Lectionary 1602

Lectionary 1602, designated by 1602 in the Gregory-Aland numbering, is a CopticGreek bilingual manuscript of the New Testament, on parchment leaves, dated paleographically to the 8th century.[1][2]

Lectionary 1602
New Testament manuscript
Coptic text
TextEvangelistarion
Date8th century
ScriptCoptic / Greek diglot
Now atUniversity of Michigan
Size36.2 by 28.4 cm

Description

The text is written in Greek Uncial letters, on 88 parchment leaves (36.2 by 28.4 cm), in 2 columns per page, and 28 lines per page.[1]

The codex contains Lessons from the four Gospels lectionary (Evangelistarium).

It has two endings to the Gospel of Mark (as in codices Codex Regius Ψ 099 0112 274mg 579).[3]

The codex is now located in the University of Michigan (P. Mich. Inv., Nr. 4942, 1 fol.) in Ann Arbor.[1]

gollark: Unless it doesn't.
gollark: Anyway, many of the bugs in potatOS come from stuff like the SPUDNET daemon not being subject to sandboxing, so people can fake events and stuff going to that in increasingly convoluted ways to make it execute code when it shouldn't.
gollark: It was used to provide sandboxed copies of potatOS for testing and stuff.
gollark: Or crane, my really, *really* broken sandboxingish thing.
gollark: Well, it sort of is, in that it complains lots if you try and delete SYSTEM32.

See also

References

  1. K. Aland, M. Welte, B. Köster, K. Junack, Kurzgefasste Liste der griechischen Handschriften des Neues Testaments, (Berlin, New York: Walter de Gruyter, 1994).
  2. Handschriftenliste at the Münster Institute
  3. Bruce M. Metzger, Bart D. Ehrman, "The Text of the New Testament: Its Transmission, Corruption and Restoration", Oxford University Press, Oxford 2005, p. 77.
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