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201 Pages·2015·1.008 MB·English
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Constantine Tischendorf i ii Constantine Tischendorf The Life and Work of a 19th Century Bible Hunter Including Constantine Tischendorf’s When Were Our Gospels Written ? Stanley E. Porter iii Bloomsbury T&T Clark An imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing Plc Imprint previously known as T&T Clark 5 0 Bedford Square 1385 Broadway London New York W C1B 3DP NY 10018 U K USA www.bloomsbury.com BLOOMSBURY, T&T CLARK and the Diana logo are trademarks of Bloomsbury Publishing Plc First published 2015 © Stanley E. Porter, 2015 Stanley E. Porter has asserted his right under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act, 1988, to be identifi ed as Author of this work. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or any information storage or retrieval system, without prior permission in writing from the publishers. No responsibility for loss caused to any individual or organization acting on or refraining from action as a result of the material in this publication can be accepted by Bloomsbury or the author. British Library Cataloguing- in-Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library. ISBN: HB: 978-0-56765-801-2 PB: 978-0-56765-802-9 ePDF: 978-0-56765-803-6 ePUB: 978-0-56765-800-5 Library of Congress Cataloging- in-Publication Data Porter, Stanley E., 1956– Constantine Tischendorf: the life and work of a 19th century bible hunter / by Stanley E. Porter. pages cm “Including Constantine Tischendorf’s When were our Gospels written?” Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978-0-567-65801-2 (hardback) — ISBN 978-0-567-65802-9 (paperback) 1. Tischendorf, Constantin von, 1815–1874. 2. Biblical scholars—Germany— Biography. I. Tischendorf, Constantin von, 1815–1874. Wann wurden unsere Evangelien verfasst? English. II. Title. BS501.T57P67 2015 220.092—dc23 [B] 2014030901 Typeset by Refi neCatch Limited, Bungay, Suffolk iv CONTENTS Foreword vii PART ONE Introduction and context 3 The life of Constantine Tischendorf 11 The work of Constantine Tischendorf 61 Conclusion 73 PART TWO An introduction to Constantine Tischendorf’s When Were Our Gospels Written? 79 Constantine Tischendorf, When Were Our Gospels Written? 111 Translator’s preface 113 Introductory narrative of the discovery of the Sinaitic Manuscript 117 v vi CONTENTS Chapter I Ecclesiastical testimony 131 Chapter II The testimony of heretics and heathen during the second century 145 Chapter III Apocryphal literature 151 Chapter IV Testimony of apostolic fathers: Barnabas and Papias 157 Chapter V Manuscripts and versions of the second century 171 PART THREE Selected bibliography 177 Index 185 FOREWORD I am acutely aware that this is not a biography of Constantine Tischendorf or the full critical study that his life and work merit. Tischendorf deserves a full and complete biography that traces the course of his intellectual development from start to fi nish and, more importantly, a thorough assessment of the range and signifi cance of his great intellectual accomplishments, of which the discovery and publication of C odex Sinaiticus must rank as the most important. This is a mere sketch of a few of the accomplishments of a great and much maligned man. This book is written to appear in the year of the 200th anniversary of Tischendorf’s birth, 1815. In that sense, this volume is also a commemorative volume devoted to a man who deserves commendation of the highest order. Tischendorf no doubt led a fascinating life, even though he is not nearly as well known as he once was. This book is an attempt, at least in part, to begin to correct this lack of knowledge, and certainly address some misperceptions about him. Although Tischendorf at fi rst glance appears to be a typical German scholar of the nineteenth century (photographs of him do nothing to dispel this, with his very stern and upright appearance), his scholarly and pietistic motivation for his textual work propels him beyond most others of his age— or of any age. This motivation led him to feats that can only be described as heroic, especially when we consider their grandeur, their scope and their lasting signifi cance. It is doubtful whether we will see another like Tischendorf any time soon. Even though this is not the complete biography that he deserves, in it I have tried to convey what I have long found fascinating about this scholar who roamed the world in search of the Bible’s earliest manuscripts—out of a sense of pious devotion to God’s word and belief that discovery of the earliest manuscripts would confi rm its textual reliability. He accomplished great things, although today many people know him more for controversy and question his vii viii FOREWORD motives regarding C odex Sinaiticus than recognize the signifi cance of his accomplishments. I do not mean this to be an exercise in hagiography nor a work of critical biography. Instead, it is meant as an introduction to key moments in his life, with an assessment of these events in the light of his numerous accomplishments. Besides my short biographical sketch of Tischendorf, this volume includes a second part. This second part consists of an introduction and interpretive summary of Tischendorf’s popular apologetic work, When Were Our Gospels Written? This volume was written in response to the pressing critical needs of the time and was received with great fanfare. In my introduction to this reprinted work, I attempt to place Tischendorf’s writing of this short book within its critical milieu, and then distill the argument that he presents in the fi ve chapters of this book. Tischendorf’s book was written for a popular audience, and so it lacks the critical apparatus one would perhaps now expect to accompany such a work, especially where references to other scholars and ancient sources are concerned. I have attempted to provide some of these references, though clearly have not been able to include all of them. Nevertheless, I think that this work is worth considering because it brings together Tischendorf’s personal beliefs with his scholarly ambitions and purpose that dominated most of his intellectual life from around 1840 until his death in 1874. I trust that this short work from Tischendorf himself—not one of his edited manuscripts, but a book of contemporary scholarly concern—will help to add insight into the work of this important scholar. I have also found it interesting how relevant his arguments seem, when one compares the situation in which he wrote with some of the discussions in contemporary scholarship, raising the question of what scholarship has or has not learned in the course of the last 150 years, but that topic merits further discussion at another time. I have had a longstanding fascination with Tischendorf. This dates back to my early days as a scholar, when I fi rst began to get involved in matters textual, and was developed further in the course of my papyrological and epigraphical scholarship. Of course, I have been intrigued by the story of his repeated visits to St Catherine’s Monastery and the discovery and identifi cation of C odex Sinaiticus . As a result, I often speak about Tischendorf. My students have come to believe that any course that they take from me in which Tischendorf does not make a signifi cant appearance in one way or FOREWORD ix another—usually in the recounting of the tale of his discovery of the great codex—is a course that is much the poorer for not sharing in the excitement of this story and adventure. I am fortunate to own one of the 327 facsimile editions of the codex that Tischendorf produced for the Czar of Russia (20 printed on parchment). My copy is apparently one of the 100 that Tischendorf was allowed to sell as his compensation for his heroic editing and publishing task. The four volumes that comprise my copy were purchased by some of the trustees of the Flounders Institute of Ackworth, England 1 and donated to Haverford College on 25 August 1865, where the complete set was placed in the College library. There the edition remained for many years, until the institution apparently sold it. Even though an accompanying undated newspaper article that I received with the edition says that “The Library of Haverford College has been recently enriched by a gift, which will always remain one of its most valued treasures—the ‘Codex Sinaiticus,’ in the imperial edition,” it now is one of the prized possessions of my own library, where I consult it regularly in the course of my own textual work. The edition is not only an important work of scholarship, but is an excellent representation of exacting German book production in its attention to detail, from the paper chosen (Tischendorf came from a line of paper merchants) and the design of the fonts (by printers in the printing town of Leipzig). The writing of even such a slim volume as this could not have been accomplished without the benefi t of the work of many others. In particular, I wish to thank Professor Dr Christfried Böttrich, of Greifswald University, Germany, who has graciously provided valuable materials to help me in this rudimentary study of Tischendorf. Professor Böttrich has written a number of important works on Tischendorf, and we can all hope for him to write the defi nitive biography of this great man. I acknowledge that I have used his several scholarly writings, his own biographical study, and his bibliography in the preparation of this short volume. I refer to 1 According to the web, the Flounders Institute was a Quaker teacher training institute in nineteenth-c entury England. Haverford College was founded in 1833 by Quakers in the Philadelphia, Pennsylvania area, although the College now has no formal ties to Quakerism.

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