Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The great edition, of which the text and apparatus appeared in 1869 and 1872, was called by himself editio viii; but this number is raised to twenty or twenty-one, if mere reprints from stereotype plates and the minor editions of his great critical texts are included; posthumous prints bring the total to forty-one. Four main recensions of ...
The manuscript was brought by Constantin von Tischendorf in 1845 and in 1853 from Sinai. Tischendorf edited its text in Monumenta sacra inedita. [4] [5] The codex is divided, and located in three places: Russian National Library (Gr. 16, 1 f.) in Saint Petersburg — Matt. 12:17-19.23-25
Tischendorf died before he could finish his edition, and the third volume, containing the Prolegomena, was prepared and edited by C. R. Gregory and issued in three parts (1884, 1890, 1894). [3] [4] Tischendorf gave the evidence known in his time. He used 64 uncial manuscripts, a single papyrus manuscript, and a small number of minuscule ...
The manuscript also contains, consistently, the use of Nomina Sacra. Studies done by Karyn Berner [ 5 ] and Philip Comfort [ 6 ] contended that 𝔓 66 had the work of three individuals on it: the original, professional scribe; a thoroughgoing corrector; and a minor corrector.
ἀπ’ οὐδενὸς ap’ oudenos ((away) from / because of no one) – Alexandrian text-type. [19] ὑπ’ οὐδενὸς hup’ oudenos (under(neath) / by / through no one) – Byzantine text-type. [19] Luke 8:45 εἶπεν ὁ Πέτρος Ἐπιστάτα, οἱ ὄχλοι συνέχουσίν σε καὶ ἀποθλίβουσιν.
Tischendorf – discoverer and editor of the codex. Scrivener and Tischendorf [12] dated the manuscript to the 8th century, Gregory to the 9th century. In the present time the manuscript has been assigned on palaeographical grounds to the 9th century [23] or to the 10th century. The 8th century is also possible palaeographically, but it is ...
One part of the codex was found by Tischendorf in an eastern monastery in 1853, another part in 1859. [7] As a result, the codex is divided and housed in two places. 158 leaves were bought in 1855 and they are housed in the Bodleian Library (Auct. T. infr 2.2) in Oxford and 99 leaves of the codex are located now in the National Library of Russia (Gr. 33) in Saint Petersburg.
The manuscript is lacunose. Tischendorf labelled it by 137 a and 176 p. [3] According to some scholars, it is one of very few witnesses of the Western text-type with complete text of the Book of Acts. [3] [4] [5] But Robert Waltz categorizes it with the Harklean Family (Family 2138) in a subgroup with its close relative Minuscule 2412. The ...