language menu item language menu item language menu item language menu item

Detail showing wax accretion on Quire 83, folio 4 verso
Detail showing wax accretion on Quire 83, folio 4 verso.

Download the full image.

Production

Codex Sinaiticus was copied by more than one scribe. Constantine Tischendorf identified four in the nineteenth century. Subsequent research decided that there were three, but it is possible that a fourth (different from Tischendorf’s fourth scribe) can be identified. Each of the three undisputed scribes has a distinctive way of writing which can be identified with practice. Each also had a distinctive way of spelling many sounds, particularly vowels which scribes often wrote phonetically. One of them may have been a senior copyist.

To make their manuscript, the scribes had to perform a series of tasks. They had to

  1. determine a format (there are very few surviving manuscripts written with four columns to a page);
  2. divide the work between them;
  3. prepare the parchment, including ruling it with a framework for the layout of columns and lines;
  4. prepare the manuscripts they were copying;
  5. get pens and ink together;
  6. write the text;
  7. check it;
  8. assemble the whole codex in the right order.

Find out more about Codex Sinaiticus