Category:Qumran Studies--1940s
Qumran Studies in the 1940s--Works and Authors
< 1940s -- 1950s -- 1960s -- 1970s -- 1980s -- 1990s -- 2000s -- 2010s -- ... >
Overview
The initial discovery of the Dead Sea Scrolls took place between November 1946 and February 1947. Two Bedouin shepherds discovered seven scrolls housed in jars in a cave now known as Cave 1, on the northern shore of the Dead Sea, near the Qumran site. These scrolls were later identified as the complete Isaiah Scroll, the Community Rule, the Pesher Habakkuk, a second Isaiah Scroll, the War Scroll, the Thanksgiving Hymns, and the Genesis Apocryphon.
For some time the Bedouin kept the scrolls in their tents, later they contacted some antiquities dealers in Bethlehem in the hope of selling the manuscripts, but without success. Eventually the manuscripts were purchased by a Syrian Orthodox cobbler, Khalil Iksander Shahin, nichnamed Kando. Kando sold four manuscripts to the Syrian metropolitan archbishop of Jerusalem, Mar Athanasius Yeshua Samuel (i.e. the complete Isaiah Scroll, the Community Rule, the Pesher Habakkuk, and the Genesis Apocryphon). The remaining three mss (i.e. the Thanksgiving Hymns, the War Scroll, and then the second Isaiah Scroll) were purchased by Israeli archaeologist Eleazar Sukenik in Nov-Dec 1947 with funds from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.
In 1948 the scrolls caught the attention of John C. Trever, a young researcher at the American Schools of Oriental Research (ASOR). On 21 February 1948 Trever photographed three of the scrolls discovered in Cave 1 and purchased by the Syrian archbishop (i.e. the complete Isaiah Scroll, the Community Rule, and the Pesher Habakkuk), both on black-and-white and standard color film. Realizing the importance of the discovery, Trever called back from Amman, Jordan the head of ASOR, Millar Burrows, and another American young researcher at ASOR William H. Brownlee. On 11 April 1948, Burrows announced to the scholarly community the discovery of the scrolls in a general press release. They also convinced the Metropolitan archbishop to leave for New York with the four scrolls in his possession.
At the end of 1948, the government of Jordan finally gave permission to the Arab Legion to search the area where the original Qumran cave was thought to be. Consequently, Cave 1 was identified on 28 January 1949, by Belgian United Nations observer Captain Phillipe Lippens and Arab Legion Captain Akkash el-Zebn. A preliminary excavation of the Cave was conducted from 15 February to 5 March 1949 by the Jordanian Department of Antiquities in collaborabion with the Ecole Biblique et Archeologique, under the direction of Gerald Lankester Harding and Roland de Vaux. Additional Dead Sea Scroll fragments, linen cloth, jars, and other artifacts were recovered.
The first scholarly reports were published by Eleazar Sukenik and Gerald Lankester Harding.
Pages in category "Qumran Studies--1940s"
The following 15 pages are in this category, out of 15 total.
1
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- מגילות גנוזות (The Dead Sea Scrolls / 1948 Sukenik), book
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- The Dead Sea Scrolls (1949 Harding), essay
- Vorläufige Mitteilungen über die am Nordwestende des Toten Meeres gefundenen hebräischen Handschriften (Preliminary Announcements about the Hebrew Manuscripts Found at the Northwestern End of the Dead Sea / 1949 Hempel), book