Page:Catholic Encyclopedia, volume 9.djvu/681

 MANUSCRIPTS

mo

MANUSOaiPTS

Y, or CfHl. Taitrinensis (iiintli century; iu National Library', Turin) contains I/Csscr Prophets.

Z, or Cod, Tischendorf (ninth century) contains fragments of Kings; published by Tischendorf.

r, or Cod. Cryptoferratensis (eighth or ninth century; at Grot taf errata) contains fragments of Prophets.

A. or C(td. Bodleianus (fourth or fifth centiuy; Ox- forUi in Hodl. Libr.) contains a fragment of Daniel.

6, or Cod, Washington (fifth or sixth century, to be in Smithsonian Institution), contains Deut. — Jos., found in Egj'pt, one of the Freer MSS. There are likewise seven uncial Psalt<;rs (two complete) of the ninth or t^nth century and eighteen rather unim- portant fragments listed by Swete (op. cit., p. 140).

(iii) Vellum Minuscule. — More than 300 are known but unclassified. The Cambridge Septuagint pur-

xcviii, 3; ci, 16-cii, 13) published by Taylor (op. cit.), (v) The fourth-centunr papyrus fragments of Gen., i, 1-5, published, 1900, bv Grenfell and Hunt.

(c) Theodotion (see versions of the Bible). — The Book of Daniel of Theodotion is found in the IJCX MSS. previously mentioned. The Milan palimpsest contains his text in part.

(d) Symmachus (see Versions of the Bible). — MS. sources are the Milan palimpsest, Cambridge fragment, and Hexaplaric marginal notes, all of which arc MS. sources of Aquila.

Swete, Introduction to the O. T. in Greek (1900); Kenton. Our Bible and the Ancient MSS. (1898); Nestle, Srpttiaffintor aludien (1886-1007); Field, Origenia Hexaplorum qua aupernaU (Oxford. 1875).

(3) New Testament MSS,— (a) In General. — ^Tbere are, according to the latest authority on this subject,

•LiTllpOVNlAI : KAIPrcWVo AVION. .,

tioroYeceAiAiAr*i»Ki<'i»"r»^"»»^ '.'

OlAt-M AOH-I A« AYTOy UyJ. AMTOTlAA«Hh|

-i-oY«*<""^x V At- KAi ^« oxoM n-c- rAiexrjFriKj

Hi*OIOM S-«|sH»lAH«li|sl4»A|»lt'Am»M

c Aci or^AY «''^* • iArTii»o\oYt'iN oi MAiM* < A iro\ roK cAhft Ar iMooYKoyt'cnihi

AUdKrlOC'If'Al 01H4 OAf f-CMIipACAYToY*' '

oyAt " o If ■mY • ^ AN<-rM*i»rAi oc iioiM»-rN ikAY^iA oirriiriMAfCNAY'*'*'^ '"' ' " KAiqU'V^^Y '"*"'*'*'*^*"*'^*'**''^'*^®**** ' '

I «Y«V K-Aii oyi-Ai'"* oY^*' *««^"P*^****' *'*'^*!fe'&

cJ»AieMKAHAn>K-rMKAllOICMrl'AYl'*r**' ■

on■oV»^■•^?o^^^*^*^*A^f•lM^■■lMMlVlOMOl*• •»»-

"•»• n*01 1' I r r«'Yt' • "^ ■' »'• i AY » M»« MCf awcaca mcmt •I iisiAr|ir-A:;«iMrr>*oiMfinrAnPiATtiifinrMAYt*" AiMn|*i>ifiic- f'lMrMoiAAiTniow^ir •■•

MAKAl'inrt^l riAt'MMOlA AC OflK*ATArATOtT

KAii»A|'AriArm'i-»i«Y^^**'^**V *'.

kAii-i»-cAouiMrtMAYi»>Y'»»A^»*^^»''^"^ J^*#

f V M A r * I. I ■ I IM CA ft IVA T *l » *' N MMKI A W«r*im0C '


 * tMPA|MlX€l,lsjrilMXt»|.A llAfCTIfpQYWf^ »»

AYTOtslOirpAMMArrir VAIOl^AfK'AlQI-

cni».t-Ain^ATu.iMpAiirY«'iiMA5i)«i*Vf'*' '

KAl Hl-nriif AiAY rtiYAYToCA^ jcAfriMtwrt*

roVf\ lA Aori»'MoY«'AY noMA^rKfiax*^*" »' • 1 HNxr ii-AtxoMri'Hux^ ereifoYKA^'TMA**

(KlliltlVir i-4ii KAiAMAC'TAC*«-CTAit>ll

(■»iu MNCoiii^yx»fMCiui'Al HAiioAtoAi uiArrc'iiinitiiisj

Ml"

ItnAft^

,Uf Abl* A rci A C c- 1 1 Mil Uj" KJkOin

AbijLC pt-iLVtji-.rif-.y

diSripiiliAtirfHtiillKiv rcir-pc jLtiNTurit t-iLC- SrirAV «''i| Jiu-AM|-iVfnA;siili«iv tAtimit-AkAMT «|^ii(lAiTiAiii-ff'CT«<1V.-rA|L(yAeiY ^to-I-tlAMI'C-lC I'C r qilUlf Al UIMT

diffipiH It «iiVAtihAl l\<|(in(l|sinMli('c-T

frjrAt^i-int^iV mANcliic Am I- i- 1 clrdi i ci «|iiii-«i(% iC:|iA^T

VilbuVMOMlilvltAI fViA|MO(|i'AF*-N'IK«CM<4l'«Bllli'

lALTiLilcii ili«iv cn(l< «it4t ir iiiilir^N «ifiMiU(Tiopc rAi^jic rrt vA^*>*Amr-i«lurif illi hi*io,\i9«ii«lcciVi-tVS«m€»|.ACUV ' ifATuvov .ViA«ir«-iriKic v«*«V«nA*r «lir Tn^ fTT|AhAr*('Ai.Y*"f »*\^^-^,^ forriAriciMf \% niEticnilit't nil i •I»inriAMinviAsicUa»hA»MhAi\ytili«in \«iK«.«NV.XVf iir *

^i-^ii Atii c cniKV Af1f-uv iwrr<R|ioi;A*»« ^ciYYiiifc I VAMiAin hf-Ki "

MCfn-Aui ctiAU f-A^VBf AMimAUiVA,"

kl

\

Codex Bsz.fs Opix)aite PaRos, CJrcok and l4itin (Kftducetl; — Luke, vi, 1-9 his. iu Cambridge University Library

poses to collate the chief of these minuscules and to group them with a view to discriminating the various recensions of the LXX. More than half of these MSS. are Psalters and few of them eive the entire Old Testament. In editing his Alcald Polyglot, Cardinal Ximcnes used minuscules 108 and 248 of the Vatican.

(b) A(iuila (see Vkrsions of the Bible). — MS. traces of the text of Aquila are found in: (i) frag- ments of Origen's third columns, written as mar^nal notes to some MSS., such as Q; (ii) the Milan palimp- sest of the Hexapla, a most important tenth century copy found by Mercati in 189G. It contains about elev'en Psalms, has no Hebrew column, and uses the space thereof for variant readings ; (iii) the Cambridge fragment, seventh oentur^^ di.scovored in a Cairo geni- zah. It contains parts of Ps., xxi (see Taylor, " Cairo Genizah Palimpsests", 1000). The name Jahweh is written in old Hebrew letters, (iv) The Cairo frag- ments of the fourth and fifth centuries: three palimp- sests (containing III Kings, xx, 7-17; IV Kings, xxiii, Xl-27) published by Burkitt in 1897; and four portions <rf the Tsalms (Ixxxix, 17-xci, 10; xcv, 7-xcvi, 12;

von Soden ("Die Schriften des N. T. in ihrer Altesieo erreichbaren Textgestalt", Berlin, 1902), 2328 New- Testament MSS. extant. Only about 40 contain, either entire or in part., all the books of the New Testa- ment. There are 1716 MS. copies of the Gospels. 531 ' of the Acts, 628 of the Pauline Epistles, 219 of the Apocalypse. The commonly reoeive, a MS. of the Gos- pels; D3 or Dpaw' is Cod. Claromontanus, a MS. of the Pauline Epistles; Eg ^r ^^' ^^ ^9^* Laudianus, a MS. of the Acts. The nomenclature is less clear for minus- cules. Each group has a different set of numbers. If a minuscule Ix? a complete MS. of the New Testament, it is designated bv four different numbers. One and the same MS. at Leicester is Evan. 69, Act. 31, Paul. 37, Apoc. 14. Wettstein's lists of New-Testament MSS. were supplemented by Birch and Schols; later on