Two fragments belonging to the British Museum have been published in H.J.M. Milne, Catalogue of the Literary Papyri in the British Museum (London: British Museum Press), pages 187–90 (numbers 226 and 227). Milne's transcriptions have been reproduced in Albert-Marie Denis, editor, Fragmenta Pseudepigraphorum Quae Supersunt Graeca (Leiden: Brill, 1970), pages 253ff (PVTG 3). Facsimiles of the verso and recto may be found in Frederick G. Kenyon, editor, Greek Papyri in the British Museum (London: British Museum Press, 1893), pages 225–27, under numbers 113a [13a] and 113 [12b], respectively. Three other fragments, "in all probability belonging to the same manuscript," have been published by W. M. Lindsay in The Athenaeum, number 3019 (September 5, 1885), page 304. A single papyrus fragment is preserved in the catalogue of the Louvre under catalogue number E.7738a, and it represents a different copy of the document, a work that must be dated before the sixth or seventh-century date of the papyri itself.
Two fragments belonging to the British Museum have been published in H.J.M. Milne, Catalogue of the Literary Papyri in the British Museum (London: British Museum Press), pages 187–90 (numbers 226 and 227). Milne's transcriptions have been reproduced in Albert-Marie Denis, editor, Fragmenta Pseudepigraphorum Quae Supersunt Graeca (Leiden: Brill, 1970), pages 253ff (PVTG 3). Facsimiles of the verso and recto may be found in Frederick G. Kenyon, editor, Greek Papyri in the British Museum (London: British Museum Press, 1893), pages 225–27, under numbers 113a [13a] and 113 [12b], respectively. Three other fragments, "in all probability belonging to the same manuscript," have been published by W. M. Lindsay in The Athenaeum, number 3019 (September 5, 1885), page 304. A single papyrus fragment is preserved in the catalogue of the Louvre under catalogue number E.7738a, and it represents a different copy of the document, a work that must be dated before the sixth or seventh-century date of the papyri itself.