Why this codex matters on a Westcott and Hort site
Codex Sinaiticus matters here because it became one of the manuscript pillars of the textual shift associated with Westcott and Hort. Their argument was broader than one codex, but later critics are right to insist that the codices they privileged cannot be treated as beyond dispute.
What Westcott and Hort actually did with Sinaiticus
Westcott and Hort did not merely cite Sinaiticus as an isolated curiosity. They treated it together with Vaticanus and related evidence as part of a larger textual theory. Hort’s early private language about “such early ones” shows how strongly manuscript age mattered to him. That quotation proves his preference; it does not by itself prove that the manuscripts he preferred were in fact the oldest or the best.
Why later critics object
A substantial line of criticism argues that Sinaiticus, Vaticanus, and similar witnesses were overvalued, mishandled, or in some cases even wrongly assumed to be genuinely ancient in the way later textbooks present them. The issue on this site is not to settle every technical dispute in one paragraph. It is to state plainly that the textbook formula “oldest and best” remains challenged, and that a fair account of Westcott and Hort must leave room for that challenge.
Local documents preserved on this site
Codex Sinaiticus — 8.5×11 booklet
A preserved local PDF copy of the Codex Sinaiticus evidence document supplied for this site project.
Codex Sinaiticus — 11×17 booklet
The larger-format local PDF copy preserved from the earlier site files.
Context
Return to the manuscript overview
Use the main manuscript page for the wider theory of codices and why Sinaiticus never stood alone in the Westcott-Hort method.