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  2. Textual criticism is a branch of textual scholarship, philology, and literary criticism that is concerned with the identification of textual variants, or different versions, of either manuscripts (mss) or of printed books. Such texts may range in dates from the earliest writing in cuneiform, impressed on clay, for example, to multiple ...

  3. Textual criticism, properly speaking, is an ancillary academic discipline designed to lay the foundations for the so-called higher criticism, which deals with questions of authenticity and attribution, of interpretation, and of literary and historical evaluation.

  4. Christian Frederick Matthaei (1744–1811) was a Griesbach opponent. Karl Lachmann (1793–1851) was the first who broke with the Textus Receptus. His object was to restore the text to the form in which it had been read in the Ancient Church in about AD 380. He used the oldest known Greek and Latin manuscripts.

  5. Textual criticism. A branch of literary criticism concerned with analyzing and determining the accuracy of texts.

  6. Textual criticism - History, Manuscripts, Analysis | Britannica. Contents. Home Philosophy & Religion Humanities. History of textual criticism. From antiquity to the Renaissance. Until the 20th century the development of textual criticism was inevitably dominated by classical and biblical studies.

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