Result for A7333758B6E8482B941FFA30D4669EFD0E205283

Query result

Key Value
FileName./etc/fonts/conf.d/61-gfs-gazis.conf
FileSize50
MD50B21D08F8AD3FDEB29815C2C350A78F6
SHA-1A7333758B6E8482B941FFA30D4669EFD0E205283
SHA-25649589E5D8C140194517B295380FAB7DA9B23D6D233741AF2E2850BCB81EE292F
SSDEEP3:7vWLUCdQDLETlJIU/LiWn:C/dQkJ4W
TLSHT10A90021265096C754941C491F10548501A8113D1305D2220F46558446994485214A301
hashlookup:parent-total31
hashlookup:trust100

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Parents (Total: 31)

The searched file hash is included in 31 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:

Key Value
MD5EF8F0961FE2EC7F61EB0BDEC36EC3964
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionDuring the whole of the 18th century the old tradition of using Greek types designed to conform to the Byzantine cursive hand with many ligatures and abbreviations - as it was originated by Aldus Manutius in Venice and consolidated by Claude Garamont (Grecs du Roy) - was still much in practice, although clearly on the wane. GFS Gazis is a typical German example of this practice as it appeared at the end of that era in the 1790's. Its name pays tribute to Anthimos Gazis (1758-1828), one of the most prolific Greek thinkers of the period, who was responsible for writing, translating and editing numerous books, including the editorship of the important Greek periodical Ερμής ο Λόγιος (Litterary Hermes) in Wien. GFS Gazis has been digitally designed by George D. Matthiopoulos.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNamegfs-gazis-fonts
PackageRelease4.fc18
PackageVersion20091008
SHA-101D24CCDBC5F1A1FAA6825491702C43E532CA45D
SHA-256F052923A618E7A835FE59C32EFD7D1D1AB1D4C424DE475E0CAA72CA920760BE5
Key Value
MD58FA8F588F2093540C42C82C464A51883
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionDuring the whole of the 18th century the old tradition of using Greek types designed to conform to the Byzantine cursive hand with many ligatures and abbreviations - as it was originated by Aldus Manutius in Venice and consolidated by Claude Garamont (Grecs du Roy) - was still much in practice, although clearly on the wane. GFS Gazis is a typical German example of this practice as it appeared at the end of that era in the 1790's. Its name pays tribute to Anthimos Gazis (1758-1828), one of the most prolific Greek thinkers of the period, who was responsible for writing, translating and editing numerous books, including the editorship of the important Greek periodical Ερμής ο Λόγιος (Litterary Hermes) in Wien. GFS Gazis has been digitally designed by George D. Matthiopoulos.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNamegfs-gazis-fonts
PackageRelease6.fc20
PackageVersion20091008
SHA-10289846841796A0A7F07722CD8479F5006E1A091
SHA-256A37EF3D2AFF84226490C85767FD3831E48C7052D22B93A4D510FA0DB5E0F445E
Key Value
MD51A29D5F2C5CAE8E3409946E53DF42607
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionDuring the whole of the 18th century the old tradition of using Greek types designed to conform to the Byzantine cursive hand with many ligatures and abbreviations - as it was originated by Aldus Manutius in Venice and consolidated by Claude Garamont (Grecs du Roy) - was still much in practice, although clearly on the wane. GFS Gazis is a typical German example of this practice as it appeared at the end of that era in the 1790's. Its name pays tribute to Anthimos Gazis (1758-1828), one of the most prolific Greek thinkers of the period, who was responsible for writing, translating and editing numerous books, including the editorship of the important Greek periodical Ερμής ο Λόγιος (Litterary Hermes) in Wien. GFS Gazis has been digitally designed by George D. Matthiopoulos.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNamegfs-gazis-fonts
PackageRelease5.fc19
PackageVersion20091008
SHA-114FB5516AEA781F7D3F6BD9D06509C88BF8D6D86
SHA-256B8245138F32CDE6838131A5E0EF1E4B772338EAD8410A7FF63D462FEAABD1A12
Key Value
MD5E41D76CC2036600570A27F487714CC08
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionDuring the whole of the 18th century the old tradition of using Greek types designed to conform to the Byzantine cursive hand with many ligatures and abbreviations - as it was originated by Aldus Manutius in Venice and consolidated by Claude Garamont (Grecs du Roy) - was still much in practice, although clearly on the wane. GFS Gazis is a typical German example of this practice as it appeared at the end of that era in the 1790's. Its name pays tribute to Anthimos Gazis (1758-1828), one of the most prolific Greek thinkers of the period, who was responsible for writing, translating and editing numerous books, including the editorship of the important Greek periodical Ερμής ο Λόγιος (Litterary Hermes) in Wien. GFS Gazis has been digitally designed by George D. Matthiopoulos.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNamegfs-gazis-fonts
PackageRelease2.fc15
PackageVersion20091008
SHA-12030490428D806791B89EADDD617F19529842E6B
SHA-256231ABCE3BFADE3F10B4D798281EB57C1B2875FC0CE3C4EEE79F69EBC94892DCE
Key Value
MD58E4479212C3CF0F56BD49F79B2F5D962
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionDuring the whole of the 18th century the old tradition of using Greek types designed to conform to the Byzantine cursive hand with many ligatures and abbreviations - as it was originated by Aldus Manutius in Venice and consolidated by Claude Garamont (Grecs du Roy) - was still much in practice, although clearly on the wane. GFS Gazis is a typical German example of this practice as it appeared at the end of that era in the 1790's. Its name pays tribute to Anthimos Gazis (1758-1828), one of the most prolific Greek thinkers of the period, who was responsible for writing, translating and editing numerous books, including the editorship of the important Greek periodical Ερμής ο Λόγιος (Litterary Hermes) in Wien. GFS Gazis has been digitally designed by George D. Matthiopoulos.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNamegfs-gazis-fonts
PackageRelease8.fc21
PackageVersion20091008
SHA-120A18E91E23D554CB6C4899CC4D5D900FD4DD5CB
SHA-2563B280A9BFA18BF582E94F7FCC1B3E661873C56085D1EF7761D3E0D0D863CE7E6
Key Value
MD5A93A6A032AD7F33D57FBF9DB94088F05
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionDuring the whole of the 18th century the old tradition of using Greek types designed to conform to the Byzantine cursive hand with many ligatures and abbreviations - as it was originated by Aldus Manutius in Venice and consolidated by Claude Garamont (Grecs du Roy) - was still much in practice, although clearly on the wane. GFS Gazis is a typical German example of this practice as it appeared at the end of that era in the 1790's. Its name pays tribute to Anthimos Gazis (1758-1828), one of the most prolific Greek thinkers of the period, who was responsible for writing, translating and editing numerous books, including the editorship of the important Greek periodical Ερμής ο Λόγιος (Litterary Hermes) in Wien. GFS Gazis has been digitally designed by George D. Matthiopoulos.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNamegfs-gazis-fonts
PackageRelease1.fc13
PackageVersion20091008
SHA-120D1689A67B07914851F98AA8346A222F608DED2
SHA-256C53729F1C400D9F3825318C992A1DD0A14AE49CF7C4AA63903A71E326B8C3955
Key Value
MD51C82FD055D28811618CEDD55E923C833
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionDuring the whole of the 18th century the old tradition of using Greek types designed to conform to the Byzantine cursive hand with many ligatures and abbreviations - as it was originated by Aldus Manutius in Venice and consolidated by Claude Garamont (Grecs du Roy) - was still much in practice, although clearly on the wane. GFS Gazis is a typical German example of this practice as it appeared at the end of that era in the 1790's. Its name pays tribute to Anthimos Gazis (1758-1828), one of the most prolific Greek thinkers of the period, who was responsible for writing, translating and editing numerous books, including the editorship of the important Greek periodical Ερμής ο Λόγιος (Litterary Hermes) in Wien. GFS Gazis has been digitally designed by George D. Matthiopoulos.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNamegfs-gazis-fonts
PackageRelease4.fc18
PackageVersion20091008
SHA-125AD95A1A1ECED3588316DB5D25BB1D8016E86C6
SHA-256B972B09877A0E40F56D0D56C93AE2FD07FD249967FA6EFCFE832B8997C9F6EFD
Key Value
MD5F51F96780B2ABECC58E1A27F62607CB5
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionDuring the whole of the 18th century the old tradition of using Greek types designed to conform to the Byzantine cursive hand with many ligatures and abbreviations - as it was originated by Aldus Manutius in Venice and consolidated by Claude Garamont (Grecs du Roy) - was still much in practice, although clearly on the wane. GFS Gazis is a typical German example of this practice as it appeared at the end of that era in the 1790's. Its name pays tribute to Anthimos Gazis (1758-1828), one of the most prolific Greek thinkers of the period, who was responsible for writing, translating and editing numerous books, including the editorship of the important Greek periodical Ερμής ο Λόγιος (Litterary Hermes) in Wien. GFS Gazis has been digitally designed by George D. Matthiopoulos.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNamegfs-gazis-fonts
PackageRelease5.fc19
PackageVersion20091008
SHA-1272BE4EB3130F45B96E28A9B17B89CE3C6B212F9
SHA-2563A3FF16C12D01BEB878E17DE0FD03883D949A55127E863D1315B12F5F5245B2E
Key Value
MD5C8C4F176A79B73949811CEA601957215
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionDuring the whole of the 18th century the old tradition of using Greek types designed to conform to the Byzantine cursive hand with many ligatures and abbreviations - as it was originated by Aldus Manutius in Venice and consolidated by Claude Garamont (Grecs du Roy) - was still much in practice, although clearly on the wane. GFS Gazis is a typical German example of this practice as it appeared at the end of that era in the 1790's. Its name pays tribute to Anthimos Gazis (1758-1828), one of the most prolific Greek thinkers of the period, who was responsible for writing, translating and editing numerous books, including the editorship of the important Greek periodical Ερμής ο Λόγιος (Litterary Hermes) in Wien. GFS Gazis has been digitally designed by George D. Matthiopoulos.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNamegfs-gazis-fonts
PackageRelease2.fc15
PackageVersion20091008
SHA-12A40DBFF5B9D3D9394709724A129B67400D9EC92
SHA-2566FDC470CB3167F82C16FACA50F5D9B644FB97E4C312F60AFA9E003B40DB77E65
Key Value
MD52D73BF1AA4E5D786AA7AFE7BB7D26FD2
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionDuring the whole of the 18th century the old tradition of using Greek types designed to conform to the Byzantine cursive hand with many ligatures and abbreviations - as it was originated by Aldus Manutius in Venice and consolidated by Claude Garamont (Grecs du Roy) - was still much in practice, although clearly on the wane. GFS Gazis is a typical German example of this practice as it appeared at the end of that era in the 1790's. Its name pays tribute to Anthimos Gazis (1758-1828), one of the most prolific Greek thinkers of the period, who was responsible for writing, translating and editing numerous books, including the editorship of the important Greek periodical Ερμής ο Λόγιος (Litterary Hermes) in Wien. GFS Gazis has been digitally designed by George D. Matthiopoulos.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNamegfs-gazis-fonts
PackageRelease9.fc23
PackageVersion20091008
SHA-12BCFEBD743035BC2ADA5C9DD4225FD278E256AC3
SHA-25651E7D4A931A87F5E9D4799D1327E2F28FE86AB115F6BACD9CA5C1CAC804F90B7