 So, this is an extremely short presentation. I'm not a Burma Studies person, and I don't have any kind of grand things to tell you. Basically, this is just what we found in the library. So, here we go. The story here is, when I came to SOAS, I started studying Burmese. We talked to some old friends, like Tillman Frosch and Christian Bauer, and they said that there were notebooks where loosehead transliterated all of the old Burmese inscriptions somewhere at SOAS in the library. But it wasn't in the catalog. We looked everywhere. But eventually, it was found in the SOAS archive, which is, say, not in the library archive, but in the operational archive of the university, where the HR files are and things like that, was these materials. So here's an overview of what's there. And now, it's in the library, and you can consult it by going to the archive in the basement of the library. So this is what we have. We have these epigraphical papers. As you heard from Carol earlier, most of Luc's collection ended up at the Australian National University. But for whatever reason, these notebooks were left at SOAS. They were also microfilmed in the 1980s, and the microfilms at the British Library. And they've all been scanned and are online, both at SOAS and at the Buddhist Digital Resource Center. So you can look at them. So let's just show you. This is a bit about the history of the collection, which I won't read out, but it was held by Luc in Jersey until the time of his passing, and then ended up at SOAS. And then these are letters about where they're discussing the request. And this is a list of Luc's epigraphical papers that he was proposing to transfer to SOAS. And this is an overview. So we have these three different shelf marks and Luc's transliterations, the notebooks A to Q. And those are, well, I haven't gone through this material extremely closely, but it's related to the Oxford volumes, yeah, the big epigraphic papers. Yeah, the old Burmese inscriptions. You mean black dots? No, no, not black. I think it's just called the old Burmese inscriptions. Big from the 1930s printed author in the press. And yeah, so here, inscriptions of Parma was the series. And the transliterations follow the order of the facsimiles that were published in this series. So here's a facsimile and the transliteration. And then there are notebooks with transliterations from Ava inscriptions. And this is the kind of thing that it looks like. Yeah, and this is the third item, which is kind of miscellaneous papers related to Burmese inscriptions. And this stuff has not been studied systematically. We just rediscovered it like six months ago. So you feel free to, this is like an ad, come visit the SOAS library, look at this, or find it on the internet. And then this is where it is on the internet, at the SOAS online collection. And you can flip through and take a look. And then this is just a list of other places where loose materials are deposited, mostly at the Australian National University. And a lot of the Australian National University material is available online through Sea-Lang. Sea-Lang's proper name? Sea-Lang. Just Sea-Lang, yeah. S-E-A-L-A-N-G. Yeah, so if you just Google S-E-A-Lang, L-A-N-G, you can find a lot of scans of the loose materials that are at the Australian National University. So that's the nice thing now is this material at SOAS and the material at ANU have both been digitized and are available online. And then I'll just also mention I sort of was asked, the library didn't want to show you pictures of it because of questionnaires of copyright, but the actual photographs, the photographic, not the plates, but the sort of exposures that went into the Oxford book in the 1930s are also in the SOAS library, in all tin casters. So that's there too. And then nothing to do with loose in particular, but another thing that we've re-found in the SOAS library, we're on a sort of a kick of finding old Burma-related materials, is all of the operational files of the Stuart dictionary. I don't know how many people know, but there was a big dictionary project in Burma in the 40s that then got kind of put on ice to some extent after, I don't know, after independence. And it was here at SOAS for a while, John O'Kell actually worked on it. And we've just re-found their sort of operational archive as well, just in the last couple of weeks. So those are, you know, some, just to tell you about these things in the library, and to some extent, if you like, this proposal actually, I think of Carol's, to have an event about the life and work of loose coincided very nicely with this rediscovery of loose materials. So that's all of my presentation.