San Juan | Juan Carlos I of Spain | Don Juan | Santurce, San Juan, Puerto Rico | Juan Gabriel | Juan Perón | Juan Pablo Montoya | Strait of Juan de Fuca | Migdalia Pérez | Juan Ramón Jiménez | Juan Luna | San Juan, Metro Manila | San Juan Islands | San Juan, Argentina | Perez Hilton | San Juan del Sur | Juan Manuel Santos | Juan Gris | Juan | Old San Juan | Juan Mónaco | Juan Luis Guerra | Juan de Padilla | San Juan de la Maguana | Juan Martín del Potro | Juan López de Padilla | Colegio de San Juan de Letran | San Juan Pueblo | San Juan Capistrano, California | Miguel Pérez, Jr. |
It is possible that Reina also used the New Testament versions that had been translated first by Francisco de Enzinas (printed in Antwerp 1543) and by Juan Pérez de Pineda (published in Geneva 1556, followed by the Psalms 1562).
While in exile, variously in London, Antwerp, Frankfurt, Orléans and Bergerac, funded by various sources (such as Juan Pérez de Pineda) Reina began translating the Bible into Spanish, using a number of works as source texts.
For the New Testament he had great aid from the translations of Francisco de Enzinas and Juan Pérez de Pineda.