San Antonio Express-News

Dead Sea Scroll fragments found in ‘Cave of Horror’

- By Ilan Ben Zion

JERUSALEM — Israeli archaeolog­ists on Tuesday announced the discovery of dozens of Dead Sea Scroll fragments bearing a biblical text found in a desert cave and believed hidden during a Jewish revolt against Rome nearly 1,900 years ago.

The fragments of parchment bear lines of Greek text from the books of Zechariah and Nahum and have been dated around the first century based on the writing style, according to the Israel Antiquitie­s Authority. They are the first new scrolls found in archaeolog­ical excavation­s in the desert south of Jerusalem in 60 years.

The Dead Sea Scrolls, a collection of Jewish texts found in desert caves in the West Bank near Qumran in the 1940s and 1950s, date from the third century B.C. to the first century

A.D. They include the earliest known copies of biblical texts and documents outlining the beliefs of a little understood Jewish sect.

The roughly 80 new pieces are believed to belong to a set of parchment fragments found in a site in southern Israel known as the “Cave of Horror” — named for the 40 human skeletons found there during excavation­s in the 1960s — that also bear a Greek rendition of the Twelve Minor Prophets, a book in the Hebrew Bible. The cave is located in a remote canyon around 25 miles south of Jerusalem.

The fragments are believed to have been part of a scroll stashed away in the cave during the Bar Kochba Revolt, an armed Jewish uprising against Rome during the reign of Emperor Hadrian, between 132 and 136. Coins struck by rebels and arrowheads found in other caves in the region also hail from that period.

“We found a textual difference that has no parallel with any other manuscript, either in Hebrew or in Greek,” said Oren Ableman, a Dead Sea Scroll researcher with the Israel Antiquitie­s Authority. He referred to slight variations in the Greek rendering of the Hebrew original compared to the Septuagint — a translatio­n of the Hebrew Bible to Greek made in Egypt in the third and second centuries B.C.

Alongside the Romanera artifacts, the exhibit included far older discoverie­s found during its sweep of more than 500 caves in the desert: the 6,000year-old mummified skeleton of a child, an immense, complete woven basket from the Neolithic period, estimated to be 10,500 years old, and scores of other delicate organic materials preserved in caves’ arid climate.

 ?? Menahem Kahana / AFP via Getty Images ?? Israel Antiquitie­s Authority’s Tanya Bitler displays 2,000-year-old biblical scroll fragments. Also found were coins and a basket made 10,500 years ago.
Menahem Kahana / AFP via Getty Images Israel Antiquitie­s Authority’s Tanya Bitler displays 2,000-year-old biblical scroll fragments. Also found were coins and a basket made 10,500 years ago.

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