Papyrus Bookrolls with Jewish and Christian Content
This close study of 40 extant fragments of papyrus bookrolls with Jewish and Christian content focuses on details like format and scribal habits that might suggest distinct scribal communities. The study isolates three groups. (1) Nine BCE-era Septuagint papyri from Egypt and the Judaean desert with striking similarities in high-quality script and generous formatting, suggesting a trans-mediterranean community of scribes with definite ideas about the proper look and feel of Septuagint manuscripts on papyrus. (2) Seven Septuagint bookrolls from the Common Era that resemble classical literary rolls in format and handwriting but include features like nomina sacra and the Paleo-Hebrew tetragrammaton, suggesting production in specialized workshops. (3) Twenty-four Christian-content rolls from the same era that exhibit features like wide columns, untrained hands, and inconsistent punctuation, indicating informal or “private” copies produced by copyists not from the pool of scribes used to create bookrolls with classical Greek texts.
Duke Scholars
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Related Subject Headings
- Religions & Theology
- 5005 Theology
- 5004 Religious studies
- 2204 Religion and Religious Studies
Citation
Published In
EISSN
ISSN
Publication Date
Publisher
Related Subject Headings
- Religions & Theology
- 5005 Theology
- 5004 Religious studies
- 2204 Religion and Religious Studies