Hugh Broughton and the King James Bible, revisited

Hugh Broughton (1549–1612) is best known today as the eccentric puritan who, having been excluded from the translation committees of the King James Bible, published a vicious attack on the final product. While this has been enough to guarantee Broughton a passing mention in most histories of the top...

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Main Author: Macfarlane, K
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Equinox Publishing 2020
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author Macfarlane, K
author_facet Macfarlane, K
author_sort Macfarlane, K
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description Hugh Broughton (1549–1612) is best known today as the eccentric puritan who, having been excluded from the translation committees of the King James Bible, published a vicious attack on the final product. While this has been enough to guarantee Broughton a passing mention in most histories of the topic, there remain few systematic analyses of the complex and shifting reasons behind his strong dislike of the new translation. This article expands our understanding of Broughton’s attitude to the English Bible through the analysis of four previously unknown manuscript sources, preserved in British Library MSS Sloane 3088 and Egerton 791. After introducing the sources and giving an overview of their provenance, the article highlights some of their most remarkable features and explains their significance both for our knowledge of Hugh Broughton in particular as well as for studies of vernacular translation more broadly.
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spelling oxford-uuid:30000931-42f7-43f9-8b6d-bd3b96c0683e2022-06-20T07:10:25ZHugh Broughton and the King James Bible, revisitedJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:30000931-42f7-43f9-8b6d-bd3b96c0683eEnglishSymplectic ElementsEquinox Publishing2020Macfarlane, KHugh Broughton (1549–1612) is best known today as the eccentric puritan who, having been excluded from the translation committees of the King James Bible, published a vicious attack on the final product. While this has been enough to guarantee Broughton a passing mention in most histories of the topic, there remain few systematic analyses of the complex and shifting reasons behind his strong dislike of the new translation. This article expands our understanding of Broughton’s attitude to the English Bible through the analysis of four previously unknown manuscript sources, preserved in British Library MSS Sloane 3088 and Egerton 791. After introducing the sources and giving an overview of their provenance, the article highlights some of their most remarkable features and explains their significance both for our knowledge of Hugh Broughton in particular as well as for studies of vernacular translation more broadly.
spellingShingle Macfarlane, K
Hugh Broughton and the King James Bible, revisited
title Hugh Broughton and the King James Bible, revisited
title_full Hugh Broughton and the King James Bible, revisited
title_fullStr Hugh Broughton and the King James Bible, revisited
title_full_unstemmed Hugh Broughton and the King James Bible, revisited
title_short Hugh Broughton and the King James Bible, revisited
title_sort hugh broughton and the king james bible revisited
work_keys_str_mv AT macfarlanek hughbroughtonandthekingjamesbiblerevisited