Minuscule 614, α 364, is a Greek minusculemanuscript of the New Testament, on parchment. Palaeographically it has been assigned to the 13th century. The manuscript is lacunose. Tischendorf labelled it by 137a and 176p. According to some scholars, it is one of very few witnesses of the Western text-type with complete text of the Book of Acts. But Robert Waltz categorizes it with the Harklean Family in a subgroup with its close relativeMinuscule 2412. The earliest representative of this family is the marginal readings of the seventh-century Harklean Syriac version.
Description
The codex contains the text of the Acts of the Apostles, Catholic epistles, and Pauline epistles on 276 parchment leaves, with only one lacuna. The text is written in one column per page, 23 lines per page. It contains Prolegomena, lectionary markings at the margin, incipits, anagnoseis, subscriptions at the end, and stichoi. Synaxarion, Menologion, and liturgical notes were added by a later hand. It contains additional material Journeys and death of Paul, it was added by a later hand. The order of books: Acts, Pauline epistles, and Catholic epistles. Hebrews is placed after Epistle to Philemon. The text of Romans 16:25-27 is following 14:23, as in Codex AngelicusCodex Athous Lavrensis, 0209, Minuscule 1813263304514601241 1877 1881 1984 1985 2492 2495, and most other manuscripts.
Text
The Greek text of the codex has been described as a representative of the Western text-type. Aland placed it in Category III. It is a sister manuscript to Minuscule 2412; they share slight variations of the Harklean marginal addition to Acts 18:21, καὶ ἀνήχθη ἀπὸ τῆς Ἐφέσου, τὸν δὲ Ἀκύλαν εἴασεν ἐν Ἐφέσῳ. In the Catholic epistles Aland placed it in Category V. The same text is found at the margin of the Book of Acts in Harklean Syriac. It has some the Caesarean readings in the Catholic epistles. In Pauline epistles its text is almost pure the Byzantine text. Bruce M. Metzger noted: "It contains a large number of pre-Byzantine readings, many of them of the Western type of text." Clark and Riddle, who collated and published text of 2412, speculated that 614 might even have been copied from 2412. The text is similar to Codex Bezae and Codex Laudianus. It is important witness of the Western text in that parts of the Acts where these two manuscripts are mutilated, especially at the end, because they do not have ending parts. In Acts 27:5; 28:16.19 codex 614 is witness for unique textual variants, which these two codices formerly contained.