Codex Alexandrinus Table of Contents

The following references served as the principal sources in developing the Table of Contents presented below:

British Museum, The Codex Alexandrinus (Royal MS. 1 D v-viii) in Reduced Photographic Facsimile: Old Testament, Part I, Genesis—Ruth, London, 1915.

Cowper, B.H., Codex Alexandrinus. Novum Testamentum Graece, Williams & Norgate, London, 1860.

Swete, Henry Barclay, The Old Testament in Greek, in three volumes, C.J. Clay and Sons, Cambridge at the University Press, 1887, 1891, 1896.

Swete, Henry Barclay, The Psalms in Greek According to the Septuagint with the Canticles, C.J. Clay and Sons, Cambridge at the University Press, 1896.

Swete, Henry Barclay, An Introduction to the Old Testament in Greek, C.J. Clay and Sons, Glasgow, 1900.

The Table of Contents so developed has been "expanded" in the sense that the original was abbreviated by, e.g., simply referring to the 14 epistles of St. Paul. This approach allowed the Table of Contents for the entire Bible to be presented on a single page, as shown below (with pointers to selected books added as a means to orient the reader). However, to provide a more complete sense of the actual books included and their order, each such summary entry in the original Table of Contents is followed by an indented sublisting in the expanded contents provided below.

The Original:

Recreated and Expanded:

Notes:
(1) No attempt was made to recreate all of the diacritical marks in the Greek text.
(2) Bold words in the "Transliterated or Translated English Name" column represent the names selected as the indices used to capture the Bible Canon elsewhere on in this web site.