03162nam 2200325 450 991047715230332120230329044929.0(CKB)5470000000568419(NjHacI)995470000000568419(EXLCZ)99547000000056841920230329d2016 uy 0engur|||||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierCommentaries, Catenae and Biblical Tradition Papers from the Ninth Birmingham Colloquium on the Textual Criticism of the New Testament : in association with the COMPAUL project /edited by H.A.G. Houghton[Place of publication not identified] :Gorgias Press ; :University of Birmingham,2016.1 online resource (350 pages)List of Contributors -- List of Abbreviations -- Preface -- 1 An Introduction to Greek New Testament Commentaries with a -- Preliminary Checklist of New Testament Catena Manuscripts. -- 2 The Context of Commentary: Non-Biblical Commentary in the Early Christian Period. -- 3 Biblical Catenae: Between Philology and History. -- 4 Catenae and the Art of Memory. -- 5 Parsing Paul: Layout and Sampling Divisions in Pauline Commentaries. -- 6 Resurrection Appearances in the Pauline Catenae. -- 7 The Reception of Scripture and Exegetical Resources in the Scholia in Apocalypsin (GA 2351). -- 8 Theodoret's Text of Romans. -- 9 Bethania, Bethara, or Bethabara: Fortunatianus of Aquileia and Origen's Commentary on John, with particular reference to John 1:28. -- 10 Ambrose the Appropriator: Borrowed Texts in a New Context in the Commentary on Luke. -- 11 Rufinus' Translation of Origen's Commentary on Romans. -- 12 The Transmission of Florus of Lyons' Expositio epistolarum beati -- Pauli apostoli. State of the Art and New Results. -- 13 Biblical Quotations in the Gothic Commentary on the Gospel of John (Skeireins). -- 14 An Overview of Research on Bohairic Catena Manuscripts on the Gospels with a Grouping of Arabic and Ethiopic (G̸ʲ̸z) Sources and a Checklist of Manuscripts. -- Index of Manuscripts -- Index of Biblical Passages -- Index of Subjects.In 2011, the European Research Council awarded Dr Hugh Houghton a Starting Grant to lead a five-year project investigating the earliest commentaries on Paul as sources for the biblical text. 1 This project, known by its acronym COMPAUL, was intended to build on Dr Houghton's doctoral work analysing Augustine's gospel citations. 2 The aim was to instigate a better understanding of commentaries and their contribution to the transmission of the New Testament in anticipation of two major editing projects: the Vetus Latina edition of the four principal letters of Paul and the Novum Testamentum Graecum Editio Critica Maior of all Pauline Epistles being planned by the IGNTP.Commentaries, Catenae and Biblical Tradition 220.6Houghton H. A. G.NjHacINjHaclBOOK9910477152303321Commentaries, Catenae, and biblical tradition2905586UNINA