Island in Outer Hebrides, Scotland, UK
Barra
(
;
Scottish Gaelic
:
Barraigh
[?par?aj]
or
Eilean Bharraigh
[?elan
?var?aj]
ⓘ
;
Scots
:
Barra
) is an island in the
Outer Hebrides
,
Scotland
, and the second southernmost inhabited island there, after the adjacent island of
Vatersay
to which it is connected by the
Vatersay Causeway
. The island is named after Saint
Finbarr of Cork
.
In 2011, the population was 1,174.
[3]
[6]
English and Gaelic are widely spoken, and at the 2011 Census, there were 761 Gaelic speakers (62% of the population, falling from 76% in the 1991 census).
[7]
Geology
[
edit
]
In common with the rest of the
Western Isles
, Barra is formed from the oldest rocks in Britain, the
Lewisian gneiss
, which dates from the
Archaean
eon. Some of the gneiss in the east of the island is noted as being
pyroxene
-bearing. Layered textures or
foliation
in this
metamorphic rock
is typically around 30° to the east or northeast.
Palaeoproterozoic
age
metadiorites
and
metatonalites
forming a part of the East Barra Meta-igneous Complex occur around
Castlebay
as they do on the neighbouring islands of
Vatersay
and
Flodday
. A few
metabasic
dykes
intrude the gneiss in the east.
[8]
The island is traversed by a handful of
normal faults
running WNW-ESE and by west-facing
thrust faults
bringing
nappes
of gneiss from the east.
Blown sand
masks the bedrock around
Borve
and Allisdale as it does west of Barra airport.
Peat
deposits are mapped across Beinn Chliaid and Beinn Sgurabhal in the north of the island.
[9]
Geography
[
edit
]
The Isle of Barra is roughly 60 km
2
(23 sq mi) in area, 11 mi (18 km) long and 6 mi (10 km) wide. A
single-track road
, the A888, runs around the coast of the southern part of the island following the flattest land and serving the many coastal settlements. The interior of the island here is hilly and uninhabited. The west and north of the island has white sandy beaches consisting of sand created from marine shells adjoining the grassed
machair
, while the southeast side has numerous rocky inlets. To the north a sandy peninsula runs to the beach airport and Eoligarry.
History
[
edit
]
Early history
[
edit
]
Human presence on Barra since the
Neolithic era
was established by the discovery of a near-complete pottery beaker dating from 2500 BC during the construction of a road in the 1990s. A number of stone remains were also found, including a neolithic "work platform", which complement the several
standing stones
scattered around the island. In the hills to the north of Borve, there is a large
chambered cairn
, sited in a prominent position.
Beyond the main island, a
Bronze Age
cemetery is located on
Vatersay
, as well as an
Iron Age
broch
; the remains of a similarly aged broch is located on the east of Barra itself. Remains of Bronze Age burials and
Iron Age
roundhouses were also discovered in sand dunes, near the hamlet of
Allasdale
, following storms in 2007
[note 1]
. Occupation of Barra continued during the later Iron Age, as evidenced by the discovery of a
wheelhouse
from the end of the period, which was later re-occupied between the 3rd and 4th centuries, and again in the 7th and 8th centuries.
These occupations were followed in the 9th century by
Viking
settlers, who gave the island the
Old Norse
ey
("island") part of its name. Various origins of
Barr
have been suggested, including the Gaelic personal name
Finnbarr
, the Old Norse elements
berr
or
barr
("bare" or "rough"), and the
Celtic
element *
barr
("top" or "peak").
[11]
According to the ancient
Grettis saga
, the first viking to arrive was named
Omund the Wooden-Leg
.
-
Neolithic "work platform", near Vatersay
-
-
Iron Age wheelhouse near Vatersay
-
Kingdom of the Isles
[
edit
]
The Vikings established the
Kingdom of the Isles
throughout the Hebrides, including Barra. Following Norwegian unification, the Kingdom of the Isles became a crown dependency of the Norwegian king; to the Norwegians, it was
Suðreyjar
(meaning
southern isles
).
Malcolm III of Scotland
acknowledged in writing that they were not Scottish, and King
Edgar
quitclaimed
any residual doubts. In the north of Barra, from this period survived a gravestone, on which a
Celtic cross
is present on one side, and
runic
inscriptions on the other
[note 2]
.
In the mid 12th century,
Somerled
, a
Norse-Gael
of uncertain origin, launched a coup, which made Suðreyjar entirely independent. Following his death, Norwegian authority was nominally restored, but in practice, the kingdom was divided between Somerled's heirs (
Clann Somhairle
), and the dynasty that Somerled had deposed (the
Crovan dynasty
).
Clann Ruaidhri
, a branch of Somerled's heirs, ruled Barra, as well as
Uist
,
Eigg
,
Rum
, the
Rough Bounds
,
Bute
,
Arran
, and northern
Jura
.
[12]
[13]
[14]
[15]
[16]
In the 13th century, despite Edgar's quitclaim, Scottish forces attempted to conquer parts of Suðreyjar, culminating in the indecisive
Battle of Largs
. In 1266, the matter was settled by the
Treaty of Perth
, which transferred the whole of Suðreyjar to Scotland, in exchange for a very large sum of money.
[note 3]
The Treaty expressly preserved the status of the rulers of Suðreyjar; the Clann Ruaidhri lands, excepting Bute, Arran, and Jura, became the
Lordship of
Garmoran
, a quasi-independent crown dependency, rather than an intrinsic part of Scotland.
Lordship of Garmoran
[
edit
]
In 1293, King
John Balliol
established the
Sheriffdom of Skye
, which included the Outer Hebrides. Following his usurpation, the sheriffdom ceased to be mentioned
[note 4]
, and the Garmoran lordship (including Barra) was confirmed to
Ruaidhri Mac Ruaidhri
, the head of Clann Ruaidhri. In 1343, King
David II
issued a further charter to Ruaidhri's son,
Raghnall
,
[17]
but Raghnall's assassination, just three years later, left Garmoran in the hands of
Amy of Garmoran
.
The southern parts of the Kingdom of the Isles had become the
Lordship of the Isles
, ruled by the
MacDonalds
(another group of Somerled's descendants). Amy married the MacDonald leader,
John of Islay
,
[18]
but a decade later he divorced her, and married the king's niece instead (in return for a substantial
dowry
). As part of the divorce, John deprived his eldest son,
Ranald
, of the ability to inherit the Lordship of the Isles, in favour of a son by his new wife. As compensation, John granted Lordship of the Uists to Ranald's younger brother Godfrey and made Ranald Lord of the remainder of Garmoran.
On Ranald's death, disputes between Godfrey and his nephews led to an enormous amount of violence. In 1427, frustrated with the level of violence generally in the highlands, King
James I
demanded that highland leaders should attend a meeting at
Inverness
. On arrival, many of the leaders were seized and imprisoned; Alexander MacGorrie, son of Godfrey, was considered to be one of the two most reprehensible, and after a quick
showtrial
, was immediately executed.
[19]
As Alexander had by now inherited Godfrey's
de facto
position as Lord of Garmoran, and in view of Ranald's heirs being no less responsible for the violence, King James declared the Lordship of Garmoran forfeit.
Lairds and pirates
[
edit
]
Following the forfeiture, and in that same year,
the Lord of the Isles
granted
Lairdship
of Barra (and half of
South Uist
) to Giolla Adhamhnain Mac Neill,
Chief
of
Clan MacNeil
.
Headquartering themselves at
Kisimul Castle
and making use of
Birlinns
, the MacNeils became famed for
piracy
after attacking English ships during the reign of
Queen Elizabeth I
. They were summoned by
King James VI
? King of Scotland ? to answer for their behaviour. The Chief, Roderick MacNeil ("Rory the Turbulent"), argued that he thought King James would be pleased, since Queen Elizabeth had beheaded his mother
Mary, Queen of Scots
. Pleased, King James released him.
[
citation needed
]
The mainly
Catholic population
of the island was under serious threat during the
Jacobite Uprising of 1745
. According to Bishop
John Geddes
, "Early in the spring of
1746
, some ships of war came to the coast of the isle of Barra and landed some men, who threatened they would lay desolate the whole island if the
priest
was not delivered up to them. Father
James Grant
, who was missionary then, and afterward Bishop, being informed of the threats in a safe retreat in which he was in a little island, surrendered himself, and was carried prisoner to
Mingarry Castle
on the Western coast (i.e.
Ardnamurchan
) where he was detained for some weeks."
[20]
After long imprisonment at
Inverness
and in a
prison hulk
in the
Thames River
, Father Grant was deported to the
Netherlands
and warned never to return to the
British Isles
. Like the other priests imprisoned with him, Father Grant did so almost immediately.
[21]
The descendants of the
Clan Chiefs
held on to Barra until 1838, when the island was sold to Colonel
John Gordon
of
Cluny
(for the sum of £38,050). Roderick MacNeil, Chief of the MacNeils, had already abandoned Kisimul Castle, and built a mansion in the north of Barra; the ensuing debt was one of the reasons he sold the island.
In common with many of the new
Anglo-Scottish
landlords, Colonel Gordon
evicted most of the islanders
to make way for sheep farming. Some of the displaced islanders variously went to the Scottish mainland. Others joined the
Scottish diaspora
in
Australia
,
New Zealand
, the
United States
, and
Canada
.
Gaelic
traditional singer
and Barra native
Flora MacNeil
later recalled one the best sources of the Gaelic songs she learned at local
ceilidhs
was her mother's cousin, Mary Johnstone. Johnstone's parents had moved to
Mingulay
after being evicted by Colonel Gordon's
factors
and she returned to her ancestral island after Mingulay was abandoned in 1912. In later years, Johnstone would regularly visit the MacNeil family's croft near
Castlebay
and sing at the ceilidhs.
[22]
By far the worst mass evictions took place, according to Barra
seanchaidh
(historian) John "The Coddy" MacPherson, during the
Highland Potato Famine
of the
1840s
. Many residents of Barra were unwillingly rounded up and forced by Colonel Gordon's factors to board the
Admiral
, an immigrant ship anchored at
Lochboisdale
,
South Uist
, and which then set sail for
Canada
.
[23]
MacPherson later said of those who were evicted, "Now they were aboard, and they sailed away and it took them six months, I think, to get across from Lochboisdale to
Quebec
- or the
St. Lawrence
somewhere anyway. After that, there was nothing for them but trees and poverty, and those wretched fellows had to back it for life. Going through the hardships of the emigrants who went across the
Atlantic
in the
Admiral
, not many people would credit them today."
[24]
The MacNeil Chiefs were also among the migrants, settling at first in Canada, but moving to the United States by the 20th century. Barra was restored to MacNeil ownership in 1937 when the Barra estate, which encompassed most of the island, was bought by Robert Lister Macneil, an American. In 2000, his heir,
Ian Roderick Macneil
(another American), let Kisimul Castle to
Historic Scotland
, on a 1000-year lease (for a rental of £1 and a bottle of whisky, per annum). In 2003, he transferred ownership of the Barra Estate to the
Scottish Government
;.
[25]
Under Scottish law, the inhabitants have the right to take possession of the estate themselves, if they so wish.
Having been flown unofficially for at least a decade, the island's flag received official recognition from the
Lyon Court
and the
Flag Institute
in November 2017. The design is a white
Nordic cross
on a green background.
[26]
[27]
Places of interest
[
edit
]
The main village is Castlebay (
Bagh a' Chaisteil
) in a sheltered bay, where
Kisimul Castle
sits on a small
islet
not far from shore; giving the village its name. This is the main harbour.
A smaller medieval tower house,
Dun Mhic Leoid
, is in the middle of Loch St Clare on the west side of the island at Tangasdale.
[28]
The highest elevation on the island is
Heaval
, near the top of which is a prominent white marble statue of the
Madonna and Child
, called "Our Lady of the Sea", which was erected during the
Marian year
of 1954. The predominant faith on the island is
Catholicism
and the Catholic church dedicated to Our Lady of the Sea is apparent to those arriving at Castlebay.
[29]
Other places of interest on the island include a ruined church and museum at
Cille Bharra
, a number of
Iron Age
brochs
such as those at
Dun Chuidhir
and
An Dun Ban
, and a range of other Iron Age and later structures which have recently been excavated and recorded.
[
citation needed
]
Barra is connected by a modern causeway to the smaller island of
Vatersay
, population 90.
-
Satellite photo of Barra,
Vatersay
and surrounding islands
-
View from Heaval of Castlebay, looking south to Vatersay
-
Easary, showing the more rocky east coast of the island.
Economy
[
edit
]
Tourism provides the main income for the majority of islanders; the high season lasts from May to September. Thousands of people visit the island every year, the busiest times being during
Feis Bharraigh
& BarraFest in July. The
Dualchas
Heritage and Cultural Centre is located in Castlebay, next to
Castlebay Community School
. It has various exhibitions each year and is open throughout the year.
[30]
In April 2020,
Conde Nast Traveller
summed up Barra as "a delightful little island with its own castle and beach airport" and recommended visiting the "high cliffs in the east and lovely beaches and bays in the west".
[31]
The Outer Hebrides Web site particularly recommended visits to sites "the iconic Kisimul Castle at Castlebay" and stopping to see the Barra seals at Seal Bay.
[32]
The Explore Scotland tourism Web site also discusses the Barra Golf Club, Kisimul Castle, Barra Heritage and Cultural Centre, Heaval for exceptional views, Church of Our Lady Star of the Sea and Cille Bharra, the ancient graveyard.
[33]
According to the Scottish Government, "tourism is by far and away the mainstay industry" of the Outer Hebrides, "generating £65m in economic value for the islands, sustaining around 1000 jobs" The report adds that the "islands receive 219,000 visitors per year".
[34]
The Outer Hebrides tourism bureau states that 10-15% of economic activity on the islands was made up of tourism in 2017. The agency states that the "exact split between islands is not possible" when calculating the number of visits, but "the approximate split is Lewis (45%), Uist (25%), Harris (20%), Barra (10%)".
[35]
Castlebay is the primary base for tourists, with a few hotels, a supermarket, bank and petrol station. Explore Scotland stated in 2020 that the island was "also an ideal starting point for visiting and exploring the Uists and Benbecula".
[36]
In 2010, camping on the machair at the airport was banned due to erosion; this prompted crofters to provide areas on their crofts for visiting tourists.
[37]
Boat trips to the neighbouring island of
Mingulay
are available during the summer season, and island-hopping plane trips are also available.
The Barratlantic factory, in
Northbay
is a fish and shellfish processing company. As of 2020, its main products were king scallops and langoustines but it was selling most types of white fish from the quayside. Their Web site indicated that the stock included "cod; haddock; skate; witches; megrims; turbot; Dover sole and monkfish which you can buy direct from the factory".
[38]
The Hebridean Toffee Factory in Castlebay is one of the few manufacturers on Barra and it makes the products locally. According to Visit Scotland, the toffee can be ordered from anywhere in the world; "it is made to order and is usually shipped within 24 hours".
[39]
Isle of Barra Distillers was founded by Michael and Katie Morrison in 2016; their Barra Atlantic Gin was first sold in August 2017 and the company has expanded since then.
[40]
[41]
As of early 2021, the distillery continued marketing gin, with great success.
[42]
The plan for whisky was stated on its Web site as: "It is our goal to open the Islands first Single Malt Whisky Distillery within the next 2-3 years".
[43]
The
Isle of Barra distillery
[44]
was founded in 2003 as Uisge Beatha nan Eilean Ltd
[45]
and became a Community Benefit Society in 2018
[46]
under the
Co-operative and Community Benefit Societies Act 2014
. In December 2012, four 6 kW wind turbines
[47]
made by Proven (Proven were bought by
Kingspan Group
in 2011
[48]
) were erected
[49]
next to the reservoir Loch Uisge,
[50]
which originally supplied the mains water to Castlebay. It is proposed that as much as possible of the raw materials, supply chain and labor to produce the whisky should remain as local as possible to minimise imports and maximise the benefit to the island's economy.
Media
[
edit
]
The island has featured in a variety of
media
.
Film and TV
[
edit
]
Barra is home to a TV production company, Little Day Productions, who produced the documentary
Barra to Barcelona
, which was broadcast on BBC Alba in 2022 and 2023. Much of their work features Barra and Vatersay.
Besides being regularly featured in various television programmes on the
Scottish Gaelic
channel
BBC Alba
since it began broadcasting in 2008, Barra has also been part of:
The 1949
Ealing Studios
comedy
Whisky Galore!
was filmed on Barra. The film is based on the novel
Whisky Galore
by Sir
Compton Mackenzie
, itself a fictionalised telling of the story of the
SS
Politician
, which ran aground with a cargo of some 50,000 cases of whisky on board in 1941. Mackenzie, who lived near the airport and died in 1972, is buried in a grave marked by a simple cross at
Cille Bharra
cemetery, which is situated a little way up the hillside overlooking Eoligarry jetty.
[4]
[51]
[52]
The sequel
Rockets Galore!
was also filmed in and around the island.
[53]
The
sitcom
Dad's Army
, broadcast from 1968 to 1977,
Private Frazer
claims to be from Barra, which he often describes as "a wild and lonely place".
[54]
Barra was featured on
Time Team
, in which archeologists excavated several Iron Age sites.
Barra was also featured in the 2006
Channel 5
documentary
Extraordinary People: The Boy Who Lived Before
, where a young boy named Cameron, who lived in
Glasgow
, claimed to have memories of past life on the island.
[55]
The island was the location for the fifth (2011) and sixth series (2012) of the
BBC Two
documentary
An Island Parish
documenting the arrival and subsequent experiences of a new Catholic priest on the island ? Father John Paul.
[56]
Books
[
edit
]
The
Franciscan
priest, specialist in
mystical theology
and author
Rayner Torkington
wrote a book describing how he was influenced after a chance encounter on Barra by meeting a hermit called Peter Calvay who had lived on the island of
Hellisay
for a number of years in the first half of the twentieth century.
[57]
The book, titled
Peter Calvay, Hermit: A Personal Rediscovery of Prayer
, was first published in 1977 and has had at least eleven reprintings.
Torkington's book
Wisdom from the Western Isles: The Making of a Mystic
, published in 2008, also describes the author's meetings with Peter Calvay whilst he was staying on Barra.
[58]
Other
[
edit
]
In 2008 the Barra
RNLI
Life Boat,
Edna Windsor
, was featured on a series of stamps.
[59]
The first class stamp shows the 17-metre (56 ft)
Severn class lifeboat
in action in the Sound of
Berneray
20 kilometres (12 mi) southwest of Barra in 3.5 m (11 ft 6 in) swell with 30 km/h (16 kn) of wind.
[60]
Sports
[
edit
]
Barra hosts an annual half-marathon called the
Barrathon
,
[61]
which is part of the Western Isles Half Marathon series. This is accompanied by a shorter fun-run for families and younger children. A number of fund-raising events are held around this, including
ceilidhs
and dances.
There is also an annual hill race, in which participants run up Heaval (383 m) before returning to Castlebay Square.
[
citation needed
]
The fastest recorded time, set in 1987, is 26.25 minutes.
[
citation needed
]
The Barra community holds an annual
games
on the island.
[
citation needed
]
The island golf club,
Comunn Goilf Bharraidh
, has a 9-hole course that is claimed to be the furthest west in the
United Kingdom
.
[
citation needed
]
However, this title may be held by one of the courses near
Enniskillen
in
Northern Ireland
.
[
citation needed
]
Tourists can also go
sea kayaking
or
power kiting
and fishing. Pony trekking available on the rare, native
Eriskay Ponies
.
[62]
[63]
Transport
[
edit
]
Barra's airport
, near
Northbay
, uses the 2-mile-long (3 km) cockle shell beach of
Traigh Mhor
, (Scottish Gaelic:
An Traigh Mhor
"The Great Beach") as a runway. Planes can land and take off only at low tide, so the timetable varies. Voted the world's most scenic landing location using a scheduled flight,
[64]
Barra's airport is claimed to be the only airport in the world to have regular scheduled flights landing on a beach.
[65]
As of 2019
Loganair
advertises flights to Barra in the
de Havilland Canada DHC-6 Twin Otter
aircraft, travelling to and from
Glasgow
. There are usually flights every day of the week in the summer.
A large
ro-ro
ferry
runs between the island and
Oban
from the ferry terminal at Castlebay, and takes about five hours. A smaller vehicle ferry links the island to
South Uist
and travels between
Ardmore
(
An Aird Mhor
) at the north of the island and
Ceann a' Gharaidh
in
Eriskay
(
Eirisgeigh
). This crossing takes around 40 minutes. Both are run by
Caledonian MacBrayne
.
Internal road
[
edit
]
There are local buses, which use the circular A888 and the road to the northern ferry terminal to Eriskay and the airport, and usually coincide with flight times and ferry times.
Coimhearsachd Bharraigh agus Bhatarsaigh
[
edit
]
Coimhearsachd Bharraidh agus Bhatarsaidh
(Barra and Vatersay Community) Ltd is a community-owned company whose aim is to support community development on Barra and Vatersay. The company is managed by a volunteer board of directors drawn from the membership. Membership is open to residents of the two islands whose names appear on the voting register.
[66]
The company's latest project is a 900 kW Enercon E-44 wind turbine installed at
Gob Sgurabhal
, at the most northwesterly point of the island. At the time of construction, it was anticipated that the wind resource would make this one of the most productive 900 kW turbines in Western Europe.
[67]
Climate
[
edit
]
Barra has an
oceanic climate
, with mild temperatures year-round.
Climate data for Barra (
Traigh Mhor
Airport, 0 m asl, averages 1991?2020)
|
Month
|
Jan
|
Feb
|
Mar
|
Apr
|
May
|
Jun
|
Jul
|
Aug
|
Sep
|
Oct
|
Nov
|
Dec
|
Year
|
Mean daily maximum °C (°F)
|
8.6
(47.5)
|
8.2
(46.8)
|
9.2
(48.6)
|
10.7
(51.3)
|
13.1
(55.6)
|
14.9
(58.8)
|
16.4
(61.5)
|
16.6
(61.9)
|
15.1
(59.2)
|
12.6
(54.7)
|
10.4
(50.7)
|
8.8
(47.8)
|
12.1
(53.8)
|
Mean daily minimum °C (°F)
|
4.6
(40.3)
|
4.3
(39.7)
|
4.7
(40.5)
|
6.1
(43.0)
|
7.8
(46.0)
|
10.0
(50.0)
|
11.7
(53.1)
|
12.1
(53.8)
|
11.0
(51.8)
|
8.8
(47.8)
|
6.5
(43.7)
|
4.9
(40.8)
|
7.7
(45.9)
|
Average rainfall mm (inches)
|
143.5
(5.65)
|
101.7
(4.00)
|
99.0
(3.90)
|
70.2
(2.76)
|
55.2
(2.17)
|
67.1
(2.64)
|
78.3
(3.08)
|
93.7
(3.69)
|
93.2
(3.67)
|
112.7
(4.44)
|
125.2
(4.93)
|
135.9
(5.35)
|
1,175.7
(46.29)
|
Average rainy days
(≥ 1 mm)
|
22.5
|
18.8
|
18.4
|
13.9
|
12.9
|
12.8
|
14.8
|
17.4
|
16.5
|
20.3
|
22.0
|
21.7
|
212.0
|
Mean monthly
sunshine hours
|
27.2
|
63.2
|
105.5
|
163.0
|
211.8
|
177.3
|
160.6
|
158.7
|
118.6
|
84.8
|
42.8
|
19.5
|
1,333.1
|
Source:
Met Office
[68]
|
People from Barra
[
edit
]
See also
[
edit
]
Notes
[
edit
]
- ^
In May of that year,
Channel 4
's
Time Team
came to investigate the remains. The programme was broadcast on 20 January 2008.
[10]
- ^
Discovered in 1865, the gravestone is now located in Edinburgh, though a facsimile was later placed in the chapel near the stone's original location on Barra
- ^
4000 marks
- ^
In surviving records, at least.
References
[
edit
]
- ^
"Map of Scotland in Scots - Guide and gazetteer"
(PDF)
.
- ^
a
b
Area and population ranks: there are
c.
300
islands over 20 ha in extent and
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Further reading
[
edit
]
- Edited by
John Lorne Campbell
(1936),
The Book of Barra, Being accounts of the Island of Barra in the Outer Hebrides written by various authors at various times, together with unpublished letters and other matter relating to the Island
. Published by G. Routledge and Sons Ltd. and printed by the Edinburgh Press in 1936. Republished by Acair in 1998 (
ISBN
0861521048
).
- John Lorne Campbell (1992),
Tales from Barra: Told by The Coddy
,
Birlinn Limited
.
- Ealasaid Chaimbeul (1982),
Air Mo Chuairt/My Journey, Memories of an Island School Teacher
,
ISBN
9780861525546
.
External links
[
edit
]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to
Barra
.
Wikivoyage has a travel guide for
Barra
.
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