The following is a leaf from the Biships' Bible published in 1568.
It covers Exodus 16.5-17.9, and includes a nice woodcut seemingly depicting Joshua fighting the Amalekites.
The first authorised bible in English is the Great Bible published in 1539, while another protestant bible in English, the Geneva Bible, was published in 1557-60. The Bishops' Bible follows these two versions.
Since the Geneva Bible was permeated with Calvinism, it was not well received by bishops of the Church of England, whereas the Great Bible was based on the Vulgate rather than the Hebrew and Greek originals. Thus, at the instigation of Matthew Parker, the then Archbishop of Canterbury, bishops began to work on a new translation based on the original texts. The end product, the Bishops' Bible, was first published in 1568. It was substantially revised in 1572, while its last complete edition was published in 1602. This last edition was used as the basis of the King James Version published in 1611, which replaced the Bishops' Bible as the standard bible of the Church of England.