Uncial 0136
Uncial 0136 | |
---|---|
text | Gospel of Matthew 14; 25–26 † |
language | Greek- Arabic |
date | 9th century |
Found | Sinai, Rendel Harris |
Storage location | Russian National Library |
size | 33 × 27 cm |
Type | Byzantine text type |
category | V |
Uncial 0136 (in the numbering by Gregory-Aland , from Soden ε 91) and Uncial 0137 is a Greek-Arabic uncial manuscript of the New Testament . It was dated to the 8th century using paleography .
The manuscript contains small parts of the Gospel of Matthew 14 : 6-13; 25.9-16 and 25.41-26.1 on three sheets of parchment (33 cm × 27 cm). It was written in two columns per page with 16 lines each in large uncial letters.
The codex comes from Sinai and is now in the Russian National Library (Gr. 281) in Saint Petersburg . Manuscript 0136 was part of the same codex as Uncial 0137. They were separated in the 19th century and cataloged with different numbers. Uncial 0137 contains the text of Math. 13.46–52. It is a Greco-Arabic diglotte. It was found by Rendel Harris on Sinai. Uncial 0137 is located as Harris 9 in St. Catherine's Monastery on Sinai.
The Greek text of the manuscript represents the Byzantine text type . Aland placed it in Category V a.
See also
Individual evidence
- ↑ a b 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, pp. 120-121.
- ↑ CR Gregory , "Textkritik des Neues Testament", Leipzig 1900, Volume 1, p. 96.
literature
- J. Rendel Harris , Biblical Fragments from Mount Sinai (London, 1890), pp. 25, 26.
- Hermann von Soden, The Writings of the New Testament, in their oldest accessible text form based on their text history , Verlag von Arthur Glaue, Berlin 1902, p. 89.
- Kurt Treu , The Greek Manuscripts of the New Testament in the USSR; a systematic evaluation of the text manuscripts in Leningrad, Moscow, Kiev, Odessa, Tbilisi and Erevan , T & U 91 (Berlin, 1966), pp. 116–117.