Could this be the biggest find since the Dead Sea Scrolls? 70 metal books found in cave in Jordan could change our view of Biblical history
Lines of inquiry: The metal tablets could change our understanding of the Bible
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Revelation: Experts speculate that the tablets could be the lost collection of codices referred to in the Bible's Book Of Revelation
Hidden meaning: Scrolls, tablets and other artifacts, including an incense bowl, were also found at the same site as the tablets
SHEPHERD'S DISCOVERY WHICH UNEARTHED A TREASURE TROVE
The Dead Sea Scrolls, counted among the most important archaeological finds of the modern era, were discovered in a cave (pictured) by a Bedouin shepherd in the West Bank.
The scrolls consist of 30,000 separate fragments making up 900 manuscripts of biblical texts and religious writings from the time of Jesus.
The fragile parchment and papyrus fragments have been the subject of intense study for more than half a century by an international team of scholars who are still trying to understand the significance of some 30 per cent of the texts which are not included in the Bible or any other previously known religious writings.
The scrolls include the earliest known copy of the Ten Commandments, an almost complete Book of Isaiah and many of the Psalms.
Some of the texts were damaged by well-intentioned restoration attempts since the 1950s that included the use of Sellotape, rice paper and perspex glue.
This estimate is based on the form ofcorrosion which has taken place, which experts believe would be impossible to achieve artificially.If the dating is verified, the books would be among the earliest Christian documents, predating the writings of St Paul.The prospect that they could contain contemporary accounts of the final years of Jesuss life has excited scholars although their enthusiasm is tempered by the fact that experts have previously been fooled by sophisticated fakes.David Elkington, a British scholar of ancient religious history and archeology, and one of the few to have examined the books, says they could be the major discovery of Christian history.It is a breathtaking thou! ght that we have held these objects that might have been held by the early saints of the Church, he said.But the mysteries between their ancient pages are not the books only riddle. Today, their whereabouts are also something of a mystery. After their discovery by a Jordanian Bedouin, the hoard was subsequently acquired by an Israeli Bedouin, who is said to have illegally smuggled them across the border into Israel, where they remain.However, the Jordanian Government isnow working at the highest levels to repatriate and safeguard thecollection. Philip Davies, emeritus professor of biblical studies atSheffield University, said there was powerful evidence that the bookshave a Christian origin in plates cast into a picture map of the holycity of Jerusalem.
X marks the spot: The cave in Jordan where the artifacts were discovered
Dr Margaret Barker, a former president of the Society for Old Testament Study, confirmed that a sealed book is mentioned in the BibleAs soon as I saw that, I wasdumbstruck, he said. That struck me as so obviously a Christianimage. There is a cross in the foreground, and behind it is what has tobe the tomb [of Jesus], a small building with an opening, and behindthat the walls of the city.
There are walls depicted on otherpages of these books too and they almost certainly refer to Jerusalem.It is a Christian crucifixion taking place outside the city walls.The British team leading the work on the discovery fears that the present Israeli keeper may be looking to sell some of the books on to the black market, or worse destroy them.But the man who holds the books denies the charge and claims they have been in his family for 100 years.Dr Margaret Barker, a former president of the Society for Old Testament Study, said: The Book of Revelation tells of a sealed book ! that was opened only by the Messiah. Other texts from the period tell of sealed books of wisdom and of a secret tradition passed on by Jesus to his closest disciples. That is the context for this discovery.
Groundbreaking find: A section of the Dead Sea Scrolls, which were unearthed in 1947
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