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Biblical Archaeology Review, July/August 1990

Volume16Number4

Special Section

Dead Sea Scrolls Update

The Dead Sea Scroll Monopoly Must Be Broken

“Why won’t the scholars assigned to edit the Dead Sea Scrolls allow anyone to see photographs of the unpublished manuscripts?” That is the question that almost immediately arises in any discussion of the Dead Sea Scroll scandal. We have no good answer. Indeed, we don’t think there...Read more ›

Dead Sea Scrolls Update

Israeli Oversight Committee Takes Charge

A new actor has suddenly appeared on the stage of the drama known as the Dead Sea Scroll Publication Scandal—an Israeli oversight committee. Although the committee has been in existence for some time, it was largely inactive. Indeed, it never even met until last fall.a Now, however,...Read more ›

Dead Sea Scrolls Update

A Visit with M. Jozef T. Milik, Dead Sea Scroll Editor

By Joseph A. Fitzmyer

It had been almost 32 years since I last saw Jozef T. Milik. We were in Jerusalem, and we had both been working on the Dead Sea Scrolls. My work consisted of helping to prepare a concordance of the non-Biblical texts from Cave 4 by placing each...Read more ›

Features

Glorious Beth-Shean

Huge new excavation uncovers the largest and best-preserved Roman/Byzantine city in Israel

Archaeologically speaking, Beth-Shean refers to two major sites. The first is a tell, a magnificent mound rising from the plain: Biblical Beth-Shean on whose walls the Philistines displayed the mutilated bodies of King Saul and his sons, whom they had killed in battle at...Read more ›

Epigraphy in Crisis—Dating Ancient Semitic Inscriptions

By Edward Lipinski

Joan Scheuer’s fascinating volunteer report in the January/February issue (“Searching for the Phoenicians in Sardinia,” BAR 16:01) was especially interesting to me as a student of paleography. She describes a very important Phoenician inscription, known as the Nora Fragment, and explains how Professor Frank Cross of Harvard...Read more ›

“Love Your Neighbor as Yourself”—What It Really Means

By Abraham Malamat

It is one of the fundamental commandments of the Torah (the Pentateuch or Five Books of Moses). It is exemplary of Jewish morality, and it very early characterized the Christian faith as well. For 2,000 years, however, it has been misinterpreted. The commandment appears in Leviticus. Moses...Read more ›

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