Codex Washingtonianus preserves a mixed Gospel text, combining Alexandrian, Western, and Byzantine elements, and through its unique readings helps clarify the original wording of the Gospels.
New Testament Textual Family Groupings and Their Documentary Value
The textual families of the New Testament reveal how the Alexandrian tradition preserves the earliest and most accurate form of the inspired Greek text.
The Age of the Critical Text: Westcott–Hort, von Soden, Local Texts, Alexandrian, Western, Caesarean, Byzantine, Gregory–Aland Numeration, and Modern Greek New Testament Editions
Early papyri and major codices anchor the Greek New Testament, defining the critical text from Westcott–Hort to NA28/UBS5 and clarifying Alexandrian, Western, and Byzantine streams.
The Age of the Critical Text: Origins, Development, and Evaluation of the Westcott-Hort Tradition
The Westcott-Hort critical text revolutionized New Testament textual criticism by prioritizing early Alexandrian manuscripts and documentary evidence.
Exploring the Rich Heritage of Minuscule 124: A Greek New Testament Manuscript
Delve into the intriguing world of Minuscule 124, an 11th-century Greek New Testament manuscript. This article unveils the manuscript's journey from Calabria to Vienna, its role in the Ferrar Group (Family 13), and its distinctive textual variants. Understand how Minuscule 124 contributes to our knowledge of early Christian texts and textual criticism.

