The Codex Wizanburgensis 99 is an 8th-century Latin Vulgate manuscript of the New Testament.
Contents
The Wizanburgensis contains the homilies of Augustine, the Catholic Epistles and the Letters to Timothy, Titus and Philemon among some other works. It is the oldest Latin Vulgate manuscript to contain the Johannine Comma in its main text, with the addition of the words 'sicut et'.
References
- Bengel, Johann Albrecht (1858). Gnomon of the New Testament.
- ^ Düsterdieck, Friedr (1854). Die drei johanneischen Briefe: Mit einem vollständigen theologischen Commentare (in German). Dieterich.
- Dabney, Robert Lewis. Discussions of Robert Lewis Dabney Vol. 1: Evangelical and Theological.
in the University Library of Dublin, which is supposed by some to be of little authority, because suspected of having been conformed to the Latin ; and in the Codex Wizaniurgensis, which Lachmann reckons of the eighth century.
- Lachmann, Carl Conrad F. W. (1850). Novum Testamentum Graece et Latine [the latter being the Vulgate version]. C. Lachmannus recens., P. Buttmannus Graecae lectionis auctoritates apposuit (in Greek).
- FirstJohnCh5v7
- Robert, Jamieson. Jamieson, Fausset, and Brown Commentary, Volume 4: Phillipians to Revelations. Delmarva Publications, Inc.
- Bengel, Johann Albrecht (2024-08-02). Gnomon of the New Testament: Vol. V. BoD – Books on Demand. ISBN 978-3-385-55186-2.
- Ebert, Friedrich Adolf (1825). Zur handschriftenkunde (in German). Steinacker und Hartknoch.