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‘Blank’ Dead Sea Scrolls reveal hidden letters

- Words by Laura Geggel

Four Dead Sea Scroll fragments, previously thought to be blank, are anything but: detailed imaging has revealed that these ancient pieces of parchment contain letters, sewn thread, ruled lines and even a discernibl­e word, new research finds.

The finding almost went unnoticed until Joan Taylor, a professor of Christian origins and Second Temple Judaism at King’s College London, took a magnifying glass to these fragments and noticed that there was a ’lamed’, the Hebrew letter for ‘L’, written on one of them. At the time Taylor said she thought that she “might be imagining things. But then it seemed maybe other fragments could have very faded letters too.”

Taylor’s hunch paid off. One of the four fragments had four lines of text, with a total of 15 to 16 completely or partially preserved letters. One word, ‘Shabbat’, the Hebrew word for ‘Sabbath’, is clearly visible, and this clue, as well as several other letters, suggest that this fragment might be from the biblical book of Ezekiel (46:1-3).

The Dead Sea Scrolls consist of more than 900 manuscript­s written by an ancient Jewish sect known as the Essenes. Since the scrolls’ discovery in the Qumran Caves of the West Bank in 1946, scholars have pored over the texts, which include versions of the Hebrew Bible, calendars, astronomic­al observatio­ns and community rules.

Although some parchments touted as Dead Sea Scrolls are forgeries, the fragments studied in this experiment are the real deal. These fragments were discovered during the official excavation­s of the Qumran Caves, and were not channelled through the antiquitie­s market.

This collection of fragments was then donated to the University of Manchester in 1997, but received little attention – until now, when Taylor spied the Hebrew letter. To see if any of the other fragments had text, she photograph­ed all the pieces in the collection that were over one centimetre long – 51 in total – that appeared blank to the naked eye.

Taylor used multispect­ral imaging, a technique that uses various wavelength­s on the electromag­netic spectrum, such as infrared, to capture images of hard-to-see figures, such as the carbon-based ink on the scrolls. In the end she and her colleagues found that some fragments had ruled lines or vestiges of letters, but only four fragments had Hebrew or Aramaic text. One of those pieces was from the sewed edge of a parchment scroll and had a few letters on it.

“With new techniques for revealing ancient texts now available, I felt we had to know if these letters could be exposed,” Taylor said. “There are only a few on each fragment, but they are like missing pieces of a jigsaw puzzle you find under a sofa.”

“This fragment might be from the biblical book of Ezekiel (46:1-3)”

 ??  ?? The Hebrew word ‘Shabbat’ is visible in the upper-right-hand corner. A lamed – the letter ‘L’ in Hebrew – is written on the left side
The Hebrew word ‘Shabbat’ is visible in the upper-right-hand corner. A lamed – the letter ‘L’ in Hebrew – is written on the left side

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