History of English Bibles and William Tyndale

History of English Bibles and William Tyndale
Slide Note
Embed
Share

Evolution of English Bibles from the 14th to 17th centuries, including the impact of William Tyndale's translations. Learn about the Geneva Bible, the Bishops Bible, and King James I's role.

  • English Bibles
  • William Tyndale
  • Geneva Bible
  • Bishops Bible
  • King James I

Uploaded on Feb 18, 2025 | 0 Views


Download Presentation

Please find below an Image/Link to download the presentation.

The content on the website is provided AS IS for your information and personal use only. It may not be sold, licensed, or shared on other websites without obtaining consent from the author.If you encounter any issues during the download, it is possible that the publisher has removed the file from their server.

You are allowed to download the files provided on this website for personal or commercial use, subject to the condition that they are used lawfully. All files are the property of their respective owners.

The content on the website is provided AS IS for your information and personal use only. It may not be sold, licensed, or shared on other websites without obtaining consent from the author.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The King James BibleTranslated in 1611

  2. Apple of my eye Old as the hills At death s door At my wit s end Baptism of fire Bite the dust Blind leading the blind Casting pearls before swine Buttering someone up Casting the first stone The haves and have-nots Thieves in the night Scum of the earth Sackcloth and ashes Streets paved in gold Skin of my teeth Save the best for last

  3. English Bibles 1380: First English Manuscript (John Wycliffe) 1525: Tyndale New Testament (1st printing in English) 1535: Coverdale Bible 1537: Matthew-Tyndale Bible 1539: The Great Bible (1st authorized for public use) 1560: Geneva Bible 1568: The Bishops Bible 1609: Rheims New Testament (1st authorized Catholic)

  4. The Geneva Bible TheBible The Bishops Bible

  5. The Geneva Bible Published in 1560 Relied on William Tyndale s translation Language was more accessible Puritans and Calvinists both loved the Geneva Bible Surviving copies are dirty and well-used Anti-royal in the marginal notes King James did not like the marginal notes

  6. William Tyndale Knew eight languages When he translated the Bible into English, it was illegal Left England to work with Martin Luther in Germany Printed the first English language Bible Executed in 1536 His English translation of the Bible is considered the best Basis for much of the King James Bible

  7. The Bishops Bible Published in 1568 Translated by bishops of the Anglican Church Image of Queen Elizabeth on the title page Language was hard to understand Nobody used it The people did not like the Bishops Bible

  8. King James I Cousin of Queen Elizabeth I Became king in March 1603 Scottish King James VI Wanted to be remembered

  9. The Rules No anti-royal notes in the margins Use common language An accurate translation that relies on excellent scholarship

  10. The Team Formed in 1604 54 scholars Six subcommittees Each subcommittee translated a different part Within the subcommittee, individuals translated, then compared translations Subcommittee agreed on the best translation Large committee approved subcommittee work Revising committee took a final version to two bishops, the Archbishop of Canterbury, and finally, King James

  11. The Result Finished in 1611 People liked the Geneva Bible better Printing errors were common Clergy used The Great Translation Smaller-sized bibles were printed and distributed to churchgoers By mid-1600s, most people used The Great Translation Became known as the King James Bible: his legacy English traders and colonists took the King James Bible along By the 1800s, Bible Societies distributed King James Bibles throughout the world.

  12. Lasting Influence Most often used translation in Protestant religions Often the only book in a household Bridges cultural and religious traditions Flowing language and prose rhythm Language and content influence modern poetry Political ramifications from 1600s to 2000s

  13. The KingJamesBible Influencing life, literature, and society for over 400 years.

Related


More Related Content