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Papyrus 5

Papyrus 5
New Testament manuscript
Papyrus 5 - Oxyrhynchus 1781 - British Library, inv. 2484 - John 1, 20.jpg
Name P. Oxy. 208
Text John 1; 16; 20 †
Date ~250
Script Greek
Found Oxyrhynchus, Egypt
Now at British Library
Cite Grenfell & Hunt, Oxyrhynchus Papyri II, 1899, pp. 1 ff; XV, pp. 8-12.
Size 12.5 cm by 25 cm
Type Western text-type
Category I
Hand documentary hand
Note close to Codex Sinaiticus

Papyrus 5 (in the Gregory-Aland numbering), designated by siglum 5, is an early copy of the New Testament in Greek. It is a papyrus manuscript of the Gospel of John dating palaeographically to the early 3rd century. The papyrus is housed in the British Library. It has survived in a very fragmentary condition.

The text of the manuscript was reconstructed several times. Textually it is very close to Codex Sinaiticus, but with some exceptions.

The manuscript is a fragment of three leaves, written in one column per page, 27 lines per page. The surviving text of John are verses 1:23-31.33-40; 16:14-30; 20:11-17.19-20.22-25.

It was written in a documentary hand, in a round, upright uncial of medium size. It uses the nomina sacra with abbreviations (ΙΗΝ ΙΗΣ ΠΡ ΠΡΑ ΠΡΣ ΘΥ), though not for ανθρωπος.

There is a tendency to brevity, especially in omitting unnecessary pronouns and conjunctions.

According to reconstruction of Philip W. Comfort

In John 1:38 "οι δε" was added superlineary; αυ was deleted by dots above the letters.

In John 16:19 "ο" was added superlineary.

In John 16:29 αυτω was added superlineary.


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