John Wycliffe, 1382
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The Bible was first put into English in the 7th centuary.
The Venerable Bede first translated the Gospels into Saxon, a precursor of English; in the seventh century, but Wycliffe is the first man credited with translating the whole Bible into English in the thirteenth century. Both these translations were made in England. Wycliffe's translation was the precursor of the Kings James Version of 1611, which was the first modern language translation of the Bible; also made in England.
The Geneva Bible
the first translation was in English while the first bible printed was called guttenbergs bible.
The first English translation of the Bible was done by John Wycliffe around 1380 AD.
John Wycliffe (1324-1384 AD) translated the first Bible into English, and Johanes Gutenberg (1398-1468 AD) invented the printing press, printing the Gutenberg Bible circa 1450 AD. ====Answer (more)==== John Wycliffe (1324-1384 AD) translated the first Bible into English under special permission but this Bible was mostly forbidden to be read. The Protestant Reformation began and Martin Luther wrote the first complete Bible totally in German in 1522. Wiliam Tynedale printed the first Bible in English independently in 1523. His work was used again in the King James Version in 1611.
The aposels were the ones who made the first bible. They were dictated from our almighty God!
Yes, it is the oldest English translated Bible.Answer:The first true English Bible is Wycliffe's translation published in 1382. Tyndale's Bible, which was more accurate was published in 1525. Other English translations prior to The King James version (published 1611) include the Coverdale Bible (1535), Roger's Bible (1537), and the Geneva Bible (1560).
Several people did. The earliest translation into English was made by William Tyndale, in 1525. He was however executed before he could finish the job completely. The first completetranslation into English (the so-called Matthew Bible) was made by John Rogers in 1537 under the pseudonym 'Thomas Matthew'. The first officially authorized translation that has become the basis of many later Bible translations was authorized by King James I of England in 1611 and is known as the King James Bible.
English: "In" and Hebrew: bereshith
Wycliff
1539