Rare first edition King James Bible to go on show at Riyadh’s King Faisal Center

The leather-bound edition of the Christian text was published by Robert Barker. (Supplied)
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Updated 31 December 2019
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Rare first edition King James Bible to go on show at Riyadh’s King Faisal Center

DUBAI: A first edition of the King James Bible, published in 1611, is set to go on show at the King Faisal Center for Research and Islamic Studies (KFCRIS) after the rare text was received on loan from a private Saudi collector.

The leather-bound edition of the Christian text was published by Robert Barker, a printer to King James I of England, in the 17th century and is known as the “He” Bible due to a printing error on one of the pages in which the phrase “and he went into the citie” is written, instead of  the correct “she went.”




The work is notable for its decorative binding and use of calf leather with brass plates and clasps. (Supplied)

Experts say that this tiny error makes the copy more valuable due to its rarity, while the book is also notable for its decorative binding and use of calf leather with brass plates and clasps.

The copy of the Bible will go on show at KFCRIS in early 2020 alongside a collection of printed copies of the Qur’an in an exhibition that will explore how early printing technology impacted religious studies.




Early editions, such as the one on loan to the KFCRIS, also contain maps, genealogies and tables of psalms. (Supplied)

The King James Version of the Bible was commissioned by King James I in 1604, only a year after his accession to the throne. It was the first officially sanctioned translation of the Bible from Latin into common English, which caused controversy at the time.

Fast forward four centuries later and the text has become the standard Bible that unifies the English-speaking church — it was revised once in 1769 and has remained largely unchanged since then.




Early editions, such as the one on loan to the KFCRIS, also contain maps. (Supplied)

Early editions, such as the one on loan to the KFCRIS, also contain maps, genealogies and tables of psalms that no longer exist in modern editions.

This translation of the Bible inspired countless works of art and poetry by famous figures such as the composer George Frideric Handel, author Ernest Hemingway and trailblazing political figures like Martin Luther King Jr.  


Queen Rania shares new family picture

Updated 13 December 2025
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Queen Rania shares new family picture

DUBAI: Queen Rania of Jordan on Saturday shared a new family picture, offering a rare glimpse of the royal family together.

The photograph shows the queen with King Abdullah II, their children Crown Prince Hussein, Princess Iman, Princess Salma and Prince Hashem, as well as Princess Rajwa, the crown prince’s wife, and Jameel Alexander Thermiotis, Princess Iman’s husband, alongside the king and queen’s grandchildren, Princess Iman bint Hussein and Amina bint Jameel.

The family is pictured walking together outdoors, dressed in coordinated soft green and blue tones.

Queen Rania captioned the post: “May the bonds of family and love continue to grow in the year ahead.”