In 1947, a shepherd in the hills north of the Dead Sea visited a contact in Bethlehem, a dealer of antiquities to foreign visitors, offering fragments of written material. The dealer, from the Syriac community, was unsure of the items’ value and began enquiries which followed Syriac Orthodox religious and intellectual networks. Despite initial scepticism, the fragments were the first of the now globally famous Dead Sea Scrolls, and ever since have been surrounded by rumours and controversy. Inextricably entwined in these has been the Palestinian Syriac Orthodox church, in a pattern of involvements which link this small Christian community with the creation of knowledge in and about Mandate Palestine, the fate of its members during the Nakba...
This paper probes the history of the Temple Mount complex during the British Mandate for Palestine. ...
The issue no. 2 of 2019, entitled “Perspectives on the Treaty Framework of Deuteronomy”, hosts this ...
This paper examines Palestinian Orthodox Christian identity as shaped by recent historic and contemp...
Nearly fifty years ago, some Bedouin shepherds stumbled upon a cache of ancient texts in caves near ...
When the shepherd boy Muhammad ed-Deeb ( The Wolf”) of the half-nomadic tribe Ta\u27amire threw a st...
The last sixty years afford us a remarkable, though largely unexplored, opportunity to examine the D...
The Dead Sea Scrolls—in the popular imagination, the very name conjures up scandal, intrigue and mys...
Quite apart from the contents of the Dead Sea Scrolls, the history of their discovery and the accoun...
In 1930, the British Colonial Office signed a formal agreement with Moshe Novomeysky, a Jewish Russi...
When Bedouin shepherds discovered the first of the Dead Sea Scrolls in 1947, one of the most fascina...
The archive of the Judean woman Babatha, with its 35 legal papyri in Aramaic and Greek (P. Yadin 1-3...
About the author Brandon Moist is a senior at Shippesnburg University majoring in History and Intern...
This thesis explores the politics of representing the assemblage of ancient manuscripts known as the...
This paper probes the history of the Temple Mount complex during the British Mandate for Palestine. ...
The issue no. 2 of 2019, entitled “Perspectives on the Treaty Framework of Deuteronomy”, hosts this ...
This paper examines Palestinian Orthodox Christian identity as shaped by recent historic and contemp...
Nearly fifty years ago, some Bedouin shepherds stumbled upon a cache of ancient texts in caves near ...
When the shepherd boy Muhammad ed-Deeb ( The Wolf”) of the half-nomadic tribe Ta\u27amire threw a st...
The last sixty years afford us a remarkable, though largely unexplored, opportunity to examine the D...
The Dead Sea Scrolls—in the popular imagination, the very name conjures up scandal, intrigue and mys...
Quite apart from the contents of the Dead Sea Scrolls, the history of their discovery and the accoun...
In 1930, the British Colonial Office signed a formal agreement with Moshe Novomeysky, a Jewish Russi...
When Bedouin shepherds discovered the first of the Dead Sea Scrolls in 1947, one of the most fascina...
The archive of the Judean woman Babatha, with its 35 legal papyri in Aramaic and Greek (P. Yadin 1-3...
About the author Brandon Moist is a senior at Shippesnburg University majoring in History and Intern...
This thesis explores the politics of representing the assemblage of ancient manuscripts known as the...
This paper probes the history of the Temple Mount complex during the British Mandate for Palestine. ...
The issue no. 2 of 2019, entitled “Perspectives on the Treaty Framework of Deuteronomy”, hosts this ...
This paper examines Palestinian Orthodox Christian identity as shaped by recent historic and contemp...