- Source: Stichometry of Nicephorus
The Stichometry of Nicephorus is a stichometry attributed to Patriarch Nicephorus I of Constantinople (c. 758-828). The work appears at the end of the Chronographikon Syntomon. It consists of a list of New Testament and Old Testament works categorized between canonical, disputed, and apocryphal, along with the total number of lines in each text.The work was composed in the 9th century. Some manuscripts attribute the work anonymously rather than to Nicephorus. It is significant in the area of canon studies as it includes counts for Christian texts which have been lost over the course of time. This has enabled modern scholars to determine how much of various fragmentary texts from the New Testament apocrypha and Old Testament apocrypha remain missing.
The New Testament writings considered disputed:
Revelation of John
Apocalypse of Peter
Epistle of Barnabas
Gospel of the Hebrews
The Old Testament writings considered disputed:
Book of Enoch
Testaments of the Twelve Patriarchs
Prayer of Joseph
The testament of Moses
Assumption of Moses
A work titled "Abraham", possibly the Apocalypse of Abraham
Eldad and Modad
Apocalypse of Elijah
Apocalypse of Zephaniah
Apocalypse of Zechariah
References
External links
The stichometry of Nicephorus (English, Greek, Latin)
Teubner edition with critical apparatus in Nikephoros, Chronographikon syntomon in: Nicephori Archiepiscopi Constantinopolitani, Opuscula historica, ed. C. de Boor, Leipzig 1880, p. 80–135, esp. 132 – 135. (Greek, Internet Archive)
In a collection of documents on the history of the Christian canon by E. Preuschen, Analecta (Freiberg and Leipzig: Mohr, 1893), pp. 156–8. (Greek, Internet Archive).
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Nikephoros I dari Konstantinopel
- Injil orang Ibrani
- Stichometry of Nicephorus
- Nikephoros I of Constantinople
- Nicephorus
- Stichometry
- Epistle of Barnabas
- Apocalypse of Peter
- Acts of John
- Assumption of Moses
- Gospel of the Hebrews
- Al-Fihrist