Although it is true that Erasmus did not have any Alexandrian manuscripts in his possession he certainly had access to Alexandrian readings. "A correspondent of Erasmus in 1533 sent that scholar a number of selected readings from it (Vaticanus), as proof of its superiority to the received Greek text." (Our Bible and the Ancient Manuscripts" Frederic Kenyon, Eyre and Spottiswoode, Her Majesty's Printers, London, 1896, page 133.) Erasmus was given 365 readings from Vaticanus by Spanish Priest Juan Sepulveda.Faith alone said:Erasmus had no Alexandrian texts to use because only a handful had been discovered at that time, and Vaticanus and Sinaiticus, the two oldest and considered by far the best, were not available.
Hort postulated a 4th century recension to explain the rapid decline of the Alexandrian textform and the rapid rise of the Byzantine by the 6th century.I'm not sure what you are saying. The further back you do, the more extreme percentage-wise the critical texts are in the majority. There are about 217 MSS and MSS fragments of the papyri and uncials from the 6th century and earlier. Miniscules did not come on the scene until the 9th century, and were not dominant until the 11th century. That is why I said that I do not give much stock to anything before the 10th century... actually, mainly the 9th century and earlier. Now 364 of all Greek MSS are from the 9th century and earlier, and if we include the 10th century, that number rises to 536.
Perhaps you were assuming that the Byzantine textform is only represented by minuscules. However, of you will check the great letter uncials you will note that many of them are Byzantine. A (5th century) is Byzantine in the Gospels, E is Byzantine except for portions of Luke, F, G, H, K, L, M, N, O, P, Q, R, S, U, V, W, Y, Gamma, Pie, Sigma, Phi, and Omega are all primarily Byzantine.
As to dismissing "anything before the 10th century" don't you mean "after the 10th century?"
Even Hort only went so far as to claim the absence of "distinctively Byzantine" readings from manuscripts, versions, and Church Fathers before the mid-fourth century. Of course, that was proven wrong by Harry A. Sturz, in his book, The Byzantine Text-Type and New Testament Textual Criticism (Nashville: Thomas Nelson, 1984), pp. 137-230, wherein he points out the discovery of over 150 distinctly Byzantine readings all dating prior to 350AD (the date of Aleph and B).Now of those over 500 Greek MSS, how many are Byzantine? The oldest Byzantine MSS come from around the 7th century, though a few papyri fragments were found as early as the 5th century. There are over 200 MSS before the 7th century and earlier, and only a handful are of the Byzantine family.
I had hoped the English Majority Text Version (now published by Jay Green as The Modern King James Version) would gain a substantial foothold but it appears that Green lacks the resources to promote the version.Personally, I would love to see a popular English NT out there based on the majority text alone.