[3] The headpieces with geometric and foliate decoration in gold and colours (folios 15r, 93r, 145r, 229r).
[4] The Greek text of the codex is a representative of the Byzantine text-type.
Kurt Aland placed it in Category V.[6] According to the Claremont Profile Method it represents mixed Byzantine text (mixture of Byzantine textual families) in Luke 1 and Luke 10.
[2] On folio 92 verso it has inscription "Nikolaos Kataphaga of Katharak".
[4] In 1649 it belonged to Athananius, a Greek monk, in 1724 to Bernard Mould (b. c. 1683; d. 1744),[3] English chaplain at Smyrna, who owned it in 1724 (as minuscule 115).
[4] It was examined by Griesbach, Bloomfield,[5] Henri Omont, and Cyril Ernest Wright.