The British Library is to put the remains of the world's oldest bible online
for public viewing.
The remaining fragments of the
Codex
Sinaiticus, which are stored in Britain, Russia, Germany and a monastery in
the Sinai Desert, will be scanned and made available for viewing for the first
time since their discovery.
"I think it is fantastic that, thanks to technology, we can now make the
oldest cultural artefacts, that were once so precious you couldn't show them to
anyone, accessible to everyone in really high quality," Ulrich Johannes
Schneider, director of Leipzig University Library, which holds part of the
manuscript, told Reuters.
A preview, containing the Book of Psalms and the Gospel of Mark will be put
online on Thursday and the full text should be available by next July.
However, the bible is likely to cause some controversy as it contains no
mention of the resurrection of Jesus. Instead the disciples enter Jesus's tomb,
find it empty and leave in fear.
The Codex Sinaiticus was written over 1,600 years ago in Greek, and analysis
of the pages shows that it has been heavily amended over the centuries.
The copy only covers part of the New Testament and contains books not found
in the current Christian bible, such as the Epistle of Barnabas and the Shepherd
of Hermas.
It was discovered in Saint Catherine's Monastery in Mount Sinai by a German
biblical scholar in 1844, where parts of it still remain.
The British Library's sections were purchased from the Russian authorities
for £100,000 in the 1930s.
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