This article contains information about the literary events and publications of 1537.
Events
- February â The Institution of the Christian Man (also called The Bishops' Book), is written by a board of 46 divines and bishops headed by Thomas Cranmer. The purpose, like that of the Ten Articles of the previous year, is to implement the reforms of Henry VIII by separating from the Roman Catholic Church and reforming the Ecclesia Anglicana. "The work was a noble endeavor on the part of the bishops to promote unity, and to instruct the people in Church doctrine."
- December 28 â The Ordonnance de Montpellier initiates a legal deposit system for books in the Kingdom of France.
- Date unknown
- Construction of the Biblioteca Marciana in Venice to the design of Jacopo Sansovino begins, continuing until 1560.
- Paracelsus starts to write Astronomia Magna or the whole Philosophia Sagax of the Great and Little World.
- Two complete Bible translations into English, both based on Tyndale's, appear:
- Myles Coverdale's 1535 text is the first to be printed in England (by James Nicholson in Southwark, London).
- The Matthew Bible edited by John Rogers under the pseudonym "Thomas Matthew", is printed in Antwerp.
- The English scholar John Twyne publishes an edition of the late-medieval encyclopedic verse dialogue Sidrak and Bokkus, '.
New books
Prose
Drama
Poetry
Births
Deaths
References