Where Were the Dead Sea Scrolls Found?
See maps of Qumran area
The Dead Sea Scrolls were found in caves that run along the shores of the Dead Sea. It
is a barren wilderness where life has always had a tenuous foothold. The lowest place on
Earth, at 1,300 feet (400 meters) below Sea Level, the Dead Sea has a salt content 7 to 8
times that of the world's oceans and it evaporates at a rate of 55 inches a year, often
creating a thick, heavy stench in the air.
Less than 2 inches of rain falls on this desolate land in any given year. Temperatures
hover above 100 degrees Fahrenheit for days on end during the long summer.
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The
ruins at Khirbet Qumran |
The Dead Sea Scrolls were discovered in 11 caves. Those caves are
geologically of two kinds; five of the caves are natural cavities in the hard limestone cliffs, in
the dolomite. They, of course, are natural caves. The other six caves are artificial
caves which were dug in soft marl.
Close to the caves in which the scrolls were found are ruins that
are known as Khirbet Qumran. The site had been surveyed briefly between 1941 and 1946, but
the discovery of the scrolls called for a more thorough examination of the site.
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| Part of
the elaborate water system at Qumran. |
Between 1951 and 1956, Roland de Vaux excavated the site and created a survey report that still stands
as the major work done on the site to this date. The most active period of occupation at
Khirbet Qumran was during the years 134 BC to 31 AD. This is the period when the
inhabitants built the structure that we see remaining today.
The site was a complex that included a tower, a scriptorium, kitchen, laundry, potters
kilns, meeting hall, pantry, large cisterns, and an elaborate water system that that was
fed by an aqueduct that captured water from the surrounding hills. Coins, linen, and
pottery artifacts found at the site were used in assessing the date of the site.
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A
cistern used for ritual bathing. |
The elaborate water system was used to fill a number of cisterns at Qumran. The
members of the community would come in from the fields at the fifth hour of every day and
ritually cleanse themselves before taking part in a communal meal. Ritual bathing at
Qumran was an important part of their day and has been construed by some to foreshadow the
later Christian ritual of baptism. It is important to understand, however, that the
members of the community were Jews, adhering to a strict observance of the Mosaic
tradition. They did not recognize Christ as a Messiah, although they lived in a world that
knew of him and his teachings.
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