The Catena Commentaries on the Book of Prophet Isaiah by St. Cyril of Alexandria: The Preslavian Heritage in Middle Bulgarian and Russian Manuscript Tradition Cover Image

Катенните коментари на Св. Кирил Александрийски върху книга на пророк Исайя: преславското наследство в среднобългарска и руска редакция
The Catena Commentaries on the Book of Prophet Isaiah by St. Cyril of Alexandria: The Preslavian Heritage in Middle Bulgarian and Russian Manuscript Tradition

Author(s): Stilyana Batalova
Subject(s): Christian Theology and Religion, History, Language and Literature Studies, Cultural history, Middle Ages, Theology and Religion, 6th to 12th Centuries, Biblical studies, Eastern Orthodoxy, Translation Studies
Published by: Великотърновски университет „Св. св. Кирил и Методий”
Keywords: Cyril of Alexandria; Slavonic translation; Greek catena; Book of Isaiah; scholia
Summary/Abstract: The article discusses some scholia by St. Cyril of Alexandria from the Greek Catena on the Book of Prophet Isaiah in comparison with the Preslav translation according to several representatives of the two Slavonic manuscript traditions – the Middle Bulgarian (F.I. 461 from the Russian National Library in Saint Petersburg) and the Russian ones (Mss. Chudovski 182, 183 and 184 from the State Historical Museum in Moskow and Ms. 89 and Ms. 90 from the Collection of the Troitse-Sergieva Laura). The parallels between the Greek and Slavonic manuscript traditions make it possible to draw the following conclusions. The complex Slavonic tradition should be explored because the Middle Bulgarian manuscript tradition is incomplete and represents only a part of the Preslav translation, and the conclusions made on its basis are incomplete. The parallel study of the Slavonic translation with samples from the Greek Catеnae shows that it is insufficient to work only with the full text of the commentary in Patrologia Graeca, as some translation decisions in Slavonic can be explained only by the Greek source used. The study of the scholia by St. Cyril of Alexandria in Slavonic translation, as well as the study of the scholia by Theodulus and John Chrysostom, point to the possibility that the Slavonic translation represents unknown or today unpreserved abbreviated version of the Greek catena.

  • Page Range: 119-139
  • Page Count: 21
  • Publication Year: 2019
  • Language: English, Bulgarian, Old Bulgarian