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Dead Sea scrolls (Uniform Title)

Preferred form: Dead Sea scrolls
Used for/see from:
  • Jerusalem scrolls
  • ʻAin Fashka scrolls
  • Jericho scrolls
  • Scrolls, Dead Sea
  • Qumrân scrolls
  • Rękopisy z Qumran
  • Shikai bunsho
  • Megilot Midbar Yehudah
  • Dodezee-rollen
  • Kumránské rukopisy
  • Documentos de Qumrán
  • Textos de Qumrán
  • Rollos del Mar Muerto
  • Manuscritos del Mar Muerto
  • Manuscrits de la mer Morte
  • Dödahavsrullarna
  • Kumranin kirjoitukset
  • Kuolleenmeren kirjoitukset
  • Qumranhandskrifterna
  • Qumranin kirjoitukset
  • Qumran Caves scrolls

Access point is for the collection of manuscripts in Hebrew, Aramaic, and Greek.

Wallenstein, M. Hymns from the Judean scrolls ... 1950.

Sobre los Documentos de Qumrán, 1975: cover (Documentos de Qumram) p. 121 (Textos de Qumrán) p. 158 (Rollos del Mar Muerto, Manuscritos del Mar Muerto, Manuscrits de la mer Morte)

Email from FI-HUHM, Oct. 9, 2006 (additional forms in Finnish and Swedish: Dödahavsrullarna, Kumranin kirjoitukset, Kuolleenmeren kirjoitukset, Qumranhandskrifterna, Qumranin kirjoitukset; taken from VESA and correspond to the ones used by the National Library of Finland and other Finnish libraries)

www.deadseascrollsfoundation.com viewed August 24, 2012 (... Hebrew, Aramaic, and Greek texts)

Wikipedia, September 22, 2016 (The Dead Sea Scrolls, in the narrow sense of Qumran Caves Scrolls, are a collection of some 981 different texts discovered between 1946 and 1956 in eleven caves (Qumran caves) in the immediate vicinity of the Hellenistic-period Jewish settlement at Khirbet Qumran in the eastern Judaean Desert, the modern West Bank; consensus is that the Qumran Caves Scrolls date from the last three centuries BCE and the first century CE; include the third oldest known surviving manuscripts of works later included in the Hebrew Bible canon, along with deuterocanonical and extra-biblical manuscripts which preserve evidence of the diversity of religious thought in late Second Temple Judaism; most of the texts are written in Hebrew, with some in Aramaic (in different regional dialects, including Nabataean), and a few in Greek. If discoveries from the Judean desert are included, Latin (from Masada) and Arabic (from Khirbet al-Mird) can be added)

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