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Middle English Bible translations



         


History of the English Bible
Overview
Old English translations
Lindisfarne Gospels
Middle English translations
Wyclif's Bible
Early Modern English translations
Tyndale's Bible
Coverdale's Bible
Matthew's Bible
Taverner's Bible
Great Bible
Geneva Bible
Bishops' Bible
Douay-Rheims Bible
King James Version
Modern English translations
18th and 19th century
Quaker Bible
Thomson's Translation
Webster's Revision
Young's Literal Translation
Joseph Smith Translation
Julia E. Smith Parker Translation
English Revised Version
20th and 21st century
American Standard Version
Revised Standard Version
New World Translation
New American Standard Bible
Jerusalem Bible
New American Bible
New English Bible
New International Version
English Standard Version
Ongoing translation projects
Anchor Bible Series
New English Translation

The age of Middle English was not a fertile time for Bible translations but saw the first major translation that of John Wyclif. The period of Middle English begins with the Norman conquest and ends about 1500. The influence of French as the preferred language limited English literature of all types.

Sample of Wyclif's translation:

Be not youre herte affraied, ne drede it. Ye bileuen in god, and bileue ye in me. In the hous of my fadir ben many dwellyngis: if ony thing lasse I hadde seid to you, for I go to make redi to you a place. And if I go and make redi to you a place, eftsone I come and I schal take you to my silf, that where I am, ye be. And whidir I go ye witen: and ye witen the wey. (John 14:1-4)

All translations of this time period were all from Latin or French. Greek and Hebrew texts would become available with the development of the Johann Gutenberg's movable-type printing press which coincided with the development of Early Modern English language and would lead to a great increase in the number of translations of the Bible in the Early Modern English era.





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