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How to use this section, in four steps:

  • Step 1

What type of source are you referring to? Find it in the list below and go to the appropriate section, then go to Step 2.

  • Step 2

Is this the first time you have used this particular source?

If yes, create a footnote with the full reference, in the style of the first example.

Then go to Step 4.

If no, go to Step 3.

  • Step 3

Have you footnoted this source earlier in your essay/thesis?

If yes, create a footnote with a shortened title, in the style of the second example

  • Step 4

Are you constructing the bibliography? Create a reference in the style of the third example, and place it in its proper alphabetical order.

In some of the examples that follow, the prescribed sequence of information is given in a template. Following the template are either two or three examples: a first reference, a second or subsequent reference, and a bibliographic entry.

 

  

8.4.1 Print Media

Journal Article

First reference:     John D. Author, “Title,” Journal volume/issue (year): page(s).

Bibliography:          Author, John D. “Title.” Journal volume/issue (year): page(s).

Note that, According to SBL convention, double quotation marks are used and the comma (or full stop) goes inside them. A closing question mark or exclamation mark replaces the full stop of a bibliography, but not the comma of a reference (see the second example). The issue number should only be included if the pagination starts afresh in each issue (compare the examples). The page numbers are preceded by a colon. In second and subsequent references, only the author’s surname, an abbreviated title, and the relevant page(s) need be supplied. In the bibliography, full stops follow author and title, and the journal title is fully written.

First Reference

15. Stephen K. Williams, “The ‘Righteousness of God’ in Romans,” JBL 99 (1980): 261.

Second Reference

21. Williams, “Righteousness,” 270.

Bibliography

Williams, Stephen K. “The ‘Righteousness of God’ in Romans.” Journal of Biblical Literature 99 (1980): 241–90.

First Reference

10. Mark W. Chavalas, “Did Abraham Ride a Camel?,” BAR 44.6 (2018): 52, 64-65.

Second Reference

11. Chavalas, “Did Abraham Ride a Camel?,” 64.

Bibliography

Chavalas, Mark W. “Did Abraham Ride a Camel?” Biblical Archaeology Review 44.6 (2018): 52, 64–65.

Books and Edited Books

First reference:     Author(s)[or, Editor(s), ed(s).], Title, ed. editor, trans. translator, number of volumes vols., edition ed., series-title number (place: publisher, year), page(s).

Bibliography:          Author(s)[or, Editor(s), ed(s).]. Title. Edited by editor. Translated by translator. number of volumes vols. edition ed. series-title number. place: publisher, year.

The main change from the old SBL style is that ONLY the publication details (place: publisher, year) are included within parentheses in footnotes. When there are two or three authors or editors, list them all and separate the last two by “and”. When there are more than three, list just the first followed by “et al.” in the first reference, but list all of them in the bibliography. The page numbers (omitted in the bibliography) are preceded by a comma. In the bibliographic version, all elements before the place of publication are separated by full stops, and “edited by” and “translated by” are fully written.

First Reference

17. James Robinson and Helmut Koester, Trajectories Through Early Christianity (Philadelphia: Fortress, 1971), 23.

Second Reference

25. Robinson and Koester, Trajectories, 23.

Bibliography

Robinson, James, and Helmut Koester. Trajectories Through Early Christianity. Philadelphia: Fortress, 1971.

First Reference

2. John F. Oates et al., eds., Checklist of Editions of Greek and Latin Papyri, Ostraca and Tablets, 4th ed., BASPSup 7 (Atlanta: Scholars Press, 1992), 10.

Second Reference

5. Oates et al., Checklist, 4.

Bibliography

Oates, John F., William H. Willis, Roger S. Bagnall, and Klaas A. Worp, eds. Checklist of Editions of Greek and Latin Papyri, Ostraca and Tablets. 4th ed. Bulletin of the American Society of Papyrologists, Supplements 7. Atlanta: Scholars Press, 1992.

Note that “eds.” is omitted in the second reference; and in the bibliography, the series title is written in full. It is not necessary to include the names of the editors of the series, if given. Do not confuse impressions, printings, or reprints with editions. A second edition represents a change in the text from the first edition, whereas an impression is merely a reprinting of the same edition. A book which is styled the fifth printing of the first edition is cited by the date of the first edition, not the date of the printing. Do not use a reprint date.

First Reference

48. Adolf Harnack, History of Dogma, trans. Neil Buchanan, 7 vols. (Boston: Little, Brown, 1896–1905).

Second Reference

58. Harnack, History of Dogma, 2:126.

Bibliography

Harnack, Adolf. History of Dogma. Translated from the 3rd German ed. by Neil Buchanan. 7 vols. Boston: Little, Brown, 1896–1905.

Note that in the second reference the volume number is in Arabic numerals, and separated from the page numbers by a colon. Note also the fuller information provided in the bibliography regarding the translation.

 

Recent Reprint Title (N.B.—where possible, cite from the original)

First Reference

16. John Van Seters, In Search of History: Historiography in the Ancient World and the Origins of Biblical History (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1983; repr., Winona Lake, IN: Eisenbrauns, 1997), 35.

Second Reference

17. Van Seters, In Search, 70.

Bibliography

Van Seters, John. In Search of History: Historiography in the Ancient World and the Origins of Biblical History. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1983. Repr., Winona Lake, IN: Eisenbrauns, 1997.

If a reprint is old (public domain), the original place and publisher—but not date—may be omitted.

Full History of a Translated Volume

For research students it will normally be desirable to include details of the original if a work is cited in translation.

First Reference

71. J. Calvin, Institutes of the Christian Religion, ed. John T. McNeill, trans. Ford Lewis Battles, 2 vols., LCC 20–21 (Philadelphia: Westminster, 1960), III.ii.2; trans. of Institutio Christianae religionis, in libris quatuor nunc primum digesta, certisque distincta capitibus, ad aptissimam methodum: aucta etiam tam magna accessione ut propemodum opus novum haberi possit (Geneva: Robert Estienne, 1559).

Second Reference

73. Calvin, Inst. II.vi.4.

Bibliography

Calvin, J. Institutes of the Christian Religion. Edited by John T. McNeill. Translated by Ford Lewis Battles. 2 vols. Library of Christian Classics 20–21. Philadelphia: Westminster, 1960. Translation of Institutio Christianae religionis, in libris quatuor nunc primum digesta, certisque distincta capitibus, ad aptissimam methodum: aucta etiam tam magna accessione ut propemodum opus novum haberi possit; Geneva: Robert Estienne, 1559.

First Reference

5. Julius Wellhausen, Prolegomena to the History of Ancient Israel (New York: Meridian Books, 1957), 296; repr. of Prolegomena to the History of Israel, trans. J. Sutherland Black and Allan Menzies, with preface by W. Robertson Smith (Edinburgh: Adam & Charles Black, 1885); trans. of Prolegomena zur Geschichte Israels, 2nd ed. (Berlin: G. Reimer, 1883).

Second Reference

17. Wellhausen, Prolegomena, 55.

Bibliography

Wellhausen, Julius. Prolegomena to the History of Ancient Israel. New York: Meridian Books, 1957. Reprint of Prolegomena to the History of Israel. Translated by J. Sutherland Black and Allan Menzies, with preface by W. Robertson Smith. Edinburgh: Adam & Charles Black, 1885. Translation of Prolegomena zur Geschichte Israels. 2nd ed. Berlin: G. Reimer, 1883.

Undergraduate students who cite a work that has been translated and/or reprinted from an older original may omit the full history of the volume and simply add the original date of publication in square brackets after the date:

First Reference

71. Calvin, J. Institutes of the Christian Religion, ed. John T. McNeill, trans. Ford Lewis Battles, 2 vols., LCC 20–21 (Philadelphia: Westminster, 1960 [1559]), III.ii.2.

Second Reference

72. Calvin, Institutes, IV.i.1.

Bibliography

Calvin, J. Institutes of the Christian Religion. Edited by John T. McNeill. Translated by Ford Lewis Battles. 2 vols. Library of Christian Classics 20–21. Philadelphia: Westminster, 1960 [1559].

 

Article in an Edited Volume

First reference:         Author(s), “Title,” in Book Title, ed. editor(s), trans. translator, number of volumes vols., edition ed., series-title number (place: publisher, year), page(s).

Bibliography:              Author(s). “Title.” Pages page(s) in Book Title. Edited by editor(s). Translated by translator. number of volumes vols. edition ed. series-title number. place: publisher, year.

First Reference

11. William J. Dumbrell, “Paul’s Use of Exodus 34 in 2 Corinthians 3,” in God Who is Rich in Mercy: Essays Presented to Dr. D. B. Knox, ed. Peter T. O’Brien and David G. Peterson (Homebush West, N.S.W.: Lancer, 1986), 179–94.

Second Reference

17. Dumbrell, “Paul’s Use of Exodus,” 181–82.

Bibliography

Dumbrell, William J. “Paul’s Use of Exodus 34 in 2 Corinthians 3.” Pages 179–94 in God Who is Rich in Mercy: Essays Presented to Dr. D. B. Knox. Edited by Peter T. O’Brien and David G. Peterson. Homebush West, N.S.W.: Lancer, 1986.

Book Review

The publication details of the reviewed work may be omitted:

First Reference

13. Georg Sauer, review of Die Prosareden des Jeremiabuches, by Helga Weippert, ThZ 30 (1974): 172–73.

Second Reference

14. Sauer, review of Die Prosareden des Jeremiabuches (by Weippert), 172.

Bibliography

Sauer, Georg. Review of Die Prosareden des Jeremiabuches, by Helga Weippert. Theologische Zeitschrift 30 (1974): 172–73.

 

Unpublished Dissertation or Thesis

The title is not italicised, but placed in quotation marks:

First Reference

8. G. A. Cole, “Cranmer’s Views on the Bible and the Christian Prince” (MTh thesis, University of Sydney, 1983), 58.

Second Reference

9. Cole, “Cranmer’s Views,” 19.

Bibliography

Cole, Graham A. “Cranmer’s Views on the Bible and the Christian Prince.” MTh thesis, University of Sydney, 1983.

Article in a Lexicon or Encyclopaedia

For a lexicon or theological dictionary entry (i.e. which discusses a word or family of words), you should give the title and whole page range of the entry in the first reference, but just the dictionary abbreviation and page in subsequent references. In the bibliography, cite only the dictionary. Note the Arabic numeral for the volume number, followed by a colon.

First Reference

90. Ceslas Spicq, “αjμοιβή,” TLNT 1:95–96.

Second Reference

102. Spicq, TLNT 1:95.

Bibliography

Spicq, Ceslas. Theological Lexicon of the New Testament. Translated and edited by James D. Ernest. 3 vols. Peabody, MA: Hendrickson, 1994.

An article in an encyclopaedia or dictionary (i.e. which discusses a theme, person, idea, etc.) should, however, be specifically cited in the bibliography.

First Reference

31. K. Stendahl, “Biblical Theology, Contemporary,” IDB 1:418–32.

Second Reference

34. Stendahl, “Biblical Theology,” 1:419.

Bibliography

Stendahl, K. “Biblical Theology, Contemporary.” Pages 418–32 in vol. 1 of The Interpreter’s Dictionary of the Bible. Edited by G. A. Buttrick. 4 vols. Nashville: Abingdon, 1962.

 

Other Special Cases

Quoting already-quoted words (e.g. when the book you are reading mentions or quotes an ancient or foreign-language source). If possible, go back to the source and cite it for yourself! If the source is unavailable or unintelligible, do not include it in your bibliography, as you did not consult it. In footnotes, imitate the following examples:

12. J. G. Eichhorn, Einleitung in das Alte Testament, 3rd edn (Leipzig: Weidmannischen Buchhandlung, 1803), 3:154, cited by Andrew G. Shead, A Mouth Full of Fire: The Word of God in the Words of Jeremiah, NSBT 29 (Leicester: IVP, 2012), 79.

17. Hadad-yith‘i inscription (800 BC), translated by Sandra L. Richter, The Deuteronomistic History and the Name Theology, BZAW 318 (Berlin: de Gruyter, 2002), 203.

27. Sefire Inscriptions, Stele I, Face B, trans. Joseph A. Fitzmeyer, in William W. Hallo and K. Lawson Younger, Jr., eds., The Context of Scripture (Leiden: Brill, 2003), 2:214.

Beyond this there remain complex examples for which, at an undergraduate level, consistency and common sense should be the guide rather than strict adherence to the letter of the law. If further help is necessary, refer to the SBL Handbook, 95–102, for examples of citations from conference papers, magazine articles, ANET, COS, the Loeb Classical Library, papyri, ostraca, ancient epistles and homilies, the Ante- and Post-Nicene Fathers, J.-P. Migne’s Patrologia Latina and Patrologia Graeca, and Aufstieg und Niedergang der römischen Welt. Before citing texts from the Judaean Desert, see the SBL Handbook, 176.

There is no need to list references to the Bible. Likewise, there is no need to list references to well-known documents from church history or antiquity. Like biblical references, these can be cited in parentheses within the main body of the text. For example:

(Josephus, Ant. 2.233–235)

(b. B. Bat. 12a)

(Calvin, Inst. III.ii.2)

(Barth, CD IV/1, 128)

When you come across other works which are referred to by similar such abbreviations (e.g. Luther’s works or the Mishnah), imitate the usage of your source in your own referencing. Note that when you cite the exact words of a translation of ancient or classic modern works, the translator should be acknowledged. In this case, the source should be included in the bibliography.

(Calvin, Inst. III.ii.2 [Battles])

(Josephus, Ant. 2.233–235 [Thackeray, LCL])

Josephus. Translated by H. St J. Thackeray et al. 10 vols. Loeb Classical Library. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1937.

8.4.2 Electronic Media

NOTE: The attention of students is drawn to the variable quality of material available on the Internet. Much of it is “informal,” i.e. it has not been subject to review by publishers or normal academic peer review. Accordingly care should be exercised in the citing of such material.

Electronic Journal Article

Electronic journals have fixed page numbers, like print journals. If you consulted the article in a library or commercial database, you may give the name of the database instead of a DOI.

First Reference

6. Campbell Brown, “Consequentialize This,” Ethics 121.4 (July 2011): 752, http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/660696.

Second Reference

13. Brown, “Consequentialize This,” 761.

Bibliography

Brown, Campbell. “Consequentialize This.” Ethics 121.4 (July 2011): 749–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/660696.

First Reference

8. Andrew Curtin, “Covenant: The Construction of Identity in Israel,” Old Testament Research 8.4 (October 2012): 16, Academic OneFile.

Second Reference

17. Curtin, “Covenant,” 18–19.

Bibliography

Curtin, Andrew. “Covenant: The Construction of Identity in Israel.” Old Testament Research 8.4 (October 2012): 15–28. Academic OneFile.

 

CD-ROM Reference with a Corresponding Print Edition

Cite a book on CD-ROM as you would if it was the print edition. You do not need to specify the medium of the book in your citation.

Digitized Version of Printed Book (digitized libraries, AcCordance modules, etc.)

If the book is readily available, cite it as if it were the print edition. You do not need to specify the medium of the book in your citation. Bible software programs should provide you with the relevant citation details. For example, https://www.accordancebible.com/Accordance-Citations.

If it is a rare book, provide the DOI/URL or the name of the database you accessed. Two bibliography entries may serve as examples:

Abbott, George. The Whole Booke of Iob Paraphrased, or, Made Easie for Any to Understand. London: Printed by Edward Griffin for Henry Overton, 1640. http://rarebooks.dts.edu/viewbook.aspx?bookid=1206.

Coverdale, Miles. Goostly Psalmes and Spirituall Songes Drawen out of the Holy Scripture, for the Comforte and Consolacyon of Soch as Loue to Reioyse in God and His Worde. London: Iohan Gough, 1535. Early English Books Online.

 

Online Database

When citing databases with formally published content, the author of the content or the owner of the site should be referenced, plus the title of the content, the name of the database, and a release or revision date. Two bibliography entries may serve as examples:

British Museum. “134322: Ivory plaque depicting a winged sphinx.” British Museum Collection Database. Oct 2017. https://www.britishmuseum.org/research/collection_online/collection_object_details/collection_image_gallery.aspx?assetId=30770001&objectId=369007&partId=1.

The ETCSL Project, Faculty of Oriental Studies, University of Oxford. “Regularised Forms of Proper Nouns in the ETCSL.” The Electronic Text Corpus of Sumerian Literature. Updated 17 Oct 2006. http://etcsl.orinst.ox.ac.uk/cgi-bin/etcslpropnoun.cgi.

 

Book Published Electronically or Online with No Print Counterpart

NOTE: cite e-books only if a print or digitized copy with stable page numbers is not available. If an e-book is available in more than one format you should cite the version you consulted. For books consulted online, include an access date and a DOI/URL. If no fixed page numbers are available, you can include a section title or a chapter or other number.

First Reference

1. Stanly Johny, The ISIS Caliphate: From Syria to the Doorsteps of India (New Delhi: Bloomsbury India, 2018), ch. 1, EPUB ebook.

Second Reference

17. Johny, ISIS, ch. 6.

Bibliography

Johny, Stanly. The ISIS Caliphate: From Syria to the Doorsteps of India. New Delhi: Bloomsbury India, 2018. EPUB ebook.

 

Other Material Published Online: Periodicals, Blogs, Social Media

Citations should include all of the following that are known and relevant: the author of the content; a title or phrase (e.g. the first 160 characters of a post) describing the content; the name of the magazine or blog (italics) or platform (Facebook, Instagram, etc., non-italics); the owner or sponsor of the site; the date the content was generated; and the URL. Access dates are not required.

The specific URL for a Facebook post is found by clicking on the three dots on the upper right-hand corner of the post, selecting “embed,” then selecting “advanced settings.”

Informal online material should be referenced in notes and, if formally (commercially) published and of sufficient substance, in the bibliography. Blog entries are typically not included in a bibliography, as they are informal comments. Social media content need not even be referenced in a note, if a brief description in the text can suffice (see example).

First Reference

5. Charles Truehart, “Welcome to the Next Church,” Atlantic Monthly 278 (August 1996): 37–58, https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/1996/08/the-next-church/376646/ .

Second Reference

9. Truehart, “Next Church,” 57.

Bibliography

Truehart, Charles. “Welcome to the Next Church.” Atlantic Monthly 278 (August 1996): 37–58. https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/1996/08/the-next-church/376646/ .

First Reference

4. Paul Helm, “Review of Oliphant’s Aquinas: II,” Helm’s Deep: Philosophical Theology (blog), 30 Dec 2018, http://paulhelmsdeep.blogspot.com/2018/12/ .

Second Reference

8. Helm, “Review.”

Bibliography

Not needed as it was not formally (commercially) published and not of sufficient substance.

First Reference

34. “What Does It Mean to Find Joy in Christ?” Facebook post, Moore Theological College, 16 Jan 2019 at 21:00, https://www.facebook.com/mooretheologicalcollege/posts/10156240638502523:0 .

Second Reference

38. “What Does it Mean,” Facebook post.

Bibliography

Not needed as it was not formally (commercially) published and not of sufficient substance.

A sample text that cites social media content, both with and without a note:

Lost on many readers was the fact that Obama’s tweet was a quotation from Nelson Mandela: “‘No one is born hating another person because of the color of his skin or his background or his religion...’” (@BarackObama, Twitter, 12 Aug 2017).

Visual symbolism, as when the face of Martin Luther King Jr. looms large over Obama in a photograph, can portray a relationship between two authors with considerable sophistication.16

16. @obamawhitehouse, “‘Life’s most persistent and urgent question is, “What are you doing for others?”’” Instagram photo, 17 Jan 2017, https://www.instagram.com/p/BPWgvHeDo_y/?utm _source=ig_web_copy_link.

 

Online Audiovisual Material

As relevant or available, the following information should be included: Author, “title of content,” directed by, date filmed/recorded, owner or sponsor of content, medium and duration, date posted, URL. Normally there would be a reference in a note, but not in the bibliography. Again, use the most stable URLs possible, e.g. by going to the site of the company that creates the content (http://vimeo.com, http://soundcloud.com), not the site where it is hosted. These media would not normally be included in a bibliography.

12. Channel 4 News, “Jordan Peterson debate on the gender pay gap, campus protests and postmodernism,” YouTube video, 29:55, posted 16 Jan 2018, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aMcjxSThD54&t=18s.

17. Phillip Jensen, “Spirit-Inspired Christian Living,” Moore College Centre for Christian Living, Vimeo video, 1:02:27, posted 6 Dec 2018, https://vimeo.com/286099598 .

33. Tony Payne, “Podcast Episode 022: Enjoying God,” Moore College Centre for Christian Living, Soundcloud, 35:18, posted 6 Dec 2018, https://soundcloud.com/user-410568914/podcast-episode-022 .

8.4.3 Archival sources

Archival sources include correspondence, meeting minutes, unpublished papers or lectures, oral history recordings and photographs, which are held in an institutional collection. Include enough information so that another person can find the same document or collection. Use square brackets to indicate information not recorded on the document. Publications of limited circulation (e.g. newsletters) are cited in the same way as published periodicals. Digitised audio and video recordings may be cited in the same way online audiovisual material.

Letter from an archive

First reference:         Author, to recipient, date, repository, series no.

First Reference

34. W.G. Broughton to George Gilbert, 24 June 1844, Samuel Marsden Archives, Series 033-20-2.

Second Reference

38. Broughton to Gilbert, 1844.

Bibliography

W.G. Broughton to George Gilbert, 24 June 1844, Samuel Marsden Archives, Series 033-20-2.

Unpublished paper or lecture from an archive

First reference:         Author, title, date, collection, repository, series no.

First Reference

34. T.C. Hammond. “Lighter moments in a long life.” 1960. T.C. Hammond Papers, Samuel Marsden Archives, Series 044-7-1.

Second Reference

38. Hammond, “Lighter moments.”

Bibliography

Hammond, T.C. “Lighter moments in a long life.” 1960. T.C. Hammond Papers, Samuel Marsden Archives, Series 044-7-1.

 

Unpublished document with group author

First Reference

34. Moore College Women’s Auxiliary. Minutes of meeting of Moore College Women’s Auxiliary. 7 July 1945. Samuel Marsden Archives, Series 017-1.

Second Reference

38. Moore College Women’s Auxiliary, Minutes.

Bibliography

Moore College Women’s Auxiliary. Minutes of meeting of Moore College Women’s Auxiliary. 7 July 1945. Samuel Marsden Archives, Series 017-1.

 

Citing multiple documents from the one collection

First Reference

34. W.G. Broughton to George Gilbert, 24 June 1844. Samuel Marsden Archives, Series 033-20-2.

Second Reference

38. W.G. Broughton to Sarah Broughton, 29 December 1848. Samuel Marsden Archives, Series 033-2-58.

Third Reference

38. W.G. Broughton to Edward Coleridge. 25 February 1839. Samuel Marsden Archives, Series 033-1-5. Broughton, W.G. Correspondence. Samuel Marsden Archives, Series 033.

 

Oral history interview recording

First Reference

34. Mary Andrews, Interview by Margaret Lamb. 7th February 1992. Digital recording, 01:17:13, https://moorecollege.access.preservica.com/IO_4ff01cbf-736b-4805-af59-2c6b04ff6419/

Second Reference

38. Andrews, Interview by Margaret Lamb.

Bibliography

Andrews, Mary. Interview by Margaret Lamb. 7th February 1992. Digital recording, 01:17:13, https://moorecollege.access.preservica.com/IO_4ff01cbf-736b-4805-af59-2c6b04ff6419/

Transcription of an interview

First Reference

34. Leon Morris. Interview by Stuart Piggin. 1988. Oral History Interview Transcripts. Samuel Marsden Archives, Series 287-1.

Second Reference

38. Morris, Interview by Stuart Piggin.

Bibliography

Morris, Leon. Interview by Stuart Piggin. 1988. Oral History Interview Transcripts. Samuel Marsden Archives, Series 287-1.

 

Photographs (known photographer)

Reference

34. Australian Church Record. “Deaconess visiting maternity ward.” 1958. Australian Church Record Photograph Collection. Samuel Marsden Archives, Series 001-16-7-23.

Bibliography

Australian Church Record. “Deaconess visiting maternity ward.” 1958. Australian Church Record Photograph Collection. Samuel Marsden Archives, Series 001-16-7-23.

 

Photographs (unknown photographer)

Reference

34. [Photographs of Nathaniel Jones]. Ca. 1886-1910. Nathaniel Jones Papers. Samuel Marsden Archives, Series 041-13.

Bibliography

[Photographs of Nathaniel Jones]. Ca. 1886-1910. Nathaniel Jones Papers. Samuel Marsden Archives, Series 041-13.

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