No one dided for the KJV. You don't even have your history correct. The KJV was created by the Church of England, back when England was persecuting CATHOLICS.
It was work of Tyndale that was persecuted, along with all the other early protestant translators. the 1500s saw the printing revolution, which of course ment that Bibles could now be mass produced and that is exactly what happened. Every language across Europe had a Bible translated and printed. Greek was used because it was not a dead language and the language of the learned and educated people.
One of the ridiculous comments I read from King James Onlyists is that the only Bibles in existance are these blasted Latin ones and a few other Greek and Hebrew. REally? NO I do not think so.
You see, Gods word, ie the Bible was not just confined to Latin or Greek. For example we know of a 4th century translation of the Bible in Gothic, which was translated by bishop Ulfila, a half Greek half Goth who studied in Rome. Being Greek and therefore being fluent in Greek, and being Goth, he was able to make a perfect translation of the Bible, he even created the Gothic alphabet for the purpose. a fragment from 6th century copy, the Codex Argenteus still exists today.
We know next to nothing about our past, but we do know that many languages had thier own translations, the Wessex Bible for example, that was West Saxon language, the Czech had their translation in the 14th Century, so did the English with Wycliffe. How many more of the earliest translations have been lost to time?
It is clear that there were plenty of Bibles and Gospels in dozens of languages from time of Christ, even more amazing when you tink that they all had to be hand written, that is until the aforementioned printing press became common place. From the early 16th Century and into the 17th, the we see a huge surge and demand for translations of the Bible in every language across Europe, we know this is the case because we still have evidence of these Bibles, in that copies survived, which is rare.
The Hungarians had the Hussite Bible, dating back to early 1400's, Sweeden had the Bible in thier own language, Gustav Vasa in 1534, My name sake, Agricola translated the Bible from Greek to Finnish in 1548. The Dutch government commissioned thier own Bible the Statenvertaling in 1618, there was even a translation into Welsh in the 1500s.
So you can see every nation and every language had its own translation of the bible, The Word of God has always been available in all languages, we must remember that. The German bibles are prolific, if anything they can proberbly claim that thier Bible is the perfect preserved final authoritative version, not the King James.
Therefore, you can see that the King James Bible is a relative late comer and is just one of dozens of languages commissioned by the respective authorities and governments from the 1500s. So what makes the King James so special to the Cult of King James Only?