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Table of Contents
Version 1.0.

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2, 8 September 2022

Version history:

  • 1.0, 14 October 2016

  • 1.0.1, 6 November 2018

  • 1.0.2, 8 September 2022

Introduction

Authors who deal with Greek and Latin texts conventionally use a set of text critical symbols. Although they are not quite universally used in the same way (it depends partly on the subject area: literary texts transmitted in mostly medieval manuscripts vs. documentary texts transmitted in ancient papyri, inscriptions), they are understood by all classical scholars and by many medieval, Byzantine, and early modern scholars as well.

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In addition to the Leiden symbols, the following are also used:

2E2
⸢abc⸣

 ⸢ (U+

2E22): top left half bracket;

⸣ (U+2E23): top right half bracket. 

These enclose text which has not been transmitted in the document being transcribed, but which is preserved in another textual witness of the same text.
⸦abc⸧ [Latin epigraphy only] 

⸦ (U+2E26): left sideways U bracket;

⸧ (U+2E27): right sideways U bracket. 

Various uses. Among other things, these brackets indicate the use of Claudian letters. (Claudian letters are now encoded in Unicode as Ⅎ (U+2132), ⅎ (U+214E), Ↄ (U+2183), ↄ (U+2184), Ⱶ (U+2C75), ⱶ (U+2C76), so use of these brackets for Claudian letters will become intermittent.) Also, to indicate resolution of left-pointing, mirrored letter forms; resolution of the symbol for the name Manius; and to enclose the description of a picture found in an inscription.
⸨abc⸩ [Latin epigraphy only] 

⸨ (U+2E28): left double parenthesis;

⸩ (U+2E29): right double parenthesis.

 Used by some in lieu of ⸦ ⸧.
[abc]

[ (U+005B): left square bracket;

] (U+005D): right square bracket.

Note that in editions of ‘non-documentary’ texts such as those which have come down to us via (copies of) manuscripts dating usually from the Middle Ages or later, square brackets [ ] often enclose text which the editor deems a mistaken addition by a scribe, not text which is not transmitted in an ancient document, as in papyrology and epigraphy.
†corrupted text†† ‘cross of despair’ (U+2020): dagger.The † or crux desperationis (‘cross of despair’) indicates that the word or textual string so marked is considered to be irredeemably corrupt by the modern editor of the text. One word is marked with the crux at the head: †corrupt; while two cruces are used to enclose corrupt text consisting of more than one word: †corrupted text† (although this is also done by some editors when only one word is considered corrupt).

α͙β͙γ͙

◌͙ (U+0359): combining asterisk belowUsed in transcriptions of Herculaneum papyri. “[I]ndicates the editorial change of a letter only transmitted by (Neapolitan or Oxford) apographs.” (Christian Vassallo)

Conversion to typeset text

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