The manuscript is a
codex (the precursor to the modern
book), containing an almost complete text of the four
Gospels on 309 parchment leaves (sized ). The text is written in one column per page, and 16-21 lines per column. There are six
gaps (known as
lacunae):
Matthew 1:1-9:11; 10:35-11:4;
Luke 1:26-36; 15:25-16:5; 23:22-34; and
John 20:27-21:17. The manuscript would have originally consisted of 42
quires made of 8
folio's (this being 8 parchment leaves placed on top of each other, then folded in half to create pages) for a total of 674 pages. The missing sections total 66 pages. The text is written in black and brown ink, including Greek accents and breathing marks. Greek punctuation is used throughout the manuscript, using the high, middle, and low phrase mid-dots, along with the comma. The chapters (known as /
kephalaia) are included, with their titles (known as /
titloi) written at the top and bottom of the pages. The chapter lists (also known as ) are written before the Gospels of Mark, Luke, and John (due to the missing first portion of Matthew, unable to determine whether a chapter list was before the Gospel of Matthew as well), with brief subscriptions written at the end of each Gospel. There are ornamented headpieces (beginning titles) at the start of Mark, Luke, and John (again, due to beginning of Matthew missing unable to determine whether it was the same there). The beginning ( /
arche) and ending ( /
telos) signs for the weekly lection readings of the Church calendar are also inserted. The Ammonian sections and Eusebian canons are also included (these being early divisions of the for Gospels into sections), with the chapter numbers written in the side margins. The chapter titles, Ammonian and Eusebian numbers, lection markings, and initial letters of each new section are written in carmine ink, except for the text comprising Luke 1:1-11:26 which are all written in black ink. == Text ==