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The prologues are, however, of no value as a historical source for the evangelists' backgrounds. They rely on the biblical text itself and various unreliable traditions as sources. [6] The earlier anti-Marcionite prologue to Luke was a source, but not the other two anti-Marcionite prologues. [7]
The anti-Marcionite prologues are three short prefaces to the gospels of Mark, Luke and John. No prologue to Matthew is known. They were originally written in Greek, but only the prologue to Luke survives in the original language. All three were translated into Latin and are preserved in some 40 manuscripts of the Vulgate Bible. [2]
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The schema is very similar to that of the Text Encoding Initiative, though on the one hand much simpler (by omission of many unneeded constructs), and on the other hand adding much more detailed metadata, and a formal canonical reference system to identify books, chapters, verses, and particular locations within verses.
This is a documentation subpage for Template:Books of the Bible. It may contain usage information, categories and other content that is not part of the original template page. See also
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This {{Religious text primary}} template can be copy-pasted to the very top of the page/article, where it will produce a banner like the one at the top of this template page. Usage This template says that an article uses primary source documents from a religion or religious text, and it needs more reliable secondary sources.