
Contents
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The Bible before the Scottish Reformation The Bible before the Scottish Reformation
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The Origin of the Geneva Bible Trajectory The Origin of the Geneva Bible Trajectory
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English Editions of the Geneva Bible English Editions of the Geneva Bible
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The Variety of Textual Forms The Variety of Textual Forms
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The Advent of Junius’ Text of the Apocalypse The Advent of Junius’ Text of the Apocalypse
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A Strategy behind the Different Versions A Strategy behind the Different Versions
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How Did this Apply to Scotland? How Did this Apply to Scotland?
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The Advent of the King James Version The Advent of the King James Version
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The Characteristics of the Geneva Tradition The Characteristics of the Geneva Tradition
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Bibliography Bibliography
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12 The Bible in Sixteenth-Century Scotland
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Published:August 2019
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Abstract
The Geneva Bible is commonly thought of as a single version produced by the Marian exiles with marginal notes which was disliked by King James VI and superseded by the Authorized or King James Version after 1611. The chapter shows that there were three major text forms in the Geneva Bible tradition: the ‘pure’ Genevans, the Geneva Tomson version which followed Beza’s Latin New Testament, and finally the Geneva Tomson Junius version which added a very extensive commentary to the Book of Revelation. Moreover, study of the material culture of what must be understood as the Geneva Bible ‘project’ shows that different typefaces and different bundling of paratextual additions were designed to appeal to different readerships. Two distinctive Geneva Bible versions were published in Scotland (the Arbuthnot/Bassandyne text of 1579 and the Andro Hart text of 1610). It is suggested that use of the Geneva tradition flourished in Scotland until about 1640 and fostered a highly informed, argumentative sense of separate religious identity.
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