Categories of New Testament manuscripts


New Testament manuscripts in Greek can be categorized into five theoretical groups, according to a schema introduced in 1981 by Kurt and Barbara Aland in The Text of the New Testament. The categories are based on how each manuscript relates to the various theorized text-types. Generally speaking, earlier Alexandrian manuscripts are category, while later Byzantine manuscripts are category. Aland's method involved considering 1000 passages where the Byzantine text differs from non-Byzantine text. The Alands did not select their 1000 readings from all of the NT books; for example, none were drawn from Matthew and Luke.

Description of categories

The Alands' categories do not simply correspond to the text-types; all they do is demonstrate the 'Byzantine-ness' of a particular text; that is, how much it is similar to the Byzantine text-type, from least to most similar. Category can be equated with the Byzantine text-type, but the other categories are not necessarily representative of a text-type. Even though most texts in Category agree with the Alexandrian text-type, they are not necessarily Alexandrian themselves; they are just very non-Byzantine.
The Alands introduced the following categories :
  • Category : "Manuscripts of a very special quality which should always be considered in establishing the original text." This category includes almost all manuscripts before the 4th century. These manuscripts have almost no Byzantine influence, and often agree with the Alexandrian text-type, but are not necessarily Alexandrian themselves. Some 4th-century and earlier papyri and uncials are in this category, as are manuscripts of the Alexandrian text-type. The Alands say the manuscripts in this category are important when considering textual problems, and in their opinion "presumably the original text".
  • Category : "Manuscripts of a special quality, but distinguished from manuscripts of Category by the presence of alien influences." The manuscripts in this category are similar to category manuscripts, and are important in textual consideration of the autograph. However, the texts usually contain some alien influences, such as those found in the Byzantine text-type. Egyptian texts fall in this category.
  • Category : "Manuscripts of a distinctive character with an independent text... particularly important for the history of the text." The manuscripts in category are important when discussing the history of the textual traditions and to a lesser degree for establishing the original text. The manuscripts usually contain independent readings, and have a distinctive character. ƒ and ƒ are examples of manuscript families that fall within this category. Manuscripts of this category usually present mixed or eclectic text-type.
  • Category : "Manuscripts of the D text." Category contains the few manuscripts that follow the text of the Codex Bezae. These texts are of the Western text-type.
  • Category : "Manuscripts with a purely or predominantly Byzantine text." This category may be equated with the Byzantine text-type. Byzantine and mostly Byzantine texts fall under this category.
  • Uncategorised: Some manuscripts studied by the Alands were not categorised, for example because they were too short to determine which group they belonged to, or fell somewhere in between. The unclassified manuscript could be representative of the Western text-type, the "Caesarean text-type", or anything else.

Distribution of Greek manuscripts by century and category

The following table is derived from Kurt & Barbara Aland's The Text of the New Testament.
Century and approximate year
2nd
,,
2nd / 3rd
,,,,, 0189
3rd
,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 02200212,
3rd / 4th
,,,,,,, 0162, 0171
4th
,,, 01, 03,,,,,,, 0185, 058, 0169, 0188, 0206, 0207, 0221, 0228, 0231, 0242
4th / 5th
057,,,,, 0181, 0270,, 059, 0160, 0176, 0214, 0219
5th
02, 0254, 04, 016, 029, 048, 077, 0172, 0173, 0175, 0201, 0240, 0244, 027402, 032, 062, 068, 069, 0163, 0165, 0166, 0182, 0216, 0217, 0218, 0226, 0227, 0236, 0252, 026105026, 061
5th / 6th
, 071, 076, 088, 0232, 0247,, 072, 0170, 0186, 0213
6th
, 06, 08, 073, 081, 085, 087, 089, 091, 093, 094, 0184, 0223, 0225, 0245,,,,, 06, 015, 035, 040, 060, 066, 067, 070, 078, 079, 082, 086, 0143, 0147, 0159, 0187, 0198, 0208, 0222, 0237, 0241, 0251, 0260, 0266022, 023, 024, 027, 042, 043, 064, 065, 093, 0246, 0253, 0265
6th / 7th
,,, 083, 0164, 0199
7th
, 098,,,, 0102, 0108, 0111, 0204, 0275,, 096, 097, 099, 0106, 0107, 0109, 0145, 0167, 0183, 0200, 0209, 0210, 0239, 0259, 0262, 0103, 0104, 0211
7th / 8th
,
8th
019, 0101, 0114, 0156, 0205, 0234, 095, 0126, 0127, 0146, 0148, 0161, 0229, 0233, 0238, 0250, 025607, 047, 054, 0116, 0134
8th / 9th
044 044
9th
33 010, 038, 0155, 0271, 33, 892, 2464012, 025, 037, 050, 0122, 0128, 0130, 0131, 0132, 0150, 0269, 56509, 011, 013, 014, 017, 018, 020, 021, 025, 030, 031, 034, 039, 041, 045, 049, 053, 063, 0120, 0133, 0135, 0136, 0151, 0197, 0248, 0255, 0257, 0272, 0273, 461
9th / 10th
18410115, 1424 1424, 1841
10th
1739 0177, 0243, 1739, 1891, 2329051, 075, 0105, 0121a, 0121b, 0140, 0141, 0249, 307, 1582, 1836, 1845, 1874, 1875, 1912, 2110, 2193, 2351028, 033, 036, 046, 052, 056, 0142, 1874, 1891
11th
1175, 1243, 234481, 323, 945, 1006, 1854, 1962, 229828, 104, 181, 323, 398, 424, 431, 436, 451, 459, 623, 700, 788, 1243, 1448, 1505, 1838, 1846, 1908, 2138, 2147, 2298, 2344, 2596 103, 104, 181, 398, 431, 451, 459, 945, 1006, 1448, 1505, 1846, 1854, 2138, 2147, 2298
11th / 12th
256, 17351735, 1910256
12th
1241 36, 1611, 2050, 21271, 36, 88, 94, 157, 326, 330, 346, 378, 543, 610, 826, 828, 917, 983, 1071, 1241, 1319, 1359, 1542b, 1611, 1718, 1942, 2030, 2412, 2541, 27441, 180, 189, 330, 378, 610, 911, 917, 1010, 1241, 1319, 1359, 1542b, 2127, 2541
12th / 13th
15731573
13th
2053, 2062442, 579, 1292, 18526, 13, 94, 180, 206, 218, 263, 365, 441, 614, 720, 915, 1398, 1563, 1641, 1852, 2374, 2492, 2516, 2542, 2718 6, 94, 180, 206, 218, 263, 365, 597, 720, 1251, 1292, 1398, 1642, 1852, 2374, 2400, 2492, 2516
13th / 14th
1342
14th
24271067, 1409, 1506, 18815, 209, 254, 429, 453, 621, 629, 630, 1523, 1534, 1678, 1842, 1877, 2005, 2197, 2200, 23775, 189, 209, 254, 429, 1067, 1409, 1506, 1523, 1524, 1877, 2200
14th / 15th
2495
15th
32269, 205, 322, 467, 642, 1751, 1844, 1959, 2523, 265269, 181, 205, 429, 467, 642, 886, 2523, 2623, 2652
16th
61, 522, 918, 1704, 188461, 522, 918, 1704
16th / 17th and later
849, 2544 2544

Number of manuscripts by century and category

CenturyCategory Category Category Category Category
II3
II/III6
III2512
III/IV82
IV5810
IV/V1 77
V2161912
V/VI66
VI153112
VI/VII143
VII28174
VII/VIII21
VIII6125
VIII/IX11
IX37125
IX/X122
X151810
XI372416
XI/XII221
XII152416
XII/XIII11
XIII242118
XIII/XIV1
XIV141712
XIV/XV1
XV1119
XVI54
XVI/XVII21

Limitations

This system of classification would seem to prefer manuscripts which coincide more or less with the critical text of the Nestle-Aland and UBS Greek New Testaments, of which there are many supposedly Alexandrian manuscripts in Category. Some manuscripts are placed in Category because they are considered too "brief" to classify. The Alands consider Uncial 055 unclassifiable because it is a commentary, and not exactly an "Uncial" manuscript. Accordingly,, Uncial 080, Uncial 0100, Uncial 0118, 0174, 0230, 0263, 0264, 0267, 0268 are considered by the Alands to be too brief to classify. Uncial 0144 and 0196 are not accessible. The Alands do not classify, stating this is due to the Diatessaric character of text.
was classified to Category, but it is not a representative of the Alexandrian text-type. According to biblical scholar Philip Comfort it is "a good example of what Kurt and Barbara Aland call "normal".
The Alands references are one of the most widely used references for New Testament textual criticism in theological studies today along with the UBS and continues to receive regular updates as more manuscripts are found and become available for study. Published apparatus are constrained by limitations of space. Furthermore, updates do not happen in real time although efforts have made rapid progress in bringing the data online allowing for a more real-time access to research and discussion in ways no other text from antiquity has ever been done with the scale and scope of evidentiary materials. Originally, Waltz stated: