The Geneva Bible : a facsimile of the 1560 edition / With an introduction by Lloyd E. Berry.
Material type: TextLanguage: English Original language: Undetermined Publication details: Madison : University of Wisconsin Press, (c)1969.Description: vi, 28 pages, iv, 474, 122, 14. leaves : illustrations, maps ; 28 cmContent type:- text
- unmediated
- volume
- BS170 .G464 1969
- COPYRIGHT: covered - CIU has obtained rights for you to copy and share this title in electronic or print format with students, faculty, and staff.
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Reference (Library Use ONLY) | G. Allen Fleece Library REFERENCE | res | BS170.B582.G464 1969 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 31923001893581 |
"The translators do not identify themselves anywhere in the Bible ... William Whittingham has always been considered to have been the general editor."--Introd., pages 7-8 (2d group)
Leaves printed on both sides.
The Geneva Bible is one of the most historically significant translations of the Bible into English, preceding the King James Version by 51 years.1. It was the primary Bible of 16th-century English Protestantism and was used by William Shakespeare,2. Oliver Cromwell, John Knox, John Donne, and others. It was one of the Bibles taken to America on the Mayflower. (Pilgrim Hall Museum has collected several Bibles of Mayflower passengers.) The Geneva Bible was used by many English Dissenters, and it was still respected by Oliver Cromwell's soldiers at the time of the English Civil War, in the booklet The Souldiers Pocket Bible.3. This version of the Bible is significant because, for the first time, a mechanically printed, mass-produced Bible was made available directly to the general public. It came with a variety of scriptural study guides and aids (collectively called an apparatus), which included verse citations that allow the reader to cross-reference one verse with numerous relevant verses in the rest of the Bible, introductions to each book of the Bible that acted to summarize all of the material that each book would cover, maps, tables, woodcut illustrations, and indices. Because the language of the Geneva Bible was more forceful and vigorous, most readers strongly preferred this version to the Great Bible. In the words of Cleland Boyd McAfee, "it drove the Great Bible off the field by sheer power of excellence.
COPYRIGHT: covered - CIU has obtained rights for you to copy and share this title in electronic or print format with students, faculty, and staff.
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