The study of palimpsest manuscripts has a long tradition and has led to spectacular discoveries of new texts or new text versions. Recent decades have seen the development of advanced nondestructive methods of multispectral imaging and computer-based image processing. The focus of such research have been individual manuscripts, such as the Archimedes palimpsest that was studied in Baltimore, or the Dexippus fragments in Vienna. The Sinai Palimpsests Project broke new ground by studying for the first time a collection of palimpsest manuscripts that have been preserved for centuries in the library of the Monastery of Saint
Catherine in the Sinai (Egypt). The erased layers preserve texts in eleven languages of the Christian
Orient. An international team of scholars has identified numerous new texts or versions of texts,
often in very early scripts. This volume has its origin in a conference that was held in Vienna in 2018, where these results of the Sinai Palimpsests Project were presented, along with the advances in image capture and image processing that have made them possible. Additional contributions about current projects in the study of palimpsests, also including Jewish and Muslim text traditions, place the study of palimpsest manuscripts within the larger context of the cultural history of the middle ages. The 30 contributions in this volume thus offer a cross-section, including the most recent technologies,
of the current state of research in palimpsest studies.
Supported by: Fonds zur Förderung der wissenschaftlichen Forschung (FWF) - Projekte
Le palimpseste Sin. syr. NF M56N du nouveau fonds de Sainte-Catherine : son apport à la codicologie araméenne christo-palestinienne, aux versions anciennes des textes bibliques et à l’histoire de la liturgie
A Carbonized Septuagint Palimpsest of the Libri sapientiales in Biblical Majuscule, Codex Taurinensis, Biblioteca Nazionale Universitaria, C.V.25 (Rahlfs-Ms. 3010): Its Text and Context