Kirsopp Lake - various notes including Coislinianus - no mention of three crosses note ?

Steven Avery

Administrator
The Text of the New Testament
Sinaiticus p. 12-14

p. 13
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p. 4 - Matthew 13:54 and origin
http://books.google.com/books?id=Q3YNAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA4

Section beginning p. 54
Eusebian Ammonian etc Euthalius
 

Steven Avery

Administrator
Codex Sinaiticus Petropolitanus. The New Testament. The Epistle of Barnabas and the Shepherd of Hermas. Preserved in the Imperial Library of St Petersburg. Now Reproduced in Facsimile from Photographs By Helen and Kirsopp Lake (1911)
https://archive.org/details/codexsinaiticus_201907/page/n9/mode/2up

p. n6 ix
The terminus a quo, from which the date of the MS. must be reckoned, is provided by the fact that the Eusebian apparatus was added to it before it was issued from the scriptorium (see p. xix). It is unfortunate that we do not know

Coislinianus
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Convoluted theory
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The date which must be assigned to the time when the
Codex was in Caesarea depends entirely on that which palaeo-
graphy gives to the writing of the C correctors, and especially
of course to that of the scribe who wrote the notes at the
end of Ezra and Esther. On this point opinions are likely
to differ. The latest date suggested is the seventh century;
the earliest is the fifth. Dr. F. G. Kenyon and Dr. A. S.
Hunt agree in regarding the sixth century as possible,
but the former is inclined to accept the seventh as equally
possible, while the latter is more disposed to prefer an
earlier date.

p xviii
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p. xix
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The Sinaitic and Vatican Manuscripts and the Copies Sent by Eusebius to Constantine (1918)
https://archive.org/details/jstor-1507391/page/n1/mode/2up
 
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Steven Avery

Administrator
Likely no mention of the three crosses note, definitely not in NT and the OT was "largely identical".

The Periodical, Volume 8, Issue 116
https://books.google.com/books?id=IL7fAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA24

The facsimile of the Old Testament text of the Codex Sinaiticus now published is made from negatives taken at Pctrograd and in Leipzig by Dr. Lake and his wife in the summer of 1913. The introductory pages are largely identical with those prefixed to the facsimile edition of the New
Testament published in 1911
 
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