Uncial 041

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New Testament manuscripts
PapyriUncialsMinusculesLectionaries
Uncial 041
Codex Petropolitanus fols.  164v-165r.jpg
Surname Petropolitanus
character Π
text Gospels
language Greek
date 9th century
Storage location Russian National Library
size 14.5 x 10.5 cm
Type Byzantine text type
category V

The Codex Petropolitanus ( Gregory-Aland no. Π or 041 ; von Soden ε 73) is a Greek manuscript of the New Testament , which is dated to the 9th century. The handwriting is incomplete.

description

The manuscript consists of the four Gospels on 350 sheets of parchment with gaps (Matthew 3:12–4,17; 19.12–20.2; Luke 1.76–2.18; John 6.15–35; 8.6– 39; 9.21-10.3). Mark 16: 18–20 replaced in minuscule from around the 12th century. There are asterisks in John 5.4 and 8.3–11. The format is 14.5 × 10.5 cm, the text is in a column with 21 lines. The letters are small and inclined to the right, accents, alcohol asper and lenis are present.

text

The Greek text of the Codex represents the Byzantine text type and is assigned to Category V. The manuscript belongs together with the Codex Cyprius to the group Π.

History of manuscript

The manuscript belonged to the Parodi family in Smyrna and was given to the Russian emperor by Mr Parodi in 1859 at the instigation of Tischendorf .

The codex is kept in the Russian National Library (Gr. 34) in Saint Petersburg (hence Petropolitanus ).

See also

Individual evidence

  1. a b c Kurt Aland , 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 1981, ISBN 3-438-06011-6 , p. 123.
  2. ^ Kurt Aland: Synopsis Quattuor Evangeliorum. Locis parallelis evangeliorum apocryphorum et patrum adhibitis edidit. German Bible Society, Stuttgart 1996, p. XXIV.
  3. a b c d Caspar René Gregory , textual criticism of the New Testament. Volume 1. Hinrichs, Leipzig 1900, p. 85.
  4. ^ Silva Lake: Family and the Codex Alexandrinus. The Text According to Mark. Christophers, London 1937.

literature

Web links