Jax wrote: ↑Thu Apr 08, 2021 9:18 am
How useful do you think this tool would be for researching NS in unical?
It will not distinguish majuscule from minuscule manuscripts for you, so far as I can tell. If you had a separate list of uncial/majuscule manuscripts, so that you knew which ones to look for, then this apparatus could be of tremendous help, I would think.
Is there a reason behind researching the nomina sacra only in manuscripts which use capital letters?
You can see what kind of information you are getting in this screenshot of Matthew 1.1:
CNTTS Matthew 1.1.png (65.73 KiB) Viewed 1840 times
Each of the double angle brackets (>>) after the list of manuscripts attesting a variant unfolds into a table with the manuscripts on that list tabulated by century and Aland category (I-V); I have shown only one of those tables in my screenshot. It really is quite amazing.
Jax wrote: ↑Thu Apr 08, 2021 9:18 am
How useful do you think this tool would be for researching NS in unical?
It will not distinguish majuscule from minuscule manuscripts for you, so far as I can tell. If you had a separate list of uncial/majuscule manuscripts, so that you knew which ones to look for, then this apparatus could be of tremendous help, I would think.
Is there a reason behind researching the nomina sacra only in manuscripts which use capital letters?
Just trying to study documents in the first couple centuries which are all in capital letters.
Ben C. Smith wrote: ↑Thu Apr 08, 2021 9:41 am
You can see what kind of information you are getting in this screenshot of Matthew 1.1:
CNTTS Matthew 1.1.png
Each of the double angle brackets (>>) after the list of manuscripts attesting a variant unfolds into a table with the manuscripts on that list tabulated by century and Aland category (I-V); I have shown only one of those tables in my screenshot. It really is quite amazing.