Franz Anton Knittel Explained

Franz Anton Knittel (April 3, 1721  - December 10, 1792) was a German, Lutheran orthodox theologian, priest, and palaeographer. He examined palimpsests' text of the Codex Guelferbytanus 64 Weissenburgensis and deciphered text of Codex Carolinus. He was the author of many works.

Life

Knittel became a priest in 1751 and the archdeacon of the main church in Wolfenbüttel in 1753.[1] In 1766, he became general superintendent and the first preacher in Wolfenbüttel and in 1776 general superintendent in Brunswick.[2] After receiving work in the main church of Wolfenbüttel Knittel started to examine manuscripts housed in the Ducal Library of Wolfenbüttel. In 1756, he studied the Codex Guelferbytanus 64 Weissenburgensis. The manuscript and its palimpsest text had earlier been examined by Heusinger, who described it in 1752,[3] but Knittel was the first who recognized that the palimpsest Greek text belonged to two different manuscripts of the New Testament. Knittel designated these two texts by sigla A and B. He recognized also lists of the Greek, Ancient (to 1453);: κεφαλαια (chapters) as another, the third Greek manuscript. Knittel also deciphered and reconstructed the Gothic-Latin text of the palimpsest and published it in 1762 at Brunswick.[4] It is known as Codex Carolinus. The upper text of palimpsest contains text of Isidore of Seville's Origines and his six letters. Knittel designated it by siglum E and dated it to the 11th century.

Knittel made many errors in deciphering the palimpsest's text, especially in the Latin text of Codex Carolinus (e.g. enarrabilia for scrutabilia). Tischendorf made a new and more accurate collation for the Latin text (edited in 1855).[5] A new collation of the Gothic text was published by Carla Falluomini in 1999.[6] Knittel examined also other manuscripts (e.g. Minuscule 126, 429).

Knittel defended a traditional point of view in theology and was against the modern textual criticism. He defended an authenticity of the Pericopa Adulterae (John 7:53-8:11), Comma Johanneum (1 John 5:7), and Testimonium Flavianum. According to him Erasmus in his Novum Instrumentum omne did not incorporate the Comma from Codex Montfortianus, because of grammar differences, but used Complutensian Polyglotta. According to him the Comma was known for Tertullian.[7]

Works

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. [Heinrich Döring]
  2. Heinrich Döring, Franz Anton Knittel, in: Die deutschen Kanzelredner des achtzehnten und neunzehnten Jahrhunderts, p. 173
  3. Jakob Friedrich Heusinger, De quattuor Evangeliorum Codice Graeco, quem antiqua manu membrana scriptum Guelferbytana bibliotheca servat, Guelf 1752.
  4. Ulphilae versionem Gothicam nonnullorum capitum epistolae Pauli ad Romanos e litura MS. rescript Bibliothecae Guelferbytanae, cum variis monumentis ineditis eruit, commentatus est, detitque foras, Brunovici 1762
  5. Constantin von Tischendorf, Anecdota sacra et profana (Lipsiae 1855), p. 155–158.
  6. G. W. S. Friedrichsen, The Gotic Text of Rom. XIV, in Cod. Guelferbytanus, Weissenburg 64, JTS 1937, pp. 245-247
  7. Knittel, Neue Kritiken über den berühmten Sprych: Drey sind, die da zeugen im Himmel, der Vater, das Wort, und der heilige Geist, und diese drei sind eins Braunschweig 1785