The first objective of the project was to produce a full catalogue of Greek New Testament catena manuscripts. This was published in month 36 in printed form (Parpulov, 2021) and a searchable online database (
https://itsee-wce.birmingham.ac.uk/catenacatalogue/(se abrirá en una nueva ventana)). At the end of the project, this contained 724 items. The project has identified over 50 manuscripts not previously recognised as catenae, and added 35 manuscripts to the official register of Greek New Testament manuscripts. Several of these have now been incorporated into scholarly editions and the catena catalogue has become adopted as an authoritative reference source.
The second objective was to examine the nature and structure of Greek New Testament catenae. The project identified 23 catena types not currently listed in the Clavis Patrum Graecorum. These have now been integrated into this official catalogue, along with a complete reworking of the classification of manuscripts of catenae on the Acts of the Apostles and the Gospel according to Luke (Scieri, 2022; Patton, 2023). The project produced full-text editions of five catenae on Luke (Manafis, 2024), the Pseudo-Oecumenian Catena on Romans (Marcon, 2022) and the oldest surviving catena manuscript, Codex Zacynthius (Houghton, Manafis and Myshrall, 2020). These publications open catenae to a wider readership. A variety of project outputs provide new information about the history and development of the catena tradition and individual documents.
The third objective was to locate catenae within the textual tradition of the New Testament. The first approach was to examine features of catena manuscripts in the published volumes of the Novum Testamentum Graecum Editio Critica Maior. This demonstrated that this genre of witness did contain distinctive characteristics (Houghton, 2023b). The second approach was to produce fresh transcriptions of manuscripts of the Pauline Epistles in order to provide full-text comparisons, including the application of the Coherence-Based Genealogical Method and phylogenetic algorithms. This resulted in significant advances in the selection of manuscripts for the Editio Critica Maior of the Pauline Epistles (Houghton, 2019 and forthcoming), as well as identifying four previously unrecognised copies of surviving documents (increasing the known total from 18 to 22; see Houghton & Myshrall, 2023; Patton, 2023) and other ineligible witnesses. Other contributions included illustrations of how catena tradition affected the sequence of biblical books (Patton, 2022) and discounted what has long been considered an exceptional witness to the short ending of Mark (Houghton, 2023a). These findings will all be reflected in future editions and scholarship on the text of the New Testament.
The project hosted a consultation of European experts in Brussels in month 20 and a workshop in month 46. A hybrid conference was held in Birmingham in month 60, whose presentations continue to be available on a YouTube channel. Team members have also presented their work at a range of international scholarly conferences. A broad range of outputs have been produced, including five monographs, eight datasets and some exceptionally highly-viewed articles in peer-reviewed journals.