Our review of the Elizabethan Age and the end of the 16th - the beginning of the 17th centuries would be incomplete if we didn’t mention the history of the English Bible, because it was during that particular period that the most well-known and widely read version of it was created in English. As far as we know for many centuries the Bible was written in Latin so it was unknown to the ordinary English people. The first attempt to bring the Word of God to the common people was made by Alfred the Great in the 8th century.
During the Middle Ages the mystery and miracle plays based on the lives of saints were presented to the English. Later the priest John Wycliff (1320-1384) translated the Bible into English. Later came William Tyndale who was burning with desire to bring the Bible to everyone. Tyndale began printing his translation in 1525. However religious wars and conflicts cut short and made a martyr of him. And he was executed in 1536. Miles Coverdale later issued a translation based partly on Tyndale's and he supervised the preparation of the Great Bible. In 1540 it was established in all the churches. During the reign of King James I who succeeded Queen Elizabeth I after her death in 1603 the need for a better translation was recognised. 54 scholars and churchmen assembled in 1604 and worked for 7 years together. In 1611 they completed "The King James Bible" - the most familiar version among Protestants. This translation is more poetic than other translations of the Bible. No other book has had greater influence on English literature than the Bible. Its literary value lies in its variety and wealth of material. Its style is stately and simple, direct and poetic.
During the Middle Ages the mystery and miracle plays based on the lives of saints were presented to the English. Later the priest John Wycliff (1320-1384) translated the Bible into English. Later came William Tyndale who was burning with desire to bring the Bible to everyone. Tyndale began printing his translation in 1525. However religious wars and conflicts cut short and made a martyr of him. And he was executed in 1536. Miles Coverdale later issued a translation based partly on Tyndale's and he supervised the preparation of the Great Bible. In 1540 it was established in all the churches. During the reign of King James I who succeeded Queen Elizabeth I after her death in 1603 the need for a better translation was recognised. 54 scholars and churchmen assembled in 1604 and worked for 7 years together. In 1611 they completed "The King James Bible" - the most familiar version among Protestants. This translation is more poetic than other translations of the Bible. No other book has had greater influence on English literature than the Bible. Its literary value lies in its variety and wealth of material. Its style is stately and simple, direct and poetic.
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