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It came from the same codex as manuscript Uncial 0112.
The manuscript 0136 was part of the same codex to which Uncial 0137 belonged.
Uncial was still used, particularly for copies of the Bible, tapering off until around the 10th century.
Hammer produced his first type design, Hammer Uncial, in 1921.
As on the older seal, the words "Purdue University" are set in the typeface Uncial.
Among its manuscripts are Uncial 063 and Uncial 0102.
Aland placed it in Category V. Uncial 0142 was probably the ancestor of the codex 056.
Pruneti examined and edited text of Uncial 0277 and many other ancient and mediaeval manuscripts.
Eberhard Nestle distinguished new group - Talismans, and to this group included Uncial 0152.
Wieland Willker, Uncial 0130 at the "Textual Commentary"
Some other manuscripts: Uncial 075, Uncial 0161, Minuscule 798.
He examined numerous manuscripts found in Oxyrhynchus, e.g. Papyrus 2, 35, 36, Uncial 0171, 0173.
Uncial, as well as glagolitic alphabet, has a peculiar trait - clearness and straightness of tracings (writings).
The handwriting is close to the half-uncial script, as in Uncial 055 and Uncial 0141.
It contains menaeon (see Uncial 0120, Uncial 0133).
It led to Uncial, a majuscule script commonly used from the 3rd to 8th centuries AD by Latin and Greek scribes.
It is a palimpsest, the upper text is a menaeon (see Uncial 094, Uncial 0133).
Formerly it was included together with Uncial 0272 and Uncial 0273 in Uncial 0133.
This variant is supported only by one Greek manuscript Uncial 0250, and by Codex Bobiensis, syr, arm, Diatessaron.
The text of Romans 16:25-27 is following 14:23, as in Codex Angelicus Uncial 0209, Minuscule 181 326 330 451 460 614 1241 1877 1881 1984 1985 2492 2495.
The first book that was printed in this operation was Milton's Samson Agonistes (1931), using what would be known as his Samson Uncial type.
This order is found in the following manuscripts: Bezae, Monacensis, Washingtonianus, Tischendorfianus IV, Uncial 0234.
Many typefaces are based on historical hands, such as Blackletter (including Fraktur), Lombardic, Uncial, Italic, and Roundhand.
The other two Greek codices written in that way are Codex Vaticanus (Uncial B/03) and Uncial 053.
Papyrus 7, Papyrus 89, Papyrus 121, Uncial 080, Uncial 0100, Uncial 0118, 0174, 0230, 0263, 0264, 0267, 0268 are too brief to classify.