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Codex Borgianus, designated by T or 029 (in the Gregory-Aland numbering), ε 5 (von Soden), is a Greek and of the , dated to the 5th century.

(1995). 9780802840981, William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company. .
The name of the codex came from its former owners.


Contains
The Greek text of the codex contains:

  • Luke 6:18-26; 18:2-9.10-16; 18:32-19:8; 21:33-22:3; 22:20-23:20; 24:25-27; 29-31;
  • John 1:24-32; 3:10-17; 4:52-5:7; 6:28-67; 7:6-8:31.

The Sahidic text of the codex contains:

  • Luke 6:11-18; 17:29-18:9; 18:?-42; 21:25-32; 22:12-23:11; 24:18-19; 24:21-23;
  • John 1:16-23; 3:2-10; 4:45-52; 6:21-58; 6:58-8:23.


Description
The codex contains 17 parchment leaves (), with fragments of the Gospel of Luke 6, 17-19, 21-24 and Gospel of John 1, 3-4, 6-8. The manuscript is written in two columns per page, 26-33 lines per page, with the Greek and Sahidic on facing pages. Lines are very short, only 6, 7, 8, and 9 letters in lines. It is written in large letters compressed only on the edge. The letters are square. Tischendorf suggested the scribe was a Copt, because the letters often show Coptic forms. There is no notation of sections or other divisions. The shapes of alpha and iota are specially noticeable. It has no accents and breathings.


Text
The Greek text of this is a secondary representative of the Alexandrian text-type (named also Egyptian text) with a mixture of the Byzantine readings. placed it in Category II. and Barbara Aland, The Text of the New Testament..., pp. 113, 160. The Alexandrian text of the Gospel of John stands in close relationship to the Codex Vaticanus, and P75.Bruce M. Metzger, Bart D. Ehrman, The Text of the New Testament: Its Transmission, Corruption and Restoration, Oxford University Press, 2005, p. 80.

The text of is omitted, as in codices p75, א*, A, , 1071.UBS3, p. 305

It does not contain John 5:4 (0125) or the Pericope Adulterae ().UBS3, pp. 337, 356.

It reads βηθαβαρα in John 1:28 and βηθσαιδα in John 5:2.


History
The manuscript came from the . It once belonged to Cardinal , hence the name of the codex.

Fragments of the codex were discovered independently at separate times and were numbered 029, 0113, 0125, and 0139. Together they have 23 leaves. "It appears that the ignorant monk who brought this manuscript with him from Egypt to Europe, was so unaware of its value, that he lost the greater part of the leaves".S. P. Tregelles, "An Introduction to the Critical study and Knowledge of the Holy Scriptures", London 1856, p. 180

The text of Codex 029 was carefully edited in 1789 by A. A. Giorgi.A. A. Giorgi, Fragmentum evangelii S. Johannis Graecum Copto-Sahidicum, Rome 1789. The manuscript was examined by , who collated the Greek text of 029. Birch gave this description of the codex:

Codex in membranis scriptus est, charactere unciali quadro, graeco textui adjecta est versio coptica. Vehementer sane dolendum, particulam tam exiguam eximini codicis servatam esse, ex quo, si integrum aetas tulisset, plurima ad textus emendationem peti potuissent.A. Birch, Variae Lectiones ad Textum IV Evangeliorum, Haunie 1801, p. LVII
purchased two pages in 1912 in Cairo for John Pierpont Morgan.


Present location
A few leaves from Uncial 070, formerly designated by Ta, were wrongly listed by Tregelles as a part of the same codex to which Borgianus belonged.

The codex is located at the (Borgia Coptic 109), in New York City (Pierpont Morgan M 664A), and in (BnF Copt. 129).


See also
  • List of New Testament uncials
  • Coptic versions of the Bible
  • Textual criticism


Further reading


External links

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