The Codex Wizanburgensis 99 is an 8th-century Latin Vulgate manuscript of the New Testament.[1][2][3][4]
Contents
editThe Wizanburgensis contains the homilies of Augustine, the Catholic Epistles and the Letters to Timothy, Titus and Philemon among some other works.[5] It is the oldest Latin Vulgate manuscript to contain the Johannine Comma in its main text, with the addition of the words 'sicut et'. [6][7][2][8]
References
edit- ^ Bengel, Johann Albrecht (1858). Gnomon of the New Testament.
- ^ a b Düsterdieck, Friedr (1854). Die drei johanneischen Briefe: Mit einem vollständigen theologischen Commentare (in German). Dieterich.
- ^ Dabney, Robert Lewis. Discussions of Robert Lewis Dabney Vol. 1: Evangelical and Theological.
in the University Library of Dublin, which is supposed by some to be of little authority, because suspected of having been conformed to the Latin ; and in the Codex Wizaniurgensis, which Lachmann reckons of the eighth century.
- ^ Lachmann, Carl Conrad F. W. (1850). Novum Testamentum Graece et Latine [the latter being the Vulgate version]. C. Lachmannus recens., P. Buttmannus Graecae lectionis auctoritates apposuit (in Greek).
- ^ FirstJohnCh5v7
- ^ Robert, Jamieson. Jamieson, Fausset, and Brown Commentary, Volume 4: Phillipians to Revelations. Delmarva Publications, Inc.
- ^ Bengel, Johann Albrecht (2024-08-02). Gnomon of the New Testament: Vol. V. BoD – Books on Demand. ISBN 978-3-385-55186-2.
- ^ Ebert, Friedrich Adolf (1825). Zur handschriftenkunde (in German). Steinacker und Hartknoch.