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Full Description
The Euthalian tradition is a complex and pervasive set of late ancient prefaces, lists, divisions, and other paratexts transmitted alongside Acts, the Catholic Epistles, and Pauline Epistles, preserved (at least in part) in over 600 Greek manuscripts. This book catalogues the extent of the Euthalian tradition, introducing these features, pointing to their significance for research on the New Testament, and mapping their distribution in manuscripts produced from the sixth century onward. This catalogue is a tool for further research on the New Testament's Greek manuscripts, reception history, and intellectual context.
Contents
Acknowledgements
Introduction
1 The Euthalian Tradition and Its Features
2 Additional Items Not Catalogued
3 The Corpus
4 Using the Catalogue
5 Using the Feature Inventory
6 The Euthalian Tradition and Catenae: A Test Case
Catalogue
A Substantial Witnesses (22)
B Intermediate Witnesses (245)
C Chapter Lists and/or Hypotheses Only (264)
D In-Text Annotations Only (19)
E Miscellaneous Witnesses (40)
F Fragmentary Witnesses (37)
G Manuscripts with No Euthalian Material (162)
H Manuscripts Not Marked in the Catalogue (106)
Features Inventory
Catena Cross-Reference List
Bibliography
Gregory-Aland and Ditykon Number Index