Textual critics and palaeographers like
Wettstein,
Tischendorf,
Scrivener and
Gregory dated the manuscript to the 10th century.
Henri Omont and Lake dated it to the 12th century, and
Dean Burgon to the 12th or 13th century. It is dated by the
Institute for New Testament Textual Research to the 12th century because the frequent occurrence of enlarged letters, rounded breathing marks, flourishes and ligatures seem to eliminate earlier dates. The manuscript was presented to the monastery of the
Preaching Friars by Cardinal
Ragusio, general of the
Dominicans. It was used by
Desiderius Erasmus in the
first edition of his
Novum Testamentum (1516); as a result, some of its readings are found in the
Textus Receptus. Erasmus used this codex very little because its text was different from other manuscripts with which he was acquainted.
Oecolampadius and Gerbelius (Erasmus's sub-editors) insisted that he use more readings from this codex in his third edition; however according to Erasmus, the text of this codex was altered from the Latin manuscripts and had secondary value. Since 1559, it has been kept at the
University of Basel, along with
Codex Basilensis and
minuscule 2.
Johann Albrecht Bengel used several extracts from the codex, and
Wettstein was the first who thoroughly examined it. According to him, in the Gospels its text agrees with the most ancient codices and
patristic quotations; therefore, he called it number one. In 1751 he changed his high opinion (
Novum Testamentum Græcum), dating the codex to the 10th century. Wettstein collated this manuscript twice, with many errors; according to biblical scholar
Samuel Prideaux Tregelles, his collation was incorrect in more than 1,200 readings.
Leonard Hug supported Wettstein's last opinion that the codex was
Latinisated. Tregelles and Roth again collated the text of this codex, and Tregelles noticed that it was textually close to
Minuscule 118.
Dean Burgon noticed that minuscules
131 and
209 were also textually similar. This entire group was examined by Kirsopp Lake in 1902, and it was called "the Lake Group" (or
Family 1). The text of the family was established on the basis of minuscule 1 (the manuscript was collated with Minuscules
118,
131, and
209).
Scrivener demonstrated that at least 22 verses of Erasmian's Greek New Testament text were derived from minuscule 1: • ; ; ; , , , • , , ; ; ; • , ; ; , ; • ; ; The manuscript has been cited in all critical editions of the
Greek New Testament, and systematically cited in the third and fourth editions edited by United Bible Societies (UBS3 and UBS4) and Nestle-Aland's 26th and 27th editions (NA26 and NA27). In NA27, the codex is cited as a witness of the first order. == See also ==