![]() ![]() The Book of Daniel, as it now stands in the ordinary Hebrew Bibles, is generally divided into two main parts. This article will deal first with the Book of Daniel as it is found in the Hebrew Bible, and next, with its deutero-canonical portions. ![]() As in the Vulgate nearly all the deutero-canonical portions of that prophetical writing form a kind of appendix to its proto-canonical contents in the Hebrew text. In the Septuagint, the Vulgate, and many other ancient and modern translations of the Bible, it comprises both its proto- and its deutero-canonical parts, both of which have an equal right to be considered as inspired, and to be included in a treatment of the Book of Daniel. In the Hebrew Bible, and in most recent Protestant versions, the Book of Daniel is limited to its proto-canonical portions.
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