Sweet About Me and Cynthia Ann Parker: Difference between pages

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[[Image:Cynthia.jpg|thumb|right|Cynthia Ann Parker and her daughter in 1861]]
{{Infobox Single <!-- See Wikipedia:WikiProject_Songs -->
'''Cynthia Ann Parker''', or '''Naduah''' (also sometimes spelled "Nadua" and "Nauta"),{b.ca 1827-d.1870} was an Anglo-Texas woman of [[Scots-Irish]] descent who suffered being kidnapped twice in her lifetime - once from her natural family at the age of nine by a [[Native Americans in the United States|Native American]] raiding party, and once from her Indian family at the age of 34 by [[Texas Ranger Division|Texas Rangers]]. Cynthia Ann was a member of the large Parker frontier family that settled in east [[Texas]] in the 1830s. She was captured in 1836 by Comanches during the [[Fort Parker Massacre|raid of Fort Parker]] near present-day [[Groesbeck, Texas]].
| Name = Sweet About Me
| Cover = Gabriella Cilmi - Sweet About Me.png
| Artist = [[Gabriella Cilmi]]
| from Album = [[Lessons to Be Learned]]
| A-side =
| B-side =
| Released = [[17 March]] [[2008]] <small>([[UK]])</small><br/>[[26 April]], [[2008]] <small>([[Australia]])</small><br/>[[6 June]] [[2008]] <small>([[Europe]])</small><br/>[[4 September]] [[2008]] <small>([[Brazil]])</small>
| Format = [[CD single]]<br/>[[Digital download]]
| Recorded =
| Genre = [[Pop music|Pop]], [[soul music|soul]]
| Length = 3:10 <small>(radio edit)</small><ref>{{ cite web | url=http://phobos.apple.com/WebObjects/MZStore.woa/wa/viewAlbum?id=273877333&s=143444 | title=Sweet About Me (Radio Edit) - Single | publisher=[[iTunes Store]] | accessdate=2008-04-18}}</ref><br/>3:27 <small>(album version)</small><ref>{{ cite web | url=http://phobos.apple.com/WebObjects/MZStore.woa/wa/viewAlbum?id=277036375&s=143444 | title=Lessons to Be Learned| publisher=[[iTunes Store]] | accessdate=2008-04-18}}</ref>
| Label = [[Island Records]]
| Writer = [[Miranda Cooper]]<br/>[[Brian Higgins (producer)|Brian Higgins]]<br/>Tim Larcombe<br/>Tim Powell<br/>Nick Coler<br/>[[Gabriella Cilmi]]
| Producer = Brian Higgins<br/>[[Xenomania]]
| Chronology = [[Gabriella Cilmi]] AUS singles
| Last single =
| This single = "'''Sweet About Me'''"<br/>(2008)
| Next single = "[[Don't Wanna Go to Bed Now]]"<br/>(2008)
{{Extra chronology
| Artist = [[Gabriella Cilmi]] UK
| Type = singles
| Last single =
| This single = "'''Sweet About Me'''"<br/>(2008)
| Next single = "[[Save the Lies (song)|Save the Lies]]"<br/>(2008)
{{Extra album cover
| Upper caption = Alternate covers
| Background = khaki
| Cover = Sweet_About_Me.jpg
| Lower caption = UK Cover
}}
}}
}}
"'''Sweet About Me'''" is the debut single by [[Australian]] singer [[Gabriella Cilmi]]. The song, co-written with and produced by [[Xenomania]], is taken from Cilmi's debut album ''[[Lessons to Be Learned]]''. Sweet About Me was released again on [[June 9]], [[2008]] in different formats and with new tracklistings. It is used in a commercial for [[Sure (brand)|Sure]] in the UK, as well as a commercial for [[Dove (brand)|Dove]] Bodywash in UK, Sweden and Brazil.


==Recapture by Texas Rangers at Pease River==
==Music Video==
In December 1860, Cynthia Ann and her daughter were among a Native American party captured at the [[Battle of Pease River]] by [[Texas Ranger Division|Texas Rangers]] led by [[Lawrence Sullivan Ross|"Sul" Ross]].<ref name="handbook">{{Handbook of Texas|id=TT/rbtal|name=Pease River}}. Retrieved [[30 October]] [[2006]].</ref> After fierce fighting, the Comanche realized they were losing and fled. Ross and several of his men pursued the chief who had been giving orders. The chief was fleeing alongside another rider. As Ross and his men neared, the other rider held a child over her head; the men did not shoot, but instead surrounded and stopped her. Ross continued to follow the chief, eventually shooting him three times. Although the chief fell from his horse, he was still alive, and refused to surrender. Ross's cook, Antonio Martinez, who had been taken captive in Mexico after Nocona killed his family, identified the captured chief as Nocona. With Ross's permission, Martinez fired the shot that took Nocona's life.<ref>Benner (1984), p. 54.</ref> There is some dispute whether the man killed was actually Nocona or someone else.
A music video was released for the song, which aired on [[MTV]] and other channels.


When Ross arrived back at the campground, he discovered that the woman his men had captured had blue eyes. He assured her that no young boys had been killed in the battle, so her sons, [[Quanah Parker|Quanah]] and Pecos were safe.<ref name=brenner56>Benner (1984), p. 56.</ref> The woman could not speak English, and did not know her name or where she came from. After much questioning, she remembered a few details of her capture as a child. The details matched what Ross knew of the [[Fort Parker Massacre]] of 1836.<ref name=brenner57>Benner (1984), p. 57.</ref>
==Track listing==
*'''UK/Australian CD<ref>{{ cite web | url=http://www.amazon.co.uk/Sweet-About-Me-Gabriella-Cilmi/dp/B0013XZQXY/ref=pd_sim_m_h__title_8 | title=Sweet About Me [Single] | publisher=[[Amazon.co.uk]] | accessdate=2008-04-18}}</ref><ref>{{ cite web | url=http://www.heraldsunhit.com.au/product/sweet_about_me_1687409_682462.html | title=Sweet About Me | publisher=[[Herald Sun HiT]] | accessdate=2008-04-18}} </ref>
# "Sweet About Me"
# "[[Echo Beach]]"
# "This Game"


Though some of the Rangers urged Ross to set her free to return to the Comanches, he considered it best to try to return her to her white family. Ross knew many settlers had lost children to the Indians, and many of them might feel this was their child or relative.{{Fact|date=September 2007}} Ross sent the woman to Camp Cooper and sent a message to Colonel Isaac Parker, the uncle of a young girl kidnapped in the raid. When Parker mentioned that his niece's name was Cynthia Ann Parker, the woman slapped her chest and said "Me Cincee Ann."<ref name=brenner57/> Isaac Parker took her to his home near Birdville. In 1861, the Texas legislature granted her a [[league (unit)|league]] (about 4,400 acres) of land, a pension of $100 per year for the next five years, and made her cousins, Isaac Duke Parker and Benjamin F. Parker, her legal guardians.
*'''UK re-release CD'''
# "Sweet About Me"
# "Sweet About Me" (Robbie Rivera remix)


==Death==
*'''iTunes Remix & Live EP'''<ref>{{ cite web | url=http://phobos.apple.com/WebObjects/MZStore.woa/wa/viewAlbum?id=275819476&s=143444 | title=Sweet About Me (Remix & Live) - EP | publisher=[[iTunes Store]] | accessdate=2008-04-18}}</ref>
[[Image:Cynthia Ann Parker Gravestone.jpg|thumb|right|Cynthia Ann Parker's gravestone]]
# "Sweet About Me" (Sunship Vocal mix)
Cynthia Ann never adapted to her new life among the whites, and attempted to escape on several occasions. Her brother, Silas Jr., was appointed her guardian in 1862, and took her to his home in [[Van Zandt County, Texas|Van Zandt County]]. When Silas was mustered into the [[Confederate States of America|Confederate]] Army, Cynthia Ann went to live with her sister, Orlena. According to some accounts, the Parker family was negotiating to return her to west Texas and her adopted people when the [[American Civil War]] broke out. The chief cause of Cynthia Ann's unhappiness was that she missed her sons and never knew what had happened to them. In 1863, her daughter, Prairie Flower, caught influenza and died from pneumonia.
# "Sweet About Me" (Matthew Herbert's Savoury mix)
# "Sweet About Me" (Ashley Beedle Vocal mix)
# "Sweet About Me" (Truth & Soul mix)
# "Sweet About Me" (Later with Jools Holland)


In her grief, Cynthia Ann stopped eating. She became sick and died in 1870. She was buried in Fosterville Cemetery in Anderson County near [[Frankston, Texas|Frankston]]. Her son, [[Quanah Parker|Quanah]], moved her body in 1910 to the Post Oak Cemetery near [[Cache, Oklahoma]]. He was buried there in 1911. She and her son were moved in 1957 to the [[Fort Sill]] military cemetery in [[Oklahoma]]. Thanks to her son, Cynthia Ann Parker was finally reunited with her Comanche family.
== Charts ==
On [[March 9]] [[2008]], "Sweet About Me" debuted on the [[UK Singles Chart]] at #68, and rose to its peak position of #38 two weeks later.<ref>{{ cite web | url=http://www.chartstats.com/songinfo.php?id=33717 | title=Sweet About Me | publisher=ChartStats.com | accessdate=2008-04-18 }}</ref>


==Aftermath==
On [[April 14]], the song peaked at #1 on the [[ARIA Charts|ARIA Singles Chart]] and is certified platinum for sales of 70,000 copies <ref>[http://www.ariacharts.com.au/pages/charts_display.asp?chart=1U50 Top 50 Singles Chart - Australian Record Industry Association<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>.
The city of [[Crowell, Texas]] holds the ''Cynthia Ann Parker Festival'' annually - a two day celebration to honor the memory of Cynthia Ann Parker. They advertise the event as "a fun and educational weekend showcasing both Native American and European settlers history of the region."
It reached #1 again on [[May 19]], while her debut album reached #2 on the albums chart<ref>{{ cite web | url=http://www.digitalspy.co.uk/music/a93760/gabriella-cilmi-tops-aussie-singles-chart.html | title=Gabriella Cilmi tops Aussie singles chart | publisher=[[Digital Spy]] | author=Beth Hilton | date=2008-04-14 | accessdate=2008-04-18 }}</ref>. This makes her the youngest Australian to reach the top of the charts, beating out ''[[Australian Idol]]'' winner [[Casey Donovan (singer)|Casey Donovan]] by just nineteen days.<ref>{{ cite web | url=http://ariacharts.com.au/pages/chartifacts.htm | title=Chartifacts | publisher=[[ARIA Charts]] | date=2008-04-14 | accessdate=2008-04-18 }}</ref>


The town of [[Groesbeck, Texas]] holds an annual Christmas Festival at the site of old Fort Parker every December. The original fort has been re-built on the original site to exact specifications.
On [[April 20]], it re-entered the UK Singles Chart at a higher position of #34 and then peaked at #6.
On [[July 20th]], months after its release, the song reached #2 on the UK Airplay Chart. On [[July 27]] [[2008]], the song managed to climb 5 places from #12 to #7. However, the following week, the song fell back to #12,then to #16,and #18 the following week,but rising again to #15.After several weeks of going down the charts,it re-entered the Top 40 on [[October 5th]], rising from #65 to #38. It has so far spent 31 consecutive weeks on the UK Singles Chart.


[[Hardin-Simmons University]] in [[Abilene, Texas]] has named one of its colleges in her honor, the "Cynthia Ann Parker College of Liberal Arts."
[[Oasis]] frontman [[Liam Gallagher]] recently claimed that "Sweet About Me" is his favourite song of 2008 so far.<ref>[http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/showbiz/bizarre/article1427805.ece Gabriella Cilmi melts Liam Gallagher's heart of stone | The Sun |Showbiz|Bizarre<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>


The 1956 movie ''[[The Searchers (film)|The Searchers]]'', which was based on an [[Alan Le May]] novel, directed by [[John Ford]], and featured [[John Wayne]] as an obsessed frontiersman searching for years for his kidnapped niece, is widely believed to have been principally based on Cynthia Ann Parker's story; [[Natalie Wood]] and her younger sister [[Lana Wood]] portray the kidnapped woman at different ages.
"Sweet About Me" has amassed 972,000 points on the United World Chart, making it one of the most successful songs by an Australian artist of recent times.
{| class="wikitable sortable"
! Chart (2008)
! Peak<br/>position<ref>{{ cite web | url=http://acharts.us/song/34350 | title=Sweet About Me | publisher=aCharts.us | accessdate=2008-03-30 }}</ref>
|-
| [[ARIA Charts|Australian Singles Chart]]
| align="center"|1
|-
| [[Austria|Austrian Singles Chart]]
| align="center"|2
|-
| [[Belgium|Belgian Singles Chart]]
| align="center"|3
|-
| [[Denmark|Danish Singles Chart]]
| align="center"|5
|-
| [[Netherlands|Dutch Singles Chart]]
| align="center"|1
|-
| Euro 200 Singles Chart
| align="center"|5
|-
| [[German Singles Chart]]
| align="center"|2
|-
| [[Irish Singles Chart]]
| align="center"|16
|-
| [[FIMI|Italian Singles Chart]]
| align="center"|4
|-
| [[Recording Industry Association of New Zealand|New Zealand Singles Chart]]
| align="center"|6
|-
| [[Norway|Norwegian Singles Chart]]
| align="center"|1
|-
| [[Portugal|Portuguese Singles Chart]]
| align="center"|27
|-
| [[Sverigetopplistan|Swedish Singles Chart]]
| align="center"|25
|-
| [[Switzerland|Swiss Singles Chart]]
| align="center"|2
|-
|align="left"|[[Turkey|Turkish Singles Chart]]<ref>[http://www.billboard.com.tr/pages/Turkiye_top20.aspx/ Turkey Top 20 Chart] Retrieved on [[2008|2008-09-15]]</ref>
|align="center"|9
|-
| [[UK Singles Chart]]
| align="center"|6
|-
| U.S. ''Billboard'' [[Eurochart Hot 100 Singles|European Hot 100]]
| align="center"|2
|-
|}


== Personnel ==
== Footnotes ==
# There is some confusion about the correct birth and death dates for Cynthia Ann Parker. Different sources place her birth from 1825 to 1827 in Coles, Clark or Crawford counties of Illinois, and her death from 1864 to 1871 in Anderson County, Texas. However, her presence in the 1870 Anderson County census makes an earlier death date unlikely.
* Produced by [[Brian Higgins (producer)|Brian Higgins]]/[[Xenomania]]
# Writing in the ''Crowell Index'' on October 8, 1909, Tom Champion opined, "...I am convinced that the white people did more harm by keeping her away from them than the Indians did by taking her at first."
* Mixed by Jeremy Wheatley, Assisted by Richard Edgeler
* Vocals: Gabriella Cilmi
* Keyboards: Brian Higgins, Tim Larcombe & Tim Powell
* Drums: Marc Parnell
* Guitars: Nick Coler & Jason Resch
* Bass: Kieran Jones
* Cello: Nick Squires
* Vibes & Xylophone: Brian Higgins & Nick Coler
* Harmonica: [[Mark Feltham (musician)|Mark Feltham]]
* Programmed by Tim Powell & Brian Higgins

== External links ==
* Review of [http://music.unrealitytv.co.uk/gabriella-cilmi-sweet-about-me-single-review/ Sweet About Me] on Unreality Music


== References ==
== References ==
<div class="references-small">
{{Reflist}}
<references/>


*{{citation|last=Benner|first=Judith Ann|title=Sul Ross, Soldier, Statesman, Educator|publisher=[[Texas A&M University Press]]|date=1983|location=[[College Station, Texas]]}}
{{start box}}
*{{citation|last=Exley|first=Jo Ella Powell|title=Frontier Blood: Saga of the Parker Family|publisher=Texas A&M University Press|year=2001|isbn=978-1585441365}}
{{succession box
*{{citation|last=Hacker|First=Margaret|title=Cynthia Ann Parker: The Life and the Legend|publisher=Texas Western Press|year=1990|isbn=978-0874041873}}
| before = "[[Bubbly]]" by [[Colbie Caillat]]
</div>
| title = [[ARIA Charts|Australian ARIA Singles Chart]] [[List of number-one singles in Australia in 2008|number-one single]] (first run)
| years = [[April 14]], [[2008]]
| after = "[[Low (Flo Rida song)|Low]]" by [[Flo Rida]] featuring [[T-Pain]]
}}
{{succession box
| before = "[[4 Minutes (Madonna song)|4 Minutes]]" by [[Madonna (entertainer)|Madonna]] featuring [[Justin Timberlake]] and [[Timbaland]]
| title = [[ARIA Charts|Australian ARIA Singles Chart]] [[List of number-one singles in Australia in 2008|number-one single]] (second run)
| years = [[May 19]], [[2008]] - [[June 15]] [[2008]]
| after = "[[No Air]]" by [[Jordin Sparks]] and [[Chris Brown (singer)|Chris Brown]]
}}
{{succession box
| before = "[[I Kissed A Girl]]" by [[Katy Perry]]
| title = [[VG-lista|Norwegian VG-lista]] number-one single
| years = [[September 23]], [[2008]] - [[September 30]] [[2008]]
| after = "[[Still Water]]" by [[Erlend Bratland]]
}}
{{end box}}


==Further reading==
{{Gabriella Cilmi}}
*{{citation|last=Meyer|first=Carolyn|title=Where the Broken Heart Still Beats: The Story of Cynthia Ann Parker|publisher=Gulliver Books|year=1992|isbn=9780152956028}}
*{{citation|last=Robson|first=Lucia St. Clair|title=Ride the Wind|publisher=Ballantine Books|year=1985|isbn=978-0345325228|url=http://www.luciastclairrobson.com/RidetheWind.htm}}

== External links ==
*[http://www.rootsweb.com/~txnavarr/biographies/p/parker_cynthia_ann.htm Biography of Cynthia Ann Parker] - Roots. Web
*{{Handbook of Texas|id=view/PP/fpa18|name=Cynthia Ann Parker}} - from Handbook of Texas online
*[http://texashistory.unt.edu/widgets/pager.php?object_id=meta-pth-6725&recno=47&path=/data/UNT/Books/meta-pth-6725.tkl Account of the 1836 attack Parker's Fort] from [http://texashistory.unt.edu/permalink/meta-pth-6725 Indian Wars and Pioneers of Texas] by [[John Henry Brown]] published 1880, hosted by [http://texashistory.unt.edu/ The Portal to Texas History]
*[http://www.meyna.com/caparker.html Cynthia Ann Parker - Comanche (By Adoption)]


{{DEFAULTSORT:Parker, Cynthia Ann}}
[[Category:2008 singles]]
[[Category:Debut singles]]
[[Category:1826 births]]
[[Category:2008 songs]]
[[Category:1870 deaths]]
[[Category:Gabriella Cilmi songs]]
[[Category:People from Texas]]
[[Category:Songs produced by Xenomania]]
[[Category:People from Crawford County, Illinois]]
[[Category:Number-one singles in Australia]]
[[Category:Texas Ranger Division]]
[[Category:Number-one singles in Croatia]]
[[Category:Comanche tribe]]
[[Category:Number-one singles in Portugal]]
[[Category:Battles involving the Comanche]]
[[Category:Texas-Indian Wars]]


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Revision as of 02:46, 12 October 2008

Cynthia Ann Parker and her daughter in 1861

Cynthia Ann Parker, or Naduah (also sometimes spelled "Nadua" and "Nauta"),{b.ca 1827-d.1870} was an Anglo-Texas woman of Scots-Irish descent who suffered being kidnapped twice in her lifetime - once from her natural family at the age of nine by a Native American raiding party, and once from her Indian family at the age of 34 by Texas Rangers. Cynthia Ann was a member of the large Parker frontier family that settled in east Texas in the 1830s. She was captured in 1836 by Comanches during the raid of Fort Parker near present-day Groesbeck, Texas.

Recapture by Texas Rangers at Pease River

In December 1860, Cynthia Ann and her daughter were among a Native American party captured at the Battle of Pease River by Texas Rangers led by "Sul" Ross.[1] After fierce fighting, the Comanche realized they were losing and fled. Ross and several of his men pursued the chief who had been giving orders. The chief was fleeing alongside another rider. As Ross and his men neared, the other rider held a child over her head; the men did not shoot, but instead surrounded and stopped her. Ross continued to follow the chief, eventually shooting him three times. Although the chief fell from his horse, he was still alive, and refused to surrender. Ross's cook, Antonio Martinez, who had been taken captive in Mexico after Nocona killed his family, identified the captured chief as Nocona. With Ross's permission, Martinez fired the shot that took Nocona's life.[2] There is some dispute whether the man killed was actually Nocona or someone else.

When Ross arrived back at the campground, he discovered that the woman his men had captured had blue eyes. He assured her that no young boys had been killed in the battle, so her sons, Quanah and Pecos were safe.[3] The woman could not speak English, and did not know her name or where she came from. After much questioning, she remembered a few details of her capture as a child. The details matched what Ross knew of the Fort Parker Massacre of 1836.[4]

Though some of the Rangers urged Ross to set her free to return to the Comanches, he considered it best to try to return her to her white family. Ross knew many settlers had lost children to the Indians, and many of them might feel this was their child or relative.[citation needed] Ross sent the woman to Camp Cooper and sent a message to Colonel Isaac Parker, the uncle of a young girl kidnapped in the raid. When Parker mentioned that his niece's name was Cynthia Ann Parker, the woman slapped her chest and said "Me Cincee Ann."[4] Isaac Parker took her to his home near Birdville. In 1861, the Texas legislature granted her a league (about 4,400 acres) of land, a pension of $100 per year for the next five years, and made her cousins, Isaac Duke Parker and Benjamin F. Parker, her legal guardians.

Death

Cynthia Ann Parker's gravestone

Cynthia Ann never adapted to her new life among the whites, and attempted to escape on several occasions. Her brother, Silas Jr., was appointed her guardian in 1862, and took her to his home in Van Zandt County. When Silas was mustered into the Confederate Army, Cynthia Ann went to live with her sister, Orlena. According to some accounts, the Parker family was negotiating to return her to west Texas and her adopted people when the American Civil War broke out. The chief cause of Cynthia Ann's unhappiness was that she missed her sons and never knew what had happened to them. In 1863, her daughter, Prairie Flower, caught influenza and died from pneumonia.

In her grief, Cynthia Ann stopped eating. She became sick and died in 1870. She was buried in Fosterville Cemetery in Anderson County near Frankston. Her son, Quanah, moved her body in 1910 to the Post Oak Cemetery near Cache, Oklahoma. He was buried there in 1911. She and her son were moved in 1957 to the Fort Sill military cemetery in Oklahoma. Thanks to her son, Cynthia Ann Parker was finally reunited with her Comanche family.

Aftermath

The city of Crowell, Texas holds the Cynthia Ann Parker Festival annually - a two day celebration to honor the memory of Cynthia Ann Parker. They advertise the event as "a fun and educational weekend showcasing both Native American and European settlers history of the region."

The town of Groesbeck, Texas holds an annual Christmas Festival at the site of old Fort Parker every December. The original fort has been re-built on the original site to exact specifications.

Hardin-Simmons University in Abilene, Texas has named one of its colleges in her honor, the "Cynthia Ann Parker College of Liberal Arts."

The 1956 movie The Searchers, which was based on an Alan Le May novel, directed by John Ford, and featured John Wayne as an obsessed frontiersman searching for years for his kidnapped niece, is widely believed to have been principally based on Cynthia Ann Parker's story; Natalie Wood and her younger sister Lana Wood portray the kidnapped woman at different ages.

Footnotes

  1. There is some confusion about the correct birth and death dates for Cynthia Ann Parker. Different sources place her birth from 1825 to 1827 in Coles, Clark or Crawford counties of Illinois, and her death from 1864 to 1871 in Anderson County, Texas. However, her presence in the 1870 Anderson County census makes an earlier death date unlikely.
  2. Writing in the Crowell Index on October 8, 1909, Tom Champion opined, "...I am convinced that the white people did more harm by keeping her away from them than the Indians did by taking her at first."

References

  1. ^ Pease River from the Handbook of Texas Online. Retrieved 30 October 2006.
  2. ^ Benner (1984), p. 54.
  3. ^ Benner (1984), p. 56.
  4. ^ a b Benner (1984), p. 57.
  • Benner, Judith Ann (1983), Sul Ross, Soldier, Statesman, Educator, College Station, Texas: Texas A&M University Press
  • Exley, Jo Ella Powell (2001), Frontier Blood: Saga of the Parker Family, Texas A&M University Press, ISBN 978-1585441365
  • Hacker (1990), Cynthia Ann Parker: The Life and the Legend, Texas Western Press, ISBN 978-0874041873 {{citation}}: Unknown parameter |First= ignored (|first= suggested) (help)

Further reading

External links