The
holy book, known for nearly 400 years as the Sinners’ Bible, gets one of the
Ten Commandments wrong.
Instead
of warning Thou shalt not commit adultery, the Seventh Commandment omits “not”
and reads Thou shalt commit adultery.
The
mistake was not spotted for a year after 1,000 copies of the Bible were printed
in 1631.
Furious
King Charles 1 ordered that they should all be burned but a few escaped the
recall.
Amid
the uproar, the Archbishop of Canterbury wrote: “I knew the tyme when great
care was had about printing, the Bibles especially, good compositors and the
best correctors were gotten being grave and learned men.”
It is
not now known whether publishers Robert Barker and Martin Lucas, the royal
printers, made a genuine error or if it was a mischievous act by a business
rival.
Bible
GETTY
The
mistake was not spotted for a year after 1,000 copies of the Bible were printed
in 1631
Simon
Roberts, from Bonhams’ books and manuscript department, said: “There are a few
theories about how the error made it into print.
It may
have been a simple slip up but others think it was a plot to sabotage Barker’s
reputation
Simon
Roberts, Bonhams auctioneers
“It
may have been a simple slip up but others think it was a plot to sabotage Barker’s
reputation.”
Barker
and Lucas were stripped of their printing licence and fined £300, more than
£30,000 in today’s money.
After
the error things only got worse for Barker.
In
1635 he was imprisoned for racking up huge debts and died behind bars in 1645.
Only
nine copies of his controversial bible, also known as the Wicked Bible, exist
today.
The
volume being sold is tipped to fetch £15,000 when it goes under the hammer on
November 11 at Bonhams in London.
No comments:
Post a Comment