Tuesday, December 29, 2020

4 Enoch: The Online Encyclopedia of Second Temple Judaism, and Christian and Islamic Origins

 From the website:


Scholarship and Fiction, from the 15th century to the present


A website by Gabriele Boccaccini, PhD

Professor of Second Temple Judaism and Christian Origins, University of Michigan / Founding Director, Enoch Seminar


The website provides a comprehensive survey of the history of research for each of the subfields listed below, including thousands of books, edited volumes, works of art and fiction, as well as biographies of authors


Second Temple Studies : Apocalyptic Studies -- Archaeology -- Bible Studies -- Christian Origins Studies -- Early Christian Studies -- Early Islamic Studies -- Early Jewish Studies -- Early Samaritan Studies -- Enochic Studies -- Gospels Studies -- Hebrew Bible Studies -- Hellenistic-Jewish Studies -- Historical Jesus Studies -- Johannine Studies -- Josephus Studies -- New Testament Studies -- NT Apocrypha Studies -- Qumran Studies -- OT Apocrypha Studies -- OT Pseudepigrapha Studies -- Pauline Studies -- Petrine Studies -- Philo Studies -- Reception History -- Septuagint Studies -- Wisdom Studies -- Women's Studies -- Varia


Fiction : Art -- Cinema -- Dance -- Literature -- Music


People's Generations -- Biographies -- Jewish Authorship -- Women Authorship -- In memoriam


Works' Chronology -- Languages -- Highlights -- Indexes


Timeline : 2020s -- 2010s -- 2000s -- 1990s -- 1980s -- 1970s -- 1960s -- 1950s -- 1940s -- 1930s -- 1920s -- 1910s -- 1900s -- 1850s -- 1800s -- 1700s -- 1600s -- 1500s -- 1450s -- Medieval


Enoch Seminar -- Nangeroni Meetings -- Enoch Colloquia -- Enoch Graduate Seminar


With the contribution of the Michigan Center for Early Christian Studies and the Alessandro Nangeroni International Endowment, and the collaboration of friends and colleagues of the Enoch Seminar (Carlos Segovia, Samuele Rocca, Pierpaolo Bertalotto, Jason Zurawski, Deborah Forger, Ronald Ruark, Isaac Oliver, et al.). See also: Enoch Seminar Online and follow us on Facebook. @2009-2018. <This website is constantly revised, enlarged and updated by the Author>4 Enoch

Wednesday, October 21, 2020

Hittite Personal Names

 Hittite Personal Names

From the homepage:

Hittite Personal Names is a database on the PNs attested in the Hittite written sources (cuneiform texts, seals, and hieroglyphic inscriptions). It is based on the available publications and repertoires (including M.-C. Trémouille’s Répertoire Onomastique at HPM), expanded and integrated by a non-systematic review of the secondary literature as well as by original research. Valuable data sets have been provided by Marco Marizza (cuneiform texts, Boğazköy seal impressions) and Max Gander (PNs from Ortaköy/Šapinuwa). Corrections and feedback of any kind are welcome and gratefully acknowledged.

The database consists of a repertoire of attestations and a general PNs list which is integrated in the search tool Hittite Name Finder.

Spellings are provided in exceptional cases only. The normalization of PNs spelled with hetherographic elements is still non-systematic in the present version.

 

Ancient Egyptian Dictionary, Bands I-III

 As the title says:

For a link to Band I, click here.

Bloomsbury Open: Biblical and Classical Studies

 This is wonderful addition to open-access resources. All are freely downloadable; but as far as I can see, you have to download individual chapters.

Bloomsbury Open: Biblical Studies


Bloomsbury Open: Classics

Posted: 16 Oct 2020 02:57 PM PDT

 Bloomsbury Open: Classics

  • favourite

Gregory Lamb, PhD Diss., "Literary Survey of the Second Temple Period (Including an Introduction to Greco-Roman Literature)"

 Lamb - 2016 - PhD Dissertation

Lamb, Gregory E. "Literary Survey of the Second Temple Period (Including an Introduction to Greco-Roman Literature)." PhD, Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary, 2016.

If you're looking for discussion of the texts of this period, you'll be disappointed. It's 234 pages of timelines, texts, bibliography, etc. However, having a comprehensive list like this is a very valuable inventory of the literature of the period, and it's searchable.

Elements in Ancient Egypt in Context

Elements in Ancient Egypt in Context  

Hurry now! This freebie is only accessible until 3 Nov 2020.

SEMANTIC DICTIONARY OF BIBLICAL HEBREW

 Semantic Dictionary of Biblical Hebrew

This budding project from United Bible Societies presently has 5687 entries. It looks like it could be a great alternative or supplement to HALOT, the Classical Dictionary of Hebrew, etc.

Saturday, August 29, 2020

Open Educational Resources for the Ancient Near East

 Open Ed Resources for the ANE

The site offers information on Digital Archaeology, images, primary texts, bibliographies, and other categories.

 

Sunday, August 16, 2020

New open-access commentary on Deuteronomy

William Whitt has shared his new commentary on Deuteronomy. I'm checking with him to see if his 2019 commentary on Genesis is also open-access.

Thursday, August 13, 2020

More tools for studying the Hebrew Bible (this time from Marc Brettler)

 Tools to Study the Hebrew Bible 

 This site aims to teach students how to use a set of specialized tools for the study of the Hebrew text of the Hebrew Bible (henceforth, the Bible). These are different from the tools used for modern Hebrew because the languages are substantially different, and because the study of ancient texts, written in "dead" or "literary" languages, such as BH (biblical Hebrew), is fundamentally different from the study of modern languages.  The types of tools presented here include:

  1. Scholarly Editions of the Hebrew Bible
  2. Lexica
  3. Grammars
  4. Concordances: Electronic and Paper
  5. Other Research Tools
I have also included some helpful exercises designed to help students learn how to use the major scholarly tools, as well as some other tools that the beginning and intermediate student of biblical Hebrew may find useful; you can navigate among these by using the links below:

Wednesday, August 12, 2020

Videos for the apparatus and Masoretic notes in BHS

 Here are two videos from David Z. Moster:

1. "How to Use the Biblia Hebraica Stuttgartensia: The Scholarly Apparatus"

https://youtu.be/YNT1ouWSYYg

running time: 17:07

Excellent overview of the history of BHS ("Introduction"), the page layout ("Page"), and a few examples of variants of the MT, e.g., Sam Pent, LXX ("Case Studies"-- here, he leans too heavily on the lectio facilior in my opinion).


2. "How to Use the Biblia Hebraica Stuttgartensia: The Masorah Notes"
https://youtu.be/62KFxvJi0mA

running time: 20:42

Here again, a well-organized presentation divided, again into three sections: 

  • "Textual Instability": scribal errors such as omissions, additions, and metathesis
  • "the Masoretes": the Masoretes' efforts to preserve their received text by the addition of a system of pointing for vowels and cantillation
  • "3 Types of Masoretic Notes in the BHS": the marginal notation systems of the Masorah Ketanah and Gedolah (along with explanations of Masoretic signals where the reading should be adjusted such as the system of Kethib/Qere), and the Masorah Sofit

In this video he also favors the lectio facilior, and speaks of "the" biblical text when there were several text families, e.g., Palestinian, Tiberian (hence the Masoretes preserved the text they received--but that's probably too much detail for an overview).

The two are a superb introduction to what can be baffling when one first opens BHS.

Thursday, August 6, 2020

International Voices in Biblical Studies


This a new, open-access monograph, the contents of which are:

Stories of Minjung Theology: The Theological Journey of Ahn Byung-Mu in His Own Words
Ahn Byung-Mu; Translated by In Hanna and Park Wongi , 2019
DownloadPaperbackHardcover
Landscapes of Korean and Korean American Biblical Interpretation
Edited by John Ahn, 2019
Download Paperback Hardcover
A Filipino Resistance Reading of Joshua 1:1–9
By Lily Fetalsana-Apura, 2019
Download Paperback Hardcover
A Samoan Reading of Discipleship in Matthew
By Vaitusi Nofoaiga, 2017
Download Paperback Hardcover
Reading Ruth in Asia
edited by Jione Havea and Peter H. W. Lau, 2015
Download Paperback Hardcover
Migration and Diaspora: Exegetical Voices of Women
in Northeast Asian Countries
Hisako Kinukawa, 2014
Download Paperback Hardcover
Zer Rimonim: Studies in Biblical Literature and Jewish Exegesis
Michael Avioz, 2013
Download Paperback Hardcover
Women at Work in the Deuteronomistic History
Mercedes L. García Bachmann, 2013
Download Paperback Hardcover
The Old Testament and Christian Spirituality: Theoretical and Practical Essays from a South African Perspective
Christo Lombaard, 2012
Download Paperback
Reading Ezra 9–10 Tu’a-Wise: Rethinking Biblical Interpretation in Oceania
Nasili Vaka’uta, 2011 
Download Paperback
Global Hermeneutics? Reflections and Consequences
Knut Holter and Louis Jonker, 2010 
DownloadPaperback

Friday, July 31, 2020

Digital Dead Sea Scrolls


From the website:
View the Great Isaiah Scroll

Great Isaiah Scroll

The Great Isaiah Scroll (1QIsaa) is one of the original seven Dead Sea Scrolls discovered in Qumran in 1947. It is the largest (734 cm) and best preserved...more »
View the Dead Sea Scrolls Video
The Dead Sea Scrolls, which include the oldest known biblical manuscripts in existence, have been digitized and are now accessible online. view »
View the War Scroll

War Scroll

The War Scroll (1QM), popularly known as "The War of the Sons of Light Against the Sons of Darkness," is one of the seven original Dead Sea Scrolls discovered...more »
View the Temple Scroll

Temple Scroll

The Temple Scrolla (11Q19) was almost certainly discovered in 1956 in Cave 11, located about two kilometers north of Khirbet Qumran. The manuscript is written...more »
View the Commentary on the Habakkuk Scroll

Commentary on the Habakkuk Scroll

The Commentary on Habakkuk (Pesher Habakkuk, 1QpHab), is a relative complete scroll (1.48 m long) and one of the seven original Dead Sea Scrolls discovered...more »
View the Community Rule Scroll

Community Rule Scroll

The Community Rule (Serekh Hayahad, 1QS), formerly called the "Manual of Discipline," is the major section of one of the first seven scrolls discovered...more »
"We are privileged to house in the Israel Museum's Shrine of the Book the best preserved and most complete Dead Sea Scrolls ever discovered,” said James S. Snyder, Anne and Jerome Fisher Director of the Israel Museum. "They are of paramount importance among the touchstones of monotheistic world heritage, and they represent unique highlights of our Museum's encyclopedic holdings. Now, through our partnership with Google, we are able to bring these treasures to the broadest possible public."... more »

BiblIndex - Index of Biblical Quotations in Early Christian Literature


From the website:

ACCESS TO THE SEARCH FORM

Presentation

BiblIndex is an index of biblical references found in Christian literature, both Western and Eastern texts, at present covering the three first centuries, along with part of the fourth. The eventual goal is to cover the whole Late Antiquity and the early Middle Ages, in order to renew the study of the interpretation and history of biblical texts. BiblIndex also may be used as an online Synoptic Bible (Biblical tools) or as an Index of Patristic Works (Patristical tools). Access to data is completely free.

More details...

More information about the project

Visit our Scientific Blog on hypothese.org.

You want to help ?

You can make a donation to the Association des Amis de Sources Chrétiennes.

If you want to contribute, please send an e-mail: contact.

Archaeological Survey of Israel (update)

From AWOL:

Archaeological Survey of Israel - English - Hebrew
http://www.antiquities.org.il/survey/images/site-logo-eng.png
The sites documented in the Archaeological Survey of Israel are published on the website where they are displayed in survey squares of 100 sq km (10 × 10 km). The list of maps is presented below in alphabetic order, according to their names and numbers as recorded in Yalquṭ Ha-Pirsumim. The survey maps can be seen on the right side of the screen against the background of an aerial photograph. The sites (marked with yellow dots) can be accessed by zooming in on the screen and a description of them will appear by clicking on the dots. The introduction to each map and search options are also displayed.

Sunday, July 12, 2020

Dissertations in Ancient Near Eastern Studies Approved by the University of Chicago Department of Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations

From AWOL:
Solange Ashby
June 2016: Calling Out to Isis: The Enduring Nubian Presence at Philae
Rozenn F. Bailleul-LeSuer
June 2016: The Exploitation of Live Avian Resources in Pharaonic Egypt: A Socio-Economic Study
Aaron Alexander Burke
June 2004: The Architecture of Defense: Fortified Settlements Of The Levant During The Middle Bronze Age
Katherine Strange Burke
June 2007: Archaeological Texts and Contexts on the Red Sea: The Sheikh’s House at Quseir al-Qadim
Aaron Michael Butts
June 2013: Language Change in the Wake of Empire: Syriac in Its Greco-Roman Context
David Michael Calabro
June 2014: Ritual Gestures of Lifting, Extending, and Clasping the Hand(s) in Northwest Semitic Literature and Iconography
Dennis R. M. Campbell
March 2007: Mood and Modality in Hurrian
Cameron Lindley Cross
August 2015: The Poetics of Romantic Love in Vis & Rāmin
A. Asa Eger
August 2008: The Spaces Between The Teeth: Environment, Settlement, And Interaction On The Islamic-Byzantine Frontier
Humphrey Hill Hardy II
June 2014: Diachronic Development in Biblical Hebrew Prepositions: A Case Study in Grammaticalization
Michael Dean Jennings
June 2015: Beyond the Walls of Jericho: Khirbet al-Mafjar and the Signature Landscapes of the Jericho Plain
Helene J. Kantor
March 1945: Plant Ornament: Its Origin and Development in the Ancient Near East
Michael Kozuh
March 2006: The Sacrificial Economy: On The Management Of Sacrificial Sheep And Goats At The Neo-Babylonian/Achaemenid Eanna Temple Of Uruk (c. 625-520 BC)
John S. Nolan
June 2010: Mud Sealings And Fourth Dynasty Administration At Giza
Tate Paulette
March 2015: Grain Storage and the Moral Economy in Mesopotamia (3000-2000 BC)
Foy D. Scalf
March 2014: Passports to Eternity: Formulaic Demotic Funerary Texts and the Final Phase of Egyptian Funerary Literature in Roman Egypt
Stephanie Lesan Selover
June 2015: Excavating War: The Archaeology of Conflict in Early Chalcolithic to Early Bronze III Central and Southeastern Anatolia
Randy L. Shonkwiler
March 2014: The Behdetite: A Study of Horus the Behdetite from the Old Kingdom to the Conquest of Alexander
Jason Alik Ur
December 2004: Urbanism and Society in the Third Millennium Upper Khabur Basin
Grace White
December 1993: The Religious Iconography of Cappadocian Glyptic in the Assyrian Colony Period and its Significance in the Hittite New Kingdom
Bruce Williams
December 1975: Archaeology and Historical Problems of the Second Intermediate Period
Ilya Yakubovich
June 2008: Sociolinguistics of the Luvian Language

OTTC: A Blog for Old Testament Textual Criticism

OT Textual Criticism blog

From the website:
This blog is intended to be an outlet for research and questions on the textual criticism of the Old Testament/Hebrew Bible and related issues.

The blog has a plethora of Hebrew, Greek, etc., mss for textual criticism. 

Bibliography of New Testament Textual Commentaries

The following information appeared on the 12 July 2020 edition of AWOL and is from Elija Hixson:

I’ve been casually compiling a list of New Testament textual commentaries for several months. There is a lot more than just Metzger. I thought it might be helpful to post them here. This wasn’t an exhaustive attempt at getting every single last one of them, so I’m almost certain I’m missing some. I’ll try to keep an eye on the comments in case any readers think of any I missed. I make no judgments on the value of any of these; some are no doubt better than others. There will eventually be a textual commentary to accompany the Tyndale House Greek New Testament, but because it is still in the preparation stages and is not yet published, I leave it off the list.

I am excluding articles, chapters and monographs written on individual variants, and in general commentaries that happen to deal with variants (though Aune's Revelation WBC is an exception). That being said, I do include a few things here that are not primarily textual commentaries but contain interesting or valuable text-critical discussions.

I have arranged the following first in canonical order, then alphabetical by author, then finally by date (earliest first).

Update (8 July 2020): I added a few entries based on feedback from readers. I admit that I'm inconsistent in the way that I have cited sections of books—sometimes as a book section (e.g. Scrivener) and sometimes just mentioning the book itself (e.g. Westcott and Hort). Either way, there should be enough information here to track these works down. Thanks to readers who suggested additions: Jan Krans-Plaisier, Thomas Kraus, Teunis Van Lopik, M.M.R., and Mark Ward.

Whole New Testament

Bengel, Johann Albrecht. Η Καινη Διαθηκη. Novum Testamentum Graecum Ita Adornatum Ut Textus Probatarum Editionum Medullam Margo Variantium Lectionum in Suas Classes Distributarum Locorumque Parallelorum Delectum Apparatus Subiunctus Criseos Sacrae Millianae Praesertim Compendium, Limam, Supplementum Ac Fructum Exhibeat Inserviente Jo. Alberto Bengelio. Tübingen: Cotta, 1734.
Bengel, Johann Albrecht. Apparatus Criticus Ad Novum Testamentum Criseos Sacrae Compendium, Limam, Supplementum Ac Fructum Exhibens. Editio Secunda Curis B. Auctoris Posterioribus Aucta et Emendata, Copiosoque Indice Instructa. Edited by Philipp David Burk. Tübingen: Cotta, 1763.
Comfort, Philip W. New Testament Text and Translation Commentary: Commentary on the Variant Readings of the Ancient New Testament Manuscripts and How They Relate to the Major English Translations. Carol Stream, Ill.: Tyndale House Publishers Inc., 2008.
Comfort, Philip W. A Commentary on the Manuscripts and Text of the New Testament. Grand Rapids: Kregel Academic, 2015.
Comfort, Philip W. A Commentary on Textual Additions to the New Testament. Grand Rapids: Kregel Academic, 2017.
Doedes, Jacobus Izaak. Verhandeling over de tekstkritiek des Nieuwen Verbonds. Haarlem: Bohn, 1844.
Donaldson, Amy M. “Explicit References to New Testament Variant Readings Among Greek and Latin Church Fathers.” PhD thesis, University of Notre Dame, 2009. Available here: https://curate.nd.edu/show/5712m615k50. Note: If you haven’t been reading Amy Donaldson’s work, what have you been doing with your life? It’s not really a textual commentary, but it contains a kind of anthology of patristic text-critical discussions.
Loken, Israel P., and Rick Brannan. Lexham Textual Notes on the Bible. Lexham Press, 2014. Note from publisher’s website: “For comparison, these notes are more than one might find as a footnote in a modern Bible translation, but less than what one would find in a textual commentary such as those by Metzger, Comfort, or Alford.”
Metzger, Bruce M. A Textual Commentary on the Greek New Testament. London: United Bible Societies, 1971.
Metzger, Bruce M. A Textual Commentary on the Greek New Testament. 1st ed., corrected. Stuttgart: United Bible Societies, 1975. Note: I haven’t checked what the corrections are or what differences there are between these two editions.
Metzger, Bruce M. A Textual Commentary on the Greek New Testament. 2nd ed. Stuttgart: Deutsche Biblegesellschaft, 1994.
Nestle, Eberhard. “Textkritische Bemerkungen Zu Einzelnen Stellen Des NT.s.” In Einführung in das Griechische Neue Testament, 2nd ed., 208–265. Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1899.
Published in English as:
Nestle, Eberhard. “Critical Notes on Various Passages of the New Testament.” In Introduction to the Textual Criticism of the Greek New Testament, edited by Allan Menzies, translated by William Edie, 247–335. London: Williams and Norgate, 1901.
New English Translation - Novum Testamentum Graece New Testament. Stuttgart/Dallas: Deutsche Bibelgesellschaft/NET Bible Press, 2004. Note: There are some text-critical notes that accompany the NET Bible. I cite the NET+NA27 edition here simply because it was the edition I found at Tyndale House when I made this update to the list.
Omanson, Roger L. A Textual Guide to the Greek New Testament. Stuttgart: Deutsche Biblegesellschaft, 2006. Note: I am not sure if this book does much more than simplify/expand/explain Metzger’s Textual Commentary. I admit I haven’t spent a whole lot of time with it, but when I have consulted it, it’s usually just been Metzger re-worded and explained.
Scrivener, Frederick Henry Ambrose. “Application of the Foregoing Materials and Principles to the Criticism of Select Passages of the New Testament.” In A Plain Introduction to the Criticism of the New Testament for the Use of Biblical Students, edited by Edward Miller, 4th ed., 2:321–412. London: George Bell & Sons, 1894.
Westcott, B. F., and F. J. A. Hort. “Appendix I. Notes on Select Readings,” in Introduction to the New Testament in the Original Greek. New York: Harper and Brothers, 1882. Note: I’m not sure if this section could be said to be Westcott and Hort or just Hort. On p. 18 of the book, we find the following statement: “For the principles, arguments, and conclusions set forth in the Introduction and Appendix both editors are alike responsible. It was however for various reasons expedient that their exposition and illustration should proceed throughout from a single hand ; and the writing of this volume and the other accompaniments of the text has devolved on Dr Hort.” Update: Resolved (see comments below by Peter Gurry).

 Gospels

Multiple Gospels
Weiss, Bernhard. Textkritik der vier Evangelien. TUGAL NF 4.2. Leipzig: Hinrichs, 1899.
Wheeler, Frank. “Textual Criticism and the Synoptic Problem: A Textual Commentary on the Minor Agreements of Matthew and Luke Against Mark.” PhD diss., Baylor University, 1985.
Willker, Wieland. “An Online Textual Commentary on the Greek Gospels (12th Edition),” 2015. http://www.willker.de/wie/TCG/.
Matthew
Blass, Friedrich. Textkritische Bemerkungen zu Matthäus (BFCT 4.4; Gütersloh: Bertelsmann, 1900). Note from Jan Krans-Plasier:To be consulted together with Friedrich Blass, Euangelium secundum Matthaeum cum variae lectionis delectu (Leipzig: Teubner, 1901). There is more by Blass, e.g. his editions of Luke, John, Acts, and Hebrews.”
Borland, Jonathan C., Mike Arcieri, and Maurice A. Robinson. “A Textual Commentary on the Greek New Testament,” 2010–2017. https://tcgnt.blogspot.com/. Note: Takes a Byzantine priority position but only covers Matt. 1:5–8:4 (as of 5 July 2020).
Miller, Edward. A Textual Commentary upon the Holy Gospels, Part 1-14. London: George Bell & Sons, 1899. Note: This work defends a ‘traditional text,’ but I admit I haven’t read it enough to know if it simply defends the textus receptus at every point by any means necessary, if it usually defends the textus receptus but occasionally breaks from it in favour of majority text readings, etc.
Mark
Blass, Friedrich. Textkritische Bemerkungen zu Markus (BFCT 3.3; Gütersloh: Bertelsmann, 1899).
Elliott, J. K. “An Eclectic Textual Commentary on the Greek Text of Mark’s Gospel.” In New Testament Textual Criticism: Its Significance for Exegesis. Essays in Honour of Bruce M. Metzger, edited by Eldon J. Epp and Gordon D. Fee, 47–60. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1981.
Reprinted as:
Elliott, J. K. “An Eclectic Textual Commentary on the Greek Text of Mark’s Gospel.” In Essays and Studies in New Testament Textual Criticism, 159–170. Estudios de Filologia Neotestamentaria 3. Cordoba: Ediciones el Almendro, 1992.
Elliott, J. K. “An Eclectic Textual Commentary on the Greek Text of Mark’s Gospel.” In The Language and Style of the Gospel of Mark: An Edition of C. H. Turner’s “Notes on Marcan Usage” Together with Other Comparable Studies, 189–201. NovTSup 71. Leiden: Brill, 1993.
Greeven, Heinrich, and Eberhard Güting. Textkritik Des Markusevangeliums. Münster: LIT-Verlag, 2005.
Haelewyck, Jean-Claude. “The Healing of a Leper (Mark 1,40-45):  A Textual Commentary.” Ephemerides Theologicae Lovanienses 89.1 (2013): 15–36.
Turner, C. H. “A Textual Commentary on Mark I.” JTS (o.s.) 28.2 (1927): 145–58.
Wasserman, Tommy. “A Short Textual Commentary on the Lucan Travel Narrative (Luke 9:51–19:46).” In Getting Into the Text: New Testament Essays in Honor of David Alan Black, edited by Daniel L. Akin and Thomas W. Hudgins, 90–115. Eugene, OR: Pickwick, 2017.

Acts + Catholic Epistles

Acts
Wachtel, Klaus. “Text-Critical Commentary.” In Novum Testamentum Graecum Editio Critica Maior: III Die Apostelgeschichte / Acts of the Apostles. Teil 3: Studien / Part 3: Studies, edited by Holger Strutwolf, Georg Gäbel, Annette Hüffmeier, Gerd Mink, and Klaus Wachtel, 1–38. Stuttgart: Deutsche Bibelgesellschaft, 2017.
Rius-Camps, Josep, and Jenny Read-Heimerdinger. The Message of Acts in Codex Bezae: A Comparison with the Alexandrian Tradition. 4 vols. JSNTSup/LNTS. London: Bloomsbury T. & T. Clark, 2004–2009. Note: I mention this 4-volume set simply because of its idiosyncratic emphasis on a particular strand of the manuscript tradition.
Weiss, Bernhard. Die Apostelgeschichte: Textkritische Untersuchungen und Textherstellung. TUGAL, 9.3/4. Leipzig: J.C. Hinrichs, 1893.
Catholic Epistles
Wachtel, Klaus. Der byzantinische Text der katholischen Briefe: eine Untersuchung zur Entstehung der Koine des Neuen Testaments. ANTF 24. Berlin: W. de Gruyter, 1995. Note: The textual commentary section of this work concerns the Teststellen used in the Text und Textwert volumes.
Weiss, Bernhard. Die katholischen Briefe: Textkritische Untersuchungen und Textherstellung. TUGAL, 8.3. Leipzig: J.C. Hinrichs, 1892.
Jude
Albin, Carl Axel. Judasbrevet: traditionen, texten, tolkningen. Stockholm: Natur och kultur, 1962. Note: Thanks to Thomas Kraus for directing me to this one.
Landon, Charles. A Text-Critical Study of the Epistle to Jude. JSNTSup 135. Sheffield: Sheffield Academic Press, 1996.
Wasserman, Tommy. The Epistle of Jude: Its Text and Transmission. ConBNT 43. Stockholm: Almqvist & Wiksell International, 2006.

Paul (Including Hebrews)

More than one letter
Erasmus, Desiderius. Annotations on Galatians and Ephesians. Edited and translated by Reimer A. Faber. Collected Works of Erasmus 58. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2017. Note: I include Erasmus’ Annotations for historical value even though they are really more like a category I have rejected—commentaries that address variants. Additionally, I only include here the volumes currently available in English translation; the rest are, of course, available in Latin.
Weiss, Bernhard. Textkritik der paulinischen Briefe. TUGAL 14.3. Leipzig: Hinrichs, 1896.
Romans
Erasmus, Desiderius. Annotations on Romans. Translated by John B. Payne, Albert Rabil Jr., Robert D. Sider, and Warren S. Smith Jr. Collected Works of Erasmus 56. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1994.
1 Corinthians
Kloha, Jeffrey. “A Textual Commentary on Paul’s First Epistle to the Corinthians.” PhD thesis, University of Leeds, 2006. (Four volumes!)
Galatians
Carlson, Stephen C. The Text of Galatians and Its History. WUNT 2.385. Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck, 2015.
Wasserman, Tommy. “A Short Textual Commentary on Galatians.” In Studies on the Text of the New Testament and Early Christianity: Essays in Honor of Michael W. Holmes On the Occasion of His 65th Birthday, edited by Daniel M. Gurtner, Juan Hernández Jr., and Paul Foster, 345–371. NTTSD 50. Leiden: Brill, 2015.
Philippians
Price, James D. “A Computer-Aided Textual Commentary on the Book of Philippians.” Grace Theological Journal 8.2 (1987): 253–290.
Rodgers, Peter R. “A Textual Commentary on Philippians 2.5–11.” In Text and Community: Essays in Memory of Bruce M. Metzger, Volume 1, edited by J. Harold Ellens, 187–195. New Testament Monographs 19. Sheffield: Sheffield Phoenix Press, 2007.
2 Thessalonians
Edwards, Grant G. “The Text and Transmission of 2 Thessalonians.” PhD thesis, University of Birmingham, 2019. Note: The thesis is defended but not available yet, but I’ve seen the Table of Contents, and one of the chapters is a textual commentary. I imagine it will probably be part of a published version eventually, but I mention it here as the PhD thesis because it hasn’t been published yet.
Zimmer, Friedrich. Der Text der Thessalonicherbriefe: samt textkritischem Apparat und Kommentar. Quedlinburg: Chr. Friedr. Viewegs, 1893. Note: This work is different from Zimmer’s earlier work listed below, and this one is hard to describe. There’s an introduction on text-critical method, discussions of manuscripts, etc, and a critical text with an apparatus that blends things together—the manuscript witnesses like a normal apparatus and also bits of commentary mixed in.
Zimmer, Friedrich. “Zur Textkritik des zweiten Thessalonicherbriefes.” Zeitschrift für Wissenschafliche Theologie 31 (1888): 322–342. Note: No shame in admitting that I only know about Zimmer because of Grant.
The Pastorals
Elliott, J. K. The Greek Text of the Epistles to Timothy and Titus. Studies and Documents 26. Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press, 1968.
A slight revision of:
Elliott, J. K. “An Examination of the Greek Text of the Epistles to Timothy and Titus.” DPhil thesis, University of Oxford, 1967. UPDATE: Two of the three volumes of this thesis available here.
Philemon
Solomon, S. Matthew. “The Textual History of Philemon.” PhD. diss., New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary, 2014. Note: The majority of this work consists of an extensive edition of Philemon with all variants in all known manuscripts (up to 2014; P139 had not been published yet), but it contains a textual commentary section at the end.
Hebrews
Bruce, F. F. “Textual Problems in the Epistle to the Hebrews.” In Scribes and Scripture: New Testament Essays in Honor of J. Harold Greenlee, edited by David Alan Black, 27–39. Winona Lake, IN: Eisenbrauns, 1992. Note: It was by reading Bruce that I learned that John Calvin (and Erasmus before him) advocated a conjectural emendation at Hebrews 11:37. Calvin rejected the textus receptus there, writing, “The words they were temptedseem superfluous, and I have no doubt that the likeness of the two words επρίσθησαν and έπειράσθησαν was the reason why the second gradually crept into the text being added erroneously by some ignorant scribe, as Erasmus conjectures“ (p. 184 of Johnston’s 1963 translation). On this conjecture, see its entry in the Amsterdam Database of New Testament Conjectural Emendation: https://ntvmr.uni-muenster.de/nt-conjectures?histID=s25589.

Revelation

Aune, David E. Revelation. 3 Volumes. Word Biblical Commentary 52a–52c. Nashville: Thomas Nelson, 1998.
Elliott, J. K. “A Short Textual Commentary on the Book of Revelation and the ‘New’ Nestle.” NovT 56.1 (2014): 68–100.
Schmid, Josef. Studies in the History of the Greek Text of the Apocalypse: The Ancient Stems. Translated and edited by Juan Hernández, Jr., Garrick V. Allen, and Darius Müller. Text-Critical Studies 11. Atlanta: SBL Press, 2018.
Originally published as:
Schmid, Josef. Die alten Stämme, vol. 2 of Studien zur Geschichte des griechischen Apokalypse-Textes. MThS 2. Munich: Zink, 1955.
Weiss, Bernhard. Die Johannes-Apokalypse: Textkritische Untersuchungen und Textherstellung. TUGAL, 7.1. Leipzig: J.C. Hinrichs, 1891.