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This eclectic collection contains 16 articles on a variety of
topics within Qumran Studies from a conference held in memory of
the late Professor Alan Crown. Essays cover the impact of the
Qumran discoveries on the study of the Hebrew Bible and the New
Testament to the study of the scrolls themselves and the community
organizations presupposed in them, focusing as well on topics as
diverse as sexuality, scribal practice and the attitude to the
Temple in the scrolls.
This volume contains the proceedings of the conference entitled
"Halakhah in Light of Epigraphy" held on 29 May, 2008 under the
auspices of the David and Jemima Jeselsohn Center for Epigraphy at
Bar-Ilan University. Epigraphic finds, here interpreted broadly to
include papyri, scrolls, and the like, have immeasurably enriched
our knowledge of the ancient Jewish past while at the same time
posing a challenge to modern scholarship: how does one integrate
old knowledge, based on previously known sources, with new
information? We now recognize that Rabbinic texts are normative:
they tell us how their authors believed life should be lived,
rather than the details of ordinary, everyday, experience. What
weight, then, should be given to traditional halakhic texts in
evaluating the contents of newly discovered written remains? And
what light can be shed by these new finds, especially those
inscriptions and documents that record small moments of ancient
Jewish life, upon the long-familiar normative texts? The conference
on Halakhah in Light of Epigraphy was intended to generate
discussion on these broad issues, as well as to provide a forum for
exploration of specific matters of Halakhah reflected in the
epigraphic sources. The papers in this volume tend to emphasize the
centrality of Halakhah in ancient Judaism. The first section of the
volume is devoted to Halakhah in the Dead Sea Scrolls, with
contributions by Moshe Benovitz, Vered Noam, Eyal Regev, Lawrence
Schiffman, and Aharon Shemesh. These papers examine diversity in
halakhic positions, in terms of both exegesis and practice (e.g.,
festival rituals, dietary laws, and sexual relationships),
exploring evidence of halakhic development over the course of the
Second Temple period, and halakhic variety among different groups.
The second section relates to quotidian documents, and contains
Hanan Eshel's survey of the legal documents found in the refuge
caves; Steven Fraade's examination of the parnas; Shamma Friedman's
analysis of the Jewish bill of divorce; and David Goodblatt's
discussion of dating formulae. The final section of the volume
examines a variety of epigraphic sources, and includes the
following articles: Yonatan Adler on tefillin; Chaim Ben David on
synagogue inscriptions; Tal Ilan on burial practices; Ze'ev Safrai
and Hannah Safrai on an early Christian text; and Guy Stiebel on
food at Masada.
Until recently, most non-biblical manuscripts attested in the
Qumran library were regarded as copies of texts that were composed
after the books of the Hebrew Bible were written. Students of the
Hebrew Bible found the Dead Sea Scrolls therefore mostly of
interest for the textual and interpretative histories of these
books. The present collection confirms the importance of the Dead
Sea Scrolls for both areas, by showing that they have
revolutionized our understanding of how the text of the biblical
books developed and how they were interpreted. Beyond the textual
and interpretative histories, though, many texts attested in the
Qumran library illuminate the time in which the later books of the
Hebrew Bible were composed and reworked as well as Jewish life and
law in the time when the canon of the Hebrew Bible developed. This
volume gives important examples as to how the early texts attested
in the Dead Sea Scrolls help to better understand individual
biblical books and as to how the later texts among them illustrate
Jewish life and law when the canon of the Hebrew Bible evolved. In
order to find an adequate expertise for the seminar The Dead Sea
Scrolls and the Hebrew Bible, the editors invited both junior and
senior specialists in the fields of Hebrew Bible, Second Temple
Judaism, Dead Sea Scrolls and Rabbinics to Rome.
Among the most prominent hallmarks of the late Prof. Hanan Eshel
(19582010) were his generosity, passion, and integrative approach.
The eighteen essays in this volume were selected by Prof. Eshel
shortly before his untimely death, to be printed as a collection
aimed at contextualizing the textual finds of the Dead Sea Scrolls
within their archaeological settings and within the contours of
contemporary scholarship.The Qumran texts that stand at the center
of these articles are correlated with archaeological and geographic
information and with a variety of textual sources including
epigraphic evidence and, especially, the Hebrew Bible, Josephus,
and rabbinic texts. The essays are organized according to the
provenance of the discovered material, with sections devoted to the
Damascus Documentand the scrolls from Caves 1, 3, 4, and 11, as
well as a final more general chapter.Half of the essays have been
previously published in English, while the other half have been
translated from Hebrew here for the first time. The book includes
essays that have been co-authored with Esther Eshel, Shlomit
Kendi-Harel, Zeev Safrai, and John Strugnell.
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