Minuscule 9

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New Testament manuscripts
PapyriUncialsMinusculesLectionaries
Minuscule 9
text Gospels
language Greek
date 1167
Storage location Bibliothèque nationale de France
size 23.5 x 17 cm
Type Byzantine text type
category V

Minuscule 9 (numbered after Gregory-Aland ), ε 279 ( Soden ) is a Greek minuscule manuscript of the New Testament on 298 sheets of parchment (23.5 cm × 17 cm). The manuscript was dated to the 12th century using paleography . However, it contains a colophon , which indicates the date 1167. It was written in one column per page with 20 lines each.

description

The Codex contains the full text of the four Gospels , the Eusebian Canon and Synaxarium . According to the colophon, it was written when "Manuel Porphyrogennetus was ruler of Constantinople , the Amauri of Jerusalem and William II (Sicily) ".

This codex was used by Robert Estienne in his Editio Regia of 1550, he references it as ιβ '. The code was in private hands and belonged to Peter Stella. It later became part of the Kuster collection (Kuster's Paris 3).

The code is currently in the Bibliothèque nationale de France (Gr. 83) in Paris .

The Greek text of the Codex represents the Byzantine text type .

See also

Individual evidence

  1. a b K. Aland, M. Welte, B. Köster, K. Junack, Brief List of the Greek Manuscripts of the New Testament , Walter de Gruyter, Berlin, New York 1994, p. 47.
  2. FHA Scrivener, A Plain Introduction ...
  3. ^ Caspar René Gregory : Text Criticism of the New Testament , Volume 1. JC Hinrichs'sche Buchhandlung, Leipzig 1900, pp. 129-130.
  4. ^ Kurt Aland, and Barbara Aland, "The Text of the New Testament: An Introduction to the Critical Editions and to the Theory and Practice of Modern Textual Criticism", transl. Erroll F. Rhodes, William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company , Grand Rapids, Michigan, 1995, p. 138.