Qumran: miasto esseńczyków
Ładowanie...
Data
2011
Autorzy
Tytuł czasopisma
ISSN czasopisma
Tytuł tomu
Wydawca
Wydawnictwo KUL
Abstrakt
The article is devoted to the issue of a function of the Qumran settlement and its connection with the scrolls that were discovered in the caves. It attempts to answer the question whether, in the light of current archeological and literary knowledge, the hypothesis that Qumran was the settlement of the Essenes where the scrolls were written and copied, can be sustained. It re-examines the most relevant data. Apart from other things, it relates to theses on the stratification of the settlement put forward by J.-B. Humbert and J. Magness. Consequently, it confirms that the Qumran-hypothesis of R. de Vaux is still valid, however, in some aspects it should be corrected. In the conclusion, the author emphasizes the importance of some theses proposed by Humbert. He underlines that although the scrolls undoubtedly belonged to the Essenes their Jerusalem origin seems more probable than Qumran.
Opis
Słowa kluczowe
Qumran, zwoje znad Morza Martwego, rękopisy z Qumran, Morze Martwe, esseńczycy, rękopisy, manuskrypty, miasto, starożytność, historia, Historia Naturalis, Pliniusz Starszy, archeologia, odkrycia archeologiczne, badania archeologiczne, Dead Sea Scrolls, Dead Sea, Essenes, manuscripts, city, antiquity, history, Gaius Plinius Secundus, Pliny the Elder, archaeology, archeology, archaeological discoveries, archaeological research
Cytowanie
Scripta Biblica et Orientalia, 2011, T. 3, s. 199-207.
Licencja
Attribution 3.0 Poland