Definition of Vulgete
Vulgate, a version of the Bible in Latin executed by St. Jerome
( q. v.), and was in two centuries after its execution
universally adopted in the Western Christian Church as authoritative for
both faith and practice, and from the circumstance of its general
reception it became known as the Vulgate ( i. e. the commonly-accepted
Bible of the Church), and it is the version accepted as authentic to-day
by the Roman Catholic Church, under sanction of the Council of Trent.
"With the publication of it," says Ruskin, "the great deed of fixing, in
their ever since undisturbed harmony and majesty, the canon of Mosaic and
Apostolic Scripture, was virtually accomplished, and the series of
historic and didactic books which form our present Bible (including the
Apocrypha) were established in and above the nascent thought of the
noblest races of men living on the terrestrial globe, as a direct message
to them from its Maker, containing whatever it was necessary for them to
learn of His purposes towards them, and commanding, or advising, with
divine authority and infallible wisdom, all that it was best for them to
do and happiest to desire. Thus, partly as a scholar's exercise and
partly as an old man's recreation, the severity of the Latin language was
softened, like Venetian crystal, by the variable fire of Hebrew thought,
and the 'Book of Books' took the abiding form of which all the future art
of the Western nations was to be an hourly expanding interpretation."
- Wikipedia
Vul"gate (?), n. [NL. vulgata, from L.
vulgatus usual, common, p. p. of vulgare to make general, or
common, fr. vulgus the multitude: cf. F. vulgate. See
Vulgar, a.] An ancient Latin version of the
Scripture, and the only version which the Roman Church admits to be
authentic; -- so called from its common use in the Latin Church.
&fist; The Vulgate was made by Jerome at the close of the 4th century.
The Old Testament he translated mostly from the Hebrew and Chaldaic, and
the New Testament he revised from an older Latin version. The Douay
version, so called, is an English translation from the Vulgate. See
Douay Bible.
Vul"gate (?), a. Of or pertaining to the
Vulgate, or the old Latin version of the Scriptures.
Vul"gate (?), n. [NL. vulgata, from L.
vulgatus usual, common, p. p. of vulgare to make general, or
common, fr. vulgus the multitude: cf. F. vulgate. See
Vulgar, a.] An ancient Latin version of the
Scripture, and the only version which the Roman Church admits to be
authentic; -- so called from its common use in the Latin Church.
&fist; The Vulgate was made by Jerome at the close of the 4th century.
The Old Testament he translated mostly from the Hebrew and Chaldaic, and
the New Testament he revised from an older Latin version. The Douay
version, so called, is an English translation from the Vulgate. See
Douay Bible.
Vul"gate (?), a. Of or pertaining to the
Vulgate, or the old Latin version of the Scriptures.
- Webster's Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
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