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Prodigal1984
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Here’s an online Clementine Vulgate that has them as well. Actual scans.
http://www.sacredbible.org/vulgate1822/index.htm
http://www.sacredbible.org/vulgate1822/index.htm
Thanks! Yeah, I considered going down that road in the past, but have since decided against it.Good work! I see that the NABRE and RSV-CE are on BibleGateway.com - but their legal department may have negotiated the rights.
Mine is the first year it was published back in 2008. But you are right, just checked one more time, its after the OT and before the NT in an appendix. Its practically hiddenMust be something they added at some point. Mine does. I have the 2017 edition. Note they are in the appendix after the Old Testament in it( after 2 Maccabees),which is where they were in the Douay Rheims. In the Vulgate they followed the New Testament.
Wow, that guy accomplished a pretty impressive feat. He made it own English translation of the Vulgate. That must have take a ton of work. Thanks for the sources!Here’s an online Clementine Vulgate that has them as well. Actual scans.
Latin Bible, Biblia Sacra, Vulgatae Editionis, 1590, 1592, 1593, 1598
No problem. Yah, it makes sense that it is like that. Just the layout of the Bible. The Table of Contents in the beginning of the book doesn’t lay out every book. Just the Old Testament. And then the Appendix has its little Table of Contents. And then the New Testament has it’s own. Which is how traditional Bibles were formatted. So yah it could be easy to miss.Mine is the first year it was published back in 2008. But you are right, just checked one more time, its after the OT and before the NT in an appendix. Its practically hiddenIts missing from the table of contents where I quickly checked the first time. Thanks!
Mine as well. Enjoy!The Douay Rheims is one of my favorite translations of the Bibly. I will check this out. Thanks