Someone should write this book.
Christian scribes wrote the sixth century Codex Climaci Rescriptus in Aramaic, the ancient language that Jesus spoke. Its 137 sheepskin leaves include both Old Testament and New Testament material.
Then, according to a Forbes article, the manuscript was taken from what is now Israel to the Sinai desert in Egypt and hidden for 300 years at the ancient St. Catherine's monastery. It's not clear why the codex was transported there, though Sotheby's speculates that it was taken there by Christian refugees fleeing Muslim persecution.
Ninth century scribes at the monastery, falling upon hard times without parchment, cannibalized older works. They tore pages from eight different books -- six in Aramaic and two in Greek -- and erased the original writing then wrote over it in black ink. They wrote instructions on running the monastery, copied from a sixth-century monk named John Climacus. Ah bureaucrats.
Next chapter: Twin British sisters found the codex in 1892 in Cairo. The twins bought as many leaves of the codex as they could between 1895 and 1906. They brought them to England and bequeathed them to Westminster College in Cambridge on their deaths in the 1920s.
In what sounds a bit like history repeating itself, now Westminster is raising cash for some building renovations. The Sotheby's sale was set for today. This Sotheby's link has a detailed provenance.
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