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de 24; p. 4, 13 syneidomen] 24, syneidamen 19, 20; p. 4, 16 aneu without] 24 and with letters epsilon, upsilon ligated 20, ana 19; p. 6, 7 hothen whence] 19, 20, hotan whenever 24; p. 6, 26 eutheia straight line] 19, omitted at the end of the verse 20, but added in the margin by first hand, eutheia in margin 24.
Finally, the Viennese codex suppl. gr. 36 (64 Kollar), a paper codex of the 15th century, which contains only the first two books of the Conics (it belonged to Count Hohendorf), appears to have been copied from V itself; for in figure II, 32 it does not have the letter N, and the readings p. 2, 15 euplo fair sailing, p. 226, 6 to] omitted in Vienna and at the end of the verse in V, show that it depends on V. It does not have the lacunae of p. 2; p. 2, 12 hon de for on being. Otherwise, nothing has come to my knowledge regarding it.
There remain the codices of the same class 8, 12, 21, 23, all of which a common error, kryptein to hide on p. 4, 27, shows to originate from codex 2; for so, because of the letters in V being deformed, as I said, codex 2 (corrected by recent hand) wrote it instead of krinein to judge. They do not have the lacunae of p. 2. Whether all were copied from codex 2 itself or one from another, I cannot affirm for certain; compare p. 2, 4 echoi] 2, 8, 12, 23, echei 21; p. 2, 12 on] hon de 2, 8, 12, 21, 23; escholaze was at leisure] 2, 8, 12, escholazen 21, 23; p. 2, 19 symmemigoton mixed together] 2, 8, 12, 21, symmemiloton 23; p. 2, 20 kai to and the] 2, 8, 12, 21, kai 23; p. 4, 1 peptoken has fallen] 8, 12, 23, peptoke 2, 21; p. 4, 4 kai] 2, 12, omitted 8, 21, 23; exeirgasmena worked out] 2, 8, 12, 21, exergasmena 23; p. 4, 9 eideis you will know] 2, 8, 12, 23, eideis 21; p. 4, 17 synthesin composition] 2, 8, 12, 23, thesin thesis 21; p. 4, 21 kata] 2, 8, 12, omitted 21, 23; p. 6, 14 tou of the] 2, 8, 23, tou kentrou tou of the center of the 12; p. 8, 10 hekasten each] hekaste at the end of the verse 2, hekaste 8, 12, 23; p. 8, 18 syzygeis yoked/conjugated] 2, 8, 23, syzygeis de 12; p. 8, 19 diametroi diameters] 2, 12, 23, diametroi 8; p. 8, 21 alpha] omitted 8, alpha-on 23, theorema alpha-on first theorem 12; p. 10, 9 esti is] 2, 8, 23, estin 12. Thus codices 8, 12, 23 can be seen as copies of codex 2 itself, but codex 21 perhaps depends on codex 23. Since codex 21 belonged to Matthaeus Macignus, it is undoubtedly the same one that Tomasinus, in Bibliotheca Patauina manuscripta p. 115, enumerates among the codices of Nicolaus Triuisanus, to whom the Venetian mathematician Macignus had bequeathed his library (see Tomasinus p. 115²).
Modena II D 4
Paris 2354
Gotha gr. 12
Canon. 106
Finally, that codices 7 and 25 were copied from codex 11 is apparent from the fact that these alone place Serenus's booklet on the section of a cone before his other work. Compare furthermore p. 2, 8 euarestesomen] 11 with euro I found written above, eurosthesomen 7, eu(euro)arestesomen 25; p. 2, 12 paragenetheis having arrived] paragenomenos 7, 11, 25; p. 2, 15 ekplo] ekploun 7, 11, 25.
Ambrosian A 101 sup.
Uppsala 50