The Gutenberg Bible was simply an edition of the Vulgate, therefore written in Latin.
Saint Jerome wrote the Vulgate. Jerome was a Roman Catholic priest who lived from 347 to 420 AD. He and others consulted original texts in Hebrew, Greek and Aramaic to clean up the Latin translation then in use by the Catholic Church. He was tasked to do this by Pope Damasus the First in the year 382.
The "vulgate" is the principal Latin version of the Bible, prepared mainly by St. Jerome in the late 4th century, and (as revised in 1592) adopted as the official text for the Roman Catholic Church.
The first Latin translation of the Bible is known as the Vulgate. It was translated from the original Hebrew and Greek manuscripts.
The first Latin translations of the Bible are collectively known as Vitus Latina. All of varying quality, they were eventually replaced by St. Jerome's Latin Vulgate in the 5th. century. The Vulgate was the first collective version of the entire Bible, rather than the assembled patchwork of the piece-by-piece Vitus.
The Vulgate.
Yes. It is the Holy Bible, specifically the Vulgate.
AnswerThe Latin translation of the Bible by Jerome is called the Vulgate.
Jerome.
The Vulgate is a translation of the Bible into Latin made by Jerome. An accessible English translation that follows this tradition is the Douay-Rheims American version.
The Gutenberg Bible was simply an edition of the Vulgate, therefore written in Latin.
Saint Jerome wrote the Vulgate. Jerome was a Roman Catholic priest who lived from 347 to 420 AD. He and others consulted original texts in Hebrew, Greek and Aramaic to clean up the Latin translation then in use by the Catholic Church. He was tasked to do this by Pope Damasus the First in the year 382.
Yes. It is the Holy Bible, specifically the Vulgate.
The Vulgate is the Latin version of the Bible made in A.D.382 as a revision of older Latin translations.
The Latin version of the Bible was translated by Jerome. It is called the Vulgate and was the official Catholic Bible up until very recently.
That would be Fr. Jermaine, who translated the Bible into the Latin Vulgate, circa 400 CE.
The "vulgate" is the principal Latin version of the Bible, prepared mainly by St. Jerome in the late 4th century, and (as revised in 1592) adopted as the official text for the Roman Catholic Church.