Codex Seidelianus I
Uncial 011 | |
---|---|
Surname | Codex Seidelianus I |
text | Gospels |
language | Greek |
date | 9th century |
Storage location | London , Cambridge |
size | 25.7 x 21.5 cm |
Type | Byzantine text type |
category | V |
The Codex Seidelianus I ( Gregory-Aland no. G s or 011 ) is a Greek manuscript of the four Gospels , which dates from the 9th or 10th century. The codex was named after Andreas Seidel, who owned it in the 17th century. The handwriting is incomplete.
description
The manuscript consists of the four Gospels on 252 sheets of parchment (25.7 × 21.5 cm), described in 2 columns, 21 lines.
The large uncial letters are executed with spirit and accents, but these are usually not precisely set.
251 sheets are kept in the British Library (Harley 5684) in London and one sheet in Cambridge in ( Trinity College B XVII.20).
The Greek text of the Codex represents the Byzantine text and is assigned to Category V.
After Seidel's death, the Codex was bought by La Croze in 1718 , who gave it to the Hamburg clergyman Johannes Christopher Wolf. Half a sheet was probably cut out by Wolf and sent to Bentley for inspection. That sheet is now in Cambridge. The rest of the manuscript went to the Harleian Library, which later went to the British Museum.
See also
Individual evidence
- ^ Metzger, Bruce M. , The Text of the New Testament: Its Transmission, Corruption and Restoration , 2005, Oxford University Press, pp. 74-75.
- ↑ a b c d Kurt and Barbara Aland : The text of the New Testament. Introduction to the scientific editions as well as the theory and practice of modern textual criticism . German Bible Society , Stuttgart 1989, p. 119. ISBN 3-438-06011-6
- ^ A b Caspar René Gregory, text criticism of the New Testament (Leipzig 1900), vol. 1, p. 50f.
literature
- JC Wolff , "Anecdota Graeca" (Hamburg, 1723), III, pp. 48-92.
- SP Tregelles , Account of the Printed Text , p. 160.
Web links
- Codex Seidelianus G e (011) : in the Encyclopedia of Textual Criticism
- Pictures in the British Library