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         Tyndale William:     more books (101)
  1. The Theology of William Tyndale by Ralph S Werrell, 2006-05-25
  2. The Work of William Tyndale
  3. The Gospels: Gothic, Anglo-Saxon, Wycliffe and Tyndale Versions Arranged in Parallel Columns with Preface and Notes by Joseph Bosworth by William Tyndale, John Wycliffe, et all 2010-02-10
  4. Works of William Tyndale- 2 volumes by William Tyndale, 2010-03-01
  5. William Tyndale, a Biography: A Contribution to the Early History of the English Bible by Richard Lovett, Robert Demaus, 2010-02-14
  6. Selected Writings: William Tyndale by William Tyndale, 2006-05-28
  7. The Works Of The English Reformers V3: William Tyndale And John Frith by William Tyndale, John Frith, 2007-07-25
  8. William Tyndale: Collapse of a School-Or a System? by John Gretton, 1976-01
  9. Dayspring; A Story of the Time of William Tyndale, Reformer, Scholar, and Martyr by Emma Marshall, 2010-04-01
  10. William Tyndale: the translator of the English Bible by William Dallmann, 2010-08-09
  11. William Tyndale (Men with a mission) by James J Ellis, 1891
  12. William Tyndale's Five Books of Moses, Called the Pentateuch: Being a Verbatim Reprint of the Edition of M.Ccccc.XXX. : Compared with Tyndale's Genesis ... Bible : With Various Collations and P by William Tyndale, Jacob Isidor Mombert, 2010-03-16
  13. Let There Be Light William Tyndale and The Making of the English Bible by D. Daniell, 1994-01-01
  14. William Tyndale and the Law (Sixteenth Century Essays and Studies) by Anne Richardson, John A. R. Dick, 1994-06

21. Tyndale's Bible
Context and influence of Tyndale, part of the Changing Language virtual exhibit by the British Library.
http://www.bl.uk/learning/langlit/changlang/writtenword/tyndale/tyndalelang.html
Sign up for our e-newsletter Home Learning Changing Language Language and the written word Tyndale's bible SEARCH
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    Tyndale's bible
    Enlarge William Tyndale's Bible was the very first English language Bible to appear in print. It was first published in the year 1525. It may be difficult for us to imagine today, but during the 1500s the very idea of an English language Bible was shocking and subversive. A Forbidden Language Throughout medieval times the English church was governed from Rome by the Pope. All over the Christian world, church services were conducted in Latin. By Tyndale’s day, vernacular Bibles were available in parts of Europe, where they added fuel to the popular and subversive arguments initiated by the monk, Martin Luther – a religious crisis known as the Reformation, which resulted in the splitting of Christianity into Catholic and Protestant Churches. But in England it was still strictly forbidden to translate the Bible into English. Most people in Europe were unable to speak Latin, and so could not understand the Bible directly. The Church therefore acted as the mediator between God and the people, with Priests interpreting the bible on behalf of their congregations.

22. Tyndale, William Summary | BookRags.com
Tyndale, William. Tyndale, William summary with 3 pages of encyclopedia entries, research information, and more.
http://www.bookrags.com/research/tyndale-william-eorl-14/

23. Illustrations On: Tyndale, William | Bible.org - Worlds Largest Bible Study Site
Related Topics
http://bible.org/illustrations/2303/Tyndale, William

24. Catholic Culture : Library : Tyndale's Heresy
An examination of William Tyndale s translation of the Bible and why he was condemned for heresy.
http://www.catholicculture.org/library/view.cfm?recnum=4749

25. Alibris: Tyndale William,
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26. Sacred Text: Tyndale New Testament
British Library page with a short history and a photograph of a page.
http://www.bl.uk/onlinegallery/sacredtexts/tyndale.html
Home Online Gallery Sacred texts Tyndale New Testament
Tyndale New Testament
Tyndale's New Testament was the first to be printed in English. This is one of only two complete copies surviving from the 3,000 or more printed in 1526 by Peter Schoeffer in the German city of Worms. Tyndale's translation was pronounced heretical in England, so his Bibles were smuggled into the country in bales of cloth. Those discovered owning them were punished. At first only the books were destroyed, but soon heretics would be burned too - including Tyndale himself in 1536. Enlarged image Zoomable high-resolution image
William Tyndale's New Testament, Worms (Germany), 1526. Gospel of John (beginning)
British Library C.188.a.17
Listen to curator Dr Moira Goff on this text
Who was William Tyndale?
He was a scholar and theologian who was born in Gloucestershire at the end of the 15th century. Tyndale was educated at Oxford and then at Cambridge. An impressive scholar, fluent in eight languages, he was ordained as a Christian priest in around 1521. As a chaplain back in Gloucestershire, he was influenced by the writings of Dutchman Desiderius Erasmus, who argued for personal faith between the individual and God, not mediated and controlled by the Church hierarchy. But such views, and Tyndale's plans to translate the New Testament into English, were unpopular with the clergy. He fled to London in 1523 and tried unsuccessfully to find support from the bishop of London, Cuthbert Tunstal.

27. William Tindale Translation
Brief article on his translation of the New Testament and Pentateuch, by Yale University Press.
http://tyndalearchive.com/scriptures/wtt.htm
WTT - 1530 William Tindale Translation Pentateuch New Covenant Home Contacts Versions When William Tyndale could not receive support in England to translate the Bible into English, he went to Germany, never to return. Here he dodged Roman Catholic authorities. In 1525, he started printing his New Testament in Cologne. When he was betrayed, he fled to Worms and continued his work. The first completed New Testament in English appeared early in 1526(?). When copies reached England, any that could be found by authorities were burned at St. Paul's Cross. After losing money, copies, and time in a shipwreck, he started over again. Having completed the Pentateuch, he began printing it in Antwerp in 1530. In the following year, he translated Jonah and revised Genesis. In 1534 and 1535, he made revisions to the New Testament. He was kidnapped by Antwerp authorities and imprisoned. On orders of papal authorities, requests for his release were denied. In 1536, he was executed at the stake. He did not complete the translation of the Old Testament. The Old Testament (Pentateuch only) version being used was published by Southern Illinois University Press in 1967. "Being a verbatim reprint of the edition of M.CCCCC.XXX [1530]. Compared with Tyndale's Genesis of 1534, and the Pentateuch in the Vulgate, Luther, and Matthew's Bible, with various collations and prolegomena." [Prolegomena: a treatise serving as a preface or introduction to a book. (

28. Tyndale, William Definition Of Tyndale, William In The Free Online Encyclopedia.
Tyndale, Tindal, or Tindale, William (all tĭn`dəl), c.1494–1536, English biblical translator (see Bible Bible Gr.,=the books, term used since the 4th cent. to denote the
http://encyclopedia2.thefreedictionary.com/Tyndale, William

29. Britannia Biographies: William Tyndale
Biography covering his life, work, and legacy.
http://www.britannia.com/bios/tyndale.html
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William Tyndale (1492-1536) Walking along the Embankment in London one discovers several statues of great people. One statue there is erected to the memory of William Tyndale. William was born in 1493 in the county of Gloucester. Little is known of his childhood, but as a young man he was educated at Magdalen Hall at Oxford and later attended Cambridge University. In 1520 Tyndale accepted a post at Little Sodbury as tutor and chaplain in the household of Sir John Walsh. In this home he had many theological discussions with priests of the area. In 1408 a law had been passed forbidding any translation of the Scripture into English and warned that any one caught reading the Scriptures would be excommunicated. Clerics argued that "ordinary people could not understand the Bible if they had one," but Tyndale had a burning desire to bring the truths of the Bible to the common people around him. Tyndale vowed to one priest, "If God spare my life, ere many years, I will cause a boy that driveth the plough to know more of the Scriptures than thou doest!" With this determination Tyndale sought the permission and the encouragement of the Bishop of London for his endeavours. He was refused so he left England, never to return again.

30. William Tyndale: Biography From Answers.com
William Tyndale (ca. 14951536) was the greatest of all English biblical scholars. His translation of the Bible into English formed the major part of the Authorized Version
http://www.answers.com/topic/william-tyndale
var isReferenceAnswers = true; BodyLoad('s'); On this page Library
William Tyndale
Biography:
William Tyndale
Home Library Miscellaneous Biographies William Tyndale (ca. 1495-1536) was the greatest of all English biblical scholars. His translation of the Bible into English formed the major part of the Authorized Version, or King James Bible. William Tyndale was born in Gloucestershire and mostly educated at Oxford, where he earned a master of arts degree in 1515. He became a priest and, doubtless influenced among other things by the work of John Colet and Erasmus at Cambridge some years earlier, decided to produce an English translation of the Bible. He found support from a rich London cloth merchant. Within months, however, he became convinced he must leave London if he was to succeed; and, accordingly, with the financial support of the merchant, he left England in 1524, never again to return. After short sojourns in Hamburg, and, possibly, Wittenberg , Tyndale settled down at Cologne in 1525. He quickly began the printing of his New Testament, but only a few sheets had been finished when the city fathers got wind of it and stopped it. The work was resumed at Worms, and by April 1526 an octavo edition was being sold in London. In November all available copies were burned at St. Paul's Cross. In 1528 Tyndale published the Parable of the Wicked Mammon

31. COB-NET Historical Notes: William Tyndale
Biography, with footnotes and comments.
http://www.cob-net.org/text/history_tyndale.htm

32. Tyndale, William | Tyndale, William Information | HighBeam Research - FREE Trial
Tyndale, William Research Tyndale, William articles at HighBeam.com. Find information, facts and related newspaper, magazine and journal articles in our online encyclopedia.
http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1G2-3424503201.html

33. Tyndale, William - Juerg’s London Memorials Guide
Juergs guide to London Memorials. With pictures and information of Tyndale, William, how to get there, nearest tube stations, other nearby sights, pubs, shops, museums
http://www.juerg-mueller.com/london/pictures/memorials/tyndale/
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34. William Tyndale
Background, biography, details of his work, and an overview of his legacy.
http://www.prca.org/books/portraits/tyndale.htm
Chapter 40 William Tyndale: Father of the English Bible
Introduction We all have many Bibles in our homes: our own Bibles and our children's Bibles, as well as family Bibles used for family devotions. Most of us have the King James Version of the Bible, sometimes called the Authorized Version, prepared under the aegis of James I in 1611. It is a sad fact that our Bibles often lie unused, taken for granted, a somewhat peripheral part of our life. Yet behind our Bibles stands a story of great heroism, towering faith in God, and drops of martyr's blood. The story is that of William Tyndale, fathe r of the English Bible. Tyndale's Early Life William Tyndale was born sometime in the early 1490s on the Welsh border into the home of a well-to-do farmer. He went to Magdalen Hall, Oxford where he received his M.A. degree in 1515 and was ordained into the Roman Catholic clergy. In that same year he transferred to Cambridge University probably because he had heard that the Greek New Testament of Erasmus was available there, and he was interested in reading Scripture in its original language. One must understand the situation in England at this time. Henry VIII, husband of many wives, was on the throne. Dedicated Roman Catholic, but bitter enemy of the pope's rule in England, Henry persecuted Protestants on the one hand, but separated the church of England from papal control on the other hand. The church itself was rife with evil, wickedness in high places, and fornication of every sort. One of the chroniclers of the age characterized the priests as running from the houses of prostitutes to the altar to perform mass; incapable of understanding the Latin in which they mumbled their liturgies; superstitious and worshippers of such relics as a gown of the virgin Mary, a piece of the burning bush of Moses, straw from the manger at Bethlehem, and a complete skeleton of one of the babies murdered by Herod the Great; drunkards and gluttons whose wicked lives were supported by the blood, sweat and tears of the common working folk.

35. Tyndale, William
William Tyndale (sometimes spelled Tindall or Tyndall) (ca. 1494–September 6, 1536) was a sixteenth century Protestant reformer and scholar who translated the Bible into the
http://www.newworldencyclopedia.org/entry/William_Tyndale
Tyndale, William
From New World Encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation search Previous (William Tubman) Next (William Wallace) William Tyndale
Protestant reformer and Bible translator Born ca. 1494
Gloucestershire, England Died September 6, 1536
near Brussels, Belgium William Tyndale (sometimes spelled Tindall or Tyndall ) (ca. 1494–September 6, 1536) was a sixteenth century Protestant reformer and scholar who translated the Bible into the Early Modern English of his day. Although a number of partial and complete English translations had been made from the seventh century onward, Tyndale's was the first to take advantage of the new medium of print , which allowed for its wide distribution. In 1535, Tyndale was arrested, jailed in the castle of Vilvoorde outside Brussels Belgium for more than a year, tried for heresy and treason and then strangled and burnt at the stake in the castle's courtyard. At the time, the Church believed that if lay people had direct access to the Bible they would misinterpret and misunderstand what they read. Possibly, they would question the teaching of the Church and the authority of the priests. By keeping the Bible in Latin, which few other than priests and scholars could, read, the role of the priest as gatekeeper was protected. Tyndale also made a significant contribution to English through many of his phrases that passed into popular use. His legacy lives on through his continued influence on many subsequent English translations of the Bible. Much of Tyndale's work eventually found its way into the

36. FOX's Book Of Martyrs
Biography detailing his life and work.
http://www.ccel.org/f/foxe/martyrs/fox112.htm
FOX'S BOOK OF MARTYRS
CHAPTER XII
The Life and Story of the True Servant and Martyr of God,
William Tyndale
We have now to enter into the story of the good martyr of God, William Tyndale; which William Tyndale, as he was a special organ of the Lord appointed, and as God's mattock to shake the inward roots and foundation of the pope's proud prelacy, so the great prince of darkness, with his impious imps, having a special malice against him, left no way unsought how craftily to entrap him, and falsely to betray him, and maliciously to spill his life, as by the process of his story here following may appear. William Tyndale, the faithful minister of Christ, was born about the borders of Wales, and brought up from a child in the University of Oxford, where he, by long continuance, increased as well in the knowledge of tongues, and other liberal arts, as especially in the knowledge of the Scriptures, whereunto his mind was singularly addicted; insomuch that he, lying then in Magdalen Hall, read privily to certain students and fellows of Magdalen College some parcel of divinity; instructing them in the knowledge and truth of the Scriptures. His manners and conversation being correspondent to the same, were such that all they that knew him reputed him to be a man of most virtuous disposition, and of life unspotted. Thus he, in the University of Oxford, increasing more and more in learning, and proceeding in degrees of the schools, spying his time, removed from thence to the University of Cambridge, where he likewise made his abode a certain space. Being now further ripened in the knowledge of God's Word, leaving that university, he resorted to one Master Welch, a knight of Gloucestershire, and was there schoolmaster to his children, and in good favor with his master. As this gentleman kept a good ordinary commonly at his table, there resorted to him many times sundry abbots, deans, archdeacons, with divers other doctors, and great beneficed men; who there, together with Master Tyndale siting at the same table, did use many times to enter communication, and talk of learned men, as of Luther and of Erasmus; also of divers other controversies and questions upon the Scripture.

37. Tyndale, William
Tyndale, William Encyclopedia article; The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition, 2009. Read Tyndale, William at Questia library.
http://www.questia.com/read/117050606
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38. William TYNDALE
Career and accomplishments.
http://www.tudorplace.com.ar/Bios/WilliamTyndale.htm
William TYNDALE Born: ABT 1495, Slymbridge, near the Welsh border Died: 1536 His date of birth is unclear, with sources giving dates varying between 1484 and 1496. He was born most probably at North Nibley (15 miles s.s.w. of Gloucester), England. He received his degrees from Magdalen College, Oxford, and also studied at Cambridge. He was ordained to the priesthood in 1521, and soon began to speak of his desire, which eventually became his life's obsession, to translate the Scriptures into English. He became chaplain in the house of Sir John Walsh , at Little Sodbury in Gloucestershire, in about 1521. It is reported that, in the course of a dispute with a promminent clergyman who disparaged this proposal, he said, " If God spare my life, ere many years I will cause a boy that driveth the plow to know more of the Scriptures than thou dost ". The remainder of his life was devoted to keeping that vow, or boast. He had admired the teaching of Erasmus at Cambridge (he made an English translation of the master's Enchiridion) and was certain in his heart that the way to God was through.

39. Tyndale, William°
TYNDALE, WILLIAM (c. 1490–1536), English Bible translator and religious reformer. An Erasmian humanist, Tyndale began work on a new, vernacular Bible in 1520, but met so much
http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/judaica/ejud_0002_0020_0_20133.html

40. William Tyndale - Hertford College
Biography and portrait.
http://roadrunner.hertford.ox.ac.uk/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=90

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