Qumran

From 4 Enoch: : The Online Encyclopedia of Second Temple Judaism, and Christian and Islamic Origins
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Qumran / Khirbet Qumran is an archeological site located in the West Bank on a dry plateau about a mile from the northwestern shore of the Dead Sea, in the area in which most of the Dead Sea Scrolls were found.

The settlement was constructed during the Hasmonean period (late 2nd century BCE) and was occupied until 68 BC, when it was destroyed by the Romans during the Jewish War, and never rebuilt. Most scholars see a close connection between the scrolls and the settlement; Qumran was the home of a sectarian community who collected the scrolls and authored some of them.

Archeology of Qumran

The site had been known to European explorers since the 19th century. The ruins were commonly interpreted as those of a fort.

Interest in the site arose in the late 1940s when the first Dead Sea Scrolls were found in nearby caves. The site was extensively excavated in the 1950s by archaeologists under the direction of Roland de Vaux. De Vaux interpreted the ruins as the home of a community of Essenes who lived a quasi-monastic life devoted to prayer and the study and writing of religious documents.