Codex Ravianus (also called Berolinensis) is a manuscript rewritten from the Complutensian Polyglot Bible.
[3] Although it was rewritten from the Complutensian text, there are some textual divergences between them: Matthew 2:13; 15:22; 17:2; 23:8; 1 John 5:10; Jude 22,[4] which all stem from the errors of the pen of the Ravianus's scribe.
[5] The codex was used as an argument in the 18th century that Complutensian was rewritten from the Codex Ravianus, even with imitation of its letters, but scholars like La Croze, Griesbach, and Michaelis proved that errors of Ravianus are nothing more than errors of the pen.
[8] Johann Jakob Wettstein added it into the list of the Greek New Testament manuscripts, and designated it siglum 110.
[3] The text was published by Treschow, while it was examined and described by Griesbach,[9] Georg Gottlieb Pappelbaum (in 1796), and Gregory (in 1900).