Qumran
Encyclopedia : Q : QU : QUM : Qumran
- This article refers to the real Qumran. For the fictional country in the British sitcom Yes, Minister, see Qumran (fictional country).
Since the discovery in the middle of the 20th century of almost 900 scrolls in various states of completeness, mostly written on parchment, extensive excavations of the settlement have been undertaken. Jewish ritual baths and cemeteries have been found, a large cistern, a large dining or assembly room, an alleged scriptorium, and a guard tower.
Most scholars consider it to have been home to a Jewish sect, often said to be Essenes; others have proposed that it was a villa for a single wealthy family, or even that it was a Roman fort. The large cemetery nearby may contain some answers, if women are buried there in great numbers. It would tell what the occupants of the settlement were like and who lived there; but under Jewish law excavating cemeteries is forbidden.
The scrolls were found in a series of caves just to the west of the settlement. Some of the caves seem to have been permanent libraries with built in shelves. The texts found in them represent the beliefs and practices of different Jewish religious orientations. A number of them appear to have been selected for the library there, when Qumran is thought to have become the asylum for supporters of the traditional priestly family of the Zadokites against the Hasmonean priest/kings. A letter found in the 1990s expresses the reasons for creating a community, some of which mirror Sadducean arguments in the Talmud. But most of the scrolls seem to have been dumped in the caves only during the turmoil of the First Jewish Revolt, at a time when Jericho and Jerusalem were facing the sack, or had already been sacked, but Qumran was still standing and secretly accessible from Jerusalem via the Kidron Valley.
More recently the theory of Qumran being a religious settlement has garnered much critique and is not considered very likely anymore. The ruins at Qumran were most probably a merchant outpost, many such posts can be found around the Dead Sea. Various pieces of money have been found along the shore and there is existing proof of flourishing trade connections in the area. The ritual baths and cisterns were used to refine clay for pottery. The Dead Sea Scrolls remain unexplained.
See also
- Temple in Jerusalem: section on Possible Temple at Qumran under Attempts at Rebuilding
External links
- [Qumran National Park]- Travel information and photos.
- Claims that Qumran was a pottery factory: Schiffman, Lawrence, [“Origin and Early History of the Qumran Sect”], Biblical Archaeology. Volume 58, Number 1, March 1995.
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