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The Geneva Bible: 1560 Edition

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Original translation. Original commentary. Original illustrations. If you are looking for one of the most original Bibles―this is it! Get the first English Bible ever to be translated from the original languages of Greek and Hebrew. This is a facsimile of the Geneva Bible, which means you get an exact copy of the original (including margin notes from the translators!). Use this Bible as your main translation, next to another version, or simply as a must-have keepsake from Christian history!

The Geneva Bible was a monumental achievement in the history of Protestant Bible translation. Born in a time of religious and political upheaval it helped foster Scripture literacy among the common people of England and offered for the first time “study resources” to make the Bible easier to understand.

Features that made this Bible revolutionary then and still makes it valuable

Features that make this particular version of the Geneva Bible a top
Enjoy seeing original illustrations from the Geneva Bible! Not all modern Bibles include illustrations yet the Geneva Bible of 1560 did. It was created so both the common people and church leaders could deepen their understanding of the Bible―and included labeled diagrams and maps!

Fascinating facts about the Geneva

1192 pages, Hardcover

First published May 1, 1560

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Hendrickson Publishers

102 books1 follower

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Displaying 1 - 11 of 11 reviews
1 review1 follower
June 7, 2008
The first ever study Bible. The King James version came out, in competition with the Geneva Bible in order to keep Christians from studying it themselves. I understand that the king (James) did not like what Calvin was stating in the margins about tyrannical governments. This was the Bible that the Pilgrims brought to our shores and influenced the founding of the greatest gentile nation, in the history, of mankind. Also, an excellent Bible with Calvin's commentaries.
Profile Image for Timothy.
Author 2 books17 followers
December 30, 2012
Wonderful and as lovely as the King James 1611 edition!! In many respects this is my favourite old version. It has a wealth of helpful notes in the margins. The Puritans and others aboard the Mayflower to Plymouth, MA had this version with them.

I have carried this version to meetings with me, along with my King James Version, even though it is nearly two inches thick! This and other old translations goes with me within the Kindle also. :):) That makes it handy to carry instead of the volumes I'd be lugging about 631 feet southwards to the Mennonite meetinghouse I attend! An excellent achievement long before the Douay/Rheims version of 1609—1610 and the King James version of 1611.

A wonderful version, and delightful to have on hand. This is a piece of history, since the Puritans and Pilgrims stepped off the Mayflower with this version! A very wonderful translation and easy to read after you adjust to the spellings, which had no standard to go by in those days, thus many things were spelled as they sounded to the authors and translators! Still, another masterpiece! Worth a spot on your shelf!
Profile Image for Zachary Kreft.
51 reviews1 follower
October 17, 2019
A facsimile (think high-quality photo copy) of the Geneva Bible, published in 1560, three years into the reign of Elizabeth I. It was begun during the reign of her sister Mary, a Catholic, and so had to be produced in a protestant country on the continent, hence it's the Geneva Bible. It came 34 years after William Tyndale's New Testament (the first complete translation of the New Testament from the Greek into English) and 51 years before the King James version. This is actually one of my favorite study Bibles because its notes are so intelligent and interesting, in a way not common in modern Bibles.

Its importance comes largely from its place in the history of the Bible in English. Following Tyndale, most English translations are revisions of previous translations, and so this one stands between Tyndale and King James. This is also the Bible of Shakespeare and the Bible carried by the puritans aboard the Mayflower to the New World.

Early printed books are also beautiful in ways modern books aren't, and this is a particularly good example. The typeface varies enough from modern fonts that it can take a little getting used to. It also uses old fashioned spellings and abbreviations.

One final point in favor of this edition is that its foreignness and the slightly greater difficulty we have reading it force us to read it more slowly, thereby increasing the time we spend on it and the thought we give it.
Profile Image for K.C. Herbel.
Author 8 books39 followers
June 14, 2017
While I recommend reading the Bible, I would recommend finding another version of the holy book besides this one. It was not user friendly on my kindle and I gave up reading it to return to a hard copy I keep in my office.
I will say that this version is insightfully translated, in the parts I read.
Profile Image for William Sariego.
250 reviews3 followers
June 20, 2023
An incredible historic work, I wanted this for my collection. Reading it, however is quite difficult. Scripture itself is readable, despite the Old English, which isn't that difficult to follow. The marginal notes however, and even the book introductions are quite small and require young eyes or a magnifying glass!
Profile Image for Andrea Mitchell.
6 reviews
February 23, 2016
Although I have not read the entire book the part that I did read was very interesting. To be honest one line in particular caught my attention and it was talking about a "green herb". Was he implying cannabis or what? I don't understand why God was so mad at the people that he put here. If he created these people in his own light then why get so angry that almost everyone must die. What gives you that much power just because you have it. I feel like that was extreme over kill and then after killing everyone for him to say okay I won't ever do it again like he acted like a woman on her period, how one minute you curse the land and wipe everything off and the next you ur like okay it's all over and better. Go be fruitful and multiply, to me that is very scary and crazy. Also I wonder how he would view the world now and it makes me wonder how the books will be of this lifetime.(170)
Profile Image for Josh.
29 reviews1 follower
November 2, 2015
Some Old Testament passages can be rather dry in modern translations, but sound so much more epic in 16th century English. The New Testament epistles, however, become harder to follow.
In the facsimile edition, there were only a few spots where the main text was missing a letter or two. A bit more often, the smaller font of the marginal commentary took longer to decipher.
Some of the commentary is amusingly outdated (e.g., from Luke XV:8 a drachma is "some what more in value then fyue pence of olde sterling money"--thanks, that's helpful. . .). Much of it is useful in seeing Christ through all of scripture. Then there are the comments that show obvious denominational bias--much vehemency against the Pope in particular, especially in Revelation.
18 reviews5 followers
December 30, 2007
For those who are interested in reading the same Bible used by the Pilgrims and first Americans (among others) then this is a very interesting protestant Bible. Don't let the old english get in the way...you will be surprised how quickly it becomes a non-issue for all but the most elusive words. Historical and a great companion for serious study.
Profile Image for Aaron Meyer.
Author 9 books57 followers
January 10, 2014
A must have on the shelf. Predating the KJ version by many years. It was this bible which came to Colonies and had the most influence on the thinking of its founders.
Profile Image for Craig Bolton.
1,195 reviews86 followers
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September 23, 2010
The Geneva Bible: A Facsimile of the 1560 Edition by Lloyd E. Berry (2007)
Displaying 1 - 11 of 11 reviews

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