| Key | Value | 
|---|---|
| FileName | ./usr/share/fontconfig/conf.avail/61-gfs-gazis.conf | 
| FileSize | 308 | 
| MD5 | D8E635B3C33C27E3C4F60DEF853CD8C7 | 
| SHA-1 | 38D387E9BDC7E947076B1D32953883507A722AEC | 
| SHA-256 | 383B09A89A5C1361C129254B3023A0D4111874EAE07F0F2C14AB530607F015CF | 
| SSDEEP | 6:TMVcqbcuL3VaYh9NeciB2UNyyPSB2UNi9D5aYh9NmA5sJxLn:TMuN23Vam9sc62UfPq2Us5am9d5+tn | 
| TLSH | T1C0E0C21E60F40160B0901A0B732138830FC09EBBA1A3302230D83C489F8D5D351137C6 | 
| hashlookup:parent-total | 33 | 
| hashlookup:trust | 100 | 
The searched file hash is included in 33 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:
| Key | Value | 
|---|---|
| MD5 | EF8F0961FE2EC7F61EB0BDEC36EC3964 | 
| PackageArch | noarch | 
| PackageDescription | During 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. | 
| PackageMaintainer | Fedora Project | 
| PackageName | gfs-gazis-fonts | 
| PackageRelease | 4.fc18 | 
| PackageVersion | 20091008 | 
| SHA-1 | 01D24CCDBC5F1A1FAA6825491702C43E532CA45D | 
| SHA-256 | F052923A618E7A835FE59C32EFD7D1D1AB1D4C424DE475E0CAA72CA920760BE5 | 
| Key | Value | 
|---|---|
| MD5 | 8FA8F588F2093540C42C82C464A51883 | 
| PackageArch | noarch | 
| PackageDescription | During 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. | 
| PackageMaintainer | Fedora Project | 
| PackageName | gfs-gazis-fonts | 
| PackageRelease | 6.fc20 | 
| PackageVersion | 20091008 | 
| SHA-1 | 0289846841796A0A7F07722CD8479F5006E1A091 | 
| SHA-256 | A37EF3D2AFF84226490C85767FD3831E48C7052D22B93A4D510FA0DB5E0F445E | 
| Key | Value | 
|---|---|
| MD5 | 603821297EDC9098069C6D61EC3B551C | 
| PackageArch | noarch | 
| PackageDescription | During 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. | 
| PackageMaintainer | Fedora Project | 
| PackageName | gfs-gazis-fonts | 
| PackageRelease | 8.fc22 | 
| PackageVersion | 20091008 | 
| SHA-1 | 0CD3BD749DF06832A349A96DB9B3A28CCDE6424A | 
| SHA-256 | 35DC30DD1E40E5277950C5AAB9ED48E358C6D16EC78558DF3CF068B68EFCD361 | 
| Key | Value | 
|---|---|
| MD5 | B07C929AEDD7B84AA979E6F8D8377A41 | 
| PackageArch | noarch | 
| PackageDescription | During 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. | 
| PackageMaintainer | Fedora Project | 
| PackageName | gfs-gazis-fonts | 
| PackageRelease | 2.fc15 | 
| PackageVersion | 20091008 | 
| SHA-1 | 0D0D5EE6AFE849EF1FACB29717E1251893BCBAC7 | 
| SHA-256 | 80EF7F4112BB85F83A8798D3FE5013F0F4B84CBF514B375128BF11C1EC3450A2 | 
| Key | Value | 
|---|---|
| MD5 | 1A29D5F2C5CAE8E3409946E53DF42607 | 
| PackageArch | noarch | 
| PackageDescription | During 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. | 
| PackageMaintainer | Fedora Project | 
| PackageName | gfs-gazis-fonts | 
| PackageRelease | 5.fc19 | 
| PackageVersion | 20091008 | 
| SHA-1 | 14FB5516AEA781F7D3F6BD9D06509C88BF8D6D86 | 
| SHA-256 | B8245138F32CDE6838131A5E0EF1E4B772338EAD8410A7FF63D462FEAABD1A12 | 
| Key | Value | 
|---|---|
| MD5 | E41D76CC2036600570A27F487714CC08 | 
| PackageArch | noarch | 
| PackageDescription | During 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. | 
| PackageMaintainer | Fedora Project | 
| PackageName | gfs-gazis-fonts | 
| PackageRelease | 2.fc15 | 
| PackageVersion | 20091008 | 
| SHA-1 | 2030490428D806791B89EADDD617F19529842E6B | 
| SHA-256 | 231ABCE3BFADE3F10B4D798281EB57C1B2875FC0CE3C4EEE79F69EBC94892DCE | 
| Key | Value | 
|---|---|
| MD5 | 8E4479212C3CF0F56BD49F79B2F5D962 | 
| PackageArch | noarch | 
| PackageDescription | During 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. | 
| PackageMaintainer | Fedora Project | 
| PackageName | gfs-gazis-fonts | 
| PackageRelease | 8.fc21 | 
| PackageVersion | 20091008 | 
| SHA-1 | 20A18E91E23D554CB6C4899CC4D5D900FD4DD5CB | 
| SHA-256 | 3B280A9BFA18BF582E94F7FCC1B3E661873C56085D1EF7761D3E0D0D863CE7E6 | 
| Key | Value | 
|---|---|
| MD5 | A93A6A032AD7F33D57FBF9DB94088F05 | 
| PackageArch | noarch | 
| PackageDescription | During 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. | 
| PackageMaintainer | Fedora Project | 
| PackageName | gfs-gazis-fonts | 
| PackageRelease | 1.fc13 | 
| PackageVersion | 20091008 | 
| SHA-1 | 20D1689A67B07914851F98AA8346A222F608DED2 | 
| SHA-256 | C53729F1C400D9F3825318C992A1DD0A14AE49CF7C4AA63903A71E326B8C3955 | 
| Key | Value | 
|---|---|
| MD5 | 1C82FD055D28811618CEDD55E923C833 | 
| PackageArch | noarch | 
| PackageDescription | During 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. | 
| PackageMaintainer | Fedora Project | 
| PackageName | gfs-gazis-fonts | 
| PackageRelease | 4.fc18 | 
| PackageVersion | 20091008 | 
| SHA-1 | 25AD95A1A1ECED3588316DB5D25BB1D8016E86C6 | 
| SHA-256 | B972B09877A0E40F56D0D56C93AE2FD07FD249967FA6EFCFE832B8997C9F6EFD | 
| Key | Value | 
|---|---|
| MD5 | F51F96780B2ABECC58E1A27F62607CB5 | 
| PackageArch | noarch | 
| PackageDescription | During 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. | 
| PackageMaintainer | Fedora Project | 
| PackageName | gfs-gazis-fonts | 
| PackageRelease | 5.fc19 | 
| PackageVersion | 20091008 | 
| SHA-1 | 272BE4EB3130F45B96E28A9B17B89CE3C6B212F9 | 
| SHA-256 | 3A3FF16C12D01BEB878E17DE0FD03883D949A55127E863D1315B12F5F5245B2E |