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  • 1
    Language: English
    Year of publication: 2023
    Titel der Quelle: From the Thames to the Euphrates
    Angaben zur Quelle: (2023) 128-140
    Keywords: Bible Manuscripts, Hebrew ; History ; Bible Manuscripts, Aramaic ; History ; Manuscript design History
    Abstract: This contribution deals with the medieval tradition of producing manuscripts of the Hebrew Bible alongside with the Aramaic paraphrase (the Targum) and/or exegetical commentaries or any other type of works related to the Hebrew text of the Bible. Such medieval manuscripts are referred to here as ‘glossed Hebrew Bibles’, and they are identified as precedents - in terms of layout and organization of contents - for Bomberg’s and Ibn Hayyim’s Biblia Rabbinica and for other editions of the mikra’ot gedolot. Differences are explored in the glossed Hebrew Bibles produced in the medieval Jewish geocultural areas of Sepharad, Ashkenaz and Italy, in order to allow to describe different traditions of selecting texts and layouts, and to determine what the role of exegetical traditions was in the selection of commentaries. The layout of the Biblia Rabbinica is then analysed in light of the earlier manuscript tradition, revealing both continuities as well as some innovations.
    Note: Includes 6 illustrations (pp. 135-140).
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  • 2
    Language: French
    Year of publication: 2023
    Titel der Quelle: From the Thames to the Euphrates
    Angaben zur Quelle: (2023) 21-37
    Keywords: Canart, Paul ; Bible Sources Canon ; History ; Manuscripts, Byzantine
    Abstract: This article is devoted to the study of a hypothesis put forward by Paul Canart at a conference held in Namur in 2012 (“Comment le Livre s’est fait livre”), presented in the previous article of this same volume, according to which, in the Codex Basilianus (Vat. gr. 2106 + Marc. gr. 1), the books of Esther and A-B Esdras were originally found at the end of this Bible, after the New Testament. After a brief presentation of the book, the various material and textual elements that make it possible to understand its internal structures will be systematically analysed in order to best reconstruct the main lines of its architecture. By the end of this investigation it will be possible to assert that the eminent scholar’s suggestion, however surprising it may be, has every chance of being correct.
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  • 3
    Language: French
    Year of publication: 2023
    Titel der Quelle: From the Thames to the Euphrates
    Angaben zur Quelle: (2023) 13-19
    Keywords: Bible Sources Canon ; History ; Bible Manuscripts ; History ; Manuscripts, Byzantine
    Abstract: In anticipation of the symposium organised by Chiara Ruzzier and Xavier Hermand in Namur in 2012 (“Comment le Livre s’est fait livre”), Paul Canart and Patrick Andrist looked at the Greek pandects of the first millennium, dividing the workload. Paul Canart chose to focus on the three partially preserved pandects from the ninth and tenth centuries (Codex Basilianus = Vat. gr. 2106 + Marc. gr. 1 ; Codex Pariathonensis = Par. gr. 14 + Stavronikita 29 ; Bible of Patrice Leon = Reg. gr. 1). Unfortunately, his paper did not make it into the 2015 proceedings as he had hoped to travel to Venice to continue his work, as well as adapt his text to the latest thinking on the Syntaxe du Codex. However, he kindly sent Patrick Andrist his notes, which were already substantial on many points and partially drafted, and later encouraged him to further pursue this task. It is as a tribute to the pioneering work of this outstanding researcher, as well as in memory of a dear friend and for documentary purposes, that his written notes, which inspired an article that appeared in 2020 as well as my research presented in this same volume, are published here. These notes therefore reflect the state of Paul Canart’s unfinished research in 2012. Unless otherwise indicated, all changes made have been limited to typographical corrections, standardising according to this volume’s editorial rules, and finishing a few incomplete sentences ; some points have however been made in notes added to the article. The sometimes oral style of this text, which was written to serve as a basis for the presentation in Namur, has been preserved. (PA).
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