TC: A Journal of Biblical Textual Criticism:
Volume 2 (1997)

Click here to see articles from TC 1 (1996).

It is now possible to view TC articles with Greek, Hebrew, and other non-Roman characters in the original scripts! Both Netscape 3.0 and Microsoft's Internet Explorer 3.0 allow the display of non-Roman characters by means of the font tag. (Currently, the Windows 95 version of Netscape has a bug that does not allow the display of foreign characters--Windows 3.1, NT, Mac, and Unix versions work, however.) In addition, you must download the appropriate fonts from the Scholars Press FTP site. Articles that include non-Roman characters in their original scripts will be designated "HTML original scripts," and the fonts required will be indicated at the beginning of the article.

For people who do not have one of the new browsers, display of non-Roman characters is problematic. Thus, TC uses a standard transliteration scheme in the regular HTML and text versions of all its articles. Words that are transliterated in the text are enclosed in tags that indicate the language of the words, for example, <heb> (Hebrew), <arc> (Aramaic), <grc> (Greek), and <syr> (Syriac). Click here to see a more complete list of abbreviations.

Articles

No articles are currently available in volume 2.

Reviews

One of the goals of TC: A Journal of Biblical Textual Criticism is to provide informative and timely reviews of books in the field of biblical textual criticism. Anyone who would like to suggest a book for review or who would like to volunteer to be a reviewer may contact the TC book review editor, Leonard Greenspoon (ljgrn@creighton.edu) or the general editor, James R. Adair (jadair@scholar.cc.emory.edu).

H. P. S. Bakker, Towards a Critical Edition of the Old Slavic New Testament. A Transparent and Heuristic Approach - HTML, text

Gert J. Steyn, Septuagint Quotations in the Context of the Petrine and Pauline Speeches of the Acta Apostolorum - HTML, text


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