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Catalog of Greek Christian Miniature Codices

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Abstract The catalog in this chapter and the next represents the miniature codices included in this study. As noted in chapter 1, the study restricts itself here to miniature codices that are less than 12 cm in breadth, contain distinctively Christian content (New Testament texts, non-canonical writings, and other patristic and liturgical texts), are from the “early” stages of manuscripts (by which we mean they are majuscule texts), and utilize the Greek language (though bilingual codices, or portions thereof, are included if one of the languages is Greek). The manuscripts are divided into three major categories: New Testament texts, non-canonical texts, and liturgical–ritual texts. This chapter only covers New Testament texts. For each manuscript, the following information is provided: unique manuscript number, content, dimensions, date, material, catalog numbers (Trismegistos/LDAB, Van Haelst), brief description (noting key scribal conventions and palaeographical features), and select bibliography.
Title: Catalog of Greek Christian Miniature Codices
Description:
Abstract The catalog in this chapter and the next represents the miniature codices included in this study.
As noted in chapter 1, the study restricts itself here to miniature codices that are less than 12 cm in breadth, contain distinctively Christian content (New Testament texts, non-canonical writings, and other patristic and liturgical texts), are from the “early” stages of manuscripts (by which we mean they are majuscule texts), and utilize the Greek language (though bilingual codices, or portions thereof, are included if one of the languages is Greek).
The manuscripts are divided into three major categories: New Testament texts, non-canonical texts, and liturgical–ritual texts.
This chapter only covers New Testament texts.
For each manuscript, the following information is provided: unique manuscript number, content, dimensions, date, material, catalog numbers (Trismegistos/LDAB, Van Haelst), brief description (noting key scribal conventions and palaeographical features), and select bibliography.

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