The codex contains a small part of the Gospel of Mark 9:14-18.20-22; 10:23-24.29,[1] on two purple parchment leaves. Size of the leaves is unknown because of their fragmentary condition. It is written in two columns per page, 18 lines per page,[2] in large uncial letters, in gold. The uncial letters are similar to the Codex Petropolitanus Purpureus.[3]
Currently it is dated by the INTF to the 6th century.[2][4]
^Kurt Aland, Synopsis Quattuor Evangeliorum. Locis parallelis evangeliorum apocryphorum et patrum adhibitis edidit, Deutsche Bibelgesellschaft, Stuttgart 1996, p. XXIΙΙ.
^"Liste Handschriften". Münster: Institute for New Testament Textual Research. Retrieved 21 April 2011.
^П. Успенский, Путешествие по Египту и в монастыри Святого Антония Великого и Преподобного Павла Фивейского, в 1850 году. Saint Petersburg, 1856, p. 77.
Further reading
Gerasimos G. Mazarakis, καιρον, 1883.
Kurt Treu, Die Griechischen Handschriften des Neuen Testaments in der USSR; eine systematische Auswertung der Texthandschriften in Leningrad, Moskau, Kiev, Odessa, Tbilisi und Erevan, Texte und Untersuchungen 91 (Berlin: 1966), pp. 110-111.