- Source: Tetraevangelion
Tetraevangelion (Greek: τετραευαγγέλιον, "Four Evangelia/Gospel Books"; Georgian: ოთხთავი, ot'kht'avi; Old Slavonic: благовѣствованиѥ; Bulgarian: Четвероевангелие; Serbian: Четворојеванђеље) is a name used in Eastern Orthodox terminology for the Canonical gospels of the Four Evangelists. Examples of notable medieval manuscripts include:
Gospels of Tsar Ivan Alexander (1355–56), Bulgarian, illuminated.
Jakov of Serres' (1354), Serbian, illuminated.
Vani Gospels (12–13th c.), Georgian, illuminated.
Mstislav Gospel (12th c.), Russian, illuminated.
Codex Marianus (11th c.), South Slavic. One of the oldest Slavic tetraevangelia.
Codex Zographensis (10–11th c.), South Slavic, illuminated. Oldest Slavic tetraevangelion.
References
Sources
Francis Watson (26 May 2013). Gospel Writing: A Canonical Perspective. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing. pp. 584–. ISBN 978-0-8028-4054-7.
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Daftar Minuscule Perjanjian Baru (1–1000)
- Tetraevangelion
- Radoslav's Gospel
- Stephen the Great
- Byzantine music
- Minuscule 1813
- Bible translations into Romanian
- List of people from Serbia
- Turcheș Church
- Memory of the World Register – Europe and North America
- List of New Testament minuscules (201–300)