Papyrus 139
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| New Testament manuscript | |
| Name | P. Oxy. 83 5347 |
|---|---|
| Sign | 𝔓139 |
| Text | Philemon 1:6-8 (recto); 18-20 (verso). |
| Date | 4th century |
| Script | Greek |
| Found | Oxyrhynchus |
| Now at | University of Oxford, Sackler Library, Oxford, England |
| Cite | Parsons, Peter John and Nikos Gonis and W E H Cockle, The Oxyrhynchus Papyri, vol. 83, no. 5347, Egypt Exploration Society: London, England, 2018. |
| Size | 13.2 x 21 cm |
| Type | Alexandrian |
Papyrus 139 (designated as 𝔓139 in the Gregory-Aland numbering system) is a small surviving portion of a handwritten copy of part of the New Testament in Greek. It is a papyrus manuscript of Philemon. The text survives on a single fragment of a codex, the recto containing about the last half of ten lines of a single column of a page, and the verso containing about the first half of nine lines of the next page. The manuscript has been assigned paleographically to the fourth century.[1]
𝔓139 is housed at the Sackler Library at the University of Oxford in Oxford, England.[1]