Researchers supported by the University of Glasgow have discovered dozens of previously lost pages from one of the earliest manuscripts of the New Testament by the apostle Paul.
The unearthed documents (42 pages in total) shed new light on how early Christians studied the Bible. A research team from the university said the documents are part of Codex H, a 6th century Greek manuscript that includes Paul’s letters.
Researchers have discovered a major advance in New Testament research after recovering dozens of long-lost pages from what is believed to be one of the oldest known manuscript collections of the Apostle Paul’s letters. pic.twitter.com/Af8yYRgGB6
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“The breakthrough came from an important starting point,” explained lead professor Garrick Allen. “We knew that at some point, the manuscript had been reinked. The chemicals in the new ink caused ‘offset’ damage to the facing pages, essentially creating a mirror image of the text on the opposite leaf. It left marks several pages deep in some cases, barely visible to the naked eye, but very clear using modern imaging technology.”
This manuscript, known as GA 015, was dismantled in a monastery on Mount Athos in the 13th century. At the time, it was common for parchment pages to be reused as binding for other books, resulting in parts of the manuscript being scattered in libraries across Europe, and many believed it to have been lost forever.
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One of the most surprising discoveries among the documents discovered are some of the earliest recorded chapter lists, which are very different from the way believers divide the Bible today.
Allen said: “Given that Codex H is such an important piece of evidence for understanding the Christian Bible, the discovery of this amount, as well as new evidence of what Codex H originally looked like, is nothing short of monumental.”
According to Artnet, multispectral imaging has made it possible to read 1,500-year-old documents, allowing researchers to identify ink marks that would otherwise be virtually impossible to see with the naked eye.
“In collaboration with the Early Manuscripts Electronic Library (EMEL), we used multispectral imaging to process images of extant pages to recover ‘ghost’ texts that no longer physically exist, effectively retrieving multiple pages of information from each physical page,” the researchers wrote. “To ensure historical accuracy, the research team collaborated with experts in Paris to carry out radiocarbon dating, confirming the parchment’s origins in the 6th century.”
Although the contents of the newly discovered document were already known, the unearthed document revealed an organizational style different from modern documents.
Paul’s written manuscripts feature the earliest known use of the Euthalian device, a form of annotation and classification that allows readers to find their place within a text, before the advent of page numbers, tables of contents, and indexes.
Only fragments of Codex H are currently available, but scholars believe the manuscript may have once contained hundreds of pages. Although many critics have long decried the reuse of parchment into other books, recycling practices may have preserved the fragments that exist today.
“Codex H is a very important piece of evidence for understanding the Christian Bible,” Allen says. “The discovery of this amount of evidence, as well as new evidence of its original appearance, is nothing short of monumental.”
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