Item #512163 THE NEW TESTAMENT OCTAPLA: Eight English Versions of the New Testament in the Tyndale - King James Tradition. Luther A. Weigle, Tyndale 1525, Great Bible 1539, Geneva Bible 1560, Bishops Bible 1568, Rheims 1582, King James 1611, RV / ASV 1881/1901, RSV 1946.
THE NEW TESTAMENT OCTAPLA: Eight English Versions of the New Testament in the Tyndale - King James Tradition

THE NEW TESTAMENT OCTAPLA: Eight English Versions of the New Testament in the Tyndale - King James Tradition

Thomas Nelson & Sons, 1960. First Edition. Hardcover with Dust Jacket. 1489pp. Large 4to, sewn binding in publisher's brown buckram. Text with some light foxing around the edges, small nick to tail of backstrip, clean and unmarked otherwise with solid binding; DJ edgeworn and chipped at tail, spine faded, dampstain to spine interior, now wrapped in mylar. 'The New Testament Octapla presents-for the first time-the full text of eight English translations of the New Testament, from Tyndale to the Revised Standard Version, arranged on facing pages. It shows the development of the Tyndale-King James tradi-tion, in the succession of translations from 1525 to 1611 and in the revisions from 1870 to 1960. Versions included here, with dates in parentheses indicating years of original publication, are: Tyndale (1525) 1535 Rheims 1582 Great Bible (1539) 1540 King James (1611) 1873 Geneva Bible (1560) 1562 (RV 1881) ASV 1901 Bishops Bible (1568) 1602 RSV (1946) 1960 TYNDALE is represented by his final revision, the GH edition published in 1535, which is reprinted here for the first time in book form. Miles Coverdale's translation, known as the GREAT BIBLE, was commissioned by Sir Thomas Cromwell, Secretary to King Henry VIII, and Vicar General. The first edition, published at London in 1539, was the first 'authorized' edition. The second edition, used here, was published in 1540. The GENEVA BIBLE was published by English Protestants who had fled to Geneva from the persecutions under Queen Mary. Although never 'authorized' it became the household Bible of the English-speaking peoples. The second edition, 1562, is used The text of the BISHOPS' BIBLE is that of the revision of 1572, as printed in the edition of 1602. This Bible was authorized by Convocation, and its possession enjoined upon the churches. This became the basis of the revision under King James. The RHEIMS translation is copied from the first edition, 1582. It was made from the Latin Vulgate by Roman Catholic scholars, the larger part of the work being done by Gregory Martin. King James I ordained in 1604 that a translation of the whole Bible be made; in 1611 this version of the Bible was published, with a dedication to him. The text of the KING JAMES VERSION here used is taken from the critical edition which was published as The Cambridge Paragraph Bible of the Authorized English Version, in 1873. The revision of the 1870's is represented by the AMERICAN STANDARD VERSION, 1901, rather than the Revised Version published in England in 1881, for its use led directly to the next major revision, the REVISED STANDARD VERSION, which appears here as published in 1960. Each of the versions is reproduced in The New Testament Octapla in the edition on which succeeding scholars have based their work. The copy of Tyndale's GH edition in the New York Public Library, supplemented by photostats from the Bod-leian Library of Oxford University, and photostats of the other sixteenth-century editions were used to ensure accuracy. The spelling, punctuation, and paragraphing of the selected edition of each version have been retained. Verse numbers have been added to Tyndale and the Great Bible to make for easier comparison.' (From the dust jacket). VERY GOOD / Good. Item #512163
ISBN: B000KP5S7A

Price: $150.00