The first Bible to be printed in England was produced in by the royal printer, and with Henry VIII’s initial support. It has attracted little scholarly attention. This first extensive examination traces its creation and early reception as witness to the uncertain course of the English Reformation. Its origins reveal a dependency on Continental models, which were then modified to create a book carefully placed between conservatism and reform. Priests, scho- lars, children and crooks left their marks on the Bible, and advanced digital technology exposes unique evidence for the merging of Latin and English in late Henrician liturgy
'LORD CROMWELL presenting a New Translation of the BIBLE to HENRY VIII. at LONDON, in the Year 1538,...
The story of the Bible in Maynooth mirrors the separate yet parallel development of the translation...
This 415-year-old Bible, printed in 1603, is permanently housed in the Lynn University Archives. Off...
This book is the first in-depth study of the production and use of Bibles in late medieval and early...
The chapter looks at devotional and religious books printed in England in English between 1476 and 1...
Lay Bible reading took hold in England after the Protestant Reformation, and the ramifications of th...
Printing in the Anglo-Saxon type began in the mid-sixteenth century in a burst of activity that was ...
With the coming of the Protestant Reformation, the 15th and 16th centuries were religiously tumultuo...
William Shakespeare’s thirty-nine plays contain numerous biblical references. Of the 151 English Psa...
The arrival in England of Tyndale’s New Testament in the 1520s is still widely heralded as a transfo...
During the reign of King Henry VIII, England experienced a sudden change in the realm of religion. I...
In Reformation studies, the printed Bible has long been regarded as an agent of change. This dissert...
During the last decade of Henry VIII’s life, his Protestant subjects struggled to reconcile two loya...
The Geneva Bible was translated into English at Geneva Switzerland by English Protestant exiles and ...
This article presents a short overview of the printing history of the Bible in German and English at...
'LORD CROMWELL presenting a New Translation of the BIBLE to HENRY VIII. at LONDON, in the Year 1538,...
The story of the Bible in Maynooth mirrors the separate yet parallel development of the translation...
This 415-year-old Bible, printed in 1603, is permanently housed in the Lynn University Archives. Off...
This book is the first in-depth study of the production and use of Bibles in late medieval and early...
The chapter looks at devotional and religious books printed in England in English between 1476 and 1...
Lay Bible reading took hold in England after the Protestant Reformation, and the ramifications of th...
Printing in the Anglo-Saxon type began in the mid-sixteenth century in a burst of activity that was ...
With the coming of the Protestant Reformation, the 15th and 16th centuries were religiously tumultuo...
William Shakespeare’s thirty-nine plays contain numerous biblical references. Of the 151 English Psa...
The arrival in England of Tyndale’s New Testament in the 1520s is still widely heralded as a transfo...
During the reign of King Henry VIII, England experienced a sudden change in the realm of religion. I...
In Reformation studies, the printed Bible has long been regarded as an agent of change. This dissert...
During the last decade of Henry VIII’s life, his Protestant subjects struggled to reconcile two loya...
The Geneva Bible was translated into English at Geneva Switzerland by English Protestant exiles and ...
This article presents a short overview of the printing history of the Bible in German and English at...
'LORD CROMWELL presenting a New Translation of the BIBLE to HENRY VIII. at LONDON, in the Year 1538,...
The story of the Bible in Maynooth mirrors the separate yet parallel development of the translation...
This 415-year-old Bible, printed in 1603, is permanently housed in the Lynn University Archives. Off...