[4] A colophon indicates that while copying the Pauline epistles, the scribe followed a manuscript that contained text edited by Origen.
In a marginal note to the text of 1 John 5:6, a corrector added the reading δι' ὕδατος καὶ αἵματος καὶ πνεύματος (through water, and blood, and spirit) as found in the following manuscripts: Codex Sinaiticus (א), Codex Alexandrinus, 104, 424c, 614, 2412, 2495, ℓ 598m, syh, sa, bo, and by the early church father Origen.
[5][4] Scholar G. Zuntz finds close links between the manuscript and the text contained in 𝔓46, Codex Vaticanus, teh Coptic Sahidic and Boharic, Clement of Alexandria and Origen.
[3] Professor J. de Zwaan and biblical scholar Kirsopp Lake saw the manuscript in 1911, but were unable to take photographs of it for further study.
[3]: viii Scholar Robert P. Blake took a photostat copy of the manuscript in 1921, from which Enslin made a collation (as mentioned above).
[3]: viii, 141 The manuscript is currently housed at the Great Lavra monastery (shelf number B 184), on Mount Athos in Greece.