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User:Godsy/Paris Bible

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  • Comment: needs expansion, may be a tenable article DGG ( talk ) 22:02, 29 November 2013 (UTC)

Paris Bibles were a format of the Bible written in the thirteenth century, the first bibles to be regularly produced as a single volume book. There were two primary factors that led to this.

First, the thirteenth century saw the development of very tiny script, known as "microscript." This in turn was a reaction to twelfth century copying practices, which favored extravagant, large lettering and illuminations. The microscript allowed the text of the Bible, for the first time, to be placed into a single volume in a practical manner.

Secondly, the students studying at the University of Paris, a university that specialized in Theology, were in need of a standarized copy of the Scriptures which could function on a more systematic level. To this end, the Paris Bible saw the first real efforts at placing the books of Scripture into a standard "order" - something which was neither necessary nor possible when the books appeared as separate volumes. The order selected for the Paris Bible had a large influence on that still used today. It consisted of:

References

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  • The Book: A History Of The Bible by Christopher De Hamel, Chapter 5: Portable Bibles Of The Thirteenth Century, pp. 119-122