Citation
The Black Prince

Material Information

Title:
The Black Prince a book for boys
Creator:
Jones, M ( Meredith )
M'Enery, Robert ( Illustrator )
Thomas Nelson & Sons ( Publisher )
Place of Publication:
London
Edinburgh
New York
Publisher:
T. Nelson and Sons
Publication Date:
Copyright Date:
1876
Language:
English
Physical Description:
296 p., [2] leaves of plates : ill. (some col.) ; 18 cm.

Subjects

Subjects / Keywords:
History -- Juvenile literature -- Great Britain -- Edward III, 1327-1377 ( lcsh )
Biographies -- 1876 ( rbgenr )
Bldn -- 1876
Genre:
Biographies ( rbgenr )
individual biography ( marcgt )
Spatial Coverage:
England -- London
Scotland -- Edinburgh
United States -- New York -- New York
Target Audience:
juvenile ( marctarget )

Notes

General Note:
Added title page and plate printed in colors.
Statement of Responsibility:
by M. Jones ; with illustrations from designs by Robert M'Enery.

Record Information

Source Institution:
University of Florida
Holding Location:
University of Florida
Rights Management:
This item is presumed to be in the public domain. The University of Florida George A. Smathers Libraries respect the intellectual property rights of others and do not claim any copyright interest in this item. Users of this work have responsibility for determining copyright status prior to reusing, publishing or reproducing this item for purposes other than what is allowed by fair use or other copyright exemptions. Any reuse of this item in excess of fair use or other copyright exemptions may require permission of the copyright holder. The Smathers Libraries would like to learn more about this item and invite individuals or organizations to contact The Department of Special and Area Studies Collections (special@uflib.ufl.edu) with any additional information they can provide.
Resource Identifier:
ALH2708 ( NOTIS )
61118092 ( OCLC )
026829503 ( AlephBibNum )

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Full Text









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By M. JONES,

AUTHOR OF “THE CHILDREN’S BIBLE PICTURE-BOOK,” ‘‘PRINCE CHARLIE,
THE YOUNG CHEVALIER,” ETC. ETC.

Gith Ellustrations from Besigns by Robert M'‘Enerp, Esq.



¢* I'll tell you a tale of a knight, my boy;
The bravest that ever was seen.”



LONDON:

T. NELSON AND SONS, PATERNOSTER ROW;
EDINBURGH; AND NEW YORK.



1876.

AED a ELA CIPO LL AOR i OLE OI IO A BAL IORI LOOR tne SO Cg ee er tonne







Drefuce.

B= Sau wars of Edward III. in France are
‘4 el, sometimes spoken of as though they
were mere wars of aggression. To
this view of them I cannot give an unqualified



assent, The law of succession, though pretty
well ascertained, was not so strictly observed in
those days as to prevent all controversy upon —
the subject. And seeing that, in his peculiar
case, others, beside Edward himself, thought that
he had a claim to the crown of France, I am
disposed to look upon his French wars as spring-
ing from an honest determination on his own
part, and that of his people, to rectify, by force
the wrong which, as he conceived, had been
done him by the French nobles, in assigning the
throne to Philip of Valois.

I do not affirm that he was in the right; but



iv : PREFACE,

I do think he had sufficient grounds for sup-
posing himself to be so. The circumstances of
_the case were undoubtedly such as to leave room
for honest difference of opinion about it. Nor
do I think that any one of us, who had as
colourable a claim to a great estate as had
Kidward III. to the French crown, would leave
any stone unturned in our efforts to get pos-
session of it. Of course we should not ficht ;
that is the ultimate process of nations, But
not a single law court should we leave unvisited,
carrying up our appeal step by step, until we
gained our cause, or were barred by the final
adverse decision of the highest court of all: as
Edward was ultimately barred by the final
adverse decision, unmistakeably expressed by
successes in arms, of the French nation. |
Much, however, as men may differ as to the
merits of his elaim, all must unite in unbounded
admiration of the courage, fortitude, judgment,
and generosity, displayed by our great monarch,
and his greater son, in thosé marvellous en-.
counters between the few and the many, which
have, for five long centuries, made Crecy and
Poitiers names of pride throughout England.
And the present seems a peculiarly suitable



PREFACE. Vv

time for recalling in detail the far-off glories
of the two Edwards; seeing that “wars and
rumours of wars” have, since 1854, been almost
incessantly around us; and we, the few, as we
were on those old battle-fields, are sometimes
disposed to look anxiously upon the many that,
as we apprehend, may be against us. But
Norman fire, grafted upon Anglo-Saxon endur-
ance, 1s still our inheritance; and should war,
either at home or abroad, be thrust upon us,—
with a just cause, and, above all, with “God”
for “our Hope and Strength,” we may with con-
fidence look to come out of it as triumphantly
as did the little imperiled band that followed
Edward into France, and with more permanence
of success than was awarded to them.
En glishmen still pray, as well as fight!

M. J.

Lonpon, September 11, 1868.










Contents.

I. The Childhood of the Black Prince,

II.
III.
IV.

V.
VI.

Vil.
VIII.

Origin of the Wars in France,

Passage of the Somme, oss
The Battle of Crecy, wos
The Siege of Calais, - ese
Treachery at Calais, | eos

The Prince’s Expedition from Bordeaux,

The Battle of Poitiers, oes
The English again invade France,
The Prince’s Court in Aquitaine,
The Prince’s Spanish Campaign,
Troubles in Aquitaine, eee

Treaty of Peace broken by the French,

eeu

Incidents of the War—-Death of Chandos,

. The Death of the Prince, eee



. The Sack of Limoges—The Prince returns to England,

ese

eos

eee



“







“

weak,





I,

bed eat French wars of our great Edward IIL, and
‘4 Pa his greater son, Edward the Black Prince,
afford a wonderful example of what stout



English hearts and hands can achieve, even in the
face of overwhelming numbers. Those wars have
made Cregy and Poitiers household words in England,
and we now propose to tell, in detail, their story; to-
gether with that of the gallant leader under whom the
English name became terrible in France. We shall
find the narrative present us with admirable pictures
of fortitude, humanity, and generosity, as well as of
warlike skill and daring. |

Kdward, the Black Prince, the heroic son of Edward
III. of England, was born at the old royal palace of
Woodstock, on the 15th of June, 1330. His mother
was Philippa, daughter of William, Count of Hainault.
In 1327, when she was a mere girl of fourteen, the
princess, attended by a brilliant train of knights



12 THE CHILDHOOD OF THE BLACK PRINCE.

and gentlemen, came over to England to marry its
young monarch, who was only two or three months
older than herself. The marriage proved a happy one;
more so than usually falls to the lot of royal person-
ages: for Philippa was gentle and good, and sincerely
attached to her husband ; and he, in return, gave her,
throughout their long life, the affection she so well
deserved. The birth of their boy was a great delight
both to them and the whole nation ; and in the glad-
ness of his heart the king munificently rewarded the
bearer of such welcome tidings, assigning him a liberal
yearly pension in money, till he could settle lands
upon him to the same value.

We do not know much about the royal nursery in
those days. One thing, however, we do know, that the
first year or two in that apartment are spent very
much alike, whatever may be the centuries compared.
Whether the date be 1800 or 1300,—kicking, crawling,
squalling, and eating porridge, equally engrosses the
young occupant, be he prince or be he peasant. This
may not be very dignified, but we cannot help that.
The‘ further process of shortening those interminable
long tails to their petticoats, with which it is the cus-
tom to endow very young babies, also passes upon a
Prince of Wales, irrespective of the date of his birth.,
While in his first attempts to walk, the tumbles and
knocks upon the head, encountered by the heir-apparent
of our day, have certainly been shared by that stalwart



THE CHILDHOOD OF THE BLACK PRINCE. 13

child whom we see so dimly through the mist of five
receding centuries. For both, the same mother’s heart
has beaten ; and, tender as was that of Philippa for her
first-born, we may not believe that it was more tender
than that of her whom we English of this day love to
call our sovereign.

One would certainly have liked to know something
of the childhood of one who was destined to fill so im-
portant a part in our own history, and in that of our
neighbours across the channel, as does the Black
Prince. But though we have gossip five centuries old,
it is not gossip about babies, For grave historians to
record that Joan of Oxford was his nurse; that Mistress
Matilda Frampton had the honour of rocking the royal
cradle; and that, in his third year, he was created
Karl of Chester ; is not telling us much: it is the boy
himself we want to hear about.. But the nursery door
is close shut upon its little princely inmate, and how-
ever precocious or stupid he may haye been, to us it is
all a blank. |

At the age of six, however, we get a glimpse of our
Edward of the olden time; for his father then created
him Duke of Cornwall, a title that is still borne by the
Prince of Wales. In those days, the creation of a peer
was a ceremony ; not as now, when a slip of paper con-
verts a banker into a lord ; and the ceremony, in this
case, must have been a sight worth seeing, A title
meant something then. It carried with it power and



14 THE CHILDHOOD OF THE BLACK PRINCE.

authority, and the symbols of these were formally de-
_livered to him who received it. Perhaps it was because
the prince was such a very little fellow that all the
usual formalities were not gone through on this occa-
sion. His rights over the duchy of Cornwall were,
ceremoniously, conveyed to him: simply by girding his
tiny waist with a sword ; the other usual ensigns of
authority—the ring and the staff—were not transferred
to him. The new-made duke, the first that England
had ever known, immediately proceeded to show that
the distinction conferred upon him was no empty one.
Bestowing knighthood was one of the powers attached
to it, and twenty gallant youths that day received it
trom his hand. By this time, too, we find that the
small man was minding his book, with grave Dr.
Burley for his tutor, and a group of youngsters to
learn lessons with him, instead of being left in
stately solitude to con them over by himself. Among
these associates, Simon Burley afterwards became
one of the prince’s favoured and most distinguished
knights. | 7

King Edward’s French wars, of which we shall speak
presently, carried him much abroad ; and his Highness
of Cornwall (he was not Prince of Wales yet), was,
in his father’s absence, appointed Lieutenant of the
kingdom. His lieutenancy was no mere pretence,
not a name only; for this child of eight years old
actually held a parliament for his father at Northaip-



THE CHILDHOOD OF THE BLACK PRINCE. 15

ton, in 1338. for, under the young duke’s presidency, it voted large
supplies for carrying on the popular war with Philip
of Valois and his friends.

Here, again, those tiresome old chroniclers do not
tell us how the prince got through his important busi-
ness, nor even how much of it fell to his share. But
at the mature age of eight, he would certainly get on
better than did James VI. of Scotland, who, (at three
or four years old), having to perform a regal duty of
the same kind, wound up his address to Lords and
Commons, by remarking, in the same breath, that
there was a hole in the roof of the parliament-
house. We cannot for one moment suppose that
our Edward made such “a hole” in his manners as
this !

The promise of the young prince’s babyhood—for he
really was a fine child—was now being fulfilled. He
grew up a handsome, strong-limbed, intelligent lad ;
and at the age of nine, when his father, who was busy
preparing for his contest with the French, sent for him
to the castle of Louvain to keep Christmas with him-
self and his queen, one of the Christmas amusements
of that “noble and royal” assembly was to propose a
marriage between the boy and the little daughter of
the Duke of Brabant, the young lady being then four
years old. The match went no further than those
Christiuas conversations by a blazing log-fire; one of



16 THE CHILDHOOD OF THE BLACK PRINCE.

the prince’s own countrywomen, celebrated for her
beauty as the “Fair Maid of Kent,” being destined
for the wife, not of a hopeful boy, but of a man re-
nowned throughout Christendom as the hero of Crecy,
Poitiers, and Najara.







(3)

ES: ;
Cpemsamsa ie

FRAN

SES. ,
Anon ore ww nce HO











If.

eral’ the time that King Edward IIT. came tosthe
‘throne, the English had considerable pos-



sessions in the south of France, which had
been brought by Queen Eleanor, wife of Henry IL, as
her marriage portion. For these possessions the kings
of England had been accustomed to do homage to the
kings of France, as (what was called) their feudal su-
periors. This ceremony did not at all affect their in-
dependence as sovereigns of England. It only related
to their lordship over those French duchies, in relation
to which they were not quite so supreme as was the
monarch of France, and as they themselves were at
home: they owed to the French king, so far as these
French dominions were concerned, a limited sort of
obedience, in compliance with what was called the
feudal law.

The feudal system, of which this law was a part,
was a relic of the old conquering times when he who
had won lands by his sword—as William the Norman



90 ORIGIN OF THE WARS IN FRANCE.

did in England—portioned them out among his fol-
lowers, on condition that their swords should help him
in case of need: the amount of military service, thus
rendered, being in proportion to the extent of lands
bestowed. Other independent sovereigns, besides
those of England, though none of such importance and
grandeur as they, were in the same position as Edward:
owning feudal obedience to some one who, in that par-
ticular, was greater than they. But, saving this mere
feudal obedience, it would not have been wise for any
feudal lord, however high and mighty, to require more
from them. In such a case, they would have flown in |
the face even of his Highness of France as readily as
in that of a meaner potentate.

This sort of feudal obedience, then, had been rendered
by our monarchs, on account of their portion of the
kingdom of France. But on the death of Charles the
Fair, King of France, in 1328, our Edward JIL, as his
nephew, considered that he was the next heir to the
throne, and therefore, as supreme lord, had a right to
the whole kingdom. The great lords and peers of
France thought otherwise, and gave the crown to Philip
of Valois, cousin to the late king. Their reason for
preferring a more distant relation than Edward, was
that as (according to the custom of France, which does
not suffer a woman to reign), Queen Isabella of Eng-
land could not succeed to the crown herself, neither
could her son inherit through her. Edward and his



ORIGIN OF THE WARS IN FRANCE. 4

friends were, however, confident in their view of the
case. Indeed, there was room for dispute in the
matter; and most probably the real reason why Philip
was chosen instead of Edward, was, not so much out of
regard to the Salic law, as to the circumstance of
Philip’s being a Frenchman, one of themselves, while
Edward was an English king.

There was only one way of deciding such a quarrel,
that is, by fighting ; and to this the English king, with
the hearty concurrence of his people, and the pur-
chased help of his allies, speedily resorted.

Believing himself to be the rightful heir to the
French throne, it was not particularly agreeable to
Edward, in the first flush of youth and sovereignty, to
be called upon to go over to France, and perform that
customary homage of which we have been speaking,
for a mere corner of the kingdom. The whole belonged
to him, as he thought; why then should he go down
upon his knees to return thanks for the limited owner-
ship of a part of it? King Philip had already been
crowned a twelvemonth, and all his other feudatories—
as those who acknowledged him for feudal superior,
were called—had done homage to their lord in the
manner prescribed. The mode of doing this was for
the feudatory or vassal,-to kneel bareheaded, un-
belted, and unarmed before his lord, between whose
hands he placed his own, vowing the customary
obedience; or, in other and old words, promising



99 ORIGIN OF THE WARS IN FRANCE.

to become his “man.” The lord then bestowed a
kiss upon the kneeling knight, and the ceremony was
at an end.

It was, as has been said, excessively disagreeable to
Edward, as King of England, thus to humble himself
to his neighbour. Young as he was (he was only seven-
teen), he was already distinguished, not only as sove-
reign of a realm that might vie in importance with
that of France, but for the energy and valour which ke
had displayed in his contests with the fierce, rude
warriors of Scotland. And his high spirit, high both
from his position, and from his personal merit, re-
volted from the ceremonial submissiveness required.

from him. According to the custom of that age, how-
| ever, he could not absolutely refuse it when summoned,
unless he had been prepared at once to go to war
about the matter.

Accordingly, when Philip’s messengers requiring the
accustomed duty from the English king, presented



themselves at Windsor,—which had, even then, for -
more than two centuries been a royal palace,—they
were received with all the courtesy due to their own
rank, and that of their master. But, with the same
punctilious politeness, they were informed that the
king must consult with his council, before he could
engage to perform the homage demanded from him,
Edward forthwith came up to town, and assembled

his trusty councillors at Westminster. Before them



ORIGIN OF TITE WARS IN FRANCE, 23

the messengers laid their credentials, and then with-
drew, while the knotty question, to pay homage or
refuse it—in other words, peace or war—was discussed,
Discretion is said to be the better part of valour, and
the council possessed this valuable quality; for, seeing
that the nation was not, just then, in a condition to back
their king, with “bills and bows,” if he declined com-
pliance with the French king’s demands, they decided
that he should obey Philip’s bidding. The messengers
were then again summoned. before that stately assem-
blage; and by the mouth of the Bishop of London (in
those days bishops were often leading statesmen), were
duly informed that the king, their master, would forth-
with pass over into France to render the homage re-
quired by his cousin Philip.

So far all seemed smooth. Edward kept his word,
and on the 26th of May 1329, set out on this unplea-
sant errand, attended by a fitting train of nobles,
bishops, and knights. His suite comprised a thousand
horse, and he was received by Philip, with correspond-
ing magnificence, at Amiens; where the homage was
paid in presence of three kings—those of Bohemia,
Navarre, and Majorca, and a crowd of nobles, drawn
together to do honour to the new liegeman. Never
was bitter pill more brightly gilded. But it was a
bitter pill, that Edward at first made some difficulty
about swallowing in the prescribed fashion. He made
his appearance in the Cathedral of Amiens (where his



94 ORIGIN OF THE WARS IN FRANCE.

“lord” sat in a chair of state), armed and royally
robed ; nor was he disposed either to strip himself of his
regal and knightly insignia, or to do the kneeling part
of the business. Both, however, were relentlessly ex-
acted of him; and, in a terrible temper, Edward of
Hngland, avowed himself vassal—for Guienne—to
Philip of France; whom, in his secret soul, he wished
at Jericho.* Fifteen days were afterwards passed in
feasting, tournaments, and grave conferences, between
the politicians of that brilliant congress; and then -
Edward returned to his young wife at Windsor, well
pleased with his reception at the French court, however
much he might dislike that part of the performance
in which he had been the leading actor.

- Among the nobles of France who had assisted in—
placing the crown upon the head of Philip of Valois,
was his brother-in-law, Count Robert of Artois. He was
a particularly great man, and stood so high in Philip’s
good graces, that almost everything in the kingdom
was guided and ordered by my Lord Robert. Ere long,
however, Philip’s violent liking for his brother-in-law
turned, as is not uncommon, to an equally violent
hatred of him. The count’s moral character was cer-
tainly nothing to boast of. Indeed, it is said that he
was guilty of the shabby vice of forging title deeds, in
order to mend his claim on certain lands in France.

* It has been denied that Edward performed his homage in the humiliat:
ing manner described. But some old authorities take this view of it,



ORIGIN OF THE WARS IN FRANCR. 25

On account of this, Philip was strongly inclined to cut
off the count’s head, if he could only catch him! and
after having hunted his intended victim out of several
states, to which, in succession, he had fled from the
axe and block prepared for him, Robert was at last
fairly driven to England, for the shelter denied him
elsewhere.

Philip had much better have let his brother-in-law
stay quietly at home, and keep his cunning head on
his broad shoulders ; for, once in the court of England,
he diligently employed all. the influence which a man
of his reputation possessed, in urging upon the king the
justice of his claim to the French throne, and in inciting
that young, valorous spirit to plead his cause with the
sword. Such a mode of upholding it could not but be
agreeable to one yet glowing with successful fight
against those, over whom his grandfather had so long
ridden, rough-shod, that he began at last to think he
really had a right to do it. The Frenchman accom-
panied Edward in his expedition against the Scots,
and while in the field plied him well with arguments
for flying at higher game. He further comforted the
soul of the young monarch by assuring him that his
claim was held good by several lawyers.

Count Robert was reckoned a man of great sagacity.
He was also of royal descent. No wonder that the
king began at last to yield to his persuasions, and to
hold many anxious conferences with his council, as to



26 ORIGIN OF THE WARS IN FRANCE.

whether he should, or should not, carry his steel-clad
host from the bare heaths of Scotland, which they had
already trampled down, to try their fortune on the fair
fields of France. The knights of those days, be it said,
rather preferred fighting in France, to fighting in
Scotland; as the former country afforded them more
luxurious quarters.

Edward’s council were well enough disposed that
the king should advance his claim to the French
crown, and prosecute it by arms, if need were. The
resources of his own kingdom were not, however, at
the time adequate to do this; and to do it effectually
he must seek aid from his friends and allies on the -
continent. They, therefore, advised that he should
send ambassadors to his gallant and gouty father-in-
law, the Earl of Hainault, to ascertain what could be
done in that quarter. To these ambassadors, the earl
and his brother, the Lord John, gave all that was in.
their power to give, that is, advice; a very good thing
_ when nothing better is to be had. And acting upon
their counsel, Edward contracted alliances with the
lords, and small sovereigns of the Low Countries; who,
some for love, more for money, and others, won by the
cheaper means of flattery and promises, agreed to aid
him in his grand enterprise. __

One of Edward’s allies in this business was, it is
true, neither sovereign nor lord, though he was as
poweriul and important as though he were both the



ORIGIN OF THE WARS IN FRANCE. 27

one and the other. This ally was Jacob van Arteveld,
who, having retired from the brewing business, which
he had carried on with great success, next took up
that of governing the Flemings, in a style rather more
imperative than had ever been adopted by their lawful
sovereign, the Earl of Flanders. From the earl they
had thought proper to revolt; but whether they liked
the brewer any better, after they had got him, may be
questioned, for Jacob had an awkward habit of ‘killing
off, without the slightest ceremony, any one to whom
it pleased him to take a dislike. Further, as is fre-
quently the case, when men of low birth are raised to
power and wealth, he was much more extragavant—
with the money of the Flemings—than the earl had ever
been, who was born to these two good things. He
taxed the Flemings heavily in a variety of ways. They
had both indirect, and direct, exceedingly direct, taxation;
for after he had spent the accustomed duties, no one
~ knew, nor dared to ask, how, he would proceed to
what Ae called borrowing large sums from the citizens ;
his borrowing, being the next best, or worst thing to
demanding, seeing that no one who had any regard for
lis own safety, felt at lberty to say—no! Indeed,
whenever he thought fit to tell them he wanted more
money, it was always best to take his word for it, and
let him have it. In short, Jacob played King Stork
- among his new subjects with a vengeance!

To this amiable individual King Edward addressed



28 ORIGIN OF THE WARS IN FRANCE. *

himself so effectually, that the stout, sturdy Flemings, fat-
tened and strengthened on such beer as Jacob had been
wont-to brew, were joined in his cause, with the more
sprightly cavaliers of the empire; that is, of Austria
and Germany. When Edward’s own forces were united
to these, there was a gallant army under his direction,
or that of his lieutenants, who, with various fortune,
kept fighting a little here, and a little there, for the next
eight years. Amid their skirmishing we may notice
that Count Robert came to his end; and finally found
a quiet resting-place in the choir of our old St. Paul’s.
The din of the city, teeming with mercantile life, per-
chance even now roars around the ashes of that turbu-
lent warrior. His death was lamented in England, for
he had qualities to win admiration in those far off days ;
and according to the fashion (more heathen than Chris-
tian), of the times, Edward swore to take a terrible re-
venge for it. -

Towards the close of this period of skirmishing, that
is in 1343, when the young Edward was thirteen years
old, his father, with all solemnity, conferred upon him
the title of Prince of Wales. The king also thought
that with the help of Jacob the brewer, the revolted
Flemings might be persuaded to accept the young prince
as their sovereign. But the earldom of Flanders was
not to be added to the rest of his titles and possessions.
Van Arteveld was heartily willing to do all that Edward
wished from him. It was very pleasant to patronize a



ORIGIN OF THE WARS IN FRANCE. 29

king. But he soon found that he had promised more
than he could perform. He condescended to consult
with his turbulent Flemings, on the question of this con-
templated transfer of their allegiance; but it seems that
by this time they were tired of Jacob and his iron rule.
They murmured loudly at the proposal, declaring that,
with God’s help, they would never disgrace themselves
so far as to disinherit their “natural lord, in favour of
a stranger.” And they whispered, one to another, tnoat
Jacob was carrying things with rather too high a hand ;
and they would not endure it any longer. Nor did
they ; for forthwith the mob fell upon the unfortunate
brewer, and killed him.

Edward, who, attended by the prince, and a stately
retinue, had come over to Sluys in Flanders, and was
there anxiously awaiting the result of Jacob’s negotia-
tions, was not easily pacified after this destruction of
his hopes. He immediately took his son home again,
vowing vengeance against the Flemings, and all belong-
ing to them. Those discreet people, however, soon
patched up a peace with him; and though they begged
to be excused from any attempt to deprive their young
Earl Lewis of his rights, they adroitly insinuated that,
as the king had a daughter, Flanders might very pos-
sibly be ruled by his family after all, through her mar-
riage with their lord.

And so the poor brewer, whose mangled remains were
scarcely cold in their unhonoured grave, was forgotten



30 “ORIGIN OF THE WARS IN FRANCE.

as speedily as possible, and every one was quite com-
fortable. |

_Jacob’s fate was sad; but his violence had merited
it. He had taken “the sword,” and he “perished”
by. it,












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Bassas of the Somme.




rea DWARD’S disappointment at the loss of the
Ke earldom of Flanders, which he had hoped to
secure for his son, was not merely for the
loss of title and territory. We know how he longed to
gain possession of what he considered his rightful in-
heritance; how this longing had led him to court the
brewer of Ghent; and might have induced him to culti-
vate even more ignoble acquaintance, could they have
served him in the matter. The reason for his wish ta
gain the Flemings was his having entertained the hope
of making Flanders his key to unlock that beautiful,
fertile France, out of which (with the exception of his’
own hereditary portion) he was kept, as he thought, so
unjustly. And now that roaring raging mob in the
peaked and gabled streets of Ghent, had put an end
to his fine scheme. But for this, itis to be feared that
the slaughter of a dozen brewers, instead of only one,
would not have disturbed his tranquillity.

But there were other roads into France besides those

(3) 3



34 PASSAGE OF THE SOMME.

through Flanders, and King Edward was soon to find
them. For two years ot more his lieutenants in the
south of France, where he was “at home,” and no one
_ denied it, had been as busy as possible in dealing out
hard knocks to their neighbours—the less loved that
they were such near neighbours. His cousin, the Kari
of Derby, (not of the house of Stanley, but a royal
Plantagenet), was driving all before him in Gascony,
where he had met with little opposition ; for to carry on
war successfully requires plenty of money; and money
was just the thing that Philip of Valois wanted. In
the early part of 1346, however, Philip contrived to
get-so far out of his difficulties as to raise an army of
a hundred thousand men, who, with lords and knights
almost innumerable, marched into Gascony, under the
command of the Duke of N ormandy, and set them-
selves, so steadily, and successfully, to the retaking of
the Earl of Derby’s conquests in that province, that
the thing soon became serious. Sir Walter Manny, who
had, a few years before, come over to England in the
train of the good Queen Philippa, was with the com-
paratively small body of English who were thus fiercely
attacked in southern France ; and though he was in him-
self a host, his skill and bravery, with that of other
knights, also brave and skilful, did not prevent the
fortune of war from going sadly against them.

In this strait Edward proposed going himself to the
assistance of his faithful, but harassed followers, His



$

PASSAGE OF THE SOMME. 25

people heartily seconded him. Men and arms, and ships
for their transport, were soon collected, and the young
prince, now in his sixteenth year, was to have his first
experience of actual war among them. |

Masses of soldiers, armcd and accoutred for their
deadly, though necessary function, form a picturesque
spectacle even in our'own days. But, in comparison
with the very olden time of which we are writing, war
is now shorn of almost all its strange, outside beauty.
There were the knights glittering in plate armour, hel.
meted, crested, plumed, with each one his bright shield,
throwing off sunbeams as he moved along; while their
satin and embroidered surcoats were fit for the train of
a duchess on drawing-room days. The surcoat was a
flowing sort of robe, thrown over the armour. The
lance, with its little fluttering pennon, was an exceed-
ingly picturesque weapon, as we may see by our modern
lancers. Nor was the huge steel battle axe, or hammer,
(martel, was its old name,) added by some to the ordi-
nary equipment of lance and sword, and which was
slung from their saddle-bow, other than an imposing
looking implement of destruction. |

Then the horses were nearly as fine, and well de-
fended by plates of steel, as their masters. How puzzled
the poor animals must have felt, to be stalking about
in iron cases; and further, on high days and _ holidays,
with what one may call embroidered petticoats down
to their heels!



36 | PASSAGE OF THE SOMME.

The man-at-arms—what we should now “call the
cavalry soldier—though less brilliantly mailed than the
knight or noble, was not the less encased in good ser-
viceable metal, that would withstand sword stroke, or
spear-thrust. Indeed, we are told that prostrate knights
and men-at-arms, defying all penetrating weapons, have
had to be cracked like lobsters, by blows of the ham-
mer, before the death-dealing dagger could find its way
through their iron shells.

This man-at-arms with his little retinue of attendants
(for he was a great man in his way), formed a striking
group ; while the mounted and mail-clad host were
varied by bodies of archers, in their loose, easy-fitting
dress: for we did not, in those days, strap and buckle up
our soldiers as we do now. These stout fellows were
armed with the formidable bow and arrow of our old
English yeomen: bows as tall as themselves, wherein
the yard-long shaft was drawn by main strength of.
body, not of arms merely, right up to the ear, before it
was discharged on its twanging, death-carrying errand.
Those yard-long arrows would pierce the stoutest
armour impervious to all ordinary weapons. As for
our [rish and Welsh fellow subjects, who now hold their
own in our armies as well as the best of us, making
men proud to enter their distinctive regiments; they
did not come out at all well in the days of Edward ITL
and our wars in France. In fact they were a long way
behind the English in civilization; so a big knife, or any



PASSAGE OF THE SOMME. oT

other awkward tool that was capable of doing mischief,
was thought quite good enough for them.

“Tell that” noé “to the marines,” but to the Welsh
Fusiliers, and Connaught Rangers.

Of such was the small though effective army now
destined for the shores of France. We may imagine
how enthusiastically the fine, handsome lad, heir, not
only to the crown of England, but to that ot the rich
country they were bound to win, would be received by
his noble, knightly, and yeomanly companions in arms.
Nor can we doubt that the wild Irish and Welsh infan-
try would brandish their knives, and shout him a wel-
come. In number this force did not exceed thirty
thousand. But we shall see what these could do against
the chivalry and countless hosts of Philip of Valois.

Southampton was the place appointed for the em-
barkation of the English army, and thence the fleet
sailed on the 24th of June, 1346. Edward left young
Lionel, his third son, to take care of things at home,
while he was away. This, of course, was a mere thing
of state, Master Lionel being only eight years old;
grave, bearded men, such as the lords Nevil and Percy,
and several bishops, were in reality entrusted with
the weighty cares of government. Nor did the war-
loving king forget the prudent defence of his realm, by
arms, as well as by wise heads; a sufficient military
force being appointed for its protection during his ab-
sence,



6-38 PASSAGE OF THE SOMME,

The army which the king, his son, and some of the
greatest nobles and warriors of the time now commanded
for the conquest of France, was designed, as has been
said, to make its first attempt in the southern provinces.
Contrary winds, however, baffled that design, and on
the third day after their sailing from Southampton,
which they did merrily enough, drove them on their
own coast of Cornwall, instead of that of Gascony.
And here, after beating about for a while—nobody en-
joys coming ‘back again, like a boomerang from its
mark—they were compelled to anchor, and suffer nearly
a weeks’ detention. |

On board the king’s ship there was a French noble-
man, named Sir Godfrey de Harcourt, who, having
given offence at his own court, had run away to that of
England, where he was received with great favour.
During the time they were detained by foul winds on
the Cornish coast, this Sir Godfrey set himself to alter
Edward’s plan as to the place of landing. He advised
that the descent should be made upon Normandy; that
- northern province being very rich and fertile, and
| having the further advantage of being quite out of the
way of the rough skirmishers who had turned the —
south upside down. It was, therefore, quite unpre-
pared for defence, its knighthood, with their retainers,
being drawn off to the field of action. Its population,
too, were quiet and peaceable, occupied with the care of
their fields and flocks, and knowing nothing of sword,



PASSAGE OF THE SOMME. 39

lance, and cross-bow,—the cross-bow was that form of
the weapon chiefly used on the Continent, and it was
not considered so manly a one as the old English long-
bow. |

The advice was sound, and Edward had sense enough
to take it. After having threatened thé south, it was
good policy on his part to swoop down upon the com-
paratively defenceless north. Winds and waves fav-
_oured him now, and speedily brought him and his
fieet to La Hogue, in Normandy, on the 10th of July.
If you look at the map you will see the little point
jutting out, almost opposite to the Isle of Wight.

The king was the first to leap ashore. But “ most
haste” is not always “ best speed.” Not looking before
heleaped, or making some other such simple blunder,
down came his Highness (for it was not “ Majesty” in
those days) full length on the strand, with such force
as to set the royal nose a-bleeding. That looked bad ;
and his superstitious nobles entreated him to return to
his ship, and not think of effecting a landing after so
unfortunate a beginning. Edward, however, was as
superiot to those about him in good sense as he was
in military prowess, and he passed off his tumble with
a jest, observing that the very ground itself was obvi-
ously longing for him.

The joke told; a good joke always will tell; and the
disembarkation at once took place. The prince, who
was aboard his father’s ship, set foot, for the first time.



40 PASSAGE OF THE SOMME.

on the territory that he hoped would one day be his,
Nobles, knights, men-at-arms, and everybody else, in-
cluding the wild Irish and Welsh, were duly got out
of the ships; and horses, armour, warlike stores, with
endless baggage, were all safely landed at last upon the
sandy beach, where they camped for that summer’s
night. Rich tents were pitched for royalty and my
lords; while his cloak, and the glittering star-lit sky
overhead, were shelter enough for the humbler warrior
of that resolute little band.

A few days rest was allowed upon this spot; while,
to qualify them duly for the coming struggle, the
prince, and some other young nobles, had the honour of ©
knighthood conferred upon them by the king. Then
a council of war was held to decide on the course to
be pursued ; and at this it was determined that the
Karl of Huntingdon, with about a hundred and twenty
men-at-arms, and four hundred archers, should remain
with the fleet, while the rest of the army moved on in
three divisions. One of these was under the command
of the king, with whom was his son, the new-made
knight, panting to do honour to his knighthood by
some signal feat of arms. Sir Godfrey de Harcourt
led the second ; the Earl of Warwick the third. The
order of march was, for the king’s division, or main
body, to move on in the centre ; the Earl of Warwick’s .
division extended itself on the right ; and that of Sir
Godfrey, which was a little in advance, acted upon the



PASSAGE OF THE SOMME. 4]

leit. The fleet followed their course along the coast,
all uniting in one object,—that of plundering, burning,
and destroying everything that came in their way.

They met with little opposition, for the simple
country folks, who, as has been said, knew nothing
of soldiers and battles, took to their heels and fled be-
fore the English ; the knights and men-at-arms who
should have protected them from these cruel invaders
being far away, fighting under the Duke of Nor-
mandy. So, between the fleet and the army,—spreading
itself like a pestilence—the English took many rich
towns, and acquired plunder to an enormous extent ;
gold, silver, and valuable merchandise, which they care-
fully packed up, sent on board their attendant ships,
and rejoicingly conveyed to England. Spoil was so—
abundant that the very camp followers “turned up
their noses” at rich furred gowns, which, in those days,
were worn; and there was no lack of provision for this
locust-like swarm either, seeing that those who fled
could not take their well-stored houses and barns with
them.

King Philip meanwhile was not idle. When news
was brought him that the English had landed in Nor-
mandy, and were destroying that province at their
pleasure, he summoned every earl, baron, and knight,
who owed him service, to march with him against
them. The lords eagerly obeyed his command, but
some were so distant from the scene of action that they



42 PASSAGE OF THE SOMME.

could not attend the king in time to check the advance
of the enemy, who soon made their way to within a
few miles of Paris. The citizens were terribly frightened
when they found the English at their very gates ; the
more so that Philip was just setting out to St. Denis,
about four miles off, to join the lords who were
assembled there. Expecting to be swallowed at a
mouthful by those terrible islanders,—upon their knees
the poor citizens besought the king to stay and take
care of them, for if he did not, the English would cer-
tainly come upon them, and make themselves masters
of his fine city of Paris.

King Philip thought he should best protect his fine
city of Paris and its trembling inhabitants by joining
- his army at St. Denis, and fighting the invaders. He
told the suppliants so ; and to cheer their hearts, de-
clared that the English would never touch them, nor
their city either. This turned out quite true, as Kd-
ward, having burned some villages near its walls, passed
on northwards, by Beauvais, where he hung twenty of
his own people for having set fire to the abbey of St.
Messien, contrary to his express commands that no
church or monastery should be injured. Beauvais was
attacked, but its inhabitants, with a good military
bishop at their head, showed fight so gallantly that the
English were beaten back. The people of Poix, a little
further on, either not being in a mood for fighting, or
not prepared for it, thought best to buy off the enemy.



PASSAGE OF THE SOMME. _ 43

A certain sum was agreed upon, on the faith of which the
town and its two fortresses were to be left untouched.
The king and the young prince slept there quietly that
night, and next morning withdrew the army to pursue
its march. No sooner, however, were they out of
the way than those excellent people of Poix recovered
from their fright, and plainly told the few English who
had been left behind to receive the ransom, that they
would not pay one penny of what they had promised ;
and so saying, they fell fiercely upon the little troop.
This was shabby. Fortunately for the English, who
defended themselves gallantly, their rear-guard was not
far off, and they hastily sent to it for succour. Lord
Reginald Cobham, and Sir Thomas Holland who com-
manded, hastened to the help of their comrades, with
loud shouts of “Treason, treason !” and speedily pun-
ished the townsmen’s bad faith by slaying great
numbers of them, burning their town, and pulling
down their castles to the very ground.

This was severe; but faith ought to be kept, even
with an enemy. Those who break their word must
not complain if they suffer for it.

One of these castles, when the army first took pos-
Session, was found to be garrisoned by two young
ladies, the beautiful daughters of its absent lord. They
were chivalrously protected from the rude soldiery by
that glorious John Chandos, of whom we shall hear
again; and the Lord Basset, who brought them to the



44 PASSAGE OF THE SOMME.

king’s presence. Edward received the ladies with all
courtesy, asking them whither they would go, and
commanded that they should be safely conducted to
their chosen place of refuge. |

Edward’s career, in the north-west of France, had so
far been highly successful. Still, in the neighbourhood
of Paris, it was materially checked by the French
having broken down the bridges over the numerous
rivers that intersect that part of the country, and from
which the district received its former name, of the Isle
of France, At Poissy, about twenty miles from the
capital, the English almost stuck fast; but the army
was extricated by a feint on the part of its leader.
Edward made as though he were going off in the op-
posite direction, then returned hastily, patched up the
bridge, and got, for that time, out of the way of Philip
and his avenging host. But though he escaped here,
he soon found that the net was being drawn closer
around him. Broken bridges stopped him on every
hand, while those hundred-thousand angry Frenchmen
were almost upon his heels. It seemed the turn of the
English to be swallowed up now, for they were finally
placed between the bridgeless Somme and the French
army, eager to avenge, upon the king of England and
the beardless boy his son, the injuries inflicted by
them upon the French nation.

Many English heads had been laid low, spite of the
triumphant character of their inroad, so that the origi-



PASSAGE OF THE SOMMER. 45

nal odds of- thirty thousand against one hundred
thousand, were fearfully increased at this juncture.
Fighting or starving seemed the only alternatives
offered to the English, and they were not inclined to ac-
cept either. In this dilemma Sir Godfrey de Harcourt
and the Earl of Warwick, with a couple of thousand
men-at-arms and archers, were sent down stream to see
whether bridge or ford, of some kind or other, could
not be discovered. The search was fruitless ; and when,
on their return to the army, they had communicated
the result of it, the king, who was full of thought and
care, ordered immediate preparations to be made for
decamping, as King Philip was already within six
miles of them. There really seemed to be nothing now
but a run for it.

Those iron-clad and iron-hearted men of the four-
teenth century prayed as well as fought. Before the —
sun had risen upon the dispirited little army, there was
heard not only the trumpet-sound for breaking up the
camp, but the quiet voice of the priest imploring mercy
from the God of heaven, and blessing the kneeling wor-
shippers. What a heart-felt “Good Lord, deliver us !”
would ascend from that imperilled band! and who shall
say that those prayers were not heard ?

In stern military order the march commenced : men-
at-arms, archers, and their shaggy comrades with the
big knives, streamed out of Airaines; and even the
hindermost files, those whom loitering or business had



46 PASSAGE OF THE SOMME.

thrown into the veriest rear, had cleared it for a good
two hours, before the French vanguard, in equal mili-
tary order, entered the town. The enemy had escaped
them, that was plain. So, instead of exchanging blows
with the English, their only revenge was to sit down
and eat up the good things that were, of necessity, left
behind. ‘There were barrels of wine; joints on the spit,
just ready for roasting ; bread and pastry half-baked
in the ovens ; and tables, vainly spread for the nobles
and knights now careering away in the distance; com-
pelled to fly, and yet not so disheartened as to be in-
capable of attacking a little town that stood in their
way, knocking it all to shivers, and then taking up
their lodging in it for the night.

King Philip fixed his quarters at Airaines, and,
doubtless, the excellent cheer thus provided for them
by the retreating foe, was (without any fear of the usual
consequence of things going down the “ wrong throat ”)
heartily enjoyed by his followers) We cannot for a
moment suppose that his Highness of France would
condescend to eat any of these English “leavings !”
At Oisemont, a town between Airaines and Abbeville,
King Edward afresh held a council, and ordered the
prisoners, whom his troops in their skirmishing about
the country had seized, to be brought before him, that
he might question them as to the possibility of getting
over the river. He asked these, very courteously, if
they knew of any ford below Abbeville where he and



PASSAGE OF THE SOMME. 47

his army might cross the Somme, adding, that to him
who would conduct him to such a place he would give
his liberty, and that of any twenty, whomsoever he
might choose, of his companions. |
Liberty is sweet ; and, thereupon, up spoke a common
fellow (named Gobin Agace) to this effect :—
“Sir,—I promise you, under peril of my life, to
guide you to a place where you and your whole army
may pass the river without hurt. There are certain
fords where twelve men a-breast may cross twice in the
day, and not have water above their knees; but when
the tide is in, the river is so full and deep that no one
can cross it. When the tide is out, the river is so low
that it may be passed on horseback, or on foot with-
out danger. The bottom of this ford is very hard, of
gravel and white stones, over which all your carriages
may safely pass, and from thence it is called Blanch-
taque. You must, therefore, set out early, so as to be
ut the ford before sunrise.” -
Overjoyed at such good news, the king readily pro-
mised the speaker a round sum of money, in addition
to his liberty, provided his statement, as to this ad-
mirable ford, proved correct. |
Gobin, as it happened, was a true man—to his own
interest ! We must say nothing of his king and coun-
try. Some people would sell the whole world, if they
only saved their own precious necks thereby. This was

precisely Gobin’s condition.



48 PASSAGE OF THE SOMME.

After two or three hours of anxious, uneasy rest, king,
prince, knights, and meaner men alike, arose. Mid-
night though it was, the trumpets were heard sounding
loudly for the march; and by break of day all were
moving on, under the leadership of the illustrious
Gobin, to the ford of Blanchtaque. The brightening
sunbeams of an early August morning played upon the
broad waters of the river; for, alas! the Somme was a
tidal stream, and, by the time the faithful Gobin had
brought up his royal and military train, the tide was
at its height. To make bad worse, at the other side of
the swelling flood appeared Sir Godemar du Fay, a
great Norman baron, to whose especial care it had
been committed to baffle the King of England at this
point. Sir Godemar was at the head of a large force
of men-at-arms and infantry, backed by the burly,
well-armed townsmen of Abbeville, and a zealous
swarm of country-folks in their smock-frocks. What
sort of weapons was wielded by these good fellows in
the smock-frocks, historians do not tell us. Most
likely they snatched up their pitchforks and goads ; °
which, rude enough considered as instruments of war,
were yet capable, when poised by such brawny arms,
of inflicting very ugly wounds on any of the enemy
unfortunate enough to come within their range. The
pass leading from the ford was well manned bya posse
of Genoese cross-bowmen.

The brimming river, and the armed host upon its



PASSAGE OF THE SOMME. 49

opposite bank, formed a rather disheartening prospect.
But it was a case of “nothing venture, nothing win ;”
though an experienced commander, such as the still
young monarch of England, was not going to do any-
thing rashly. The river had to be crossed, and those
threatening Frenchmen on the other side had—in
school-boy phrase—to be “thrashed” before his brave
followers were free from peril. The tide at length
turned, as the highest tide will do; and, eagerly watch-
ing its slow retreating course, the keen eye of our
Edward at once marked out the precise time when he
must dash forward and dare everything. A footing in
the stream became possible, and then, in the name of
“God and St. George,” the horsemen, king, prince, and
all, leaped into the shallowing water. And on the op-
posite bank, making the air ring with shouts of “God
and St. Denis,” in sprang the French men-at-arms;
quite as ready (observes an old writer) for a tilting
match in the water, as on dry land. Fierce blows and
thrusts were exchanged, as they plowtered in the stream ;
and the sword of the young prince, it is said, was then
first stained with blood.

It must, from that time have assumed a very differ-
ent aspect in his eyes. Before, it was the mere glitter-
ing plaything of a boy; henceforth, it was the terrible
death-dealing weapon of a man!

The forcing of this passage over the Somme was no

easy matter. French, against English valour was, that
(3) 4.



50 , PASSAGE OF THE SOMME.

day, well matched. The English archers, however, at
last turned the day in favour of their countrymen.
Their fearful storm of arrows: compelled even the
bravest of the French knights to give way; and the
English fairly won the opposite bank, driving their
opponents before them in all directions. In the hot
pursuit which followed, terrible slaughter was done
pon the flying enemy. Knights, men-at-arms, fat
burghers from Abbeville, and simple peasants fresh
from their flocks and fields, found, that day, one com-
mon doom, from sharp Enghsh lances and swift-winged
English arrows.

The river was crossed. But it was only just in time,
seeing that some of the hindmost were set upon, and
slain by, the nent cavalry of the advancing French
army.

King Philip was not particularly pleased when he
found that his prey had escaped him. Nor did it add
to his satisfaction, on his own arrival at the river’s
bank, to perceive that the tide was already flowing
back again, so as to leave him no chance, save that of
going round to the bridge at Abbeville. In his first
paroxysm of rage he ‘bethought him of hanging Sir
Godemar Fay, for not having better disputed the pas-
sage comiiitted to his keeping; but the. intercession of
his brother knights saved that nobleman from so dis-
graceful a fate.

Honest Gobin—well, he was honest to his new



PASSAGE OF THE SOMME. | 51

master, though a little treacherous to his old one—
duly received the promised reward, and a good horse
into the bargain. His service was worth paying for
handsomely. Then solemn thanks were returned by
the English to God who had delivered them from so
pressing a danger. With that baffled -French host, on
the other side of the now flowing tide, the English
- must have felt somewhat as did the Israelites when
the returning waves of the Red Sea, over which they
had passed dry-shod, rolled in again upon “ Pharaoh and
bis horsemen,” swallowing them up in its triumphant
waters.

The deliverance of the English however, great and
thankworthy as it was, was yet but a temporary one.
Philip, speeding away over the round-about bridge at
Abbeville, was soon heard of again in their rear; and
then a stand, to meet him, and fight for it, was made,
near Crecy in Ponthieu. For “now,” said Edward,
‘Tam on my mother’s lawful inheritance, given as her

marriage-portion, and I am resolved to defend 1t against

Philip of Valois.”






















IV.
The Battle of Creep.

‘Bea lE celebrated battle-field of Crecy lies about
ei eight miles north of Abbeville. Edward’s

army here drawn up, was much smaller



than that of the enemy. As has been said, it is pro-
bable that it fell considerably short of its original
thirty. thousand; while the French—if rumour did not
exaggerate their numbers—amounted to a hundred and
twenty thousand. As things turned out, we might
afford to make them a present of the odd twenty
thousand ; and believe that it was only one hundred
thousand gallant Frenchmen and their allies that our
mere handful destroyed on that memorable day.

The comparative insignificance of the English, how.
ever, made it all the more important that they should
be posted as advantageously as possible ; the Karl of
Warwick and Sir Godfrey de Harcourt, therefore, rode
over the ground, noticing, with keen practised eyes,
how every yard of it might be turned to the best ac-
count. That business settled, they were in pretty good



56 THE BATTLE OF CRECY.

heart about the matter. Provisions were plentiful in
the country ; and even had they not been, their own
Stores were far from being exhausted. So, having first
ascertained that Philip had no intention of giving battle
immediately, they pitched their tents that night in the
plain. |

There, all was soon eager preparation for the antici-
pated struggle of the next day.. Arms were examined.
A faulty lance-shaft might have brought destruction
upon the knight who wielded it, a weather-rotted bow-
string would have rendered one arrow useless ; and
with their inferior numbers, not one lance, nor one orey-
goose-winged arrow could they afford to throw away.
Then there was a great clattering and overhauling of
armour. Cuirasses, cuisses,—the pieces that protected
the legs—helmets or gauntlets, wanting a strap here, or
a buckle there, had to be made “right and tight,” and
polished up into the bargain. These were the per-
sonal cares of squires, and men-at-arms ; the squires
waiting upon the knights their masters, the men-at-
arms waiting upon themselves. The king and prince
‘were occupied in giving a great supper to the leaders
of their brave troops, and at that entertainment no
fears of to-morrow’s clash of arms spoiled their knightly
appetites. They ate well, they drank well, and then
retired from the royal presence to tent or cloak, as
each one best pleased, with the determination of ight.
ing well next morning.



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PREPARATIONS ON THE EVE OF BATTLE
page 56



THE BATTLE OF CRECY. 57

The cares and hospitalities of the day ended, the king,
in his solitude, first kneeled down in devout prayer to
God, that He would give him victory in the forthcom-
ing battle, and then, like the rest, threw himself upon
his bed about midnight. |

Early next morning, August 26th, he and the prince
joined in prayers, and received the Holy Communion.
The greater part of his army did the same; and then
the trumpets sounded to arms, and for each division of
the army to take the ground marked out for it.

There were three of these divisions. The first was
commanded by the Prince of Wales; and under him
were some noble and knightly warriors, whose descend-
ants—if there be any of the old blood still remaining—
may well be proud of their ancestors at Crecy. There
were the Earls of Warwick and Oxford, Sir Godfrey de
Harcourt, the Lords Reginald Cobham, Thomas Holland,
Stafford, Mauley, Delawarre, Bartholomew, Burghersh,
Robert Neville, Thomas Clifton, Bourchier, Latimer,
Sir John Chandos, and other knights notable in their
day, but whose very names are now extinguished.
The brave boy was bravely supported. This division
numbered about eight hundred men-at-arms, two thou-
sand archers, and one thousand Welshmen. All at
once moved on in good order, to their appointed post ;
each lord displaying his banner and pennon,—the pen-
non was a forked streamer attached to the upper part
of the lance,—and marching in the centre of his men.



58 THE BATTLE OF CRECY.

The second division was commanded by the Earls of
Southampton, and Arundel; the Lords Roos, Wil-
loughby, Basset, St. Albans, Lascels, Multon, Sir Lewis ©
Tufton, and many others. It comprised eight hundred
men-at-arms, and twelve hundred archers.

The king himself headed the reserve, or third
division, of about seven hundred men-at-arms, and two
thousand archers. The men-at-arms (as was some-
times the custom, like that of our old-fashioned
dragoons), were dismounted, and prepared to fight on
foot. The baggage of the entire army, with the
waggons and horses, was placed in the rear within an
enclosure, to which there was but one entrance, and
that, we may believe, was well guarded. Trenches
were hastily dug on both sides as an additional protec-
tion to the little army; and in front were placed a few
cannon, then a novel invention, used, perhaps for the
first time, during Edward’s previous wars in Scotland.

His forces being thus marshalled in battle-array, the
king, wearing neither helmet nor coat of mail, but
simply his usual hood and dress, mounted. his riding-
horse, or hackney as it was called; the magnificent
charger being reserved for the battle-field ; and passing
at a foot’s pace through their ranks, with his marshals
on either hand, addressed his men, encouraging them
to guard the honour of their sovereign, and defend his
right to the throne of France. His cheerful looks, and
still more cheering words, went straight to the hearts



THE BATTLE OF CRECY. 59

of his stalwart fellows, who drew fresh courage from
his animating appeals. For, if truth must be told,
some of them were becoming a little down-hearted ;
the numbers against them being so terribly overpower-
ing as somewhat to damp the confidence inspired by
previous successes.

As by this time it was near ten o’clock (the usual
dinner-hour of that period), the king ended by bidding
his men eat and drink heartily ; and then he retired to |
his own post. Advice so agreeable was instantly acted
upon; and after they had eaten and drunken to their
heart’s content, they packed up their pots, barrels,
dishes, platters, and such things in the waggons, and
then sat down on the ground with their helmets and
arms beside them, that they might be the fresher when
the enemy came up. And so they prepared to meet
the formidable Philip of Valois.

That same Saturday morning the King of France
also rose betimes ; and as soon as he and-his army had
had prayers, they moved on towards the English. When
within four miles of Abbeville, they too were formed
in order of battle, and then continued their march; the
infantry in front, to keep out of the way of their own
cavalry. Four knights whom Philip had sent forward
to reconnoitre, now returned, bringing him word that
they had caught sight of the English, drawn up as we
have described them, on the sloping ground near
Crecgy ; and they advised him to halt his troops for the



60 THE BATTLE OF CRECY.

night, where they were, for if they went on, they would
certainly be too tired to attack the English with any
advantage. Upon this, the order was given to “halt
banner, in the name of God and St. Denis.” St.
Denis was the patron saint of the French, as St.
George was of the English. Those in front halted
accordingly. But they who were in the rear, vowed
they would not halt, till they were as forward as the
front. And with that they kept pushing on.

Oh, what mischief came of this piece of stupidity !
By the pressure from behind, spite of the efforts of the
king and his generals to stop them, the front ranks
were driven on until, in utter disorder, they came with-
in sight of the enemy. The appearance of Edward’s
well-ordered battalions rather checked their ardour;
and they fell back, in a confused manner, upon the
rear, to whom they communicated their own panic;
panics being eminently catching. Some few did what
all might have done had they chosen, and made their
way to the front; but the greater part hung back.
There was unaccountable confusion and disorder
throughout the whole French army; so that their vast
numbers did them more harm than good. An attempt
was made to rally them; and at last, on they went, —
but in a sad pell-mell sort of fashion, hither and
thither, as each lord, baron, or knight thought fit.

Seeing them advance, the English rose from the
ground where they were sitting, and fell into their



THE BATTLE OF CRECY. 61

ranks, All was calmness and order here; and the
boy-prince, whose division was to bear the first brunt
of battle, took the post that had been assigned to him.
His archers were in the van, his men-at-arms in the
rear. ‘The Earls of Northampton and Arundel, were
stationed so as to support the prince, in case of need.
The king formed his division on a height at a little
distance, where he could overlook the field, and bring
up his reserve, or not, as the battle might turn. He
himself stood by a windmill, which, not long ago, was
said to be still remaining on this memorable spot.

The attack was made by the French about three
o’clock in the afternoon. Their first line consisted of
fifteen thousand Genoese cross-bowmen; and these the
king bade his marshals order forward, “in the name
of God and St. Denis,” to begin the battle. The
Genoese, however, were in no condition for doing go.
They had had a long day’s march on foot, heavily
armed; and were so worn out with fatigue, that they
plainly told the constable they were not fit for any-
thing. The Earl of Alencon, who commanded the
second division, hearing this, exclaimed in a pet,—
“This is what one gets by employing such scoundrels,
who fail us when most wanted.” And, among them,
they managed to drive the poor, tired, drenched
Genoese (for there was a heavy thunder-storm at the
time) on towards the English. The storm, which added
to their confusion, soon, however, cleared off, and the



§2 THE BATTLE OF CRECY.

sun shone out bright, but full in the faces of the French,
so dazzling and blinding -them, that it was even worse
than the rain.

At length, spurred on by their commanders, the
Genoese prepared for action, and sprang with a shout
towards the English, who stood firm, never minding
their noise. Again they leaped forward with a great
cry as before; but the English, with that boy at their
head, stirred not a foot. It was plain there was
no frightening them with mere noise. A third time
there was a bound and a cry, and then—not noise
alone—thousands of bolts from their cross-bows, fell
upon the enemy. Now was the time for the boy to
prove himself a man. The word of command was
given; and, advancing one step, the English archers
poured in, among the foe, such a shower of arrows
that, as an old writer says, it was like a snow-storm:
keen, stinging arrows, for soft snow-flakes, The
Genoese could not stand this. Heads, arms, legs,
broad chests, pierced by the long, sharp shafts,—they
fled in dismay; cutting their bow-strings, already
weakened by the rain, and throwing down their useless
weapons, as they turned their ignominious backs
upon the English yeomen.

Philip, in-a rage at their flight, called out to his
mounted men-at-arms to “kill those rascals.” And, no-
thing loth, the horsemen rode in among their wearied,
discomfited comrades, cutting them down without



THE BATTLE OF CRECY. 63

mercy ; while still, amid the mingled mass of men
and horses, hot and thick fell the merciless English
arrows ; hottest and thickest wherever the press was
greatest. Into that wounded, writhing heap, too,
plunged sullenly the clumsy stone balls of those new, »
and alarming great guns in front; whose noise, to un-
accustomed ears was, we are told, as “ though God
thundered!” Down went men and horses among the
baffled Genoese, one overthrowing another; and he
who was once down, had no chance of rising again.
Then, when the rout and disorder was at its height,
was the time for the Irish and Welshmen. Passing
through the ranks of their own men-at-arms and
archers, their great knives, if not very military wea-
pons, proved fatal, to many a gaily accoutred prostrate
horseman. No distinction of rank was there. Noble
and squire alike were remorselessly slain by these
rough soldiers, whose zeal was anything but pleasing
to their own knightly sovereign. King Edward could
not abide such wholesale slaughter. Possibly (for
meaner motives will sometimes mingle with generous
ones), he regretted the loss of the abundant ransom,
which such prisoners as those who had perished under
the cruel knives of his half-savage infantry, would have
furnished. or, according to the custom of the times,
knights’ and gentlemen, when taken prisoners, were
allowed to purchase their freedom by sums of money
proportioned to their rank and wealth.



64 THE BATTLE OF CRECY.

It was here that the brave, blind old king of Bohemia,
who marched under Philip’s banner, met his fate. Un-
able, through blindness, to make his own way into the
fight, he bade two faithful knights lead him on, that he
might strike at least one good sword-stroke at the
enemy. They placed him between them, fastened their
horse bridles to his, that they might not be separated
in the throng, and then, in all three dashed, fought
valiantly, and all fell on the battle-field, where next
morning their bodies were found on one spot; their
three horses still linked together, standing quietly by
them. The Lord Charles of Bohemia, son to the king,
was bringing up a force to aid the French; but per-
ceiving, when at a little distance that the battle was
going against them, he discreetly turned aside and went
_ his way.

The young prince meanwhile was so hard pressed by~
the French second line, under the Earl of Alencgon,
which had advanced to back the flying rabble of.
Genoese, that the Earls of Arundel and Northampton ~
moved up their division to support him. The battle
was terribly hot here, and the king of France himself,
hovering on their skirts, was eagerly looking for an
opening to lead his third division in among them. The
English archers, however, formed an impenetrable wall
against him, that he vainly endeavoured to break
through; and the struggle lay chiefly between the
prinve’s force and that under Alengon. The young



THE BATTLE OF CRECY. 65

fellow was sorely put to it; and fearing for so precious
a life, the Earl of Warwick sent off a knight, post haste
to the king, entreating him to bring up the reserve, to
rescue his son from so imminent a danger.

“Is my son dead, or wounded, or unhorsed?” was
the king’s answer to this urgent request.

“No,” replied the knight, “but he is so hardly
matched that he cannot long hold out without you.”

“Sir Thomas,” was the rejoinder, “go back to your
comrades, and tell them they must not send to me for
help so long as my son is alive. He must this day
win his spurs, and I am determined, if God will, that
the glory of this day shall be his own, and that of those
who are with him.”

The knight galloped back again with his message,
which seemed to put fresh life into the princely lad
and his brave companions. Fiercer blows were dealt,
hotter and more strenuous was the attack, till, ere long,
the unruly multitude of French knights, and squires,
and men, began to give way before them. The Earls
of Flanders and Alencon, who had turned the flank of
the prince’s archers, were slain, together with many of
their best knights; and the entire first and second
French lines were forced back. Philip made a vigorous
effort to turn the fortunes of the day; but it was of no
use; the whole French army was utterly. routed and
driven off the field in confusion. The royal standard

narrowly escaped capture. Its bearer was struck down
(3) 5



66 THE BATTLE OF CRECY.

in the fight, but while French and English eagerly con.
tended for so glorious a prize, the one to seize, the
other to rescue it, a French knight hastily with his
sword, cut the banner from its shaft, wrapped it round
his body, and rode off with it. King Philip himself
was wounded, his horse was killed under him by an
arrow, and as he sprang on another, Sir John de Hain-
ault snatched at the reins, and forced him off, telling
him by way of comfort, that if he had lost one battle,
he might gain another. And away they both swept to
Amiens, with a retinue of only sixty knights and men-
at-arms, in place of the splendid array of the morning.

It was a murderous and cruel battle ; for the
desperate English gave no quarter, nor would they
ransom any. At night-fall, as the noise died away,
they looked upon the field as their own, and lighted up
torches and great fires, intending to bivouac where they
stood ; for in their circumstances they dared not venture
on immediate pursuit. The king, who had never even
put on his helmet, then descended from his post of °
observation, and leading forward his battalion, which
like himself, had looked on only, throughout that hard-
fought day, advanced to meet his son. He folded him
in his arms, and kissed him lovingly, saying, in the
quaint language of those times, “ Sweet son, God give
you good perseverance! You are indeed my own son,
for very valiantly have you this day acquitted yourself
You are worthy to be a king!”



THE BATTLE OF CRECY. 67

Such words, from such a father, fell pleasantly upon |
the ear of the panting, battle-stained boy. Most
modestly was the loving commendation received, and
then he fell upon his knees, to beg his father’s blessing.
That, we may be sure, was heartily given. |

The rejoicings of the Enclish on this eventful night
were orderly rejoicings, for the king had utterly for-
bidden all noise or riot. And they were fittingly
mingled with many thanksgivings to God, who had
given them so wonderful a victory. Their losses were
trivial. Those of the French were immense. Clumsy
stone cannon balls, lance, sword, sheaves of unerring
arrows, and even those big knives, had done their work.
upon kings, princes, nobles, knights, and common men,
to the number of forty thousand. There, as the old
poet has sung,—

‘Sceptre and crown
Had tumbled down,

And in the dust were equal laid,
With the poor crooked scythe and spade! ”

The next morning which was Sunday, proved so
foges that none could see twenty yards before him,
and this circumstance threw another considerable body
of French into the hands of the English. Edward had
ordered out a strong detachment of five hundred lances,
and two thousand archers, under his two marshals, who
were directed to. scour the neighbourhood, lest any of

the enemy should be collecting again to make a fresh



68 THE BATTLE OF CRECY.

stand against him. French troops, ignorant of the
total overthrow of their army, had that morning left
Abbeville and St. Riguier to join Philip at Crecy; and
these in the mist, taking the English for their own
friends, were almost among them before they discovered
. their fatal mistake. The encounter between the two
was short, but sharp, and ended in the slaughter of
creat numbers of the French, not one of whom would
have escaped, had not the fog (which had betrayed
them to their discomfiture) favoured the flight of a few,
who thus saved themselves,
party of French, under the Archbishop of Rouen, and
the Grand Prior of France, met with the same fate from
the marshals’ detachment, who cut them almost all to
pieces, including their right reverend leader. Others,
found wandering in the fields, where they had lain all
night, were also savagely put to the sword. In short,
it is said that more were slain on that Sunday morn-
ing, than had fallen in the battle itself.
The returning marshals informed the king, who was
just coming from prayers, of their successful and san-
guinary proceedings. And then, as there was no fear of
a second army to be encountered, by his command,
heralds, attended by their secretaries, slowly traversed
the field to take account of the dead. The name and
rank of the slain knights could only be ascertained by
their coats of arms, emblazoned upon the shield, or
surcoat ; and when this sad task was ended, by Edward’s



THE BATTLE OF CRECY. 63

order, the chiefest of them were reverently laid to rest
in consecrated ground attached to the monastery of
Montenay, close at hand. The king himself, with his
great lords, all clad in black, took part in the solemn
ceremony, by way of doing honour to his brave, though
unfortunate enemies. Three days’ truce was granted
for burying the dead. It is said to be from this time
that the Prince of Wales, who, young as he was, had
shown himself so terrible at Cregy, was known among
the French by the titlk—now so familiar to our ears —
—of the Black Prince. oe

Hot from their fierce, but brilliant encounter at Crecy,
Edward, on the following Monday, August 28th,
marched his brave Britons straight to the siege of
Calais. It was a four days’ march, and they did a little
burning and plundering by the way. _














yt





V.
Che Siege of Calais.

peserea TLE governor of Calais was a brave Burgundian



knight, named Sir John de Vienne; and
other valiant knights with squires to match,
but whose names are scarcely worth preserving, served
under hint, The town was strongly fortified, and these
grim men in iron cases, were determined to hold it
against the King of England, and his victorious son.
That king, however, and that son had equally deter-
mined to take it; and therefore—in military phrase—
“sat down ” (which means something like, standing up !)
before Calais, on the Ist of August, 1346. They did
this with all calmness and order, as though they could
afford to take their time about it. The camp was
marked out, tents were pitched; and even a sort of
town composed of huts, thatched with straw, or broom,
soon sprang up under those marvellous English hands,
impertinently close to the walls of the besieged city.
Markets were established here for all comers; and in
them, fish, flesh, fowl, bread, clothing—all sorts of



74 THE SIEGE OF CALAIS.

things, either from the surrounding country, or from
over seas, might be had for money. As for those who
had no money, it is to be presumed that they would
have been as ill off in the king’s market before Calais,
as in any other. From this comfortable kind of settle-
ment the English made frequent sorties (that is another
military phrase, and literally means—going out), doing
much mischief in the neighbourhood, and picking up
spoil for themselves; occasionally, it must be owned,
though not often, getting the worst of it. They made
no attempt to storm the town. They had neither men,
nor engines of war enough for that. Their grand object
was to compel the surrender of the garrison by cutting
off their supply of provisions. This is called, blockad-
ing a place. If he failed to starve the defenders of
Calais into submission, Edward hoped that at any rate
their sufferings would draw the King of France thither
to attempt their relief, and that would afford him
another opportunity of beating Philip.

The blockade was strict, and so experienced a com-
mander as John de Vienne, at once saw that he must
make diligent preparation to baffle the well-laid plans of
the two Edwards. If provisions could not be brought
into the town, it was plain that they must make what
they had go as far as possible, by reducing the number
of consumers. ‘The less meat, the fewer mouths; that
was how the difficulty must be met. Of course,
soldiers who could fight, were to be retained at any



THE SIEGE OF CALAIS. 75

cost; and the rich inhabitants whose wealth had
enabled them to lay in store of eatables and drinkables,
or to purchase the good things that were occasionally
at great risk smuggled in, spite of the English, were at
liberty to stay if they liked. As for those who could
neither fight, nor contribute to the general stock, they
must troop, and the sooner they were got rid of, the
better.

Prompt execution followed resolution. It was a
hard thing, but military necessity is harder still; so
one Wednesday morning, seventeen hundred of those
who were of no use in the defence—who had only
craving mouths, instead of the soldiers, trained right
hand, or the merchant’s money bags,—were driven out
of the town, weeping and wailing, to await the mercy
of the English camp, through which they must pass.
Poor men, women and children,—it was a strange
sight, that stream of miserable, forlorn, human beings,
from grey-heads to infants, unconscious of their troubles,
in their mother’s arms; and the staring English, in
utter astonishment, asked what in the world they meant
by thus coming right into the midst of the enemy;
why had they left the town ?

The answer was simple enough : “ Because they had
nothing to eat.” The English were enemies, bent,
spite of all the Frenchmen that Philip of Valois could
scrape together, on taking his strong town of Calais,
But they were also men; and their good, honest hearts.



76 THE SIEGE OF CALAIS.

were touched by the distress of these unhappy people,
mercilessly turned out by their countrymen to perish.
To permit them to pass on, unharmed, to a‘place of
refuge, was much ; but it was not all. That noble King
Edward, in addition to this, ordered the poor wretches
a hearty dinner; and then, when the hungry “enemy”
had been “ fed,” (we know Who has bidden us do that !)
he gave to each of them two pence—worth more than
as many shillings in these days—to carry them on
their doleful journey. That man deserved to take
Calais. No wonder that many fervent prayers were
offered up by these unfortunate French men and
women for their benefactor ; English invader and claim-
ant of their Philip’s crown though he was. It was
indeed a good work that Edward did that Wednesday.
“ Blessed is he that considereth the poor and needy.”
To such, a recompense is surely promised. |

The character of this great king and that of his
great son, warlike as they both were, was one of general
humanity; and this beneficence to the poor, helpless
wretches driven out of Calais, was an illustrious example
of it. War isa cruel trade; but there are two ways of
carrying it on: Like men and like wild beasts. _

The siege of Calais was protracted. Blockading is
slow work ; and as more men, more money, more every-
thing was wanted, the young prince was despatched
to England to seek fresh succours. These, thanks to
the liberality of parliament, were abundantly obtained ;



THE SIEGE OF CALAIS. Va

for Englishmen, to their very heart’s core, enjoyed the
successful contest with France, and did not much care
what they paid for it. |

During the course of this tedious eleven months’ ©
siege, an incident occurred which is worth recording,
as an interesting exhibition of the knightly manners of
the time. |

It has been named that the Duke of Normandy,
eldest son of the French king, was engaged at the
other end of the country laying siege to Aiguillon, a
town in Edward’s French. possessions, where all the
fighting had been going on, until Godfrey de Harcourt
suggested Normandy. From this place the duke was
recalled by Philip, who required all the forces he could
gather to resist that formidable father, and no less
formidable son, who had been carrying everything
before them in the north. The siege was accordingly
ravsed, as it is termed—that is, given up; and the
celebrated Sir Walter Manny, who commanded in the
town, making a dash after the retreating French, took
a handful of good prisoners, whom his people brought
back with them to the castle. Among these prisoners
was a Norman knight, a very important personage
indeed; and as Sir Walter longed to be with his
countrymen before Calais, he cleverly contrived to join
them by means of this same prisoner, whom he cour-
teously bade fix his own ransom. The sum named by
the knight was a large one. Great men did not like



78 THE SIEGE OF CALAIS.

to be let off too cheaply on these occasions, because
that looked as if they were worth little. And in reply,
Sir Walter told him, that if he would procure per-
mission for his captor and twen ty others to ride straight
through France to Calais, without stopping by the
way or conducting themselves otherwise than as ordin-
ary travellers, he would let him go without any ransom
at all, and thank him into the bargain. If the knight
failed to procure-this safe-conduct, he was to return to
his prison within one month.

The terms were tempting. Off set the Norman
knight after his duke, got the required passport, and
posted back again with it to Sir Walter, who gave him
his freedom as he had promised.

Sir Walter then with twenty horsemen took the road
to Calais. He went to work frankly; told every one
who he was; and wherever he stopped for the night,
on showing his safe-conduct, was allowed to proceed
next morning. On arriving at Orleans, however, there
was a change. No respect was in that city shown to
the duke’s permission for him to pass free; nay, he
was even arrested and sent immediately to Paris, where
be was thrown into prison.

The Duke of Normandy, of course, heard of the con-
tempt with which his safe-conduct had been treated,
and of the usage to which so renowned a knight had
been subjected. He was terribly put out by it. It.
was contrary to all the laws of knighthood, and he



THE SIEGE OF CALAIS. 79

hastened to the king his father, urgently pleading for
the liberation of the prisoner, otherwise, as he said,
people would think he had granted the safe- conduct
solely for the purpose of betraying Sir Walter.

The king’s answer to his son was not very consola-
tory. He simply replied that he intended putting Sir
Walter Manny to death, as he considered him one of
the most important of his enemies.

The indignant duke’s rejoinder was, that if any
harm was done to the knight, neither he nor any of his
people should ever again bear arms against the king
of England. And with that, father and son quarrelled
violently—the duke at last flinging out with a renewed
declaration that he would not serve in the king’s armies
so long as Sir Walter Manny was kept in prison.

Things remained in this state for some time; but at
length the king became ashamed of his discourteous
behaviour, allowed Sir Walter to go free, and reim-
bursed him the expenses to which his shameful impri-
sonment had put him. He went further, and, by way
of plastering the wound which he had himself inflicted,
even invited Sir Walter to the royal dinner-table,
pressing upon him rich gifts and jewels, which the
knight accepted, subject to the pleasure of his own
sovereign ; for he did not know whether Edward would
like him to keep them. Edward did not choose that
a knight of his should receive presents from the enemy.
So, right royally saying to him, “ Sir Walter, we have



- 80 THE SIEGE OF CALAIS.

enough, thank God, both for you and for ourselves,”
he bade him return them to their donor ; intimating -
to Sir Walter, that the faithful servants of the King of
England must look to their own master, not to the
King of France, for their reward. Sir Walter accord-
ingly sent back the jewels by a cousin of his, who was
only too glad to keep them himself, when Philip bade
him do so.

The siege of Calais still held on its slow course, |
according to the manner of sieges ; its monotony being
varied, towards the close of the year, by the arrival in|
camp of Queen Philippa and her son the prince.
Philippa had had her hands full during the absence of
her lord—the hard battle of Neville’s Cross, in Dur-
ham, in which the King of Scotland was taken prisoner,
| having been fought under her own eyes. Her recep-
tion in the camp was one befitting both her rank and
the heroic courage she had recently displayed; and as
she brought in her train many great ladies of the
court, there were brave doings, in the way of feast
and tournament, to celebrate so agreeable a visit. |

The King of France was not disposed to give up
_ Calais quietly, but his attempts to relieve it proved
fruitless. He raised an immense army, far outnum-
bering that of the enemy, for this purpose; but the
English were so skilfully intrenched by their great
leader, that Philip could not get near the town. It
was in vain that he invited Edward to “ come out and



THE SIEGE OF CALAIS. 81

fight ;” Edward knew better, and told him so, than
to sacrifice the advantages which had cost him so much
time and treasure. So this vast French army, after the
citizens had admired its numerous banners fluttering
in the moonlight, decamped, leaving the people of
Calais, who sorrowingly watched its departure, to do
the best they could for themselves.

Bad was the best, for the blockade had been so strict
that their provisions were well-nigh expended. Yea,
horses, dogs, cats, and viler creatures, had been already
eaten by the wretched inhabitants, who could no longer
endure starvation. So they entreated John de Vienne,
their governor, to mount the walls and make signs that
he wished a parley with the besiegers. That word
parley is a French word, bodily imported into our
English, with the slight alteration of our spelling it with
a y, instead of a z, and really means, talk! So Sir
John reluctantly did as they would have him; for he
was a brave knight, and would rather have held out
the town to the last.

The governor’s summons was answered by Sir Wal-
ter Manny and Lord Basset, to whom he spoke man-
fully, saying that the king his master had entrusted
the defence of Calais to him and his companions,
and they had done their duty till they were now
near famishing with hunger; and he prayed that
the King of England would be content with posses-

sion of the castle and town, in which he would find
\3) 6



82 THE SIEGE OF CALAIS.

great store of riches, letting the garrison depart unmo-
lested.

Sir Walter had no very agreeable answer to this
entreaty. He assured John de Vienne that the King
of England his master was so enraged at the loss of
men, time, and money, which this siege of Calais had
cost him, that he would offer the garrison no terms
save those of unconditional surrender ; for him to put
to death whom he pleased, and admit to ransom whom
he pleased.

The spirit of the governor was roused by this cruel
declaration, and he told Sir Walter that he and his —
companions had only done what English knights and
squires in similar circumstances would have done—
held out as long as there was a stick or stone standing,
and a mouthful of food for any one. But still, famish-
ing as they were, they would endure much more,
rather than that the meanest horse-boy in the place
should fare worse than they. And he besought Sir
Walter to represent their hard case to the King of
England, of whose knighthood he had so high an
opinion, that he could not believe he would deal so —
harshly with them as he had threatened.

- The king, however, was really as angry as man could
be, and he told Sir Walter that the garrison of Calais
- must take his first terms or none, ‘Sir Walter expos-
‘tulated with him, that if he dealt such hard measures
to his conquered enemies, his own knights would rather



THE SIEGE OF CALAIS. 83

unwillingly go out on dangerous service, expecting, if
taken by the French, to be put to death, just as he, if
he did not relent, put to death -the brave fellows who
had so long held Calais against him. It would cer-
tainly be death for death, if the fortunes of war turned
against them.

Edward softened somewhat at this view of the case,
which was strongly urged by others of his nobles. So,
by way of mending matters, he dismissed Sir Walter
with his last requisition, which was, that six of the
principal citizens of Calais, carrying the keys of the
town and castle, should present themselves before him,
bare-headed, bare-foot, and with ropes round their necks,
and that he should do what he pleased with them ;
hang them, or not, as the humour took him; the rest
of the inhabitants being permitted to go free.

It was a hard measure, but there was no help for it;
and back went that generous soul de Manny with this
last proposal, of which, no doubt, he was a little
ashamed. On his arrival, the governor caused the
town’s bell to be rung, collected all the citizens in the
public hall, and then communicated to them the final
answer of the inplacable monarch. Loud lamentations
and wailings broke forth from the assembled throng when
the king’s will was made known to them; and even the
hardy knight de Vienne, wept at the sight of their dis-
tress. For awhile there was a gloomy silence through-
out the multitude: life was sweet, and each one feared



84 THE SIEGE OF CALAIS.

to lose it. At length patriotism, and a sense of duty
prevailed even over the love of life ; and one of the richest
merchants of Calais, named Eustace de St. Pierre, rose
up, saying, “Sirs, it would be great pity to suffer so
many people to die of famine, if by any means it could
be prevented, and it would be well-pleasing in the eyes
of our Saviour, if such misery coyld be averted. I
have such faith and trust in finding grace with God if
I die to save my townsmen, that I offer myself as first
of the six.”

Bravely spoken Eustace de St. Pierre! That man’s
name deserves to come down to posterity.

As for the assembled crowd, they rose up, and as an
old writer tells us, “almost worshipped him ;” many
throwing themselves, weeping, at his feet.

Another citizen, also wealthy and in great reput-
with his fellow townsmen, then offered himself to be
the second. This was John Daire. Others followed,
till the required number was complete ; and Eustace de
St. Pierre, John Daire, James and Peter Wisant, and
two more whose names have perished, though the
memory of their heroic deed endures, agreed to give
themselves up to death to save the lives of the famish-
ing people of Calais. The six were merchants, members
of a class little esteemed by the knighthood of that
day. But, merchants though they were, they were
indeed noble men.

John de Vienne then collecting together his little



THE SIEGE OF CALAIS. 85

sacrificial band, mounted a small pony, (for his wounds
disabled him from walking), and conducted them in the |
prescribed humiliating manner—bare-foot, bare-headed,
and with ropes round their necks—to that gate of the
town which opened on the English camp. A crowd
followed them to the gate, weeping and lamenting;
and when it was opened, the seven passed through to
the English barriers, where Sir Walter Manny was
waiting to receive them. The six citizens were
delivered up to him, in due form, with an earnest —
request that he would intercede with his sovereign for
their lives; and then de Vienne, with a heavy heart,
turned back again to the miserable town.

When brought into Edward’s presence, the prisoners,
upon their knees, gave up the keys of the castle and
town, praying the king to spare their lives. This,
Edward at first did not seem at all disposed to do; the
people of Calais had done him so much mischief by sea
in times past, that he was now quite in a mood to cut
off a few of their heads, by way of punishing them for
it. And, accordingly, spite of the pitying looks and
entreaties of the great lords and knights around him,
he straightway gave command that the heads of the six
should be stricken off. It was in vain his gallant
followers interceded for the voluntary captives; he
would not hear a word on their behalf De Manny,
and even the prince himself pleaded unavailingly, though —
they reminded him that a charge of cruelty, such as ne.



86 | THE SIEGE OF CALAIS.

true knight ought to incur, would certainly rest upon
him, if he carried out his fierce purpose. —

What was denied to the entreaties and remonstrances
of his son, and of his nobles, Edward was, however,
forced to grant to the prayers of ‘his queen whom he
tenderly loved, and who, having just crossed the seas
to join him, after her victorious encounter at Neville’s
Cross, deserved some boon at his hands. On her knees,
weeping, she prayed him for Christ’s sake, as well as
for his love to her, to have pity on these unfortunate
citizens of Calais.

The king for awhile, and in silence, looked at the
_ Weeping, kneeling figure; and then gently telling
Philippa he wished she had been anywhere, rather than
where she was at that moment, for he could not refuse
her request, bade her do with the six as she pleased.
Nothing loth, she carried them off in triumph to her
own tent, had those horrible ropes taken from their
necks, clothed and fed them; and then, with a supply
of money for their journey, commanded them to be
safely conducted out of the camp.

It was in August 1347, after an eleven months’ siege,
that the strong town of Calais surrendered to the king
of England. Edward, accompanied by his queen and
son, took possession of it in state, having first ordered
his officers to imprison a portion of the garrison, and
drive all the inhabitants bodily out of the town, which
he was resolved to convert into a thoroughly English.



THE SIEGE OF CALAIS. 87

one, by filling it with his own subjects. The king made
Calais his residence for some little time, during which
the prince, at the head of a strong detachment, made a
sort of foray into the neighbouring country, which he
burned and ravaged as far as the Somme, and then
returned laden with spoil.

After this, as the one kingdom found fighting ruinous,
and the other found it costly, a truce was agreed upon
between the two; and Edward, having appointed a
favourite Italian knight of his, named Sir Americ de
Pavie, governor of Calais, set sail for England with the
queen, the prince, and his little daughter Margaret, who
had been born in the captured city. After being well |
tossed about on his own seas (he complained that winds
and seas always favoured him when he went to France,
but were dead against him on his return), he landed at
Sandwich, then a considerable port, on the 28th of
September.

Sir Americ de Pavie, the newly appointed governor
of Calais, happened to be something of a rascal; and
we shall hear of him again.





*












G@reachery at Calais,

a Cus

Seite. young Prince of Wales was now a youth
34 ¥ei} of seventeen; tall, handsome, strong, valiant,
distinguished for his deeds of arms, as well
as for the other knightly qualities of courtesy, modera-
tion, and gentleness. He, and his illustrious parents,
were received with acclamations by the English people,
whose heads were nearly turned by those wonderful
doings in France. In great state the three entered the
city of London—for at that date, the city was a “ gen-
teel” place, and not as now, wholly given up to mer-
chandise. Merchants, tradesmen, and artisans certainly —
exercised each one his calling, or craft there. But
there also the great nobles had their dwellings, whose
faded splendours may still be discerned in the ware-
houses and offices of modern times; bales of goods
crowding the halls within which lords and ladies were
wont to show their stately presence, and brisk clerks,
scribbling away as if for their very lives, in the room
of those who wielded the sword—the power of those






92 TREACHERY AT CALAIS.

days—and cased their limbs in steel, instead of broad
cloth. |

Royal feastings and tournaments celebrated the
recent prowess of the new-made royal knight. And
that young, muscular form, and stout heart distinguished
itself in this mimicry of war, as it had done in the
grim reality of it in France.

The tournament was the chosen diversion of knights
and ladies of the fourteenth century. In it, companies
of knights, armed as if for battle, save that lance and
sword were pointless, spurred furiously against each other,
squadron against squadron, till broken lances, knights
unhelmed, or some of them lifted bodily out of their
saddles by the shock, terminated the contest, and the
one or the other was proclaimed victor. The ground
enclosed for the purpose was called the lists; and it
was surrounded by galleries for spectators, among whom
ladies were conspicuous; for they as well loved to look
upon these rough trials of skill, as the combatants
themselves loved to enter upon them. Occasionally
the excitement of these warlike games became so great
that battle in play was converted into battle in down-
right earnest; and men were maimed, and lives lost
within the gaily decorated lists, and under the unshrink-
ing eyes of the high born dames surrounding them.

If only two knights engaged, the one against the
other, it was called a joust.

At Canterbury, then a city of more importance than



TREACHERY AT CALAIS. 93

it is now, and Eltham, where at that time stood a royal
palace, whose great hall has long ago been turned into
a barn, these festivities were held in notable style.
People’s notions about being handsomely dressed vary
at different times and different places. Here, at
Eltham, the extraordinary equipments of two of the
knights who levelled lance at each other, have been
handed down to us by admiring chroniclers; and
when we read in their dusky pages that over the
armour of these same cavaliers—armour, no doubt, of
most exquisite finish, after the fashion of tilting
armour—they wore hoods of white cloth, buttoned
with large pearls, and embroidered with figures of
dancing-men dressed in blue, we must admit that they
were magnificent according to their notions, and
supremeiy ridiculous according to ours. We should
dress up a Merry Andrew in such guise. With them
it was the sumptuous apparel of noble and gallant
soldiers ; and for this special piece of finery the two
gentlemen, we are told, were indebted to the king’s
wardrobe. Five centuries hence, perhaps the people
of England may laugh at our modern notions of how
nobles and warriors should be habited.

Rejoicings and festivities, however, were not to last
long. The stalwart youth upon whom the affection of
all England rested was to have more work—real work,
not pretence—found for him through the medium of
Sir Aymeric de Pavia, who, it has been said, was some-



94 , TREACHERY AT CALAIS.

thing of a rascal; and being one, soon showed him-
self. 7 :
There was a French knight, Sir Geoffrey de Chargny,
in command of St. Omer, who was what in England
would have been called Lord Warden of the Marches.
He was charged with the protection of the French —
frontier, and with the duty of keeping a sharp eye on

the doings of their troublesome English neighbours |.

in the north. Now, as old chroniclers tell us, this
Sur Geoffrey bethought him that Lombards were not
only poor, but money-loving; and as de Pavia was
a Lombard, this consideration suggested how he should
be dealt with for the interest of Philip of Valois. So
Sir Geoffrey entered into communication with the
‘Italian governor of Calais, and by degrees—we know
not how he went to work—succeeded in persuading
that honourable knight to sell Calais to him for twenty
thousand crowns—about £10,000 of our money. It
was a shabby transaction, but the story is quite true.
A man high in command agreed to give up his trust
to the enemy, in return for a’ sum of money! The
affair was so snugly arranged, that it was thought no
one could possibly know anything about it, and that
the abominable bit of treachery would be consummated
in perfect safety.

It was not so. King Edward loved and trusted the
Lombard, but still took measures for ascertaining
whether his affection and confidence were well bestowed ;



TREACHERY AT CALAIS. 95

and so it came to his ears how the town of Calais, the
winning of which had cost him so dear, was to be sold
to its former owners by the governor whom he had
placed over it.

Sir Geoffrey and Sir Aymeric were a couple of clever
fellows, but Edward was a match for them both. He
at once despatched a messenger to Sir Aymeric, de-
siring him to come over to Westminster immediately
——a command that was cheerfully obeyed, for it never
entered the Italian’s head that his roguery had been
found out by his master. Doubtless he fancied some ~
fresh mark of royal favour was about to be bestowed
upon him! On presenting himself before the king, he
was coolly informed of his treachery, and that he de-
served to die forit. Down on his knees dropped the
astounded knight, praying for mercy, assuring Edward
there was plenty of time even yet for him to break
faith with Sir Geoffrey, and earnestly begging that he
might be allowed to expiate one act of treachery by
_ another. The king was disposed to make use of him;
the fellow had still the power of being serviceable ;
and therefore, instead of hanging him for his vile
huckstering about the city of Calais, sent him back
again, with full instructions how to undo what he had
already done in the matter.

Only too happy this time to take in his friend Sir
Geoffrey, in place of the King of England whom he had
failed to entrap, the baffled Italian returned to his



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8c12c130add0f772624a5a1f5c663b2c9d82ed49
'2012-06-28T20:57:06-04:00'
describe
'38650' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWQB' 'sip-files00137.pro'
7d888a3673aafd8be2b5248673c70a90
7dec098bf53b7505dbd0320d8de25331eff2e3c3
'2012-06-28T20:55:09-04:00'
describe
'816' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWQC' 'sip-files00217.pro'
db564ff5561a67a7b406850b4b49755d
565b689c8d926e5541fc3827056bce425c362f52
'2012-06-28T20:44:25-04:00'
describe
'42204' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWQD' 'sip-files00274.QC.jpg'
2995ea23a373a246f3a2e000bd4f890a
5cccdea8ad0dc9522a5668ee4bffe2edb2d6bc55
'2012-06-28T20:46:42-04:00'
describe
'123410' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWQE' 'sip-files00209.jpg'
55a7939fb237ecc604f688e850c74e56
f487f6c35d3cec55d03bf64873a0894759822c7f
'2012-06-28T20:44:21-04:00'
describe
'1704112' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWQF' 'sip-files00127.tif'
a675a37e1f0419b111c02569de070f66
7914e6aff85713b27e900745d97a94dd38019813
'2012-06-28T20:47:48-04:00'
describe
'43627' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWQG' 'sip-files00186.QC.jpg'
e33957048b5e7f29be127ce2fbc7772e
6820cc8dbcd770e280eb8275860bd18fe0fe95df
'2012-06-28T20:52:22-04:00'
describe
'48355' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWQH' 'sip-files00119.jpg'
1e9dc1576ca22fc61cb8cb9f9f309515
64eafda6408fc0d58a5ba1f290c6055e39057616
'2012-06-28T20:51:48-04:00'
describe
'10864' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWQI' 'sip-files00133thm.jpg'
d748ab2ec39bbc440888075b1783fd45
78a6a91019792dd121408827459687ef84f8f39f
'2012-06-28T20:50:47-04:00'
describe
'122912' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWQJ' 'sip-files00146.jpg'
ce2148aa30b4606f02e874b1ea91531a
6565837f7b0a41598c510933cefbe053524113a9
'2012-06-28T20:53:17-04:00'
describe
'10839' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWQK' 'sip-files00179.QC.jpg'
a794f22d6701cb1b293945c0cff1ef19
81187b69dd29a09bed53a94ab8a737190a0f42f3
'2012-06-28T20:45:51-04:00'
describe
'115303' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWQL' 'sip-files00219.jpg'
d404c866cfe9b2820cd7d271cace02b7
55d52e254fd32f1ab0adb47b2cf7ec77b5fd4298
'2012-06-28T20:54:42-04:00'
describe
'3018' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWQM' 'sip-files00313thm.jpg'
ed8a22e8f7329bd84db73237c8e8fcde
d48fc67acd6bfcedd7dfbf92b98cb4d956a49556
'2012-06-28T20:48:28-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWQN' 'sip-files00313.txt'
bc949ea893a9384070c31f083ccefd26
cbb8391cb65c20e2c05a2f29211e55c49939c3db
'2012-06-28T20:50:58-04:00'
describe
'224' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWQO' 'sip-files00001.pro'
cceba597abff2fb51784ef7b20616895
59cc94574b684a6161ff8bbdfe3f5b18a95a2529
'2012-06-28T20:49:53-04:00'
describe
'1522' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWQP' 'sip-files00175.txt'
d89f4128cf02c8ae0ea6cffb9d596eb8
1ac2d3636b61cfea4d4b113b1e706121b00b560e
'2012-06-28T20:46:45-04:00'
describe
WARNING CODE 'Daitss::Anomaly' Invalid character
'40533' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWQQ' 'sip-files00089.pro'
516e8d5a25044e2b198971220cb612f7
166b5d107998131239dbbe7b0b8d5d7b9acbb9d5
'2012-06-28T20:48:55-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWQR' 'sip-files00273.tif'
94003612434fa60b619c48de9a4a4088
fa645f3d7e84d9d638cd8c6887e838debbabf44d
'2012-06-28T20:56:06-04:00'
describe
'1474' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWQS' 'sip-files00077.txt'
8175a3e6594c8afc36cc121fd721455d
a667ce186a2d90388e280d6f4c95f2691de8c747
'2012-06-28T20:44:31-04:00'
describe
'1509' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWQT' 'sip-files00233.txt'
c4ee15cb91cbf1f502323437896d3d6b
f6d41f2e2630a61a246444f48333445c34257aff
'2012-06-28T20:47:04-04:00'
describe
'125949' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWQU' 'sip-files00234.jpg'
660db46baca44d627e46149ec3381e35
07ec2b028f214b0f333786d1cb35cb781004dc34
'2012-06-28T20:50:17-04:00'
describe
'1539' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWQV' 'sip-files00089.txt'
4a8775ab7818817c61598d0a5c7b021d
48f60c7e73dd5c731769edf07370eb54372c098b
'2012-06-28T20:53:49-04:00'
describe
'3586' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWQW' 'sip-files00018.QC.jpg'
133e0e82fcee23301bc1fa1e5044462d
9d843b84429c63e7fb62d214d077e0d5cc2c1ed3
'2012-06-28T20:47:08-04:00'
describe
'123929' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWQX' 'sip-files00155.jpg'
a0b081d2ec098f1c316a9f4da9b40c75
f22d0ceb32830e3e5fda9c1e8882a9cdeb68aad6
'2012-06-28T20:45:45-04:00'
describe
'11353' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWQY' 'sip-files00122thm.jpg'
093f2647305b62df4b06b3f2d264a328
1690b1ffc941ecb53a86b2e50e8ae2b036414eaf
'2012-06-28T20:49:06-04:00'
describe
'129556' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWQZ' 'sip-files00090.jpg'
f4bcb171a3f8d286d556a0a29e475eeb
37a3d8e9e7372ac0bdb5a18f1a81bc43a4d0ecf2
'2012-06-28T20:56:22-04:00'
describe
'3891' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWRA' 'sip-files00311thm.jpg'
09721079b1722ec6ca5bb7cd18dc917a
98ab2f975902f8e8b0b019269bb3c9de69c2e4f7
'2012-06-28T20:50:10-04:00'
describe
'11578' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWRB' 'sip-files00062.jp2'
e718af6f32b0db6ff481d1f416a45cf5
422ad13c42c5aeade2c6af7a075012caa97dbad2
'2012-06-28T20:52:28-04:00'
describe
'11010' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWRC' 'sip-files00095thm.jpg'
76bef202a152cfc8e5d954e93c8dc52b
1bfc18ec5e50d36fd22a97bb90aeeb9df6fc4a47
'2012-06-28T20:55:04-04:00'
describe
'11102' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWRD' 'sip-files00280thm.jpg'
13d70ae2d0e7d1619c028be508f21959
a9793ec99594a750674fd52133eea5029d6f2066
'2012-06-28T20:49:27-04:00'
describe
'40021' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWRE' 'sip-files00034.pro'
812d98875a8badb980f7ab3e34ffce62
5b3f8699eb3512b961414505f2efc3e9fb140be8
'2012-06-28T20:49:36-04:00'
describe
'1704052' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWRF' 'sip-files00093.tif'
36a0f52912676b784dced7e9ec481153
24ee6e245d01a172ff1033fd46ef2f9f044bf13f
'2012-06-28T20:48:23-04:00'
describe
'10730' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWRG' 'sip-files00241thm.jpg'
4a0a144a30754c639990e4621aafc714
eb0b6bc99f376c3b6ef7064e0776598291870fb0
'2012-06-28T20:47:10-04:00'
describe
'38264' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWRH' 'sip-files00177.pro'
db2103247fee7e8ae6b3da1a985e8c7c
4af9c1c58a12c0ca26d09320a358c553ab10b67a
'2012-06-28T20:50:52-04:00'
describe
'12009' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWRI' 'sip-files00068thm.jpg'
2b16c86597b4221e29ab9a38eabcc4cc
693ce34ce2664ca9aeafe0a07532f2195a67627a
'2012-06-28T20:54:54-04:00'
describe
'43169' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWRJ' 'sip-files00088.pro'
db3d51ac2385a02dfec8a4d5a830ec1f
617630a56690e99cc2ceaee325245adbfd6082ea
'2012-06-28T20:53:08-04:00'
describe
'123110' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWRK' 'sip-files00200.jpg'
256b8b97359dd44df6c2b3a418289784
139f9e7cba7902be3bc24d15708f156dde0174cc
'2012-06-28T20:50:38-04:00'
describe
'1704360' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWRL' 'sip-files00042.tif'
bb978b7e32112a0a13480aac605e0d21
7ccaa299b563e6bc6210c7a10b464b63addf8c88
'2012-06-28T20:55:41-04:00'
describe
'1703984' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWRM' 'sip-files00247.tif'
a8b24a6f623f352a4dc4ded8314e8afb
c22b5f177fe687922aab42e357ac707c40c4af43
'2012-06-28T20:49:14-04:00'
describe
'1704248' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWRN' 'sip-files00091.tif'
b7c4c478cc91985b82b771bc08e714e4
c7fa550fb89afcae5369378a0e64b4cc24bb65ae
'2012-06-28T20:44:23-04:00'
describe
'1703988' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWRO' 'sip-files00147.tif'
2ea8ee5c5f6f366a7ce6c48ca8a166c5
7d321046cef3f97fe7659375038fdac67dd488e8
'2012-06-28T20:46:36-04:00'
describe
'11125' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWRP' 'sip-files00252thm.jpg'
6b5df3336b9d3cba3da77dc0149b650c
7ebbb283fe0ad2be28fcdcbfbde2de1154904ebf
'2012-06-28T20:54:59-04:00'
describe
'44726' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWRQ' 'sip-files00130.QC.jpg'
99113f90445da8628a5e8af0da41a43e
b7bb06e8f44a30cc55f9daf2bc9be0960c7f5088
'2012-06-28T20:56:34-04:00'
describe
'34017' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWRR' 'sip-files00097.QC.jpg'
e18aaa2f3a44c153defd66e3c6fe79dd
bf4e30e3af9bc50d5fbccaefdd704245ff9527a2
'2012-06-28T20:54:50-04:00'
describe
'12645388' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWRS' 'sip-files00039.tif'
463760b6068f3239deda3b562fb84fac
4c3d8964110934f9859afad01b0f6da129d2e12d
'2012-06-28T20:52:36-04:00'
describe
'11034' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWRT' 'sip-files00262thm.jpg'
636395c9910a90da3abce0db5d72b54b
4a0b762c761f493812809dec98cba73ab60be7e9
'2012-06-28T20:51:45-04:00'
describe
'1695628' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWRU' 'sip-files00118.tif'
f5d863dc9ae4b613fabbdcbd442efa0d
c9a8235fffe3856678eee526f33396dd796c917a
'2012-06-28T20:45:04-04:00'
describe
'34030' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWRV' 'sip-files00308.QC.jpg'
453d5c99b83fba8110e1b8e92f2a1a83
8f1677386ce8f86f3374655cb8921052a907e95b
'2012-06-28T20:44:27-04:00'
describe
'208677' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWRW' 'sip-files00148.jp2'
d0fc6ddc8631f7fc024cf2c9560ffceb
9a3cc7b9f7ff52bd766a7d51aee1c5be0834b84e
'2012-06-28T20:45:44-04:00'
describe
'42311' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWRX' 'sip-files00224.pro'
7b59e572b639b31ca91228938cedc205
33d98f8b03fbe1f8da413f4e4511674e19bb780a
'2012-06-28T20:54:29-04:00'
describe
'20975' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWRY' 'sip-files00312.QC.jpg'
b7683984c20679b772527c5d2255b3a8
56b106d0c38bf7a00c4b14e5e3ae336ae61c8299
'2012-06-28T20:44:32-04:00'
describe
'205211' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWRZ' 'sip-files00183.jp2'
fcd3e09314e4f6203efe1c7407b1dcd1
702863a9fa6abe883a0a705a709f7f0c487f91ce
'2012-06-28T20:47:58-04:00'
describe
'41830' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWSA' 'sip-files00152.QC.jpg'
f903ef3b38690b21e0682d10896aedb1
387a7c259607941556f26b7efc56ee5225f81996
'2012-06-28T20:56:12-04:00'
describe
'10586' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWSB' 'sip-files00276thm.jpg'
3905d079d453cb9e3fd2a5bcc5df3191
45965e315b13b2e81bcd3b4f96937ef01c5186c0
'2012-06-28T20:57:01-04:00'
describe
'1703972' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWSC' 'sip-files00109.tif'
fbe1f90081241bb55208b8f291a83a15
fecccf2aedb025e1759686a878d50a73161e4d1f
'2012-06-28T20:49:13-04:00'
describe
'1703804' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWSD' 'sip-files00190.tif'
ae5d2a14e9ab9f73a685ba3e26cdaabd
3b1581a828658c17b99be5c37d6e652c72bff14c
'2012-06-28T20:48:00-04:00'
describe
'203288' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWSE' 'sip-files00173.jp2'
4364b4368ad91dd624cee40e6e3c4d58
400a846e6215f001ddc614f797609eb1a96d3daa
'2012-06-28T20:48:40-04:00'
describe
'1703564' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWSF' 'sip-files00204.tif'
ec211a3a21d79c75d19c07a0c2f63b37
f4667865e1dcb03077ca79cc9503d79889e4052c
'2012-06-28T20:51:47-04:00'
describe
'1703776' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWSG' 'sip-files00265.tif'
f8b5b7bc01853176e6982c35784482d7
24714fa1558ccdc8787c3268d7133c699b51e579
'2012-06-28T20:48:01-04:00'
describe
'1060' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWSH' 'sip-files00271.txt'
73f9e26c08c99ae8b70021a22b979320
24f8049893031098ff6543c782dbcb0cf5318659
'2012-06-28T20:45:31-04:00'
describe
'205474' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWSI' 'sip-files00284.jp2'
f9c6979126d43cfc4370652377a49081
83816edf90ebab04a18eccf48e990e975e3f69b7
describe
'115323' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWSJ' 'sip-files00239.jpg'
1123003e3e8dfc9777b59813a2d04f50
7756963631e650bd5062ba6f4446ff90930fd934
'2012-06-28T20:52:00-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWSK' 'sip-files00140.tif'
63eddf1fb151d7c1cd080c72d4ea0f92
1f280749c3acb96ffb51de6e7232d81d5d3f1f15
'2012-06-28T20:45:02-04:00'
describe
'40396' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWSL' 'sip-files00116.pro'
faab3e3f83580299aee7b79c802049fb
ed01230841dfc787455f1420cce54eb9a86d151a
'2012-06-28T20:55:54-04:00'
describe
'10629' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWSM' 'sip-files00060.jpg'
135657041e59b195d1d88713638cef19
3b52c170e88d110da6751ed6714a9f363e2fd674
'2012-06-28T20:47:21-04:00'
describe
'116' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWSN' 'sip-files00025.txt'
997cac4855eb172863368a8082188821
7724fa9cd8eddd27ec5b1843877c2a0785a2192e
'2012-06-28T20:46:20-04:00'
describe
'36618' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWSO' 'sip-files00019.QC.jpg'
c5c93d73a750efb6fcd056f9c85768ee
92cd875097bbf6ec511bd92b9a4ed2b5275f5ce8
describe
'1015025' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWSP' 'sip-files00119.jp2'
553c046dbdb61b43b4c6ab2aa45141f4
2c42311842f9404733df4ace0ac4c5d38a968356
'2012-06-28T20:53:11-04:00'
describe
'120930' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWSQ' 'sip-files00244.jpg'
582bff20eeb75a1ac3ffb96b96fd3bad
2e4a34b596550a5f8b97bd94890677b0814867ce
'2012-06-28T20:44:15-04:00'
describe
'121707' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWSR' 'sip-files00071.jpg'
6c0e0a7c61faae31b909e5309de31242
92e5c840fac3687efb40d329e33d9083d8adc26e
'2012-06-28T20:52:24-04:00'
describe
'11513' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWSS' 'sip-files00142thm.jpg'
a28211362ab5673f833b3437df05b30b
98b59239e6ed21527641f0b8f298c118e64f470d
'2012-06-28T20:53:28-04:00'
describe
'40853' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWST' 'sip-files00182.pro'
bfbbd52caf271f3c6885a81f80a41e5a
2172797625feb091e3693b952d4267831fa0faf0
'2012-06-28T20:50:53-04:00'
describe
'41772' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWSU' 'sip-files00242.pro'
8fde3723db88a907f72898975174a7f4
f921b48ca2b3618ee7ec63bc7ff8ad008b367339
'2012-06-28T20:47:59-04:00'
describe
'125338' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWSV' 'sip-files00306.jpg'
e6ce705e7ed9af67f52883a60b385433
587e1cdb8da1b8a0dd425180a31b3cbd795bcc6e
'2012-06-28T20:51:49-04:00'
describe
'126014' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWSW' 'sip-files00095.jpg'
ecd22a230f26e792610bc0c695eb48aa
b06deb69008e2c0b7024355dd7219b2f33fef74e
'2012-06-28T20:49:31-04:00'
describe
'1704388' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWSX' 'sip-files00286.tif'
8bc52c27f34c044e19ea35578b5bd62e
d5227ffbddeda6457e2e58d69c49daa9d9adf3e5
'2012-06-28T20:55:40-04:00'
describe
'11052' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWSY' 'sip-files00186thm.jpg'
60a9638dd20fec79d436e9ec0c00143c
9d24d01c2d22d4fcb7bd4b1c14835260d0f3fc3a
'2012-06-28T20:54:00-04:00'
describe
'1703952' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWSZ' 'sip-files00103.tif'
4ccfff0af7ae4ee9d80bdd031d437724
10a21c8dfbef761300b991ab5c281dbc144b1316
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWTA' 'sip-files00172.txt'
dfd964c3ff8895b99ce854aa4ecb876e
3b198c2a1628e4094e642a60f12dd017f2b68ae4
'2012-06-28T20:51:00-04:00'
describe
'1704528' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWTB' 'sip-files00088.tif'
c1eb1e309ef0849e7a19e4d8f8b360b8
3396fbe49d25a0e48fde941bc021fc78626011d3
'2012-06-28T20:50:35-04:00'
describe
'119930' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWTC' 'sip-files00028.jpg'
ea63c5ff98572b5f4efe998d53957505
b72c11eb3ecdc54dc0e20df7a862227d613a0c9c
'2012-06-28T20:56:18-04:00'
describe
'10257' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWTD' 'sip-files00173thm.jpg'
249b58596eb2bb6b38350a331c2e21e7
976f51c84dba61ce27899172d655ef166aa7a42c
'2012-06-28T20:44:20-04:00'
describe
'28864' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWTE' 'sip-files00239.pro'
80eae9e630e7151a132e1028297761ae
1d4b8ec21ada1d5a4fa30ca5fdce176c3efc079f
'2012-06-28T20:53:55-04:00'
describe
'1475' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWTF' 'sip-files00147.txt'
7eb5f7e0b9c699098908444e8dfd2b44
c0301201189e18b16379f0f78ba3b79f55f34fc6
'2012-06-28T20:51:01-04:00'
describe
'120848' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWTG' 'sip-files00293.jpg'
3164531318a4699e46939cdbe2a34ef3
8818d8c08465239a324c8277887cbbc1320d13e7
'2012-06-28T20:45:57-04:00'
describe
'39844' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWTH' 'sip-files00164.pro'
3f5e0b78e45ed78b33abcd6d02a0acf1
990664266453723b4803a2399e010de4aaa22c20
'2012-06-28T20:57:07-04:00'
describe
'38841' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWTI' 'sip-files00108.pro'
def70db75c80c862dff539d895905db5
fc7074c47954a0669450e0212ab0d9e07da1534c
'2012-06-28T20:52:49-04:00'
describe
'126164' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWTJ' 'sip-files00222.jpg'
cf579386f0e42cdbe269a0fcd96b5386
9ff645d5cf837c6bb8e6c3f5c079cfb03783e25e
'2012-06-28T20:52:04-04:00'
describe
'37087' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWTK' 'sip-files00219.QC.jpg'
a795c9a12ac53df80952f9e2829a3ca4
425f44cef0512e6e5a8aa5cf9ac3ec07099e59e8
'2012-06-28T20:45:21-04:00'
describe
'40811' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWTL' 'sip-files00295.QC.jpg'
caef1a67044530487295d658b7d8c9eb
5ad1055b87604d064d487737391447fc220ae4fe
'2012-06-28T20:50:29-04:00'
describe
'41149' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWTM' 'sip-files00156.QC.jpg'
54413a2afe493119a7f41bb27f0dc759
d03228fcaf521830bec8ede42eaa06c0f484be5d
'2012-06-28T20:56:29-04:00'
describe
'33202' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWTN' 'sip-files00012.pro'
a4cfe14acb4f4d4fcf9193cce23a1bef
ee685b9a8b71b403db59ea5053dff5bacbe057a8
'2012-06-28T20:46:38-04:00'
describe
'120798' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWTO' 'sip-files00253.jpg'
dd9febc4cb7fa60644da10abea567949
7104c12a4b239c76ad656722161ce8d8f6053854
'2012-06-28T20:56:44-04:00'
describe
'45583' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWTP' 'sip-files00005.jpg'
f8e116a60600186503f5c81494600752
42f6439c6b57a5b8f1bd208df6cec57f83391807
'2012-06-28T20:47:11-04:00'
describe
'2829' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWTQ' 'sip-files00197thm.jpg'
718ffeb895be7fb4efc70b73a14d4a79
ef6bfb8ed7f95f0c9bdebfdd0217fcb82aa21e11
'2012-06-28T20:48:15-04:00'
describe
'287' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWTR' 'sip-files00040.pro'
bc882db0d2ac29a25857a46952cd2d9f
719d69a913147abd4f4c66853d2d40bb435cd89a
'2012-06-28T20:51:32-04:00'
describe
'1476' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWTS' 'sip-files00276.txt'
567344b209d0b3a300156561f367d84b
c728da4fa8c60f282384f7afa9d16ddd22a885fe
'2012-06-28T20:52:51-04:00'
describe
'39114' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWTT' 'sip-files00174.pro'
d06526988f628aa648d0cea0033cf4f4
b7600b3097cc4334bf3b2607fab9d5183cb786f4
'2012-06-28T20:50:51-04:00'
describe
'1534' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWTU' 'sip-files00210.txt'
a62777e879266825d4c557ce999d50e2
35f9f8d3b34b2257bf07316a85c5c40ae8ab19cb
'2012-06-28T20:51:15-04:00'
describe
'1551' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWTV' 'sip-files00215.txt'
092acc70be609e81ce5cd54a2adecb0f
df9a8038b159a4679fef54ccba516f43b0e6f737
'2012-06-28T20:44:48-04:00'
describe
'10043' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWTW' 'sip-files00201thm.jpg'
e7a360cfe574fa39954262b94f9ebf50
836f21d8cdba3c5be9a8a10559a90ee03ec08729
'2012-06-28T20:46:16-04:00'
describe
'38109' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWTX' 'sip-files00111.pro'
2ae480c4155b5f941d0b83405fc295c8
9678d48f81f19ba254017d3cf5df94aceeed88d7
'2012-06-28T20:48:35-04:00'
describe
'195163' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWTY' 'sip-files00023.jp2'
af4f719a459299da33cf29defd69615e
c9af1f0ab1a93a439691986d04d20b422768725d
describe
'203339' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWTZ' 'sip-files00155.jp2'
8d1bc3fa08b04dd126533c16affde595
0cad6ab10615db44b862e652f2cebeaebc02c77f
'2012-06-28T20:47:50-04:00'
describe
'247739' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWUA' 'sip-files00161.jp2'
8ca2a4896ac1a4d3229f4993e1de673d
2c49feeb6bea12aa890a05f0ea03cf39749ed92a
'2012-06-28T20:54:18-04:00'
describe
'42156' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWUB' 'sip-files00148.QC.jpg'
4916575b1620e271f1e20856dcf230e1
1f93a6d969e300491181b3f7feae38722e21fb78
describe
'11282' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWUC' 'sip-files00110thm.jpg'
69eb342f631f84fd2ea09c000db7a20c
d74b038a138d6f20541455fb49991ea6d9d4c220
'2012-06-28T20:51:23-04:00'
describe
'12390' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWUD' 'sip-files00074thm.jpg'
9358b394250342603b4b0354931944fb
08863eecf2bc257198e5da01f8aa08735f511648
'2012-06-28T20:56:27-04:00'
describe
'43602' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWUE' 'sip-files00122.QC.jpg'
b40c2685ad6d1c32452a44c6131a0569
9e94d765c64b6c83bb5af1a6cf3b958750b334db
'2012-06-28T20:50:24-04:00'
describe
'76041' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWUF' 'sip-files00038.jp2'
7d77c98572a0bd3670e8653b17563f8c
6ce72b0ab86ab6db71fc5fee8f3fb70146854130
'2012-06-28T20:47:55-04:00'
describe
'126946' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWUG' 'sip-files00096.jpg'
ca0c71161c4b210affa0ec4ecce815f3
9bacacd31449fff8d593e5163ab08dde9cc4bd27
'2012-06-28T20:53:27-04:00'
describe
'1536' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWUH' 'sip-files00235.txt'
ee4987f1f550d5ea28a826abf6f26144
5e2e48ce2f1c66d8200de517623d3a2aba2c4deb
'2012-06-28T20:45:23-04:00'
describe
'40665' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWUI' 'sip-files00201.QC.jpg'
1592c57bebe9e9eb128c4cecde2b6662
fe4e3cbedf215c64b97a30a26e38c19484f4b773
'2012-06-28T20:54:46-04:00'
describe
'41096' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWUJ' 'sip-files00134.pro'
8dcd06f6b9d4037d0bfc71ea1af8a112
abc03629f75bdf7a2e8d186e4b5a50bae449a847
'2012-06-28T20:51:41-04:00'
describe
'131625' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWUK' 'sip-files00298.jpg'
871558923f158fba8bb6742100e12e0a
8cb7705bec885119c61b4e38e4602b7671b548bf
'2012-06-28T20:49:11-04:00'
describe
'131768' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWUL' 'sip-files00076.jpg'
7ac31a85bba455a1fca901d36bfb5e67
5b392c0cd82f981776a8ba3ba0a0d9146e94d61c
'2012-06-28T20:51:26-04:00'
describe
'117781' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWUM' 'sip-files00201.jpg'
20e12e2f965fb7e5f550a3a10633ef54
71298ffac41dad7c9ca24f33d775a97243267485
'2012-06-28T20:52:32-04:00'
describe
'11884' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWUN' 'sip-files00086thm.jpg'
d7171c72ee8e4a8f74a23bcb90fe2314
7cbb0f83e9683a941e6f11e3f3834c0d2684a5bb
'2012-06-28T20:50:46-04:00'
describe
'1511' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWUO' 'sip-files00229.txt'
722735881472336d55b0ef818268401a
e67b65cef963cd4e97843cbfc5956f8e9a0502e8
'2012-06-28T20:56:53-04:00'
describe
'1501' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWUP' 'sip-files00192.txt'
7af12b22d33af2651ee8d690cacde167
31afa6d0e87ea29f1f9cc840e731fab1d627d07a
'2012-06-28T20:55:11-04:00'
describe
'12123' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWUQ' 'sip-files00014.jp2'
72155542e440be2d7713db154fded743
f7133e42e027f5bb60ad987134bc218e8e65e01b
'2012-06-28T20:47:34-04:00'
describe
'1697776' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWUR' 'sip-files00178.tif'
990f720877f1facaf44d02275d7ac75b
4f282e9c4aa6f23f746d339c84bb6fd9010f7345
'2012-06-28T20:52:35-04:00'
describe
'121509' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWUS' 'sip-files00194.jpg'
051abd935496c8675483466c52b2b1b7
26ac3318890f2fa1a8e5623b3392fc8e0d82d68e
'2012-06-28T20:46:55-04:00'
describe
'9313' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWUT' 'sip-files00219thm.jpg'
1adfd33bb72516657fc1ce25065c5d6d
200c6f9e3c3d833e96e5d04ca3141a85adebbe59
'2012-06-28T20:51:56-04:00'
describe
'11481' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWUU' 'sip-files00130thm.jpg'
6d5f800ee43da4c30da22f2d5828e7d9
cc14b14304efd6a2aa22971e4759053bc52b6a17
'2012-06-28T20:53:51-04:00'
describe
'216970' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWUV' 'sip-files00074.jp2'
dbf30a18ca4c13c7624533633e539693
44e0d0aff33d752ddfb2cb7ad9eac03a6e174295
'2012-06-28T20:57:23-04:00'
describe
'1352' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWUW' 'sip-files00018thm.jpg'
b26a5f250e3de26c11aac8baa03408b4
e9c3cd919ee4cd53966eeba27a54fea882acf695
'2012-06-28T20:45:47-04:00'
describe
'42863' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWUX' 'sip-files00194.QC.jpg'
e598978b6fa544140320d4a3ee8a29ec
8a4fcc41fc77609b5c0e00bd3f76f24a91aa95d6
'2012-06-28T20:50:57-04:00'
describe
'212529' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWUY' 'sip-files00045.jp2'
81935d0a9a740bf8a96ac2175ea8dd5a
24e0a3ffbbe415d17632551b7dc0482d771babc3
'2012-06-28T20:51:43-04:00'
describe
'213222' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWUZ' 'sip-files00250.jp2'
d06cd6efa5a17718c98340c2a4349edc
7206df5c2bc2077ce5156bb909b13d6fa613f835
'2012-06-28T20:44:43-04:00'
describe
'41478' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWVA' 'sip-files00165.pro'
531c17289f0a070cc1cbfd85085f8401
0885d2d0e88c3e3642cc7cf6d6b7fe41199ae0af
'2012-06-28T20:48:48-04:00'
describe
'122860' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWVB' 'sip-files00192.jpg'
9313b0a8b2a3fdb6f7bbb6aa933d480e
bc507d6f2c20a064c1b8c8700e303560379df9aa
describe
'120266' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWVC' 'sip-files00287.jpg'
8d279bee0a645397b8b14245f3d0d02a
37f86fcf9ad120d6878b50534f870a2b3b1e4d3b
'2012-06-28T20:55:32-04:00'
describe
'1704024' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWVD' 'sip-files00153.tif'
54e465b43edf2b2810a06292bdab0d41
14fd5837d4e13841cd9914fe8657258a4245e279
'2012-06-28T20:45:26-04:00'
describe
'213757' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWVE' 'sip-files00222.jp2'
7e839b4f59664d209216a3d8fbb5df19
70cb9e54963c2a8cbd00557680f5632c61a60728
'2012-06-28T20:55:29-04:00'
describe
'37797' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWVF' 'sip-files00058.pro'
b4cf633ab8ad3909c07016475b5c3bd3
0ec74228a1ae5912c7b44cdd878d74c7ec55e248
'2012-06-28T20:51:44-04:00'
describe
'753408' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWVG' 'sip-files00081.jp2'
794764adc361cb9ea8f2ee234348dd48
8e625eaafdb84ff49ddd422d40d70f7c49b4e680
'2012-06-28T20:55:16-04:00'
describe
'1555' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWVH' 'sip-files00274.txt'
d3dbc4cb4defe9a092f833fb77cc2b19
b10e09c3098b4c40ffa71730e78eb8d554745fd3
'2012-06-28T20:47:03-04:00'
describe
'126967' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWVI' 'sip-files00226.jpg'
7c415eafc5e46ca827a63a22fabd889b
1cca6ed361935c5dd5f98174ebf9238707d9986e
'2012-06-28T20:50:26-04:00'
describe
'1546' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWVJ' 'sip-files00209.txt'
785502fee164622ff7e0cfdeb24da3d2
8caa3aeb04130303d0234461385916d013acf47b
'2012-06-28T20:54:28-04:00'
describe
'5990' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWVK' 'sip-files00238.jp2'
c895584b1b65838c15ad96c27ed7817e
b8cd5c20045e4ab3ecfd54b81e9f527ea1149add
'2012-06-28T20:52:18-04:00'
describe
'40355' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWVL' 'sip-files00171.QC.jpg'
fa1f5fa9bbffb4cc2171fd138928b330
e6bc76e5af6acfd349d8de33c8f7ed76e0f73a02
'2012-06-28T20:53:50-04:00'
describe
'101675' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWVM' 'sip-files00097.jpg'
05dce1d21a39c47422798d9906343076
e01159829c958908f1c54cf530012e8677c2bdd5
'2012-06-28T20:50:28-04:00'
describe
'38505' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWVN' 'sip-files00230.pro'
58f1fb132f0650420a7945f47cf8c856
dd5788631d8980888d178484298dbfd5604d911e
describe
'114518' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWVO' 'sip-files00034.jpg'
cfa6bba960bc48cb8a7a4d820cc4c407
f6d98c3d1899558eb5f35cccac734b069e5debb5
describe
'1703396' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWVP' 'sip-files00239.tif'
128a7d6c7e595c3474dae65f69968720
8ba72bba105741d1eed41bfdf269225c9b6f39d9
'2012-06-28T20:50:03-04:00'
describe
'122013' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWVQ' 'sip-files00261.jpg'
a7651df0c3461c1bea73b9f38222bf64
768b1a7e9b7de9804c79ec82b2abfc1320a85c43
'2012-06-28T20:48:52-04:00'
describe
'124870' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWVR' 'sip-files00280.jpg'
e82874410c1390dd95f5cb35945ae502
dbf9a2725b3493c77e27ca431e379467df4b1c50
'2012-06-28T20:56:43-04:00'
describe
'55251' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWVS' 'sip-files00002.jpg'
8de1dea854602c36b027495e84ae6f8b
27fd42128b69d777e6bddd313564258321f8833e
'2012-06-28T20:51:19-04:00'
describe
'119511' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWVT' 'sip-files00279.jpg'
06d10f5a2c263bfba93794bfb98086ac
f43135112d863123250e022d53a3a5ca76acb1a0
'2012-06-28T20:51:13-04:00'
describe
'9594' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWVU' 'sip-files00239thm.jpg'
3ef59da01f34b1aa0fe85fcfb616cead
0701fd969131eea9e85c3d0be20d613ebcde50c2
'2012-06-28T20:52:34-04:00'
describe
'201686' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWVV' 'sip-files00163.jp2'
e98936e21bf9ed3cfdec708c73e64166
0a62d95e1954308d54eaef73ba7e25a70812a591
'2012-06-28T20:46:47-04:00'
describe
'11634' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWVW' 'sip-files00076thm.jpg'
6ea372de047d2007f982f823340e5f08
7bbe9b0e5e91212f4c906c70bdf6f9ef6e10d061
'2012-06-28T20:45:22-04:00'
describe
'147399' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWVX' 'sip-files00013.jp2'
89e72e9995d5a61f5710b3141f19adba
cbafe57071abd208d4e1bf1b6b4bf332d20524f0
'2012-06-28T20:49:19-04:00'
describe
'1146' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWVY' 'sip-files00097.txt'
6933516a6ebf087f3af46ae871486c65
43b9bbc43bc1e1d760d1086e9f7f9c72a761716c
describe
'9811' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWVZ' 'sip-files00121thm.jpg'
9710bc83fcb3fef62f5216c89b10fd19
10d11885c88d76c30d089fd7dd93828115bc99be
'2012-06-28T20:56:25-04:00'
describe
'207406' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWWA' 'sip-files00089.jp2'
f67ce41dbacc67391fbf0e7aba9072b7
c9084b13dc8aa76d66aaf68d75366186a36562ad
describe
'1703624' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWWB' 'sip-files00277.tif'
10ad6d7602087d95e26a0c5ff1f0c6b6
ca5836d2f9336c64198cf893667a96e5abf39b1f
'2012-06-28T20:55:19-04:00'
describe
'1503' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWWC' 'sip-files00154.txt'
ab0936919a28bbb59b45f87d8e20cfd5
71978d9481c3b268e8b8a5499056a3aba78012d5
'2012-06-28T20:46:06-04:00'
describe
'918' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWWD' 'sip-files00255.pro'
68f0d401cddd56481e05c5d5b0359e23
ed044827bbf96d9230c410ba258212d90ae8216d
'2012-06-28T20:48:09-04:00'
describe
'41487' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWWE' 'sip-files00207.QC.jpg'
99c509d164cd7d42cbcdf8122a496d60
f50537ad06f94d193e6749612c8223f6be2c89da
'2012-06-28T20:50:16-04:00'
describe
'112189' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWWF' 'sip-files00027.jpg'
bfea4764941d40b7fe2fa303032f19c0
5a3c572f50dd9f3c6cb6040d99ff36868434d17a
'2012-06-28T20:50:07-04:00'
describe
'44105' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWWG' 'sip-files00306.QC.jpg'
5739f09c8d44f963ec7e4276083ea643
56b40a7771e26eba89901c1072e85ccea2d4ee78
'2012-06-28T20:56:49-04:00'
describe
'1704352' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWWH' 'sip-files00064.tif'
79527e5b709a9c6ace46b7af556572bd
2eed8f22db3c6d5a1e9f8d1d86ebe486b34a5b1a
'2012-06-28T20:51:16-04:00'
describe
'9118' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWWI' 'sip-files00291thm.jpg'
279a352c0c55993a75144f797396c6b5
030ac2e0e498a76f09fcb2f6ac0548900e3bcbeb
describe
'40972' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWWJ' 'sip-files00209.pro'
b1908007180b49a52d2b6dd82a8c9de1
d037453d2101f4e7c76fca568c73ccc45aeb0bd9
describe
'1138' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWWK' 'sip-files00219.txt'
89211c2a04fcd4c40d6188d6e594561d
ce9518f162d11296fd544c72971344d17a598b18
describe
'1287' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWWL' 'sip-files00098thm.jpg'
fa4fcbe9ebcb2d1e32fe557a744cfa69
c304c2a7f3486969b7bb589aca709bf7bd8563dc
describe
'111336' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWWM' 'sip-files00257.jpg'
cdd4f8ee77ba8837ba1e3818ee4f1d48
13265ce18f3e046f0da6e93908a57f7ab9a65836
'2012-06-28T20:46:00-04:00'
describe
'10856' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWWN' 'sip-files00218.jpg'
a270a0f9814166999a206a9c13d47fef
a022fa0e36d23ef6844de4eb971bbf4c50c835ee
describe
'35569' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWWO' 'sip-files00011.QC.jpg'
636c4fbce1ab78a5842a44d1815ed060
dc0c31ace0d4898deef2195208eb08b5604c225c
'2012-06-28T20:56:15-04:00'
describe
'39763' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWWP' 'sip-files00034.QC.jpg'
d360c58572342610b4963b185c1ff4ee
8f0ac757d0e0b770891e496f0552ae6d130bf478
'2012-06-28T20:48:10-04:00'
describe
'202369' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWWQ' 'sip-files00297.jp2'
a35d9d4d72b184d7728e68fefc6ce7af
f1dcfb24c48b2e1e23bb4014849dc7ca2839cb1a
'2012-06-28T20:52:59-04:00'
describe
'41462' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWWR' 'sip-files00279.QC.jpg'
06ae120e982e42990bc60062d529cbcb
edaa45881436ee1084e56fcf574821e319bd6d2d
'2012-06-28T20:54:24-04:00'
describe
'1703752' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWWS' 'sip-files00251.tif'
e1207c638ca10b1f2401021cd2dcae05
2868a025a4ceb41cbd913d0b55b290071357bc37
'2012-06-28T20:49:58-04:00'
describe
'204377' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWWT' 'sip-files00221.jp2'
a09947813e06430d85f3816a01adef32
14cbd555e3b416828e31976ce456e1f44949d44d
'2012-06-28T20:51:22-04:00'
describe
'41255' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWWU' 'sip-files00028.pro'
352f730d06e86e4e68364f0113cca01f
ef7342dd9deb2e75a72308a055f493edf73201f7
describe
'1530' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWWV' 'sip-files00132.txt'
19f8ecaed3323017d9d6374ebf1d09e0
1fc4de47478cf5c277c915f37e3fbf2c861f1c25
'2012-06-28T20:53:35-04:00'
describe
'126997' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWWW' 'sip-files00232.jpg'
be71fe04800f190ed2e5fe86ce007596
cf56d12a0361affb1021ae9b2eb508f916a266e3
'2012-06-28T20:55:48-04:00'
describe
'1704076' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWWX' 'sip-files00246.tif'
9f65be80f3f5f47535116d42b404adf2
0cb31dfa5716c8e0fc89fe63141608b28afaec07
'2012-06-28T20:45:20-04:00'
describe
'1089058' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWWY' 'sip-files00312.jp2'
89cebf06f3062d2e14bc7485dfc266e8
29af4c0966240d07361ba9fb11c4decaf474c823
'2012-06-28T20:49:08-04:00'
describe
'122726' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWWZ' 'sip-files00204.jpg'
93118587ad8e12d9d291bf6c0d5ca549
dd1c472175530e411e34b3cd18919fc180df2b1a
'2012-06-28T20:47:22-04:00'
describe
'40264' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWXA' 'sip-files00126.pro'
d842497408234f85f31ca7d97744820d
fa5023b7f6bfb2f40d18390ff37248ad765e7b6e
'2012-06-28T20:47:27-04:00'
describe
'126462' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWXB' 'sip-files00262.jpg'
d878b203bf7c53f9544a377caf25adfa
5d94ce2460ffe411b33c736e6d16100530495373
'2012-06-28T20:51:08-04:00'
describe
'1695664' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWXC' 'sip-files00026.tif'
3f5117a2eda27f55b25822fc4c1d0186
0c41ee5cd22e1c4c9c09cd40855230a2ebc9b135
'2012-06-28T20:54:30-04:00'
describe
'222968' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWXD' 'sip-files00168.jp2'
371d2170bae986bef67e721def90b6cc
ed8e2f485a8a57d0da48e669eb55d35986c29961
describe
'1463' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWXE' 'sip-files00230.txt'
434de6c2b7cde3b3c6bdffaad9bd4a18
6b3200d07984c1fa9409c9ed234aa7459f34e0c6
'2012-06-28T20:54:52-04:00'
describe
'3170' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWXF' 'sip-files00238.QC.jpg'
7ae32a8b95dba24b5feb2d1196854d65
3af4b03f27492f50ea78dd5d30124287e5407a85
'2012-06-28T20:54:31-04:00'
describe
'13077368' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWXG' 'sip-files00179.tif'
1c1956e02e4d6401281f34834b781b4c
30e573ef934b1503cdd302b28e243bd2821d8528
'2012-06-28T20:57:18-04:00'
describe
'124469' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWXH' 'sip-files00143.jpg'
26dcefc081dc24860e666dd18aee30fe
a3abcaf36f542083d4a9d48eabab16cf211c4d34
'2012-06-28T20:54:25-04:00'
describe
'28355' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWXI' 'sip-files00199.pro'
f2090e20a3217fd88e2239d6a069f674
e8b1425dd49463f2e4369a36e1bb6f029f5c6941
describe
'40667' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWXJ' 'sip-files00267.QC.jpg'
df3bb131fd3af22dbfeccac6650460f6
b4d40267f0eac375d8fb02210e4f438d4b32eb1b
describe
'40137' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWXK' 'sip-files00075.pro'
11539c0f3eb2df85addce50f24917099
ac9e657d389479a051dc4e3859358cbee545bf32
'2012-06-28T20:56:03-04:00'
describe
'230114' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWXL' 'sip-files00257.jp2'
3507b4385a26ea4bceb8e1128474b197
b40347139522fe411de4bcab9e7cd17b9db2685b
'2012-06-28T20:56:02-04:00'
describe
'12795964' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWXM' 'sip-files00005.tif'
dfc1ad34892a520621171dbcecc36f7c
b61cad5f521f26f9759ec56faa6071d1e7d1be32
'2012-06-28T20:48:57-04:00'
describe
'41680' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWXN' 'sip-files00190.pro'
ffbffb9a4f9d679469f39e24074e4c0c
02f40901803a91e85e6ab258d64ba10fc41cabdd
describe
'11331' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWXO' 'sip-files00062.jpg'
9f4cb46d37c3007168fb8834cffd3065
5575cce0b0e764143d032bcbe329f22b40b2aff7
'2012-06-28T20:49:48-04:00'
describe
'1704004' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWXP' 'sip-files00169.tif'
fc9359b702887e70d162122fab10a73b
f051fe1fc06585e47764142b50ae90102b393fd0
'2012-06-28T20:55:13-04:00'
describe
'1750' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWXQ' 'sip-files00142.txt'
01d1608ec229999176bf1081b4929a7b
c40aeb79e98976aa07d8972c44830dd5db9fa431
'2012-06-28T20:55:31-04:00'
describe
'39517' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWXR' 'sip-files00244.pro'
fefd93c70f72c92a7d2e9fab2d80da38
0fa528b94be56185062267eaa742531d2cc7216c
'2012-06-28T20:46:11-04:00'
describe
'1703960' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWXS' 'sip-files00253.tif'
03bc697ae76ce33524c676c494148748
e3b76f2aefa517e580c1f0cb36e86e664882418c
'2012-06-28T20:48:33-04:00'
describe
'119741' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWXT' 'sip-files00105.jpg'
83c20eacae255eb42f762b44680b4ac7
62d68ed5e0060cbbd17ef5a2bdcfff7d2497764f
describe
'223842' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWXU' 'sip-files00128.jp2'
806ac4d28fa7d0b4762609d603bafd67
f7310a65dae213e8e9e47f715ccefadff3ba16cb
'2012-06-28T20:52:16-04:00'
describe
'1703540' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWXV' 'sip-files00020.tif'
c433ed8b618231ec9df5c23aa325f8c9
09f7a348e1db2bbd572f35b57ae27c54bd0b43e9
'2012-06-28T20:48:20-04:00'
describe
'43455' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWXW' 'sip-files00143.QC.jpg'
23244f4bf22e151c61c5eb9cf4bb7684
9e35357b04a75c51e477296e1cec7b64ff79357d
'2012-06-28T20:56:04-04:00'
describe
'43256' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWXX' 'sip-files00234.QC.jpg'
d2b0cd6c7e9c210305237f7931075d5d
87f280a5e1adb69c43b24093b1820ab40877c1fd
'2012-06-28T20:50:27-04:00'
describe
'10683' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWXY' 'sip-files00234thm.jpg'
c448af2c912cfef2285b52e7dac15d3f
845b216c1b1a70d3a92ce1da1c0a529478dd5580
'2012-06-28T20:55:24-04:00'
describe
'230057' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWXZ' 'sip-files00242.jp2'
f3dd12fa62117f280c10f0336169e233
6c0517b0ab8811c107a227fd63e1d7193af842b8
'2012-06-28T20:47:35-04:00'
describe
'218' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWYA' 'sip-files00118.pro'
a190bc92e7d68ab248abc53d1ec8b91c
99f35d33535bcb6d67129bbc29e62ff999aa4c4a
describe
'223670' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWYB' 'sip-files00068.jp2'
48433f595fdd1ed1b51e53646f29e96d
077c2a839fb4a8a2defadfee85bd16c0d36a4ace
'2012-06-28T20:48:41-04:00'
describe
'10408' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWYC' 'sip-files00009.pro'
d80a4adb7da5e1666472a9320c9d86f3
06438f439e693dc05deac1b3d7d3814037cd79bd
'2012-06-28T20:52:10-04:00'
describe
'230234' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWYD' 'sip-files00042.jp2'
c2250a4ff372be1379991135d4c4106d
9857e9f6255a797a5a00cc5e48c2669938e0a389
'2012-06-28T20:55:05-04:00'
describe
'40767' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWYE' 'sip-files00280.pro'
09018f4319940e69a308f9d1fa27ae31
82a61f7ae91322de4a72cce236144439fbb4e4a1
'2012-06-28T20:45:05-04:00'
describe
'1704208' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWYF' 'sip-files00192.tif'
cce3eb31291c9cd9002caeb870b4da54
b0c1fce3a0933946f284521eb33aa151baa669c6
describe
'222623' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWYG' 'sip-files00130.jp2'
64db5b5f9ee1cf11b043d00bd5c549f5
1ca2d850055bd5fde41feec5ca4538ce5da6017a
'2012-06-28T20:48:50-04:00'
describe
'121528' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWYH' 'sip-files00286.jpg'
fb659935c486d2fca7c1430d58f0b728
7d68a486deabea5f9477fd9ec2226179b2e95de5
'2012-06-28T20:56:59-04:00'
describe
'44139' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWYI' 'sip-files00116.QC.jpg'
a25379f1a63fd569b110a56e591b5fcd
5c8ebcee4e326d8ab3863869795134d96242a79e
describe
'250436' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWYJ' 'sip-files00121.jp2'
5c499575a304f5ac81fcd8f23208681a
5006648a4f433f344e3c2b987021283786f0b68c
'2012-06-28T20:52:52-04:00'
describe
'11764' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWYK' 'sip-files00212thm.jpg'
462ab1e4b5e8d7149030376fb9703fff
bdfa4bf958a8206d7924d23b1648a3bf9fd00d88
describe
'211217' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWYL' 'sip-files00051.jp2'
325accf9863a335d9d674c9e5f2ee65f
a3a5b6ce27498324c72adf208a3639009709be10
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWYM' 'sip-files00213.tif'
fe197cbc7e03652812eed25561086fd3
fb1cd57b995633fc8e177cfe44a23cb856e50b0c
'2012-06-28T20:45:07-04:00'
describe
'3396' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWYN' 'sip-files00038thm.jpg'
900b2655f7eaf973317c7829ba3adab2
b3ec5ce1a43c7307027de128c6619694cf3a4bb6
describe
'1548' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWYO' 'sip-files00185.txt'
862ae139e695f88c53420c9f29bf6d0f
3649a20e1e97364a33ac465a9bf97843fd515896
describe
'1519' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWYP' 'sip-files00051.txt'
6662433991b342cef6b2ded576dfab4b
317dc95dbe4cb32f866003b82172b128abb01d76
'2012-06-28T20:56:20-04:00'
describe
'1703680' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWYQ' 'sip-files00028.tif'
9a28b57cbc27ce06c563968837a0619a
7f58c7aaf200c8031a1ea29197c16126c4c72be7
'2012-06-28T20:52:17-04:00'
describe
'214651' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWYR' 'sip-files00064.jp2'
b341f76adf4e53d6bbcadf566142cf12
93a8cd5c9e24e5f9a558920152ac2d7a4183af98
'2012-06-28T20:55:10-04:00'
describe
'41677' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWYS' 'sip-files00167.QC.jpg'
ef473e9705d5e973efedc9f6bf790941
47c1867ec4b25ee18d1820b3bd6f0f2758c32142
'2012-06-28T20:55:47-04:00'
describe
'205913' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWYT' 'sip-files00189.jp2'
45efef4130bd576b3e386b77a7845e83
bba6d7853ab866e0d59d094c2d0784ed271f18cb
'2012-06-28T20:50:11-04:00'
describe
'111443' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWYU' 'sip-files00030.jpg'
f574fdaf80d9dd3d3993bce81a5b85f9
d6c299042d76b12f455d1acdce566b5a4ab3663a
'2012-06-28T20:51:34-04:00'
describe
'227304' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWYV' 'sip-files00272.jp2'
46d26e8e65f3e2aac4cd02e95f71b70b
95b389562e29599a2205271e4aa6ead131149cf8
'2012-06-28T20:50:31-04:00'
describe
'42224' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWYW' 'sip-files00189.QC.jpg'
f1a7f106ef005e193987144cc69cd653
54ec9713774f6a5e80ca787d5a8e02a47641f1d8
describe
'32363' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWYX' 'sip-files00311.jpg'
680ae5a80d0c081fccd434aa8ef8bba3
3321957d3bd976c2e4e82bdcacef4c67ae54e363
'2012-06-28T20:56:48-04:00'
describe
'44145' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWYY' 'sip-files00102.QC.jpg'
028d35bfae0bc84d444d4c017825f981
0bc99d8559dda2cedafc4a9be6cdde4db04c4974
'2012-06-28T20:47:36-04:00'
describe
'211737' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWYZ' 'sip-files00143.jp2'
f3aaf26179032a42e25c282e8a5c1815
84252c0f93cf2c29354d0dea2ac73db3db67df46
'2012-06-28T20:55:58-04:00'
describe
'125497' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWZA' 'sip-files00228.jpg'
16fa40ff64bb26a19ffb95f669753bdd
4ff5bd561d8b8f5e091f628c9f61a4c9b19d179d
'2012-06-28T20:53:34-04:00'
describe
'11421' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWZB' 'sip-files00214thm.jpg'
c555d076de55640d8540c95e257cf5fa
067db961bdd38085e93d0df812430a98c0760873
'2012-06-28T20:56:24-04:00'
describe
'1704676' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWZC' 'sip-files00056.tif'
588736dda4630e5db4b3a3b5be459125
3f9a633ed9536d7f18fd944cf90b871a038c0c73
describe
'6748' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWZD' 'sip-files00178.pro'
bebc084c358d73001bb20ef798edc108
4cb5cba2becbfe993d33c776dc26547ffd7cf1ff
'2012-06-28T20:46:31-04:00'
describe
'1703928' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWZE' 'sip-files00233.tif'
323c6a42b0094bbdea2e1cce81f474cc
a9654cb342344032b24dfcf100dacd6c17552438
'2012-06-28T20:44:13-04:00'
describe
'37744536' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWZF' 'sip-files00002.tif'
f7f2f38e9e1b99b9f4e0e10b39b59cd2
a4c573a55f58c41ae1c5e9601a4c3c4cddd9ebba
'2012-06-28T20:49:22-04:00'
describe
'1489' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWZG' 'sip-files00149.txt'
059c3cc7eb129e25778e3522816dc5c0
dce1c3f5c413a45775668732953fcbfb61a34f2c
'2012-06-28T20:45:19-04:00'
describe
'1704124' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWZH' 'sip-files00260.tif'
9f9303291621398c0bae2e14d177fcbf
267e8aa1e791f1cd89e76ce720499a9234b5fc75
'2012-06-28T20:46:29-04:00'
describe
'123664' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWZI' 'sip-files00296.jpg'
773f7993086c55baff5c8dc8da5b9775
f1a5b22d606a4267bb0df60b796ebf4bc72fff5a
'2012-06-28T20:45:36-04:00'
describe
'210687' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWZJ' 'sip-files00102.jp2'
be08374f4acc6adc2149d6858ca8adc5
a6f1a11b6cd59a9f6e59773d8bef9b1b941db6e4
'2012-06-28T20:47:43-04:00'
describe
'43879' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWZK' 'sip-files00250.QC.jpg'
ec05cb2309b313bbf81600dbc53301a9
2c5c91bb908576d86b0af6a17d20e953d04e3d33
'2012-06-28T20:46:18-04:00'
describe
'204927' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWZL' 'sip-files00207.jp2'
893451fcbd370938886e8c4b6a705cb6
d88fa4b38bbe1fc481899d9652e4d5516686142b
describe
'42284' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWZM' 'sip-files00188.QC.jpg'
a26efa9372a20d092193d44ec16a4c23
782227fba561f27a9ac00e667fdd92a888211f53
'2012-06-28T20:47:38-04:00'
describe
'1523' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWZN' 'sip-files00146.txt'
6cd1abeffd1d37bc93790b78777bb2e8
269760050e47a4e76587fdd8afa08f887c16f38d
'2012-06-28T20:52:14-04:00'
describe
'1704100' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWZO' 'sip-files00143.tif'
38380c400348d62d9e0fdf618469aeb9
b3b8b1d551d3317173130eba4a26e7e86ece37ff
'2012-06-28T20:45:35-04:00'
describe
'109606' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWZP' 'sip-files00055.jpg'
a1dbed3a67bc1dc924e7b36a2bdcabd6
96d327b0c9dcd6b2eb877d12493341b506fed22a
'2012-06-28T20:51:50-04:00'
describe
'202278' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWZQ' 'sip-files00263.jp2'
33e9a13e73ea161b01ad6070150d17a5
cb6d2bedfc45aacb017ce239571ceeeb9107a019
'2012-06-28T20:48:25-04:00'
describe
'124578' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWZR' 'sip-files00021.jpg'
a6a6a2f9864a845b502315378a266188
16a733b5e3633192424ab491c1e71c8186c1c51b
describe
'132222' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWZS' 'sip-files00078.jpg'
5744d33596c41e9e0432f8e6dd21271a
0a57d7fad9af82d7bae1a6809ef7fc10115903d1
'2012-06-28T20:49:32-04:00'
describe
'9873' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWZT' 'sip-files00303thm.jpg'
93d331bcf667ed989e82dacaa6cd529b
fb498af84201f5626a2b89748539ef58c1fbb811
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWZU' 'sip-files00064thm.jpg'
f249b673bbb54e068f9396b61bc391f3
8ab8210f74c5ef14055524ace3e3d48694729a03
describe
'113750' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWZV' 'sip-files00199.jpg'
da5e3bfcf48d9309c2c73c722d2641dc
d1a117a07bb2d11137c7da4e36225fb18243f2c6
'2012-06-28T20:49:04-04:00'
describe
'218676' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWZW' 'sip-files00226.jp2'
8bc0daf856c5a34f0c5e5201f071e9b4
aa731ce0294794e0ef4cc32496595d21dbabebb6
describe
'40514' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWZX' 'sip-files00265.QC.jpg'
28ba517092ee249f710783543e319f9c
591739606f2b2af3494172dada4ef65196d15862
'2012-06-28T20:45:11-04:00'
describe
'99513' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWZY' 'sip-files00308.jpg'
30f0f79fb90f90c1f077de706859aa91
d2bc8e6e32cf8e9ba0be2832477468e539653d15
'2012-06-28T20:57:10-04:00'
describe
'1704688' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAWZZ' 'sip-files00046.tif'
57a36ca0eeb88ef069d76e4a416b718a
62f503318ab2182537efe8eed5b860d04f514ba4
describe
'201264' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXAA' 'sip-files00295.jp2'
1f38404008c33b534e3c77d4228ac488
8306471faf3c3dca72865e76824237bdf3fb2ed4
'2012-06-28T20:50:22-04:00'
describe
'1137' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXAB' 'sip-files00121.txt'
5efbdcf7ccf30a7cc8a125f1fea0f735
333faac561d4723b0076396cacf4fdc10ccdbd6f
'2012-06-28T20:48:54-04:00'
describe
'39434' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXAC' 'sip-files00284.pro'
149c22bde28f542177176d494f5da38d
544f9503bac29debead09118f9899c283a1c1c9e
describe
'208480' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXAD' 'sip-files00133.jp2'
6fa51c55ca55a756986ed8664694219b
7efe186cf16d0d70edc136b086fb18f82025b31e
'2012-06-28T20:47:24-04:00'
describe
'39876' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXAE' 'sip-files00039.jpg'
ee9312d21281556c7206ea5b842b8e72
91e28ed252a2b8b5aae8786e8cdd257dbd2c8b9d
'2012-06-28T20:57:14-04:00'
describe
'219897' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXAF' 'sip-files00246.jp2'
96b11b61204d3f9e6c9372918f03998a
594a6c9e7faeee9038be9743c4e0b8dc46f83c94
'2012-06-28T20:45:15-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXAG' 'sip-files00138.tif'
8a874ac326b2c1e505bb22f6f3fcd1ac
dec13a3da550ab92cf21aac4175f66f138d4a129
'2012-06-28T20:46:39-04:00'
describe
'1730' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXAH' 'sip-files00294.txt'
e110379dd512fbaf9ef1b0c8ad892e90
83720d64717e68a53e43299adc573a4e4460f9b1
describe
'122270' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXAI' 'sip-files00167.jpg'
5aca4fc336e86db069a387c8671b0106
1fcd260cf265e7e0662031aebadd5073d409823c
describe
'2976' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXAJ' 'sip-files00099thm.jpg'
8de7b1472ed78518bba3252bbaba5339
96897bdc5c10ab9aec7ac1a9450c321dc7b07f8f
describe
'1479' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXAK' 'sip-files00170.txt'
51023c68d994578418e52601ba3acab9
16604ce74222380b7d32ea1650fd1ca60970fbea
'2012-06-28T20:55:45-04:00'
describe
'76502' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXAL' 'sip-files00015.jpg'
1b467ace5f8b8a9e27dc2cf4ed946c4b
904b92110e851da55a25e0bf802e702ecd59eef1
'2012-06-28T20:48:04-04:00'
describe
'42884' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXAM' 'sip-files00280.QC.jpg'
64de3f5b5a448cf2b0991f3308ab5ea1
afaeb3cbd197b4dfc33d29bf7206c061e8d98099
'2012-06-28T20:52:20-04:00'
describe
'224874' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXAN' 'sip-files00054.jp2'
166d6c6e5d6bab3bfcc646b35ebcd99d
d83707ff7922a88b3d8876f612262a73c6b50b9b
'2012-06-28T20:56:01-04:00'
describe
'764' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXAO' 'sip-files00099.pro'
a69b63d70e3c5576b7075905922a172f
6887cf24eda2a4f6aefdc92af66dcb2f76f08158
describe
'40265' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXAP' 'sip-files00243.pro'
806f9eed15607365a6974ea8eb48484f
906e5691a75101918783539d0d6f8724005e2444
'2012-06-28T20:49:30-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXAQ' 'sip-files00018.tif'
a528f80f483d8980d15ba30cba6e0f06
e6f036c303468bf32eb4da728f296e53159d1bd3
'2012-06-28T20:51:04-04:00'
describe
'212818' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXAR' 'sip-files00095.jp2'
fb082bdd7c080fc59ad93823692e52e7
3949003eb2e52a08ff68a691a16c990792db29ea
'2012-06-28T20:54:11-04:00'
describe
'1457' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXAS' 'sip-files00108.txt'
e15eff3bc2b500baab293d7cb84e0b20
5a3bee524b39c1f6a6ddf3adf9dc4f4e7496340c
describe
'26167' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXAT' 'sip-files00117.pro'
3b0511c597e899173fbf41c647095f19
83c3753eb0ef47a7eaf62b478cd01f15da54d9bc
'2012-06-28T20:47:20-04:00'
describe
'42975' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXAU' 'sip-files00211.QC.jpg'
ba3db28d302631d37fe0a8ccf08c40d8
35944d2e183fe6b60cafd49b56c8913febeb94f6
'2012-06-28T20:54:51-04:00'
describe
'10191' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXAV' 'sip-files00171thm.jpg'
ccc806c93292b505a3c26ce15178e9f4
3dd65c80f9f1cde20a51129fe6b4cf50a4205f79
'2012-06-28T20:54:36-04:00'
describe
'9819' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXAW' 'sip-files00177thm.jpg'
9552ee08f6f36bf3e940e415e2797d39
62f12f6035ca2bdc5f5be009688ad15129c3d09d
describe
'44375' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXAX' 'sip-files00056.QC.jpg'
17009546872d3c120861021d0971f1ed
45aebe2ff39f28915071b8f4212ce5c35cb1a83a
'2012-06-28T20:55:12-04:00'
describe
'42081' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXAY' 'sip-files00244.QC.jpg'
89c269630d9e16da1ae281830bcab2be
da48c149c5f67c2f9a664a35d2de99cb018c6cc6
'2012-06-28T20:55:14-04:00'
describe
'10932' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXAZ' 'sip-files00176thm.jpg'
7bc14fb55f9b3ed4e1d90e7a1e223e6e
5c83d16cd7c32cb955adea66f8cf70bfd547c264
'2012-06-28T20:56:35-04:00'
describe
'1273' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXBA' 'sip-files00060thm.jpg'
b3c52da68d4d3ec011d080af7e667cde
888f32b3822beede4c0bda1c862ccca0b945ad9f
describe
'1702912' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXBB' 'sip-files00291.tif'
667f5e7208ac7867c024567df525f50e
0f9f20ed1ce147b60a1c2a309d3e55a54b2b397f
'2012-06-28T20:48:53-04:00'
describe
'42789' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXBC' 'sip-files00095.QC.jpg'
cd7bee3c1c3c8375a4e2fda344bfd85c
245d6c0e2f55ba79db4ef8cd51fb3bcbbb4ff8e3
'2012-06-28T20:54:12-04:00'
describe
'40793' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXBD' 'sip-files00204.pro'
1c59deea15a401f4b536d82e54f7435f
cede5765d92b19358388527d7dc162b8c24fb5a9
'2012-06-28T20:44:54-04:00'
describe
'41636' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXBE' 'sip-files00240.pro'
8b2d6a8de8de83b4d578eb2afde4da7a
7651c920b296991939514d4e8e42065d257e9e6f
describe
'2742' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXBF' 'sip-files00061thm.jpg'
377298177635d95920314b6eeb83a171
2b54df1b3ea02dccdfa1324b4130a748531bd032
'2012-06-28T20:49:15-04:00'
describe
'39136' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXBG' 'sip-files00153.pro'
f983f03d5a962bde3519f4fa4ee7b4f2
626c760211307069395a1310c90dfcd1c985b022
'2012-06-28T20:53:29-04:00'
describe
'41435' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXBH' 'sip-files00147.QC.jpg'
02cfc488bc2dacebcf9ba743c81fead2
65e6f87198cf5125dfb4f29ca876319435aaafc7
'2012-06-28T20:55:02-04:00'
describe
'1462' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXBI' 'sip-files00055.txt'
9d6f16957a5f9b8ceb74fa20cd861bee
5d6de2ed355338b6e312390ee28422e86cce7253
describe
'11356' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXBJ' 'sip-files00264thm.jpg'
0a78a6e642416e1b2fc2d02d9127bbd1
cedca0e0c69ca2d05e01d5a6e46846f745d060d2
'2012-06-28T20:52:25-04:00'
describe
'122630' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXBK' 'sip-files00092.jpg'
e0a8f640c87f7713232a575c4e250652
ff8f71c25ca7f169ee85f209fcee43f72f7c6e05
'2012-06-28T20:55:21-04:00'
describe
'41093' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXBL' 'sip-files00215.pro'
f650dda93a5ae5d007e67db3467815ea
c9b408cea7bef343c066da0e1d7619881fe501b8
'2012-06-28T20:54:58-04:00'
describe
'41089' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXBM' 'sip-files00258.pro'
7bdea32d78335b5935d61ab0a97b1d9b
65d56b10219ce1131aba055abef03a56edf99c01
'2012-06-28T20:45:52-04:00'
describe
'44002' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXBN' 'sip-files00260.QC.jpg'
b98d8845c961fad31282f97f2cce7939
6ebb922319bf405b64bf08048a9344c179083e98
'2012-06-28T20:54:56-04:00'
describe
'73' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXBO' 'sip-files00217.txt'
04e36b72a4417d4ea5f6c31d543253f3
50e9305bfe5e94152dc94cefb8a32d600eae2709
'2012-06-28T20:52:54-04:00'
describe
'41199' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXBP' 'sip-files00278.pro'
59f70c18edfce33223d9b4cfd5863797
0c4c2dd85cbfd339ec1ab479a4f9a73bb72a0a26
'2012-06-28T20:53:37-04:00'
describe
'213191' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXBQ' 'sip-files00225.jp2'
779658fdd991bd793faafa662cbc249a
857539d9fae3a22e44c8ddb41b2710a9702893f1
'2012-06-28T20:55:55-04:00'
describe
'1532' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXBR' 'sip-files00093.txt'
281006ead263e8eb37e1ed1374499f0d
e712200ab0b2cec4b2c8bf6eb95473641b686bb4
describe
'10874' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXBS' 'sip-files00284thm.jpg'
62369a02a9100413472614425b1fa4a7
b04f4841bb384b19df4313868923657fa6f946c2
'2012-06-28T20:46:33-04:00'
describe
'116190' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXBT' 'sip-files00043.jpg'
d64255567b69082938c757ef000007fd
c9db2e3882cd0b6cde69b466bd399931af6c454e
'2012-06-28T20:55:56-04:00'
describe
'11590' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXBU' 'sip-files00224thm.jpg'
b1dad6ade8fe013831ac0bdd70638484
a5de09fa7728432859a38cde1053ef56d1f8fb76
describe
'122911' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXBV' 'sip-files00036.jpg'
2cc5f52c93a0122773b34658e3d445ce
895e2824cdd5d86ea3c77f359a590c3385a8fd49
'2012-06-28T20:44:14-04:00'
describe
'11147' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXBW' 'sip-files00050thm.jpg'
a459a9d2e12efcee3a714a4b67f4200b
e5af78d48d2ec40d61af3cbdd5c17c5287f09542
'2012-06-28T20:53:31-04:00'
describe
'44162' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXBX' 'sip-files00288.jpg'
1cac97a384e5169272f1d80cfcbd40a0
563b81599589f77cb7f3a330b3dd6d4e4d1452f5
'2012-06-28T20:45:43-04:00'
describe
'204609' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXBY' 'sip-files00035.jp2'
e8c152aa49b299b5c2d2b32f6582d09a
3bca5350f8c23b235ec8e49d0040ac255f9c2471
'2012-06-28T20:52:46-04:00'
describe
'1527' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXBZ' 'sip-files00280.txt'
1cea8aac6a531f42ca436ffda88a3c9a
53cfbbcd74bb5973cb5490b2681c8047dba1babf
'2012-06-28T20:49:59-04:00'
describe
'204992' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXCA' 'sip-files00215.jp2'
a3ce4a27f33ee334aaec9037e1f0eb69
1b64fbb072eeb785504047ebfcb70d7d68f9d8f4
'2012-06-28T20:54:13-04:00'
describe
'81036' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXCB' 'sip-files00254.jp2'
b57fd396ef00f4693ebb87edcb79dfd0
54c97d7d0d74f849e93557c2f2b5848322abda43
describe
'92908' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXCC' 'sip-files00313.jp2'
cde4d5163df116307b0ca03d55e50d65
8d3cb1e05ff64279fc9def03033453dfe343647c
describe
'27016' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXCD' 'sip-files00027.pro'
13be989cad560299507683b9296dd41a
cd8a496fbfef96e3b7b817dd2f1909390e040384
'2012-06-28T20:49:34-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXCE' 'sip-files00080.tif'
a6335b8ac8fb0d75f27d09dfc2b38fa5
05e2099d2ecf72dc248ddb55f6b63567148b742b
'2012-06-28T20:55:59-04:00'
describe
'43037' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXCF' 'sip-files00202.QC.jpg'
009f8add0be8c473cbf4cc305caa71d0
eb78a0f00163d5d38e6d08afcc8ad368cda98674
'2012-06-28T20:51:10-04:00'
describe
'41217' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXCG' 'sip-files00189.pro'
8ac5694ef24020240e24b69adf61080f
debe3a91eeafc00f60f266a13d7905387f12228e
describe
'122559' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXCH' 'sip-files00211.jpg'
5ba29e7bccb4d96a5aef045ac81baab4
8cae379a49250999f70c4a70608b59c4c324d61a
'2012-06-28T20:51:36-04:00'
describe
'44228' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXCI' 'sip-files00168.QC.jpg'
239a0fa8b7bb7bdeb050d0e9c718bfc7
f34dcdddec48a1f8de441eaacb7d366acf06b750
'2012-06-28T20:48:26-04:00'
describe
'203139' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXCJ' 'sip-files00149.jp2'
63185604f0be46905a117203a1cd72c3
3a358db5789c0d1670dba5a9f5ea03c69d5ab6fe
'2012-06-28T20:45:48-04:00'
describe
'119879' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXCK' 'sip-files00231.jpg'
38c60a736aabae5aa7e4bf2723f33099
e8bfc32a8ea6ee0ac9f477e878102f7d344ef4d4
describe
'40168' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXCL' 'sip-files00287.pro'
f289fde6dabdeb31015f725549dfec42
9ab55b3e26aa048afe5787aa15d56c7fbf8bbfb9
'2012-06-28T20:45:12-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXCM' 'sip-files00155.tif'
d4e2aabc3c36ed09a711dd0cc8f3556d
37d607191e4d32027bcb88c121b48900c9f478e8
'2012-06-28T20:49:56-04:00'
describe
'1815' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXCN' 'sip-files00104.txt'
913d63d41c8ef11165595adf7a1853e8
0270367d0c471d58bd8d81da9549de91cf09b579
'2012-06-28T20:47:57-04:00'
describe
Invalid character
'1454' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXCO' 'sip-files00296.txt'
b12da5170138397273ef4cf2d692c6ec
c9c2bb3b856dd49398fb6dd800e472fb35aa43e7
'2012-06-28T20:51:02-04:00'
describe
'240674' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXCP' 'sip-files00046.jp2'
7ed74e91cf50dd0212fdabcb8b438fa1
188b81a4ed5265f9e2d4c26e776884ca7b6cbc18
'2012-06-28T20:49:44-04:00'
describe
'41940' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXCQ' 'sip-files00135.pro'
aa141845d1385b689e75b9a6f5b5a07f
e62cca91421b29132e3d5e3a90a53b00cddc1e58
'2012-06-28T20:49:50-04:00'
describe
'121827' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXCR' 'sip-files00281.jpg'
2bce0a44c4bf6500fff347b70e80ce94
eb3ce1ec862eef7754af7d04e5098ee8f03e2a6d
'2012-06-28T20:52:43-04:00'
describe
'129576' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXCS' 'sip-files00266.jpg'
9975f704055640e0ac3f2244034c06ba
f40bae27c6e954f85aa235a1db5f90a808eeeb99
describe
'11197' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXCT' 'sip-files00278thm.jpg'
1d81110add82324ecee4937af115c25f
f43df6b841c3e8be01f903171e146789408bc732
'2012-06-28T20:45:28-04:00'
describe
'202575' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXCU' 'sip-files00049.jp2'
afadf322e0418aa484a2516e07159dd6
b42aafbce4a1600e8f33c542cb91fbf767c65a42
'2012-06-28T20:52:55-04:00'
describe
'40879' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXCV' 'sip-files00156.pro'
e9dd7002717c7c85af42c9df24f880c8
d85bb0053ac4814326177c0c6c2cb15eec1282b6
describe
'1756652' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXCW' 'sip-files00200.tif'
7264d4b64453abe826416842b935f595
d6dab885e8118f3bffb5556055286bd6d2fc8db9
'2012-06-28T20:57:22-04:00'
describe
'1697920' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXCX' 'sip-files00038.tif'
7db000faa4dd4feb3e2fb3f49d192860
44b64b57bd57c6a6eb13c1f874290d76faf450ad
'2012-06-28T20:46:28-04:00'
describe
'11422' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXCY' 'sip-files00082.jpg'
d47078fe028afa92adc2ef4c0de36236
f7a5bf11cfd1f1b257d4e71b38a95c32f5114eb2
'2012-06-28T20:49:29-04:00'
describe
'39845' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXCZ' 'sip-files00025.jpg'
d7d7f77655a548495202fc303b13b366
2648b5b825a86bf5703a628b27cabad35c5e74bf
describe
'1587' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXDA' 'sip-files00242.txt'
2dc7b06c43420d4a60b2ea0aa623c609
e5299d8b86045ef6c1b8a1ba85c64811566ad186
describe
'1477' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXDB' 'sip-files00284.txt'
f4154b1a61ec7d9a730388eec4a34608
63425a103aa7c9e67e51363bce07e7319fc34a18
'2012-06-28T20:50:00-04:00'
describe
'11043' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXDC' 'sip-files00026.jpg'
5bd06fe3f2303eee06c733caa499ed19
038bc0d53c69a4f6e4381739ee3b880f0f8edf8f
'2012-06-28T20:48:37-04:00'
describe
'237059' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXDD' 'sip-files00078.jp2'
e4bcd310d73674d933bbc1f76327cf7f
b88057d9b6d03849ed2898cb02ad0e5ebeedc01a
'2012-06-28T20:49:17-04:00'
describe
'21032' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXDE' 'sip-files00015.pro'
4d3ce1c61808494f45b5bc4c68ddb9ce
ac6b95e20c7e7315a825d06cfe50b27dac764b0a
'2012-06-28T20:50:36-04:00'
describe
'10688' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXDF' 'sip-files00037thm.jpg'
07014a8604efa0e68cdfa263a5f3be77
a1eafe616d77752645b570c699252a81cbed6a0e
'2012-06-28T20:51:07-04:00'
describe
'42945' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXDG' 'sip-files00282.QC.jpg'
a2bc4c55072e0d67b93c5d57948871e2
e87523581d103ffffc8dd7ad8b4a3f2ada293fe2
describe
'42849' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXDH' 'sip-files00206.QC.jpg'
6b9ceb983d913bb421137d080f0d3e89
6d74c5de0137867898c5b2250085ab3f66179660
'2012-06-28T20:51:17-04:00'
describe
'37152' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXDI' 'sip-files00055.QC.jpg'
f657555dee76af3d7a254300ef38ff00
ef00811d82370b075d27f636a087b25e43580bab
'2012-06-28T20:54:43-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXDJ' 'sip-files00160.pro'
3703f7fd973a9f93946fd17a833a6b9e
763810d6d39c0c6d17d682ad27021ed0c0db73d3
describe
'39612' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXDK' 'sip-files00295.pro'
1e71292688003fe3cf39c095f2bc8e0b
09f16e6d41ba04c5dbe32559b8f60fd258bfd631
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXDL' 'sip-files00198.tif'
c16d145c6d999041789799fb000812e3
54fbcc0688623bee90961896447c3d367d4c93f2
'2012-06-28T20:49:38-04:00'
describe
'226433' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXDM' 'sip-files00232.jp2'
dfa76c1ee3b08b3d1e5e69ed1b8d98a3
3d522b56cf9b70b7b06b99f9e193012a0e385bfb
'2012-06-28T20:46:32-04:00'
describe
'212545' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXDN' 'sip-files00072.jp2'
c39b2e5ac4a9c182c48b8eb07d50b374
8a32585792109b1899defdf90c5094ba77cdce7b
'2012-06-28T20:50:06-04:00'
describe
'238900' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXDO' 'sip-files00141.jp2'
a73f82601cef863c1c7a5a7244edb4b3
187e22b7dc4fd0b706889ea9bedcc7b1c5804b1b
'2012-06-28T20:49:51-04:00'
describe
'1721' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXDP' 'sip-files00259.txt'
37f1c50a44bac2b6f8e13ede459453a1
d0e569735941fbba5a34f2ff53506b7e982f1598
describe
'28951' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXDQ' 'sip-files00121.pro'
b8702f4551846ce687559ea7176331f9
0f8f71877005a67be85ac038a3353f2bec8f571d
describe
'117973' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXDR' 'sip-files00007.jpg'
55c00d71258801317e66e0298ebe8344
ce04534d6bd06370514ff4145ef3461e125e2e39
describe
'3478' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXDS' 'sip-files00016.QC.jpg'
d9ae9e54d101db7167c9eac996ce79e4
beb0bf84837a30d6425122fac548e4c6ed29ab79
describe
'3482' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXDT' 'sip-files00062.QC.jpg'
4cf769f65f98d5379cfa8bc29c176087
784c67c4f6dde7c18db85e3dcd78a104168920e5
'2012-06-28T20:49:33-04:00'
describe
'123442' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXDU' 'sip-files00175.jpg'
cdb2c1d938383adbab2826b049854e71
86bc2e00c1143afd1ef4a32312b50a30ba759b1c
'2012-06-28T20:56:00-04:00'
describe
'11782' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXDV' 'sip-files00078thm.jpg'
b5e63b8f9c36c04d14844832f0fa4bed
3145ab246783c770f3452ab4b9ebba27e63cc148
'2012-06-28T20:44:59-04:00'
describe
'28178' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXDW' 'sip-files00083.pro'
f399e4f20cfbc3abc598a3e283da2d8b
bd52338993174bfbb22c67d2fbd6704609cedfb5
'2012-06-28T20:47:23-04:00'
describe
'10144' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXDX' 'sip-files00022thm.jpg'
e0abe58af498788f97077129d5988643
6d124f0827b76476d99afa3372b019e7b9479323
'2012-06-28T20:50:34-04:00'
describe
'42103' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXDY' 'sip-files00214.pro'
8511ad48cb1db6ec81b428759560f8b6
548603ca085a961dcb6db7d733976aebe2f894e7
'2012-06-28T20:47:56-04:00'
describe
'1704012' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXDZ' 'sip-files00031.tif'
221b2c78a244ea1a67a4b9114576a7ba
2cd57a40f1b4e57156f5328d41a6a3edbf688d61
'2012-06-28T20:55:53-04:00'
describe
'200544' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXEA' 'sip-files00075.jp2'
9876db88ce1aba7c350500247993015a
555523216fb6701a30b22a753df395edc71ec8c1
'2012-06-28T20:45:03-04:00'
describe
'40454' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXEB' 'sip-files00136.pro'
5a969273bba84bbdc34f9f89b4adb468
46bb9ee0d60977383c4e8286d756d0098b8cf56e
'2012-06-28T20:45:10-04:00'
describe
'43842' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXEC' 'sip-files00220.QC.jpg'
fa3a7594658757193835226df898a6d8
c7c91923a7115973391cb01d770671e9d21fa13c
describe
'831' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXED' 'sip-files00011.txt'
985e2a4a6f604380fb7c629dddedb077
8a03e25e557ec5c043819cff225a01c482d9c732
'2012-06-28T20:45:46-04:00'
describe
'112636' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXEE' 'sip-files00141.jpg'
855873f9d1c6a369e8a63d4ea1489bf7
ec20cf3d2054fa0257fc2083bd5d43c7d160f66b
'2012-06-28T20:50:08-04:00'
describe
'210195' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXEF' 'sip-files00058.jp2'
989cbd79759672e3b8aa083be1db0e02
ad8f11a4afd815ba33b5b289cb8ac4e194a56ef9
'2012-06-28T20:51:14-04:00'
describe
'40429' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXEG' 'sip-files00176.QC.jpg'
152376e669f0fec015a48e7bccae1aeb
4b3f279e856fe0c92b553991debf1d476ccf0ec9
'2012-06-28T20:55:27-04:00'
describe
'9991' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXEH' 'sip-files00081.QC.jpg'
c562c9beccd635ab61e95a0161f7cfca
100625180e6cc5f992b472f8e6849c647fe19436
'2012-06-28T20:45:54-04:00'
describe
'40197' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXEI' 'sip-files00053.pro'
97604b6f5711f2e29562b6b9cb314a11
6aa1f4a14865fe63e79beaf6e25c14d41a1be3a9
'2012-06-28T20:54:16-04:00'
describe
'10465' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXEJ' 'sip-files00100.jp2'
a10186c7aa40d6d608ed756c713f61fc
213e38156c6de202e21772cc4a342aedf902f859
'2012-06-28T20:56:56-04:00'
describe
'10741' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXEK' 'sip-files00189thm.jpg'
1cd33671c16050b43e3e04553776aec9
8b77927bbeacdb878561969b21396d46ceadc477
'2012-06-28T20:45:34-04:00'
describe
'40857' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXEL' 'sip-files00243.QC.jpg'
d995c975ceb2a47b2e575e505f76b260
3ece52d2c25325d552cbb00cc5da2b1148d47874
describe
'212010' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXEM' 'sip-files00282.jp2'
78f0b4ddc4c37377a62486434639397d
4e48937d956f956f2e298a6bd69dd43c091302de
describe
'119439' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXEN' 'sip-files00268.jpg'
5452704b9c4dfaa02e4f898af0db98d4
de2974b08e5319a922491b9a503c57077cadaf67
describe
'1637237' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXEO' 'sip-files00301.jp2'
5096c2882a6d650126e13cde33956def
1dbb5e4438459862dafc8cd65742a7e3764d663b
'2012-06-28T20:50:20-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXEP' 'sip-files00067.tif'
a7bb6e25ec073ca6b8ff472211b94700
9dc3ffef320a19243bcad6e84b78af4c64bea80e
'2012-06-28T20:50:19-04:00'
describe
'194938' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXEQ' 'sip-files00249.jp2'
99673ea1f40848413658e5fab748f530
8d5df7b214525cf34f764905c18588d2c0549b9b
describe
'131990' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXER' 'sip-files00084.jpg'
4087670a3ba1f20bc90cdb2ff45dc3c2
cb19e607764c7cd55ee9cba4e51e8d364864de81
'2012-06-28T20:47:33-04:00'
describe
'245638' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXES' 'sip-files00063.jp2'
c5cf8d5483b3e1daf8c2327e825e90d3
4a50188a52dc1268e4b2173980d68c2eda62ebc4
'2012-06-28T20:45:39-04:00'
describe
'46326' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXET' 'sip-files00298.QC.jpg'
f574a30e2eeedee0e15019dbf800958b
6eba4250ef7f03f9022e8dd0ca17ff65d20fa65c
describe
'39486' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXEU' 'sip-files00301.QC.jpg'
c837e91a52fa964ef8ff1b5fa8531275
4d8d3b2922aa80678ddc60cae2bc9fcd694d21ce
describe
'3516' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXEV' 'sip-files00237thm.jpg'
1297efb2b9376b1f723330a9e0cabdc4
612370c385aabb45a93f3132ded3e91b94726913
describe
'10525' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXEW' 'sip-files00203thm.jpg'
cfbc6652e6645d0a1ca28e8a0569819e
f94c0f7f9edd2891dfa427fc763f7b01c5ba82d5
'2012-06-28T20:53:25-04:00'
describe
'10822' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXEX' 'sip-files00272thm.jpg'
44bd92db88b261126259df8eca410a81
6e90a6a14ffc50d5a76992834c83e0ef183fc45b
'2012-06-28T20:48:51-04:00'
describe
'1514' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXEY' 'sip-files00263.txt'
787dcc566d19aeade1216ab7492511ce
42c6c216960b520baef0f29ca41d1c0cc7ec7088
describe
'11690' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXEZ' 'sip-files00042thm.jpg'
76d67b469ce4ae531a28339b2ba426c8
1806c2bb9b66590c99d69ac4f6dcdd5bb00fb61a
describe
'1703912' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXFA' 'sip-files00023.tif'
9ed9152ecb9cf3f5722fbbf68e3639af
0186be0e6a6411055754c6fb0f515f73adff0ad7
'2012-06-28T20:45:16-04:00'
describe
'8211' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXFB' 'sip-files00117thm.jpg'
20f6b83eb59cbdc21b5d29970ba34bd2
b5577a4cda5d9eae11c3cf6510b8d2b9a17ee779
'2012-06-28T20:48:11-04:00'
describe
'46460' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXFC' 'sip-files00292.QC.jpg'
373111b367d7466362d88213fb22f73e
fa266b393f56d61a3463a122d689fcd0904fe234
'2012-06-28T20:57:27-04:00'
describe
'1367' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXFD' 'sip-files00062thm.jpg'
6c23db3487e0ff29904adfa6c633c35a
62bdd3ede5d781e1c537165d0257d61893e40b05
describe
'88260' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXFE' 'sip-files00013.jpg'
815611c6c845df0350d738a75f9c5cbb
40e6d86e52b4fefb7ee928cd6fa9e7c608ddae9a
'2012-06-28T20:57:29-04:00'
describe
'1516' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXFF' 'sip-files00145.txt'
ef3204b52e9d7435ce50aeb6e108ca0a
ecfb77e0cf138c40001316acc346d8d15e333e68
'2012-06-28T20:47:01-04:00'
describe
'38280' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXFG' 'sip-files00296.pro'
cdb8829108c4f4dfec6e882ca6a4ebeb
d08440465965fc6612d38800a421308f6c28cb97
describe
'204399' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXFH' 'sip-files00203.jp2'
ecb163b6c28b593fe57d4a8c280d2439
91d5e1ad5811a06c186fa4441eefa6ae7c9c438b
'2012-06-28T20:55:28-04:00'
describe
'41452' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXFI' 'sip-files00174.QC.jpg'
e42cc8c3181113803d6a2ffbc5a01abd
c76ffee0214e3f0571cec0bea1237d7e9d882845
describe
'40385' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXFJ' 'sip-files00221.pro'
9def617c880d711c9be8ac88c767e1de
001473cfb56acf469cf016f01547a49032d9e83d
'2012-06-28T20:53:09-04:00'
describe
'39518' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXFK' 'sip-files00303.QC.jpg'
c394fc01710570b9e05bf83aa53eb3ce
69007d384f6efcfbf7bbef2d254004412b24bddb
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXFL' 'sip-files00024.txt'
ada012c8af84c1a70a4e46e036cab443
4d455867b8ac2090e33a12a18652ad92f17f493e
describe
'13077400' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXFM' 'sip-files00061.tif'
5050a3151b309d24d158499716e610a8
1ff053dc66612d55dab28c535abac3ed964f41fe
'2012-06-28T20:55:50-04:00'
describe
'207127' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXFN' 'sip-files00166.jp2'
9fe43947e02400c3693adbf0e31ddf9a
1fd0b6f2dcd6a331c015bf0f38af33ba45118dd6
'2012-06-28T20:53:15-04:00'
describe
'1702936' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXFO' 'sip-files00063.tif'
075a4c1c93345a46da22c9f4397c2c19
71d6f80b63dc9b14ba6e3a79ffa5d4517d53dc16
'2012-06-28T20:53:10-04:00'
describe
'1580' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXFP' 'sip-files00187.txt'
c77c781c516448d58cae2dbf884a95e7
fbb35d0c189f11d733a2c3704c77f8bb1347cf33
'2012-06-28T20:49:55-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXFQ' 'sip-files00014.tif'
cc64aa73489bd3cfd1456aeb9a4801ca
a24e621eb3031c51c4e32d637e81d84f7df92431
describe
'10208' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXFR' 'sip-files00036thm.jpg'
f9b6776c156366eeff88ef43299fcd17
fc199efd82a7ece25978851011b40bb04dfb7e79
'2012-06-28T20:52:12-04:00'
describe
'1704000' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXFS' 'sip-files00221.tif'
7d5cf3e22eeee42078b89b205d235fcd
43dbd2e16b443a156ede5a495c2a6f785169fe99
describe
'39301' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXFT' 'sip-files00172.pro'
795a238e3e99bdd49f792ae3b24221c1
4212d2382ca6527fee73bb314351e5e5f354bcf9
'2012-06-28T20:52:37-04:00'
describe
'257984' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXFU' 'sip-files00101.jp2'
8df8ac499507c21a726e7eb03cf9b2d0
5a62ef84ac01f727572fb3af4c018aa1c04570a7
describe
'211252' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXFV' 'sip-files00028.jp2'
5d1ef6d65f5bba462034f055eff4ea7e
033ea77db62be3fb2fae64dd44169959771f7d62
'2012-06-28T20:49:57-04:00'
describe
'42346' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXFW' 'sip-files00093.QC.jpg'
64dd1a572e5130d8166ce6503fdce6bf
20ca1aec84159faf90da983d0c536b7ec77fb9c7
'2012-06-28T20:47:18-04:00'
describe
'208495' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXFX' 'sip-files00261.jp2'
5831378b6b192abae9ec03c53dec35f2
bbd4b1cb52fbc49869db88f7656c9e4576fb8f22
describe
'43662' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXFY' 'sip-files00223.QC.jpg'
097a9c663a23d0e3aee0fd73350f4d40
42cf6a4e632287aedd85ba0e8afb6bd2e43fcdc5
'2012-06-28T20:49:41-04:00'
describe
'41162' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXFZ' 'sip-files00293.QC.jpg'
de30baa70e37374a5f8e4935fc53e3f4
f6b3b24b9e05bde60e8171c6e220a1fcd670c01d
'2012-06-28T20:50:12-04:00'
describe
'13077516' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXGA' 'sip-files00099.tif'
c80f6108f75e7d38e45a35d4cdce902a
d723cc9f741cafb5481b7bed6a993d6484c58b77
describe
'4609' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXGB' 'sip-files00270.jp2'
8a555722ebd2dc05fade8f196d829e56
8fad3a821afeade75c11fe479c513d43b8ac1991
'2012-06-28T20:45:53-04:00'
describe
'118045' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXGC' 'sip-files00073.jpg'
748894125699bb62b1dc04ef8030bfc6
42d75b4bcafee8f12d23e0b7e9279ff9b852cf43
'2012-06-28T20:50:44-04:00'
describe
'1484' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXGD' 'sip-files00085.txt'
017e6b27bf2ec8da04348f40bc671663
02c3c375ab699f1c96edf0f914c10d1fcd386c0d
describe
'211544' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXGE' 'sip-files00129.jp2'
7f24c2b8440a9f3e6f88d9f20475a322
4b194f5c567978f124dbed4075dfb2958fda66d7
describe
'11351' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXGF' 'sip-files00222thm.jpg'
40088de3ff7da29dc707343a2a06ab2f
f55621dadfc5f54bd5c64718ccbeb01b26edf907
'2012-06-28T20:53:16-04:00'
describe
'40555' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXGG' 'sip-files00071.pro'
5ce47106a65c5bac3818f9105b94943e
b1f966a32c19e368b44d3c71f51e85ee6a695d3c
'2012-06-28T20:46:59-04:00'
describe
'208128' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXGH' 'sip-files00169.jp2'
1c23bfb492cef3ab631681c751376fb0
aa841aa2fc6163eff58d38551eb36f698998cd29
'2012-06-28T20:53:54-04:00'
describe
'318' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXGI' 'sip-files00062.pro'
e0753b2777de8a27bdbd32a0f2ca06d8
d08002108f0c51b226199b41acfd96d1b5b33bb8
'2012-06-28T20:53:38-04:00'
describe
'38693' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXGJ' 'sip-files00030.pro'
bfaa1e80c1124482163d61ab17cef98f
e67396b4c0e97c121d0ef04c29188b650114d713
'2012-06-28T20:45:50-04:00'
describe
'1537' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXGK' 'sip-files00169.txt'
d146f7ecf4dc72e22e47ece9f6e5aa13
f9fbcc9241e016d1b40844d6ba0973330c43dac0
'2012-06-28T20:51:20-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXGL' 'sip-files00095.tif'
9e09b71915482fb002e34aa10c12bdfd
dbeaf27f093f847a8142952e4fb6b21d03e87ccd
describe
'43197' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXGM' 'sip-files00255.jpg'
c542e090f2da461be6e654a77d1d69d4
1e517bc12fb06666d294aec170c18b1f63696be5
describe
'127907' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXGN' 'sip-files00135.jpg'
c74167bdee241831e27125c580c3af84
35f57ac4cd6a1dbd5bb9fe2d161678771e51d118
describe
'11033' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXGO' 'sip-files00286thm.jpg'
31cba6ae927bc3dfa9cb02b2f790578f
6cb8f22e311a834b6e904548de65668b0b8bbacb
describe
'8521' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXGP' 'sip-files00013thm.jpg'
0bb40f99236680a6bbacf5421d261d27
d79cf5a665a3f15d6d3277abe2cbfa4e3b6527b8
'2012-06-28T20:44:35-04:00'
describe
'125944' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXGQ' 'sip-files00186.jpg'
5d931f4b4273421fffa88dbcc43792db
84f2bd147df9486d4b164aa80f26be5e6b030eb2
describe
'1704564' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXGR' 'sip-files00122.tif'
3a6a2ee88ca79fd5b2ca81668749ba35
ea9c2705074dd9ab0b076d03a4f582601f049883
'2012-06-28T20:54:48-04:00'
describe
'45634' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXGS' 'sip-files00088.QC.jpg'
5c650e7c164dcda65e4480195b6ffa72
2326ed43a8890adf47c7f8be397fa92a19bc8662
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXGT' 'sip-files00040.tif'
821bda4bb7e406d899c632d8b3f91854
655b49b4a36f928eb54162ab3adc8ecfef570887
'2012-06-28T20:48:42-04:00'
describe
'153' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXGU' 'sip-files00002.txt'
7dca1b9cfa09925cdddefda911e4acc6
eb4e56e565b881c019774b30624a20ab0f9e322a
describe
'899' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXGV' 'sip-files00269.pro'
e10b9a917ddc89e19a968bc4a10e84fc
e8fb0b3d1476463e664d57debd51a1108dc9ece2
'2012-06-28T20:51:18-04:00'
describe
'123504' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXGW' 'sip-files00133.jpg'
bd8319028b463e343b9b3bae74906c10
e4cb2596c4e41b950ec93e30253a9fa841dad8bf
'2012-06-28T20:48:03-04:00'
describe
'207668' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXGX' 'sip-files00032.jp2'
ab30eded4de305a788ccce437b4d82dc
59a63f2d0758a20ba821936c1b7ed9d1c5977e03
'2012-06-28T20:54:40-04:00'
describe
'10464' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXGY' 'sip-files00195thm.jpg'
ef829b085e531f0d50c08647a36c77b0
5d5bffd56889505914a382af13bb34141312a39b
describe
'1704088' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXGZ' 'sip-files00115.tif'
b0073fa0e6f50a574c401642bc51a597
683df0be345b52c262134ca0b55d6240da88453a
'2012-06-28T20:54:44-04:00'
describe
'41084' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXHA' 'sip-files00031.pro'
371e9c57b351a659d4400b2982deb315
ac1ed8152eaaeaed515be4c4b57fc62109e182e8
'2012-06-28T20:54:04-04:00'
describe
'64961' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXHB' 'sip-files00024.jp2'
0233b448f0ba5e560b4a5f4ce529f31e
cb8bda93b039b0644e4a90ee74f212903233efb7
describe
'1703884' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXHC' 'sip-files00293.tif'
c425f39814404c63f56522aeee2a1868
3146a6dc205795fbf3a484a8fd7fce02b84853df
'2012-06-28T20:46:12-04:00'
describe
'1704304' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXHD' 'sip-files00258.tif'
0dd663b58029829f98084c4824b9e252
c53bfb2c9b0e0d4941a2b4f13a8c5f1c97fba16c
describe
'227986' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXHE' 'sip-files00220.jp2'
b11fadb6ab28f37ddfc8dbcd31cb10e8
fb8e95f2f93396164a20e1d1e71b5d07a4dbdd87
'2012-06-28T20:50:37-04:00'
describe
'1708' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXHF' 'sip-files00088.txt'
5b1a89f9b2cad30b3b2e048a038cd5b1
57ae21a7971e2e9e79d8bac8ea7652f970b3975c
'2012-06-28T20:52:30-04:00'
describe
'1704120' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXHG' 'sip-files00223.tif'
93d95a99a0519167856736e8ba95ca26
36ecea2cbef9101be5c894b1057f40084aa74e98
describe
'204661' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXHH' 'sip-files00241.jp2'
b75404290f11b9f6209b52e309c6ca63
de68d01daf50d3e1cafe8cbb52533b074653b288
describe
'1704188' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXHI' 'sip-files00264.tif'
5e7ccdb6d0d0ad2d08226f423acaeb64
3fd56e87697e94f6d82bc2c8e988f8a4ce10b070
describe
'3300' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXHJ' 'sip-files00140.QC.jpg'
b2e4c3168f46ed0874d3469744545af3
f82173debdccf18c6d3599db2788fea9a883e11d
describe
'37280952' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXHK' 'sip-files00311.tif'
0628c36989e78d0f18768e88658dac01
2517f2a142ce84934a70d7409bbee03f600ba761
'2012-06-28T20:46:10-04:00'
describe
'196270' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXHL' 'sip-files00177.jp2'
51a0c2187bccb81656ce496f3f7eccca
ee07193b2c1658210e0e6e5c7123105a089b2053
describe
'1504' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXHM' 'sip-files00194.txt'
5bf90060f9d6fcd441a787064ca27970
feba971dae0492a5129c8384b2a970ebaec61138
'2012-06-28T20:46:03-04:00'
describe
'43712' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXHN' 'sip-files00232.QC.jpg'
239bbefaeda8bfb3fbf90fad0e5a7456
d6b500914107c0c3a80cf0029e4307508759ffea
describe
'199569' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXHO' 'sip-files00279.jp2'
e553f4085ff0f7e7d496c19e6c486fe7
2c966cb6012c6a2862847ddeebf055b1e53e5769
'2012-06-28T20:44:38-04:00'
describe
'204478' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXHP' 'sip-files00277.jp2'
93be05b8227e4da6df14e77224125b47
d77cf00196c947fbcac41b3be33e11c096551836
describe
'39854' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXHQ' 'sip-files00231.pro'
6a262c1ad6d032342fc976080a75332f
daf0714529a28b26ed0b0be55123c953ee36c1cb
'2012-06-28T20:45:55-04:00'
describe
'1472' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXHR' 'sip-files00094.txt'
1c83ee9f9b34d8e1108869cb953af719
d1e77124dcd504c2fac516544d975d43363ff9c0
'2012-06-28T20:46:34-04:00'
describe
'199346' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXHS' 'sip-files00147.jp2'
284e5b3c468d8a68a5bb93565b9a46c2
82133f47e4e62da0a92cdec0bb349a5da1aea639
'2012-06-28T20:44:11-04:00'
describe
'41628' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXHT' 'sip-files00253.QC.jpg'
b82d4d4b49123c4140af2a89f789421d
e7d38ed9cb4cabe88d5b08ae4d3e932a7c3dcee3
describe
'1704128' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXHU' 'sip-files00216.tif'
a1e8185ae2832d5040a1e0b53ec58db4
39d97ec7843eb9b330b820e22404f39348711c51
'2012-06-28T20:45:25-04:00'
describe
'1556' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXHV' 'sip-files00228.txt'
e39ed25737508b2a268552f9f483a14e
30c5f94a931d393223c3d729207cc5e6c8466d9c
describe
'11059' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXHW' 'sip-files00204thm.jpg'
89047a71cfdf5310d202eb9e533f862d
467b07c12cc3ecbfe1f3c8340851ad6841c5b5a2
'2012-06-28T20:45:06-04:00'
describe
'811383' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXHX' 'sip-files00039.jp2'
ddcab3f2248a7cd65943e14b63c2fce7
140f47fa8ab47a8998e092eff623338dba4bae76
'2012-06-28T20:55:26-04:00'
describe
'10631' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXHY' 'sip-files00020thm.jpg'
1c3885249ec07a8fe325175ad2e0d78f
621c9683cedf8cc58c0a3cab7babd19a05396a92
'2012-06-28T20:56:10-04:00'
describe
'45209' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXHZ' 'sip-files00266.QC.jpg'
66af380863b03f069a288d44179297b6
e603a49d8a098e4896b37ff02eec4e94c0db8058
'2012-06-28T20:47:19-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXIA' 'sip-files00136.tif'
f6fb3fff7910cc9b50df90888651631c
87c43c20f9753bd525f797a938c72340a6f86e32
describe
'21958' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXIB' 'sip-files00079.pro'
c3c98975c5bc0ece7433437aaf7cf27d
f853f53cc3f5a029d5f0b8f5271c002a26cd7042
'2012-06-28T20:48:06-04:00'
describe
'44712' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXIC' 'sip-files00297.pro'
4beb308d1b456c518cd6e62a92a2c5f9
df95b3477674bb35d408dcbece33394412045d77
describe
'41795' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXID' 'sip-files00252.QC.jpg'
5a472ddb03e89582f390a8aea06989e2
aacb45df4fa12adef1bca06aba9ed225ac44493c
'2012-06-28T20:48:36-04:00'
describe
'3292' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXIE' 'sip-files00005thm.jpg'
f70bee4c220b5af910992fc61903179e
d88f9d93e9ffa1e326389efa760fb6695f5dae1c
describe
'42501' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXIF' 'sip-files00058.QC.jpg'
55d0b4bbeb67d4a6fa25a6229ce7987a
e874a9455024c57556b53081ff7cb29d572024b0
describe
'10447' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXIG' 'sip-files00172thm.jpg'
7b86deb06033eeda1bf838608e12d561
094362432b5a795c93006fa653dab0d65e96b583
'2012-06-28T20:56:39-04:00'
describe
'10299' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXIH' 'sip-files00026.jp2'
9058323c23cba76f1d3871f0b0e0266a
d6c1ccc3cdc276afac27460ec6be053a44d37d19
'2012-06-28T20:48:46-04:00'
describe
'1526' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXII' 'sip-files00303.txt'
dfa2500640f8506b0064450adc30bd54
808371515790cadad1f39a9c30200b7390db1203
'2012-06-28T20:47:39-04:00'
describe
'1502' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXIJ' 'sip-files00231.txt'
8baa557da0089362be2ce1bc04cbd407
68c8210ca95383d8124f9957bef590da69f40834
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXIK' 'sip-files00156.txt'
81ab370bc212d90250b20deaea89a8a4
6375768fa44306fccabb1b8a1d8620333f1db2b2
describe
'40325' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXIL' 'sip-files00021.pro'
c7cfdd6411260adcf6ca622f9256c42e
e0ae153a76c1bbd3fca0fbd51272f7d9aa63e7e2
'2012-06-28T20:44:19-04:00'
describe
'1704232' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXIM' 'sip-files00133.tif'
e48b7de245c9895f4677f9208c02da6c
ca8a0015dc17b02e202aa3cfbd5e73d668688eea
'2012-06-28T20:54:10-04:00'
describe
'45320' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXIN' 'sip-files00304.QC.jpg'
62aa41c50c998de22525840a0d047c54
7076750902b5cdaa3f8eca4f0921686652d15468
'2012-06-28T20:47:42-04:00'
describe
'119576' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXIO' 'sip-files00243.jpg'
11916776ee5f14d84cb24d32ea2c7d27
47db50f2a93c84fecc84a86319e96edf5873ad55
describe
'46784' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXIP' 'sip-files00078.QC.jpg'
728514d2c9c4c6d442b3cc38464ca64d
350e4ab8c8f43858e0bf59aa36a5c49d9cc31355
'2012-06-28T20:50:01-04:00'
describe
'121614' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXIQ' 'sip-files00187.jpg'
ff8f3e3145bb828aa3eae0ced9dc3e95
e1b5eeecb0b9ccd6695871184ffae773c41e8717
describe
'204043' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXIR' 'sip-files00053.jp2'
5841e98e297a3687ad92c9c64431149b
41f0e9f4eab6e1f8208ab4e6c04ff3a91dde4b0c
'2012-06-28T20:49:45-04:00'
describe
'2883' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXIS' 'sip-files00179thm.jpg'
cb0ea6d10ea3ac8b4666fb10f9b4bed2
856413ec65b576cf8370a1e2c530105b79c69000
'2012-06-28T20:52:07-04:00'
describe
'223048' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXIT' 'sip-files00086.jp2'
bf9ec98768d5fcff50e5f9d6cd8f0613
ea0b359a9d4008a051e28c4e169e226505bc5761
'2012-06-28T20:50:42-04:00'
describe
'41740' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXIU' 'sip-files00209.QC.jpg'
55b74afae39c74e2bcefed6e407fe8bd
81ea74a8c1a7e3bdd9c107f4f5aa718818cd05ff
describe
'41269' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXIV' 'sip-files00127.pro'
fe3a0cdddd63f8f022ed29b614f8dae9
3f9d61e6d02fe3cae27bddec845efce272a40fc1
describe
'1521' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXIW' 'sip-files00295.txt'
1969574fc05ce161760b7f149e3f16d7
2b462b209c4f1c8268b2fe488fe216e2a058af84
describe
'220' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXIX' 'sip-files00313.pro'
70823ac45a9a69292720a371309ab753
7cd5d1a5614987387f90181862b2f36b2be4fbca
'2012-06-28T20:44:26-04:00'
describe
'13077548' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXIY' 'sip-files00269.tif'
5986a2eb538d3ba884adbd7bcbe63565
9543185bd314cb32554f879b49de212c1c3f4864
'2012-06-28T20:50:21-04:00'
describe
'115709' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXIZ' 'sip-files00170.jpg'
365402e789353b089c06a0fd34531ef1
b9963b1e2e22d6e5212514dc35e391a56557993c
'2012-06-28T20:50:33-04:00'
describe
'107016' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXJA' 'sip-files00011.jpg'
39deb60498115796e6cc7a60cb1ad99c
30553d07bebae2e0d7403d39052d7b0aaabdff56
describe
'42098' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXJB' 'sip-files00125.QC.jpg'
0989f804c5225c573218564cc4ab034e
8f26c973f3c0a69f09851d3a81d63b5f51d448d2
'2012-06-28T20:56:09-04:00'
describe
'10036' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXJC' 'sip-files00253thm.jpg'
41d47c62a4ffb89a2734037e78d46687
fa03d58df1c8721f1cc15ddbc52a9d8051bbeb59
'2012-06-28T20:56:19-04:00'
describe
'349252' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXJD' 'sip-filesUF00028241_00001.mets'
d7a74b6285cf9361f68200621f1fca81
05937851636e4f266861f7a7022e02592adb930a
'2012-06-28T20:50:15-04:00'
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/'.
'2013-12-06T06:47:58-05:00' 'mixed'
xml resolution
http://www.uflib.ufl.edu/digital/metadata/ufdc2/ufdc2.xsdhttp://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema
BROKEN_LINK http://www.uflib.ufl.edu/digital/metadata/ufdc2/ufdc2.xsd
http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema
The element type "div" must be terminated by the matching end-tag "
".
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/'.
'171743' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXJG' 'sip-files00001.jpg'
7eef0580fb525c47a2a13a1877d33da6
262523fb1187bac0e66f8f1c7b2be1dc9607a680
'2012-06-28T20:51:27-04:00'
describe
'48346' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXJH' 'sip-files00003.jpg'
fba4df6ad76eb4fd6016dfcbb8049356
e978c939e9d7db67334792dd18b9ebd3983012f9
describe
'97554' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXJI' 'sip-files00009.jpg'
2137a79f76a3feac6e119e9999539297
8864a9e688ef86b173711f032125945dad0fc5b4
'2012-06-28T20:49:07-04:00'
describe
'112960' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXJJ' 'sip-files00012.jpg'
2c3a2eece72bfee4a3150bf2453116ea
5148df9413c471d8c5fdcf5c26f07737fec563a1
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXJK' 'sip-files00014.jpg'
f84121d2fe243a4eb621ff2d9b14386e
92f89ddba39f7183ec1edf224f27fc053b0cc625
'2012-06-28T20:50:05-04:00'
describe
'11371' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXJL' 'sip-files00016.jpg'
e216531ed17397377aa81ed28be83d68
239d9e4ae994360e7a9e213839d34a0db5b734e4
describe
'47151' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXJM' 'sip-files00017.jpg'
899f8643d957526af0f3236241e8332f
6146db8e3a32e34b9003a9d7af7ccade38ff20aa
describe
'11768' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXJN' 'sip-files00018.jpg'
3f6ba34b983b7661d395c525342a5e12
b2f4b4b9e120aa923ac58d566f8d0cf4ae1c6b59
'2012-06-28T20:49:39-04:00'
describe
'112382' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXJO' 'sip-files00019.jpg'
61298caf47778bdb20efeeab7312997a
1b67d025259710d4fb0f12bf1673cb1c4e5d2c0d
'2012-06-28T20:52:06-04:00'
describe
'122984' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXJP' 'sip-files00020.jpg'
c147091e3ec26073a3ddec93f79dc297
ad33a7f4d72cdcc1cfab44660d6fb57eebe775c3
describe
'118732' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXJQ' 'sip-files00022.jpg'
5ba68d7d977c3e79bcf1a245049e6d91
d49412f5508abda39949b91274ef30be3c99a0a4
'2012-06-28T20:53:32-04:00'
describe
'119572' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXJR' 'sip-files00023.jpg'
3b4a4d568d9b58cfc6e1598614bc0800
2697ff8d21497392b95152210fcfe39da142edad
describe
'38379' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXJS' 'sip-files00024.jpg'
097f8222dcefdb8f12cb87b1566c67e9
66ab2701ecb27da16546a19457cf043f1a484087
'2012-06-28T20:53:46-04:00'
describe
'119398' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXJT' 'sip-files00029.jpg'
0114c361315d7b3a1ab61bc177432119
c5a8cf3f3cc07c96a405c7d03708550313e46f5c
'2012-06-28T20:53:01-04:00'
describe
'124294' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXJU' 'sip-files00031.jpg'
ad61da675b79ce6bca937646043924eb
32c4fe19e26935377437c054ee37c8ecc99c8a4d
describe
'119372' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXJV' 'sip-files00032.jpg'
42a57bc5dd2e83761c150cfdf70fe05d
196d8f174653ffe7e7669453afc2fa8c32186d07
describe
'122374' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXJW' 'sip-files00033.jpg'
ee90dbba201b20a2165280ed38bcda6b
d23f9b0f04dd052ad5b842e42bc8a2d0131b0501
describe
'124177' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXJX' 'sip-files00035.jpg'
777f6679eff7782c7d1b4da7cbf82e98
fbc768720dbb09cbc54f0e77ab4c460eb5c4b4ee
'2012-06-28T20:54:35-04:00'
describe
'124505' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXJY' 'sip-files00037.jpg'
1f905939a1fce2636d6cb5e6a29f8987
6b8bdb4e621b8ac2d48260d74b583f1b7df7a81f
describe
'34009' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXJZ' 'sip-files00038.jpg'
e312780d38d6cf8325cc7834f04f5fc7
316acb7139238c5f5a6ddd76af51c4932841f9ab
'2012-06-28T20:46:41-04:00'
describe
'10816' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXKA' 'sip-files00040.jpg'
eb2f6db5e1fe1e1e695808f4b9812b5d
3cb4ab26d9918aef66c07f4bce62f45334d7202c
describe
'115293' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXKB' 'sip-files00041.jpg'
3009b3891ddf1e03d70b0a00a843af74
b5963f97899c5c399a37b11de60271ea37b968ed
'2012-06-28T20:54:45-04:00'
describe
'129306' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXKC' 'sip-files00042.jpg'
b0d4289181abb48f29ec66ef97bc5745
3702e578b64ba03372ebd1f9de6295474e30cfe6
'2012-06-28T20:48:38-04:00'
describe
'128976' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXKD' 'sip-files00044.jpg'
651bed85a4ec0479179f2d7a4cb1919a
59fd2ad4318bfac63ad45372be6ab14e74ea2a58
describe
'115726' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXKE' 'sip-files00045.jpg'
1debba78f8e7638535e6aba4916d5720
3ef489902cb2965456f40258c045624071205878
'2012-06-28T20:49:01-04:00'
describe
'128721' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXKF' 'sip-files00046.jpg'
840cc79e9e0e8ea331820b765d476eba
209d963fbcd6ad391053510628ce931f31789217
'2012-06-28T20:49:10-04:00'
describe
'113886' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXKG' 'sip-files00047.jpg'
345ecf1cabc02314c94f5adf639839c4
7b838cfdc8af93b561a9e2b1ef212b058082b7ea
'2012-06-28T20:46:01-04:00'
describe
'126422' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXKH' 'sip-files00048.jpg'
0c7c0dd6d919b9eb9c1c466ecc3a775e
c9a53efc15c1cdf7fe38ad1f2fe6d9a91eb088d6
'2012-06-28T20:45:37-04:00'
describe
'116329' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXKI' 'sip-files00049.jpg'
064defdcdb23bd8815a6056a9faa0872
064163eb4348e46663ab0f8c04cde7fea89e9713
'2012-06-28T20:51:46-04:00'
describe
'128356' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXKJ' 'sip-files00050.jpg'
4377e7107a14f180bc6418e0980a305c
a69f95838383722cbf5afd217d738ecafd3c5859
describe
'117474' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXKK' 'sip-files00051.jpg'
efd4922856b15b70b3698ddd4cff5d64
be586162d752e9cede76e265fac7dd89f253c045
describe
'126350' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXKL' 'sip-files00052.jpg'
1cf4b5f67aac2f99e6386b9b513576a3
8e83ad35e9f8efe8d5322932536799912e9d7d19
'2012-06-28T20:49:28-04:00'
describe
'115450' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXKM' 'sip-files00053.jpg'
bd63f54d036133f13ab25ccab60989a6
9dbbc08ab2d797f677c4601860feb394b0c20bcc
'2012-06-28T20:44:56-04:00'
describe
'131513' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXKN' 'sip-files00054.jpg'
db2607603f2c2f07506a1708fbc569d8
a6dd11dc77a300f4c451b8b8f8e38d328c718a0f
'2012-06-28T20:44:45-04:00'
describe
'126507' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXKO' 'sip-files00056.jpg'
0e0dc9268a91e41f51f21cede7235d6a
aae922a0d957fc38b35a148b1053dfcdd166cf3b
'2012-06-28T20:54:34-04:00'
describe
'119138' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXKP' 'sip-files00057.jpg'
88904035b98febed7838ce3871e40a20
528564d59a0f64b857120f786985fcc1f7699f25
describe
'119030' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXKQ' 'sip-files00058.jpg'
f0af5db01383ec4dc1c8698b261a9b78
520067181e566b0f3bcbf43e6aa2e163b23e96d5
describe
'93436' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXKR' 'sip-files00059.jpg'
55bccddc6ee7c5eb0de7bb877b8fb3ab
6053d0202c0770d37e737ed04b49817e1774576f
'2012-06-28T20:55:01-04:00'
describe
'38543' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXKS' 'sip-files00061.jpg'
e0abb0721f50082943abd221577b0859
a98b6d993c0f2663fd5dd1b6a386c3041ee94c5f
'2012-06-28T20:48:02-04:00'
describe
'111268' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXKT' 'sip-files00063.jpg'
acb699f27778816b0fa08ddeae8e7dde
b27a6881678359848d07d91b8e9c8941358d4a06
'2012-06-28T20:51:52-04:00'
describe
'129234' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXKU' 'sip-files00064.jpg'
a6b8f65d500eafaf968e5e1936211df5
93931db6f662b463cb7ecd574e25dc58d9f28aee
'2012-06-28T20:50:14-04:00'
describe
'160317' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXKV' 'sip-files00065.jpg'
74697572d52e77bd421bf78a10a3c69b
a05b07d95b379626ebcd2eb08d064b5c129862b9
'2012-06-28T20:56:21-04:00'
describe
'121705' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXKW' 'sip-files00067.jpg'
cde5c9c24e33355a7ec427469467e901
444d44833467796cc6d38cf87cd4e1de46a4b2d2
'2012-06-28T20:52:38-04:00'
describe
'133446' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXKX' 'sip-files00068.jpg'
57a3cd90d5a2f85150457e9c30414908
53a9a52c647c3b471a057096d20605849083af86
'2012-06-28T20:47:52-04:00'
describe
'117217' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXKY' 'sip-files00069.jpg'
77fa92e273d7f52ee2dfcc4dd0566a8c
3e97fa8f808fc146ab54f1503875533a03c2f7df
describe
'131662' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXKZ' 'sip-files00070.jpg'
4ad1ec5c72081f29fabe8ed923dfc46d
37911ee8ce96556e73ed0519c75631590dd92425
'2012-06-28T20:49:42-04:00'
describe
'124389' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXLA' 'sip-files00072.jpg'
9f665c2c90147a7d0a6a81df6fc45be4
31c510cda1be3c24d99a21f1c3b3f7c841fcb162
'2012-06-28T20:56:45-04:00'
describe
'134021' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXLB' 'sip-files00074.jpg'
1240b8b209b0574697accd132a18d6a2
a48e671447a571539ff75ffe9533cb38786df1aa
'2012-06-28T20:47:13-04:00'
describe
'119069' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXLC' 'sip-files00075.jpg'
00fe75bf56106710d8ebbc36fcdf6807
c1be8ae570e70f6ccf48fa5ed2d67692ffa16566
'2012-06-28T20:45:14-04:00'
describe
'104778' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXLD' 'sip-files00077.jpg'
1e2a13bb32b88ff6e237a56e94f062a3
2117622b84b28c5ae038cd467c9e7eccde5051bf
'2012-06-28T20:49:40-04:00'
describe
'80409' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXLE' 'sip-files00079.jpg'
e97bd3a81da7e9322957d7de6488acde
c8cf3136ad140448c4cb7719935bc19035bddcde
'2012-06-28T20:46:02-04:00'
describe
'10546' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXLF' 'sip-files00080.jpg'
d3871bb3c7291fb9886dfc28ced34cf5
b2a77bd9e9fef46a2d93094b811eb7ea2d54962b
describe
'36631' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXLG' 'sip-files00081.jpg'
113540cfdb570120c8e2cd159e1b6175
023ae18a9bf7c46deadbfc97954f532f332c6d55
'2012-06-28T20:48:24-04:00'
describe
'118927' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXLH' 'sip-files00083.jpg'
52b08104ab48d14fdba365a17f36f62c
71d76dab193dd7388e793b09bd7855f7a9988a71
'2012-06-28T20:57:25-04:00'
describe
'119999' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXLI' 'sip-files00085.jpg'
f87ac36a931ce4fa9bfd2f601a9c2497
d4ea42e3ea7a102d3392ed97edb8edcd55c93b10
'2012-06-28T20:46:53-04:00'
describe
'131664' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXLJ' 'sip-files00086.jpg'
39d77c168c511adbf59002b5b54ecfcd
4d88f186b8abb7849c1b9d28b48a5dafdfed4afb
describe
'119950' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXLK' 'sip-files00087.jpg'
5e834bc4dea0cd0939f45c5bbafc42f3
4be4c0f860352d9de6883999b2ea6b1f32c66449
describe
'124291' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXLL' 'sip-files00088.jpg'
106cd45350f545a5a9ae1bf6dfcbc6f3
a9187e6ae812415cce421a0512f26122b7df45ea
'2012-06-28T20:47:02-04:00'
describe
'123600' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXLM' 'sip-files00089.jpg'
f3e64318aa913ca6ed5b09520f3142be
22f2494920045249f142beb8b7dcb7fad5e29593
'2012-06-28T20:53:07-04:00'
describe
'124124' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXLN' 'sip-files00091.jpg'
12b5bc7a00d66a2001115d64517b6284
3b2461b0ee501fb92247ea04a05636bc3be130cd
'2012-06-28T20:50:55-04:00'
describe
'123348' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXLO' 'sip-files00093.jpg'
ea273a6e8ed2ff0be8713ed6f8b36de6
f4fc77ae1a17c229b3506de6d51d84dedea2b4e3
'2012-06-28T20:52:21-04:00'
describe
'123851' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXLP' 'sip-files00094.jpg'
3e5d1de38f849e6ffd08606ef6fc523c
66377abbdd273c821181c8584c246cda17c9439c
describe
'10626' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXLQ' 'sip-files00098.jpg'
36df26fe5ac6355e72440374df9c2cae
9dea773a4c46afe78924ffcaba30114fe0834fc3
describe
'41329' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXLR' 'sip-files00099.jpg'
591569a59b7186580f87ab6fdfa66e04
17d175caa6a161e71028775d2623ce0ae45145d8
'2012-06-28T20:44:55-04:00'
describe
'11051' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXLS' 'sip-files00100.jpg'
873376c2695640c2821b4289ea2f552d
7dfb4d3b23d258e51dccedb78a677086456cd309
'2012-06-28T20:46:44-04:00'
describe
'122868' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXLT' 'sip-files00101.jpg'
a699784b7168118b6868238de80e53e0
49132ccecf9e5c56b3d8981a827de041ea617304
describe
'127375' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXLU' 'sip-files00102.jpg'
2652c8a95cf3e0d61c724a03bb9fc86c
5e78830a0c7dca848aa44009dee9205612495d26
describe
'123436' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXLV' 'sip-files00103.jpg'
8e40d86d257ed2108f60c3004b70b522
a697f09d4b84ee9a81999c524039238c3a34a7e9
'2012-06-28T20:56:57-04:00'
describe
'125066' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXLW' 'sip-files00104.jpg'
863a72596ca13fac68474ad3b093ddea
11987fe4110e1054287eb837fdbc89b0a67a0091
'2012-06-28T20:50:59-04:00'
describe
'122154' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXLX' 'sip-files00106.jpg'
8c1496b4f0c0dbddebca706f4d7b7248
d94b063b6570ab1a0fd382a65536e7643c715a8d
'2012-06-28T20:53:58-04:00'
describe
'124042' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXLY' 'sip-files00107.jpg'
1da37a2e2ead2223070a39fa0042498f
507c3e93ae48665affa99e0a1af63129a6d5d697
describe
'119926' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXLZ' 'sip-files00108.jpg'
32b54a4d1d1c49d0798e925e820bb727
f059055da7c97483e10ab9347e51b89b9e35c1ed
'2012-06-28T20:48:30-04:00'
describe
'120576' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXMA' 'sip-files00109.jpg'
67e1cc3d13f3d6cc0b8ccc8c55aad3f6
f17dca25a6ab11915120d1b1eb6bfe0fea0450b0
describe
'124491' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXMB' 'sip-files00110.jpg'
97060fc5a899aed7b0edd82542002849
b1f09247d318aa45bed21cdcdfed76210bef618b
'2012-06-28T20:45:49-04:00'
describe
'118319' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXMC' 'sip-files00111.jpg'
3cee8dd4f554bdda117593538b0581ad
312d138c489af90133496ceb530f5c4f47d4ccbe
'2012-06-28T20:52:13-04:00'
describe
'127920' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXMD' 'sip-files00112.jpg'
88042fdc99ea5e49956a2b83e770e554
a1259c9e905879a88ea7e5622434981f3753dbc3
describe
'127265' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXME' 'sip-files00113.jpg'
9ec400cba5c0f2d02553609f6df96d37
6ca63552d3feb29525c0d8fbf3776fb6aff5bf09
describe
'126248' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXMF' 'sip-files00114.jpg'
7ee645431e32024c883e24eed3cbdab0
55e6c94ef8022e086de47dbc5a670a9242f19db6
describe
'125527' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXMG' 'sip-files00115.jpg'
51158b13bec185942e55dca1a6bc8599
f9e153a426d469839e61db4d28e106741fbe8bac
'2012-06-28T20:47:12-04:00'
describe
'126071' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXMH' 'sip-files00116.jpg'
9b666a8a13d7e6406cbb1c906515eb1a
2c1a4a28ddb6605e1ebc452038e2b9adfc3c0742
describe
'90191' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXMI' 'sip-files00117.jpg'
f08af9eff112d3f46f56e76b74901230
5d51c0bc73ac1b23417cac84c7610d46247ef28d
describe
'10411' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXMJ' 'sip-files00118.jpg'
de3b6c63ce11d513841e104721d553cc
315eb2e00e672bb6d8464b0b823f275d7ce0bff3
'2012-06-28T20:49:54-04:00'
describe
'10961' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXMK' 'sip-files00120.jpg'
ae5fe048c518a4fd9c145a3c47668709
9b00f18f116a6f0345c3c45119ff62ef669fed1a
'2012-06-28T20:48:32-04:00'
describe
'118777' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXML' 'sip-files00121.jpg'
48e992c93e7d2f3b2040f95f517b204a
25e07e4b2c3fb857b36c60e5e962f7ad5570279d
'2012-06-28T20:51:59-04:00'
describe
'119366' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXMM' 'sip-files00122.jpg'
b1517d8df3670745502552a7a2b723fa
efa2b48f505cdc6f9c67062ca9298dc7f91ceb7c
'2012-06-28T20:49:25-04:00'
describe
'131443' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXMN' 'sip-files00124.jpg'
efbe79e9fb431b3f6b7910dd1af82e79
aa488d2b55fcbe4d9d0ab9079d28ff89fda59860
describe
'120846' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXMO' 'sip-files00125.jpg'
a303c8ff30da779bfde9441cf16c576b
ac5ed359ccf92d820501f8bbfec34693e2b6719d
'2012-06-28T20:53:18-04:00'
describe
'127599' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXMP' 'sip-files00126.jpg'
530a90e5cf7e5ed24368f319ff41f2cc
670edf5227d9df217b50d7ebe7c1a26b3a14a0c2
describe
'124214' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXMQ' 'sip-files00127.jpg'
d8a8aa4d9445b10bef13e133520c8e49
9858401c9a1f8941c34822afbe1249135f688c3e
describe
'122811' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXMR' 'sip-files00128.jpg'
85dd1e8ca2043d0ea4a6f68cae726c82
345df13c3847ebf7d60962c4998a4821061f6058
'2012-06-28T20:48:34-04:00'
describe
'122866' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXMS' 'sip-files00129.jpg'
daf59a7ed39bc02e1e1056e46eace293
8a49d8dc573baf39a417c9396e7e27bccfa248c6
describe
'128709' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXMT' 'sip-files00130.jpg'
62cc9842ff444b83ea896e452c30aff2
bae91e3056c36a169fc18c1368cb1a35f2c05143
describe
'125620' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXMU' 'sip-files00131.jpg'
5a8ec0b1d3ddbe02f399956cd5c04705
04451800c816e7ded6bb8ac3a22da834d14a9e4f
describe
'128341' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXMV' 'sip-files00132.jpg'
f83484e068f912a6bca87a6d448916b8
c1afd66c187160f1e60354c28ea5bba87ea6901f
'2012-06-28T20:51:05-04:00'
describe
'129940' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXMW' 'sip-files00134.jpg'
82f1ac176700aeb754746b0b139e107b
c80cad94303d1fc18804519090add08112cda9e2
'2012-06-28T20:53:24-04:00'
describe
'125175' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXMX' 'sip-files00136.jpg'
5ac42c3c4351433691509478d75ecd5e
51459ed75d29f22a2c9786d91dde6fd71e5a099e
describe
'116493' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXMY' 'sip-files00137.jpg'
2111313d3f9be0bf2d9c432c721e7b95
1af2b490e4b18eaa9933563b3113aac3cb383aa0
'2012-06-28T20:53:43-04:00'
describe
'10427' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXMZ' 'sip-files00138.jpg'
f26561d8e90d1f60749879a9dccf94ee
bee425ecd5057a515f60077e31c83743c115dc98
describe
'41711' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXNA' 'sip-files00139.jpg'
8f2cf253a7ca987bc6f5f0a876448344
1b0b7a1d059edbac69922d8acb80f777192eaab1
'2012-06-28T20:47:07-04:00'
describe
'10686' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXNB' 'sip-files00140.jpg'
e58b1a4786d7a8ea96dbe0b12ea1ea38
f4c95cee802f94806cf4dcb31ac69355f4877122
'2012-06-28T20:55:06-04:00'
describe
'129694' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXNC' 'sip-files00142.jpg'
84253a20a59239fb2fa0c9ffdf2fe505
72bb0c38e1ac06022676c5bcdd49f80e6aeea0b2
'2012-06-28T20:49:52-04:00'
describe
'119228' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXND' 'sip-files00144.jpg'
79d4a9ab68323755d4f47b7437025f62
02e3bf01e71f128f0788eccaf4a28661f0ddebca
'2012-06-28T20:55:33-04:00'
describe
'123236' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXNE' 'sip-files00145.jpg'
9352c386135118836f5c5d2fbfadc273
e9f729ec6e6714fb65009152c90f1ce0641f2e7e
'2012-06-28T20:57:16-04:00'
describe
'119815' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXNF' 'sip-files00147.jpg'
7e19f4f09d5d7ca9ad70f62805a28bea
f55b452a2be583cd43d651eefc938e8352124d93
'2012-06-28T20:55:22-04:00'
describe
'121103' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXNG' 'sip-files00148.jpg'
61e831833c3314e1329a2408c17e535e
8b2c6696c47d2c42927eb90320ff7d266248dfa8
describe
'119936' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXNH' 'sip-files00149.jpg'
764f9305fd00d073d477046ea75a1d36
d0f5ebcdc12e2e33f5591aea220aeb2976f9d0d0
describe
'122171' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXNI' 'sip-files00150.jpg'
c6cbf96d7636b50f29bce805ea43b307
f46558c7afe3f65fb409f00ba536ca50233a27a7
'2012-06-28T20:46:25-04:00'
describe
'120272' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXNJ' 'sip-files00151.jpg'
11494b9cccef7affbb0eb9f529dac618
01154ba29c7be410f94144f60dfb6ed44ef3362c
describe
'122422' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXNK' 'sip-files00152.jpg'
7baf4eb620767ad28ba85938a8092d75
7cff76fb4aa406c3a5a5f212e8f1ecbfc64d1bf0
describe
'119384' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXNL' 'sip-files00153.jpg'
b634cc69699dbe8713adc151d09aafd6
d590fee8b180663813a75f0a07f07b81a0e2eddc
'2012-06-28T20:51:42-04:00'
describe
'117661' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXNM' 'sip-files00154.jpg'
3c4ead69bd39f264ef5378926928b2ee
c801c167cdf93b17b10ee5ff3818e43a17764a01
'2012-06-28T20:51:06-04:00'
describe
'120119' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXNN' 'sip-files00156.jpg'
22286509bd063c909306206c6b06cf91
dd8dd9e6a13894433ccc1f33daf98c17da8b0de6
'2012-06-28T20:54:41-04:00'
describe
'125209' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXNO' 'sip-files00157.jpg'
dc6e0d385a7c5c7133ba5bc7546e81ba
8afa2eccf1cbdd60b216f2b2d31005fbdb8325a6
describe
'55114' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXNP' 'sip-files00158.jpg'
952278a1f6b83e8252460061bb83f457
92da97422f9eeffe5db3ca280846edaacf2af632
describe
'37705' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXNQ' 'sip-files00159.jpg'
a82d76acd6ba82abe55466c68669edca
465e31fe3f1a37397f46e3e2b655d0a0294e1b2d
describe
'10924' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXNR' 'sip-files00160.jpg'
daf3e4bf4ab1eadae4abbdefe92cd10c
6ce09259cb120ea0ca18702d6352e2b21676736e
describe
'114702' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXNS' 'sip-files00161.jpg'
37d7231db39158404cf73938b537bf16
0d75905ddbad027ae2a70a44cea5820689a3e41d
'2012-06-28T20:52:42-04:00'
describe
'124875' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXNT' 'sip-files00162.jpg'
dc04eceeb21fe1a551f066a7b72c0bd6
348b45cfeea7b7093a10b1e08806961e54638fa3
describe
'119012' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXNU' 'sip-files00163.jpg'
1dc5b05645472dd8265ee3dc53049634
6419a1c464ef3c2d12f051b959bd722b4346329b
describe
'119989' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXNV' 'sip-files00164.jpg'
bae1fb21c86b34fc6a9fa2613220ad11
1bb06166377b872a0a7a28e0859019fc6f937440
describe
'124354' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXNW' 'sip-files00165.jpg'
3be1d265a89222b9058a818307ba3cae
6fd490116e659fc32bedfab444b87e72f80b8a07
describe
'120419' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXNX' 'sip-files00166.jpg'
df4af5c5b440b8dc52dc6f6e24c1cc8a
e22a58ef933d30594b0297b1947a982f83365411
describe
'128034' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXNY' 'sip-files00168.jpg'
10e76fa56671f84438fe8b3f636eed4d
2ff7cd3ad141da6267a1e0cec73d5196cee3e158
'2012-06-28T20:54:06-04:00'
describe
'121542' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXNZ' 'sip-files00169.jpg'
ba13bcd1ec0f71fb6074bf78f45b9c1d
8048b6f4653a1a0377bf28edb40d1b6d6e49e4df
'2012-06-28T20:51:31-04:00'
describe
'118047' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXOA' 'sip-files00171.jpg'
b6220c9ecce1815ac1ee272a73053903
3b2f377d4b87cc46eb9303ded161cac68f9972c4
'2012-06-28T20:48:07-04:00'
describe
'117980' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXOB' 'sip-files00172.jpg'
860d2d3d23b639189575e8c256079c2c
93090550a98c5f1ec928820ef892f348410fa4a2
describe
'118621' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXOC' 'sip-files00173.jpg'
01c4459e8109bb0eba492b7888e068a5
b57987b41fe8842aa7484b48d0342d3bd5f0364b
describe
'118644' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXOD' 'sip-files00174.jpg'
38bb4c4a591e9e7a88a57f1e44473f0e
4c20c4bf41c33c2c10cd5639f3c8d9ecf3961f7f
describe
'115092' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXOE' 'sip-files00176.jpg'
7d848898078d684640df9d8e4cd8dd7d
a29e574995f4260fd20c8af5211c5e3948cd7b6b
describe
'112714' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXOF' 'sip-files00177.jpg'
68ce7bbd8879062d579ff0de596c341a
8a62ea488c33d414926155bbea828a5d963ae2d1
describe
'35899' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXOG' 'sip-files00178.jpg'
07059a66d319605eed07e4edaae1ce56
321123d801b1c14c0a0d879cf731a5596ca43ccb
'2012-06-28T20:44:52-04:00'
describe
'41083' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXOH' 'sip-files00179.jpg'
0f948d120ded1169452279ff2b5178c6
2f965d48a960cf0f157dbd854863dc01c0e7691d
'2012-06-28T20:50:23-04:00'
describe
'10672' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXOI' 'sip-files00180.jpg'
82a4c14ac2ff7bca05a86c2980da7fc7
7dce043a6bdb5c0fa68043465d0f091c9bcf1aa8
describe
'115356' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXOJ' 'sip-files00181.jpg'
fb7ca772ec2b132aae2d8f4440850769
3afa9ff6389775e38d8856f70516e09b6905a0f6
describe
'123263' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXOK' 'sip-files00182.jpg'
992d106ec1204d0c8468678d5d0e3859
82596d9db9ecfd31844683fc52a45d3b56155703
'2012-06-28T20:48:49-04:00'
describe
'120668' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXOL' 'sip-files00183.jpg'
3e1f74aab05d445538539512243af070
6e85a6b375ee8a23661a3da2d8b91218f12218ac
'2012-06-28T20:53:03-04:00'
describe
'123223' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXOM' 'sip-files00184.jpg'
cddd1429d02e27a32d17061f62a4109f
78890097160e938f7d659aab937dfac187e886f2
'2012-06-28T20:55:08-04:00'
describe
'120011' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXON' 'sip-files00185.jpg'
7c23f445a00a00c6d780d0e046258626
98e142e474f9ebf8c02770416f1a0137b7c148d4
'2012-06-28T20:49:16-04:00'
describe
'120995' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXOO' 'sip-files00188.jpg'
d6172b678d7fee7117c8551edbc26761
32c984e316cd913b1cfba6d4abddf98b5f3b2048
'2012-06-28T20:46:50-04:00'
describe
'122064' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXOP' 'sip-files00189.jpg'
a19ad72463898ea2442dbaeb91a2ffbe
636768127add2b58f4b0f50dd9939a5cb53e4315
'2012-06-28T20:50:41-04:00'
describe
'126302' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXOQ' 'sip-files00190.jpg'
4d5cc6394949ee99d007f85cbd6a2d48
3006362081f7073c877682f601a7fa25cb46b717
describe
'120497' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXOR' 'sip-files00191.jpg'
f00f3a41c25bb219aa4b5460836c8d8f
0669005933fbfd53c6c096b15e376ac521ff3a46
describe
'117612' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXOS' 'sip-files00193.jpg'
857c7e8d3186292e911c253933d9aac8
3f6f219b49b3326bbf1e89c6128f94ff3b83fde6
describe
'118063' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXOT' 'sip-files00195.jpg'
c1c0ba34036c491b0aca5f5b33e225c7
500a46b5f428367c6db5d9a3f2de23899402928f
describe
'43815' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXOU' 'sip-files00196.jpg'
3f1818c6172babe828172cc230f1d894
ae9af5316550ccdc0bfcb1fd0c11434e5707419c
describe
'39465' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXOV' 'sip-files00197.jpg'
9aecb589389ef9815e6d5f675badf3bb
82e852ea7d311a475730d48afe5abdfcb5b7364a
'2012-06-28T20:47:16-04:00'
describe
'10820' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXOW' 'sip-files00198.jpg'
4201187115eb368d2d147a5ed460801c
8a1dc7ce2a63b0e0973f4d1a643521e9acfcb9bb
'2012-06-28T20:46:35-04:00'
describe
'126717' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXOX' 'sip-files00202.jpg'
ae3173dcb543c54ff4cb1b1e318fa6ce
6005fbf3dda057c1c12323b0be2dd894d72bceb3
describe
'121115' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXOY' 'sip-files00203.jpg'
ee24f682d4bda820ee4c33012bcf4d52
29629c55f25290d2e95c47a6bfb037f7e7ca5aaf
'2012-06-28T20:54:02-04:00'
describe
'117175' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXOZ' 'sip-files00205.jpg'
7b5c358fe0156452701af66acfefbd2e
8d34c67a2c00e586d09d4ab428c50267e62f9ca9
'2012-06-28T20:49:09-04:00'
describe
'125605' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXPA' 'sip-files00206.jpg'
aaa81b0a9b1335a9c879c5617a298bfb
a85e1264db976af7a83b958e22a20895cb864443
'2012-06-28T20:47:15-04:00'
describe
'122065' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXPB' 'sip-files00207.jpg'
6d55bfb92d5a52a5211a040a9f6ea197
a6de82eb377c8eab3d176cbbe3fc244f73661f14
describe
'124414' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXPC' 'sip-files00208.jpg'
5b6acac63ea18772a2c525a7ba1f2ddf
441272ab4072582112be4aef8e79fd038f46b467
'2012-06-28T20:54:21-04:00'
describe
'125380' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXPD' 'sip-files00210.jpg'
2b11745f264c59a2dc86b3fca96e6385
2ebfb3433c07965c71db0887f02a1b1299978d9b
describe
'130289' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXPE' 'sip-files00212.jpg'
fa171e0fe25cc7c61c4a7bcd7b4e130b
ed64e1eb14f0b2003710f074af87da42eb075cae
describe
'122338' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXPF' 'sip-files00213.jpg'
5f99588b6147e77ee2d04393f60d7821
c4ef8cef2571fa6bcb14f53d7d4d1dfb45619266
'2012-06-28T20:47:25-04:00'
describe
'129855' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXPG' 'sip-files00214.jpg'
e121f84682af09c0f2da73f051770d92
b9782b296e603b98bcbbeedc4ba8359a2e7e83dd
describe
'122183' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXPH' 'sip-files00215.jpg'
abcb19bea06c2e4ad7733847c142862b
f63d3f3125ca16a1dc454264730e9264714abca8
'2012-06-28T20:48:13-04:00'
describe
'122356' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXPI' 'sip-files00216.jpg'
73b39aaa61b5cf097f3d3e597c4d18f3
861a7a8d463d0e6aeec6264c8df11288f52898f5
describe
'43332' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXPJ' 'sip-files00217.jpg'
4d77dda55bd74d9d128b664d46a82b26
92832a07076d4dcb7205c74a6fc0eb1659399207
'2012-06-28T20:56:40-04:00'
describe
'127870' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXPK' 'sip-files00220.jpg'
a1e4a85fa15a7d2ec164900d7ec4e8b7
bdf2f725a9d229357a207f77871d5e32a0352757
describe
'121598' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXPL' 'sip-files00221.jpg'
170c42fb44e051546be19a55dc72ec49
11f87604029bf98f6a310e23715e529b4ea96af6
describe
'125550' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXPM' 'sip-files00223.jpg'
2871272aaabb43bb6d1bc9fa96c1e831
b84e16165bb2d656d69056491f01f1c7f989957d
describe
'131452' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXPN' 'sip-files00224.jpg'
6e2995b1327a14f636298f0649fccefb
fb724e485966735e6750a4ec7d7ab2435474efce
'2012-06-28T20:55:18-04:00'
describe
'125003' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXPO' 'sip-files00225.jpg'
f168128425273d227c140301c9c82922
ead725aed615a2ed0ba7839c962ca39644490533
'2012-06-28T20:45:30-04:00'
describe
'120309' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXPP' 'sip-files00227.jpg'
87dac64dea80316dd3140b7c791808f6
eb2a6c955283a5b1f2bd7010da39d7551fe408b4
describe
'120614' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXPQ' 'sip-files00229.jpg'
5270c4553fb735099f06a889ca8b4964
e2a91af80f8181b848a9e86ca08b9b078da55672
'2012-06-28T20:53:13-04:00'
describe
'119475' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXPR' 'sip-files00230.jpg'
37584e94ac04bcf7b7aca190c5c8bdc7
731274fc3ee7b686822dec93f8953b189a016e0a
'2012-06-28T20:45:41-04:00'
describe
'121231' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXPS' 'sip-files00233.jpg'
c9bbf157cbc6214d3f904ab29dab25c5
df31d5aef90bf2fb4208dcf797dd2d5373f558ef
'2012-06-28T20:51:12-04:00'
describe
'118858' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXPT' 'sip-files00235.jpg'
afbade90e2d21dd29320120b2f1900f4
ffb2e06aad74ff024c479176f69eba2f27450ee5
describe
'119029' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXPU' 'sip-files00236.jpg'
3033f5015a1e0f88dd097e07681c4dc3
229d642eee38587d8db2bf28980ad9bc5cf9b38a
'2012-06-28T20:56:11-04:00'
describe
'48649' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXPV' 'sip-files00237.jpg'
c211b1eb73b985c97cf62543592048c9
25ee9656104570dddf635a70538a98901ad2b2d2
'2012-06-28T20:51:09-04:00'
describe
'10376' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXPW' 'sip-files00238.jpg'
27fa0a0d837ae1a01ecb40ba854bc048
12429beac776c5fd87d6aa62f447c0b0d6cdba15
describe
'127936' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXPX' 'sip-files00240.jpg'
34847d4ff05d0b56fa669f4a7f4bba6b
a0ae53e0aaa29a8476d2ed81bf468de5bba6b4a1
'2012-06-28T20:45:27-04:00'
describe
'120774' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXPY' 'sip-files00241.jpg'
304d1b5d655d2d2206e1e59993b82841
e15e38f9d75b221c857f51b00e09ab0cb003b01c
describe
'126234' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXPZ' 'sip-files00242.jpg'
4c5bbe391f6cac0c44f77a55a88d0d3e
3e472fd0164386c55aa1edbd5a9ce39f80777c1f
'2012-06-28T20:55:44-04:00'
describe
'126108' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXQA' 'sip-files00245.jpg'
16f3930b0ed6b5cd539143443471e39a
32645c56804c2bf286ef7dea06446af6d0d7adbd
describe
'124477' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXQB' 'sip-files00246.jpg'
d6432ffd6ca121760cb70941352e54ab
d716f14d350edd18aff8c742da90be90714d8b03
describe
'115943' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXQC' 'sip-files00247.jpg'
d690a193bd07ab92f70fde5a08803426
a7f9c60d7940eeb03d8393a0d61d7f8dbdec3fb9
describe
'127546' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXQD' 'sip-files00248.jpg'
94a44ff62c889dba808484eb05739962
57837062302d5e1638f5cd52bfdb26ba83bbae5a
'2012-06-28T20:51:24-04:00'
describe
'120189' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXQE' 'sip-files00249.jpg'
35c8db3267509eabc62dd9b351fe8b10
8a2274d366b5b2621c7f8432ca75b2fb70c88e41
'2012-06-28T20:46:51-04:00'
describe
'124928' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXQF' 'sip-files00250.jpg'
6c02f244dc3c5d59196d05b1cc9bbfa8
a55784f4525f5a56d2c7cfe1719d92c1e64e22ef
'2012-06-28T20:52:01-04:00'
describe
'117452' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXQG' 'sip-files00251.jpg'
5345642a1700ffb33dcae7b35f7d7e24
4ecb3d7cc9497bbcf3baf0bf1d3f88e816f668e9
describe
'120173' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXQH' 'sip-files00252.jpg'
ae8147ef81146ecac9113e851e219970
7e47f551769e8e181f84944364b0d2d37dd50ae2
describe
'44708' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXQI' 'sip-files00254.jpg'
d604ca149a66222b0f63b25ded30a8d5
d205c612a93181b068b4979f44f1322abc48907b
'2012-06-28T20:44:50-04:00'
describe
'10290' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXQJ' 'sip-files00256.jpg'
19b988ed41b6ca242fa605145a35e432
e9319c97e6b1525e958374f86e873a5901f8f4b0
'2012-06-28T20:53:53-04:00'
describe
'124585' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXQK' 'sip-files00258.jpg'
2030891ee9255eb9ebbbb8aa48a72a92
9f6f249101ae7f0f82ae17eadc52353ff70ec1b2
describe
'123401' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXQL' 'sip-files00259.jpg'
de4014a5c6f3220e4f792f970a2552b7
17ed4b9fb3592d29df6674c85839c36c71319365
'2012-06-28T20:57:08-04:00'
describe
'125203' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXQM' 'sip-files00260.jpg'
238b94a5e71734cdb237378cb2b43089
7ad7b15c60740cdf873015fa846f04e821c9ee21
describe
'121117' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXQN' 'sip-files00263.jpg'
52edca4556053e96d857d943c7190ccf
06edba57cd02bc455f8e1e7de1140f2980f6c6e1
'2012-06-28T20:54:23-04:00'
describe
'126315' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXQO' 'sip-files00264.jpg'
6908aa0c4a29ddc6c13899ae58e84060
2f7fb52fd90c37a492ec0251c658f1aba8fda3f7
describe
'118764' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXQP' 'sip-files00265.jpg'
fd2df4895836859ef25cb1d4537e5ae7
f7cdf180db9d8a0de3247e952804576b7c31b5a7
'2012-06-28T20:47:29-04:00'
describe
'118874' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXQQ' 'sip-files00267.jpg'
ea947de821ab6ae469763fc33dd37a10
969925f7d0229b6f3a0193d0b1cf05be0166ed3d
'2012-06-28T20:56:41-04:00'
describe
'46337' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXQR' 'sip-files00269.jpg'
789b345c89408bc96ac3cd6bf7cde0d7
1b113298ac5aad213bd96574dfb34ac677999234
describe
'10214' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXQS' 'sip-files00270.jpg'
96710f22243f5098a882fbe65329dc86
ce8e5abd2d6a250cc22f20736c882af8e9f204c2
describe
'112696' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXQT' 'sip-files00271.jpg'
64804e00350e94af187e6b47415cad81
8252352d53b0f6921c05b09a94e1d35871490253
describe
'122625' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXQU' 'sip-files00272.jpg'
2dc8e915d9d08de8535a9e23a98f980c
f51d5fff2871208ad1f82440a8698eeabf2b1b9e
describe
'118606' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXQV' 'sip-files00273.jpg'
9534197d544f9ea2e8905c7513bbf0ce
ca3ecfcf1ae200d9868f0845aee0f6ca139e1296
'2012-06-28T20:57:02-04:00'
describe
'123197' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXQW' 'sip-files00274.jpg'
0d55148161252d0cceaeadd0ee3fbc4b
754cfb37e3b22f0772214548515a249ab9f1abaf
describe
'120591' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXQX' 'sip-files00275.jpg'
898e511db24f11d9a233e0638fa6a5bb
5bb743b4add7dad0bb070fe0204d7939cb4227fb
'2012-06-28T20:47:46-04:00'
describe
'116727' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXQY' 'sip-files00276.jpg'
9cceb514b74dd02b8f30b0b0c7b61579
5d3629501103b4b66a2902a124d2e648437e88d1
'2012-06-28T20:48:47-04:00'
describe
'118147' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXQZ' 'sip-files00277.jpg'
f931415905b6c021bde13a88cd50cc35
d9fb3c051825434c0b27723664a2d1ac15ea6916
describe
'125611' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXRA' 'sip-files00278.jpg'
f8411f0a3c27ce7df589e9929d6796a2
f57a2842a5a2828be053440bd79f8dcb59bb4cc8
describe
'125082' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXRB' 'sip-files00282.jpg'
a6d1870e4a621cc5d003a314940153a8
621ec5191971ba8440f3f2ef132191e81095c9a6
'2012-06-28T20:56:14-04:00'
describe
'119048' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXRC' 'sip-files00283.jpg'
1d03db287e4e26560452a213c13dacef
6a6463cdb8972d10f9b90bf1d665a829b3b0eb3c
describe
'119287' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXRD' 'sip-files00284.jpg'
03aa0ffbc6cd8cb1b022d0c38e3edd0c
0734b0bb2980fd9771822dddb78769482affcbf9
'2012-06-28T20:54:26-04:00'
describe
'120403' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXRE' 'sip-files00285.jpg'
4da8a51b3da9310decda4a81148b9b9a
e1c88c14d7ee6c907f772d82b37cc9428ce17063
'2012-06-28T20:49:24-04:00'
describe
'49550' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXRF' 'sip-files00289.jpg'
356971b1caca838f76c3ef5d05f35740
cd2199bf0cb00b7177f8932e7b4cb31ec1c4c09d
'2012-06-28T20:50:13-04:00'
describe
'10440' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXRG' 'sip-files00290.jpg'
feed8273c278a269ae7a783ccb968828
c8b6d1d86e34f0fd70bbc1deb449a31beace643e
describe
'109655' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXRH' 'sip-files00291.jpg'
0a6b48b6b3760bd193e3dd60f5aea70f
4edc8c677e86858a8bf530362e8d06fadbfce5a3
'2012-06-28T20:49:20-04:00'
describe
'133146' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXRI' 'sip-files00292.jpg'
b587129f051b84c4dfb22db371b04fa9
e5e8b17276fcdb29e32382ddaa260b4521f738e6
describe
'128996' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXRJ' 'sip-files00294.jpg'
13105f79f5d9ddf8fcbc6b02274cdd1b
949d05815034834095b210514fd159612ae2da66
describe
'117648' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXRK' 'sip-files00295.jpg'
7cb4e860341df55db2cb6faf3f62c76e
6819cb118b98f3cd53047f674c3d2eabd877960b
'2012-06-28T20:51:54-04:00'
describe
'117953' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXRL' 'sip-files00297.jpg'
304531b8dde7184337934e0d47fd85fe
9514521cbd228bb98d0ce0b8f01d452c48b5cd6e
describe
'119370' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXRM' 'sip-files00299.jpg'
f062f8a18e3e1f95f331a1818e17f96f
b43f5eb2e8825f4ab0c939c080b084c1defde662
'2012-06-28T20:45:13-04:00'
describe
'129126' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXRN' 'sip-files00300.jpg'
552e52bb5a3371181af6831d94fd7272
dd0350d9933b53423d63f0a6bb515ada9d73fabb
describe
'169411' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXRO' 'sip-files00301.jpg'
174ef66ef4fc831ffd162458de79afff
4d0c7521645c16fca7c4d40935965c4d996f1c9c
'2012-06-28T20:46:57-04:00'
describe
'114990' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXRP' 'sip-files00303.jpg'
821b5b5e9aa6521e886c135551826dc7
8dbbcd1ed08774de4872838405494d2048ef153c
describe
'130627' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXRQ' 'sip-files00304.jpg'
3eb317f378c81d0d8406b62c02cf529d
12de72af5350f684106314288206ba4a0089ec02
'2012-06-28T20:49:02-04:00'
describe
'111687' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXRR' 'sip-files00305.jpg'
75eeb7a15741d85641d36b41cd7cbf52
75937e6e1c01d21271f64c9beb18e0f5a416283e
describe
'119781' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXRS' 'sip-files00307.jpg'
3b7a8b287f48510e5a27bbec146cb230
35220e6bf41ba357adeea60904862d9a22957082
'2012-06-28T20:45:00-04:00'
describe
'102981' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXRT' 'sip-files00312.jpg'
fe0688681de8ffba65863eafb3812537
b4b8fa06b7fd570484295314b577cb7725143ac9
'2012-06-28T20:56:31-04:00'
describe
'30913' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXRU' 'sip-files00313.jpg'
b1654c72cff1330916385088ccbeb8f3
8e258e181ed7bffe2ecd1afe5ad8efe231127f38
describe
'1218328' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXRV' 'sip-files00001.jp2'
f7de91bd13e48baa538b933ec204f8e1
732a4218dc20553f3efdda89d73299a7e9ea38db
describe
'1572323' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXRW' 'sip-files00002.jp2'
325c5639a62ef3dffcd06e47a18887c1
295ba192ee0c9bcb5d3940718df38933ca690d96
describe
'87153' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXRX' 'sip-files00003.jp2'
0219748863890db7335d0523a9995f19
a28f0fe922a8927f5c5c44221fe0c76d82a1cdcb
'2012-06-28T20:53:06-04:00'
describe
'1411179' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXRY' 'sip-files00005.jp2'
91cafddc8842c51381637ae65f7a9598
627ca71731854d88f72e68e289b69a36f5b0f9be
'2012-06-28T20:53:56-04:00'
describe
'1620106' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXRZ' 'sip-files00007.jp2'
0958ca7cd5af20bc6d7fc157bc0d88a5
6ae5ad9c0bd5560b2132bc98ff647e6dd4154cb8
'2012-06-28T20:56:23-04:00'
describe
'1579607' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXSA' 'sip-files00009.jp2'
dab332d6b78adfa336baf609dbb77c08
870041656e156e85d4e70c4d1f1c534173f44b15
'2012-06-28T20:44:46-04:00'
describe
'211346' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXSB' 'sip-files00011.jp2'
73c6ea35f333d76163d1df9aaf3247d1
8606f5458398c23a573308a0f40c48b299a7d274
'2012-06-28T20:52:09-04:00'
describe
'193304' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXSC' 'sip-files00012.jp2'
d8215cf450cb1baae1f3367d6c0f6869
e80f8e73eedc39239d2e13a894364362e9052c8c
describe
'167520' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXSD' 'sip-files00015.jp2'
fb31d9ec6accd68b052bb4f7c83e607a
f75ae6dd53b718aee2f8c1df46d4b479bd555942
describe
'11730' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXSE' 'sip-files00016.jp2'
8bc34ccc1ef9bdb01d7bf7049da1edef
c1c8202b6db0c14d8563a0f57884fd0a29938d5f
describe
'1633611' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXSF' 'sip-files00017.jp2'
e1eb5379a6a649531054f4de5ff7a9a3
14b1d9a88c74e4391dfd36a07af8a5fbd608d85c
describe
'13818' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXSG' 'sip-files00018.jp2'
77f7c527c116cf2a5556cde939d5d882
2422cd251421466a4e1241a9097f55892625fac4
'2012-06-28T20:53:21-04:00'
describe
'232397' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXSH' 'sip-files00019.jp2'
0fe4b147dacf322c9f39a2a5f6277880
e7db240391b5e6d2001b41b5cf19bc4bd32c4d6f
describe
'204102' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXSI' 'sip-files00020.jp2'
f29957f9cd84c6dc9c3a96ddf209ae1c
b8dd4f9f4882108178aae36954cdfaa082164771
'2012-06-28T20:57:04-04:00'
describe
'196895' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXSJ' 'sip-files00021.jp2'
3384a2d909465e45f333b33cfface9b0
1043d4918eaadc5faca9bc4389d998a5f587442e
describe
'204740' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXSK' 'sip-files00022.jp2'
2869b742758f28675b39d46017b5b8df
837ec2df65fd0245cc9e128aa995434e085bea8c
'2012-06-28T20:49:26-04:00'
describe
'755650' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXSL' 'sip-files00025.jp2'
0eb0326f1531d934e308e95ce6358d74
77112c329e446a3dd246e3889bfce70833aab645
describe
'243261' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXSM' 'sip-files00027.jp2'
99e03f28f887f35d8aec3cf4fc929521
d983ab890335a3209752b68ec8c3633398f14996
'2012-06-28T20:55:46-04:00'
describe
'204743' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXSN' 'sip-files00029.jp2'
a49ae74688a5bd9d3431fc57c7677d4d
ac15c9ed9113bfaf404669df0e730acd5667a7ba
describe
'220952' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXSO' 'sip-files00030.jp2'
153e52c93b1013ab3803dbc6cfd9535a
67de285ee68823bb87ae6259dae48be45a158fce
describe
'209010' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXSP' 'sip-files00031.jp2'
539f213ce1c4d507266b9336b5a1f97d
5fb6f19b5903725050d47a893ad1ffc493f7c94f
'2012-06-28T20:46:49-04:00'
describe
'199232' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXSQ' 'sip-files00033.jp2'
bc788f2b3641e43010d17cdf9ff48336
e040cc64f1b1d3a01f67813385f99ce4242fe384
'2012-06-28T20:56:54-04:00'
describe
'203747' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXSR' 'sip-files00034.jp2'
9d75286c40afeeb3745dc8b74772af14
36914ead98b6a89f683bf393a14b82c86eadaff4
'2012-06-28T20:55:00-04:00'
describe
'207436' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXSS' 'sip-files00036.jp2'
fe66a5fa8b7774ed686beccbe1211e8d
1d96dd89fd5e23bd661f151fb1244a92d5316abd
describe
'199942' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXST' 'sip-files00037.jp2'
0f029c2724ca74f49766489708393fbf
94d6ecf3c6483637227cfca389bdc34d48fef7ce
'2012-06-28T20:48:43-04:00'
describe
'9392' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXSU' 'sip-files00040.jp2'
a5c3591b097b0079b1f0dd21a2d353a1
d7c86b192f02b63650c70cef53546593b041cfd6
describe
'241151' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXSV' 'sip-files00041.jp2'
cf184d802c28a4bc68b4566b3a34ac92
1d0ed9eda761588da91771ff666ba53598f6a3f3
'2012-06-28T20:52:31-04:00'
describe
'211088' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXSW' 'sip-files00043.jp2'
6be6b3836ffd298b84250cf7519cfe4d
8135e9863049cb71ef9d73fbe374430b49c4a32e
describe
'232368' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXSX' 'sip-files00044.jp2'
d84dc0e4b887f52385150d22e56dd7cd
f7f8f8e5d0d311ad1c307faf93743fbc5faa0b0f
describe
'202136' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXSY' 'sip-files00047.jp2'
c911a648357867032d969a2f53feff14
cfb74ca7398825fa15aec0aedd366e3b136b185e
'2012-06-28T20:53:40-04:00'
describe
'219420' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXSZ' 'sip-files00048.jp2'
3ef4a618866732c45f4199efb6d28415
84a043e55c6140776999826677597c7bcacc0920
'2012-06-28T20:55:37-04:00'
describe
'223167' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXTA' 'sip-files00050.jp2'
27fa408a0facf03b36b2c6e6504beef7
fc065726b2a33c00bf48d4505f6308ac074de4b2
describe
'216992' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXTB' 'sip-files00052.jp2'
4b9f3d23b4b18f71a5b144c7b8fc1eee
b2a8a50ac7d6a6c5cc24415d50e8ea68436cd164
describe
'195888' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXTC' 'sip-files00055.jp2'
32f329531fc1fd087ce47270645b7dfd
53b6abb3edd80908492f212110828fcf4a276f46
describe
'218314' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXTD' 'sip-files00056.jp2'
fd02462470dbdd5bc72056fbefb43091
8504a6038fee45e43e0cf60fb85244b9405f05a8
'2012-06-28T20:47:44-04:00'
describe
'199851' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXTE' 'sip-files00057.jp2'
1e15984d52b23e778a3790218ec775c7
be39bb77e71c383dcc59af1193cbd87437d8dae8
'2012-06-28T20:52:58-04:00'
describe
'167138' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXTF' 'sip-files00059.jp2'
aa7f07605afce8a03a6b930f50e4dc2b
56a17c7fb056f239e4cfaa663a202982a6a85872
describe
'7661' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXTG' 'sip-files00060.jp2'
b1538f52926d66bbee7f5309f94bf950
0db72768f7ef41e5023db4aaf56a04cec19b087c
describe
'779872' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXTH' 'sip-files00061.jp2'
f319d9e8f1613d6786db4731a3421ce2
ec251ad868ae39df5d25143fb658d3171890f4df
'2012-06-28T20:53:23-04:00'
describe
'1687599' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXTI' 'sip-files00065.jp2'
74179f51b8ee5aeba6820c8ca52b508d
82190879995d19328c6814fde953ad0654d76f73
'2012-06-28T20:47:32-04:00'
describe
'200811' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXTJ' 'sip-files00067.jp2'
396d1e7ec7b3f9a1c79a1da568540075
eedb73b00efdca6fc7b036183bffb69854d6c888
describe
'200149' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXTK' 'sip-files00069.jp2'
865cd775e9ef9bf9798df66cbd84e512
8931c1c1af6057a4de089d2c6f7d4ae7bcd15a92
describe
'215172' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXTL' 'sip-files00070.jp2'
baa82bf791e22481d867670bfb1f19f3
cf9643fce0ce9b6d7497972ef4ff69906f4e65a6
describe
'197825' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXTM' 'sip-files00071.jp2'
66a12c9c64d5e128fa39e06205071ee6
ec298f3122ed95db107420b8f52ecf61239ce87f
'2012-06-28T20:51:40-04:00'
describe
'202713' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXTN' 'sip-files00073.jp2'
c07c4d8b4ef15c2fd5e2597a312d6b8c
ed7e396bebe7b574716220b1341cdcd1c97e5be6
'2012-06-28T20:56:26-04:00'
describe
'222301' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXTO' 'sip-files00076.jp2'
0a6b2c9f20f3ad2518ffa71821703a9c
fb78435d31f3682ae21f01135d4e57194841daa1
describe
'184211' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXTP' 'sip-files00077.jp2'
3be499f1c44c66d8102e81bc57be104e
ba04af5379abb13b3486ed870f34344a289ba4eb
describe
'151192' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXTQ' 'sip-files00079.jp2'
93650e1d9c4f00ed8ebc6e8e22de7326
f397537354a905e1aa1d28fe98552e8c0c9e7065
'2012-06-28T20:54:17-04:00'
describe
'7542' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXTR' 'sip-files00080.jp2'
4af8e24f91227411f3e2effe9e1a5cbc
6971a6d4ef8fcc9452ab6ddffa1d07ac53191378
'2012-06-28T20:53:36-04:00'
describe
'11209' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXTS' 'sip-files00082.jp2'
ef13ee673e8aae332e6874a0a9bae7b0
f78a97bf010bb7bb5b34b74c6018ebc54a1bd1b5
describe
'254114' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXTT' 'sip-files00083.jp2'
745906e0eff4df2e228ad2d56dbd3a21
3fddae6b4145ca1b8e0f6caa3f1c44fdbeb9e8ed
describe
'221262' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXTU' 'sip-files00084.jp2'
15842ab209214ebff6e720f8d31fef1b
986a32a684ae846c384ae79434f42fbdafdd7d13
'2012-06-28T20:47:53-04:00'
describe
'203371' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXTV' 'sip-files00085.jp2'
a0b904a899ecceb944ed572e2dd1e50d
889d938ea228f18471abd14d55ccdbdb798f5889
'2012-06-28T20:50:40-04:00'
describe
'202996' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXTW' 'sip-files00087.jp2'
ab1137527239bd7866403940dddbf9b2
8f5792f178c7344c05d6ad005ccc49a08f933681
describe
'213563' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXTX' 'sip-files00088.jp2'
eee9de10f1616a832551567aa2120f5d
5364a7bd14e3e3b8be6e73b62c0701018f32f824
describe
'218671' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXTY' 'sip-files00090.jp2'
355dc342a64211f527b842caecb06e14
612c3753720a9a9e2e26d2b5c09f0a9143bbd136
'2012-06-28T20:46:54-04:00'
describe
'202707' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXTZ' 'sip-files00091.jp2'
3c8697b5f4730eaa3884e7c91992f124
e9bb6b1280fe8d2c79f375072412b82643a10bae
describe
'217627' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXUA' 'sip-files00092.jp2'
a40a59a5ef1324dc813083769ca32564
66e2b742a17d932a4769f5f5cf1b39ccc26eb31b
describe
'208537' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXUB' 'sip-files00093.jp2'
724d2dffeb1b5e8ffa9ed77f83871db2
73a31374b6188b5590bacb23cbd4070ae11ea65a
describe
'211647' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXUC' 'sip-files00094.jp2'
998dbbd2e4399c48357acd4798d1496b
68c327ad9308d5eae59ea8894a811959cd7ff1a8
'2012-06-28T20:51:21-04:00'
describe
'223455' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXUD' 'sip-files00096.jp2'
03b78b3fc6294a5910a12b4ccd87a64c
9b3244cb001aeda8422a7d63f6c466c67d11a60e
describe
'180660' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXUE' 'sip-files00097.jp2'
2bf728b524d27314577070048f294d48
7c9f2e78b2794b6c361b2e733ec0ce0cf9d08742
describe
'8460' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXUF' 'sip-files00098.jp2'
6f7db5a9b19ce387a70960cebbc30198
8deaed5ca612c22a2c7f959ad588b94073d41097
'2012-06-28T20:50:32-04:00'
describe
'836457' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXUG' 'sip-files00099.jp2'
a425ee38a624875cb9f4d12b1e6a6f00
0438cb8371c86a3d68c6ae7c6482174e00629b9c
describe
'203811' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXUH' 'sip-files00103.jp2'
b538fd23ecf816c3beb0c48aabbb2740
8b5628458b1e1808d0605eee99ced491e630c16c
'2012-06-28T20:56:13-04:00'
describe
'218413' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXUI' 'sip-files00104.jp2'
52669d5288760f74ecafbd07ca0adc53
b03f4595c3ef71c837ac0f15f0b4304fb656b8cc
describe
'206211' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXUJ' 'sip-files00105.jp2'
626f920456490cd2eb7824c7c51cd7f6
4fa34cc19c9b772b56ef74bf6dbb4ea677423b32
'2012-06-28T20:52:33-04:00'
describe
'202846' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXUK' 'sip-files00106.jp2'
34bacd8bb5d898e1618f58dabd7ef775
c0f3664e6d3ed91afc60524985d765e32661e375
describe
'198505' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXUL' 'sip-files00107.jp2'
73e232d9ff6dd5e46ad9fb9cff767bda
315798397e372063bd9c0b83b497951a80f56633
describe
'214829' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXUM' 'sip-files00108.jp2'
5548518ed543e2c8e124e007a651b866
f347149ed8e0b61727b5ff1a7f23239cdbf08e83
describe
'199832' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXUN' 'sip-files00109.jp2'
7a6fdfdf24a1b5a12e760ebdadac1ea7
514c071a83bc4e63b1cbedd00eeadd20dc112e11
describe
'205441' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXUO' 'sip-files00110.jp2'
7a11353e92377ef5954af7c76baf4e30
1e4c7d5255d739b169cb27fb5538f273ac8e6c89
'2012-06-28T20:46:43-04:00'
describe
'191040' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXUP' 'sip-files00111.jp2'
804f3612163158c6788fd7b649b811d5
50c178abcb237fe827b78e4654058d384a4375d1
'2012-06-28T20:53:20-04:00'
describe
'223183' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXUQ' 'sip-files00112.jp2'
036c1264bc1780e16c05bc374e54fc0d
37ff44ded911d5ab9f67d57b0284ec9fb262d9a3
describe
'214630' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXUR' 'sip-files00113.jp2'
19a558fa0b8b086005b3f341b8fe2b16
65f9781933111171772c747bf491ab26d526e702
describe
'212869' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXUS' 'sip-files00114.jp2'
f8648a6a5f83fa8e30f2201ed2017ca5
7688e4309024d4e1ee8f336e9993961b087fdd45
'2012-06-28T20:52:57-04:00'
describe
'201583' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXUT' 'sip-files00115.jp2'
a0aa834d95243e3ef6776ab3888d3a4f
ae8590181a24b005e968ff3515503234c5d7f55b
'2012-06-28T20:51:38-04:00'
describe
'217582' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXUU' 'sip-files00116.jp2'
564dc6ffc5c1e17606a7abd54b90bdf5
affb68911da85e5f06f5ee3bb011220245e22070
'2012-06-28T20:52:44-04:00'
describe
'150749' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXUV' 'sip-files00117.jp2'
d3cf38cc6570f7b2cb3c23558881f5a2
4915ebf264875b7686f343eee7b22b444cb7e249
describe
'6596' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXUW' 'sip-files00118.jp2'
691d62ea0fae7bdbe6f16e1a6f528022
f92997c9b40720915e295362f6b74e71562d318b
describe
'10166' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXUX' 'sip-files00120.jp2'
a5e21e23de5f7e805335c3d2fe62b62c
2f292cc597f1c4e5dfeb2a3fdec88466eb80c56e
describe
'198413' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXUY' 'sip-files00122.jp2'
7ffc7b6911752ab925110efc30be2a49
1bd3554270e26362d9d68a980eb0dd801aea9f14
'2012-06-28T20:54:22-04:00'
describe
'199127' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXUZ' 'sip-files00123.jp2'
b3cfed95db874cad70c08da84798b85a
a71f77e0397ee901c724278f0a24cc8328ab59d7
describe
'232063' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXVA' 'sip-files00124.jp2'
efc8f86a1fad6fc03b82797fb62f18b8
2d52a76a18c28186e0a23e9dc79513973ec3e9af
describe
'208108' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXVB' 'sip-files00125.jp2'
727de5a57b1e6b64756cb3414899ec9c
64d2c45b387f570c0e9868715c3740620ca4961d
'2012-06-28T20:54:33-04:00'
describe
'214403' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXVC' 'sip-files00126.jp2'
9614682193842b02b70e61babc7952dd
b78dc1b9ab1d2362aae29d15cbc3ba25980c3877
describe
'207617' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXVD' 'sip-files00127.jp2'
fa96e214518281be0aaa18616d3e3448
67eee2a9de3ec5067ab05bcb6ee84950548d119c
describe
'206646' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXVE' 'sip-files00131.jp2'
3c48748dcee07304445878eec2ea89de
53ee21892edb43c87ef74cf8f163d3a6ddb0f7ef
describe
'225353' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXVF' 'sip-files00132.jp2'
86af667c8b1f68410bed62d11bf900b1
e98bcd3b32c89f0db6f6016176938680fb63f912
'2012-06-28T20:47:37-04:00'
describe
'220013' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXVG' 'sip-files00134.jp2'
6c2328f8e98af746afe7ebd1be144023
893c42b4e9b08d864b14c0c27fca38d8f17c3b72
describe
'209040' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXVH' 'sip-files00135.jp2'
0633b20018474c41d06d96e2c4f8fc9b
ef73ace8a11b1db946291a4080464964469ac675
describe
'222171' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXVI' 'sip-files00136.jp2'
90bf4c1eef0f73f7a79c1e9d7f6623c5
c7f33eeb752c762153839c4943a54e8d7a228fdd
'2012-06-28T20:52:15-04:00'
describe
'198730' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXVJ' 'sip-files00137.jp2'
84227820aa04bdfdc0e6b9af97b65995
68347c57131b1539c894a0f543e54f892714f14d
describe
'6311' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXVK' 'sip-files00138.jp2'
af3b30ed9ee20ae41e904b7be9347437
cdc2ac227e4b54dd3c833428103d350abb5d6b75
describe
'1092551' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXVL' 'sip-files00139.jp2'
6daca33c8ad960ef7d7460b4b570c0ca
f819d7797eb043e4c6f8194de52f33d7deaa0ea9
'2012-06-28T20:53:42-04:00'
describe
'8508' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXVM' 'sip-files00140.jp2'
1f2f42dfb90319e6874daba4c16daf35
d2ec257ca94bfbba999e9a999019562b1e28bc5e
describe
'228701' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXVN' 'sip-files00142.jp2'
441f2ac8828798c8e6ce212e8bace943
76d22365f6ecaa09158294dfa3587c75f5973cf3
describe
'218620' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXVO' 'sip-files00144.jp2'
fd5fd8f1c7ced1431637e1052945183f
0dbae4ff93b741ebccddfd4c4237c96d71546d0d
describe
'205767' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXVP' 'sip-files00145.jp2'
7ba737b8f3c82c4bb529a627c24e7573
1ab8fa82638bd16a9352abcf1897cb4adfcf532d
describe
'210767' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXVQ' 'sip-files00146.jp2'
a0e5fe5fefc906e35b8cc440b4b1b5f5
57f70e5de8d635d042231be6d7505d934ff0b3b3
describe
'208822' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXVR' 'sip-files00150.jp2'
a17d7c02069432d7e80d871f078710c4
378a9e08bb7862822f989c73a5e09df9acfa9668
describe
'202737' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXVS' 'sip-files00151.jp2'
0824fdebd49bcf6de3121f13cb4f1a28
f6c05c01c4eda647a730c580fe00669d73c5325a
describe
'214339' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXVT' 'sip-files00152.jp2'
7c28fc56b4d12f23ab778bee06f2dd76
46230651863dc19b3874d6d2cc98d5a85b93e337
describe
'198113' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXVU' 'sip-files00153.jp2'
63bfecbebccd3c65a03a84c9d501dac8
78291040b772a479e8cc0260074ada8120c553d0
describe
'205890' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXVV' 'sip-files00154.jp2'
88fbc2e54211009c1a4e0d2d7373a98f
ff35effdf4edac60b79fcee99a94ca71d7281d9a
describe
'217613' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXVW' 'sip-files00156.jp2'
98a509f4c815631edce3697584195ba6
0160a560067cae990e9e041fcab3bb6d6bd18862
'2012-06-28T20:46:22-04:00'
describe
'209231' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXVX' 'sip-files00157.jp2'
c879d389276814eeccee2612fe87a942
3f49c44c01062081bf992e90853b7eba5b9f1573
describe
'109134' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXVY' 'sip-files00158.jp2'
3f8c999afcb309862565aa10af63414b
fb78a8389095f0bf98c782961e5cf165c871273f
describe
'813989' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXVZ' 'sip-files00159.jp2'
7bc9017835b0748834b8861b0b2fee06
a3ea9bd720450f737eb2e29e3418e5f6e871285f
'2012-06-28T20:51:11-04:00'
describe
'9669' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXWA' 'sip-files00160.jp2'
b83c34b9a99a9551c6385ea9e76c7b0a
c502d807e8bbb777bc0b71e3b40e65e3dcb22458
'2012-06-28T20:47:31-04:00'
describe
'220468' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXWB' 'sip-files00162.jp2'
416f796bd276e8fc861c65f35a6a683f
9ae51f3199ab80f451ae895f6e3df2bdb47b3b58
describe
'210081' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXWC' 'sip-files00164.jp2'
91bb2b1e89ea98beef35813402fb0ec6
96b1cf04cbec013f61330532cd8ffdfcdd14be50
'2012-06-28T20:47:41-04:00'
describe
'213172' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXWD' 'sip-files00165.jp2'
a8eefec907d0c37a05f9dae6f733df83
f338b02b2e7b817bdfb78ac1b83df4c84a07e6d7
describe
'206381' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXWE' 'sip-files00167.jp2'
88c7c97feecd9294ae3f8da81f7bf3ff
0bd3dc22aff5cea6a4407994e0bcaa49e2e30e5b
'2012-06-28T20:44:41-04:00'
describe
'200624' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXWF' 'sip-files00170.jp2'
6d9bcd2d7d3ec61872f6a66f9540f33a
97f01d42c06330ac78627e1e22d3c2c425815786
'2012-06-28T20:53:48-04:00'
describe
'214542' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXWG' 'sip-files00171.jp2'
1d1fa4bdae2d318c4ce20dbe8ca235bd
59d520109d1f0cc128d377334a73627a375c050d
describe
'206535' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXWH' 'sip-files00172.jp2'
5aaadaa8f11dda5958414a49c340dd03
3a2b2a7e378e1f7815d5f13b929b6524e1debd78
'2012-06-28T20:48:29-04:00'
describe
'207724' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXWI' 'sip-files00174.jp2'
cd6d6b11bdbbdfc1ccee000bef9525b5
ea9b7be143ea8a4a0ba42728f3a1292c43fb32ac
describe
'207232' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXWJ' 'sip-files00175.jp2'
b549a2568e465c9bc55c6a9d01527f71
15fc975f0662fb40d6058877a97ee5590c240b8f
'2012-06-28T20:45:17-04:00'
describe
'199579' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXWK' 'sip-files00176.jp2'
df783435fbcbc3db979a38b4e29636ac
3f965750c996a16c9a639a9b7a3285774a872907
describe
'70747' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXWL' 'sip-files00178.jp2'
a4628c2802f36db3ba3729cf781a4426
4fabf007edd5513c8c1e5051e671ef6258e44b81
'2012-06-28T20:54:19-04:00'
describe
'1108745' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXWM' 'sip-files00179.jp2'
19d80cbfec00fad5ca50f8c1ce303d80
adb843225942bba82118c69c2109551deb6b6c61
'2012-06-28T20:55:39-04:00'
describe
'8465' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXWN' 'sip-files00180.jp2'
0dce37e6f4b1d24c88c6f12f5eaa0b82
9a0399e249b73cc7fd8410f5874006b4dfeb82a6
'2012-06-28T20:48:12-04:00'
describe
'216760' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXWO' 'sip-files00181.jp2'
43980b0d7b7d79ef47547f92aee1136e
226d2e867d37e18ebd2d2ba6f8f6bbc4f0031cf2
describe
'210810' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXWP' 'sip-files00182.jp2'
81f57bb62f7fc439e10330154a4c4193
cab2e46173df076ccd7a9616314d115a063427f4
describe
'206860' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXWQ' 'sip-files00184.jp2'
9a0612f9c8d68b32259aa646fe776cd6
1681a8099a3ee42846f59524994e20e9bca58aed
describe
'199563' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXWR' 'sip-files00185.jp2'
7cc804ab5dab89d3f3f524f9fc627fb7
6d8db63eecc2fd9363854e01295cc6456034d3ca
'2012-06-28T20:47:28-04:00'
describe
'218925' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXWS' 'sip-files00186.jp2'
0e7b35b4352fe8a133ac5f6d8cdb0d30
9116cdcd94960efbd1444993395d0132de39d2b6
describe
'207509' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXWT' 'sip-files00187.jp2'
2cd83b1c8c266bb8cb719283932d85d9
06966b8c658b9a4e675adaf66c59746136c64bce
describe
'208036' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXWU' 'sip-files00188.jp2'
6003b377677f3dbb65a77ae2b7f6be79
3cd77a0f422f70dfa37518a1747df810d552f63e
describe
'221138' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXWV' 'sip-files00190.jp2'
5d23571756235515ac270f248ea13e07
286e7b949bdae26fc0e970de820bc182a94e9f86
describe
'207316' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXWW' 'sip-files00191.jp2'
020f305a30f404e386bf285146d672ae
de512210375ddad8238f6efb28e61ec41952d7db
'2012-06-28T20:56:28-04:00'
describe
'210016' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXWX' 'sip-files00192.jp2'
e0a514f0aeb5edd6664523a7267eb17e
1de28b0fbe2b8c9872975d303cc384d3b6b8baca
'2012-06-28T20:56:38-04:00'
describe
'197494' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXWY' 'sip-files00193.jp2'
9d2bab24353e93f249e9e1941be9ee2c
c0a30dd97f2e045606f940a8fe9501f820d4c298
'2012-06-28T20:45:08-04:00'
describe
'215891' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXWZ' 'sip-files00194.jp2'
a09f48e7afcbea3c0efcba9bf24b584f
3c042bb69177694de9602bb970896629ef8145f3
describe
'200774' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXXA' 'sip-files00195.jp2'
6aa78ba794566f5f749c7b9a072d8f78
e301f714504fbbd0e0df6e5ce44094728cec5a04
'2012-06-28T20:49:43-04:00'
describe
'83226' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXXB' 'sip-files00196.jp2'
4946b1cefe134610142fcf9a5bd3aa09
d9dedc8615e8b8f56df59cabd577296305616b1a
describe
'913848' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXXC' 'sip-files00197.jp2'
468431122201f1f7c6a8db180c43f011
e4866c371d8a82a827357f0e84d9004b07611ac6
'2012-06-28T20:51:25-04:00'
describe
'10309' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXXD' 'sip-files00198.jp2'
0e75ed81ec4a019af9ae76de3096a97f
dc604d2b57530d8d8887e1181e4a1c8e26a357ac
describe
'234628' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXXE' 'sip-files00199.jp2'
36dd3b2a6ffb2ff30debf111e0262c32
f3d78b19380216750c1137799605c88be08acea8
'2012-06-28T20:53:22-04:00'
describe
'216366' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXXF' 'sip-files00200.jp2'
71fd3e1ac1261d8ad6419c3e6f012710
f180789f9fb8992aa69fbedb6adc772c5f9b2119
'2012-06-28T20:46:05-04:00'
describe
'198960' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXXG' 'sip-files00201.jp2'
cb8cc0bb5ef75ca75a9a0f375c51513d
a6dc001efb7833ef0dba6d6145a1a93333595c47
describe
'220517' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXXH' 'sip-files00202.jp2'
57db0b720807d1403fa7ac942ba24af2
686d1fa0d87c9c6e22481f68d49e9453024c796a
describe
'217042' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXXI' 'sip-files00204.jp2'
14e1f99de9cc8e4b69c477ca1cc91210
6a8edc3622604966d1cc1fa457dc9f78d0edf214
describe
'197094' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXXJ' 'sip-files00205.jp2'
fc452d40ad3763853f315d8f734ee980
edc2c6407feb020660e4b2a60d88f11186e60948
'2012-06-28T20:54:09-04:00'
describe
'215944' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXXK' 'sip-files00206.jp2'
1948aef295b2fcc0f9aa655cce94dd77
57b5f4526207eefedcfc165159185def22ab9ed2
describe
'218763' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXXL' 'sip-files00208.jp2'
bd7fa195717dfb9fda8f121118ef6668
0d7622d8f6ebe94a1b905026a09126a7fa01d574
'2012-06-28T20:48:58-04:00'
describe
'209305' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXXM' 'sip-files00209.jp2'
261fe2fb4423e98b0698ed68a9b16c09
dc44a63cd3aba795eea028aed3615999bd397105
'2012-06-28T20:48:14-04:00'
describe
'215188' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXXN' 'sip-files00210.jp2'
f24915a345f8f5bad851e04a9de223bc
4dd05cf6a9d0003aa883ee3926590f98d3e72b92
describe
'197325' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXXO' 'sip-files00211.jp2'
bf309aa9b54549ba076707efc78480b1
a67d6b9e2c482575de9ef34bbc031412ea0ba30c
describe
'215675' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXXP' 'sip-files00212.jp2'
f6be75ac6f5d5642415a16a042fd77fc
b0969d9f32cd010e0191f8a14e773118fe591b08
describe
'206136' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXXQ' 'sip-files00213.jp2'
7c14f640dc209c874f77424bafcd6270
52aa627c7dbdaa1797bbeea661983155e8136e61
describe
'220491' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXXR' 'sip-files00214.jp2'
6ccf41c8872c7602c110747723724c3a
df9eb4934b838012f9aaa1f577298d0fdf59664f
describe
'210169' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXXS' 'sip-files00216.jp2'
a1cf8bc8151e3795d2ad1f3b8fc4b90a
9737f12cf1c8ea2ecf565add26cd697360f68586
describe
'930566' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXXT' 'sip-files00217.jp2'
3ce18738b53ad99fed967c6767023ee2
bcef4e09b9b7375598ec594108afb1ae2ede02e9
describe
'9347' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXXU' 'sip-files00218.jp2'
de659c58180f6bdc4c3a5d5e92dbb73f
372579abdb75be22fa3e46a6cae2c7cd52caa3f3
'2012-06-28T20:54:01-04:00'
describe
'219373' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXXV' 'sip-files00219.jp2'
20ea10e9e292e03d587c4dbb5de5bf52
5e4142d34d31b30d78762e1a522a166875cf7b61
describe
'207757' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXXW' 'sip-files00223.jp2'
88aed8f473305646a1651d3ec5893d40
0d3b8fb85fecb79c21f6536cfe2c780004885e66
describe
'225672' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXXX' 'sip-files00224.jp2'
cc637b648f7f95d8c4cac98eae1f289b
765a078a09326e5787748700fb035c2fd14e1dd3
describe
'198504' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXXY' 'sip-files00227.jp2'
96341869e2cd448638a31d251b61cc2c
b9ecc3c3c221ca1ced9e56873b786fd65c69ec91
describe
'221559' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXXZ' 'sip-files00228.jp2'
84c1234d1e8cc435defac17cc747f30c
699302ecc576cec41d8c8b02f3681db03483eef7
'2012-06-28T20:44:37-04:00'
describe
'198419' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXYA' 'sip-files00229.jp2'
b0a92764a3285c3aab577b542e37627a
6d652d2e235ab2f165de575702779ca211865058
describe
'202258' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXYB' 'sip-files00230.jp2'
98ff8ff3e22e7756c7d1a5542a6073dd
85a552e16761180d47030ba0bd042ad8f4657f4d
describe
'194798' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXYC' 'sip-files00231.jp2'
0bdca329902090a99eb8967d25ee4757
0afd9cabecca08efce74367ce9fabaa60481a55b
describe
'201117' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXYD' 'sip-files00233.jp2'
739758652d3b8d7bbcecf84d4944615a
5f3618496aa738d814bb7aa2d58a79508584025a
describe
'221440' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXYE' 'sip-files00234.jp2'
f3b4d4432a11961d00e3b7ca197afd16
e7286cd29d50938669619bc4f474ec4f11d089c2
describe
'201351' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXYF' 'sip-files00235.jp2'
9199a0e8e4936774424cba14532ceb3b
8c3da220f797ddb8a418e28e0168ed991aa7cf0a
'2012-06-28T20:46:26-04:00'
describe
'216845' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXYG' 'sip-files00236.jp2'
20611dad0f7db12268871986c66fcf00
d210314a836fcb7e9a0aa2ff83c6151a74d0f87e
'2012-06-28T20:55:03-04:00'
describe
'1128674' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXYH' 'sip-files00237.jp2'
d09aebfa3282e2ca8981e2cf542125a8
1e20fef2110ffda26c5ba7edeb405daf6fdbf2d1
describe
'218955' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXYI' 'sip-files00239.jp2'
5818abf0480ee5ff7e44ab23244c6441
be4c732907f6cb6972750de3b8675190a48bab3b
describe
'237584' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXYJ' 'sip-files00240.jp2'
9bc14b6b45fc6cb494339225d84022ae
23097c09371bb9955c6f0c850ac7fd8fe21631dc
describe
'197946' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXYK' 'sip-files00243.jp2'
a2c93cd8a0f2619f5ff7ddea187416f2
16beabd57e70ab7c59dd923919065f1b6890c330
describe
'212116' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXYL' 'sip-files00244.jp2'
2871d986be32f5cf18d3a745e2ffa99d
c5a843e0b4872171473f2a212a44be2a5aec671f
'2012-06-28T20:44:40-04:00'
describe
'206329' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXYM' 'sip-files00245.jp2'
8fb288d8f23b8236fa8a740e54f27849
d722cc703c7cc81216eaf503b1944d9f0f128499
describe
'192962' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXYN' 'sip-files00247.jp2'
2d75b36b2c27f7429719fc77b90996b2
8fd86568dbb2ceb856098614c8fca0c8f80f6b08
describe
'220521' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXYO' 'sip-files00248.jp2'
14a0726bc0cc106a38630b03340c7b85
21484c1cc445f7127d1495e1feb020a4991ac2c5
describe
'195940' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXYP' 'sip-files00251.jp2'
d399d1dca2aa47ace07e5c6c53acdb66
27a397e9687b1f66453dbf49627ee04f29ed99be
describe
'214752' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXYQ' 'sip-files00252.jp2'
9f3ef56e2aabdbf7043aafe610b8afa1
fdddc21d56e354145b6a2e9dafe79ef83c9380a2
describe
'211804' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXYR' 'sip-files00253.jp2'
9454f2013024df060d94b9fb5df06849
5da131adbbabbb9096bddef37af52b3dc544dff1
describe
'1387232' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXYS' 'sip-files00255.jp2'
f9681071e01a5668eed7de83e8c1eef5
3570fe243acff7563bae5526afc66da235bc7bbc
describe
'5117' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXYT' 'sip-files00256.jp2'
c48d7fdc162f137b8538bbdacb1f6c4b
3a2fff7a6f5b000dc308bcf3292b559ae03d7b2b
describe
'221515' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXYU' 'sip-files00258.jp2'
641b2ece73c94c07cb409c6dc0abc5d3
8ebc2d8be31ac4b5c5315b8b8dd05c704d3c11a9
describe
'206926' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXYV' 'sip-files00259.jp2'
ea51d037d3312032ccfd3ac88a8629ce
d7322dc41c0129528a84e72088bb3629d5ee4232
describe
'212981' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXYW' 'sip-files00260.jp2'
3cef7619cfd6c9ef126ba770c86a617d
549ae49cb4d82f903db0da5143bb0ade11b031f7
'2012-06-28T20:50:49-04:00'
describe
'213251' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXYX' 'sip-files00262.jp2'
61cb30f92158470975264681ed82d11f
97fd9cf44f6abdda7d0245a304dc1ce86bc52bdd
describe
'216201' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXYY' 'sip-files00264.jp2'
11e2e20f9f77db825fb2bbb6948dcbef
7f53b16e1e283b6ce69722ffa0bc71f48c95d212
'2012-06-28T20:44:44-04:00'
describe
'199157' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXYZ' 'sip-files00265.jp2'
20f5992a4463f13f76a9325ec80d0cfb
fe0d6361c47c3228e5122e3183d33857459c95f6
describe
'216234' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXZA' 'sip-files00266.jp2'
a7d06878d037f59ffcf1c966565d94ae
4911a68bcb4d3fbefc7fc350278ba2c18ebaba68
'2012-06-28T20:44:49-04:00'
describe
'202450' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXZB' 'sip-files00267.jp2'
d251ecd8b2569f9f1a41a395a78d70e0
b61f2d2b55d93c763294255309b8442795542f33
describe
'218776' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXZC' 'sip-files00268.jp2'
ec78bda8e91344a26408eb6c7626f4f8
6d90cb4fe7b0a99135c41abdd2b9e0acc5ad1775
describe
'1633605' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXZD' 'sip-files00269.jp2'
6257e25936c1b048bcd5154c96ab0c9c
964746b936b73fcb3c2156f0e514c767a7369060
describe
'217234' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXZE' 'sip-files00271.jp2'
6e4f0d9eda72c144d6afe17342fae0a9
968a5826db68555e3684aebb593ebd428a8445da
describe
'213655' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXZF' 'sip-files00273.jp2'
55e345f90b06265829f50e889527cea1
aca60b9f38af673023dedb06ef2352d15dcc6ea8
describe
'217486' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXZG' 'sip-files00274.jp2'
0a579936ef3bb4a4bb20a7a944676b3c
7dd74a282af3fe7632d82035c221ca9284d63e8b
describe
'203648' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXZH' 'sip-files00275.jp2'
e0da8d35776b887f3b6aafa3f8392b56
9843dd74cac745ebe295a05f005f85abf5c810e9
describe
'207098' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXZI' 'sip-files00276.jp2'
8470f386bfed721a70a4861cd7df79e2
7f86570b1f97182945fbd7e6429fb891c1000281
'2012-06-28T20:53:41-04:00'
describe
'213006' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXZJ' 'sip-files00278.jp2'
bfc71f8b9434b3d563dc273f4e9b1667
fc024bf81f826c71d0343c881ea35bcf602b542f
describe
'217142' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXZK' 'sip-files00280.jp2'
bf8ce4c9930a381f5bf3e8dfde730963
302cb5b1b3c5ee6f29236be34cd46a087d8215a5
'2012-06-28T20:52:48-04:00'
describe
'211773' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXZL' 'sip-files00281.jp2'
a4cb47d1196660e4c9f2644b249e332c
18819e755d898fae71d958ca5d14ffd9e02b04a3
describe
'202224' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXZM' 'sip-files00283.jp2'
f3f7a55b7b7a4db65dc847265d5856ee
d977d006e10a51a0e681205f962a9fbf84310f6c
'2012-06-28T20:49:03-04:00'
describe
'206073' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXZN' 'sip-files00285.jp2'
af32662778eb05ba9611da091b2b332b
abf0b8be26356efe431c540a287c8f0f3c412538
'2012-06-28T20:53:47-04:00'
describe
'204920' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXZO' 'sip-files00286.jp2'
878666122772c664c095fc849c6c7b3d
6a21cdc8d0b958ac390c1ef760b272c60771e1c6
'2012-06-28T20:44:12-04:00'
describe
'201592' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXZP' 'sip-files00287.jp2'
4790c23c4c75225ddd59c63ae11d548b
1ba77228868121f5c1c6d8e98a440e98b8843139
describe
'80517' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXZQ' 'sip-files00288.jp2'
78953bc9208f0fcc4e2ecbea6e92a2b6
a19bc2e262663bc4e60a95e92383c250509e9446
describe
'1633544' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXZR' 'sip-files00289.jp2'
83975304951abee7bc05314835233ab2
4d60939e38ec825f0c93c83e74d3d5ce063a9140
describe
'6141' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXZS' 'sip-files00290.jp2'
3f9fc30381a113949352178aa504a5b3
331c8ca6f15bb8b95db9d91237c31b5fb1a98a0d
describe
'243344' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXZT' 'sip-files00291.jp2'
d09be1548457e50b1998676e06c6692a
eeaa45fe568abf9e77adfd2419d6f4b92f9b5b4b
'2012-06-28T20:57:28-04:00'
describe
'223356' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXZU' 'sip-files00292.jp2'
6e1310e8944d91078f6557472a880a70
6a9672cfbc857fb56115f5ee20e01f9051dc3f1a
'2012-06-28T20:49:23-04:00'
describe
'207939' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXZV' 'sip-files00293.jp2'
3a1400bdd280e8f774edb55b8d6377bf
1b8462175e964b8ef57d1e9e78ee25c17555fc11
describe
'215156' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXZW' 'sip-files00294.jp2'
06ad143b8e346eb4485d478b1919d46e
3b643e3101de3e4d5a0f0851624ae05f51c5df54
describe
'207555' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXZX' 'sip-files00296.jp2'
df38fc890448d57c5aba2768ceb592b8
7869a4b4a13ffb1d8d1a21b4772879ad1cd5be53
'2012-06-28T20:52:53-04:00'
describe
'220251' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXZY' 'sip-files00298.jp2'
bd335b86a9fb111bf307be59cefe34a6
441bb101d310eaa6cbaeed50e9c5edfddf0d1e94
describe
'201739' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAXZZ' 'sip-files00299.jp2'
4d7d0772faab1f5d7f29171173288484
3bd9ea1a579fbe0be06c4b3601edfbe39d664e54
'2012-06-28T20:52:39-04:00'
describe
'217650' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYAA' 'sip-files00300.jp2'
8e2020388dcf001cd8eeb6ee6194cfb2
0bc1a6fe74a22efcaf16fe7ec4bb3a025032bd5b
'2012-06-28T20:53:05-04:00'
describe
'198300' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYAB' 'sip-files00303.jp2'
0015eea9b574c7a3e7e568d9b3cfd703
44398136e18c1b35ba3d5a390ce00a8b5452d766
describe
'222974' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYAC' 'sip-files00304.jp2'
2d4daf5837c6e0937998079fd57fed12
4286fe549293643b43e012efe3bf8e581fbad61e
describe
'187432' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYAD' 'sip-files00305.jp2'
ba9409a55061588abb1a94dd5b03881b
5f4df3b4508d1fbdea67c9254e7dfd54de379906
describe
'211286' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYAE' 'sip-files00306.jp2'
6820f489e8140f99c99da43da1394e5d
fc619ade169885e3f83140be1b7e4a1b0baf4ae1
'2012-06-28T20:46:27-04:00'
describe
'200920' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYAF' 'sip-files00307.jp2'
dc39abe722613f0f7e86aedcac3ad794
a5ed047f2c01d83a328081577fc2b843d113f9cf
'2012-06-28T20:56:32-04:00'
describe
'174805' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYAG' 'sip-files00308.jp2'
bf26c237ae6cf7ba2c07c3ebc49c615a
1713f2f30d678d47559691a58db1f678b783f87d
describe
'1553032' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYAH' 'sip-files00311.jp2'
236bb21c61b8cc5e3fafb34cec412d8b
2a4e711b3f801d0fd409c9e05943c661ac2d4dc3
describe
'29248780' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYAI' 'sip-files00001.tif'
867181738650844383fb3d6fa9d3b937
087436bf378a5b7248d2b1b55b79fb66d193bc89
'2012-06-28T20:48:17-04:00'
describe
'1699600' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYAJ' 'sip-files00003.tif'
83a4a7d0283d3f3f835263790ec1b481
00add8d6690f71f1b54d5d2529552d080fe175d0
describe
'38893988' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYAK' 'sip-files00007.tif'
58641d9b92513cef5fe99b98fc4956ee
68b7812fc1b6dbe548971635999a55a9381564b6
'2012-06-28T20:46:24-04:00'
describe
'12648096' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYAL' 'sip-files00009.tif'
f55e455b1d9357290092110044f8d57f
8b9217d4a79df7eff11d4bf0c2ba420a1ee04356
describe
'1703072' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYAM' 'sip-files00011.tif'
eaa30cb6ce244f2e9a56576a0f6680f5
e20df9686b82e75443fb231cad4ec40250f14696
'2012-06-28T20:51:33-04:00'
describe
'1703152' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYAN' 'sip-files00012.tif'
ac6f6f2b6e71b3c3cfb640d3dc40d55f
fa565f6bbca176a1e4758b29cdb7d26ba511a5eb
describe
'1701712' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYAO' 'sip-files00013.tif'
373010b6e3d1ea113b2f69cc4b1b4940
213a1a98005fa1a24225a25dcf44aaa224745877
'2012-06-28T20:54:08-04:00'
describe
'1700684' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYAP' 'sip-files00015.tif'
3ca9f4c46f5fc589731fc8e246c489ed
17617679fb6042accb7d6672452f100d34460bcc
'2012-06-28T20:57:05-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYAQ' 'sip-files00016.tif'
cbb60f412826312abd4d42c7a30c970f
982a0caa92f8bb0ba8be159906e676fac0e7d6b4
describe
'13077752' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYAR' 'sip-files00017.tif'
ee921ea7894e38fec8feffa1acb6ef00
7566e1eb7ee70d1920156ab12e940244d296ad62
'2012-06-28T20:54:53-04:00'
describe
'1703040' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYAS' 'sip-files00019.tif'
a781026103b88090aada3d0e1e7d09d8
27bb1a271a0f2602a09ac0e478e3b8d036ab6440
'2012-06-28T20:55:36-04:00'
describe
'1704212' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYAT' 'sip-files00021.tif'
1e335602ed2b3a2cd6dd7f63aeeb60aa
84f094329b1a3c492735185f1650319181e7999b
describe
'1703420' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYAU' 'sip-files00022.tif'
d41acac3f3a9fd4c609fb19667df0a93
84185d4d729ea3bd524f3e501a0332c3883762e8
'2012-06-28T20:45:18-04:00'
describe
'1697832' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYAV' 'sip-files00024.tif'
5224587c50137b2476397d9ed204d38d
42fb06490d5cff8a444de40624d51b4c921ecc9e
describe
'12000596' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYAW' 'sip-files00025.tif'
67b631f5aae93b1472980aabf41482e7
8ae05cffa181915f8a0b88d9f5dd1caf8a698a53
'2012-06-28T20:51:53-04:00'
describe
'1703328' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYAX' 'sip-files00027.tif'
7b61f5c0dc049a6bf87410f3dd2a6b5d
61a55f7c832798d4c39cd97364af20073f590ec0
'2012-06-28T20:51:28-04:00'
describe
'1703756' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYAY' 'sip-files00029.tif'
b419f77f612df1e0baaac0ace5d24b4e
12dd9c36ac7c6834586b63bd78f29b586e8f7384
'2012-06-28T20:51:30-04:00'
describe
'1703512' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYAZ' 'sip-files00030.tif'
2595174728141a406258e1d13708fd3d
039761971170332729933a06d9021898a25fbaf3
describe
'1703500' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYBA' 'sip-files00032.tif'
b3dff8199300918c05e33af60e32346a
87c9abb3a54bc2b54054c622e19c8055a0675ebe
describe
'1704048' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYBB' 'sip-files00033.tif'
342eae4ec10e525f959fab5951469372
6f54ebfc1eea8e1cc61d04cb5f782c0dfd87ea06
describe
'1703528' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYBC' 'sip-files00034.tif'
e3e949972972dc3a57af4a1f34d6ceed
f801d308befefeaf221ca3bb30e555cd302c967a
describe
'1704040' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYBD' 'sip-files00035.tif'
3d018a89c4102106e066ba0cd3c9c3c2
acc0af3a78062b1b4be5b9603f9c0511799a5ea2
describe
'1703280' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYBE' 'sip-files00036.tif'
ce506da56e33319979ff7f6c731cc583
b97f73fb8f0f9322a75a30ace6b0da9b013052f4
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYBF' 'sip-files00037.tif'
eb7a2f0e13c29c3c5acfbf09066520af
4f26b4465ebd899b975193b087430f7884a54405
describe
'1703316' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYBG' 'sip-files00041.tif'
5dbaa44d85d70ab837aa061829c10d25
9af38ccea65a5409658dd1aca0093e82dfcb8944
'2012-06-28T20:52:23-04:00'
describe
'1703400' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYBH' 'sip-files00043.tif'
ac390236cc28a3826507d88c39007f8e
36f8a592628869bcf7c10681a4927b0eed5825d9
'2012-06-28T20:51:37-04:00'
describe
'1704800' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYBI' 'sip-files00044.tif'
b895658e7a7bc6578692cf1f8486b4ec
7049f07e4cb92e387d6c19ecc7c8e8dc7e24b2f1
'2012-06-28T20:56:30-04:00'
describe
'1703636' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYBJ' 'sip-files00045.tif'
11f80b0d836ec6edbca7862e7cd4a231
268ace4d3a3b7487543132abe4f90969236d29e4
'2012-06-28T20:53:19-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYBK' 'sip-files00047.tif'
d47dbaa2eb8404c737d382c7aa1cd5af
56de108720210218de1844b8d7e011095e04cf06
describe
'1704588' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYBL' 'sip-files00048.tif'
269011260f5be0e993608e3689cb3de5
54821f9bac109566ca12384889daa36112b68f3d
describe
'1703828' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYBM' 'sip-files00049.tif'
89268be6ad6eaa56ea54a5a6f763f2f6
31d49c181d9781f0aa9b2c6f9b291d74ceb3f6d8
describe
'1704616' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYBN' 'sip-files00050.tif'
bbfd222f74698cd6b543a53f1e6397ba
93ef70ee5be6b90c320f27f47081b7751e0f7a20
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYBO' 'sip-files00051.tif'
937450e9aac83686a6664cc18eae4a8c
0dc411202a7b4549962baa4030843f8ab6bf972a
'2012-06-28T20:44:36-04:00'
describe
'1704572' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYBP' 'sip-files00052.tif'
412b3b9c7043d4ae110f5b83292842a1
4220c3ac5fb5a212c942bd093a980280724a6889
describe
'1703692' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYBQ' 'sip-files00053.tif'
bf533a9d605ab4ce7e119f8095b0db65
54da62221c694096e5ba69bd7c7758dbb1bf369e
describe
'1704788' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYBR' 'sip-files00054.tif'
ca659ab0e96c85e85c09ecebc250f2ca
a782553de95d9a8d7ce5ac1b5717af351b220e0c
describe
'1703448' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYBS' 'sip-files00055.tif'
2f8b585293df80d6ed1589c387ebf3ad
c87507e979c95d9e583d46803f3f56a304c51a4f
'2012-06-28T20:46:30-04:00'
describe
'1703924' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYBT' 'sip-files00057.tif'
b4ec003d209a66a564b412e52b3c9a3e
0c0a8d975b2212c25ce4211456db6871a1227851
'2012-06-28T20:52:56-04:00'
describe
'1704620' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYBU' 'sip-files00058.tif'
f0c1bb9855f54607ca60d8965d779fbf
c7bc81b2744d2e50556e2f7ee1fbbee525abd10a
'2012-06-28T20:47:14-04:00'
describe
'1702164' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYBV' 'sip-files00059.tif'
714b71493818195628f729992845146f
1ed199f38f566933db419574ad2dd94267e2ca1e
'2012-06-28T20:56:33-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYBW' 'sip-files00060.tif'
55632796aae1008463801151c18d3be5
4201631b6ab79e167cd2637e8016e06e6cd54a36
describe
'1695688' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYBX' 'sip-files00062.tif'
ca86137b7bbc64af7166cb27158278b0
6823b48ec4305915dc2c5c6444077637b637c7c4
describe
'40514464' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYBY' 'sip-files00065.tif'
b9eb940721bbff3c0c7c711ee9aa5e20
4ada564d62bdfa85ad5a4ec8156f2f00ce369f4a
'2012-06-28T20:47:06-04:00'
describe
'1705096' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYBZ' 'sip-files00068.tif'
7e7854920cb359fab23468fe9f5249f9
36bc5d2cd4d3f24d1c9c8bce73d4d66796bbec8d
'2012-06-28T20:44:29-04:00'
describe
'1703852' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYCA' 'sip-files00069.tif'
19623ec49cc416d20a019d6cbdae1d9b
c7ce8c960ad0ba101c6a7b84488c667d5574e5ff
describe
'1705052' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYCB' 'sip-files00070.tif'
0170f26b08a8f39dfaaae34b69956bb2
e6ca5b26c6857c16a13f7bcaeceafbde8a2e5783
'2012-06-28T20:50:02-04:00'
describe
'1703992' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYCC' 'sip-files00071.tif'
eac923ba2b5e53906099f041011d77a7
69aa799c929a51d5da79f21e105ddc0dd502aa6a
'2012-06-28T20:45:09-04:00'
describe
'1704648' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYCD' 'sip-files00072.tif'
e09498ecbc61670717a3f937b07a00ad
eed0c1d997099b1217fa404cf98ba80059f4c3ad
'2012-06-28T20:56:07-04:00'
describe
'1703768' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYCE' 'sip-files00073.tif'
92023bb590cf39078eb79723d92117a6
6692f3be0a1c4e3ae5d8e7f890c727e0c11bb7aa
'2012-06-28T20:57:00-04:00'
describe
'1705120' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYCF' 'sip-files00074.tif'
f721670e2dbcd632f4184f41cd566d4d
e89a85253db32c75f11b9acdf004c7d5b915a972
describe
'1703996' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYCG' 'sip-files00075.tif'
91af881b0106d43c220d8caa82f471f7
16eb5388b33926a88cf106ab125dc8fb35b6efd2
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYCH' 'sip-files00076.tif'
dcfaed6c00b33c50d1895a8cad60ba74
75f6b55f16bf5af93a4ca60cdf1643fc1a73d894
'2012-06-28T20:46:13-04:00'
describe
'1702952' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYCI' 'sip-files00077.tif'
b22216349e1c1bbfc643af3816c75dfc
77f840d5c6ec03e33e0a6d6e1d2b44260b062ee5
'2012-06-28T20:49:46-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYCJ' 'sip-files00078.tif'
d649daa8f8dfd85cfa801925486b97a9
cc50120c40a680bad0f7676c16daf03c28770a44
'2012-06-28T20:44:33-04:00'
describe
'1701012' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYCK' 'sip-files00079.tif'
d6bebc8593041976c1ad8fe25298c53a
bce9df90718850c2e6b79f5b63c285051797ff9e
'2012-06-28T20:49:49-04:00'
describe
'13077392' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYCL' 'sip-files00081.tif'
aa15cfcb9a565c57706832f2c2a7b545
834366876cef48fb47db5c719508c5dcc35211d0
describe
'1695660' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYCM' 'sip-files00082.tif'
54af1e4be64e34cc462853341a42b447
eb7b1ac8763516a2d90be6de692da2c0da510678
describe
'1703524' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYCN' 'sip-files00083.tif'
c16eab1bc5a3227f89fb788660ac1c72
3f19eb5b4d7ac606b91b7a509d3df301e774d87c
describe
'1704852' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYCO' 'sip-files00084.tif'
116b0191f7a6348e561149828bd8809c
d3f13302b54356eafe3ad44befb6dab3c068805e
'2012-06-28T20:44:16-04:00'
describe
'1704288' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYCP' 'sip-files00085.tif'
f2a0bc1033c6ac75b1edeaa40baf5fde
d1c02b6ae43b5b2076ca74c67c90bc2d0ff0eef7
'2012-06-28T20:48:19-04:00'
describe
'1705044' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYCQ' 'sip-files00086.tif'
e1bcab3d99deeda81f8b9d3e9ecf2428
1a89a62483a440e32d2cdaffd4f7e92961f85fd4
'2012-06-28T20:53:57-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYCR' 'sip-files00087.tif'
494a0ec81e6c78dfd3048aa31e63b1de
2376f1876914991e2b80d96902dd9e1872260d63
describe
'1704168' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYCS' 'sip-files00089.tif'
947d254c4332029b855be98320424fc0
13ac97122abbd3a574b95fc0408a2898c6e954cd
'2012-06-28T20:45:42-04:00'
describe
'1704816' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYCT' 'sip-files00090.tif'
bcad758c9cab27f82d8313e0c2fc1157
c082e0444a948fc33851b4980b44970c4dbb9a01
describe
'1704604' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYCU' 'sip-files00092.tif'
91a510568c7c2f965fa40a898194d659
19038e0fd83bff56fe89b7a1bc3170c90cc4ae97
'2012-06-28T20:54:39-04:00'
describe
'1704736' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYCV' 'sip-files00094.tif'
db7d539ea20d31a071006dce7dd23f4a
b27e73d238dc57bc97e79bfe702bc243b547d053
'2012-06-28T20:45:56-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYCW' 'sip-files00096.tif'
5843affc7dad3f0d28c88b0959303e8c
dac0ccc3fd6c4240ea4d334fcdc6ed47db533c0a
describe
'1702576' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYCX' 'sip-files00097.tif'
ccf29d62ad50fe1684c76c50e8f2c583
feef112d63a3aa2197fc8e17097e55f6dfb32d44
'2012-06-28T20:55:23-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYCY' 'sip-files00098.tif'
fbe6349d9659ead6f408ad6abb2257cc
da978955121dbdba782c73c3f411e22169c462b5
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYCZ' 'sip-files00100.tif'
bfe89285249d79ee7dc478efc65763db
0e0f1e6193449989a0a2bf3c6694d2a6f3cfbb96
'2012-06-28T20:54:38-04:00'
describe
'1703656' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYDA' 'sip-files00101.tif'
18ead2e87d901387544ff93ad86d81fc
0b698311f29e14c4e4da1971e9c30920ab1d8646
describe
'1704684' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYDB' 'sip-files00102.tif'
088a1ffa6344135ae95452bbc5d00dde
b6979e2b85ae9bafd95d9bc8bd0552ed02f104b6
describe
'1704820' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYDC' 'sip-files00104.tif'
6e3864ecbb37f960ce094930e2711821
c25a12265e844a5fec59e2bfa876cad8da5ea37d
describe
'1704028' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYDD' 'sip-files00105.tif'
fd4c0082644d118639c334b72672fc50
2d1ca3256176f3e53efb4d5d5d699103dee14e00
describe
'1704236' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYDE' 'sip-files00106.tif'
edfbbb2f2c0bdd251e1852acbbcac0f0
75886d6422df8f61a72c4daf995a6e6f92eed85c
'2012-06-28T20:54:20-04:00'
describe
'1704476' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYDF' 'sip-files00107.tif'
d1ef0f5e16f599d3c5d3f005ac0295fa
e9bfae7338cdc1271ca8a5eab8bccb571ae767b9
describe
'1704460' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYDG' 'sip-files00108.tif'
5f04cf4e03c1158a9bfa35d942ae7eaf
5e4386234440caa26509492e3c3b65d316d246f7
'2012-06-28T20:51:58-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYDH' 'sip-files00110.tif'
2e549f34610f8666ac1fb565e40799dc
ede07f4c3b046e0f71b70f302aab3246e8e296da
'2012-06-28T20:50:09-04:00'
describe
'1703976' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYDI' 'sip-files00111.tif'
54e8dccf0d1678b764caff9cbd184912
cb05dd95a062e3229be99a51a8afe62c259674aa
describe
'1704624' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYDJ' 'sip-files00112.tif'
1eb944572ccb96918629e52d1d10f922
cfcfce425e0ae36424dd6abca0295b588cf8c013
describe
'1704160' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYDK' 'sip-files00113.tif'
a26af49a9784c69c5896582760d7bc65
bfbe01407cafd166d862f481d2d017d8475cf97c
describe
'1704724' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYDL' 'sip-files00114.tif'
2e105c7aaa875791933a5b5b045c0823
a109d262d80545a1d5fcab1e4691af8fbf56d4b0
describe
'1704448' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYDM' 'sip-files00116.tif'
28539d0f2ab995eee8a53ee349221af3
0ba700053793a6936a6e589d42c786a0870df07e
describe
'1701680' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYDN' 'sip-files00117.tif'
ec6508a6ce6e24af4a2a986d3568f5fe
8592823346c0b69f79cbca8f7df1483c1a1c1f0b
'2012-06-28T20:51:51-04:00'
describe
'13077860' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYDO' 'sip-files00119.tif'
9755b4e0f6c4f1e8438e712675ea583e
591a383062d0966d0beab0a6f0a33ba0bca6f86b
'2012-06-28T20:48:22-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYDP' 'sip-files00120.tif'
688d053fcbc867486b6423301fb34089
a8373671ef21559498162a2831b0673b0e389abc
'2012-06-28T20:47:17-04:00'
describe
'1703476' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYDQ' 'sip-files00121.tif'
fa6972fdd1b17af8e1356126c537e7f4
e06065584fa7662e0b666b22794911b416fafa9f
'2012-06-28T20:55:20-04:00'
describe
'1704268' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYDR' 'sip-files00123.tif'
d92e16fbfa548d6ed966e4815e76a252
ceaa73e1b5c1e1f252108cc6bad794bc711463ce
describe
'1704776' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYDS' 'sip-files00124.tif'
9ef3bd1a84ce2bfeb5b3759d9a45854c
16501177a4245a12c8194e11cdbba5f057f40e01
'2012-06-28T20:54:07-04:00'
describe
'1704008' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYDT' 'sip-files00125.tif'
42e782723fa66366df60bfdf5817bdad
01fbdbfd987747eeccd153fa033a0cec8b6ae833
describe
'1704808' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYDU' 'sip-files00126.tif'
849038c29a7b190b1a0fbdf326277df2
65039af4ae9f69ea9d4211723b788fb3aa80b7d4
describe
'1704444' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYDV' 'sip-files00128.tif'
01c4cfc042c07ad9544584a1ad81bf60
2b5e14a3e868e5faa6ee81d958d5e0ef9b6a9edd
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYDW' 'sip-files00129.tif'
c4f1400e258833ce999f262ed69f5ac8
5c0087fd9adc889dafd16e8acbf71656090fa89d
'2012-06-28T20:56:42-04:00'
describe
'1704832' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYDX' 'sip-files00130.tif'
8ea1fbdfd068e52d72f25e234b26c2a5
7044aa580f33225df64c505767122406bb6cbaa6
describe
'1704164' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYDY' 'sip-files00131.tif'
df84a0ab3fba7a0dcb1ca224508eb074
e5e003e9c282f05c3c32b7a153aa12c440637b53
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYDZ' 'sip-files00132.tif'
4946081115b55796bdb3206e00d93656
e4bb56efa341bd330fe0ff10d9eb3f479144f00d
describe
'1704456' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYEA' 'sip-files00134.tif'
b0ad476328b9a9706b486497ebb579bd
8eefed9a9c5d6f2855099e387b98acb0621331d5
describe
'1704256' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYEB' 'sip-files00135.tif'
4e5aaf747292eeb323150c939734c2bb
88a80ae3883be0b75e933073260ade1069e097e3
'2012-06-28T20:52:08-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYEC' 'sip-files00137.tif'
7ee0554fb90e57995d0c1412a1199f4b
5ff83e18b759789bc8d415367985680772e6c583
describe
'13077496' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYED' 'sip-files00139.tif'
f5eb51c22272a755b66bac267a7e6c7b
7422e0706d56882dcb9a7d778fe54df5a77d256b
'2012-06-28T20:55:43-04:00'
describe
'1703256' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYEE' 'sip-files00141.tif'
d34c694687f8c787aab1c9e4bbf4b901
4f3f157dea5f0d1b0ea6b3aa13dbc4f130ab68e6
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYEF' 'sip-files00142.tif'
a16f2b382d60064ce17fde680acc35ee
9b06b01fa8450f29ca122b1b586b880296e2aa8e
describe
'1770448' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYEG' 'sip-files00144.tif'
174774f33100634ea0c73817c5d97646
e993d567ac8b1bf4bcf978aa6f74b1f7732d6f77
'2012-06-28T20:55:52-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYEH' 'sip-files00145.tif'
f6178072c8358926e71c0a0fc8d8d081
7b9cbccdc7f089621a7ce46c6e24fedb71cd60f3
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYEI' 'sip-files00146.tif'
ccaeaf54025460565f3a3ce6db8c7251
d295fb0183fcdb53516e5aa14c7c8c2b457cf119
'2012-06-28T20:46:46-04:00'
describe
'1703748' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYEJ' 'sip-files00148.tif'
369a75052f6020cd0a16bffdf334600a
43e7d9f4f96e8afef0236b022f6338c6073675df
'2012-06-28T20:55:49-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYEK' 'sip-files00149.tif'
02c0563acc796a1fc88fa4e06726ffc7
208ea589a55fcb6cee52113ed98faef53b568a63
describe
'1703536' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYEL' 'sip-files00150.tif'
5c0fa165699fc99e39d4672e03941bdc
39b17cb40a9d2a57063b193ee2d79b97ab9d3c0d
'2012-06-28T20:50:25-04:00'
describe
'1703796' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYEM' 'sip-files00151.tif'
d7e3858740544717541dfae2c5a5b17e
5b76702c51d00ec9476c0e5e32d8473ff1cb331c
describe
'1703744' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYEN' 'sip-files00152.tif'
948e3796ca3fee20b61ea6ad819a86df
fdffe35542edf2080ea7f27a6b0a16c4ad82306b
'2012-06-28T20:57:03-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYEO' 'sip-files00154.tif'
0229c2d26b10e2aa2003279557c0b33e
3396151f3cc6ca1d589c122ccd435b6f220a5e58
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYEP' 'sip-files00156.tif'
2feebc77878646a1d9efb357757b900f
14d7b5afc5b56df7ca7f75c1dede15f39c9a536d
describe
'1703964' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYEQ' 'sip-files00157.tif'
724fda89e7c81b713cd387671d4cf3e3
311a434d86469ea59fb55bff343bdb3ccfd98cce
describe
'1698940' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYER' 'sip-files00158.tif'
726c04c6e72d499b1232e0a8610633e1
95821a3f371799baeba14d24860678d47f92b10e
describe
'13077472' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYES' 'sip-files00159.tif'
1ac0e9bc2c0a2f0dad0ddfbabd5bcd01
01e58c2b3177f31c9ae36fe018c865402eb02653
'2012-06-28T20:45:59-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYET' 'sip-files00160.tif'
c5fd4a0ecb86bf3cc802f20bd92b5091
a8bb558fe88721e8e37e300088b4935eaed3423f
'2012-06-28T20:48:59-04:00'
describe
'1703260' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYEU' 'sip-files00161.tif'
772140f957bfe68cbde5f3be7d7a6253
5976b63e7b2fc518a8149199333d3e780ea3f404
'2012-06-28T20:54:27-04:00'
describe
'1703800' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYEV' 'sip-files00162.tif'
9501804eef6a0034715bf929363b4c62
c12d1300c9e332a03ad84fcb41ca8784d6b73c1f
'2012-06-28T20:53:04-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYEW' 'sip-files00163.tif'
afaf730c157499f47cd0f5b6a90e6443
a68fd77131f5fdcaad60513af16619332d4a8454
describe
'1703408' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYEX' 'sip-files00164.tif'
5d01d6c2cd00ce324a7a108cee4cf1e2
c7867bd53ae01ece12cef2b5576beb079ed0d07f
'2012-06-28T20:44:57-04:00'
describe
'1704132' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYEY' 'sip-files00165.tif'
4cee32c2b0b7461a0c61e0bd992d04fd
73440b0f1d217e7dd9b203d9521257910c2de898
'2012-06-28T20:49:05-04:00'
describe
'1703716' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYEZ' 'sip-files00166.tif'
5aef34d86c3de4fe541065f221c7c5a2
7b9aa887544aa968c55de49355373791cb0efaf9
describe
'1704172' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYFA' 'sip-files00167.tif'
8c9f133ce0562d99e6b8067ad570ade1
3cc58548cc580d5720378be4f512f8dc6c09766e
describe
'1703868' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYFB' 'sip-files00168.tif'
ad82d7369dd10a3d68a58d7c375712f1
145a3054a42a83b79a235f4fb37c984abdbc91ef
describe
'1703436' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYFC' 'sip-files00170.tif'
e2c2a8ec54806f2d8a0c3067e99a26c2
a4dcc1c0c3f28e4335200c55ee045de95cc1a56e
'2012-06-28T20:50:54-04:00'
describe
'1756952' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYFD' 'sip-files00171.tif'
33fc416c4c00947ea9177c78dd54146c
568c4df517f35e396f43603fab3ff7cb3e207845
describe
'1703844' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYFE' 'sip-files00172.tif'
fbd3d6ec9bebb5c039b81b64818f4af1
90555b5d002956af81a114521a313b8fb3fe06a8
describe
'1703836' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYFF' 'sip-files00173.tif'
7632f4b29e07ca3ddbf0591150ccb352
66f69e5bfc28bfae4eb9417bae5796eebed4c54d
describe
'1703892' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYFG' 'sip-files00174.tif'
d0fae6973588c6304f0582f0ef63acbf
ddb1697c2c2602e3e6c0d044951c4a884fcd2eb8
'2012-06-28T20:49:12-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYFH' 'sip-files00175.tif'
302fa72c3a5d5f8853187fc8c2f09f9a
3aa052f8af975fbaebe21dc5e6be6ef23436b7e1
'2012-06-28T20:44:22-04:00'
describe
'1703824' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYFI' 'sip-files00176.tif'
ffcf1b845c83a0f5612e92d98f62a764
2d8eb3b7df49086917a03fed557c1102533a6e15
'2012-06-28T20:57:13-04:00'
describe
'1703728' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYFJ' 'sip-files00177.tif'
ec46f6f315f82823bab09be4caf7e6ee
73505c6d5db921d7d53b4906924a6fa2e6050a74
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYFK' 'sip-files00180.tif'
a27c71a76356c19cc8a35fb334197c5c
de2c6393b6f241d5ef105d50ad87eab9a71d09cd
describe
'1703376' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYFL' 'sip-files00181.tif'
0c000e20981d18a411602b445e2abaaf
806da1f2aa34595f9a70766b8999305b76dde2c3
'2012-06-28T20:44:42-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYFM' 'sip-files00182.tif'
02b8ac7d7cf6f01a84ad6b87f86458cf
39cd02b375b257f8989f9671fa8d3b051d719478
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYFN' 'sip-files00183.tif'
fdc90a5bedd0484f6a8c2749993bb547
ddf48445a6c9f5203af47ac1ffc94b2ca1b0782a
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYFO' 'sip-files00184.tif'
faec0da5d9911e5fdc54e16f0b225ee8
7f9506e58f09512f113e778f6f78e834bf11f1d4
'2012-06-28T20:46:17-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYFP' 'sip-files00185.tif'
c3feac688974be4689eb27c2c8911615
9774c2c1627ce0b7b3e9af4890a8070f6b1ba757
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYFQ' 'sip-files00186.tif'
d7a5bf21aba60adee2712e629af6cc53
7003356f626d115fa9237b3a18602d44d69ece2e
'2012-06-28T20:54:15-04:00'
describe
'1703876' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYFR' 'sip-files00187.tif'
89a1642be54b82f9dba46de6e79e225e
1bb74f1c66dc74020e5742361c65d6132a287357
describe
'1703812' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYFS' 'sip-files00188.tif'
10eb0024adf7d570504d38af3da9bfe0
a69783af0d37f85d3ef4b75eda68b97aa065265c
'2012-06-28T20:55:30-04:00'
describe
'1703820' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYFT' 'sip-files00189.tif'
ff9ca828a716cbc95f455a3125eba5b0
7bfa52740a8b8b99fefd6a47d2abb2f8a6728a91
describe
'1704144' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYFU' 'sip-files00191.tif'
b0b919b6f7d026b51a465e47fff76c0d
2a2fcd59cf7652a438bf9cdb463204f13c5b8553
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYFV' 'sip-files00193.tif'
b9b2ce17e1cdccd66f852f7dda93337e
cd709459be64f2a77e599e379e69ee1a8aadb0f7
'2012-06-28T20:54:03-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYFW' 'sip-files00194.tif'
9fa96927569e20c8771b7bdf1a69eede
378b76a922bb0fac820f030f601fcccbac961f75
describe
'1703640' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYFX' 'sip-files00195.tif'
ef5da2996c6bb2925b89871751ce010a
1a0954d06741b1a2496f8dfc8bfed97fec1d0f7f
'2012-06-28T20:46:37-04:00'
describe
'1698144' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYFY' 'sip-files00196.tif'
172f9cbb8c78ac41540a06c9c13e1037
9bec0de92eb1c1430b700ebba2f6c7deea59e0e4
'2012-06-28T20:45:01-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYFZ' 'sip-files00197.tif'
bd86f6d63552d9b20987b7ce0e120b88
431148dbea2de9aa40ab5e3d046b94d5411858e8
'2012-06-28T20:44:58-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYGA' 'sip-files00199.tif'
fa2de49e82bc1417ef40fab0b723ca8f
dcf8d4207e4c7281c2b134c8dfa5d1609576880f
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYGB' 'sip-files00201.tif'
7f1ac7895116c7229cbc97179c24caeb
a4ae8efcf647b17c619b6be3a0dfcecee7cb8696
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYGC' 'sip-files00202.tif'
6d8175c7634049c1b933d3f5f399ca0f
32eb2d3a42f23706f58d4e0ec43dd5148580dcf5
'2012-06-28T20:49:18-04:00'
describe
'1703944' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYGD' 'sip-files00203.tif'
e82ca63a266807eca5f7cd22d8c45a08
78788631cfd0e39e4d9379927726f659702498c3
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYGE' 'sip-files00205.tif'
ebcf3fc4ad70a911d842591de3808aaf
bfa5006445cee28f99e100dcd97deca440641983
'2012-06-28T20:45:33-04:00'
describe
'1703896' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYGF' 'sip-files00206.tif'
38885363d6b868a0c4290ace5daa2841
457ec85f821a0ab583157ebfa45017251ee54d30
'2012-06-28T20:55:25-04:00'
describe
'1703932' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYGG' 'sip-files00207.tif'
43d00380942609d1696cbb88ff711c2a
49dc31ce4824156b593123d20750ceb631c9563b
'2012-06-28T20:50:45-04:00'
describe
'1704060' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYGH' 'sip-files00208.tif'
f8cc62da06bf2f7efd0225ab75414903
fc56c3024dbae19b79fdfe2d1ee3c6a6e1914fd9
'2012-06-28T20:49:35-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYGI' 'sip-files00209.tif'
3d9d3efe8273e2819cb046bb06c74224
2c8d93697ca7762121d2a65aa838581d8d2be591
'2012-06-28T20:50:48-04:00'
describe
'1704316' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYGJ' 'sip-files00210.tif'
eb3f83a035b66020a79694c8d7df427c
b8f9636c60e21eba7810f9456e92caa0634f07f0
describe
'1625460' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYGK' 'sip-files00211.tif'
abba6587b1468cc2e655d25d5dd4660a
00c7a0c7ff07dc4754315a741148450ef04d40ac
describe
'1637648' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYGL' 'sip-files00212.tif'
2766dc450f29747a030fdb5e1cbf0425
d8333048f84d71460864aea023ead9c0583c4783
describe
'1704312' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYGM' 'sip-files00214.tif'
c2deb06fbdf43183e72c5909d1453bef
ab8ac6eb0b27310a86f9ac2ac7aece2bfabf64dc
'2012-06-28T20:44:17-04:00'
describe
'1703848' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYGN' 'sip-files00215.tif'
2c6957580ed10545f3ca473cd7e78ee1
6e09ee79e329c0c0a5159bfd8503682667bd6e7b
describe
'12545116' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYGO' 'sip-files00217.tif'
8413a07152dff7314613ca5b47b745f4
4f2b54ff235497bb82c5c5a444a2a492d127b52d
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYGP' 'sip-files00218.tif'
8871061e89ea41e74f6566bc9502da58
30b048009da91a32b90321d80c1a6382a1338c61
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYGQ' 'sip-files00219.tif'
6e5ab3ba6b675b9f5d1cc5cad7d4078e
25c4656697fb9a52707615607d57343d6c653f32
'2012-06-28T20:47:00-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYGR' 'sip-files00220.tif'
bf009d6b4f5aa6898629c1c687a007a4
d03618bda55cc81125b886e045f02df60306b5cc
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYGS' 'sip-files00222.tif'
591bc3c4022b8f6f66647572f0a1748a
820ef9577a83986ded85764b56459ac6ee2b2771
'2012-06-28T20:51:03-04:00'
describe
'1704184' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYGT' 'sip-files00224.tif'
66e132ccf8858c0a4208d2e458f92820
feca10ec68ddbf4703f29f91bbf53611a43e2c5a
'2012-06-28T20:44:28-04:00'
describe
'1703772' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYGU' 'sip-files00225.tif'
7c88fa12fcfbed68f362072dc50d19b1
81eeeb4535e27f0e2a320a7cacf9306546d205e8
describe
'1704324' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYGV' 'sip-files00226.tif'
504e6eedf2f90546c210be10a2db2dca
a1c65c52b445d1ba6b9a180904f606c366e7aa47
'2012-06-28T20:52:47-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYGW' 'sip-files00227.tif'
6ec9483bbf1f1ae4e3b7c923d0905acf
99a53411fbc12c72dec30bac69528bb3769fdbd1
describe
'1703948' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYGX' 'sip-files00228.tif'
9770b16cb4754faa3adbe6aeab46e4d3
1807fe67fd18b8f1a099845c6d99278849e97424
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYGY' 'sip-files00229.tif'
0af08dd3ebfd9579abe767b9a964fc40
a137d2d2243bbfb61239cb2741f4b1d585f4a0db
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYGZ' 'sip-files00230.tif'
df78687dfca1b4342938e80aad743aa0
ce0798517c04c6658d73d40443f7ee55bdbbc73b
'2012-06-28T20:56:47-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYHA' 'sip-files00231.tif'
c10fead2ec9e65b856da7c5a4d62d0b7
bef3c7858924c1de65f41f1e9dc9ba038be6bf22
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYHB' 'sip-files00232.tif'
c78e53ab58bdaebd7f53ad7b67316f79
61ed9dcbca7b8a9c9e76141ad82d2f1930cf9f2b
'2012-06-28T20:56:08-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYHC' 'sip-files00234.tif'
e994506e2287f1dee59094f726dfad1d
762451d08d71f7cf29d9e5363bae8772f2a7d211
describe
'1703856' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYHD' 'sip-files00235.tif'
7adb5b8153a5c8a69937dd4639a7dac9
bd9e9940d9c5c2e4dcc66b32ac368d51b1b13600
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYHE' 'sip-files00236.tif'
b2532420f44a349bc28fc82e280ec0d2
34d8913ffe420f12d8d65ca0b6059bf9da7a9985
'2012-06-28T20:55:38-04:00'
describe
'13077864' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYHF' 'sip-files00237.tif'
7423fbdc64e2986b5b29c46efe3fe2b2
9819183d243bcb0c1d8ceb2497e0ba8b9776ea27
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYHG' 'sip-files00238.tif'
55ef90db39ec9645a74bb03586fb7dcd
d836ad468997a098e4841ed81a6dfaacbb06bd8d
describe
'1704192' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYHH' 'sip-files00240.tif'
e6e0958df8e8decaf12b08de85062ed3
7973f855a43d6ceead922bc952c7ec1a647ebbb2
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYHI' 'sip-files00241.tif'
47ee236699cedecd255ce5b66c4f4012
433bd6bc58489fddf91172d9eefb58a42c888aae
'2012-06-28T20:50:50-04:00'
describe
'1704356' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYHJ' 'sip-files00242.tif'
870f6317a31e726b2a37a729462ab6b2
5995d51bdf27e7b84c39c172f972cd4c98c6516f
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYHK' 'sip-files00243.tif'
a700def416beac398d0a949fb212a23c
b57a61252970d5d7b05862225d52164e0dacf525
describe
'1703908' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYHL' 'sip-files00244.tif'
d0c7fb98bdb9bab9447ecb2466bda975
c97b91e074d0c049a1084c91aff23f96e2f1a3bb
'2012-06-28T20:44:53-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYHM' 'sip-files00245.tif'
470fdc2e4ae950cf3c14ee09531e3458
de7f62afa152c9f1ce23b160f413aca0a21e1447
describe
'1704180' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYHN' 'sip-files00248.tif'
e12193894c3339e36b897909a8150cdf
289046103e0334775b977be3d7f0a30d4b0cce68
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYHO' 'sip-files00249.tif'
4e22a88bd265dc21612ccdbf5e3d4dd7
36bec3f4ce1cdc8c314c42f494931c2a9bc972de
'2012-06-28T20:56:17-04:00'
describe
'1704292' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYHP' 'sip-files00250.tif'
3a945645ee3f380f080a6aeb80c7d791
e638812d78e1c5498fa908aeecf1f2115b6a4a40
describe
'1704084' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYHQ' 'sip-files00252.tif'
c94cae52f0678b141abee1606fb321ee
f3c1eae57a537fcda140341510c8dc303c363ee8
describe
'1698392' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYHR' 'sip-files00254.tif'
8ec26531bec5439f8119ef91741b2ede
1451b879a5e786254c194cd1aab94a51021d0df0
'2012-06-28T20:48:05-04:00'
describe
'13077552' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYHS' 'sip-files00255.tif'
3a3338ce7223c737a657bc5e980d9b01
1c72df753e474b0a926169df7b2cd23949389ccc
'2012-06-28T20:56:51-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYHT' 'sip-files00256.tif'
a33f2467fa7d5925465511197d242a35
3e8b0b54f5c13f5665c75e3071b7ca8f6769fbb4
describe
'1702972' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYHU' 'sip-files00257.tif'
77192249da826b31c5333511d7c3dc1b
84d84093c53ed79ee5ee078981ad1d398387ca33
'2012-06-28T20:50:18-04:00'
describe
'1703936' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYHV' 'sip-files00261.tif'
8597f763a77d9b4c6b9b59d4e984ac50
99ab896ff7a5b4a019074f96acdb88164699a8c6
describe
'1704152' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYHW' 'sip-files00262.tif'
e3e0b6077db985ea28fde72ca2c7c3c4
064aae24b862cdc52d1a38791d71f32ab1a76dd3
'2012-06-28T20:51:57-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYHX' 'sip-files00263.tif'
848f8115cad79ce269f118e3a958a149
812a91ca0baba0b229da5a4023ecaac89c5b5fb7
describe
'1704632' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYHY' 'sip-files00266.tif'
eb5add7077b0016f2ad0d0292c3f2dc4
f420554f9f5f71987fa5bcd17a0705417806b94a
describe
'1703660' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYHZ' 'sip-files00267.tif'
0c1f9952bce84a74b48808fc823ac7b1
4668f1ffd5a1cc6db208ecb4c0d8ed73163e1067
describe
'1703816' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYIA' 'sip-files00268.tif'
34f579ba028148a36173da2e1f4a9fef
9c75139b7e2b4cd45f887fad5b75eac0ef9744dd
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYIB' 'sip-files00270.tif'
51196eaa22f99eab5696f661fd33a8ff
b3df503635a7646db78ff004d8911a8af86ad6c6
describe
'1703312' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYIC' 'sip-files00271.tif'
d82a1a0ced68f168ab4432be0f01eb57
fdc9b07ca57cfa4caf0332b05447361d6327f44f
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYID' 'sip-files00272.tif'
46d61ab67805eee1e31aca04b1e89774
6baef083a012685a51d7dd4671d6a4e672abcc09
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYIE' 'sip-files00274.tif'
e7858e56dc305310fbc39a9c6e72efa0
5ca5def09f2dc81beab6818ca451798d2cd99d2a
'2012-06-28T20:52:02-04:00'
describe
'1703696' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYIF' 'sip-files00275.tif'
e6eb50b64c5955d9d1e41e0203aeb8f0
7630d7b5635d592faf50673e718efa31ad4741e9
describe
'1703648' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYIG' 'sip-files00276.tif'
e4969e8ecfc6810e78a7773770a3c0f1
2d20d6c148b312583db3f976d334e887fb1f8cda
describe
'1704452' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYIH' 'sip-files00278.tif'
8a7eb8f9054274071966bff2d44d723b
94a374017f4b3947cf8257cbf8d75c543772b103
'2012-06-28T20:47:40-04:00'
describe
'1703832' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYII' 'sip-files00279.tif'
b1621f241027550b18919563610cfad8
d46a8e06b78743821918d13a2b135e15e7c55621
describe
'1704696' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYIJ' 'sip-files00280.tif'
40a8a523ac65d5d417ae8f58612560d4
f957789271488991a1038542a229a568a3cd1df4
'2012-06-28T20:46:07-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYIK' 'sip-files00281.tif'
74680aa1cb7392c48d251fe97da280e4
8a8bfb26d24ed4290a966d65a0e656cd1180897c
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYIL' 'sip-files00282.tif'
71785d40489929270da2ce34c86feaf1
ed84564018968d065f4b27346efb8e7a86de3e4f
'2012-06-28T20:56:37-04:00'
describe
'1704508' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYIM' 'sip-files00284.tif'
3803342b5d6bbaf64a311815958d95d6
9442ba9e64965e7598225e7ed296361bd0167862
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYIN' 'sip-files00285.tif'
1085de2c25151286adefa534bc07776d
97bd0e61ee9379a5986fd015ec7d8aad337ac349
describe
'1703676' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYIO' 'sip-files00287.tif'
7446c9bdb9aacad9da5b583995a2d7f7
2c17a6b87f5ef01b306cfaafec30bce4f46b0d97
'2012-06-28T20:44:34-04:00'
describe
'1698384' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYIP' 'sip-files00288.tif'
3554ce2fe7ec28c650b266f8c871fb1e
6ca43be699e2df51a2656860c7ab7d4ff5b369c6
'2012-06-28T20:53:59-04:00'
describe
'13077660' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYIQ' 'sip-files00289.tif'
5916befbfcce3c1b1c3ac238bda4a683
340359f33eaeff09071210c5d2ecf226a9afb54f
'2012-06-28T20:45:24-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYIR' 'sip-files00290.tif'
a6d97a3d9a15fea82fb6a77947b1259a
7a038f53e714ed5845ab497f0e30ab72101bf144
describe
'1704780' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYIS' 'sip-files00292.tif'
9f15e0679a21e277bb21b4b400444981
0b8a44c1271ede2d071c112ea0ccfea68da428c4
describe
'1704708' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYIT' 'sip-files00294.tif'
948423cb9fc0693fcc814883ea54f859
a2b0a3a8d986654538c47aa57f5649e013943b2b
'2012-06-28T20:46:40-04:00'
describe
'1703632' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYIU' 'sip-files00295.tif'
4d70bd04f04d46716ee58ef2a32b02bf
eb90eb2cebc300cee999dd8a76211b89a4acec86
describe
'1704692' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYIV' 'sip-files00296.tif'
a165043e7d75376dca39915e00778b98
2b59c5589bc87a3f064e6c2ddaa833f0b3ce53ec
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYIW' 'sip-files00297.tif'
df696a80e206ec78092b5a051ca46cba
2ee3e2297e44753c50333f139f0e54fbd524346d
'2012-06-28T20:54:05-04:00'
describe
'1704880' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYIX' 'sip-files00298.tif'
d303081310c1f64fe1636a1f8ff2c36e
5022b5687c7a14bb65d7afb1255639bf99d55ef1
'2012-06-28T20:56:05-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYIY' 'sip-files00299.tif'
757681f7ecdf734c531240bc05d6cf1a
386e3f44f84cb26a06aff825e48c483b48f02c4e
describe
'1704932' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYIZ' 'sip-files00300.tif'
1e1718278a2a1feada976e89cb062f83
34b8ffe35427a738cbaf750548b4cd0d200f1380
'2012-06-28T20:52:11-04:00'
describe
'39307060' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYJA' 'sip-files00301.tif'
02bec3e878eb53427b63b1e92fa50d0a
8d0b3b217df37118aea6038462d72b8ef56eea61
describe
'1703368' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYJB' 'sip-files00303.tif'
bb94c094a6475641b4aec0f736b7a33e
0139902fa1578ac78d3a9f8cc7c760b6007d62ac
'2012-06-28T20:57:19-04:00'
describe
'1704980' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYJC' 'sip-files00304.tif'
d79d44b82e569f0925008901c9c3401b
5d7d5b6dbbaeb9d2f4356ffba5e85ed13c88c182
describe
'1703332' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYJD' 'sip-files00305.tif'
70a976cdcffbd93d4dfe1a90d85be4ca
01fdc1815cd535e5850c8cf29963207134535eb3
'2012-06-28T20:57:09-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYJE' 'sip-files00306.tif'
70014330af2ff376c7876a346676cf72
fef805bd9b450d82b72c2766b6c15211a09aa03a
'2012-06-28T20:54:55-04:00'
describe
'1703432' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYJF' 'sip-files00307.tif'
a46bac7d622046ae2e2b258ed4849eb5
461f0e5ac8f5f9da98fa6432a664afb15897dfe9
describe
'1702336' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYJG' 'sip-files00308.tif'
a3414effabf88a399599081fb7874ebb
f5e242f1bc23563db108a04cc2e36bf503509a0c
describe
'26154644' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYJH' 'sip-files00312.tif'
654639a575fef0722319aa63db590a15
2ebee2a34d40049218a59c0539fef250f9351e56
'2012-06-28T20:47:49-04:00'
describe
'2236552' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYJI' 'sip-files00313.tif'
31940c66df2ce621957ff03d0f9cd0aa
1c85d64b1bcca6fadf3cddba8a67ddbade2ee74e
'2012-06-28T20:57:12-04:00'
describe
'3398' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYJJ' 'sip-files00002.pro'
50a308ffe9590e75d087d924bee0717b
d130f7c88bab0e9738f934c89c94ab717c79a0d6
describe
'3439' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYJK' 'sip-files00003.pro'
9fef45a7540a428753be37b91ecb3fcc
aba4497ea6ab60a1045e2d74f71d6097f8f5e1f1
describe
'953' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYJL' 'sip-files00005.pro'
26fc35ad926fee2716fe0b48fcf969b4
8853350409f4cddd62e42e3a8e0b45d33a399739
'2012-06-28T20:44:24-04:00'
describe
'4500' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYJM' 'sip-files00007.pro'
4fab2ee9b241661df04c524daeb8917b
d832a274698ddb8c83c782f07ad1b59d0f0feb84
describe
'21100' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYJN' 'sip-files00011.pro'
48c46db1a506feb3edaaf7e293e6e713
84a1a318f9dce8e5064d575a80eea32fed227330
describe
'22143' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYJO' 'sip-files00013.pro'
16aa68e694a99ca45b294e71a64ca711
f324ecf666aabc7093aa6fd23ee2a0b8d3e106d3
describe
'380' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYJP' 'sip-files00014.pro'
93c72268f2a8fd6cf942b1fff01e6c6e
4ef7d43427256a6ccc14d00fbfecf7c5a6f3b2cc
describe
'610' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYJQ' 'sip-files00016.pro'
0f3299cc8d4dba2532e0408c61c1f732
4e2c3ea84eae64aad2a48cb86afc6a9265f66ae3
describe
'948' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYJR' 'sip-files00017.pro'
5d18e833ec555192e307daecc60628bc
40aa050b93ea74b8248c9baa9bdbd66d877a76f1
describe
'411' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYJS' 'sip-files00018.pro'
fd4e139d4fc517a550ba947d4607893e
3922e9ca877fbd35ecd1901befe11fa389e1cfda
describe
'25804' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYJT' 'sip-files00019.pro'
bb2a5c54cb47642f0436e4bd0b4629ef
463285298bf0bbb4346b815aff6cc60f947f1bc7
describe
'41315' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYJU' 'sip-files00020.pro'
f7dcda438fcf40b31df465211562d46a
aa73ad950696b04c2b0a46c48c1716b4762612ec
describe
'39785' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYJV' 'sip-files00022.pro'
b4f198c15fd2039d5945382e9a56465f
a042b8c131f67161761ec73f2186f15c7b004915
describe
'39041' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYJW' 'sip-files00023.pro'
6a80a0df481d4df0a170793c50414062
6ea515c53c942f0654f6d73e7f8bfe2083f6dec9
describe
'7312' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYJX' 'sip-files00024.pro'
8ede25051193a56570b6232356c3788c
8dca49a653928f4796056e739a62567b3caffd2a
describe
'369' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYJY' 'sip-files00025.pro'
5c8b677d82d7f81c1890f89be1e247bd
258a36d9bb9b89241a0d4796c8f04ac7b74e6508
describe
'356' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYJZ' 'sip-files00026.pro'
8e2e131c35875485365814d60cddcd2b
e6bc183408d5433c67642ab2d149fc84032346e0
describe
'39764' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYKA' 'sip-files00029.pro'
1996df75fc207b905b6024caf02c75ca
6804a8f0dace9d00c89239b78fd703813ed4e8dc
describe
'46125' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYKB' 'sip-files00032.pro'
39a849274e5e3f4428d81b404eef1dc9
67749cfb64251d2df384ccc01be56510a8459e4a
describe
'40309' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYKC' 'sip-files00033.pro'
d9805767ed6eb104e08e3ba6021d0df4
976a77fe497ef8e396ba88cabd7d90e58f640a27
'2012-06-28T20:54:37-04:00'
describe
'41289' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYKD' 'sip-files00035.pro'
629fe50fa29d9fb16b50cfc4a6ab1a22
b667c8a7542eed385a6889e15211c9e803b8c0fe
describe
'42213' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYKE' 'sip-files00036.pro'
81020a6edf44bd337ae3c587bbe4d75c
35a1256968c0f779393e537d1ee1f98881882cad
describe
'40683' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYKF' 'sip-files00037.pro'
ae76511c7667ca4c89eff6b2f7e49232
8bb8389ded9be12e4e283ca3bebe61f734d3884e
describe
'6135' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYKG' 'sip-files00038.pro'
ae72541aaec52430ec5cf2bfc5656837
84b695c86680aeb25ffc4b5f4c96e4ce7c537851
describe
'821' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYKH' 'sip-files00039.pro'
7755cb71bb0ef9579f72d496e3b2ec32
9475679411da566c92f47edca09524ad1766fb8e
describe
'27638' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYKI' 'sip-files00041.pro'
79b4c1aedf6e0d98190dcda1277b0597
7191252d69a4fb5d12d210d0ef13252ca207e69c
describe
'41780' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYKJ' 'sip-files00042.pro'
59da4f375a3ed9bcd46c67e547958d53
cf4f2e0faa2c636ade9ecc4130a763b34a171c29
describe
'39935' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYKK' 'sip-files00043.pro'
5e346e154aae2e651fd5db4c4f14f847
26a8b8412c85e1be1a6e0e91c025b0e9d4573c1c
describe
'41543' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYKL' 'sip-files00044.pro'
71a82808a76cbb96f76ced54409357e5
7ade48928490b1b2e8d2f25b2b94e708e2d8b8a5
describe
'39256' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYKM' 'sip-files00045.pro'
570184ea0a4d0e64089742002824eb9f
2bd4c29e8a89fe2260d7a761405f40ba79413ff6
describe
'40920' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYKN' 'sip-files00046.pro'
09d1fd398593fe519c3970cd7631a96f
267c47e9c3f4eb23ad88b00e5231958b2b3be13a
describe
'39456' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYKO' 'sip-files00047.pro'
9cad90b47c269a73e7aa6467efc70a13
f2d9e8d870c909383a0ce3ade2075a3dadbaedc7
'2012-06-28T20:46:58-04:00'
describe
'40691' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYKP' 'sip-files00048.pro'
284afa5963805bf5f5e3361a4ff9ed78
65636e27c2800ed0e8b41bb91f5178114de891c7
describe
'39408' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYKQ' 'sip-files00049.pro'
b053cad91d6d50e51be8580b3cc0eb0f
543b4055140f0594128938440b394c7a34f369db
describe
'41445' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYKR' 'sip-files00050.pro'
4e27d0fbccab45c58fef29790c9b8158
97a8afdcd12fbbf475751919c41036fee5471d1a
describe
'40208' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYKS' 'sip-files00051.pro'
b8a451c8c1f4dedd27d1c68799c8c1e0
6466fdeac971f07ef9e38a5c2efb16c187d30834
'2012-06-28T20:53:26-04:00'
describe
'40072' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYKT' 'sip-files00052.pro'
02081628af056c8a8a98ce364a4dcbc6
44b7afce76dc252e8af9ed4da3f7c8e49a2d80d2
describe
'41604' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYKU' 'sip-files00054.pro'
e3c3630ba8221555613671e07191a657
c27483f0af30c6e13ce5bef1fe7b93403b487662
describe
'38591' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYKV' 'sip-files00055.pro'
fcb366707f6c9117f1b7a47172f97149
a36acb2b7c3e206331499fe5030656768fbf31db
describe
'40001' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYKW' 'sip-files00056.pro'
29ab6a2f02178dab05c2f9c48fe07905
3186cd2d4728ee91333bf356bb1f1671858110c7
describe
'40645' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYKX' 'sip-files00057.pro'
7a880c641a0e9040edfed42f3fd6e718
287cc91e2f2d66760e8881cfb8c55a8adfd47c4c
describe
'28451' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYKY' 'sip-files00059.pro'
18daea8ff4c7932b4bc699c4c8352814
7930fa5a9c9fbbdaf0bd1732bbc7a7aae04d3f0f
'2012-06-28T20:46:14-04:00'
describe
'286' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYKZ' 'sip-files00060.pro'
a8fbac3749dad8aa4e89db9064309f9b
9ad18be6b485074f13f9ad2de6007804a3fcefac
describe
'795' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYLA' 'sip-files00061.pro'
769a24e32db098594746e58b80de568b
9df93b2f35fb3c3951cb201ce88a828df19cea37
describe
'26926' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYLB' 'sip-files00063.pro'
39d45750c4d89261f15e577b439aa0a7
5239f556ab8b5e18d8cc74780fa10f7b3b84ef1c
describe
'40062' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYLC' 'sip-files00064.pro'
32ce56b8cc2b20653da984b5447ce3af
83c7bbd36f2494440bfc695c123916b220e07d9d
'2012-06-28T20:52:29-04:00'
describe
'20936' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYLD' 'sip-files00065.pro'
f79ae8f654811707c91ad3c2df75204f
053f541714718ba972b3eea7a671821f91ff99e6
describe
'40267' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYLE' 'sip-files00067.pro'
e7bdb3f5cef8f67914d6340f6c131cef
79517fc8917969572a64ee3b6724facaddedccf8
describe
'41202' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYLF' 'sip-files00068.pro'
674061e0409ecb3cdaa379f45669d07e
ec78047578cbf410cc499a7b1cab6377162c47e7
describe
'39600' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYLG' 'sip-files00069.pro'
015c67f464b91d777bc981751498b4fe
7eaf0b08c7caa770c1f4bbe320deace1d98719dd
describe
'40244' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYLH' 'sip-files00070.pro'
dd6f0bf154c3afb06a6a7d022c6f5b77
a6a20ad852cebfd11790fd90fb22309c688cd184
'2012-06-28T20:49:47-04:00'
describe
'38979' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYLI' 'sip-files00072.pro'
0961636ea7d127f922dbaca1d84110f5
c58a140e8d80ae31bf66b7228a49633d0b6d0334
describe
'40013' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYLJ' 'sip-files00073.pro'
2c735dbee565d3e24fe20c5fff943f2f
3f6997a428bba4e0e0bdad718e4e99a1969a1f39
describe
'40289' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYLK' 'sip-files00074.pro'
144facf8b60c15e608a90a013e495b94
d206179eb0876db5a699a8e5cd5f19beaa13327d
describe
'45828' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYLL' 'sip-files00076.pro'
3e3796d81b058d268cbe4589fe53318b
70853712e1ed4e29e0548d4e760fd527c3fdcfe6
describe
'37069' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYLM' 'sip-files00077.pro'
845b8cc00c336c3ea8f62c0406d00a3d
db49a551762079825fa312a3968124814b7d869e
describe
'41616' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYLN' 'sip-files00078.pro'
c3f89a4cfa77ecbb7fc8d8f1ad1900cd
83e4f0b99c72b0b0dfb934ad5ac16cfde6ba0e9a
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYLO' 'sip-files00080.pro'
c3ce766c764bbf564d8c1ffb41ec3f41
d7905b195da26d83875ea9f00b75e628092ae54f
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYLP' 'sip-files00081.pro'
8686994ae130bc882362b107240c2b04
5f0adacc2384cea9e9ce0ebe09617aefa7da744d
describe
'348' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYLQ' 'sip-files00082.pro'
11c0d69499287de549e961191cc532dd
6a3201175031f89b9c178e648c1c599e43678e9e
describe
'41647' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYLR' 'sip-files00084.pro'
0c518ea14e5ebcec09e9dbd3b8ac9eca
63e28e2ed7922ee83d248669be50b4373aa07a71
describe
'39412' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYLS' 'sip-files00085.pro'
36f1099d874bb63de8ae4e5124c44b86
63f6d2f508765821dd2dd2493e80ee05915e10c1
describe
'40813' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYLT' 'sip-files00086.pro'
42b116beea4a7952fb722706c2f2add6
54b1c67ed4944b610d10c1ff556166252174f0b4
describe
'38813' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYLU' 'sip-files00087.pro'
ace52ca6a0a027f7bdb4363d810db661
54bf06313e6e15c86ad1a61557886380be6c68ab
'2012-06-28T20:56:58-04:00'
describe
'40075' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYLV' 'sip-files00090.pro'
2b2a8ceb5e945171b074c5e913319d54
ecf88587573fb9db8d3258d32b7b8d587aad976b
describe
'39911' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYLW' 'sip-files00091.pro'
f1895a68094dd217e683abcf2f75a1fb
84dcf0b1578ff0d40634df44a930f97c3dd88e15
describe
'43325' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYLX' 'sip-files00092.pro'
e0992b52472a2c414540d7dee9dc24c2
b51333950c45b47693de091672608d521b784b7a
describe
'40686' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYLY' 'sip-files00093.pro'
65d51f8b591af2bed761ebdfe1e39129
e2c0d244d68f8cc24b8051545510f962ed39aa4f
'2012-06-28T20:51:35-04:00'
describe
'39042' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYLZ' 'sip-files00094.pro'
af9aec85b5fa4443cd8dfb1ed11aad55
cd538fa8267095b35a7b074d6548205fd3ccb6f2
describe
'40958' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYMA' 'sip-files00095.pro'
3a2e8cf4576e980c556bea924384662b
b86446791f7035c51906a31815ff3d5d3f8c951d
describe
'40424' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYMB' 'sip-files00096.pro'
1b43545bde069baf60f7da59e3c0dfa1
cbcdae6f5571ffcd5d3dc43fc7de540ad160c3bd
describe
'28666' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYMC' 'sip-files00097.pro'
e70ed770f9c6e78c3eb066ab75e9e449
cc5f74ab44d8295a623769c41114256e194f15a9
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYMD' 'sip-files00098.pro'
d86d6a9a9272205dd3305361421995ea
3f9b6b4f726de1d37fd15d50d798a52c24581af0
describe
'288' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYME' 'sip-files00100.pro'
1810cb146102d55a5880cbad941e29cd
b2bd8e7098273d8e68e99c0714c4f9cce24081cd
describe
'28579' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYMF' 'sip-files00101.pro'
57f6baf34ffdb49fc791bac4e52fcb56
394e32a3373ae1515a22303b3250bf362307577a
describe
'39388' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYMG' 'sip-files00102.pro'
368fbef48fa75ced15a50a0470988c89
f509b2fc3526d12a7a0f03e2ca56d59ccc3396c4
describe
'40006' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYMH' 'sip-files00103.pro'
2f426c4c4ee869d490ba45672fb4185a
7c9e3f5f206aa8bfce8324ac01c16ec4da3e4b0d
describe
'44720' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYMI' 'sip-files00104.pro'
b4389a0663c104c66ad6f7d76dea031f
341bffcba1d4f9f3b64a635fd896155d8bbf3f68
describe
'39144' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYMJ' 'sip-files00105.pro'
d6fcd7209c2ec72106f0881f8cb85dce
4229be755fa1cc81bcf4c230d501cd6e50d62ff4
describe
'38413' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYMK' 'sip-files00106.pro'
607492934d6c02e1b4d4658208b9571a
181e3936d5ce43f0ae46b25e857783268e9972ef
describe
'40133' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYML' 'sip-files00107.pro'
1357099af917923c0d919184dda07d49
5cffe6c81ff1030a34479297aa639a73ed4f8c66
'2012-06-28T20:52:27-04:00'
describe
'40130' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYMM' 'sip-files00109.pro'
cbe341045fd3e6ac59aaeaedb498b74d
e649dc3f2fae7248d9fdb2b80d3cf3531fa9a66f
'2012-06-28T20:52:50-04:00'
describe
'38733' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYMN' 'sip-files00110.pro'
b59d328994809d189abae6ec453eb23f
12e97bc593cdae04edd5199e7c0b8b15acb8b40a
describe
'40560' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYMO' 'sip-files00112.pro'
c9ecb192e3fcb7549929dc9ab834dd26
39b071734a4429a5a193430e1142cc6475958412
'2012-06-28T20:55:35-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYMP' 'sip-files00113.pro'
3f3de8240d9c3e185a05d551e1b94d68
95184f8f408b8f6d998f31545c3265f478371479
'2012-06-28T20:48:08-04:00'
describe
'40107' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYMQ' 'sip-files00114.pro'
1105edee2dfe83a0439ba704db48ae8b
aa29941cdb4172bd8cca3d10ee756cdcb42ca6ff
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYMR' 'sip-files00115.pro'
533dcee6717a06fc654959bea1f139aa
2225df147f029cb2885f6598b5e40717b537d6b6
describe
'1336' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYMS' 'sip-files00119.pro'
af1ab8ce2e304effe635ef2d594cc42d
48c496ed37a773d075cf973377ffb48f3aae3ac3
describe
'312' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYMT' 'sip-files00120.pro'
d67e2d57bac00df6cce15a9aa74f6fe2
f2331f862098d0c081d346c563c7002fff31c3b3
describe
'37832' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYMU' 'sip-files00122.pro'
c7abb1c7648685ac480378209857100a
764c0263ac4022105fe248ac41b816e9dd49ec5a
describe
'39678' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYMV' 'sip-files00123.pro'
caa2329e9b089682ff7afb513b1e85c2
7215bee1fbeff7a6473fa20a62bb00815d55ea5a
describe
'42784' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYMW' 'sip-files00124.pro'
ae0625b7606bd004a503615afb90cbfb
30862246d63efc8df9ed1dad4e928d5dcb272ef2
'2012-06-28T20:52:45-04:00'
describe
'40383' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYMX' 'sip-files00125.pro'
81e84754a4b471aa7147ec4c93537914
af73b15463fdcc6eb49c742349f6f25cbf0d4a51
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYMY' 'sip-files00128.pro'
db9eb28d51d0f87ace93f9c136d47ec0
4b89a84fedb81c18b427f66ccb4044eb7048f38f
describe
'40964' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYMZ' 'sip-files00129.pro'
e1b1b046298e45dad99799b65bf5e4b6
9476738c2298eb3cab45b258d17d5b0ac5f7ba42
describe
'40939' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYNA' 'sip-files00130.pro'
6d86ed94cb0f1ac6c4ad64fa1fd6cb1e
33f42b8e3025efdd53516d2c3ea88c48b5ce321e
describe
'41097' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYNB' 'sip-files00131.pro'
1da3f18ca67cfaed37c386ec1c4936d9
3ff641268fd11f054157bbd2a9773e6aa5a48797
describe
'40956' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYNC' 'sip-files00132.pro'
9bddb10227d401fb5a272765b4f0e8f8
ec99ddaa6fea5df344bf4f4b0681bb98b6c7cd89
describe
'40468' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYND' 'sip-files00133.pro'
98d33debc8754b3d7fa983dab882f7b6
9828542841b11ce625c2f837221117875e11dab4
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYNE' 'sip-files00138.pro'
2c2306eb0ddd72ed44e7e0b19f7f4d0e
eb83a13704ba2723f6b0e72591d4cb5e7bb251a3
describe
'429' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYNF' 'sip-files00139.pro'
f4bb9877c618038249d7199dea10027d
411cb8008b4000d972ccb0823b2a85f16c7e20cc
describe
'392' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYNG' 'sip-files00140.pro'
463cd4305eee2632f7722541b80d5de9
378a03f6864a5a3a7c37d73197117e2a817623c0
describe
'26030' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYNH' 'sip-files00141.pro'
0b739101d832ac94b16c016a735b1730
0f1ce10c02d14fca13ad9f86fba0e0a2df981d69
describe
'44517' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYNI' 'sip-files00142.pro'
2e4682e07080a5ba3604d189dc3e105a
f42e41b3a257e57dc00790718835994c8f4db136
describe
'41634' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYNJ' 'sip-files00143.pro'
58f7dd2867f10962ab8401fbf4957afb
d48d633be073238a177982cedff588082d585460
'2012-06-28T20:44:51-04:00'
describe
'43179' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYNK' 'sip-files00144.pro'
ccb0366f3c2ebc06cf64c0d6bd94a894
d9b302b3b85af945bd4609599bf95b300d01d19a
'2012-06-28T20:46:56-04:00'
describe
'40359' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYNL' 'sip-files00145.pro'
b5a0cb0a80c067279ab8a1aed759f01c
658acbb098f7918cd49a44d0bc5f81255cac6416
describe
'40145' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYNM' 'sip-files00146.pro'
e4933d37926b8a3e75e72f7a701ebbdd
289b15f53c9156977f0d2b253c8d642d58872c20
describe
'39201' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYNN' 'sip-files00147.pro'
39fe607da6d709c888e2df1b38c6bdfd
7907231e7e8313a025730a36b2c254b2952523d4
describe
'40324' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYNO' 'sip-files00148.pro'
7577539c6476d1aa1b473ddf4d3b85f3
a9e018b30e5e400f2e84917be2a8ef4acdacf39f
describe
'39601' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYNP' 'sip-files00149.pro'
45598544ceff54dcc08c1624bd28144f
60353f5f49a614281066e970ab2b5c7c8a5d0dec
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYNQ' 'sip-files00150.pro'
cf8a382df1f408cba8c29172b960c16e
e57775f127847fc48b27f1fa5fcb3c36ceda111c
'2012-06-28T20:52:40-04:00'
describe
'40471' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYNR' 'sip-files00151.pro'
1711cd580457e2f4e321b72aabf76f89
1bff3e1c7f21a39adc6b211d80b42294f47f8cc4
describe
'41433' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYNS' 'sip-files00152.pro'
4b1d3c9f69773c730b0020e613913562
50e080b571b0babc512508a5b38eef343286ddff
describe
'39404' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYNT' 'sip-files00154.pro'
dde8e4310187b9b608fcc2fb7630ba80
74910e6dbfecbc3517ac073a8fddd62907f6a5a3
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYNU' 'sip-files00155.pro'
b6a151f4e28d9c2067b4b0d02ec44c7d
edc04b53724371ae9ad04941c5aa61360c6cb885
describe
'42291' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYNV' 'sip-files00157.pro'
4b321fa9b3d64d2a0ddf4f44e0fef428
36c06ace74ac5fe1456c8b457c34ab76040b31cc
describe
'12661' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYNW' 'sip-files00158.pro'
4409c37b8900387a25d47967a2aa94cf
67e778b0a2324ec648cd34222c863eecf0d72e15
'2012-06-28T20:53:00-04:00'
describe
'722' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYNX' 'sip-files00159.pro'
0080aabc2b11055f201f652fce8a4a5c
abd00528b42c97bd23d264a40ae9628d6ec94309
describe
'41754' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYNY' 'sip-files00162.pro'
eeabdcd8fe749ebbe1bce980ffa16612
a1ba16ffdc579f2ea2a67ebd391353a356a0b546
describe
'39749' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYNZ' 'sip-files00163.pro'
2bd5ff2b966f9bbbc7fbaebbacbd42cf
b22539903ee5beebedf8e01057d0191671002ede
describe
'39532' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYOA' 'sip-files00166.pro'
c1e0dad911316e209dc603305f9a7e70
0b9dcbfe2b096633df3c2e6c0cca5dee97976510
describe
'40508' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYOB' 'sip-files00167.pro'
86caacdb64615ee37dcec86d7c8ba631
9b10f7d46f9bfcaebb71afb73bfb4815337872a1
describe
'42322' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYOC' 'sip-files00168.pro'
df63898a10b16f9245884a1242e3b635
18c26df3e41d87bf58fdf17f8873ec533c939e3a
'2012-06-28T20:53:14-04:00'
describe
'40839' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYOD' 'sip-files00169.pro'
4113578fdaeb4f9aa7a4d7bd46edc6c7
6a20bb92832f60aff5d8493a6b1a7fd4e2408536
describe
'38684' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYOE' 'sip-files00170.pro'
bf24ec47da503170b51c5d19f4fd89c2
830d96265f7f896c237635fdfabf0ae40e9bf80d
describe
'41599' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYOF' 'sip-files00171.pro'
cf75a0c409276d19dde7196b5c54b489
38b1c66e95340f8f60529db522845c1451a14497
describe
'39856' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYOG' 'sip-files00173.pro'
e2fc110eeb1af487d646d404cef41ebf
a3853bc4e44f8eb2f6cd2f32e9e29d8ab3217e4e
describe
'40346' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYOH' 'sip-files00175.pro'
c88a03dc0535d3c3a86db406a3d0b192
010dddfc2fec349332e689a96b87cee9268307f2
describe
'37659' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYOI' 'sip-files00176.pro'
4a8a4fe82a8843e4637b45612229c9ec
721a23857b3be1d09612527d7482c5a5d05d4b8b
describe
'1324' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYOJ' 'sip-files00179.pro'
2169c048aa389d03b1728c149a803725
4409994f83c680a0c41c28d269a81c75168967f9
'2012-06-28T20:45:40-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYOK' 'sip-files00180.pro'
fc4dd26c68bd7a8529116519aa1c8060
1184b6f8a47420daffb92e333f883884691e54c8
describe
'28546' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYOL' 'sip-files00181.pro'
1a82a8a4cbcf7650bc2eb4b13cbda225
a3683f1be2bc7ed502a5318c63faa1ac42320f8d
describe
'40633' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYOM' 'sip-files00183.pro'
3784c64929295dd639cc4af8b6022727
b5d5ed27ccdc0f4391f716f171d3feb6b319be34
'2012-06-28T20:55:51-04:00'
describe
'40183' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYON' 'sip-files00184.pro'
cfc514dde5498269160cc9fd1439b987
040b619ddb7456065fe0672d3b677a544e1ce61c
describe
'40164' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYOO' 'sip-files00185.pro'
0e5ea2eaa2410627aa988c5270ddca20
58259f89ed1a4e929b13be1ea4d00f14cd788268
describe
'41259' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYOP' 'sip-files00186.pro'
79f9673dfc195e5aa33906d960205ae8
8a61b0bb341d442338928072cc31fc0902ebef56
describe
'41361' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYOQ' 'sip-files00187.pro'
6c6f6515de213746f2845c4a684636eb
42a87666a37bd59db42c7d9c04d4bd3275d29be3
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYOR' 'sip-files00188.pro'
fd23d90114c22f0f88d7d8e76e490647
a8c6d47b5f31dfde34bb52fdda54e1145c0bb64e
describe
'39599' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYOS' 'sip-files00191.pro'
2541df3d3a51e3387ec1ae2f7bf3be36
4b2f190f15dcce656e1407a0ae706630ccf78bd4
describe
'40057' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYOT' 'sip-files00192.pro'
e1520d0e2ff58559144239191e59874a
1b4a2d8d46d5f9730b9d0ab1f1c10d80113f6e27
describe
'39623' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYOU' 'sip-files00193.pro'
084200328797c1e09e8b5b7f99ee26c1
e966bccdc2e8c6d1dbc2425214f4e0c5ba42a837
describe
'40047' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYOV' 'sip-files00194.pro'
f85f767a2ee3c68dcc61c278295bc71e
5f686b8177deb489d44fbacc7f7bc1fafea127d8
describe
'39683' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYOW' 'sip-files00195.pro'
4a250d06c19a946c19cfe7c61a290b50
d6a65757440775594577e1872baa0a3d14afcd0d
'2012-06-28T20:44:18-04:00'
describe
'8869' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYOX' 'sip-files00196.pro'
044c7776dd1b06727baf2b114e4edafc
6fa7fcef447aca24a9f07c218157a4257f66a7cf
describe
'1052' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYOY' 'sip-files00197.pro'
0f903b3521aed3af63e28c7a979fbf89
5be30b3f5c737fdfc71062de2c34fea87966858b
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYOZ' 'sip-files00198.pro'
bdb81eea94bdefb2cf914e5c5c11f4c5
68852d52b184fc7c77e37958ead47e4517b7c7f7
describe
'41091' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYPA' 'sip-files00200.pro'
886d6c362bde91f4ba7c8007132aced9
8b86f92e1ee60945ffe74b785bcf5b8547954e37
describe
'40419' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYPB' 'sip-files00201.pro'
162ea7eede07c7eb80ae8324ce2f71ad
b0f75a8675abf4f2c150aecc1ead1a71f66e0258
'2012-06-28T20:50:43-04:00'
describe
'41751' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYPC' 'sip-files00202.pro'
b250760f0a895dcc3dae29d1bca79088
6890642d40be31cba09bd499bb4b43849113ff2b
'2012-06-28T20:51:39-04:00'
describe
'41114' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYPD' 'sip-files00203.pro'
7bd5ed3c57475b3626ab7cbb8ec4dedb
51e0c92879e6efff6d27546ecbe12c3ce8be6f98
describe
'39507' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYPE' 'sip-files00205.pro'
93714a24d87d4c0f74fca0463ba978cd
1e0b481d78d5d723f19895ae900bbad3f5cd45eb
describe
'41308' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYPF' 'sip-files00206.pro'
07c57532cd4fb444b7f2591d3db269e9
c83d78ba83ba337acd94cdac9de200ab1abb3621
describe
'41104' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYPG' 'sip-files00207.pro'
63a41744e3566a9b535bb4837587d8be
f410b84360f2d4a1b7e45940fd948a5e91c6d206
describe
'39948' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYPH' 'sip-files00208.pro'
6d74795d761ddd7a551831bf7b2514db
9cccc6df51bbe7e84e8f08736e211478b2424ad8
describe
'40201' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYPI' 'sip-files00210.pro'
27911d7aa87e5856de638c2377cddc48
d2517ad69883b345b25d6f1e3b38ad76ccff49a1
'2012-06-28T20:46:52-04:00'
describe
'39053' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYPJ' 'sip-files00211.pro'
9108a204a4e7847893ee2567c19bed11
325923162ddbfb13d6ed2a4a370668a959db59b0
describe
'40248' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYPK' 'sip-files00212.pro'
8d06f70001f3f351d8ceaf2148540c6f
4a1b01efbf017635643fc2cd31093ea472e18bb6
describe
'40903' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYPL' 'sip-files00213.pro'
9e70d21db0ec90ce396454fe1c4646cf
d2fecb29c447985e1cc037ae799b8e3196421934
describe
'39191' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYPM' 'sip-files00216.pro'
d1e0e59544a9030738b30c72e3ff72a7
9b2fbb6f30ba4e8dc60214220c16ace4b8a9441a
describe
'317' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYPN' 'sip-files00218.pro'
7b0e69792b8a70cd40352f0aa5d98e83
81e3a921f250d8bd6ceaf25a2be32a84cb37d4f3
describe
'28312' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYPO' 'sip-files00219.pro'
bf531b6e82d6daade2416499482fe7f7
5ef5616f9a25955f75afd4234504028ec86049cd
describe
'40621' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYPP' 'sip-files00220.pro'
76abda72fa907b0cabad63e68893aa48
c1a65fd8be3f5e659779cb31073ea551a1d2055c
'2012-06-28T20:57:20-04:00'
describe
'40344' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYPQ' 'sip-files00222.pro'
1ed65d4c0bd8090b074cc36b81f93d79
84bf05fa0b05405c58d170413b3d6ad51c086d6d
describe
'41848' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYPR' 'sip-files00223.pro'
324b69a8a9f5212e8ed072dc34ebdc82
4ba35b8a9725fbb31e719e11895254ebfee025fa
describe
'42222' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYPS' 'sip-files00225.pro'
8afb7ff923f26e8e41c18bd4953c7ab4
ce27ace739fedb3a7fc9f1e1545c28b2a055357d
describe
'40943' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYPT' 'sip-files00226.pro'
8c108bfe5e2a6b1334fb6bf5d15cb756
74272ee8ffba028905320898011a1a252cdaa19c
describe
'40497' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYPU' 'sip-files00227.pro'
82690ce3ae18a0cfe2b1a99f6de38fbd
7fc8ac0b94feeb8db5ad24b250ffedd94a3c0742
describe
'41540' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYPV' 'sip-files00228.pro'
0e3d485004d93bee0debff21a6b71524
1cb43e49c438918a46f5046a0625e7a66ddb52c1
describe
'40015' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYPW' 'sip-files00229.pro'
b9b6fb8d3c62a51752ae94075db35cbb
1ac6f154cfa369891908407f171818492843aa98
describe
'41713' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYPX' 'sip-files00232.pro'
de260e963b94ce0fef182fd3adad154f
05565b10cbdfa6b767561a082dabd19b773669e7
describe
'40169' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYPY' 'sip-files00233.pro'
87148fe7d42e450776235e7c65d150cc
4927865ee9572f1a8ce5e1ed2eb77bb1f7b1e511
'2012-06-28T20:54:47-04:00'
describe
'41056' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYPZ' 'sip-files00234.pro'
b5ebe485e51cbef3c48ee8dc31cac76f
5f760614311a1d980f62c374cf2c74f6d878f599
describe
'40445' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYQA' 'sip-files00235.pro'
b9de9ed08c38f34961e9d68a15dc0424
5d0ac566aeda481d3eb1acc62bf818011418909f
describe
'39857' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYQB' 'sip-files00236.pro'
38d62f4a39bd7acf0d50c4b970be9fc5
8a1957e7c3d4a397b41955e4b86d2f5155a64fc3
describe
'1095' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYQC' 'sip-files00237.pro'
ac5702e547f99a8c18f93f5bc8ea651e
2848ce08bbf8deb0b6b371b9379ae0ca49d0bc70
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYQD' 'sip-files00238.pro'
32e842283a1a4cde341ba792c072a95b
0ec98ef1010fc52dafe33ce96a45cffe789c15c2
describe
'41188' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYQE' 'sip-files00241.pro'
9aabf7ee8c2fd4e0ece5d18667737f81
0e44b34e8f5034d899607998a9971a28c2a2e713
'2012-06-28T20:50:04-04:00'
describe
'42651' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYQF' 'sip-files00245.pro'
784ebd5bdb7dea1059f2387bf83e9442
124b811de1d99793b9cde7d5897e6402c0826288
describe
'41192' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYQG' 'sip-files00246.pro'
e02b925c29b33f32d08f8414d9e026ed
ef19b8ecf585cd5d5444739efa1cc7c6ef9270c2
'2012-06-28T20:53:12-04:00'
describe
'39348' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYQH' 'sip-files00247.pro'
a9d0e93dd21b4e1e51c6ce6ce0b8671f
baf1654adb980e6281b192ee0c7db36bf414cd8f
describe
'41369' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYQI' 'sip-files00248.pro'
a9a9c84de6f6a5f7f13a6dd4e1fa5f41
e6e0fbda8495094c927335f4061d4bd6b356ef13
describe
'40463' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYQJ' 'sip-files00249.pro'
36f3b3d316e419c407eb282eda28d5c3
35c4466e58caf384772bc9833ab1d85b0d0ea63d
describe
'40078' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYQK' 'sip-files00250.pro'
6514d14d7392d0a4b01f0dbcedf5db59
15733a0ee7feb0c621fde7489fa34389adff8a53
describe
'40074' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYQL' 'sip-files00251.pro'
406b867697c93dbf58683f0d38cd5435
c173aaa3ed84869a325961512030c7b5fcef8cad
describe
'39548' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYQM' 'sip-files00252.pro'
2bd72d1efc8f572b3088b82ee11849fa
7a2439242045993057c441a82490ff7fa95d8b37
describe
'41578' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYQN' 'sip-files00253.pro'
72c0a5fc4f70267a69264bdd6d6f5ae9
083f3f19ac4fba397963b40a68822e158fbcc415
describe
'9660' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYQO' 'sip-files00254.pro'
93ea724d14242457abdb01a9e85d8574
9f0d523d8d80f97744701ad4dbc8a0680b2a7c19
'2012-06-28T20:53:02-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYQP' 'sip-files00256.pro'
7e8543563d493031f008c6839d4a76a7
5c368fb5c902be00b1c46db54755a734c9d57029
describe
'30584' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYQQ' 'sip-files00257.pro'
8bbea7c90371c8b10775c3a58c5c6e0f
a1a00ae1a7b7e91a861c36b4c90331c975c8a15b
describe
'44277' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYQR' 'sip-files00259.pro'
47aa525fd59ab74ac00ae594e1a86fe7
df741ad21a81703cc4656682210ec8cbe7bc2348
'2012-06-28T20:55:17-04:00'
describe
'40121' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYQS' 'sip-files00260.pro'
fac32fe5a82bbb771334005ac94ad824
182b1a513268e414923cf652cfd9fc8ef37afa5f
describe
'41746' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYQT' 'sip-files00261.pro'
b97668c9dc9eef305e00e2ace1555717
a80178b3770670ad96a213ccaca5eba9892d4e32
describe
'41301' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYQU' 'sip-files00262.pro'
b9463a8002fea7111020db5d75e0ca3a
9bba83fd83235c9406e3d30e69e51552f2751db5
describe
'40094' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYQV' 'sip-files00263.pro'
e524877627dbf4581be3a3f5630ea4a0
2abddc8c8604449ebfce5507c537e8b1dfcedf4d
describe
'40798' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYQW' 'sip-files00264.pro'
91aa7737b70a7783883c2f96616d2b25
901db32daa4488b07a16e4769df7347e646c588f
'2012-06-28T20:45:32-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYQX' 'sip-files00265.pro'
c0c9c69126b7b69b63d94efb5426070e
e1f58532eac2b258b3f0d5a593f7b0002e35843e
describe
'41863' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYQY' 'sip-files00266.pro'
bd61bf50dba61004572239a4b244b641
bd529b73e0fa38d0d6f9b4e5dad30ca27240ca52
'2012-06-28T20:50:30-04:00'
describe
'41169' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYQZ' 'sip-files00267.pro'
a047d1c9892ccf256e3e8f6acc4aa6da
962974e51b49ef406a0ceb18bc6dd7b8586a0ef3
describe
'40345' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYRA' 'sip-files00268.pro'
3438f4edcc9e30bca8ee67c2ceefe6b6
8a0612aceb55a5bd465aa4189f5b7124d3b09805
describe
'26028' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYRB' 'sip-files00271.pro'
fc5cf9afb0cbf9bf1a6e107664d338be
00bd0303210c3332e64e8d403026b1e10edaaed8
describe
'41281' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYRC' 'sip-files00272.pro'
230f49a1469253a52210cd4bcaf9608d
6d07506a8b161996000fe06af64ffbe14bf8e866
describe
'40969' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYRD' 'sip-files00273.pro'
77365185f5544defecede31803d1f72b
3b2348fb0f0b26a6c7aaaed0777008ab69b51dc0
describe
'41605' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYRE' 'sip-files00274.pro'
f9ead87fe7c32a5333466f181ee56f1d
56b52c0c1541f1f7e7c3db7d677cef0f98657d5f
describe
'40279' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYRF' 'sip-files00275.pro'
49cf2fc5c49f07d7f3848c1f2d68f8e6
24ee580b9210f5238292eca06ecd173b100d28f3
describe
'38892' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYRG' 'sip-files00276.pro'
bd3a4c913c84c7ce4b4ec25eb272adec
158c117970ca5c71f2dded6b6d211f458033f4cc
describe
'44070' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYRH' 'sip-files00277.pro'
4581b170d9bad34928d4103d62253624
093e7ac288ef6e853990c3104ce21c3e699a1368
describe
'40360' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYRI' 'sip-files00279.pro'
0b1ad4360b22d005a9d4afe33e90174f
de1bd22fd8891e4a1a6977209502e45ad8664768
describe
'41988' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYRJ' 'sip-files00281.pro'
7b2f592ddfe21abec37b867b68f437e6
2a284ea760c299c87ff244f493444b3953e44e45
'2012-06-28T20:45:38-04:00'
describe
'41902' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYRK' 'sip-files00282.pro'
5e8dbd092ce4196f3d7d2cb353d527e4
44eef52f01f54cdc4f608ed83dcbf683b0717763
describe
'40620' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYRL' 'sip-files00283.pro'
fae96e34b19e8828a141bad189b89ac2
373fab64209a76afce28c8d775c96ceb29115f42
describe
'40382' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYRM' 'sip-files00285.pro'
b6a46ab05261568bfc83cd8b640052d6
16ef72859bbba6175897cf16e5f273721ef3b6e9
describe
'39024' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYRN' 'sip-files00286.pro'
5a75b2316b43c6536ea9f4ed8f8f51f4
0a0813da69c2a886ef000d7e20a6ddd732452811
describe
'8334' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYRO' 'sip-files00288.pro'
8dae7a03ad84cb31b506a6eb58172b6c
2936ae605a1173f352e722e8d116c27e92898d49
describe
'818' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYRP' 'sip-files00289.pro'
4642f823af0246ef0043a510a8ba9783
451766f90e920bee09a06adcf51cd501fc8a15c9
describe
'31936' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYRQ' 'sip-files00291.pro'
456513e6f0c09c386a50f37bfe1c8885
6b6359a15e4c48eb36ee1023458075263344bda0
describe
'41606' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYRR' 'sip-files00292.pro'
dfa28e7d3c41f26694f5b3beb171cf25
9746fde919e4edc1a4ba94ddd74c3fe787c3b800
'2012-06-28T20:56:46-04:00'
describe
'42210' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYRS' 'sip-files00293.pro'
c623e3cc00d6fae0e93881c8c0f75687
a1e4b5fa392e67f2a3f15e16f8ff115d77a62e1d
describe
'43991' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYRT' 'sip-files00294.pro'
3d128f81b63aa806865d90d445f41d00
1e85a95663295d76ad382a17602de0afaad512b5
'2012-06-28T20:52:26-04:00'
describe
'41057' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYRU' 'sip-files00298.pro'
7fe8e808fee23ca9eea645972e651e79
e3b7a4295efda4798f0cf2302587d12813261d33
describe
'44931' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYRV' 'sip-files00299.pro'
43ca71fda07441cf0c8ce43b77b170a9
ebc421976b6be58057c0ac0816e8f2ac57216b2f
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYRW' 'sip-files00300.pro'
301b49f4cf98e94969175430bf54c8e7
2ccc582fa8cf5911ef859069a18f179f2477ed0c
describe
'39909' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYRX' 'sip-files00303.pro'
2c0b5f6a16cb305991f1134da4784c5e
daa65542d1c3269e49960753bee1293a446be338
describe
'41416' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYRY' 'sip-files00304.pro'
d3c532c9916ba8d2c76da2203c16d82e
44fc642ef714b784a8f0a373276e5c881f9d21c0
describe
'38411' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYRZ' 'sip-files00305.pro'
992303a8f2dda8870f9ffc8c8302c785
b147e147675539466ac80279fbc94b2c8688d154
describe
'42259' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYSA' 'sip-files00306.pro'
464770114f0b72f5257ad3af854a72aa
b51514e0b72b714634e692b6ef954c8b2db47698
describe
'41775' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYSB' 'sip-files00307.pro'
e337b5a5ae9d776c06375d31f5a47feb
95b8469f4bebed03b30fb0076e36bf717130e3ad
describe
'28427' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYSC' 'sip-files00308.pro'
4ec6c4f60f76dcf3ffa7280e4f7796da
3ec86760de5d16c7c3ed4a1c68403378ee383eb8
describe
'215' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYSD' 'sip-files00003.txt'
38b6c8952d75668da12ce231802c2235
6c593aac6ebd5201a959d0a5dde9ddeaf4eef78a
describe
Invalid character
'150' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYSE' 'sip-files00005.txt'
02e4c4114d2613254bc3cad0da42986b
5d4baec35db714ff7ba74ada187a6a560b3f74b6
describe
'260' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYSF' 'sip-files00007.txt'
0e5a6a0126cb9c3d2f222f8f43050850
b0b10ba05912f569b7fe6ec24bf12df6bd583be4
'2012-06-28T20:55:42-04:00'
describe
Invalid character
'508' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYSG' 'sip-files00009.txt'
9f51b841d82640a3670e33f96d630d3b
b3c34f525b6da0641ec73fc54885cdff3ce3bf29
describe
'1256' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYSH' 'sip-files00012.txt'
4c93014a4e25c5f843578869d74345d4
aaad52ed95a39917ff5796034d63cd28dbf8f15d
describe
'893' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYSI' 'sip-files00013.txt'
0b7f072430660f29ea9539eb630c1324
a81afa249d8d2bb5fec12de8b40bb1d073bcc466
describe
'984' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYSJ' 'sip-files00015.txt'
a8ed8e31ba2af46ebb2da27517ace2de
b71a4f01b2c591f978dbc589cf030a07b192449e
'2012-06-28T20:52:05-04:00'
describe
'87' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYSK' 'sip-files00017.txt'
71c65cfc8fe08d442715842b2723526b
e8568f85d18c25c8df062f04a0c4fde30d75fc5d
describe
'1010' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYSL' 'sip-files00019.txt'
ff1032d861ccfaea9de46890dba8883a
eb37b69fcccdc7963517f1d8a3e8dcd3cef166d6
describe
'1547' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYSM' 'sip-files00020.txt'
6c88ae2f0aa8bd3dcc3934312df51e4e
5f9b6cce668e959eefc5b8614cddd29d6ea792b6
describe
'1518' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYSN' 'sip-files00021.txt'
040fd827402d98fbabb4b0849e4594f4
6af1ff9b172c082d8042fbd23cad30e0201823c4
'2012-06-28T20:54:32-04:00'
describe
'1624' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYSO' 'sip-files00022.txt'
ea4cd9a1ba43ef4c6962bc42b71c5127
a872f8e18491693278dd921764b684f13ce9e985
describe
'1498' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYSP' 'sip-files00023.txt'
7ab38c770867e6ab8ddb37eb98389a3c
e30aeabbfb0ebc64bff1da16f9b7d12ca61772d8
describe
'1075' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYSQ' 'sip-files00027.txt'
36c7ae93e830b7ee9364cb3d0c97b8b1
06fc7ae4f1d3ecca32d220dde8c6937b7cde7aea
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYSR' 'sip-files00028.txt'
0d11a9fc11d6639644e2ffa58dd8d56c
19069ee66ac39b7e161eb71626576ad765cea43a
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYSS' 'sip-files00029.txt'
b53cb432c277859a23d7ec166cd94b2f
ec8e0453a78e8f76d0a707147750ac962ec5feee
describe
'1458' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYST' 'sip-files00030.txt'
edb4a343e6ed0e33e14419fa6556d600
4d7403ed7e2e9a371a7269d006deb8bbb32cb38b
describe
'1543' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYSU' 'sip-files00031.txt'
3dc64699e82e28dc218fc76031ad5e73
cdcd40c22ada75398ef87695dbe8c7aebfb5f3bd
describe
'1818' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYSV' 'sip-files00032.txt'
cc59511e5f6a08893c24368253985566
3747a5d956209671e8de471230d1f70b3447f549
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYSW' 'sip-files00033.txt'
50d86fbfd7cc1557c2facb77af98e53a
4d1ec74f56d87d4f05ae77a2d8b363fca8a8e7cf
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYSX' 'sip-files00034.txt'
3210712d14a97d569d33e665e2b24716
3dd0e9188120245d668c47ea199fd1f9d65b89ff
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYSY' 'sip-files00035.txt'
944e3e30f000ca0df0f9f3fd41e48cef
638f0986ed575e8de2ad0d1666144aaab1601e55
describe
'1583' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYSZ' 'sip-files00036.txt'
6ed81330e6939c13b6c5e96e90486ea1
bcad8d65fbcd8902b931f0f659c92aa17ccde747
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYTA' 'sip-files00037.txt'
a1591520c949461ffcdbd75449d8d722
bba25d1d4980ee9a2170aac2af000a964ce2b6ae
'2012-06-28T20:56:16-04:00'
describe
'251' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYTB' 'sip-files00038.txt'
2ff9d1bde1aa080f2159e372c9f4a37d
0147fe21fb171aad83ceeed5e303d5152c3afd00
describe
'66' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYTC' 'sip-files00039.txt'
084c2429b6789ee5ee64acf805fcea16
ef700bcdef9894944def2973affab343c387a31d
describe
'1100' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYTD' 'sip-files00041.txt'
cab94e7458e3a4fd51d207a645b55bbb
88abc0dd171493c54e8a00d5c0aa813bba91b110
describe
'1633' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYTE' 'sip-files00042.txt'
4acf5bfebb2d3c78ba0e4a6a8d3dc7fe
45a55aefa710a705a603c5a0859d7e7b6c50fedb
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYTF' 'sip-files00043.txt'
8946089dcad4d8f69c5d5a1c4950427b
5f7c95a586b7c090eb5aa9f2945881e31e2e15b4
describe
'1578' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYTG' 'sip-files00044.txt'
d99071eca00ed2e5c8bae1b4f350ad61
61909c5763606db727c78c5f7dc3c4ed696b0fdf
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYTH' 'sip-files00045.txt'
9e53686418bf8c33121d24ee6fb433f5
8182980b8dc3ae822a9031fd31697305e8e42078
describe
'1569' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYTI' 'sip-files00046.txt'
f57f2e89fe1165b5cb651e7fce215cba
b696afd75236551a710e17688e227d4a153b30ca
describe
'1505' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYTJ' 'sip-files00047.txt'
0e3af10e13e3f87f68df7827203461e9
af0da297ee0f8855bd1fd5fe1e46e1743e3224a2
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYTK' 'sip-files00048.txt'
58f691ca7da6248798a1b92f732088b2
dd07376cf288ac5bafaccf71589e0161d1f365b2
describe
'1508' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYTL' 'sip-files00049.txt'
96663de9c7cff56b8bccd527b35fe4d2
110c6ba736d45baed45bcc1475a207c7af0be04d
'2012-06-28T20:54:49-04:00'
describe
'1559' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYTM' 'sip-files00050.txt'
cb19ca8699dff94b311e65b770d96b7d
c65815226f53d92de676afe743c7602a49bd1f11
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYTN' 'sip-files00052.txt'
f3ed1bd78b7a57b5d8b31229ea8a1f9e
5aa9877b279faa51b76d8e88c1cd7417282ffa4a
'2012-06-28T20:57:24-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYTO' 'sip-files00053.txt'
ba70066807f913fe0be2e8ab19e55f43
da10e423989157528659b0fd073623294cf617a9
describe
'1562' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYTP' 'sip-files00054.txt'
b0b45cf76c630843d4589be6a2814bfb
904bf777e7a1f6b907ccab3df429b608584aa082
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYTQ' 'sip-files00056.txt'
ea917e8524423fe4b87ce420d39cfcc3
f23cbfca320cdbe5c55009ff73ef9d93e172226b
'2012-06-28T20:53:52-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYTR' 'sip-files00057.txt'
ec3a127d02fe39bacf64d9720adf886a
73064dfe480136d3275186fb0c51a5cc69592a8d
describe
'1424' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYTS' 'sip-files00058.txt'
cc6844af3ce8946ada4b272d4ce5a966
8bc648726b213488a180e192b5af862cda097c1f
describe
'1088' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYTT' 'sip-files00059.txt'
3e09aeb99e8b2d9addfe68cac2921e97
3b5aee3fe78a5e665c84ff872c971928d4d2fd7a
describe
'67' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYTU' 'sip-files00061.txt'
089b0773b4b2d4371ed41e11145359c9
0144269597276d6f4c90c5035650bec30cfd5bf8
describe
'1071' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYTV' 'sip-files00063.txt'
4bf2849c7328d8bab1bd5a4f4f906195
1fb70c4f2c51d34ff63b8a9574a947dc0325c185
describe
'1515' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYTW' 'sip-files00064.txt'
3df998447a812b46f92be86762e0145a
137941af5123c0bfa26b0c7ed7856b0cf4a121db
describe
'1645' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYTX' 'sip-files00065.txt'
263cf03c9ccc777b8200ebc03bd9333d
9574436f6612e662cd2967ed405af585c03e9a0a
describe
Invalid character
'1538' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYTY' 'sip-files00067.txt'
25dc5e0b9df785a9e594c9a16cb701ca
3ae76af7876852138239d99b9466fc9ee53f48bb
describe
'1542' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYTZ' 'sip-files00068.txt'
8ecb2a5e5f7cf5a1affbc759b3a66cf0
03c4874207bf564bc74c9ad644fba135d7d7c3b2
describe
'1493' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYUA' 'sip-files00069.txt'
05a3b4955a93bc6708e1a3bfa2d8a63c
49ed04496ed0ba3fc8c914f0f212b6922ea3953b
describe
'1525' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYUB' 'sip-files00070.txt'
9ab0ef192d0cc8a109894109070accfa
0bf3900aa5ee1f8940004586e6328853d7c0622c
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYUC' 'sip-files00071.txt'
25c9268d8d3b906620b46e158822910d
2d960ea3b880ddd3269e8fa97dc3a8c70b4691b2
describe
'1480' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYUD' 'sip-files00072.txt'
f29f73cc5e601302a782d49fb66cff01
292abfb784294dd1138e93843d82bf87010c0be2
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYUE' 'sip-files00073.txt'
f023cfc974f538eba8a02243023851f2
a22f2c90a54b61fd593c3718f74c4e279815c95b
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYUF' 'sip-files00074.txt'
34433b2dc0f9f428fa2387d12752a30c
f4060629bed4935eb771a853d56646c1b729972d
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYUG' 'sip-files00075.txt'
094a9014e004bbfb96c8b55882d13007
5b4fa331ef4a044c45c9c5d86fd291eb60585df1
'2012-06-28T20:47:54-04:00'
describe
'1819' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYUH' 'sip-files00076.txt'
884880c4629491b96121fb5262f22d79
f953963cb86e3b802df7d23a4b245b8ce25bff73
describe
'1554' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYUI' 'sip-files00078.txt'
66961fc03bf3e290dbb41484e833aeb5
2e3cc657dfcd1773dc3afa1d5b124ed2d98b7f37
describe
'852' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYUJ' 'sip-files00079.txt'
e0b1c09ff834b43e3da0ae2e257450e9
e540b64613aa4627f03f21610d9cdc6bda90771b
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYUK' 'sip-files00081.txt'
fd0b5adb396cbb69c859a08732664a0c
cd71cf418e9cc26265c299a12e053b0929c53f85
describe
'1119' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYUL' 'sip-files00083.txt'
24aefc174183fa84cea5421eafa6bedd
fc600597eb664b1cf59352952f6cd8b94c9d2727
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYUM' 'sip-files00084.txt'
0e93a4ee86f5083ce20a5e6c63b19018
9594ad38e445f47e59967a492a89789ca3e83980
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYUN' 'sip-files00086.txt'
5e55d76c4ec9a2084e6a66d6410e6005
45688e29a313568a338f5b10a50ed30023aa3917
'2012-06-28T20:57:17-04:00'
describe
'1478' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYUO' 'sip-files00087.txt'
f5d38e9bc27cb7fa0357a10335b1a652
98f29a83c0ebb76340977e145a2c3bdd4d38ddd7
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYUP' 'sip-files00090.txt'
8466b5283a754721ebd727303f7e9796
006152f6b6b5f7021b62d5af4cfa2e22b583ceb4
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYUQ' 'sip-files00091.txt'
7063dcc12ffbbb38e509f2c671c4f781
4c431aa38d3ba054cec46cbaf6635125216b3a78
describe
'1733' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYUR' 'sip-files00092.txt'
1208918a83946a6ab93e92e889a0b34a
ba7fa1d877343bd2f9bc549a05bf17003f070609
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYUS' 'sip-files00095.txt'
608867d0826ff1ec8c6d6fad12c77906
2f04af12f1f70ebce9b9e896fa2bd22d3c5d0f7c
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYUT' 'sip-files00096.txt'
222ed0cf46427cb4e18c812d0dab4f8d
7aa88819e516bb9823ff55a110015bd0bd87598e
describe
'83' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYUU' 'sip-files00099.txt'
5ea213236085593ae69049a609f8cfdb
1ab927934febb77d70edd0025ae1752c18b804bd
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYUV' 'sip-files00101.txt'
9d52c0ec80e1e190b23b87556a390cba
32f75b2e6543cc77c3e1cddad2c4c497487c98d3
describe
'1499' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYUW' 'sip-files00102.txt'
1f1979a29b0bebb7008d69fd8ae5d107
dee7ac6a4292f54d54da38dc252f83d87b81f86e
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYUX' 'sip-files00103.txt'
62581baf60a6ae55301c0f498b946789
098e087a87331b9e18fba3e473ce0779f5b6b31f
describe
'1470' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYUY' 'sip-files00105.txt'
c854df8609db7284e2cbd13568a4ddff
f61f46cfc6e3414314e22baafce13434640ca71e
describe
'1443' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYUZ' 'sip-files00106.txt'
91d1384734b1f1a0ff4ffb9fb148cb96
cf0135ecdcf035cd83063b09dddc46aecde2b242
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYVA' 'sip-files00107.txt'
d8602164f9635972b80d17382a2f31e6
4fb89c9fc7926cc6f655c435ad2572ffc6c2fb49
describe
'1510' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYVB' 'sip-files00109.txt'
81ba61e33b886f5037c013d55a37424d
753f346307ce8e330d80e255062d83aff938a165
describe
'1465' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYVC' 'sip-files00110.txt'
ac89b70164632cd793709511339fc483
5412a85847b8f6ef059bdb97fa28f9c31a6b5838
describe
'1450' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYVD' 'sip-files00111.txt'
a7529748d7aaa0720a2c12e58f29a000
58577f96d58cb42379499544f9672d0d918b1957
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYVE' 'sip-files00112.txt'
18d8a9b2fa318f582e5509ec9426b83c
71cde221bed51fb99364f0622a81fac54051762e
describe
'1553' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYVF' 'sip-files00113.txt'
6217cfe4943a1e52f759a7a55591fbd5
bc3c2b2b5185aebe823c2802bc3f693ef18884dd
'2012-06-28T20:55:34-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYVG' 'sip-files00114.txt'
6429b8b8424a65dd8d142999c2e3ebc0
19c542e74d82d22855759b826ee5d609d9e9d5d3
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYVH' 'sip-files00115.txt'
8eb2b2c9376d23a910a8a2073f701697
d0ff826113e992372e930f0aba50b16d78102968
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYVI' 'sip-files00116.txt'
78cc773de93f194de68e4cd171ead35b
ad58e07f722d19afa244ce360401bd329099f358
describe
'1012' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYVJ' 'sip-files00117.txt'
a0f92ce75250432d3ae3510fe950b81e
72110df4996340416ba9f487e41b4382de2ba548
describe
'159' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYVK' 'sip-files00119.txt'
acfa96f1a8873e4c87e5017b14ac5684
2e2a53369d2d33d7ca854afa6db4924c7da81863
describe
'1433' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYVL' 'sip-files00122.txt'
5f0ae6405862f00928e03db314371f54
8cc5fef09c2689c21a793a22ff29b6f697f0773a
'2012-06-28T20:50:39-04:00'
describe
'1513' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYVM' 'sip-files00123.txt'
876fbff69a184202069018ac8bf4aa0d
dfc106a2b54a99c99994e2f379996959c26e46f5
describe
'1603' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYVN' 'sip-files00124.txt'
b0b6a9cc4db3223878703108916c5503
7aa09ea71ce0f6213ee68e77e907ca00f24481fd
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYVO' 'sip-files00125.txt'
1a1bf250eab251d04903c7c7ce8ae352
0cafd64e75d2d0657663a57d5958632c405773d3
'2012-06-28T20:49:37-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYVP' 'sip-files00126.txt'
7e6cf7294d2ce7ea114519e5f692ba74
c8666084b7f46c48c2b5d586170b8724ca44924f
describe
'1574' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYVQ' 'sip-files00127.txt'
6657fe3d9832e7aff70c94903dabde76
7dc3e1fb62343b7df518c367d6e0768a8aeb5f9b
describe
'1491' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYVR' 'sip-files00128.txt'
aa7361a021f706416785966bba6024c2
67191d9992e3d122f917da3fd31389f21047bf94
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYVS' 'sip-files00129.txt'
67b90f20c29880505fbbf398ff6a7b68
1b0576e4518251ecde037b915d0510068e54b5de
describe
'1544' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYVT' 'sip-files00130.txt'
3c39f8492ac9cf721616e2a48349f577
675bbcc0cb9eafefeafc99df9e2c8ca064fd3049
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYVU' 'sip-files00131.txt'
75633635feb06516cd7403ce30a30b1e
5984d18490f79a638c1eb83be8879c2b12136aad
describe
'1531' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYVV' 'sip-files00133.txt'
55b75daa45e5da12d82b528b2fa4ddcd
d520266b7882770ea3bcba49a339fd3e44ffe3ec
'2012-06-28T20:44:47-04:00'
describe
'1541' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYVW' 'sip-files00134.txt'
690df6dcead6005fc25d7263b1c8a2d4
703182f0c623fae880ed4c49acf9e477394182ff
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYVX' 'sip-files00135.txt'
2302a7aaddabdfbe0b908c419ec2cbff
e2100f63633448ba9f43fec23578752f8a9652a1
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYVY' 'sip-files00136.txt'
d0be9c0aebeef547a9398051a079c863
fd9302fbdae5fd803b66f9e3cb8397caed2d7df3
describe
'1456' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYVZ' 'sip-files00137.txt'
b40bc4fcad3e75d351404cbbe9103b6a
8325dbaaa8026dbead496304e56315047ad7c1fc
describe
'114' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYWA' 'sip-files00139.txt'
4f239137f2be730861e23f8bf9ffaecc
ea7bde0948276cf6543c6ba349d1f0ad430045e9
describe
'1047' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYWB' 'sip-files00141.txt'
a22f9da21099850744da7cf663514a86
ef89fc37e7792f561a67b2232e42848d6d09dd4e
describe
Invalid character
'1560' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYWC' 'sip-files00143.txt'
7f783a1e03ff43289de9bdaecd16c1c7
71a61064ec715e7c9e39a4abb4ee6bff5a9f1677
describe
'1712' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYWD' 'sip-files00144.txt'
16fe9ddc8ea133f5f8399db7ab6e1cbf
76634b187f15e80919ef5c07a32353579845f18a
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYWE' 'sip-files00148.txt'
6dffab056376aa72f15b4578b2ee54dd
3cde79ccac1fef838ed8f44e57c6b7793460792a
describe
Invalid character
'1581' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYWF' 'sip-files00150.txt'
b85c2e77d3cf558f21f083cd07e9964f
b1e402811551a9b586d9ee9bdd63c342ae3bee62
'2012-06-28T20:47:47-04:00'
describe
'1520' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYWG' 'sip-files00151.txt'
2bf92beceb236fe3a471ced7f024f3dc
df2a9226023f077072bc78d25861050eb18bdeeb
describe
'1577' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYWH' 'sip-files00152.txt'
20be2d4af7dc9a1d0874c675a69fd5f1
6294de7b496838b43e062029d0f0930ad0857104
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYWI' 'sip-files00153.txt'
02911d3d0147aeca39f8bfd4bfa99b65
f6e4e49a6a54619205ce92da02d85c71d5cf7df2
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYWJ' 'sip-files00155.txt'
650541b65df02e6bea2c8867ef479fdb
103c42d1e60c3833cfb13864f9858916352d2e73
describe
'1588' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYWK' 'sip-files00157.txt'
02734204a2c367ac034dcf36be1dcefc
67ae4110c918b59393f4841cebd7ecf68119d2ff
describe
'492' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYWL' 'sip-files00158.txt'
74a6650a3e521d5704777da11cbbff1f
8be68a8310867992a04ba150ebdbbfdfcb1aadff
describe
'106' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYWM' 'sip-files00159.txt'
73bbd5bdf344887bb4d3cd7f0f350753
74d317cc93c96d9200fc7d7497665d47374be212
describe
'1158' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYWN' 'sip-files00161.txt'
50ed839821ac2696c36c1bda1da2dab2
443012294741de0cb8267f3af7964497b44d3d47
describe
'1564' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYWO' 'sip-files00162.txt'
5f32de3b5daca79bad9508e784cecd37
0de6559ecf1c61c9a9c5d2c50776623ef5b97d1d
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYWP' 'sip-files00163.txt'
2ed29102961811065ba3f2178ca74c8e
995a8b84d3eeae6246780f7835377d4547cfeeda
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYWQ' 'sip-files00164.txt'
1af12acbd4d96e915d540c9f00a14560
09038b3dc38f3232c2d041003d471245d355248b
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYWR' 'sip-files00165.txt'
ac8d11b8519d9bbfbaa2136bf8ab97d6
9ccd628d195fd18b6f06f7062f67c3a4b8c60183
describe
'1490' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYWS' 'sip-files00166.txt'
b1bdaa713402e6b020ce8ab0d6f60fea
3a6176e9391bfc6d7a838303b0c4b7b274a3cd0d
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYWT' 'sip-files00167.txt'
a0c8d327044316b4a07b22a033e18609
7ba5051bff14df9f38f93c621f95ea3a3896fb55
'2012-06-28T20:46:19-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYWU' 'sip-files00168.txt'
404d08b156117cd0ebac0345dfcf06c4
8e5bf1dd5b8dba5c82e1a97984231921335a449f
describe
'1586' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYWV' 'sip-files00171.txt'
a24491635e67a667208da3174296200d
07ef87c2bfa867759620a13a2827e2a0a2522cba
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYWW' 'sip-files00173.txt'
d844a1db7a6f69f03ef0e1cb38e59bd9
d8d77b6037ca6ae63a47590dcb2677077b6d8752
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYWX' 'sip-files00174.txt'
be7516270f418446ce69a4022b324134
c8ab3fcb44a184fd33bb04f9b49b04984e92cdab
describe
'1430' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYWY' 'sip-files00176.txt'
6017ebca50db4ff4a4b15a964a9385f5
baabe9356084fd4d9d2095219cf757b5ae676955
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYWZ' 'sip-files00177.txt'
decb1a43582982e954a76ab3a48afe21
edbba8cc85d54498f861cce31e9e95b95dc8485b
describe
'277' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYXA' 'sip-files00178.txt'
f4eac3200fd95a6cb0b49481f1f28981
c184ca2c3c8428042b3ec239bb4ed750de1361e5
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYXB' 'sip-files00179.txt'
de75b638675407f11593ace90bbc4b0b
872c0342d2f96e0b2187faab6208e489d24f4b3d
describe
'1133' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYXC' 'sip-files00181.txt'
520bc10a2b5550743717b2899a6cf0e3
2a0fe251b190dd26957803068006388714fe8050
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYXD' 'sip-files00182.txt'
6fc2e89b0ef37fdcae76793704c89fd9
74bfee19ef53ece3d1a26eff5d270c7517b6b83a
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYXE' 'sip-files00183.txt'
3c67882955beecd43ed55250bd7f71db
eef4c50cfca9a03308d89c75369e27381c79b782
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYXF' 'sip-files00184.txt'
a2d48e2cf6af73246635224f5c6423d4
1923ec51d333c8ea713cc8b6352428b8c78bbc5a
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYXG' 'sip-files00186.txt'
0c1c6f454374d5303a8cae813fc66ad8
8914a5a037c7accfdd00b1cc573c95cbbc7da0ed
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYXH' 'sip-files00188.txt'
b80f9e5c22fc0897c5971518928b59ad
214c66d1d403a023abd066a869d2c83633d4505b
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYXI' 'sip-files00189.txt'
9e7385da0b78d70d838a7f0f5961c84b
8831dc7cfc56a8e093ea3c0d2a789fb55118db7a
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYXJ' 'sip-files00190.txt'
ee562c2d9493be731399dc696615eb13
fc5d2bfb51f426fa95fddb9dcda207b12927ba1a
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYXK' 'sip-files00191.txt'
6cc1117a037d5eac992904b5740a33c8
05d824fdd0a3ef52a617865fcc35798c17bea64e
'2012-06-28T20:54:14-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYXL' 'sip-files00193.txt'
7e13f1eb8d5e63e955a28c3e0cc3a503
95929aceaacfbef46ec4b9d7757af3e3848b00b0
describe
'1506' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYXM' 'sip-files00195.txt'
050fdb3765315b3c79c921c36c160b2b
9ca07640cf7cebf8f9121fed83686df830f75ac7
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYXN' 'sip-files00196.txt'
ece1b28e828c3dd1fcfe29992f2ec11b
5b7fe4798bf84670e60d3cf1273936ac874b7227
describe
'98' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYXO' 'sip-files00197.txt'
ab06557465d1b50b64cde4d94ae4b929
dad2b0b0c3bfba6813bd2ba866c222964050e63a
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYXP' 'sip-files00199.txt'
ccd9a077bec2e55ac0c50730eac1b12a
442a2de635f270dcb061f670da02b6f0ab5db0c6
'2012-06-28T20:47:09-04:00'
describe
Invalid character
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYXQ' 'sip-files00200.txt'
0dd739528ef83bfddda64c4736a0428d
534ce4891697f82ad1bbbf11c14f6f98154abc6b
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYXR' 'sip-files00201.txt'
b9d1018b3a6861b83f402f19534dc3e6
5e4d65cc09dd6c0ecc23f8e03543302f2c7d9f20
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYXS' 'sip-files00202.txt'
742414d5e2152677c7893d53cd8381f0
f6474bd3e3d1fc739c265d769cb9dded59b35f2e
describe
'1563' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYXT' 'sip-files00203.txt'
a510215fa51b6cdba32cc89a27c69af5
c99eacff8638297f81deb9f8d86672a8fe78c96c
describe
'1533' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYXU' 'sip-files00204.txt'
e0783261626af2d3d3de7c73d8e74ed8
a587985416424dc2db63fffc8cb68154271ccee3
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYXV' 'sip-files00205.txt'
a6fa066032b340a5f650afa2d6cf219e
b1338b856bf0e35c4693125267fe86944be24de9
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYXW' 'sip-files00206.txt'
b8842de97176f23d722c0950a74e7b37
cf2bed794a709975ffc9e670e45096a14cdf53b3
describe
'1601' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYXX' 'sip-files00207.txt'
efcbc0f2d3c22814af6009f050d9f1e5
2f16a97706106a445f25bd6d74c23d4fce5c9f7f
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYXY' 'sip-files00208.txt'
e2ed21d7a0de9a6228fb8d805fe951fa
febc6a3982c88c12717b6598e00ecea2935ede99
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYXZ' 'sip-files00211.txt'
4e8faa5c02d0539a18cc71c04ba7d03e
63384a523d22a256f76c1118e546cc46ddc2a504
describe
'1507' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYYA' 'sip-files00212.txt'
1cc7a8c31d25722884977c5853945165
5ffab7a8204e622e348acc18a83f25aec88b0ed0
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYYB' 'sip-files00213.txt'
3ebfdb9334a719598821c1006b41cceb
c28255329e3ae0fd298a76463363a80c99d6b36f
describe
'1572' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYYC' 'sip-files00214.txt'
238a689706ffac9465e9da4f98f97bd8
0d286d8531cabe75ed3561015d3707a9a2f23206
describe
'1482' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYYD' 'sip-files00216.txt'
1ed4941ad80d2e8ed13247b57f9ad205
a99ab56b88f3126805d0869736403806ab0cd8db
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYYE' 'sip-files00220.txt'
f0d18b6872c56ea95ae2ca24cbd0addf
7cc6c9827cbd52661381972fed2512c5fd1e05cd
describe
Invalid character
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYYF' 'sip-files00221.txt'
372e40d9f7c255863e2bc134828839ac
e362336d82e14b46b4e75e6310306fcd249c1fc9
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYYG' 'sip-files00222.txt'
2da614359d21dffc11d38cba9530fb99
4e135e1087093202f86c0aeca7f177581a6b6b2a
describe
'1571' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYYH' 'sip-files00223.txt'
16d09a3a04ba64151135591ed99c590f
3ecedb52fe1243802cf4baaff839977f9be8f832
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYYI' 'sip-files00224.txt'
f3f4320ed35c21560a8eeb08962a82d8
ac90ea8e3dc60df30bf490755951b679c947db2f
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYYJ' 'sip-files00225.txt'
e9ce546fa9db2242046690c6692d21da
f7ba22ef5b8400e20161d7e9b75b89a3b67036f4
describe
'1557' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYYK' 'sip-files00226.txt'
54107ce187c4eb5db14080b35972b34c
65f46a07f97772ff331ef354c0f7b7b9ccfbd4e9
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYYL' 'sip-files00227.txt'
e8d1d854d2193fc7db281675581352bf
9aabae0968fb7ff990e7572e0b26515dcdbb859e
describe
'1584' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYYM' 'sip-files00232.txt'
8c0678092881da1e82783c89f396f5d9
f6cdd4ef8ed8628841157add582c7942702487ff
describe
'1535' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYYN' 'sip-files00234.txt'
445b0e892efaf99ed30bfabbc81d454b
9ecfd68c38fe3ebdfb46024dd75f42db68a7feab
describe
'1494' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYYO' 'sip-files00236.txt'
9cbbb633d584336623024a3db12847de
0c817644a6c7fc6d6bf330f4a073f7e5b4186917
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYYP' 'sip-files00239.txt'
e60ae990d81bff8f3c0c7f16c77a8b2f
1aecaf212b215e171d52e85e7657a9866d64f887
'2012-06-28T20:52:19-04:00'
describe
'1558' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYYQ' 'sip-files00240.txt'
b69ff5c63739be075ab4dcdf3088e62f
889ec24d71c0ef3bb3b5c5e04ceaeab46d82e57a
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYYR' 'sip-files00241.txt'
7351b2386af43903d1d7ca518ae8f418
00a9f241b8733deb39d7decbfc514d3aae559765
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYYS' 'sip-files00243.txt'
39ec5d6da67d2f007930abcfe59cd68a
bc64df9b3ada089711dba585d936a7207bbc15a1
describe
'1483' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYYT' 'sip-files00244.txt'
507a2bf30d89792fa10a9d7135bb6371
b1ae9b7752f89d2eb0ea88d6afb837d547cd3d36
describe
'1602' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYYU' 'sip-files00245.txt'
a562648a7e2fe360a774753eee370dbe
7f73a7f94c80b52f417245d242f9be8260697d88
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYYV' 'sip-files00246.txt'
5ae8afa0608a51cbb11bb739e051aaa9
43c31bb4116c02c07aa80be30072d4b199db4af0
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYYW' 'sip-files00247.txt'
06639c91e0b6d4fa73ac5a3463c335d4
400a326ccfa316fbfe8c35a2e470d26c82cdf24b
'2012-06-28T20:55:57-04:00'
describe
'1549' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYYX' 'sip-files00248.txt'
e37af15786c0c0532bc4afacace17ec1
ac0d8e5d3c062f7e15526e383a1de53bc208f974
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYYY' 'sip-files00249.txt'
c9b6aa44e9f14c0b4985c42a08a9bf08
8b7cf0248d06b73759d48923008313c085b506cc
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYYZ' 'sip-files00250.txt'
35b533dd05bde1a445af52b9fb65e38f
a9f16e8c8b28fe8aa87ca110d5b784c7dd38c9eb
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYZA' 'sip-files00251.txt'
9e2b05a732489d8220eb43d514b3261d
206cc44e8a8130c26a2390a259d28aefe25e991b
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYZB' 'sip-files00252.txt'
fa3049f0d0e219e9df4a75544a9965d0
d5ce4095760a63aa2f4721613ee558b10985896d
describe
'1566' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYZC' 'sip-files00253.txt'
513ed00b5046d804ad5407241bccc156
74e908d3c4bc5c57dd210191f8741b2710085ae6
describe
'378' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYZD' 'sip-files00254.txt'
c179fe43673e14592489dfdac0318aad
129470932e002db312c8a92a62fa46115ff76c53
describe
'68' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYZE' 'sip-files00255.txt'
b0109759d04fc6f1c3145d62a0bdfe5d
05c9510d5dc3bab7eb23ad8b468bb9be9d2c47da
describe
'1222' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYZF' 'sip-files00257.txt'
106e9d9c7f26f1807df4f3f77dff49cf
35baa4989185aa42e52974b3568db9815b495190
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYZG' 'sip-files00258.txt'
d076ea576c8fccc89c05b6bfe10f7597
d79cf67fb5c902cc9d516e348f8092b4147b5b51
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYZH' 'sip-files00260.txt'
067b8b782ab650b9dcc76a373c1cb063
47599bea1037f09afbb4583a3357e47c83951aa9
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYZI' 'sip-files00261.txt'
2739bfb6f4207511a1467bd68eeed975
f82e327284ab4a874b17e9eae78173f0fcbc4804
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYZJ' 'sip-files00262.txt'
9cc4b2f6d60848cdd26551d1525e2448
18b64fa1f5babd9ab89d76820aab16dbcd27d8ea
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYZK' 'sip-files00264.txt'
3fef726ea542aee780641d065cf68e0b
f568c0f2b8f43cc8c56837796e2223a21d7e3e5f
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYZL' 'sip-files00265.txt'
bec3797b9561a5231988182bffcec1b8
ed1e35fe0aac169403040a344adc5cf3f72ec106
'2012-06-28T20:53:33-04:00'
describe
'1567' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYZM' 'sip-files00266.txt'
16067746f120cc7367467a4b7e0ff877
2338f181f52c0bf14b8fce9177658ed56bac05fd
'2012-06-28T20:47:45-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYZN' 'sip-files00267.txt'
68b216a9d3294d72ceaaeed0cacbea69
b7ba9720cedcda4a89bbbaf55b412a537e49d359
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYZO' 'sip-files00268.txt'
0d96d3fd33d2000c7e4b715a3631c3bd
32175cd82ebdf73198f4616d817113be00ef750d
describe
'69' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYZP' 'sip-files00269.txt'
08ce01f1835932b616e41a38d4b2eb8f
ed081c2c62633ea0b28afc2edf0e995d33d41a13
describe
'1550' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYZQ' 'sip-files00272.txt'
951c128d5cc16866576abb351726a2d6
292aa6e360e3a61661a5a9aba39380faf63d3987
describe
'1540' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYZR' 'sip-files00273.txt'
d460d4d7db5b22512478e31840a08305
ae6605402fe671055fef5e6185b3d916a6301762
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYZS' 'sip-files00275.txt'
9fc8892eebf84f9c0dc77a49cf9411ec
39d59b43d760d31a775fedb270f3972908bdb069
describe
'1746' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYZT' 'sip-files00277.txt'
73a0ddfc6e03606e2f590b12bdbc900c
0bf5bd6b9d1a515b28c355f01491e30fc708bb3a
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYZU' 'sip-files00278.txt'
4007b00e94ab1facd7f83d20640a8d18
1814b81ca885fac6d60deecb5655b5e8e5db4f9f
'2012-06-28T20:48:56-04:00'
describe
'1524' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYZV' 'sip-files00279.txt'
dc48785b9c09ed316bcab060f72b1437
148ad928d4b21ef63200d534b3f01459120fecb8
describe
'1579' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYZW' 'sip-files00281.txt'
050eee1d3c7291a3b55567ecd49bce5b
e25af2b5d22d3c31e3abf4a849ea53d7226d1a2a
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYZX' 'sip-files00282.txt'
61354d8b7795c51982d0a945a6cca4b8
fbdb9f3f511ef619c60f1fc96e9fc8287a4e1dda
'2012-06-28T20:49:00-04:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYZY' 'sip-files00283.txt'
fb0a248dd00517bd839c9867378a7392
7ea8361f0e0d3f27bfe8a092d5a73ea5326bfd76
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAYZZ' 'sip-files00285.txt'
c1b47db1879542efd06ba3cdead9bd60
b05a09caa4587dc47f8f595fb5bdd304066bf249
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZAA' 'sip-files00286.txt'
28df6957d8383e4a842d1caf37ab5781
5439503b017646c97c8636709eef079730dcd1fa
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZAB' 'sip-files00287.txt'
6e65d5ee7f0fa5371453c801bc61c70b
dd415eebc47bdd645c3b925a6005746a78018a22
describe
'327' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZAC' 'sip-files00288.txt'
b909722196bd310a517514589dae21ae
5fb13771e7fcb9bbdf269bf3a26c23b6e807e095
describe
'80' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZAD' 'sip-files00289.txt'
45c4f1914fe2199ee9ba102c00c5a344
3dc426fbd8e2201fa730112c14b81c66ed3bcbb6
'2012-06-28T20:56:55-04:00'
describe
'1279' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZAE' 'sip-files00291.txt'
150241904ede78e09cbac5247f16d824
19a0f7ce484dd0d3ea4ee854e31e6f4fddd518f2
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZAF' 'sip-files00292.txt'
ef264a318ac620f26798078688601cde
26afdb20672fbb1c66be914bde9668218171cc72
describe
'1593' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZAG' 'sip-files00293.txt'
49bd755746073366e8790b2e1d8b18af
8111c6f40fbcfe617331542718022f88ac78af9b
describe
'1773' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZAH' 'sip-files00297.txt'
01ff9cbe36f9fb9027cb9cd814d42af0
d7da74a1ab1257d24c8eb4f585b4424edec0c1b8
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZAI' 'sip-files00298.txt'
8c4994dcc7c1d3e0b1ef1965d773439d
b13a278bfca57e6bc0313c56ae6e564028327b9a
'2012-06-28T20:57:11-04:00'
describe
'1786' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZAJ' 'sip-files00299.txt'
a2f756dc7be6b17fc0addf236c253115
e83441b6c0a249751cf6b0cbd939a4daecff6f3e
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZAK' 'sip-files00300.txt'
f7f86736b407a1987a17e02b47fe81f4
3a50338ceeac6921ec1651869b1c5164a40d733f
describe
'398' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZAL' 'sip-files00301.txt'
9cce3dcbaed14186a65b630b94765120
259e90f8b3150f4ee999885de0fe3797159f66a1
describe
Invalid character
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZAM' 'sip-files00304.txt'
18eea382bf263d1049adef7850aef660
63fcc3ccef8f097923ade31d081856b176944adc
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZAN' 'sip-files00305.txt'
89448153e0acb241b55c8a2153a3fcb0
613394e3ba9761b15e57e436e67bcfdd675308be
describe
'1656' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZAO' 'sip-files00306.txt'
dca5dc16fe56a0709933e307cf6f5bcf
3d4f02f513bb69b09e197f80599f6946ebdc0a5a
describe
'1590' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZAP' 'sip-files00307.txt'
1dae50d21ee8ef2a9ec5b7c1b0557345
69542405d9213abf03272d7183188b063522c1ae
describe
'1098' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZAQ' 'sip-files00308.txt'
c025e9adf653ae28ec9d548517d4837a
4b41481248211c97cf234a20306c16dce0ac6fc7
describe
'7940' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZAR' 'sip-files00001thm.jpg'
07d290e7a64cf06d4eb287bbfcb1ad67
75408d8dbbe247bbeccb9b40cd8b9ff299fb6b12
describe
'40590' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZAS' 'sip-files00195.QC.jpg'
86c30d487e3435b745933c8a2c8374e2
e45085abb1927744b4e9ee8b1e90a315ed6242b6
describe
'44657' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZAT' 'sip-files00294.QC.jpg'
aeb25149936b341e0c02ea13d8c326d6
dd4cea65697e17fd6c9d28935a134a8c325f03a4
'2012-06-28T20:56:36-04:00'
describe
'38558' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZAU' 'sip-files00121.QC.jpg'
438867cba982e576fcc1d4ddff66723e
a86cd3f824712ef52aa4ea59d7e4c81cec2a2b6a
describe
'11079' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZAV' 'sip-files00206thm.jpg'
60d7cb0672582fdeb8c89b47d1eeb5c9
cc7048d09765397c1d39e34df945415472315431
describe
'10240' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZAW' 'sip-files00243thm.jpg'
fa9e954761d0b8fb9c54e6235e6196c8
b364cd3fbb9d803ac38f97797cc98f364e8659e1
'2012-06-28T20:45:58-04:00'
describe
'41645' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZAX' 'sip-files00085.QC.jpg'
840f0ac2b9d3b8354fb05a39b527d05a
7169b637c6a3d9d600c70ef88f13aee2d47d5d76
describe
'10468' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZAY' 'sip-files00031thm.jpg'
072eabc0d0ba90d47199eca7a12ab165
9391747f99266becfa288773f498f422587c38e8
describe
'10859' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZAZ' 'sip-files00146thm.jpg'
0b21926512d057f18b077d651f8ca187
5bede4d522cdc6dd361afd2c073870f0750fab2a
describe
'41098' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZBA' 'sip-files00287.QC.jpg'
f3cbc0cc50b87c26e247f42e89798025
0949b472610a4ecbacf89c747471c60ea10c086b
describe
'36287' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZBB' 'sip-files00257.QC.jpg'
1c4b88a1856488c012c77801d2e104a4
3f86877ce415759d2c47461552534767b436f31f
describe
'10101' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZBC' 'sip-files00267thm.jpg'
6b1ca785e33e945f6ae4ddd698ca1ba4
2abe7e7185ea9517d2a0ea6c91b0d98b4a2674f4
describe
'10763' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZBD' 'sip-files00129thm.jpg'
56eadbed13347face1568fa35f85873c
aa2a8c1c246ceac0d2c39ca7ca91dae6175cd275
describe
'41867' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZBE' 'sip-files00231.QC.jpg'
6842190a45b86133d42f1d2a7bb1fe74
cd04f707ccc645263cb0045fd39a24ec25c8862b
describe
'11112' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZBF' 'sip-files00025.QC.jpg'
161ba2f22923b72dcad2a3b8171b3c7e
54b13eb061ef702734c358910db44b061ab0487b
describe
'43821' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZBG' 'sip-files00107.QC.jpg'
bf2126e2d7085dd5e69d0e1072d47cd1
ca10a8bb58780727b2f265518afeb5f95d02cda7
describe
'36059' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZBH' 'sip-files00271.QC.jpg'
f67cbe13453873e49ca47d94059017ed
338c2fe5d786e77d4411b97e427bf596419341d5
describe
'11394' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZBI' 'sip-files00112thm.jpg'
9dc9738cddc4a5612cbf5bd57f9da422
7546287eeaa737e5d86ba2579b69b7cbf71b052a
describe
'10645' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZBJ' 'sip-files00157thm.jpg'
3e8fff3bd0d2ac7f7acac1f542ca0681
888a5c23d31fec4114f36975c42a5f70a7898064
describe
'44401' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZBK' 'sip-files00214.QC.jpg'
0640536e5a79283dde0b8272da530323
63e1aad4f2551cd7adc7a511029538e1dec66327
describe
'44077' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZBL' 'sip-files00132.QC.jpg'
21ca86d86da8e341277441664c872682
0db7a94f4a79a7161ba0ce77db7839de865ddd72
describe
'41845' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZBM' 'sip-files00067.QC.jpg'
ef4275f1ce97029030062becd33432f7
be25b40586e71252773675862698369936883ef9
describe
'10574' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZBN' 'sip-files00223thm.jpg'
a5aaffa87bec804a696c228c8b725689
0e6f4a0548fa94428fe33933915afae74ab53848
describe
'44689' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZBO' 'sip-files00226.QC.jpg'
92960accd8749dbf8d3a82324f70dc50
5e4e4c869c0e942deabf9d7afe1bb2a2a49c811c
describe
'10373' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZBP' 'sip-files00075thm.jpg'
2444b8642f68e7d7e8282d1a0d672dd8
324453b2b5cf064b975457c1b1e8d8b41d42e90d
describe
'1297' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZBQ' 'sip-files00180thm.jpg'
d6f531f05f88c28bfeafbab6135b4d25
3d4b1a97765f4bb98c0687740e439156fe6be870
describe
'11666' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZBR' 'sip-files00104thm.jpg'
1ef6192d7648dc147f495382c490cffc
b174de2770096625e3662101fc68fdffef967ec1
describe
'40740' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZBS' 'sip-files00285.QC.jpg'
d52bb40467d3bba4f0968fe9d6adbfad
40213f6d26b923308d5ed08e1f87ecc34d670e8a
describe
'37905' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZBT' 'sip-files00181.QC.jpg'
3a1bc90c4ab1386fa46f35c17cb0aa24
b9954cbb3d323192b1aa86bd511bf9df3c687ff2
describe
'42059' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZBU' 'sip-files00028.QC.jpg'
f9ff4f8db4afcfaf38db4c19f5b48e7e
0206609892283839f6971ecbb0832b7baf41b7c8
describe
'10558' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZBV' 'sip-files00227thm.jpg'
cb36445da65cfb30f1f5dadcabd13fc7
2c65940a1cef34b1a91ddd7dfd2e5569bd49e4b1
describe
'43620' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZBW' 'sip-files00296.QC.jpg'
a3e435f0f292a8f02bb601162c8eb3eb
38659b6765ae023155d8dc6d6f314fedb6bce603
describe
'38045' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZBX' 'sip-files00177.QC.jpg'
4f884941a695b0d1ad8335914dcf2722
284c452d58a609c5c546d976f1b3f31519782a63
describe
'11143' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZBY' 'sip-files00115thm.jpg'
6fc9d297d5d460c1bf816b9c90e30c32
5ebe157ab72645a1a8cd0bee3b9482df55d9edd4
describe
'11978' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZBZ' 'sip-files00072thm.jpg'
8f8c1f80197b8820aea63db30df96d72
5a3123bfe2f4094375a1a4f21f3a9d89e5b864ea
describe
'10572' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZCA' 'sip-files00163thm.jpg'
84b217d4de8f94fc0f49a1b98993a98d
ea918ba42ba5efa55048c3d1fdbbc356acdd8fd6
describe
'35930' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZCB' 'sip-files00141.QC.jpg'
679d52f5b7e17f064de1d75085b642c3
f5867a157d17ac3533ff05513b5a34b9172179c7
describe
'40761' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZCC' 'sip-files00163.QC.jpg'
a63a66ed8d5230bcede3bcfba481c0b3
4319bc0e2a41e0acc43c7cbb911b6380ab022874
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZCD' 'sip-files00232thm.jpg'
c53927b440bc6b9835a1776853ba7528
2ea542159e3875648591b7dc6db96e30d39e7d68
describe
'44471' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZCE' 'sip-files00048.QC.jpg'
7240f99bac3d86af9c9a5678cd90d87a
5f67f224ea282c99ac7add628fcc486210b0b801
describe
'45055' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZCF' 'sip-files00104.QC.jpg'
7cf0b1e052cbfb312761c5d89eea1f63
e31b9bc4fdc5a7ae786a364a44bf9d281546e6e7
describe
'42504' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZCG' 'sip-files00035.QC.jpg'
70c0cddb11eab4ca86a39c7438530f22
5c90555b2c9184fad32e866c365e17156e83c303
describe
'10496' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZCH' 'sip-files00147thm.jpg'
3f3f6ba8fbbb1f7b1055b78904d66730
be903eb49142c9ce6b10c727b1cdd6d97e2a87c1
'2012-06-28T20:55:15-04:00'
describe
'41977' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZCI' 'sip-files00259.QC.jpg'
d85b233f99bb976a4ba066d9e25e1610
72334ee20552695914c885ee0013a2681105d8de
describe
'11464' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZCJ' 'sip-files00304thm.jpg'
ecad852abc7ec07efd336a06af4dbab0
015ea3d47f1020a55543d68370e189d88ba2bbfb
describe
'10827' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZCK' 'sip-files00125thm.jpg'
6d79a28e6872aa6803dffbf332ec9407
38e8b926ad28f9045c241243aa46e2838ef9668d
describe
'10425' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZCL' 'sip-files00277thm.jpg'
b250ec77a19bd194d451b0084d33b123
cc85aec7895cd68fc23c87b4798d04c02b7609e7
'2012-06-28T20:51:29-04:00'
describe
'44432' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZCM' 'sip-files00126.QC.jpg'
ada94ca4668eb86c599f0992d1056298
be7267c16fb582990c4c63a1d6c48bed2c645329
describe
'46151' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZCN' 'sip-files00086.QC.jpg'
41207200146916186c0a63e55fa60b91
2476bb031a284cf6cc60a93fceb932db4774dc3b
describe
'10939' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZCO' 'sip-files00231thm.jpg'
f4ab1b7436760af4fcf8e19bbcc1b1d1
a3b1b71010a7b542ec8099fe0bf2af9b328b53d8
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZCP' 'sip-files00182thm.jpg'
90002c2d1edefa7489064220b5a764d3
90fab201d23044d718015fc6d95e7369ea23fbb9
describe
'46366' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZCQ' 'sip-files00090.QC.jpg'
b683314da9deab4ad4d97a602d29c63c
448a1be1e0e785190213467d23d657f3c1b2be18
describe
'10588' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZCR' 'sip-files00105thm.jpg'
2487ee754bc7e614b1bf99b7b7f508f8
6054e1d3bcaba728d5f7d1441760097bfd2f20b8
describe
'10063' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZCS' 'sip-files00235thm.jpg'
cdc0e282529c7921cb6294b26dc3f365
9a8a0034f3c4bc713b0a7167b614fffdbc5aa5c6
describe
'44869' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZCT' 'sip-files00142.QC.jpg'
bbfc697b197a074c00f2b992cb01b7f1
95b14dac963a78e6fce62948708dcf3a93917849
describe
'3288' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZCU' 'sip-files00040.QC.jpg'
e49c6edb306a5c5729cfbc9214c0e9ba
c08cd1463c97c666759b97d9e9a3a857026d4767
describe
'41013' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZCV' 'sip-files00205.QC.jpg'
20df664bfb522c4a9444587313d98192
159cac7478786928dc2cd503f6bc0bf75b737168
describe
'44687' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZCW' 'sip-files00222.QC.jpg'
70986e5b8b806f5a1fbdfca9f4ab8315
b9fbec0533fca7635aa5446db7fd08d8a4499ddf
describe
'11399' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZCX' 'sip-files00282thm.jpg'
f722ba35860ae3fe3fad2f37ab3c5457
5eea4983b5ecb92f3b6b2b14c4e576d56e1a3e4d
describe
'11121' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZCY' 'sip-files00139.QC.jpg'
70d5b3b2c04aa09ea37f3a15fac98fff
205b6b273f7d641b73b0037f148749309fcc1964
describe
'10749' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZCZ' 'sip-files00128thm.jpg'
014242980e90878b18fb410bdda3054a
ed20278cb92a16c75086e94ac47888e6763e1409
'2012-06-28T20:44:30-04:00'
describe
'10592' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZDA' 'sip-files00149thm.jpg'
f5cc972265ba1bb411d85f56884ea541
38869a9d58f248ae43eeb59eb9bba16db70f32c6
describe
'3223' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZDB' 'sip-files00290.QC.jpg'
ff7a8aa84aca1f13991e860971d65896
fe19e08d240418f4986bb3e5c21ea175f4d08df2
describe
'11840' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZDC' 'sip-files00255.QC.jpg'
e1e319b8d0ccc513a6203af0c07249ef
b4e74b55899a17765c732eed904f139dd1638021
describe
'11115' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZDD' 'sip-files00106thm.jpg'
b6a554b1ba72bfc5b6969bc18b4dbc98
471cd3fcc64e2dc3f37e7b6d48cf317c614dcc5a
describe
'12845' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZDE' 'sip-files00017.QC.jpg'
5afa44c332b45669d0bdabfdde11cb06
3ebc11a73dfc4a667bea364cc816080cbe6e1529
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZDF' 'sip-files00058thm.jpg'
b52c04988069ee76c5ca24902c78bcb4
11d3a7617082c106e6acfbfb9308fd5dee1b17db
describe
'2905' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZDG' 'sip-files00159thm.jpg'
e97ec689221455da60f6e6e7451a14a3
59de913251ab4c613b165e8328c0a9ee0cd4ddce
describe
'43131' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZDH' 'sip-files00145.QC.jpg'
215e63e2b6a504ae35ee580fc68db097
da4fc74fe58478d43e614a296338f0d52dd56816
describe
'10848' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZDI' 'sip-files00033thm.jpg'
cf2330c8666a19307281f83a34f7f085
b50d5979c82974978372d6816e26e5c1aa18d5aa
describe
'41151' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZDJ' 'sip-files00169.QC.jpg'
b644ad3ebd88acd79d51f123b110bbf4
8290dabaeb0bb912a0697527d53d7d13176d2d09
'2012-06-28T20:48:21-04:00'
describe
'10607' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZDK' 'sip-files00148thm.jpg'
bbb6e58a369ac1f35d5a1a355827ed68
7c589eb7d5db82eb90385df60e1c3d872ee34fa7
'2012-06-28T20:48:18-04:00'
describe
'42963' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZDL' 'sip-files00123.QC.jpg'
bfdb39f2ff69301cb063178baa7eec29
7665c0c654a2123ad44fa6d1fa235e1d5ef74335
describe
'28566' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZDM' 'sip-files00009.QC.jpg'
2f8a96128f38f24839e1f3c6017d7d88
4938d2402f10417a1bf21e87b0f2dfff6228ab23
describe
'9189' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZDN' 'sip-files00063thm.jpg'
c5b6d4ff5331a5c392cdda1ffeb1a608
4e57db872c3173d7541a582856d4db9ea05c0325
describe
'45332' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZDO' 'sip-files00046.QC.jpg'
bbc5a78d20be33ceb63248821071e2b0
ca6bf419c79b91343e33d4687250cb54029df034
describe
'38490' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZDP' 'sip-files00030.QC.jpg'
a7a9268c12f3f2e5e74a921b86096db6
68e10d11bf6bb041dfb4c4d4f6a538534664a4b1
describe
'10140' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZDQ' 'sip-files00265thm.jpg'
6bcf9e7103f52c4f04dcbb4e330635c8
f0193578808dacca931a27be0ebdb28d42924d97
'2012-06-28T20:56:50-04:00'
describe
'11551' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZDR' 'sip-files00096thm.jpg'
e4e8fe2631bf3145371ba7fc8e7f4c78
6dbfdf55e61941a2db4b28506365587d6a1d96c7
'2012-06-28T20:48:31-04:00'
describe
'5170' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZDS' 'sip-files00158thm.jpg'
d66e371587263937b9681f766b2b6eb4
60bc0f1daecba43776b8ac87f6942d67a38916fe
describe
'1288' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZDT' 'sip-files00218thm.jpg'
3c9de4f54a8c1e77738eda6a7d922cae
b04fa08b4aea9967ef898a134c92dc0a202a50ef
describe
'11265' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZDU' 'sip-files00208thm.jpg'
573fe2de105bb2df63ada9b7352203a3
77c61cc251d62b82c3aff7cb9cc3d0a815f736b4
describe
'10812' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZDV' 'sip-files00131thm.jpg'
8402a16f5797df3b5c7a8425966793e5
e4157c8554696d65acd1ee7a158680fbbe8abf15
describe
'40695' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZDW' 'sip-files00297.QC.jpg'
5c63c16b4b790b5a36c2ca56d93df5bf
254411a97a9fd53924b20345e4bd8e42fb1c6971
describe
'10651' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZDX' 'sip-files00145thm.jpg'
192a3e5edad33fabe66129d6a370b933
2b4a0b0982b224b7faf756d57668a5d92ffe79df
describe
'1344' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZDY' 'sip-files00014thm.jpg'
be49d5bd37046c4ced544740230b9329
d010a32986ff937d858c48b439db1d4cf9546cd9
describe
'4198' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZDZ' 'sip-files00196thm.jpg'
725a6a608098582810aedae3deb8ac4a
0897657099368ccefa06982de9ff7762ac68be3f
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZEA' 'sip-files00193.QC.jpg'
b1708cb901c3a2cfcc85262240611c51
cc4110cbab37299e60990da57557dc674b78910c
describe
'9806' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZEB' 'sip-files00065thm.jpg'
1e97545c4f78cddf67bb0978467b9723
2b641053e08b6e48a4941464a7c2f540d75a9307
describe
'1309' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZEC' 'sip-files00040thm.jpg'
fc0a804d29100708d9618ea3c86fb815
63e6c88b86fce49a7f99a822d35bb41d936562bd
describe
'1274' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZED' 'sip-files00160thm.jpg'
3ff00d708dc8dd3e481abd9f32bd5b61
ec9e85991b249a66e9e396fd0764a1dc999990ce
describe
'8871' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZEE' 'sip-files00097thm.jpg'
820c9ea16a9a7a3a9ee931bc89121b6c
8a9f08cb5e96cfa619a565fdc71f56328840ff56
describe
'41475' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZEF' 'sip-files00111.QC.jpg'
cc1539e9b955d152c3d0616d6e598502
50b06f767c2f63e42d0b6e7981cd108f2996e2b0
describe
'10718' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZEG' 'sip-files00108thm.jpg'
b9d0cbc8f41729c7adfa28e3ba0f2886
ede7a5215c3ea4ec5ee6170d96ce6f0756eca68b
describe
'40524' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZEH' 'sip-files00277.QC.jpg'
ae0c021b5234c690aebbe087c09c72a2
530a13bc0b4b7595af166d8ba207a5209f6f1067
describe
'10035' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZEI' 'sip-files00297thm.jpg'
95d444daf13a6b637b426d60ebd3bc07
cc5b6061b8b340ecd3055c0549531f642eb37f86
describe
'3381' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZEJ' 'sip-files00026.QC.jpg'
00196294cb8b97c33f3c68dc99365109
8f190ab6b637f861af7fd5b5e7b0a2af12b5a7ae
describe
'45848' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZEK' 'sip-files00124.QC.jpg'
37561b071a5f1c640fea725f12068776
85f1a000c3201ffa990c586601c08ade6da29887
describe
'10439' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZEL' 'sip-files00035thm.jpg'
107d9c16ec64c9039249ee985484f3b9
7a797f83cfa26d0a19759d9ee8b801b86ff77120
describe
'11136' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZEM' 'sip-files00260thm.jpg'
74da06d1a76a5aae8e90dc81b6392881
1fc12089b3c724f0fdc1c2a54ac9d1781eb24e4f
describe
'11132' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZEN' 'sip-files00113thm.jpg'
371d4c2a222c5fa594e84ae75c324063
838af33817adaf62fa01246b195a7b5b2f3187be
describe
'41771' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZEO' 'sip-files00164.QC.jpg'
0011a4f15d0b35b32fc3be6afdd44616
eeca5f885633fde749bee1a047093227ba36bb76
describe
'1292' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZEP' 'sip-files00138thm.jpg'
2057bc79da3b861a304a2aa809771797
8b435fc7e54cd8af3d0a31884e42dc931cfaf751
describe
'10228' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZEQ' 'sip-files00049thm.jpg'
a619dab58159a4cfa3f23f0eca698b1c
ad58e4570e609de584caf6d15b4f290043b166bf
'2012-06-28T20:46:04-04:00'
describe
'42440' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZER' 'sip-files00246.QC.jpg'
0c83dfecf172a53d706b261f73999298
c38f47e7428a790647ffcdec102fba3bddf062b6
describe
'14877' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZES' 'sip-files00288.QC.jpg'
31c9cf0d2a05c992d882fce9819a4722
984e4994b8520526d6ae4e877410f73ba6047305
describe
'10211' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZET' 'sip-files00281thm.jpg'
10b7a2f363fc9c85aed89618449d1bfc
4278ed58089adf5900436b557cf8a867c13713bd
describe
'9878' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZEU' 'sip-files00043thm.jpg'
47aaa7cf465b03170e46f9f35466704f
39b75c1671fbdcf75add66c4b2a15920da48d407
describe
'3679' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZEV' 'sip-files00178thm.jpg'
dbc87f6f06bca40b7ca8927252068f03
bd0053d036f21aef7ac698af07f73a43e49725cd
describe
'4276' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZEW' 'sip-files00288thm.jpg'
108d7990370b5b108651da8ce95830df
55eab6d595ea3cf38f765efa7370040d45e203a9
'2012-06-28T20:54:57-04:00'
describe
'10275' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZEX' 'sip-files00249thm.jpg'
3ec9daee7250b42da8b3b1b9055d466d
4ae5efe24b1fe3935747249adbb9da2c41008caa
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZEY' 'sip-files00263thm.jpg'
bc17f4b1e97bf41543a8f42fdf9df734
70d6411bd52b26482ee8a48ab0401ffd8c5eddbe
describe
'42700' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZEZ' 'sip-files00127.QC.jpg'
3ea9275be5324d709662d82c284c280b
1559cb4f0f87aa09df36333f37881da237ba7308
describe
'24811' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZFA' 'sip-files00015.QC.jpg'
140d02848eced3d6163ef33a100fda4f
9ad4a23d6205d6b2596a32a59c88dc1951355888
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZFB' 'sip-files00240.QC.jpg'
f160a296e5543337787240abeff26345
ebc8180c0dcda6e1166c1ff975d65dc6163a9ffb
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZFC' 'sip-files00012thm.jpg'
999ebbaa4b8a2e52cfcd716870fb7c50
700aaf4ecd7e0afd9857626e7ed236ad903c532c
describe
'1268' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZFD' 'sip-files00118thm.jpg'
1d2fff6d4748eb29a190d0629942502a
4441659bfb6abc977f5ce22f23da2e9224079105
describe
'41017' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZFE' 'sip-files00154.QC.jpg'
06aa15ff6b0bf826da52dd65330761c1
6a6663fb5f306ce4d2f50036b3fe8a0ba1a766a5
describe
'11255' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZFF' 'sip-files00116thm.jpg'
8fd0fe63bdecbc8f726f4d675aefb9de
4746927fbe752be0d06e591f32325de83c35a657
describe
'37289' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZFG' 'sip-files00161.QC.jpg'
3618988a46c43da870035ecbe18b3022
5f06883ab8ec45989ea1917db703a56d643a4353
describe
'11161' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZFH' 'sip-files00192thm.jpg'
3fca58919597e124d2ee6febf4ba59ba
179ef18ed153e713019d7237c332c83a43213466
describe
'3188' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZFI' 'sip-files00138.QC.jpg'
136696f180c0250f068f7c0ab3cb1f99
d7e3471ffd7ab14e112171a9c7eb9f9364343b3b
describe
'9194' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZFJ' 'sip-files00077thm.jpg'
2e7bf24781e0eb64c51005cdfb1705eb
932500306b34494fc62be0f0da76cb99bcb430f9
describe
'10225' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZFK' 'sip-files00287thm.jpg'
ce979b513273ba7d420fe3fd1495fcf8
29676cafaa014a8bd5a0cc1124160c55a8bb941b
describe
'41223' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZFL' 'sip-files00229.QC.jpg'
17992dba351e5c92397832770bf74e71
112a4611d270d040a1b46e24884f68e9d7c234c6
describe
'10802' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZFM' 'sip-files00164thm.jpg'
cb5f4b8ac9e6636a23be6acc539d51f4
a42061bb8b9cecc4606e47c82199ce8525fd5b20
describe
'43818' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZFN' 'sip-files00072.QC.jpg'
4af01dfc65f6c11c9750cd56bb7ebbcb
7eb7465ad580f45fe2400e1f01770682b04f3e4e
describe
'9205' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZFO' 'sip-files00011thm.jpg'
0c0c02ec48c1e1bd50470461f04f5ed8
cac6e5194abbeba96a3b7134d46043f276d301ba
describe
'40838' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZFP' 'sip-files00032.QC.jpg'
3fd6924f19fbea3c73fd7f3acf0d059b
0a17d210f112b333410d3218037827876cc6a5ed
describe
'41974' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZFQ' 'sip-files00023.QC.jpg'
d5e51343952a118725f78cfdca4312ef
82d6567e5caf6aee9af63b0bcbba0093e75b8138
describe
'10416' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZFR' 'sip-files00301thm.jpg'
5cd176c0e1da7bd93a92bbc263ab3b26
ea74af1adea8fc4aaa369ddca153968bd2b87643
describe
'10357' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZFS' 'sip-files00285thm.jpg'
8d70f539acc2e4efb092d13fa3b8d7b4
438a2b1e42a74cc03b2360df0f482f4d5724ed1d
describe
'10995' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZFT' 'sip-files00230thm.jpg'
a4923d107795db483ff4af626f1cb315
c012c4d946a86c61de9ac003a69008c0ae51f5d4
describe
'9922' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZFU' 'sip-files00311.QC.jpg'
40445d21b841c802f2b1393f3aa10096
f7f4cd58d4eb33c69bef9ab0f852a46452e1cec5
describe
'40581' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZFV' 'sip-files00045.QC.jpg'
64c9360de1fbeb390c6b535b2a255b6f
86566a30f55581b18cd7f28cddeb0f37ede04d3c
describe
'40846' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZFW' 'sip-files00307.QC.jpg'
d1b7d644d5a66cb1d139dede680459ad
5c0feb904225d5a27939fd14256e997b472a4537
describe
'11497' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZFX' 'sip-files00294thm.jpg'
ff673de66bed651ff651d347032b66b8
17b552777fea6d20ec1ee1b2781303919a1e9b8e
describe
'45269' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZFY' 'sip-files00084.QC.jpg'
b6205e8c15901bc0ae41c2fe493ebc40
446533139bb2ab036832bbe1e34554dd5fe047a9
describe
'12830' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZFZ' 'sip-files00005.QC.jpg'
6572cfea09568d5dec721f8d72fe3674
601bd9856f0727d6dc042d37dafc0e6d7e75860e
describe
'9610' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZGA' 'sip-files00271thm.jpg'
f7ceb6508562ba265129212c2a9386f4
5347a81a44c82fd00efb5b9d169c9990eecd4600
'2012-06-28T20:47:51-04:00'
describe
'43817' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZGB' 'sip-files00262.QC.jpg'
2677087b81f79f6f7078d8ce6240cab5
c4ecab2ad2503d39b17ea16ce9da8f5ebaf00843
describe
'11525' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZGC' 'sip-files00054thm.jpg'
6fb630795c9a5b54a5d50dfd8787cf14
9ccbf85deb9205c3b20785994c8dcc3bd7d5f3f3
describe
'10970' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZGD' 'sip-files00245thm.jpg'
a28eb508f1c1a1c2fdc02e47eea8961d
45d60b14e25b2d817b10c42dea8c212f3e546f11
describe
'44446' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZGE' 'sip-files00096.QC.jpg'
1827fe47ac560e0a4123be112f7014f4
79440e69b1e884d33467c820076471ae588a2a7f
'2012-06-28T20:57:26-04:00'
describe
'42402' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZGF' 'sip-files00133.QC.jpg'
19c89c7b39020d6f08f5e600b28710a8
16bd1f5f799bb8575be2c6cc1f75d71431f79b15
'2012-06-28T20:47:30-04:00'
describe
'41541' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZGG' 'sip-files00275.QC.jpg'
a9dcf4f368c8e3fe44c495d514cb7040
d9c704a9d9513f6148c36ce53cdde43ca347613b
'2012-06-28T20:52:03-04:00'
describe
'41707' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZGH' 'sip-files00233.QC.jpg'
6a060fb1c12afe7466e55647f9183d96
a97320832b3d34e5ac0c81775933f5d76ddef7b8
describe
'10152' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZGI' 'sip-files00295thm.jpg'
7300e42febfedce3d6569e43ea5f7023
40c9ea6c26576b62cd3bd343c9d2702e5cb4b1f7
describe
'40689' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZGJ' 'sip-files00022.QC.jpg'
832751591f66c2f97cb932303260298d
2679da8d01d02b943421efa1b174e353c55a0da5
describe
'10771' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZGK' 'sip-files00200thm.jpg'
f671eec9f3ca40cdf98a81bbeb545477
b4dfe03f1d3a796280fe9915f24de06b3f9a80df
describe
'11131' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZGL' 'sip-files00107thm.jpg'
6cc96cce85711e7a825157b20f10b0f0
5e537920b677ff643e9fcad9e3e9daa7a0832042
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZGM' 'sip-files00175.QC.jpg'
ac06831eacddd0b043c0373b18c2cfb4
24a17f2ef95583ed9e90fbe76c7acb5cf02d880b
describe
'10794' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZGN' 'sip-files00228thm.jpg'
c1deff8e614af9f4e7d4022fe673d2ca
f9f394dca5e8959ffc02fc07f666b1013f110f10
describe
'9969' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZGO' 'sip-files00137thm.jpg'
a0db93b1f0e2329c3f64cc37e2fee944
da84222567a8a301ba49f37361f46ba33a976ca3
describe
'5296' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZGP' 'sip-files00002thm.jpg'
09b2fb004cd48f326b0a9db5fae8c936
85b196c950be3e195b6ed79343907c4c0adc2666
describe
'11268' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZGQ' 'sip-files00114thm.jpg'
b392a6f709ec788526c18bd1f6373299
3e338229d0476437e53b50f84d94eb9ffe1d9bc6
describe
'47514' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZGR' 'sip-files00074.QC.jpg'
f10e450cade5bad7a41c8a882939dc51
fe449a9320cc45bdbc0babbe37657c52cf99ea43
describe
'11412' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZGS' 'sip-files00056thm.jpg'
9521f968cc76129939f4053fdac06db8
8dd0be335c095b84547228c1a0cff89621c72854
describe
'43852' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZGT' 'sip-files00050.QC.jpg'
a3193f9cd32bf11d0cdb94f2555dc1aa
eacbc02aa6dd0b1fdf68134393fd23e88abe8b95
describe
'10428' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZGU' 'sip-files00225thm.jpg'
abb7aa9212f642b9f501436d2219702e
3591bd0717b25bb0e1ee1d9968f520384869031f
describe
'41955' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZGV' 'sip-files00187.QC.jpg'
646dfb87a2481d5bbf17c53f069dec3a
d604235a3d48e7dd31bf7cd805ff14333333eddf
describe
'45749' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZGW' 'sip-files00042.QC.jpg'
959222108c633ca0099715bb9c958ff6
dbf0a9ca00f4b7c7fa5f35b80df581515706bf17
describe
'5016' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZGX' 'sip-files00312thm.jpg'
bba9c442ad3ed43bd45b35e0363825c1
a9d1243da4d94603c480e155358464b9d85b4724
describe
'11057' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZGY' 'sip-files00111thm.jpg'
501a90fcfa8c12a2eacc57b53b3d8a0a
96361daca2d196bdaf3fd8caccb95fc3bb9cf745
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZGZ' 'sip-files00028thm.jpg'
ef6bb7821152ea813a7075a93dbb1905
62de2e7942e182c46c8bcd14a44c95fae586253a
'2012-06-28T20:50:56-04:00'
describe
'42096' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZHA' 'sip-files00029.QC.jpg'
134e7f8e9a5467cb74d5a73124e1116f
6804c7492a099eb92a03c864b9a43d8497dfadcc
describe
'10221' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZHB' 'sip-files00193thm.jpg'
530fe1b98487f0f7a1c2fc775beadb12
f44b6e1047e271d8c16a7d3fc241fb95ca7c067f
'2012-06-28T20:48:39-04:00'
describe
'10184' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZHC' 'sip-files00073thm.jpg'
f77d60a2f9a4f7f3e6706b4d33600a99
60743cfaec4b306cf5845c9fa6e5addca1c85c5b
describe
'40290' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZHD' 'sip-files00273.QC.jpg'
c4bd486befcd5fff7ebe272560eb45a3
73030615983ac6dd34832a450764f290a93428f9
describe
'9642' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZHE' 'sip-files00053thm.jpg'
e2bd4614dc456566f2d3cf102ae333d5
e68640b26a46d85706b4f7e0b3641847e4cd1134
describe
'12319' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZHF' 'sip-files00070thm.jpg'
91f90229c0fd3283fe3972bc4a49cdc1
52cf2af67523c12fe9986c648e6f15050965d089
describe
'44230' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZHG' 'sip-files00094.QC.jpg'
cf7932fe5e0200cae429a8432c1a395e
8c95d5a3e938c2447fb13f7bc907502020100877
describe
'9430' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZHH' 'sip-files00181thm.jpg'
b2c50967a7d770db7b220a0ace0143ef
db1b655b221532c15bc988820518f29967b0aad2
describe
'11165' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZHI' 'sip-files00046thm.jpg'
124ee379fceb6a41e7bb2fe4901d6f64
1971b6f9542f2a1b79288022571e27b40874729e
describe
'45852' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZHJ' 'sip-files00054.QC.jpg'
2982dab674ae421c22e3e900fdc59554
3a2a16086e2808a62075e675a08e6de8eebabbb9
'2012-06-28T20:57:21-04:00'
describe
'10056' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZHK' 'sip-files00034thm.jpg'
27c46dd5d4aaa235b34735c988a4294c
e22836304d718e00adb210992b3aebcf19df5b53
describe
'11490' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZHL' 'sip-files00124thm.jpg'
50272417eb02f47047251d1b6ab4b115
68880b3786b3287934a3a4c4fcb621c4bb36f8f2
describe
'10671' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZHM' 'sip-files00152thm.jpg'
3b3ef37bf57743a9f0bd84882d76320f
fd023f2a1ca08548f451d14531dd0f98346c8b87
describe
'41439' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZHN' 'sip-files00241.QC.jpg'
ecbbf5909aa2cbed3e770404357dd243
af8f32215a7bff981df8ed3b71c6e0b1ff2a9f7b
describe
'30939' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZHO' 'sip-files00013.QC.jpg'
ddd5c9acd70a92ec1836b2b42fd609d9
69b260b254616ed3aa91d67c7d10a56cd7e8b18c
describe
'1263' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZHP' 'sip-files00270thm.jpg'
c711e2388725f33740d28289b5d05ea6
84b6b2f7094ea1ff0cfbe3e9313e27f12444de86
describe
'10845' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZHQ' 'sip-files00167thm.jpg'
a8e81ab17c948d3a33ae1063b627b0f5
fea3ba2b3ca118133dbbb2bdbd60750f481fbd78
describe
'44916' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZHR' 'sip-files00044.QC.jpg'
4c2249c08cbfe2f74f91f9381a220a76
6843a7edfe9926ddead736e2a6a912383b998c6c
describe
'7462' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZHS' 'sip-files00313.QC.jpg'
b098c28ddfb8ba10577167732f60b0d2
53cf8e9a22e56a787dc38747a8bd1ba83d956488
describe
'10887' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZHT' 'sip-files00165thm.jpg'
561197357f470a59f60ab240a83d59e0
68b8a53490f60e38bf5022bf1be3c358df8f4711
describe
'3672' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZHU' 'sip-files00024thm.jpg'
a5e3aadfff26878aef78e1402d09b532
d648b071e348a0ebca1841bc5dba2560588148d8
describe
'41122' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZHV' 'sip-files00281.QC.jpg'
b9eacbb3a4ac0f6e05835d70e45de73a
c9e87334ea70d37f1d48bc3cf9b491e850fe0d7f
describe
'15968' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZHW' 'sip-files00002.QC.jpg'
27983614c5e6fd1f3b8d2685632ea8a2
c284e6ca94d4e8041eb6c6fc7affe65986516e8e
describe
'41417' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZHX' 'sip-files00144.QC.jpg'
af426eed8ce81ecddfc24544da1e1b93
074907a0fa2fb2afa1d5406ed2191f437c36fbde
describe
'42355' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZHY' 'sip-files00108.QC.jpg'
10938cd921574fd46d58249154198177
83f1becfd4f2818bef8a367d841a474e9ce87710
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZHZ' 'sip-files00140thm.jpg'
77d3706df79f88812e0c5812dc6d611f
0ec4be4dc78a73ae0d01a906cb4701bec85b9057
describe
'10967' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZIA' 'sip-files00194thm.jpg'
f5d247a105e49954a849472e867fbd96
08e3d0effdd15f739c284b760789af6f6ab727e7
describe
'10850' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZIB' 'sip-files00162thm.jpg'
98569c22c0b040b46bf525d9fae52277
bfbea22a0a25984f09620d14cd528b7772b9baec
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZIC' 'sip-files00191thm.jpg'
a20319e42088e61ec346e23de3dac3d9
67c6f6b6467c21e89c7434332e520d4b7150de3b
describe
'11359' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZID' 'sip-files00296thm.jpg'
82068ef8d69a32877d474208810bc90c
7de3ce4ce417dce300ab4a3f37392c560aecdff8
describe
'11529' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZIE' 'sip-files00226thm.jpg'
67c30d5d6d3fd40bf603e67741f76258
a1750cadfe9f4b3642ae71d4a271703c81cf9eb2
describe
'10641' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZIF' 'sip-files00209thm.jpg'
fd4d8726c0cd46095acd56b954a8e9bc
36000f1e9a4732c15efd749209554220f73c2092
describe
'42306' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZIG' 'sip-files00149.QC.jpg'
b14718704aa3a177b7935a49ae3aff9e
039a1ed23a71b2b159844f33a9ef1b8ac35e5f77
describe
'4405' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZIH' 'sip-files00254thm.jpg'
71f7146bafe2b561edbf15a34fb78008
5f90073f99b06833b6085347514ae72d75cee7cf
describe
'37035' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZII' 'sip-files00027.QC.jpg'
18e3ab40ba0373d189a4f1ca4f747e79
1f6d38cee5b485d7f0ff412d44287d0b41afadbc
'2012-06-28T20:51:55-04:00'
describe
'3279' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZIJ' 'sip-files00289thm.jpg'
628046832355d40e22727340326202b4
fe67d909a44d3375489aef084d6dafc02f9b3868
describe
'10149' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZIK' 'sip-files00293thm.jpg'
064906ee8fbd4f84f44f0e0c5843248f
d05be9c8dbac27b006ad4178bd225e4e665e6eb2
describe
'10691' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZIL' 'sip-files00155thm.jpg'
d92d4e43f7d203b331e3cdca09e62793
db5316cee5ca4d6e582f7e78d49215340590bd2b
describe
'1295' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZIM' 'sip-files00290thm.jpg'
1c8eed674fca0769a364d1afe5f30fbe
4b68bbb8b579197f546e872e28ca24e052a9487b
describe
'9598' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZIN' 'sip-files00141thm.jpg'
bd22d26cc55f2e3848d80ee2306d202c
cfb9e4fe65b38768672e72830c8c69d3029e021c
describe
'3370' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZIO' 'sip-files00100.QC.jpg'
842348ac93f7a9b6e8a705148d7d335e
86aab1b2d874b7d2af322b1595d0f96c492d1fa8
describe
'12036' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZIP' 'sip-files00269.QC.jpg'
520e7c26e3f01065a6f3f732bb7d4858
ac7f59c28cd397db8e40d26d0bcdb053c6df660f
describe
'43443' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZIQ' 'sip-files00092.QC.jpg'
755bb034e2c324cfab44ee461cc23b2d
5fd372e30670c8ec08747f30a8411dd6d9027789
describe
'41524' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZIR' 'sip-files00261.QC.jpg'
0b6bec527f0024870b672948e1d184ac
d9daefd5f724efeecfd417fb9690c96e92b00313
describe
'37161' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZIS' 'sip-files00065.QC.jpg'
d8ff9d6063d74c86929a2a29d9eeb7be
622f6a7dbea3bd9f11015d336990b77f32290416
'2012-06-28T20:52:41-04:00'
describe
'41545' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZIT' 'sip-files00153.QC.jpg'
049b0039e1630805cc29d0858a071ea8
33a6a684b549bbb5c96eb6a8eba136f6ece9d554
describe
'3314' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZIU' 'sip-files00160.QC.jpg'
5506c06ec67a2501de2ae6b7401bc22e
75962ad15d3ae251d7e60de6e47963a78b700d4b
describe
'40545' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZIV' 'sip-files00299.QC.jpg'
9b1d8fc93a21488c4bd2148698fe5d1d
9a852c9f9685a3380f76f9e71cc0d1856f2d4674
describe
'11041' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZIW' 'sip-files00099.QC.jpg'
a067208343e959d19fc58b38129a5167
e97fef0d7f8e92588d3a65f6a13563cc5771270d
describe
'11207' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZIX' 'sip-files00220thm.jpg'
3a5725d9c0f6f7bf11b73813ee393d67
5a95b60a974fdfc9d6cf812acfee1f52e29a31fc
describe
'41838' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZIY' 'sip-files00284.QC.jpg'
550343e9c24a42afef1d827f98ec6b93
62cf5ef7498967b6e041b381e1903828d099527d
describe
'1346' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZIZ' 'sip-files00100thm.jpg'
acc7604fd08fc2410196b1b1244a5793
1096d915ad6f739be7d9fc62f57f5050855ef36c
describe
'11109' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZJA' 'sip-files00211thm.jpg'
9222757f5d06430703260341498a95d4
abcec383f8d9f4997aff47b539e47192d1e5ba55
describe
'42758' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZJB' 'sip-files00131.QC.jpg'
03d9f4bfa203dd90ce88923cb2560787
f08b33b9727196494c18cd5c3a905181b208a159
describe
'10294' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZJC' 'sip-files00236thm.jpg'
6fae6c0a94171fe17dec5ec28ce4154e
179c2bb5b92168950738dfb908355aa0fbb4c737
describe
'43451' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZJD' 'sip-files00278.QC.jpg'
1739221adee33dd5febf4cd5160e9331
50f20a28a7512ff9c80250ead0439ce1c77668fd
describe
'43764' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZJE' 'sip-files00248.QC.jpg'
3653326df7b2e171f8ea1b6c2e0468d7
6baf0e88b6d4ed51755ff0ffefdba715b439236a
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZJF' 'sip-files00057.QC.jpg'
33d9311966161bb8f5cbec4edcba9e25
94523dd90c0d6f6b1f804e4522481afb64fa7478
describe
'11313' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZJG' 'sip-files00240thm.jpg'
3393b56abc7da522677770bf753a3ef7
31297748ddb678eed6f93be1e46aad6a67aff755
describe
'42447' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZJH' 'sip-files00204.QC.jpg'
b48881034e7f01182371ffa79ca8735e
12ddf7dff163b484284aba0ecb648a75b1eb22f0
describe
'10351' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZJI' 'sip-files00233thm.jpg'
4e7923a43c8190fd1c2ad59afe37ddc4
abcec2cd2d8e66dd63c3773e9c20a6ab11392619
describe
'45262' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZJJ' 'sip-files00076.QC.jpg'
d8773946c504f4d105da319ef5d9557b
36578e3f3783bf7718013ae1d2570c58eee46202
describe
'10739' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZJK' 'sip-files00188thm.jpg'
f7efec3867cb2d71e41d473da7ce52ce
88f0a5956050bde459bc6507244b89913fa0d9f9
describe
'42606' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZJL' 'sip-files00106.QC.jpg'
88e8fb67535e0e975f59cce0cdc9669e
89424eef0fe8295f8372d4bcce56d0f0301c88aa
describe
'44545' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZJM' 'sip-files00114.QC.jpg'
0893c4d564cabc90e6737f9513e1d49c
7b1a8673850bbf453317628d4b60532ec6633bf2
describe
'11397' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZJN' 'sip-files00091thm.jpg'
a5415f0ab2dff9474601d3e0186ff3c7
d92ca69970ae41b994b9c6af34b082a8a741af9b
describe
'39597' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZJO' 'sip-files00049.QC.jpg'
a7ba09ffa37161a2416d3ae93f0a7af0
d203c2c1f3e9950fb327382066982aa57ad85b82
describe
'10119' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZJP' 'sip-files00061.QC.jpg'
0284b856fe11f755bc6857189ce69fcd
11775c578ffcf18d102e61be7c05740929e30ac2
describe
'10242' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZJQ' 'sip-files00279thm.jpg'
242066127d5b2d903a050078f74994ed
c73691c08bbfe7bc46cfd6830f7ed813e3dbdc57
describe
'40819' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZJR' 'sip-files00263.QC.jpg'
d7fe64010c2539db23fa428389192a7e
6365d2f2fc7b643d4d412a7428cd12a0526e965f
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZJS' 'sip-files00137.QC.jpg'
3084d6096de206d5f082ec99be733c11
34b2bafc72292fe3dbcee87180e7fdf581213a93
describe
'42673' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZJT' 'sip-files00221.QC.jpg'
6b440b03d041f84c424c330e0740a924
9869ff3e1fd96c917262baf6f9c4694375fe5a94
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZJU' 'sip-files00144thm.jpg'
418f3edbaca8c7fffccc5253b757c9fd
9825494b1314be26729c18bb30beef7ed7488da3
describe
'9318' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZJV' 'sip-files00199thm.jpg'
9aad20e127d0f548795d512222d7ceb1
0af6f1271fee116e4ad96bc6decd0f4aafdda8b8
describe
'10587' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZJW' 'sip-files00151thm.jpg'
1093d2283b1b33ca6a37ba6c062c4e58
51820937cc45038d1d24a243cbf33ad668a5b0ff
describe
'3537' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZJX' 'sip-files00119thm.jpg'
f34d52b475bab243eb012ce7807a10f0
5dd6e57aeb764f5aa144a93d6cbdf695cb76f48c
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZJY' 'sip-files00151.QC.jpg'
b72c97731ffc6d7552f834adcd8bf798
7f15f1adfdb1ace05c42d763f509c4347bda6851
describe
'43694' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZJZ' 'sip-files00242.QC.jpg'
f63d324858f83bc3a6e9a38ddcbef209
aea64b813f8af6a5eb1dac9b9d76418aa1ce8e25
describe
'10292' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZKA' 'sip-files00083thm.jpg'
87c83daa1b7ad341199394a13d68943d
54197b408a137da3df79aa238b3a51153afe17fe
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZKB' 'sip-files00229thm.jpg'
08923f859771f18a83e7305045a6ac20
bee470e808943c94acc1516cd4bbe50c5db12c32
describe
'35288' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZKC' 'sip-files00001.QC.jpg'
053c4a8d54f98f919f8cc7cc5e7ea31d
c0e9a05c7b1f63875258892a6c645d52db4c2d2e
describe
'11126' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZKD' 'sip-files00210thm.jpg'
21720ca26ef13c3d4f651e3bf8d05c0d
d1146015913f93bbd56e5012cd1b9bd5992c9ae6
describe
'42997' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZKE' 'sip-files00031.QC.jpg'
e465c54bb09d5365c7b2d28e82dbbd6e
6872e3653297b2cc4527a562eb614d02601f89af
describe
'11056' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZKF' 'sip-files00244thm.jpg'
16b13174c5fae65333954cfcbf89dbae
d0592ac548073c17647128065c66f2d3e2b5836f
describe
'1270' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZKG' 'sip-files00238thm.jpg'
b7b5f2f73efc626406762ee6307d18db
8d4086833376d3ece3b939a4507a0074e40d017b
describe
'18659' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZKH' 'sip-files00158.QC.jpg'
72ec30607371e83d05c00dc33613195d
79f0c1a7848aa4801a5e4153c7927517f46a95a3
describe
'10197' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZKI' 'sip-files00069thm.jpg'
15f2679054974d6b44d60da75262e2fd
358ec79997ef2d87cd6176a555b58d64c34d83c5
describe
'36266' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZKJ' 'sip-files00063.QC.jpg'
84fd10e1e5d165c3b4e3755c58033074
5d74f9abfe9af0498f459bd70c593cd03b5a9ddf
describe
'9017' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZKK' 'sip-files00007thm.jpg'
71c53ed0e5fd9336a1a976db8c3d7581
0e71a8f7f5aac4e7234de9836175642e889db683
describe
'11001' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZKL' 'sip-files00136thm.jpg'
806864cba3111271456ee14463b84f47
d821d2031c708728f4aad2cebc9a2632efcb4bee
describe
'43210' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZKM' 'sip-files00128.QC.jpg'
dcdd99d2da0f1608a99e1c1996945c7a
515249fdde4528874cd543b802a54e04b2f6d172
describe
'9563' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZKN' 'sip-files00257thm.jpg'
8397931a03e81b6fb3fcbfd8ad0de040
3893d5c97f51e62468bf41df1444355949e892a9
describe
'1362' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZKO' 'sip-files00082thm.jpg'
b8a224af3ddb6250c90a40a55d9310fa
42766af27d9070c026078043935a2ee10d45d9e4
describe
'3239' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZKP' 'sip-files00080.QC.jpg'
a0111824956fc4071ae5cab580adceca
b0d67bff81ac40bead15583dc13c9d137520676f
describe
'42083' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZKQ' 'sip-files00036.QC.jpg'
576694db7f1e061347ecb28a34c1d3a2
a1c0a74f4e95ef6d90791bb780099ebe3d6e751b
describe
'10744' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZKR' 'sip-files00207thm.jpg'
b9eb9532a363dadcb5f0219cd4a6b16d
f17e214c4f2d6b8cfbe6de00f4c3e8ccabcaaf02
describe
'2907' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZKS' 'sip-files00039thm.jpg'
be64ba7a929c46daa28576758f43f99f
b376757415185ff593207075f3f2bbfda5cea85a
describe
'11388' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZKT' 'sip-files00132thm.jpg'
b66ccce0891701098caffabd8af1d4b7
f608caa6f0baf0a9b32f43fff7f4c965d265bd21
describe
'3183' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZKU' 'sip-files00118.QC.jpg'
2d77424f6db1c7049d7091e7ed71e847
7e5a368ce02c4e4f88995a6ebe2c2958d22f4e79
describe
'43022' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZKV' 'sip-files00228.QC.jpg'
cf66dc9af3dfbc6d20b95a1b7c3ea093
765ab2a2e92f274b98f3d8e20b39652d90c8e503
describe
'41611' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZKW' 'sip-files00215.QC.jpg'
1f9ebc9937afc86aa15de36dd57bff46
8242f27484e7b1ae332f7840b0f12d472ac401dc
describe
'10258' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZKX' 'sip-files00205thm.jpg'
8d77b74f25deb430020de4fbe89e80af
64ec72a0800bfde44bd64a624ffd38295dfd1e40
describe
'42624' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZKY' 'sip-files00146.QC.jpg'
73b0f08272806040460d71a0e76db5ec
55f60f7b79a21c313973748b1f10de31a88632b1
describe
'15148' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZKZ' 'sip-files00254.QC.jpg'
a9aa4e368b08d0607c83cbaea552fe73
eef30f5e360e05b6e575b0c181450386301733fa
describe
'8142' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZLA' 'sip-files00009thm.jpg'
c3785e2b5979da07f226b17b622626c8
78ecc6f4d5f079ec282124afad332f4b5ee086cb
describe
'3316' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZLB' 'sip-files00218.QC.jpg'
af40570fb193237185da1a2d29e1e848
2dde46291f562856bedfb4f221eca091d056bfbe
describe
'42459' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZLC' 'sip-files00272.QC.jpg'
61fd28ae40f57394de76857065b3388b
67a9cbeeaf5988bb35df02287a89bb69e1583c6a
describe
'10915' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZLD' 'sip-files00190thm.jpg'
88c295c7420fae85990a4fee7f3bec1f
749f17f4ae3b0e35b2f1b81e6b1ddad339bf09d6
'2012-06-28T20:45:29-04:00'
describe
'3112' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZLE' 'sip-files00270.QC.jpg'
92405844f79b61f8c3dcf948d7779cb6
31a375582f1d0b2784817d11cfd3998cd576f099
describe
'11267' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZLF' 'sip-files00092thm.jpg'
40eb1ef072dec2997e55895289f53d5d
b31dc1b86428f2e38eb579e955cc6be9fd18281f
describe
'42151' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZLG' 'sip-files00109.QC.jpg'
cee0d565cc782274c4828362d1316a67
624c6687c4a33a813e2c0dc5548a9bb268a214c2
describe
'43692' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZLH' 'sip-files00091.QC.jpg'
7e2c58d43a08cd76ae73f4ac1f6de6f3
14b3595ff1b8023b2130c51778fd363fb02cf402
describe
'11014' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZLI' 'sip-files00242thm.jpg'
21bf5813e6e6087dba2c694d4f39bc45
58082a6b84a58253f62ee96405c9365348e5b7b4
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZLJ' 'sip-files00150thm.jpg'
62aca1a0bc9369238ac9182bce6da579
53072243dbfa01bf02371ab17760c5eb60bd9875
describe
'39439' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZLK' 'sip-files00047.QC.jpg'
8f80deb1ed54ee3dccac1793836233ca
4fd23b7946a64d89569a5254f38334b728a41e06
describe
'44897' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZLL' 'sip-files00134.QC.jpg'
ea44a60798926a56d05d7fd4fba2bd79
2f5c04dc6e0de87d61af5e85be81bc74bd1843bf
describe
'10203' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZLM' 'sip-files00156thm.jpg'
69e1ba742762f62f181310ea23f337bf
9a15e635008acb748c5bb0c439d1cc13f6ebb19b
describe
'10423' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZLN' 'sip-files00221thm.jpg'
6ab2eeaef06066f3e503c607b38050ad
5fb695b20db29d3c92d705723076aee695046079
describe
'11233' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZLO' 'sip-files00052thm.jpg'
1403c981258202ba2593c7363f00c645
fea790420da70509560c1337bb30ed631c166579
describe
'11606' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZLP' 'sip-files00084thm.jpg'
da63bdd2d13e6b9fb8bc4e208d499f25
db68a9e885bcf86be5355ffa6f3cc7450557370e
describe
'11821' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZLQ' 'sip-files00102thm.jpg'
1e024356e4f7d7610493e9b0e1d47d6e
f7c9e3e996eec3d62f66ff6f3d0bbb3cebc0c424
describe
'10430' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZLR' 'sip-files00038.QC.jpg'
f293924c292875dd7dd386e34923c077
9ca2159dab78687d5cdaa7561f6af68fcef9716f
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZLS' 'sip-files00256thm.jpg'
a951d76b64aa55235224bc7ad330f908
3cf5ee0396ec88b9722faf924b105d9e365a1920
describe
'40038' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZLT' 'sip-files00051.QC.jpg'
b2c399c589da7923e06f6927d306ae21
a46605ded99ff15397e90187fa8bf80753e01260
describe
'449734' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZLU' 'sip-filesUF00028241_00001.xml'
d787eb31abf067bd351b81da04c669d8
7701c97c684a9336ab35302d183221101a6ffac3
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/'.
'2013-12-06T06:47:53-05:00'
xml resolution
http://www.uflib.ufl.edu/digital/metadata/ufdc2/ufdc2.xsd
http://www.uflib.ufl.edu/digital/metadata/ufdc2/ufdc2.xsd
The element type "div" must be terminated by the matching end-tag "".
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/'.
'17162' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZLV' 'sip-files00003.QC.jpg'
0987269d1127fc9a25b455dea482f198
f7586f7ef098166ac974d1930b06ccc26eb365eb
describe
'5923' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZLW' 'sip-files00003thm.jpg'
8071efa3dbac004359de89dab39d512c
a4e8ddc7a6047031809867a160ff170c5116abc6
describe
'31943' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZLX' 'sip-files00007.QC.jpg'
ff1c029c87873f3399811536ee02807a
d76dde5998b43e4a6ffad4272e4478e0b6d496eb
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZLY' 'sip-files00012.QC.jpg'
6679229de4e7590b68e1fcd421df79b0
fa576134d4cb7fd16bc447fe62c09518cc9162fb
describe
'3540' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZLZ' 'sip-files00014.QC.jpg'
f30cd81f1d2b840cb04eaf0f4c156626
5f1c1123bb9fd9cbbcee8dd40a43765c5579f99f
describe
'6462' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZMA' 'sip-files00015thm.jpg'
1ae3ffd66d99bcc885d2d46b7fbc39c0
d358f3be37c06a0b51c6a06db671f40c2daef93f
describe
'1335' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZMB' 'sip-files00016thm.jpg'
9faf182e625c78ddc6368f7de1c09e86
42c7c0bf588be1e2756d7e36d600069575eeda39
describe
'3355' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZMC' 'sip-files00017thm.jpg'
25d5a5c23cff7d040c254ef3013479be
636220003650676a4906188bd217e6a7ddd1ce20
describe
'9513' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZMD' 'sip-files00019thm.jpg'
cbe2294e8023c9ef72257383bb47c93c
e8d17835f884e391244afa4200ba2d99dbedfa9d
describe
'42485' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZME' 'sip-files00020.QC.jpg'
145b54f8e54825ef233157825d44706f
365003caa32d5d2e473fbbb5864a77638fed6357
describe
'43890' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZMF' 'sip-files00021.QC.jpg'
3901f7c5f842bf9d80ea5609188b69e6
5ec861a32a168582888b424ced24c031951acc54
describe
'10865' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZMG' 'sip-files00021thm.jpg'
2ca52ee175cca062ec97a66faf23f591
22f2ee5af96d669fb3f6a77acbb37391bf3e2059
describe
'10632' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZMH' 'sip-files00023thm.jpg'
1430c0b5baad9cfb5455fbe72960c6fa
cd1941a98e32845cc02c5743e1ba857d21327b80
describe
'12463' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZMI' 'sip-files00024.QC.jpg'
bfa9e527338f9b9e28afb05ac2f99240
d85a88f075313cbf3d8a352e2dbe00d3ce3a3199
describe
'3362' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZMJ' 'sip-files00025thm.jpg'
22cb65045509581948714257f977f9e8
1a4d6f475e7a322b864ff45636c971763e114a8b
describe
'1325' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZMK' 'sip-files00026thm.jpg'
0db6ca0ab74aed5ec3abdf23fc2e0879
ee1bd5cd78c37aa6f3a61ffc4e7272755e69d5be
describe
'9503' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZML' 'sip-files00027thm.jpg'
e611a85638c7b23ef97e6158a02de616
ba71f06044602e12e6d39f565fd4722b7494b039
describe
'10986' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZMM' 'sip-files00029thm.jpg'
7f70c4690885074a9a7d6a1be5002f54
d25f3c89a026ae100ee65e942a9192d0ac22ce36
describe
'9556' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZMN' 'sip-files00030thm.jpg'
1f7889c567af2604099977e5e9a6c4ca
b5513c709ffdc9e15396506a6838be4a12f1dc6f
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZMO' 'sip-files00032thm.jpg'
7c902e4e534ede22a703e649f97731ac
21dacd23578184a288bb5529328a6c6e5d9efb3b
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZMP' 'sip-files00033.QC.jpg'
ac0579f9b70ba469f0a8ae37a1269e42
baf16b1672e788af9f71abd2cc93390c7c100cc5
describe
'43242' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZMQ' 'sip-files00037.QC.jpg'
cc3b69166a0d32bac610b0832ea797b2
1c7ad23ca30165ff63ab82456819849975d983de
describe
'10554' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZMR' 'sip-files00039.QC.jpg'
d72f80a49129ea1a5c4ee3ef4f09f059
802a1eadc92227144dd84ad646aec4f7b050af84
describe
'37052' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZMS' 'sip-files00041.QC.jpg'
f52caea7d5158e510ea9c3f4ad4ee0e5
698fc4d58a900dc81bbfbd8ee7ebd8899121182a
describe
'9652' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZMT' 'sip-files00041thm.jpg'
bcf2212aa31f7990a03f5183464b34d4
adbeb5ec4161c048bba456ea4f06bfda2bf44e3c
describe
'39448' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZMU' 'sip-files00043.QC.jpg'
e6f023820649b9e21ff0c4757b486def
98cb9916e85d188c527f3685aeb0d5e01a26a34c
'2012-06-28T20:44:39-04:00'
describe
'11444' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZMV' 'sip-files00044thm.jpg'
e95267ac6807a470a7cf22d5ac45aaaf
f920bdaebd026b8d532c86096284359f5be4a89f
describe
'10406' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZMW' 'sip-files00045thm.jpg'
318a216ddb3a5c926c825d28e88a4ef9
045c4f8a17921f50d7d0d77c260850cb3970dbaa
describe
'9836' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZMX' 'sip-files00047thm.jpg'
a819ac5fc48b6b41555285611ea495db
a4f4570c649600b1068fbe89174ce85efbed88eb
describe
'11340' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZMY' 'sip-files00048thm.jpg'
baafb818a995b80a373d6e6c910a4614
a980a26901ae1416c7a0dc5a086bd52aa1dc0c20
describe
'9852' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZMZ' 'sip-files00051thm.jpg'
f8dce8b80db6b1607fc81c99c5749884
8ad14b9c82d0b7e5dc65aec19d80fc3dc8d57ce7
'2012-06-28T20:57:15-04:00'
describe
'44248' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZNA' 'sip-files00052.QC.jpg'
77bec6b3ce1825d4b5065c54da531df9
54d590d61212082a174f3b40490172cc4b47ac20
describe
'39069' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZNB' 'sip-files00053.QC.jpg'
aa95d263f93ebd79d61d0622babf6232
340a0816990f36953e1d8d1e3096bd7392323dae
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZNC' 'sip-files00055thm.jpg'
d6681a701bc24f134c62887c0e2dafc6
eabd002dbe7e2800bed27a30df8b13c339f33fb9
describe
'9899' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZND' 'sip-files00057thm.jpg'
5dd38c0451d9dcf30bb4f69f4317c409
74c8852138d8db95187ea5382f6e31c37ab7e838
describe
'31618' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZNE' 'sip-files00059.QC.jpg'
b02d8b542fa344abd916eb1284473317
ea96e03226a21735c89961e42c82f1e2f628dd23
describe
'8365' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZNF' 'sip-files00059thm.jpg'
e1da69b6bf6786f8b70e529e2bf671f7
a91c00d504749bbaae08c6480d3d78ce7eed29db
describe
'3235' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZNG' 'sip-files00060.QC.jpg'
b0ec6e59534145edf1b19882392dbb06
20818af907bf66a0797104a185284f82c5635036
describe
'45045' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZNH' 'sip-files00064.QC.jpg'
f091529cc621f45c7fe7f732f6dfe13f
463f7c00a3417928a5c705d4e27ba8e2ec9192d6
describe
'10271' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZNI' 'sip-files00067thm.jpg'
d496e7fde2043196f75312c718754e37
335eb4a0b6ca1a086625531dd6e88b0e1c2ac5f7
describe
'46726' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZNJ' 'sip-files00068.QC.jpg'
c85c9b7743fab67533b3078ae7a13c21
dc98108b543178086a67fb2ca8406a38da153921
describe
'41065' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZNK' 'sip-files00069.QC.jpg'
03e1b108b81b47531909a9ab7c6c4e36
2ba1ec265453ba0e8c66b8f785a7f0bced3f2d1f
describe
'47242' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZNL' 'sip-files00070.QC.jpg'
1e3f1c16b983ed5f3937aa98a45eed64
a8504e9a8924aea25eff7de9bc768e51988dc7a1
describe
'42714' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZNM' 'sip-files00071.QC.jpg'
7b25401de39690c135ab918d0e12c7d8
561bfab1f087796d035b44b2a6062aff65240417
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZNN' 'sip-files00071thm.jpg'
4af52bb146ba91451d8126f41cc579a7
9705e51498996e83ff68a9d576d1fb494ed1f977
describe
'40245' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZNO' 'sip-files00073.QC.jpg'
f3de4677605827ff590496b5a5c91255
7b210141b5c46475816c3f8138b9480da6a16134
describe
'41296' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZNP' 'sip-files00075.QC.jpg'
907309f17ef3c415da94dbac61774830
3f60e6dcb56385d710c6737b2c751c63164a2621
describe
'35316' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZNQ' 'sip-files00077.QC.jpg'
38820def44c2889e5020cc9c5dcffa98
c1e3d8e337f44396962cbe51055c4cea61bffb8e
describe
'27141' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZNR' 'sip-files00079.QC.jpg'
1dce5a80791c754d8c5d9a507b3504bf
4b7b6d59b0aea98a5cf744d12a17979fb097012f
describe
'6859' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZNS' 'sip-files00079thm.jpg'
5b195fc578ac94d7f870a2eee9244f81
ccd3682525b688ab61e161c44e8971a8c7b72d9e
describe
'1281' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZNT' 'sip-files00080thm.jpg'
987b7931c6bf7532a7a60c94b9317d5d
1c54bbadfce48bf6ebd41ad1ff966165f19220f8
describe
'2720' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZNU' 'sip-files00081thm.jpg'
09d3067cd840991b51cae03c1f925aaa
6fbe8713baed61a47b6f7dbefeceecc51e933253
describe
'3508' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZNV' 'sip-files00082.QC.jpg'
b270a17eff5f38c9ec7a56601d258190
a2c4d178b2efee9a6587f5120a686571215b4684
describe
'38843' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZNW' 'sip-files00083.QC.jpg'
51867ee08672488b84b0fb782d7c70dd
3a1cf83eb2a08e97c6849b2b27417f9cb5daf501
describe
'10649' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZNX' 'sip-files00085thm.jpg'
b27191737aa74984a8aa603cb3744161
3ef1e5cf1b1a829d87070a7ef992f9aa19454201
describe
'41975' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZNY' 'sip-files00087.QC.jpg'
606ba757c5fb27c97bf872aca6334e2a
7f8c4b5a8a5bbeaf92c6167c9f68c546deda0d99
describe
'11026' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZNZ' 'sip-files00087thm.jpg'
29e6092c8c0ee59163e04d59fcb34333
daa35839ae86419bacff86b7cc3c52e55ed2411f
describe
'11413' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZOA' 'sip-files00088thm.jpg'
0b62a6be42c63103ce24bc1898a25d60
41be15cb810a20c515ce7e12849ab21588c2bf82
describe
'42854' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZOB' 'sip-files00089.QC.jpg'
e97176c8e57b3e4acfece2553a282dea
20675b7e609579527f6decbbf7b44bccd5e3ad33
describe
'10964' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZOC' 'sip-files00089thm.jpg'
a7672f7329544919de9048cb1ec4a4cd
588b9be61fac6df9d60d12851d0ba6639c42ff07
describe
'11822' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZOD' 'sip-files00090thm.jpg'
87f68bc2113be48cd58b31913d718470
aa20d097cd62899d2bba657a99d5a0f1fa467f6e
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZOE' 'sip-files00093thm.jpg'
e3007cc8fd6492d07765b3d34d00fb41
95fc58173e2ca26fa57a434831ff1334d405607c
describe
'11659' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZOF' 'sip-files00094thm.jpg'
2fb827dcddc621bb8ded53708c25da49
d3de49e186b97746856e6d9df0b0193d665476af
describe
'3237' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZOG' 'sip-files00098.QC.jpg'
0efc3348f063283a79f2b66e2f05f0a9
c08a8382a5fc87c6d9fc2e2acd9233f68bf196f5
describe
'39450' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZOH' 'sip-files00101.QC.jpg'
a9f7e9332085ec4e5529a8a8ef561327
7115b74b042ea75fc4e3d65aa3b36c4217d02c75
describe
'9885' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZOI' 'sip-files00101thm.jpg'
46c5cc474bde7304e8ad6a78fd60755d
ac0fa73880c18cd5ef66b0319099c1119ed5c9d7
describe
'43493' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZOJ' 'sip-files00103.QC.jpg'
ce563db695161cdc417a6088db2b7838
ef0fdb794d759c2d8b15078ccf6f030229ed6756
describe
'11113' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZOK' 'sip-files00103thm.jpg'
83470fd3d2e9697903b7ef149327a08c
0ed087d4406c91b131a353d56c4419a0856ea5b6
describe
'41469' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZOL' 'sip-files00105.QC.jpg'
6a2912cdbb16e098c477502e6721bdfb
8431b143b0a5c19606ebb67ef4e7dd7cf40482e5
describe
'10947' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZOM' 'sip-files00109thm.jpg'
fb846e9389983bd23a6321f7a9e832d2
7a7380d7084b6eec155b8bf66721da0ecc7f07ef
describe
'44043' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZON' 'sip-files00110.QC.jpg'
dd41e5aa6749843de974407ab1561c3f
754f261b077e43effff891f936793bbea7329dc1
describe
'45236' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZOO' 'sip-files00112.QC.jpg'
3aac717c583371a5869083f15d8f958d
fef449576574c54af6504ab9602068e36c6e2fb0
describe
'43949' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZOP' 'sip-files00113.QC.jpg'
48793965fd06a483ad30d9487a38e099
2bcf0386b3362e26c6af9aff96df9836d4d67e12
describe
'43591' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZOQ' 'sip-files00115.QC.jpg'
7b935007f80812dba612101b6d9eebe2
e17081a9ceb7b0db7391bd18706fced79f34ac98
describe
'30379' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZOR' 'sip-files00117.QC.jpg'
0b0a05a605fead43de7832be9f32bd2f
94df0cb8b56046ad08a9182d5d7c11ee80a68515
describe
'13285' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZOS' 'sip-files00119.QC.jpg'
3df854601e01602553f28928e8ba1a45
55db377831b61015ac96c10e6a2242874987976a
describe
'3354' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZOT' 'sip-files00120.QC.jpg'
ec295f21cc5c006546e8bfd58ef346ba
efbb0e0d10025c4ce2058a248724577223096dae
describe
'1332' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZOU' 'sip-files00120thm.jpg'
539a9ee33a4190804bf5438e25841a28
30bc6ed64c10ff9e2b38597967d3159c44d01e99
describe
'10679' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZOV' 'sip-files00123thm.jpg'
4b338bd74cd502529f8bf2e27fe340b5
d79696d73f1e8ddfa500cc6924d9ba883d87e0d9
describe
'11392' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZOW' 'sip-files00126thm.jpg'
cb6b1ddcab0dc55654f8168081842da8
0c1d9c10fed6e95921e3c4795635f2b0128b096c
describe
'11019' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZOX' 'sip-files00127thm.jpg'
94b0933ba149b8f13e776859eaea251a
f2410959e969ea11ede3065e30db83dbd166b5e6
describe
'41906' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZOY' 'sip-files00129.QC.jpg'
722ebab88b757e35ac60043343d12619
51172675c284c8879ddf9b95b757c8b0764cc9b4
describe
'11184' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZOZ' 'sip-files00134thm.jpg'
c5c3f98d82e851bbb07217de95c09c83
afe97168eaf0a3c4293f87ea08f28eda88bd9dfb
describe
'44159' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZPA' 'sip-files00135.QC.jpg'
a105e408c6076f10851e67a8851af466
c81d3a0c18c5630fc0921baa0052a131cd6ffc6c
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZPB' 'sip-files00135thm.jpg'
e01f25d2bd789b72f1bc5c95c2ec59f8
5b97ab8fcb201bbf29b1adcb73f9c057c19e16da
describe
'42858' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZPC' 'sip-files00136.QC.jpg'
5bed5b8d00d189dbfa313f884915ad37
67aef767fc3007d4e6f0f89dcbaeb478d330ae0c
describe
'2980' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZPD' 'sip-files00139thm.jpg'
2ba96832d852eaccf0d3112737e9de26
f76a30ec803f11a4fbd2498e7f6cb4611d0607cc
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZPE' 'sip-files00143thm.jpg'
2710cb826bf56b1a2e33f0e237693cf0
e63cc446b80c8e22b90f1b91f75f960d34b1bbd9
describe
'41874' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZPF' 'sip-files00150.QC.jpg'
2c5db2c47ffcfc2a53a385514fd5ebae
2fd8b4f2ee0ca51aaa1bd4b9a777f266c71aa276
describe
'10711' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZPG' 'sip-files00153thm.jpg'
70842d8eee1741405b09ee39301a5885
88d2a0662fdaf848b2da29d2ed5e3bb2bd0293a1
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZPH' 'sip-files00154thm.jpg'
3e6a0c12bd0fccac6673573033a2f87c
6e02ab48eb02611ef3e83ba11f2e219d41d4f309
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZPI' 'sip-files00155.QC.jpg'
095267d78139dda68b1f1a5ef1a9b9b6
250a02e9dab5470afe70eacda9fe46eeb22bf9d8
describe
'43228' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZPJ' 'sip-files00157.QC.jpg'
6a846ed38eac0fe0f3b2159c0c2583b9
4e0ea69f0a4a26f21c36abdd1dc1a093df6d21bb
describe
'10543' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZPK' 'sip-files00159.QC.jpg'
f7e000d8751539093e50aeb3a8557786
15bf416c5651b55181b2b6a3050853132857d58f
describe
'9357' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZPL' 'sip-files00161thm.jpg'
608dd54de809427ac3e24d4eb69b39b0
dc1fd08a8ba677f46e4b37d59ef7de4a3b910e88
describe
'42896' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZPM' 'sip-files00162.QC.jpg'
ec138c33d4e034cd5dbe6e61bc9c4201
212b1c97f128f47745566fa09d3e95615e148f83
describe
'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZPN' 'sip-files00165.QC.jpg'
065163e3617d91415a8935f99a5a85ca
6395368869bf4bede0c989b717ade91207adc423
describe
'41618' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZPO' 'sip-files00166.QC.jpg'
b14bae46571fb3339736d2e27b1c323b
5ce974a844be89fc3e35af237b258a8d69c2e271
describe
'10978' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZPP' 'sip-files00166thm.jpg'
ef85154a15957de2aa7533bce2f85e17
8568caee4720e92f9588585ef4959a29ac56268a
describe
'11128' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZPQ' 'sip-files00168thm.jpg'
3b1a24243f368b052205eed4484c9ead
985afcb3ead4d3a9e40ab196ed6bcd23aa9cbb24
describe
'10041' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZPR' 'sip-files00169thm.jpg'
47c0935b624d677ff88a974b3ad987fb
5e21e8fb233e7728200fa38abedab9725da423be
describe
'40490' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZPS' 'sip-files00170.QC.jpg'
1eac04d4157d300cc2ee55256beed80a
0be1493a27114f70e9766b6dc87375389a22b90d
describe
'10420' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZPT' 'sip-files00170thm.jpg'
3043d2bfebfdf319e4b4ecc7afc2bf7c
4d4b047652b1a168cb462fa83fcd26471592764b
describe
'41024' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZPU' 'sip-files00172.QC.jpg'
8e2982373ff74a3cd31e1c4d90aabc11
d83375502edf82266e1b71e0991643226785c9f4
describe
'40341' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZPV' 'sip-files00173.QC.jpg'
c163713a4f58a076c3e29d8eb872da11
2b3d16f439c9bb11d9b8bfc8072137fdb8474af5
describe
'10624' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZPW' 'sip-files00174thm.jpg'
3c99bc9523412dc550a88bba9f0b3ad6
3276dd71b19faf3b17e16740742feb1cac9b701e
describe
'10685' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZPX' 'sip-files00175thm.jpg'
785d8842c267d0a2e36a401bea825b20
2a58a41cec2d8ff1b229bb2b8f90c1ce0363f18b
describe
'11833' 'info:fdaE20100527_AAAAEFfileF20100527_AAAZPY' 'sip-files00178.QC.jpg'
3679e3cd8c617b716b6b96b61f0ee01e
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describe
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xml version 1.0 encoding UTF-8
REPORT xmlns http:www.fcla.edudlsmddaitss xmlns:xsi http:www.w3.org2001XMLSchema-instance xsi:schemaLocation http:www.fcla.edudlsmddaitssdaitssReport.xsd
INGEST IEID ESIGN483S_60XS4O INGEST_TIME 2014-05-06T22:12:14Z PACKAGE UF00028241_00001
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By M. JONES,

AUTHOR OF “THE CHILDREN’S BIBLE PICTURE-BOOK,” ‘‘PRINCE CHARLIE,
THE YOUNG CHEVALIER,” ETC. ETC.

Gith Ellustrations from Besigns by Robert M'‘Enerp, Esq.



¢* I'll tell you a tale of a knight, my boy;
The bravest that ever was seen.”



LONDON:

T. NELSON AND SONS, PATERNOSTER ROW;
EDINBURGH; AND NEW YORK.



1876.

AED a ELA CIPO LL AOR i OLE OI IO A BAL IORI LOOR tne SO Cg ee er tonne




Drefuce.

B= Sau wars of Edward III. in France are
‘4 el, sometimes spoken of as though they
were mere wars of aggression. To
this view of them I cannot give an unqualified



assent, The law of succession, though pretty
well ascertained, was not so strictly observed in
those days as to prevent all controversy upon —
the subject. And seeing that, in his peculiar
case, others, beside Edward himself, thought that
he had a claim to the crown of France, I am
disposed to look upon his French wars as spring-
ing from an honest determination on his own
part, and that of his people, to rectify, by force
the wrong which, as he conceived, had been
done him by the French nobles, in assigning the
throne to Philip of Valois.

I do not affirm that he was in the right; but
iv : PREFACE,

I do think he had sufficient grounds for sup-
posing himself to be so. The circumstances of
_the case were undoubtedly such as to leave room
for honest difference of opinion about it. Nor
do I think that any one of us, who had as
colourable a claim to a great estate as had
Kidward III. to the French crown, would leave
any stone unturned in our efforts to get pos-
session of it. Of course we should not ficht ;
that is the ultimate process of nations, But
not a single law court should we leave unvisited,
carrying up our appeal step by step, until we
gained our cause, or were barred by the final
adverse decision of the highest court of all: as
Edward was ultimately barred by the final
adverse decision, unmistakeably expressed by
successes in arms, of the French nation. |
Much, however, as men may differ as to the
merits of his elaim, all must unite in unbounded
admiration of the courage, fortitude, judgment,
and generosity, displayed by our great monarch,
and his greater son, in thosé marvellous en-.
counters between the few and the many, which
have, for five long centuries, made Crecy and
Poitiers names of pride throughout England.
And the present seems a peculiarly suitable
PREFACE. Vv

time for recalling in detail the far-off glories
of the two Edwards; seeing that “wars and
rumours of wars” have, since 1854, been almost
incessantly around us; and we, the few, as we
were on those old battle-fields, are sometimes
disposed to look anxiously upon the many that,
as we apprehend, may be against us. But
Norman fire, grafted upon Anglo-Saxon endur-
ance, 1s still our inheritance; and should war,
either at home or abroad, be thrust upon us,—
with a just cause, and, above all, with “God”
for “our Hope and Strength,” we may with con-
fidence look to come out of it as triumphantly
as did the little imperiled band that followed
Edward into France, and with more permanence
of success than was awarded to them.
En glishmen still pray, as well as fight!

M. J.

Lonpon, September 11, 1868.




Contents.

I. The Childhood of the Black Prince,

II.
III.
IV.

V.
VI.

Vil.
VIII.

Origin of the Wars in France,

Passage of the Somme, oss
The Battle of Crecy, wos
The Siege of Calais, - ese
Treachery at Calais, | eos

The Prince’s Expedition from Bordeaux,

The Battle of Poitiers, oes
The English again invade France,
The Prince’s Court in Aquitaine,
The Prince’s Spanish Campaign,
Troubles in Aquitaine, eee

Treaty of Peace broken by the French,

eeu

Incidents of the War—-Death of Chandos,

. The Death of the Prince, eee



. The Sack of Limoges—The Prince returns to England,

ese

eos

eee
“

“

weak,


I,

bed eat French wars of our great Edward IIL, and
‘4 Pa his greater son, Edward the Black Prince,
afford a wonderful example of what stout



English hearts and hands can achieve, even in the
face of overwhelming numbers. Those wars have
made Cregy and Poitiers household words in England,
and we now propose to tell, in detail, their story; to-
gether with that of the gallant leader under whom the
English name became terrible in France. We shall
find the narrative present us with admirable pictures
of fortitude, humanity, and generosity, as well as of
warlike skill and daring. |

Kdward, the Black Prince, the heroic son of Edward
III. of England, was born at the old royal palace of
Woodstock, on the 15th of June, 1330. His mother
was Philippa, daughter of William, Count of Hainault.
In 1327, when she was a mere girl of fourteen, the
princess, attended by a brilliant train of knights
12 THE CHILDHOOD OF THE BLACK PRINCE.

and gentlemen, came over to England to marry its
young monarch, who was only two or three months
older than herself. The marriage proved a happy one;
more so than usually falls to the lot of royal person-
ages: for Philippa was gentle and good, and sincerely
attached to her husband ; and he, in return, gave her,
throughout their long life, the affection she so well
deserved. The birth of their boy was a great delight
both to them and the whole nation ; and in the glad-
ness of his heart the king munificently rewarded the
bearer of such welcome tidings, assigning him a liberal
yearly pension in money, till he could settle lands
upon him to the same value.

We do not know much about the royal nursery in
those days. One thing, however, we do know, that the
first year or two in that apartment are spent very
much alike, whatever may be the centuries compared.
Whether the date be 1800 or 1300,—kicking, crawling,
squalling, and eating porridge, equally engrosses the
young occupant, be he prince or be he peasant. This
may not be very dignified, but we cannot help that.
The‘ further process of shortening those interminable
long tails to their petticoats, with which it is the cus-
tom to endow very young babies, also passes upon a
Prince of Wales, irrespective of the date of his birth.,
While in his first attempts to walk, the tumbles and
knocks upon the head, encountered by the heir-apparent
of our day, have certainly been shared by that stalwart
THE CHILDHOOD OF THE BLACK PRINCE. 13

child whom we see so dimly through the mist of five
receding centuries. For both, the same mother’s heart
has beaten ; and, tender as was that of Philippa for her
first-born, we may not believe that it was more tender
than that of her whom we English of this day love to
call our sovereign.

One would certainly have liked to know something
of the childhood of one who was destined to fill so im-
portant a part in our own history, and in that of our
neighbours across the channel, as does the Black
Prince. But though we have gossip five centuries old,
it is not gossip about babies, For grave historians to
record that Joan of Oxford was his nurse; that Mistress
Matilda Frampton had the honour of rocking the royal
cradle; and that, in his third year, he was created
Karl of Chester ; is not telling us much: it is the boy
himself we want to hear about.. But the nursery door
is close shut upon its little princely inmate, and how-
ever precocious or stupid he may haye been, to us it is
all a blank. |

At the age of six, however, we get a glimpse of our
Edward of the olden time; for his father then created
him Duke of Cornwall, a title that is still borne by the
Prince of Wales. In those days, the creation of a peer
was a ceremony ; not as now, when a slip of paper con-
verts a banker into a lord ; and the ceremony, in this
case, must have been a sight worth seeing, A title
meant something then. It carried with it power and
14 THE CHILDHOOD OF THE BLACK PRINCE.

authority, and the symbols of these were formally de-
_livered to him who received it. Perhaps it was because
the prince was such a very little fellow that all the
usual formalities were not gone through on this occa-
sion. His rights over the duchy of Cornwall were,
ceremoniously, conveyed to him: simply by girding his
tiny waist with a sword ; the other usual ensigns of
authority—the ring and the staff—were not transferred
to him. The new-made duke, the first that England
had ever known, immediately proceeded to show that
the distinction conferred upon him was no empty one.
Bestowing knighthood was one of the powers attached
to it, and twenty gallant youths that day received it
trom his hand. By this time, too, we find that the
small man was minding his book, with grave Dr.
Burley for his tutor, and a group of youngsters to
learn lessons with him, instead of being left in
stately solitude to con them over by himself. Among
these associates, Simon Burley afterwards became
one of the prince’s favoured and most distinguished
knights. | 7

King Edward’s French wars, of which we shall speak
presently, carried him much abroad ; and his Highness
of Cornwall (he was not Prince of Wales yet), was,
in his father’s absence, appointed Lieutenant of the
kingdom. His lieutenancy was no mere pretence,
not a name only; for this child of eight years old
actually held a parliament for his father at Northaip-
THE CHILDHOOD OF THE BLACK PRINCE. 15

ton, in 1338. for, under the young duke’s presidency, it voted large
supplies for carrying on the popular war with Philip
of Valois and his friends.

Here, again, those tiresome old chroniclers do not
tell us how the prince got through his important busi-
ness, nor even how much of it fell to his share. But
at the mature age of eight, he would certainly get on
better than did James VI. of Scotland, who, (at three
or four years old), having to perform a regal duty of
the same kind, wound up his address to Lords and
Commons, by remarking, in the same breath, that
there was a hole in the roof of the parliament-
house. We cannot for one moment suppose that
our Edward made such “a hole” in his manners as
this !

The promise of the young prince’s babyhood—for he
really was a fine child—was now being fulfilled. He
grew up a handsome, strong-limbed, intelligent lad ;
and at the age of nine, when his father, who was busy
preparing for his contest with the French, sent for him
to the castle of Louvain to keep Christmas with him-
self and his queen, one of the Christmas amusements
of that “noble and royal” assembly was to propose a
marriage between the boy and the little daughter of
the Duke of Brabant, the young lady being then four
years old. The match went no further than those
Christiuas conversations by a blazing log-fire; one of
16 THE CHILDHOOD OF THE BLACK PRINCE.

the prince’s own countrywomen, celebrated for her
beauty as the “Fair Maid of Kent,” being destined
for the wife, not of a hopeful boy, but of a man re-
nowned throughout Christendom as the hero of Crecy,
Poitiers, and Najara.




(3)

ES: ;
Cpemsamsa ie

FRAN

SES. ,
Anon ore ww nce HO





If.

eral’ the time that King Edward IIT. came tosthe
‘throne, the English had considerable pos-



sessions in the south of France, which had
been brought by Queen Eleanor, wife of Henry IL, as
her marriage portion. For these possessions the kings
of England had been accustomed to do homage to the
kings of France, as (what was called) their feudal su-
periors. This ceremony did not at all affect their in-
dependence as sovereigns of England. It only related
to their lordship over those French duchies, in relation
to which they were not quite so supreme as was the
monarch of France, and as they themselves were at
home: they owed to the French king, so far as these
French dominions were concerned, a limited sort of
obedience, in compliance with what was called the
feudal law.

The feudal system, of which this law was a part,
was a relic of the old conquering times when he who
had won lands by his sword—as William the Norman
90 ORIGIN OF THE WARS IN FRANCE.

did in England—portioned them out among his fol-
lowers, on condition that their swords should help him
in case of need: the amount of military service, thus
rendered, being in proportion to the extent of lands
bestowed. Other independent sovereigns, besides
those of England, though none of such importance and
grandeur as they, were in the same position as Edward:
owning feudal obedience to some one who, in that par-
ticular, was greater than they. But, saving this mere
feudal obedience, it would not have been wise for any
feudal lord, however high and mighty, to require more
from them. In such a case, they would have flown in |
the face even of his Highness of France as readily as
in that of a meaner potentate.

This sort of feudal obedience, then, had been rendered
by our monarchs, on account of their portion of the
kingdom of France. But on the death of Charles the
Fair, King of France, in 1328, our Edward JIL, as his
nephew, considered that he was the next heir to the
throne, and therefore, as supreme lord, had a right to
the whole kingdom. The great lords and peers of
France thought otherwise, and gave the crown to Philip
of Valois, cousin to the late king. Their reason for
preferring a more distant relation than Edward, was
that as (according to the custom of France, which does
not suffer a woman to reign), Queen Isabella of Eng-
land could not succeed to the crown herself, neither
could her son inherit through her. Edward and his
ORIGIN OF THE WARS IN FRANCE. 4

friends were, however, confident in their view of the
case. Indeed, there was room for dispute in the
matter; and most probably the real reason why Philip
was chosen instead of Edward, was, not so much out of
regard to the Salic law, as to the circumstance of
Philip’s being a Frenchman, one of themselves, while
Edward was an English king.

There was only one way of deciding such a quarrel,
that is, by fighting ; and to this the English king, with
the hearty concurrence of his people, and the pur-
chased help of his allies, speedily resorted.

Believing himself to be the rightful heir to the
French throne, it was not particularly agreeable to
Edward, in the first flush of youth and sovereignty, to
be called upon to go over to France, and perform that
customary homage of which we have been speaking,
for a mere corner of the kingdom. The whole belonged
to him, as he thought; why then should he go down
upon his knees to return thanks for the limited owner-
ship of a part of it? King Philip had already been
crowned a twelvemonth, and all his other feudatories—
as those who acknowledged him for feudal superior,
were called—had done homage to their lord in the
manner prescribed. The mode of doing this was for
the feudatory or vassal,-to kneel bareheaded, un-
belted, and unarmed before his lord, between whose
hands he placed his own, vowing the customary
obedience; or, in other and old words, promising
99 ORIGIN OF THE WARS IN FRANCE.

to become his “man.” The lord then bestowed a
kiss upon the kneeling knight, and the ceremony was
at an end.

It was, as has been said, excessively disagreeable to
Edward, as King of England, thus to humble himself
to his neighbour. Young as he was (he was only seven-
teen), he was already distinguished, not only as sove-
reign of a realm that might vie in importance with
that of France, but for the energy and valour which ke
had displayed in his contests with the fierce, rude
warriors of Scotland. And his high spirit, high both
from his position, and from his personal merit, re-
volted from the ceremonial submissiveness required.

from him. According to the custom of that age, how-
| ever, he could not absolutely refuse it when summoned,
unless he had been prepared at once to go to war
about the matter.

Accordingly, when Philip’s messengers requiring the
accustomed duty from the English king, presented



themselves at Windsor,—which had, even then, for -
more than two centuries been a royal palace,—they
were received with all the courtesy due to their own
rank, and that of their master. But, with the same
punctilious politeness, they were informed that the
king must consult with his council, before he could
engage to perform the homage demanded from him,
Edward forthwith came up to town, and assembled

his trusty councillors at Westminster. Before them
ORIGIN OF TITE WARS IN FRANCE, 23

the messengers laid their credentials, and then with-
drew, while the knotty question, to pay homage or
refuse it—in other words, peace or war—was discussed,
Discretion is said to be the better part of valour, and
the council possessed this valuable quality; for, seeing
that the nation was not, just then, in a condition to back
their king, with “bills and bows,” if he declined com-
pliance with the French king’s demands, they decided
that he should obey Philip’s bidding. The messengers
were then again summoned. before that stately assem-
blage; and by the mouth of the Bishop of London (in
those days bishops were often leading statesmen), were
duly informed that the king, their master, would forth-
with pass over into France to render the homage re-
quired by his cousin Philip.

So far all seemed smooth. Edward kept his word,
and on the 26th of May 1329, set out on this unplea-
sant errand, attended by a fitting train of nobles,
bishops, and knights. His suite comprised a thousand
horse, and he was received by Philip, with correspond-
ing magnificence, at Amiens; where the homage was
paid in presence of three kings—those of Bohemia,
Navarre, and Majorca, and a crowd of nobles, drawn
together to do honour to the new liegeman. Never
was bitter pill more brightly gilded. But it was a
bitter pill, that Edward at first made some difficulty
about swallowing in the prescribed fashion. He made
his appearance in the Cathedral of Amiens (where his
94 ORIGIN OF THE WARS IN FRANCE.

“lord” sat in a chair of state), armed and royally
robed ; nor was he disposed either to strip himself of his
regal and knightly insignia, or to do the kneeling part
of the business. Both, however, were relentlessly ex-
acted of him; and, in a terrible temper, Edward of
Hngland, avowed himself vassal—for Guienne—to
Philip of France; whom, in his secret soul, he wished
at Jericho.* Fifteen days were afterwards passed in
feasting, tournaments, and grave conferences, between
the politicians of that brilliant congress; and then -
Edward returned to his young wife at Windsor, well
pleased with his reception at the French court, however
much he might dislike that part of the performance
in which he had been the leading actor.

- Among the nobles of France who had assisted in—
placing the crown upon the head of Philip of Valois,
was his brother-in-law, Count Robert of Artois. He was
a particularly great man, and stood so high in Philip’s
good graces, that almost everything in the kingdom
was guided and ordered by my Lord Robert. Ere long,
however, Philip’s violent liking for his brother-in-law
turned, as is not uncommon, to an equally violent
hatred of him. The count’s moral character was cer-
tainly nothing to boast of. Indeed, it is said that he
was guilty of the shabby vice of forging title deeds, in
order to mend his claim on certain lands in France.

* It has been denied that Edward performed his homage in the humiliat:
ing manner described. But some old authorities take this view of it,
ORIGIN OF THE WARS IN FRANCR. 25

On account of this, Philip was strongly inclined to cut
off the count’s head, if he could only catch him! and
after having hunted his intended victim out of several
states, to which, in succession, he had fled from the
axe and block prepared for him, Robert was at last
fairly driven to England, for the shelter denied him
elsewhere.

Philip had much better have let his brother-in-law
stay quietly at home, and keep his cunning head on
his broad shoulders ; for, once in the court of England,
he diligently employed all. the influence which a man
of his reputation possessed, in urging upon the king the
justice of his claim to the French throne, and in inciting
that young, valorous spirit to plead his cause with the
sword. Such a mode of upholding it could not but be
agreeable to one yet glowing with successful fight
against those, over whom his grandfather had so long
ridden, rough-shod, that he began at last to think he
really had a right to do it. The Frenchman accom-
panied Edward in his expedition against the Scots,
and while in the field plied him well with arguments
for flying at higher game. He further comforted the
soul of the young monarch by assuring him that his
claim was held good by several lawyers.

Count Robert was reckoned a man of great sagacity.
He was also of royal descent. No wonder that the
king began at last to yield to his persuasions, and to
hold many anxious conferences with his council, as to
26 ORIGIN OF THE WARS IN FRANCE.

whether he should, or should not, carry his steel-clad
host from the bare heaths of Scotland, which they had
already trampled down, to try their fortune on the fair
fields of France. The knights of those days, be it said,
rather preferred fighting in France, to fighting in
Scotland; as the former country afforded them more
luxurious quarters.

Edward’s council were well enough disposed that
the king should advance his claim to the French
crown, and prosecute it by arms, if need were. The
resources of his own kingdom were not, however, at
the time adequate to do this; and to do it effectually
he must seek aid from his friends and allies on the -
continent. They, therefore, advised that he should
send ambassadors to his gallant and gouty father-in-
law, the Earl of Hainault, to ascertain what could be
done in that quarter. To these ambassadors, the earl
and his brother, the Lord John, gave all that was in.
their power to give, that is, advice; a very good thing
_ when nothing better is to be had. And acting upon
their counsel, Edward contracted alliances with the
lords, and small sovereigns of the Low Countries; who,
some for love, more for money, and others, won by the
cheaper means of flattery and promises, agreed to aid
him in his grand enterprise. __

One of Edward’s allies in this business was, it is
true, neither sovereign nor lord, though he was as
poweriul and important as though he were both the
ORIGIN OF THE WARS IN FRANCE. 27

one and the other. This ally was Jacob van Arteveld,
who, having retired from the brewing business, which
he had carried on with great success, next took up
that of governing the Flemings, in a style rather more
imperative than had ever been adopted by their lawful
sovereign, the Earl of Flanders. From the earl they
had thought proper to revolt; but whether they liked
the brewer any better, after they had got him, may be
questioned, for Jacob had an awkward habit of ‘killing
off, without the slightest ceremony, any one to whom
it pleased him to take a dislike. Further, as is fre-
quently the case, when men of low birth are raised to
power and wealth, he was much more extragavant—
with the money of the Flemings—than the earl had ever
been, who was born to these two good things. He
taxed the Flemings heavily in a variety of ways. They
had both indirect, and direct, exceedingly direct, taxation;
for after he had spent the accustomed duties, no one
~ knew, nor dared to ask, how, he would proceed to
what Ae called borrowing large sums from the citizens ;
his borrowing, being the next best, or worst thing to
demanding, seeing that no one who had any regard for
lis own safety, felt at lberty to say—no! Indeed,
whenever he thought fit to tell them he wanted more
money, it was always best to take his word for it, and
let him have it. In short, Jacob played King Stork
- among his new subjects with a vengeance!

To this amiable individual King Edward addressed
28 ORIGIN OF THE WARS IN FRANCE. *

himself so effectually, that the stout, sturdy Flemings, fat-
tened and strengthened on such beer as Jacob had been
wont-to brew, were joined in his cause, with the more
sprightly cavaliers of the empire; that is, of Austria
and Germany. When Edward’s own forces were united
to these, there was a gallant army under his direction,
or that of his lieutenants, who, with various fortune,
kept fighting a little here, and a little there, for the next
eight years. Amid their skirmishing we may notice
that Count Robert came to his end; and finally found
a quiet resting-place in the choir of our old St. Paul’s.
The din of the city, teeming with mercantile life, per-
chance even now roars around the ashes of that turbu-
lent warrior. His death was lamented in England, for
he had qualities to win admiration in those far off days ;
and according to the fashion (more heathen than Chris-
tian), of the times, Edward swore to take a terrible re-
venge for it. -

Towards the close of this period of skirmishing, that
is in 1343, when the young Edward was thirteen years
old, his father, with all solemnity, conferred upon him
the title of Prince of Wales. The king also thought
that with the help of Jacob the brewer, the revolted
Flemings might be persuaded to accept the young prince
as their sovereign. But the earldom of Flanders was
not to be added to the rest of his titles and possessions.
Van Arteveld was heartily willing to do all that Edward
wished from him. It was very pleasant to patronize a
ORIGIN OF THE WARS IN FRANCE. 29

king. But he soon found that he had promised more
than he could perform. He condescended to consult
with his turbulent Flemings, on the question of this con-
templated transfer of their allegiance; but it seems that
by this time they were tired of Jacob and his iron rule.
They murmured loudly at the proposal, declaring that,
with God’s help, they would never disgrace themselves
so far as to disinherit their “natural lord, in favour of
a stranger.” And they whispered, one to another, tnoat
Jacob was carrying things with rather too high a hand ;
and they would not endure it any longer. Nor did
they ; for forthwith the mob fell upon the unfortunate
brewer, and killed him.

Edward, who, attended by the prince, and a stately
retinue, had come over to Sluys in Flanders, and was
there anxiously awaiting the result of Jacob’s negotia-
tions, was not easily pacified after this destruction of
his hopes. He immediately took his son home again,
vowing vengeance against the Flemings, and all belong-
ing to them. Those discreet people, however, soon
patched up a peace with him; and though they begged
to be excused from any attempt to deprive their young
Earl Lewis of his rights, they adroitly insinuated that,
as the king had a daughter, Flanders might very pos-
sibly be ruled by his family after all, through her mar-
riage with their lord.

And so the poor brewer, whose mangled remains were
scarcely cold in their unhonoured grave, was forgotten
30 “ORIGIN OF THE WARS IN FRANCE.

as speedily as possible, and every one was quite com-
fortable. |

_Jacob’s fate was sad; but his violence had merited
it. He had taken “the sword,” and he “perished”
by. it,









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Bassas of the Somme.




rea DWARD’S disappointment at the loss of the
Ke earldom of Flanders, which he had hoped to
secure for his son, was not merely for the
loss of title and territory. We know how he longed to
gain possession of what he considered his rightful in-
heritance; how this longing had led him to court the
brewer of Ghent; and might have induced him to culti-
vate even more ignoble acquaintance, could they have
served him in the matter. The reason for his wish ta
gain the Flemings was his having entertained the hope
of making Flanders his key to unlock that beautiful,
fertile France, out of which (with the exception of his’
own hereditary portion) he was kept, as he thought, so
unjustly. And now that roaring raging mob in the
peaked and gabled streets of Ghent, had put an end
to his fine scheme. But for this, itis to be feared that
the slaughter of a dozen brewers, instead of only one,
would not have disturbed his tranquillity.

But there were other roads into France besides those

(3) 3
34 PASSAGE OF THE SOMME.

through Flanders, and King Edward was soon to find
them. For two years ot more his lieutenants in the
south of France, where he was “at home,” and no one
_ denied it, had been as busy as possible in dealing out
hard knocks to their neighbours—the less loved that
they were such near neighbours. His cousin, the Kari
of Derby, (not of the house of Stanley, but a royal
Plantagenet), was driving all before him in Gascony,
where he had met with little opposition ; for to carry on
war successfully requires plenty of money; and money
was just the thing that Philip of Valois wanted. In
the early part of 1346, however, Philip contrived to
get-so far out of his difficulties as to raise an army of
a hundred thousand men, who, with lords and knights
almost innumerable, marched into Gascony, under the
command of the Duke of N ormandy, and set them-
selves, so steadily, and successfully, to the retaking of
the Earl of Derby’s conquests in that province, that
the thing soon became serious. Sir Walter Manny, who
had, a few years before, come over to England in the
train of the good Queen Philippa, was with the com-
paratively small body of English who were thus fiercely
attacked in southern France ; and though he was in him-
self a host, his skill and bravery, with that of other
knights, also brave and skilful, did not prevent the
fortune of war from going sadly against them.

In this strait Edward proposed going himself to the
assistance of his faithful, but harassed followers, His
$

PASSAGE OF THE SOMME. 25

people heartily seconded him. Men and arms, and ships
for their transport, were soon collected, and the young
prince, now in his sixteenth year, was to have his first
experience of actual war among them. |

Masses of soldiers, armcd and accoutred for their
deadly, though necessary function, form a picturesque
spectacle even in our'own days. But, in comparison
with the very olden time of which we are writing, war
is now shorn of almost all its strange, outside beauty.
There were the knights glittering in plate armour, hel.
meted, crested, plumed, with each one his bright shield,
throwing off sunbeams as he moved along; while their
satin and embroidered surcoats were fit for the train of
a duchess on drawing-room days. The surcoat was a
flowing sort of robe, thrown over the armour. The
lance, with its little fluttering pennon, was an exceed-
ingly picturesque weapon, as we may see by our modern
lancers. Nor was the huge steel battle axe, or hammer,
(martel, was its old name,) added by some to the ordi-
nary equipment of lance and sword, and which was
slung from their saddle-bow, other than an imposing
looking implement of destruction. |

Then the horses were nearly as fine, and well de-
fended by plates of steel, as their masters. How puzzled
the poor animals must have felt, to be stalking about
in iron cases; and further, on high days and _ holidays,
with what one may call embroidered petticoats down
to their heels!
36 | PASSAGE OF THE SOMME.

The man-at-arms—what we should now “call the
cavalry soldier—though less brilliantly mailed than the
knight or noble, was not the less encased in good ser-
viceable metal, that would withstand sword stroke, or
spear-thrust. Indeed, we are told that prostrate knights
and men-at-arms, defying all penetrating weapons, have
had to be cracked like lobsters, by blows of the ham-
mer, before the death-dealing dagger could find its way
through their iron shells.

This man-at-arms with his little retinue of attendants
(for he was a great man in his way), formed a striking
group ; while the mounted and mail-clad host were
varied by bodies of archers, in their loose, easy-fitting
dress: for we did not, in those days, strap and buckle up
our soldiers as we do now. These stout fellows were
armed with the formidable bow and arrow of our old
English yeomen: bows as tall as themselves, wherein
the yard-long shaft was drawn by main strength of.
body, not of arms merely, right up to the ear, before it
was discharged on its twanging, death-carrying errand.
Those yard-long arrows would pierce the stoutest
armour impervious to all ordinary weapons. As for
our [rish and Welsh fellow subjects, who now hold their
own in our armies as well as the best of us, making
men proud to enter their distinctive regiments; they
did not come out at all well in the days of Edward ITL
and our wars in France. In fact they were a long way
behind the English in civilization; so a big knife, or any
PASSAGE OF THE SOMME. oT

other awkward tool that was capable of doing mischief,
was thought quite good enough for them.

“Tell that” noé “to the marines,” but to the Welsh
Fusiliers, and Connaught Rangers.

Of such was the small though effective army now
destined for the shores of France. We may imagine
how enthusiastically the fine, handsome lad, heir, not
only to the crown of England, but to that ot the rich
country they were bound to win, would be received by
his noble, knightly, and yeomanly companions in arms.
Nor can we doubt that the wild Irish and Welsh infan-
try would brandish their knives, and shout him a wel-
come. In number this force did not exceed thirty
thousand. But we shall see what these could do against
the chivalry and countless hosts of Philip of Valois.

Southampton was the place appointed for the em-
barkation of the English army, and thence the fleet
sailed on the 24th of June, 1346. Edward left young
Lionel, his third son, to take care of things at home,
while he was away. This, of course, was a mere thing
of state, Master Lionel being only eight years old;
grave, bearded men, such as the lords Nevil and Percy,
and several bishops, were in reality entrusted with
the weighty cares of government. Nor did the war-
loving king forget the prudent defence of his realm, by
arms, as well as by wise heads; a sufficient military
force being appointed for its protection during his ab-
sence,
6-38 PASSAGE OF THE SOMME,

The army which the king, his son, and some of the
greatest nobles and warriors of the time now commanded
for the conquest of France, was designed, as has been
said, to make its first attempt in the southern provinces.
Contrary winds, however, baffled that design, and on
the third day after their sailing from Southampton,
which they did merrily enough, drove them on their
own coast of Cornwall, instead of that of Gascony.
And here, after beating about for a while—nobody en-
joys coming ‘back again, like a boomerang from its
mark—they were compelled to anchor, and suffer nearly
a weeks’ detention. |

On board the king’s ship there was a French noble-
man, named Sir Godfrey de Harcourt, who, having
given offence at his own court, had run away to that of
England, where he was received with great favour.
During the time they were detained by foul winds on
the Cornish coast, this Sir Godfrey set himself to alter
Edward’s plan as to the place of landing. He advised
that the descent should be made upon Normandy; that
- northern province being very rich and fertile, and
| having the further advantage of being quite out of the
way of the rough skirmishers who had turned the —
south upside down. It was, therefore, quite unpre-
pared for defence, its knighthood, with their retainers,
being drawn off to the field of action. Its population,
too, were quiet and peaceable, occupied with the care of
their fields and flocks, and knowing nothing of sword,
PASSAGE OF THE SOMME. 39

lance, and cross-bow,—the cross-bow was that form of
the weapon chiefly used on the Continent, and it was
not considered so manly a one as the old English long-
bow. |

The advice was sound, and Edward had sense enough
to take it. After having threatened thé south, it was
good policy on his part to swoop down upon the com-
paratively defenceless north. Winds and waves fav-
_oured him now, and speedily brought him and his
fieet to La Hogue, in Normandy, on the 10th of July.
If you look at the map you will see the little point
jutting out, almost opposite to the Isle of Wight.

The king was the first to leap ashore. But “ most
haste” is not always “ best speed.” Not looking before
heleaped, or making some other such simple blunder,
down came his Highness (for it was not “ Majesty” in
those days) full length on the strand, with such force
as to set the royal nose a-bleeding. That looked bad ;
and his superstitious nobles entreated him to return to
his ship, and not think of effecting a landing after so
unfortunate a beginning. Edward, however, was as
superiot to those about him in good sense as he was
in military prowess, and he passed off his tumble with
a jest, observing that the very ground itself was obvi-
ously longing for him.

The joke told; a good joke always will tell; and the
disembarkation at once took place. The prince, who
was aboard his father’s ship, set foot, for the first time.
40 PASSAGE OF THE SOMME.

on the territory that he hoped would one day be his,
Nobles, knights, men-at-arms, and everybody else, in-
cluding the wild Irish and Welsh, were duly got out
of the ships; and horses, armour, warlike stores, with
endless baggage, were all safely landed at last upon the
sandy beach, where they camped for that summer’s
night. Rich tents were pitched for royalty and my
lords; while his cloak, and the glittering star-lit sky
overhead, were shelter enough for the humbler warrior
of that resolute little band.

A few days rest was allowed upon this spot; while,
to qualify them duly for the coming struggle, the
prince, and some other young nobles, had the honour of ©
knighthood conferred upon them by the king. Then
a council of war was held to decide on the course to
be pursued ; and at this it was determined that the
Karl of Huntingdon, with about a hundred and twenty
men-at-arms, and four hundred archers, should remain
with the fleet, while the rest of the army moved on in
three divisions. One of these was under the command
of the king, with whom was his son, the new-made
knight, panting to do honour to his knighthood by
some signal feat of arms. Sir Godfrey de Harcourt
led the second ; the Earl of Warwick the third. The
order of march was, for the king’s division, or main
body, to move on in the centre ; the Earl of Warwick’s .
division extended itself on the right ; and that of Sir
Godfrey, which was a little in advance, acted upon the
PASSAGE OF THE SOMME. 4]

leit. The fleet followed their course along the coast,
all uniting in one object,—that of plundering, burning,
and destroying everything that came in their way.

They met with little opposition, for the simple
country folks, who, as has been said, knew nothing
of soldiers and battles, took to their heels and fled be-
fore the English ; the knights and men-at-arms who
should have protected them from these cruel invaders
being far away, fighting under the Duke of Nor-
mandy. So, between the fleet and the army,—spreading
itself like a pestilence—the English took many rich
towns, and acquired plunder to an enormous extent ;
gold, silver, and valuable merchandise, which they care-
fully packed up, sent on board their attendant ships,
and rejoicingly conveyed to England. Spoil was so—
abundant that the very camp followers “turned up
their noses” at rich furred gowns, which, in those days,
were worn; and there was no lack of provision for this
locust-like swarm either, seeing that those who fled
could not take their well-stored houses and barns with
them.

King Philip meanwhile was not idle. When news
was brought him that the English had landed in Nor-
mandy, and were destroying that province at their
pleasure, he summoned every earl, baron, and knight,
who owed him service, to march with him against
them. The lords eagerly obeyed his command, but
some were so distant from the scene of action that they
42 PASSAGE OF THE SOMME.

could not attend the king in time to check the advance
of the enemy, who soon made their way to within a
few miles of Paris. The citizens were terribly frightened
when they found the English at their very gates ; the
more so that Philip was just setting out to St. Denis,
about four miles off, to join the lords who were
assembled there. Expecting to be swallowed at a
mouthful by those terrible islanders,—upon their knees
the poor citizens besought the king to stay and take
care of them, for if he did not, the English would cer-
tainly come upon them, and make themselves masters
of his fine city of Paris.

King Philip thought he should best protect his fine
city of Paris and its trembling inhabitants by joining
- his army at St. Denis, and fighting the invaders. He
told the suppliants so ; and to cheer their hearts, de-
clared that the English would never touch them, nor
their city either. This turned out quite true, as Kd-
ward, having burned some villages near its walls, passed
on northwards, by Beauvais, where he hung twenty of
his own people for having set fire to the abbey of St.
Messien, contrary to his express commands that no
church or monastery should be injured. Beauvais was
attacked, but its inhabitants, with a good military
bishop at their head, showed fight so gallantly that the
English were beaten back. The people of Poix, a little
further on, either not being in a mood for fighting, or
not prepared for it, thought best to buy off the enemy.
PASSAGE OF THE SOMME. _ 43

A certain sum was agreed upon, on the faith of which the
town and its two fortresses were to be left untouched.
The king and the young prince slept there quietly that
night, and next morning withdrew the army to pursue
its march. No sooner, however, were they out of
the way than those excellent people of Poix recovered
from their fright, and plainly told the few English who
had been left behind to receive the ransom, that they
would not pay one penny of what they had promised ;
and so saying, they fell fiercely upon the little troop.
This was shabby. Fortunately for the English, who
defended themselves gallantly, their rear-guard was not
far off, and they hastily sent to it for succour. Lord
Reginald Cobham, and Sir Thomas Holland who com-
manded, hastened to the help of their comrades, with
loud shouts of “Treason, treason !” and speedily pun-
ished the townsmen’s bad faith by slaying great
numbers of them, burning their town, and pulling
down their castles to the very ground.

This was severe; but faith ought to be kept, even
with an enemy. Those who break their word must
not complain if they suffer for it.

One of these castles, when the army first took pos-
Session, was found to be garrisoned by two young
ladies, the beautiful daughters of its absent lord. They
were chivalrously protected from the rude soldiery by
that glorious John Chandos, of whom we shall hear
again; and the Lord Basset, who brought them to the
44 PASSAGE OF THE SOMME.

king’s presence. Edward received the ladies with all
courtesy, asking them whither they would go, and
commanded that they should be safely conducted to
their chosen place of refuge. |

Edward’s career, in the north-west of France, had so
far been highly successful. Still, in the neighbourhood
of Paris, it was materially checked by the French
having broken down the bridges over the numerous
rivers that intersect that part of the country, and from
which the district received its former name, of the Isle
of France, At Poissy, about twenty miles from the
capital, the English almost stuck fast; but the army
was extricated by a feint on the part of its leader.
Edward made as though he were going off in the op-
posite direction, then returned hastily, patched up the
bridge, and got, for that time, out of the way of Philip
and his avenging host. But though he escaped here,
he soon found that the net was being drawn closer
around him. Broken bridges stopped him on every
hand, while those hundred-thousand angry Frenchmen
were almost upon his heels. It seemed the turn of the
English to be swallowed up now, for they were finally
placed between the bridgeless Somme and the French
army, eager to avenge, upon the king of England and
the beardless boy his son, the injuries inflicted by
them upon the French nation.

Many English heads had been laid low, spite of the
triumphant character of their inroad, so that the origi-
PASSAGE OF THE SOMMER. 45

nal odds of- thirty thousand against one hundred
thousand, were fearfully increased at this juncture.
Fighting or starving seemed the only alternatives
offered to the English, and they were not inclined to ac-
cept either. In this dilemma Sir Godfrey de Harcourt
and the Earl of Warwick, with a couple of thousand
men-at-arms and archers, were sent down stream to see
whether bridge or ford, of some kind or other, could
not be discovered. The search was fruitless ; and when,
on their return to the army, they had communicated
the result of it, the king, who was full of thought and
care, ordered immediate preparations to be made for
decamping, as King Philip was already within six
miles of them. There really seemed to be nothing now
but a run for it.

Those iron-clad and iron-hearted men of the four-
teenth century prayed as well as fought. Before the —
sun had risen upon the dispirited little army, there was
heard not only the trumpet-sound for breaking up the
camp, but the quiet voice of the priest imploring mercy
from the God of heaven, and blessing the kneeling wor-
shippers. What a heart-felt “Good Lord, deliver us !”
would ascend from that imperilled band! and who shall
say that those prayers were not heard ?

In stern military order the march commenced : men-
at-arms, archers, and their shaggy comrades with the
big knives, streamed out of Airaines; and even the
hindermost files, those whom loitering or business had
46 PASSAGE OF THE SOMME.

thrown into the veriest rear, had cleared it for a good
two hours, before the French vanguard, in equal mili-
tary order, entered the town. The enemy had escaped
them, that was plain. So, instead of exchanging blows
with the English, their only revenge was to sit down
and eat up the good things that were, of necessity, left
behind. ‘There were barrels of wine; joints on the spit,
just ready for roasting ; bread and pastry half-baked
in the ovens ; and tables, vainly spread for the nobles
and knights now careering away in the distance; com-
pelled to fly, and yet not so disheartened as to be in-
capable of attacking a little town that stood in their
way, knocking it all to shivers, and then taking up
their lodging in it for the night.

King Philip fixed his quarters at Airaines, and,
doubtless, the excellent cheer thus provided for them
by the retreating foe, was (without any fear of the usual
consequence of things going down the “ wrong throat ”)
heartily enjoyed by his followers) We cannot for a
moment suppose that his Highness of France would
condescend to eat any of these English “leavings !”
At Oisemont, a town between Airaines and Abbeville,
King Edward afresh held a council, and ordered the
prisoners, whom his troops in their skirmishing about
the country had seized, to be brought before him, that
he might question them as to the possibility of getting
over the river. He asked these, very courteously, if
they knew of any ford below Abbeville where he and
PASSAGE OF THE SOMME. 47

his army might cross the Somme, adding, that to him
who would conduct him to such a place he would give
his liberty, and that of any twenty, whomsoever he
might choose, of his companions. |
Liberty is sweet ; and, thereupon, up spoke a common
fellow (named Gobin Agace) to this effect :—
“Sir,—I promise you, under peril of my life, to
guide you to a place where you and your whole army
may pass the river without hurt. There are certain
fords where twelve men a-breast may cross twice in the
day, and not have water above their knees; but when
the tide is in, the river is so full and deep that no one
can cross it. When the tide is out, the river is so low
that it may be passed on horseback, or on foot with-
out danger. The bottom of this ford is very hard, of
gravel and white stones, over which all your carriages
may safely pass, and from thence it is called Blanch-
taque. You must, therefore, set out early, so as to be
ut the ford before sunrise.” -
Overjoyed at such good news, the king readily pro-
mised the speaker a round sum of money, in addition
to his liberty, provided his statement, as to this ad-
mirable ford, proved correct. |
Gobin, as it happened, was a true man—to his own
interest ! We must say nothing of his king and coun-
try. Some people would sell the whole world, if they
only saved their own precious necks thereby. This was

precisely Gobin’s condition.
48 PASSAGE OF THE SOMME.

After two or three hours of anxious, uneasy rest, king,
prince, knights, and meaner men alike, arose. Mid-
night though it was, the trumpets were heard sounding
loudly for the march; and by break of day all were
moving on, under the leadership of the illustrious
Gobin, to the ford of Blanchtaque. The brightening
sunbeams of an early August morning played upon the
broad waters of the river; for, alas! the Somme was a
tidal stream, and, by the time the faithful Gobin had
brought up his royal and military train, the tide was
at its height. To make bad worse, at the other side of
the swelling flood appeared Sir Godemar du Fay, a
great Norman baron, to whose especial care it had
been committed to baffle the King of England at this
point. Sir Godemar was at the head of a large force
of men-at-arms and infantry, backed by the burly,
well-armed townsmen of Abbeville, and a zealous
swarm of country-folks in their smock-frocks. What
sort of weapons was wielded by these good fellows in
the smock-frocks, historians do not tell us. Most
likely they snatched up their pitchforks and goads ; °
which, rude enough considered as instruments of war,
were yet capable, when poised by such brawny arms,
of inflicting very ugly wounds on any of the enemy
unfortunate enough to come within their range. The
pass leading from the ford was well manned bya posse
of Genoese cross-bowmen.

The brimming river, and the armed host upon its
PASSAGE OF THE SOMME. 49

opposite bank, formed a rather disheartening prospect.
But it was a case of “nothing venture, nothing win ;”
though an experienced commander, such as the still
young monarch of England, was not going to do any-
thing rashly. The river had to be crossed, and those
threatening Frenchmen on the other side had—in
school-boy phrase—to be “thrashed” before his brave
followers were free from peril. The tide at length
turned, as the highest tide will do; and, eagerly watch-
ing its slow retreating course, the keen eye of our
Edward at once marked out the precise time when he
must dash forward and dare everything. A footing in
the stream became possible, and then, in the name of
“God and St. George,” the horsemen, king, prince, and
all, leaped into the shallowing water. And on the op-
posite bank, making the air ring with shouts of “God
and St. Denis,” in sprang the French men-at-arms;
quite as ready (observes an old writer) for a tilting
match in the water, as on dry land. Fierce blows and
thrusts were exchanged, as they plowtered in the stream ;
and the sword of the young prince, it is said, was then
first stained with blood.

It must, from that time have assumed a very differ-
ent aspect in his eyes. Before, it was the mere glitter-
ing plaything of a boy; henceforth, it was the terrible
death-dealing weapon of a man!

The forcing of this passage over the Somme was no

easy matter. French, against English valour was, that
(3) 4.
50 , PASSAGE OF THE SOMME.

day, well matched. The English archers, however, at
last turned the day in favour of their countrymen.
Their fearful storm of arrows: compelled even the
bravest of the French knights to give way; and the
English fairly won the opposite bank, driving their
opponents before them in all directions. In the hot
pursuit which followed, terrible slaughter was done
pon the flying enemy. Knights, men-at-arms, fat
burghers from Abbeville, and simple peasants fresh
from their flocks and fields, found, that day, one com-
mon doom, from sharp Enghsh lances and swift-winged
English arrows.

The river was crossed. But it was only just in time,
seeing that some of the hindmost were set upon, and
slain by, the nent cavalry of the advancing French
army.

King Philip was not particularly pleased when he
found that his prey had escaped him. Nor did it add
to his satisfaction, on his own arrival at the river’s
bank, to perceive that the tide was already flowing
back again, so as to leave him no chance, save that of
going round to the bridge at Abbeville. In his first
paroxysm of rage he ‘bethought him of hanging Sir
Godemar Fay, for not having better disputed the pas-
sage comiiitted to his keeping; but the. intercession of
his brother knights saved that nobleman from so dis-
graceful a fate.

Honest Gobin—well, he was honest to his new
PASSAGE OF THE SOMME. | 51

master, though a little treacherous to his old one—
duly received the promised reward, and a good horse
into the bargain. His service was worth paying for
handsomely. Then solemn thanks were returned by
the English to God who had delivered them from so
pressing a danger. With that baffled -French host, on
the other side of the now flowing tide, the English
- must have felt somewhat as did the Israelites when
the returning waves of the Red Sea, over which they
had passed dry-shod, rolled in again upon “ Pharaoh and
bis horsemen,” swallowing them up in its triumphant
waters.

The deliverance of the English however, great and
thankworthy as it was, was yet but a temporary one.
Philip, speeding away over the round-about bridge at
Abbeville, was soon heard of again in their rear; and
then a stand, to meet him, and fight for it, was made,
near Crecy in Ponthieu. For “now,” said Edward,
‘Tam on my mother’s lawful inheritance, given as her

marriage-portion, and I am resolved to defend 1t against

Philip of Valois.”










IV.
The Battle of Creep.

‘Bea lE celebrated battle-field of Crecy lies about
ei eight miles north of Abbeville. Edward’s

army here drawn up, was much smaller



than that of the enemy. As has been said, it is pro-
bable that it fell considerably short of its original
thirty. thousand; while the French—if rumour did not
exaggerate their numbers—amounted to a hundred and
twenty thousand. As things turned out, we might
afford to make them a present of the odd twenty
thousand ; and believe that it was only one hundred
thousand gallant Frenchmen and their allies that our
mere handful destroyed on that memorable day.

The comparative insignificance of the English, how.
ever, made it all the more important that they should
be posted as advantageously as possible ; the Karl of
Warwick and Sir Godfrey de Harcourt, therefore, rode
over the ground, noticing, with keen practised eyes,
how every yard of it might be turned to the best ac-
count. That business settled, they were in pretty good
56 THE BATTLE OF CRECY.

heart about the matter. Provisions were plentiful in
the country ; and even had they not been, their own
Stores were far from being exhausted. So, having first
ascertained that Philip had no intention of giving battle
immediately, they pitched their tents that night in the
plain. |

There, all was soon eager preparation for the antici-
pated struggle of the next day.. Arms were examined.
A faulty lance-shaft might have brought destruction
upon the knight who wielded it, a weather-rotted bow-
string would have rendered one arrow useless ; and
with their inferior numbers, not one lance, nor one orey-
goose-winged arrow could they afford to throw away.
Then there was a great clattering and overhauling of
armour. Cuirasses, cuisses,—the pieces that protected
the legs—helmets or gauntlets, wanting a strap here, or
a buckle there, had to be made “right and tight,” and
polished up into the bargain. These were the per-
sonal cares of squires, and men-at-arms ; the squires
waiting upon the knights their masters, the men-at-
arms waiting upon themselves. The king and prince
‘were occupied in giving a great supper to the leaders
of their brave troops, and at that entertainment no
fears of to-morrow’s clash of arms spoiled their knightly
appetites. They ate well, they drank well, and then
retired from the royal presence to tent or cloak, as
each one best pleased, with the determination of ight.
ing well next morning.
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PREPARATIONS ON THE EVE OF BATTLE
page 56
THE BATTLE OF CRECY. 57

The cares and hospitalities of the day ended, the king,
in his solitude, first kneeled down in devout prayer to
God, that He would give him victory in the forthcom-
ing battle, and then, like the rest, threw himself upon
his bed about midnight. |

Early next morning, August 26th, he and the prince
joined in prayers, and received the Holy Communion.
The greater part of his army did the same; and then
the trumpets sounded to arms, and for each division of
the army to take the ground marked out for it.

There were three of these divisions. The first was
commanded by the Prince of Wales; and under him
were some noble and knightly warriors, whose descend-
ants—if there be any of the old blood still remaining—
may well be proud of their ancestors at Crecy. There
were the Earls of Warwick and Oxford, Sir Godfrey de
Harcourt, the Lords Reginald Cobham, Thomas Holland,
Stafford, Mauley, Delawarre, Bartholomew, Burghersh,
Robert Neville, Thomas Clifton, Bourchier, Latimer,
Sir John Chandos, and other knights notable in their
day, but whose very names are now extinguished.
The brave boy was bravely supported. This division
numbered about eight hundred men-at-arms, two thou-
sand archers, and one thousand Welshmen. All at
once moved on in good order, to their appointed post ;
each lord displaying his banner and pennon,—the pen-
non was a forked streamer attached to the upper part
of the lance,—and marching in the centre of his men.
58 THE BATTLE OF CRECY.

The second division was commanded by the Earls of
Southampton, and Arundel; the Lords Roos, Wil-
loughby, Basset, St. Albans, Lascels, Multon, Sir Lewis ©
Tufton, and many others. It comprised eight hundred
men-at-arms, and twelve hundred archers.

The king himself headed the reserve, or third
division, of about seven hundred men-at-arms, and two
thousand archers. The men-at-arms (as was some-
times the custom, like that of our old-fashioned
dragoons), were dismounted, and prepared to fight on
foot. The baggage of the entire army, with the
waggons and horses, was placed in the rear within an
enclosure, to which there was but one entrance, and
that, we may believe, was well guarded. Trenches
were hastily dug on both sides as an additional protec-
tion to the little army; and in front were placed a few
cannon, then a novel invention, used, perhaps for the
first time, during Edward’s previous wars in Scotland.

His forces being thus marshalled in battle-array, the
king, wearing neither helmet nor coat of mail, but
simply his usual hood and dress, mounted. his riding-
horse, or hackney as it was called; the magnificent
charger being reserved for the battle-field ; and passing
at a foot’s pace through their ranks, with his marshals
on either hand, addressed his men, encouraging them
to guard the honour of their sovereign, and defend his
right to the throne of France. His cheerful looks, and
still more cheering words, went straight to the hearts
THE BATTLE OF CRECY. 59

of his stalwart fellows, who drew fresh courage from
his animating appeals. For, if truth must be told,
some of them were becoming a little down-hearted ;
the numbers against them being so terribly overpower-
ing as somewhat to damp the confidence inspired by
previous successes.

As by this time it was near ten o’clock (the usual
dinner-hour of that period), the king ended by bidding
his men eat and drink heartily ; and then he retired to |
his own post. Advice so agreeable was instantly acted
upon; and after they had eaten and drunken to their
heart’s content, they packed up their pots, barrels,
dishes, platters, and such things in the waggons, and
then sat down on the ground with their helmets and
arms beside them, that they might be the fresher when
the enemy came up. And so they prepared to meet
the formidable Philip of Valois.

That same Saturday morning the King of France
also rose betimes ; and as soon as he and-his army had
had prayers, they moved on towards the English. When
within four miles of Abbeville, they too were formed
in order of battle, and then continued their march; the
infantry in front, to keep out of the way of their own
cavalry. Four knights whom Philip had sent forward
to reconnoitre, now returned, bringing him word that
they had caught sight of the English, drawn up as we
have described them, on the sloping ground near
Crecgy ; and they advised him to halt his troops for the
60 THE BATTLE OF CRECY.

night, where they were, for if they went on, they would
certainly be too tired to attack the English with any
advantage. Upon this, the order was given to “halt
banner, in the name of God and St. Denis.” St.
Denis was the patron saint of the French, as St.
George was of the English. Those in front halted
accordingly. But they who were in the rear, vowed
they would not halt, till they were as forward as the
front. And with that they kept pushing on.

Oh, what mischief came of this piece of stupidity !
By the pressure from behind, spite of the efforts of the
king and his generals to stop them, the front ranks
were driven on until, in utter disorder, they came with-
in sight of the enemy. The appearance of Edward’s
well-ordered battalions rather checked their ardour;
and they fell back, in a confused manner, upon the
rear, to whom they communicated their own panic;
panics being eminently catching. Some few did what
all might have done had they chosen, and made their
way to the front; but the greater part hung back.
There was unaccountable confusion and disorder
throughout the whole French army; so that their vast
numbers did them more harm than good. An attempt
was made to rally them; and at last, on they went, —
but in a sad pell-mell sort of fashion, hither and
thither, as each lord, baron, or knight thought fit.

Seeing them advance, the English rose from the
ground where they were sitting, and fell into their
THE BATTLE OF CRECY. 61

ranks, All was calmness and order here; and the
boy-prince, whose division was to bear the first brunt
of battle, took the post that had been assigned to him.
His archers were in the van, his men-at-arms in the
rear. ‘The Earls of Northampton and Arundel, were
stationed so as to support the prince, in case of need.
The king formed his division on a height at a little
distance, where he could overlook the field, and bring
up his reserve, or not, as the battle might turn. He
himself stood by a windmill, which, not long ago, was
said to be still remaining on this memorable spot.

The attack was made by the French about three
o’clock in the afternoon. Their first line consisted of
fifteen thousand Genoese cross-bowmen; and these the
king bade his marshals order forward, “in the name
of God and St. Denis,” to begin the battle. The
Genoese, however, were in no condition for doing go.
They had had a long day’s march on foot, heavily
armed; and were so worn out with fatigue, that they
plainly told the constable they were not fit for any-
thing. The Earl of Alencon, who commanded the
second division, hearing this, exclaimed in a pet,—
“This is what one gets by employing such scoundrels,
who fail us when most wanted.” And, among them,
they managed to drive the poor, tired, drenched
Genoese (for there was a heavy thunder-storm at the
time) on towards the English. The storm, which added
to their confusion, soon, however, cleared off, and the
§2 THE BATTLE OF CRECY.

sun shone out bright, but full in the faces of the French,
so dazzling and blinding -them, that it was even worse
than the rain.

At length, spurred on by their commanders, the
Genoese prepared for action, and sprang with a shout
towards the English, who stood firm, never minding
their noise. Again they leaped forward with a great
cry as before; but the English, with that boy at their
head, stirred not a foot. It was plain there was
no frightening them with mere noise. A third time
there was a bound and a cry, and then—not noise
alone—thousands of bolts from their cross-bows, fell
upon the enemy. Now was the time for the boy to
prove himself a man. The word of command was
given; and, advancing one step, the English archers
poured in, among the foe, such a shower of arrows
that, as an old writer says, it was like a snow-storm:
keen, stinging arrows, for soft snow-flakes, The
Genoese could not stand this. Heads, arms, legs,
broad chests, pierced by the long, sharp shafts,—they
fled in dismay; cutting their bow-strings, already
weakened by the rain, and throwing down their useless
weapons, as they turned their ignominious backs
upon the English yeomen.

Philip, in-a rage at their flight, called out to his
mounted men-at-arms to “kill those rascals.” And, no-
thing loth, the horsemen rode in among their wearied,
discomfited comrades, cutting them down without
THE BATTLE OF CRECY. 63

mercy ; while still, amid the mingled mass of men
and horses, hot and thick fell the merciless English
arrows ; hottest and thickest wherever the press was
greatest. Into that wounded, writhing heap, too,
plunged sullenly the clumsy stone balls of those new, »
and alarming great guns in front; whose noise, to un-
accustomed ears was, we are told, as “ though God
thundered!” Down went men and horses among the
baffled Genoese, one overthrowing another; and he
who was once down, had no chance of rising again.
Then, when the rout and disorder was at its height,
was the time for the Irish and Welshmen. Passing
through the ranks of their own men-at-arms and
archers, their great knives, if not very military wea-
pons, proved fatal, to many a gaily accoutred prostrate
horseman. No distinction of rank was there. Noble
and squire alike were remorselessly slain by these
rough soldiers, whose zeal was anything but pleasing
to their own knightly sovereign. King Edward could
not abide such wholesale slaughter. Possibly (for
meaner motives will sometimes mingle with generous
ones), he regretted the loss of the abundant ransom,
which such prisoners as those who had perished under
the cruel knives of his half-savage infantry, would have
furnished. or, according to the custom of the times,
knights’ and gentlemen, when taken prisoners, were
allowed to purchase their freedom by sums of money
proportioned to their rank and wealth.
64 THE BATTLE OF CRECY.

It was here that the brave, blind old king of Bohemia,
who marched under Philip’s banner, met his fate. Un-
able, through blindness, to make his own way into the
fight, he bade two faithful knights lead him on, that he
might strike at least one good sword-stroke at the
enemy. They placed him between them, fastened their
horse bridles to his, that they might not be separated
in the throng, and then, in all three dashed, fought
valiantly, and all fell on the battle-field, where next
morning their bodies were found on one spot; their
three horses still linked together, standing quietly by
them. The Lord Charles of Bohemia, son to the king,
was bringing up a force to aid the French; but per-
ceiving, when at a little distance that the battle was
going against them, he discreetly turned aside and went
_ his way.

The young prince meanwhile was so hard pressed by~
the French second line, under the Earl of Alencgon,
which had advanced to back the flying rabble of.
Genoese, that the Earls of Arundel and Northampton ~
moved up their division to support him. The battle
was terribly hot here, and the king of France himself,
hovering on their skirts, was eagerly looking for an
opening to lead his third division in among them. The
English archers, however, formed an impenetrable wall
against him, that he vainly endeavoured to break
through; and the struggle lay chiefly between the
prinve’s force and that under Alengon. The young
THE BATTLE OF CRECY. 65

fellow was sorely put to it; and fearing for so precious
a life, the Earl of Warwick sent off a knight, post haste
to the king, entreating him to bring up the reserve, to
rescue his son from so imminent a danger.

“Is my son dead, or wounded, or unhorsed?” was
the king’s answer to this urgent request.

“No,” replied the knight, “but he is so hardly
matched that he cannot long hold out without you.”

“Sir Thomas,” was the rejoinder, “go back to your
comrades, and tell them they must not send to me for
help so long as my son is alive. He must this day
win his spurs, and I am determined, if God will, that
the glory of this day shall be his own, and that of those
who are with him.”

The knight galloped back again with his message,
which seemed to put fresh life into the princely lad
and his brave companions. Fiercer blows were dealt,
hotter and more strenuous was the attack, till, ere long,
the unruly multitude of French knights, and squires,
and men, began to give way before them. The Earls
of Flanders and Alencon, who had turned the flank of
the prince’s archers, were slain, together with many of
their best knights; and the entire first and second
French lines were forced back. Philip made a vigorous
effort to turn the fortunes of the day; but it was of no
use; the whole French army was utterly. routed and
driven off the field in confusion. The royal standard

narrowly escaped capture. Its bearer was struck down
(3) 5
66 THE BATTLE OF CRECY.

in the fight, but while French and English eagerly con.
tended for so glorious a prize, the one to seize, the
other to rescue it, a French knight hastily with his
sword, cut the banner from its shaft, wrapped it round
his body, and rode off with it. King Philip himself
was wounded, his horse was killed under him by an
arrow, and as he sprang on another, Sir John de Hain-
ault snatched at the reins, and forced him off, telling
him by way of comfort, that if he had lost one battle,
he might gain another. And away they both swept to
Amiens, with a retinue of only sixty knights and men-
at-arms, in place of the splendid array of the morning.

It was a murderous and cruel battle ; for the
desperate English gave no quarter, nor would they
ransom any. At night-fall, as the noise died away,
they looked upon the field as their own, and lighted up
torches and great fires, intending to bivouac where they
stood ; for in their circumstances they dared not venture
on immediate pursuit. The king, who had never even
put on his helmet, then descended from his post of °
observation, and leading forward his battalion, which
like himself, had looked on only, throughout that hard-
fought day, advanced to meet his son. He folded him
in his arms, and kissed him lovingly, saying, in the
quaint language of those times, “ Sweet son, God give
you good perseverance! You are indeed my own son,
for very valiantly have you this day acquitted yourself
You are worthy to be a king!”
THE BATTLE OF CRECY. 67

Such words, from such a father, fell pleasantly upon |
the ear of the panting, battle-stained boy. Most
modestly was the loving commendation received, and
then he fell upon his knees, to beg his father’s blessing.
That, we may be sure, was heartily given. |

The rejoicings of the Enclish on this eventful night
were orderly rejoicings, for the king had utterly for-
bidden all noise or riot. And they were fittingly
mingled with many thanksgivings to God, who had
given them so wonderful a victory. Their losses were
trivial. Those of the French were immense. Clumsy
stone cannon balls, lance, sword, sheaves of unerring
arrows, and even those big knives, had done their work.
upon kings, princes, nobles, knights, and common men,
to the number of forty thousand. There, as the old
poet has sung,—

‘Sceptre and crown
Had tumbled down,

And in the dust were equal laid,
With the poor crooked scythe and spade! ”

The next morning which was Sunday, proved so
foges that none could see twenty yards before him,
and this circumstance threw another considerable body
of French into the hands of the English. Edward had
ordered out a strong detachment of five hundred lances,
and two thousand archers, under his two marshals, who
were directed to. scour the neighbourhood, lest any of

the enemy should be collecting again to make a fresh
68 THE BATTLE OF CRECY.

stand against him. French troops, ignorant of the
total overthrow of their army, had that morning left
Abbeville and St. Riguier to join Philip at Crecy; and
these in the mist, taking the English for their own
friends, were almost among them before they discovered
. their fatal mistake. The encounter between the two
was short, but sharp, and ended in the slaughter of
creat numbers of the French, not one of whom would
have escaped, had not the fog (which had betrayed
them to their discomfiture) favoured the flight of a few,
who thus saved themselves,
party of French, under the Archbishop of Rouen, and
the Grand Prior of France, met with the same fate from
the marshals’ detachment, who cut them almost all to
pieces, including their right reverend leader. Others,
found wandering in the fields, where they had lain all
night, were also savagely put to the sword. In short,
it is said that more were slain on that Sunday morn-
ing, than had fallen in the battle itself.
The returning marshals informed the king, who was
just coming from prayers, of their successful and san-
guinary proceedings. And then, as there was no fear of
a second army to be encountered, by his command,
heralds, attended by their secretaries, slowly traversed
the field to take account of the dead. The name and
rank of the slain knights could only be ascertained by
their coats of arms, emblazoned upon the shield, or
surcoat ; and when this sad task was ended, by Edward’s
THE BATTLE OF CRECY. 63

order, the chiefest of them were reverently laid to rest
in consecrated ground attached to the monastery of
Montenay, close at hand. The king himself, with his
great lords, all clad in black, took part in the solemn
ceremony, by way of doing honour to his brave, though
unfortunate enemies. Three days’ truce was granted
for burying the dead. It is said to be from this time
that the Prince of Wales, who, young as he was, had
shown himself so terrible at Cregy, was known among
the French by the titlk—now so familiar to our ears —
—of the Black Prince. oe

Hot from their fierce, but brilliant encounter at Crecy,
Edward, on the following Monday, August 28th,
marched his brave Britons straight to the siege of
Calais. It was a four days’ march, and they did a little
burning and plundering by the way. _





yt


V.
Che Siege of Calais.

peserea TLE governor of Calais was a brave Burgundian



knight, named Sir John de Vienne; and
other valiant knights with squires to match,
but whose names are scarcely worth preserving, served
under hint, The town was strongly fortified, and these
grim men in iron cases, were determined to hold it
against the King of England, and his victorious son.
That king, however, and that son had equally deter-
mined to take it; and therefore—in military phrase—
“sat down ” (which means something like, standing up !)
before Calais, on the Ist of August, 1346. They did
this with all calmness and order, as though they could
afford to take their time about it. The camp was
marked out, tents were pitched; and even a sort of
town composed of huts, thatched with straw, or broom,
soon sprang up under those marvellous English hands,
impertinently close to the walls of the besieged city.
Markets were established here for all comers; and in
them, fish, flesh, fowl, bread, clothing—all sorts of
74 THE SIEGE OF CALAIS.

things, either from the surrounding country, or from
over seas, might be had for money. As for those who
had no money, it is to be presumed that they would
have been as ill off in the king’s market before Calais,
as in any other. From this comfortable kind of settle-
ment the English made frequent sorties (that is another
military phrase, and literally means—going out), doing
much mischief in the neighbourhood, and picking up
spoil for themselves; occasionally, it must be owned,
though not often, getting the worst of it. They made
no attempt to storm the town. They had neither men,
nor engines of war enough for that. Their grand object
was to compel the surrender of the garrison by cutting
off their supply of provisions. This is called, blockad-
ing a place. If he failed to starve the defenders of
Calais into submission, Edward hoped that at any rate
their sufferings would draw the King of France thither
to attempt their relief, and that would afford him
another opportunity of beating Philip.

The blockade was strict, and so experienced a com-
mander as John de Vienne, at once saw that he must
make diligent preparation to baffle the well-laid plans of
the two Edwards. If provisions could not be brought
into the town, it was plain that they must make what
they had go as far as possible, by reducing the number
of consumers. ‘The less meat, the fewer mouths; that
was how the difficulty must be met. Of course,
soldiers who could fight, were to be retained at any
THE SIEGE OF CALAIS. 75

cost; and the rich inhabitants whose wealth had
enabled them to lay in store of eatables and drinkables,
or to purchase the good things that were occasionally
at great risk smuggled in, spite of the English, were at
liberty to stay if they liked. As for those who could
neither fight, nor contribute to the general stock, they
must troop, and the sooner they were got rid of, the
better.

Prompt execution followed resolution. It was a
hard thing, but military necessity is harder still; so
one Wednesday morning, seventeen hundred of those
who were of no use in the defence—who had only
craving mouths, instead of the soldiers, trained right
hand, or the merchant’s money bags,—were driven out
of the town, weeping and wailing, to await the mercy
of the English camp, through which they must pass.
Poor men, women and children,—it was a strange
sight, that stream of miserable, forlorn, human beings,
from grey-heads to infants, unconscious of their troubles,
in their mother’s arms; and the staring English, in
utter astonishment, asked what in the world they meant
by thus coming right into the midst of the enemy;
why had they left the town ?

The answer was simple enough : “ Because they had
nothing to eat.” The English were enemies, bent,
spite of all the Frenchmen that Philip of Valois could
scrape together, on taking his strong town of Calais,
But they were also men; and their good, honest hearts.
76 THE SIEGE OF CALAIS.

were touched by the distress of these unhappy people,
mercilessly turned out by their countrymen to perish.
To permit them to pass on, unharmed, to a‘place of
refuge, was much ; but it was not all. That noble King
Edward, in addition to this, ordered the poor wretches
a hearty dinner; and then, when the hungry “enemy”
had been “ fed,” (we know Who has bidden us do that !)
he gave to each of them two pence—worth more than
as many shillings in these days—to carry them on
their doleful journey. That man deserved to take
Calais. No wonder that many fervent prayers were
offered up by these unfortunate French men and
women for their benefactor ; English invader and claim-
ant of their Philip’s crown though he was. It was
indeed a good work that Edward did that Wednesday.
“ Blessed is he that considereth the poor and needy.”
To such, a recompense is surely promised. |

The character of this great king and that of his
great son, warlike as they both were, was one of general
humanity; and this beneficence to the poor, helpless
wretches driven out of Calais, was an illustrious example
of it. War isa cruel trade; but there are two ways of
carrying it on: Like men and like wild beasts. _

The siege of Calais was protracted. Blockading is
slow work ; and as more men, more money, more every-
thing was wanted, the young prince was despatched
to England to seek fresh succours. These, thanks to
the liberality of parliament, were abundantly obtained ;
THE SIEGE OF CALAIS. Va

for Englishmen, to their very heart’s core, enjoyed the
successful contest with France, and did not much care
what they paid for it. |

During the course of this tedious eleven months’ ©
siege, an incident occurred which is worth recording,
as an interesting exhibition of the knightly manners of
the time. |

It has been named that the Duke of Normandy,
eldest son of the French king, was engaged at the
other end of the country laying siege to Aiguillon, a
town in Edward’s French. possessions, where all the
fighting had been going on, until Godfrey de Harcourt
suggested Normandy. From this place the duke was
recalled by Philip, who required all the forces he could
gather to resist that formidable father, and no less
formidable son, who had been carrying everything
before them in the north. The siege was accordingly
ravsed, as it is termed—that is, given up; and the
celebrated Sir Walter Manny, who commanded in the
town, making a dash after the retreating French, took
a handful of good prisoners, whom his people brought
back with them to the castle. Among these prisoners
was a Norman knight, a very important personage
indeed; and as Sir Walter longed to be with his
countrymen before Calais, he cleverly contrived to join
them by means of this same prisoner, whom he cour-
teously bade fix his own ransom. The sum named by
the knight was a large one. Great men did not like
78 THE SIEGE OF CALAIS.

to be let off too cheaply on these occasions, because
that looked as if they were worth little. And in reply,
Sir Walter told him, that if he would procure per-
mission for his captor and twen ty others to ride straight
through France to Calais, without stopping by the
way or conducting themselves otherwise than as ordin-
ary travellers, he would let him go without any ransom
at all, and thank him into the bargain. If the knight
failed to procure-this safe-conduct, he was to return to
his prison within one month.

The terms were tempting. Off set the Norman
knight after his duke, got the required passport, and
posted back again with it to Sir Walter, who gave him
his freedom as he had promised.

Sir Walter then with twenty horsemen took the road
to Calais. He went to work frankly; told every one
who he was; and wherever he stopped for the night,
on showing his safe-conduct, was allowed to proceed
next morning. On arriving at Orleans, however, there
was a change. No respect was in that city shown to
the duke’s permission for him to pass free; nay, he
was even arrested and sent immediately to Paris, where
be was thrown into prison.

The Duke of Normandy, of course, heard of the con-
tempt with which his safe-conduct had been treated,
and of the usage to which so renowned a knight had
been subjected. He was terribly put out by it. It.
was contrary to all the laws of knighthood, and he
THE SIEGE OF CALAIS. 79

hastened to the king his father, urgently pleading for
the liberation of the prisoner, otherwise, as he said,
people would think he had granted the safe- conduct
solely for the purpose of betraying Sir Walter.

The king’s answer to his son was not very consola-
tory. He simply replied that he intended putting Sir
Walter Manny to death, as he considered him one of
the most important of his enemies.

The indignant duke’s rejoinder was, that if any
harm was done to the knight, neither he nor any of his
people should ever again bear arms against the king
of England. And with that, father and son quarrelled
violently—the duke at last flinging out with a renewed
declaration that he would not serve in the king’s armies
so long as Sir Walter Manny was kept in prison.

Things remained in this state for some time; but at
length the king became ashamed of his discourteous
behaviour, allowed Sir Walter to go free, and reim-
bursed him the expenses to which his shameful impri-
sonment had put him. He went further, and, by way
of plastering the wound which he had himself inflicted,
even invited Sir Walter to the royal dinner-table,
pressing upon him rich gifts and jewels, which the
knight accepted, subject to the pleasure of his own
sovereign ; for he did not know whether Edward would
like him to keep them. Edward did not choose that
a knight of his should receive presents from the enemy.
So, right royally saying to him, “ Sir Walter, we have
- 80 THE SIEGE OF CALAIS.

enough, thank God, both for you and for ourselves,”
he bade him return them to their donor ; intimating -
to Sir Walter, that the faithful servants of the King of
England must look to their own master, not to the
King of France, for their reward. Sir Walter accord-
ingly sent back the jewels by a cousin of his, who was
only too glad to keep them himself, when Philip bade
him do so.

The siege of Calais still held on its slow course, |
according to the manner of sieges ; its monotony being
varied, towards the close of the year, by the arrival in|
camp of Queen Philippa and her son the prince.
Philippa had had her hands full during the absence of
her lord—the hard battle of Neville’s Cross, in Dur-
ham, in which the King of Scotland was taken prisoner,
| having been fought under her own eyes. Her recep-
tion in the camp was one befitting both her rank and
the heroic courage she had recently displayed; and as
she brought in her train many great ladies of the
court, there were brave doings, in the way of feast
and tournament, to celebrate so agreeable a visit. |

The King of France was not disposed to give up
_ Calais quietly, but his attempts to relieve it proved
fruitless. He raised an immense army, far outnum-
bering that of the enemy, for this purpose; but the
English were so skilfully intrenched by their great
leader, that Philip could not get near the town. It
was in vain that he invited Edward to “ come out and
THE SIEGE OF CALAIS. 81

fight ;” Edward knew better, and told him so, than
to sacrifice the advantages which had cost him so much
time and treasure. So this vast French army, after the
citizens had admired its numerous banners fluttering
in the moonlight, decamped, leaving the people of
Calais, who sorrowingly watched its departure, to do
the best they could for themselves.

Bad was the best, for the blockade had been so strict
that their provisions were well-nigh expended. Yea,
horses, dogs, cats, and viler creatures, had been already
eaten by the wretched inhabitants, who could no longer
endure starvation. So they entreated John de Vienne,
their governor, to mount the walls and make signs that
he wished a parley with the besiegers. That word
parley is a French word, bodily imported into our
English, with the slight alteration of our spelling it with
a y, instead of a z, and really means, talk! So Sir
John reluctantly did as they would have him; for he
was a brave knight, and would rather have held out
the town to the last.

The governor’s summons was answered by Sir Wal-
ter Manny and Lord Basset, to whom he spoke man-
fully, saying that the king his master had entrusted
the defence of Calais to him and his companions,
and they had done their duty till they were now
near famishing with hunger; and he prayed that
the King of England would be content with posses-

sion of the castle and town, in which he would find
\3) 6
82 THE SIEGE OF CALAIS.

great store of riches, letting the garrison depart unmo-
lested.

Sir Walter had no very agreeable answer to this
entreaty. He assured John de Vienne that the King
of England his master was so enraged at the loss of
men, time, and money, which this siege of Calais had
cost him, that he would offer the garrison no terms
save those of unconditional surrender ; for him to put
to death whom he pleased, and admit to ransom whom
he pleased.

The spirit of the governor was roused by this cruel
declaration, and he told Sir Walter that he and his —
companions had only done what English knights and
squires in similar circumstances would have done—
held out as long as there was a stick or stone standing,
and a mouthful of food for any one. But still, famish-
ing as they were, they would endure much more,
rather than that the meanest horse-boy in the place
should fare worse than they. And he besought Sir
Walter to represent their hard case to the King of
England, of whose knighthood he had so high an
opinion, that he could not believe he would deal so —
harshly with them as he had threatened.

- The king, however, was really as angry as man could
be, and he told Sir Walter that the garrison of Calais
- must take his first terms or none, ‘Sir Walter expos-
‘tulated with him, that if he dealt such hard measures
to his conquered enemies, his own knights would rather
THE SIEGE OF CALAIS. 83

unwillingly go out on dangerous service, expecting, if
taken by the French, to be put to death, just as he, if
he did not relent, put to death -the brave fellows who
had so long held Calais against him. It would cer-
tainly be death for death, if the fortunes of war turned
against them.

Edward softened somewhat at this view of the case,
which was strongly urged by others of his nobles. So,
by way of mending matters, he dismissed Sir Walter
with his last requisition, which was, that six of the
principal citizens of Calais, carrying the keys of the
town and castle, should present themselves before him,
bare-headed, bare-foot, and with ropes round their necks,
and that he should do what he pleased with them ;
hang them, or not, as the humour took him; the rest
of the inhabitants being permitted to go free.

It was a hard measure, but there was no help for it;
and back went that generous soul de Manny with this
last proposal, of which, no doubt, he was a little
ashamed. On his arrival, the governor caused the
town’s bell to be rung, collected all the citizens in the
public hall, and then communicated to them the final
answer of the inplacable monarch. Loud lamentations
and wailings broke forth from the assembled throng when
the king’s will was made known to them; and even the
hardy knight de Vienne, wept at the sight of their dis-
tress. For awhile there was a gloomy silence through-
out the multitude: life was sweet, and each one feared
84 THE SIEGE OF CALAIS.

to lose it. At length patriotism, and a sense of duty
prevailed even over the love of life ; and one of the richest
merchants of Calais, named Eustace de St. Pierre, rose
up, saying, “Sirs, it would be great pity to suffer so
many people to die of famine, if by any means it could
be prevented, and it would be well-pleasing in the eyes
of our Saviour, if such misery coyld be averted. I
have such faith and trust in finding grace with God if
I die to save my townsmen, that I offer myself as first
of the six.”

Bravely spoken Eustace de St. Pierre! That man’s
name deserves to come down to posterity.

As for the assembled crowd, they rose up, and as an
old writer tells us, “almost worshipped him ;” many
throwing themselves, weeping, at his feet.

Another citizen, also wealthy and in great reput-
with his fellow townsmen, then offered himself to be
the second. This was John Daire. Others followed,
till the required number was complete ; and Eustace de
St. Pierre, John Daire, James and Peter Wisant, and
two more whose names have perished, though the
memory of their heroic deed endures, agreed to give
themselves up to death to save the lives of the famish-
ing people of Calais. The six were merchants, members
of a class little esteemed by the knighthood of that
day. But, merchants though they were, they were
indeed noble men.

John de Vienne then collecting together his little
THE SIEGE OF CALAIS. 85

sacrificial band, mounted a small pony, (for his wounds
disabled him from walking), and conducted them in the |
prescribed humiliating manner—bare-foot, bare-headed,
and with ropes round their necks—to that gate of the
town which opened on the English camp. A crowd
followed them to the gate, weeping and lamenting;
and when it was opened, the seven passed through to
the English barriers, where Sir Walter Manny was
waiting to receive them. The six citizens were
delivered up to him, in due form, with an earnest —
request that he would intercede with his sovereign for
their lives; and then de Vienne, with a heavy heart,
turned back again to the miserable town.

When brought into Edward’s presence, the prisoners,
upon their knees, gave up the keys of the castle and
town, praying the king to spare their lives. This,
Edward at first did not seem at all disposed to do; the
people of Calais had done him so much mischief by sea
in times past, that he was now quite in a mood to cut
off a few of their heads, by way of punishing them for
it. And, accordingly, spite of the pitying looks and
entreaties of the great lords and knights around him,
he straightway gave command that the heads of the six
should be stricken off. It was in vain his gallant
followers interceded for the voluntary captives; he
would not hear a word on their behalf De Manny,
and even the prince himself pleaded unavailingly, though —
they reminded him that a charge of cruelty, such as ne.
86 | THE SIEGE OF CALAIS.

true knight ought to incur, would certainly rest upon
him, if he carried out his fierce purpose. —

What was denied to the entreaties and remonstrances
of his son, and of his nobles, Edward was, however,
forced to grant to the prayers of ‘his queen whom he
tenderly loved, and who, having just crossed the seas
to join him, after her victorious encounter at Neville’s
Cross, deserved some boon at his hands. On her knees,
weeping, she prayed him for Christ’s sake, as well as
for his love to her, to have pity on these unfortunate
citizens of Calais.

The king for awhile, and in silence, looked at the
_ Weeping, kneeling figure; and then gently telling
Philippa he wished she had been anywhere, rather than
where she was at that moment, for he could not refuse
her request, bade her do with the six as she pleased.
Nothing loth, she carried them off in triumph to her
own tent, had those horrible ropes taken from their
necks, clothed and fed them; and then, with a supply
of money for their journey, commanded them to be
safely conducted out of the camp.

It was in August 1347, after an eleven months’ siege,
that the strong town of Calais surrendered to the king
of England. Edward, accompanied by his queen and
son, took possession of it in state, having first ordered
his officers to imprison a portion of the garrison, and
drive all the inhabitants bodily out of the town, which
he was resolved to convert into a thoroughly English.
THE SIEGE OF CALAIS. 87

one, by filling it with his own subjects. The king made
Calais his residence for some little time, during which
the prince, at the head of a strong detachment, made a
sort of foray into the neighbouring country, which he
burned and ravaged as far as the Somme, and then
returned laden with spoil.

After this, as the one kingdom found fighting ruinous,
and the other found it costly, a truce was agreed upon
between the two; and Edward, having appointed a
favourite Italian knight of his, named Sir Americ de
Pavie, governor of Calais, set sail for England with the
queen, the prince, and his little daughter Margaret, who
had been born in the captured city. After being well |
tossed about on his own seas (he complained that winds
and seas always favoured him when he went to France,
but were dead against him on his return), he landed at
Sandwich, then a considerable port, on the 28th of
September.

Sir Americ de Pavie, the newly appointed governor
of Calais, happened to be something of a rascal; and
we shall hear of him again.


*



G@reachery at Calais,

a Cus

Seite. young Prince of Wales was now a youth
34 ¥ei} of seventeen; tall, handsome, strong, valiant,
distinguished for his deeds of arms, as well
as for the other knightly qualities of courtesy, modera-
tion, and gentleness. He, and his illustrious parents,
were received with acclamations by the English people,
whose heads were nearly turned by those wonderful
doings in France. In great state the three entered the
city of London—for at that date, the city was a “ gen-
teel” place, and not as now, wholly given up to mer-
chandise. Merchants, tradesmen, and artisans certainly —
exercised each one his calling, or craft there. But
there also the great nobles had their dwellings, whose
faded splendours may still be discerned in the ware-
houses and offices of modern times; bales of goods
crowding the halls within which lords and ladies were
wont to show their stately presence, and brisk clerks,
scribbling away as if for their very lives, in the room
of those who wielded the sword—the power of those



92 TREACHERY AT CALAIS.

days—and cased their limbs in steel, instead of broad
cloth. |

Royal feastings and tournaments celebrated the
recent prowess of the new-made royal knight. And
that young, muscular form, and stout heart distinguished
itself in this mimicry of war, as it had done in the
grim reality of it in France.

The tournament was the chosen diversion of knights
and ladies of the fourteenth century. In it, companies
of knights, armed as if for battle, save that lance and
sword were pointless, spurred furiously against each other,
squadron against squadron, till broken lances, knights
unhelmed, or some of them lifted bodily out of their
saddles by the shock, terminated the contest, and the
one or the other was proclaimed victor. The ground
enclosed for the purpose was called the lists; and it
was surrounded by galleries for spectators, among whom
ladies were conspicuous; for they as well loved to look
upon these rough trials of skill, as the combatants
themselves loved to enter upon them. Occasionally
the excitement of these warlike games became so great
that battle in play was converted into battle in down-
right earnest; and men were maimed, and lives lost
within the gaily decorated lists, and under the unshrink-
ing eyes of the high born dames surrounding them.

If only two knights engaged, the one against the
other, it was called a joust.

At Canterbury, then a city of more importance than
TREACHERY AT CALAIS. 93

it is now, and Eltham, where at that time stood a royal
palace, whose great hall has long ago been turned into
a barn, these festivities were held in notable style.
People’s notions about being handsomely dressed vary
at different times and different places. Here, at
Eltham, the extraordinary equipments of two of the
knights who levelled lance at each other, have been
handed down to us by admiring chroniclers; and
when we read in their dusky pages that over the
armour of these same cavaliers—armour, no doubt, of
most exquisite finish, after the fashion of tilting
armour—they wore hoods of white cloth, buttoned
with large pearls, and embroidered with figures of
dancing-men dressed in blue, we must admit that they
were magnificent according to their notions, and
supremeiy ridiculous according to ours. We should
dress up a Merry Andrew in such guise. With them
it was the sumptuous apparel of noble and gallant
soldiers ; and for this special piece of finery the two
gentlemen, we are told, were indebted to the king’s
wardrobe. Five centuries hence, perhaps the people
of England may laugh at our modern notions of how
nobles and warriors should be habited.

Rejoicings and festivities, however, were not to last
long. The stalwart youth upon whom the affection of
all England rested was to have more work—real work,
not pretence—found for him through the medium of
Sir Aymeric de Pavia, who, it has been said, was some-
94 , TREACHERY AT CALAIS.

thing of a rascal; and being one, soon showed him-
self. 7 :
There was a French knight, Sir Geoffrey de Chargny,
in command of St. Omer, who was what in England
would have been called Lord Warden of the Marches.
He was charged with the protection of the French —
frontier, and with the duty of keeping a sharp eye on

the doings of their troublesome English neighbours |.

in the north. Now, as old chroniclers tell us, this
Sur Geoffrey bethought him that Lombards were not
only poor, but money-loving; and as de Pavia was
a Lombard, this consideration suggested how he should
be dealt with for the interest of Philip of Valois. So
Sir Geoffrey entered into communication with the
‘Italian governor of Calais, and by degrees—we know
not how he went to work—succeeded in persuading
that honourable knight to sell Calais to him for twenty
thousand crowns—about £10,000 of our money. It
was a shabby transaction, but the story is quite true.
A man high in command agreed to give up his trust
to the enemy, in return for a’ sum of money! The
affair was so snugly arranged, that it was thought no
one could possibly know anything about it, and that
the abominable bit of treachery would be consummated
in perfect safety.

It was not so. King Edward loved and trusted the
Lombard, but still took measures for ascertaining
whether his affection and confidence were well bestowed ;
TREACHERY AT CALAIS. 95

and so it came to his ears how the town of Calais, the
winning of which had cost him so dear, was to be sold
to its former owners by the governor whom he had
placed over it.

Sir Geoffrey and Sir Aymeric were a couple of clever
fellows, but Edward was a match for them both. He
at once despatched a messenger to Sir Aymeric, de-
siring him to come over to Westminster immediately
——a command that was cheerfully obeyed, for it never
entered the Italian’s head that his roguery had been
found out by his master. Doubtless he fancied some ~
fresh mark of royal favour was about to be bestowed
upon him! On presenting himself before the king, he
was coolly informed of his treachery, and that he de-
served to die forit. Down on his knees dropped the
astounded knight, praying for mercy, assuring Edward
there was plenty of time even yet for him to break
faith with Sir Geoffrey, and earnestly begging that he
might be allowed to expiate one act of treachery by
_ another. The king was disposed to make use of him;
the fellow had still the power of being serviceable ;
and therefore, instead of hanging him for his vile
huckstering about the city of Calais, sent him back
again, with full instructions how to undo what he had
already done in the matter.

Only too happy this time to take in his friend Sir
Geoffrey, in place of the King of England whom he had
failed to entrap, the baffled Italian returned to his
96 TREACHERY AT CALAIS.

governorship—not saying one word, good, bad, or in-
different, to the knight of St. Omer, who thereupon
thought all was right, and took his measures accord-
ingly. |
The time for the completion of the treason was at
length fixed. It was to be the last night of the year,
1348, and Sir Aymeric immediately sent his brother over
to England to tell the king. |

Upon receipt of this news, Edward, who was keep-
ing Christmas gaily at the queen’s palace of Havering
in Essex, collected a small force of three hundred men-
at-arms and three thousand archers, and embarking
with them and the prince at Dover, got into Calais so
quietly, that no one except a few of his principal
officers knew anything about it. It was his will that
de Manny should have command of the enterprise—
king and prince, in plain armour to conceal their rank,
both fighting under him. The soldiers were placed in
ambuscade in different parts of the castle; and then °
all was ready for Sir Geoffrey when he came with his

money. |

Sir Geoffrey accordingly, on the 3lst of December,
approached the town about midnight, having a good
force with him; and then halting to let his rear come
up, sent forward two of his squires to ask Sir Aymeric
if it were time for their master to advance. The Ttalian
said that it was; and immediately on hearing this, Sir
Geoffrey marched his men in battle array over the
TREACHERY AT CALAIS. 97

bridge of Neuillet, sending forward twelve of his knights
with a hundred men-at-arms, to take possession of the
castle—for he thought that if he had that, the town
would easily follow. To one of these knights, Sir
Odoart de Renty, was entrusted the price of the town
and castle, as agreed upon with the governor.

The little party plodded on in the dark, till they
reached the castle, where the accommodating de Pavia
had already let down the draw-bridge for them; and
after they had passed over, Sir Odoart gave him the
bag of money. De Pavia took it, and, saying “he
had not time to count it, but supposed it was all
there,” flung it into a room, which he immediately
locked up, telling the Frenchmen he would lead them
to the great tower that they might the sooner be mas-
ters of the castle.

The wicked Italian! In that very tower were the
king and prince, with two hundred followers, who, the
moment de Pavia pushed back the bolt, rushed out
upon the bewildered French, with the cry, “de Manny
to the rescue! What! do these Frenchmen think to
take the Castle of Calais with a handful of men?”
And with that they laid about them with their swords
and battle-axes in such a style as speedily satisfied
their French friends that now was the time for discre-
tion rather than valour. Resistance was evidently
useless, so they at once yielded themselves prisoners.
They were politely handed into the tower whence the

(3) 7
98 TREACHERY AT CALAIS.

English had issued; the key was turned upon them;-
and, leaving them strongly guarded, the English cava-
liers sprang upon their horses, and sallied forth to find
Sir Geoffrey.

Sir Geoffrey had drawn up the remainder of his
little army in the plain, and there awaited the signal
to advance and take possession. He was in a fidget:
those twenty thousand crowns already handed over to
the treacherous Italian, and yet no gates thrown open
for him to march into Calais, as agreed upon! Sir
Geoffrey was fidgetty; he was also cross, grumbling
out to one near him that if the Italian were “ much
longer about opening the gate, they should all die
of cold.” And, indeed to stand thus in their ranks,
mounted and under arms, in the middle of a De-
cember night, was a freezing sort of thing. The
knight to whom he spoke answered sneeringly, that as
the Lombards were a strange people, possibly Sir
_ Aymeric was all this time counting the money, and
examining it lest there should be any bad coin among
it. Cold and vexed, of course both were rather spite-
. ful. And yet they did not think half badly enough
of Sir Aymeric de Pavia. |

Vexed they were destined to remain, but not cold ;
warm work was at hand in place of freezing in their
saddles. The two Edwards, with barons, and knights,
and fluttering banners, were advancing in the orey

1

morning, and with shonts of “Manny to the rescue!
TREACHERY AT CALAIS. 99

suddenly presented themselves to the enemy. “If we
fly,” exclaimed Sir Geoffrey at this sight, “all is lost!
Let us fight it out!” “By St. George, you are right,”
replied some of the English who were near enough to
overhear him; “shame upon him who thinks of re-
treating!” |

There was nothing for it now but to accept the
challenge thus given; and the two parties prepared to
do their best and worst at each other. Suir Geoffrey
placed his men a little in the rear of his first position ;
and dismounting, that the battle might be on foot, they
drove their horses out of the way. They then planted
themselves in close order, with their lances, shortened
to five feet, held in such a manner as to present a
phalanx of sharp points towards the enemy. The
English were also on foot—king and prince under
de Manny’s banner; and the contest was fierce be-
tween these two gallant companies. How the prince
fared we know not; but the king, we are told, matched
himself with a brave French knight, Eustace de Ribeau-
mont, who twice struck him down on his knees, but
was at last forced to surrender to the king, of whose
rank he was utterly ignorant. The English were
victorious in all directions. Such of the Frenchmen
as could catch their horses, rode off as fast as they
could, out-distancing the English, who had only their
own legs on which to pursue them; and Sir Geoffrey
de Chargny ended this little business of br, ‘ng Calais
100 TREACHERY AT CALAIS.

from its untrustworthy governor, by being himself,
along with many others, carried prisoner within the
walls which he had expected to enter as lord and
master.

Not till they were brought into the presence of their
captors did the Frenchmen know to what illustrious
foes they had been opposed. Those two simple knights,
under the well-known de Manny, were actually the
English king and his son, who most courteously re-
ceived their crest-fallen and unwilling visitors. As it
was New Year’s-day, the king would have them all to
supper with himself; when, like a good host, he con-
trived to make them enjoy themselves, notwithstanding
the disasters of the night. The French knights were
his guests, and sat at the royal table. They were
waited upon by the prince and his English knights, who
afterwards quietly got their own supper at another table.

The king had a kindly word for every one except
poor Sir Geoffrey, in whose teeth he could not help
flinging, how that he had thought to get Calais more
cheaply than it had been bought, and how he had been
disappointed of it. To Sir Eustace, who had fought
him more hardly, as he said, than any other knight
with whom he had ever contended, he gave a rare
circles of pearls, and as much praise as that gallant
gentleman could conveniently swallow. And so all
ended politely, if not agreeably to some of the parties

concerned.
TREACHERY AT CALAIS. 101

Sir Aymeric was of course displaced from the office
which he had so unworthily occupied ; the governor-
ship of Calais was bestowed upon Sir John Beauchamp,
and the king and prince then returned to England.

‘But it was not to rest that the warlike king, and
his son, growing up in his father’s warlike image, came

back again to their own island :—

‘“* Fair jewel, in bright silver set!”

Fighting, fighting, fighting was the order of the day five
centuries ago; and after having fought and beaten the
French, they had to fight and beat the Spaniards. To
do the former the Black Prince and his father had had
to go to France. The Spaniards came to them to fight,
and be beaten signally.

It was in 1350, the year but one after that false
Italian and scheming Frenchman had conspired to
cheat Edward out of his dearly-bought acquisition of
Calais, that the Spaniards thought proper to come and
try the metal of the English in their own seas. They
had better have stayed at home. We English consider
the seas circling our island as our very own, and on this
occasion we proved them so to the utter discomfiture
of the invaders. The Spaniards came, sailing con-
fidently enough, perhaps it should be said impertinently
enough, along the Sussex coast, until what came of it
was distinctly visible, the day being clear, from the
hilly sea-side margin of that county.
162 ‘TREACHERY AT CALAIS.

The Spaniards had forty large ships, laden not only

with merchandise from Flanders, but with more offen-
- sive stores in the shape of cannon and cross-bows,
with ammunition to match, for the benefit of the
English. Large stones and bars of beaten iron were
also among their missiles, for the purpose of being
pitched into vessels alongside to sink them. A simi-
lar plan is still occasionally adopted in modern naval
warfare ; cold shot, as it is called,—that is, balls heaved
overboard instead of being discharged from a gun,—
being thrown into small boats, with this design.

The king, being tired of the mischief done by the
Spaniards to his merchant vessels, had made up his
mind once for all to put an end to it. His design
was seconded with all their hearts by his lords and
other great men, so that a handsome fleet was readily
equipped, and kept cruising between Dover and Calais
to catch the Spaniards as soon as they made their ap-
pearance. ‘The Prince of Wales commanded one divi-
sion of the fleet. His young brother, the Earl of
Richmond, afterwards known as the celebrated John
of Gaunt, was also on board. Not that a lad of nine
years old could be of any use, but that he was such
a pet with his father that he would have him.

They had not to wait long for the Spaniards, and
when they met, the appetite for hard fighting was
equally good on both sides. The king immediately
ordered his ship to be laid alongside the first Spaniard
TREACHERY AT CALAIS. 103

that bore down upon them. The two came together
with a crash that broke the Spaniard’s mast, and canted
out of its upper works those who were stationed aloft
to hurl down the large stones and iron bars spoken
of ; while at the same time the force of the concussion
cracked the English vessel like a walnut, causing her
to leak till she was near sinking. But for all that the
two crews fought madly, and the English, leaving their
own sinking ship, scrambled on the deck of the Spa-
niard, whose crew they threw overboard,

The prince and his division had their hands equally
full elsewhere, for it was no ignoble foe to whom they
were opposed.
upon his vessel, and grappling it fast, knocked them
about to some purpose. The storm of cross-bow bolts,
stones, and lumps of iron raged there, as it had done -
upon the king’s ship, and as stoutly was it met; but
meanwhile, between the straining timbers water poured
in at such a rate that it was almost more than the
crew could do, by incessant baling, to keep themselves
afloat. They fought the more desperately for this, for
it was—Conquer, or be drowned! At last they were
rescued from inevitable destruction by the Duke of
Lancaster, who, seeing the pyince’s extreme danger,
made his vessel fast to the other side of the Spaniard,
so as to hug her between them, and effected a diversion
by the fierceness of this new attack. Two to one pre-

vailed ; the Spaniard struck his flag, and the prince,
104 TREACHERY AT CALAIS.

with his followers, climbing up her tall sides from their
own sinking tub of a boat, which instantly went down,
took possession, flinging the crew, to a man, into the
sea: perhaps by way of expressing thankfulness for
their own preservation! We don’t do such things
now-a-days. |

Throughout the whole fleet the battle raged horribly
for some hours, but victory eventually declared for the
English. Fourteen Spanish vessels were sunk or taken,
the rest sheered off, and then the battered English
flotilla came to anchor about dusk between Rye and
Winchelsea. ‘Thence the king and his two sons has-
tened to the monastery where Queen Philippa had
spent that anxious day, tormented by reports from her
household, who, posting themselves on the hills over-
looking the watery battle-field, conveyed to her most
alarming accounts of the number and size of the enemy’s
ships. She was greatly comforted by seeing the two
Edwards and her boy, who had “ sinelled powder” for
the first time, all safe and sound. And feasting and
merriment succeeded to the din of battle and the de-
spairing cry of drowning Spaniards.

In this same year occurred an entertaining instance
of the high esteem in which the King of England was
held by foreign powers. Two knights, an Italian, John
de Visconti, and a Frenchman, Sir Thomas dela Marche,
fighting under the banner of the Kings of Armenia and
Cyprus, against the Turks, had a violent quarrel. Vis-
TREACHERY AT CALAIS. 105

conti accused de la Marche of taking a bribe to betray
the Christian army into the hands of its infidel enemies.
De la Marche told him that he lied; and as after this
there was nothing for it but a duel between them, it
was decided by their friends that the two should come
over to England to refer the matter to Edward as the
most heroic and honourable monarch in Christendom,
and, after the manner of the times, to fight a solemn
duel before him, the result of which was supposed to
prove the guilt or innocence of the accused party.

Visconti and de la Marche accordingly sailed to
England, and presenting themselves before the king,
delivered to him letters (signed by their royal and
noble leaders in the crusade), in which was set forth
the ground of their dispute, and that further prayed
him to suffer the two knights to settle it by single
combat before him. After delivering these letters,
Visconti formally accused de la Marche of the de-
grading treason mentioned in them, and threw down
his gauntlet in token of willingness to prove his accu-
sation by force of arms. De la Marche as stoutly took
it up, to signify his readiness to prove his innocence
in the same manner.

The king accepted the office of umpire between them,
and appointed a day whereon, at Westminster, the
cause should be thus strangely tried before himself,
the prince, and the whole court. At the time fixed the
combatants made their appearance, mounted and in
106 TREACHERY AT CALAIS.

complete armour. The trumpets sounded for the
charge, and they spurred their coursers against each
other with all the vehemence of men who have given
and received the lie; but both spears being broken in
the first encounter without either of the knights being
unhorsed, they sprang from their saddles and renewed
the combat on foot with their swords. They struck
hard and long until these at last were useless, and then,
like a couple of tiger-cats, they flew at each other with
their hands and arms, tugging and wrestling, till down -
they both tumbled in the lists. They might have
kicked and struggled, and rolled over on the ground
long enough, cased as they were in steel, had not de
la Marche furnished himself with weapons that gave
him what to our notions, seems a shabby advantage
over his adversary. The joints of his gauntlets had
sharp spikes, called gadlings, fixed in them, and striking
- these between the bars of his antagonist’s helmet,
Visconti, who had trusted, like a gentleman, to the
ordinary weapons of such combats, was obliged to cry
out for mercy, and own himself vanquished. The king
upon this, throwing down his warder, proclaimed that
the fight was at an end, and as de la Marche was
victor, adjudged him guiltless of the crime laid to his
charge. |

The successful knight, who did not feel at all ashamed
of the manner in which he had gained his victory (for,
even in those chivalrous days, such things were per-
TREACHERY AT CALAIS. 107

mitted by the law of arms), then made a donation of
his vanquished foe, who was his prisoner, to the prince,
to be dealt with as he pleased. As we might expect,
the captive was instantly liberated, and after receiving
kindly courtesies from his owner, was permitted to
return home at his leisure.

De la Marche further, in all the pride of proved in-
nocence, dedicated his suit of mail (gadlings included,
we suppose) to St. George, the patron saint of England,
and devoutly hung it up in St. Paul’s Cathedral: for
the acceptance of that mythological personage.

His venturing to try this cause in presence of the
King of England, instead of settling it at home, is said
to have cost him his life after his return to his own
country. |

It was amid the rejoicings after Edward’s return
from Calais that our English Order of the Garter was
instituted by that monarch ; the Black Prince being one
of its first, and most illustrious knights.


~ THE PRINCE’S EXPEDITION FROM BORDEAU


~,


VIL

CT

fy @ LILIP of Valois died on the 22d of August

1350, a few days before Edward’s naval vic-

a
rd



tory over the Spaniards, and was succeeded
by his son John, a prince of many virtues, but not a
particularly clever king. The truce between the two
kingdoms still continued in name, but it was perpetually
broken in little paltry ways, or smart skirmishes. In
truth, the English and French did not love each other ;
at all events, not when the English were on French
ground; and they could not help flying at each other
whenever they came in contact. Perhaps, had each
stayed on his own side of the channel, they might have
been the best friends in the world. The English com-
piained that the French broke the truce, and doubt-
less the French bruught the same charge against the
English. Being ourselves English, we are inclined to
believe that we did keep it a little better than they.
Indeed historians tell us that at this period Edward was
sincerely desirous of being at peace with his neighbours.
112 THE PRINCE'S EXPEDITION FROM BORDEAUX.

But though Edward offered to resign his claim on
the French crown provided he might hold his paternal
possessions in that country free from the customary
homage and also retain his much prized conquest of
Calais, John resolutely declined to bargain with him
on those terms, |

In consequence of this, early in 1355, as the truce
was to expire that year, the English king made vigorous _
preparations for setting to work again so soon as his
engagement to be quiet had come to an end. His par-
liament, as usual, were liberal in finding him money
for so popular a war; and the Prince of Wales, now
in his twenty-fifth year, was sent into the west of Eng-
land to rouse the martial ardour of the gentry and com-
monalty of that part-of the country. This was done —
so effectually that, on the 10th of September, he
sailed from Plymouth with a fleet of three hun-
dred sail, having on board a gallant array of lords
and knights, with their numerous retainers,—a force
that, on his arrival at Bordeaux, was swelled by
the enthusiastic natives of the English province of
Guienne to the number of sixty thousand. Certainly

here were—
‘“‘ Enough to fight, enough to fall, and enough to run away.”
Hitherto the fortunes of the Black Prince and his

father have been so mingled that, following the one,
we have of necessity followed the other. Now the in-
THE PRINCE'S EXPEDITION FROM BORDEAUX. 113

dependent action of the prince began, and we shall see
what he could do alone.

The short autumn was spent in ravaging Languedoc,
—a southern province containing more than half-a-dozen
of the present departments of France,—burning, de-
stroying, and making great numbers of prisoners, not-
withstanding the presence in the province of a much
larger French army, who appeared to think it best to
let the prince have his own way. Five hundred vil-
lages are said to have been burned during this foray,
beside many fortified towns, before the prince thought
fit to retire to winter quarters. His father was busy
doing similar mischief in the north of France, where
King John was, like his army in the south, engaged
in watching him, till Edward found it expedient to
go home and defend his own territories against the
Scots.

The summer of the coming year, 1356, was destined
to see more important results, achieved too with a
far smaller force. On the 6th of July the prince left
Bordeaux, the seat of his government, with a small
army of two thousand men-at-arms and six thousand
archers, only a part of whom were English, and pene-
trating the centre of France in a north-easterly direc-
tion, ravaged the country in a most awful manner,
For some time, strangely enough, as before, there was
no one to oppose him, and plunder and destruction
went on at his pleasure. Whenever that desperate

(3) 8
114. THE PRINCE'S EXPEDITION FROM BORDEAUX.

band of English and Gascons entered a well-provisioned
town, there they took their ease for a few days, and
when they departed, that no one else might do the
same, they destroyed all the food and drink that was
left. O what a scene was there, over and over again,
of wheat and oats burning, wine casks dashed to pieces,
their contents streaming in all directions, and other
wreck and waste of God’s good gifts to his thankless
creatures! Of course the embarrassment of the enemy
is the object of all such dreadful work as this, which
still finds a place in our own wars, and perhaps it may
be needful to use even such means of preventing battles
having to be fought twice over. But there is something
very shocking in wilful destruction of the fruits of the
garth, produced as they are by long toil and patience of
_ the husbandman, with God’s blessing upon it, and whose
reproduction must require at least another twelve-
months’ toil and patience. Pulling down houses and |
castles seems a trifle in comparison. They are man’s
work. ‘The fruits of the earth are peculiarly God’s
work, for we might dig and delve till we were tired,
and yet never have a blade of corn did not He give it.

Vierzon, in the ancient province of Berri, now divided
into the departments of Cher and Indre, was the limit
of this terrible expedition ; for while stopping there to —
take breath, news was brought to the prince of the
French king’s being ready for him at Chartres, about
‘sixty miles to the north of him, with an army at least
THE PRINCES EXPEDITION FROM BORDEAUX. 115

six times the size of his own. Further advance was
impossible, as, in order to get at the French king (even
had it been discreet to fight him), the English would
have been obliged to cross the Loire, whose various
passes were so strongly guarded that it was out of the
question to think of forcing them. In such a state of
things, going back again was the only course to be
pursued. A council.of war held by the prince, decided
that this should be done; and, after wrecking and
ruining Vierzon—for which they had no further use—
the English and Gascons wheeled round, and set out -
on their return-march to Bordeaux.

The retreat—for so it must be called—was con-
ducted in so orderly a manner, that for six days a
French force of three hundred lances (that included a
much greater number of men) hung upon their heels,
without finding a chance of attacking them. This
was disappointing ; so, on drawing near the town of
Romorantin, the Frenchmen took a roundabout course
which placed them in advance of the English, for
whom they then waited in ambuscade, in a spot com-
manding a very narrow pass through which the latter
must proceed to reach the town. That very day, a
company of two hundred horsemen, under some of the
most distinguished lords and knights in the prince’s
army, had pushed forward before the main body,
and coming up to this pass, rode safely through it.
The moment that they had cleared it, however, the
116 THE PRINCE'S EXPEDITION FROM BORDEAUX.

French, who were well mounted, struck spurs into
their horses, and galloped after them, lance in hand.
The English, hearing the ring of the horses’ hoofs,
turned round and instantly halted to receive the foe.
They opened their ranks as they did so, and the
French, charging full speed, dashed through them,
overturning not more than five or six of the English.
As soon as that whirlwind of men and horses had passed
through, the ranks were closed up, and, charging in
their turn, the English did terrible damage to the
French rear. Down went knights, and squires, and
common men under the impetuous shock, and hand to
hand the two companies fought, till it was long uncer-
tain to which side victory would incline. At this
juncture the vanguard of the English army came in
sight, skirting a wood ; ‘and then the French retreated
full speed, closely followed by the English troop, who
pursued them with much slaughter into the town of
Romorantin. Of it they took easy ‘possession, while
the pursued got safe into the castle, where they shut
themselves up.

The prince himself arrived in time to find how brisk
an encounter his little squadron had sustained ; and
when he entered the town he found it crowded with
his own people, all anxious to attack the castle. He
at once sent Sir John Chandos to hold a parley with
those who commanded in it. These were a knight be-

longing to the neighbourhood, aud an ecclesiastic ; for
THE PRINCE'S EXPEDITION FROM BORDEAUX. 117

clergymen in those days were sometimes as clever in
military science as in theology. Sir John accordingly
advanced to the barriers, and making signs that he
wished to speak to some one, the lord of Boucicault,
and the hermit of Chaumont, came to meet him. Sir
John, with all courtesy, then delivered the prince’s mes-
sage, which was to require the surrender of the castle,
promising in that case, good terms to its garrison.

The lord of Boucicault and his clerical friend replied
to Sir John that they were not at all disposed to ac-
cept his master’s invitation to surrender; nay, that
they had made up their minds to fight it out to the
last, if he thought proper to attack them. This was
explicit, and Sir John Chandos and the Frenchmen
returned to their respective quarters, little the better
for their conference at the barriers.

The prince meant to have the castle, and hearing the
ill success of his envoy in persuading its defenders to
give it up, prepared to take it. Next morning a
general assault was made upon the fortress, the Eng-
lish archers, like riflemen, being stationed in the
ditches, and delivering their shafts with such precision
that scarce a man dared to show himself upon the
walls. Then, upon hurdles, and doors hastily torn
down, anything in short, that would float, others
eagerly crossed the ditch, and began undermining the
walls with pickaxes and mattocks, heedless of the huge
stones and pots of hot lime flung down upon them by
118 THE PRINCE'S EXPEDITION FROM BORDEAUX.

the besieged. In this manner for a whole day the
fierce work went on, without any decided advantage on
either side, until night for a while separated the com-
batants. The Enghsh then retired to snatch a few
hours’ sleep, which might reeruit them for a fresh
attack in the morning. This renewed attempt was
headed by the prince in person, and was as stoutly
made as it had been on the preceding day. Amid the
storm of missiles one of the prince’s squires was slain
by a great stone hurled from the castle, and this only
made him the more resolute to have the fortress, cost
what it might.

Some of the wiser heads among that soldierly set at
length began to think that lances and arrows had not
much chance against stone walls. So they got up
some of the clumsy engines of war used in those days;
(O, how different from our Armstrong guns!) and from
them, bullets, and, what was still worse, Greek fire—a
terrible composition that burned quite as well under
water as above it—was shot into the castle. It was
soon in a blaze; and, burned out, and smoked out, the
only chance for its defenders was to yield themselves —
to their assailants. They surrendered accordingly on
the 4th of September. Great numbers of the garrison
were mercifully set at lioerty by the prince, and after
having pulled down the castle, he pursued his route,
carrying with him a couple of lords and the hermit as

his prisoners,
THE PRINCE'S EXPEDITION FROM BORDEAUX. 113

The taking of the castle of Romorantin was a spirited
little affair, and doubtless put the English in heart for
what was to follow ; for Poitiers, whose name has for
five centuries past rung in our ears like the blast of a
trumpet, was now close at hand.

The prince (as he had sworn “by the soul of his
father,” his most solemn oath!) had taken this same
castle of Romorantin ; but he had lost some precious
time in doing so—precious, at least, if he desired to
keep out of the way of John of France, with his sixty
thousand Frenchmen. That vast army, composed of
the best blood and the best sinews in France, having
poured across the Loire at various points, was now
rapidly gaining upon him—a circumstance that the
increasing scarcity of forage led the prince to suspect ; |
and it was needful to decide upon some course of
action. Determined to know the worst, he sent out a
detachment of sixty men, well armed and mounted, to
look about for the enemy ; and these getting among
some heath and wood in the neighbourhood, came by
accident in sight of a small party of French who were
straggling along that way to reach their main body. |
There were about two hundred of them, and as soon
as their quick eyes had made out the English troop, |
they donned their helmets, unfurled their banners, and
setting lance in rest, spurred after them. The Eng-
lish, having the prince so close behind, had a mind to
let themselves be pursued, in order to draw the French
120 THE PRINCE'S EXPEDITION FROM BORDEAUX. -

into a trap. So they turned round, and made briskly
for the rugged road that led through the wood. The
invitation thus given was too tempting to be declined ;
and away after them clattered the whole squadron,
shouting and hallooing, to what they supposed the fly-
ing enemy, till all at once, in their headlong haste, they
found themselves right upon the prince’s own banner.
The skirmish that ensued was very hot and _ fierce.
Almost all the Frenchmen were either slain or taken
prisoners ; and from the latter the prince learned that
the king of France, with his whole army, was so near
at hand that it would be impossible to avoid a battle.

This was serious ; but the spirit of the lion-hearted
Plantagenet still glowed in the bosom of his descendant,
and suitable preparations for the inevitable contest were
immediately made. Stragglers were recalled, and com-
manding, on pain of death, that none should break the
ranks, whatever might be the temptation to a separate
tilting match with the enemy, the prince that Saturday
gave his men a seven hours’ march before halting in
the plains of Maupertuis, a few miles from Poitiers.
Here, in a strong position, surrounded by vineyards
and hedges—small, teezing, but very effectual obstacles
in the way of the enemy’s horse—he camped for the
night. )

The prince had no sooner halted his banners than he
detached a squadron of two hundred well-mounted
men-at-arms for the purpose of reconnoitring. This
THE PRINCE'S EXPEDITION FROM BORDEAUX. 121

party was under the command of several knights,
among whom was Sir John de Greilly, Captal de
Buche, one of the great fighting men of those days.
That title, Captal, was an old and very rare one of
southern France, and is equivalent to the one of count.
They soon came upon the rear of the French, whose
horsemen were swarming over the plain, and, making
a rush at them, knocked many out of their saddles,
besides taking some prisoners. This attack upon their
rear, threw the whole main body of the French into
commotion ; and news of it being carried to the king,.
he turned back from the city of Poitiers, which he was_
just entering, pitching his tents in the field instead.
And very late indeed was it, we are told, before those
startled Frenchmen got to bed that night !

The return of the captal and his companions made
the prince fully aware of the danger of his situation,
and the impossibility of escape. “God help us,” was
his exclamation after hearing their report, “then we
must see how we may best fight thein !”

The prince, however, knew that God helps those who
help themse'ves, and he at once set about strengthening
and fortifying the well-chosen position which he had
taken up. His troops were posted, as has been said,
on a little sloping plain surrounded by woods and vine-
yards, hedges and ditches, and open to attack in front
only. To reach them even that way the assailants must
approach through a narrow lane, in which four horse-
122 THE PRINCE'S EXPEDITION FROM BORDEAUX.

men could scarcely ride abreast. The hedges on each
side this lane were now lined with archers, so that any
troops entering would be placed between a cross fire of
arrows—worse one thinks than a cross fire of rifles, for
each of those keen arrow-heads had a yard-long tail
attached to it, which must have added horribly to the
pain and embarrassment of the poor wretches whose
bodies were pierced by them. At the end of the lane,
where it opened on the ground occupied by the English
army,—if such a name as army may be given to a small
body of eight or ten thousand men,—another company
of archers was drawn up, and these were backed by
dismounted men-at-arms. Behind these the remainder
of this terribly inadequate force was disposed in three
lines; the Earl of Warwic commanding the van, the
prince himself heading the main body, while the Earls
of Suffolk and Salisbury took care of the rear. A
~ chosen body of troops, led by the captal, was sent, under
cover of night, round a hill that stood to the prince’s
right in order to flank the enemy in case of an engage-
ment. Such entrenchments as the nature of the ground
permitted were rapidly thrown up: and thus he-pre-
pared to receive the French in the renowned battle of
Poitiers. | |

The King of France had been no less busy ordering
his huge battalions for the coming struggle. The Eng-
lish were few in number, but past experience told him
they were not to be despised on that account.
THE PRINCE'S EXPEDITION FROM BORDEAUX. 123

Early next morning,—it was Sunday,—after prayers
in his tent, and receiving the Holy Communion with his
four sons, he also prepared for the battle by arranging
his army according to what we may call the “rule of
three,’—that is, in three divisions, like those of the
prince except in size, for each one of these contained
twice as many men as were in the whole English army.
ihe van was under the leadership of his brother, Philip
of Orleans, the main body was commanded by the
Dauphin, his eldest son, with whom were his brothers
Lewis and John, and some renowned commanders to
take care of the boys! The rear was under the king
himself; his youngest son Philip, a boy of fourteen,
being with his father. It was a fine sight, whether
under the rich rays of a September sun, or thrown into
dead dense masses bya lowering sky,—historians do not
tell us what kind of day it was,—and the innumerable
banners and pennons that flickered over the heads of
this mailed host proclaimed the presence of the noblest
chivalry of France. |

While the army was being formed in order of battle,
the king sent Sir Eustace de Ribeaumont,—he who had
received the pearls from our Edward as the prize of
superior valour,—and some other knights to examine
how the English had disposed themselves. During
their absence on this errand, he addressed his army,
reminding them how they had been in the habit of
boasting what they would do to the English if they
124 THE PRINCE'S EXPEDITION FROM BORDEAUX.

could only get at them, and that now, with the enemy
in sight, was the time to make good their vaunts. This
address was cheerfully responded to, thousands vowing
that, with God’s help, they would that day show them-
selves true men. At that moment up came Sir Eustace
and his companions, who, after having informed the
king of the numbers of the English army, and the ex-
cellent manner in which it was drawn up, advised that
a body of three hundred of their own best armed and
mounted gentlemen should first force the passage of
the lane, and beat down the archers at the other end
of it, and then that the battle should take place on foot ;
the entrenchments of the English and their natural
fortifications of hedge and ditch being such as to im-
pede the action of cavalry except in this first instance
of clearing the way.

This advice was acted upon. The army was formed
as for battle, each lord under his own banner ; and ali
alike, knights, squires, and men-at-arms dismounted.
They were ordered to take off their spurs, which might
have tripped them up had they been left on their heels ;
and to shorten their lances to five feet that they might
be the more manageable in close combat.

The two armies were on the point of engaging when
a peace-naker appeared on the scene. The Pope had
more than once endeavoured to settle the quarrel be-
tween the kings of France and England, and now by
his mission, one of his cardinals, de Perigord, made a
THE PRINCE'S EXPEDITION FROM BORDEAUX. 128

fresh attempt to prevent bloodshed. Coming full gal-
lop to the king, as he stood there armed from head to
foot, he entreated him, for the love of God, to stay a
moment and suffer him to go to the prince with such
terms as might induce a brave man to retire from what
the French deemed a hopeless contest.

The king was impatient to begin the battle, but he
could not for very shame refuse this request of the
cardinal, who forthwith rode off to the English camp.
There, on foot, in the midst of a vineyard, he found tlie
prince, who most courteously received his visitor. The
cardinal entreated that he might be permitted to make
peace between him and King John, and the prince re-
plied that he would willingly listen to any reasonable
terms, such as would neither touch his own honour nor
injure his army. For, with seven to one against him,
he thought it as much the part of a good general to
treat with the enemy as to lead on his slender force to
a heroic but most probably fatal contest. Rashness
and bravery are two different things, though they are
sometimes confounded. ‘The prince was brave ; hence,
seeing himself so vastly outnumbered by an army in-
cluding all the greatest warriors of France, he was ready
to treat on honourable terms. Had he been rash, he
would have insisted upon fighting without more ado.
Finding the prince thus disposed to an accommodation,
if it could be brought about, the cardinal ambled back
again, and prevailed upon the king to agree to a truce
126 THE PRINCE'S EXPEDITION FROM BORDEAUX.

till next morning in order to give opportunity for ar-
ranging a cessation of hostilities. He had some diffi-
culty in persuading him to this, for, in truth, John
wished the cardinal and his peace-making far enough!

All that Sunday did the good cardinal hurry back-
wards and forwards between the French and English
armies, vainly urging these two princes to put fighting
out of their heads. All his pains were fruitless, and
that they. were so was entirely the fault of King John,
who fancied the English were so completely in his
power that he might do as he pleased with them. ‘The
prince was so fully aware of his hazardous position that
he even offered to give up all his conquests in the re-
cent expedition, the castle of Romorantin included, to
set free the whole of his prisoners without ransom, and
further, to engage not to take up arms against ['rance
for the next seven years. But when John, in addition,
insisted that the prince and one hundred of his knights —
should yield themselves his prisoners, else he would
ficht, the thing became preposterous ; and indignantly
declaring that his countrymen should never have to
pay his ransom, the prince threw the whole negotiation
overboard, and prepared to defend himself as he best
could.

It was sad folly on John’s part, as we shall see. He
was just like the boy with the filberts; grasping too
much, he lost all.

During the interval occupied by the cardinal’s amiable
THE PRINCE'S EXPEDITION FROM BORDEAUX. 127

aad 4,

but unavailing exertions, various knights from the
two armies rode out to have a look at the enemy, and
criticize his plan of operations. Chandos on the one
side and de Clermont on the other were among these,
and meeting in the plain, a very amusing but very
brisk little quarrel sprang up between them. As these
two redoubted warriors drew near each other, they per-
ceived, to their mutual disgust, that each liad precisely
the same coat of arms embroidered on his surcoat.
Now, in those days, for one gentleman to assume the
armorial bearings of another was considered about as
deadly an offence as could possibly be given: accord-
ingly de Clermont called out fiercely,—“ Chandos,
since how long is it that you have taken upon you to
wear my arms?” With equal fierceness Chandos re-
torted that it was de Clermont who had stolen his.
This was met by a flat denial from the Frenchman;
with the addition that, but for the truce existing be-
tween them, he would soon show, by force of arms,
who had the best right to the disputed coat. Chandos,
in return, angrily bade him prove that next day in the
field; and when the Lord de Clermont had relieved
his feelings by a sneer at the English, who, being un-
able to invent anything new, were always ready enough
to help themselves to the “ handsome” devices of their

neighbours, the two knights parted in high dudgeon.
s
(8) .

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Be iS ik Gos
Pe? x ery ae

SA) a
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mane”, | BEES >




VILL.
Che Dattle of Porters.

peserd iE eventful morning came,—Monday, the 19th
Sees} of September 1356,—that was to decide
whether the English were to be swept out



of France, or King John taught a lesson of moderation
in dealing with a valiant enemy.

The prince, before engaging, briefly addressed his
brave fellows, reminding them that though they were
but a small company, yet victory depended, not upon
numbers, but upon the will of God, Who gave it as He
pleased. He therefore besought them, for God’s sake,
to do their best that day, as he, their prince, with God’s
help, would also do. And few as they were, that
‘small company” were in high spirits for the coming
battle.

The specially well-armed and well-mounted body of
French gentlemen, of whom we have already heard,
began the attack by endeavouring to force the passage
of the lane leading to the ground occupied by the
English army. Their gallant steeds stalked statelily
132 THE BATTLE OF POITIERS.

between the two hedges ; but once fairly in, from both
sides of the way came a shower of arrows, directed
chiefly at the horses, that set them a-plunging and
capering till their riders found it impossible to control
them. Smarting with wounds, the frightened animals
at last turned right round, jerking the heavily-armed
knights and squires out of their saddles in all direc-
tions; those who were thrown being speedily trampled
under foot. Some few spurred their horses over or
through the hedges, and so came upon the archers
posted at the end of the lane, by whom they were soon
cut to pieces. Seeing the discomfiture of their cavalry,
a large body of dismounted men-at-arms, under the two
French marshals, de Clermont and d’Andreghen, threw
themselves into that deadly lane, and for awhile pressed
forward desperately. But they fell thick and fast
under the snow-like storm of arrows (for the archers
of Poitiers were those of Cregy) that flanked them, and
such as struggled through, spent and disordered, were
an easy prey to the English men-at-arms. One of
their leaders was slain, d’Andreghen was taken prisoner,
and finally the greater part were fairly beaten back, so
that, pressing upon the troops behind, they not only
impeded their advance, but frightened many so terribly
that they ran off to their horses, and rode away as fast
as they could,

Galled by a continued and thick flight of arrows, the
entire first battalion of the French gave way. At this
THE BATTLE OF POITIERS. 133

juncture the captal and his horse came thundering
round the hill, and fell upon the division of the Dauphin ;
which, already in confusion through the rout of those
in front, was thrown into utter disorder by this im-
petuous attack of cavalry, supported by archers, who,
as an old chronicler tells us, ‘ shot so thickly and well,
that the French did not know which way to turn them-
selves to avoid their arrows.” Seeing the battalion
waver, the English, who had hitherto fought on foot,
sprang on their horses, which were ready at hand, and
_ led by the prince, dashed in among the Frenchmen
with loud shouts of “ St. George for Guienne.” “ Mont-
joye St. Denis,” ‘was the answering cry, as the pon-
derous mailed men and horses came clashing against
each other, and were at once plunged into a very whirl-
wind of battle. The life-blood of many a lord, and
knight, and squire that day streamed over the gay
armour whose steel-plates were riven by stout English
lance-thrusts, or those intolerable arrows. The French-
men were brave, no one doubted that, but somehow
panic and fright got among them, and once in, there
was no getting rid of it. The noble lords to whom
King John had committed the guardianship of his
three eldest sons, by way of taking care of the youths,
discreetly ran away with them; and in their company
galloped off eight hundred lances,—that is, as many
knights, with their followers,—for whom the distant sight
of the combat had been more than enough. Pell-mell,
134 THE BATTLE OF POITIERS.

hither and thither rolled and raged that fearful battle,
some flying, some fighting fiercely, but with horrible
loss on the part of the French. |

The third division, under the king, stood its ground
better than the other two; and had all fought as did
John himself, the defeat which his sixty thousand
suffered from eight thousand would have been less
crushing. But his personal valour, together with that
of the spirited boy at his side and a devoted few who
had gathered round them, could not retrieve the fortunes
of that fatal day. Three hours’ bloody work swept |
the French host off their own plains, leaving the Black
Prince and his heroic few, undisputed masters of the
field. Such a defeat seems inexplicable : ‘and yet so it
was; showing that victory, as the prince had said, is
not a mere matter of numbers, but that it falls to those
to whom God wills to give it.

It was indeed He who gave it to this handful of
English and Gascons, who, the very day before, had
been insultingly required to deliver up their best and
bravest leaders as prisoners to the now vanquished
enemy.

The battle seemed already at an end, and yet John,
spite of wounds, and having lost his helmet in the
struggle, was still dealing around him heavy strokes
with his battle-axe, in a sort of despairing attempt to
cut his way out of the throng of English and Gascons
that were pressing around him, with loud shouts to
THE BATTLE OF POITIERS. 135

surrender “or he was a dead man.” There was no
escape for him; and pulled to and fro by his eager
captors, he anxiously inquired for the Prince of Wales,
that he might give himself up to one of equal rank
with himself. But the prince was in a distant part of
the field; and the king was at length compelled to
throw.down his gauntlet, in token of surrender, to Sir
Denis de Morbeque, a French knight in the English
service, who had shouldered his way through the crowd
to get at him.

While this extraordinary scramble for a king was
taking place, the prince, worn out with heat and fatigue,
was implored by Sir John Chandos (who had never
left him the whole day, and whose practised eye saw
that the day was their own), to take breath and rest
awhile, now that his work was done. That experienced
commander advised that the prince’s banner should be
displayed on a little eminence at hand, to serve as a
rallying point for such of his forces as had been car-
ried away in their wild pursuit of the flying enemy,
who were slaughtered up to the very gates of-Poitiers,
This was done, and a tent being pitched, the prince
took off his helmet to cool himself, and pour some
wine down his parched throat, while trumpets and other
instruments of music rang out joyous notes of victory.
The number of knights around him was continually
- Increasing, as one and another returned from the chase
bringing his prisoners with him. From some of these
136 THE BATTLE OF POITIERS.

the prince inquired whether anything was known of
King John; and as none knew what had become of
him, save that he was certainly killed or taken, as he
had never quitted the field, the Earl of Warwic and
_ Lord Cobham were sent to seek him out.

They immediately mounted their horses, and making
for a small hillock, where they might overlook the
whole plain, saw a crowd of dismounted men-at-arms
coming slowly along, and evidently in great commotion.
The unfortunate King of France and his son were
the centre of this unruly group, and in no little danger-
from the over-anxiety of each one to make good his
claim to so distinguished a prisoner. They pushed
and pulled him about, bawling, “It was I that took
-him;” “No, no, it was I;” and some were ready
brutally to settle the dispute, by killing the subject of
their rude contention. The king entreated them to
take him and his son courteously to the prince their
master; assuring his rival captors that there was no
need to quarrel about him, seeing he was able to
enrich them all by his ransom. But they gave no
heed to his remonstrances; the fellows could not take
a step without breaking out into new brawls about
their prisoners; and it was well that at this juncture
Warwic and Cobham caught sight of the party. Con-
jecturing from their violent excitement, that they had
got some one of importance, the two lords spurred
among them in a moment, and asking what was the
THE BATTLE OF POITIERS. 137

matter, were told that they had captured the King of
France, and that more than ten knights and squires
were contending for him, each one protesting that the
king was his prisoner.

My Lords Warwic and Cobham settled that question
upon the spot. Pushing through the crowd, whom
they unceremoniously drove right and left, they com-
manded every one to keep his distance, on pain of
death ; then, with all reverence, taking possession of
the king’s person themselves, they respectfully con-
ducted him to the prince. .

During their absence on this errand, the prince’s
next inquiry was about the Lord James Audley ; one
of the most renowned of his knights, who, before the
battle began had earnestly requested that he might be
foremost in the attack, in compliance with a certain
vow which he had made; a thing not unusual in those
strange old days. His petition being granted, he
placed himself with his four squires, far in advance of
the first division of the army, to be ready for the
enemy. The names of these squires have come down
to us, and they deserve a place in our record. They
were Dutton of Dutton, Delves of Doddington, Fowle-
hurst of Crew, Hawkstone of Wainehill; perhaps even
after the lapse of five hundred years they may still
have descendants,—in blood, if not in name. ‘This
little company did wonders that day, beating down all
befure them, or chasing them off the field, without
138 THE BATTLE OF POITIERS.

stopping to make prisoners. Glory, which in this
instance was self-defence, was their object; not gain,
from large ransoms. Those who give hard blows, how-
ever, may chance to receive them, and the gallant
Audley’s headlong career at Poitiers was ended by
wounds innumerable, which, before the close of the
_ engagement, compelled his squires to drag him aside,
strip off his armour, and be his surgeons to the best
of their ability. All this was told the prince, and
also that the wounded man was lying in a litter (a sort
of hand carriage), hard by.

The good-natured prince, grieved to hear of the
brave knight’s condition, sent some of his people to
see whether Audley were in a fit state to be brought
to him ; as, if he were not, he would himself go to him.
A pleased and proud man was the bruised, battered,
and slashed Lord James when this condescending
message was brought him, and calling eight of his
servants he bade them carry him, litter and all, to his
master. The prince leaning over the wounded man,
embraced and thanked him for his services, commend-
ing his prowess in terms of such princely graciousness
as were more than a balm for the knight’s aching
wounds. Nor did he confine himself to praise alone ;
on the spot he conferred upon his faithful friend a
yearly pension of near £4000, of our present money ;
a royal gift which the Lord James (after gratefully
acknowledging it to the donor), subsequently bestowed
THE BATTLE OF POITIERS. 139

upon his four squires, whose good swords had that day
helped him to win so much glory. |

There was a strange simplicity about the fighting
men of those days. ‘To ensure the validity of this gift
to his squires, the Lord Audley summoned several
English nobles, relations of his, to his tent; and in their
presence, whom he called upon to bear witness to it,
formally made the donation to the four. These stern
warriors were deeply moved by his generosity, and as
they glanced one at another, there broke from them
the response: “May the Lord God remember you for
this! We will bear witness to this gift whensoever
and wheresoever we may be called upon to do so.”
The prince hearing afterwards that his grant had been
handed over to my lord’s squires, was so far from being
offended, that he replaced the pension by one of much
larger amount.

Just as the wounded knight was being borne away,
Warwic and Cobham were seen approaching with their
royal prisoner. The prince went forth to meet them;
and when they met, bending as reverentially before
John, as though the king were still in the height of
his power, he conducted him to his tent, with such
soothing, kindly words as only the heart of a thorough
gentleman could, at such a moment, have prompted.
With his own hands he presented refreshments to the
discomfited and toil-worn monarch, in so amiable a
manner as could not but take off the sharp edge of his
140 THE BATTLE OF POITIERS.

sore calamity. There was no triumphing over a fallen
foe, nor even wounding slight, of one who not twenty-
four hours before had proposed such insolent terms to
those whom he reckoned at his mercy, but in whose
_hands a sudden reverse had now placed his own fate.
Had there been either the one or the other, scarce any
could have wondered at it. But the young conqueror
was master of hamself; a mastery which some do not
attain throughout a long life; and spite of temptations
to the contrary, on this occasion fully carried out the
golden rule: to do to others, as we would that they
should do to us. John was touched by a generosity
which he well knew how to appreciate; though, in the
hour of his own fancied superiority, he had suffered
himself to be carried away by feelings of an opposite
nature; and in few, kingly, heartfelt words, paid to
the prince’s goodness and valour, the tribute they so
well deserved. }

There was now leisure to examine into the results of
this famous Battle of Poitiers. It was crushing to the
French. The chief of their nobility and knighthood
were either slain or taken prisoners, thousands were
lying dead on the plains of Maupertuis, while to crown
their misfortunes their king himself, with his son, was
in the hands of the victors. To the English it was
deliverance from destruction, cheaply obtained, for, as
before, their loss was inconsiderable. The prisoners
‘that they had made outnumbered their own army two-
THE BATTLE OF POITIERS. — 141

fold; so that, ere the day was over, the work of ransom
went briskly on. Both English and Gascons were very
liberal in this matter, no larger ransom than a man
could conveniently pay being exacted from him, and
many were at once liberated on their own promise to
bring the amount agreed upon to Bordeaux the next
Christmas. They could afford to be liberal, seeing their
prisoners were at the rate of two to a man. And
further, those vain-glorious French, taking for granted
they were going to drive the English—to Jericho! had
come to the field as splendidly armed as though it
were to a tournament, and furnished as if for a festival.
So that, beside ransom money, vast quantities of
jewels, gold and silver plate, and rich holiday vest:
ments, fell to the share of their fortunate conquerors.
But there was more than liberality shown to the
prisoners on this occasion; there was kindly courtesy
also, for the humane conduct of the prince had its
influence upon every one under his command. Doubt-
less also their own unlooked for escape from what
appeared inevitable ruin, had had its effects in soften-
ing their hearts.

Sir Denis de Morbeque, though he took a king, was
in danger of coming worse off than any of his compan-
ions, who had picked up mere ignoble prey; for the
ransom of a king, in those days, was fixed at so large
a sum, that, according to the law of arms, no private
knight might receive it. None but the rival sovereign
142 THE BATTLE OF POITIERS.

was allowed to pocket such illimitable cash. Sir
Denis, however, had great glory thereby, and in due
time a very satisfactory gift from his own prince, to
make amends for the ransom he had lost.

It was late in the evening before all the English
were collected in camp again, after their pursuit of the
,enemy. Business being then ended, there was leisure
for refreshment, and the duties of hospitality. The
prince had a magnificent supper prepared in his own
tent, for the king, his son, and such of his nobles as
were of sufficient rank to partake in the entertainment.
The said supper was furnished out of the captured French
baggage-waggons; for, in addition to danger from the
enemy, the English had, the day before, been in some
risk of starving; food being so scarce in the camp,
that many of the poor fellows had scarcely tasted bread
for three days. No fear now of an empty larder! The
king and his son, with half-a-dozen of his very greatest
lords, were placed in state at a table a little higher
than those at which the rest of the captive company
were seated; and upon him the prince himself waited,
with all ccurtesy. His prisoner-guest would fain have
urged him to take a seat at his own table; but the
prince modestly declined doing so, saying he was not
worthy of the honour, of sitting down in the presence
of so puissant a monarch, and so valiant a knight, ag
John had that day shown himself. He then prayed
the king not to make the worse cheer because God
THE BATTLE OF POITIERS. 143

had withheld victory from his arms ; assuring him that
from the King of England he would receive such
honourable and friendly treatment, as would in all
likelihood restore peace between the two kingdoms.
And he delicately commended the bravery of the
French king, while he endeavoured to console him
under his misfortunes. .

John was moved to tears by the generosity of his
conqueror, and a murmur of applause arose from the
French nobles, who declared, that if God gave him life,
the young Englishman would be one of the most gallant
princes in Christendom.

The next morning, after public thanksgivings for
this signal victory, the camp was broken up, and the
army, laden with spoil, and carrying with it the royal
prisoners, resumed its march to Bordeaux. An ad-
vanced guard of five hundred men-at-arms preceded it
to see that the way was clear, but such was the con-
-sternation spread throughout the country that none
dared to oppose them. Their progress was slow, owing
to the vast quantity of heavy baggage which they
carried in their train ; but Bordeaux was at last gained,
and thrown into a tumult of joy by the prince’s good
fortune. The royal party took up their abode in the
monastery of St. Andrew—the king and his son occu-
pying one side, aud the prince the other. There the
winter was spent in much feasting and merriment; the
English and Gascons throwing about them in all direc-
144 THE BATTLE OF POITIERS.

tions the gold they had so abundantly won at the
battle of Poitiers.

The rejoicings in England were no less vivid, for in-
deed the prince’s victory had laid the kingdom of
France almost at Edward’s feet. Solemn thanksgivings
in churches, with bonfires in every town and village,
testified the public joy; and such knights and squires
as had been in that famous battle, held up their heads
higher than ever when they returned to their native
country.

Karly in the spring of 1357, the prince prepared to
leave Bordeaux for England, carrying King John and
his son with him. But his Gascon lords were very un-
willing to lose sight of so illustrious a prisoner, whom
they had, as they said, helped to take; and they told
the prince, quietly, that it was not their intention to
permit his being taken away from them. The king—
they thanked Heaven for it—was in excellent health,
the city of Bordeaux was quite good enough for a royal
residence, they felt themselves perfectly equal to keep-
ing guard over him, and therefore it was their will that
he should remain where he was. Things were taking
an awkward turn now. ‘Two or three dozen great
barons. making up their minds that they would not
allow a certain thing to be done, was enough in the
middle ages to make even a monarch hesitate. Pos-
sibly they might do now ; but in those days they were
apt to take rougher ways of carrying their point, |
THE BATTLE OF POITIERS. 145

The prince had already sought to propitiate these
gentlemen by deputing them to high and honourable
offices in the province during his absence, as well as by
promising them “ great rewards and profits,” which, as
a malicious old writer remarks, “are all that a Gascon

?

loves or desires ;” and yet, like Oliver, they were
“asking for more!” In reply, he politely admitted
the cogency of what they had said, but added that the
king his father had a strong desire to see so notable a
prize of the late battle, and indeed to have possession
of it himself! And again he thanked them for their
loyal service, and promised them suitable rewards.

Neither flattery nor promises moved the sturdy
Gascons from their purpose. At length Chandos and
Cobham, who, being better acquainted with them than
the prince was, knew at what these lords were aiming,
whispered to him, “Sir, sir, offer them a handsome sum
of money, and you will soon find they will do whatever
you please.” The prince took the hint, and proposed
sixty thousand florins as the price of their submission.
This was rejected; and as he perceived it was simply
because he had not bid high enough, he raised his offer
to one hundred thousand, which they thought proper
to accept ; giving him, in return, permission to set out
on his travels as soon as he liked !

This important point settled, the prince and his
prisoners took ship on the 24th of April. The fleet
that conveyed them was large and strongly armed, for

(3) 10
146 THE BATTLE OF POITIERS.

there were alarming reports of those well-beaten French
having raised two large armies, and posted them so
that they might readily fall upon the English as they
sailed up the channel, and rescue the king. They
proved mere reports, the only dangers of the voyage
were those from weather, and all disembarked, safe and
sound, at Sandwich on the 5th of May. Two days’
rest was enjoyed here, and then the calvaleade took its
slow way, by Canterbury, Rochester, and Dartford, to
London, where, by the king’s command, extraordinary
preparations had been made to give the prince and his
illustrious captives a fitting reception.

Never surely, either before or since, was Lord Mayor
in such a turmoil and worry of anxiety as was Sir
Henry Picard, who at that time filled an office of rather
more importance than it is in our days. A Lord
Mayor, five centuries ago, was somebody ; not as now,
when he “ stands, the shadow of a name ;” and Sir
Henry had to pay the penalty of greatness. His cares
and fatigues in doing the honours of his own domain,
were, however, well rewarded by the success of the
pageant got up by this zealous dignitary to dazzle the
eyes of the fallen monarch, while it exhibited the
wealth and greatness of his captors. ‘At Southwark
the prince and his train were met by a thousand
citizens on horseback, dressed in their best, and by
them conducted over London Bridge -into the city ;
| John, robed as became a king, mounted on a mavuifi-
THE BATTLE OF POITIERS. 147

cent white charger, while the prince, plainly apparelled,
ambled by his side, on a small black horse. On enter-
ing the city the throng of sight-loving Englishmen was
so great that they had some ado to make their way
through it; leaving them ample time to admire all the
fine things brought out by the inhabitants to do their
visitors and themselves honour—houses, shops, win-
dows, balconies, on éither side were all a-glitter, not
only with plate and tapestry, but with the sterner wares
of arms and armour. Shields, helmets, corslets, breast
and back pieces, coats of mail, gauntlets, swords, spears,
bows and arrows, battle axes, and costly horse furniture
of polished mail, were displayed in picturesque pro-
fusion. And seven mortal hours were consumed in
passing along these decorated streets before the long
procession reached its journey’s end. As it approached
Westminster a train of clergy, in the sumptuous robes
of that period, came forth to meet their prince, chant--
ing as they walked the solemn melodies of the Church.
And thus, atcompanied by civil, military, and ecclesi-
astical dignities, the heir of England entered West-
minster Hall, where his father, on a throne of state,
awaited him. Edward rose to receive his royal visitor
as though that reluctant visitor had been a friend
rather than a captive; and, after courteously saluting
him, embraced and thanked his son amid the thunder-
ing acclamations of the vast concourse around.

King John was that night royally entertained by his
148 THE BATTLE OF POITIERS.

brother of England, and then had the palace of the
Savoy, a noble building belonging to the Duke of Lan-
caster, assigned to him and his son for their residence.
The king and queen frequently visited them. It was
not long afterwards exchanged for Edward’s own
palace of Windsor Castle, where John and Philip went
about hunting, and hawking, and diverting themselves
according to their tastes, very much as though they
had been at home!







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Renta 4H kingdom of France was reduced to a most
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Poitiers. Its monarch a captive, its noblest
and most valiant slain,—all its affairs fell into the
utmost confusion. The dauphin, a youth of eighteen,
assumed the government, but he was too young to have
much authority in such troublous times. Things were
quite above his hand. So the chief of the remaining
nobles, the clergy, and the citizens, met together at
Paris, and decided that thirty-six ‘of their number,
chosen equally from each class, should govern the
country in the absence of its king. But this govern-
ment also was one that had little weight; and spite of
it, disorder, misery, and bloodshed, filled the land.

In one department of France, the peasantry rose in
insurrection with the avowed intention of killing all
the nobility and gentry, whose use in the kingdom they
professed themselves incapable of seeing. Having

selected for their chief one whose pre-eminence in bad-
152 THE ENGLISH AGAIN INVADE FRANCE.

ness had pointed him out for that distinction, they
dubbed him Jacques Bon-homme, (a name whence this
insurrection takes its title of the Jacquerie), and under
his leadership they outrageously attacked the upper
classes, purposing to exterminate every man of them.
If it had been men alone upon whom they wreaked
their vengeance, it would not have been so bad; but
these wretches also murdered women and children with
incredible ferocity. The horrid cruelties of which they
were guilty make one’s blood cold but tg read of; and
people fled before them in all directions, recklessly ab-
andoning their fine houses and castles, with the rich
and costly furniture of them, to the fury of the rebels ;
too happy if themselves, with their wives and children,
might escape with their lives: better be houseless and
homeless than torn to pieces by such demons as were
the followers of Jacques Bon-homme. Among those
who thus fled for their lives, were the Duchess of Nor-
mandy, and more than three hundred cther ladies, who
shut themselves up in the city of Meaux, under the
protection of the Duke of Orleans. They fancied they
should be safe here, but would have found themselves
wofully mistaken had it not been for the chivalrous
gallantry of an enemy—the Captal de Buch, and his
cousin, the Count of Foix—who, hearing of their dis-
tress, (for the people of Meaux had opened their gates
to the rebels), hastened to the rescue.

The captal and his friend were only just in time—
THE ENGLISH AGAIN INVADE FRANCE. 153

nine thousand of the insurrectionary mob had marched
upon the town, which they were entering, when these
two good knights, with a slender retinue of horsemen,
came upon them. They met in the market-place; and
fearful, as well as deserved, was the execution done by
sword and lance on the ill-armed, ferocious throng of
peasants. They had shown no mercy, and assuredly
now they found none. Dead and dying, they were
flung into the river by wholesale, while those who fled
were pursued and struck down until seven thousand of
the nine were destroyed. This terrible vengeance put
an end to the Jacquerie.

The Parisians, under their provost, had also taken
advantage of the distresses of their country to get up a
revolt in the capital itself, and no little trouble did its
suppression cost the unfortunate Duke of Normandy.

All these things made the French still more desirous
that peace should be concluded between them and the
English.

A truce (that is, a cessation of hostilities) for three
years had indeed been agreed upon during the time
King John was at Bordeaux ; and that gave both parties
time to think over the matter, and consider whether
they might not do better than continue working each
other all the mischief in their power. King John,
however, had been in captivity nearly three years be-
fore a treaty of peace could be arranged. At length, a
few months before the expiration of the truce, he and
154 THE ENGLISH AGAIN INVADE FRANCE.

the Lord James de Bourbon, one of his nobles, together
with King Edward and the Prince of Wales, proposed
certain terms of peace, including three hundred thou-
sand crowns for the king’s ransom, and one million for
that of his nobles who were prisoners with him ; Ed-
ward, on his part, engaging in return to renounce his
claim to the French crown. ‘This treaty was sent over
to the dauphin for his acceptance; but, acting by the
advice of his council, that young prince rejected it.
They said the terms were too hard, and that, rather
than submit to them, they would not only endure the
distress in which they then were, but leave their king
to his fate.

King John was not particularly pleased with this
answer. In it he thought he detected the influence of
his old enemy the King of Navarre, whom the dauphin,
in his distraction, had taken into his confidence, and.
whom John knew to be capable of deceiving forty such
innocent youths as his eldest son. As for King Ed-
ward,—why, as the French declined the peace he offered
them, he at once prepared to go to war with them more
formidably than ever.

Meanwhile, that pleasure might go hand in hand
with business, he entertained himself and his royal
prisoners—for King David of Scotland shared the
captivity of his brother of France—with the diversion,
best loved in those days by knights and gentlemen, of a
tilting match. Smithfield, a uame associated in our
THE ENGLISH AGAIN INVADE FRANCE. 155

ears alone with sheep and oxen, was one of the fashion-
able, places for amusement of the sort; and, to give
the greater zest to this particular display of arms, the
king caused it to be published that the Lord Mayor,
the two sheriffs, and the aldermen, would keep the
field against all comers. Even in‘ those days, when
Lord Mayors and aldermen were much more important
personages than they are now, this announcement pro-
duced no little surprise and speculation. But the fact —
was that the king, with his four sons and nineteen of
his nobles, played mayor and corporation on the occa-
sion ; and bearing the city arms on their shields and
surcoats, unhorsed or unhelmed, or otherwise damaged
their apparently more aristocratic opponents. Great
was the delight of the kings, and lords and ladies, who
looked on during these three days’ sport. But greater
still, if possible, was the delight of the good citizens at
the royal and princely condescension thus exhibited in
personating their more plebeian selves. |
The termination of the truce, so eagerly looked for,
at length arrived, and King Edward summoned his
barons, and knights, and men of war of all kinds, to
attend him on his new expedition for the subjugation
of France. So large and well ordered an army never
before left the shores of England. Such was the
eagerness of all to engage in this fresh attempt to crush
their huge neighbour, that, as an old writer tells us,
“There was not knight, squire, nor man of honour,
156 THE ENGLISH AGAIN INVADE FRANCE.

from the age of twenty to sixty, that did not go.”
There were a hundred thousand of them in all; and,
making the very air ring with shouts of “God and St.
George,” they embarked at Sandwich, with Edward the
Black Prince and three of his brothers, on the 27th of
October, 1359, Eleven hundred vessels were required
to carry over this immense force to Calais, where a
miscellaneous gathering of Gascons and Flemings,
under the Duke of Lancaster, awaited them. The duke
had much ado to keep together these needy Gascons
and Flemings; but by dint of giving them money, and
taking them out on little mischief-making and plun-
dering excursions, he preserved their zeal and valour
from evaporating before the much longed-for arrival of
the English army.

The transit to Calais was rapidly performed, the fleet
casting anchor there in the evening of the day on which
it sailed. But the disembarkation was a work of time as
well as of labour, and it was four or five days after its
arrival at Calais before the army was in condition to
begin its march into the country.

That march must have been a sight worth seeing;
full of terrible beauty to those who, like the war-horse
of Scripture, “smelled the battle afar off,” and rejoiced
in it!

First came, slow tramping along, five hundred steel-
clad knights, well armed with sword and lance, and the
heavy death-dealing battle-axe. A thousand archers
THE ENGLISH AGAIN INVADE FRANCE, 157

were in their rear, preceding the king’s own battalion,
which consisted of three thousand men-at-arms, and
five thousand archers. Immediately behind the king’s
battalion came the long, long. baggage train, extending
more than four miles ; as we may well believe when we
find that it included five thousand waggons, containing
not only the usual stores of an army in the enemy’s
country, rough enough however plentiful, but the added
luxuries of handmills to grind their corn, ovens to bake
bread, and other things to match. Formerly they had
trusted to chance for a supply of these necessaries.
Now, campaigning was beginning to be reduced to a
system. Further, on board these waggons was a
number of small boats made of boiled leather, each one
large enough to hold three men, and these were to be
employed in fishing lakes or streams to provide food
during Lent, which in those days was strictly kept as
a time of meagre diet. or diversion by the way, the
king had with him a train of thirty falconers with their
hawks, and sixty couple of hounds: a royal example
that was duly followed by many of his lords and other
great men, who also carried with them their hawks
and hounds.

The battalion of the prince, with whom rode his
three brothers, followed the baggage-train. His was
composed of full three thousand men-at-arms, admir-
ably mounted, and glittering in all the military finery
of the day. Such surcoats, such scarfs, such tokens
158 THE ENGLISH AGAIN INVADE FRANCE.

from lady-loves! For, in the fourteenth century, it
was the fashion to wear scarfs of ribbon, or a knot, or |
precious glove, purloined from some fair damsel whom
the knight professed to admire, and in defence of whose
superior beauty he was willing to run a tilt against all
comers. ‘Tilting matches of this kind, even between
cavaliers of opposing armies, not unfrequently took
place to beguile a pause in the fierce encounter of real
battle. Five hundred pioneers, with spades and axes
to cut down trees and hedges, and level roads, accom-
panied this array, which marched in such close order
as to be ready to engage at a moment’s notice, and so
watchfully, that not even the meanest lad belonging to
the camp was left behind. Woe betide the laggards on
that march, for such delayed the whole body, and
doubtless would “catch it” for so doing.

The foreign lords were highly gratified by this grand
display of military strength, not only because it was
admirable in itself, but because having spent all their
money, and even some of them pawned their horses and
armour while awaiting the king’s arrival, the sight of
such enormous wealth inspired them with a comfortable
hope of his proving a good pay-master, now that he
was really come. And they gently intimated as much
to the king. Asking for money, however, is always
reckoned a terrible test of friendliness, and so it proved
on this occasion. The zeal of these lords to serve him
_ {and get plenty of French plunder !) was, of course, very
THE ENGLISH AGAIN INVADE FRANCE. 159

delightful to the monarch, but—oh, how many fine
things that bué has spoiled!—he begged to inform
them that in truth he could not afford to pay them for
it; adding graciously that if they chose to remain
with him and share his fortunes, they should receive a
liberal share of the spoil. For Edward was now fully
bent on either totally subduing France, or inflicting
upon it so severe a chastisement as should enable him
to dictate his own terms of peace.

If a wet blanket had been rudely thrown over all
these noble Gascons and Flemings, they could not have
been more thoroughly dashed and damped than they
were by this royal speech. Some were so disgusted by
it, that they went straight home, bidding adieu to all
visions of glory and plunder ; others were content to
remain, and take their chance of both.

The advance of the army was in a south-easterly
direction, through the old province of Picardy, at that
time a waste desolate country, seeing that for three
years past the ravages of war had stopped all cultiva-
tion of the soil, Even its wretched inhabitants would
have perished, had not supplies of grain been sent from
more fortunate districts of unfortunate France, so that

of course there was nothing for the invaders to pick up.

Edward had been aware of this beforehand, hence that
ample baggage-train, which was now verily a friend in
need, Pursuing their route into Champagne, things

somewhat mended ; there was more food to be found ©
160 THE ENGLISH AGAIN INVADE FRANCE.

on the spot, but as for the weather,—well, it “rained
cats and dogs and swords with their points downwards,”
on these intrusive Englishmen, who were excessively
uncomfortable in consequence. They might there, had
they been musically disposed, with great appropriate-
ness have sung in chorus their old country song of—

‘“‘ The rain, it raineth every day.”

But spite of wind and weather they fought and plun-
dered their way on to Rheims, the city in which the
kings of France were usually crowned, and where Ed-
ward, regarding himself as King of France, had a great
mind to be crowned also. The city, however, was
strongly held by the French, under one of their arch-
bishops, who was as clever at fighting as at his own
more proper professional duties ; and as before being
crowned within it, it was first needful to take it, Rheims
was invested in due form.

The king took up his quarters at St. Waal, a few
miles from the city; the prince had his at St. Thierry,
and each kept his court in grand style. A good part
of the winter was spent here, not very pleasantly ; for |
as Edward was unwilling to risk the storming of so
well fortified a place, little could be done towards pro-
moting his much wished for coronation at Rheims.
The besiegers, however, diverted themselves meanwhile
_ by making, with various success, occasional forays into
the neighbouring country. |
THE ENGLISH AGAIN INVADE FRANCE. 161

The capture of the garrison of Cormicy was so neatly
effected on one of these occasions, that we must stop
to relate it. A brave English knight, Sir Bartholomew
- Burghersh, had his quarters at this place, where the
French had so strong and well-defended a castle that
they never dreamed of their unpleasant neighbours
attacking it. That idea, however, had presented itself
to Sir Bartholomew, who examined the fortress
thoroughly; and the result of his examination being
but to convince him of the hopelessness of taking it by
assault, he resolved to try whaé mining would do for
him. To work went his miners with a will, and keep-
ing at it day and night, soon burrowed their way right
under the great tower, which they propped up with
timber, and then told their lord that they only awaited
his signal to throw the whole concern down. Sir
Bartholomew, accompanied by his comrade, John de
Guistelles, then rode to the castle, and made signs that
he wished to have a parley with the governor, Sir
Henry de Vaulx. Sir Henry, from the battlements,
accordingly bade him say what he wanted. “I want
you to surrender,” returned the knight, “or you will
all be destroyed.” On this Sir Henry, who knew
nothing about the mine, began to laugh, and asked
how it was to be done,—they were perfectly supplied
with means of defence, and certainly were not going to
surrender simply because the English asked them to do
so.” “Indeed,” said Sir Bartholomew, “if you only

(3) ll
162 THE ENGLISH AGAIN INVADE FRANCE.

knew your situation, you would surrender without
more ado.” “ Why, what zs our situation,’ demanded
the impatient governor. “Come out, and I will
show you,” was the reply. On assurance of his safety
Sir Henry and three others came out to the two
English knights, who immediately conducted them to
the mine, and showed them their great tower held up
alone by beams of wood.

That sight worked wonders in the Frenchman’s
mind, With many thanks to the English knight for
not miserably destroying them all, as he might have
done, he instantly gave up himself and his garrison as
prisoners. They were removed from the castle, and
after the last had left it, the timber in the mine was
set on fire, splitting the tower in two, and bringing
the whole down with an awful crash. The governor,
who stood with the English looking on, could not,
when he saw this fearful spectacle, refrain from again
expressing his sense of Sir Bartholomew’s noble con-
duct in saving himself and his people from destruc-
tien; “ For,” said he, “ had our own countrymen of the
Jacquerie, who formerly overran this country, had the
same advantage over us, they would not have used it
so generously.”

This was a spirited episode, and a very pleasing one.
But as for King Edward and the prince, seven weeks
of such stupid work as “ sitting down” before Rheims,
looking and longing, was quite enough for them ; the
THE ENGLISH AGAIN INVADE FRANCE. 163

more so that their horses were beginning to die off for
want of provender. So they gave up the siege of
Rheims, and moved on in the same compact vigilant.
order as before, ravaging and destroying the country,
until, on the last day of March, they had advanced
within a few miles of Paris.

The aim of the dauphin in defending himself against
this alarming invasion had been to avoid coming to any
engagement with the enemy, and so to leave him to
waste his strength.

This sort of passive resistance, taught him by the
disastrous consequences of former pitched battles with
those indomitable islanders, did not at all please the
English, who, on camping before Paris, sent heralds to
invite the dauphin to come forth from behind his pro-
tecting gates and walls, and do battle on the open
field. The duke, however, was not to be driven
from his game ; to this invitation he returned a very
decided, ‘‘ No, thank you;” an answer which vexed the
king still more. It was as bad as firing at a mud fort,
to be always hunting an enemy who would not come
out and fight. So, as the dauphin would not come to
them, some of the more spirited of the English deter-
mined to go to him. The king made a number of
new knights, and these together with a few old ones,
who were tired of letting their arms rust, set out, under
the leadership of Sir Walter de Manny, to attack the
barriers of the city. They dashed forward, and had
164 THE ENGLISH AGAIN INVADE FRANCE.

some satisfactory skirmishing between the bars, and so
on; for though there were numbers of French knights
who longed to ride out and exchange blows with the
English, the dauphin’s orders against it were impera-
tive, and they were obliged to be content with poking
and cutting at each other through the barriers. Thrust
of lance and stroke of sword, however, even under
these disadvantages, let out some noble lives; so, as has
been said, all were well satisfied.

The last day spent by Edward’s immense army,
almost beneath the walls of Paris, was signalized by
this brisk encounter. The next morning the king
moved away, intending to spend the summer in Brit-
tany, and return in the autumn again to try his hand
at taking the city of Paris.

The French meanwhile had kept making proposals
of peace, to which Edward would not listen, until
moved to it by his cousin, the Duke of Lancaster.
A violent storm of thunder and lightning, which fright-
ened the English nearly out of their wits, backed
the duke's arguments effectually. Edward began to
think that heaven itself was offended by his implacable
spirit, and at once he avowed his willingness to come
to terms.

A treaty was therefore arranged between the two
powers on the 8th of May 1360, at Bretigny. Accord-
ing to this, Edward undertook to renounce his claim to
the throne of France, in return for several provinces
THE ENGLISH AGAIN INVADE FRANCE. 165

ceded to him, and a ransom of £1,500,000 for the
king. This treaty was negotiated by the prince and the
dauphin, in the name of the two kings ; and, after each —
had signed it, each, during the time of divine service,
ratified it by oath: the dauphin at Paris, the prince at
Normandy. Approaching the altar, after these words
had been thrice repeated,—“O Lamb of God, that
taketh away the sins of the world, grant us thy peace !”
* —each one laid his right hand upon the consecrated
communion bread, and his left upon the holy Gospels,
solemnly swearing to observe the treaty. The cere-
mony ended, the English army was withdrawn from
France, leaving, we may presume, few to regret its
absence. The king’s division was shipped at Calais;
he himself joined the prince at Harfleur, where they
embarked, and landed at Rye in Sussex on the 18th
of May.

All the difficulties in the way of King John’s return
being thus removed, the prince took him over to Calais
in July. The French, however, were not ready with
the money part of the agreement at that time, so that
it was the 26th of October before the king was really
free. Before parting, Edward, who had joined them at
Calais, gave a magnificent entertainment to his brother
of France. The princes of England and some of the
chiefest nobility waited bare-headed on their illustrious
guest, and then the two kings graciously bade each
other farewell. John took his departure from Calais
166 THE ENGLISH AGAIN INVADE FRANCE.

on the 28th of the month, the prince, who had courte:
ously entertained him during his delay in that city,
escorting him to Boulogne. Edward himself accom-
panied his late prisoner for one mile out of Calais:
when anew they parted with apparently friendly feel-
ings in their hearts, hostile as had been their acquaint-
ance. |
The prince, on his return to Calais, left France with
_ his father, and arrived at Dover on the last day of
October. They were welcomed joyfully, for the Eng-
lish were not only very proud of the results of the war,
but, seeing it had cost so much, they were very glad
that it was at an end. The king and prince brought
with them forty hostages for the due fulfilment of the
French treaty, and it was the king’s special command
to all his officers that these noblemen should be
courteously treated. A command so faithfully obeyed
that my lords went in and out as they pleased; hunt-
ing and hawking when they were so disposed ; or,
in quieter mood, making themselves agreeable to the
English ladies, |

Our Black Prince, about this period, contrived to
make himself so agreeable to his cousin Joan, called,
on account of her beauty, the Fair Maid of Kent,
that the two were married on the 10th of October
1361.

They were neither of them young—the prince was
thirty-one ; and the lady, who was a widow, was a
THE ENGLISH AGAIN INVADE FRANCE. 167

little older. The story goes that the prince was plead-
ing the cause of a friend who loved the countess, until
she, tired with his importunities, told him that when
she was young she had been disposed of in marriage
by others, but that now, having come to years of dis-
cretion, and being her own mistress, she would please
herself, and certainly would not marry beneath the
royal rank which she inherited from her grandfather
Kidward I. , |

There was something either in what the lady said,
or in her manner of saying it, that at once made the
prince understand that if he asked for himself instead
of his friend, he should not plead in vain. Upon this
hint he acted, found that his conjecture was quite cor-
rect, and they were right royally married at Windsor
Castle.

Christmas was spent at the prince’s own manor, or
palace of Berkhampstead in Hertfordshire, about one-
and-tweuty miles north-west of London. This estate
had been given to lim and “ his heirs for ever” when
he was created Duke of Cornwall; and with its well-
wooded park of more than twelve hundred acres,
abounding with fine fat deer to hunt and to eat, and the
more than princely magnificence with which his house-
hold was conducted, it is to be hoped that the prince,
together with the lady his wife, spent their time plea-
santly.

The prince’s town-house, as we should now call it,
168 THE ENGLISH AGAIN INVADE FRANCE.

was in the then fashionable neighbourhood of Bil-
lingsgate.

King Edward was much pleased with this marriage
between his son and the beautiful heiress of Kent, and

it proved a happy one.


Se



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Che Prinee’s Court mv Aquitaine.

ee 2\0 WARD was well pleased with his bargain of
K pes the treaty of Bretiony. But there were



others, who had never been taken into the
account, who were very much displeased with it. These
were the French inhabitant’ of the provinces ceded to
the English, who were grieved to their heart’s core
when they found they must withdraw their allegi-
ance from their own native sovereign, and yield it to a
stranger. Some of them boldly contended: that the
king had no power thus to transfer them, and they
quoted old charters of the Emperor Charlemagne, against
this new treaty of King John’s. Others, more ‘sub-
missively, wrote pathetic letters to the king, entreating
him, “for the love of God,” not to do this thing, for
they would rather be taxed every year to the half of
their property than be turned over to the English. The
necessity, however, was too pressing for John to yield
either to the solicitations or remonstrances of his dis-
tressed people. All he could do was to send soothing
172 THE PRINCE'S COURT IN AQUITAINE. |

messages to them, and remind them that compliance
was inevitable, otherwise the treaty would not stand.
So they were obliged to give way. “Since our king
will have it so,” said the people of Rochelle, one of the
cities to be given up, “we will do homage to the
English. But our hearts are still French.”

One pities these unfortunate Frenchmen. Only
think, if we were obliged to swear allegiance to the
Emperor of the French! How ill that would go
down. Yet it would not be quite so bad as their case,
seeing they were obliged to kiss the hand that had go
frequently, since the field of Crecy, smitten them so
heavily. We have never endured such degradation
from our neighbours,

The governor chosen by Edward for his newly-
acquired and newly-confirmed possessions, did honour
‘to his sovereign’s choice. Sir John Chandos was the
very model of knighthood in the best days of chivalry.
“He was,” says Froisart, “a most sweet-tempered
knight, benign, amiable, courageous, prudent, and sin-
cere in all his dealings.” Higher praise could scarcely
be bestowed upon man, and we cannot wonder to hear
that “none was more beloved and esteemed than he.”
His establishment as Lord of Aquitaine, Poitou, Guines,
and the other ceded provinces in the south, was princely,
and he so carried himself as to win the affections of his
reluctant subjects. But well-as he was liked, the creat
folks of Aquitaine thought it would be more dignified
THE PRINCE'S COURT IN AQUITAINE. 173

for them to be governed by the prince in person, who
had been recently created Prince of Aquitaine, in addi-
tion to being Prince of Wales. At this very juncture
also it occurred to the English parliament, busied in
finding ways and means for their glorious but costly
monarch, that if the prince were to reside on his rich
French inheritance, they should have one less of the
| king’s sons to provide for. So, between the two, it fell
out that about a couple of years after the cessation of
hostilities, our prince was appointed to govern the
English possessions in Southern France, in room of
the splendid John Chandos. |
Great preparations were made for this event; and,
after taking leave of the king and queen at the
prince’s own palace of Berkhampstead, where several
days had been passed together, the prince and princess _
sailed for their new home in February 1363, intending |
to take up their residence in Bordeaux.
sail landed them “high and dry” at Rochelle, one
of the towns that had been so unwilling to be handed
over to new masters, and in which this feeling had
run so high that for a twelvemonth no Englishman
was suffered to enter it. The great Englishman
that now presented himself was, however, cordially
received. Sir John Chandos, with a stately retinue
of nobles and knights, met him there, and four days
were spent in festivities. On the fifth, the prince
departed for Poitiers, visiting various towns in
174 THE PRINCES COURT IN AQUITAINE.

the principality before establishing himself in Bor-
deaux. |

His court there was a very magnificent one, at which
the prince received his new subjects most graciously.
Sir John Chandos he made constable of the principality,
and Sir Guiscard d’ Angle his marshal. Other English
knights of less note were also placed in office; who, at
a distance, followed their master’s example, and kept
up more state than altogether pleased the people of the
country. Perhaps they had a suspicion that they should
have to pay for it!

Sir John Chandos, though after the prince’s arrival
he was no longer chief, was yet, next to his master, the
greatest man in the province. An old writer gives an
amusing instance of this. Chandos, with other nobles
and knights, was one day being entertained at court,
when wine was served to the constable immediately
after the prince, and before any one else. The Earl of
Oxford was offended at this; being of higher rank
than Sir John, he thought he ought to have been served
before him ; so, when Chandos’ squire brought him
the cup, he angrily bade the young man give it to his
master. The squire, who possibly had as good blood
in his veins as my lord of Oxford, was quite equal to
this emergency. “Why should I do that,” said he
fiercely, “seeing he has already drunk? Drink your-
self, since it is offered you, for, by St. George, if you
do not, I will throw it in your face!” In very fear
THE PRINCES COURT IN AQUITAINE. 175

that this bold squire would do as he threatened, the
earl drank, or pretended to drink, and there the matter
ended for the time. But, when the prince had retired,
Sir John, who had noticed what passed, came up and
administered a quiet but most stinging rebuke to the
presumptuous earl. ‘“ What,” said he, “are you dis-
pleased that I drank first, who am constable of this
country! J may well take precedence of you, seeing
my sovereign chooses to have it so. It is true you were
at the battle of Poitiers, but since the lords present
know not how that came to pass I shall tell them, that
it may not be forgotten. You came back from France
without leave, contrary to the king’s commands, who, -
when he saw you, ordered you instantly to’ return
thither to your duty under pain of forfeiting life and
lands. And that is how you came to be at the battle,
where you commanded only forty lances, while I had
sixty. Bethink you then whether I do not well to take
precedence of, and drink before you.”

The poor foolish earl was so confounded by this
terrible setting down, that he had not a word to say,
and as our historian relates, wished himself anywhere
but where he was.

There was still great difficulty 3 in getting the French
treaty properly executed. The Duke of Anjou, son of
King John, had been one of the hostages given to
King Edward for its due performance; and this young
prince disgracefully broke his parole, or word of hon-
176 THE PRINCE'S COURT IN AQUITAINE.

our not to escape. He had obtained permission to be
removed from London to Calais, pretending that his
being there would facilitate the settlement of affairs;
but once in Calais, he was svon off home again. King
John was deeply offended by this act of his son’s, and
determined on returning to England himself, partly to
excuse his son, partly in the hope that he and King
Edward together might make provision for ending
these troubles. His counsellors were strongly opposed
to such a measure. They did not care whether the
treaty were scrupulously fulfilled on their part or not,
and, in plain terms, they told him that he would be
very foolish if he again put himself in the power of
the English king. But John’s high sense of honour
could not brook that any fault should rest upon him;
and telling his counsellors that though good faith
were banished from the rest of the world, it should
still be found in the breast of kings, he took ship, and
arrived in London about Christmas 1363. He was
received with all honour, as such a man deserved.
Indeed, there appeared to exist a very cordial feeling
between King Edward and himself. Edward, who was
with his queen at his fine palace of Eltham, sent a
retinue of knights to Dover to welcome his royal
visitor and bring him to the palace, where he arrived
on the Sunday afternoon. They did not keep Sunday
in those days as we do now; for we are told they
entertained themselves with singing and dancing, in
THE PRINCE'S COURT IN AQUITAINE. 177

which one of the young French lords particularly dis-
tinguished himself, until supper-time.

On entering London, the citizens came out with
much reverence to meet John, and bring him to his
former residence of the Savoy. There, throughout
the winter, the royal family visited him in the most
friendly manner; and there, unhappily, this chivalrous
monarch, being seized with illness, breathed his last,
in about a year after his leaving France: sincerely
mourned by king, queen, and the princes of England.
His son, the Dauphin Charles, succeeded to his crown.
The body of John was embalmed, carried to France,
and there solemnly interred in the cathedral of St. Denis.
The ceremony ended with a magnificent dinner!

The Prince led a stately and quiet life in his princi-
pality of Aquitaine. Here, attracted by his fame, came
Peter, king of Cyprus and Jerusalem, to see with his
own eyes the hero with whose praises all the civilized
world rang. Peter, who had done battle valiantly
against the Turks in Palestine, had been making a rov-_
ing sort of tour through Europe, for the purpose of
urging its various monarchs to assume the Red Cross,
and join him in a fresh crusade in the East. He was
well received by all, and had promises from some—fine
speeches from others. By the King of England and
his queen he was welcomed with uncommon magnifi-
cence. Such dinners, such suppers, such entertain-
ments were provided in his honour! But as for going

(3) 12
178 THE PRINCE'S COURT IN AQUITAINE,

on crusade, Edward said he was too old for that,—too
discreet, he very likely meant; though he readily
granted permission to such of his knights as desired it,
to go to Peter’s assistance. The King of Cyprus
would also fain have had the Prince’s help for his cru-
sade. Till he had seen him, he said, he had done
little; so he crossed over, and the Prince, who then
kept his court at Angouléme, hearing of his arrival at
Poitiers, sent Chandos, with a handsome retinue, te
meet and bring His Majesty of Cyprus to him. The
king was just in time for a grand tournament, held in
celebration of the birth of the Prince’s eldest son,
Edward, and altogether was treated with great distinc-
tion; but the Prince, like his father, declined going
a-crusading with him. Still Peter was delighted with
his host; delighted also to find that, though he could
not prevail on the Prince to take up arms with hin,
he was free to enlist for this holy war as many of the
English and Gascon knights in the province as he
liked. |

But though the Prince refused to measure his
strength against infidels in the East, quiet and he
were not long to be acquainted. It suited neither
mind nor body. Work of his own sort was pre-
sently found him, and it came about in this way :—
During King Edward’s long wars in France, vast num-
bers of mere soldiers of fortune had banded themselves
together—men who would fight for either party that
THE PRINCE'S COURT IN AQUITAINE. 179

would pay them best. A rascally sort of thing; but it
must be owned that there were some fine fellows
amongst them, especially among their leaders, who
were chiefly English and Gascons. The peace of Bre-
tigny might have thrown these men out of employment,
but that the King of Navarre—him whom John had
suspected of giving bad advice to the dauphin—quar-
relled with his old friend Charles after the latter came
to the throne, and a teazing little warfare was kept up
between them, which found employment in the fighting
line for those who wanted it; while at the same time
there was the old chronic contest going on, to decide
whether the Lord Charles of. Blois, whom the French
had always backed, or the Earl of Montfort, for whom
the English as pertinaciously stood up, should have
the duchy of Brittany. But Navarre and France at
last patched up their quarrel. The aunt and sister
of the former king had the merit of bringing this
about. And as it had been settled, by hard blows,
that the Earl of Montfort should henceforth be Duke
of Brittany, the difficulty then was to know how to
dispose of the tools with which this stern handicraft of
fighting had been carried on; for these soldiers of for-
tune, or Free Companions, as they called themselves,
finding their occupation gone, became a terror to the
inhabitants, whom they pillaged and plundered with-
out mercy. Their old marauding habits so clung to
them that they could not throw them off. Indeed,
180 THE PRINCE'S COURT IN AQUITAINE.

they said that France was their own domain, and they
would live by pillage. The Pope was good enough to
excommunicate them, but they did not care a fig for that;
and as there were nearly fifty thousand of them scour-
ing the country, seizing towns and castles, and thence
laying the neighbourhood under contribution, the evil
was a serious one, that exceedingly puzzled French
statesmen to remedy. The King of England had
covenanted with the King of France to assist him in
putting down these pillagers, who resolutely refused
to disband when bidden to do so; but Edward, in his
zeal, got ready so large a force for this purpose, that
Charles, in a fright, hastened.to decline his help. He
had no notion of letting so many fighting Englishmen
enter his dominions, whatever might be the pretext;
so he undertook to get rid of them himself.
Fortunately for him, in 1366 an opportunity occurred
of finding occupation in Spain for these unquiet spirits
and restless bodies. Pedro, king of Castile, called the
Cruel, (a name that he well deserved,) had for his mis-
deeds been deposed, and his kingdom bestowed upon
Don Henry; who was: called his brother. But not
being himself disposed to acquiesce in this transfer of
his property, he took up arms to defend his rights.
Henry did the same to maintain his claim, and the
French determined to aid the latter by sending him a
great batch of these insupportable Free Companions.
For money they would have gone to fight in the moon,
THE PRINCE'S COURT IN AQUITAINE. 181

had there been any way of getting there; so they
made no difficulty about crossing the Pyrenees. It
cost a good deal to send them out, but it was indeed
building a bridge of gold for a retreating enemy, which
is always reckoned good policy; and the French did
not grudge the price. The only stipulation made. by
_ the Companions was, that they should not be employed
against the Prince of Wales in Aquitaine. Some of
them had served under his banner, and his chivalrous
character must deeply have impressed even these hire-
lings, seeing that though they were ready enough to
take service with another, they were unwilling to
bear arms against one so good and so great. as our
Prince.

Sir Bertrand du Guesclin, one of the greatest war-
riors that France ever produced, led the Companions
into Spain. He took them by way of Avignon, where
the Pope was, and demanded, first, that his fellows
should be released from the excommunication pro-
nounced against them; secondly, that the Pope should
furnish him with a large sum of money. There was
no difficulty about granting the first request; the
second was altogether a different affair. But as Du
Guesclin assured the Pope that the second was much
the more important of the two—absolution they could
do without, but money was indispensable—he was
obliged to give them both. So they went on their way
rejoicing ; their prowess (for they could fight) soon con-
182 THE PRINCE'S COURT IN AQUITAINE.

firming Don Henry on his throne, and driving Don
Pedro out of the country.

Pedro, however, was not going to take the matter
quietly. The fame of the Prince of Wales had spread
far and wide—fame, not only for valour and military
genius, but for his other knightly qualities of generosity
and goodness. So this horrible Pedro, who was an
utter wretch, finding himself deprived of his kingdom, -
wrote a piteous letter, recounting his misfortunes to the
Prince, and praying him, “for the love of God,” to
help him in the recovery of his dominions, from which
the Pope, his own brother, and the Free Companions
had driven him.

The humane and generous temper of the Prince was
touched by this appeal. Perhaps we may also believe
that his military ardour was roused by the prospect of
fresh fields to be fought and won; for with him fight-
ing and winning had ever been one. But he was too
prudent a man to do anything hastily. King Pedro’s
letter and supplications were placed before two of the
prince’s counsellors, and these two wise heads, having
laid themselves together, came to the conclusion that
the prince would do well to grant Pedro’s request, and
march forthwith into Spain for his help. Others of
his counsellors, equally wise and wary, were, however,
of a different mind; and thus they advised their
prince :—“ My Lord, it is true that you are one of the
most notable princes in the world, and are, God be
THE PRINCES COURT IN AQUITAINE. 183

thanked! at peace with every one. It is also well
_ known that, for repute of your knighthood, no king
dare anger you. You ought, therefore, to be content
with what you have, and not seek for enemies, ‘This
Don Pedro is a man cruel, proud, and ill-disposed,
who has done so much evil in his kingdom that there-
fore his people have driven him away. He has done
grievous wrong to his neighbours, and, moreover, it is
commonly said that he murdered the young lady his
wife, your cousin, daughter of the Duke of Bourbon.
It were therefore well to bethink you before you suc-
cour him; for what he now endures are chastisements
from God, who orders them that kings and princes
of this world may therefore learn not to commit like
wickednesses.”

The prince was not particularly pleased with this,
and, in reply, told his lords that he was perfectly
acquainted with all Don Pedro’s ill deeds; but still,
spite of them, it was neither decent nor proper that
one who was not really his brother, though called so,
should take his crown from him; and no king’s son
ought to suffer it. Further, his father and King Pedro
had been allies, and that was another reason why he
should render the aid requested of him.

His lords were still of the same mind,—that he should
stay at home, and leave King Pedro and King Henry
to fight it out between themselves. But not a bit
could they prevail wit the prince, who every day be-
184 THE PRINCE'S COURT IN AQUITAINE.

came more eager to set out on this expedition te
Spain. King Pedro, meanwhile, had followed his
letter, bringing his three daughters with him; and,
hearing of his arrival, the prince rode out from Bor-
deaux to meet him, escorting him to that city with
all honour and courtesy; for, in addition to his mili-.
tary renown, the prince had that of being the best-
bred gentleman of his time. In conversation, Pedro
backed his request by so many promises of what he
would do in return, as were enough to tempt any
ambitious man. The prince’s son was to be made
king of Gallicia, in Spain; while such unheard-of
riches were to be showered, both upon the prince and
his followers, as set both English and Gascons a-long-
ing to go and do battle for this same Pedro.

In an evil hour the prince had his own way, and
began to make preparations for carrying an army into
Spain. About twelve thousand of the most noted
Free Companions were invited to join his standard,
and even those who had served in Spain against Don
Pedro gladly prepared to change sides and fight for
him. Over and above his own followers, four hun-
dred English men-at-arms and archers jomed the
prince, under his brother the Duke of Lancaster.
Flemings and Germans he might have had in plenty,
had he cared for them; but he did not wish to have
strangers about him. Money, the sinews of war, had

also to be provided in large quantity ; for the prince
THE PRINCE'S COURT IN AQUITAINE, 185

had undertaken to pay the cost of the expedition, on faith
of Pedro’s promise to re-imburse him. A portion of the
late French king’s ransom became due at this time, quite
opportunely, and to swell the amount the prince, by
the advice of Chandos and Sir William Felton, melted

down and coined his gold and silver plate. It was a

pity to take such pains and expense for so hopeless a
villain as Don Pedro.

Securing men, money, and other munitions of war
consumed much time; so that it was the 10th of
January 1367 before the prince left Bordeaux on his
way to fight Don Pedro’s quarrels. His second son,
Richard, afterwards king of England, was born only a
few days before the prince entered upon this Spanish
expedition.

One of the fine promises by which Pedro tempted
the prince to his aid, and which he thought important
enough to be confirmed by a legal document, makes one
smile. It was, that if at any time the King of Eng-
land, the prince, and their successors, kings. or princes
of England, should have a fancy for fighting, under
the banner of His Majesty of Castile, against the in-
fidels—that is, Turks or Moors—the said king and his
three eldest sons should have the chief command of
the vanguard—the post of honour—in preference to
any other princes of Christendom. And in case they
did not feel disposed to avail themselves of this graci-—

ous permission to serve under him, the English stan.
186 THE PRINCE'S COURT IN AQUITAINE.

dard should be set up in the same place, by way of
asserting their pre-eminent dignity in the army !

But in those days the Turks were a power in Europe,
not a name only; the Moors held large possessions in
Spain; and as Mohammedans they were reckoned the

eommon enemies of Christendom.






XL.

Che Prince's Spanish Campaign.

JEFORE setting out for Spain, the prince had
| bargained with the King of Navarre for a



free passage through his dominions. But
as the army slowly advanced on its route, such alarm-
ing reports of the king’s bad faith (which his past
character led them to believe) were made to its com
manders as induced some of them to bring things to a
point by attacking him. Sir Hugh Calverly, a distin-
guished leader of the Free Companions, pressed for-
ward and took two towns belonging to Navarre, and
this brought the king himself, in a rage, to confer with
the prince. The result of their conference was, that
the previous stipulation of a free passage was con-
firmed; and that fine army of thirty thousand men,
under the most renowned commander of the age, be-
gan streaming through the various defiles in the Pyre-
nrees, Which give France access to Spain.

Passing the Pyrenees, however, in the winter season

is no trifling matter, especially for armies, with thei:
190 THE PRINCE'S SPANISH CAMPAIGN,

cumbrous baggage waggons. It is true there was no
enemy to oppose them,—in those mountain passes a
handful of men might have kept a whole army at bay,
—but there were natural difficulties to contend with,
and to meet these, so far as was possible, the entire
force was divided into three bodies, one of which was to
march through them each day. The vanguard, amount-
ing to twelve thousand cavalry, passed on the Monday.
It was commanded by the Duke of Lancaster, with whom
was the brave Chandos, at the head of his own com-
pany of twelve hundred lances, all bearing the knight’s
arms on their pennons. On Tuesday the prince’s divi-
sion of ten thousand horse scrambled through, with
bitter wind and snow in their teeth chilling them to
the very bones, With him was Don Pedro, together
with the King of Navarre, who, in the excess of his
complaisance, was now doing the honours of his own
country to the prince. They halted at Pampeluna,
where the king treated his travel-worn friends to a
good supper. Wednesday saw the remainder of the
army safe through the defile, and then the whole —
camped for several days’ rest in the valley of Pampe-
luna, where food for man and horse was abundant.

In this land of plenty the Free Companions, falling
into their old habits, made themselves rather more free
than welcome. It had been arranged between the
king and prince that provision for the army should be
found on payment for it; but these rovers very much
THE PRINCE'S SPANISH CAMPAIGN. 191

preferred snatching it to acquiring it in so tame a man-
ner as by purchase. Pillaging came so naturally to
them that, in truth, they cow/d not refrain; and the
King of Navarre was not a little vexed with himself
for permitting such vagabonds free entrance into his
country. However, there they were, and all that he
could do was to entreat them to be a litle better be-
haved, which they graciously promised.

On marching further into the country the advanced
_ guard of the prince’s army came in contact with some
of King Henry’s troops, and a little skirmishing took
place between the two. Henry himself sent his anta-
gonist a formal challenge to battle, and his boldness
rather pleased the prince than otherwise. “ He must
be a valiant gentleman,” said he, “to write me such a
letter ;” and awaiting an attack from him, the army
was drawn up in order of battle, with banners and
pennons waving, at Vittoria, where, near five centuries
later, another English hero was to gather one of his
many laurels. During this pause the honour of knight-
hood was conferred on many of the prince’s followers.
Among those advanced to this dignity were his own
step-son, Sir Thomas Holland (the fair Joan, it will be
remembered, was a widow when the prince married
her) and the worthless Don Pedro; three hundred new
made knights in all were that day waiting, with all
the impatience imaginable, to show that they had de-

served their spurs.
192 THE PRINCE'S SPANISH CAMPAIGN.

They waited in vain, however. King Henry, hourly
expecting reinforcements, both from Arragon and under
Du Guesclin,—the latter was bringing him four thou-
sand men,—hung fire till it was too late to do anything.
And though the prince was quite in a mood to fight
had the chance been offered him, yet he was not dis-
pleased that the day passed over quietly, as his rear
division of more than six thousand men had not yet
come up. When night fell his people all returned to
their quarters, the order being, that when the trumpet
sounded next morning, they were to form in the same
order as before. The enemy, however, was beforehand
with them! At peep of dawn next day six thousand
well mounted, well armed Spaniards, under the king’s
brothers Dons Tello and Sancho, rode forth to make
an early visit to the English camp. As the sun rose
on their long glittering files, they fell in with a body
of Companions belonging to Sir Hugh Calverly, which
they attacked and defeated, carrying off their baggage,
and fercing Sir Hugh to fly post haste to the Duke of
Lancaster’s division, whose vanguard was next set
upon by the victorious Spaniards, with loud shouts of
“ Castile,” “Castile.” The attack was so sudden and
impetuous that down went tents, huts, and everything
before it; and the whole division was drawn out to
meet the enemy as hastily as the disorder into which
it was thrown would permit, the rest of the army get-
ting into motion after it. The Spaniards, who had no
THE PRINCE'S SPANISH CAMPAIGN, 193

notion of fighting so many, retreated in good order
when they saw the extensive preparations for receiving.
them, but meeting on their way an advanced guard of
about two hundred English and Gascons, under Sir
William Felton, they ventured to charge them. Six
thousand against two hundred left no doubt as to the |
result, though it cost the swarming Spaniards some
hours’ hard fighting before the last of that valorous
little company was slain. Their leader, Sir William, was
among the first, for, after having drawn up his troop on
a slight eminence, he dashed, lance in rest, full gallop
into the midst of the enemy, running one of their
knights right through the body, armour and all, and
then flinging him dead out of the saddle. The Spa-
niards instantly closed round the gallant Englishman,
but though his strong arm dealt around such blows as
that few required a second stroke, he was overpowered
and at last killed. A few boys alone escaped, by the.
swiftness of their horses, to carry this disastrous news
to their prince. |

King Henry was exceedingly delighted when his re-
turning troops narrated to him the brisk doings of the
day; and in the joy of his heart, he received their suc-
cess as an omen of the easy and entire destruction of
the English army. An old French commander, how-
ever, who was present and knew better, stopped the
king, assuring him that when he came to meet the
prince in person, he would then find “ tough and hardy”

—@) 13
{94 THE PRINCE'S SPANISH CAMPAIGN.

knights, men who would die where they stood sooner
than think of flying. He therefore entreated him not
to risk a battle with the prince, but rather starve him
out by guarding all the passes and defiles so strictly
that no provision could reach him; in which case he
would soon be obliged to take himself off home again.

But the king was not to be persuaded. He thought
of his overpowering numbers,—a hundred thousand
well armed and determined men,—and of the glory of
beating (as he intended doing) so renowned a -com-
mander as the Prince of Wales, and he took his reso-
lution accordingly. “ By the soul of my father,” said
he, “I have such a desire to see this prince, and try
my streneth with him, that we will never part without
a battle.” And so the old Frenchman was silenced.

After some marching and manceuvring, amid wind,
_ rain, and snow, and such scarcity of provision in the
prince’s camp that a small loaf was sold for a florin,
the two armies came in sight of each other between
Navarretta and Najara, in Old Castile, on the 2d of
April 1367, and each was drawn up in order to be
ready for battle on the morrow.

The bright armour of these glittering battalions was
a beautiful sight when the sun rose upon them next
day. The prince, with some of his officers, ascended a
rising ground, and seeing the enemy marching upon
them, formed his own line in the plain, and then halted.
The Spaniards, perceiving what he was about, did the
THE PRINCE'S SPANISH CAMPAIGN, 195

same, and then each man tightened his armour for the
combat.

While they thus stood facing ‘each other, Sir John
Chandos advanced in front of the English, with his
banner in his hand; for, after the manner of those times,
in presence of the enemy he was to have the rank of
a knight-banneret conferred upon him. This was a
very high dignity, since he who received it must not
only be a valiant soldier, and ordinarily a gentleman
by birth, but was also required to have such an extent
of landed property as to have gentlemen by birth for
his vassals, who, in time of war, ranged themselves
under his banner. John Chandos was both. a valiant
soldier and of gentle birth, and he could bring into
the field knights enough to meet the third qualification.
The ceremony was performed in this manner :—Pre-
senting his banner to the prince, “ My lord,” said he,
“here is my banner, which I offer you that I may dis-
play it in such manner as may best please you; for I
have sufficient lands to enable me to do go, and main-
tain the rank which it ought to hold.” The prince,
taking the banner, cut off the point to make it square,
—for in those days a square banner was a peg higher
in dignity than a pointed or swallow-tailed one,—and
then returned it to its owner, saying,—“ Sir John, I
return your banner; God grant you strength and
honour to preserve it.”

The newly docked banner was received with accla.-
196 THE PRINCE'S SPANISH CAMPAIGN.

mation when Sir John went back with it to his com-
pany. Every man among them felt that he was a step
higher in the world than before, and vowed that, with
God’s help, he would worthily defend it. A vow that,
before sunset, was as worthily performed.

The two armies now began to move towards each |
other, but before they met, the prince, raising his eyes
and hands towards heaven, uttered aloud this devout
prayer :—“ God of truth, the Father of Jesus Christ,
Who hast made and fashioned me, grant through Thy
grace that the success of this battle may be for me and
my army; for Thou knowest that in truth I have been
solely emboldened to undertake it in the support of
Justice and reason, to reinstate this king on his throne,
who has been disinherited and driven from it, as well
as from his country.” And with that, taking Don
Pedro by the hand,—“ Sir King,” said he, “you shall
this day know whether you have anything in the king-
dom of Castile or not.” Then crying out,—“ Advance
banners in the name of God and St. George,” the two
armies came clashing together in mortal combat.

The battalion of Lancaster and Chandos first engaged
with that under du Guesclin, and the old French mar-
shal who had advised starvation instead of fi ghting ; and
a tough fight those veterans made of it. Neither would
give way, and they got terribly mixed up together, in
the struggle each to force back the other. The prince’s
_ division charged another body of Spaniards, one of
THE PRINCE'S SPANISH CAMPAIGN. 197

whose leaders (he who, with his thousands, had at last
destroyed those poor two hundred English and Gascons)
took fright, and rode straight off the field with two —
thousand of his horsemen. The remainder were soon
disposed of, and then the prince fell upon the division
commanded by King Henry himself, in which there
was at least forty thousand horse and foot. Here the
battle began in good earnest. In addition to sword,
lance, and axe, some of these troops were armed with
slings, from which they hurled stones with so much
violence as to break through the steel helmets of their
adversaries. English arrows came deadlily among them
in return, and the plain resounded with cries of,—
“ Castile for King Henry,” “ St. George for Guienne.”

Sir John Chandos did honour to his new banner;
but pressing forward too eagerly, he was surrounded,
unhorsed, and would have been slain by a huge Cas-
tilian, who bore him to the ground, but for a knife that
he carried in his bosom, with which, as he lay under
his antagonist, he stabbed him to death in the back
and sides, and then threw him off. He afterwards
rejoined his own people, who had made their way to
the spot where he had fallen; and the capture, among
others, of the celebrated du Guesclin, was the splendid
trophy of the new banneret’s arms. |

The English and Gascons fought bravely, and so did
some of the Spaniards; but panic possessed so many
of them that it was in vain for King Henry to rally
198 THE PRINCE'S SPANISH CAMPAIGN.

his troops. Thrice he checked their flight, and brought
them again to the charge, but it was in vain; the
prince, with his thirty thousand, was more than: a
match for the Spanish king’s hundred thousand, who
fled in all directions ; Don Henry himself at last mount-
ing his horse, and galloping off with the runaways,
hey were closely pursued as far as Najara, which
the English entered pell-mell with them; and in that
headlong chase numbers fell, slain by the enemy, or
drowned in the river, into which they leaped in hope
of escape from the murderous weapons behind, and
whose current was tinged with the blood of men and
horses. This town of Najara yielded a rich spoil to
the first comers, in the shape of plate and jewels be-
longing to Don Henry and his nobles.

The defeat, which was accomplished before noon of
that April morning was total and deadly; and as the
enemy was swept away, the prince fixed his banner
upon a bush hard by as a rallying point for his men,
who gradually drew up around him in fine order, even
after so hardly fought a battle. |

Pedro, hot from the pursuit, galloped up on a black
courser, but seeing the prince, dismounted, approached
him on foot, and would have kneeled while he thanked
his deliverer, had not the prince prevented him.
Taking the king by the hand,—« Cousin,” said he,
“give thanks to God, for to Him belongs the praise;
the victory comes from Him, and not from me.”
THE PRINCES SPANISH CAMPAIGN. 199

A monarch, one who, for his genius, his grandeur,
and the strange vicissitudes of his life, was one of the
most remarkable that ever reigned, said between three
and four thousand years ago,—“ The help that is done —
upon earth God doeth it Himself!” Edward, Prince
of Wales and Acquitaine, the victor of three well fought
fields, knew this, and had the moral courage to avow
it to that reprobate Don Pedro,

The ample provision of King Henry’s camp, all of
which he left behind him in his flight, furnished a wel-
come refreshment for the prince's hungry army. It
was not the first time that his troops had been indebted
to the vanquished for a meal; nor need we wonder at
being told that they enjoyed their supper. Under
King Henry’s deserted tents they made themselves
comfortable for the night, and spent the next day,
which was Palm Sunday, in needful rest. By six
oclock on that morning the prince was up and re-
ceiving such of his officers as waited upon him. Among
them came King Pedro, who was most graciously wel-
comed, but who more than startled his princely host
by courteously requesting that the prisoners should be
given up to him that he might cut their heads off!
This was rather too much. The prince paused a& mo-
ment, and then told the king that he also had a request
to make, which he entreated, for the sake of their friend-
liness, might not be refused. The king, who could deny
nothing to the man who had just restored his crown to
2900 THE PRINCE'S SPANISH CAMPAIGN.

him, cheerfully promised to grant it whatever it might
be. So the prince made his request, which was that
Pedro should pardon all his rebellious subjects, with
the exception of one flagrant offender, with whom he
might do as he pleased.

It was very disappointing to Pedro the Cruel not to
be allowed to cut off so many heads when they were in
his power. But as he was obliged to comply with the
prince’s wish, he swallowed his vexation, and, like a
sensible man, did what was required of him as though
he liked doing it. Nay, more, when the prince deli-
vered up the prisoners to him, he kissed his brother,
Don Sancho, who was one of them (Don Henry and
Don Tello were neither of them there to be kissed), and
to all save the excepted one (who was instantly be-
headed outside the tent), promised forgiveness of the
past if they would only do better in future. The
prince’s humanity that day saved many lives 3 nor did
he forget to show kindly courtesies to the Spanish
nobles who had been his captives,

Don Pedro with his suite then rode off to Burgos,
the capital of Old Castile, leaving the prince and his
army still in camp. Next day after evening prayers,
the camp was broken up, and he marched after the
king to Burgos, which he entered in state, with his
brother the Duke of Lancaster and other nobles. His
army lay in the surrounding plains, the prince being
entertained in the city; though his tent was pitched
THE PRINCE'S SPANISH CAMPAIGN. 901

in the midst of his brave fellows whom he visited
every day.

News.of this, the prince’s third great victory, speedily
passed into France, England, Germany, and other
European countries, where it added vastly to his re-
nown. Some of his enthusiastic admirers declared
that such a prince as he, was worthy of governing the
whole world. By his countrymen this astounding feat
of arms of settling a disputed succession by one blow,
was celebrated with much feasting and pageantry.
But in France there was mourning and lamentation,
for their many warriors fallen in the battle, and for
their greatest of all, du Guesclin, who was an unran-
somed prisoner.

Rather more than three weeks were spent at Burgos,
and then, seeing that the rebellion was crushed, and
Pedro secure on his throne, by the renewed allegiance
of his subjects, the prince thought proper to put him
in mind of their agreement, before setting out from
Aquitaine. So he begged that the money which he
had advanced for the expedition might be repaid him
as speedily as possible, that they might get them gone,
otherwise he feared his men-at-arms might begin to
help themselves. The king assured him that he would
faithfully fulfil all that he had promised, but, unfor-
tunately, at that moment, he had no money. He
would go immediately to Seville, and there procure
enough to satisfy the prince’s army, which he recom-
902 THE PRINCE'S SPANISH CAMPAIGN.

mended should be meanwhile marched into the fertile
country about Valladolid, where, by Whitsuntide at
latest, he would himself join them, with the needful
funds.

This sounded so fair that the prince and his council
were content. Off set Pedro in one direction seeking
money, and off set the prince in another, to find good
quarters for his men.

The English kept wearily waiting at Valladolid, the
Companions beguiling their tedium by a little pillaging,
according to their wont; but no Pedro made his
appearance, neither did he think it worth while to send
word why he did not come. Perplexed and annoyed
at this, the prince, by the advice of his council, de-
spatched three knights to the city of Sevile, (almost at -
the other side of the country, and where Pedro was all
the time,) to demand the reason of this non-fulfilment
of his promise. The king pretended to be exceedingly
delighted to see these knights, and he told them
politely how very sorry he was that he had been unable
to do as he promised his good friend the prince. He
had himself remonstrated with his subjects, and set
others to do the same, on their slowness in bringing in
supplies, but his people excused themselves by saying
it was impossible to collect any money so long as the
Free Companions were in the country. These vagabonds
had, as he declared, already killed three or four of his
officers, who were actually on their way to the prince
THE PRINCE'S SPANISH CAMPAIGN. 203

with money; and he therefore begged that the prince
might be entreated, from him, to be good enough to
send those wicked Companions right away home, and
leave some of his knights, to whom the amount due
should be scrupulously paid. And with this he bade
the prince’s messengers farewell.

They returned to their master with the answer they
had got; and its delivery perplexed and annoyed him
still more, for he now began to suspect that Pedro
meant to shuffle out of his engagements. The cunning
Castilian had, according to the French proverb, sucked
the orange, and was now preparing to throw away the
rind. The prince was deeply wounded; to a man of
his high sense of honour such shabbiness was inex-
pressibly offensive, and he had the further mortification
of reflecting that it was for such a one that he had so
freely poured out blood and treasure, and thrown away
his own strength in that destructive climate. For the
four months that he had spent about Valladolid, were _
the four hottest months of that hot portion of the
Continent ; and prince and people were alike all wasting
under it. The army was in haste to leave so unhealthy
a country; indeed, it appears that in those days the
English had a great dislike to the climate of Spain.
Castile, they complained, was full of barren rocks and
mountains, the rivers were. angry, brawling streams,
and its inhabitants were beggarly. While as for
Spanish wines, of which we, in our day, make so much
— 204 THE PRINCE'S SPANISH CAMPAIGN.

account, the being obliged to drink them was another
of the grievances attending service in Spain. They
said these wines were so strong and fiery, that they
disordered their heads, and consumed their lungs and
liver; so that, between hot suns and hot wines,
Englishmen, “who in their own country were sweetly
nourished” with good meat and ale, and who made a
tolerable shift to live in the pleasant country of France,
were in Castile, “burnt within and without.” “Rough-
ing it” on a bottle of port with their beef-steak, was
evidently opposed to the notions of these grumbling
Englishmen. Then the nights were so overpoweringly
hot, that they could not bear any bed-clothes, while the
extreme cold of early morning came on so suddenly,
that all unclothed as they were, it threw them into
fevers and other maladies. Altogether Spain was not
to their mind ; especially now that the ungrateful Pedro
was going to leave them to their own resources, spite
of his solemn engagements to the contrary. There was
another reason why they should get back againas quickly
as possible. King Henry when he fled, had hastened
into France, where, by the connivance of the Duke of
Anjou, he was now threatening Aquitaine, of which the
Princess of Wales, in the absence of her lord, had been
left guardian. And though the French king with
whom the English were at peace, had peremptorily for-
bidden Henry;s attacking the. prince’s dominions, it yet
was time for him to be at home and take care of himself.
THE PRINCE'S SPANISH CAMPAIGN. | 205

Orders were therefore issued for the immediate
return of the army. The King of Majorca, who had
been a brave comrade of the brave prince, was too
ill in bed to be removed when they departed, so they
were obliged to leave him behind. The prince would
fain have had some of his people stay to protect his
friend, but even that, the self-denying monarch refused,
for he said he knew not how long he might be confined
there by illness. So tents were struck, baggage-waggons
piled, and those whom war and climate had spared,
began their march homewards ; conquerors, yet sufferers.

There had been difficulties in getting into Spain.
There were now difficulties in getting out of it, for
some of the mountain-passes on the borders of Arragon
were closed against them; by the evil influence of
that bad King of Navarre, as it was said; and this
caused a whole month’s detention of the army, on its
route, while negotiations were carried on with the King
of Arragon, for passage through his share of the
Pyrenees. In truth it was not the fault of the King of
Navarre that these passes were not open; but he was
so very bad and untrustworthy a character, that if any-
thing went wrong where he was at all concerned,
people took for granted that it was his doing. He
made his appearance, however, as soon as the King of
Arragon had consented to let his kingdom be turned
into a thoroughfare for a while, waited respectfully
upon the prince, and by way of not being outdone in
206 THE PRINCE'S SPANISH CAMPAIGN.

courtesy by his brother of Arragon, offered a free
passage through his own kingdom of Navarre, (which
was a much shorter route than that through Arragon)
to the prince, the Duke of Lancaster, and some other
knights. The rest of the army might, for him, get
home as they liked, and when they liked. The prince
gladly accepted this offer for himself and his friends ;

and such was his influence with the king that he finally
induced him to extend his permission to the entire
army.

_ They marched as quietly as possible through: Navarre,
for that was in the covenant, and the king himself
attended them to the borders of his kingdom; partly,
it may be supposed, to do honour to the most notable
prince in Europe, partly, no doubt, to see that their
engagements to keep the peace and pay honestly for
such things as they required, should be respected by
the English and Gascons under his command. At
Bayonne, the frontier town of his own possessions, the
prince halted to give a few days’ rest to his weary and
weakened frame; for this expedition to Spain had
given him his death-blow; and then he pursued his
route to Bordeaux. His reception there was stately,
befitting the return of a victorious monarch. But it
was loving also; for the wife who had been so sad at
thought of his going away, came out to meet him,
bringing with her his little son Edward, then a child
of three years old.



XII.

Croubles wv Aquitaine,

=| HIS Spanish expedition brought great glory
4 269} to the prince; and that was all. The injury it



did him was incalculable. His health was
utterly broken; some supposed that slow poison had
been secretly administered to him by his enemies; but
his illness was more probably the result of climate and
hardships. And thanks to the worthless Pedro, he
brought back with him from Spain a load of debt that,
as we shall presently see, ultimately led to the destruc-
tion of English power in southern France. That was
a heavy price to pay for the world’s plaudits.

The prince’s first care on reaching home, was to dis-
perse the remains of his army. The great men of it
took care of themselves; the Gascon lords with their
retainers returned to their own castles, the English
knights to their various offices in the province ; and
those from over seas followed their leader, the Duke of
Lancaster, to England. But the Free Companies still
remained to be disposed of. They would not disperse

(3) 14
210 TROUBLES IN AQUITAINE,

until they had received their pay; and as Don Pedro’s
promise to pay had been found worse than valueless,
the prince was obliged to pledge himself to them for
payment, and meanwhile suffer them to make themselves
at home in Aquitaine. Tor he said, that though Don
Pedro had broken faith with him, it would ill become
him to act in like manner towards those who had
served him so well. These dangerous visitors were
therefore to remain where they were until he could
raise money enough to satisfy their demands. This
was no easy matter; the Spanish expedition had com-
pletely impoverished the prince, and as the Companions,
amounting to six thousand men, presently began to
“meet the difficulty by living at free quarters upon the
indignant inhabitants, he had no resource but to beg
them to take themselves out of his dominions, as for
the present he could do nothing for them.

Strange to say, these rude, unprincipled men did as
they were requested. They had no objection to living
by plunder, nay, as has been said, they liked it; but
for his very valiancy and goodness, they preferred not
to plunder their old master, provided they could be
equally well served elsewhere. And as France, their
“own domain” was open to them, they trooped thither,
to the great satisfaction of the prince’s subjects, and
the extreme dismay of those of King Charles. So this
danger was staved off for awhile.

Lhe prince’s Spanish and French prisoners had been
TROUBLES IN AQUITAINE. 211

duly ransonied, and had gone home, with the exception
of the brave du Guesclin, who still remained in bondage.
He was thought so essential to the defeated King
Henry, that the prince’s advisers were unwilling to let
him go, befere Don Pedro had paid his long bill, for
fear of another Spanish contest, in which, with no
Prince of Wales to contend against, the Frenchman
and his master would certainly have the best of it.
So he was left to chafe and fret, and get on as he best
could in this enforced idleness.

During his captivity, the prince one day, good
humouredly, asked du Guesclin how he was. “ Never,
better, my lord,’ was the answer, “I cannot be other-
wise than well, seeing I am the most honoured knight
in the world.” The prince did not exactly see that,
and bade him explain himself. In reply he was told
that throughout France and Spain, it was said that the
reason why du Guesclin was left a prisoner was that
the prince was so afraid of him, that he dared not set
him at liberty. And that, the knight ventured to
think, was paying him a very high compliment. The ©
prince could not stand this. It might be a joke, or it
might be earnest; but not for one moment could he
endure the idea of anybody’s thinking that he feared
living man. “By St. George,’ was his prompt re-
joinder, “it is not so.” And he told the knight, that
on payment of a ransom, amounting to about ten
thousand pounds, he should immediately be free. It
212 TROUBLES IN AQUITAINE.

is supposed that the prince thought du Guesclin could
not command. so large an amount, and therefore that
he should hear no more about his ransom. But he was
mistaken. Du Guesclin, who knew his own value,
and how his countrymen rated him, snapped at the
offer, thanking the prince for putting so high a price
upon him; a price which he declared would be raised
if every old woman in France had to contribute the
produce of her spinning-wheel towards it.

The prince’s counsellors blamed him very much for
suffering himself to be thus trapped into liberating the
most formidable of his opponents, before Don Pedro’s
coin was forthcoming; and they advised him to break
his word with the prisoner. But though vexed enough
at himself the prince could not do that. He had
“promised,” certainly to “his hurt,” but “changing,”
on that account, was a thing not to be thought of.
Du Guesclin was accordingly liberated on his parole,
and, by the help of the King of France and the Duke of
Anjou, within one month paid the large sum demanded
of him. As had been feared, the knight immediately
returned to the aid of Don Henry; who taking up
arms a second time against the detested Pedro, over-
threw, and murdered him with his own hand.

The worn-out frame of the prince required rest, now
that he was at home. But instead of rest he was
plunged into cares and vexations. The death of Pedro
put an end to all chance of payment of his large debt,
TROUBLES IN AQUITAINE, 913

if indeed there had been any chance before. And as
the prince considered himself responsible, to those who
had fought under him, for the satisfaction of their just
claims, it was incumbent upon him to provide money
in one way or other. Pedro might defraud him, but
it was impossible for him to defraud others. The only
way in which it appeared to him that he could raise
the requisite funds, was by imposing a heavy tax upon
his subjects. This tax was called the Fouage; it was
literally a tax upon every chimney or house-fire in the
province ; and it excited the liveliest discontent among
the inhabitants of the whole principality. A parliament
was summoned at Niort, te whom the prince’s chaneellor
announced the impost, explaining how it was to be
levied, and that it was not designed to last more than
five years, or at any rate, no longer than until the debt
caused by the campaign in Spain was discharged.
Some members assented to it; but a number of the
greatest barons protested against it; saying that when
assuming the lordship of Aquitaine, the prince had
sworn to maintain all the rights and privileges of its
nobles, who when they were vassals to the King of
France had no taxes, or duties to pay, nor were they
going to do it now, —they would fight first. Nevertheless,
for peace’ sake, they were willing when they returned
home, to give further consideration to the subject,
and take counsel concerning it with their neighbours.
Nothing more could be obtained from these resolute
214 TROUBLES IN AQUITAINE.

barons of Gascony, for it was they, who were the dissen-
tients ; so the parliament was broken up, to reassemble
on a certain day named by the prince. The more peace-
able feelings of its insubordinate members, however,
evaporated by the time they reached their own castles
_and fortresses, at whose grim walls many a glance was
doubtless cast, as their sturdy owners thought how they
might, in case of need, hold them out against their
lord. Pay the tax they would not,—those old castles of
theirsshould smoke sooner than that ; neither would they
return to the parliament, catch them doing that. But
there was one thing they would do, and this was, walk off
straightway to the King of France, tell him their troubles,
and appeal to him, as their sovereign lord, against the
oppressive doings of the Prince of Aquitaine.

Now this talk of appealing to the King of France
was a downright mistake of theirs. According to the
treaty of Bretigny, King Charles was no more soverelon
lord to them, than he was to the English nobles. In
it all right and jurisdiction over them had been for-
mally given up. But in their anger it was not con-
venient to remember this, and Charles, to whom they
posted, was much too well bred to tell them they were
altogether in the wrong about it. Of course he, in
his secret soul, was well pleased with so charming an
opportunity of picking a quarrel with the prince, and
having the prince’s own lords to back him in it. But
neither did he tell this to the Gascons. He told them
TROUBLES IN AQUITAINE, 218

blandly that the prince’s attempt to encroach upon
their rights and privileges, was most probably the
fault of ill-advisers in his court; nevertheless, all that
he himself could with propriety do for them should be
done willingly; he had sworn, as his father had done,
tu several articles of peace with the King of England,
all of which, of course, (speaking off hand,) he could
not remember; but he would have them looked into,
and all the rights and privileges of the Gascon nobles, as
there established, he would readily help them to main-
tain. With that he royally bowed them out ; sowell satis-
fied with their answer, that they did not care to return
home. They preferred remaining at Paris with so gra-
clous a monarch, into whose willing ear they might pour
their complaints of the prince’s pride and presump-
tion; and their assurances of his perfect competence
to settle the matter, spite of that formidable individual.

If the prince was displeased at the point-blank
refusal of these Gascon noblemen to pay the tax im-
posed upon the province, he was still more so at their
referring the subject of dispute to one who had really
nothing to do with it. It was a positive insult to
himself. They had no right of appeal; that, as has
been said, was given up when the twice-beaten French
were forced to surrender so large a portion of their
broad lands to the English; lands over which he now
ruled, subject only to his own father, as sovereign lord.
dhe hearth-tax he made up his mind to have ; he was not
916 TROUBLES IN AQUITAINE.

_ to be baffled by these insubordinate barons, nor that
meddling French king. Such was the prince’s mood.

Chandos, who was a wise, as well as a valiant man,
and whose gray hairs had brought him greater experi-
ence in matters of state, than his valiant master could
boast of, opposed the prince’s persistence in this tax.
He foresaw the dangers of it, and would fain have
avoided them. Unfortunately the prince was not to
be moved, and finding his interference useless, Sir
John judged it best to retire from the court for awhile;
that he at least, might not have the blame, of what he
had done his best to: prevent. So to give colour to
his departure, he made the excuse of wishing to visit
his estate of St. Sauveur, le Vicomte, in Normandy,
(conferred upon him, for his great services, by King
Edward,) which he had not seen for three years. And
with Sir John out of the way, the prince went on
demanding the tax, from the more manageable portion
of his subjects, who were willing to pay it; rejoicing
no doubt that he was at last carrying his point, spite
of Chandos, and his over caution, and the insolent
doings of those intolerable Gascons. |

Those Gascons meanwhile, were still besieging the
French king with their entreaties that he should j udge
between them and their prince; entreaties which they
now enforced by threats of carrying their case else-
where, to some other sovereign, if he refused them
help. Charles, as we are aware, was all the time
TROUBLES IN AQUITAINE. 217

longing to do as they wished him; but as he very well
knew that such a proceeding on his part would almost
inevitably end in war with England, he was obliged to
proceed very warily; not only in order to give some
appearance of right to what he did, but on account of
one of his brothers, the Duke de Berri, being still a
hostage in that country.

In this difficult and dangerous state of affairs, there
was not wanting a mischief-maker (one rarely is, where
he is least required,) to make ill worse. The Earl of
St. Pol, one of the French hostages in England, having,
like his Grace of Anjou, distinguished himself by
breaking his parole, and sneaking away home, was
filled with an uncommon hatred of those whom he had
treated so shabbily, and of course was correspondingly
anxious to do them all the injury in his power. With
this amiable motive (knowing full well that if the
prince were summoned to Paris, in character of a
vassal, it would inevitably produce a war,) he busied
himself in urging upon the French king a compliance
with the Gascon lords’ request. Others joined him in
this, including the Duke of Anjou, who, as has been
said, was in the same discreditable predicament as
himself, that of a breaker of his word. Knights and
gentlemen held the keeping of their word, as one of
their most sacred duties ; the breaking of it, as one of
the most dishonouring crimes of which they could be
guilty. Hence it is pretty plain that though they
218 TROUBLES IN AQUITAINE,

might be nobles, these two individuals were neither
gentlemen, nor good knights. However, such were
among the king’s advisers; and all together, word-
breakers, and those not so disgraced, did their best to
persuade Charles of what he was very willing to be-.
lieve,



that he was still feudal lord of the prince, and, as
such, had a right to summon him to plead before him.
They further made a fuss about the ill conduct of the
English since the peace was signed; and the result of
their advice and persuasions was the calling of a solemn
council to examine the various documents concerning the
treaty, and to deliberate on the best mode of action.

The prelates and nobles who composed the council
read, and re-read these documents, and thought, and
better thought over their contents, till they came to
the desired conclusion :—that the rights of the King of
France were invaded in Aquitaine, and that the English
had behaved so badly, that he would be justified in
making war upon them.

This opinion of his council was so agreeable to
Charles, that he received it very graciously, and deter-
mined to act upon it, as soon as it was safe for him to
do so. Accordingly, spinning out the time by telling
his impatient Gascon clients that though he should be
exceedingly sorry to drive them to any foreign lord to
seek the justice which they required at his hands, yet
such affairs called for much prudence and deliberation,

be set to work quietly, to sound these gentlemen as to
TROUBLES IN AQUITAINE, 219

whether they were able to support him with any
adequate force in ease of war with the English. And
as, beside paying the cost of their twelvemonth’s resi-
dence in Paris, he also gave them presents of rich
jewels (which gentlemen wore in those days, as well
as ladies), we cannot be surprised at their vowing that
they both could and would stand by him. In addition
to these Gascons, some of the northern folks also pro-
tested that they hated the English (as well they might,
seeing the English had so often ridden rough-shod
over them), and were quite ready, if the opportunity
were given them, to return to their old allegiance, and
prove stanch Frenchmen.

So far so good. The train was being gradually laid,
that was to blow the English to the moon,—or, at any
rate, out of France. The next step in the process was
now to be taken. A document was drawn up, as an
appeal from the Gascon lords, to Charles, king of
France, against the oppressions of the Prince of Wales,
and praying the king that they might have justice
done them. The wording of a document like this,
which was to throw two kingdoms into a blaze, was
rather a nice matter. Much scratching out, and inter-
lining, and preparation of very rough drafts, took place
before it was ready to be fairly copied, and sent to the
prince, with an intimation that he must present him-
self in Paris, to answer the appeal before his lord of
France, and abide judgment upon it.
920 TROUBLES IN AQUITAINE.

Tt was done at last, and by way of giving it due
effect, an “eloquent lawyer,” and a “noble knight,”
were appointed to carry this impertinent document,
and still more impertinent message, to the victor of
Crecy, Poitiers, and Navaret.

The twain set out on their errand, and as, wherever
they came, they announced themselves as the king’s
commissioners to the Prince of Wales and Aquitaine,
they had no lack of civility on their journey. When
they reached Bordeaux, where the prince and princess
were then keeping their court, it was too late to seek
an interview that day. So they remained for the night
at their inn, going next morning to the Abbey of St.
Andrew’s, which was the prince’s residence when in
his capital city.

Finding they were messengers from the King of
France, the courtiers received them very kindly; and
when their lord was informed of the arrival of these
envoys, he courteously ordered them to be at once
conducted to his presence. After making their best
bows to the prince, and opening their credentials, they
respectfully delivered the impudent message with which
they were charged; and which ended by bidding him
use no delay in obeying the summons, but to set out
to Paris, to have sentence pronounced upon him, as
speedily as possible. It was dated at Paris, the 25th
of January, 1369.

The prince heard it out quietly, and was silent for
TROUBLES IN AQUITAINE, 291

awhile. Then came his calm answer to this outrageous
insult: “We shall willingly come to Paris, since the
King of France desires it, but,—it shall be with our
helmet upon our head, and sixty thousand men at our
back !” |
Down upon their knees dropped the two Frenchmen,
at this alarming reply, and began to beg and pray the
prince, for God’s sake, to have mercy upon them.
They found out they had indeed put themselves into
the lion’s den, and feared that in another moment they
should be gobbled up. Tremblingly, they assured him
they meant no offence ; they had only carried a message,
as any of his subjects would do for him, and they en- |
treated that no responsibility of it might be thrown
upon their unfortunate shoulders. The prince hastened
to assure them that he was not in the least angry with
them,—such small game was beneath his notice,—but
he was exceedingly angry with those who had ‘sent
them on such an errand. The king, he said, had been
ill-advised thus to meddle where he had no business.
Charles had nothing to do with quarrels between him
and his barons. It was at his own peril that he had
thrust himself into them, and he should soon find out -
that when Aquitaine was given up to the King of
England, all rights, and jurisdiction over it, were given
up at the same time, so that there was no appeal, save
to him. If it cost a hundred thousand lives, the King
of France should be made to understand that; and
222 TROUBLES IN AQUITAINE.

turning on his heel, he left them, thunderstruck by the
explosion they had provoked.

Standing planted there, in stupid astonishment, some
of the English knights present told them, in a friendly
manner, that they had executed their commission very
well, but they had better go home, for they would get
no other answer than the one they had received. So
the “eloquent lawyer,” and the “noble knight,” re-
turned to their inn, not a little crest-fallen with their
morning’s adventures. Fright, however, had not taken
away their appetites, for the historian has thought it
worth his while to leave on record that they got their
dinner, before packing up, and setting out back again
with the tremendous answer they had received. _

The prince had acted with becoming spirit in dealing
with this insult from the French court ; but it occa-
sioned him much uneasiness, foreseeing, as he did, that
war was its ultimate design; and that he, the old
scourge and terror of France, was no longer the brilliant,
vigorous leader of his brave bands, but a disease-stricken
man, slowly sinking into his grave. Such considera-
tions were enough to fill him with painful anxiety;
and his feelings were shared by those about him. To
their dull wits no better plan suggested itself than that
he should have the “eloquent lawyer” and the “noble
knight” put to death, by way of suitable recompense
for the impertinence of which, poor wretches, they had
been the medium. The hot zeal of these gentlemen,
TROUBLES IN AQUITAINE. 223

however, found no countenance from the prince, who
yet was so incensed against the messengers, as well as
their master, that when he heard they had left Bor- |
deaux, on the road to Thoulouse, where the Duke of
Anjou was, he inquired whether they had had any
passports given them. Understanding that they had
none, he desired that they should be followed, brought
back, and thrown into prison for their pains; for, on
re-considering the matter, he could not regard them as
envoys from the King of France, but from his own
rebellious. vassals, and as such, of course, they had no
privileged character. Above all, he could not endure
that they should go straight to his old enemy the
Duke of Anjou, and tell him how they had insulted
the prince to his face.

Sir William le Moine, who was despatched on this
errand, made such haste that he soon came up with
the travellers; and, fancying, no doubt, that he was
vastly improving upon his master’s directions, instead
of arresting them in the prince’s name for bringing
defiant messages from his rebellious vassals, he, to
their utter horror, accused them of horse-stealing; as
he pretended, on the complaint of the innkeeper with
whom they had lodged. There was a pleasant thing
for a couple of French gentlemen, who had just had
the enjoyment of treating the great Prince of Wales
and Aquitaine, as though he were any ordinary baron,
to have so vulgar a crime as that of stealing a horse—
Q24 TROUBLES IN AQUITAINE.

aninnkeeper’s horse, too—laid to their charge! Of course
it was of no use for them to say that they had not done
it. They were forthwith clapped into prison, some of
their people being permitted to continue their journey,
and tell the Duke of Anjou, if they thought fit, how
the French king had dealt with the prince, and with
what contempt his messengers had been treated,

Both king and prince now began to make prepara-
tions for war, and in the course of them sundry knights
and nobles changed sides; some who had formerly
served the prince now tendering their allegiance to the
King of France, and some of his liegemen turning heart
and soul to the English cause. The Free Companions
were also divided, one party selling their hireling
valour to the prince, while others had secretly made
merchandise of themselves to the French. The first
blood spilled in what was destined to be a long, and to
the English, disastrous war, was by the refractory
Gaseons; who in revenge for the imprisonment of the
king’s messengers, (or rather, as the prince had said, of
their own,) took up arms, and set upon a small troop
of the prince’s followers, under his High Steward, Sir
Thomas Wake. It was a safe little adventure; the
Gascons, numbering three hundred lances, were in
ambuscade, so that the rout of sixty unsuspecting
horsemen, was no very wonderful affair, though doubt-
less they plumed themselves upon it.

The prince was in a rage when he heard that the
TROUBLES IN AQUITAINE. G25

Gascon lords had dared to attack his high steward ;
and he vowed to inflict severe punishment’ for the
offence. With this view he recalled Sir John Chandos,
from the quietude of his Norman estate, and that
valiant knight was soon in the saddle at the head of a
large company of men-at-arms and archers. With him
was the Captal de Buch, as well as other nobles ; and
many hard blows were exchanged between them and
the Gascon lords, sometimes to the advantage of one,
sometimes to that of the other. |

King Edward could scarcely believe that Charles in:
tended fighting, and so did not take as much care as he
might have done of his northern French possessions.
While to gain a little more time, things not being quite
ready for the grand crash, Charles sent envoys to Eng-
land, to lodge all sorts of complaints against Edward
and his son the prince. They managed to employ two
whole months in this agreeable work, holding many
conferences with the king, whom they sometimes put
in a passion with their unreasonableness ; but, of course,
they did not come to any settlement of the quarrel,
that not being their object.

At length when the King of France was aware that
the war had already broken out in Gascony ; that in
the north, certain of Edward’s subjects were only await-
ing a convenient opportunity of betraying him; and
that he himself had a numerous army, not only ready,

but eager for war with the Prince of Wales; he thoug lit
(3) =
lo
926 TROUBLES IN AQUITAINE.

the time was come for him to throw off the mask,
The mode which he adopted for doing this was to send
a formal declaration of war to the English court ; but,
either from impudence or ignorance, he actually sent
this important document by his own valet. It was a
dreadful blunder, and Edward and his council were not
a little offended at so gross an impropriety as sending
a declaration of this nature by such hands. They said
(and they were quite right) it was not decent that war
between two such great monarchs as those of France
and England, should be declared by a common servant.
Some man of rank, prelate or baron, would have been
‘more fittingly employed upon the errand.

It was well the poor valet had not to suffer for his
master’s indiscretion. But he was civilly dismissed after
he had delivered his letters (of whose contents he pro-
tested his ignorance), and got away home with all speed.

King Charles, however, did a worse thing than even
this of offering an unworthy insult to his great rival.
After sending off his shabby messenger to the English
court, he sent that shabby St. Pol, and Sir Hugh de
Chatillon to Abbeville, which had been secretly won
over to the French, and whose gates being opened to
them, gave an example of defection which was speedily
followed by the whole province of Ponthieu, before the
reinforcements, ordered from England for the protec-

tion of the county, could arrive.






. vy NS. |
cs up a PSD
Co Ey X Ire
>) }

TREATY OF PEACE BROKEN BY THE FRENCH. y

@ — fF)
Wi i eS et Wp
Ce
—\

o XS YAY
Crs







| ‘XII
Creaty of Peace broken by the French.

h< N old historian tells us that Kiag Edward was



)

when he heard of
these things. And certainly if anything
can justify people’s being in “a mighty passion,” the
craft, the successful craft, of King Charles was ample

excuse for an utter loss of temper on the part of our

in a “mighty passion’

ereat Edward. It was enough to provoke any one who
had suffered and fought so hard for conquest, as he had,
to have the fruit of that conquest stolen from him.
Had Ponthieu been again the prize of him who could
hit hardest and longest,—however ill it had befallen
him in the contest, Edward could have borne it better.
As the treaty was now broken by the French, he again,
by advice of Parliament, assumed the title and arms of
King of France,—a title and shield which have only of
late years been erased from our coin. Till that period,
every shilling and sixpence, handed over the meanest
shopkeeper’s counter in England, bore testimony to the
won hand with which, from time to time, we English
230 TREATY OF PEACE BROKEN BY THE FRENCH.

have stricken our neighbours over the channel in main-
tenance of a right claimed over them. With the hearty
support of his Parliament, he further made preparations
for a tough struggle with that treaty-breaker, Charles
of France. A military force under his third son the
Duke of Lancaster, and the Earl of Pembroke his son-
in-law, was at onee ordered to the assistance of the
Prince of Wales ; and thanks to the Duke of Brittany,
whose quarrels as Earl of Mountfort the English had
long espoused, permission was obtained to land these
troops at St. Malo, and march them through his
dominions to the seat of war.

A numerous body of those rough and ready fellows,
the Free Companions, was also brought to the prince’s
aid by Sir Hugh Calverly; and being immediately ap-
pointed to execute summary justice on the leading
Gascon mal-contents, executed their commission in the
most satisfactory manner to their employer,—by plun-
dering, burning, and otherwise destroying the lands of
these noblemen. Thus England and France were once
more at war. ‘The monarchs of those two countries, it
should be added, not only fought but preached against
each other! That is, they set their clergy to do it, and
on both sides the water these exerted themselves, in
their way, by “long and fine” sermons, setting forth
the justice of the quarrel, as actively as did the fight-
ing men. The exhortations of the clergy had much
influence on the French king’s success. In addition to
TREATY OF PEACE BROKEN BY THE FRENCH. 231

preaching up the justice of the war, which both kings — |

required from their clerical subjects, Charles went so
far as to go in solemn procession with his ecclesiastics, ©
praying for the success of his arms. And as, after the
custom of those times when extraordinary devotion was
intended, he walked shoeless and stockingless on these
occasions, doubtless a still happier result was antici-
pated from his exertions.

Had Charles kept faith with the English, we might
have felt more respect for his prayers. But while we
reprobate word-breaking, either by monarch or subject,
it must be admitted that the temptation to free so large
a number of his people from a foreign yoke, and him-
self from a continual humiliation, was very great; and
those of us who never yield to temptation, even when
it is most enticing and most convenient, are, perhaps,
the fittest to pour unmeasured censure on the French
king’s doings. Yet, with all our allowance for the
vehement temptation presented to this sovereign, (or
to any one else who proves false, when remaining true
would injure him), we are not to forget that promises
must be kept. Had the morality of the Prince of
Wales been of as loose a character as that of his op-
ponent, the war might not have taken place; for, as we
have seen, it was brought about solely by the imposi-
tion of that hearth-tax, which was forced upon the
prince by his determination not to break faith with
those to whom he had pledged his word.
232 TREATY OF PEACE BROKEN BY THE FRENCH.

Charles was not content with attacking and under.
mining the English in France. He also fitted out an
immense fleet, which, under the command of his
brother, the Duke of Burgundy, was designed to invade
and utterly destroy England. Not Napoleon himself,
when he talked of driving us English into the sea,
contemplated a more entire destruction of those terrible
islanders than did he. Both, however, were doomed to
disappointment in their glowing anticipation of victory.
Between brisk preparations made for his reception on
the other side the channel, and fresh work cut out for
his troops by the arrival of the Duke of Lancaster in
the north, Charles thought it best to give up his plan
of attacking his old enemies upon their own shores; so
that his fine fleet was of no use to him, the troops who
should have gone on board it finding quite enough to
do in watching the duke’s army. Fighting they did
not attempt, though far superior in number ; being
warned, by past experience, that pitched battles with
the English did not agree with their constitution,

The first success of the French in this long, and to
the English disastrous, contest, it has been said, was
gained by craft. But it must be owned that when
blows decided the matter (and some very hard ones
were struck on both sides) they still had the best of it.
Our time was come. Perhaps we had no business in
France! And then there was no longer the Black

Prince to meet the enemy in the field, He was too ill
TREATY OF PEACE BROKEN BY THE FRENCH. 233

even to mount his horse; had he not been, Charles and
his people would scarcely have ventured to stir in the.
matter. The prince, like sop’s sick lion, was com-
pelled, in his feebleness, to endure indignities which
in health and strength none would have dared to offer
him. |

While the Dukes of Lancaster and Burgundy in the
north were thus watching each other, as a cat would a
‘mouse, things were going on more briskly in the south,
to which we must now turn our attention. There
small battles were fought, and castles besieged with
varying success as fortune favoured, now the French
and then the English. Chandos, the captal, Lord
Audley—the Audley of Poitiers—and Sir Robert
Knolles, were the principal leaders in this part of the
country. Grief for the death of his son, however,
caused Audley to retire from active service ; and then
Chandos, who was a tower of strength to his master,
succeeded that nobleman as Seneschal of Poitou. In
this character Sir John got together a strong body of
English and Poitevins, with which he purposed making
an excursion into Anjou to beat up the quarters of the
French in that province ; and as the young Earl of
Pembroke was in garrison with two hundred lances at
Mortagne-sur-mer, he sent for him to join the expedi-
tion. There was nothing that the earl would have
liked better; but some mean souls about him suggest-
ing that if he, who was but a young knight, went out
234 TREATY OF PEACE BROKEN BY THE FRENCH.

in company with so old and experienced a commander
as Chandos, the latter would have all the credit of the
enterprise, his ardour cooled down rapidly, and he was
easily persuaded that so great aman as he ought to act
by himself, in order that all the world might know
what a very clever fellow he was. So he declined Sir
John’s invitation, who consequently was obliged to go
without him.

Sir John marched into Anjou, where, pitching his
quarters in the plains, he sent out light divisions in all
directions to destroy the neighbouring country, in
which, during the fifteen days they remained there,
they did “infinite mischief,” as one may well believe.
When there was no more mischief to be done, they
set out on their return to Poitou. On arriving at
Chauvigny, about eighteen miles from Poitiers, informa-
tion was brought Sir John of the near neighbourhood
of a large body of men-at-arms under de Sancerre,
Marshal of France; and as he wished to attack him,
he sent a second time to Pembroke, begging him to
bring up his men. The foolish earl again refused,
though the herald who carried the message found him
mustering his men, as if for service; and as without
him Sir John had not force sufficient to meet the
marshal, he was reluctantly obliged to give up his
purpose, and go straight to Poitiers where his followers
dispersed,

As soon as Pembroke heard that Sir John had dis-
TREATY OF PEACE BROKEN BY THE FRENCH. 235

banded his troops, he thought that now (when he could
have all the glory to himself) was the time for him to
show of what sort of stuff he was made. So at the head
of three hundred men-at-arms, whose numbers were in-
creased by others as they passed along, he sallied out
of Mortagne, and made his way into Anjou, apparently
for the purpose of gleaning, where Chandos had been so
ruthlessly shearing. Of course it was very pleasant
for the little, great man to go about doing mischief on
his own account, rather than at the bidding of the knight.
of Poitou. The mischief was his own, his very own; no
chance of Sir John’s getting the least bit of credit for it.
But, alas! pride had a fall The French did not think
quite so highly of my lord as he thought of himself;
Chandos they knew and feared, but the insolent young
knight, whose vanity would not allow him to serve
under that veteran, (they had heard the whole story),
they thought they might manage to overthrow. To
this end several of the French commanders laid their
heads together, and concerted for the discomfiture of
the brisk young earl. Collecting their troops they ac-
cordingly came stealthily on his track, and just as the
earl’s party had re-entered Poitou, and settled them-
selves, comfortably as they thought, in the village of
Puirenon, in, about supper time, dashed the French-
men, making the dusky streets resound with cries of,
“Our lady for Sancerre,” and tilting away at every one
they met. The uproar soon reached head-quarters, and
236 TREATY OF PEACE BROKEN BY THE FRENCH.

the earl and his friends, arming in haste, came along
with such of their people as they could get together to
see what was the matter. But unluckily for them the
French had, in this sudden manner, so completely got
possession of the place as to render it impossible for
the whole company to assemble. Separated, they were
easily cut off, and, after many of them had been killed
or taken prisoners, Pembroke and a few others were
driven to take shelter in an ill-fortified house belonging
to the Knights Templars, where they just contrived to
save their precious selves; all the earl’s plate being
left behind as a trophy for the French.

Tt was rather humiliating for my lord, just as he
was rejoicing in having got rid of the overwhelming
superiority of the great Chandos, to find himself thus
caught like'a rat in a trap. But his worst humiliation
was yet to come, as we shall see; and, however un-
patriotic it may be thought, we cannot after all, help
enjoying the troubles of this presumptuous young
soldier.

As the French had no mind to be deprived of their
prey, when it appeared to be within their grasp, they
marched up to the house where our friends had taken
refuge, and after examining it pretty closely, determined
to attack it. Scaling ladders were accordingly brought,
fixed against the walls, and, holding their shields over
their heads to ward off stones and arrows from above,

some bold fellows struggled up. But, as an old writer
TREATY OF PEACE BROKEN BY THE FRENCH, 237

says, when they had done that, they had not done
much, for on reaching the top of the wall, they met so
brisk a reception from the beleaguered knights, as sent
them to the bottom again, much quicker than they had
mounted; while such flights of arrows were poured in
upon those below, as made even that anything but a
comfortable post.

Time after time were these attempts made and re-
pulsed, until the deepening gloom of evening rendered
it impossible to renew them. Sounding their trumpets
for the retreat, the French then sheared off, in remark-
ably good spirits, saying they had done enough for one
day, but would try again on the morrow. For fear
lest the birds should be flown before morning,
they placed a strong guard in front of the house,
which they were determined to have, either by assault
or by starving out its garrison; and then they re-
tired to their quarters where they “made a night of
it.”

Being ill supplied with provisions as well as artil-
lery, my Lord Pembroke and his friends were by no
means 1n so cheerful a frame of mind as that enjoyed
by the confident Frenchmen. They could, of course,
make shift to fast for awhile, but still after all, hunger
added to danger is anything but enlivening. And yet,
even this was better than what my lord had to come
to at last. It was very mortifying, after riding his
high horse with the veteran of Poitou; but in his pre-
238 TREATY OF PEACE BROKEN BY THE FRENCH.

sent strait there was no help for it; Chandos must be
sent for to help him out of the difficulty, into which
his own obstinate folly had got him. So the belea-
guered party managed to smuggle one of their number
out at the back door, with injunctions to ride for his
life to Poitiers, and entreat Sir John to come to their
assistance, It was midnight when the messenger was
despatched, in hope of bringing Chandos to them by
next day’s noon; but being unacquainted with the
country, he wandered about until it was broad daylight,
before he even found the road to Poitiers. Meanwhile,
at peep of dawn, the French were at work again, climb-
ing up their ladders, and getting the benefit of a wake-
ful night spent by the earl and his friends in adding
to their means of defence against these persevering
assailants. Great stones and even ponderous benches
had been carried to the roof of the house, and thence.
were now liberally bestowed upon the heads of the
besiegers below; while as before—the fight, hand to
hand, with such as sealed the wall, was as obstinate as
it possibly could be.

As the morning wore on, anxious glances were cast
on the road leading to Poitiers, in hopes of catching some
signs of the knight’s approach for their rescue. Not
even Bluebeard’s sister-in-law “sister Anne,” looked
out more eagerly for her brothers, than did those
English knights, under the unlucky leadership of Lord
Pembroke, for the advancing banner of Chandos. Dut
TREATY.OF PEACE BROKEN BY THE FRENCH. 239

no welcome “cloud of dust,” announced that deliver-
ance was at hand!

Between six and nine o'clock the French, tired of
climbing up their long ladders only to be knocked on
the head, or pitched to the bottom again after they got
to the top, sent off for pickaxes, mattocks and such
like tools, for the purpose of undermining the walls,
pressing some of the sturdy villagers around, into their
service for this congenial occupation. The earl was
alarmed (and hungry) before, but he was in a regular
fright now, for this was by far the most dangerous
trick the enemy had yet played him; and to hasten
Chandos to his aid, he sent off another squire, post
haste, out at the back as before, with his own ring as
a token, by way of convincing the old knight that it
was really he himself who wanted him. By this time,
however, the first messenger, who had wandered about
the whole night before finding the road to Poitiers, had
arrived in that city on his jaded steed; and hearing
that Sir John was at prayers (for, as we have said,
those warriors of the olden time, prayed as well as
fought), at once rushed in to him, dropped upon his
knees, and besought his speedy interference on behalf
of the young earl and his companions. |

Sir John was justly piqued at Pembroke’s double
refusal to join his expedition, so he took the matter
very coolly. “It was,” he said, “almost impossible

to get to Puirenon time enough to serve the earl, -
240 TREATY OF PEACE BROKEN BY THE FRENCH.

as prayers were not yet ended;” and so saying,
he calmly went on with them again, When service
was over, the tables were covered for dinner, and
just as the seneschal was about to sit down, in
came squire the second, who, like his predecessor,
kneeling before the great man, presented his token,
with an urgent request that Chandos would hasten to
help the earl out of his pressing danger. Sir John
took the ring, examined it closely, and seeing that it
really was the earl’s signet, remarked as before, very
gravely, that if the danger were as imminent as de-
scribed, it would be impossible for him to get to
Puirenon in time; and therefore he ordered dinner to
be served.

Oh, that the earl could but have scen the quiet con-
tempt with which Sir John treated his petitions,
instead of only feeling the consequences of it!

The stately household sat down to table, wondering,
as they ate and drank, what possessed their master ;
but by the time the second course was brought up, Sir
John began to think he had inflicted sufficient punish-
ment upon the vain boy shut up in the Templars’
house at Puirenon. Raising his head from his plate,
they must have been dull who could not perceive the
kindling glance of his eye, as he told them that the
Earl of Pembroke, son-in-law of their lord, the King of
England, entreated him for help so courteously that it
behoved them at once to mount and be gone—if it
TREATY OF PEACE BROKEN BY THE FRENCH. 241

were possible to arrive in time. Pushing the table
from him as he spoke; he rose, saying: “ Gentlemen,
I am determined to go to Puirenon!” __

The call to “boot and saddle,” as the trumpets rang —
out their shrill note, was a joyful sound to his fol-
lowers, who were soon armed and riding away with
their master to Puirenon. News of this approaching
succour speedily reached the French, who, little as
they cared for Pembroke, were not (after some hours’
hard fighting that day) particularly anxious to come
in collision with the Seneschal of Poitou. “Dear
lords,” said some of their scouts, “look well to your-
selves, for Sir John Chandos with two hundred lances,
is coming from Poitiers with great haste, and greater
desires to meet you.” This piece of information
settled the matter. They came to a unanimous con-
clusion that they had best be off with the spoil and
prisoners, before worse came of it; and with trumpets
sounding the retreat they retired, bag and baggage,
from the siege of my Lord Pembroke and his com-
panions. |

The earl and his knights seeing their tormentors
retire, took for granted that Chandos was on his way to
their help, and that intelligence of his advance had
reached the enemy. So they hastily took horse to go and
meet him, some in their eagerness riding double. It was
“hail fellow, well met!” when they came up with the
seneschal; only Sir John was vexed at not being in

(3) 16 : |
242 TREATY OF PEACE BROKEN BY THE FRENCH.

time to fight the French after all. And then, as there
was nothing more to be done, they departed to their
several quarters; the earl carrying his crest much
lower than he did before he was obliged to beg and
pray a simple knight to come to the rescue of so high
and mighty a lord as himself.

The prince loved his brother-in-law Pembroke; but
we may safely conclude that when that nobleman next
presented himself at Angouleme, where the court then
was, he received a satisfying portion of the royal
invalid’s best thunder and lightning, in return for
the public exhibition of his own folly and incom-
petence, which he had chosen to make on. this occa-
sion.

The prince, languishing under mortal illness, had at
this time other griefs additional to those of seeing his
hard-won. territories wrested from him; while he, in
his disabled state, was forced to employ such prigs as
Pembroke in their defence. His mother, the “good
@ueen Philippa,” the loving wife and parent, as well
as the heroine, who, in her husband’s absence, could
defend his kingdom for him, was now lying upon her
death-bed. Her character appears to have been
altogether admirable; one that, apart from natural
affection, must have commanded the affection and
esteem of such a man as Prince Edward. We may
believe the old historian, who tells us that her death

was “right piteous to the king, her ehildren, and the
TREATY OF PEACE BROKEN BY THE FRENCH. 243

whole realm.” She was taken ill at Windsor, and her
sickness continuing so long and heavily that, as the
same writer says, it presently appeared there was no
remedy for it but death, she summoned the sorrowful
king to her bedside that she might make some requests.
of him. ,

Putting her trembling hand from out her coverings.
she took his within it, and reminding him how happily
and prosperously they had lived together for more than
forty years—from early youth to age—she prayed that
now she was about to leave him, he would fulfil. her -
last wishes, which (after providing for her servants, her
religious benefactions, and some other matters): were.
that, when he too should quit this changeful: life, he
should be laid by her side in the cloisters.of Westminster.
The king, with tears, promised: all. that she desired;
and soon after, having commended: him and_ her
youngest son Thomas (who, poor boy, stood crying by
her side) to God, she devoutly yielded up her soul into
His hands; a soul which,as the same old historian relates,
he firmly believes was, with joy, carried up to heaven
by the holy angels, for her whole life had been pure,
charitable, and good. She died on the 15th of August,
1369, in the fifty-seventh year of her age, and her re-
mains were interred in Westminster Abbey; where, in
due time, as she had desired, her weary, worn-out lord
found his last resting-place by her side. The parti-
cular spot, close by the shrine of Edward the Confessor,
244 TREATY OF PEACE BROKEN BY THE FRENCH.

had been marked out by himself, ten years before, ag
that in which his bones should be laid,

The death of Queen Philippa was greatly lamented
at home, and it was a sad day when intelligence of it
reached her people and children in France. But they
did not suffer grief to disarrange their grim battle

array !





XIY.

\

Incidents of the WHar—Death of Chandos.

pee HE war still dragged on its slow length. No-




thing decisive was done, the tactics of the
French being still te avoid general engage-
ments; while in the skirmishing, and attack, or defence
of towns and fortresses, that oecupied several campaigns,
though victory sometimes inclined to the French, some-
times to the English, yet in the main, the English
cause continued steadily declining.

The death of Sir John Chandos, who, about this
time, was killed in a skirmish, was a heavy blow to
the English interest in France. Sir John had been
excessively irritated by the loss of St. Salvin, a town of
Poitou, which had been treacherously given up to the
enemy; and in his anger that such a thing should
have happened in his own province, vowed he would
have it again, by some means or other, and make its
inhabitants pay dearly for the insult they had put upon
him. Scheme after scheme for the recapture of the
town did he devise, but the vigilance of its new
248 INCIDENTS OF THE WAR.

governor, Sir Louis de Julien, who was not to be
caught napping, proved too much even for the genius
and bravery of Chandos. Though baffled, however, he
was not discouraged; and resolving to make one more
desperate attempt to regain it, he summoned the
Poitevin nobles and knights, by whom he was much
beloved, to attend him at Poitiers, on New Year’s Eve,
1370. They came trooping at his call, and at the
time appointed, he left that city at the head of three
hundred lances; none, save the principal lords in his
company, knowing what was the object of the expedi-
tion. They marched towards St. Salvin, and on arriv-
ing there about midnight, it was explained to them
that their cold ride was for the purpose of retaking it.
Dismounting, and giving their horses to their grooms,
they descended silently into the ditch of the fortress
and prepared to plant the scaling ladders which they
had brought with them. All went right, and they
would soon have made their way into the fort, among
the sleepy and unsuspecting Frenchmen, when, as ill
luck would have it, there came such a blast from the
warder’s horn, as made them suddenly pause in their
proceedings, taking for granted that they were dis-
covered. ‘This, as it turned out, was a mistake; but
believing it, and the success of the attack depending
upon its being a surprise, there was nothing left for
them, but to crawl out of the ditch again, as quietly as
they could, mount their horses.and ride off
INCIDENTS OF THE WAR. © 249

On arriving at Chauvigny, five or six miles distant,
as nothing more was to be done, the greater part of the
discomfited troops returned home, leaving their com-
mander, with about a hundred lances in that town,
Sir John, who was too vexed to go straight back again,
was disposed to make a halt here, and as he stood, grim
and gloomy, warming himself at the kitchen fire of the
inn, Lord Thomas Percy, who had remained behind,
asked his leave to ride out with his men in search of
adventures. Permission was granted, but he had not
been long gone when word was brought to Chandos that
the French had taken the field, and were on their road
to Poitiers. Sir John did not at first much mind about
it; he was too thoroughly out of humour with his dis-
appointment to care for a brush with them, and as he
thought his people could put them down without him,
he was not for stirring. Second thoughts, however,
which in his case were not “the best,” led him to change
his purpose, and mounting his horse he left Chauvigny
with about forty lances ; for at any rate he must return
to Poitiers, and might as well do it then as later.

They pursued their route leisurely by the river until,
as the day broke, they came within sight of their friends,
under Percy, and the French, dismounted, and lance in
hand, prepared to dispute the passage of the bridge at
Lussac which it was necessary for the latter to cross.

Riding up to the French, of whom he made very
licht, Sir John, who was by no means amiable that
250 INCIDENTS OF THE WAR.

morning, began rating them soundly: “Do you hear,
you Frenchmen,” said he, “you area rascally set, going
about as you please, night and day, taking towns and
castles in Poitou, as though the country were your
own.” And then, his passion rising as he spoke, “Sir
Louis, Sir Louis, you and Carnet, (the French leaders)
are too much masters. Here I have been seeking you
this year and a half, and now I have found you, we will
see which is the stronger. You say you have often
wanted to see me. Here I am, look at me well, I am
John Chandos, and if God please, I will now see what
you are made of.”

While Sir John was thus scolding a-main, one of
the Frenchmen drew his sword, and setting upon an
English squire named Dodenhale, gave him some such
severe strokes that he knocked him off his horse.
Hearing the noise behind him Sir John turned, and
seeing Dodenhale on the ground, with several of the
French laying upon him as hard as they could, was in
a greater rage than ever. Angrily asking his men what
they were about to suffer their comrade to be slain in
that fashion, he lept from his horse, bidding.them “ dis-
mount, dismount.” Ina trice they followed his example,
the squire was rescued, and the battle began.

Sword in hand, with his banner displayed, Sir John
advanced towards the French, who, seeing the mood he
was in when he came up, had at once drawn close to-

gether, and prepared to engage. But alas, alas! that
INCIDENTS OF THE WAR. 251

January morning the ground was slippery with frost, and
the knight, trammelled with his flowing surcoat, slipped
on its glassy surface. Just at that moment a French
squire, James de St. Martin, levelled a lance at his blind
side, (Sir John had lost an eye while hunting five years
before) and the visor of his helmet being unfortunately
open it entered his face below the eye. The thrust was
made with a strong arm, and in stumbling, Sir John
bore upon the cruel weapon with such force that it
penetrated the very brain before it was wrenched out
again. He fell without a word, for it was his death-
blow, turning over once or twice in the extremity of
his agony. Seeing him down, his followers pressed for-
ward like madmen to avenge their leader. De St.
Martin was soon run through both legs by one of Chan-
dos’ squires, while his uncle, Sir Edward Clifford, be-
striding the body of his valiant nephew, dealt around
him such lusty sword-strokes as effectually shielded it
from the enemy who were struggling to carry it off the
field. But spite of the furious bravery with which they.
fought, the English were overpowered by the superior
force to which they were opposed, and most of them
were taken prisoners, Clifford still standing over, and
refusing to quit the dying man, whose almost lifeless:
body he had so well defended.

If the French had only been able to mount at once,
they would now have carried off their prisoners, and
made a successful affair of it. But unluckily for them,
952 INCIDENTS OF THE WAR.

their servants who were holding their horses in the rear,
taking fright at first glance of the advancing banner of
Chandos, had ridden away with them, anxious to pro-
tect their own valuable persons, though at the expense
of their masters, who were left in the lurch. The
Frenchmen were sorely put out when they discovered
this, for they knew that in that hostile district it would
never do for them, wearied as they were with battle,
to attempt to carry off their prisoners, and their own
wounded, a-foot.

So they sent off two or three of their number to
hunt up the horses and servants. While awaiting the
return of these, what should they see but a body of
more than two hundred Poitevins, who had turned out
on purpose to seek them, and were coming up with
flying banners, under the leadership of some of the great
lords of the province. The tables were turned now with
a vengeance. Without horses, toil-worn, encumbered
with wounded and slain, beside their own prisoners,
they had no chance of resisting this fresh troop. There
was small time for deliberation, but in that brief space
their resolution was formed. Pointing out'the advane-
ing knights to the English whom they had taken, they
promised these their liberty on condition of their ac-
cepting their recent captors as prisoners, and defending
them against the new comers: for some reason or other
the Frenchmen very much preferred falling into the
hands of the English, to being in the power of their
INCIDENTS OF THE WAR. 253

own countrymen of Poitou. The English willingly
consented to this bargain; so when the Poitevins gal-
loped up, lance in rest, the Frenchmen, backing a little
out of the way, shouted to them, “ Holla ! stop my lords,
we are prisoners already.” Thenewly released English
confirming this, down sunk those threatening lance-
points, and the owners, finding their work done to their
hand, at once became peaceable. |

But when they saw their seneschal lying there
speechless and wounded to death, their grief broke forth —
in bitter lamentations: crying out, “Oh, Sir John
Chandos! cursed be the forging of the lance that
wounded thee, and perilled thy life, thou flower of
knighthood!” They wept, they wrung their hands,
especially his own servants, as they thus tenderly be-
wailed him ; while the wounded knight, though sensible,
could only answer them with his groans.

His armour was removed very gently by his servants,
and then, supported upon the shields of his knights, he
was slowly carried to Mortemer, a fort not far from the
spot where this unhappy encounter had taken place.
It was an unhappy encounter for the English, for though
they brought back good store of French prisoners, that
was not to be set in the balance against the loss of
Chandos, who survived but one day and night that
terrible lance-thrust from a mere squire.

Thus fell, in a pitiful skirmish, one of the best and
bravest knights that England ever produced.
954 INCIDENTS OF THE WAR.

His death was universally mourned. When the sor-
rowful news was made known, the prince and princess,
and indeed all his countrymen, were sad at heart, saying
that now they had lost all. Even some of the most
renowned French nobles lamented for him; for though
they feared him, they honored him as a knight who,
like their own Bayard of after years, was “ without fear,
and without stain.” And had he but been made
prisoner instead of being piteously slain, they had such
reliance on his wisdom, and the esteem in which he
was held by his lord, that they doubted not he would
have made peace between France and England. That
hope was at an end, now that he was in his grave at
Mortemer, and there was nothing for it but “war to
the knife.”

The King of England, indeed, made an attempt at
mediation by publishing letters, in which, having re-
cited the oppressions complained of by the Gascon lords,
he, as superior lord, declared his will that amends should
be made them ; and that a full pardon should be granted
to such as having taken part with the French should
now return to their allegiance. By way of balancing this
act of grace for the insurgents, it was further set forth
that any complaints which the prince or his people had
to make against them should be equally redressed. But
Edward was not successful in his peace-making; the
wound was too deep to be healed by such remedies.
Great part of the population were tuo thoroughly French
‘

INCIDENTS OF THE WAR. 255

e

at heart to care for being the prince’s subjects at any
price, and the tide of French conquest swelled still
higher and higher against him.

About this time the castle of Belleperche, belonging
to the Duke of Bourbon, was seized by the Free Com-
panions belonging to the English; and as it was a most
desirable stronghold, whence they might ravage the
Bourbonnois, in which it was situated, at their leisure,
they settled themselves here. It had the further re-
commendation of containing a most valuable prisoner ;
for as at the time they took possession of it the duke’s
mother (who was also mother of the French queen)
made it her residence, the old lady, as well as the old
walls, fell into their hands; and though it was not con-
sidered correct, in those days, to make prisoners of
ladies, whether old or young, the Companions were too
lawless a set to feel themselves bound by the rules of
polite warfare. So they stuck to the old duchess like
wax, as well as to her fine castle.

Both king, queen, and duke were excessively annoyed
at having their mother a captive, and in such hands;
but they were obliged to submit to it for a while, until
the increasing success of the French arms enabled the
duke to raise a large body of troops with which he
hastened to her relief.

He “sat down” before the castle in due form, build-
ing a sort of strong wooden fortress for the shelter of
his men at night, while the day was spent in skirmish- —
956 INCIDENTS OF THE WAR.

ing with the garrison. Among the weapons of offence,
provided by the duke on this occasion, were several
large machines, the artillery of those days, for hurling
huge stones and logs of wood; and with these he kept
up such a pelt, night and day, against his own walls as
nearly frightened his mother out of her senses. With
towers falling and roofs crashing in around her, it was
no wonder that the poor old lady’s nerves should be
somewhat shaken by her son’s strenuous efforts for her
deliverance. And to such an extent was this the case
that she sent repeated messages, begging him not to
knock down the castle about her ears in this fashion,
for she could not stand it; but to get her out in some
less alarming manner. The duke was sorry for his
mother, of course he was; but he was much too good
a son to give the slightest heed to her entreaties, know-
ing full well that if he spared his mother’s nerves it
would be at the cost of her liberty ; so he kept thunder-
ing on as hard as ever.

| The garrison at length began not to like it; nay, they
found themselves so harassed by this persevering duke
that they were obliged to implore succour from their
friends further south. As the castle was too important
a one to be lightly given up, the prince ordered a rein-
forcement, under the Earls of Cambridge and Pembroke,
to march at once for its relief. On their arrival at
Belleperche, these camped opposite the besiegers, who, in
their turn, invited aid from all such knights and squires
“a, INCIDENTS OF THE WAR. 257

of their own party, as were anxious to distinguish them-
selves by deeds of arms; an invitation that added con-
siderably to their numbers,

The two armies remained looking at each other for
fifteen days, and then the English commanders, tired of
doing nothing, sent a herald to the Duke of Bourbon,
inviting him to a pitched battle at any place he might
choose toname. This the duke, point-blank, refused,
sending word in reply that he was not going to fight just
to please them, neither would he quit his post until he —
had retaken his castle of Belleperche. The rejoinder was
that since he would not fight he should, in three days’
time, between nine and twelve o’clock in the morning,
see his lady-mother placed .on horseback, to be carried
off, and he might rescue her if he could. But not even
this threat moved the duke from his purpose. “ Tell
your masters,” said he, “that they wage a disgraceful
war when they seize an ancient lady from among her
Servants, and carry her away prisoner; such a thing
was never before known.” He went on to say that it
would certainly be very unpleasant to him to see his —
mother carried off in that way; but they must do it if
they thought fit, and he must rescue her as soon as he
was able. The castle, however, they could not take
away with them, and that he would have. He would
fight them fifty against fifty if they liked, and the vic-
tors should have the castle.

The English were no more disposed to accept the

(3) 17
258 INCIDENTS OF THE WAR.

duke’s proposal than he had been to close with theirs, _
So, as they had said, on the third day, at nine in the
morning, the poor old duchess was set upon a hand-
somely caparisoned horse, and together with her ladies
and servants, marched off in company of the whole
army; which, with trumpets sounding and banners
flaunting in the air, returned to Limonsin, where their
prize was detained for some time by the Companions
who had first taken her and her castle.

An angry man was the duke when he saw his mother
led off in this manner. And an angry man was the
prince also with the whole affair. He did not wage war
wpon women, he said. It was a disgrace to his chivalry
that he could not forgive, and never would have suffered
on the part of his own people. Had they taken the
duchess, she should instantly have been set at liberty.
But those rovers, the Free Companions, were too little
under control for him to interfere authoritatively in the
case. Ungovernable, however, as they were, their re-
gard for the prince led them speedily to accede to his
scheme for ridding himself of the shame of keeping a
noble lady in captivity. This was to exchange the
duchess for Sir Simon Burley, one of his own knights,
and the school-fellow of his early days, who had fallen
into the hands of the French. So the duke got both
his mother, and his castle back again; for he marched
into the latter, as soon as the Companions marched out

pe:
OL it,



XV.

Che Sack of Limoges—The Vrince
returns to England.
EaieeatE death of Chandos, whose great name and
‘4 PGi) great deeds had hitherto held the prince’s
disaffected subjects in awe, led to the falling



away from their allegiance of several more of the
Gascon and Poitevin lords. And as this necessitated
increased efforts on the part of the English, to keep
their heads at all above water, Sir Robert Knolles was
summoned to England, to advise with the old king as
to what was best to be done. |

Sir Robert was joyfully received at Windsor, and
one result of the anxious consultations held there was
the raising of a large army, which, under the command
of Sir Robert, was to land at Calais, and thence march
through the country to the assistance of the prince,
who was also to be joined by a tolerably respectable
body of men-at-arms and archers, under his’ brother,
the Duke of Lancaster.

The army under Sir Robert amounted to thirty

e
262 THE SACK OF LIMOGES.

thousand men. They landed in safety at Calais ; and,
after a few days’ rest in that neighbourhood, took their
road southwards, plundering and destroying the coun-
try, or else despoiling the inhabitants by making them
pay smartly to be spared. So terrible were Sir Robert’s
doings, that for many a long year afterwards the pin-
nacles and gable ends of ruined churches and houses
in the district which he had laid waste, were known,
in bitter jest, as “ Knolles’ mitres.” In this style he
marched along, until his destroying host made their
appearance before the gates of Paris. The king, with
the Constable of France, and a throng of nobles and
knights, was in the city at the time; but, follow-
ing his old successful policy of avoiding an engagement,
he looked coolly on, while the fire and smoke of the
enemys ravages were daily visible to the affrighted
citizens. It was not an easy thing for these French
knights to lie there inactive, while all this destruction
was going on; but the king's orders were imperative,
aud there was no contravening them. Charles was
encouraged in his passive resistance by the Lord de
Clisson, one of the most influential of his counsellors.
“Sir,” sald he, “why should you employ your troops |
against these madmen? Let them go about their
business ; they can’t deprive you of your kingdom, nor
drive you out of it by smoke.”

De Clisson was quite right. There was no driving

Charles out of his own France, either by smoke or any-
THE SACK OF LIMOGES. 263

thing else; and, finding that he could not by such
means provoke a battle, Sir Robert was forced to pass
on his way towards the south.

Just as the English were breaking up their camp,
and had, by way of leave-taking, set fire to as many
villages round about as were yet unburned, there
occurred one of those incidents that are so. strikingly
illustrative of chivalric notions in the middle ages. One
of the English knights, tired out with having no op-
portunity afforded him of showing his prowess in arms,
made a vow that he would, at any rate, advance as far
as the barriers of the city, and strike them with his
lance, as a parting insult to those intolerably forbearing
Frenchmen. Accordingly, lance in hand, target slung
round his neck, and completely armed, save his helmet,
which, as customary, was carried by his squire, he rode
towards the gates. On approaching them his helmet
was laced on, and then, striking spurs into his good
steed, he went prancing and curvetting right up to.
them. As they were open, it was thought he meant to
enter the town ; but that was not his purpose. Deal-
ing the timbers a hearty blow with his lance, his vow
was accomplished, and he then turned to rejoin his
friends. The French lords and knights clustered about
the walls looking on, applauded his spirit and courage,
at the same time bidding him get away as fast as he
could, for they were unwilling so “plucky” a fellow
should come to any harm. But, though they gener-
264 THE SACK OF LIMOGES.

ously let him alone, this adventure cost the knight his
life, and that by very vulgar hands.

Riding back through the suburbs carelessly enough,
for he had no thought of danger, he was met by a sturdy
fellow of a butcher, who—with a heavy axe which he
carried, one, doubtless, for knocking down oxen—struck
the knight so violent a blow between the shoulders as
sent him flat on his horse’s neck. Just as he was re-
covering himself, a second blow on the head, cut
through helmet and skull, causing him to drop sense-
less out of the saddle; while his terrified horse galloped
off at once to the spot where the squire was awaiting
their return. Seeing the horse come back riderless,
the man set off in alarm to look for his master, whom
he found lying there, with four fellows pounding away
at him as though they were hammering an anvil,
and who soon beat out of him what little life had been
left by the butcher's axe. At this sight, the squire,
frightened for himself, fled as fast as he could, and the
poor knight, whose foolhardiness had brought him to
his end, being killed outright in this horrible fashion,
received honourable interment from the French lords,
by way of testifying their admiration of his boldness ;
for in those days such rash and foolish deeds were
held in great esteem—valour was honoured for its own
sake: people did not always stop to inquire whether it
was tempered by discretion, The knight’s English

friends were, of course, angry enough; not at their
THE SACK OF LIMOGES. 265

comrade’s folly, but at their losing him by the hands
of a pitiful butcher. It was in their eyes anything but
a respectable end for so valiant a knight; and so it
must be owned is it in ours !

Leaving Paris behind him, Sir Robert pressed on
towards the prince, but with diminishing forces ; for
some of the lords and knights under his banner took
to quarrelling among themselves, and with their brave
commander also, because, forsooth, they were much
too great men to serve under a simple knight. The
truth was that Sir Robert, who was of mean parentage
in Cheshire, had raised himself from the ranks,—as we
should phrase it in these days,—having entered the
army aS a common soldier during King Edward’s —
French wars ; and that illustrious monarch, who knew
a good soldier when he met with one, had advanced
him, solely on account of his valour, to his present de- -
servedly high position. There was among these cap-
tains one special mischief-making gentleman, who, it
is supposed, had been bought by French gold ; and he
ended his grumbling by deserting with a large body of
mnen: a piece of treachery that afterwards cost him his
head. This was a severe blow to Sir Robert’s army,
but a worse was to follow. Du Guesclin, who had
been fetched from Spain and created Constable of
France, collected a large force, which he led out to that
part of the country where the army of the north was
moving about, with the intention of fighting, when they
286 THE SACK OF LIMOGES.

two met. Sir Robert, hearing of his approach, thought
it best to be beforehand with him, and as his companies
were scattered, sent orders to their various captains to
join him that he might attack the constable. Unfor-
tunately, before the junction could be effected, du
Guesclin fell in with one of these detachments, and a
sharp engagement ensued, in which, though the Eng-
lish stood their ground valiantly, they were entirely
defeated, every man of them being either killed or
made prisoner.

His army being thus broken up, it was impossible
for Sir Robert to reach his destination in the south.
The only thing left for him was a retreat to the friendly
province of Brittany, where his people dispersed in
different directions, some taking service with other
commanders, while the remainder, whose zeal for com-
bating the French had evaporated, went quietly back
again to England. What sort of reception they met
there, we are not told. It may be supposed not to
have been a very enthusiastic one.

Du Guesclin treated his brave prisoners very courte-
ously, allowing them to go at large, on parole, until
they could procure their ransoms. He was a brave
man himself, and therefore knew how to respect valour
in others.

While these things were going on in the north, the
poor sinking prince was stung into a last effort to

grapple with his enemies in the south. The Dukes uf
THE SACK OF LIMOGES. 267

Berri, and Anjou, brothers of the French king, with
each of them a formidable army at his back, marched
towards Aquitaine, with the ultimate intention of join-
ing their forces, and besieging the prince himself in
Angouléme. They moved onwards, each in his route,
taking cities and castles on their way, until the whole
country was alarmed, and the prince, vowing his
enemies should never find him shut up in town or
fortress, but that he would, as of old, meet them in
the open field, determined to give them battle in per-
son. From far and near his loyal subjects were sum-

moned to attend him ; and the rendezvous being fixed —

at Cognac, on the Charente, he proceeded thither with
the princess, and their second son Richard, then a child
of five years old.

Meanwhile the Duke of Anjou had advanced as far as
Linde, a town situated on the Dordogne, and occupied
by a strong garrison under a Gascon knight, named
Sir Thomas de Batefol. The duke, who had a mind
to take this town, ordered his forces before it, planted
his battering machines, and prepared to besiege it in
due form: Linde, he vowed, he would have, he would
not stir a foot until he had made it his own. At the
same time he contrived to make the inhabitants under-
stand that if, they submitted to him quietly, it would
be decidedly the more comfortable plan for all parties.
The people of Linde were anxious to follow the example
of the other revolting towns, and as the duke’s fine

9

¢
268 THE SACK OF LIMOGES.

promises to them were backed by still finer ones of
handsome bribes to the governor, who was to have
so much down and a pension for life, the whole
affair was very neatly arranged between them: the
gates were to be opened, and the duke was to take
peaceable possession of the town.

If a secret, however, be communicated to many per-
sons (as this shameful one had, of course, to be), it is apt
to ooze out; and so it was in the matter of the treacher-
ous surrender of the good town of Linde. It is not
known who was the leaky individual, but the fact is that
the whole arrangement was made known to the Earl of
Cambridge, who commanded at Bergerac, about three
miles off, the very night before it was to be carried out.

The news came like a thunder clap ; but there was
just time to disappoint the contracting parties. The
captal, and Sir Thomas Felton, who were with the earl,
declaring they would be present at the surrender of
the town, immediately set off thither with a consider-
able body of troops. Arriving at day-break, they com-
manded one of the gates to be opened, and riding right
through the town, never drew bridle till they reached
the opposite one, before which the French were already
crowded, awaiting its being thrown open by that dis-
reputable Sir Thomas, who was there to admit them.
The traitor had made a good bargain for himself,
but he did not live to enjoy it. The captal, springing
from his horse, sword in hand, fell upon the knight,
THE SACK OF LIMOGES. 269

and, sternly telling him he should commit no more
treason, ran him through the body with such force that
the point of his weapon came out on the other side.
The French fled at sight of the captal and Felton, and
the town was saved for the time. The inhabitants
were, of course, dreadfully frightened lest they should
suffer for their share in the transaction ; the speedy
justice done on their governor, who lay there a dis-
honoured corpse, leading them to apprehend the worst
for themselves. But as they made a profusion of
apologies, and threw the whole blame upon the dead
man, who, of course, could not answer for himself, they
got off better than they deserved; though the captal
and Felton judged it expedient to remain in the town,
to secure their good behaviour, as long as the Duke of
Anjou camped in the neighbourhood.

It was just at this time that the French leaders be-
came aware of the prince’s design to take the field
against them in person ; and, feeble as he was known to —
be, such was the terror inspired by his mere name, that
even the great du Guesclin advised that they should,
for the present, be content with what they had done,
and retire, leaving garrisons in the numerous towns
that had already transferred themselves to the French, |
or been seized by them. The prince, it was thought,
eould not last long, and when he was gone, they might
have their own way of it. |

As the Duke of Anjou entered the prince’s territories
270 THE SACK OF LIMOGES,

by the way of Toulouse and Agen, the Duke of Berrt
brought his troops into the Limousin, where, after
doing much mischief, he laid siege to the city of
Limoges. The Bishop of Limoges was one in whom
his lord, the prince, placed great confidence, of which,
as it afterwards turned out, he was utterly unworthy ,
for, while the Dukes of Berri and Bourbon were lying
before the city, he secretly entered into. a treaty to
deliver it up to them. This was easily effected, as,
owing to the prince’s trust in the bishop, a very small
force of English, under Sir Hugh Calverly, had been
deemed sufficient to garrison Limoges; and the inhabi-
tants, being joined by their treacherous prelate, soon
overpowered Sir Hugh and hismen. The gates were
then opened to the French, who marched in with much
parade, rested themselves for three days, and then, as
the Duke of Anjou had done, beat a retreat, retiring
each one to his own post, and leaving a hundred men-
at-arms, under three French knights, to guard their
new and important acquisition.

The prince was in a rage when he heard of the trick
his friend the bishop had played him; and he swore by
the soul of his father—his most solemn oath—that he
would have Limoges back again, the very first thing
he did, and punish its slippery citizens severely.

Fair means were tried to begin with. The prince
sent heralds to the delinquents, with his commands that

they should return to their duty, and deliver up the
THE SACK OF LIMOGES. OTk

bishop to him. But, trusting to their strong fortifica-
tions and garrison, the citizens contemptuously refused —
to do either the one or the other. A more peremptory
summons was next conveyed to them, accompanied by
a threat of pulling their city down to the very ground,
and putting all its inhabitants to the sword, in case of
disobedience. But this had no better effect than the
former—nay, the herald himself, a privileged person, |
was treated with insult, and his master was set at
defiance. Upon this the prince immediately left Cognac
with a large body of cavalry, archers, and other foot
soldiers, having a grand array of lords and knights with
him, among whom were his brothers, the Duke of Lan-
caster, and the Earl of Cambridge. His brother-in-law,
Lord Pembroke, was also one of the party.

The prince, still so weak that he could not sit on
horseback, was carried in a litter during this march.
On camping before the guilty city, he vowed he would
never quit his ground until it was at his mercy; and
seeing the determination of their powerful enemy, the
bishop and his friends began to repent very heartily of
having got themselves into such a scrape. © Repentance,
however, came too late; they had not now the power,
if they had the will, to deliver up the city, for the
Frenchmen were masters of it, and they made very light
of the fears both of bishop and people; assuring them
they would undertake to deal with the prince who, spite
of his threats, should do no manner of harm to Limoges.
972 THE SACK OF LIMOGES.

It was all very well for them to talk largely in this
way; but they sang a different tune before long.

A careful examination of the city and its defences,
convinced the besiegers that they had little chance of
carrying it by storm. So far the garrison were right;
their fortifications were strong enough to keep out the
prince. But there are other ways of getting behind
stone walls, beside clambering over them, or beating them
down; and the prince, in whose warlike expeditions, a
strong corps of those useful fellows, we moderns call.
‘“‘sappers and miners,” was always to be found, decided
to attempt its capture by mining.

For a month or more, the miners kept steadily at
work. The prince would not even be tempted into
skirmishing with the hostile troops; that would have
been agreeable enough to the knightly feelings of both
sets of combatants, but it would not have contributed
to the end he had in view, which was to lay that
insolent city at his feet. For this purpose, humble pick-
axe and mattock were better adapted than more
chivalrous weapons; and the prince, who was a great
general, as well as a brave soldier, was not to be led
astray by brilliant achievements which conduced nothing
to the final result of his campaign. Self-denial is one
of the essential qualities of a good soldier. Such fool-
hardiness as that of the knight who ravi all sorts of risk
in fulfilment of his vow to strike the barriers of the city

of Paris, is a military vice, not a military virtue.
THE SACK OF LIMOGES. — 973

The prince was busy, and the garrison was not idle ; |
but spite of their countermining (for mining is a game
that two can. play at), at the end of the time mentioned,
his men had got on so well that they reported their
readiness to throw down a large portion of the wall,
whenever their commander thought fit to have it done.
Six o'clock next morning was the time fixed upon ; and
at that hour, the combustibles with which the mine was
filled, being set on fire, down toppled so great an extent
- of grim stone wall, that the ditch was filled with it.
This formed a capital causeway for the English troops.
They strode rapidly over it, and passing through the
breach, soon beat down the gates and barriers with
their heavy and sharp axes.

The suddenness of the attack added to its success.
The besiegers, headed by the prince, his brothers and
other commanders, rushed into the town, and as he had
sworn, took terrible vengeance on the affrighted inhabi-
tants. It was a sad business ;.the once humane and
generous prince was indeed now “cruel,” as he had
always been “courageous as a lion,” and heedless of
entreaties for mercy, three thousand men, women, and -
children paid with their lives for the crime of their
treacherous bishop. |

How the prince should have so changed is inexplic-
able ; but changed he was, fearfully, when he could
sanction this horrid slaughter. He had been keeping

_ bad company, with Pedro the cruel, of whom this evil

(3) 18
oy THE SACK OF LIMOGES.

deed was more worthy than of him who had stayed the
hand of that monster, after the battle of Najara,
Excuse for the prince there is none, nor do we care to
seek it. Possibly the irritation of long continued, dis-
qualifiying illness, at a time when he must have been
panting to be in the saddle, once more leading his
valiant few to victory, against the swarming armies of
France, added to indignant anger at the base eonduct
of the bishop and citizens of Limoges, may in some
degree account for this unwonted outbreak of the evil
passions of our human nature. And it must not be
forgotten that, five centuries ago, death, and human
suffering were much more lightly thought of than they
are now. |

One party of the besiegers hastened to the epis-
copal palace, and seized the prelate, the real cause of all
these horrors. He was dragged with little ceremony
before the incensed prince, who flashing his angry
eyes upon him, answered his prayers for mercy by
assuring him he should lose his head for his pains;
and so saying, he at once ordered the culprit from his
presence.

The three French knights whom the Duke of Anjou
had left to defend the city, seeing the state of affairs,
drew up their men in good order, with an old wall at
their backs to protect their rear, and resolved, like
brave soldiers, to sell their lives as dearly as possible.

They were attacked heartily by the prince’s brothers,
THE SACK OF LIMOGES. 975

Lancaster, Cambridge, and Pembroke ; who advancing
on foot set upon them so stoutly that notwithstanding
the gallant defence of the Frenchmen, their men were all
slain ortaken. The three royal brothers matched them-
selves singly against the three French knights, and the -
fight between them was so well maintained that the
prince himself (who was still borne in a litter), drew
near to watch the combat, for pure love of feats of
arms. - |

Personal valour, however, was now unavailing to
retrieve the day’s disasters, and having done enough for.
honour, the Frenchmen gave up their swords in token
of surrender. But though they could not rescue the
doomed city, their gallantry had its reward; for the

prince, who-had been looking on, was so delighted with
the prowess of these knights, that for their sakes he

stopped the murderous work that was going on in the

city. Limoges, was of course, given up to plunder ;

and when the English had pillaged it to their heart's

content, they set it on fire, drawing off afterwards, with

their spoil and prisoners, to Cognac again.

The guiltiest man in that unfortunate town, fared the
best. The bishop did not lose his head, as the prince
had promised him, and as he verily deserved to do. —
His escape is said to have been owing to the friendli-
_ ness of the Duke of Lancaster, who asked his brother
to place the prisoner in his hands, under pretence of

seeing execution done upon him. Instead of that, how-
276 THE PRINCE RETURNS TO ENGLAND.

ever, the duke suggested to the pope that he should
intercede for the bishop’s life; and as a request from
the pope could not well be refused, the prince ordered
that the offender should be given up, though, it is
sald, at the same time he regretted that the prelate’s
head was not off before the arrival from Rome, of this
unpleasant “ begging-letter.”

As winter now approached, the time for campaigning
was at an end; so the prince’s army was disbanded, and
sent into quarters for that useless season.

The siege of Limoges was our hero’s last campaign.
His next battle was to be with an enemy that never yet
was known to spare ; and who finally bears down the best
and the bravest : Death had been menacing the prince
in the distance, and was now gradually drawing nearer
and nearer, for the final struggle. Before striking
down the gallant father, however, his cold hand closed
upon toe innocent son; or rather let us say, God,
Whose servant death is, took that innocent child to
himself.

In a few months after his return from Limoges, worn
and exhausted with battle, and saddened doubtless by
the unwonted cruelty into which his angry feelings had
betrayed him—cruelty so unlike him—the prince lust
his eldest son Edward, a boy of seven years old. The
poor child died at Bordeaux, in the early part of the
year 1371, to the great affliction of his parents and the
whole court.
THE PRINCE RETURNS TO ENGLAND. 277

The prince now took the advice of his physicians to
return to England on account of his health, as his
native air might, it was thought, restore him. Previous
to his setting sail from Bordeaux, he gave up the: poor
remains of the once stately province of Aquitaine, to
the care of his brother, the Duke of Lancaster. All
the barons and knights of the principality who con-
tinued faithful to their allegiance were summoned to
Bordeaux to take leave of their prince, and do homage
to his successor. Being assembled in the hall of
audience, the prince told them that so long as his
health had permitted him, he had striven to be a good
lord to his vassals, and to defend them from all their
enemies. Now he was compelled to leave them, and
he besought them to be as loyal and obedient to his
brother, as they had been to him. They willingly
pledged themselves to this, and in token of their fealty
(as was the manner of those times), kneeling before the
duke, placed their hands between his, and kissed
him. :

The fleet that was to convey the prince to England
was now awaiting him in the Garonne; and he went
on board as soon as this important ceremony was at an
end. His wife, and now only son Richard, were with
him, as well as his two step-sons ; and favourable winds
speedily landed them in safety at Southampton. Two
days’ rest for the invalid were needful here; and then.
his stalwart knights and attendants taking horse, while
278 THE PRINCE RETURNS TO ENGLAND.

he himself was obliged again to have the unwonted in-
dulgence of a litter, the eavaleade moved on to Windsor,
where the king received his great son very tenderly,
After a short time had been spent there, the prince
took up his residence at his Manor of Berkham.
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commanders, valorous knights, stout men-
at-arms, were all in vain; there was no stemming the
current of popular opinion, which flowed on steadily,
in favour of converting that English principality into -
a French province. It is no easy matter to crush out
nationality ; and this was the task that King Edward
had set himself to perform in the south-west of France,
aud in which he was thus signally discomfited. One
after another the Gascon lords who had sworn allegiance
to the prince’s brother, as his deputy, quietly trans-
ferred that allegiance, together with their own lands,
to the French king, and there was no power to punish
their bad faith. These things were by no means ex-
hilarating to the princely invalid in his retirement at
Berkhamstead. That under such circumstances he
could entirely refrain from chafing and fretting over
his own enforced inactivity, was not to be expected;
282 THE DEATH OF THE PRINCE.

and his anxiety and vexation contributed to disappoint
the hopes that had been entertained of the beneficial]
effects of a return to his own country. Sweet English
air could not counteract their influence.

The Duke of Lancaster, had been left behind in
Aquitaine, but he presently got tired of his post, and
threw it up. He had meanwhile married the eldest
daughter of the late King Pedro, being advised by his
courtiers that it would be a charitable act on his part —
to “comfort” the princess in this particular fashion;
advice which he took, seeing that in return for his
“compassionate” deed, he acquired a claim to the throne
of Castile, when King Henry could be got out of the
way. ‘The Earl of Pembroke was appointed governor
of Aquitaine in the duke’s place. He had made him-
self liked in the province, spite of his nonsense about
that expedition of John Chandos’, and great things
were expected from him when he came to rule the
turbulent Gascons. Like many other great expectations,
however, they were doomed to be disappointed. When
the earl’s fleet had arrived off Rochelle, on the 22d of
June 1372, he found the port blocked up, by a large
naval force, which, ostensibly belonging to the Spaniards,
had in reality been sent thither by the King of France,
acting in concert with Henry of Castile, who, no doubt,
greatly enjoyed thus plaguing his old enemies, the
English.
for the Spaniards were numerous, and the English,
THE DEATH OF THE PRINCE. — 283

though few, were full of spirit. But neither spirit nor
obstinate valour could avail against superior strength,
and the use of a new and terrific means of destruction.
Fire-ships, it is said, were first used in this sea-fight ;
by their agency thirteen of the largest English vessels
were burnt, and after two days’ hard work of it, the
English were totally defeated, the earl himself, together
with many of his best knights being taken prisoners.

The state of feeling in the prince’s town of Rochelle,
may be understood from the eireumstance of its in-
habitants looking quietly on while this fatal battle was
being fought, and never attempting to render the least
assistance to their fellow subjects, though earnestly
urged to do so-by the governor, and some other brave
knights who were with him. After this, we cannot be
surprised to find the Rochellers presently transferring
themselves and their city, in a formal manner, to
Charles of France, having first had the precaution to
make particularly good terms for themselves.

The Spaniards were so set up with having managed
to beat the English, and at sea too, that they were
perfectly riotous in their joy, during the day or two of
their remaining at anchor before Rochelle. Then, on
the afternoon of the 24th, when the tide was at flood,
with colours flying (pennons floating frem their mast-
heads, of such length, that they sometimes dipped in
the undulating waters), and a prodigious “row” of
drums and trumpets, they sailed off to their own: coast
284 THE DEATH OF THE PRINCE.

of Galicia, carrying with them the earl, and their other
unfortunate prisoners, who, according to the barbarous
Spanish custom of that day, were chained like criminals
as soon as they were put on shore. The earl was sub-
sequently ransomed, but died on his way home.

King Edward was almost overwhelmed when news
of the destruction of his armament, and the capture of
Pembroke, reached England. It was more vexation
also for the prince, who had already had the grief of
losing the captal; that gallant commander being taken
prisoner in a skirmish before the castle of Soubise, to
which the French had laid siege. The captal, as con-
stable of Aquitaine, was the prince’s right hand; and
the French greatly rejoiced when once they had got
him strictly guarded within the walls of the temple at
Paris. Misfortunes, it is said, never come single.
They were “thick and threefold” just now, for in
addition to these two serious ones, a third provoking
humiliation fell to the lot of the English monarch and
his son. Evan, of Wales, supposed to be son of one
of the Welsh princes whom Edward had put to death,
entered heart and soul into the service of the French
king, in order to revenge his own losses of parent and
territory. At the head of four thousand Frenchmen,
he attacked the English in Guernsey, beat them soundly,
and would have damaged them still further had he not
been recalled by Charles to more important service in
France.
THE DEATH OF THE PRINCE. 285

Towards the end of August in this same year there
was so much amendment in the prince’s health that he
resolved to join a new expedition, which the king was
fitting out against the obstinate Gascons and their
abettors. He was growing desperate, and vowed, that
he would now either retake all that he had lost,
whether it was by treachery, or honest fighting, or lose
all that remained.

The immediate occasion of this expedition was the
condition of a considerable number of the king’s faithful
subjects, who being besieged in Thouars, by du Gues-
clin, were reduced to such straits as compelled them
to promise to surrender, if after communicating their
distress to King Edward, he should be unable to
succour them before a certain time, Michaelmas in that
year. The army got together for this purpose was a
very large one; a special summons being issued, com-
manding that all persons throughout the kingdom,
capable of bearing arms, should present themselves,
properly equipped at Southampton, where four hundred
_vessels were moored to carry them across the seas.
Previous to embarkation a solemn assembly was held
at Westminster, where Richard of Bordeaux, the infant
son of the prince, was duly acknowledged as successor
to King Edward, in case, (as was too likely) the prince
should die before his father.

The king, his sons, then the great barons of the
realm, swore to maintain the rights of young Richard,
286 THE DEATH OF THE PRINCE.

and the love that the whole people of England haa for
the prince, caused this to be a very popular measure,

This weighty business settled, the king and his sons
went on board, and the fleet left Southampton, for
Rochelle, where it was intended to land the army.
But there was now no break in King Edward’s ill
fortune. Those propitious winds that were wont to
carry him over to the shores of France no longer filled
his sails; and after beating about for nine weeks, they
were reduced to the humiliating necessity of sailing
back to England without striking one stroke in defence
of the few possessions in France that still remained to
the English, They had a spanking breeze to take
them home again! Oh, if it had but blown in the
right direction !

The army was disbanded on reaching shore, for it
was now of no use; and Edward grumbled out that
there never was a king who had fought so little as
Charles of France, nor one who had ever given him
more trouble. The “passive resistance” system had
served Charles well. .

After this unlucky termination of the expedition,
the French king required the fulfilment of their pro-
mise from the knights pent up at Thouars; and they
had no excuse for refusing it.

It might have been expected that the Duke of
Brittany, whose quarrels the English had espoused
zealously, and with so much success, would have proved
THE DEATH OF THE PRINCE. 287

a valuable ally to them during their declining fortunes
in France. The duke would fain have been so, he
would have liked to help them, actively, instead of
passively only. Gratitude impelled him to this course,
for he said, that “such as he was, the English and their
king had made him, he owed everything he had to
King Edward.” But his people were so thoroughly
French, that he dared not stir in favour of his old patrons.
In fact his nobles, in the most polite and friendly
manner in the world informed him, that if he sided
with the English, they would throw him overboard
immediately ; so their “dear lord,” as they called him,
had to keep quiet, and swallow his vexation as he best
could. ,

This fruitless voyage to Rochelle, is almost the last
glimpse that we have of the Black Prince. Hopeless of
ever regaining health and vigour enough for active duty,
he formally resigned the principality which his father
had conferred upon him, and which was rapidly slipping
away from under English rule. He was too feeble even
to take any conspicuous part in home affairs; though
there, as well as abroad, were disorders, which he, in
his better days, might and would have remedied, and
which must sorely have oppressed his spirit in the melan-
choly seclusion of his Hertfordshire home. The old
king, doubtless in his dotage, did things that not only
lowered him in the esteem and affection of his subjects,
but also excited their strong discontent, which parlia-
288 THE DEATH OF THE PRINCE.

ment took the liberty of expressing pretty plainly. His
ambitious son, John of Gaunt, the Duke of Lancaster
of this story, took advantage of the king’s failings to
lay hold of more power than fairly fell to him, and
this again added to the public uneasiness ; while the
prince, who might have ruled all hearts in his father’s
dominions, was obliged to look, helplessly, on, capable
only of suffering, not of acting. Once only the expir-
ing flame leaped up, and the prince, spite of his over-
whelming malady, repaired to-Westminster to see
justice done on some of his brother’s creatures who had
abused the king’s authority entrusted to them, to the -
oppression of his subjects. One of these gentlemen,
not knowing with whom he had to deal, thought to bribe
the prince with a thousand pounds, concealed in an
innocent looking fish-barrel. But it was indignantly
sent back; with an intimation that the offender must
bear the consequences of his misdeeds: as “he had
brewed so he must drink.” _

_ The end came at last; not such an one as might
have been expected for the hero of Creey, Poitiers, and
Najara. ‘Death on the battle-field, so coveted by the
- knights of that period, as the most glorious that could
befall a soldier, was not the fate of him, the best
soldier of them all. Consumed by relentless disease,
he was to meet, and succumb to, his last enemy on
that sorrowful couch at Westminster, and the time was
immediately at hand. On the 7th of June, of the
THE DEATH OF THE PRINCE. 289

same year, 1376, in which, spite of increasing illness,
he had made himself a terror to the evil doers, who
had imposed upon the old king’s imbecility, a fresh
accession of his malady put an end to all hope for his
important life, and compelled his attendants to apprize
their master of his rapidly approaching doom. The
announcement was one for which he was not unpre-
pared ; his sufferings had been patiently, and religiously
endured, and now he sedulously addressed himself to
the last duties of a Christian man. His worldly affairs
were first set in order, in a manner that showed his
appreciation of those who had faithfully served hin ;
and this occupied much of the short remaining time of
him to whom time was about to be no more. The
next day was Trinity Sunday, a festival which the
prince had always been accustomed to observe with
especial solemnity; and he broke out into a pathetic
prayer that as he had ever loved that holy day, and
caused others to celebrate it with him to the honour
of the Blessed Trinity, he might now be at once called
to his rest to keep the festival in Heaven with Him to
Whose glory it was dedicated. Tokens of good will
were then distributed to those around him, and a
solemn charge given to his little son, soon to be King
of England, that he should see his father’s will in these
matters religiously respected.

A painful incident followed. The prince feeling
his last hour draw near, had commanded that his door

(3) 19
290 THE DEATH OF THE PRINCE |

should be closed to none, not even to the meanes}
page of his household ; and among the sad and sorrow-
ful throng who presented themselves, came one whose
motive for entering that awful chamber, it would not
be easy to divine. This was Sir Richard Stury, one of
those evil doers for whose just punishment the prince
had thrown off the lethargy of mortal illness, but who
knew right well that though already condemned for
his misdeeds, he need fear no penalty when once the
ghastly form before him was motionless upon his bier.

The prince was at this time in his death-agony, yet
seeing the villain advance, he bade him draw near to
behold that which he had ' long desired to see; and
when Stury vehemently affirmed that he had never
desired the death of the prince, the dying man repeated
his charge, adding that the fellow’s own conscience
assured him that so long as the prince lived, his evil
deeds would never go unpunished; now his righteous
avenger was going whither God called him, and to Him
he remitted the wrong doer, praying that He would
put an end to his “evil deeds.”

Stury, penitent or rather perhaps over-awed for the
moment, wept and prayed the prince to pardon him.
But the latter too well knew the value of his peniten-
tial tears: “God that is just,” said he, “reward thee
according to thy deserts; I will not that thou trouble
me any longer; depart forth of my sight not hereafter
to see my face again !”
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DEATH OF THE BLACK PRINCE

page 29]
THE DEATH OF THE PRINCE, | 291

The agitation of this cruel disturbance of his last
moments shook out the few remaining sands of the
prince’s life. Seeing him near his end, the Bishop of
Bangor earnestly exhorted him to forgive his enemies,
and to crave pardon alike from God and man for all
his offences against them; but, faint and breathless,
the prince could but respond by a feeble “I will, I
will,” often repeated. With well-meant, but pitiless ~
pertinacity, the bishop told him that was not sufficient,
he must deliberately express his forgiveness, and hope
of mercy for himself. For one short moment the
deathly languor passed away; and then, with folded.
hands and eyes raised to heaven, the prince solemnly
gave thanks to God for all His mercies, beseeching Him
to pardon his offences, and desiring forgiveness of all
men whom he had himself offended.

They were his last words; his morning prayer was
granted, and before the close ot that Trinity Sunday |
lis spirit had passed away to keep, as we may well
believe, more high and holy festival in the immediate
presence of that glorious Trinity Whom he had hon-
oured upon earth.

Edward, the Black Prince, was but in his forty.
sixth year when he thus died, to the inexpressible grief
of the whole nation which had once looked forward to
the wise, just, and glorious reign of one, renowned for
valour and goodness, throughout the known world: and
on whose manhood there rested but that sole stain of
292 THE DEATH OF THE PRINCE.

the Sack of Limoges. A stain it was, and a deep one.
No excuse can be found for it. Perhaps, as has been
said, it may be accounted for, by his own peculiar
circumstances of intense provocation, and the long con-
tinued irritation of disqualifying illness during a period
which imperatively called for the most vigorous exertion
both of mind and body.

He lay in state for some days at the palace, where
vast numbers flocked to take a last look of one, so be-
loved and honoured, that even in France, by royal
command, a solemn funeral service for him was per-
formed in presence of the king and his chief nobility.
His funeral finally took place, with much pomp and
real mourning, in Canterbury Cathedral; the long,
attendant train passing, sad and slow, through the city
where, nineteen years before, the glittering cavalcade
that welcomed the victor of Poitiers, had held its
triumphant march. A stately marble monument still
existing, was erected over his remains. There may be
seen the recumbent mailed figure of this mighty prince,
with the hands, according to the touching fashion of
the olden time, meekly joined as if in prayer; while
around it are displayed the helmet, coat of mail, gaunt-
lets, shield, and sheath of the sword, that once gleamed
so terrible in battle to hostile Frenchman and Spaniard.
The inscription, in old French, tells us that:—“ Here
lieth the noble prince, the Lord Edward, eldest son
‘of the very noble King Edward III, late Prince of
THE DEATH OF THE PRINCE. 293

Aquitaine and Wales, Duke of Cornwall, and Earl of
Chester, who died on Trinity Sunday, the 8th of June,
in the year of grace, 1376. On whose soul God have
mercy! Amen.” |

“The good fortune of England,” says an old writer,
“as if it had been inherent in his person, flourished in
his health, languished in his sickness, and expired at
his death, with whom died all the hope of Englishmen.
During his life they feared no invasion of the enemy,
hor encounter in battle; for he assailed no nation but
he overcame, and besieged no city that’ he did not
take.” | | |

It may give us some notion of the way in which our
ancestors of five centuries ago viewed things, when we
mention that it was commonly thought at the time,
that the peculiar position of two planets, Saturn and
Jupiter, had something to do with the prince's
lamented death. But nobody doubted that a huge’
bearded comet (one with a tail perhaps as long as the
glorious one of 1858), which was seen in the heavens
the year preceding his decease, predicted it, if it did
not actually cause it ! |

The captal, who was still ungenerously detained in
prison at the time of the prince’s death, did not long
survive him. Grief for the loss of his master is said.
to have shortened the life of this gallant Englishman,
who died in captivity. He might have had his liberty,
had he been willing to take an oath never again to
9G4 THE DEATH OF THE PRINCE.

bear arms against France. Death in prison was pref-
erable to liberty on such terms; and the name of
John de Greilly, Captal de Buch, ought to be had in
lasting honour by his countrymen, as patriot as well as
hero.

After the death of his renowned son, King Edward
retired, mourning and breaking his heart, to his palace
at Eltham where, in about a twelvemonth, he too died ;
it is said, forlorn, friendless, forsaken by every one
save a priest, who, bending over the dying man, spoke
words of heavenly consolation in his ear, fast closing
to all earthly sounds. Humbly did the royal penitent
acknowledge his errors; and, with that mighty Name
upon his lips, which can alone assure sinful men of
pardon, for His sake Who bought it upon the bitter

cross, the great Edward yielded up his weary spirit.

Those splendid victories in France, which marked
the reign of King Edward and his heroic son, were like
a dream of conquest; for when his grey head was laid
low, by the side of loving Philippa, the last fragment of
them had disappeared, with the exception of Calais;
whose loss was destined to break the already more than
half-broken heart of one of his most unhappy successors.

The Princess of Wales, the once beautiful Joan, sur-
vived her lord for some years. She, too, was honoured
_ and loved by the English people. In one of the fierce
outbreaks of the citizens of London, the populace
THE DEATH OF THE PRINCE. 295

sacrificed their murderous resentment against the Duke
of Lancaster (who had given them violent offence), to
her intercession ; contenting themselves instead, with
hanging his coat-of-arms upside down in the streets, by
way of intimating that they considered him a dishon-
oured knight. And on another occasion she stood be-
tween him and the wrath of her son King Richard ;
earning for herself the blessing bestowed upon the
“ peacemakers,” by painfully travelling from the one to
the other, until she had reconciled the two : thus avert-
ing the horrors of a civil war which was on the point
of arising out of their quarrel.

Not even her virtues and popularity, however, could
shield her from insult and violence at the hands of Wat
Tyler’s vagabond host during their famous insurrection.
Marching upon London from Kent, they fell in with the
' princess and her ladies returning from a pilgrimage to
Canterbury,—one of the acts of piety of that day,—set
upon her carriage, treated herself with base insolence,
and after frightening them all almost out of their lives,
suffered them to make their escape to the Tower, where
they hoped to find safety with the king. But while he
went to meet the rebels at Mile End, the Tower was
surprised by others of them who had remained in-
the city to do mischief. These wretches rushed hither
and thither, killing and slaying without mercy, broke
into the apartments of the princess, and smashed even
her bed, so that she was carried out fainting ; in which
996 THE DEATH OF THE PRINCE,

state she was got away, by the river, to another of the
king’s palaces, where she remained, half dead with
terror, until the insurrection was subdued, and the king
himself hastened to comfort his mother with the good
news. Her death, nine years after that of the prince,
is said to have been caused by grief for the apprehended
fate of her son, the Earl of Huntingdon (the son of her
first husband), who having, in a fit of passion, killed
Lord Ralph Stafford, was, spite of the pleadings of his
mother, threatened with capital punishment for his
crime: a doom which, however, he eventually escaped.

The Black Prince left but one child, a son, after-
wards Richard II. Of his fate none can speak cer-
tainly, for the walls of Pontefract Castle still keep their
melancholy secret. He died childless; so that, literally,
in the “ next generation,” the “ posterity ” of the hero
of Crecy and Poitiers was “destroyed,” and “his name”
“blotted out!”

** Deus judex est. Hunc humiliat, et hunc exaltat !"—Ps. )xxv.



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