Close Menu
    Facebook Instagram LinkedIn
    • العربية (Arabic)
    • English
    • Français (French)
    Facebook Instagram LinkedIn
    Middle East Transparent
    • Home
    • Categories
      1. Headlines
      2. Features
      3. Commentary
      4. Magazine
      Featured
      Headlines Jerusalem Post

      Argentina knew Josef Mengele was living in Buenos Aires in 1950s, declassified docs reveal

      Recent
      1 December 2025

      Argentina knew Josef Mengele was living in Buenos Aires in 1950s, declassified docs reveal

      28 November 2025

      A Year Later, Lebanon Still Won’t Stand Up to Hezbollah

      26 November 2025

      BDL Opened the Door to Digitization — The State Must Walk Through It

    • Contact us
    • Archives
    • Subscribe
    • العربية (Arabic)
    • English
    • Français (French)
    Middle East Transparent
    You are at:Home»Categories»Features»Skeletons could provide clues to who wrote or protected the Dead Sea Scrolls

    Skeletons could provide clues to who wrote or protected the Dead Sea Scrolls

    0
    By Science News on 27 November 2017 Features

    SCROLL CALL  Newly excavated skeletons at a roughly 2,000-year-old West Bank site support a theory that a community of celibate men lived there at the time the Dead Sea Scrolls were placed in nearby caves. These men may have written or protected the scrolls.

     

    Few women or children have been found at Qumran burial site, suggesting similarities to Byzantine monastery cemeteries

     

    BY BRUCE BOWER

    BOSTON — A decades-long debate over who once occupied a settlement located near the caves where the Dead Sea Scrolls were found has taken a chaste turn.

    Analyses of 33 newly excavated skeletons of people buried at the West Bank site, Qumran, supports a view that the community consisted of a religious sect of celibate men. Anthropologist Yossi Nagar of the Israel Antiquities Authority in Jerusalem presented the findings November 16 at the annual meeting of the American Schools of Oriental Research. Preliminary radiocarbon dating of one of the Qumran bones indicates that the interred bodies are around 2,200 years old — close to the same age as the ancient texts, which are estimated to have been written between around 150 B.C. and A.D. 70.

    Plus, reexamination of 53 previously unearthed human skeletons from Qumran’s cemetery, now housed in France, found that six of seven individuals formerly tagged as women were actually men, Nagar said. A small number of children have also been excavated at Qumran.

    Israel Antiquities Authority anthropologists Hanania Hizmi and Yevgeny Aharonovich directed the latest excavations at Qumran in 2016. The researchers called in Nagar to study the skeletons. He identified 30 of the newly excavated individuals as definitely or probably males, based on factors that include pelvic shape and body sizes. (There was not enough evidence to assign a sex to the remaining three.) At the time of their deaths, the men ranged in age from around 20 to 50 or more, Nagar estimated.

    HIDING PLACE Caves near the community of Qumran, such as this one, held the Dead Sea Scrolls. Qumran housed a community largely composed of celibate males, says a researcher who has studied newly excavated graves at the ancient site.

     

    “I don’t know if these were the people who produced the Qumran region’s Dead Sea Scrolls,” Nagar said. “But the high concentration of adult males of various ages buried at Qumran is similar to what has been found at cemeteries connected to Byzantine monasteries.” The Byzantine Empire, founded in A.D. 330, was an extension of the Roman Empire in the eastern Mediterranean.Earlier investigations of Qumran suggested it was founded more than 2,700 years ago. Warfare led to its abandonment before it was settled again for about 200 years, up to around the year A.D. 68.

    Discovery of the Dead Sea Scrolls, which include parts of the Hebrew Bible, in 11 nearby caves between 1947 and 1956 stimulated intense interest in who had occupied Qumran. In February of 2017, researchers revealed they had found another cave in the same area that possibly held scrolls or pieces of papyrus and leather intended to be written on.

    An influential early theory held that members of an ancient, celibate Jewish sect, the Essenes, lived at Qumran and either wrote the Dead Sea Scrolls or were caretakers of these religious, legal and philosophical documents. But over the past 30 years, other possible inhabitants of Qumran have been proposed, including Bedouin herders, craftsmen and Roman soldiers.

    Qumran individuals show no signs of war-related injuries and are not predominantly young adult men, as would be expected of a cemetery for soldiers, Nagar said. The Qumran skeletons can’t be confirmed as Essenes, but their identity as part of a community of celibate men appears probable, he added.

    Extraction and analysis of DNA from the Qumran skeletons would help confirm that they are all, or almost all, men, said Jonathan Rosenbaum, a professor of Jewish Studies at Gratz College in Melrose Park, Penn.

    Researchers removed small samples of bone from some of the newly excavated Qumran skeletons before reburying the finds in their original resting places. Nagar wasn’t sure if any attempts to retrieve DNA from bone samples would be launched.

    Citations

    Y. Nagar et al. The people of Qumran — new discoveries and paleodemographic interpretations. American Schools of Oriental Research annual meeting, Boston, November 16, 2017.

    Further Reading

    B. Bower. Digital rehab exposes Biblical roots of ancient Israeli scroll. Science News Online, September 21, 2016.

    B. Bower. Return of the kings. Science News. Vol. 174, November 22, 2008, p. 10.

    Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email WhatsApp Copy Link
    Previous ArticleSaudi Arabia’s Arab Spring, at Last
    Next Article Pew: Europe’s Growing Muslim Population
    Subscribe
    Notify of
    guest
    guest
    0 Comments
    Newest
    Oldest Most Voted
    Inline Feedbacks
    View all comments
    RSS Recent post in french
    • En Turquie et au Liban, le pape Léon XIV inaugure son pontificat géopolitique 27 November 2025 Jean-Marie Guénois
    • «En Syrie, il y a des meurtres et des kidnappings d’Alaouites tous les jours», alerte Fabrice Balanche 6 November 2025 Celia Gruyere
    • Beyrouth, Bekaa, Sud-Liban : décapité par Israël il y a un an, le Hezbollah tente de se reconstituer dans une semi-clandestinité 20 October 2025 Georges Malbrunot
    • L’écrasante responsabilité du Hamas dans la catastrophe palestinienne 18 October 2025 Jean-Pierre Filiu
    • Le Vrai Historique du 13 octobre 1990 17 October 2025 Nabil El-Khazen
    RSS Recent post in arabic
    • بلدية صيدا لا تلتزم القوانين 4 December 2025 وفيق هواري
    • دراسة لمصرف لبنان: وزارة الطاقة اشترت “فيول” لنظام الأسد بأموال المودعين! 4 December 2025 الشفّاف
    • حبيب صادق وسيمون كرم والممانعة 4 December 2025 محمد علي مقلد
    • السفير سيمون كرم رئيساً لوفد لبنان الى “الميكانيزم” 3 December 2025 الشفّاف
    • ملاحظات أولية على هامش زيارة البابا للبنان 2 December 2025 جريس أبو سمرا البتدّيني
    26 February 2011

    Metransparent Preliminary Black List of Qaddafi’s Financial Aides Outside Libya

    6 December 2008

    Interview with Prof Hafiz Mohammad Saeed

    7 July 2009

    The messy state of the Hindu temples in Pakistan

    27 July 2009

    Sayed Mahmoud El Qemany Apeal to the World Conscience

    8 March 2022

    Russian Orthodox priests call for immediate end to war in Ukraine

    Recent Comments
    • Will Saudi Arabia fund Israel’s grip over Lebanon? – Truth Uncensored Afrika on Lebanon’s Sunnis 2.0
    • farouk itani on A Year Later, Lebanon Still Won’t Stand Up to Hezbollah
    • فاروق عيتاني on BDL Opened the Door to Digitization — The State Must Walk Through It
    • انطوانحرب on Contributing to Restoring Confidence
    • jam on Lives in freefall: The triumph of decline
    Donate
    Donate
    © 2025 Middle East Transparent

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

    loader

    Inscrivez-vous à la newsletter

    En vous inscrivant, vous acceptez nos conditions et notre politique de confidentialité.

    loader

    Subscribe to updates

    By signing up, you agree to our terms privacy policy agreement.

    loader

    اشترك في التحديثات

    بالتسجيل، فإنك توافق على شروطنا واتفاقية سياسة الخصوصية الخاصة بنا.

    wpDiscuz