For decades after they were discovered in a cave, the Dead Sea Scrolls were allowed to be examined closely only by fewer than a couple dozen scholars and archaeologists.
Now, with infrared- and computer-enhanced
photography, anyone with a computer can view these 2,000-year-old
relics, which include the oldest known copies of biblical text and a
window on the world and times of Jesus.
High-quality
digitized images of five of the 950 manuscripts were posted for free
online for the first time this week by Google and the Israel Museum
in Jerusalem, where the scrolls are housed. The post includes an
English translation and a search feature to one of the texts, the Great
Isaiah Scroll.
The scroll, one of seven animal
skin parchments discovered in 1947 in a cave in Wadi Qumran in the West
Bank, is the largest and best preserved. Read More
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