The Lost Books of the Bible and the Forgotten Books of Eden

The Lost Books of the Bible and the Forgotten Books of Eden (1926) is a collection of 17th Century and 18th Century English translations of some Old Testament Pseudepigrapha and New Testament Apocrypha which were assembled in the 1820s, and then republished with the current title in 1926.

Contents

History of the translations

Rutherford Hayes Platt, in the preface to his 1963 reprint of The Lost Books of the Bible and the Forgotten Books of Eden states:

"First issued in 1926, this is the most popular collection of apocryphal and pseudepigraphal literature ever published."

The translations were first published, under this title, by an unknown editor in The Lost Books of the Bible Cleveland 1926, but the translations had previously been published many times.

Although some of the recent reprint editions claim translations by Lightfoot and R. H. Charles, much of the content of the 1926 edition derives from the London bookseller and satirist William Hone (1780-1742) who made an edition of translations by the Welsh non-conformist minister Jeremiah Jones (biblical scholar) (1693–1724) and William Wake (1657–1737), later Archbishop of Canterbury. The translations of Wake and Jones are now only of academic curiosity, having been replaced by translations based on more complete manuscript evidences.

For more modern translations see the standard modern editions:

Reprint editions

Contents of The Lost Books of the Bible

Contents of The Forgotten Books of Eden

References