Between the fourteenth until the late nineteenth centuries, Coptic in Ethiopian handwriting Ge'ez Bibles were published in Ethiopia, the first independent African nation.
The Bible was first translated into Ge'ez, the language of the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church, by Syrian missionaries in the fourth century, which was the beginning of Christianity in Ethiopia. Abu Rumi then produced the first Amharic translation of the Bible in the first half of the nineteenth century.
To know more about the 14th century Ethiopian Coptic Geez Bible, origin of the Geez language, how the Ge'ez language is used today in Israel, Ethiopia and Eritrea, how the Bible was translated into Geez and Amharic, the Garima gospels, collections of manuscripts from the Ethiopian Gospel, the oldest and most complete Bible, canons of the Ethiopian Bible, the books of Enoch and why it was rejected by the Jews and much more.
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History