Jakub Wujek Bible

Cover page of first edition from 1593.
Cover page of Jakub Wujek's Bible from 1599.

The Jakub Wujek Bible (Polish: Biblia Jakuba Wujka) was the main Polish Bible translation used in the liturgy of the Roman Catholic Church in Poland from the late 16th century till the mid-20th century.

The translation was done by a Polish Jesuit, Jakub Wujek (after whom it is commonly named), with the permission of Pope Gregory XIII and the Jesuit Order. It was based on the Vulgate. The first edition was completed in 1593, but the full authorized edition was ready only two years after Wujek's death, in 1599.

History

The full title of the Bible is: Biblia to iest Księgi Starego y Nowego Przymierza według Łacińskiego przekładu starego, w kościele powszechnym przyiętego, na Polski ięzyk z nowu z pilnością przełożone, z dokładaniem textu Żydowskiego y Greckiego, y z wykładem Katholickim, trudnieyszych miejsc, do obrony wiary swiętej powszechnej przeciw kacerstwóm tych czasów należących: przez D. Iakuba Wuyka z Wągrowca, Theologa Societatis Iesu. (This is the Bible Books of the Old and New Testament according to old Latin translation, in regular church accepted, translated to the Polish language with new attention, with additions of Jewish and Greek texts, with Catholic interpretations of difficult passages, for the defence of the universal holy faith against the heretics of these times, by D. Iakub Wuyek of Wągrowiec, Theologa Societatis Iesu.)

The Jakub Wujek Bible replaced the Leopolita's Bible (1561), and was in turn replaced by the Millennium Bible (1965).

In 1584 Polish Jesuits and the primate of Poland, Stanisław Karnkowski, decided that a new Polish translation of Bible was needed, as the previous Leopolita's Bible from 1561 was not seen as adequate, and contemporary Protestant translations were seen as better.[1][2] Jakub Wujek, already known for excellent translations of parts of the Bible into his homilies, was chosen to head the task.[1] The first edition of the New Testament was ready in 1593.[1] The translation was accompanied with footnotes, explanations and polemics.[1]

The Clementine Vulgate, issued in 1592, caused a delay in the translation, as it had to be checked for consistency with the new Latin version.[1][2] Wujek finished work on the New Testament, revised with the Clementine Vulage, in 1594, and on the Old Testament in 1596; the works were immediately published.[2] The final version of Wujek's Bible was ready in 1599, after corrections from a Jesuit commission, two years after Wujek's death in 1597.[1][2] Some modern scholars tend to rank the first edition, from 1593/1594, over that from 1599.[1]

Importance

Wujek's Bible is widely recognized as an excellent translation, one of the most important works of the Renaissance in Poland, and a major work advancing the written Polish language.[1][2] Various parts of it were quoted by Polish poets, including Adam Mickiewicz and Juliusz Słowacki.[2] It would also serve as a major Polish-language Catholic Bible till the Millennium Bible of the 20th century (1965) and was also an important source for the prime` Polish-language Protestant Bible, the Gdańsk Bible of 1632.[1]

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 (Polish) Grzegorz Kubski, Wzór biblijnej polszczyzny (Model of Biblical Polish Language), Przewodnik Katolicki, 1 August 2007.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 (Polish) Stanisław Koziara, Biblia Wujka w języku i kulturze polskiej (Wujek's Bible in Polish Language and Culture)

Further reading

External links

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