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  • ...ent) Tregelles (Horne, 106) exhibits "the genealogy of the text" thus. The manuscripts placed together are those related in character of text; those placed under ...ion, (1546), which was based on a collation of manuscripts, in the Royal [[Library]] with the Complutensian text. </p> <p> ''The Editions Of Beta And Elzevir.
    125 KB (19,941 words) - 11:25, 15 October 2021
  • | now at = [[British Library]] The '''Codex Alexandrinus''' (London, [[British Library]], Royal MS 1. D. V-VIII; [[Biblical manuscript#Gregory-Aland|Gregory-Aland]] no. ''
    66 KB (9,278 words) - 11:29, 11 October 2021
  • ...the New Testament writers wrote. There are in existence over five thousand manuscripts of the Greek New Testament (in part or in whole), and although these increa ...d White, Pars Prior, p. xii). Wordsworth and White’s F. </p> <p> V. Gothic Manuscripts:— </p> <p> <b> 1. </b> [[Upsala]] University, the ‘Codex Argenteus.’
    52 KB (8,183 words) - 10:08, 13 October 2021
  • Text And Manuscripts Of The New Testament <ref name="term_9172" /> ...w Testament with the first suggestion as to genealogical classification of manuscripts. J. J. Wetstein of [[Basel]] and Amsterdam, though a very great collector o
    47 KB (7,772 words) - 08:27, 15 October 2021
  • ...he present article may be seen in <em> Facsimiles from Biblical MSS in the British Museum </em> (1900). The best edition of the Clementine Vulgate is that of ...was taken; nor was it known at that time, that the more ancient the Greek manuscripts and the other versions were, the closer was their agreement with the Vulgat
    112 KB (18,524 words) - 08:28, 15 October 2021
  • ...al B. In some cases it may be argued that the text of the LXX Septuagint [[Manuscripts]] was influenced by the NT; but this objection is greatly minimized by the ...amaritan Pentateuch, or that the translators of the Septuagint made use of manuscripts written in ancient characters. Next to the Pentateuch, for ability and fide
    103 KB (16,641 words) - 08:18, 15 October 2021
  • Biblical. Manuscripts <ref name="term_49622" /> ...Manuscripts). '''K,''' (of the Epistles), ''Codex Mosquensis'' (98 in the Library of the [[Holy]] [[Synod]] at Moscow), containing the Catholic and Pauline E
    32 KB (5,399 words) - 11:09, 15 October 2021
  • ..., with illuminations, was prepared for Cromwell himself, and is now in the library of St. John’s College, Cambridge.] </p> <p> <strong> 23. </strong> The fi ...writes judiciously also on the Wycliffe period and on the Revised Version (British and American). The Wycliffe period should also be studied in Forshall and M
    114 KB (19,458 words) - 07:46, 15 October 2021
  • ...wever, Dr. [[W.]] Cureton discovered, among the manuscripts brought to the British Museum from the convent of [[S.]] Maria Deipara in the Nitrian desert in Eg
    36 KB (6,026 words) - 00:05, 13 October 2021
  • ...Ages, and recovered by Ceriani in an old Latin version in the Ambrosian [[Library]] at [[Milan]] in 1861. </p> <p> <i> Contents </i> .—Moses calls to himse ...This was found, like so many other treasures, by Ceriani in the Ambrosian Library, Milan. Jer is the principal spokesman in the book. It is revealed to him t
    136 KB (22,943 words) - 14:47, 16 October 2021
  • ...s, apocalyptic and apocryphal, were competing for a place in the religious library. There is no means of showing how or when the third group was separated fro ...rantable; (3) that the Septuagint version as we know it from the Christian manuscripts extant is by no means a sufficient proof that the Alexandrians possessed a
    88 KB (14,696 words) - 16:21, 14 October 2021
  • ...profit a monument which had been a useless, though a glorious, monument of British valour. The inscription upon this celebrated stone proved to be a decree of ...f many scrolls. This kind of book has become known as a codex. (See also [[Manuscripts]] .) </p>
    125 KB (20,438 words) - 14:04, 14 October 2021
  • ...hville: Broadman Press, 1987). </p> <p> Archaeology has supplied <i> older manuscripts </i> of Bible texts than those previously depended on, examples of objects
    54 KB (8,875 words) - 23:32, 12 October 2021
  • ...tual family-tree of Jesus. It may well be believed that descendants of the royal house treasured the record of their origin; and on the other hand it seems ...uke 6:1, the Alexandrinus manuscript, but the Sinaiticus and the Vaticanus manuscripts omit it), and proclaiming Himself its Lord. They resolve to "destroy" Him (
    353 KB (59,740 words) - 13:33, 13 October 2021
  • ...ons" formed no part of the book, though they exist in all Greek and Syriac manuscripts of Daniel, which have come down to us. Probably the "additions" existed as
    32 KB (5,508 words) - 14:53, 16 October 2021
  • ...p> <p> Besides these, there are several MSS. known to exist chiefly in the British libraries. Some of these are noticed in Bentley's Critica Sacra, edited by
    28 KB (4,606 words) - 11:02, 15 October 2021
  • ...ish biblical scholarship. The American reader will see differences between British English and American English. </p> <p> Roman Catholics issued the [[Jerusal
    11 KB (1,812 words) - 23:32, 12 October 2021
  • ...(See [[Canon]] .) Moreover God has preserved by human means a multitude of manuscripts, patristic quotations, and ancient versions, enabling us to restore the ori ...have a correct copy is quite another question. The variations in the Greek manuscripts do not affect any one of the fundamental doctrines of Christianity, and onl
    278 KB (46,715 words) - 13:32, 13 October 2021
  • ...''תורה''''' (Vienna, 1852, 2 vols. Svo). This edition was reprinted by the British and Foreign Bible Society at Berlin, with the corrections of [[Theophilus]]
    32 KB (5,053 words) - 16:49, 15 October 2021
  • ...(Tauchnitz edition) with the various readings of the three most celebrated manuscripts has done much to familiarize the ordinary English reader with the materials
    22 KB (3,505 words) - 08:28, 15 October 2021

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