King James of England seperated from the Catholic Church and made his own copy of the Bible called The King James Version in 1611. If you're talking about the kings of Israel and Judah...you can find that in any standard Bible.
Was unable to find any verse in the Bible that directly addresses any form of illicit drug use by anyone, including a King.
He did not translate any passages in the KJV Bible.
No. Not yet.
It is not in the King James version
There does not appear to be any record of anyone called King Samuel.However, Samuel King, a former governer of Rhode Island, United States of America, was born on May 23, 1786.One famous person in the Bible, called Samuel, was a leader, judge and prophet, but not a king.
The name "Samantha" does not appear in any translation of the Bible, including the King James Version.
No. King James didn't translate any bible. He hired biblical scholars to translate the bible. The KJV wasn't the first English bible version. The Bishops bible, the Geneva bible, among others were translated first.
It's not in any Bible version.
Yes, there were six other English versions of The Bible prior to the King James version. They were, in order of oldest to the most recent, the Tyndale Bible, the Coverdale Bible, the Matthew Bible, the Gret Bible, the Geneva Bible, and the Bishops Bible.
Yes, there were six other English versions of the Bible prior to the King James version. They were, in order of oldest to the most recent, the Tyndale Bible, the Coverdale Bible, the Matthew Bible, the Gret Bible, the Geneva Bible, and the Bishops Bible.
the word - laminin - does not appear in the King James version of the Bible, nor in any English language version of the Bible