Difference between revisions of "(++) The Dead Sea Scrolls Deception (1991 Baigent, Leigh), arch-fi"

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[[Category:English language|1991 Baigent]]
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[[Category:Dead Sea Scrolls (subject)|1991 Baigent]]
[[Category:Jesus of Nazareth (subject)|1991 Baigent]]
[[Category:Jesus of Nazareth (subject)|1991 Baigent]]
[[Category:Vatican conspiracy (theme)|1991 Baigent]]
[[Category:Vatican conspiracy (theme)|1991 Baigent]]
[[Category:Mega Bestsellers|1991 Baigent]]
[[Category:Mega Bestsellers|1991 Baigent]]

Revision as of 09:20, 1 January 2010

The Dead Sea Scrolls Deception (1991) is an arch-fi book by Michael Baigent and Richard Leigh.

Abstract

“The explosive contents of the Dead Sea Scrolls and how the Church conspired to suppress them.” A masterpiece of fantastic archaeology. The authors argued that the Scrolls were the work of Jewish zealots who had much in common with, and may have been identical to, the early followers of Jesus led by his brother James, and promoted a conspiracy theory accusing the Roman Catholic Church of having suppressed the “true” contents of the Dead Sea Scrolls. By two of the authors of Holy Blood, Holy Grail (1982 Baigent/Leigh/Lincoln), arch-fi.

Editions and translations

Published in London and New York; translated into several languages.

Table of contents

External links