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The Septuagint (LXX)

The Septuagint — abbreviated LXX ("seventy," for the traditional seventy-two Jewish translators) — is the ancient Greek translation of the Hebrew Old Testament, produced in Alexandria beginning in the 3rd century BC. It was the Scripture of the Greek-speaking Jewish world and of the early Christian church, and the great majority of Old Testament quotations in the New Testament follow its wording rather than the Hebrew. The Septuagint also preserves a broader canon (including the Deuterocanonical / "Apocryphal" books) and frequently differs from the later Masoretic Hebrew text, making it essential for textual study, translation work, and understanding how the apostles read their Bible.

The complete LXX runs to several megabytes of text, so it is not inlined on this page — instead, the complete English (Brenton, 1851) and Greek (Swete, 1909–1930) Septuagint are hosted here in full and can be downloaded directly below.

Source: https://ebible.org/Scriptures/details.php?id=eng-Brenton


Download the complete texts

The full English and Greek Septuagint are hosted here in their entirety — free to read and to download:


Complete English text — Brenton (1851), Public Domain

The standard public-domain English Septuagint is Sir Lancelot C. L. Brenton's translation, The Septuagint Version of the Old Testament, first published in 1851. It is a full English rendering of the Greek Septuagint and is freely reproducible.

The complete Brenton English text is hosted on this page — see Download the complete texts above.

Complete Greek text — Swete (1909), Public Domain

For the Greek text in the public domain, use Henry Barclay Swete's edition, The Old Testament in Greek According to the Septuagint (Cambridge University Press, 1909 and earlier editions). The Swete edition is out of copyright and is available as scanned volumes.

The complete Swete Greek text is hosted on this page — see Download the complete texts above.

Copyright warning — DO NOT host Rahlfs / Rahlfs-Hanhart

The most widely cited modern critical edition of the Greek Septuagint is Rahlfs (Septuaginta, ed. Alfred Rahlfs, 1935) and its revision Rahlfs-Hanhart (2006). These editions are under copyright held by the Deutsche Bibelgesellschaft (German Bible Society) and MUST NOT be reproduced, hosted, or redistributed here.

Why the LXX matters for this ministry


Provenance & licence: The English Septuagint reference is Sir Lancelot C. L. Brenton's 1851 translation, hosted at eBible.org as eng-Brenton, which states it was "Published in 1851, and now in the Public Domain." The Greek reference is Henry Barclay Swete's edition (Cambridge, 1909), available as public-domain scans at archive.org. The Rahlfs (1935) and Rahlfs-Hanhart (2006) critical editions are copyright Deutsche Bibelgesellschaft and are deliberately NOT reproduced or hosted. The complete Brenton (English) and Swete (Greek) texts are hosted on this page under "Download the complete texts"; the Brenton text is Public Domain, and the Swete Greek digital compilation is redistributed under the GNU GPL v3.0 with attribution to Eliran Wong / BibleBento.com.

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