The manuscript was brought by clergyman and scientist
John Covel from
Mount Sinai (
Egypt) to
England (along with
minuscule 65). Covel marked it as codex 5, but afterwards gave it the name of
the Sinai manuscript. ; Former 110 In his numeration, textual critic
Johann Jakob Wettstein gave the
siglum 110 to
Codex Ravianus (also called
Berolinensis), a transcription from the
Complutensian Polyglot (the earliest printed multi-languaged Bible) so slavish that it copies even typographical errors from that exemplar. It also includes some variant readings inserted from
Stephanus's 1550 edition (an early critical edition of the New Testament). It once belonged to Christian Rave, a professor in
Uppsala (hence the name
Codex Ravianus). In 1908, Gregory removed Codex Ravianus from the list of Greek New Testament manuscripts. Codex Ravianus is now no longer listed, as it is only a facsimile of the Complutensis Polyglot. It is housed in the
Berlin State Library. ; Current History Minuscule 110 was examined by textual critic
John Mill, and the text of Acts and Paul (but not the Catholic Epistles) was examined by textual critic
Samuel Thomas Bloomfield. Biblical scholar
Frederick H. A. Scrivener collated the text of Revelation. Biblical scholar
Caspar René Gregory saw the manuscript in 1883. It was formerly labelled as 28, 34, or 8. Gregory assigned it the number 110 in his
Liste, which is still used today. The manuscript is dated by the
Institute for New Testament Textual Research (INTF) to the 12th century. It is currently housed at the
British Library, (shelf number
Harley MS 5778) in London, England. == See also ==