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This manuscript page features a single column of Syriac text. Four large cross-shaped symbols serve as a header or divider at the top. The page shows heavy weathering with brownish stains and modern annotations, including folio numbers and a bibliographic reference in Latin.
...?
...? which is ...?
...? in which ...?
...? but ...?
...?
...?
...?
...?
...?
...?
...?
...?
...? the Lord ...?
...?
...?
...?
...?
...?
...?
...?
...?
...?
...?
...?
...? God ...?
...?
Page 11
Page 12.
This weathered parchment leaf features Syriac script written in brown ink. The surface is darkened by age and moisture. Traces of a secondary Latin hand are visible beneath the Syriac text in the lower half of the page. A digital stamp from the Vatican Library is present at the bottom.
The manuscript leaf is in poor condition, showing severe moisture staining, pigment loss, and general fading throughout. A large circular digital watermark from the Vatican Apostolic Library also obscures much of the central text area. Approximately 24 lines of text in a Syriac Serto original: "Serto" refers to the cursive, "looped" script common in West Syriac traditions script are present, but the writing is extremely faded and stained, making a continuous character-by-character translation impossible. The text appears to be a prose narrative or theological treatise, specifically a "Canon" or ecclesiastical rule.
Approximately 3-4 lines of faded Syriac text?
... ...? of God ...? ...
... ...? in the name ...? ...
... ...? and from ...? ...
... ...? that for them ...? ...
... peace ...? ...
... ...? to you ...? ...
... ...? of life ...? ...
... ...? God ...? ...
... ...? from ...? ...
Remaining 8-10 lines of Syriac text are illegible due to fading and staining.?