New Testament manuscript | |
Name | Sangermanensis |
---|---|
Sign | Dabs1 or g1 |
Text | Paul |
Date | c. 900 |
Script | Greek/Latin |
Now at | National Library of Russia, Petersburg |
Size | 36 × 27.5 cm (14.2 × 10.8 in) |
Type | Western |
Category | II |
Hand | coarse, large, thick |
Note | copy of Claromontanus |
Codex Sangermanensis designated by Dabs1 or 0319 (in the numbering Gregory-Aland), α 1027 (Soden), is a tenth-century diglot manuscript, formerly in the library of St. Germain des Prés, Paris, hence its name Sangermanensis, "of Saint Germanus". Now it is preserved in the Bibliothèque nationale, Number 11105 Fonds Latin.[1] It contains the Pauline Epistles, lacking most of 1 Timothy and parts of Romans and Hebrews. It is particularly notable as one of the two such copies which display clear evidence of having had Claromontanus as exemplar (another is Uncial 0320).[2] It is now part of the National Library of Russia (Gr. 20) collection in Saint Petersburg.[3][4]