Book contents
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- PART I THE HISTORY OF THE GREEK OLD TESTAMENT AND OF ITS TRANSMISSION
- PART II THE CONTENTS OF THE ALEXANDRIAN OLD TESTAMENT
- CHAPTER I Titles, Grouping, Number, and Order of the Books
- CHAPTER II Books of the Hebrew Canon
- CHAPTER III Books not included in the Hebrew Canon
- CHAPTER IV The Greek of the Septuagint
- CHAPTER V The Septuagint as a Version
- CHAPTER VI Text divisions: Stichi, Chapters, Lections, Catenae, &c
- PART III LITERARY USE, VALUE, AND TEXTUAL CONDITION OF THE GREEK OLD TESTAMENT
- APPENDIX: THE LETTER OF PSEUDO-ARISTEAS
- INDICES
CHAPTER I - Titles, Grouping, Number, and Order of the Books
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 August 2011
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- PART I THE HISTORY OF THE GREEK OLD TESTAMENT AND OF ITS TRANSMISSION
- PART II THE CONTENTS OF THE ALEXANDRIAN OLD TESTAMENT
- CHAPTER I Titles, Grouping, Number, and Order of the Books
- CHAPTER II Books of the Hebrew Canon
- CHAPTER III Books not included in the Hebrew Canon
- CHAPTER IV The Greek of the Septuagint
- CHAPTER V The Septuagint as a Version
- CHAPTER VI Text divisions: Stichi, Chapters, Lections, Catenae, &c
- PART III LITERARY USE, VALUE, AND TEXTUAL CONDITION OF THE GREEK OLD TESTAMENT
- APPENDIX: THE LETTER OF PSEUDO-ARISTEAS
- INDICES
Summary
The Greek Old Testament, as known to us through the few codices which contain it as a whole, and from the lists which appear in the Biblical MSS. or in ancient ecclesiastical writings, differs from the Hebrew Bible in regard to the titles of the books which are common to both, and the principle upon which the books are grouped. The two collections differ yet more materially in the number of the books, the Greek Bible containing several entire writings of which there is no vestige in the Hebrew canon, besides large additions to the contents of more than one of the Hebrew books. These differences are of much interest to the Biblical student, since they express a tradition which, inherited by the Church from the Alexandrian synagogue, has widely influenced Christian opinion upon the extent of the Old Testament Canon, and the character and purpose of the several books.
1. The following tables shew (A) the Hebrew, Greek, and Latin titles of the canonical books of the Old Testament; (B) the order and grouping of the books in (1) lists of Jewish origin, (2) the great uncial MSS. of the Greek Bible, (3) patristic and synodical lists of the (a) Eastern, (b) Western Church.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- An Introduction to the Old Testament in GreekWith an Appendix Containing the Letter of Aristeas, pp. 197 - 230Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1900