Bible
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Bible
Summary
Bible is a religious text[1]. Bible ranks in the top 0.85% of religious_text entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (12,776 views/month, #2 of 234).[2]
Key Facts
- Bible authored various authors[3].
- Bible authored group of authors[4].
- Bible's religion is recorded as Christianity[5].
- Bible's instance of is recorded as religious text[6].
- Bible's instance of is recorded as collection of literary works[7].
- Bible's instance of is recorded as religious object[8].
- Bible's genre is religious literature[9].
- Bible's genre is religious text[10].
- Bible is a type of sources of law[11].
- Bible's Commons category is recorded as Bible[12].
- Bible's language of work or name is recorded as Biblical Hebrew[13].
- Bible's language of work or name is recorded as Aramaic[14].
- Bible's language of work or name is recorded as Koine Greek[15].
- Bible comprises Old Testament[16].
- Bible comprises New Testament[17].
- Bible comprises Hebrew Bible[18].
- Bible's has edition or translation is recorded as Gustav Vasa Bible[19].
- Bible's has edition or translation is recorded as Charles XII Bible[20].
- Bible's has edition or translation is recorded as Gustav II Adolf Bible[21].
- Bible's has edition or translation is recorded as Normalupplagan[22].
- Bible's has edition or translation is recorded as Helge Åkessons översättning[23].
- Bible's has edition or translation is recorded as Church Bible of 1917[24].
- Bible's has edition or translation is recorded as Wycliffe's Bible[25].
- Bible's has edition or translation is recorded as Old English Bible translations[26].
- Bible's has edition or translation is recorded as Tyndale Bible[27].
Body
Authorship and Creation
Authored works include various authors[3], a term[28] and group of authors[4], a collective author[29].
Publication
Languages include Biblical Hebrew[13], Aramaic[14], and Koine Greek[15]. Genres include religious literature[9] and religious text[10].
Cultural Impact
Things named for Bible include Codex Gigas[30], a written work[31], founded in 1300[32], written by Bohemia[33]; The Satanic Bible[34], a religious text[35], written by Anton LaVerga[36]; bible[37]; .bible[38], a generic top-level domain[39], founded in 2015[40]; and Bible award[41], an award[42].
Why It Matters
Bible ranks in the top 0.85% of religious_text entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (12,776 views/month, #2 of 234).[2] Bible has Wikipedia articles in 30 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[43] Bible is known by 64 alternative names across languages and contexts.[44]
Bible has been cited as an influence by Abraham Lincoln[45], a politician[46], 1809–1865[47], of United States[48]; Oscar Milosz[49], a poet[50], 1877–1939[51], of Lithuania[52], awarded the Knight of the Legion of Honour[53]; Tears of the Prodigal Son[54], a literary work[55], written by Ivan Gundulić[56]; and Fabrice Hadjadj[57], an essayist[58], b. 1971[59], of France[60], awarded the Grand prix catholique de littérature[61].
Entities named for Bible include Codex Gigas[30], a written work[31], founded in 1300[32], written by Bohemia[33]; The Satanic Bible[34], a religious text[35], written by Anton LaVerga[36]; bible[37]; .bible[38], a generic top-level domain[39], founded in 2015[40]; and Bible award[41], an award[42].
FAQs
Who did Bible influence?
Bible has been cited as an influence by Abraham Lincoln[45], Oscar Milosz[49], Tears of the Prodigal Son[54], and Fabrice Hadjadj[57].