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“Heresy and Error”: The Ecclesiastical Censorship of Books, 1400–1800 An Exhibition at Bridwell Library, September 20 – December 17, 2010 | |||||
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11. William Tyndale (d. 1536). The Parable of the Wycked Mammon. “Malborowe, in the lande of Hess: Hans Luft, 8 May 1528” [London?: s.n., 1537?].
Supporting the Protestant
belief in justification by faith, William Tyndale’s
essay on Christ’s parable of the unjust steward
(Luke 16) was one of the eighteen works
prohibited in England by mandate of the Archbishop
of Canterbury in 1526. Heavily influenced by Martin
Luther’s tract on the same parable first published
in 1522, Tyndale’s version likely was in print by
1526, although no copy of that date survives. The
earliest extant copies are from an edition published
in Antwerp in 1528 by an anonymous printer who used
a false imprint claiming that it had been produced
by one of Luther’s leading publishers in Marburg,
Germany. Bridwell Library’s two copies of the work share this
false imprint, although they are actually
from an edition published secretly in England
approximately ten years later. |
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