I checked an edition of the Greek NT with a fuller
apparatus criticus. It also omits
eis apoleian from the text but has it in the notes--the earliest manuscripts with it are apparently 8th century, but it seems to be supported by the Syriac translation.
My copy of the Vulgate was published in Madrid in 1960, edited by Ioannes Leal, S.I. (Juan Leal, S.J.). So edited by a Jesuit, but pre-Vatican II so maybe OK. It's not a critical edition in as much as it lacks an apparatus criticus.
You might appreciate the Greek resources at
Biblehub. One can see several underlying Greek texts:
Acts 25:16 See bottom for:
- Nestle 1904
- Westcott and Hort 1881
- Westcott and Hort (NA27 and UBS4 Variants)
- RP Byzantine Majority Text 2005
- Greek Orthodox Church
- Tischendorf 8th Edition
- Scrivener's Textus Receptus 1894
- Stephanus Textus Receptus 1550
I have a few text only Vulgates (on a desktop system I have not powered on in a while).
One of my favorite resources in the Online Codex Sinaiticus, a photo facsimile of the actual text! The uncials are gorgeous!