{
    "type": "FeatureCollection",
    "name": "artefact",
    "crs": {
        "type": "name",
        "properties": {
            "name": "EPSG:4326"
        }
    },
    "features": [
        {
            "type": "Feature",
            "geometry": {
                "type": "Point",
                "coordinates": [
                    0,
                    0
                ]
            },
            "properties": {
                "id": 476,
                "artefact_uri": "https:\/\/4care-skos.mf.no\/artefact\/476",
                "site_id": 0,
                "site_uri": "https:\/\/4care-skos.mf.no\/place\/",
                "site_name": null,
                "clm_id": "TM 851632",
                "material": "Papyrus",
                "description": "Willoughby Papyrus; Gregory-Aland P134; Gregory-Aland \ud835\udd13134; JBL 137 (2018): 935-958.\r\nA small papyrus fragment containing the second Gospel of John 1.49-2.1. This fragment is interesting due to its use of an unabbreviated form of \u03b8\u03b5\u1f79\u03c2 \"God\" in l. 5 recto (usually abbreviated as a nomen sacrum), its format (written along the fibres of a book-roll) and the addition of an unknown Christian text on the verso.\r\nThe fragment is comprised of 3 parts (the largest of which measures 7 x 4.5 cm) that preserve 6 lines of text on both recto and verso. It appears to have been folded, with the recto containing the NT passage on the outside; see ed. pr.\r\nThe ed. pr. describes the hand as slightly slanting and informal, and that it belongs to Pasquale Orsini and Willy Clarysse\u2019s group 2b as a style that deveoped from bureaucratic and chancery writing. Both texts seem to have been written by the same hand, but at different times, as is indicated by differences in the thickness of the strokes, colour of the ink, etc.\u00a0\r\nThe text contains accentuation and breathings (see lines 2, 4 and 5, recto) and a diastole (l. 6, verso). There are no lectional aides in the unknown Christian text of the verso. Both sides contain various (and at times inconsequent) nomina sacra. Most notable is the unabbreviated \u03b8\u03b5\u1f79\u03c2 in l. 5, recto.\r\nThe passage from the Gospel of John appears to have been copied onto a sheet from an unused book-roll, and was then rotated 180 degrees and used to inscribe the unknown Christian text; see ed. pr.",
                "date_from": 250,
                "date_to": 349,
                "dating_criteria": "Palaeography. The ed. pr. compares the hand with inter alia P103 (NT text from the 3rd c., Oxyrhynchus), and suggests a date in the 3\/4 c. also on the basis of the diastole in l. 6 verso.\u00a0",
                "selection_criteria": "Literary genre (Biblical),Literary genre (Non-canonical),Nomina sacra",
                "absolute_relative_date": null,
                "stratigraphic_context": "",
                "shelf_mark": "",
                "bibliography": "",
                "external_links": [
                    {
                        "text": "TM 851632 \/ LDAB 851632",
                        "url": "http:\/\/www.trismegistos.org\/text\/851632"
                    },
                    {
                        "text": "NT.VMR (images)",
                        "url": "http:\/\/ntvmr.uni-muenster.de\/manuscript-workspace?docID=10134"
                    }
                ],
                "classes": "Textual",
                "writing_medium": "Sheet\/roll,Uncertain",
                "text_content": "Literary",
                "language": "Greek",
                "archive": "",
                "authors": [
                    {
                        "author": "Sofia Heim",
                        "year": "2021"
                    }
                ]
            }
        }
    ]
}