- Papyrus 37
New Testament manuscript infobox
form=Papyrus
number=P37
caption=recto
name=
text=Matthew 26:19-52
date=3rd/4th century
found=Unknown, bought in Cairo in 1924
now at=University of Michigan
cite=H. A. Sanders. "An Early Papyrus Fragment of the Gospel of Matthew in the Michigan Collection." "Harvard Theological Review ." vol. 19. 1926, pp. 215-226.
size=1 leaf; 12 x 22 cm; 33 lines/page
type=Free, mostly Western, Egyptian
cat=I
hand=documentary
note=Papyrus 37 (P37) is an early copy of the New Testament in Greek. It is a
papyrus manuscript of theGospel of Matthew dating to the 3rd century, sometime around 250-260 CE, due to its affinities with P53 (dated to 260 CE), The correspondence of Heroninos (dated shortly before or after 260 CE) and a letter by Kopres (P. Greco-Egizi 208, dated 256 CE). [Philip W Comfort and David P Barrett. "The Text of the Earliest New Testament Greek Manuscripts". Wheaton, Illinois: Tyndale House Publishers Incorporated, 2001, pp. 141, 369.]It is currently housed at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor Library (inventory #1570), and was purchased in Cairo, Egypt, in 1924. Its exact origin is unknown, but it most likely came from Egypt. The manuscript is a fragment of a single leaf consisting of one column of 33 lines (40 to 50 characters per line), roughly 12.1 cm by 22.4 cm. The fragment is damaged on all sides with considerable lacunae and was probably originally 15 cm by 25.5 cm. The surviving text of Matthew are verses 26:19-52. This portion of Matthew depicts the
Last Supper , the betrayal by Judas, and the beginning of theArrest of Jesus .The papyrus uses a legible, cursive-like script with irregular character linking. The cursive letters resemble the cursive that was common between the years 200 and 350. There are many variations in the letters, which makes a precise dating based onpaleography difficult. The writer was most likely literate and educated because the letters do not appear crude or imitative, but the irregularities suggest the writer was not an experiencedscribe . The handwriting is similar to personal letters and documents from the mid 3rd century.Certain
nomina sacra (ΚΕ ΙΗ ΠΝΑ ΙΗΣΥ) are employed in the text. There are no punctuation or accent marks. There are, however, dots that appear in irregular intervals, placed in the text by a later hand, apparently to help reading. This suggests that the manuscript was used at one point in church. Because the manuscript is so short, it is difficult to gauge the regularity of the dots, or their purpose for certain.The text-type is most follows Western readings. By Sander's count, there are 85 extant variants in this portion of Matthew. 18 of those readings are supported by nearly all manuscripts. 11 are unique to the manuscript. The remaining 56 fall within Western, Alexandrian, and Caesarean text-types. The text has to be reconstructed in places of lacuna by comparing the amount of space missing to the number of letters in various readings. Based on the reading variations, the text most likely originated in Egypt.
See also
*
List of New Testament papyri References
*Sanders, Henry A. "An Early Papyrus Fragment of the Gospel of Matthew in the Michigan Collection." "Harvard Theological Review." vol. 19. 1926, pp. 215-226.
External links
University of Michigan Library entry, with scanned
* [http://images.umdl.umich.edu/cgi/i/image/image-idx?rgn1=ic_all;op2=And;rgn2=ic_all;op3=And;rgn3=ic_all;c=apis;back=back1178851945;subview=detail;resnum=1;view=entry;lastview=reslist;cc=apis;entryid=x-1469;viewid=1570V.TIF;start=1;q1=1570;chaperone=S-APIS-X-1469%201570V.TIF verso]
* [http://images.umdl.umich.edu/cgi/i/image/image-idx?rgn1=ic_all;op2=And;rgn2=ic_all;op3=And;rgn3=ic_all;c=apis;back=back1178851945;resnum=1;view=entry;lastview=reslist;cc=apis;entryid=x-1469;viewid=1570V.TIF;start=1;q1=1570;chaperone=S-APIS-X-1469%201570V.TIF;np=next;evl=description recto]
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