New Testament manuscript |
|
Text | New Testament |
---|---|
Date | 11th-century |
Script | Greek |
Now at | Uppsala University |
Size | 17 cm by 12.5 cm |
Type | Byzantine |
Category | V |
Note | marginalia |
Minuscule 901 (in the Gregory-Aland numbering), δ 162 (von Soden), is an 11th-century Greek minuscule manuscript of the New Testament on parchment. It has marginalia. The manuscript has survived in its complete form.
The codex contains the text of the New Testament (without Book of Apocalypse), on 328 parchment leaves (size 17 cm by 12.5 cm), with some lacunae. The text is written in one column per page, 31 lines per page. It contains also liturgical books with hagiographies: Synaxarion and Menologion.
The order of books: Gospels, Acts of the Apostles, Catholic epistles, and Pauline epistles.
It has errors of Iota subscriptum.
It contains tables of the κεφαλαια (tables of contains) before each of the Gospels, Euthalian Apparatus, subscriptions at the end of each of the Gospels with numbers of στιχοι. It has so called Jerusalem Colophon.
The Greek text of the codex is a representative of the Byzantine. Hermann von Soden classified it to the textual family Iφβ.Kurt Aland placed it in Category V.