Papyrus 20

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The original size of the leaves was 17 by 12 cm.
The original size of the leaves was 17 by 12 cm.
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The text is neatly written in upright semi-cursive letters. The main [[Nomina Sacra]] are used, but πατηρ/pater/father and ανθρωπος/anthropos/man are written out in full.<sup>[2]</sup>
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The text is neatly written in upright semi-cursive letters. The main [[Nomina sacra|Nomina Sacra]] are used, but πατηρ/pater/father and ανθρωπος/anthropos/man are written out in full.<sup>[2]</sup>
The Greek text of this codex is representative of the [[Alexandrian text-type]] (rather proto-Alexandrian). [[Kurt Aland|Aland]] placed it in [[Categories of New Testament manuscripts#Category I|Category I]].<sup>[1]</sup> This manuscript shows the greatest agreement with [[Codex Sinaiticus]] and [[Codex Vaticanus Graecus 1209|Vaticanus]],<sup>[3]</sup> but not with codices [[Codex Ephraemi Rescriptus|Ephraemi]], [[Codex Regius (New Testament)|Regius]] and other late Alexandrian manuscripts.<sup>[1]</sup>  
The Greek text of this codex is representative of the [[Alexandrian text-type]] (rather proto-Alexandrian). [[Kurt Aland|Aland]] placed it in [[Categories of New Testament manuscripts#Category I|Category I]].<sup>[1]</sup> This manuscript shows the greatest agreement with [[Codex Sinaiticus]] and [[Codex Vaticanus Graecus 1209|Vaticanus]],<sup>[3]</sup> but not with codices [[Codex Ephraemi Rescriptus|Ephraemi]], [[Codex Regius (New Testament)|Regius]] and other late Alexandrian manuscripts.<sup>[1]</sup>  

Revision as of 01:41, 15 January 2011

Papyrus 20 (in the Gregory-Aland numbering), designated by Image:C3945eee4633c095c5059f9a67aca5f7.png20, is an early copy of the New Testament in Greek. It is a papyrus manuscript of the Epistle of James, but it only contains Chapter 2:19-3:9. The manuscript has been paleographically assigned to the early 3rd century.[1]

Contents

Description

The original size of the leaves was 17 by 12 cm.

The text is neatly written in upright semi-cursive letters. The main Nomina Sacra are used, but πατηρ/pater/father and ανθρωπος/anthropos/man are written out in full.[2]

The Greek text of this codex is representative of the Alexandrian text-type (rather proto-Alexandrian). Aland placed it in Category I.[1] This manuscript shows the greatest agreement with Codex Sinaiticus and Vaticanus,[3] but not with codices Ephraemi, Regius and other late Alexandrian manuscripts.[1]

Philip Comfort has conjectured that the scribe who wrote Image:C3945eee4633c095c5059f9a67aca5f7.png20 was also the same scribe who wrote Image:C3945eee4633c095c5059f9a67aca5f7.png27, where the Greek letters α, β, δ, ε, λ, ι, μ, ν, ο, π, ρ, σ, ψ, υ, φ, ω are formed identically in both manuscripts.[]

It is currently housed at the Princeton University Library (AM 4117) in Princeton.[]

See also

References

Further reading

External links

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