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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 October 2011
During recent years the trend of New Testament textual studies has been toward the identification and establishment of local texts. If these be old, they serve as witnesses to the original text, if late, they are helpful in showing the trends of textual development and add to our knowledge of the history of the Church. We are far removed from the New Testament studies and problems of 1898, when Grenfell and Hunt published the first papyrus fragment of the New Testament, Oxyrhynchus 2 containing Matthew 1, 1–20.
1 This paper covers a part of the material used in the Charles Eliot Norton lectures of the Archaeological Institute of America delivered in 1932.
2 See Salonius' article for the text of the other Berlin fragments not fully reported by Gregory.
3 The full text of the Vienna fragments is given by Wessely in Studien zu Paläographie und Papyruskunde.
4 See Harvard Theological Review, XX, pp. 1–15, for a study of the Michigan fragment.