Uncial 070

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New Testament manuscripts
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Uncial 070
Uncial 0191 (K. 9031) .jpg
Surname Fragmentum Woideanum
text Luke - John
language Greek - Coptic diglot
date 6th century
Storage location Paris , Oxford , London , Vienna
size 37 × 28 cm
Type mixed
category III

Uncial 070 (in the numbering of Gregory-Aland , of Soden ε 6) is a Greek Coptic Diglot - Unzialmanuskript of the New Testament . It was dated to the 6th century using paleography .

The codes 0110, 0124, 0178, 0179, 0180, 0190, 0191, 0193, 0194 and 0202 come from the same manuscript.

content

The original manuscript is divided into 10 parts with their own numbering. The content of the respective uncial manuscript is:

070 (13 folios) - Luke 9: 9-17; 10.40-11.6; 12.15-13.32; John 5: 31-42; 8.33-42; 12.27-36
0110 (1 folio) - John 8: 13-22
0124 (22 folios) - Luke 3: 19-30; 10.21-30; 11.24-42; 22.54-65; 23.4-24.26; John 5: 22-31; 8.42-9.39; 11.48-56; 12.46-13.4
0178 (1 folio) - Luke 16: 4-12
0179 (1 folio) - Luke 21.30-22.2
0180 (1 folio) - John 7,3-12
0190 (1 folio) - Luke 10.30-39
0191 (1 folio) - Luke 12: 5-14
0193 (1 folio) - John 3: 23-32
0202 (2 folios) - Luke 8: 13-19; 8.55-9.9.

description

The code contains parts of the Gospel of Luke and John . He is described on 44 sheets of parchment (37 × 28 cm). Each page has two columns with 35 lines each. The Coptic texts are not completely identical to the Greek texts. The manuscript was written in round, uncompressed letters. The pages have Coptic numbers. Alcohol asper, alcohol lenis and accents are available, but often incorrectly set. It was probably written by a Coptic scribe, since he wrote βαβουσα instead of λαβουσα in Luke 13:21 and δεκαι instead of δεκα και in Luke 13:16.

Some of the leaves (Luke 12: 15-13, 32; John 8: 33-42) once belonged to Karl Gottfried Woide , who received them from Egypt. They are known as the Fragmentum Woideanum and have been designated T a or T woi . At times they were confused with the Codex Borgianus .

Current retention

The code is broken down into 11 parts and is kept in five locations. The manuscript has several numbers because it was only later known that the different parts belong to the same manuscript.

Aland placed the text of the Code in Category III .

See also

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d e f Kurt Aland et Barbara Aland, The Text of the New Testament: An Introduction to the Critical Editions and to the Theory and Practice of Modern Textual Criticism , trans. Erroll F. Rhodes, William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, Grand Rapids, Michigan, 1995, p. 119.
  2. a b C. R. Gregory , "Text Critique of the New Testament", Leipzig 1900, vol. 1, p. 75. Digitizedhttp: //vorlage_digitalisat.test/1%3D~GB%3D~IA%3Dtextkritikdesne00greggoog~MDZ%3D%0A~SZ%3Dn87~doppelseiten%3D~LT%3D~PUR%3D
  3. ^ Frederick Henry Ambrose Scrivener : A Plain Introduction to the Criticism of the New Testament , Volume 1 1894, p. 147.
  4. ^ SP Tregelles , "An Introduction to the Critical Study and Knowledge of the Holy Scriptures", London 1856, p. 180.

literature