Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 March 2011
The parchment fragment reproduced on Plate I was acquired some twenty years since by the British Museum, where it is numbered Or. 6201 C (1). It lay among a large quantity of Coptic papyrus and parchment MSS., the dialect, scripts, and incidental names of which confirm the seller's statement that all were bought together at Ashmunain. The ages of these manuscripts vary greatly; some of the parchment uncials should belong to the 5th or 6th century, others and some of the papyri to the 9th or 10th. The large majority of the latter are, however, of the 7th or 8th century. Obviously, from such facts none but the vaguest conclusions can be drawn.
207 note 1 See the former in the Berlin Academy's Sitzb. 1904, 348Google Scholar, and Abh. 1904Google Scholar; the latter in ib.Abh. 1910Google Scholar, and in this Journal, 1909, 299 (esp. 319). Further, Longworth Dames in this Journal, 1907, 1055.
207 note 2 Journ. Egypt. Arch., ii, 214.Google Scholar
207 note 3 The half-consonants are here transcribed as written, without any vowel values being attributed to them.
208 note 1 One may recall here the sojourn of Peter the Iberian at Oxyrhynchus and the translation thither of the relics of James Intercisus.
208 note 2 The Academy, 1883, i, 264.Google Scholar
208 note 3 Zoega, , Catalogus, pp. 420, 450Google Scholar; Br. Mus. Coptic Catalogue, No. 194; Am´lineau, , Œuvres de Sch., i, 372Google Scholar. Cf. Leipoldt, , Schenute v. Atripe, 86.Google Scholar
208 note 4 Eutychius, ; Patr. Gr., 111, 1023.Google Scholar
208 note 5 Patr. Lat., 73, 945.Google Scholar
208 note 6 Rival Monophysite sects are fond of using it of each other; Patrol. Or., i, 454.Google Scholar