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  1. Codex Argenteus - Wikiwand

  2. The Mysterious Codex Argenteus: Famed Silver Bible of the Goths

  3. Early translations of the New Testament - Wikipedia

  4. Codex Argenteus โ€“ the โ€˜Silver Bibleโ€™ - Memory of the World

  5. The history of Codex argenteus - Uppsala University

  6. People also ask
    The Codex Argenteus ( Latin for "Silver Book/Codex") is a 6th-century illuminated manuscript, originally containing part of the 4th-century translation of the Christian Bible into the Gothic language.
    p>https//www.youtube.com/embed/FtZhAh9cj6E</p><p>The Codex Argenteus - the 'Silver Bible' - in Uppsala University Library is one of the most famous manuscripts in the world. It contains the most comprehensive still existing text in the Gothic language.
    The Codex Argenteus (literally: "Silver Book") was probably written for the Ostrogothic king Theodoric the Great, either at his royal seat in Ravenna, or in the Po valley or at Brescia; it was made as a special and impressive book written with gold and silver ink on high-quality thin vellum stained a regal purple, with an ornate treasure binding.
    Many pages have disappeared during Codex Argenteusโ€™s eventful 1,000-year journey through Europe. It originally consisted of at least 336 pages. Of these, 187 are now held in Uppsala. In 1669, Codex argenteus was acquired by Uppsala University Library as a gift from Chancellor Magnus Gabriel De la Gardie, and has remained here ever since.
  7. Codex argenteus - Uppsala University

  8. Codex Argenteus | Gothic manuscript | Britannica

  9. What's Silver, Purple, and Very Well-Traveled? - Atlas Obscura

  10. A โ€œSilver Bibleโ€: The Codex Argenteus - Aleteia