Thu Nov 16 05:01:22 1995
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From: DC PARKER
Organization: Fac of Arts:The Univ. of Birmingham
Date: Thu, 16 Nov 1995 09:57:05 GMT
Subject: Re: Itacisms
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Mark_O'Brien wrote
>
> After doing a bunch of collation in Sinaiticus, and noticing the great
> multitude of itacisms, I was curious about the theories regarding
> these variants. What is the concensus out there about how a
> manuscript like Sinaiticus was copied? Was the scribe following an
> oral reading of an exemplar, or was he following a written copy in
> front of him? Most textbooks seem to indicate that itacism was the
> result of hearing errors (eg. Metzger), but there seem to be
> indications in Sinaiticus that it was not based on an oral reading of
> an exemplar (occurences of haplography and dittography). Hence
my question: How do we explain these cases of itacism where there
was no hearing involved? Was there in fact a stage in the
development of the Greek language where some of these itacisms
were in fact the correct spellings of words?
>
> I'm just trying to think through these issues and would appreciate
> any insights. Thanks.
I would recommend reading Milne & Skeat, "Scribes & Correctors of
the Codex Sinaiticus, esp. Ch. VII, 'Orthography & the Dictation
Theory'.
On Koine Greek, read first F.T. Gignac, "A Grammar of the Greek
Papyri of the Rom. & Byz. Periods, Vol. 1 Phonology" (Testi e
Documenti per lo Studio dell'Antichita 55), Milan, n.d. (but about
1975), and G. Mussies, "The Morphology of Koine Greek as used in
the Apoc. of St. John", Leiden: Brill, 1971.
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