecff
'2012-05-27T15:45:00-04:00'
describe
'1656110' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHDU' 'sip-files00172.jp2'
c8c26d1f836d28d388ca6a330635d559
ed1eda9d8c64d57507749d08a7b00adc24a4fed1
describe
'214036' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHDV' 'sip-files00267.jpg'
8cef57dd5c69f41b4b7ed4df8f215983
b10df4f444a6e0fe2f4ca993ead4746e63ea0529
describe
'45064' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHDW' 'sip-files00191.pro'
86e6774b036c280ef54b1daa8840bb43
39cb6a00c6f990aa3ba30a45edadc960d37cf58b
describe
'1538025' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHDX' 'sip-files00256.jp2'
1f7e575df47352c797efc23b50b39ed1
1e69d75b422416cfb614eaa8a2da8397c8c5d29c
describe
'13752500' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHDY' 'sip-files00112.tif'
85c700cecbaed5e47d228288b0b36936
0cb718cf0e4e4d2bdec8efcfb7253513986e197d
'2012-05-27T15:41:26-04:00'
describe
'41338' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHDZ' 'sip-files00281thm.jpg'
db08438da68070c3bc640e8a8100857b
86dce15cbc854e7f2dbf32ee621f3ebcf532200e
describe
'13010376' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHEA' 'sip-files00024.tif'
3d9ce572bc934e301b7d75bcef251ea0
cc40dae74bdd16bd6de1b7da4fb2d425f5851276
describe
'14257376' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHEB' 'sip-files00231.tif'
e7ebec3b1d485fe79b5de40f8f233447
728c8516bf2abcea3682c0bac9b61d765f0b814a
'2012-05-27T15:49:27-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHEC' 'sip-files00211.jp2'
5155a2d6c4bfafc8446647df1db100a8
f3f44d54e33e94cb1697ef2c4bd42cfd8b7268d8
describe
'42030' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHED' 'sip-files00043thm.jpg'
3f92ec8067a2f4fa78d1f880af895a09
fe1ec7e4f69e8adeaacf5d05ffa4008fb2974a25
describe
'30706' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHEE' 'sip-files00178thm.jpg'
b9a4de2302c0edf166ad90cd646c53df
a041c1d857b7422c2d2fd6ecd730bb57be6d2e81
describe
'1741318' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHEF' 'sip-files00070.jp2'
881174e2189e4a2de35921b3a7867762
0c76fdb66979e44d5296d29b50f8e9dc982ee0b2
describe
'42546' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHEG' 'sip-files00120.pro'
a3ed17d25cdf15bf479b8cb5adeb027e
26ac293258064966756e1267ec406cc782f27c0d
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHEH' 'sip-files00106.jp2'
f13a3f0bf026e7027d26f8aaa90f3702
887be9f1aaa8bc695e40a41525d8a64eeae6343d
describe
'1538750' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHEI' 'sip-files00122.jp2'
9a1492c3d18245447fac55254f328bcd
66bfe4d00228dc58ab70978a2dbe3c42d3d4eed2
'2012-05-27T15:48:45-04:00'
describe
'41812' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHEJ' 'sip-files00260.pro'
f0801df8447454cc9c69fd3de3f73514
a6a78e31b7d27adcbffb079b17b25b404956fbad
'2012-05-27T15:41:17-04:00'
describe
'38361' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHEK' 'sip-files00288thm.jpg'
e79ff6c6bdd2c33222e70d7205e5e758
2899ea5d029db3de132e12d20e3605d42692436e
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHEL' 'sip-files00174.jp2'
462578003c3dc6de6f88d538962947ea
85a1c53e6f562131e84ff62a3c8077de812bc8db
describe
'30776' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHEM' 'sip-files00249thm.jpg'
42eae7e886a9c68b022f08a69d92921b
33a9505b49151df110fc4226d0efacfa18a58645
describe
'31130' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHEN' 'sip-files00263thm.jpg'
4003d176bf433a5c523e32b831617226
953d54a9dbcd8d89dace1e33bd9381a95083f875
describe
'221331' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHEO' 'sip-files00058.jpg'
5da3d594c5d0233d107ff758a0619078
892ca0fab3097930838bd1e7c9ec91d085341965
describe
'75848' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHEP' 'sip-files00127.QC.jpg'
7818a3d4c89eb25a50e8287fc0826036
823e461c566a1c871268803eef3a2b94d7fb45d2
describe
'87982' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHEQ' 'sip-files00015.QC.jpg'
d8066cb0c06ad09b22fa514a9d107aa4
c6a4cfe47ec06f50d0522a3d53f161897ee6a70d
describe
'32351184' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHER' 'sip-files00001.tif'
b4832c38047025b894d39918db26cdd9
b4a62fe3f0d08879ffe0467944146fe5af2408d3
'2012-05-27T15:36:43-04:00'
describe
'31959' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHES' 'sip-files00218.pro'
5d61b711ffbba889d297ace1719faa62
0ee8351d4dcc65ad3ea559ae09d860880b5f58c9
describe
'43126' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHET' 'sip-files00180.pro'
bb0d98c0cb13bb7d5b5c43b57bf31994
859e6af21e58839bc493944ad926bf33810df8a2
describe
'13514044' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHEU' 'sip-files00141.tif'
a01df4ebad62ae5c3f178f5f58bd5b78
47fd84545ef64e866723d41c7b6f855422d8b30a
describe
'180697' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHEV' 'sip-files00014.jpg'
4916c33dd0e9acd61df4c71390625654
96abcd878e247b67e105f41fb9cfb2fe4ef0954f
describe
'1701' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHEW' 'sip-files00222.txt'
0c6844cbab2e3ad5ab026c0bb874f2be
e495c0bbdf6b5613deecd4409ad2c96cce9b60bd
describe
'97780' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHEX' 'sip-files00240.QC.jpg'
f14709b132f7ea349e34459abb295f70
3d098aad79d802968cba7a06b1daf457b4988ecc
describe
'287495' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHEY' 'sip-files00225.jpg'
a3b9aa1e61e8bb0561977e3fe151289f
e8644e2af4ac29cff9f885bec98bf68e2783660e
describe
'42595' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHEZ' 'sip-files00012thm.jpg'
fb8e3eb6f1ff42bbbb955d7860ecf1e6
c7b20ac966a5c55adfc891ea7ecb90ac62f1cb36
describe
'42137' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHFA' 'sip-files00118thm.jpg'
5ef800087d77da26d54ffcd5660364f7
a204e3b0d7f2318cbced5ba440318d7ac902dcdd
describe
'1523944' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHFB' 'sip-files00017.jp2'
c609e87d1606033803728ab3c22f4169
05091f05b22e3b9b6fda9a24855b0472fb3b5e99
'2012-05-27T15:41:27-04:00'
describe
'41241' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHFC' 'sip-files00268.pro'
16cd8da461502342815dc5e1a2e019c6
95631c1dffcbb9237953119cfb683b6560d6af92
describe
'70756' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHFD' 'sip-files00154.QC.jpg'
1118ee730b89ff0b0b6a9ce144a3902a
fab4d2d292adff46f47844b692559fffde66c6eb
describe
'1687603' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHFE' 'sip-files00108.jp2'
2523da5492e04b9da0001d6520658c45
549730fff495c33fe06a997ef38e2f9c8de1134d
'2012-05-27T15:43:04-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHFF' 'sip-files00174.txt'
4050c7022f7721faa5540a611b219408
2d162ae95e809570aadebc4e9e555c4dfdf1e50a
describe
'1684' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHFG' 'sip-files00091.txt'
154d3d2237388f6f03a7ac4ba117915e
3b50a7015a06c69995ce3d94a3964c262e3c1de2
'2012-05-27T15:39:29-04:00'
describe
'23883' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHFH' 'sip-files00116thm.jpg'
6cd5b8af96ad06db45dc633082da2fa3
019e8ecc4fc3cce8cbb51840e49249ca0e068046
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHFI' 'sip-files00208.txt'
6afc40114e68c051c3d20214a81a98c9
fabc5efdcfaaa0a32172cac593cbf1f55b6d7f01
describe
'12350548' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHFJ' 'sip-files00013.tif'
c36ba47b8acfa290a51169ab4729e02d
550153ec56d86f74c0f6fc6513380d3f3fb15f78
describe
'1630216' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHFK' 'sip-files00205.jp2'
5576a85a3d01b9113024f0fc45e927a8
6482c7dc7664d56cb24741eef940ce6dd6eb8308
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHFL' 'sip-files00237.jp2'
213c49730e391d1ef042be0a156d03de
7d34efb55b7f5caa8263fe9b557f7b979dac721b
describe
'33153' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHFM' 'sip-files00115.pro'
577980cc772fb6fa8f1133763a960dde
ba2e48787e5eb0c2b508432af530758e659fc138
'2012-05-27T15:48:12-04:00'
describe
'29339' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHFN' 'sip-files00161.QC.jpg'
92fde928b3335b3a291b20a81675546a
7995ca6cccb17cae573209df011b8145e58b240c
'2012-05-27T15:40:16-04:00'
describe
'13513424' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHFO' 'sip-files00121.tif'
1ceb1e659d977bca586df0d11d49841a
d541b4b838882b49bdab46003f8db9ea1770f2e5
'2012-05-27T15:44:16-04:00'
describe
'41581' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHFP' 'sip-files00192thm.jpg'
e5de7f0b5c2d0d0deff30bb5ad0346de
cf800e4298f9887e05b4b465b84d470b68ce4f22
describe
'104765' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHFQ' 'sip-files00138.QC.jpg'
315e6b0fddf3d3a04eb60ef1f6911aa5
2fb9baa3cb8ab4d5083819f99a78df76c3ef3683
describe
'13514124' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHFR' 'sip-files00197.tif'
a52743fde698f72215b47b01b28e1227
074deb446cc63dde9c64850b739c6ad05cad06b1
'2012-05-27T15:49:54-04:00'
describe
'38353' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHFS' 'sip-files00077thm.jpg'
a23169f194e23e8352ae8103689ebc08
daec9751fb47950d639213b51487585b03328a05
describe
'40314' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHFT' 'sip-files00287thm.jpg'
335b0d8aa506092609d6e76d7dd762b5
48e29c4b791a263f3c60e3a1b77b6baa46ce4e0e
describe
'92666' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHFU' 'sip-files00229.QC.jpg'
556f0fc91e0ce4bb030aa2329aaa0da0
3e11be19d53737075af2fe5e272a6a3b81d2f40a
'2012-05-27T15:47:54-04:00'
describe
'30264' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHFV' 'sip-files00164thm.jpg'
0a6f162beca7dfd73cac056cfef235c0
f2fac18c7734a6f8701458a9e770324724b73ca5
describe
'239317' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHFW' 'sip-files00164.jpg'
6b212bcf0d3bd8c55845247b3ffd2ce5
4694ba109f0c180dd475420345a10d2bc8c092c1
'2012-05-27T15:38:38-04:00'
describe
'228833' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHFX' 'sip-files00086.jpg'
2fc3cb7f0f9a44044e565feb10fd59c8
2d2955cdbbb461700d24bf2c8bd652d17f80c095
'2012-05-27T15:41:45-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHFY' 'sip-files00223.txt'
a25e08325e4eac449060a9aa4af918d4
0e1300532d480cd08bbbbf768386cd969bc23f05
describe
'1705565' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHFZ' 'sip-files00227.jp2'
f7cead0eb88ecf474d676f05f48ed232
436147b859a3b883fe77ae61a2eec0361556f458
describe
'1662' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHGA' 'sip-files00206.txt'
381287bfe52f1415c35f73ff4e9ae4b0
739b4d7326acee8dc3bd09ae215f081e7466c079
describe
'1647136' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHGB' 'sip-files00223.jp2'
270a1a0929d97814021aef3ed15728ef
6eb04c20f68bd44bfa365d27a4e0e7f8a4c298f7
'2012-05-27T15:47:38-04:00'
describe
'1687577' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHGC' 'sip-files00083.jp2'
47251e2b400a2a3ee324ea4797c9c0ff
22409dc1b4b1cc095e13dee07d10a1fbe9b4d141
describe
'97218' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHGD' 'sip-files00072.QC.jpg'
9df7d97a54beca224f25334000e85d80
adf834a123eeba4d426ccf7a08545039586d62ea
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHGE' 'sip-files00134.tif'
c3c6428b92923154ab6bb7427c82afe1
6965e8640a715295012b716c642e7aa90c04b3d4
describe
'4320' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHGF' 'sip-files00006.jp2'
d5d697dec4c315419be3ca0110a05cc2
33aad5333c2275fa11ca8afbda8b931c8ff3c876
describe
'1084' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHGG' 'sip-files00111.txt'
c759ee22b5c4643d9b52634e2f12e284
b7d3e1578a73677e1c4f028072600fa07e543521
describe
'29629' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHGH' 'sip-files00011thm.jpg'
a6dc47cc02d87cf63a70ff102e366729
b61620d15776b7688f77e3aafaf3c25d3ccb6f2b
'2012-05-27T15:45:19-04:00'
describe
'13508696' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHGI' 'sip-files00006.tif'
69917663f4dbd776f338b484105637df
810a6c7f92731498b4762df9d15ac3501bf86231
describe
'1556' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHGJ' 'sip-files00248.txt'
50101d967a4835e0d49053a400c8fe07
b24225228a0e51df023b830e43bbbea0610a8fdd
'2012-05-27T15:46:23-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHGK' 'sip-files00201.txt'
faee90877a615f738f54cd247d0af330
743a2b034d8f8752be92a2addb69f47c06970690
'2012-05-27T15:39:19-04:00'
describe
'100103' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHGL' 'sip-files00032.QC.jpg'
753d20c6fedf8334279eafbf1c445b9f
1e4243f7c8e5a803e078ec601a77a06b6fe509a7
describe
'44103' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHGM' 'sip-files00026.pro'
c88548da5b404bd555d77c522f805305
28156115a4b023f7c624041de9d7b468e62d5d77
'2012-05-27T15:39:10-04:00'
describe
'43451' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHGN' 'sip-files00044.pro'
90e50531f4f86d3f665492b2966e3efb
ccb5a6ed0c78ec0a2d4c3ad639fe52703a803c30
describe
'98549' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHGO' 'sip-files00023.QC.jpg'
a3bc19e52e0b7946681a0a1e2bfb277a
62b8eddeccb16dd5341b34eae32a0fbd618101d5
describe
'339' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHGP' 'sip-files00225.txt'
e82f69ceb014829975e086894bf45048
93200968a9cd27bacf27ca35b2797b12ccdcbd6d
'2012-05-27T15:44:00-04:00'
describe
Invalid character
'41775' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHGQ' 'sip-files00253.pro'
8c22cfa5f248a81239eeb7cb096ef498
fdca45add8a753f8f06b036a9bd0f6cf3e367c0d
describe
'230627' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHGR' 'sip-files00260.jpg'
64653095e56e99b9d44f635b26cadd21
9aa7248391deb6f561696e18650ee9101b9ea570
'2012-05-27T15:50:19-04:00'
describe
'1647637' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHGS' 'sip-files00286.jp2'
b91e6175bb058b8f3ee4b5cd4a6d1267
6aee499e08bfb0ead5b90c01283920f89c9f0c30
describe
'1575029' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHGT' 'sip-files00278.jp2'
94870c9f0a90b9963a09dce438779fa8
0575fadb54d7a42125f85f29f3a1ae4878dcc9cb
describe
'242397' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHGU' 'sip-files00059.jpg'
5c9a522ba9968081ce680eb75334ac3d
f7ced3603e87566f9b6344a6349df8004e55690e
describe
'1262' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHGV' 'sip-files00115.txt'
cd6e1d39d47c27356bea4c4176f12659
84e6173b3f990e4cea5ce2351c88c6f94c231e74
describe
'40900' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHGW' 'sip-files00274.pro'
55e26f79aeabf9cb75b67305a10f7f91
4e1cc986b266d6ae9ffc6e63f7544d9a77488151
describe
'264087' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHGX' 'sip-files00216.jpg'
9c697f9814c33f7e629ca29b10718242
64f3eacf0d313aba34a7d3396b93b9a7b347f34c
describe
'67870' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHGY' 'sip-files00075.jpg'
aece8dbbf32ea6828479d6087c2e0d36
13d8622f50382975713049ca6ed085dd4bdb2c4b
describe
'1624389' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHGZ' 'sip-files00059.jp2'
d663fe32b6cd6587d68619a772e06d4f
e5b947745948a44f51fb9a47df6eebafb0f4fa22
'2012-05-27T15:40:21-04:00'
describe
'13165940' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHHA' 'sip-files00240.tif'
9babadd4486d76b12e43b4f8a88485e4
61ef7c56fcc79e7f815bb63398210f461baf0244
'2012-05-27T15:42:02-04:00'
describe
'44964' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHHB' 'sip-files00102.pro'
48ebc598819693fd8201da9e2055a97c
4b128a5c43f95d12ad4aabf088714e77de2a5a70
'2012-05-27T15:46:56-04:00'
describe
'17013' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHHC' 'sip-files00285thm.jpg'
6c08ad8eabec877f6659ef64b22194da
3707304ca014e621a02e907b153a92e3deacfbd7
describe
'80915' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHHD' 'sip-files00285.jpg'
908066090866dad95e29fff399900b78
bf06704410ba1d3a1c0b32e72aee9dde3f022924
describe
'249046' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHHE' 'sip-files00235.jpg'
1300c343d0619a645e345dbf6f422fac
fee18cb81251fb582f6d47469f19370d48640631
describe
'1683002' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHHF' 'sip-files00201.jp2'
44abe22d204a7c1b17f1bcb63de4b460
e248426247957735409ed8dfac4a5045ac6b4324
describe
'45263' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHHG' 'sip-files00010.pro'
832341f9049c3ecbc89cc93bcd68d9df
b4742e2da35020d9e6b0bdce118991bc7568ca00
describe
'1786260' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHHH' 'sip-files00030.jp2'
01673886bf0082fdd57ef7b7faf2e729
84ac23f630dcf315e48b6d63e25bdacc996ac0b5
'2012-05-27T15:42:11-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHHI' 'sip-files00135.jp2'
c0b270d98527fbe1904df898d3157a63
bebd2794f26417fb0577873d25ce192e5a73105b
describe
'241965' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHHJ' 'sip-files00178.jpg'
4babbb89e35702dc3908bc2f6aa4869c
b09c8bd72c82d30d6c485a549c42a35f574f4dca
describe
'41100' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHHK' 'sip-files00230thm.jpg'
6f333f7859186744b1ee651fe962f95c
b07a46b7fab3295dbd2045cca521296074b9997a
'2012-05-27T15:45:17-04:00'
describe
'49043' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHHL' 'sip-files00045.QC.jpg'
1323cfe7e1b5d4c20b23059178bf556e
01bbc879cb31b2eafd30ef7ad097e2913dcddf0c
describe
'13444324' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHHM' 'sip-files00232.tif'
5e0932600c705941d59958f3a4e100c1
2497078833c519324e47d9c47bda1940c3c2da7d
'2012-05-27T15:45:13-04:00'
describe
'71049' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHHN' 'sip-files00084.QC.jpg'
d91b4fb2311496e7d943173153814475
401631878920d123e83b7548bdb01412be4d81fb
describe
'175747' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHHO' 'sip-files00185.jpg'
0334da3f97b765fab4244ca2488f566a
7a7a8f40c2cb37b42b09ad92bb7677720940f937
describe
'13896308' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHHP' 'sip-files00092.tif'
d9000bf3cb73b8e4cdb88785328400ef
ebd9655d368e4bfd893d686ce29ac11074ab1ee2
'2012-05-27T15:36:49-04:00'
describe
'1627' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHHQ' 'sip-files00212.txt'
4a9ff18f4e22a22d7991110984982b59
da5199fb6e8270cf44dd82a829ccf55f0804f65e
describe
'192690' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHHR' 'sip-files00227.jpg'
2076d296dea6c6265a8dbe2876bb7f78
511d1a40b4dd6a74d8fc48e9883f1ccae0f2bd02
describe
'31729' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHHS' 'sip-files00005.QC.jpg'
c6b37197a376a7a695cdb0e3e50b4b8a
7234d564d863da3ba5cbb0d20871c8e1c9621c93
describe
'1602' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHHT' 'sip-files00016.txt'
0e47bdef2250886d07410cc53f051661
d3b30996dbb9da01ecbca0cb1b28b7c734de777c
describe
'1687543' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHHU' 'sip-files00116.jp2'
18586f7283920567dd227db1c114be2a
873c0495c572c3a94b1962b389380c5d4f10041c
'2012-05-27T15:37:15-04:00'
describe
'13512344' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHHV' 'sip-files00009.tif'
2f8f353fdca733a18b69a02ca81f846a
f122a655dd65e6b6ebab2e56bfb7b1b124ae62ce
'2012-05-27T15:43:36-04:00'
describe
'242280' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHHW' 'sip-files00150.jpg'
1d4d2e0e5848f10d7113e0ff67507ad4
78f3c6c60ce4a98bd00cd07cc8cd3cc6b0b0ac55
describe
'33097' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHHX' 'sip-files00273.pro'
6826ececb492f6a6b8d7587fc1e52239
76b154a6fb9960744f5103dd17955cfce1363c3b
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHHY' 'sip-files00073.jp2'
a0a9d469e981c3c5afbb9be2c26713da
535e4c32b64205ad2030a3dd2f98a932e683d7a0
describe
'29517' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHHZ' 'sip-files00271thm.jpg'
000d599aee793be508094f5cd1eef79c
31ec15efc90b27196b06d2432c32418ab4fce44d
describe
'249121' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHIA' 'sip-files00221.jpg'
17272a1be1ee2759a98a0bd60d4c78a4
a6438eb5786e68a4d82b7c84124025638ce26bea
'2012-05-27T15:49:07-04:00'
describe
'82205' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHIB' 'sip-files00262.QC.jpg'
4ce4ad474ba208e7c4d7da3eeec3e85e
063587c6d16be25309cf2b21da43ccf81961a18e
describe
'40171' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHIC' 'sip-files00054thm.jpg'
d02e0482ac7c0ef4dab0f4f5eada5974
79631383ed82d39ebf54bbfbd89945f464a671a0
describe
'221961' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHID' 'sip-files00114.jpg'
158d351279a440cb2468fcee91e26d60
fbb8412a49c38646cde5f0f1ef5c721373eb038e
describe
'33424' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHIE' 'sip-files00245thm.jpg'
07d5ae04b37687fee7f4c1464c7ff500
af7503883a44411e7ef43988bd037e5751efe972
'2012-05-27T15:46:10-04:00'
describe
'63085' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHIF' 'sip-files00272.jpg'
3e4496de7146c63ea51f1b847abebb83
1393af24aef0e12b88cb697b90ffe8ebcaf88995
describe
'1604610' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHIG' 'sip-files00185.jp2'
effc130971177a95472a81d418a97649
d02df0216437c4ac0cff55fcb6b232b40f99c549
describe
'1651909' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHIH' 'sip-files00266.jp2'
90d8087d0996afdc7833b30951c7ac39
4222071afd543cbebbe93ac3a507992a662256db
describe
'43778' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHII' 'sip-files00033.pro'
f79da2343ac0ffbb9475988c0b95b765
37b80a299bc9118f085ed608080586ace32af2e6
describe
'321965' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHIJ' 'sip-files00122.jpg'
9dc6a311c4810a85a901eaaeeef429f6
0cb5ad9eecd0be3a8b6c188b02e49edd2b73a200
'2012-05-27T15:48:36-04:00'
describe
'34811' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHIK' 'sip-files00279.pro'
2281c86ac48f5dcbd467e6c30410c654
f2545d88fc01c1d24adccc9239772ea268d66713
'2012-05-27T15:45:26-04:00'
describe
'80167' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHIL' 'sip-files00096.QC.jpg'
5c8ace17f106736d55eaab6e0f7b898f
482e2b0ba5b41aff72559004c3f441251824173b
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHIM' 'sip-files00153.jp2'
6606f64bbae498e6096d774513ed43aa
680d25c05437fc15078d671e22ba83301c540e59
describe
'80415' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHIN' 'sip-files00133.QC.jpg'
b11b0efe18e514083d1136cc1011379c
dd03c7f8a55591a2e8f5dac3c12fdfb0621e9176
describe
'13514592' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHIO' 'sip-files00096.tif'
d34a0a73e521e5a5273e511283f82284
766f6925c103900f74302a10960d0b61a1079c1a
'2012-05-27T15:50:09-04:00'
describe
'97069' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHIP' 'sip-files00275.QC.jpg'
b5425fd454def4869a6f3a1e46b38b23
1b53653ec155bc957b399f0b42dcdcb7a91afe63
describe
'221613' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHIQ' 'sip-files00077.jpg'
4cb72ad4394d042691046f6b47c64b9e
c3cd4a5b37a44dcb967ab633192838c8cc749016
describe
'335' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHIR' 'sip-files00256.txt'
2284d98c0866577495d3ff17eb091cc9
46edfa62cb7a1696c32518e9212fed8b7ebd7eb9
describe
Invalid character
'71009' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHIS' 'sip-files00233.QC.jpg'
85fbfd0b27ea02a14287665850e47084
172c439cad9f8811df569af62ff2c8d5ab038545
describe
'1150' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHIT' 'sip-files00162.txt'
0eee8a50925a85fd2da100711dc1dfaf
3fd4223cc6743fcf322999f583d675407b923f93
'2012-05-27T15:38:41-04:00'
describe
'13512896' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHIU' 'sip-files00279.tif'
20df79252b69381b38c96baaa00bf7f7
6edf219304be604130c48b97449b94cfee58d582
describe
'1724451' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHIV' 'sip-files00273.jp2'
0ba5e14984108aa0d6e34497cada04e8
9063603fd922a3b2d3c794120fad975be1b54f67
describe
'44275' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHIW' 'sip-files00138.pro'
db5a26b2408033a69fa512209aa0b446
cb91bb1b82f797c9289dd262e0a28902510469bd
describe
'1648767' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHIX' 'sip-files00208.jp2'
cdbd96ee0d8ab89f42fee1798a83d3b8
0309477d4b154c5102c2cf0b214567c23d2527cc
describe
'72192' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHIY' 'sip-files00022.QC.jpg'
214aaa00a5c3dbe87d87781d20908196
05dbdbadd80e3e7f89e10c9adf78a2c11f004501
describe
'41586' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHIZ' 'sip-files00200thm.jpg'
02e3bf65c0014e3372c33470699b1380
2980f027894e3a073c4891d0cd555cc30d04bdd3
describe
'259155' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHJA' 'sip-files00047.jpg'
2ac053a31863264cadc9b8bf64c7925a
e7c6d4b01bc7602103a24c1606d4f5e6d37951e4
describe
'13514452' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHJB' 'sip-files00035.tif'
f8d45b355ea8708ccb8d9b496cbe58c0
b52a34408a5717647a717dab20260421a7136292
describe
'43924' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHJC' 'sip-files00107thm.jpg'
bbef0539318e66517f60dcf7d4f2959c
d4c26094578c0ad6973c2abc95df5fd65f4de3a0
describe
'80860' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHJD' 'sip-files00175.QC.jpg'
1c9de853c4be484d2553f52733063b3f
b537b9993689f6a9036dc6dd270baa2995d54715
describe
'41034' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHJE' 'sip-files00228thm.jpg'
df79d149495672ad7920c904a6380772
7481909f233b5bf31c2c38910cdaac4f3ee16a61
describe
'1676' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHJF' 'sip-files00026.txt'
136ee722d3c2460263417615c2815d34
688d535c6d69246f2dccbb1329d583073e08333f
describe
'40511' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHJG' 'sip-files00137thm.jpg'
a5caa7291bf3112e7b2362d76be0754a
4c38da81513e1b78353eb4f72b7403f0feac502a
describe
'16880' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHJH' 'sip-files00002thm.jpg'
af71ac8dab54136c88a65edec0c5e912
d83bbc7bb4e226f56547d2a7ed1a5dbdc9e34630
'2012-05-27T15:46:54-04:00'
describe
'14001436' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHJI' 'sip-files00282.tif'
f293999ec72b20642f6c9fc45e0175b6
1bd8a786e6ef3a80bdcb9c4fafe316db650e110c
'2012-05-27T15:43:40-04:00'
describe
'38581' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHJJ' 'sip-files00114thm.jpg'
89d8e08dcf1c7588754a298f316ff992
06baff1b03d3d4d0c5b2bfa2daa5ab18461b0321
describe
'87017' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHJK' 'sip-files00074.QC.jpg'
c389475ef100f28227129fbe7416c78c
87a6d1e279b7a5c825c1065d8103e12b794282fd
describe
'1712953' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHJL' 'sip-files00123.jp2'
f2d592fb9ff7fa7b9f59aa657a0a0e9e
017751fd00031d3b45aefbc92b42ef50bb3c4fb3
describe
'8641' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHJM' 'sip-files00256.pro'
4f6b1a265534096ef013e29a795a69f0
d63fc696bd10a12aefa319a738ee691abb2fe3cb
describe
'24065' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHJN' 'sip-files00056thm.jpg'
239648dce6c27b6c55d3f931324d7e71
769b34eafa251dcb094b36e3c053ec35fa5f0005
describe
'65367' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHJO' 'sip-files00050.QC.jpg'
cc46288cac9fbb4cdfbf91dbbfa52066
fe5617b65234aa0f0c388ce7283c673464702aec
describe
'13144268' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHJP' 'sip-files00170.tif'
1d494103808722d1196c03b06d0fc103
32426ae6f5bebd01ff25c5c244ea88a61ae787bb
'2012-05-27T15:46:08-04:00'
describe
'1220' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHJQ' 'sip-files00116.txt'
3ea1625f347fd638c3afcb9056acf993
1823bd08ce508ea51dbfa5d690f0daad2c3c4a18
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHJR' 'sip-files00290.jp2'
6cfaea5ecb8114b5499a2155d1199f7a
f7dfa785cb63a25061515f50bff004a9f714eaf7
describe
'972' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHJS' 'sip-files00176.txt'
48394a6b299432c1920158bcd8ea892d
65a171d4516f0d84033d5a0f976101012fc476cc
describe
'13172868' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHJT' 'sip-files00158.tif'
997bbaecd986d1063219ff2e3f096274
6fec382abeb1ffc283418c6f2ea5fe2a382dd058
'2012-05-27T15:41:42-04:00'
describe
'333529' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHJU' 'sip-files00004.jpg'
32aefc50ed4ffe1c9252bf2c80337a1c
bbfb1c429c66790d806b70b27fe7fe12822268fe
'2012-05-27T15:36:41-04:00'
describe
'1640' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHJV' 'sip-files00137.txt'
a938d1a0fc2a1f91d8f91a86e3a5c3e6
920f8c5e5572c7d51356943cda3e5b533d4a2f3a
describe
'1388797' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHJW' 'sip-files00004.jp2'
249bb52d9254639d793177ed1715af84
605e518a9ea2638d45b73ab029390b1aecfdd6b5
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHJX' 'sip-files00011.jp2'
d5ac72618e54d0e1194e5d2736c164d6
552fc47b771bc3e063091ac97f9bc54706abb42a
describe
'32290' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHJY' 'sip-files00225thm.jpg'
af59d3fda487319457b3bff625e5b7a0
d1a8bf7bac6c57ff99c96fc3f0267de48e364f8d
describe
'1225' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHJZ' 'sip-files00177.txt'
776ba106423244352a802fa3f24932f8
7e3bc3e4cd703e2c94c02c7104a14efece125be2
describe
'78269' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHKA' 'sip-files00187.QC.jpg'
450b4ddfff6f6ccc01ba5fc1a9e3bbd8
e6344f9917d303088555fdeb94ea0125944e50f0
describe
'13514424' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHKB' 'sip-files00241.tif'
bc96e40284f522b80f49971ea56990c3
987b89dca89b5d1f511b0c3f610612d69bf740d3
describe
'233319' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHKC' 'sip-files00181.jpg'
132194772922bf7a989a9fe15cb7f712
6914658d2bc26835cb57b5e074257f67ccc9c4bf
describe
'65600' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHKD' 'sip-files00042.QC.jpg'
8d3260652c0450bf58d993d4664918f7
815bc24c24faf2e842ed1ba04e570e79558ad2fc
describe
'258175' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHKE' 'sip-files00113.jpg'
45b854703fa1990dc9b70ff3b97263e0
06c750f9f6bd317269db78e50c64eb3cca743632
describe
'31769' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHKF' 'sip-files00245.pro'
db5669a14c5d85032433e8aa4206b7e1
a9702d4715facfedc89d36c1366cc1386287cceb
describe
'23722' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHKG' 'sip-files00111thm.jpg'
4f5b188da6388edc8b5556de5a8942f7
a6b6c9694e4e8621c1889472138c4cd21f8bbce7
'2012-05-27T15:36:36-04:00'
describe
'13514696' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHKH' 'sip-files00174.tif'
580b68e19ba5b84e99c38187f7b8d9cd
45287a2b20361534d3a81e0de5f938dd0a09c0a2
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHKI' 'sip-files00237.tif'
a7c092b7042644bcd96a3c1fc2817fcf
1b8f8ae095348cf8056c318e58189b74fd42e521
'2012-05-27T15:50:05-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHKJ' 'sip-files00160.txt'
c1536e3b3cdcb38b454f26dd8380971c
9af9884e4bb82b8ffbdc0ecb794c616801bc601a
describe
'39527' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHKK' 'sip-files00028thm.jpg'
7b7c8cf8915f8691d2144e00cc5cf0db
d51f07f88e6a6f5398e5de14a28f4b432b95f2d1
describe
'1211' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHKL' 'sip-files00127.txt'
b5c6684d8af46ba2b5585d031512bbb8
8867932078d0b2e983a27293c4130498ddd24f22
describe
'12150128' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHKM' 'sip-files00003.tif'
41cfb7e6103cfaf642425fc4a7242f09
117595fda9036ab1bab7e8e1711d6a73cfa80528
'2012-05-27T15:38:26-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHKN' 'sip-files00181.txt'
4e1b4428f7ee245e454daeb38db55e71
f4be42130f6b12067714fbef27048735b397b718
describe
'72833' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHKO' 'sip-files00029.QC.jpg'
9ad48dda492d2d3bf7250ebeea15dee5
1319ee262ca6a8d2cacabeb009db4274dc37bfde
'2012-05-27T15:47:52-04:00'
describe
'196754' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHKP' 'sip-files00091.jpg'
e091f1c8fceedf2f78692a54fe7af16d
55cc26a7131d560a007979e15502a8011c05f227
describe
'26131' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHKQ' 'sip-files00184.pro'
986376b727853c9e997d2e45b305b56b
e67b0befb01a86478f16fcbd0997b80b80d0f45c
describe
'1664' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHKR' 'sip-files00261.txt'
d5309d35ec187e500de265762812f83b
c42f31469978fd170203af51f6c92a6c6ef68a74
describe
'28670' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHKS' 'sip-files00193thm.jpg'
e46e4eb98a699e98743939b868776754
29b868c6cd06ec275ec790af2665b1fab4611cce
describe
'14505624' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHKT' 'sip-files00015.tif'
8ece602b6fd6cf51a696764bcfd5e261
f6500824e803d16cc1519db1bda5fc867be465f2
'2012-05-27T15:49:24-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHKU' 'sip-files00146.tif'
2a36e484ba37b1263fa864c3a5d892f1
4536f99bf43f7c000482f4939144d3cc63871d6c
describe
'29690' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHKV' 'sip-files00073thm.jpg'
c931d8c15943cf180888a4507891b2e2
765babdce7cece50f48e0b29cf1c5afad6434231
describe
'72821' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHKW' 'sip-files00273.QC.jpg'
764ae9d402d9725182f9742f42f5d696
db8a9e53c37ca43d4212a77d18c9425eae1d880e
describe
'30827' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHKX' 'sip-files00053thm.jpg'
fea65972915ca755eb712d24bde8ab0b
a8b87645ea3199f7f01aef997fdef2b6fff0b5fe
'2012-05-27T15:38:52-04:00'
describe
'30607' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHKY' 'sip-files00050.pro'
9028ab8a2469ff3a1cffd84cd6b57f94
e6ff19b74236a3bd4c5443b8b686b19a37647e26
describe
'33152' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHKZ' 'sip-files00070thm.jpg'
5eec413413f5467425e5cb13737726ab
858787f43ad9de943965e74e49052120d305302b
describe
'1043' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHLA' 'sip-files00041.txt'
2957c1c4225db0bb423e47cca5f7761f
fbf5e406950129f4cc2e27bd13dec1206809ea11
describe
'40511268' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHLB' 'sip-files00292.tif'
d917213aa502c926977c927df1ebfe25
37450e93bfc8688e98ebd3919a9c039131aa5350
'2012-05-27T15:43:39-04:00'
describe
'1641916' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHLC' 'sip-files00216.jp2'
fec20b9e414daa49f37d66622e0db2a8
0e079d80da3775cdc4d9ec5b4a767749a91a6d7d
describe
'43527' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHLD' 'sip-files00087.pro'
4ba5f2dd74441ecf48cbd9baf2d40b7e
8b46a5c75ba55bbb98647fbe13c134cfb96d6883
describe
'82976' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHLE' 'sip-files00094.QC.jpg'
8b94aee58de34b6f7c4dba085df81e67
43fcc7187bbaec80b19be3b2679405bdf0f16d62
describe
'13197252' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHLF' 'sip-files00203.tif'
3c99505c9400201c8dc25507d2087b8d
284ef59f50141871a8e56d485b94bf5e7cf58549
'2012-05-27T15:40:50-04:00'
describe
'1248' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHLG' 'sip-files00234.txt'
e6615c1806adfdd6812deec5f6ff7c89
2a07457666930d75b033fba43947f8d5ef516f46
describe
'233827' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHLH' 'sip-files00063.jpg'
9569b125f053a926613648240e76f1f2
3fa960d584c8e2416c3bd1350cbab78cec685093
describe
'41229' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHLI' 'sip-files00181thm.jpg'
0503b12ac43b5fb3e349e8f059133ccc
c995c30de73ca2bf0015b7a09b86c6664f2b20b3
describe
'1184' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHLJ' 'sip-files00022.txt'
f43f3d208f17e71bd99c262f04741d93
b82ef01fcf4b804670da7531a6daedf785b16400
describe
'43290' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHLK' 'sip-files00229.pro'
369096479790796fb51b67cd444757c6
49d7dece700cc9dd52bfa19461a564d9dce7b720
describe
'1608' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHLL' 'sip-files00190.txt'
0c7ac8943c08b39fce70bcdd4d78b4c3
b962f0d2422e02021234912ae7067c8d37dc476d
describe
'579' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHLM' 'sip-files00036.txt'
ccca16d9f8afcad348a8eb27fc24382e
b85814636f53086ad1eb4d5fd248a4f2a6889d8b
describe
'33818' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHLN' 'sip-files00046thm.jpg'
8ab21cbd8b165cae100a100b74c4e41b
a24e4101afe5b8187b663a85b832eccb5c49ae4a
describe
'91212' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHLO' 'sip-files00054.QC.jpg'
49356199f78193a2f15a58f2eed41b4c
7ea5632ff28fdcfbc97d09ee3c4902a49fc01403
describe
'40844' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHLP' 'sip-files00034thm.jpg'
61b2a3122ec3cdb02efe41038c117970
4633790cb3b3fe8020b1a063fa6016df3086c5e8
describe
'253547' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHLQ' 'sip-files00032.jpg'
f101e76e34c4d5524743e42af30449b6
f69b2d62baf7afcd1d79b0dea251e34f7198ef65
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHLR' 'sip-files00023.pro'
f767aadcc7c58f550b03e3cf75f2f66f
9f95b3516060631add8d7375dacbd0878c438ee2
'2012-05-27T15:45:14-04:00'
describe
'41776' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHLS' 'sip-files00124thm.jpg'
e52edc233aa1e4e4a40e0dcdd35d2995
27fb9d2ded69408e042b6bb588a1b864a0fe2499
'2012-05-27T15:49:04-04:00'
describe
'31014' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHLT' 'sip-files00152thm.jpg'
acc4384da64798f5ffe896512b3f2e8c
5d35ee103eb7f12c78f965fd51bba2af45bc81a0
describe
'13511448' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHLU' 'sip-files00083.tif'
fd6d7c3dc7b91be98a0ea7755d28f7ae
468679c8cca6d836d300aed21b396c32fb01749b
'2012-05-27T15:45:27-04:00'
describe
'13514004' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHLV' 'sip-files00173.tif'
6996b978d933397d585c6c30aee5317f
3e7e7e1e4ebe68071af5fd186b23b6b7f8fa0933
'2012-05-27T15:43:09-04:00'
describe
'83438' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHLW' 'sip-files00241.QC.jpg'
9d405f33a1a4e9a3b6deeb8ff3d50df2
7c055aa35103ea2d874a45f738d78a15f1f505b1
describe
'82252' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHLX' 'sip-files00013.QC.jpg'
06583aabb8b0214b615c3c8f782abd06
7a102998a3a2ea49d9bddf4de3f67e223b377cde
describe
'41138' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHLY' 'sip-files00270thm.jpg'
32d8a60380918abe3f937eda5f23de70
54e2e717ef930489f718fee6b5eadec3095ee8d5
describe
'28548' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHLZ' 'sip-files00167thm.jpg'
5e6c1818946a3b22eae12fd9e46b7bd8
27be9ed97a8d5e3137a93b1d3a7a598bebc8878b
'2012-05-27T15:43:44-04:00'
describe
'90863' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHMA' 'sip-files00044.QC.jpg'
0fff6028c2e080a5e9f1eb0984c28429
35ab89fde973cd43f85064922a0acb88d7470e5d
'2012-05-27T15:46:57-04:00'
describe
'41710' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHMB' 'sip-files00165thm.jpg'
b895592f6ac425e92cb32a6f87ce9cde
19527c8ee7200a72c239798ecf3f94ca3bb835bb
describe
'1683' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHMC' 'sip-files00044.txt'
6fff517f65a1177f8501cfa6685a96b7
2c981a879b1c3990f471e639f13f549b7444458c
describe
'13918520' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHMD' 'sip-files00288.tif'
bb7ef7fade7bf36d2ee35eee92813bfe
b0ad20b37d34d5c22d536612ddca235e62a89248
describe
'1546' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHME' 'sip-files00151.txt'
7c2070033714d6cd45d01c69c96cf6d3
641f6084e2a1895f32fd3ba54ecc4d73b3bd5a6f
'2012-05-27T15:48:34-04:00'
describe
'802' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHMF' 'sip-files00083.txt'
203cbd3af730703446f8e021fe3b761d
561c5e28b57ba962f38558f171003e80f4e386a2
describe
'29798' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHMG' 'sip-files00024thm.jpg'
e736d3f60f86f2d6d3493831f53974b8
1f244a68ff99f94333d95c5667e4a20d8f4939e7
describe
'881' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHMH' 'sip-files00045.txt'
021e69d377f3ff0b8b239a2e22321f4f
845ebff2f90f15f5403e634d4b4b031c16ce7216
'2012-05-27T15:48:22-04:00'
describe
'1687578' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHMI' 'sip-files00206.jp2'
383492c9159954c2ba269b16731afcb8
645b986fa9587519abc847ff5e5211c89261eba6
describe
'241373' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHMJ' 'sip-files00145.jpg'
9a6d049dd3c45cc18e5de9f12a188655
eef6c82da1ca89616f6fca656154d80e170fe29a
describe
'96318' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHMK' 'sip-files00281.QC.jpg'
cb2eaa3b25b200d61b0c75107e5ccea9
e021a7869712981b9150c0cfe93684207b0cf6f5
describe
'30893' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHML' 'sip-files00002.QC.jpg'
8810b5255ef45406409d0c8e493c1038
ed54ce5b53215dcfbdf6c1344f13ad63ccaf9e94
describe
'90427' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHMM' 'sip-files00144.QC.jpg'
c67b231e89fa74739521d4d493d7c97f
b477f3e5b04337adc4ed7d73e58e424eb0e6086b
describe
'13909928' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHMN' 'sip-files00280.tif'
9494f83815af96d1950dfd38515cabd0
51903d438985b73ffe719edf0cda915a8e6f2b2d
'2012-05-27T15:40:05-04:00'
describe
'81810' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHMO' 'sip-files00108.QC.jpg'
41277f13d2362d78abd79bf91c6e6279
08df8bd9288b821d93a05c7729df4d8a598ab234
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHMP' 'sip-files00243.txt'
d105d1992c9cb20610112a31f2c11482
84576fa6bf45063491c4e41c9aa91e57f2e1d4b1
'2012-05-27T15:48:58-04:00'
describe
'34964' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHMQ' 'sip-files00140thm.jpg'
fcde1aad468e7e2550ff726aadc6c1d5
6d38bb5214d65da004e0556ddc4d6099fd341967
describe
'26060' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHMR' 'sip-files00194thm.jpg'
e8067337344e1964137e88a696310166
87441df9a84361c449753368981fba1344545fcd
describe
'204051' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHMS' 'sip-files00131.jpg'
229a50458a91caa7fc0777e2277cdc9e
2982dff595f4faafc343fcbd6c2614bda41f5a4c
describe
'24188' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHMT' 'sip-files00162thm.jpg'
99a990032941c630d88909474fa85dc9
cc75161bdad1677caebcd3840c2d4cadf48ad39a
'2012-05-27T15:46:11-04:00'
describe
'247243' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHMU' 'sip-files00240.jpg'
e6057a0673fe9a3c9278f7f8722c2353
e36f7c5deec5fc644f1a93a0cf09e82b5dec600a
'2012-05-27T15:43:24-04:00'
describe
'1693' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHMV' 'sip-files00166.txt'
6e1eb05ea0c89da711930a72ccb4d1de
8fa15dfb43603dc4faa2e069aeff7ddd0fbef7de
'2012-05-27T15:49:57-04:00'
describe
'39528' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHMW' 'sip-files00191thm.jpg'
6e1fb5ad6f3feb6ce828b8dee4fe78f8
acce364f9d664d61f59b230ce55941a63185dafb
describe
'1770724' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHMX' 'sip-files00087.jp2'
1ceb2ed1d5ba41151ae123662bb3a5f6
71c90220b691eb658dd6e64564419fbbe7226dca
describe
'12545448' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHMY' 'sip-files00105.tif'
404dc50bc56ea757e399a89bdc9897a6
9b59bb1551b57a006532d4188e68ec37eede77c3
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHMZ' 'sip-files00246.txt'
19323861179c570a2d2050b69a4e0268
cf7701cfe8cf91086e4fb77fb6f6d3789616cf94
describe
'13513832' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHNA' 'sip-files00267.tif'
7b29deb718fc572d025683bf4998444d
79ce0e26a2ecceabf9bb0ae84bd4b7354ef81b47
describe
'34029' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHNB' 'sip-files00226thm.jpg'
451bcac4aa1779047d42c8af83eb932f
116a5e0c5b18f498dcbf50961784ae0db1024cfc
'2012-05-27T15:48:41-04:00'
describe
'1599258' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHNC' 'sip-files00253.jp2'
6edb8775e0f4a21b63184d8950268b6c
bd80db43ab07335f163c134c594304d4d6821655
describe
'43905' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHND' 'sip-files00216.pro'
75ab9c0150025af2fe58b588570bbb4f
84841dd6fe0b45fcb8e60ae65a903df6ee76b523
describe
'1680713' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHNE' 'sip-files00140.jp2'
bcf4ddd27ad73dea6b09bb670bf0f4f1
edd231db1f5801f7f8b54898af337db75b95d402
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHNF' 'sip-files00247.txt'
8db157b29bec1d1f99b8306a975fc1fc
e2f9dfa1184f4281ce167f08e3ee83fe656527e3
describe
'1477' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHNG' 'sip-files00027.txt'
86d4778098ddf35b8446afe25f38de5a
153d22e87930a1c2c20609897330823d5c4b3c88
describe
'1658' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHNH' 'sip-files00038.txt'
ef15fb45a3bef993dac8b297c02e63fa
621ae699b651173be906e251839b43505537dc45
'2012-05-27T15:47:40-04:00'
describe
'39399' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHNI' 'sip-files00209thm.jpg'
066b8746a6343810dd0c509d19e67fd3
4eb45cd0733cd2853e6ff4b52fae62cc1d58b481
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHNJ' 'sip-files00002.pro'
eed8c6b1850df803191ec2a0947d4fdc
c95bb8836d6b1e69327b6762d0fc3dab463c8995
describe
'76746' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHNK' 'sip-files00149.QC.jpg'
1d1a37b9cc013981b8e23b8d9176f4e9
295286f67bd11739f84ecbb1e09f84432ce99ae7
describe
'29748' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHNL' 'sip-files00254thm.jpg'
43604db0bac7277e7d6220ac58e3cb86
a215044906d161255c8540e467e9f1e1c1232cf0
describe
'91634' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHNM' 'sip-files00027.QC.jpg'
9653835b325fcbb13e5ef55e3a4ff5f0
5853bd63b2f2dbda29ad7e4b21f56b20de5fb412
describe
'40402' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHNN' 'sip-files00289thm.jpg'
fcb712df7bc29a8668e7b1990f897ecc
9b51f317606bca103357c910a05e2bac29c81b81
describe
'21816' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHNO' 'sip-files00293thm.jpg'
fb8ffbdb94fc10245be25af0a23dc683
fde790d43951072fb556621c1f770a647d90b31c
describe
'5050' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHNP' 'sip-files00004.pro'
e481697aa08f11c81e042a562278ac97
f64ea09c77c0646e2f04367c70df3b11d6501154
describe
'29136' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHNQ' 'sip-files00155thm.jpg'
e5b2b2071eb8d2d59b59bd8216e4ccc0
3054111544d94c006c1bd4d3874c20201e424f39
describe
'1695' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHNR' 'sip-files00010.txt'
acbb82d7ed6fbe67ea0a6433bee902ea
ebb4f2dca269d36136a6a862992e9e93b964e5b4
describe
'82704' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHNS' 'sip-files00168.jpg'
2a66ba95b1c935469bbe35f6a50abc54
6322b688198dc07b40d611ea4098030a3709a44b
describe
'26166' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHNT' 'sip-files00290thm.jpg'
516124310ced5097559718bb53d60cd7
cae3d076c57f243a36fdfe6a5d9a154b791b7f6a
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHNU' 'sip-files00139.jp2'
2571433117fd79d8fa84afcdb68b61b4
5bcbe242a9c6789c36185d8289b2b7a2d3de9257
describe
'13514888' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHNV' 'sip-files00119.tif'
1b90e634e2937a0710682a3bbbae84ec
a8e97a1ccb54e2a1ee142b2f05099d804ad3fa0e
describe
'29299' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHNW' 'sip-files00141thm.jpg'
f4e893652c531776d7d741bf3f62cefa
bfd8d5d7a233b4d07ed9529c4bd6ac3fe73bcafa
describe
'330' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHNX' 'sip-files00293.pro'
26869f00b608d80bc9c0e6cba4f20154
523e9161086dd9f9040658e8a1b837ee31278ae0
describe
'30979' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHNY' 'sip-files00010thm.jpg'
236af004e448d8e007837e2f0169499a
5a60e6ce530fff38175329a5b96b58d965e4d938
'2012-05-27T15:46:03-04:00'
describe
'89865' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHNZ' 'sip-files00100.QC.jpg'
47270518f8d683faba66c002f383d474
29138e3e21bda1afe9aeb55f9e2950eb4dade53c
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHOA' 'sip-files00162.jp2'
42325addf5ee2160a34583d739325873
1de3d44645c8b8ed2827ba96c8fa3343f913d3a1
describe
'90751' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHOB' 'sip-files00269.QC.jpg'
ff8e89b1a1c497ad52adefddfe5040bc
1c5b48c683a7126ea7aee2db6ae434f7be9075d9
describe
'43624' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHOC' 'sip-files00100.pro'
1d132a1c4e9b3703c1121a6f63d84fc9
f569a0074dc1538a70967ca7c10e5f17ce9f064b
describe
'44443' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHOD' 'sip-files00048.pro'
6ac00e3da3e6e71fc87090b0a2908ad2
0ddc9fae024bad9e88382909243a71f27e7826c8
describe
'194494' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHOE' 'sip-files00290.jpg'
abbc5558028b475fdf949a23e87d52ca
203d56caa7f64227ccd81f30022d42c6cfe2e0c1
'2012-05-27T15:39:48-04:00'
describe
'256186' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHOF' 'sip-files00031.jpg'
b5ebed147dc3e75e99565873ab467657
62d60f20349257eecc6239b879ac5410336bca15
describe
'13514812' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHOG' 'sip-files00142.tif'
436dec02c881491558ed0b7d44bd021f
6df1471433e517854d75030ce81f0cf356e9765d
describe
'94352' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHOH' 'sip-files00092.QC.jpg'
4d0eb1969a60d1d63cee1752be853d83
2a060a1515aadf0936f8d891b104a28136cb834b
'2012-05-27T15:38:57-04:00'
describe
'242328' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHOI' 'sip-files00246.jpg'
4846d370ba0a4a3b335f2c150c4a2838
34ab08273b5a9105b19932e854d4d64d02fe0561
describe
'12967200' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHOJ' 'sip-files00157.tif'
d7fc6a3f3c29c1e7ccd069dde1862fb9
9901b78d5b7a99c7b3df2b7e107744df1b7da472
'2012-05-27T15:38:53-04:00'
describe
'228821' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHOK' 'sip-files00237.jpg'
89b01065d123b65c42d2050e8294936a
466892c4642fcc7e3f72c286d5e736ba49bac839
'2012-05-27T15:37:54-04:00'
describe
'1616324' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHOL' 'sip-files00247.jp2'
bac7b0b040b5817557cfd098f1aa10ba
bcff1f951fee79c9165c6153672666b69f7aaf37
describe
'101706' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHOM' 'sip-files00261.QC.jpg'
22355624d6fd06fe795e8eca8d5a849c
9c9fcf4aa2bf38a6bb52d02a3d7421bc364d9239
describe
'238718' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHON' 'sip-files00174.jpg'
08c1b946d8d9d9924a4a572eca603140
9fbb525a9a0922faf7c4ecc77c5264fa99c6aa9c
describe
'101382' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHOO' 'sip-files00065.QC.jpg'
d45117d96d7593f0e88039387ec50e1c
404b0b45f429a1e694da925472970f157c328d7b
'2012-05-27T15:43:34-04:00'
describe
'29241' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHOP' 'sip-files00195.pro'
e45caf39e71d5fa156f662bf6a3194b3
be16a2551d08173a5d9dcda57b032c38c2df7410
describe
'14066892' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHOQ' 'sip-files00034.tif'
1c0204e8f2596117dfdd1a8bf06b7d07
c591009adfd1951486a3013e7fbf2c1ee7fa8884
'2012-05-27T15:41:18-04:00'
describe
'47466' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHOR' 'sip-files00153.QC.jpg'
1c8fed9fa4cf17fcfc83a7b6a7659693
57a9a1a8ff8507cdd2258cf7d91c771e1c99b296
'2012-05-27T15:48:57-04:00'
describe
'14366876' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHOS' 'sip-files00285.tif'
7ce0e9b4f0813ee84b4ec91b22054358
71b5bd6486de185407548d9be1a54e4bed5d1f11
'2012-05-27T15:38:43-04:00'
describe
'99629' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHOT' 'sip-files00160.QC.jpg'
3812c1f92a210011949b335e95298732
cc7cff812150c59b42052fffa6b8cd1769a10454
describe
'1648' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHOU' 'sip-files00216.txt'
07a6f98df0abb5caf1efe966fe7457be
8f807a6dd46aa9fac18b16f6acfdd54024dd1cb3
describe
'95816' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHOV' 'sip-files00099.QC.jpg'
d229778713fe0106c11953fbc54a73eb
2d9d9d97731ea2dd8afb5e7bc557171dac212205
describe
'43989' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHOW' 'sip-files00220thm.jpg'
8c1c599d97197f31c7b9fd008ebeffe2
8ccdf05a89cb8a646687fdc127af6794a5b1aefe
describe
'39941' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHOX' 'sip-files00095.pro'
625aa8a8395cd6fbdb029abe17118e30
7195a3fed3a9296afe1011930693bf84e8cbe10f
describe
'13474448' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHOY' 'sip-files00113.tif'
10deb0172da4204b9be6b76399ea0711
a0e1db20bc7914dc090188dc7f7f560dcd2c1aee
'2012-05-27T15:44:19-04:00'
describe
'195536' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHOZ' 'sip-files00037.jpg'
1dec00b2b2fed5d4157b75536974723c
6c3d348c58810973cdb9f859c3fa02db5ae29efe
describe
'90376' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHPA' 'sip-files00284.QC.jpg'
57fad67d05750e6dd26b8f4091e4f6f1
1903cf78e91b011381a0e5090074f9a12ba9dc17
describe
'44030' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHPB' 'sip-files00197.pro'
6ca063e8ed32f0b0776f3d3348fc01df
42b51b50cd555fe0646832f9bad6485c56d50e02
describe
'32231' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHPC' 'sip-files00100thm.jpg'
5711b5f16ac171abf4a3ec13a2d88c8d
caa612bb42322911688f1053eb2846e21cdf8221
describe
'29446' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHPD' 'sip-files00211thm.jpg'
74739636ed5344307a997630f15db4ee
37ba4d234a8feab4f726ff6d4cd961aa4b1deef7
describe
'42450' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHPE' 'sip-files00072.pro'
63a2aaa9061c67a979f651262896513a
4bff7afc854d9b293206b85d04ad5a4a7533ef10
describe
'13515156' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHPF' 'sip-files00074.tif'
d4b6862e7eb0fdb16e308265ad7eda52
e7b447cc2e8b8216acb4ce1ccb7b36bc0a50bc5d
'2012-05-27T15:44:03-04:00'
describe
'165356' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHPG' 'sip-files00189.jpg'
7f7f75a40e522bac3a59c62cdf37d0c4
7cc985d6626abac9c8ab56069bf5639171137102
describe
'73136' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHPH' 'sip-files00131.QC.jpg'
2f22b6aa44eeee8ce66176e1be70a135
92729928abcdc2731cd47f54ddb574d2da47e43a
describe
'1643346' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHPI' 'sip-files00158.jp2'
da3e6c9a96814e4d1f1df5e490d2b29f
c32a23ad2978ef13223e190b0f8ab2547b9ea6aa
describe
'239597' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHPJ' 'sip-files00134.jpg'
535a17fcdb699555078dfe08b357a77d
ee46d766117653c5f8f8479bbdf749cf6be5ad3f
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHPK' 'sip-files00163.txt'
0ca3d5a5da298e5aef6c0e62097f28d6
086bd83f803cb772fda34e9fec36a3a48c357b4d
describe
'13989864' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHPL' 'sip-files00029.tif'
92be785a38cc6f85feb5ad64194afbb1
8148d540ee6ffb0fccb65e882b682d14c97b9f94
'2012-05-27T15:45:20-04:00'
describe
'14190184' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHPM' 'sip-files00087.tif'
9f8c7f0d9c57ec7549c102dcb591910d
c0173b688591570a12a0846e21eb6113145641d7
'2012-05-27T15:44:48-04:00'
describe
'295819' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHPN' 'sip-files00292.jpg'
2df8ea4a06ad199799553949f37ee4b0
f5f47d1736e6b2fdd458686a5d34346dc75082f0
describe
'1755310' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHPO' 'sip-files00034.jp2'
8eef66687b98025c76a1d1dff86a0040
79bdaee7d718efad53c7193e69c6bfabb72066bf
describe
'329470' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHPP' 'sip-files00002.jp2'
b00a010a30113533572b6684d77ad218
fd02dae688011e364c1ceb4656d3799b1e383620
'2012-05-27T15:50:41-04:00'
describe
'42607' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHPQ' 'sip-files00236thm.jpg'
4ffe326d0f3673406b96eda24309d85c
30609acc548ba9f9f18253575773ff03bdd99cc4
describe
'225427' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHPR' 'sip-files00271.jpg'
cd3e241d6f200b9ef6149da8e6edb065
f2137dbbbfa0f05922c1f98514ae15909fe55fbf
describe
'88431' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHPS' 'sip-files00278.QC.jpg'
8482e1fb243d8b8bfab3f56903854b5b
dede39676dc79791f48fe88aca698cefaca20cd8
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHPT' 'sip-files00211.txt'
78eaf985c523884b981cc095f1e8282f
3457e01b0053c2091c96ecc19a7a3055d328a23c
describe
'92282' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHPU' 'sip-files00248.QC.jpg'
d83806e50f7579218490a01e80f8218e
9217251e9090e17eb4e395c9a73d9075fb62566e
describe
'32992' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHPV' 'sip-files00226.pro'
86ea96e0e6c72a9051e240cc70125378
2e57565c888d1bf494a8d9336854032cda6d580f
'2012-05-27T15:39:41-04:00'
describe
'42486' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHPW' 'sip-files00078.pro'
0626baefd57ef29def8ee46bd1c633cc
ebb7a91e43ea7010ae1779bddbfe2c8bd6aebfb6
describe
'35850' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHPX' 'sip-files00290.pro'
8fadac6f785a6f5ca82e45ca0d10971e
90e65b668c18ba3ffd0658ac285b7654c699b015
describe
'88179' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHPY' 'sip-files00057.QC.jpg'
f9fd70ac73b3f78bd3f22fcc65628c7e
61e35bda79b44fc563537c6e76a841840119fb6c
describe
'8837' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHPZ' 'sip-files00017.pro'
07c5d0dd7b31313a8181dbf044c08d65
98b6ae52c2e11b30d580fc94f8d12d6f0b6fd740
describe
'13879864' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHQA' 'sip-files00043.tif'
b2e7c3730ccc0438a426dbdf82a318ca
5fad2f4dac4d41ecd64aba5c2ddecded027a7944
'2012-05-27T15:45:55-04:00'
describe
'13038772' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHQB' 'sip-files00160.tif'
9ed9deaf54535b050379c017c9b9491b
9eb716743a646069ac4f03fa44f300ab3abe5395
'2012-05-27T15:48:48-04:00'
describe
'42044' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHQC' 'sip-files00240thm.jpg'
6960b894abea2f588255e7af0f90a809
0701b4581fac765c8b57b1d7084470c40139cbd7
describe
'1674101' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHQD' 'sip-files00191.jp2'
02e4d653ec9d3e2cb16129059e6b108f
571610870f4f832b9ce065c398fdca232770195d
describe
'81320' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHQE' 'sip-files00049.jpg'
40aa582eb26b11dc8a2cf27c9c883cd8
2d6dbdaa46588f98946497817047a1d9436754fc
describe
'277' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHQF' 'sip-files00066.txt'
d99e86188151f25f899d9a9b09ce8832
a2389ab4e4725202bcc82834d629b37dad50f697
'2012-05-27T15:39:38-04:00'
describe
'12949044' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHQG' 'sip-files00104.tif'
1735b795e815654ff0869cd18b3596a2
a4fb013a8cf87745c1146881b81901757e2f64a0
describe
'100304' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHQH' 'sip-files00204.QC.jpg'
189d878498f07ea09da4514406159888
e820776cbf90bb6a28115b1e50805be0b71fd1fc
'2012-05-27T15:48:40-04:00'
describe
'1624945' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHQI' 'sip-files00176.jp2'
eda962e6b8d2aecd26903f14853c0413
0ac934c40df5b69f1710d2cfd40d1d79a55e320c
'2012-05-27T15:38:04-04:00'
describe
'41036' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHQJ' 'sip-files00264.pro'
3cee47cd7ab418a48e83029600b8e53b
106e2fe46505b6c4a620246e0e4a892ee0a36f59
describe
'31393' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHQK' 'sip-files00233thm.jpg'
684ad956fabe45081a2efd3725dedac0
a977c7116899d30ca377456a4f400981340f1694
'2012-05-27T15:44:36-04:00'
describe
'29737' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHQL' 'sip-files00056.pro'
7bfabd4d6a44a839227da4c873680bb3
6f963ad125d1890053428b670f1e70540614fe00
'2012-05-27T15:43:11-04:00'
describe
'41015' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHQM' 'sip-files00109.pro'
02ec8bd1d9e87629fd130acb4a14c2e7
eea800b1ca40888d1ec622bb3cc8a84af4c07e64
'2012-05-27T15:50:21-04:00'
describe
'31322' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHQN' 'sip-files00042.pro'
c273d2f0f4f683698200e96914fdc9e1
9fd2ad55d7d5f6cef4c8442942f699315ef6b479
describe
'37706' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHQO' 'sip-files00007.pro'
8a10134c234c19eace44478bce0c53f6
d66e67dd316b67e5edc65255e303c2e4a3efbe8b
describe
'13068520' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHQP' 'sip-files00012.tif'
090ebb2fef1c29fc9b084ffc16512035
a20325fc131c7adfa1bcc0b32709ac4e7fe56f4a
'2012-05-27T15:39:01-04:00'
describe
'72151' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHQQ' 'sip-files00076.QC.jpg'
a5e9f1180f06620f849d1c11becace5c
ef959fded3cfc8582a5663f644f6ecba84079444
describe
'12860620' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHQR' 'sip-files00199.tif'
952f371965728838d0db87faa3934e4a
8e4f9bb8e291bc1d89859038aabfd109d1be6393
'2012-05-27T15:47:13-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHQS' 'sip-files00167.jp2'
30ebc01cc23f1cd8715d3a84bec68bfe
ae0354832778f04517ebd8be03c1275cb85887e9
'2012-05-27T15:41:12-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHQT' 'sip-files00080.pro'
307dfdcd2fb3adecf5346f5b45469898
5cea664b2887ec85f27411a9e3c80637f918747c
describe
'359' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHQU' 'sip-files00161.txt'
fea2a5aeda78c9854717d52f1011e896
fcd08c19b8045a17fb82b5358a30c47d0525bce5
describe
'40259' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHQV' 'sip-files00188thm.jpg'
2728bcc3e75c87812af6b09190de9d64
821c7e2f8e6fe490bc08d3ad4a8b857ee2fd19ec
describe
'237519' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHQW' 'sip-files00126.jpg'
a99913eb60ae3e9a39ee47a1fce9b225
abdefb1c7011cb6a85d5d6c6b6b32036a57f6038
describe
'1764658' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHQX' 'sip-files00171.jp2'
3ef32ba50f922f393715d2d942a0412d
f447821e70e0be6552543b9b1921444403c5d2e5
describe
'63960' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHQY' 'sip-files00106.QC.jpg'
3b1472876d4321b124cbbf9e0c3d5e9d
4b0ef0e28e122a168175bdc551a0b8cea800778e
'2012-05-27T15:48:15-04:00'
describe
'1687560' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHQZ' 'sip-files00271.jp2'
eb922c2c283f0207cdb0d417fbf282e8
d659c573d31815dbd694614649cfa9c59ca472df
describe
'14650084' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHRA' 'sip-files00050.tif'
76c4af7bc1e8bad01ea10076ca4e88f8
dd9b9d168be3c1233af5c5eae4d4c8cbedfc98ef
'2012-05-27T15:49:10-04:00'
describe
'87925' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHRB' 'sip-files00114.QC.jpg'
927d9294a0a4152a78b8742095cdba72
a0e479438a5cd1bd3aa86352bb31c3f742b443f7
describe
'1670' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHRC' 'sip-files00197.txt'
da7147736083a1abc830f1bc5b36d9fc
555db846c63ce2b30df0f572810e3da0a2b969ba
describe
'1595038' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHRD' 'sip-files00252.jp2'
42bccc525a3e49e92115e9896008f50a
88e66539f02f808594b6fbc5902ff9ebc9606e9a
'2012-05-27T15:39:46-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHRE' 'sip-files00009.jp2'
53ff71ad042644d22e7e0cc34aa0e2e5
d5659d0c6df7b5396be4e13c9e28f9a46b626ca5
describe
'28696' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHRF' 'sip-files00091thm.jpg'
8368dc9464de27214a4b87d64dac1d1d
985e3802192a6666b1baac7e14717c5f3aab4b0b
describe
'1848193' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHRG' 'sip-files00229.jp2'
b4a62b1e8f332908f2e4775d14fbc262
2cf70e9cba0e22dfb03d9218ebfb689c451139e6
describe
'31803' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHRH' 'sip-files00049.QC.jpg'
6d7f4a976042a9973a7ee274372ffe5c
3828c3cccb7e9425f5de4b9ac39bdbb995976942
describe
'76307' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHRI' 'sip-files00061.QC.jpg'
b125c4e1a77410a96af5d3daeaf0af10
548f53e0ef4e1da8286f93f3e9c16e0055a8c70d
'2012-05-27T15:37:35-04:00'
describe
'1533' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHRJ' 'sip-files00058.txt'
87a5765ad89c5a2a845abebb3c65c19d
4b2a1fd0a41f403aaa77cbf8d053c33b91880ac2
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHRK' 'sip-files00057.jp2'
5d7cfa7e9561d9ec1824413d886e9476
9b1369297c47a1facd53c66eb15f14108cdf6e41
'2012-05-27T15:47:08-04:00'
describe
'2903' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHRL' 'sip-files00003.pro'
031e42ca9cabfa8ae54552cccd30719e
524579e463e1825bc031eeda97d5f749105030c2
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHRM' 'sip-files00095.txt'
5631ef1a089847906182ca78945f2efc
4b2ca5691c883791370f5569c631ec1086a79ebe
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHRN' 'sip-files00155.txt'
5dc4a85e620ae4fc18cb20afe7d63afe
36c4645cf2f6619eda9832dee2af90208654b683
describe
'1828825' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHRO' 'sip-files00050.jp2'
d1a8e4c78c959d0cd617297c171fa44f
2a81fb1adeee641d31eabebe8e0a8b56886b6045
'2012-05-27T15:41:57-04:00'
describe
'13888008' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHRP' 'sip-files00218.tif'
d6509b15916db0e465a55bf3fe9c9c9c
31d886ce43d0015932153920d2c33145fdd438a2
'2012-05-27T15:47:39-04:00'
describe
'183208' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHRQ' 'sip-files00132.jpg'
22f26ff53d10ff3b89b8ead70efde7a6
354a723c16be2954ecb4fa8000cf93b0d1d4d266
describe
'24695' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHRR' 'sip-files00279thm.jpg'
8e1b9f04a55191695ef51024ef2cab74
b8a18784bb7329bfb367a8957b9474517c79b986
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHRS' 'sip-files00289.txt'
407293cff63abdfd148e0d1fc69f868e
5a30135751cf9cb4e36a7ee6086538e72c3e0ab9
describe
'86986' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHRT' 'sip-files00263.QC.jpg'
c46204280eec6c89f6bfe4d472b9d0aa
00b883b4735a7b09b33695d546a71ab7eb15abca
describe
'1596377' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHRU' 'sip-files00008.jp2'
5bd4c6d8ad88ec08f850bf1e5132c427
ffc72596e91fae94e12c72d35df90e6ebd72f9d4
'2012-05-27T15:45:22-04:00'
describe
'95655' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHRV' 'sip-files00137.QC.jpg'
7e716a179564f5d5d0712766e8d8dd23
7ec1f7363e39bbbc4cb4fdc5e2748f0fe2afc988
describe
'13509680' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHRW' 'sip-files00089.tif'
8ffbc1c127808c241acfc1a1162f1550
4e7a5403d636276499637d9c975b1889c5f93e06
'2012-05-27T15:36:57-04:00'
describe
'1687554' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHRX' 'sip-files00096.jp2'
fa07db4490a0ae03ebffa30fd9362cef
e762d8b013c44404230f50f9444d24fe87956388
describe
'98794' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHRY' 'sip-files00221.QC.jpg'
2d89eac5cf19f04db58949474afe34e1
779935b476888cf8bdaaf85b04106a9712a82a0b
describe
'895' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHRZ' 'sip-files00153.txt'
58692c91d5cbb4214cadfad681be3bc2
9d4ebf1c4bc0ce905c6a6f06abef5d2d07bd50d7
describe
'31431' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHSA' 'sip-files00144thm.jpg'
9c7d842c6b3490a74cd34059819dc5d5
1f1652e5aa63d3fa3c07273c40e92f5f293e4e1e
describe
'40302' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHSB' 'sip-files00199thm.jpg'
26ed4c9870fb16756e3877bc9bd05425
b15c3200f685fa44b7d48f950e181afad25412f8
describe
'224990' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHSC' 'sip-files00024.jpg'
d8205e347e4cd5b6ca6281b3d33310eb
c540ead05f594ede5640379d4e207521110f2ac4
describe
'261900' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHSD' 'sip-files00220.jpg'
2246b62819c80390bbf6815b3941fff3
2873e4dd9a94010fe91803f787a683ecff968153
describe
'1735868' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHSE' 'sip-files00280.jp2'
e49cfbfdf285c9da24594010797c4a3e
8c9328be16bb373b3a80c19badcc9cec0ad5bb14
'2012-05-27T15:42:22-04:00'
describe
'231588' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHSF' 'sip-files00018.jpg'
139958e26eaa018a4bf2b94d77720df5
f9da44384b3bdda2c89867d7ccf0919a356cbf13
describe
'28924' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHSG' 'sip-files00151thm.jpg'
c87df77999f41e33bda72d5a3a30fa20
c1a02d6fda892ae6fa9723f90beba5e0df31a950
'2012-05-27T15:40:44-04:00'
describe
'13512568' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHSH' 'sip-files00111.tif'
4f02967a5ed19c0897c40bbe23a779d7
69163244b8393076b2fd019a224dd932138aa110
'2012-05-27T15:40:11-04:00'
describe
'13514660' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHSI' 'sip-files00182.tif'
19cd09d9051195bcce27e262bc71431a
5a79fb31ab20308121dc6a41e4c3580c0266a81d
'2012-05-27T15:43:28-04:00'
describe
'31034' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHSJ' 'sip-files00119thm.jpg'
c797ad67d170652e18fc5c395e23e894
fd931cc9f7ceb7c65834183429622c7117176979
describe
'251166' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHSK' 'sip-files00180.jpg'
23feb7bd61c04441c67342351566ef0c
be16aa85fc774e919966529418069cf08b6f24cc
describe
'13512700' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHSL' 'sip-files00162.tif'
11a306b8d418c5c8dfd8042d3e390c80
7c10314cea53a3e7e0b7d0e2385bd3d05ec1bc98
describe
'244380' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHSM' 'sip-files00215.jpg'
34c1f81920e9d096958086de6f772653
a034bbccbc2c2e8f8f6de1a132721d194dc1deec
describe
'79608' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHSN' 'sip-files00151.QC.jpg'
fe67e758a71333b3b0d58a44a0cf752e
2aae91c4460f73c670dbfd7fc0514714800eaa35
describe
'67097' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHSO' 'sip-files00250.jpg'
715f20ce39754101da48a0794d38d3cc
cfe79f65f636d017bb001b8338253a458fedccf1
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHSP' 'sip-files00132.jp2'
1cfd2b6c7a6d8d377ab18c7d1fa4ab96
e2c64cc3af92668c6ad8fe834bc0b3298488c188
'2012-05-27T15:38:37-04:00'
describe
'14205572' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHSQ' 'sip-files00255.tif'
6851c58a72205c508dcd73a1a4e67504
252e9a968aafd9de1b3b7cb815c59d5799cab2ca
'2012-05-27T15:37:29-04:00'
describe
'13514272' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHSR' 'sip-files00254.tif'
577da77d3dc7a152d2b46423e848483e
caec8475e3b1800d86fd625cb69fe23fb9518c8d
describe
'1690287' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHSS' 'sip-files00268.jp2'
824b83781f84c273cb6bde6889e1bc1b
2135988f8a4d86cda879dbb9b1b719d88c91597c
describe
'41672' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHST' 'sip-files00228.pro'
2697cb7f4a6c5838f6e552744ef01ae7
d6912038559738220b9fe3a5ca7a224af7411c43
describe
'228127' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHSU' 'sip-files00035.jpg'
6dbae5e88ca18498c2266d3a32d8fa54
17a0c481a9748a38478c20bdf9f386059d61a951
'2012-05-27T15:37:41-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHSV' 'sip-files00094.jp2'
1f31a229af086c58c0d4161190586d09
388e371688a5b1d36fc13ea521084ba8dc31620b
'2012-05-27T15:43:32-04:00'
describe
'1615502' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHSW' 'sip-files00104.jp2'
783772c5a4cb55b9099a9ef7681793f8
93429fbe33a3bc7fd70f6ca8bb0a1b3583f32319
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHSX' 'sip-files00144.jp2'
2bf082c49ec6f6dc6c984acbb2cdbee9
e72ff71f0ed3a937ca202a3f6837c9f95a19286b
describe
'180567' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHSY' 'sip-files00273.jpg'
00003ed195b5ad239a9b79ebaa4aead1
f243c433c4919d183dd4be1d9ffdbc3fa8223770
describe
'84252' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHSZ' 'sip-files00242.QC.jpg'
c20c0fcb8396ea5ad1f646606dc9e140
1fffb5c6bc3f54781342d9987393845bc599413b
describe
'1817303' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHTA' 'sip-files00019.jp2'
27af0a2c45e8c19f42f249d0307ca925
5285a52f2debb7f09dbe1c0f1dbc7d2becc1e3c3
describe
'20144' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHTB' 'sip-files00083thm.jpg'
06683d9ea7273bb074c1a84d21ed662c
ed13f9dfe8bd7d7f38232f08bceeda7ead8eaf3d
describe
'39574' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHTC' 'sip-files00229thm.jpg'
de3021828d52434d135eee26aff26598
752df0147e54fe91fda89dc41b9c9e887203cfca
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHTD' 'sip-files00267.jp2'
e61ef86e0ec44586f819c65c2f4bf45b
7663798b3303515b7ca7fdc16ace3eddd1694e59
describe
'13514728' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHTE' 'sip-files00249.tif'
98dc97775515d435f973841d8f5cb6d7
78d887f88c0cace005e7b8d63a65f5c09aec6e7a
describe
'103704' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHTF' 'sip-files00001.QC.jpg'
2fba4fddb3a0f105d433daae852c2ada
3ee2595f994e4a387e5f739f611f6c8671019062
describe
'36848' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHTG' 'sip-files00188.pro'
7b9127cfaa57964adae25892dc71eb84
323326929c71ed892f5990fca9bc312972847649
describe
'13514648' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHTH' 'sip-files00224.tif'
690e10380b49b082e7e7c624fe3afe78
f9dc2825fd570d883b2f7ec40766ebcdc026c475
describe
'244622' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHTI' 'sip-files00283.jpg'
ab9efeb216866e82b795c5bb4106c5f9
7a701d9e098372cae19b5d09eaad1f1d4ac690aa
describe
'42090' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHTJ' 'sip-files00210thm.jpg'
f12d75c659679e3baf72f22e0119a190
ad527821681675b5f80db9f7f6581f7ea53e82b2
describe
'1607' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHTK' 'sip-files00171.txt'
1ab4cfa77d540d12f8cd43c279b38676
e2e28615ed23e290922022c67ad501452f589426
describe
'46518' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHTL' 'sip-files00277.pro'
8142cdbde9de8ff54c82109663c1ffa7
68eaca6ac57c817a56de5e11c8c6ef2bfb8e28dc
describe
'30208' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHTM' 'sip-files00022.pro'
ddff7afeec34112ab5fbfc75d858506a
ed6f1438d761f944df35eb2be00490f4601915f8
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHTN' 'sip-files00055.jp2'
c052750345b3ec6957f64d50a4ed1aa8
cb1c24e66060591b93ee208ccb1b2502c335da32
describe
'1622229' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHTO' 'sip-files00192.jp2'
22dbbb91e15792f4a037a4dba86adb0f
e0dfcc5beb821fc7745f1dbc41f3a595d523fac5
describe
'16' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHTP' 'sip-files00293.txt'
610bd589e2300ce2ed227f29a870b120
a70ec11f6ad8778a8046d1322e38160cbc4e66ca
'2012-05-27T15:41:58-04:00'
describe
'99148' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHTQ' 'sip-files00031.QC.jpg'
b0a6bfd745f265dc7e412316ad018dfa
eeaed04110118496268f08cf2cab2c27367ae311
'2012-05-27T15:44:32-04:00'
describe
'40388' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHTR' 'sip-files00244thm.jpg'
01e707fc0c976a4b476228df2bec764b
83447fe72352143bf419809864c4c81bba1c5a94
describe
'13163236' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHTS' 'sip-files00033.tif'
65e117e8b8004f298d354267b3d3a528
47555280f58c518cd86ce8ec0102748f53f7e83d
'2012-05-27T15:48:38-04:00'
describe
'308080' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHTT' 'sip-files00066.jpg'
5b4fb750fe56c68c03f334a2a5e780a4
a134eebfb01c8336ce5f88cd3db2b7fe032f153c
describe
'28900' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHTU' 'sip-files00238thm.jpg'
88b26e3ef10f26064892426171cd5ab9
543d9cdd58894a98acbb4a8f451262357f21bda8
describe
'107200' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHTV' 'sip-files00158.QC.jpg'
c41dc334b774a78be31199fab300184b
46fb2393f96a4eec2c9790e1deaa41f58d37e0d7
describe
'19482' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHTW' 'sip-files00069thm.jpg'
cef99c644937434713080b8697a73df6
486ef58d3a62d764d9a6c233e40cd88b8f120744
describe
'30100' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHTX' 'sip-files00162.pro'
7593c229eb9b24e5e664e5819e0b9e74
80335200b76af15b2529523100a73a13ee79f90f
describe
'13509580' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHTY' 'sip-files00075.tif'
0cdc18f8f3ad54ebd506a2364be8b73d
c37c32890620bd0e67a42112752e4b41cc5c3344
'2012-05-27T15:48:47-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHTZ' 'sip-files00205.txt'
51291aedd51eb8f70b3c5d948044bfe4
410f1c18a5d788ed8ae4e4aea16a60bfd7e8abd9
describe
'1834' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHUA' 'sip-files00275.txt'
978b893b0364b85257ef3aa98fb9e9d8
7e65f6059d1fbbc68965571d52b5fca5b77ef086
describe
Invalid character
'13890496' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHUB' 'sip-files00117.tif'
40390b8869acec6e81ef674512550273
757741e4b7d8af7130a211569783d349e57ac9da
describe
'13512128' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHUC' 'sip-files00041.tif'
8f982e584b08d14960659e339388a94c
7bebe93833b88e413d869cf4ba04b05a4eada629
'2012-05-27T15:46:40-04:00'
describe
'41662' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHUD' 'sip-files00150.pro'
5944b34e9f5e0fe4a1e5ac99e3c08adc
5abbb91041d0cf5070f09190137f0d7a62f2b3bb
'2012-05-27T15:36:53-04:00'
describe
'93881' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHUE' 'sip-files00063.QC.jpg'
44b01dd3a836c84119a66571cdfb22d0
cd8642948d5ebfcea0bbc4abefe3a05897cad82f
'2012-05-27T15:38:32-04:00'
describe
'13949704' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHUF' 'sip-files00120.tif'
f33aec96a393de7b0b2a6ef18c12b324
4208a9dba482ac2c3712dd9a431f197f169f370d
'2012-05-27T15:39:03-04:00'
describe
'1607559' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHUG' 'sip-files00209.jp2'
258f5690bd5c1c0a7349d40bd4158b8f
903c42a10cbf2aebf96731f998b58658c5a1e429
'2012-05-27T15:47:00-04:00'
describe
'36117' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHUH' 'sip-files00007thm.jpg'
a3175d30c7f6edfc9bc87ced742da46e
eafe27835ba76d0d6e895130a9d6cef4be35b3f4
describe
'30456' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHUI' 'sip-files00136thm.jpg'
4563e8fd0b93c2c3e07db9308dd8c79c
f2ece291a894dbc98ddd46de8031b868394d4016
describe
'8694' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHUJ' 'sip-files00006thm.jpg'
ec2ea6e3dcb965daf48093f0dbb106fb
a891e722fd52f246f7635eeefb292df517298933
describe
'66800' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHUK' 'sip-files00128.QC.jpg'
4b8a8dc58bd8ca22526e9c9c79ab6081
f5216f9262e32d95fc1a5ad7d21a5c343a8d5e45
describe
'13511452' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHUL' 'sip-files00055.tif'
eeb1bc415c1d64c24194a1d85734e55e
c132f68320d668149b6194b088ffdd0ed17bba0a
'2012-05-27T15:50:16-04:00'
describe
'241145' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHUM' 'sip-files00147.jpg'
549136236ecb5c407e87b1eccd3442c2
607e9287149ed040e4cc4106e4d9b7b5449d9f2b
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHUN' 'sip-files00103.jp2'
44b348090e7a8fb577a629af3c22c3fc
d193bdbd636c0200ebede295d4d962b4bf5d0079
describe
'41974' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHUO' 'sip-files00257thm.jpg'
cee13fce77a7b5d6eaec05d811a99866
94926c3f4e2e02ccbb8f4bf6a0bd2b9336d4f151
describe
'1702406' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHUP' 'sip-files00198.jp2'
a56f91addbed24448649f1e1d2e7072a
e68de3ffb32105bbe07ac67aac6114654ed36caf
'2012-05-27T15:43:26-04:00'
describe
'1329' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHUQ' 'sip-files00273.txt'
666a9d19087266fdad5c421bff707484
4dc8f48bfdd1ee4d83def055d51a5fca2f463564
describe
'41389' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHUR' 'sip-files00082.pro'
077ce34b6ff68a45466e566b203b938d
eb0744038f00a909f92ee82b27cef688d2f5dadd
describe
'1642590' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHUS' 'sip-files00240.jp2'
4f6e6853961bd808127787cf47e96cef
dc327b1d91c482fef92a2aa1ea86862b8570ec41
describe
'1689144' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHUT' 'sip-files00212.jp2'
a007b4cb081743f16732d652d4e4cb9e
a05994a579461fabf945a586c4bf4a5b278ce7cd
describe
'148168' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHUU' 'sip-files00265.jpg'
9cb79bf916455727a936e24e6ebdfd18
4e71c1eb3c767fca89ab5b9a760eda99d3ee8f21
describe
'30583' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHUV' 'sip-files00082thm.jpg'
35eeb00ec590d771e7dea5e08258b071
a92ad02bc58cc14eb77723d28c060e9fb7c22dce
'2012-05-27T15:46:31-04:00'
describe
'1642' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHUW' 'sip-files00120.txt'
11169f62cad37ee8a961f79bd266692c
a7906ec419324356de3031116ac24fdae8620227
'2012-05-27T15:37:11-04:00'
describe
'246570' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHUX' 'sip-files00142.jpg'
07098bb7af0c3bcef86c380024f21a31
e36076d69e8c28075be41271a60da370505ade23
describe
'1696' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHUY' 'sip-files00080.txt'
c9cfae3a2be9f520416b546a3a8adf1a
d2b020bf0917ebf886a11165e9c5122d4663b109
'2012-05-27T15:45:06-04:00'
describe
'13514160' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHUZ' 'sip-files00211.tif'
180ad4cb9c8362d9f6e135b2c8a2d8a9
88bca29fbdc42f3a0bf42e96baaf35ec3d81be9b
'2012-05-27T15:42:50-04:00'
describe
'98948' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHVA' 'sip-files00080.QC.jpg'
cde4416b35a46a8d94a3a6ab5616c521
653b75176197a6e5d8ca67d1d037b1c9bf18983a
'2012-05-27T15:48:49-04:00'
describe
'257345' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHVB' 'sip-files00144.jpg'
f286b376c8d0bfcb5b1d78a27511c069
8e0473526ea7b2625c6a1386230bacb71277fe48
describe
'129183' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHVC' 'sip-files00202.jpg'
6db4d746907afd2362fa8350909add1d
1f9aa48b6bfd466fc119c4cdb5993278f3499312
'2012-05-27T15:44:35-04:00'
describe
'39838' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHVD' 'sip-files00036.QC.jpg'
dd42c1f8b8b22ea6b4360b0db862c68c
3b63a28b73356316fa0587cbfebc7f718cedec2a
describe
'1700515' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHVE' 'sip-files00186.jp2'
2119874603e2ecb046189d488a6ac69b
ad066a82a61cc1c0c73d5c528f4ebe8d0a90d982
describe
'40067' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHVF' 'sip-files00207thm.jpg'
3f909f1ecfe4de354709077d441f0ad9
69648623c46e7c5c0207252ff5da2bac8add2b25
'2012-05-27T15:49:50-04:00'
describe
'42808' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHVG' 'sip-files00039thm.jpg'
ae68096a9a1d92db7245c6ea175a21cc
70083978afba3a15f2c87696f305b1c7b4ff6b1d
describe
'25178' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHVH' 'sip-files00132thm.jpg'
fb41765275e6dd3c0873ca3c426ccb96
a71359befb052c716b1e2e79a7c6bb3085ec2bfe
describe
'42515' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHVI' 'sip-files00073.pro'
ccbe6e66fcd0cca2e7e438159b778636
a9eb6d3391a2770ef96342de0fed3a9d4e86a72f
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHVJ' 'sip-files00118.QC.jpg'
7ade54dc1b168920ca4759bbfb4ab24a
c8e38ca3e0f95b2a46f4c74f9dc81a8acd50c9de
describe
'95835' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHVK' 'sip-files00228.QC.jpg'
809b47570fe4920fcb95125bb1098521
c8e53d4b608cf8939363d2d8fbbed194e1a1a88d
describe
'1687478' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHVL' 'sip-files00239.jp2'
cd76c7717f05c58dd4945288e3c54cdc
a35b42af7c5a2b45a189246ccf7bc623fd37880e
describe
'41223' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHVM' 'sip-files00091.pro'
4d0531dd4a1d9bd68ab431ba694a9740
e1339f3255aae5e0ff184255ef55d54e5693e28b
describe
'96051' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHVN' 'sip-files00215.QC.jpg'
fdec922cb9e2b472291fd55010116a83
7ed3772c122561871ddde99d2e5542645baf8091
describe
'39406' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHVO' 'sip-files00205thm.jpg'
6b60c14757877bc7558b67a60c2b3b5f
3968140018de83f26a9c26bd42a243682ea7cbbd
describe
'72183' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHVP' 'sip-files00146.QC.jpg'
d052bca8d7ee4e7dff6a2c6d5374717b
10c8aa5fac9e60af73838eed437d747752dfcc5d
describe
'39840' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHVQ' 'sip-files00060.pro'
1fe7aa0a986cc3fcdb3febd3291dbf98
6836a555e5e8bd468405ec9b9f26337d0ec76ae6
describe
'80550' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHVR' 'sip-files00254.QC.jpg'
b5540bf6ea390494ccec388ebf4fdbcf
1789df3114a587399d626995e6c5f817967d5856
describe
'43273' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHVS' 'sip-files00235.pro'
4e46cf3ac9700d0c37594b40118089a9
1e7577cb17df9a163f330009ccea102f639de23e
describe
'22404' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHVT' 'sip-files00009thm.jpg'
c7dde069abaf954a7febe8618af0b80c
e7d3cd2d2145c36eb893730ef2b6c402602a982b
describe
'235023' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHVU' 'sip-files00205.jpg'
143c81b0c736d24caad2f051c95de626
ad0e8753bbc3f30d2a3516d2aa856ba132737de4
describe
'194580' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHVV' 'sip-files00154.jpg'
25e165e609a6fa5beb201b56381c50bb
e3476fd1c29aaabb486aee9927302c6cf3bdceed
describe
'75958' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHVW' 'sip-files00218.QC.jpg'
e1fc092d73ab7620a7d18d73847545a1
bbac6782d49f6a837575fb4272d11347ed6984d0
'2012-05-27T15:37:53-04:00'
describe
'9357' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHVX' 'sip-files00168.pro'
b2d304afa651b151216f01afffb5c87b
9e379b22b6c10b95c3dfab78ef429f5d3234bc6f
describe
'41204' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHVY' 'sip-files00104.pro'
13aa6abb8d5e0e775ae7213b0bb9575a
11da2f11f67d418e3dfb077220811999ac2d7369
describe
'1681' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHVZ' 'sip-files00118.txt'
8f5313f2615021588c4c6c68c5f65070
528e8bd56d839e07c31880ead103f21fa837a4e7
'2012-05-27T15:44:09-04:00'
describe
'1581289' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHWA' 'sip-files00127.jp2'
5fca682f84a61d853cffe55a638b086f
dd4b63370e602fe08ef224d57e931c1b5c2be3c5
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHWB' 'sip-files00182.jp2'
0b73382b224982f50e16892eb304fac1
404d63d009db81f8d198b16f7197c878c56bb2b4
describe
'1686578' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHWC' 'sip-files00204.jp2'
041a0c5720b6954fad941babd0987d4d
f440bc1f4e650bfcc1ac9d8df6eb185747c509a0
describe
'25721' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHWD' 'sip-files00272.QC.jpg'
8f05e9682e7a57bd1b2b93815665663c
023a2c80354693bfa660661e3ea3e4691e6ce6f4
describe
'13164888' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHWE' 'sip-files00215.tif'
ac7c78933a74e2226d034cb60f0885b2
c9e4a33a9126a2c9d09d0cba6783b2dfa7cc736e
'2012-05-27T15:43:31-04:00'
describe
'1591701' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHWF' 'sip-files00233.jp2'
f193a355f24941d98672a0a87ddb269c
fd8be3fac46c6a06757077416e1e11ec38a192d0
describe
'29906' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHWG' 'sip-files00190thm.jpg'
daf99a54ac08da936b0de5f9d6009b2d
be14d2bcb82ad59f201c083e0bf5856909edb3ab
'2012-05-27T15:42:18-04:00'
describe
'95991' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHWH' 'sip-files00270.QC.jpg'
825b34f8528af2a68d665659d82adf85
c963aa5209739fd7db1ae1f9b6151919505221df
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHWI' 'sip-files00193.txt'
9cd0be9ecb910a55242e97dd6d238f49
a3e80a61c23cade58cc363cf0c22b4da0aee72fb
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHWJ' 'sip-files00241.txt'
16d407b3cb65c94fd8918b5cbf5e0049
aad43695e806ac15c4c8f35eabf27a08f6fc391b
describe
'41527' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHWK' 'sip-files00092thm.jpg'
ffc59b6b08bf4f63921364e1a1f3057c
f3b45bc46de75d2079fcaf5d0f262c4205fc85d2
describe
'97541' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHWL' 'sip-files00109.QC.jpg'
9983f6bf71e2493f55bf33ec2afb7403
c28402ade11f788b6b10cf84f37a2dbddbd5b432
describe
'1733920' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHWM' 'sip-files00092.jp2'
061cfd5bf29bf8b32e6ef5b6abdeea7a
b4f80cf775456f8b51215f96da138b5462e24718
describe
'207542' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHWN' 'sip-files00149.jpg'
3afd4224bf03652c7051ccc5992b2be1
d5ea4942adcfca6f5137a597af7104202a31e53b
describe
'40233' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHWO' 'sip-files00068.pro'
16ab746ecc621b274ec60e1745702a67
d9a1d20ab7a56c7be1bb612ecf9ef01cb56dba87
describe
'13808056' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHWP' 'sip-files00044.tif'
49d063ee1647e2a8a2775917730c77c4
7c8a513f8697e2eb35b30cc6cbbc79a32d647c6b
'2012-05-27T15:42:28-04:00'
describe
'14035076' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHWQ' 'sip-files00084.tif'
0e1995329bccfeac773ff2c44cf48c6c
0d3250e1a3ccd734d27f208ea9d5d7d2acb6e52c
'2012-05-27T15:41:09-04:00'
describe
'233577' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHWR' 'sip-files00079.jpg'
c28f14958f474d7a3ae46e7467d497c1
1a049761cfaf964aaf70517ef0328827e10d8c20
describe
'1573' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHWS' 'sip-files00167.txt'
57b83bfe413242a0bd9287a765a47be8
4a51db2dd02e676c8d6a66102f6de4567852e22f
describe
'258366' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHWT' 'sip-files00012.jpg'
1d4133f11d0fd26c2147a28237fae20d
f3babc66ddbc831deba1d9e742ab9f02be6f7125
'2012-05-27T15:44:22-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHWU' 'sip-files00251.jp2'
5612324e0a996fb3ae82d53e2b94b461
824d08c240986bf7d970998c2e7e953f27df48d5
describe
'75384' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHWV' 'sip-files00091.QC.jpg'
b92f65f2731926fab81cfc46e3fe7e14
fd19ec18a23433a8a505558bd8c260d63427db52
'2012-05-27T15:41:28-04:00'
describe
'29720' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHWW' 'sip-files00132.pro'
cf47303f0157a9747c305d4384fd913a
1778fe2f5d2b82b23c8c6536a95a0c825c8a6f5e
describe
'12207668' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHWX' 'sip-files00017.tif'
045971c34b32957453e998f69b42ddf2
b654c44d9cbf3e7073cb1f911459d871d780c606
'2012-05-27T15:43:06-04:00'
describe
'1181' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHWY' 'sip-files00046.txt'
1be022a2ca49bd29ad6c0917126eb97e
99b10773c8acb592c62cbb8293975c5670505c3f
describe
'42739' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHWZ' 'sip-files00171.pro'
d4a36d3ec3fae079c73a49631c21e72c
ecfe789cfc159dd90ea316663a4061cec6c633a5
describe
'42774' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHXA' 'sip-files00237.pro'
f9c46eb174318adac92c9906a4aaba85
84e1ccf2bf39fd832def349ff6180e3ec6609a1c
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHXB' 'sip-files00016.tif'
4422644beabac22a4b5337cc4b3256ae
ca62ba1de45a8a179e4ccb26c06c4d261eb4c583
describe
'30945' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHXC' 'sip-files00123.pro'
924493f46e474da1a93a4bf2ccdabe6a
569a3c08c8ac75db61abae8808b95184f2171a87
describe
'29507' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHXD' 'sip-files00242thm.jpg'
71cf940221d9be1131bc40d525670a52
78a8fc07b3b3d9af2b68f871bfe5c51f4699fb1f
describe
'2417' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHXE' 'sip-files00001.txt'
e1f344fcd9b0b06737b8f9e0c81fc040
7d310472f3c3a3fd96864b1446d561e63b8789de
describe
Invalid character
'31304' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHXF' 'sip-files00150thm.jpg'
ccf9ff813a3db2f89f1c3c9a136b7b1b
e9097f1f16a3d87257c781f3cff76a2351f61e7f
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHXG' 'sip-files00288.txt'
8fe20aaeaf85c48606e4cdf7c64e5348
16310b6ac83fa3d907de28a2e57be349e114b9d2
describe
'1819430' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHXH' 'sip-files00289.jp2'
46cd0bfcd634efd7af05d5a3d4e87544
ca2d798dddb79b3139bfb20368bd62175d85fdc6
describe
'100274' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHXI' 'sip-files00047.QC.jpg'
7c8308a672ee7df86e7cb48fc4ee5743
81d9af105b1d29007e08a2d9821231148741b8b6
describe
'85794' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHXJ' 'sip-files00134.QC.jpg'
abdeb36ce69be1066f66bde9e9762cc5
856035e4c06d1ba95499fb31140820c23df931cc
describe
'253759' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHXK' 'sip-files00100.jpg'
c05f811cdd484dd7d1cad282818a3042
1ba6ee7f0ecf5fd6438465e8e565ccded0e48728
describe
'1311' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHXL' 'sip-files00226.txt'
ba25c5894514cb3999c425e65c4075db
e6bcd9eea945899107ea1fc69c0a291b40ebe0eb
describe
'1687252' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHXM' 'sip-files00217.jp2'
86bab44e780f418127d5cfa7e9ec8d65
37aa922c05f9133845c2905fd781fd5c361e1be4
describe
'40883' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHXN' 'sip-files00149.pro'
bd81f4320309e2158399df1b87f89281
189632ca7d359444e3256a571d9fc25f300314d1
'2012-05-27T15:38:22-04:00'
describe
'43649' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHXO' 'sip-files00051.pro'
05a9337948a1060a22f5f5686a33208a
c6b11ca568df69878d61543358affcbbd1763926
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHXP' 'sip-files00152.txt'
a5b522aa2252f0f9f74a8c3abe0acdfe
b9a707a096b94c6020e88de6fdd342be527d7425
'2012-05-27T15:50:20-04:00'
describe
'31368' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHXQ' 'sip-files00156thm.jpg'
927856ef31497ade0c1edf36451bcc6c
c305ca2c9bdbdf5f1eed79b15c79bdd2ed1ee711
describe
'41565' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHXR' 'sip-files00236.pro'
40d754bd55bfd2860f2522409c18da89
13255b98b3775f94fac975eaa2033776d831cad2
describe
'191320' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHXS' 'sip-files00245.jpg'
6dee9be23e029ecad3e62eb7b2d8d00a
a1d23a5e9f19f12a52ee27682c7787fae6f254a3
describe
'41982' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHXT' 'sip-files00221thm.jpg'
c77218161d6bde8bff8ff11a3d3e6e31
3e9eb6bbf87e32617a60c6cad8dfef1ba12e2424
'2012-05-27T15:38:29-04:00'
describe
'13031068' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHXU' 'sip-files00263.tif'
1a36793a3322e361d672a314f967295b
311041b71a1a08f1254f77517a75af4dbf89c01e
describe
'247994' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHXV' 'sip-files00048.jpg'
bb2a78afbfd8b8b2c7b1ac6b717a3d13
4d9449619f6e34c7ca8d077a3bb6b1455f953589
describe
'1751' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHXW' 'sip-files00047.txt'
061535d594e2349aeff975dac812df56
d7fc515ea9ef8f3465e02a48d2d18f4595abd0ee
describe
'245999' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHXX' 'sip-files00166.jpg'
47206c70d581497dc524d0a9b64ec54a
c68eb0a0fc19e773224a7280ec0627be2e12af59
'2012-05-27T15:45:34-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHXY' 'sip-files00066.jp2'
71cb9f76bddb2282aa4cdc1d01bd2b09
45dc19a896b073d2a837825288fdd19345a9a27b
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHXZ' 'sip-files00035.txt'
78d613933779a0031c5cf25e0a26b73e
5818eb7668734f8b48a647e53864ab2531b16ac3
describe
'1528' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHYA' 'sip-files00096.txt'
2d34c856e322cf0dcab4ebb80e1f087f
bd7c70597ed5473ed6bd27c43432cd9c03250789
'2012-05-27T15:49:06-04:00'
describe
'1794390' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHYB' 'sip-files00285.jp2'
25b7eb99ca3ecb07d20b8476cdbbf592
c5ef06734f9a5044479f5de6e473d7d821bda2e0
describe
'38833' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHYC' 'sip-files00052thm.jpg'
843f9ae414d3cb1a9cd21c05ae5f8dd8
ab928aa71bf87abecabf6d9990c8202f833e3334
describe
'238622' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHYD' 'sip-files00057.jpg'
6cb4971b9f3ccee2a58724e086db49eb
46b2539c08868cc9dc8fa613bbed17048c6b468b
describe
'9667' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHYE' 'sip-files00213.pro'
ab54b8dd1c4c7f0b0b3a031dcdf89e2b
4559b5af0616d286ce163624f92a8df02edfd591
describe
'282754' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHYF' 'sip-files00158.jpg'
018a8e420b827ba1376a721d6bf2d755
316df19b228e396c96d9f29691d4bb4ce36e7e09
'2012-05-27T15:48:43-04:00'
describe
'189888' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHYG' 'sip-files00259.jpg'
27095beec1f23b7d2a1e5feff27258db
f911041c4759a9de7f091c50eebda35ac6b84017
describe
'1663' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHYH' 'sip-files00048.txt'
2a4f2a52207d04d0b32d5cad676c9b8b
23dbf0f4b1f7acc7397a0660d937b7926c5b9bc4
describe
'13673276' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHYI' 'sip-files00062.tif'
d473366c026fa5badc3b39bf21504da4
7778bbca3f763aceb37f6145148409c8b87b0549
describe
'14562296' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHYJ' 'sip-files00019.tif'
4eb47d82b1674bc9f977e917d2838d9b
6422c6f56e24be0a01d245fd52cd14a056779e52
describe
'31482' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHYK' 'sip-files00106.pro'
842619f88843afd393561a8f14345d48
d8d4bc82dd65c3bfe1e9186bfa6978c10ab6c219
describe
'43605' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHYL' 'sip-files00057.pro'
06f085eb2ece8726f79a4cc5b0165ab0
6442a62d9042a141b92ea8df0e6c29414dca723d
'2012-05-27T15:42:32-04:00'
describe
'14043272' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHYM' 'sip-files00124.tif'
f055267e12bd3d6af0a916b5438eeb4d
1e21316c1a3f173531aa36a2a5568e0651b74351
describe
'1229' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHYN' 'sip-files00037.txt'
a340d45fec1701ad0079972118aee9b8
b42e6adb080a84b81d6823a87f3ddc4338200059
describe
'44753' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHYO' 'sip-files00158.pro'
330cc27a2524ba0d51e675990998f1fd
e45ea4d3d1daef22aa17115cefd8d318cece5b97
describe
'13509532' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHYP' 'sip-files00272.tif'
e33d5d1373cfa5643f7c20a9a9527b91
fdcb05bc682af66160ff0cb7b64bfe22c864a075
'2012-05-27T15:40:23-04:00'
describe
'13928' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHYQ' 'sip-files00036.pro'
6efdfc5ef34fa0d5043633d6823464eb
78ded549b393c95798ce194c15a406247316be77
describe
'31137' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHYR' 'sip-files00084thm.jpg'
17e9757b343099c03f76c87b0b9e9c82
617154162c3636a7d36fd2ec53da22657eca7fa5
describe
'12777612' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHYS' 'sip-files00107.tif'
6f2cd84f05618ec30b302346762770b8
57b98f8cfd56598af078a7cd5c16fad0b6abe928
'2012-05-27T15:42:53-04:00'
describe
'1695625' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHYT' 'sip-files00200.jp2'
f17c862419bfe4c37d2216fe0f022e62
e429385f8a6363fdb67c3144f9762253e66a2d37
describe
'41915' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHYU' 'sip-files00102thm.jpg'
e2c732b7a6eb9fb7b27dd869822422cd
9e62692945d24af4874db603b22f3571fa3ef399
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHYV' 'sip-files00067.txt'
efbffda168680a3f8051953f3884ca94
0ec14b15fff7be6d8c85cc3c964a4fba34ba6f4c
describe
'95056' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHYW' 'sip-files00038.QC.jpg'
84125964569126c5885cbd14bc0980ac
a93987af72c0f86f215955e728100c6368008436
describe
'1549' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHYX' 'sip-files00268.txt'
614f132ecb534683f1f0ad5c33dff103
96500e95911ae7c46adcbabc336e554dffe9e2ad
describe
'13513060' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHYY' 'sip-files00098.tif'
0d48fb026fd38d40fec1de4f70837173
05e108668947d7383cedd2c87fbc0ddea89bb9a5
'2012-05-27T15:47:53-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHYZ' 'sip-files00151.tif'
04b14d7ab921aa586737b2528def662a
0985fdab956af0ca424af4b8109dccafdae2bc0f
describe
'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHZA' 'sip-files00256thm.jpg'
3dc1627a535c7decfb1f7aefb74228e7
402276b85d445382ead55a756b866bd7f2c2e697
describe
'90850' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHZB' 'sip-files00051.QC.jpg'
30f1413e1f83e8bd71443d040687bfae
8812ff9ff4ac03508b0abc2e1caf4080168ebe72
describe
'216065' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHZC' 'sip-files00151.jpg'
c5cfab4dcd2a0631484848edfce0e200
47b0cf58effe3d101d2c294d98f7aa6d9972cd6b
describe
'133598' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHZD' 'sip-files00045.jpg'
d3e6f41133a8c9bef7769da05abe4ef8
ea276c1c49fdd4ce61bfaed1e1c508aee0d8ec44
describe
'183066' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHZE' 'sip-files00022.jpg'
25d4e48a182e45f630229293011914aa
ff616178d84806eb87afb2391de1180d07292eb2
'2012-05-27T15:45:02-04:00'
describe
'92544' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHZF' 'sip-files00200.QC.jpg'
5e9d118a0f4328db9f0b8ab4341b93b5
d4c9fa77d2f770a167596ce745cce7253fdc4c04
'2012-05-27T15:44:20-04:00'
describe
'29286' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHZG' 'sip-files00258.QC.jpg'
53021727dc44697ab413f7745b02b18d
cbbdb46f19adbb00802cb1b295fa881988f7c9ca
describe
'129563' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHZH' 'sip-files00153.jpg'
dfdcd77bf6f5a4d004ce1745dab50078
b32b2cd7fe7e72ee2c0d69d4f2591ae81a8fb8c7
describe
'174794' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHZI' 'sip-files00116.jpg'
30fa31b0b4a6d7494cbff34d8e5a3ec5
dda725c84a3e4ba6cf9403e8cd437ff6c6ffe3ae
describe
'1687609' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHZJ' 'sip-files00151.jp2'
a8edab2b55e9d279c2706b747f9d7d0b
8aa7fef7db1681ab3d7e7461ad794bf0c48432d1
describe
'10669' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHZK' 'sip-files00101.pro'
eaa6e827e249fd6af9ca7c3733a3ad65
393bc1ea38e16d04dac00648394810c5eee2d357
describe
'1631713' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHZL' 'sip-files00138.jp2'
02cc04fdd4406563151a233a5435fe34
59206dfd1c2d2c427c0b589cab89320cd7e5ca96
describe
'13053580' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHZM' 'sip-files00226.tif'
946fc3c3d8c3a236c3174dd565329fb7
981746a5225110eb921f6a1ebc81853be9c124cb
describe
'45031' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHZN' 'sip-files00144.pro'
a6fdb416bed067e621408744b8390d5a
f6bbdfbbd1620c9317fffd562cccfc1d68e0ea96
describe
'44504' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHZO' 'sip-files00011.pro'
8e443032eae5bdd4d3846b98b0d463bb
ec27b5de77236115897c7b2bfaf7cd280f438ed6
describe
'14672480' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHZP' 'sip-files00051.tif'
8c7a92a28f35a99aa9ccb73ea232b33f
73c307f3398ed081d796a1d349f0c4b3a151e1fe
'2012-05-27T15:45:25-04:00'
describe
'73252' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHZQ' 'sip-files00070.QC.jpg'
67635d1fd1d643cb75dd3f1336b12cf1
fd5c3f758b5e007aa8d1b38ff84514b5f9f02fba
describe
'1605469' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHZR' 'sip-files00097.jp2'
bbacc2d05e73649c62894e92ec453b9f
2fa6ca8c25398a445da73d2aca72bded5cf5dc99
describe
'66766' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHZS' 'sip-files00098.QC.jpg'
a7857dc9f3ed6f6e52dfbd525443bbb0
d8d2eae5aac01ecfca6ad73ea9e9780de2d5d355
describe
'43687' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHZT' 'sip-files00139.pro'
eecd8e1265c4e4b2f7f92501df0cb58b
549fcac0410299b9704b543d3cddb443a19bb112
describe
'99300' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHZU' 'sip-files00235.QC.jpg'
1c8deee70f9e4fbaa2e366f27322fbbf
a58ce051e58325a32792f47ebd6d8e0ab697f74c
describe
'87945' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHZV' 'sip-files00077.QC.jpg'
fd98644d2e36f67df91342eff67ed6bc
c0b69d8ba420443c3ca08b07650df3ce859b053e
describe
'13950916' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHZW' 'sip-files00070.tif'
5352f633b819c5738a5c870a81d08741
a300f4bebbcce25cd7f3c9fe02d31015414e577f
'2012-05-27T15:39:15-04:00'
describe
'84867' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHZX' 'sip-files00082.QC.jpg'
8e9c65697cbe0b0ffc513a30ea29fc5d
0632511406f42ffe411da23d94a8fc5d3fb60477
describe
'221259' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHZY' 'sip-files00163.jpg'
8ece528c7096dae7e078e9f58542658a
869a1b107f1e5c4b2c3e2bbe5af025d9c156e07f
describe
'31360' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAHZZ' 'sip-files00213.QC.jpg'
d2b0bf622de0c5f21e667795a1d76102
ece8d6cd23baf9bb891d1a9124186400fa6431a4
describe
'1200' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAIAA' 'sip-files00189.txt'
74d5dd57598cfeb2a21184562f466a40
c44a745af3865319a2f16bcf7aee5b7ac41221ff
describe
'1779170' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAIAB' 'sip-files00231.jp2'
f292f13af6de6358a1eab9142b939af6
26a43bddc214a53f964730c668864eb9a5a8472d
describe
'19943' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAIAC' 'sip-files00045thm.jpg'
f967df11aa59313852169a286fa3e462
9dfe106bef543786f37147bd263cc259d05c8079
describe
'1620613' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAIAD' 'sip-files00137.jp2'
79b1cdd44db1a119e34d08af53deb72e
f3a9fcdda154754e7b6b3d761e17dfc46ecaba29
describe
'14192884' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAIAE' 'sip-files00287.tif'
0f7aa61ea887dd372e12a2eeeb2841b1
97f74729f56ed17ec2115e148671ddcbbc775655
'2012-05-27T15:43:58-04:00'
describe
'7159' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAIAF' 'sip-files00250.pro'
32e0b4af85a59083b8718f14f8a69b1b
89c1b6678495b205e8aae433d4c75d0a2b619728
describe
'1733458' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAIAG' 'sip-files00218.jp2'
65e1b07dcfd011f73a237abbeb5c5bf1
b61f8903256df72c0549f33e167022ae6edbae37
describe
'1633993' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAIAH' 'sip-files00165.jp2'
5eff93ba622e02de1f0f429f2f7ef7de
0faaf5168c1700d4048c1bbc5e96195965c84a29
describe
'440364' 'info:fdaE20100403_AAAAAEfileF20100403_AAAIAI' 'sip-filesUF00026051_00001.xml'
93be511da05338bbc7653e85fbb5f1b4
f03038b578a73c63d4f5ab08cc503f908c4475d0
'2012-05-27T15:49:25-04:00'
describe
TargetNamespace.1: Expecting namespace 'http://www.uflib.ufl.edu/digital/metadata/ufdc2/', but the target namespace of the schema document is 'http://digital.uflib.ufl.edu/metadata/ufdc2/'.
'2013-12-06T20:54:36-05:00' 'mixed'
xml resolution
http://www.uflib.ufl.edu/digital/metadata/ufdc2/ufdc2.xsd
BROKEN_LINK http://www.uflib.ufl.edu/digital/metadata/ufdc2/ufdc2.xsd
The element type "div" must be terminated by the matching end-tag "
".