1947 | --
[Feb ?] Bedouin shepherd finds 7 scrolls in jars
in cave
above Khirbet Qumran. |
| --
[March] British barricade Jewish settlements in
Jerusalem to contain incidents of violence. |
| --
[April] Ta'amireh Bedouin take scrolls to Bethlehem
antiquities dealer (Kando) who shows
them to the Syrian Orthodox Archbishop of Jerusalem (Athanasius
Yeshue Samuel) who purchases 4 of them (including
the Isaiah scroll
[above], Habakkuk
commentary, Genesis Apocryphon
& the Community
Rule) for about
$250. |
| --
[Nov.] Another Bethlehem antiquities dealer (Feidi
Salahi) shows 2 other scrolls to Hebrew University
Prof. Eliezer Sukenik. |
| --
[Nov. 29] United Nations votes to partition Palestine
between Arabs & Jews. |
| --
[Dec.] Sukenik
buys 3 scrolls (another
Isaiah scroll, the
War scroll,
& Hodayoth)
from Salahi. |
1948 | --
[Jan.] Sukenik
sees Archbishop Samuel's
scrolls but fails to arrange purchase. |
| --
[Feb.] Syrian Orthodox monk shows Isaiah
scroll to John
C. Trevor at American Schools of Oriental Research
(ASOR) center in Jerusalem who, with ASOR colleague
William Brownlee, photographs & identifies
it . |
| --
[Mar.] American archaeologist, William
F. Albright, confirms Trevor's
identification of Isaiah
scroll as the oldest
known Hebrew manuscript.
-- Archbishop Samuel
gives ASOR
director Millar Burrows rights to publicize
scrolls & takes scrolls to Beirut as violence between
Arabs & Jews increases. |
| -- [Apr. 11] Burrows
issues press release announcing the discovery of the scrolls. |
| --
[May 15] British leave Palestine. Jews establish
state of Israel & repel Arab attacks. |
| --
Trevor
describes "The Discovery of the Scrolls" in
Biblical Archaeologist 11 (46-68).
-- Prof. Sukenik
publishes portions of his scrolls, identifying the authors
as Essenes.
-- G. L. Harding, British director of
antiquities for Jordan, launches search for scroll caves
with aid of Jordan's Arab Legion. |
1949 | --
[Feb.] Harding
authorizes Roland de Vaux of French Dominican
l'Ecole Biblique to survey Cave
1 where the first 7
scrolls had been discovered. Many more fragments recovered,
including original Hebrew versions of Jubilees
& the Testament of Levi. |
| --
Archbishop Samuel
brings 4 scrolls to U.S. to try to raise money for Palestinian
refugees & publishes account of his purchase in Biblical
Archaeologist 12 (26-31). Scrolls displayed in American
museums through 1951. |
1950 | --
French scholar, André Dupont-Sommer,
publishes his Preliminary Views on the Dead Sea Manuscripts,
identifying them as the product of Essenes & suggesting
that they were composed at the still unexcavated
site of Khirbet
Qumran.
-- Skeptical historian, Solomon Zeitlin,
challenges "The Alleged Antiquity of the Scrolls"
& claims they were forgeries (Jewish Quarterly
Review 40-41).
-- W. F. Albright
engages Zeitlin
in public debate in Philadelphia presenting persuasive
arguments for the authenticity of the scrolls based on
external evidence .
-- Trevor
publishes photos of Isaiah
scroll & a commentary
on Habakkuk (1QpHab). |
1951 | --
Burrows
& Brownlee
publish text of 1QS
as Manual of Discipline (1951).
-- Harding
locates Kando
& agrees to purchase all scrolls he can get from Bedouin. |
| --
[Nov.] Fr. R.
de Vaux begins excavation
of Khirbet Qumran. |
1952 | --
[Feb.] Bedouin discover 30 fragments of other scrolls
in Cave 2, including Jubilees & the ben
Sirach in the original Hebrew. |
| --
[March] Teams from ASOR
explore other caves. Copper
scroll found in Cave
3. |
| --
[Sept.] Kando
sells De Vaux
a large pile of fragments from another cave.
-- Jordanian consortium seeks funds from foreign museums
& universities to purchase more scrolls.
-- De Vaux locates Cave 4 less than 200 yards from Khirbet Qumran.
15000 of fragments of 574 mss. found including Aramaic
versions 1 Enoch & Tobit, a scroll
of Samuel that was closer to the Greek Septuagint than
the official Hebrew text & fragments of a copy of
the Damascus
Covenant, a text
that had been discovered in 1896 in the geniza of old
Cairo synagogue.
-- Nearby Caves 5 & 6 yield fragments of other copies
of the Damascus
Covenant. |
1953 | --
R. de Vaux's
lectures to the British Academy on his Qumran excavations
support Dupont-Sommer's
hypothesis that the scrolls were written in its "scriptorium"
by Essenes.
-- Harding
assembles international team of 8 scholars to work on
scrolls in east Jerusalem:
from U.S.: Frank Moore Cross (McCormick)
& Patrick Skehan (Catholic U);
from U.K.: John Allegro (Manchester)
& John Strugnell (Oxford)
from France: Dominique Barthélemy &
Jean Starcky
from Germany: Claus-Hunno Hunziger (Göttingen).
from Poland: Josef T. Milik. De Vaux
named project director. |
1954 | --
Sukenik's
son, Yigael Yadin, in the U.S. arranges
covert purchase of Archbishop
Samuel's 4 scrolls
for $250,000.
-- Chaim Rabin (Oxford) re-edits the
fragments of the Zadokite Document |
1955 | --
[Feb.] Yadin
returns to Israel reuniting the 7 original scrolls. |
| --
[May] Literary critic Edmund Wilson
publishes article in the New Yorker arguing Dupont-Sommer's
observation of parallels between the figure of the Teacher
of Righteousness & Jesus indicated that Christian
ideas were borrowed from the scrolls. |
| --
Barthélemy
& Milik
publish the fragments of Cave 1.
-- Caves 7-10 south of Qumran yield other mss.
-- Allegro (of Manchester U) enlists Manchester College
of Science & Technology's aid in opening the Copper scroll.
Sends preliminary transcriptions listing huge buried treasure
to de Vaux. |
1956 | --
Allegro publishes The Dead Sea Scrolls, announcing
that the Copper scroll
contained "an inventory of the the sect's most precious
possessions" (183).
-- De Vaux
& Harding
issue statement to French Academy dismissing the Copper scroll's
buried treasure as a fiction, incompatible with Essene
communal economy.
-- Rabin
publishes article suggesting that the
Copper scroll was written
by zealots who buried the Temple treasure.
-- In BBC broadcast Allegro claims to have found evidence
that Qumran sect worshipped a crucified Messiah &
suggests that Christians borrowed this story.
-- De Vaux,
Milik,
Starcky,
Skehan
& Strugnell
send letter to London Times challenging Allegro.
-- Allegro retracts claims & admits they were based
on his interpretation rather than on text.
-- Genesis Apocryphon unrolled at Hebrew
U & published by Yadin.
-- De Vaux's
team of scholars complete reconstruction & photographing
of fragments of scrolls from Cave 4.
-- Bedouin sell Kando
7 scrolls from Cave 11 who sells 6 of them to the Palestine
Archaeological Museum which in turn auctions them to European
& American institutions |
1957 | --
Jewish scholar, Cecil Roth, proposes
"A Solution to the Mystery of the Scrolls" (Commentary
24) identifying the authors as followers of the zealot
leader, Menachem, who was executed in Jerusalem
by other Judean rebels in 68 CE.
-- Theodore H. Gaster (Columbia U) publishes
English translations of 13 Dead Sea Scriptures from
cave 1 claiming that they "furnish a picture of the
religious and cultural climate in which John the Baptist
conducted his mission and in which Jesus was initially
reared...and whose religious ideas served largely as the
seedbed of the New Testament" (12). |
1958 | --
Hunziger
leaves Dead Sea scroll team. De Vaux gives his scrolls
to Maurice Baillet.
-- De Vaux
finishes excavating Khirbet Qumran. |
1959 | --
Allegro returns to Palestine to launch his own search
for the treasure described in
Copper scroll, without
success. De Vaux
accuses him of disturbing excavations for a treasure hunt. -- Dupont-Sommer's
Essene Writings from Qumran details archaeological,
paleographic & historical evidence supporting classic
hypothesis of the scrolls' origins.
-- Milik's
survey of Ten Years of Discovery in the Judean Wilderness
suggests that the "last phase" of the Essene
community had militant zealot characteristics.
-- Milik
publishes translation of
Copper scroll in Revue
Biblique without mentioning his use of Allegro's
transcriptions.. |
1960 | --
Allegro publishes his own book on The Treasure of
the Copper Scroll using unauthorized photos.
-- Death of Archaeological Museum's patron, John
D. Rockefeller Jr., ends main source of funding
for work on scrolls. |
| --
[June] Transcription of Cave 4 scrolls completed;
workshop dismantled & scrolls locked in safe.
-- Photos of 574 texts divided among remaining scholars:
-- Cross
& Skehan
take responsibility for editing biblical scrolls; Milik
& Strugnell
get 200 others. |
1961 | --
De Vaux
reviews Allegro's Copper Scroll book, attacking
it as imprecise & dishonest.
-- Yadin
learns that Kando
still had largest scroll from Cave 11 but fails to negotiate
purchase. |
1962 | -- New translation
of Dead Sea Scrolls in English by Geza
Vermes (Oxford) becomes popular introduction
to Qumran as the center of the Essene sect. |
1963 | --
K. H. Rengstorf (U of Münster) claims
the Dead Sea scrolls originally came from the Temple library
in Jerusalem (Hirbet Qumran and the Problem of the
Library of the Dead Sea Caves).
-- Yadin
begins excavation of Masada. Copies of Hebrew ben
Sirach & the Songs of Sabbath
Sacrifice found in Cave 4 of Qumran discovered in
Masada synagogue built by zealots. |
1965 | -- British OT
scholar, G. R. Driver, publishes The
Judean Scrolls: the Problem & a Solution challenging
the accuracy of De Vaux & Dupont-Sommer's interpretation
of archaeological & paleographic evidence in dating
the scrolls & supporting Roth's
hypothesis of the 1st c. CE zealot origins of the scrolls.
-- Shrine of the Book
(The Israel Museum, Jerusalem) opens exhibiting major
scrolls from Cave 1 & documents from the bar Kochba
revolt. |
1966 | --
[Aug.] Allegro publishes "The Untold Story
of the Dead Sea Scrolls" in Harpers Magazine,
accusing de Vaux's team of deliberately avoiding releasing
scrolls because of content adverse to Christian teaching.
-- Driver
& other eminent OT scholars sign letter in London
Times criticizing Allegro's charges.
-- Allegro persuades Jordan government to nationalize
Palestine Archaeological Museum. |
1967 | --
[June 5-10] Israel defeats Arabs in 6 Day War &
occupies Palestine to the Jordan, gaining control of Khirbet
Qumran, the Rockefeller Archaeological Museum & all
the scrolls (except the Copper Scroll & some
fragments from Cave 1 that had been sent to Amman, Jordan).
-- Yadin
searches Kando's
property in Bethlehem & finds the Temple Scroll in a shoe box. |
1967-69 | --
Pro-Arab scholars de
Vaux, Skehan,
Starcky
& Milik
refuse to cooperate with Israelis. Further publication
of scrolls blocked. |
1970 | -- Norman
Golb (U of
Chicago) presents paper
to ASOR
Albright Insitute in Jerusalem, questioning whether all
Dead Sea scrolls were products of an Essene sect based
at Qumran, but is denied authorization to examine unpublished
scrolls. |
1971 | --
[Sept.] W.F.
Albright & R.
de Vaux die. |
1972 | --
Fr. Pierre Benoit of Dominican Ecole
Biblique becomes project director, vowing to cooperate
with Israeli authorities to bring scrolls to publication.
-- Spanish Jesuit Jose O'Callaghan publishes
article in Biblica 53 interpreting fragments
of Greek scrolls from Cave 7 as remnants of New Testament
books (Mark 6:52-53, 1 Tim 3:16-4:1 & James 1:23-24). |
1973 | -- Agreement
reached to publish scrolls under revised title (Discoveries
in the Judean Desert) without reference to modern
political jurisdictions. |
1975 | --
Lawrence Schiffman (NYU), an expert
in Jewish law, publishes The Halakah of Qumran based
on the regulations in the
Damascus Covenant
& the Community
Rule. |
1976 | --
Milik
publishes long-awaited Hebrew fragments of Book of
Enoch claiming that absence at Qumran of any text
comparable to the "parable" section of the Ethiopic
version proved that the "son of Man" passages
in the Ethiopic text were later Christian insertions. |
1977 | --
30th anniversary of scrolls' discovery prompts Geza Vermes
to warn of "academic scandal" if pace of publication
of scrolls is not accelerated.
-- Biblical Archaeologisteditor, David Noel Freedman, questions
the ethics of a small group of scholars having exclusive
rights to study & publish the scrolls "at their
own...discretion" (p. 96). |
1979 | -- Allegro publishes
The Dead Sea Scrolls & the Christian Myth claiming
that the gospels were narrative fictions about a non-existent
hero (Jesus) based on the Teacher of Righteousness. |
1980 | --
Burrows
& Skehan
die. Emanuel Tov & Elisha
Qimron (U of Negev) become first Israeli scholars
to work on the Dead Sea scrolls.
-- Philanthropist Elizabeth Bechtel finances
a re-photographing of the scrolls & has a microfilm
of the project made for herself. |
1983 | --
Yadin
publishes The
Temple Scrollfrom Cave 11.
-- Ben Zion Wacholder (Hebrew Union College)
publishes The Dawn of Qumran: the Sectarian Torah
& the Teacher of Righteousness arguing that scrolls
were written by opponents of Jerusalem Zadokites.
-- Historian Robert Eisenman (Cal State
at Long Beach) publishes Maccabees, Zadokites, Christians
& Qumran arguing that the scrolls were produced
by a militant splinter group of Sadducees who who became
the zealot movement out of which John the Baptizer &
early Christianity arose. |
1984 | --
Invited to lecture at the Rockefeller Museum, Golb
argues that the absence of autograph letters & legal
documents among Dead Sea scrolls indicated that they were
not composed at Qumran.
-- Jerusalem post reports that Strugnell
& Qimron
had found a "letter from the Teacher of Righteousness"
to the Wicked Priest among Cave 4 scrolls (4QMMT).
-- Yadin
& Brownlee
die. |
1986 | -- Strugnell
invites Schiffman
to elucidate the ritual laws in the Acts of Torah
(4QMMT) & sends him photos & transcriptions.
-- Eisenman
publishes James the Just in the Habakkuk Pesher
(1QpHab) identifying the Teacher of Righteousness as the
brother of Jesus & his opponents -- "the Man
of the Lie" & "the Wicked Priest" --
as Paul & Hanan II.
-- German scholar Carsten Thiede's Earliest
Gospel Manuscript? argues that O'Callaghan's
identification of 7Q5
as a fragment of Mark requires complete revision of many
modern assumptions about the composition of the gospels. |
1987 | --
Fr. Benoit
dies; succeeded by Strugnell.
-- Elizabeth Bechtel
donates her private microfilm of the scrolls to the Huntington
Library (Cal) shortly before her death.
-- Vermes
convenes London conference on 40th anniversary of discovery
of the scrolls & calls for immediate publication
of all photographs without transcription, commentary or
editorial notes. |
1988 | --
Allegro & Starcky
die.
-- German scholar G. Wilhelm Nebe identifies
2 fragments from Cave 7 as portions of the epistle of
Enoch in Greek (Revue de Qumran 13). |
1989 | --
Royal Dutch Academy grants
Wacholder permission
to publish its fragment of a 2nd copy of the
Temple scroll.
Strugnell
sends Wacholder scroll photos & a concordance of unpublished
scrolls that had been made at his insistence 30 years
earlier.
-- Oxford mediates $350,000 grant to expedite publication
of the scrolls. |
| --
[March] Eisenman
asks Strugnell
for access to photos of Cave 4 scrolls of
Damascus Covenant.
Strugnell refuses since Eisenmann lacked training
to interpret paleographic documents. |
| --
[May-Aug.] Herschel Shanks, editor
of Biblical Archaeological
Review, calls
for publication of timetable for release of the scrolls
& characterizes
Strugnell's response
as a "hoax or fraud." |
| --
[Sept.] Shanks
publishes correspondence between Eisenman
& Strugnell.
NY Times & other newspapers run articles on debate
between scholars over issue of access to the scrolls.
-- Colloquium on scrolls in Mogilany, Poland issues resolution
calling for immediate publication of photos of the scrolls. |
| --
[Oct.] Israelis with access to scrolls begin to
send Eisenman
unauthorized photos of the scrolls. |
1990 | -- [June]
Schiffman
publishes "The New Halakhic Letter (4QMMT)
& the Origins of the Dead Sea Sect" (Biblical
Archaeologist 50), arguing that the Essenes originated
ats schismatic Sadducees who withdrew from Jerusalem when
leading Sadducees accepted Hasmonean claims |
| --
[Nov. 9] Israeli newspaper HaAretz publishes
interview in which Strugnell
characterized Judaism as "a horrible religion"
& lamented the survival of Jews as a group. |
| --
[Dec.] Eisenman
shows 1700 scroll photos to U
of Chicago scroll specialist,
Michael Wise, who immediately begins
transcription. |
| --
[Dec. 30] Emanuel
Tov replaces
Strugnell as editor-in-chief
of the Dead Sea Scrolls project. |
1991 | --
Wacholder's
request for further scroll photos denied.
Wacholder's assistant, Martin Abegg,
uses Strugnell's
unpublished concordance
to begin to reconstruct transcription of original texts.
-- Golb
& Wise
launch Dead Sea Scrolls Project at U of Chicago's
Oriental Institute to decipher fragments from cave 4. |
| -- [June
24] Oxford announces receipt of a complete set of
scroll photos & formation of Forum for Qumran Research
under direction of Vermes. |
| --
[Sept. 4] Herschel
Shanks announces publication
of Wacholder
& Abegg's
computer-reconstructed transcription of scrolls based
on Strugnell's unpublished
concordance. |
| --
[Sept. 22] Huntington Library grants all "qualified
scholars" access to the Bechtel
microfilm of the photos of the scrolls. |
| --
[Oct. 22] Israeli department of Antiquities
announces that it will grant access to official photos
of the scrolls to scholars who agree not to publish their
findings. |
| --
[Nov 20] Shanks
publishes Eisenman's
photos in A Facsimile Edition of the Dead Sea Scrolls,
co-edited by James M. Robinson. |
| --
[Nov 25] At annual meeting of the Society of Biblical
Literature in Kansas City MO, scroll project director,
E. Tov,
announces lifting of all publication restrictions, allowing
any scholar to examine the official scroll photos &
publish whatever was discovered.
-- SBL passes resolution affirming the right of all scholars
to have access to facsimile reproductions of all ancient
manuscripts without any publication restrictions |
1992 | -- In Jesus
& the Riddle of the Dead Sea Scrolls Barbara
Thiering (U of Sydney) interprets the scrolls
as the product of rivalry between the supporters of John
the Baptizer (the "Teacher of Righteousness")
& Jesus (the "Man of the Lie"). |
| --
[Nov.]
Eisenman & Wise
publish The Dead Sea Scrolls Uncovered containing
transcriptions & translations of 50 scrolls. |
1993 | -- [Apr.] Project Judaica Foundation
opens Scrolls from
the Dead Sea Exhibitat Library of Congress. |
1994 | --
Qimron
& Strugnell
publish the Acts of Torah (4QMMT) but retract
their earlier claim that it was written by the Teacher
of Righteousness.
-- Schiffman
publishes Reclaiming the Dead Sea Scrolls developing
his thesis that the Qumran sect was founded by schismatic
Sadducees, but insisting (like Golb)
that many of the Dead Scrolls were eclectic sources that
were not composed at Qumran. |
1995 | --
Golb
publishes Who Wrote the Dead Sea Scrolls? challenging
the identification of Qumran as an Essene settlement &
updating Rengstorf's
argument that the scrolls came from libraries (of different
groups) in Jerusalem. |
| --
[Aug.] Israeli archaeologist Hanan Eshel announces discovery
of 4 sealed man-made caves near cave 4. |
| --
[Nov.] Bruce Zuckerman (USC) reports
on his use of infra-red
photography & digital imaging
to reconstruct the text & lacunae in fragments of
4QDan & the potential of this technology for restoring
the text of other damaged scrolls. |
1996 | -- French scholar
Emile Puech supports Nebe
against Thiede
in identifying Cave 7's Greek fragments as portions of
1 Enoch rather than various New Testament books (Revue
Biblique 103). |
1997 | -- Ernest
Muro uses computer scans to reassemble
Cave 7 fragments, confirming Puech's
identification of text as 1 Enoch 103 in Greek (Revue
de Qumran 70) & show that the controversial
7Q5
is probably not from any OT or NT book. |
1998 | --
Distinguishing the worldview of sectarian scrolls found
only at Qumran from that of non-canonical
works that circulated elsewhere, Gabriele Boccaccini
(UMich) goes Beyond the Essene Hypothesis to
argue that Qumran was not the center of the Essene movement
but rather the retreat of an extremist splinter group
that had separated from the main Enochic/Essene party. |
2000 | Steve
Mason argues that the hypothesis identifying the authors
of the Dead Sea scrolls as Essenes ignores & distorts
the accounts of Josephus. |