Critical apparatus
A critical apparatus in textual criticism of primary source material, is an organized system of notations to represent, in a single text, the complex history of that text in a concise form useful to diligent readers and scholars. The apparatus typically includes footnotes, standardized abbreviations for the source manuscripts, and symbols for denoting recurring problems.
As conceived of by one 19th-century editor:
Shakespearean studies
Many editions employ a standard format for a critical apparatus, as illustrated by a line from Hamlet, which the Oxford Complete Works prints as follows:The apparatus for the line might be rendered as:
The format of the apparatus has several parts:
- The location of the variant in the text
- The lemma, which is the portion of the text to which the note applies
- A right bracket
- The source from which the edition took its reading
- A list of variants, in each case followed by the source in which the variant is found, and set off with a semicolon.
In the example given, the first folio and the three early quartos each have a different reading of the line in question. The editors have concluded that all four early sources are corrupt, and instead have adopted a reading suggested by G. R. Hibbard. Other editors of the play may choose a different reading of the line. The apparatus summarizes all of the textual evidence, allowing readers to assess for themselves whether the editor has made the best choice. Sometimes the editor will add a commentary, defending the choice made, explaining why other readings were rejected, or discussing how other editors have treated the passage.
This format has been used for critical apparatuses of Shakespeare and many other authors. In variorum editions, the apparatus is often placed at the bottom of the page. Sometimes a three-part format is employed, with the main text at the top of the page, textual variants in the middle, and the editor's commentary at the bottom. This remains the most common format for Shakespeare editions, although the Oxford Complete Works breaks with tradition by putting its critical apparatus in a separately published volume.
Biblical studies
The first printed edition of the New Testament with critical apparatus, noting variant readings among the manuscripts, was produced by the printer Robert Estienne of Paris in 1550. The Greek text of this edition and of those of Erasmus became known as the Textus Receptus, a name given to it in the Elzevier edition of 1633, which termed it as the text nunc ab omnibus receptum.The Novum Testamentum Graece uses a system of sigla created by Caspar René Gregory in 1908, and extended by Kurt Aland, known as Gregory–Aland numbering; these sigla are widely used in academic writing about the Greek text. The most important uncials are given Hebrew, Roman, or Greek letter names: א, A, Dp, or Ξ. The papyri are assigned the Blackletter character ? followed by a superscript number. Here, Papyrus Oxyrhynchus 208 + 1781 is and the Chester Beatty Papyri, which contains the Gospels and Acts, is. The superscript numbers follow the order of registration, and do not reflect the age of the manuscript or order of importance. The minuscules are given plain numbers, and the lectionaries are notated by script, ranging from ℓ 1 up to ℓ ''2463.
For Vetus Latina manuscripts, sigla are related to content, so they are not unique. For example, the letter t'' refers to Codex Bernensis in the gospels, but Liber Comicus elsewhere, which may lead to confusion. Other means of identifying manuscripts include a full name and the standard unique serial number for each manuscript given by its custodian.
Sigla, names and numbers serve different scholarly purposes. Sigla, in the context of reference to an original document, provide unique and concise identification of witnesses to the text of that original, suited to minimising the space taken by citation in a critical apparatus. Names, on the other hand, normally refer to specific handwritten volumes, either as originally bound or in their current form. Names are typically Latin, and can refer to the place of composition or rediscovery, the current location, a famous owner, a volume's function, or can even refer to physical characteristics of a volume. The Book of Mulling is also known as Liber Moliensis after the name of the scribe, as tradition has it.