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Topic: Cranmer



  
 Long Ago and Far Away - Tribute to Thomas Cranmer
Cranmer was the son of a village squire in Nottinghamshire.
With his fellow reformers Cranmer was eager to promote biblical preaching and especially the doctrine of justification by faith alone through the grace of Christ.
It is sometimes called "Cranmer's Bible" because he wrote a Preface to it.
http://www.acl.asn.au/amb_cranmer.html   (986 words)

  
 CRANMER - LoveToKnow Article on CRANMER
His views on church polity were dominated by his implicit belief in the divine right of kings (not of course the divine hereditary right of kings) which the Anglicans felt it necessary to set up against the divine right of popes.
Meeting with Cranmer, they were naturally led to discuss the kings meditated divorce from Catherine of Aragon..
It is interesting, in view of his later efforts to spread the knowledge of the Bible among the people, to know that in the capacity of examiner he insisted on a thorough acquaintance with the Holy Scriptures, and rejected several candidates who were deficient in this qualification.
http://27.1911encyclopedia.org/C/CR/CRANMER.htm   (5147 words)

  
 Gilbert Cranmer's Testimony Regarding Ellen White
Elder Cranmer believed the Lord heard the prayer of faith in behalf of the sick, and their were numerous examples of miraculous healings witnessed in the church.
Elder Cranmer raised a number of churches, and a church structure was organized in 1860.
After Cranmer parted with the SDA church, many said, "If you are going to leave, we shall follow." Quite a number of the church at Otsego no longer walked with the SDA church.
http://www.ellenwhite.org/cranmert.htm   (1468 words)

  
 Thomas Cranmer
While as a priest Cranmer had already taken a vow of celibacy, his reading of scripture (especially his noting that apostles had married) convinced him that marriage was permitted the clergy and to be esteemed among them.
He concluded that scripture, the church fathers, and church councils concurred that Henry was unlawfully married.
In the freer political climate Cranmer penned the Book of Homilies, a theological compend summarizing Protestant doctrine; the Book of Common Prayer, still used by Anglicans worldwide; and the Forty-Two Articles, closest to the Reformed theology of the continent.
http://www.victorshepherd.on.ca/Heritage/cranmer.htm   (996 words)

  
 Cranmer as Reformer
Cranmer’s ‘strategy’ was to contend for the gospel, obey the king and trust God for the outcome.
For some, Cranmer’s central belief was the authority of Scripture according to its ancient interpretation, but it took a long time for this cautious scholar to come to any firm conclusions on the basis of his Scriptural exegesis.
This is not because he was a heartless ideologue, but because, with Scripture and the Church Fathers, he believed in a glorious afterlife such that martyrdom was not a final blow for God’s elect.
http://www.ans.com.au/~lwindsor/topical/Cranmer_Reformer.htm   (4286 words)

  
 Thomas Cranmer
Cranmer is criticized as a receptionist [not the kind you meet in a dentist's office] for teaching here and elsewhere that Christ is received by the faithful Christian in Communion in a way that does not depend on the bread and wine by themselves but on the heart of the believer.
We must honour Thomas Cranmer and be grateful to him, for in the English Bible, the Book of Common Prayer, the Book of Homilies, he helped translate and reform the faith and worship of the English speaking world, recalling it to a simpler more direct proclamation of Christ and the Gospel.
Sentenced for that offense and publicly degraded, Cranmer recanted almost his whole position, affirmed transubstantiation (a more physical belief in the presence of Christ in the bread and wine an Communion) and the supreme authority of the Pope in the English Church.
http://www.stpeter.org/cranmer.html   (797 words)

  
 Cranmer
In his letters to Cranmer, Calvin did not scold Cranmer for holding to erroneous doctrines; his quarrel with Cranmer was the slowness with which Cranmer pressed for reformation in the church.
Upon Cranmer's return, he was appointed to the highest post in the church of England, Archbishop of Canterbury.
Though Cranmer remained content with an episcopal and Erastian form of church government in which the king was the head, he at least delivered the church from the worst of Rome's abuses.
http://www.prca.org/books/portraits/cranmer.htm   (1944 words)

  
 Amazon.co.uk: Books: Thomas Cranmer: A Life
Cranmer was decidedly "low church" in his beliefs and liturgy.
Thomas Cranmer was the architect of the Anglican Book of Common Prayer.
Cranmer's beliefs were distinct, certain, and in some respects quite different from what I had thought.
http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/0300066880   (1596 words)

  
 Cranmer, "Against Transubstantiation"
Also, Cranmer uses St. Paul’s letter to the First Corinthians and the gospels of Matthew, Mark, and Luke to expel beliefs of the corporal presence of Christ in the bread.
According to G. Bromiley, Cranmer’s beliefs on holy communion are as follows: “it is a real presence only to those who receive in faith” (82).
During the Church of England’s split from Rome, Cranmer experienced a reformation of his personal beliefs, primarily in the doctrine of Christ’s real presence in the holy Eucharist.
http://www.valpo.edu/english/emtexts/cranmerprint.html   (1688 words)

  
 EIPS - Thomas Cranmer
From the outset Cranmer would accept the archbishopric as coming from the King alone: the Pope was for him entirely out of the question.
In 1534, by royal order, a copy of the Bible was placed in every parish church so that all might read the Word of God.
On the death of Archbishop Warham the King's great desire was to place Thomas Cranmer in the vacant see.
http://www.ianpaisley.org/article.asp?ArtKey=cranmer   (786 words)

  
 [EMLS 4.3 (January, 1999): 6: 1-11] Review of Thomas Cranmer: A Life
Not only was the Book of Common Prayer an attempt at enforcing unity within the English church, but also Cranmer was concerned "with establishing English doctrine as a standard acceptable to the whole spectrum of Evangelical truth on the continent, from the Lutherans to the Swiss" (393).
MacCulloch presents evidence that "given greater leisure and a reformation more firmly consolidated, Cranmer would have moved the liturgy of the Church of England closer to that of Farel and Calvin in Geneva, Poullain in Glastonbury or Laski in the Stranger Church" (512).
Nevertheless, when MacCulloch claims that only one reference to Margaret Cranmer survives, I am prepared to believe him.
http://www.shu.ac.uk/emls/04-3/lawrrev.html   (2058 words)

  
 Cranmer & Holy Communion
To serve the purposes of worship he brought the resources of the scholar: appreciation of the fine compositions of liturgical Latin; knowledge of the rules of rhythm and clausula; facility and felicity in translation; a feeling for the meaning of words.
Thomas Cranmer has been accused by some Anglicans of dislocating the Canon of the Mass and of confusing the Rite in "The Order for Holy Communion" in the 1552 Book of Common Prayer.
Liturgical style, to be effective, must express a sense of the Divine Majesty which is the Object of address.
http://www.episcopalian.org/pbs1928/Articles/CranmerHolyCommunion.htm   (722 words)

  
 Anglican Theological Review: Thomas Cranmer, A Life
Cranmer's insistence on putting one's faith in God alone provides the central theological thread in his homilies, polemical writings and liturgical schemes.
This biography expands the impact of Cranmer's central rivalry with the Bishop of Winchester, Stephen Gardiner.
Although other scholars and religious polemicists over the past 35 years have written extensively and often decisively about him, Cranmer has remained a shadowy, largely misunderstood, controversial and underappreciated figure.
http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qa3818/is_199801/ai_n8787398   (1062 words)

  
 Thomas Cranmer
Cranmer's Bible, published by Coverdale, was known as the Great Bible due to its great size: a large pulpit folio measuring over 14 inches tall.
It became the first English Bible authorized for public use, as it was distributed to every church, chained to the pulpit, and a reader was even provided so that the illiterate could hear the Word of God in plain English.
In 1549 he helped complete the Book of Common Prayer, for which his contributions are well-known.
http://www.greatsite.com/timeline-english-bible-history/thomas-cranmer.html   (662 words)

  
 Glimpses bulletin #140: Archbishop Thomas Cranmer burns
The Roman Catholic Church convened the Council of Trent to counter the spreading Reformation influence.
Edward was a convinced Protestant, and so Cranmer was retained and now had the opportunity to reform the church fully.
He believed in reform, but from within the Catholic church, and he was horrified by Luther's separation from Rome.
http://chi.gospelcom.net/GLIMPSEF/Glimpses/glmps140.shtml   (1778 words)

  
 Thomas Cranmer
And now comes the painful fact that in the last month of Cranmer's life his courage failed him, and he was persuaded to sign a recantation of his Protestant opinions.
Boldly and undauntedly he stood up at the stake while the flames curled around him, steadily holding out his right hand in the fire, and saying, with reference to his having signed a recantation, "This unworthy right hand," and steadily holding up his left hand towards heaven.
Cranmer, beyond all doubt, laid the foundation of our present Prayer-book and Articles.
http://user.mc.net/~norbie/christian/reformers2h.html   (1297 words)

  
 Reformation Leaders - Cranmer, Luther, Calvin - Holy men?
Cromwell was a Reformer, and pushed through the main religious changes of the 1530s - the royal supremacy, the printing of the English Bible, the closing of the monasteries, the destruction of shrines and images, and the restriction of Holy Days.
It often surprises people that the first leader of the Church of England under Henry was not Archbishop Cranmer, but Thomas Cromwell - who was made the king's Vicar-General, with direct authority over the Church and its Bishops.
The Latin Mass was abolished - replaced by Cranmer's own sonorously-worded Book of Common Prayer - and another plundering of the Church began.
http://www.geocities.com/aprofaith/leaders.htm   (3526 words)

  
 WORLD March 15, 1997. Journey to the stake: Martyr Thomas Cranmer hesitated on the way
As the priests shouted to drown out his words, Archbishop Cranmer ran from the church to the stake where he was quickly chained and the fires lit.
Here is the mysterious power of Christian faith: That through our weakness the power of God is revealed and his glory shines through in the face of Christ (2 Cor.
The church was packed as people came to watch the final proceedings.
http://www.reformednet.org/salt/970512/cranmer-journeytothestake.htm   (697 words)

  
 Anglican Journal, December 2003 -- The enigma of Thomas Cranmer
Believing it is the King, not the Pope, who is head of the church, Cranmer came to see papal authority as false.
Besides translating liturgy into the vernacular and abolishing superfluous saints' days, Cranmer reduced the Offices of the Church from eight to two: Mattins and Evensong.
Anglicans will recognize the great 16th century English theologian as the author of the Book of Common Prayer, but according to his definitive biographer, Cranmer was all of the above, and more.
http://www.anglicanjournal.com/129/10/oped05.html   (605 words)

  
 Cranmer, Thomas --  Britannica Student Encyclopedia
The first archbishop of Canterbury of the reformed Church of England, Cranmer found a way that did not violate church law for Henry VIII to annul his marriage to Catherine of Aragon without having to go to the pope.
As archbishop, he put the English Bible in parish churches and drew up the Book of Common Prayer.
http://www.britannica.com/ebi/article-9273847   (799 words)

  
 Cranmer - definition of Cranmer by the Free Online Dictionary, Thesaurus and Encyclopedia.
English prelate who as archbishop of Canterbury (1533-1553) was instrumental in the marital machinations of Henry VIII, revised the Book of Common Prayer (1552), and instituted other reforms.
The Book of Common Prayer, now used in the English Church coordinately with Bible and Psalter, took shape out of previous primers of private devotion, litanies, and hymns, mainly as the work of Archbishop Cranmer during the reign of Edward VI.
Cranmer - definition of Cranmer by the Free Online Dictionary, Thesaurus and Encyclopedia.
http://www.thefreedictionary.com/Cranmer   (162 words)

  
 Hugh Latimer, Nicholas Ridley, & Thomas Cranmer
Cranmer five times wrote a letter of submission to the Pope and to Roman Catholic doctrines, and four times he tore it up.
Under the reign of Edward, he became bishop of Rochester, and was part of the committee that drew up the first English Book of Common Prayer.
As long as the monarch was ordering things that Cranmer thought good, it was easy for Cranmer to believe that the king was sent by God's providence to guide the people in the path of true religion, and that disobedience to the king was disobedience to God.
http://www.satucket.com/lectionary/Latimer_Ridley_Cranmer.htm   (774 words)

  
 Anecdote - Thomas Cranmer - High Stakes
Indeed, after Mary reestablished the Catholic faith as the country's official religion, she had Cranmer - as well as Nicholas Ridley (the Bishop of London) and Hugh Latimer (the Bishop of Worcester) - tried as Protestant heretics and excommunicated.
While awaiting a decision, he was forced to watch his colleagues burned at the stake.
Cranmer, Thomas (1489-1556) English archbishop of Canterbury (1562-1556) [noted for his support of Henry VIII in his divorce from Catherine of Aragon and for his translation and dissemination of the English Bible]
http://www.anecdotage.com/index.php?aid=8844   (290 words)

  
 cranmer
He granted the annulment of Henry VIII and Catherine of Aragon's marriage, and wrote the English Book of Common Prayer, a mainstay of the Anglican religion.
It depicts a confident Cranmer, vested in the order of bishops and
He also presided over the marriage of Henry and Anne Boleyn, and his account of the king's marriage and Anne's pregnancy was designed to make sure their child was a legitimate heir to the throne (the future Elizabeth I.) After Henry VIII died, Cranmer was Imprisoned by Mary I for his Protestant views.
http://www.d.umn.edu/~aroos/cranmer.html   (420 words)

  
 Thomas Cranmer
In 1548 he converted the Mass into Communion, constructed two new Prayer Books (1549 and 1552) and composed the 42 articles of religion in 1553.
Educated at Jesus College, Cambridge, he took holy orders in 1523.
Cranmer was also godfather to the king's daughter
http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/TUDcranmer.htm   (449 words)

  
 Britannia Biographies: Thomas Cranmer, Archbishop of Canterbury
The Book of Common Prayer is the lasting memorial of the religious spirit of that time, and Cranmer are entitled to the fullest share of praise for the wisdom which guided its compilation.
The course which he advocated with regard to the divorce of Queen Catherine brought him into favour with King Henry VIII and, in 1533, he was appointed Archbishop of Canterbury.
The servility with which Cranmer lent himself to the accomplishment of Henry's lawless desires, the timidity which made him acquiesce in deeds of tyranny and violence, from which his conscience revolted, remain as a blot on his memory.
http://www.britannia.com/bios/abofc/tcranmer.html   (397 words)

  
 Cranmer's Sentences
Behind Cranmer stands the great Tyndale who 'single-handed achieved the backbone of the English Bible': anyone who has enjoyed the privilege of reading Tyndale aloud to a congregation will have become aware of an earthly toughness of speech which the Authorized Version doesn't always retain.
For Ian Robinson the crucial figure in this 'establishment' is Cranmer, and as befits a book dedicated to the Prayer Book Society of England, Cranmer is at its centre.
Before Cranmer, however, not only the indispensable Tyndale, but the long centuries of periodic prose before the very idea of a sentence could be identified, necessitating a lengthy study of pre-medieval linguistic theory and of medieval punctuation.
http://www.tyndale.org/TSJ/16/gomme.html   (1198 words)

  
 Police accuse Cranmer of attacking son
"I was defending myself from him," Cranmer, 47, said.
Cranmer yesterday acknowledged that he was involved in a brawl with his son but claimed he was attacked.
Police at the house spoke with Cranmer's son, Charles, and his wife, Lesa.
http://www.postgazette.com/localnews/20030916cranmer0916p5.asp   (342 words)

  
 Primary Sources: The execution of Archbishop Thomas Cranmer, 1556
Thus I have enforced myself, for your sake, to discourse this heavy narration, contrary to my mind: and, being more than half weary, I make a short end, wishing you a quieter life, with less honor; and easier death, with more praise.
Imprisoned by the Catholic Queen Mary I, Cranmer wrote a recantation of Protestantism, but he denied that recantation before he died.
This dramatic account of Archbishop Thomas Cranmer's execution was written by an anonymous bystander.
http://www.englishhistory.net/tudor/pcranmer.html   (779 words)

  
 Thomas Cranmer - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Born in 1489 at Nottingham, Cranmer was educated at Jesus College, Cambridge and became a priest following the death of his first wife.
Edward died in 1553, to be succeeded by his half-sister, Mary I of England, who had been brought up a Catholic and wished to return the country to its former faith.
During Edward's reign, Cranmer introduced the Book of Common Prayer, a modernized version of which is still used today, and in general, led the Church of England in a more Protestant direction.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Cranmer   (419 words)

  
 Thomas Cranmer Life Stories, Books, & Links
FIND BOOKS BY THOMAS CRANMER AT Powell's Books
Cranmer's promotion of the English Bible and his authorship of The Book of Common Prayer are his most significant connections to Christian literature, but for fiction readers he is known through his connection to Ray Bradbury's book-burning novel, Fahrenheit 451.
Thomas Cranmer - Life Stories, Books, and Links
http://todayinliterature.com/biography/thomas.cranmer.asp   (142 words)

  
 Thomas Cranmer gallery
"Cranmer renouncing his recantation" from the 1631 ed.
Courtauld Institute of Art and the Church Commissioners, courtesy of the Archbishop of Canterbury
http://www.tudorhistory.org/people/cranmer/gallery.html   (39 words)

  
 Cranmer, Thomas. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001-05
The situation changed with the accession (1547) of the young Edward VI, during whose reign Cranmer shaped the doctrinal and liturgical transformation of the Church of England.
With his friend Thomas Cromwell, he endorsed the translation of the Bible into English and was influential in procuring a royal proclamation (1538) providing for a copy in every parish church.
A lecturer at Jesus College, Cambridge, he is said to have come to the attention of the king in 1529 by suggesting that Henry might further his efforts to achieve a divorce from Katharine of Aragón by collecting opinions in his favor from the universities.
http://www.bartleby.com/65/cr/Cranmer.html   (426 words)

  
 MOA - Doug Cranmer - Doug Cranmer and the Haida Houses
When Cranmer grew tired of talking to the people who would stop and ask him what he was doing, he would fire up his chain-saw whether he needed to or not so that people would leave him alone.
MOA - Doug Cranmer - Doug Cranmer and the Haida Houses
Thirty years later, he was convinced that he had never made it to the opening ceremonies for the Haida Houses and totem poles.
http://www.moa.ubc.ca/Exhibitions/Online/Sourcebooks/Doug/page2_3.html   (461 words)

  
 Cranmer picks Christopher for RAD board
He is seen as one of the upstanding members of the community," Cranmer said.
Cranmer's spokeswoman, Sandy Hamm, said Christopher had agreed to give up the school post for the asset board position, which is unsalaried.
Christopher, 68, would be required to resign his seat on the Mt. Lebanon school board to accept the RAD position.
http://www.post-gazette.com/regionstate/19980604bchris5.asp   (358 words)

  
 Cranmer's assault hearing postponed
Police were called Sept. 14 after Cranmer allegedly hit one of his sons, who he claimed was attacking him.
Elash said Cranmer had visited his home and had not been residing there.
Cranmer has frequently criticized the police since his days as a Brentwood councilman, and after his arrest, a police officer objected to his latest comments at a council meeting.
http://www.post-gazette.com/localnews/20031126cranmerr7.asp   (288 words)

  
 cranmer on Flickr - Photo Sharing!
Cranmer is one of the several families that have all of their members buried here.
Sign up for a free account, or sign in (if you're already a member).
http://www.flickr.com/photos/addieplum/2642207   (51 words)

  
 Cranmer Family
The Cranmers do not all spell their names alike: some have it Cranmer, others Cramer, and still others Crammer, but the variation is easily accounted for.
Stephen Cranmer was considered one of the wealthy men of Bass River, and a man of considerable influence in the place of his adoption, and for some generations his posterity were people of wealth and influence.
The Cranmers of New Jersey claim to be the descendants of Thomas Cranmer, the Archbishop of Canterbury, who was burned at the stake for his devotion to Protestantism by order of Queen Mary, at Smithfield, England, May 21, 1556.
http://home.adelphia.net/~budd/Cranmer.html   (239 words)

  
 [No title]
This fact made it frustratingly difficult to drum up efforts to apprehend him, for though it was clear that he had intentionally brought ruination to any number of innocent lives, no one involved was quite sure where to find him or exactly what to charge him with once they had.
Thankfully most of the books were safely recalled, and when told exactly what had happened and who had been responsible, Keyhole's execs considered themselves fortunate.
The first several batches of books were already on the way to distributors before the change was noticed, and for reasons that are not clear to this day, the frantic calls from Keyhole's heads of operation were not returned until a few days too late.
http://www.sixsixfive.com/513.html   (342 words)

  
 MOA - Doug Cranmer - Five Weeks With Mungo
Although he only spent five weeks that holiday carving with Mungo, Cranmer credits him for most of his early training.
Mungo wouldn't tell Cranmer what to do, though:
It was painted on both sides because it was going to be used in a Victoria day parade.
http://www.moa.ubc.ca/Exhibitions/Online/Sourcebooks/Doug/page2_2.html   (373 words)

  
 Cranmer, Thomas
The mild-mannered Cranmer's loyalty to Henry helps him hold the vacillating king's support and survive the political intrigues of the court.
In the play's final scene, Cranmer christens the newborn Princess Elizabeth (later Queen Elizabeth I) and prophesies the glory of her future reign.
http://search.eb.com/shakespeare/micro/728/65.html   (44 words)

  
 Cranmer, Thomas (1489-1556)
This document is from the Christian Classics Ethereal Library at
Search works of Thomas Cranmer on the CCEL:
http://www.ccel.org/c/cranmer   (40 words)

  
 Steven Cranmer's Publications
Cranmer, S. 1993, ``Some Aspects of Illuminated Model Atmosphere Theory as Applied to Close Binary Systems,'' Mon.
GO BACK to Steven Cranmer's Home Page, or to the Harvard-Smithsonian CfA Home Page.
Cranmer, S. R., Kohl, J. L., and Noci, G. ``UVCS/SOHO: The First Two Years,'' Space Sci.
http://cfa-www.harvard.edu/~scranmer/cranmer_lp.html   (1118 words)

  
 LookSmart - Search results for "A Lute of Jade L Cranmer-Byng"
Byng Free Online Library A Lute by Cranmer Byng L. best known authors titles are available on the Free Online Library.
Library L. Cranmer Byng cranmer byng.thefreelibrary Lute Jade Result Language
A Lute of Jade - L. Cranmer- Byng - Free Online Library Library L. Cranmer-Byng A Lute of Jade Online DictionarySpelling...
http://www.looksmart.com/r_search?look=&sl=1&search=us317836&key=A+Lute+of+Jade+L+Cranmer-Byng   (406 words)

  
 Steven Cranmer's Miscellaneous Work
This list, in reverse chronological order, is by no means comprehensive.
Cranmer, S. ``What are Stellar Winds?'' September 1995, University of Delaware, Graduate Student Brown-Bag Informal Talk Series (BITS).
GO BACK to Steven Cranmer's Home Page, or to the Harvard-Smithsonian CfA Home Page.
http://cfa-www.harvard.edu/~scranmer/cranmer_unpub.html   (1299 words)

  
 Last Words of Thomas Cranmer
As the fire was put to him, Cranmer stretched out his right hand and thrust it into the flame crying with a loud voice, 'This hand hath offended.'
http://justus.anglican.org/resources/pc/misc/lwcranmer.html   (690 words)

  
 Medieval Sourcebook: Letter of Thomas Cranmer, 1533
In this letter Cranmer writes of the official divorce of Henry VIII from Catherine of Aragon and the coronation of Henry's next Queen, Anne Boleyn.
If you do reduplicate the document, indicate the source.
Letter of Thomas Cranmer on Henry VIII's divorce, 1533
http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/source/cramner-hen8.html   (540 words)

  
 Goals by Hal Cranmer
If I accomplish my goals, they will enrich the lives of those around me. Then, hopefully, people will someday have good things to say about me.
Hal Cranmer [send him mail] is an Air Force Academy graduate and former military and commercial pilot.
He now works for an industrial manufacturing company in Minnesota.
http://www.lewrockwell.com/orig6/cranmer2.html   (1171 words)

  
 NFB-RD: Re: FORWARDED MAIL FROM TIM CRANMER
Previous message: Curtis Chong: "Re: FORWARDED MAIL FROM TIM CRANMER"
I need to confirm with President Maurer, but it looks like Saturday
http://www.nfbcal.org/nfb-rd/1645.html   (184 words)

  
 Welcome to the World of Scott Cranmer - prints, art prints, fine art prints, paintings, visionary, visionary art, ...
Welcome to the World of Scott Cranmer - prints, art prints, fine art prints, paintings, visionary, visionary art, surrealism, surrealistic art
http://www.scottcranmer.com   (21 words)

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