The Middle English Bible : a reassessment / Henry Ansgar Kelly.
2016
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Items
Details
Title
The Middle English Bible : a reassessment / Henry Ansgar Kelly.
Published
Philadelphia : PENN, University of Pennsylvania Press, [2016]
Copyright
©2016
Description
xiv, 349 pages ; 24 cm
Associated name
Series statement
The Middle Ages series
Note
In the last quarter of the fourteenth century, the complete Old and New Testaments were translated from Latin into English, first very literally, and then revised into a more fluent, less Latinate style. This outstanding achievement, the Middle English Bible, is known by most modern scholars as the "Wycliffite" or "Lollard" Bible, attributing it to followers of the heretic John Wyclif. Prevailing scholarly opinion also holds that this Bible was condemned and banned by the archbishop of Canterbury, Thomas Arundel, at the Council of Oxford in 1407, even though it continued to be copied at a great rate. Indeed, Henry Ansgar Kelly notes, it was the most popular work in English of the Middle Ages and was frequently consulted for help in understanding Scripture readings at Sunday Mass. In 'The Middle English Bible: A Reassessment', Kelly finds the bases for the Wycliffite origins of the Middle English Bible to be mostly illusory. While there were attempts by the Lollard movement to appropriate or coopt it after the fact, the translation project, which appears to have originated at the University of Oxford, was wholly orthodox. Further, the 1407 Council did not ban translations but instead mandated that they be approved by a local bishop. It was only in the early sixteenth century, in the years before the Reformation, that English translations of the Bible would be banned.
Bibliography, etc.
Includes bibliographical references (pages 303-327) and index.
Contents
A history of judgments on the Middle English Bible
Five and twenty books as "official" prologue, or not
The Bible at Oxford
Oxford doctors, Archbishop Arundel, and Dives and Pauper on the advisability of Scripture in English
The Provincial Constitutions of 1407
Treatment of the English Bible in the fifteenth century
The end of the story: Richard Hunne and Thomas More.
Five and twenty books as "official" prologue, or not
The Bible at Oxford
Oxford doctors, Archbishop Arundel, and Dives and Pauper on the advisability of Scripture in English
The Provincial Constitutions of 1407
Treatment of the English Bible in the fifteenth century
The end of the story: Richard Hunne and Thomas More.
Series
Middle Ages series.
Place of creation/publication
United States -- Pennsylvania.
Item Details
Call number
BS136 .K45 2016