Sunday, November 9, 2025

‘Civil War Lodge’s plans’

    

Civil War Lodge of Research 1865 has its designs upon the trestleboard for next month and the ensuing year.

Matthew Szramoski
First, the big news: At the annual communication yesterday, Grand Lodge elected and installed MW Matthew Todd Szramoski into the Grand Master’s chair. The name probably rings a bell; he is in charge at the George Washington Masonic National Memorial. And the Research District has a new DDGM: CWLR’s very own Secretary, RW Bennett Hart! Congratulations to everybody on the leadership team for 2026.

Civil War Lodge will meet Saturday, December 6 at Babcock Lodge 322 in Highland Springs, Virginia for our own installation of officers. Our thirtieth anniversary arrives this Thursday, so the Stated Communication will be an extra celebration. As you know, CWLR meetings typically are built into a weekend of activities (I encourage all research lodges to incorporate this idea into your schedules) so there will be Friday and Saturday things to do outside the lodge room, to wit:

Friday, December 5
Dinner at 6:30 p.m.
Roberto Italian Restaurant in Sandston

Saturday, December 6
Babcock Lodge 322 in Highland Springs
Open Lodge at 10 a.m.
Installation at noon.
Lunch at one o’clock.
Cold Harbor Battlefield
in Mechanicsville at 3 p.m.
Dinner at Mexico Restaurant
in Sandston at 7 p.m.

Plans for next year (meetings will be in Virginia except where noted) are:

April 11: New Market Battlefield
July 18: Monterey Pass, Pennsylvania
August 29: Grand Master’s Research Lodge Official Visit at Hay Market Lodge 313
October 10: Fort Monroe
December 5: to be determined

I think all these are close enough for me to attend, so hopefully I’ll see you around.
     

Thursday, November 6, 2025

‘New leadership in New Jersey’

    
Gill Raoul Calderon
Grand Master Omar Morris
and Junior Grand Warden Glenn Visscher.

Congratulations are in order upon the huge news pulsating right now from Atlantic City: Omar Morris is the new MW Grand Master of the Grand Lodge of New Jersey, and RW Glenn Visscher has been elected and installed in the Grand South. Huzzah!

I’ve known both for a long time (Omar is from my former lodge), and I couldn’t nominate Masons more worthy for these top jobs. Personally, being a refugee from that Grand Lodge, I believe the single most important task for the voting members of that jurisdiction is to continue electing decent human beings to their highest offices. The coming four years are looking bright indeed over there.

Congratulations to all.
     

Wednesday, November 5, 2025

‘Time to join/renew to receive AQC 138’

    
It is time to renew with (or join) QCCC for 2026. Quatuor Coronati Correspondence Circle is the corporate side of Quatuor Coronati Lodge 2076 in London. Membership in the lodge is limited to a small number of scholars who are elected, but guys like you and me may join QCCC, the principal benefit of which is possession of the treasury that is Ars Quatuor Coronatorum, the lodge’s annual book of transactions.

QC2076 will meet one more time this year for its installation of officers next Thursday at Great Queen Street. Bro. Richard Gan will be seated in the Solomonic Chair and will present his inaugural paper. From the summons:


Printed Masonic Periodicals
in England 1793-2024

Richard’s paper tracks the progress and regress of Masonic publishing through to the present day, a time when there is no longer any Masonic periodical with a national circulation in England, the last having ceased hard-copy publication in December 2024 when it transferred online.

Richard L. Gan was born in 1950 Bradford to Polish parents. He was educated at the Becket School, Nottingham, and graduated in Geology at London University, where he also took a Master’s Degree in education; in addition, he holds a Degree in Management Studies from the Open University. Richard’s professional career included teaching, educational management and Masonic administration.

He retired in June 2010 as Deputy Grand Secretary of the Grand Lodge of Mark Master Masons and thereafter was editor of The Square until 2014.

Richard was initiated in Ribblesdale Lodge No. 8020 in Nottingham in 1977 and promoted to Past Assistant Grand Director of Ceremonies in 2008. He is a Grand Officer in all the major Orders of Freemasonry and in addition has served as the Grand Principal Conductor of the Work (Assistant Grand Master) in the Grand Council of Royal and Select Masters and as Provincial Grand Master in the Mark for Middlesex.

Richard lives in Lincolnshire and writes and researches on subjects that include Victorian Freemasonry and the Orders beyond the Craft. He was elected a full member of Quatuor Coronati Lodge in 2014. He has been a regular Masonic speaker and has delivered more than fifty talks and lectures on a range of Masonic subjects; he has authored four monographs, six papers and eight books.


For next year’s meetings, the lodge has scheduled:


Thursday, February 19
Rob Hammond
“Does Freemasonry
Follow the Railroad?”

Thursday, May 14
Paul Calderwood
“Welsh Freemasonry
& the Unlawful Societies Act”

Thursday, June 25
Rod Taylor
“Masonic Firing Glasses”

Thursday, September 10
Daniel Johnson
“Solomon’s Temple in Myth & Ritual”
The 2026 Prestonian Lecture

Thursday, November 12
Installation Meeting
Installation Paper


Someday I will visit, I keep telling myself. Click here to join QCCC or click here to renew your membership.
     

‘2026 Prestonian Lecture’

    
Magpie file photo
Other big news from earlier this year, during my dereliction from blogging: the announcement of next year’s Prestonian Lecturer! At the Quarterly Communication of the United Grand Lodge of England in June, the Board of General Purposes said Bro. Daniel Johnson will present “Solomon’s Temple in Myth & Ritual.”

To my knowledge, he is not related to the Bro. Johnson in the post below. 

Every year, one scholar is chosen for the distinction. The job is to travel about the jurisdiction, delivering the lecture in lodges, and raising funds for a charity. I see Bro. Johnson will appear at QC2076 next September. There’s nothing stopping them from traveling abroad, of course, and I have a history of hosting these outstanding workmen here in the New York City area. Maybe something can be arranged for 2026 too.
     

Sunday, November 2, 2025

‘Freemason helps thwart knife attack’

    
Andrew Johnson
One of the two London North Eastern Railway employees credited with helping stop the knife attacks aboard a commuter train last night is a Freemason, according to a number of laudatory messages shared on social media by Brother Masons today.

W. Bro. Andrew Johnson, a 17-year Royal Navy veteran who served in the Iraq War, was driving. Upon hearing an alarm and learning of the violence onboard the King’s Cross-bound train, he had its route changed from express tracks (125 m.p.h.) to local, thereby allowing for a stop at Huntingdon that allowed British Transport Police to board, make arrests, and evacuate the wounded.

Eleven were reported injured. Johnson’s co-worker, who physically confronted an assailant, is in “a life-threatening condition,” according to the BBC.

Two suspects initially were apprehended, one of whom was released, for the stabbings and slashings of eleven victims, and one weapon has been recovered. 

The government there somehow was able to proclaim very early that this is not a “terrorist incident.” Makes you wonder what would qualify as a terrorist incident.

After a little poking around, I think I can say Bro. Johnson is affiliated with Ceres Lodge 6977, of the Provincial Grand Lodge of Northamptonshire and Huntingdonshire. He also is a Royal Arch Mason.

God bless you, Bro. Andrew. Prayers for all the injured victims.
     

‘The Revolution WILL be televised’

    

Documentarian Ken Burns will have his latest, The American Revolution, debuted on PBS in two weeks. It’s a long shot, but I am hoping some mention of Freemasonry will fit in the six-chapter, 12-hour series coming November 16.


It’s only fair. Many of his previous works involve historical Freemasons but do not mention the fraternity, such as The Statue of Liberty (1985), Lewis & Clark (1997), Mark Twain (2001), The Roosevelts (2014), and, most recently, Benjamin Franklin (2022). I’ve always believed his style of filmmaking would be ideal for a story about Freemasonry itself. He excels at telling of generational histories (Baseball, 1994; Jazz, 2001; Country Music, 2019) and epochal events (The Civil War, 1990; The War, 2007; The Vietnam War, 2017).

Who better to chronicle the adventures of a folkway that germinated in sixteenth century Scotland and spread around the globe, influencing cultures and societies everywhere while embracing the giants of Western Civilization? Many years ago, I emailed his office pitching that idea, but received no reply.
     

Saturday, November 1, 2025

‘Webinar on New York genealogical research’

    

Sorry for the short notice but, if you can be available Thursday afternoon, I think you’ll find this webinar on research techniques profitable. From the publicity:


Unlocking the Mysteries:
An Introduction to Using
American Fraternal Records
in Genealogical Research

Thursday, November 6
6 p.m.
Free (registration is required)
Click here

Join us for a virtual webinar hosted by the New York Genealogical & Biographical Society about American Masonic and fraternal organizations, focusing on New York, and how their records can help you in your genealogical research.

Join Jeffrey Croteau and Sarah Shepherd of the Scottish Rite Masonic Museum & Library for a webinar about American Masonic and fraternal organizations, focusing on New York, and how their records can help you in your genealogical research.

The presentation will start with a brief introduction to popular fraternal organizations such as Freemasonry and Order of Eastern Star, Independent Order of Odd Fellows, Improved Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks of the World, and Knights of Pythias.



The presenters will discuss what types of fraternal records exist, go in-depth on where to find them, and talk about what kind of information these records may contain. This talk will be followed by a Q&A session. This virtual webinar will take place on Thursday, November 6, at 6 p.m.

The event, part of the Scottish Rite Masonic Museum & Library’s fiftieth anniversary programming, will be hosted by the New York Genealogical & Biographical Society.

This is a free online webinar, but registration is required.
     

‘Good Samaritan’s Thanksgiving’

    
Good Samaritan Lodge 336 in Gettysburg will host another of its famous Civil War Dinners in three weeks. If it wasn’t hundreds of miles away, I’d be there every time, but if you are nearer, you should go. Here is the publicity:

Click to enlarge.

As you know, November 22 is the anniversary of the death of C.S. Lewis in 1963. The scholar-author (and Inkling!) was inspired by the parable of the Good Samaritan (Luke 10) to exhort Christians to convert the moral instruction of that Scripture into personal action. As the C.S. Lewis Institute puts it:

C.S. Lewis Institute
Click to enlarge.

     

Thursday, October 30, 2025

‘Grand Masters fete Lafayette at The ALR’

    
Almost everybody in attendance last night
at The American Lodge of Research.

Research lodges typically don’t get a lot of glitz (it’s safe to say we prefer that) but, twenty-four hours ago, The American Lodge of Research had five grand masters partaking in our celebration of the moment in 1824 when the Marquis de Lafayette was knighted a Templar.

The ALR concluded New York Freemasonry’s celebration of the bicentenary of Lafayette’s farewell tour of the United States, sponsored by the Masonic Order and heavily involving New York. We assembled, appropriately, inside the Colonial Room but, admittedly, this was not exactly the meeting we planned, as fate interfered and kept a special guest from joining us. It was a full evening anyway. Our keynote speaker was David Dixon Goodwin, Past M.E. Grand Master of the Grand Encampment of Knights Templar, who explained the early history of Chivalric Masonry in the United States.

Yves and David.
Actually, he began with a recapitulation of the story of the medieval Knights Templar, careful to point out how none of that connects to the modern Masonic Templars, but that “we represent the same values in today’s world.” My takeaway is the KT story in America follows a seemingly boilerplate trajectory we know from Masonry here generally. A whiff of a trace of ritual is in one record in the 1780s. Before you know it, there’s a grand encampment in one state, Pennsylvania being first in this case. Then other states. Big names get involved, such as Thomas Smith Webb, DeWitt Clinton, and Joseph Cerneau. Cerneau’s presence confounds orthodox enforcers of recognition rules (like the Pennsylvanians, I’d say). Then a move to establish a national structure, called the General Grand Encampment gains popularity, albeit without Pennsylvania’s support initially. And then, the grand commandery system we know today is birthed and spreads from six such bodies in 1827 to forty-three in 1900—despite Masonry’s ups and downs during the nineteenth century—to more than sixty today.

The part of the meeting diminished by circumstance was to be a display of Masonic regalia connected to Lafayette. Livingston Library Executive Director Michael LaRocco was scheduled to return to The ALR to exhibit the apron Morton Commandery 4 is believed to have presented to Lafayette, but he was unable to join us. Thanks to Worshipful Master Yves Etienne, we did get to see one of twelve silver chalices used in KT’s ritual libations that dates, at least, to this Lafayette visit to New York.

Columbian Commandery silver chalice used
when Lafayette was made a Sir Knight in 1824.

No way of knowing if the great man drank from this particular goblet, of course, but it was used in the historic ceremony that day more than two centuries ago.

The lodge was blessed with more than the usual showing of visitors. The Most Worshipful Steven A. Rubin, Grand Master of Masons in the State of New York, was accompanied by Grand Treasurer Alberto Cortizo, Senior Grand Deacon Gustavo Teran, Grand Historian Pierre de Ravel d’Esclapon, and Grand Marshal Peter Unfried. Two exceptionally special guests, who sojourned further than from several floors above, were Most Serene (I hope I have that correct!) Malerbe Jacquet, Grand Master of the Grand Orient d’Haiti, who was accompanied by Gaétan Mentor, Past GM of the Grand Orient.

If you’re keeping score, we’re up to four (4) grand masters.

The Worshipful Master is keen on introducing dignitaries and permitting time for their remarks—and presenting gifts. Past Grand Master Bill Sardone, also a PGM of DeMolay International, (five GMs now) was escorted to the East for brief comments, which he always manages to craft with good humor.

Our Worshipful Master gives lots of gifts. Last night our distinguished guests received plaques commemorating the evening. Here, MW Bill Sardone receives his.

In addition, he too spoke of medieval Templar history, recollecting the discovery in 2001 by a Vatican archivist of the fourteenth century trial transcripts and other documents from the prosecution of the military order, and how a collection of reproductions of those documents are in the Livingston Library. (It was exactly seventeen years ago when The ALR hosted the unveiling of those impressive facsimiles next door in the French Ionic Room. A memorable meeting!)

Grand Master Jacquet with Past GM Mentor.

Past Grand Master Mentor, continuing on Templar thoughts, explained that “the Templar ideal is not conquest, but is the mastery of the self” and displays faith and action intertwined. Grand Master Jacquet, speaking French and interpreted by Mentor, spoke of Lafayette as he is known as “The Hero of Two Worlds,” explaining how the Marquis earned that appellation for his role in both the American and French revolutions. Jacquet reminded the brethren (sometimes we forget) of Haiti’s own revolt, gaining independence from France at the close of the eighteenth century.

MW Steven A. Rubin
Always the final speaker in any setting, Grand Master Rubin congratulated the lodge on its efforts in education, and described how the revamped Masonic University and other recent initiatives can cooperate with The ALR and the Livingston Library to help Masons gain a deeper understanding of the meaning of Masonry.

In other news, the backdoor of Masonic Hall again is closed to traffic. The next Stated Communication of The ALR will be next March on a date to be determined. And there is a new research lodge in the works! To be named Veritas, it will focus on Masonic philosophy, rather than history, and I look forward to sharing more information as it becomes available.
     

Wednesday, October 29, 2025

‘Don’t meet on the level of commonplace’

    
The Independent


The soul hath its senses, like the body, that may be cultivated, enlarged, refined, as itself grows in stature and proportion; and he who cannot appreciate a fine painting or statue, a noble poem, a sweet harmony, a heroic thought, or a disinterested action, or to whom the wisdom of philosophy is but foolishness and babble, and the loftiest truths of less importance than the price of stocks or cotton, or the elevation of baseness to office, merely lives on the level of commonplace, and fitly prides himself upon that inferiority of the soul’s senses, which is the inferiority and imperfect development of the soul itself.

   

Albert Pike
“Perfect Master”
Morals and Dogma
1871

And a fine statue, of eleven feet of bronze atop a 16-foot granite pedestal, it is—particularly now after a restoration that has it looking new.

That rejuvenation was required, in case you didn’t know, because the memorial was vandalized, toppled, and burned five years ago by a pack of feral “racial justice protesters.”

The “news media,” here and abroad, have swamped us in recent hours with their ritualistic mantra on the statue’s return last Saturday. NBC, BBC, NPR, New York Times, Fox, The Hill, The Washington Post (naturally), and many others want you to know that Bad Orange Man has reinstalled the Confederate general’s statue in our nation’s capital. All the hype could trick you into thinking Pike is central to U.S. history, when, of course, none of the “journalists” would be aware of him if not for the mobocracy manufactured for this statue. Albert Pike never even was central to Freemasonry.

This memorial has nothing to do with the Confederacy, the Civil War, slavery, or anything beside its intended purpose of conveying the appreciation and admiration of Scottish Rite Freemasons for Pike, the conservator of that Rite at mid nineteenth century.

It’s always been a matter for debate. Before it was erected the first time—on October 23, 1901U.S. Army veterans objected, saying it was an insult to all who fought for the righteous cause of the North. Somehow they neglected to vandalize, tear down, and burn the statue.

Still preoccupied with the Confederacy? Maybe President Lincoln, in his second inaugural address, weeks before his murder, can calm you: “With malice toward none with charity for all; with firmness in the right as God gives us to see the right, let us strive on to finish the work we are in to bind up the nation’s wounds, to care for him who shall have borne the battle, and for his widow and his orphan—to do all which may achieve and cherish a just and lasting peace among ourselves and with all nations.”

I haven’t seen any comment from the Scottish Rite Southern Jurisdiction where, at least on this aspect of Pike, it’s “Albert who?”
     

Sunday, October 26, 2025

‘Ari Roussimoff’s Masonic mirror’

    
‘Masonic Legacy’ by Ari Roussimoff.

Ari Roussimoff, my favorite contemporary painter of Masonic speculations, recently revealed his latest. Titled “Masonic Legacy,” the composition continues with ideas you’ll recognize from earlier works, but with this difference: the mirror at the center.

In Masonic ritual and symbol, the mirror can be found inside the Chamber of Reflection and near the close of the EA° in certain rites. Ari explains his own employment of the tool:



“Masonic Legacy,” 2024-25. Recently completed.

At the very center is an actual mirror. Whenever a Freemason looks into it, he will see not only his reflection, but he also will see himself as part of a long and great history.

Details of the painting.

In regards to my depiction of Hiram Abiff (on the right, and standing on the winding stairs), it should be noted that back in that era, Master Builders or Architects were regarded in a way similar to royalty. They did not dress like ordinary laborers, hence the aristocratic clothing worn by Hiram in my painting.

This painting is on wood, measuring approximately 10½ x 10½ inches.

Details of the painting.


This piece is for sale. (Ari tells me photos don’t do the painting justice, even though I think it looks sensational from here.) Contact him here. Click here to see what more you can obtain to beautify your lodge room or your study or wherever you think best. Ari’s website is here.
     

Saturday, October 25, 2025

‘Shelby visits the research lodge’

    
RW Shelby Chandler, Past DDGM of Virginia’s Research District, visited New Jersey Lodge of Masonic Research and Education 1786 on September 13 as keynote speaker on the history of his lodge, Fredericksburg 4. (Low-light photography is dicey.)

Continuing the what I did on my summer vacation blogging, the weekend after the MLMA meeting (see post below) brought a special couple of days with Shelby Chandler of Virginia. He visited New Jersey Lodge of Masonic Research and Education 1786 to be our keynote speaker on Saturday, September 13, giving a talk on the history of his lodge, Fredericksburg 4—of George Washington, Hugh Mercer, et al. fame. Shelby also is a Past Master of George Washington Lodge of Research 1732 at Fredericksburg, and is a Past DDGM of the Grand Lodge of Virginia’s Research District, now six lodges strong.

Shelby traveled north the day before and was greeted by Worshipful Master Don who, in addition to getting Shelby squared away at the hotel, took him sightseeing to the Washington Crossing Historic Site, Princeton University, and elsewhere. (Note to self: explore feasibility of research lodges having reciprocal visits of speakers.)

About the lodge meeting: the research lodge stands at the forefront of New Jersey Freemasonry’s celebration of our nation’s 250th anniversary. Following our previous meeting’s discussion of John Paul Jones, on this day we learned about Fredericksburg Lodge, as Shelby walked us through its first 150 years. There’s a lot more history and historical giants than George Washington. Both the Revolution and the Civil War factor in that lodge’s story, with many colorful details about its members and its building. Read a little about that here.

Prior to that, Secretary Erich employed his talents as a historian to explain how Freemasons could (and should) make more sense of our history by using the techniques of academic historians, namely dividing the fraternity’s past into manageable epochs, from the mists of time pre-1717 to the “Pop Masonry” period of Dan Brown and National Treasure.

And before that, the Worshipful Master reviewed the book Histoire de la Franc-Maconnerie, which bloomed into an hourlong conversation among the brethren on the vexing vagaries of Freemasonry in France: multiple grand jurisdictions doing things we just find odd.

The following day, Don brought Shelby to the Princeton Battlefield, and we toured this truly hallowed ground. This January 1777 battle was as pivotal to the American Founding as the Declaration itself or the arrival of Rochambeau’s expeditionary army. Read about that here.

Photos of Princeton Battlefield State Park, including Thomas Clarke House:

Our guides at Princeton Battlefield State Park were terrific. That’s Will Krakower, at left, who led us around the grounds and unpacked the story of the battle. Sorry to say I cannot recall the name of the gentleman on the right. The table in the foreground displays a scale map of the field and the troop movements.

Map of the area displayed in Clarke House.

This is a descendant of the Hugh Mercer Oak. After being wounded in battle, it is said Gen. Mercer was laid under the tree that stood here to rest while the fighting continued. That tree remained until 2000, when it was felled by a storm, but the tree was genetically reproduced, and that’s what you see today.

Shelby at the marker placed near the tree.

Period pieces neatly displayed
inside Clarke House.

Get the Keno Brothers on the phone!

Gen. (and Bro.) Mercer died in this room. Not in this particular bed, but in the room.

I wonder what tobacco in the eighteenth century tasted like. I know there were makers of smoking tobaccos and snuffs in England (Kendal) around that time that employed techniques appreciated still today, but in the colonies? I assume it was pretty rough and rudimentary, with strong nicotine hits. Drying, aging, curing, etc. Did they know to do these systematically or at all? 

 
     

Wednesday, October 22, 2025

‘MLMA day in Trenton & Philly’

    
Most of the gang at the MLMA annual meeting last month at the Trenton Masonic Temple in New Jersey, home state of outgoing President Glenn Visscher, front right.

So I’d better get started recapping the great Masonic weekends I’ve enjoyed recently. I’m going to start in the middle with the annual meeting of the Masonic Library and Museum Association on Saturday, September 6, which spanned two states.

I missed the Friday night dinner, but arrived at the Hilton in Jersey on Saturday morning to find the group in great spirits and ready for a long day of work and play. There are two news items that merit sharing here.

1. The peaceful transfer of power was completed during the meeting, and the MLMA leadership for the next two years is comprised of President Dirk Hughes, of the Michigan Masonic Museum and Library; Vice President Julia Wells, of the Iowa Masonic Library & Museum; Tyler Vanice, from the George Washington Masonic National Memorial, remains as Secretary; and Eric Trosdahl, of St. Paul Lodge Number Three in Minnesota, is setting a record for longevity as our Treasurer.

2. Future annual meetings of the association are scheduled.

2026: Chancellor Robert R. Livingston Masonic Library and Museum of the Grand Lodge of New York, in New York City.
2027: Masonic Library & Museum of the Grand Lodge of Washington, in Washington State.
2028: Scottish Rite Masonic Museum & Library, in Lexington, Massachusetts.
2029: Saint Paul Lodge Number Three in Minnesota.

Our meeting last month was hosted by the Trenton Masonic Temple in Trenton, New Jersey, home of the Museum of Masonic Culture which has been curated by outgoing MLMA President Glenn Visscher and his family since, I think, the 1990s. Then we rode the Shriners’ “trolley” to the Masonic Temple in Philadelphia for a tour of the building, including its Library & Museum, all arranged by Moises Gomez. Having been to the Philly temple often and recently, I didn’t shoot many photos, so what follows is a selection from the Trenton temple, its museum, and one lodge room.

New President Dirk Hughes, at right, explains some
of the nuances of museum curating.

New Jersey’s research lodge used to meet in this room.

The West of the same room.

The first minutes of the Grand Lodge of New Jersey.

I didn’t realize a few details about the mysterious lodge
at Basking Ridge were at our fingertips.

New Jersey has a Crudeli bust too!
Sorry for the glare.

In the museum room.

It’s not a museum, in my view, without tobacciana,
although I believe this is a match safe, not a snuff box.

I love these menageries fashioned by creative brethren.

Make Masonic material culture great again!

Remember when grand lodge law books could fit
in your jacket pocket? Good times.

The Royal Arch apron of John Scott, MEGHP
of the Grand Chapter of New Jersey in 1826
and the namesake of my chapter, Scott No. 4.

While we were enjoying the Museum of Masonic Culture,
Glenn and Mark recorded a promo for their podcast,
The Rite Stuff, seen on YouTube. Click here.