Vulgate
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The Vulgate (lat. Vulgata) is a translation of the Christian Bible. St. Jerome did most of the work. The Vulgate was written in Latin in the 5th century.
Other websites [change]
| Latin Wikisource has original writing related to this article: |
| Latin Wikisource has original writing related to this article: |
- The Clementine Vulgate, searchable – 2005 Edition. Michael Tweedale, et alia. No apocrypha.
- Biblia Vulgata Stuttgart edition, flanked by Douay-Rheims and King James Versions
- Stuttgart Vulgate, with Douay-Rheims Version, Gallican Psalter and complete Daniel
- Stuttgart Vulgate with Apocrypha, but missing Psalm 151 and Laodiceans
- Nova Vulgata, from the Vatican
- Timeline of Jerome's translations
- Treasures in Full: Gutenberg Bible Complete digitized texts of the two Gutenberg bibles in the British Library
- Codex Gigas – Official Codex Gigas site at the National Library of Sweden. Complete digitized manuscript.
- Quattuor Evangeliorum Consonantia – The Latin harmony of the Gospels (1)
- Quattuor Evangeliorum Consonantia – The Latin harmony of the Gospels (2)
- Free audio recording of Psalm 22(23) from the juxta Hebraicum psalter by Librivox
- Latin Vulgate Project with Douay-Rheims version
- Biblia Sacra Vulgata – Novum Testamentum Latine (Latin)
- Learn Bible Latin reading the Vulgate from lesson 1
- SacredBible.org the Clementine Vulgate in the 1861 Vercellone, 1914 Hetzenauer, and 1822 Leander van Ess editions.
- Greek Latin Audio downloadable audio files of almost the entire New Testatment Vulgate