The first printed Bible was the Gutenberg Bible. (It wasn't printed in English.) I personally use the King James Version. If you want to get extremely technical, the original text for all Bibles comes from mainly the original Greek and Hebrew writings.
The first printed Bible was the Gutenberg Bible, printed in 1456.
No, the King James Version of the Bible is not the original version. The original texts of the Bible were written in Hebrew, Aramaic, and Greek, and the King James Version is a translation of those texts into English that was completed in 1611.
The Bible version considered to be closest to the original texts is the New American Standard Bible (NASB).
The Gutenberg Bible (also known as the 42-line Bible or the Mazarin Bible) is a printed version of the Latin Vulgate translation of the Bible that was printed by Johannes Gutenberg, in Mainz, Germany in the fifteenth century
No one can get a copy of the original Bible, as its manuscripts have been lost.
The original manuscripts
One thought:I can provide a partial answer...The Bible was written originally in Hebrew, Aramaic and Greek, and there were already many handwritten copies in these languages and certain Egyptian dialects in existence by the 3rd century. The Wycliffe Bible in 1380 was the first complete handwritten Bible in the English . The first printed Bible, the Gutenberg Bible, came out in 1456, in Latin.
Im not sure if you can get a free printed version of the publication, but you can read and search the KJV here: http://www.kingjamesbibletrust.org/the-king-james-bible/read-and-search-the-kjv also you can view how the original version looked here: http://www.kingjamesbibletrust.org/the-king-james-bible/digitized-kjv-of-1611/genesis
The version of the Bible that is most faithful to the original Hebrew text is generally considered to be the Jewish Publication Society (JPS) Tanakh.
The original King James Version (KJV) Bible was completed in 1611. It was the English translation of the Christian Bible, commissioned by the Church of England.
There are no original versions of the Bible in the world today, but the closest we have now to the is the Received version of the New Testament in Greek and the Septuagint Greek translation of the Hebrew Old Testament.Answer:The book known as the Bible has been reworked and revisited many times during its existence from the first Jewish texts to the choice of the "official" Bible books during the middle ages. As a consequence there is no original version, just the present version.