"The Gestation of the Codex" or, "From Scroll and Tablets to Codex and Beyond"



Download 0.89 Mb.
Page12/12
Date16.08.2017
Size0.89 Mb.
#33137
1   ...   4   5   6   7   8   9   10   11   12
[[check for more reviews!!]]

Review by Eldon Jay Epp, Journal of Biblical Literature 105.2 (Jun., 1986) 359-361

Mostly a report, with some emphasis on the speculative nature of the relationship to early Christianity.



Review by G. D. Kilpatrick, Vigiliae Christianae 38.4 (Dec., 1984) 409-412

Problem of Pauline authorship of Pastorals; early use of Mark; connection of (Greek) Roman Christianity with Latin Roman evidence; simplistic argument for nomina sacra unity; place of the epistles in canon formation. Kilpatrick himself is inclined to emphasize Christian desire to differentiate from Judaism in both codex and nomina sacra choices.

Review by Rosamond McKitterick [Oxford Journals page] Library (1985) 360-363

The codex, however, antedates the formation of the Gospel canon and is very difficult to link with it. This part of the discussion would have been enriched had the possible ownership of the surviving books, the market for the new format and the question of who would have been reading these books been considered, for the manuscripts and their proposed context seem to have significant implications for levels and use of literacy among the Christian communities of the ancient world. (363)


[also qustions the actual isolation of Egypt in bookmaking, arguing for possible imports having much effect]


Review by Peter J. Parsons, Classical Review (1987) 82-84

Offers several queries and corrections, noted above in the appropriate places in the text. Also check:  "P. 13 The reference, Asc., In Mil. 29, has dropped out" [presumably was present in the earlier CHR version?].


Note by J. David Thomas in his obituary for T.C.Skeat:

Skeat's other major contirbution to palaeographical and codicological studies was the book he produced with Colin Roberts, The Birth of the Codex ( based in part on a previous article by Roberts in the Proceedings of the British Academy). Although in some respects controversial and by no means the last word on the subject, this book is fundamental for any examination of this extremely complicated problem, and has been reprinted more than once. Also of enormous value is the chapter on Early Christian Book-Production [[1969, reprinted in Elliott]], which he contributed to the Cambridge History of the Bible (an Italian translation appeared as a separate volume in 1976).


Additional Bibliography and Information [see email file "codex" -- main items copied below]



http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/awiesner/oralit.html [early depictions of scrolls and writing tablets]
http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/jod/texts/transformations.syllabus.html [O'Donnell syllabus]
http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/jod/texts/cultures.bib.html [more recent O'Donnell comments and bibliographical notes]
Gary Frost, Adoption of the Codex Book: Parable of a New Reading Mode [online, secondary but generally accurate]
David Ganz, The Ancient and Early Medieval Book [site, good bibliography]
good bibliography! http://classics.rutgers.edu/bookbib.html
Jason T. Larson, review of Trobisch, David. The First Edition of the New Testament. Oxford/New York: Oxford University Press, 2000. ISBN: 0-19-511240-7. pp. viii+175. US $29.95.
John Bodel, Pliny and the Book http://classics.rutgers.edu/bookbib.html
Julia Holloway information page = http://www.umilta.net/folio.html

Elliott obituary for Skeat

Date: Wed, 12 Apr 2000 10:31:43 -0400
Subject: The Codex
From: joseph pope [JoePope@compuserve.com]

Further to to the discussion regarding the supplanting of the scroll by the codex it has been believed generally that the codex developed over time from the wooden tablets used by Roman schoolchildren for writng. Two or three of these tablets would be held together by a leather thong at top left corner of tablets.   Startling confirmation for this hypothesis was found about a dozen years ago at excavations at Dakleh Oasis 400 miles south of Alexandria and 240 miles west of Luxor.  There was found at the bottom of steps leading to a domestic kitchen the earliest extant codex in the form of nine boards measuring 14 by 5 inches bound together with four thongs.  This primitive codex is dated to c. 295 AD.  The surface is gesso. On it is written in Greek three works by Isocrates.  Thus the earliest extant copy of anything by him.  I have used photos of this discovery in my lectures on the history of the book to great effect for the past five years.


Joe Pope

[and later, from Heaps, on possible Jewish codices]


J. H. Breasted, "The Physical Processes in Writing in the Early Orient
and Their Relation to the Origin of the Alphabet." American Journal of
Semitic Languages and Literatures, XXXII (1915-16), 230-49.
F. G. Kenyon, Ancient Books and Modern Discoveries (1927).
J. P. Hyatt, "The Writing of an Old Testament Book,"  Biblical
Archaelogist, VI (1943), 71-80.
D. Diringer, The Alphabet (1947).
G. R. Driver,  Semitic Writing from Pictgraph to Alphabet (2nd ed.,
1954).

[Jim O'Donnell] It is remarkable that the selection of the codex and the formation of the canon are both utterly fundamental decisions we know early Christians made and there is no evidence for who made them or how they made them.

"Kevin P. Keane"
Why, finally, does Cicero speak of inchoare librum rather than volumen if the codex as a common format was so far in the future?

Julia Bolton Holloway, Hermit of the Holy Family, Librarian,


Biblioteca e Bottega Fioretta Mazzei, Cimitero 'Degli Inglesi'
Piazzale Donatello 38, 50132 FIRENZE, Italy  e-mail: juliana@tin.it
websites: http://www.umilta.net  http://www.florin.ms
I'd appreciate help from the list. Am looking at book cupboards in late antiquity, as well as capsas of scrolls.
Have decided to put the Ezra illumination from the Codex Amiatinus up, with its book cupboard, side by side with the book cupboard in the tomb mosaic for Galla Placidia in Ravenna at http://www.florin.ms/aleph.html, with Laurentian Library dott.ssa Franca Arduini's essay on the Codex Amiatinus. The cupboards are remarkably similar, though one has nine codices of the Bible, is of wood, inlaid with ivory birds, animals, geometrical figures, while the other, with the four codices of the Gospels, the kind Boethius described in the Consolation, is all of ivory. Both bind their books in kermes red. Those in Amiatinus even have two delicate red leather straps to hold the boards on the sides. What other examples of such book cupboards should I think of?
And is there any significance to early Christian tombs of women, Domitilla in the Catacombs with a capsa of biblical scrolls, Galla Placidia in Ravenna with a Gospels cupboard? For this stress on literacy? (One can see it also in classical women's tomb portraits where they have styli to their lips.)
I've done a blow-up of the Tyronian notes on Ezra's folios in the Amiatinus. Anyone game to try to read them? We'd publish the interpretation, if valid, in the Proceedings of the City and the Book congress just held on the Codex Amiatinus.

[Sigrid] Hebrew Manuscripts in the Biblioteca Palatina in Parma


> The Parma library boasts one of the largest collections of Hebrew manuscripts in Europe - close to 1600 codices - the great majority of them dating to the Middle Ages. The collection is particularly rich in Biblical manuscripts (500 MSS), biblical exegesis (200), talmudic and halakhic works (200), liturgy (250), philosophy (150), kabbalah (100), and sciences (75).
The manuscripts were described by the staff of the Institute of Microfilmed Hebrew Manuscripts in the Jewish National and University Library. The catalogue was edited by the director of the Institute, Benjamin Richler. Paleographical and codicological descriptions were prepared by Prof. Malachi Beit-Arie, Director of the Hebrew Palaeography Project.

[11 July 1990 Humanist, from Marc Bregman]


 Haran, Menachem
"Book-Scrolls in Israel in Pre-Exilic Times", Journal of Jewish Studies 33:1-2, (1982), pp. 161-173.
"Book-Scrolls at the Beginning of the Second Temple Period -- The Transition from Papyrus to Skins", Hebrew Union College Annual 54 (1983), pp. 111-122.
"More Concerning Book Scrolls in Pre-Exilic Times", Journal of Jewish Studies 35 (1984), pp. 84-85.
"Book Size and the Device of Catch Lines in the Biblical Canon", Journal of Jewish Studies 36 (1985), pp. 1-11.
"Bible Scrolls in Eastern and Western Jewish Communities from Qumran to the High Middle Ages", Hebrew Union College Annual 56 (1985), pp. 21-62.
"The Codex, the Pinax and the Wooden Slats", Tarbiz 57 (1988), pp. 151-164 [Hebrew with English abstract]
Book Size and the Thematic Cycles in the Pentateuch," Die Hebraeische Bibel und ihre zweifache Nachgeschichte -- Festschrift fuer Rolf Rendtorff zum 65. Geburtstag, ed. E. Blum, C. Macholz u. E. W. Stegemann
See http://www3.iath.virginia.edu/lists_archive/Humanist/v04/date.html#271

[Lupia]
Papyri codices of the New Testament


P1=     12-13 x 25 cm (mid. 3rd cent.)
P2 =    25 x 15 cm (4th-5th cent.)
P3=     25 x 18 cm (6th cent.)
P4=     18 x 14 cm (c. 150-175)
P5=     25-26 x 14-13 cm (early 3rd cent.)
P6=     25 x 18 cm (4th-5th cent.)
P7=     26.3 x 15.2 cm (4th-5th cent.)
P8=     25 x 15 cm (4th cent.)
P9=     11 x 14-15 cm (3rd cent.)
Parchment codices (Bibles and/or New Testaments)
(01) Codex Sinaiticus =                 43 x 38 cm (4th cent.)
(02)  Codex Alexandrinus =      32 x 26 cm (5th cent.)
(03) Codex Vaticanus =          27 x 27 cm (4th cent.)
(04) Codex Ephraemi=            33 x 27 cm (5th cent.)
(05) Codex Bezae=               26 x 21.5 cm (5th cent.)
(06) Codex Claromantanus=       24.5 x 19.5 cm (6th cent.)
(016) Codex Freerianus =        25 x 20 cm (5th cent.)
(022) Codex Petropolitanus =    32 x 27 cm (6th cent.)
(023) Codex Sinopensis =        32 x 25 cm (6th cent.)
(024) Codex Guelferbytanus A =  26.5 x 21.5 cm (6th cent.)
(026) Codex Guelferbytanus B =  26.5 x 21.5 cm (5th cent.)
(027) Codex Nitrensis =         29.5 x 23.5 cm (6th cent.)
(029) Codex Borgianus =         26 x 21 cm (5th cent.)
(032) Codex Freerianus e        21 x 14.3 cm (5th cent.)

[Eugene Vance] In many 4th c. Christian sarcophagi, one sees the transmission of the Law from Christ to Peter as the bestowal of a scroll. However in a few sarcophagi one sees St. Paul, usually to the right of Christ, receiving a codex, and receiving it directly from heaven and not from Christ. While I have my own hunches about the significance of this detail, I wonder if there is some obvious primary iconographical reference here that eludes me. Any leads?


[and also later] What interests me, though, is the fact that the iconography depicts this revelation specifically as a codex, possibly as a counterpoint to the "law" handed to Peter as a scroll-- a counterpoint between archetypes that is highly emphasized in Ravenna. It is interesting that, as Harry Gamble argues convincingly, the first Christian codices to circulate as such in Christian culture in the late 1st and early 2nd centuries were the writings of Paul, thus giving to the codex a new and privileged place in the spiritual culture of the Church.

[Dirk Jongkind] I am trying to find the earliest examples of codices consisting of more than one quire. This can mean either the survival of two or more quires or the mere presence of a quire-number somewhere in the margin. So far the following MSS head the list for papyrus and parchment respectively:


Papyrus: P.Chester Beatty I (P45; gospels and Acts); III
Parchment: P. Rylands 1 53 (Pack 1106; Homer; quire number present); III/IV
Any further suggestions?
[Have no access to Turner's Typology at the moment; both copies in Cambridge have disappeared!?]

I remember an article by T. C. Skeat in which he suggests that P4 (Luke 1-6) may be from the same MS as P64/67 (Matt 3-26). If his thesis is correct, then this would have been a sizable MS (four gospels?). P46 could get away with one quire, but must have been pushing the boundary of a practical codex (i.e. one that folds flattish and in which the central leaves don't have to be trimmed too much.) If P4 is from the same codex as P64/67, then this would be a candidate for an early multiple quire codex as well. [Tim Finney]

Wieland Willker
Well, if that is allowed, then of course also P66 is allowed, which (acc. to Aland) consisted of several quires, too. There are also quite substantial LXX codices from the 2nd CE, but I don't know of quire numbers.

--
Date: Fri, 22 Jun 90 12:08 GMT


From: Don Fowler
Subject: RE: 4.0213 History of the Codex? (1/26)

The standard work on the introduction of the codex is C. H. Roberts and T. C. Skeat The Birth of the Codex london 1983, though many areas remain controversial. But one should be very careful about excessive technological determinism. There is a lot of re-evaluation going on of the notion of orality and its effects in Greco-roman culture, and a growing scepticism about the sort of stuff Havelock and others pushed out. The development of literary scholarship as we know it - a concern for exact wording, even down to questions of punctuation and accentuation - took place in the Greco-roman world in the 3rd C B.C.E. when scrolls were the norm. That was also the period when the order of works was fixed for many authors. But try asking a Sanskritist about the way Panini and the other grammars were (indeed are) discussed orally and you will see that the question of respect for the word and literacy are much more complicated than fanatics like Ong make out. There's a huge bibliography.

Don Fowler.
---

Eric G. Turner entitled The Typology of the Early Codex (U. Penn. Press, 1977): In his preface Turner


apologizes for his use of the term "Christian" to mean "biblical" as follows:

I have used "Christian" as a blanket term to describe theological, religious, polemical or scriptural works that are obviously not "Greek literature" [sic! from a classicist's perspective]. I wish I had used a more neutral terminology. Dr. K. Treu has recently pointed out ... that a number of anomalies make it less certain than has been generally supposed that the use of the codex form and certain standardized _nomina sacra_ are firm evidence that the text concerned is of Christian ambiance. [Preface, xxii]


//to be continued//



 
Download 0.89 Mb.

Share with your friends:
1   ...   4   5   6   7   8   9   10   11   12




The database is protected by copyright ©ininet.org 2024
send message

    Main page