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While the order of the gospels in ancient manuscripts almost always follows the order printed in modern Bibles (Matthew-Mark-Luke-John), some important ancient copies rearrange the order of the gospels. One of these sequences is Matthew-John-Luke-Mark, and can be found in a few important Greek and Latin manuscripts. Previously, researchers attempted to identify later Greek manuscripts in this order with inconclusive results. This article presents five later manuscripts in a cursive handwriting from the 9th to 11th centuries that feature the gospels in this rare order. These five manuscripts, and two of the older manuscripts, contain a Byzantine commentary alongside the biblical text. These commentaries are called catena, from the latin word meaning chain. They interpret the biblical text through a series of comments taken from early Christian writings by multiple authors arranged into a continuous commentary. Studying the composition of these gospel commentaries and the ways they were copied in the manuscript books explains why the Western order was adopted in these later manuscripts.

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This page is a summary of: Greek Catenae and the “Western” Order of the Gospels, Novum Testamentum, December 2021, Brill,
DOI: 10.1163/15685365-bja10012.
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