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11-18-2011, 01:30 AM | #11 |
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Literary Forgeries (1907) by J. A. Farrer (archive.org) The section on the 1st-2nd cent. papyri is the most important: The Mayer Papyri. But it was not till 1860 that Simonides again came prominently before the world. When he did so, he as usual caused a stir. It was on 13th February that he called on Mr. Joseph Mayer of Liverpool with a request to inspect his celebrated museum of antiquities. On 22nd February he dedicated to Mr. Mayer, "as a small mark of his personal attachment," his Brief Dissertation on Hieroglyphic Letters, in explanation of five Egyptian antiquities in the Museum. It was published in Greek and English by Mr. David Nutt, abounds with ingenious interpretations of the hieroglyphic characters, and frequently quotes the authority of Uranius. But the great discovery was to follow, Mr.Mayer had acquired, partly by purchase from a dealer called Sams and partly from the Rev. H. Stobart, a number of papyri which he had never examined and which had remained in a state of neglect. The difficult work of unrolling these papyri, of fixing them on canvas, and of deciphering them, was conducted by Simonides in the Museum, in the presence, more or less constant, of Mr. Mayer himself, of the Curator of the Museum, and of Mr. John Eliot Hodgkin. It was. not till August that some of these papyri were removed to Simonides' own house for purposes of further examination. The discovery therefore on 1st May of certain fragments of St. Matthew's Gospel on one of these papyri would seem to have been made under conditions which rendered fraud impossible or unlikely. Yet the information appended at the end to the effect that the Gospel had been written at the dictation of St Matthew by Nicolaus the Deacon in the fifteenth year after the Ascension savoured of the highest improbability. And if the papyrus was genuine, it was the oldest known Christian document in existence. No wonder the literary world was excited. And the excitement grew as the finds grew in number. Within a few months Simonides had discovered fragments from the Epistles of St. James and of St Jude; portions of eight chapters of the Book of Genesis ; the Ten Commandments ; the Periplus of Hanno ; the first page of a work by Aristaeus ; some fragments of Zoroaster ; seven epistles of Hermippus ; and a fragment of Androsthenes, an admiral of Alexander the Great. In this case there was no question of making profit out of MSS., forged or genuine; the MSS. were the property of Mr. Mayer, and Simonides' only concern with them was their decipherment. But the name of Simonides excited suspicion, though the motive as well as the opportunity of forgery were not discernible. The Mayer papyri were exhibited and examined at a meeting of the Royal Society of Literature on the evenings of 9th and loth January, 1863, Sir F. Madden, Sir H. Rawlinson, Simonides and others being present. The Report of the Council was read on 11th February, and was strongly condemnatory of the genuineness of the documents. The condemnation was founded on such facts as the similarity in the handwriting of the MSS., albeit they purported to be of different ages ; the juxtaposition of different dates and characters on the same papyrus ; the unusual length of the lines of the writing ; the difference in the colour of most of the papyri from that of genuine papyri. And one papyrus was denounced as "a rank forgery" by reason of certain little flecks of red blotting-paper which Mr. C. W. Goodwin discovered, and which he maintained had been used to erase the Hieratic writing in order to make place for the subsequent Greek writing. But it is questionable whether this blotting-paper had not been legitimately used in the difficult work of unrolling and mounting the papyri previous to deciphering them. And the admission that Simonides exhibited two rolls of Hieratic writing, " the genuine- ness of which was not doubtful," sets one wondering whether the conclusions of the majority of the Council were correct, or would stand the test of the great advance that has since been made in the science of palaeography. Simonides published excellent facsimiles in 1861 and 1864 of most of these papyri. But it is best to inspect the originals as he mounted them himself in the Museum of the Free Public Library at Liverpool, where they may still be seen, together with tracings taken by him for his lithographed facsimiles. It is almost impossible to believe in his manufacture of these papyri. They correspond in writing and appearance with numberless other papyri which have of recent years been discovered and published. And there are in the collection three papyri, still unrolled, time-worn and brittle, looking like huge cigars, and containing no one knows what precious secrets of antiquity. If these are forgeries, they can hardly be forgeries by Simonides ; and if he was guiltless in respect of these, he was presumably guiltless in respect of the others. One of the chief objections urged in 1863 against these papyri was the similarity of the handwriting in documents belonging to widely different periods. But this similarity is the last thing that can be fairly predicated of them. Let any one compare the two volumes of the facsimiles, and it is rather the diversity than the similarity of the handwriting which will strike his attention. As little force can now be attached to another argument urged at the time against the papyri by Mr. Vaux, secretary to the Literary Society, in an AthetuEum review of Simonides' facsimiles (7th December, 1861). Mr. Vaux laid it down dogmatically as "an undoubted fact that no MSS. of any kind, if we except the Hieratic papyri, are known to ascend to the first or second century, and that of those of the fourth or fifth there are not more than five or six throughout all the libraries of Europe". Therefore, it was argued, these papyri, for many of which Simonides claimed the first century, could not be genuine. But since recent discoveries in Egypt have carried many Greek papyri manuscripts as far back even as the third and fourth century B.C., this argument has ceased to exist. In short, if these Mayer papyri are to continue to be regarded as spurious, it ought to be only after an impartial re-study of them, and a clear statement of the palaeographical reasons for differentiating them from others which are accepted as genuine." ----------------- Such revelations border on astounding. If the Matthew fragments are not forgeries, but rather are ancient documents from the 3rd or 2nd century, they are invaluable. But even more important, the fragments of the letters of 1st John are equally valuable, and need close re-examination. |
11-18-2011, 03:07 AM | #12 | |
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11-18-2011, 03:48 AM | #13 |
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11-18-2011, 05:37 AM | #14 | |
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11-18-2011, 06:11 AM | #15 | |
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Forgers often claim or ensure a second find, because the second authenticates the first (as the second alleged find of Piltdown did, for example). The Tel Dan stele exhibits the same phenomenon -- finds a year later helped authenticate the initial 1993 find and (WHAT A COINCIDENCE) rebut specific forgery charges. If Sinaiticus is Simonides' forgery it would not surprise me if he as an experienced forger had stashed a section away to authenticate his first find at a later date. Especially since if Codex S really is his, then it is the apex of his forgery career, like the Jesus Ossuary, Piltdown, the Ching Shan Diary, etc. The point made above that Sinaiticus has many readings of Vaticanus brings up another issue: a forger typically uses an exemplar to create the forgery. I would sure like to know more about the discovery of the manuscripts in an area that was conveniently buried under a quake (what quake, when?) so that it could be indisputably authenticated. Vorkosigan |
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11-18-2011, 06:56 AM | #16 |
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The author of this thread asked the question "Is Codex Sinaiticus a Forgery After All"? Now, who does he expect to answer such a question on BC&H?
If he is NOT prepared to answer his own question then I don't know who can. We on BC&H have NOTHING to examine and have no ability to examine the Codex Sinaiticus in its original form on this forum. The question simply cannot be answered. It is BEYOND the scope of this forum. We can say what is found in the Codex Sinaiticus as presented but we have NO means of resolving the question of authenticity of the Codex. |
11-18-2011, 10:16 AM | #17 | |||||
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In a sober estimate, the account given by Simonides makes the probability close to nil that he created one or more copies at the Sinai monastery as a poison pill for the eventuality that his plot against Tischendorf should backfire. Quote:
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11-18-2011, 11:16 AM | #18 |
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My only observation is that if there was ever a need for some sort of forensic testing of a document - this is it. Yes, Simonides confessed to the 'forgery' (if it was one) but only after being exposed as forger. The association between Tisch and Simonides is particularly compelling. Much more compelling than other forgery arguments
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11-18-2011, 01:38 PM | #19 | |
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11-18-2011, 01:39 PM | #20 |
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Apparently Kirsopp Lake argued for authenticity but discovered some interesting (and unexplained) properties associated with the ink: http://codexsinaiticus.org/en/projec...ation_ink.aspx
In 1862 Constantine Tischendorf published the first facsimile[9] of Codex Sinaiticus. In the introduction (Prolegomena), he presents the results of his studies on the manuscript through which he was able to identify four different scribes in charge for writing the portion of Codex Sinaiticus that survived until today. Kirsopp Lake also had the chance to study the manuscript in depth and took pictures of the Codex leaves. He produced two facsimiles[10] (one of the New Testament in 1911 and one of the Old Testament in 1922), this time including the fragments from Sinai brought back to Russia in the 1850s by the Archimandrite Porfiri Uspenski. While developing the glass plate negatives of the leaves, Kirsopp Lake noticed a difference in the way the inks were reacting. Some of them would take longer to appear, suggesting differences between the media.[11] However, he does not provide any further explanation, but the difference of “behaviour” and “reaction” of the writing media may indicate a variation in composition (or proportions) of ingredients used to manufacture the inks. Kirsopp Lake therefore already had some understanding of the various scribes involved in writing the Codex Sinaiticus and, with further studies, he agreed with Tischendorf’s results. Milne and Skeat’s analysis[12] of Codex Sinaiticus in the early 1930s confirmed Tischendorf’s identification of three scribes, but not the fourth. They identified Scribe A, Scribe B and Scribe D, assigning to D the Poetical Books in the Old Testament, previously assigned to C by Tischendorf. |
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