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Qumran

(1,975 words)

Author(s): Lange, Armin (Vienna)
This item can be found on the following maps: Dead Sea (textual finds) [German version] I. History of finds The settlement of Q. on the northwest shore of the Dead Sea, c. 20 km southeast of Jerusalem, receives its name from Wādī Q., at the end of which it lies. After Bedouins discovered the first scrolls in nearby caves in 1947, the settlement of Q. itself was excavated in a total of five campaigns, 1951-1956 [11; 28; 29; 30; 31], and digs and surveys have been carried out very recently [5; 18; 24; 26]. The Ḫirbat Q. site es…

Essenes

(2,454 words)

Author(s): Lange, Armin (Vienna)
[German version] A. Etymology The name E. (Ἐσσηνοί, Ἐσσαῖοι; Essēnoí, Essaîoi) was probably applied by outsiders to the community that it describes. It represents an attempt to render in Greek the Aramaic ḥasayya ( ḥsyh is Qumranic, now attested in the non-Essene Aramaic Levi Document: wl mtmḥ šm ḥsyh mn kwl mh llm, ‘and the name of the devout will not be extinguished in eternity’; 4 Q 213a 3-4 6). The Hebrew ḥāsı̂d that has the same meaning as the Aramaic ḥasayya is also found, as part of a place-descriptor of the settlement of Qumran that had at that time been destr…

Qumran

(1,835 words)

Author(s): Lange, Armin (Tübingen)
Dieser Ort ist auf folgenden Karten verzeichnet: Totes Meer (Textfunde) [English version] I. Fundgeschichte Die am NW-Ufer des Toten Meers, ca. 20 km südöstl. von Jerusalem gelegene Siedlung von Q. erhielt ihren Namen vom Wādī Q., an dessen Ende sie liegt. Nachdem Beduinen 1947 in nahegelegenen Höhlen die ersten Schriftrollen entdeckten, wurde in den J. 1951-1956 [11; 28; 29; 30; 31] in insgesamt fünf Kampagnen die Siedlung von Q. selbst ausgegraben. Bis in die jüngste Zeit wurden Nachgrabungen und Surveys vo…

Totes Meer (Textfunde)

(2,868 words)

Author(s): Lange, Armin
Als Textfunde vom T. M. (Asphaltitis limne) werden jene Hss. bezeichnet, die in den am T. M. gelegenen FO Ketef Jericho, Qumrān (= Q), Ḫirbat al-Mird, Wādī n-Nār, Wādī l-Ġuwair, Wādī l-Murabbaa (= WM), Wādī Sudair, Naḥal Ḥever (= NḤ), Naḥal Mišmȧr, Naḥal Ṣeelim und der Masada (= M) sowie in dem zw. Samaria und Jericho gelegenen Wādī d-Dāliya (= WD) gefunden wurden. Eine vollständige Liste aller Texte (= T.) findet sich in [3. Bd. 39]. [English version] I. Wādī d-Dāliya Die mit Ausnahme von WDSP 38 (griech.) in aram. Sprache verfaßten und stark beschädigten Wadi ed-Daliyeh Samari…

Essener

(2,284 words)

Author(s): Lange, Armin (Tübingen)
[English version] A. Etymologie Der Name E. (Ἐσσηνοί, Ἐσσαῖοι) wurde der so bezeichneten Gemeinschaft wohl von Außenstehenden gegeben. Sie stellt die griech. Wiedergabe des aram. ḥasayya dar ( ḥsyh ist qumranisch jetzt in dem nichtessenischen Aramaic Levi Document belegt: wl mtmḥ šm ḥsyh mn kwl mh llm, ‘und der Name der Frommen wird nicht ausgelöscht werden in Ewigkeit’; 4 Q 213a 3-4 6). Das zu aram. ḥasayya bedeutungsäquivalente hebr. ḥāsı̂d findet sich als Teil einer Ortsbezeichnung der damals schon zerstörten Siedlung von Qumran auch in einem auf 134/5 …

Wisdom Literature

(4,476 words)

Author(s): Hutter, Manfred | Lange, Armin | Lips, Hermann v. | Bagordo, Andreas
[German Version] I. Religious Studies Words for wisdom display a great range of meanings, which need to be taken into account in discussing Wisdom literature. Etymologically the words wise and wisdom ¶ (also Ger. Wissen, “knowledge”) derive from the Proto-Indo-European root * weid- (cf. Sanskrit vid- with its derivatives veda, “[religious] knowledge,” and vidya, “knowledge”; also Lat. videre, “see”). Gk γνῶσις/ gnṓsis, “knowledge” (including the technical term Gnosis), Sanskrit jñāna-, “knowledge,” and Eng. know have a common verbal root * jen( ə)-. Equivalents to the Heb. verb םכ…

Qumran

(10,781 words)

Author(s): Lange, Armin
[German Version] The term Dead Sea Scrolls (Ger. somewhat misleadingly Qumrantexte; modern Heb. megilot midbar yehudah) is a collective term for the manuscripts discovered near the Dead Sea at Ketef Jericho, Qumran, Khirbet Mird, ¶ Wadi en-Nar, Wadi Ghweir, Wadi Murabbaʿat, Wadi Sdeir, Na al Ḥever, Na al Mishmar, Na al Ṣeʿelim, Masada, and in the Wadi ed-Daliyeh between Samaria and Jericho. A complete list of all the texts can be found in E. Tov et al., eds., The Texts from the Judaean Desert (DJD 39, 2002). This article deals with the individual sites and their manusc…

Temple Scroll

(877 words)

Author(s): Lange, Armin
[German Version] I. Manuscripts and Influence at Qumran Three manuscripts of the Temple Scroll have survived: 4QT (4Q524), 11QTa, b (11Q19 and 11Q20). The assignment of 11Q21 (11QTc) to the Temple Scroll is uncertain. Paleography and damage patterns link 4Q365a (4QT?) to the manuscript 4Q365 (4QRPc). The manuscript 11QTa, with remnants of 66 columns (8.148 meters out of what was originally about 9 meters), is the best preserved. The earliest surviving manuscript, 4QT, can be dated paleographically to the period between 150 and 125 bce (Puech, 87f.). With minor variations, the t…

Qumran Sectarian Rules

(905 words)

Author(s): Lange, Armin
[German Version] I. Genre The title Sectarian Rule or Community Rule ( serek) has been given to works of various types that deal with the religious regulation of actual communities (e.g. the Essenes [see also Qumran], e.g. S and D) or eschatological communities (the army of the Sons of Light, e.g. SM). The term serek is taken from the title of manuscript 1QS; only recently has it been applied to a broad spectrum of different religious rules. The Essenes also referred to such rules as midrash (4QSb 5 1; 4QSd 1 I 1; 4QDe 11 II 15; [4QDa 18 V 20]), making clear the “exegetical” character of t…

1.1.2.2.3 Excursus: The Hebrew Text in the Bibles of the Carolingian Renaissance

(2,260 words)

Author(s): Fuller, Russell E. | Lange, Armin
Part of 1 History of Research - 1.1 Hebrew and Greek Texts in Judaism and Christianity - 1.1.2 Medieval Times - 1.1.2.2 Christian Scholarship In medieval times, Christians relied for the Hebrew text of the Bible, mainly on the works of Origen and Jerome but did not study it textcritically themselves. Despite occasional Christian interest in the Hebrew language as e.g. illustrated by Isidore of Seville’s Etymologies,1 by Bede,2 and by Roger Bacon,3 only very few Christians were able to read Hebrew texts.4 The diverse textual transmission of the Vulgate (I.1.3.5; 1.2.1) motivated Chris…
Date: 2022-10-20

1.1.2.1 The History of the Jewish Canon

(8,736 words)

Author(s): Lange, Armin
Part of 1 Overview Articles - 1.1 Introduction - 1.1.2 Canonical History of the Hebrew BibleThe Jewish canon is known today as a collection of twenty-four holy books structured in three parts: Torah (Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, Deuteronomy), Prophets (Joshua, Judges, 1–2 Samuel, 1–2 Kings, Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel, Minor Prophets), and Writings (Psalms, Job, Proverbs, Ruth, Canticles, Qohelet, Lamentations, Esther, Daniel, Ezra–Nehemiah, 1–2 Chronicles). Its contents and structure developed over many centuries if not more than a millennium. 1.1.2.1.1 Terminol…
Date: 2020-03-17

1.2.3 Aramaic Texts

(4,218 words)

Author(s): Lange, Armin
Part of 1 Overview Articles - 1.2 The Textual Histories of the Deuterocanonical TextsThis article deals only with Jewish Aramaic textual versions of deuterocanonical texts. I will therefore address neither Christian Palestinian Aramaic texts (1.2.13) nor any Syriac versions (1.2.5) – Syriac being a dialect of Aramaic. For the Jewish Aramaic textual versions of the deuterocanonical books, the same general considerations apply as for their Hebrew ones. The reader is therefore referred to the principal deliberations at 1.2.2.1.Most Aramaic versions of deuterocanonical book…
Date: 2020-10-18

1.2.2 Hebrew Texts

(13,180 words)

Author(s): Lange, Armin
Part of 1 Overview Articles - 1.2 The Textual Histories of the Deuterocanonical Texts1.2.2.1 General Considerations regarding Hebrew and Aramaic TextsAs a modern term, the word deuterocanonical delimits texts that were not recognized by ancient Jews as canonical.1 It describes the differences between the Jewish canon (I.1.1.2.1) and the various Christian canons (I.1.1.2.2; 1.1). Those books that are not canonical in Judaism but are canonical in one or more Christian canons are regarded as deuterocanonical. In Christianity itself, the deuterocanon…
Date: 2020-10-18

1.1.2.2 The History of the Christian Old Testament Canon

(21,617 words)

Author(s): Lange, Armin
Part of 1 Overview Articles - 1.1 Introduction - 1.1.2 Canonical History of the Hebrew BibleThis article discusses how the Christian canon of the Old Testament developed until, in his letter to Bishop Exsupersius of Toulouse, Pope Innocent i authorized a specific canon list in the year 405 c.e. (1.1.2.2.6.6). Innocent’s decision marks an important turning point in the canonical history of the Christian Old Testament because for the first time a canonical list was backed by papal authority. Nevertheless, the structure and book repertoire of …
Date: 2020-03-17

3.2.1 Ancient Manuscript Evidence

(1,893 words)

Author(s): Lange, Armin
Part of 3 Joshua - 3.2 Ancient Hebrew TextsThree Hebrew manuscripts of the book of Joshua survive from antiquity. 4QJosha and 4QJoshb were found at Qumran, while XJosh comes most likely from one of the sites connected with the Second Jewish War. Of these three Joshua manuscripts, the text of 4QJosha is non-aligned, while the text of 4QJoshb can be characterized as semi-Masoretic and the text of XJosh as proto-Masoretic. For 4Qpaleo paraJosh, it remains uncertain whether it attests to a variant literary edition of the book of Joshua or, more likely, to a rewriting of that book.1 3.2.1.1 4QJos…
Date: 2020-03-17

Introduction to the Textual History of the Bible

(2,481 words)

Author(s): Lange, Armin
Manuscript finds such as the Dead Sea Scrolls, the Cairo Genizah manuscripts, the discoveries at Nag Hammadi, and many more have radically changed our knowledge of the textual history of the Jewish and Christian Bibles. These new insights have led to several noticeable paradigm shifts in the field of textual criticism. Textual witnesses are no longer regarded as quarries for textual variants but are studied as texts and traditions in their own right. For instance, the study of the Septuagint is …
Date: 2020-03-17

2.2.1 Ancient, Late Ancient, and Early Medieval Manuscript Evidence

(24,708 words)

Author(s): Lange, Armin
Part of 2 Pentateuch - 2.2 Ancient Hebrew TextsIn this article1 only the Pentateuch manuscripts from the Dead Sea as well as late ancient and early medieval Pentateuch manuscripts are discussed. Other textual evidence from antiquity, such as the Silver Scrolls from Ketef Hinnom, ancient tefillin and mezuzot, the Nash Papyrus, the Severus Scroll Variant List, and Rabbi Meir’s Tora are addressed in 2.2.5. A total of 106 manuscripts from the various sites around the Dead Sea that attest to the text of the Pentateuch have been published. Of thes…
Date: 2020-03-17

17.2.1 Ancient Manuscript Evidence

(245 words)

Author(s): Lange, Armin
Part of 17 Esther - 17.2 Ancient Hebrew TextsThere are no surviving manuscripts of the book of Esther from antiquity. Since the discovery of the Dead Sea Scrolls, scholars have stated that no copy of Esther was found at the various sites around the Dead Sea.1 Although this is certainly true, several Essene texts from the Qumran library allude to the book of Esther.2 Esth 2:9, 17 1QS (1Q28) ii:4 Esth 3:7 4QDb (4Q267) 9 i 1 Esth 3:7 4QMen of People Who Err (4Q306) 1 2 Esth 3:14 1QSa (1Q28a) i:26–27 Esth 9:22 4QpHosa (4Q166) ii:16–17 These allusions leave little doubt that the Essenes knew the…
Date: 2020-03-17

16.2.1 Ancient Manuscript Evidence

(1,019 words)

Author(s): Lange, Armin
Part of 16 Lamentations - 16.2 Ancient Hebrew TextsThe only four ancient Hebrew manuscripts of Lamentations that are extant were all found in the Qumran caves.1 16.2.1.1 3QLam (3Q3)Only two small fragments of 3QLam are extant attesting to nine complete or partial words from Lam 1:10–12 and 3:53–62. The manuscript was executed in a Herodian formal hand.2 The tetragrammaton is written in the paleo-Hebrew alphabet (3QLam 1 2 = Lam 1:11). Baillet’s reconstruction of the text points to a stichometric arrangement of the two preserved acrostics, in which ea…
Date: 2020-03-17

1.7.1 Jewish Quotations and Allusions

(3,266 words)

Author(s): Lange, Armin
Part of 1 Overview Articles - 1.7 The Biblical Text in Light of Its Quotations and AllusionsThe study of the ancient, late ancient, and early medieval textual history of the Hebrew Bible suffers from a distinct lack of manuscript evidence. In the case of the Hebrew Bible, quotations from and allusions to biblical books are a mostly untapped resource that preserves not only individual variant readings from these epochs but also provides information about the dispersion of possible group affiliations of the vario…
Date: 2020-03-17
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