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PL
Jednym z ważnych średniowiecznych rękopisów cyrylickich pochodzących z Rusi Kijowskiej jest Apostoł Krystynopolski – kodeks z XII wieku, obecnie przechowywany w dwóch częściach, w niepełnej postaci, w Kijowie (Instytut Rękopisów Biblioteki Narodowej Ukrainy im. W.I.  Wernadskiego od 1927 roku) i we Lwowie (Muzeum Historyczne we Lwowie od 1948 roku). W artykule zbadano cztery pergaminowe karty z Krakowa (Biblioteka Książąt Czartoryskich, Polska), odkryte w lipcu 2020 roku. Badanie cech paleograficznych, ortograficznych, językowych i tekstologicznych wykazało, że są one zaginionym wcześniej fragmentem Apostoła Krystynopolskiego (fragmenty Act 13,5–20, 15,29–16,4, 1Tim 4,8–5,4 i 2Tim 1,10–2,4). Krakowskie karty stanowią kontynuację części kijowskiej oraz początek i koniec części lwowskiej kodeksu. Część krakowska została oderwana przed 1888 rokiem, w którym kodeks był zaprezentowany publiczności na wystawie  Instytutu Stauropigiańskiego we Lwowie, a także odnotowany i opisany w katalogu przez Antonija Petruszewicza. Artykuł zawiera kompletną fotokopię  odkrytych fragmentów.
EN
One of the important Cyrillic medieval manuscripts from Kievan Rus is the Apostolus Christinopolitanus – a 12th-century codex which is now separated into two parts that are preserved (though some fragments have been lost) in Kyiv (Institute of Manuscript of V.I. Vernadskyi National Library of Ukraine, since 1927) and Lviv (History Museum of Lviv, since 1948). This article discusses four parchment folia from Kraków (The Princes Czartoryski Library, Poland) discovered in July 2020. Paleographical, orthographical, linguistic and textological features indicate that this section is the previously lost part of the Apostolus Christinopolitanus (excerpts from Act 13,5–20, 15,29–16,4, 1Tim 4,8–5,4 and 2Tim 1,10–2,4). The Kraków folia are the continuation of the Kyiv part and the beginning and final part of the Lviv part of the codex. The Kraków part was detached before 1888, when the manuscript was shown to the public at the Lviv Stauropegion Institute Exhibition and described and foliated for the catalogue by Antonij Petruševič. This article contains photocopies of all of the newly-discovered fragments.
EN
This article is devoted to the recently attributed eight parchment strips stored in the Сollection of the Archdiocese Archives in Gniezno (MS Fragm. 244). These fragments have not previously appeared in the scientific literature, so the main purpose of this publication is to inform the scientific community about the new sources and their introduction into circulation. All the bits are written with the Ustav script. These fragments were separated from two different Church Slavonic codices as the analysis of handwriting and the content has shown. Six strips belong to the one manuscript with the text from the New Testament. These are two incomplete passages from Eph 3,14–21 and Eph 4,14–16, that allow identifying the original codex as Apostol Aprakos. Two other strips from the liturgical codex. They contain excerpts from prayers, which were read at the evening service on the eve of the feast of the Trinity. The attribution of the content of these two strips has allowed us to consider them an additional part of the Liturgiсon. Those fragments may be dated to the 12th – 13th centuries according to the studies of the material side of the pieces, palaeography of scripts, graphic and orthographic identification, and linguistic features.
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