Dead Sea Scrolls come to Philadelphia's Franklin Institute [LINK]
"...the heart of the exhibit is the large, round display table of 10 Dead Sea scroll fragments, the jewel of which is a small parchment containing the oldest surviving biblical account of creation: “In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth. ...” Besides the five-month run at the Discovery Museum in Manhattan, this is the first time the Genesis scroll fragment will be on display in North America.
"Like most of the other scroll pieces — including one describing Noah’s death and another containing the famous lines from Isaiah that foresee a day when “the wolf shall live with the lamb” — the Genesis fragment is of dark amber hue and difficult to read in the dim light necessary to keep it from fading.
"And should visitors gazing on that small, Hebrew script find themselves trying to imagine the culture that created these texts, they need only glance at the walls around them for a sense of how the people of the Middle East lived and worshipped two and three millennia ago.
"The collection consists of more than 600 figurines, altars, coins, pottery, menorahs, bone boxes, and incense burners, and a giant stone from the Western Wall of the great temple of Jerusalem. The exhibition was created in cooperation with the Israeli Antiquities Authority, the Discovery Museum, and the Franklin Institute. It will be open seven days a week through mid-October.
Rob
"...the heart of the exhibit is the large, round display table of 10 Dead Sea scroll fragments, the jewel of which is a small parchment containing the oldest surviving biblical account of creation: “In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth. ...” Besides the five-month run at the Discovery Museum in Manhattan, this is the first time the Genesis scroll fragment will be on display in North America.
"Like most of the other scroll pieces — including one describing Noah’s death and another containing the famous lines from Isaiah that foresee a day when “the wolf shall live with the lamb” — the Genesis fragment is of dark amber hue and difficult to read in the dim light necessary to keep it from fading.
"And should visitors gazing on that small, Hebrew script find themselves trying to imagine the culture that created these texts, they need only glance at the walls around them for a sense of how the people of the Middle East lived and worshipped two and three millennia ago.
"The collection consists of more than 600 figurines, altars, coins, pottery, menorahs, bone boxes, and incense burners, and a giant stone from the Western Wall of the great temple of Jerusalem. The exhibition was created in cooperation with the Israeli Antiquities Authority, the Discovery Museum, and the Franklin Institute. It will be open seven days a week through mid-October.
Rob