The article shows the ways in which a language of marriage became normative in early modern English translations of the Hebrew Bible. Focusing on successive biblical versions (especially from Tyndales translation based for the first time on the Hebrew original, published in 1530/1, to the Authorized Version published in 1611), it shows how Hebrew terms relating to a variety of domestic and sexual union were rendered in English biblical versions in a language pertaining to monogamous matrimony. This was further amplified in adjacent textual commentaries and notes. The use of a contemporary language of marriage in early modern biblical translations the article suggests was not unlike the ways in which early modern commentator perceived social...
This paper asks whether the Church of England considers sources other than the Bible in its teachin...
This article examines how the translators of the King James Bible (1611) appropriated much of the wo...
This Article analyzes the mainline Lutheran, Calvinist, and Anglican models of sex, marriage, and fa...
By investigating the language of neighbourliness and friendship in English translations of the Hebre...
How can we explain the immense popularity of the English Bible? This book argues that the vernacular...
Marriage in the first-century Mediterranean world (1): Females in a male world This article is th...
The significance of early modern Bible translation cannot be overstated, but its “breadth, and lengt...
A fundamental change in the understanding of marriage becomes apparent in the first century A.D., de...
This monograph is a detailed examination of legal reasoning in the Hebrew Bible. Focusing on the exe...
This article clarifies the concept of an ‘institution’, and distinguishes between social, legal and ...
There are many discussions, OT exposition and Hebrew exegesis about marriage based on Genesis 2:21-2...
The article reviews the limited evidence for writings associated with the Jewish community in Englan...
This article presents a short overview of the printing history of the Bible in German and English at...
This presentation deals with a Christian description of early modern Jewish marriage rituals. The te...
The chapter crystallises working principles that guided translators of the Hebrew Bible in the early...
This paper asks whether the Church of England considers sources other than the Bible in its teachin...
This article examines how the translators of the King James Bible (1611) appropriated much of the wo...
This Article analyzes the mainline Lutheran, Calvinist, and Anglican models of sex, marriage, and fa...
By investigating the language of neighbourliness and friendship in English translations of the Hebre...
How can we explain the immense popularity of the English Bible? This book argues that the vernacular...
Marriage in the first-century Mediterranean world (1): Females in a male world This article is th...
The significance of early modern Bible translation cannot be overstated, but its “breadth, and lengt...
A fundamental change in the understanding of marriage becomes apparent in the first century A.D., de...
This monograph is a detailed examination of legal reasoning in the Hebrew Bible. Focusing on the exe...
This article clarifies the concept of an ‘institution’, and distinguishes between social, legal and ...
There are many discussions, OT exposition and Hebrew exegesis about marriage based on Genesis 2:21-2...
The article reviews the limited evidence for writings associated with the Jewish community in Englan...
This article presents a short overview of the printing history of the Bible in German and English at...
This presentation deals with a Christian description of early modern Jewish marriage rituals. The te...
The chapter crystallises working principles that guided translators of the Hebrew Bible in the early...
This paper asks whether the Church of England considers sources other than the Bible in its teachin...
This article examines how the translators of the King James Bible (1611) appropriated much of the wo...
This Article analyzes the mainline Lutheran, Calvinist, and Anglican models of sex, marriage, and fa...