Schlachter Bible

The Schlachter-Bibel is a German translation of the Bible by Franz Eugen Schlachter, first translated from the Greek and Hebrew text of the Bible in 1905.

At first he published the Book of Job in the year 1893. Later on, the so-called Miniaturbibel was the first German language Bible version in the twentieth century. The Miniatur-Bible was one of the smallest Bibles ever printed in the German language. It was very thin with very legible printing. The Bible would fit in any of the pockets of a man's jacket. The edition was published in the year 1905, the following house-bible in the year 1907 and the hand-bible in the year 1908. The last edition of the original Miniaturbibel was published in the year 1911.

Franz Eugen Schlachter was a preacher of the Evangelische Gesellschaft in Bern, Switzerland and a man of the holiness movement. The translation was concordant, and at the same time, the language flowed well. The reader could discern the meaning of the original text. By 1911, the year of Schlachter's death, he had completed 13 editions of his Bible.

In 1918, two Swiss pastors named Linder and Kappeler revised the Schlachter bible, and the Genfer Bibelgesellschaft lead a new revision of the translation in 1951, although it was a light revision. The text was faithful to Franz Eugen Schlachter's original and had only been edited slightly. In 2003, the last revision, called the Schlachter Version 2000, was completed. It follows the same approach as the original Miniaturbibel, but is also very accurate to the Greek and Hebrew original. The new edition also includes many references.

All editions of the Schlachter Bible came in three formats: there was a pocket-edition, a hand-edition, and a greater family-edition.

Literature of the Schlachter-Bibel

External links