The Dead Sea Scrolls


By Misheal Al-Kadhi, from the Arabic Paper

 

The scrolls and scroll fragments recovered in the Qumran environs represent a voluminous body of Jewish documents, a veritable "library", dating from the third century B.C.E. to 68 C.E. Unquestionably, the "library," which is the greatest manuscript find of the twentieth century, demonstrates the rich literary activity of Second Temple Period Jewry and sheds insight into centuries pivotal to both Judaism and Christianity. The library contains some books or works in a large number of copies, yet others are represented only fragmentarily by mere scraps of parchment. There are tens of thousands of scroll fragments. The number of different compositions represented is almost one thousand, and they are written in three different languages: Hebrew, Aramaic, and Greek.

The main categories represented among the Dead Sea Scrolls:

  • Biblical Those works contained in the Hebrew Bible. All of the books of the Bible are  represented in the Dead Sea Scroll collection except Esther.
  • Apocryphal or pseudepigraphical Those works which are omitted from various canons of the Bible and included in others.
  • Sectarian Those scrolls related to a pietistic commune and include ordinances, biblical commentaries,  apocalyptic visions, and liturgical works.