Uncial 047


Uncial 047 is a Greek uncial manuscript of the Gospels. The codex is dated paleographically to the 8th century. Formerly the codex was designated by Hebrew letter ב. It has full marginalia.

Description

The codex contains on 152 parchment leaves almost complete text of the four Gospels, with some lacunae. The text is written partly in double columns and partly in cruciform, 37 or 38 lines per page. Parchment is thick, ink is brown. The letters are small.
The text is divided according to the κεφαλαια, whose numbers are given at the margin, and their τιτλοι at the top of the pages. There is also a division according to the smaller Ammonian Sections, with references to the Eusebian Canons.
It contains prolegomena, lists of the κεφαλαια before each Gospel, lectionary equipment on the margin, and Verses.
It does not contain the text of, text of John 5:3.4 is present, but they were marked by an obelus in the left-hand margin, indicating that the passage is doubtful. The pericope John 7:53-8:11 is not marked by an obelus or asterisk.
It uses the form ειπαν, typical of Koine Greek, instead of ειπον, typical of Byzantine Greek.

Lacunae

Matthew 2:15-3:12; 28:10-20; Mark 5:40-6:18; 8:35-9:19; John 2:17-42; 14:7-15:1; 18:34-21:25.

Text

The Greek text of this codex is a representative of the Byzantine text-type, Aland gave for it the following textual profile: 1751, 961/2, 62, 21s Aland placed it in Category V. Wisse recognized its text – in Luke 1; 10; 20 – as text of the textual family Kx. Hermann von Soden did not classify it in this group.
In John 1:29 it lacks ο Ιωαννης along with manuscripts Sinaiticus, Alexandrinus, Vaticanus, Cyprius, Campianus, Petropolitanus Purpureus, Vaticanus 354, Nanianus, Macedoniensis, Sangallensis, Koridethi, Petropolitanus, Athous Lavrensis, 045, 0141, 8, 9, 565, 1192.

History

Currently the manuscript is dated by the INTF to the 8th century.
The codex was discovered by Gregory in 1886, who gave the first description of the codex.
The codex was formerly held in the monastery of St. Andrew on Athos Peninsula. C. R. Gregory examined it in 1886. It was brought by Thomas Whittemore to the United States. Since 1942 the codex has been located in the Princeton University Library, in Princeton, New Jersey.