TitleGenesis: the story of NoahDate of publication1834SourceA Hieroglyphic Bible; or, select passages in the Old and New Testaments, represented with emblematical figures for the amusement and instruction of youth with a short account of the lives of the Evangelists, and other piecesDescription
Religious education was a high priority in children's education from the medieval period well into the 20th century. The first Hieroglyphic Bibles were published in 1675. Others appeared in the 18th and 19th centuries. The famous wood engraver Thomas Bewick produced a series of wood cuts for one of these curiosities.
In these Bibles, some of the words are removed and an image substituted instead. The child is thus presented with a puzzle and if he knows his Bible texts well enough he can read the combined text and pictures with little difficulty. To help those less familiar, the answer is provided at the bottom of the page. Because of the space required for the images, only a much reduced text was possible.
Some of the images could be difficult to interpret, but the book had an advantage for children in that it would be one of the few they would be allowed to read on Sunday.
The story of Noah and the flood has remained an enduringly popular Bible story, generating many versions of stories and toys.
This Hieroglyphic Bible is inscribed 'Reginald Ward the gift of his affectionate Papa'.