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Displaying 1 - 20 of 29 results

Searching for Essenes at Ein Gedi, Not Qumran

By Hershel Shanks
018 Most Dead Sea Scroll scholars agree that Qumran, the settlement near the caves where the scrolls were found, was inhabited by Essenes, an anti-Temple Jewish sect in the years before the Roman destruction of 70 C.E. A stalwart minority of...
Biblical Archaeology Review, July/August 2002

Another View: Do Josephus’s Writings Support the “Essene Hypothesis”?

By Kenneth AtkinsonHanan EshelJodi Magness
Biblical Archaeology Review, March/April 2009

Qumran—The Pottery Factory

Dead Sea Scrolls Not Related to Settlement, Says Excavator
By Hershel Shanks
026 Qumran, that desolate, supposedly monastery-like site with its ritual baths and communal dining room overlooking the Dead Sea, had nothing to do with the Dead Sea Scrolls found in nearby caves, according to a just-released study. Your vision...
Biblical Archaeology Review, September/October 2006

Who Lies Here?

Jordan tombs match those at Qumran
By Hershel Shanks
049 Not whodunit but whoisit? The mystery deepens. I mean the mystery of the cemetery at Qumran with its 1,200 graves. Who was buried there? The conventional wisdom is that it was the Essenes. The reasoning goes like this: Sectarian manuscripts...
Biblical Archaeology Review, September/October 1999

The Enigma of Qumran

Four archaeologists assess the site
By Hershel Shanks
024 If you want to understand how archaeologists think, how they reason, how they work, how they interpret finds—and why they sometimes disagree—you will enjoy this discussion among four prominent archaeologists who know as much about Qumran and...
Biblical Archaeology Review, January/February 1998

The Difference Between Scholarly Mistakes and Scholarly Concealment: The Case of MMT

By Hershel Shanks
064 Mistakes in scholarship are inevitable. When they occur, they can lead other scholars into further error. One error begets another. I recently read a fascinating article, by a young graduate student at Hebrew University named Yosef Garfinkel...
Biblical Archaeology Review, September/October 1990

Jerusalem Rolls Out Red Carpet for Biblical Archaeology Congress

Serious issues raised concerning nature of Biblical archaeology as well as publication of Dead Sea Scrolls
By Hershel Shanks
012 For a week in April, all Jerusalem was aglitter with archaeology. The occasion was the International Congress on Biblical Archaeology marking the 70th anniversary of the Israel Exploration Society. At the opening session, the Acting President...
Biblical Archaeology Review, July/August 1984

Chief Scroll Editor Opens Up—An Interview with Emanuel Tov

By Hershel Shanks
032 For more than a decade, Hebrew University professor Emanuel Tov has been in charge of the scholarly team that is publishing the Dead Sea Scrolls. It hasn’t always been easy; but now, with the 37th volume of the Discoveries in the Judean...
Biblical Archaeology Review, May/June 2002

The Great Debate

Jesus doesn’t really matter in Britain, but he clearly does in America. Why?
By N. T. Wright
Bible Review, August 1999

Don’t Let Pseudepigrapha Scare You

By Hershel Shanks
014 You can’t understand Christian origins unless you understand the Old Testament Pseudepigrapha. So says Professor James H. Charlesworth of Princeton Theological Seminary, and he is clearly riding the crest of modern scholarship. Nobody...
Bible Review, Summer 1987

How Jesus Saw Himself

By N. T. Wright
022 The quest for the historical Jesus began as a protest against traditional Christian dogma. But when the supposedly “neutral” historians peered into the well, all they saw was a featureless Jesus. Even when these scholars decided that...
Bible Review, June 1996

Masada—The Final Reports

By Hershel Shanks
058 059 Masada: The Yigael Yadin Excavations 1963–1965, Final Reports (Jerusalem: Israel Exploration Society/Hebrew University of Jerusalem, 1989–1995,...
Biblical Archaeology Review, January/February 1997

The Meeting Season

A time to learn, a time to drowse, a time to mingle with colleagues from around the world
By Hershel Shanks
042 Summer is the time for alphabet-soup scholarly conferences. Some are held annually, like those of the International SBL (Society of Biblical Literature), the CBA (Catholic Biblical Association) and the SNTS (Studiorum Novi Testamenti Societas...
Bible Review, December 1988

At Least Publish the Dead Sea Scrolls Timetable!

By Hershel Shanks
056 A new timetable for the publication of still-secret Dead Sea Scroll fragments is being negotiated between Israel’s Department of Antiquities and the scholar-editors to whom publication was assigned 35 years ago. Fragments of approximately 400...
Biblical Archaeology Review, May/June 1989

Dead Sea Scroll Variation on “Show and Tell”—It’s Called “Tell, But No Show”

By Hershel Shanks
018 You’re not going to believe this! Next summer, at the Biblical Archaeology Congress in Jerusalem, Joseph Baumgarten, newly assigned to edit and publish the coveted Damascus Documents from the Dead Sea Scrolls, will, after more than 35 years,...
Biblical Archaeology Review, March/April 1990

Golden Anniversary of the Scrolls

By Hershel Shanks
063 There, on a moonlit night beside the ruins of Qumran, was the voice of Yigael Yadin, Israel’s most illustrious archaeologist, dead these 13 years, reading in the original language from a letter by Shimon bar Kosiba, better known as Bar-Kokhba...
Biblical Archaeology Review, November/December 1997

Whose Bones

New Qumran Excavations, New Debates
By Magen BroshiHanan Eshel
026 026 027 Under the headline, “Digging for the Baptist,” the August 12, 2002 issue of Time magazine asked its readers: “Have...
Biblical Archaeology Review, January/February 2003

Is the Vatican Suppressing the Dead Sea Scrolls?

By Hershel Shanks
066 A book that will soon be available in the United States was recently published in England under the title The Dead Sea Scroll Deception by Michael Baigent and Richard Leigh (Jonathan Cape, 1991).1 The book’s thesis is that the Vatican...
Biblical Archaeology Review, November/December 1991

Intrigue and the Scroll—Behind the Scenes of Israel’s Acquisition of the Temple Scroll

By Hershel Shanks
023 Were it not for the efforts of the man who got Jerry Falwell started in television, the famous Dead Sea Scroll known as the “Temple Scroll” might never have come to light. At least that is the story according to Reverend Joe Uhrig, now...
Biblical Archaeology Review, November/December 1987

MMT as the Maltese Falcon

By Hershel Shanks
048 049 Qumran Cave 4-V: Miqsat Ma’ase Ha-Torah. Discoveries in the Judaean Desert X Elisha Qimron and John Strugnell, in consultation with Ya’akov...
Biblical Archaeology Review, November/December 1994

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