Abstract
The Ambr. MS A 147 inf., known as F in editions of the Septuagint, was written in the early 5th Century. It was considerably restored at the end of the 11th Century: all the writing was been retraced, some sheets were replaced, and a great number of corrections and notes were added. A palaeographical and codicological description of the MS is here given, focusing on its medieval restorations. A selection of notes and variant readings added in the margins are edited and commented. Many annotations quote from the Church Fathers and from the Hexapla, or add explanations from lexicographers;
they are product of a Christian school. The variants show a knowledge of
Aquila’s text and of other Greek translations, very close to the Hebrew text and belonging to the group of the ‘Jewish revisions’. Thus, F marginal notes attest to the usage by a Christian milieu of a Greek text of the Bible produced and used by Jewish communities. F arrived at the Ambrosiana Library from Macedonia
in the 17th Century.
Titolo tradotto del contributo | [Autom. eng. transl.] For the history of the Ambrosian Hexateuch A 147 inf. |
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Lingua originale | Italian |
pagine (da-a) | 299-339 |
Numero di pagine | 41 |
Rivista | AEVUM |
Volume | 83 |
Stato di pubblicazione | Pubblicato - 2009 |
Keywords
- Catenae
- Constantinople Polyglott Pentateuch
- Lexica
- Nikandros
- Philippos Paupantos
- bibliotheca ambrosiana
- greek manuscript
- hexaplaric readings
- jewish tradition
- marginal readings
- septuagint
- tabernacle account