Coverdale Bible

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Coverdale Bible
Full name
The Bible, that is the Holy Scripture of the Old and New Testament, faithfully translated into English.
AbbreviationTCB
Complete Bible
published
1535
CopyrightPublic domain due to age.
In the beginning God created heaven and earth: and the earth was void and empty, and darkness was upon deep, and the Spirit of God moved upon the water. And God said: Let there be light, and there was light.
For God so loved the world, that he gave his only Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life.

The Coverdale Bible, compiled by

folio and quarto) published in 1537 were the first complete Bibles printed in England. The 1537 folio edition carried the royal licence and was therefore the first officially approved Bible translation in English. The Psalter from the Coverdale Bible was included in the Great Bible of 1540 and the Anglican Book of Common Prayer beginning in 1662, and in all editions of the U.S. Episcopal Church Book of Common Prayer until 1979
.

History

The place of publication of the 1535 edition was long disputed. The printer was assumed to be either Froschover in

John Rogers. The other backer of the Coverdale Bible was Jacobus van Meteren's nephew, Leonard Ortels (†1539), the father of Abraham Ortelius
(1527–1598), humanist geographer and cartographer.

Although Coverdale was also involved in the preparation of the Great Bible of 1539, the Coverdale Bible continued to be reprinted. The last of over 20 editions of the whole Bible, or its New Testament, appeared in 1553.[citation needed]

Translation

Pentateuch and possibly his published Jonah. He apparently did not make use of any of Tyndale's other, unpublished, Old Testament material (cf. Matthew Bible). Instead, Coverdale himself translated the remaining books of the Old Testament and the Apocrypha. Coverdale used his working intermediate knowledge of Hebrew, Aramaic, and Greek; not being a Hebrew or Greek scholar, he worked primarily from German Bibles—Luther's Bible and the Swiss-German version (Zürich Bible) of Huldrych Zwingli[1] and Leo Jud—and Latin sources including the Vulgate
.

See also

Notes

References

  • A. S. Herbert, Historical Catalogue of Printed Editions of the English Bible 1525–1961, London: British and Foreign Bible Society; New York: American Bible Society, 1968. SBN 564 00130 9.
  • H. WAUWERMANS, art. Abraham Ortelius, col. 293.

External links