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| It is improbable that you will ever use your jet ink printer to print the complete Bible. Should you ever have to do it, you would greatly benefit by using our inkjet inks, Jet-Master inkjet refill kits and inkjet replacement print cartridges. It is common to associate the first English Bible with King James’ Bible, printed in 1607. However, the first modern English Bible was printed not in England but in Cologne, Germany – a version of the text compiled by William Tyndale in 1526. The next version was compiled, still in Germany, shortly later in 1535. Then in England Miles Coverdale combined the two versions printed in Germany and printed his own Bible version – version that he called the ‘Thomas Matthew’ Bible in 1537. In 1539 the government of King Henry VIII issued the ‘Great Bible’. Printing the Bible, however, could be a risky proposition. During the reign of Queen Mary I , a Catholic (1553-1558), John Rogers had the temerity to reprint the Matthew Bible. For this he was burned at the stake in 1555. Printing of Bibles in English was again done in Continental Europe. The next version was the Geneva Bible, also called ‘The Breeches Bible’ It conveyed a Puritanical, fundamentalist view of biblical events. Specifically, Adam and Eve, after the Fall, were not only mankind’s progenitors but also the first and original textile workers. In all previous Bibles Adam and Eve covered themselves with fig leaves. In the Geneva Bible, instead, we find that ‘they sewed figtre leaues together and made them selues breeches’. Hence the name the ‘Breeches Bible’. |
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