Bible | Gustav Mahler | Hebrew Bible | Gustav Klimt | Gustav Holst | Back to the Bible | Gustav III of Sweden | Gutenberg Bible | Gustav I of Sweden | The Bible | Gustav Meyrink | Friedrich Gustav Jakob Henle | Adam (Bible) | Sigismund III Vasa | Gustav Stresemann | The Bible (TV miniseries) | Gustav Noske | American Bible Society | Joseph (Hebrew Bible) | Gustav III | Gustav, Hereditary Prince of Sayn-Wittgenstein-Berleburg | Gustav Fischer | the Bible | Hurricane Gustav | House of Vasa | Gustav Nossal | Gustav Meier | Gustav Hertzberg | Gustav Albrecht, 5th Prince of Sayn-Wittgenstein-Berleburg | Douay-Rheims Bible |
While Swedish spelling was an entirely personal business in the Catholic Middle Ages, its gradual standardization (known as Modern Swedish) started in 1526 with the translation of the New testament of the Bible (Gustav Vasa Bible), as part of the Lutheran reformation.