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The Curetonian Gospels, designated by the siglum syr cur, are contained in a manuscript of the four gospels of the New Testament in Old Syriac. Together with the Sinaiticus Palimpsest the Curetonian Gospels form the Old Syriac Version, and are known as the Evangelion Dampharshe ("Separated Gospels") in the Syriac Orthodox Church. [1]
The manuscript is dated paleographically to the 5th century. It is called Curetonian Syriac, and is designated by Syr c. [5] The second manuscript is a palimpsest discovered by Agnes Smith Lewis at Saint Catherine's Monastery in 1892 at Mount Sinai called the Syriac Sinaiticus, and designated by Syr s.
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Syriac-language manuscripts of the New Testament include some of the earliest and most important witnesses for textual criticism of the New Testament. [citation needed] Over 350 Syriac manuscripts of the New Testament have survived into the 21st century. [citation needed] The majority of them represent the Peshitta version.
Syriac Sinaiticus, folio 82b, Gospel of Matthew 1:1-17. Superimposed, life of Saint Euphrosyne.. The Syriac Sinaiticus or Codex Sinaiticus Syriacus (syr s), known also as the Sinaitic Palimpsest, of Saint Catherine's Monastery (Sinai, Syr. 30), or Old Syriac Gospels is a late-4th- or early-5th-century manuscript of 179 folios, containing a nearly complete translation of the four canonical ...
Pages in category "Syriac manuscripts" The following 9 pages are in this category, out of 9 total. ... Curetonian Gospels; N. National Library of Russia, Codex Syriac 1;
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The Peshitta (Classical Syriac: ܦܫܺܝܛܬܳܐ or ܦܫܝܼܛܬܵܐ pšīṭta) is the standard version of the Bible for churches in the Syriac tradition.. The consensus within biblical scholarship, although not universal, is that the Old Testament of the Peshitta was translated into Syriac from Biblical Hebrew, probably in the 2nd century CE, and that the New Testament of the Peshitta was ...