Family 1: Difference between revisions

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In Mark 6:51 word εξισταντο changed into εχπλησσοντο against all other manuscripts.
In Mark 6:51 word εξισταντο changed into εχπλησσοντο against all other manuscripts.


[[Burnett Hillman Streeter|B. H. Streeter]], working largely on the basis of data supplied by Lake, proposed that Family 1, along with the [[Codex Koridethi]] (Θ), Family 13, the minuscules 28, 565, 700, and the Armenian and Georgian versions, were the remnants of what he labelled the [[Caesarean text-type|Caesarean Text]], differing in a number of common respects from the then established [[Byzantine text-type|Byzantine]], [[Western text-type|Western]] and [[Alexandrian text-type]]s.
[[Burnett Hillman Streeter|B. H. Streeter]], working largely on the basis of data supplied by Lake, proposed that Family 1, along with the [[Codex Koridethi]] (Θ), Family 13, the minuscules 28, [[Minuscule 565|565]], 700, and the Armenian and Georgian versions, were the remnants of what he labelled the [[Caesarean text-type|Caesarean Text]], differing in a number of common respects from the then established [[Byzantine text-type|Byzantine]], [[Western text-type|Western]] and [[Alexandrian text-type]]s.


== See also ==
== See also ==

Revision as of 18:16, 3 October 2008

Family 1 is a group of the GreekGospel manuscripts, varying in date from the 12th to the 15th century. The group takes its name from the minuscule codex 1, now in Basel. "Family 1" is also kown as "the Lake Group", symbolized as f1. Hermann von Soden calls the group Ih. Aland list it as Category III in the Gospels and Category V elsewhere.

Family 1 was discovered in 1902, when Kirsopp Lake (1872-1946) published Codex 1 of the Gospels and its Allies (118, 131, 209), and established the existence new textual family. This group of manuscripts based on four minuscules (1, 118, 131, 209), but now we consider 205, 205abs, 872 (Mark only), 884 (in part), 1582, 2193, and 2542 (in part) to be a members of the family.

The most obvious characteristic of the Lake Group is that these manuscripts placed Pericope adulterae (John 7:53-8:11) after John 21:25. In addition, 1 and 1582 contain a scholion questioning the authenticity of Mark 16:9-20. In Mark 6:51 word εξισταντο changed into εχπλησσοντο against all other manuscripts.

B. H. Streeter, working largely on the basis of data supplied by Lake, proposed that Family 1, along with the Codex Koridethi (Θ), Family 13, the minuscules 28, 565, 700, and the Armenian and Georgian versions, were the remnants of what he labelled the Caesarean Text, differing in a number of common respects from the then established Byzantine, Western and Alexandrian text-types.

See also

Bibliography

  • Kirsopp Lake, Codex 1 of the Gospels and its Allies, Texts and Studies, volume vii, Cambridge, 1902, collates 1 with 118, 131, and 209.
  • Hermann von Soden, Die Schriften des Neuen Testaments in ihrer ältesten erreichbaren Textgestalt hergestellt auf Grund ihrer Textgeschichte. Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1913.
  • B.H. Streeter, The four Gospels a Study of Origins the Manuscript Tradition, Sources, Autorship, & Dates, Oxford 1924, pp. 77-107.
  • Amy S. Anderson, The textual tradition of the Gospels: Family 1 in Matthew, Leiden; Brill, 2004.

External links