Search results for "Dead Sea Scrolls"

showing 6 items of 6 documents

More Dubious Dead Sea Scrolls

2021

Abstract In the course of the last eighteen years more than 75 new “Dead Sea Scrolls” fragments have surfaced on the antiquities market. These are commonly referred to as post-2002 Dead Sea Scrolls-like fragments. A growing number of scholars regard a substantial part of them as forgeries. In this article, we will discuss four more dubious fragments, but this time from the 20th Century—or at least from pre-2002. Two of the fragments have been known since the late nineties and are published in the DJD series. One was published in Revue de Qumran (2003), and one in Gleanings from the Caves (2016). All four are today accepted as part of the Dead Sea Scrolls dataset even though they are unprove…

VDP::Humaniora: 000HistoryBiblical studiesmedia_common.quotation_subjectJewish studiesReligious studiesDead Sea ScrollsArtAncient historyHebrew Biblemedia_commonDead Sea Discoveries
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Fake Fragments, Flexible Provenances: Eight Aramaic “Dead Sea Scrolls” from the 21st Century

2019

HistoryVDP::Humaniora: 000::Teologi og religionsvitenskap: 150Dead Sea ScrollsAncient history
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Nine Dubious “Dead Sea Scrolls” Fragments from the Twenty-First Century

2017

Abstract In 2002 new “Dead Sea Scrolls” fragments began to appear on the antiquities market, most of them through the Kando family. In this article we will present evidence that nine of these Dead Sea Scrolls-like fragments are modern forgeries.

Papyrology060303 religions & theologyHistoryDead seaHistoryBiblical studiesJewish studies05 social sciencesReligious studiesTwenty-First CenturyDead Sea Scrolls06 humanities and the arts0603 philosophy ethics and religionPalaeography0502 economics and business050212 sport leisure & tourismClassicsHebrew BibleDead Sea Discoveries
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Tales of saviours and iconoclasts. On the provenance of "the Dead Sea Scrolls of Buddhism"

2021

Academic research on newly discovered ancient Buddhist manuscripts is largely based on objects that come from the antiquities market and to a much lesser degree on objects coming from documented and controlled archaeological excavations. Despite their being unprovenanced, collectors and scholars often present such objects with narratives mimicking provenance. The use of the label "Dead Sea Scrolls" attached to archaeological material without connections to Judaism or early Christianity is a prevalent example of this scholarly praxis. In this article, we deconstruct provenance narratives associated with the undocumented Buddhist manuscripts in the Schøyen Collection and discuss their implica…

ArcheologyHistoryVisual Arts and Performing ArtsMajestyAllegoryJudaismmedia_common.quotation_subjectBuddhismAncient Buddhist manuscriptsEarly ChristianityArt historyprovenance narrativesDead Sea ScrollsArtNX440-632Cultural propertyArchaeologySchøyen collection (Norway)Dead Seas Scrolls of BuddhismHistory of the artsNarrativeprovenance researchcultural propertyCC1-960media_commonActa ad archaeologiam et artium historiam pertinentia
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Predetermined for Predestination? On the Assumed Notion of Predestination in the Dead Sea Scrolls

2019

The present article argues that the concept of predestination does not on the whole lend itself to Qumran studies. Unlike the writings of Augustine and Calvin, the scrolls contain nothing like a do...

LiteraturePredestinationLiterature and Literary Theorybusiness.industryNothingPhilosophyReligious studiesDead Sea ScrollsbusinessScandinavian Journal of the Old Testament
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Dead Sea Scrolls Fragments in the Museum Collection, written by Emanuel Tov, Kipp Davis, and Robert Duke

2017

060303 religions & theologyHistoryHistoryBiblical studiesJewish studiesReligious studiesDead Sea Scrolls06 humanities and the artsAncient history0603 philosophy ethics and religionHebrew BibleDead Sea Discoveries
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