Home > Apple Computer > One of the Oldest Known Copies of St. Paul’s Epistles Now Available in a Free App — Awesome

One of the Oldest Known Copies of St. Paul’s Epistles Now Available in a Free App — Awesome

January 31st, 2013
Marketing Advertising Blog — VuManhThang.Com

The University of Michigan Library’s most famous papyrus, known to scholars as Papyrus 46 (or P46), is now widely available in the form of an app for iPhone and iPad. Users of “PictureIt: EP” can flip through high-resolution images of the 3rd century codex—the oldest known copy of the Letters of St. Paul—as though through pages of a book. Obviously you do not permit ancient mss scholars come up with names of Apps. You can download a copy of the App here.

“This gives an idea of what it was like to read an ancient book, with no capitals, no spaces between words, and no punctuation,” explains Arthur Verhoogt, Acting Archivist of the Library’s Papyrology Collection. The app reveals a translation from the Greek into English with a touch of a finger, either word-by-word or by the page. Readily accessible annotations explain where the papyrus differs from the Standard Version that people know from their New Testament. They also point out scribal errors, which were common in an era when books were copied entirely by hand.

The codex in its entirety was originally made up of 104 leaves (pages), of which 86 survive. The University of Michigan purchased thirty leaves in the 1930s from antiquities dealers in Egypt, and the remaining 56 leaves (which are not included in the app) reside in the Chester Beatty Library in Dublin, Ireland.

Verhoogt believes an app featuring the Pauline Epistles will be a great service. “A general audience wants to touch this text. It’s important to them,” Verhoogt says. Images of the leaves can be viewed online, but the presentation of P46 as an electronic codex, accompanied by the translation and annotations, provides a richer experience of the material, particularly for the non-scholar.

The app was made possible with the support of the Gardner and Ann Parsons Papyrology fund, and was built by Eric Maslowski, Digital Media Commons 3D Lab Manager, along with Graphics Engine Programmer Sean Petty and 3D Artist Stephanie O’Malley. Edgar Ebojo of the University of Birmingham prepared the translation.

Here’s a video on the App. Big HT: History of the Ancient World Blog

 

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Categories: Apple Computer
  1. January 31st, 2013 at 19:41 | #1

    Wow! This certainly is unique! (This is why I don’t get much done here at home after I read your posts.) Technology is amazing. I sometimes wonder what the people back then would think about this today.

  2. Nils
    January 31st, 2013 at 20:44 | #2

    Do you know if there will be an Android version of this? We non-Apple users in the outer darkness with the wailing and gnashing of teeth could benefit greatly!

    • February 1st, 2013 at 07:41 | #3

      You might want to check with the University of Michigan.

  3. Karen Keil
    February 1st, 2013 at 11:58 | #4

    I resolved the the Apple-first/only app process by getting an iPod Touch to enable downloading apps such as this one. It is indeed awesome, especially the translation feature! It can be read either online or offline–the pages of the book can be downloaded onto your device in order to read/browse it offline and deleted off later if you wish. I’m having a little trouble, though, with it crashing here and there when turning a page.

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