
Page from Codex Vaticanus Graece 1209, B/03
The 'Codex Vaticanus' (
The Vatican, Bibl. Vat., Vat. gr. 1209; Gregory-Aland no. 'B' or '03') is one of the oldest extant
manuscripts of the Bible. It is slightly older than
Codex Sinaiticus, both of which were probably transcribed in the
4th century. It is written in
Greek, on
vellum, with
uncial letters.
Contents
Vaticanus originally contained a complete copy of the
Septuagint ("LXX") except for 1-4
Maccabees and the
Prayer of Manasseh.
Genesis 1:1 - 46:28a (31 leaves) and
Psalm 105:27 - 137:6b (10 leaves) are lost and have been filled by a recent hand.
2 Kings 2:5-7, 10-13 are also lost due to a tear in one of the pages. The order of the Old Testament books is as follows: Genesis to
2 Chronicles as normal,
1 Esdras,
2 Esdras (which includes
Nehemias), the
Psalms,
Proverbs,
Ecclesiastes,
Song of Songs,
Job,
Wisdom,
Ecclesiasticus,
Esther,
Judith,
Tobit, the minor prophets from
Hosea to
Malachi,
Isaiah,
Jeremiah,
Baruch,
Lamentations and the
Epistle of Jeremiah,
Ezekiel and
Daniel.

A section of the ''Codex Vaticanus'', containing 1 Esdras 2:1-8
The extant
New Testament of Vaticanus contains the
Gospels,
Acts, the
General Epistles, the
Pauline Epistles and the
Epistle to the Hebrews (up to Heb 9:14, καθα[ριει); thus it lacks
1 and
2 Timothy,
Titus,
Philemon and
Revelation. These missing pages were replaced by a 15th century minuscule supplement (no. 1957).
The Greek is written continuously with small neat writing, later retraced by an 11th century scribe. Punctuation is rare (accents and breathings have been added by a later hand) except for some blank spaces,
diaeresis on initial
iotas and
upsilons, abbreviations of the ''
nomina sacra'' and markings of OT citations.
The manuscript contains mysterious double dots (so called "
umlauts") in the margin of the New Testament, which seem to mark places of textual uncertainty. There are 795 of these in the text and around another 40 that are uncertain. The date of these markings are disputed among scholars and are discussed in a link below.
Provenance
The manuscript has been housed in the
Vatican Library (founded by
Pope Nicholas V in
1448) for as long as it has been known, appearing in its earliest catalog of
1475 and in the
1481 catalogue. Its place of origin and the history of the manuscript is uncertain, with
Rome, southern Italy and Caesarea all having been suggested. There has been speculation that it had previously been in the possession of Cardinal
Bessarion because the minuscule supplement has a text similar to one of Bessarion's manuscripts. According to
Paul Canart's introduction to the recent facsimile edition, p.5, the decorative initials added to the manuscript in the middle ages are reminiscent of Constantinopolitan decoration of the 10th century, but poorly executed, giving the impression that they were added in the 11th or 12th century.
T C Skeat, a
paleographer at the
British Museum, first argued that Codex Vaticanus was among the 50 Bibles that the Emperor
Constantine I ordered
Eusebius of Caesarea to produce. The similarity of the text with the papyri and Coptic version (including some letter formation), parallels with Athanasius' canon of
367 suggest an Egyptian or Alexandrian origin.
Importance
Codex Vaticanus is one of the most important manuscripts for
Textual criticism and is a leading member of the
Alexandrian text-type. It was heavily used by
Westcott and
Hort in their edition, ''
The New Testament in the Original Greek'' (1881).
See also
★
List of New Testament uncials
Literature
★ H.J.M. Milne and T.C. Skeat "Scribes and Correctors", London 1938
★ Janko Sagi "Problema historiae codicis B", Divius Thomas 1972, 3 - 29
★ T.C. Skeat "The Codex Vaticanus in the 15th Century.", JTS 35 (1984) 454 - 65
★ T.C. Skeat "The Codex Sinaiticus, the Codex Vaticanus and Constantine.", JTS 50 (1999) 583 - 625
★ Philip B. Payne "Fuldensis, Sigla for Variants in Vaticanus and 1 Cor 14.34-5.", NTS 41 (1995) 251 - 262 [Payne discovered the first umlaut while studying this section.]
★ Curt Niccum "The voice of the MSS on the Silence of the Women: ...", NTS 43 (1997) 242 - 255
★ Philip B. Payne and Paul Canart "The Originality of Text-Critical Symbols in Codex Vaticanus.", Novum Testamentum 42 (2000) 105 - 113
★ J. Edward Miller "Some Observations on the Text-Critical Function of the Umlauts in Vaticanus, with Special Attention to 1 Corinthians 14.34-35.", JSNT 26 (2003) 217-236 [Miller disagrees with Payne on several points. He notes and uses this website.]
★ Philip B. Payne and Paul Canart "The Text-Critical Function of the Umlauts in Vaticanus, with Special Attention to 1 Corinthians 14.34-35: A Response to J. Edward Miller.", JSNT 27 (2004) 105-112 [Payne still thinks, contra Miller, that the combination of a bar plus umlaut has a special meaning.]
External links
★
Codex Vaticanus NT Facsimile edition in PDF format. 16MB download
★
Codex Vaticanus B/03 Detailed description of 'Codex Vaticanus' with many images and discussion of the "umlauts".