*[+]1. (Evst. 6.)
2. Lond. Brit. Mus. Cotton. Vesp. B. xviii [xi], 11 × 8-¼, ff. 230 (16), 2 cols., mus. rubr., mut. initio et fine (Casley)288. In a fine bold hand. The Museum Catalogue is wrong in stating that it contains Lessons from the Gospels. They exactly correspond with those in our list, five of the Saints' Day Lessons being from the Catholic Epistles.
3. Readings sent to Mill (N. T., Proleg. § 1470) by John Batteley, D.D., as taken from a codex, now missing, in Trinity Hall, Cambridge. The extracts were from 1 Peter and John. Griesbach's Paul. 3 is Bodl. 5 (Evst. 19), cited by Mill only at Hebr. x. 22, 23.
4. (Evst. 112.)
*5. Gottingen, Univ. MS. Theol. 54 [xv], 10-¾ × 7-7/8, ff. 50 (28), 2 cols., formerly of the monastery Constamonitou on Athos, afterwards De Missy's (Matthaei's v). (Paul. 5 of Griesbach = Evst. 30.)
6. (Evan. 117, ff. 183-202.)
7. (Evst. 37.)
8. (Evst. 44.)
9. (Evst. 84.)
10. (Evst. 85.)
11. Par. Nat. Suppl. Gr. 104 [xii, Greg. xiii], 9-¾ × 7-½, ff. 139 (24), well written in some monastery of Palestine: with marginal notes in Arabic.
*12. (Evst, 60.)
*13. Moscow, Synod. 4 (Mt. b) [x], fol., ff. 313, 2 cols., important: once belonged to the Iveron monastery; renovated by Joakim, a monk, a.d. 1525. Cited by Tregelles as Frag. Mosq.
*14. Mosc. Synod. 291 (Mt. e) [xii], 4to, ff. 276, well written, from the monastery Esphigmenou on Athos.
*15. Mosc. Typogr. Syn. 31 (Mt. tz) [a.d. 1116], fol., ff. 200, a few Lections from 1 John at the end of Lections from Old Testament.
*16. (Evst. 52.)
*17. (Evst. 53.)
*18. (Evst. 54.)
*19. (Evst. 55.)
*20. (Evst. 56.)
[pg 369]Apost. 21-48 comprise Scholz's additions to the list, of which he describes none as collated entire or in the greater part. He seems, however, to have collated Cod. 12 entire.
21. (Evst. 83.)
22. Par. Nat. Gr. 304 [xiii, Greg. xiv], 13-5/8 × 10-¾, ff. 302 (22), 2 cols., brought from Constantinople: mut. in fine.
23. Par. Nat. Gr. 306 [xii], 13 × 10-1/8, ff. 187 (28), 2 cols., mut. initio et fine.
24. Par. Nat. Gr. 308 [xiii], ff. 201, mut., contains six Lections from 1 John and 1 Pet., more from the Old Testament.
25. Par. Nat. Gr. 319 [xi, Greg. xii], 12-¼ x 8-½, ff. 274 (22), ill written, with a Latin version over some portions of the text. Once Colbert's.
26. Par. Nat. Gr. 320 [xii], 9-1/8 × 7-¾, ff. 208 (21), 2 cols., mus. rubr., mut.
27. Par. Nat. Gr. 321, once Colbert's [xiii, Greg. xiv], 11-3/8 × 8, ff. 237 (23), mut., and illegible in parts.
28. (Evst. 26.)
29. (Evst. 94.)
30. Par. Nat. Gr. 373 [xiii, Greg. xiv], 8-3/8 x 6-¾, ff. 118 (21), mut. initio et fine: with some cotton-paper leaves at the end.
31. (Evst. 82.)
32. (Evan. 324, Evst. 97.)
33. Par. Nat. Gr. 382 [xiii, Greg. x], 9-½ × 7-1/8, 271 (22), 2 cols., mus. rubr. Once Colbert's.
34. Par. Nat. Gr. 383, once Colbert's [xv, Greg. xvi], 8-3/8 × 5-¼, ff. 206 (31), chart. In readings it is much with Apost. 12.
35. (Evst. 92.)
36. (Evst. 93.)
37. Ath. Nat. Libr. 103 [xv], 9 × 6-¼, ff. 199.
38. Rom. Vat. Gr. 1528 [xv], 8-¼ × 6, ff. 235 (26), chart., written by the monk Eucholius.
39. (Evst. 133.)
40. Rom. Barberini 18 [x], 4to, a palimpsest (probably uncial, though not so stated by Scholz), correctly written, but mostly become illegible. The later writing [xiv] contains Lessons from the Old Testament, with a few from the Catholic Epistles at the end.
41. Rom. Barb., unnumbered [xi], 4to, mut. ff. 1-114.
42. Rom. Vallicell. C. 46 [xvi], 8-½ × 6-¼, ff. 115 (24), chart., with other matter.
[+]43. (Evan. 561.) The palimpsest [viii or ix], written over the Gospels and table of Lessons, and containing Rom. xv. 30-33; 1 Cor. iv. 9-13; xv. 42-5; 2 Cor. ix. 6, 7.
44. (Evst. 232.)
45. Glasgow, Hunt. Mus. V. 3. 4 [a.d. 1199], 11 × 7-7/8, ff. 239 (22), 2 cols., mus. rubr. Written by order of Luke of Antioch. Belonged to Caesar de Missy.
[pg 370]46. Milan, Ambr. C. 63 sup. [xiv], 9-¼ × 5-3/8, ff. 153 (27), mut., bought (like Evst. 103) in 1606, “Corneliani in Iapygiâ.”
47. (Evst. 104.)
48. (Evst. 222.)289 (Greg. 59.)
49. Rom. Vat. Gr. 2068 [xi], 9-¾ × 7-½, ff. 232 (24), 2 cols., pict., mut. at end, formerly Basil 107, described with a facsimile by Bianchini, Evan. Quadr., vol. ii. pt. 1, p. 523 and Plate iv: ἐκλογάδιον τοῦ ἀποστόλου. (Greg. 120.)
50. Modena, Este Libr. ii. D. 3 [xv], 11-3/8 × 7-7/8, chart., seen by Burgon. (Greg. 89.)
51. Besançon, Public Libr. 41 [xii], 9-1/8 × 6-¾, ff. 141 (21), 2 cols. (M. Castan: see Evst. 193). (Greg. 86.)
52. Lond. Brit. Mus. 32,051 [xi, xii, Greg. xiii], 10-½ × 7-¾, ff. 192 (29), 2 cols., mut. at end, mus. rubr., got from Heraclea by Archd. Payne for the Duke of Marlborough, a.d. 1738. Formerly Blenheim 3. C. 12. (Greg. 65.)
53. (Evst. 258.) (Greg. 186.)
54. (Evst. 195.) (Greg. 73.)
*55. (Evst. 179.) (Greg. 55.)
*56. (Act. 42, Evst. 287) contains only 1 Cor. ix. 2-12. (Greg. 56.)
57. Lond. Lamb. 1190 [xiii, Greg. xi], 10 × 7, ff. 130 (25), 2 cols., neatly written, with many letters gilded, mut. at the beginning and end, and uninjured. Archdeacon Todd in the Lambeth Catalogue, p. 50, mistakes this for a copy of the Acts and all the Epistles. Bloomfield examined Apost. 57, 59-62. (Greg. 60.)
58. Oxf., Ch. Ch. Wake 33 [a.d. 1172], 11 × 8-¼, ff. 266, mus., men., the ink having quite gone in parts. (Greg. 58.)
59. Lambeth 1191 [xiii], 8 × 6-½, ff. 75 (19), much injured, mut. at the beginning and end. (Greg. 61.)
60. Lamb. 1194 [xiii], 8-5/8 × 7-5/8, ff. 109 (17), chart., mut. at the end, the writing very neat, the letters often gilded. (Greg. 62.)
61. Lamb. 1195 [xiii, Greg. xv], 10-3/8 × 7-¼, ff. 75 (17), chart., mut. at the beginning. (Greg. 63.)
62. Lamb. 1196 [xiii, Greg. xii], 10-¾ × 8, ff. 219 (23), 2 cols., mut. at the end. (Greg. 64.)
63. Instead of this, which is Act. 315 (Greg.)—
Oxford, Lincoln Coll. 4 [xii], 8 × 6, ff. 107 (?), mus. rubr., mut. beginning and end.
*64. B.-C. I. 10 (Evst. 251). (Greg. 66.)
*65. B.-C. III. 24 [xii or xiii], 4to. (Greg. 68.)
*66. B.-C. III. 29 (Evst. 252). (Greg. 67.)
*67. B.-C. III. 42 (Evst. 253). (Greg. 184.)
[pg 371]*68. B.-C. III. 53 (Evst. 2532). (Greg. 263.)
69. Brit. Mus. Add. 29,714 [a.d. 1306], 10-¾ × 8-½, ff. 178 (28), written by one Ignatius; syn., was bought of Nicolas Parassoh in 1874. (Greg. 81.)
70. Bentley's Q = Apost. 52. (See Ellis, Bentleii Crit. Sacr. xxx; Berriman, Crit. Dissertation on 1 Tim. iii. 16, p. 105.) Instead—
Cambridge, Mass. U.S.A., Harvard Univ. 2 (A. R. g. 3. 10) [xii], 11-½ × 8-½, ff. 281 (23), 2 cols., orn. (f. 202 mut.), men., apparently by the same hand as Evst. 484, but more beautiful. Hoskier, App. H, pp. 3, 4. (Greg. 75.)
*[+]71. Leipzig, Univ. Libr. Tisch. vi. f. [ix or x], 9-¾ × 7, Unc., f. 1 (24), 2 cols., containing Heb. i. 3-12, published in “Anecd. sacr. et profan.,” p. 73, &c. (Greg. 80.)
*[+]72. Petrop. Caes. Muralt. 38, 49 [ix], 8vo, one leaf of a double palimpsest, now at St. Petersburg, the oldest writing containing Acts xiii. 10; 2 Cor. xi. 21-23, cited by Tischendorf (N. T., Proleg., p. ccxxvi, 7th edition). (Greg. 70.)
[+]73. (Evst. 192.) (Greg. 180.)
[+]74. Oxf. Bodl. Arch. Seld. 9 supr., palimpsest, containing under the Christmas sermons of Proclus, Patriarch of Constantinople, almost illegible Lessons from the Septuagint, with one or two from the Epistles of SS. Peter and John. (Greg. 84.)
75. Lond. Brit. Mus. Add. 11,841 [xii or xiii, Greg. xi], 8 × 5-½, ff. 86 (22), 2 cols., mut. Amidst Old Test. Lections are (1) ff. 52-54, 1 John iii. 21-24, 26; iv. 9-19; 20-25; v; (2) f. 78 (which should precede f. 74) is a Lesson for June 28 (κη) τῶν ἁγίων ἀποστόλων πέτρου καὶ παύλου, ἀνάγνωσμα γ, containing 1 Pet. i. 3-19; ii. 11-24 (ζήσομεν). (Greg. 79.)
76. Oxf. Bodl. Misc. Gr. 319 [xiii], 11 × 8, ff. 14 (22), 2 cols., mus. rubr., four leaves being biblical, written by Symeon a reader, ἁγιοσυμεωνιτης: the date, if once extant in the red letters of the colophon, being now rubbed away. There are nine ἀναγνώσματα. The book is either a Euchology or a Typicum, more probably the former. The first Lesson is 2 Tim. iii. 2-9. The remainder are numbered as Lessons for the δεκαήμερον, or Twelve days from Christmas to Epiphany: they run thus, α᾽ Rom. v. 18-21: β᾽ viii. 3-9: γ᾽ ix. 29-33: δ᾽ 2 Cor. v. 15-21: ε᾽ Gal. iii. 28-iv. 5: ϛ' Col. i. 18-22: ζ᾽ Phil. iii. 3-9: η᾽ Rom. viii. 8-14. Found in a drawer by Mr. E. B. Nicholson, Bodley's Librarian. (Greg. 83.)
77. (Act. 98, portions marked as a1 and a3.) (Greg. 82.)
78. (Evst. 290.) Lond. B.-C. III. 44 [xiv], 4to, chart., of 339 surviving leaves, is a Typicum in two separate hands, and contains twenty-nine Lessons: viz. eleven from the Old Testament, six from the Apocrypha, two from the Gospels (Matt. xi. 27-30; Mark viii. 34-ix. 1), ten from St. Paul's Epistles. (Greg. 78.)
79. Camb. Univ. Libr. Add. 679. 2 [xii or xiii], 10 × 8-¼, ff. 102 (18), being the companion volume to Evst. 291, contains week-day Epistles [pg 372] from St. Paul. The first quire is in a different hand. Mut. six leaves. Ends sixth day of thirty-third week (2 Thess. ii. 1). (Greg. 77.)
80. (Evst. 292.) (Greg. 183.)
81. = Apost. 52. Instead—
Milan, Ambros. C. 16 inf. [xiii], 9 × 7-¼, ff. 29 (34), 2 cols. (Greg. 112.)
Scholz says of Evst. 161, and to the same effect Coxe of Evst. Cairo 18, “continet lect. et pericop.;” which may possibly mean that these copies should be reckoned for the Apostolos also.
82. Messina, Univ. 93 [xii or xiii], 9-7/8 × 7-¾, ff. 331 (22), 2 cols., perfect. (See Greg. 113.)
83. Crypta Ferrata, a. β. 4 [x], 5-7/8 × 4-¾, ff. 139 (19), mut., Praxapostolos. (See Greg. 103.)
84. Crypta Ferrata, a. β. 5 [xi], 7-½ × 6-¼, ff. 245 (20), 2 cols., mus. rubr., a most beautiful codex. (See Greg. 104.)
85. Crypta Ferrata, a. β. 7 [xi], 5-7/8 × 4-¾, ff. 64 (27), mut., Praxapostolos. (See Greg. 105.)
86. Crypta Ferrata, a. β. 8 [xii or xiii, Greg. xiv], 6-¼ × 4-¾, ff. 27 (16), carelessly written, and injured by damp, fragments, Praxapostolos. (See Greg. 106.)
87. Crypta Ferrata, a. β. 9 [xii], 5-7/8 × 4-¼, ff. 104 (22), Praxapostolos. (See Greg. 107.)
88. Crypta Ferrata, a. β. 10 [xiii], 6-¼ × 5-1/8, ff. 16 (22), mut., fragmentary, with unusual Saints' days. (See Greg. 108.)
89. Crypta Ferrata, a. β. 11 [xi], 11-3/8 × 8-5/8. ff. 191 (25), 2 cols., mus. rubr., mut. (See Greg. 109.)
90. (Evst. 322.) Crypta Ferrata. (Greg. 102.)
91. (Evst. 323.) Crypta Ferrata. (Greg. 197.)
92. (Evst. 325.) Crypta Ferrata. (Greg. 198.)
93. (Evst. 327.) Crypta Ferrata. (Greg. 172.)
94. (Evst. 328.) Crypta Ferrata. (Greg. 173.)
95. (Evst. 334.) Crypta Ferrata. (Greg. 201.)
96. (Evst. 337.) Crypta Ferrata. (Greg. 200.)
97. (Evst. 339.) Crypta Ferrata. (Greg. 201.)
98. Venice, St. Mark ii. 115 [xi or xii], 12-½ × 9-¼, ff. 277 (21-23), 2 cols., mus. rubr. (See Greg. 124.)
99. (Evst. 341.) Crypta Ferrata. (Greg. 202.)
100. (Evst. 344.) Crypta Ferrata. (Greg. 203.)
101. (Evst. 346.) Crypta Ferrata. (Greg. 204.)
102. (Evst. 347.) Crypta Ferrata. (Greg. 205.)
103. (Evst. 349.) Crypta Ferrata. (Greg. 206.)
104. (Evst. 350.) Crypta Ferrata. (Greg. 207.)
[pg 373]105. (Evst. 351.) Crypta Ferrata. (Greg. 169.)
106. (Evst. 352.) Crypta Ferrata. (Greg. 208.)
107. (Evst. 353.) Crypta Ferrata. (Greg. 209.)
108. (Evst. 354.) Crypta Ferrata. (Greg. 210.)
109. (Evst. 356.) Crypta Ferrata. (Greg. 211.)
110. (Evst. 357.) Crypta Ferrata. (Greg. 212.)
111. (Evst. 358.) Crypta Ferrata. (Greg. 213.)
112. (Evst. 312.) Messina, fragm. (Greg. 214.)
113. (Evst. 575.) Syracuse, Seminario 4, chart., ff. 219, mut., given by the Card. Landolina. (Greg. 228.)
114. Venice, St. Mark ii. 128 [xiv], 8-½ × 6, ff. 361 (19), mut. (See Greg. 125.)
115. (Evst. 931.) Ven. St. Mark ii. 130. (Greg. 126.)
116. Rom. Vat. Gr. 368 [xiii], 10 × 7-¾, ff. 136 (26), 2 cols., Old Test. Lections at end. (Greg. 118.)
117. (Evst. 381) Vat. (Greg. 264.)
118. (Evst. 387) Vat. (Greg. 223.)
119. Rom. Vat. Gr. 2116 [xiii], 7-½ × 5-¼, ff. 111 (21), mut. (See Greg. 121.)
120. Rom. Vat. Alex. Gr. 11 [xiv, Greg. xii], 11 × 7-7/8, ff. 169 (24), mut. (Greg. 123.)
121. (Evst. 395.) Rom. Vat. Alex. 59. (Greg. 227.)
122. Rom. Vat. Alex. Gr. 70 [a.d. 1544], 7-7/8 × 5-¼, ff. 18, “in fronte pronunciatio Graeca Latinis literis descripta.” (Greg. 255.)
123. Rom. Vat. Pal. 241 [xv], 8-5/8 × 7-¾, ff. 149 (21), chart. (Greg. 122.)
124. (Evst. 410.) Rom. Barb. (Greg. 216.)
125. Rom. Barb. iv. 11 [a.d. 1566], 8-¾ × 6-¼, ff. 158 (19), chart., mut. (Greg. 114.)
126. Rom. Barb. iv. 60 [xi, Greg. xii], 9-7/8 × 7-¾, ff. 322 (22), mus. rubr., a fine codex with menologium. (Greg. 115.)
127. Rom. Barb. iv. 84 [xiii, Greg. xii], 11 × 7-¾, ff. 189 (24), 2 cols., with men., mut. (Greg. 116.)
128. (Evst. 415.) Martin. (Greg. 256.)
129. (Evst. 96.) Martin. (Greg. 262.)
130. Par. Nat Suppl. Gr. 800 [xiv], 8-5/8 × 5-7/8, ff. 115 (23), chart., mut. at end. Martin, p. 174. (Greg. 88.)
131. Athos, Docheiariou 20.
132. Athos, Docheiariou 27.
133. Athos, Docheiariou 141.
134. Athos, Docheiariou 146.
135. Athos, Iveron 831.
136. Athos, Caracalla 10.
137. Athos, Caracalla 156.
[pg 374]138. Athos, Constamonitou 21 [xvii], 8vo, chart., mut.
139. Athos, Constamonitou 22 [xiv], 8vo, cotton.
140. Athos, Constamonitou 23 [xv], 8vo, chart. (Σπ. Λαμπρός.)
141. Athos, Coutloumoussi 277.
142. Athos, Coutloumoussi 344.
143. Athos, Coutloumoussi 355.
144. Athos, Protaton 54.
145. Athos, Simopetra 6.
146. Athos, Simopetra 10.
147. (Evst. 479.) Athos, Simopetra 148.
148. Athos, Simopetra 149.
149. Athos, Simopetra 150.
150. Athos, Simopetra 151.
151. Athos, Stauroniketa 129.
152. Athos, Philotheou 17.
153. Beratinus, Abp.
154. Chalcis, Mon. Holy Trinity 13.
155. Chalcis, Mon. Holy Trin. 14.
156. Chalcis, Mon. Holy Trin. 15.
157. Chalcis, School 59.
158. Chalcis, School 74.
159. Chalcis, School 88.
160. Patmos 11.
161. Patmos 12.
162. Thessalonica, Ἑλλην. Γυμν. 8.
163. Thess. Ἑλλην. Γυμν. 10.
164. Thess. Ἑλλην. Γυμν. 13.
165. Sinai 296.
166. Sinai 297.
167. Sinai 298.
168. Sinai 299.
169. Athos, Dionysius 386. (Greg. 127.)
170. (Evst. 642.)
171. Petersburg, Caes. Muralt. 38. (Greg. 70a.)
172. Petersburg, Caes. Muralt. 49. (Greg. 70b.)
173. Petersburg, Caes. Muralt. 40a. (Greg. 71.)
174. Sinai 294.
175. (Evst. 261.)
176. (Evst. 240.)
177. (Evst. 232.)
178. (Evst. 191.) (Greg. twice, 69 and 178.)
179. (Evst. 472.)
180. Athos, Dionysius 387. (Greg. 128.)
181. (Evst. 166.)
182. (Evst. 169.)
183. Petersburg, Caes. Muralt. 45a. (Greg. 72.)
184. Athos, Dionysius 392. (Greg. 129.)
185. (Evst. 275.)
186. Docheiariou 17. (Greg. 130.)
187. (Evst. 420.)
188. (Evst. 571.)
189. (Evst. 572.)
190. (Evst. 573.)
191. (Evst. 804.)
192. (Evst. 828.)
193. (Evst. 439.)
194. (Evst. 440.)
195. (Evst. 443.)
196. (Evst. 446.)
197. Petersburg, Caes. Mur. 110. (Greg. 74.)
[pg 375]198. New York, Astor's Library. (Greg. 76.)
199. (Evst. 290.)
200. Vienna, Caes. Gr. Theol. 308. (Greg. 85.)
201. Par. Nat. Gr. 922, fol. A. (Greg. 87a.)
202. Par. Nat. Suppl. Gr. 804, ff. 88 and 89. (Greg. 87b.)
[+]203. Wisbech, Peckover, Unc., palimpsest. (Greg. 90.)
204. Athens, Nat. 68 (203) [xiii], 10-5/8 × 8-5/8, ff. 218, mus. (Greg. 91.)
205. Athens, Nat. 69 (206), [xv], 8-5/8 × 5-7/8, ff. 347, mut. (Greg. 92.)
206. (Evst. 393.) Athens, Nat. (35) ? (Greg. 93.)
207. (Evst. 422.) Athens, Nat. (63). (Greg. 94).
208. (Evst. 423.) Athens, Nat. (64) sic. (Greg. 95.)
209. Ath. Nat. 95 (115) [a.d. 1576], 8-½ × 5-7/8, ff. 192, mut. at beg. (Greg. 96.)
210. Athens, Nat. ? (Greg. 97 ?)
211. Athens, Nat. ? (116 ?) [xv], 8-5/8 × 5-7/8, ff. 141. (Greg. 98.)
212. Athens, Nat. ? (114) [xvii], 8-¼ × 6-¼, ff. 190. (Greg. 99.)
213. Sinai 295. (Greg. 117.)
214. Escurial N. iv. 9. (Greg. 100.)
215. (Evst. 410.)
216. Escurial Ψ. iii. 9. (Greg. 101.)
217. (Evst. 408.)
218. (Evst. 407.)
219. (Evst. 533.)
220. (Evst. 548.)
221. (Evst. 554.)
222. (Evst. 555.)
223. Florence, Laurent. St. Mark 704. (Greg. 111.)
224. (Evst. 557.)
225. (Evst. 558.)
226. (Evst. 572.)
227. Lesbos, τ. Λείμωνος μονῆς 55, Act., Paul., Cath., Apoc., syn., men., proll., mus. rubr. (Kerameus.)
228. Lesb. τ. Λείμ. μον. 137 [xv], 8-1/8 × 4-7/8, chart. (Kerameus.)
229. (Evst. 680.)
230. (Evst. 686.)
231. (Evst. 687.)
232. (Evst. 693.)
233. (Evst. 707.)
234. (Evst. 709.)
235. (Evst. 712.)
236. (Evst. 721.)
237. (Evst. 741.)
238. (Evst. 743.)
239. (Evst. 751.)
240. (Evst. 755.)
241. (Evst. 757.)
242. (Evst. 759.)
243. (Evst. 797.)
244. (Evst. 829.)
245. (Evst. 837.)
246. (Evst. 893.)
247. (Evst. 900.)
248. (Evst. 908.)
249. (Evst. 911.)
250. (Evst. 915.)
[pg 376]251. (Evst. 916.)
252. (Evst. 917.)
253. (Evst. 924.)
254. (Evst. 929.)
255. Andros, Μονὴ Ἁγία 2, ff. 140. Injured, but well written. (Ἀντ. Μηλιαράκης.)
256. Andros, Μονὴ Ἁγία 3, chart., moth-eaten. (Ἀντώνιος Μηλιαράκης.)
257. (Evst. 428.)
258. (Evst. 272.)
259. (Evst. 518.)
260. (Evst. 894.)
261. (Evst. 895.)
262. Athos, Protaton 32, 4to, amidst other matter, κεφ. t., syn., men. (Σπ. Λαμπρός.)
263. Crypta Ferrata, Α'. δ᾽. 24. (Greg. 110.)
264. (Evst. 952.)
265. (Evst. 30.)
266. Athos, Gregory 60 [xvi], 16mo, chart., mut.
267. Kosinitsa, Ἁγία Μονή, Ἰωάννης ὁ Περευτέσης (?) 198 [a.d. 1503], written by the aforenamed.
268. Kos. Ἁγ. Μον., Νίκολλος 55 [xi], written by the aforenamed.
269. Kos. Ἁγ. Μον., Συμέων Λουτζέρες 195 [a.d. 1505], written by the aforenamed.
270. Ath. Nat. Libr. 101 [xiv], 9 × 7-1/8, ff. 169, mut. at beginning and end.
271. Ath. Nat. Libr. 102 [xvii], 8-5/8 × 6-¼, ff. 229.
272. Ath. Nat. Libr. 106 [xiv-xv], 9-½ × 7-1/8, ff. 243, mut. at beginning and end.
273. Ath. Nat. Libr. 133 [xiv], 8-5/8 × 5-½, ff. 348, pict.
274. Ath. Nat. Libr. 144 [xv], 8-¼ × 5-7/8, ff. 76, mut. at beginning and end.
275. (Evst. 956.)
276. (Evst. 957.)
277. (Evst. 958.)
278. (Evst. 959.)
279. (Evst. 960.)
280. (Evst. 961.)
281. (Evst. 962.)
282. (Evst. 963.)
283. (Evst. 964.)
284. (Evst. 965.)
285. (Evst. 966.)
286. (Evst. 967.)
287. (Evst. 968.)
288. (Evst. 498.)
[pg 377]ג. At Kosinitsa, Ἁγία Μονή 124 [x], 10-7/8 × 7, ff. 339, Evan., Act., Cath., Apoc., Paul. (sic). Written by Sabbas, a monk, in tenth century, with marginal writing [xiii].
ד. At Kosinitsa, Ἁγ. Μον. 375 [ix-x], 7-1/8 × 13, ff. 301 (16, 19, or 21). The two first gatherings are mice-eaten. Τίτλοι in vermilion, ἀναγνώσματα, κεφ. t., subscr., Evan. Mut. Matt. i. 1-ix. 1.
ה. a. Athos, Protaton 13 [vi], 4to, ff. 2, appended to Homilies of Chrysostom, and containing fragments of the Evangelists.
b. Athos, Protaton 14 [vi], ff. 3, with fragments of St. John appended at beginning and end to Lives of Saints.
c. Athos, Protaton 20 [vi], 2 cols.
d. Athos, Protaton 56 [vi], ff. 10, 2 cols., at beginning and end of a hortatory discourse [xiv], containing fragments of the Evangelists.
The chief authorities used in corrections and additions in this Edition have been as follows:—
1. MS. Notes and other remains of Dr. Scrivener, such as “Adversaria Critica Sacra,” just being published.
2. My own examination of the MSS. in London, Oxford, and Cambridge, with obliging help as to those in the British Museum from Mr. G. F. Warner, of the MSS. Department.
3. Burgon's Letters to the Guardian, 1873-74, 1882, and 1884.
4. As to Parisian MSS., the Abbé Martin's “Description technique des MSS. Grecs relatifs au N. Test., conservés dans les Bibliothèques de Paris,” Paris, 1884. And Omont's “Facsimilés des MSS. Grecs datés de la Bibliothèque Nationale du ix et du xiv.”
5. Κατάλογος τῶν Χειρογράφων τῆς Ἐθνικῆς Βιβλιοθήκης τῆς Ἕλλαδος ὑπὸ Ἰωάννου Σακκελίωνος καὶ Ἀλκιβιάδου Ἰ. Σακκελίωνος. Ἐν Ἀθήναις, 1892.
6. Ἱεροσολυμιτικὴ Βιβλιοθήκη, ἤτοι Κατάλογος τῶν ἐν ταῖς Βιβλιοθήκαις τοῦ ἁγιωτάτου ἀποστολικοῦ τε καὶ καθολικοῦ ὀρθοδόξου πατριαρχικοῦ θρόνου τῶν Ἱεροσολύμων καὶ πάσης Παλαιστίνης ἀποκειμένων Ἑλληνίκων Κωδίκων, κ.τ.λ.: ὑπὸ Παπαδοπούλου Κεραμέως, κ.τ.λ. Ἐν Πετροπόλει, 1891.
7. Ἐν Κωνσταντινουπόλει Ἑλληνικὸς Φιλολογικὸς Σύλλογος. Μαυρογορδάτειος Βιβλιοθήκη. Παραρτήματα τοῦ ΙΕ Τόμου (1884), τοῦ Ιϛ Τόμου (1885), τοῦ ΙΖ Τόμου (1886), τοῦ ΙΗ Τόμου (1888). Ἐν Κωνσταντινουπόλει.
8. Ὕπομνήματα Περιγραφικὰ τὸν Κυκλάδων Νήσων κατὰ μέρος ὑπὸ Ἀντωνίου Μηλιαράκη. Ἄνδρος, Κέως, ὑπὸ Ἁ. Παπαδοπούλου τοῦ Κεραμέως. Ἐν Ἀθήναις, 1880.
9. Ἔκθεσις Παλαιογραφικῶν καὶ φιλολογικῶν Ἐρεύνων ἐν Θράκῃ καὶ Μακεδονίᾳ: ὑπὸ Α. Παπαδοπούλου Κεραμέως. Ἐν Κωνσταντινουπόλει, 1886.
10. Κατάλογος τῶν ἐν ταῖς Βιβλιοθήκαις τοῦ Ἁγίου Ὄρους Ἑλληνικῶν Κωδίκων: ὑπὸ Σπυρίδωνος Π. Λάμπρου.
11. Catalogus Codicum Bibliotheca Imperialis Publicae Gr. et Lat. Edvardus de Muralto. Petropoli, 1840.
12. And especially the learned Prolegomena to Tischendorf, 8th edition, drawn up and issued by Dr. C. R. Gregory, who has with the greatest diligence examined a vast number of MSS. on the spot. I have had a difficult task in steering between my duty to the learned public in [pg 379] the short time allowed me for the preparation of this edition, and the desire of Dr. Gregory that I should not take more of the information supplied in his work than I could help. What I have chiefly done has been to insert his measurements, where I could obtain no others, translating them into inches, and some other particulars upon such MSS. as had been already described in the third edition. In the case of the newly-discovered MSS., which have been first recorded by Dr. Gregory, I have only mentioned them, with a general reference to Dr. Gregory's book, except where information from other sources has come to hand. I have the pleasure of paying a tribute in the case of MSS. which I have examined upon his track to the great skill and accuracy of his examinations.