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Encyclopedia > James Rendel Harris

J. Rendel Harris (Plymouth, Devonshire, January 27, 1852 - March 1, 1941) was a biblical scholar and curator of manuscripts, who was instrumental in bringing back to light many Syriac Scriptures and other early documents. His contacts at the Monastery of Saint Catherine on Mt. Sinai enabled Agnes Smith Lewis and her sister Margaret Dunlop Gibson to discover there the Sinaitic Palimpsest, the oldest Biblical document in existence.


He was educated at Clare College, Cambridge, where he was a fellow in mathematics in 1875 - 78, 1892, and in 1902 - 04. Harris spent as much time in the Near East as he could. During the same time, he served as professor of New Testament Greek at Johns Hopkins University (1882 - 85) and at Haverford College (1882 - 92). During a leave from Haverford in 1889-90, he purchased 47 Hebrew, Latin, Arabic, Syriac, Armenian and Ethiopic rolls and codices dating from as early as the 13th century on biblical and grammatical themes, "all acquired by the lawful, though sometimes tedious, processes of Oriental commerce," as he said, which he presented to Haverford. He taught theology at Leiden University (1903-04). After this, he was appointed director of studies at the Society of Friends' Woodbrooke College, near Birmingham.


Harris represented two prestigious libraries during his lifetime: Johns Hopkins, Baltimore, and John Rylands Library, Manchester, where he became the curator of manuscripts. Most of his publications dealt with biblical and patristic history; he was an extremely prolific writer.


Included among the topics on which he wrote are: Apology of Aristides (1891), Didache, Philo, Diatessaron, the Christian Apologists, Acts of Perpetua, The Odes and Psalms of Solomon (1906), Gospel of Peter, and other Western and Syriac texts, and numerous works on biblical manuscripts.


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CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Apocrypha (13309 words)
Recently R. James in the "Journal of Theological Studies", 1901, II, 572-577, claims to have found a fragment of this lost apocryphon in Latin and Old English versions.
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