Dead Sea Scrolls

Dead Sea Scrolls,
documents made of leather and papyrus, and, in one case, of copper, found between 1947 and 1956 in caves near Qumran by the Dead Sea. The scrolls, written by Jews, are mostly in Hebrew and Aramaic, but a small number are in Greek. Many are fragments of biblical texts from the Old Testament and from Jewish religious compositions otherwise only preserved through Christian manuscript traditions. The scrolls were written in the last centuries bc and 1st cent. ad.

Of particular significance in the study of Judaism in this period are the texts composed by sectarians, who are probably to be identified with Jews who used the nearby site at Qumran as a religious centre. These texts include community rules, hymns, liturgical texts, calendars, and works of bible interpretation. Among this last group is found the pesher type of interpretation, characteristic of this sect and rarely found elsewhere in Jewish literature,...

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