Vulgate


 
 

The Vulgate Bible is an early 5th century translation of the Bible into Latin made by St. Jerome on the orders of Pope Damasus I. It takes its name from the phrase versio vulgata, "the common (i.e., popular) version" (cf. Vulgar Latin), and was written in an everyday Latin used in conscious distinction to the elegant Ciceronian Latin of which Jerome was a master. The Vulgate was designed to be both more accurate and easier to understand than its predecessors. It was the first, and for many centuries the only, Christian Bible translation that translated the Old Testament directly from the Hebrew original rather than indirectly from the Greek Septuagint.

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Bible: The Bible (sometimes The Book,Good Book, Word of God, or Scripture), from Greek (τα) βιβλια, (ta) biblia, "(the) books", plural of βιβλιον, biblion, "book", originally a diminutive of βιβλο...

Latin: Latin is an Indo-European language originally spoken in the region around Rome called Latium. It gained great importance as the formal language of the Roman Empire. All Romance languages are descended from Latin, and many words based on Latin are found in other modern languages such as English. The ...

Jerome: :For other uses see: Jerome (disambiguation)...

~ Table of Content ~

Introduction
Different versions
Relation with the Old Latin Bible
The Clementine Vulgate
Nova Vulgata
The Stuttgart Vulgate
Issues of translation
Influence on Western Culture
Text (from Wikisource)
External links
 
FR: Vulgate


 

~ Related Subjects ~

Greek (3) - Old Testament (2) - Alphabet (1) - Lingua franca (1) - French (1) - Latin alphabet (1) - Roman Empire (1) - Latium (1) - Romance languages (1) - English (1) - Modern language (1) - 18th century (1) - 1960s (1) - Second Vatican Council (1) - Classics (1) -
 

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