{
    "type": "FeatureCollection",
    "name": "artefact",
    "crs": {
        "type": "name",
        "properties": {
            "name": "EPSG:4326"
        }
    },
    "features": [
        {
            "type": "Feature",
            "geometry": {
                "type": "Point",
                "coordinates": [
                    0,
                    0
                ]
            },
            "properties": {
                "id": 494,
                "artefact_uri": "https:\/\/4care-skos.mf.no\/artefact\/494",
                "site_id": 0,
                "site_uri": "https:\/\/4care-skos.mf.no\/place\/",
                "site_name": null,
                "clm_id": "TM 59353",
                "material": "Papyrus",
                "description": "PSI VII 757; KV4\r\nPapyrus fragment (6.3 x 11.1 cm) containing the Letter of Barnabas 9.1-6. This is the earliest textual witness to Barnabas' letter, besides Codex Sinaiticus.\r\nThe text is written in one column, and contextually the verso precedes the recto. Each column consists of approx. 21 lines, 42 lines survive altogether.\u00a0\r\nThe\u00a0ed. pr. does not offer any characteristics of the hand: The script could be described as a flowing, semi-uncial hand containing several ligatures, giving it a slightly documentary appearance; see Kraft 1967: 153. Naldini compares the hand to the script of Codex Sinaiticus; see Naldini 1965: 23.\r\nBesides its rudimentary punctuation (high points and enlarged first letter of the following word), the text contains some idiosyncratic nomina sacra: Words such as \u03b8\u03b5\u1f79\u03c2 and \u03ba\u1f7b\u03c1\u03b9\u03bf\u03c2 have been abbreviated as their first letter with a dot (with no further indication of the oblique forms). The more common supralinear stroke is found only in l. 8 (verso) above a \"\u03ba\" (for \u03ba\u1f7b\u03c1\u03b9\u03bf\u03c2 \"Lord\"). The text also contains two instances of accentuation (l. 36 \"\u1f51\u03bc\u1ff6\u03bd\" and 38 \"\u03c0\u03b1\u03bb\u1f76\u03bd\"). A word-internal staurogram appears in \u03c3\u03ba\u03bb\u03b7\u03c1\u03c5\u03bd\u03b5\u03b9\u03c4\u03b5 (for the first\u00a0rho)\u00a0in l. 16-17 of the recto.\r\nThere is an emphatic sense break in l. 17-18 on the recto: The beginning of l. 18 has been marked by a horizontal stroke, and in l. 17 a delta with a supralinear line appears in the left margin. It is not clear whether this is an alphabetical numeral or an abbreviation of sorts. This marker is followed by an ekthesis of\u00a0\u03c0\u1f71\u03bd\u03c4\u03b1 in l. 18.\r\nThe fragment compares closely to the manuscript-family MS G.",
                "date_from": 300,
                "date_to": 450,
                "dating_criteria": "Palaeography. The ed. pr. places the fragment in the late 4th c. (and extends the possibility to the early 5th), which is confirmed by \u00a0F. Ronconi; see Crisci 2002: no. 152.\u00a0\r\nAn earliest date (3rd c.) was given by Roberts; see Kraft 1971: 53.",
                "selection_criteria": "Literary genre (Theological),Christian symbols\/gestures\/isopsephy,Nomina sacra",
                "absolute_relative_date": null,
                "stratigraphic_context": "",
                "shelf_mark": "",
                "bibliography": "",
                "external_links": [
                    {
                        "text": "TM 59353 \/ LDAB 452",
                        "url": "http:\/\/www.trismegistos.org\/text\/59353"
                    },
                    {
                        "text": "DCLP",
                        "url": "http:\/\/papyri.info\/dclp\/59353"
                    },
                    {
                        "text": "PSI Online",
                        "url": "http:\/\/www.psi-online.it\/documents\/psi;7;757"
                    }
                ],
                "classes": "Textual",
                "writing_medium": "Codex",
                "text_content": "Literary",
                "language": "Greek",
                "archive": "",
                "authors": [
                    {
                        "author": "Sofia Heim",
                        "year": "2021"
                    }
                ]
            }
        }
    ]
}