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Between 1947 and 1956, nearly 900 ancient Jewish manuscripts were found in remote caves near Khirbet Qumran on the edge of the Dead Sea. This authoritative and accessible book explains the nature and significance of these amazing manuscripts and the dramatic impact they have had on our understanding of religion in ancient Palestine. Cutting through scholarly controversies and conspiracy theories, it demonstrates how the Dead Sea Scrolls have transformed our comprehension of the Bible, Judaism in the time of Jesus, and the rise of Christianity. In the second edition the main text, footnotes and…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Between 1947 and 1956, nearly 900 ancient Jewish manuscripts were found in remote caves near Khirbet Qumran on the edge of the Dead Sea. This authoritative and accessible book explains the nature and significance of these amazing manuscripts and the dramatic impact they have had on our understanding of religion in ancient Palestine. Cutting through scholarly controversies and conspiracy theories, it demonstrates how the Dead Sea Scrolls have transformed our comprehension of the Bible, Judaism in the time of Jesus, and the rise of Christianity. In the second edition the main text, footnotes and bibliographies have all been thoroughly updated, and a new chapter added that expands the material on the identity of the community behind the scrolls and provides a helpful survey of the manuscripts. The book is an ideal introduction for anyone interested in either the Scrolls themselves, Jewish history and religion in the Second Temple period or the early Christian movement.
Autorenporträt
Jonathan G. Campbell studied at Aberdeen and Oxford and has taught at the University of Wales, Lampeter. Since 1996, he has been teaching Biblical Studies, Hebrew and Judaism in the Department of Theology and Religious Studies at the University of Bristol, where he is Senior Lecturer in Biblical Studies and early Judaism. He has published widely on the Dead Sea Scrolls, including Use of Scripture in the Damascus Document (1995). Until recently he was Secretary to the British Association for Jewish Studies.
Rezensionen
"The new edition is somewhat expanded and brought up to date. Thesuccess and usefulness of Campbell's introduction is furtherdemonstrated in a Polish translation of the work." Journal ofJewish Studies

Praise for the First Edition:

"Without being sensational, of all the popular introductions onthe market this one explains best how revolutionary the discoveryof the Scrolls really was."- Professor P. R. Davies, inJournal for the Study of the Old Testament

"In Deciphering the Dead Sea Scrolls, Jonathan Campbell,an established expert on Qumran, has written for students and thegeneral reader a clear, well researched, balanced and highlyinformative account of the discovery of the Scrolls, the debatessurrounding them, and their significance for a better understandingof ancient Judaism and the beginnings of Christianity." -Professor G. Vermes, author of The Complete Dead Sea Scrolls inEnglish