Lt. Col. William Mudge. The Second Part of the General Survey of England and Wales Containing the Whole of Devon and a Portion of the Adjoining Counties, done by the Surveyors of His Majesties Ordnance under the Direction of Lt. Col. Mudge of the Royal Artillery, F.R.S., large scale map in eight sections, numbered XX to XXVII with engraved piano key border (to perimeter sheets only), contemporary quarter calf with marbled boards rebacked, folio, 1809.occasional light spotting and browning, end papers with creases, spine rebacked and extremities scuffed.
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Three military presentation items, all presented to M.C. Owen Royal Army Ordnance Corps, including a silver cirgarette box on his wedding, a silver plated owl on stand from RAOC, and a concrete fragment with spray paint from the Berlin wall and mounted on wooden plinth with worn brass plaque, together with two napkin rings, a plated box and a silver and glass salt (3)
An early 18th Century William IV circa 1830 New Land Pattern flintlock pistol. Brass mounted full walnut stock stamped with BO Board of Ordnance letters, engraved lock with crown WR and broad arrow, barrel further stamped with WR proof. Swivel rammer hinged at muzzle. Mechanism cocks, half cocks and dry fires. Measures approx 39cm. If this lot is required to be posted please see sale notes regarding age verification.
"Bacon's Excelsior map of Yorkshire and parts of the joining Counties showing Railways, Roads, Elevations and Distances also Local Government Divisions, revised according to the latest Ordnance Survey', a hanging wall map with index to boroughs, urban and rural districts and index - Gazetteer, printed by John Bartholomew & Co Edinburgh, H88cm W117cm
* Military Buttons. A large collection of military buttons, approximately 450, late Victorian and early 20th century, including Supply Transport Corps, Royal Army Ordnance Corps, West Lincolnshire Volunteers, Royal Scots Greys, Rifle Brigade, Royal Marines, Queen's Own Cameron Highlanders, Nova Scotia Highlanders, Indian Staff Corps, Australian Commonwealth, King's African Rifles and many more, presented on 16 card boards for display, not all completeQTY: (approx. 450 )NOTE:Provenance: The Dr Alison Smith Lean Button Collection.
Quantity of cap badges to include: ER 2nd Queen Alexandras Royal Army Nursing Corps, Intelligence Corps, Royal Army Ordnance Corps, Welsh Guards, 17/21st Lancers, Cameroonian’s, Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders, Black Watch, Army Catering Corps, Royal Marines etc all varying dates, crowns and manufactures
WW2 German Battle of Britain Luftwaffe Navigator's London Bombing Map This rare single sided waterproof map shows London West 1:20000. The map highlighting important buildings, targets etc. Including Wellington Barracks, Albert Hall, British Museum, Buckingham Palace, etc. Used condition, with one crude repair. The key is in German and the map is taken from a 1933 Ordnance Survey Map of central London. Approx. Size 38 x 28 Inches INVOICE PAYABLE ON PRESENTATION BY BANK TRANSFER ONLY
1871 Dated French Chassepot Bayonet. Single edged Yataghan blade with large fuller. The hilt with steel hook quillon, muzzle ring and brass ribbed grip. Steel locking spring and stud. Housed in its steel scabbard. The back of the blade with ordnance stamps and date 1871. GC INVOICE PAYABLE ON PRESENTATION BY BANK TRANSFER ONLY
Victorian British 1837 Pattern Brunswick Sword Bayonet A good example with a 21 3/4 inch double edged blade with spear point. Short central fuller. The forte with maker Enfield 1845 and Ordnance stamps. The brass hilt with downswept crossguard, ribbed grip with front securing slot and steel side release button. Scabbard absent. INVOICE PAYABLE ON PRESENTATION BY BANK TRANSFER ONLY
An Australian Forces pair awarded to Warrant Officer K. H. W. Willert, Royal Australian Army Ordnance Corps Australia, Defence Force Service Medal, with clasp (213321 Willert K. H. W.); National Medal (213321 K. H. W. Willert) mounted court style as worn, extremely fine (2) £140-£180 --- Provenance: Dix Noonan Webb, September 2009. Kevin Henry Walter Willert was born on 18 September 1942. He enlisted into the Australian Regular Army on 28 September 1959, based at the 1st Recruit Training Battalion, Kapooka, and Infantry Centre, Ingleburn, being allocated to the Australian Infantry Corps. As a Sergeant he was an Instructor at the 1st Recruit Training Centre and attended the Tropical Warfare Advisor’s Course, at Canungra, between May and July 1967. Latterly with the Royal Australian Army Ordnance Corps at Bandiana. He was discharged on 27 September 1980.
The rare Gold Albert Medal group of five awarded to Mr A. T. Shuttleworth, Deputy Conservator of Forests (Bombay District), late Indian Navy Albert Medal, 1st Class, for Gallantry in Saving Life at Sea, gold and enamel, the reverse officially numbered ‘No. 14’ and inscribed (Presented in the name of Her Majesty to A. T. Shuttleworth. Wrecks of the “Berwickshire” “Die Vernon” and “Terzah” 1866 and 1867) the reverse of the crown with maker’s cartouche ‘Phillips Cockspur S’, fitted with silver-gilt riband buckle; India General Service 1854-94, 1 clasp, Persia (A. T. Shuttleworth, Captns. Clk. Ferooz S.F.) fitted with silver riband buckle; Shipwrecked Fishermen and Mariners Royal Benevolent Society, gold (Allen Shuttleworth, Esqr. 1867) fitted with silver-gilt riband buckle; Lloyd’s Medal for Saving Life at Sea, 1st large type glazed silver medallion, 73mm (Allen Thornton Shuttleworth Esq. late Indian Navy. 25th September 1867) lacking reverse lunette; Royal Humane Society, large bronze medal (Successful), (Mr A. T. Shuttleworth, 1 August 1866) fitted with bronze riband buckle, generally good very fine (5) £12,000-£16,000 --- Importation Duty This lot is subject to importation duty of 5% on the hammer price unless exported outside the UK --- --- Provenance: Brian Ritchie Collection, Dix Noonan Webb, March 2005. Allen Thornton Shuttleworth, the son of Digby Edward Shuttleworth, Indigo Planter, was born in the Meerpore district of Pubna on 21 October 1839. He was educated under Mr J. Whitely at Woolwich Common and was nominated for the post of Captain’s Clerk in the Indian Navy by Captain John Shepherd on the recommendation of his uncle. Shuttleworth was admitted into the Indian Navy on 12 December 1855, and having taken the oath ‘to be true and faithful to the said Company, and faithfully and truly execute and discharge the trust reposed in me, to the utmost of my skill and power. So Help me God’, he left Gravesend on the Cairngorm on the 24th. In a letter dated ‘31 December off the Isle of Wight’, the captain of the Cairngorm reported that they had commenced their voyage to Bombay. Shuttleworth landed after a four month voyage on 21 April 1856, and was appointed Captain’s Clerk on the 8-gun H.E.I. Company’s Steam Frigate Ferooz. He was then one of twenty-four Captain’s Clerks in the Service and was paid Rs. 50 per month, which if he attained the rank of Captain in 30 to 35 years time could be expected to rise to rise to Rs. 600-800 per month. During the build up to war with Persia in 1856, Commander Rennie of the Ferooz was ordered to sail to Bushire with despatches for the Political Resident. The Ferooz left on 19 September 1856, but on reaching the Persian coast, Commander Rennie was advised to abandon his mission on account of ‘the excited state of the population’. Despite the warning, Rennie resolved to deliver his despatches on shore. C. R. Low, the author of the History of the Indian Navy, who was then a shipmate and contemporary of Shuttleworth’s, later recalled, ‘We remember, being then a Midshipman on board the Ferooz, how this judicious, as well as gallant, officer [Commander Rennie], who had ‘an eye to business’ whenever any fighting was on the tapis, took advantage of this last opportunity of reconnoitring Bushire, to take careful soundings both in going ashore and returning, to be of use in eventualities.’ Having returned to Bombay the Ferooz sailed again for Bushire in late November, this time towing two transports containing men of Major-General Stalker’s division. In the absence of any response to the British ultimatum demanding the Persian withdrawal from Herat, war was declared. The Union flag was hoisted at Kharrack for the first time in sixteen years and a Royal salute fired from the guns of the Ferooz. Offensive operations began in November with the capture of Bushire. Troops were landed at Hallilah Bay under covering fire from eight gun boats, and proceeded to storm fort of Reshire. That night Commander Rennie sent a boat with muffled oars to buoy a fourteen-foot channel off the batteries which next day enabled the Ferooz to take up a position 300 yards closer in shore than the other vessels. In the ensuing action the Ferooz was engaged in a duel with the Persian shore batteries until they were silenced and a breach effected in Bushire’s walls, whereupon the enemy flagstaff was hauled down and the garrison surrendered. The Ferooz then returned to Bombay while Lieutenant-General Sir James Outram led the expeditionary force in land and defeated the Persians at the battle of Khoosh-Ab. Again returning to the Persian Gulf, the Ferooz was next involved in silencing the heavily fortified position at Mohammerah, on the junction of the Karoon and Shatt-ul-Arab, where a Persian Army, thirteen thousand strong, had assembled under the Shahzada. Batteries had been erected of solid earth, twenty feet thick, eighteen feet high, armed with heavy ordnance placed to sweep the entire river at the junction of the Karoon with the Shatt-ul-Arab. An attempt to place a mortar battery on an island failed when the island turned out to be a swamp, but the ingenious Commander Rennie, in defiance of the engineers who said the first shot would smash it, constructed a raft of casks and studding-sail booms, which, armed with two 8-inch and two 5-inch mortars manned by the Bombay Artillery, was towed into position opposite the forts. The ships of war were given the first task of silencing the batteries, which they accomplished at point blank range under heavy fire, then landed parties of seamen to storm the southern and northern forts. To quote General Havelock ‘the gentlemen in blue had it all to themselves, and left us naught to do’. The British loss was only ten killed and thirty wounded, owing largely to Rennie’s ‘happy thought’ of placing trusses in the sides of the Ferooz, from which vast numbers of bullets were shaken out. The bold step of closing at point blank range also took them under the elevation of the Persian guns. Shuttleworth was not actively engaged in the Mutiny, but served in supporting naval operations in the 1800-ton H.E.I.C. Steam Frigate Assaye as Assistant Paymaster. Promoted Paymaster and transferred to the 300-ton Steam-gun boat Clyde in which he served the last three years of his career in the Indian Navy, Shuttleworth next took part in operations against the piratical Waghurs, who, having seized the island fort of Beyt and the fort of Dwarka, were levying large imposts from the pilgrims who came to worship at the great temple dedicated to Krishna. An expedition was mounted including H.M’s 28th Foot, 6th N.I. and a Marine Battalion, accompanied by the Ferooz, Zenobia, Berenice, Victoria, Clyde, Constance and the Lady Falkland. On 5 and 6 October, the fort at Beyt, with earthwork walls 18-40 feet thick and 30-40 feet high, and lofty, massive towers with guns, was under continual bombardment from the naval ships. Troops were landed in an attempt to storm the fort, with boats’ crews and field pieces in support, but failed in the face of heavy fire from the defenders. The Waghurs, however, evacuated the fort soon after dark and it was occupied the next day. To launch the attack on Dwarka, the force then moved to Roopon Bunder, two miles up the coast to the only place where the surf permitted a landing. The beach, however, was covered by the guns of an imposing fort. On the 19th, the Clyde, towing a naval landing party in cutters from the Ferooz, Zenobia and Berenice, opened a bombardment, and successfully put the sailors ashore. Much to the surprise of the Colonel commanding the field force,...
The Ashanti Star was awarded in 1896 to those members of the expedition under Colonel Sir Francis Scott, against the Ashantis under King Prempeh, from 26 December 1895 to 4 February 1896. The expeditionary force consisted of 420 Officers and men of the 2nd Battalion, West Yorkshire Regiment; a composite battalion made up of between 16 and 26 men from the three regiments of Foot Guards and eight Infantry Regiments; detachments of Royal Artillery, Royal Engineers, Army Medical Corps, Army Ordnance Corps, and Army Service Corps; the 2nd West India Regiment; and locally recruited Hausa forces. The Ashanti Star was designed by Queen Victoria’s youngest daughter H.R.H. Princess Beatrice, Princess Henry of Battenberg, whose husband died of fever during the campaign, and was issued unnamed; however, Colonel A. J. Price, the Commanding Officer of the 2nd Battalion, West Yorkshire Regiment, had the Stars awarded to his battalion engraved on the reverse at his own expense. A Boer War ‘Advance on Laing’s Nek’ D.C.M. group of three awarded to Sergeant A. Walmsley, 2nd Battalion, West Yorkshire Regiment, for his gallantry whilst in charge of the Maxims of the Battalion Distinguished Conduct Medal, V.R. (3325 Serjt: A. Walmsley. W. Yorkshire Regt.); Ashanti Star 1896 (3325 L. Cpl. A. Walmsley 2. W. Yorks R.) reverse inscribed in the usual Regimental style; Queen’s South Africa 1899-1902, 5 clasps, Tugela Heights, Orange Free State, Relief of Ladysmith, Transvaal, Laing’s Nek (3325 Corl. J. [sic] Walmsley, W. York: Regt.) initial officially corrected, mounted court-style for wear, heavy pitting and contact marks, suspension on QSA broken and crudely repaired, therefore fine and better (3) £1,400-£1,800 --- D.C.M. London Gazette 27 September 1901. Earlier details in the London Gazette, 8 February 1901 state: ‘No. 3325 Lance-Sergeant J. [sic] Walmsley, who distinguished himself [at the advance on Laing’s Nek on 12 June 1900] in charge of the Maxims of the Battalion.’ Arthur Walmsley was born in Blackburn, Lancashire, in 1873 and attested for the West Yorkshire Regiment at Preston on 3 October 1892. He served with the 2nd Battalion during the Ashanti campaign from 11 December 1895 to 23 February 1896, and was promoted Corporal on 1 May 1898. Transferring to the Army Reserve on 3 October 1899, after seven years with the Colours, he was recalled to the Colours less than a week later on 9 October 1899, and served with the 2nd Battalion in South Africa during the Boer War from 20 October 1899 to 15 August 1901, and then again from 11 January 1902 to 10 September 1902 (also entitled to a King’s South Africa Medal with the two date clasps). Promoted Sergeant on 7 February 1901, for his services during the advance on Laing’s Nek on 12 June 1900 he was both Mentioned in Despatches (London Gazette 10 September 1901) and awarded the Distinguished Conduct Medal. After further service in India from 21 January 1904 to 8 December 1906, he was finally discharged at his own request after 18 years’ service on 30 November 1910, after a total of 18 years and 59 day’s service. Sold with a group photographic image of the Warrant Officers, Staff Sergeant, and Sergeants of the 1st Battalion, West Yorkshire regiment, 1906 (in which the recipient is identified, and is wearing his four medals); copied record of services; and other research.
THE ADVENTURES OF PLUTO NASH (2002) - Bruno's (Randy Quaid) Gun - Bruno's (Randy Quaid) gun from Ron Underwood's The Adventures of Pluto Nash. Bruno, an android, used his pistols to protect his friends from the mobsters attacking them.This lot consists of a futuristic pistol, based on a heavily modified Para-Ordnance P-13, made of resin and painted silver-color with a black grip. It exhibits chipping to the painted finish throughout. Dimensions: 9.5" x 5.25" x 2" (24.25 cm x 13.5 cm x 5.25)Ownership may be restricted in some countries; see replica firearm notice in Buyer's Guide.This lot is offered at a $100 starting bid with no reserve.Bidding for this lot will end on Thursday, March 14th. The auction will begin at 9:00AM PDT and lots are sold sequentially via live auctioneer; tune in to the live streaming broadcast on auction day to follow the pace. Note other lots in the auction may close on Tuesday, March 12th or Wednesday, March 13th.
A flintlock pocket pistol 18th Century, by Freeman of London, with a 2 3/8in brass turn-off cannon barrel, with Ordnance marks, signed and engraved box lock, with a walnut slab butt, 20cm overallShipping Disclaimer:Buyers must be aware of their country’s shipping and import policies regarding guns, knives, swords, and other offensive weapons prior to purchase. They are required to ensure that the lot can be delivered by a specialist shipper, whether in the UK, Europe or internationally. No compensation will be given to buyers who fail to organise shipping arrangements for goods and weapons due to the prohibitions, restrictions or import regulations of their country.Condition ReportOverall good order. Lock holds firmly in both positions. Trigger guard is a little loose. Knocks and wear commensurate with age.
WW2 Canadian Cloth Shoulder Title collection. Matched pair for Royal Canadian Army Service Corps: The Elgin Regiment: Lord Strathcona's Horse Royal Canadians: Royal Canadian Hussars (Montreal): Royal Canadian Ordnance Corps: Royal Canadian Electrical Mechanical Engineers: Plus singles of Seaforth Canada and The Prince Edward island Regt (7th Recce) Canada.
WW2 US M1 Garand Bayonet with fullered single edged blade 247mm in length. Maker marked "PAL" along with US Flaming Grenade Ordnance mark. Working release catch. Black plastic grips. Overall length 366mm. Complete with scabbard. Marked with US Flaming Grenade Ordnance mark. Addition "B2" marking to scabbard throat. Complete with M1910 carrying hook.
WW2 US M3 Fighting Knife with double edged blade 172mm in length, Parkerized finish, maker marked "US M3 Imperial". Compressed leather washer grip. US Ordnance marked Flaming Grenade to pommel cap. Overall length 297mm. Complete with US M8 Scabbard, maker marked "BM Co". Has Para cord tie straps.
St . Ives. 'Copy from Ordnance Maps to show Leases and accompany Report of October 8th 1907.....The Cornish Proprietary Mines Limited,' printed map with coloured areas showing names of ownership, tear to fore edge, some nibbles to edges, generally good to very good, 88cm x 108cm, [1907]; 'Section of Standard or Virgin Lode' cross sectional view, hand drawn on linen, showing Rosewall Hill and Ransom United Mines, Saint Ives Consol Mines, vg to fine, rolled, 25.5cm x 55cm; With three other related works including an exceedingly long (approx 482cm) preparatory sketch of a mine survey. (5) From the estate of Ron Hooper, M.V.O., A.C.S.M., F.I.M.M.Born in St.Agnes, he graduated from Camborne School of Mines. After a short career mining in the Gold Coast of Ghana he joined the Camborne School of Mines, eventually becoming Senior Lecturer in Surveying. At the same time, he acted as an independent mining engineer and was appointed mineral agent for several Cornish estates including the Duchy of Cornwall, Tregothnan, and the Godolphin Estate (amongst others).
'Ordnance Survey of Ireland: Geological Survey of Ireland' Six engraved maps. Engraved at the Ordnance Survey Office, Dublin; including Manor Hamilton, Nenagh (x2) and Sligo (x3), rolled, on with tear, vg, (6) From the estate of Ron Hooper, M.V.O., A.C.S.M., F.I.M.M.Born in St.Agnes, he graduated from Camborne School of Mines. After a short career mining in the Gold Coast of Ghana he joined the Camborne School of Mines, eventually becoming Senior Lecturer in Surveying. At the same time, he acted as an independent mining engineer and was appointed mineral agent for several Cornish estates including the Duchy of Cornwall, Tregothnan, and the Godolphin Estate (amongst others).
'Trenwith Mine, St Ives,' Surveys and maps by Leonard Hawkey, 1911. Hand drawn cross sectional survey on thin linen by L. Hawkey, scale 1 inch to 5 fathoms, showing Victory Shaft, Berriman Shaft and Old Sump Shaft, reference of Adit Level, damp staining to edges, colour ink offsetting, rolled, approx 75cm x 215cm, 1911; 'Longitude Section', scale 1 inch to 5 fathoms, damp staining and nibbles to edge, rolled, approx, 75cm x 220cm [L. Hawkey, 1911]; Handrawn map on linen, with scale and compass, showing mine burrows, Stennack Road and Trenwith Terrace, damp staining, rolled, approx, 65.5cm x 143cm, [L. Hawkey, 1911], '....Berriman Shaft, Transverse Section,' hand drawn, scale 1 inch = 30 feet or 5 fathoms, damp staining to edges, approx 56cm x 21cm on much larger thin linen, rolled, [L. Hawkey, 1911]; With the same for 'Old Sump Shaft' and 'Victory Shaft'; Hand drawn survey both transverse and longitudinal sections for 'East Virgin Shaft and Sump Shaft', on linen with damp staining to edge, rolled, approx 68cm x 100cm, [L. Hawkey, 1911]; 'St Ives. Ordnance Map to show Leases and accompany Report of October 8th 1907,' tears and nibble to edges, rolled, approx 88cm x 109cm. (8)Surveyed by Hawkey during the reopening of the mine, by the German-owned 'British Radium Company' for the extraction of uranium (and radium). A fascinating survivor of subterranean St. Ives. From the estate of Ron Hooper, M.V.O., A.C.S.M., F.I.M.M.Born in St.Agnes, he graduated from Camborne School of Mines. After a short career mining in the Gold Coast of Ghana he joined the Camborne School of Mines, eventually becoming Senior Lecturer in Surveying. At the same time, he acted as an independent mining engineer and was appointed mineral agent for several Cornish estates including the Duchy of Cornwall, Tregothnan, and the Godolphin Estate (amongst others).
GROUP OF UNFRAMED MAPS including Ordnance Survey (Scotland and England) and anglers river mapsSalmon pools on the river Tay x2 100cm x 35cm overall good condition Salmon pools on the river cassley 62cm x 24cm overall good condition 1909 map of Yorkshire (west riding) sheet CLIII.5 104cm x 74cm. Decent condition small tears around the edges.1909 map of Yorkshire (west riding) sheet CLIII.2 104cm x 74cm decent condition small folds and tears around the edges1909 map of Yorkshire (west riding) sheet CLIII.3 104cm x 74cm similar condition to previous 1909 map of Yorkshire (west riding) sheet CLIII.1 104cm x 74cm similar condition to previousordinance survey of Yorkshire sheet SE15NE 56cm x 73cm overall good condition ordinance survey of Yorkshire sheet SE15NW 56cm x 73cm overall good condition
James (Henry). Plans and Photographs of Stonehenge, and of Turusachan in the Island of Lewis; with Notes relating to the Druids and Sketches of Cromlechs in Ireland, 1st edition, [Southampton: Ordnance Survey], 1867, 8 zincographed plates and plans, 8 mounted albumen prints of Stonehenge (18.5 x 23.5 cm and similar), 2 further mounted albumen prints from drawings by Henry James, one of these loose, a little spotting and dust-soiling, original cloth gilt, rubbed and some edge wear, backstrip deficient, folioQTY: (1)NOTE:Gernsheim, 359. This copy of a scarce and important photographic incunable differs slightly from most copies. The unnumbered illustration titled 'Turusachan, Callernish, or, the place of pilgrimage on the bleak headland in the Isle of Lewis' is usually reproduced as a zincograph, as the following illustrations numbered 12 to 15 at the end of the volume. However, the illustration here is a mounted albumen print of the same illustration. The additional mounted albumen print found loosely inserted bears the printed title 'Stonehenge restored: Druidical sacrifice'.
Liverpool. Starling (T.). Liverpool, published under the Superintendence of the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge, circa 1830, engraved map with contemporary outline colouring, 310 x 385 mm, together with Davies (B. R.), Liverpool and its Environs including the Cheshire Coast, circa 1830, engraved map after a survey by H. Austen, contemporary outline colouring, sectionalised and laid on linen, slight staining, some surface abrasion with loss, 445 x 530 mm, bound in contemporary cloth boards with gilt title to the upper cover, re-backed, size of boards 100 x 150 mm, with Philip (George & Son). Philips' Plan of the Town & Port of Liverpool with Birkenhead and the adjoining Cheshire Coast, circa 1860, engraved map with contemporary outline colouring, sectionalised and laid on linen, some later ink annotations, slight toning and dust soiling, 625 x 715 mm, bound in contemporary cloth boards with gilt title to the upper cover, size of boards 170 x 135 mm, plus Ordnance Survey (publishers). Untitled map of Liverpool and its environs, on a scale of six inches to a mile, 22nd September 1851, uncoloured engraved map, sectionalised and laid on linen, slight staining, 620 x 930 mm, contemporary cloth boards, upper board detached, spine crudely repaired, size of boards 225 x 145 mmQTY: (4)
Map. 1922 Ordnance Survey One Inch of Bristol District. Special Sheet Popular Edition. Includes Glos, Wilts & Somerset. Redwick at NW then Avonmouth, Iron Acton, Chipping Sodbury, Colerne at East, Farleigh Hungerford at SE, West Harptree at South, SW with Winscombe and Clevedon at West on Bristol Channel. Cloth backed.

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12129 item(s)/page