This red-letter edition New Testament (King James Version) is unique in that it provides endnotes with hyperlinks to websites containing information about key places, historical figures, and other points of interest mentioned within the text. This New Testament will periodically have new links added to it and inactive links removed. Endnote sample for Tiberius provided Author Unknown, “Tiberius”, Wikipedia. Available [Online]: (accessed 27 March 2019); Biography.com Editors, “Tiberius Biography”, The Biography.com website. Available [Online]: (accessed 2 January 2019); Dio, Roman History, trans. Earnest Cary, “Book VII”, Internet Archive. Available [Online]: (accessed 27 March 2019); Donald L. Wasson, “Tiberius”, Ancient History Encyclopedia. Available [Online]: (accessed 31 December 2018); Frederik Pohl, “Tiberius”, Encyclopedia Britannica. Available [Online]: (accessed 31 December 2018); Gaius Suetonius Tranquillus, The Lives of the Twelve Caesars, trans. J. C. Rolfe, “Tiberius”, Wikisource. Available [Online]: (accessed 25 March 2019); Garrett G. Fagan, “Tiberius”, De Imperatoribus An Online Encyclopedia of Roman Rulers and Their Families. Available [Online]: (accessed 31 December 2018); Josephus, The Antiquities of the Jews, trans. William Whiston, “Book XIII, 2.2-4, 3.4, 5, 4.2, 4-6, 5.1, 3, 6.1, 4-10, 7.2, 8.7”, Wikisource. Available [Online]: (accessed 27 March 2019); and Tacitus, The Annals, trans. Alfred John Church and William Jackson Brodribb, “Books 1-6”, Wikisource. Available [Online]: (accessed 27 March 2019).
Books can be attributed to "Anonymous" for several reasons:
* They are officially published under that name * They are traditional stories not attributed to a specific author * They are religious texts not generally attributed to a specific author
Books whose authorship is merely uncertain should be attributed to Unknown.