Shapira Scroll

Last updated

Photograph of one of the Shapira Scroll fragments, prepared by Frederick Dangerfield for Christian David Ginsburg Shapira Scroll Lithograph (partial).jpg
Photograph of one of the Shapira Scroll fragments, prepared by Frederick Dangerfield for Christian David Ginsburg

The Shapira Scroll, also known as the Shapira Strips or Shapira Manuscript, was a set of leather strips inscribed in Paleo-Hebrew script. It was presented by Moses Wilhelm Shapira in 1883 as an ancient Bible-related artifact and almost immediately denounced by scholars as a forgery.

Contents

The scroll consisted of fifteen leather strips, which Shapira claimed had been found in Wadi Mujib (biblical Arnon) near the Dead Sea. The Hebrew text hinted at a different version of Deuteronomy, including the addition of a new line to the Ten Commandments: "You shall not hate your brother in your heart: I am God, your god." [lower-alpha 1] The text also lacks all laws except for the ten commandments, which it renders consistently [lower-alpha 2] in the first-person, from the standpoint of the deity. Scholars took little time to reject it as a fake, and the shame brought about by the accusation of forgery drove Shapira to suicide in 1884.

Shapira's widow had at least part of the scroll in 1884, which she sent to Konstantin Schlottmann  [ de ]. The scroll reappeared a couple of years later in a Sotheby's auction, where it was sold for £10 5s to Bernard Quaritch, who later listed it for £25. Contemporary reports show Dr. Philip Brookes Mason displayed the "whole of" the scroll at a public lecture in Burton-on-Trent on March 8, 1889. The current whereabouts of the scroll, if it survives, are unknown.

Discovery of the scroll

Shapira gave several different accounts of the scroll's provenance, and the inconsistencies between them have been used as evidence of forgery. [1] [2] Paul Schröder, the first person Shapira showed the scroll to in person, recalled:

Mr. Shapira did not wish to tell me the provenance of the manuscript. He only told me that it came from a tomb beyond the Jordan. [3]

While in Germany, Shapira told Hermann Guthe that: [1]

At the end of July or the beginning of August a certain Selim of the tribe of Adachaje ... offered in the Shapira shop a blackish stripe of leather for sale. Shapira himself was not present and found the cheaply acquired leather in the store on his return. As Salim was unable to visit Jerusalem, he had asked his friend, the Sheik, Mahmud of Abu Dis near Jerusalem, to arrange a meeting with Salem which, finally, brought all the strips into Shapira's possession.

Another is contained within a handwritten letter from Shapira to Professor Hermann Strack of Berlin on 9 May 1883: [4]

In July 1878 I met several Bedouins in the house of the well-known Sheque Mahmud el Arakat, we came of course to speak of old inscriptions. One Bedouin . . . begins to tell a history to about [sic] the following effect. Several years ago some Arabs had occasion to flee from their enemies & hid themselves in caves high up in a rock facing the Moujib (the neues Arnon [sic]) they discovered there several bundles of very old rugs. Thinking they may [sic] contain gold they peeled away a good deal of Cotton or Linen & found only some black charms & threw them away; but one of them took them up & and [sic] since having the charms in his tent, he became a wealthy man having sheeps [sic] etc.

Shapira wrote a letter to Ginsburg in early August, informing him that: [5]

In July 1878, the Sheik Machmud Arakat, the well-known chief of the guides from Jerusalem to the Jordan, paid me the customary visit ... [as] the Sheik hat Bedouins of the East in his house, he brought them all with him. ... I heard the next day ... some men of his acquaintance had hidden themselves, in the time when Wali of Damascus was fighting the Arabs, in caves hewn high up in a rock ... near the Modjib. They found there several bundles of old black linen. They peeled away the linen and ... there were only some black inscribed strips of leather, which they threw away (or I believe he said threw into the fire, but I am not certain); but one of them picked them up. ... I asked the Sheik to employ him as a messenger to bring me some of the pieces that I might examine them, but the Sheik thought that that man would not do it, but he knew a man who was not superstitious at all. ... In about twelve days I got four or five columns ... in eight days more he brought me about sixteen; in eleven or twelve days more four or five ... I have not seen the man again. The Sheik died soon, and I lost every trace that would enable me to follow the object further.

In an account to the Palestine Exploration Fund on July 20, 1883, Shapira said that: [6]

[H]e first heard of the fragments in the middle of July 1878. A Sheikh, with several Arabs of different tribes came to him at his place of business in Jerusalem on other matters. The Sheikh had nothing to do with antiquities. They spoke of some little black fragments of writing in the possession of an Arab. They had been found in the neighborhood of Arnon. One of the Arabs spoke of them as talismans, smelling of asphalte. The day following Shapira was invited to dinner by the Sheikh, and heard more about the fragments. About the year 1865, at a time of persecution, certain Arabs had hid themselves among the rocks. There, on the side of a rocky cavern, they found several bundles wrapped in linen. Peeling off the covering they found only black fragments, which they threw away. They were picked up by one of the Arabs, believing them to be talismans ... Shapira promised the Sheikh a reward if he would bring to him an Arab he spoke of who would be able to get hold of the fragments. This happened on the day of the dinner. The Sheikh fell ill, and afterwards died. About ten or twelve days after the dinner, a man of the Ajayah tribe brought to him a small piece ... a week later, he brought fourteen or fifteen columns ... the next Sunday, fourteen or fifteen more ... ten days after, on Wednesday, he brought three or four columns, very black. Shapira saw nothing more of him.

Claude Reigner Conder received yet another version from Shapira, which attributed the scroll and the Moabite forgeries to the same location and claimed a mummy had been found with the scroll. [6]

Presentation of the scroll

In Germany

On 24 September 1878, Shapira sent copies to Konstantin Schlottmann, who had wrongly authenticated Shapira's Moabite forgeries in 1870. Schlottmann consulted with Franz Delitzsch and then denounced the scroll as a fabrication. [7] Delitzsch published separately in his journal Saat auf Hoffnung in 1880, calling it a fake. [8] [9]

On 9 May 1883, Shapira wrote a ten-page letter to Hermann Strack, saying he'd trust Strack's judgement over his own with regard to the scroll's authenticity. Strack replied on 27 May, declaring "that it was not worth [Shapira]'s while to bring such an evident forgery to Europe." [10] Also in May 1883, Shapira showed one piece of the manuscript to Paul Schröder, then the German consul in Beirut, for a short time in poor light; he refused to authenticate it without longer study of all the fragments. [lower-alpha 3] [3]

Tracing of four columns including the Decalogue by William St. Chad Boscawen and Miss Tennant, under the strict superintendence of Christian David Ginsburg. Published in The Athenaeum, 8 September 1883 Ginsburg's facsimile of the Shapira Strips, 1883.jpg
Tracing of four columns including the Decalogue by William St. Chad Boscawen and Miss Tennant, under the strict superintendence of Christian David Ginsburg. Published in The Athenaeum, 8 September 1883
Clermont-Ganneau, Shapira Strips, 1883.jpg
The form of Shapira's strips compared to a synagogue scroll margin. [11]
Shapira Strips, 1883, Scientific American. 01.jpg
One fold of the manuscript/One of the leather strips/Wadi Mujib/Specimens of ancient writing/Dolmen near Jabbok. [12]

In June 1883, perhaps having revised the text, [1] Shapira brought the scroll to Germany in an attempt to sell it to the Royal Library of Berlin. Karl Richard Lepsius, then the Library's keeper, convened a symposium of leading Bible scholars in Berlin (Lepsius himself, Eduard Sachau, Eberhard Schrader, August Dillmann, Adolf Erman, and Moritz Steinschneider) to evaluate the scroll on July 10; these unanimously declared it a fake after a 90-minute inspection. [lower-alpha 4] In a separate German analysis in the first week of July, published August 14, Hermann Guthe and Eduard Meyer concluded the scroll was a forgery; [lower-alpha 5] Theodor Nöldeke and Emil Friedrich Kautzsch were said to agree. [13] [14] Shapira also showed the scroll to Strack in person, whose view did not change. [10] The Royal Library offered to buy it at a lower price, to enable German students to study the forger's technique; [lower-alpha 6] [7] Shapira took it to London instead. The German scholars did not publicize their findings, and other experts' conclusions were reached independently. [7]

In London

On July 20, Shapira informed the secretary of the Palestine Exploration Fund that he had brought the manuscript to London, and on July 24 he showed the manuscript to the Fund's Walter Besant and Claude Reignier Conder. On July 26, he displayed the manuscript to a large number of British scholars at the Fund's offices, even tearing off a portion to demonstrate the parchment's interior; the manuscript was then taken to the British Museum for further inspection. [2] [15]

Shapira sought to sell the scroll to the British Museum for a million pounds, [lower-alpha 7] and allowed the Museum to exhibit two of the 15 strips. [16] The Museum designated Christian David Ginsburg to evaluate the strips, and he published transcriptions, translations, and facsimiles over the following weeks. On August 4, 1883, Walter Flight of the British Museum reported that much of the leather looked ancient but the margin of one piece looked brand new; [1] on August 17, Edward Augustus Bond, principal librarian of the British Museum, indicated that he too thought they were fake. [17]

On August 13, Adolf Neubauer, who had earlier exposed Shapira's fake "coffin of Samson", identified the scroll as a forgery; [18] [19] on August 19, he published further arguments against its authenticity, as did Archibald Sayce on the same day. Neubauer's identification was later called the scroll's death knell. [1]

The French Ministry of Public Instruction's Charles Simon Clermont-Ganneau, who had earlier revealed Shapira's Moabite forgeries, arrived in England on the 15th, already harboring "most serious doubts." He obtained a quick look at some fragments from Ginsburg, but was quickly banned by Shapira from further studying the scroll. [20] However, Clermont-Ganneau closely examined the two strips on display at the public exhibition on August 18 and, on August 21, he declared them to be forgeries. [21] Claude Reignier Conder also declared them fake on the 18th, [lower-alpha 8] [22] and Ernest Renan, [23] Albert Löwy, [24] and Charles Henry Waller soon followed. [25] By August 25, the Grantham Journal reported, "The official verdict on the authenticity of Mr. Shapira's manuscripts has not been given but the published evidence of experts who have examined them is unanimous against it." [26]

On August 27, Christian David Ginsburg, who as the designated philological examiner of the British Museum had been given access to the entire scroll, published the same conclusion. [lower-alpha 9] Earlier that week, the British Museum had ceased to display Shapira's strips. [27] Ginsburg also suggested that the shape of the strips, their ruling, and the leather used matched Yemenite scrolls Shapira had sold in 1877, the year before he began shopping the strips. [28] Clermont-Ganneau later made the same assessment. [21] Schlottmann, Delitzch, Strack, and Steinschneider, amazed at the ongoing situation in England, each published their July findings for the British audience in September. Ginsburg and Clermont-Ganneau published their final reports that same month.[ citation needed ]

Aftermath and scroll's fate

1883 Punch cartoon of Shapira and Ginsburg Punch 1883 Mr Sharp-Eye-Ra. Showing, in very fanciful portraiture, how Detective Ginsburg actually did Mr Sharp-Eye-Ra out of his skin.jpg
1883 Punch cartoon of Shapira and Ginsburg

Ginsburg's conclusion drove Shapira to despair, and he fled London. [16]

"You have made a fool of me by publishing and exhibiting things you believe to be false. I do not think I shall be able to survive this shame. Although I am not yet convinced that the manuscript is a forgery – unless Monsieur Ganneau did it. I will leave London in a day or two for Berlin.
Yours truly, Moses Wilhelm Shapira"

Shapira's letter to Ginsburg, August 23, 1883 [29]

In spite of writing to Ginsburg that he would leave for Berlin, he fled London to Amsterdam instead, leaving the manuscript behind, and from Amsterdam he wrote a letter to Edward Augustus Bond, principal librarian of the British Museum, begging for reconsideration of the manuscript. [30] In both letters, Shapira reaffirmed his belief in the scroll's authenticity. Six months later, on 9 March 1884, he shot himself at the Hotel Willemsbrug in Rotterdam. [31]

Shapira's widow, Anna Magdalena Rosette, had at least part of the scroll in 1884, as evidenced by a note in the Ginsburg file left by Bond. [32] Rosette sent "two small pieces" to Schlottmann for further study in 1884. It later appeared in an auction at Sotheby's in 1885 and it was purchased by Bernard Quaritch, a bookseller, for £10 5s. Two years later, Quaritch listed the scroll for sale for £25 and displayed it at the Anglo-Jewish Historical Exhibition in 1887. [21] [33]

In 1970 Professor Alan David Crown, on the basis of a misreading[ citation needed ] of a letter from Sir Charles Nicholson to Walter Scott wherein Nicholson claimed that "most" of the Shapira manuscripts had fallen into his hands, advanced the hypothesis that Nicholson had acquired the Shapira Scroll itself, with the scroll destroyed in a fire in Nicholson's London study in 1899, along with most of his collection. [21] [33] Apart from Nicholson's hyperbole—he is only known to have acquired six Torah scrolls compared to the 167 manuscripts acquired in 1884 by Adolph Sutro—Nicholson never wrote that he acquired the Shapira scroll itself. Crown's hypothesis was widely accepted as the best explanation of the scroll's fate.[ citation needed ]

In 2011 Australian researcher Matthew Hamilton identified the actual owner of the scroll, the English doctor and natural historian, Dr. Philip Brookes Mason. Contemporary reports show Dr. Philip Brookes Mason displayed the "whole of" the scroll at a public lecture in Burton-on-Trent on March 8, 1889. [34] [35] [36] Further whereabouts of the scroll, if it survived, are unknown.

Features of the scroll

Physical appearance

Shapira's scroll was composed of fifteen leather strips, some easy to read and others blackened to the point of near-illegibility. Each complete strip was extremely narrow, about 3.5 inches by 7 inches. Each complete strip had an average of ten lines of writing on one side only. They were folded, not rolled. Each complete strip was folded between one and three times, for a total of 40 folds. [37] They were covered in dark glutinous matter and had a faint odor of funeral spices or asphalt, known in the nineteenth century for their use in Egyptian mummification but not later found on genuine dead sea scrolls. [38] Some of the strips were covered in oil, artificially darkening the parchment, on top of which some had a layer of grey ash, which Shapira said had been applied to absorb the oil. [14] Each segment had one rough edge and one smooth edge, consistent with a top or bottom margin recently cut off an older manuscript. Each segment had vertical creases marked with a hard point as a scribe would mark for columns, but the text of the Shapira scroll has no relation to these lines, weaving in and out of them randomly, suggesting that a forger had taken the blank margin of a marked Torah scroll and written his text ignoring the faint column lines. [6] Ginsburg and Clermont-Ganneau suggested that the material was identical to the leather of the medieval Yemenite Torah scrolls in which Shapira had dealt in the preceding years. [30] The outline of a frame could be seen, perhaps used to administer aging chemicals, and the straight edge of one segment looked new.

Script

The scroll is written scriptio continua except in the Decalogue, a style never discovered in other Hebrew manuscripts but widely assumed by Shapira's contemporaries to have been the original form of the text. [39] In the Decalogue, every word is followed by an interpunct except לא, do not, and nota accusativi. The writing, by multiple hands, more closely resembles that of inscriptions like the Mesha Stele, already published by 1878, than it does the Paleo-Hebrew writing later found on parchment, or even the Siloam inscription, which would be published in 1880; even in the nineteenth century the similarity was thought suspect. [13] [40] André Lemaire authored a recent paleographic analysis (1997):

However, the letter shapes do not correspond exactly to any known ancient West Semitic script. It is neither Moabite (although most letters seem like imitations of Moabite writing in the Mesha Stele, which records the ninth-century B.C.E. Moabite king Mesha's victories over Israel. ...) nor "Canaanite" (West Semitic writing from about the 13th to the 11th century B.C.E.). It is neither the Hebrew script used during the First Temple period nor the archaizing paleo-Hebrew script found on coins of the First Jewish Revolt against Rome (66–70 C.E.) and the Second Jewish Revolt (132–135 C.E.) and in several of the Dead Sea Scrolls. In truth, after a simple look at the facsimile, an experienced paleographer can see it is a forgery. [41]

Ginsburg reported that some strips were duplicates in different hands, with very slight differences (noted infra).[ citation needed ]

Spelling and wording

The text uses Moabite spellings, made famous by the Mesha Stele in 1870 but never attested in any Israelite text or on parchment; some aberrant plene spellings, as of יום and סיחן, further suggested forgery. The text omits some consonantal yods as well, suggesting an erroneous attempt to replicate Moabite spellings. The scroll contains several apparent misspellings, ungrammatical phrases, and words from later Hebrew, which featured prominently in the negative assessments of its authenticity. [13] The scroll often replaces Deuteronomic words with close synonyms, including ירא > פחד, שכב > בעל, קצפ > אנפ, לפנים > מעלם, and more; these synonyms are not always exact, resulting in incongruent grammar, and sometimes rely on later meanings unattested in Biblical Hebrew. [42] [43]

Modern scholarship

Despite the unanimous assessment of the 19th century scholars who had access to the manuscripts that they were a forgery, [lower-alpha 11] a few have argued the scroll was genuine since it was lost. [47]

Menahem Mansoor argued in 1956 that re-examination of the case would be justified. [48] [7] Mansoor's conclusion was immediately attacked by Moshe H. Goshen-Gottstein and by Oskar K. Rabinowicz. [49] J. L. Teicher and others argued the scroll could be genuine. [50] [51] [52] [53] [54] [55] [56] More recently, Shlomo Guil (2017), [57] Idan Dershowitz  [ de ] (2021), [13] [58] Ross Nichols (2021), [59] and others [60] [61] [62] [63] [64] [65] [66] have argued that the strips were genuine.

However, such claims have been contested by many scholars. [67] [68] [69] [70] [71] [72] [43] [73] [74] [75] [76] [77] [78] [79] [80]

Text of the scroll

Table of correspondences between Deuteronomy and the Shapira Scroll Dershtable.png
Table of correspondences between Deuteronomy and the Shapira Scroll
Ginsburg's block print transcription [42] Ginsburg's translation [42] Deut. parallel
אלה הדברם אשר דבר משה על פי יהוה אל כל בני ישראל במדבר בעבר הירדן בערבהThese be the words which Moses spake according to the mouth of Jehovah unto all the children of Israel in the wilderness beyond the Jordan in the plain. 1:1
אלהם אלהנו דבר אלנו בחרב לאמר . רב לכם שבת בהר הזהGod our God spake unto us in Horeb, saying, Ye have dwelt long enough in this mount. 1:6
פנו וסעו לכם ובאו הר האמרי ואל כל שכנו בערבה בהר ובשפלה ובחף היםTurn you and take your journey and go to the mount of the Amorites, and unto all the places nigh there unto, in the plain, in the hills, and in the vale, and by the seaside. 1:7
ונסע מחרב ונלך את כל המדבר הגדל והנרא הזה אשר ראתם ונבא עד קדש ברנעAnd when we departed from Horeb we went through all that great and terrible wilderness, which ye saw; and we came to Kadesh-Barnea. 1:19
ואמר אלכם באתם היום [lower-alpha 12] עד הר האמרי עלו ורשו את הארץ כאשר דבר . . . אבתםAnd I said unto you, Ye are come this day unto the mountain of the Amorites. Go ye up and possess ye the land, as said [unto thee the God of thy fathers.] 1:20
לעלות ותרגנו ותאמרו בשנא . . . לאבדנו[Notwithstanding] ye would [not] go up. And ye murmured and said, Because [God] hated us ... to cause us to perish. 1:27
וינאף [lower-alpha 13] אלהם וישבע לאמר חי אני כי כל העם הראם את אתתי ואת מפתי אשר עשתי זה עשר פעמים . . . לא . . . שמעו בקלי אם יראו את הארץ הטבה אשר נשבעתי לתת לאבתהם . בלתי טפכם וכלב בן יפנה ויהשע בן נן העמד לפנך המה יבאו שמה ולהם אתננהAnd God was angry [lower-alpha 13] [and sware] saying, As I live, surely all the people that saw my wonders and my signs which I have done these ten times ... not ... they have not hearkened unto my voice, they shall not see that good land which I sware to give unto their fathers, save your children and Caleb the son of Jephunneh and Joshua the son of Nun which standeth before thee, they shall go in thither, and unto them will I give it. 1:34–36
ואתם פנו לכם וסעו המדברה דרך ים סף עד תם כל הדר אנשי המרבה מקרב המחנהBut as for you, turn you and take your journey into the wilderness by the way of the Red Sea, until all the generation of the men of rebellion shall be wasted out from among the host. 1:40
ותשבו בקדש ברנע עד תמו אנשי המרבה למת מקרב המחנה . . . [א]תם עברם היום את גבל בני עשו היושבם [בש]עיר[And they abode] in Kadesh-Barnea until the men of rebellion were wasted out by death from amongst the host. ... Ye are to pass over this day the coast of the children of Esau, which dwell in Seir. 1:46, 2:4
לא [תצר]ם ולא תתגר בם מלחמה כי לא אתן מארצם לכם ירשה כי לבני עשו נתתה ירשהThou shalt not distress them, nor meddle with them in war, for I will not give you of their land any possession, because I have given it unto the children of Esau for a possession. 2:5
החרם מעלם [lower-alpha 14] ישבה [lower-alpha 15] בה ובני עשו ירשם וישבו תחתםThe Horim from of old [lower-alpha 14] dwelt therein, and the children of Esau succeeded them, and dwelt in their stead. 2:12
ונפן ונעבר את מדבר מאב . ויאמר אלהם אלי אתם עברם היום את גבל מאב לא תצרם ולא תתגר בם מלחמה כי לא אתן מארצם לכם ירשה כי לבני לט נתתי ער ירשהAnd we turned and passed the wilderness of Moab. And God said unto me, Ye shall pass over this day the coast of Moab, ye shall not distress them, nor meddle with them in war, for I will not give you of their land any possession, because I have given unto the children of Lot the city for a possession. 2:8–9
רפאם מעלם [lower-alpha 14] ישבו בה והמאבם יקראו להם אמם וישמדם אלהם וישבו תחתםThe giants dwelt therein from of old, [lower-alpha 14] and the Moabites called them Amim, but God destroyed them, and they dwelt in their stead. 2:10
ונפן ונעבר את נחל זרד ויאמר אלהם אלי לאמר קמו ועברו את נחל ארנןAnd we turned and passed the brook Zered. And God said unto me [saying], Rise ye up and pass over the river Arnon. 2:13, 17–19
היום החלתי לתת לפנך את סיחן [lower-alpha 16] מלך חשבן האמרי ואת ארצוThis day will I begin to deliver to thy face Sihon [lower-alpha 16] the Amorite, King of Heshbon, and his land. 2:24
ונצא לקראת סיחן [lower-alpha 16] יהצה ונכה עד לא השאר לי שרדAnd we went forth against Sihon [lower-alpha 16] to Jahaz, and we smote him till we left him none to remain. 2:32–33
[lower-alpha 17] ונלכד את כל ערו מערער אשר על שפת נחל ארנן עד הגלעד ועד נחל יבקAnd we took all his cities from Aroer, which is by the brink of the river Arnon, unto Gilead, and unto the brook Jabbok. [lower-alpha 17] 2:34–36
הכל נתן אלהם אלהנו לפננוGod our God delivered all unto us. 2:36
ונפן ונעבר דרך נחל יבקThen we turned and went up the way of the brook Jabbok. 2:37
ויאמר אלהם אלי לאמר עברם היום את גבל ארץ בני עמןAnd God said unto me, saying, Ye are to pass this day the coast of the land of the children of Ammon. 2:37
לא הצרם ולא תתגר בם מלחמה כי לבני לט נתתי ארץ בני עמן ירשהYe shall not distress them nor meddle with them in war, because I have given unto the children of Lot the land of the children of Ammon for a possession. 2:19
רפאם מעלם [lower-alpha 14] ישבו בה והעמנם יקראו להם עזמזמם [lower-alpha 18] וישמ[ד]ם אלהם מפנהם וישבו תחתםThe giants dwelt therein from of old, [lower-alpha 14] and the Ammonites called them Azam-zummim, [lower-alpha 18] but God destroyed them before them, and they dwelt in their stead. 2:20
ויאמר אלהם אלי שלח אנשם לרגל את יעזר ונלכד [את] יעזר ונשב בערי האמריAnd God said unto me, send men to spy out Jaazer, and we took Jaazer and dwelt in the cities of the Amorites. Numbers 21:32
ויצא עג מלך הבשן לקראתנו [lower-alpha 19] למלחמה ונכהו עד לא השאר לו שרד ונלכד מאתם ששם עד כל כבל [lower-alpha 20] הארגב בצרת חמה דלתם וברחם לבד מערי הפרזם הרבה מאדAnd Og, the King of Bashan, went out against us to the battle, and we smote him until none was left to him remaining, and we took from him threescore cities, all the region of the Argob, cities fenced with walls, gates, and barsm beside unwalled towns a great many. 3:1
וכל ערי המשאר וכל הגלעד וכל הבשן עד סלכה ואדרעי . . . ארץ רפאם . . . גם הוא כי עג מלך הבשן מיתר הרפאם נשארAnd all the cities of the plain, and all Gilead, and all Bashan unto Salchah and Edrei, [which was also called] the land of the giants, for Og, King of Bashan, remained of the remnant of the giants. 3:2–4
ונפן ונסע נגבה ונשב מול בת פערAnd we turned and journeyed southward and abode over against Beth Peor. 3:29
ויצאו בעת ההוא בנת מאב ונשי מדין לקראתם ותקראן [ל]כם לאכל מזבחהן [lower-alpha 21] ותאלו [lower-alpha 22] מזבחהן ותשתו מנסחהן [lower-alpha 23] ותשתחו לאלההן ותזנו את נשי המדנים ותצמדו לבעל פער ביום ההואAnd at that time of the daughters of Moab and the wives of the Midianites came out against you, and they called out to you to eat of their sacrifices, and ye did eat of their sacrifices and drank of their drink-offerings, and ye bowed down to their gods and committed whoredom with the wives of the Midianites, and ye joined yourselves to Baal-peor on that day. Numbers 25
וחרה אף אלהם עלכם ויגף בכם בעת ההוא מגפה גדלהAnd the anger of God was kindled against you, and He smote you at that time with a great plague.
ושלחתי מכם אנשים ללחם את המדנים והכתם אתם לפי חרב ושבתם מאתם שבי הרבה [lower-alpha 24] למאד ותעצר המגפהAnd I sent from among you men to fight the Midianites, and ye smote them with the edge of the sword, and ye took from them captives very many, and the plague was stayed.
ואתי צוה אלהם בעת ההוא ללמד אתכם חקם ומשפטם לעשתם בארץ אשר עברם [lower-alpha 25] שמה לרשתהAnd God commanded me at that time to teach you statutes and judgements that ye might do them in the land whither ye go over to possess it. 4:1
השמרו לכם לא תספו אל מצותו ולא תגרעו ממנו.Take heed unto yourselves, ye shall not add to my statutes nor diminish therefrom. 4:2
השמרו לכם פן תשכחו ועשתם לכם פסל ותמנה תבנת כל סמל אשר בשמם ממעל וא[שר בארץ מ]תחת ואשר במים מתחת לארץTake heed unto yourselves, lest ye forget, and make you a graven image and similitude, the likeness of any figure which is in heaven above or on the [earth be]neath or in the waters under the earth, 4:23

5:8 4:39 (?)

וחרה אפי בכם והש[מדתי את]כם מהרה מן הארץ הטבה הזאת.and His anger be kindled against you, and He destroy you speedily from this good land.
וידע . . . היום ו[שמ]רת את חקתו ומצותו למען יטב לכם [ולמען] תארכו ימם על האדמה אשר אלהם אלהך נתן לכםSo know this day, and keep his statutes and his commands, that it may go well with you and that you may prolong your days upon the earth whom God, thy God gives to you.
שמע ישראל אלהם אלהנו אלהם אחר ואהבת את אלהם אלהך בכל לבבך ובכל נפשך למאד מאדHear, O Israel, God our God is one God, [and thou shalt love] God thy God with all thine heart and will all thy soul exceedingly. 6:4–5
והיו הדברם האלה אשר אנך מצוך היום על לבבך ושננתם לבנך ודברת אתם בשבתך בבתך ובלכתך בדרך (ו)בשכבך [lower-alpha 26] ובקמךAnd these words which I command thee this day shall be in thy heart, and thou shalt teach them diligently unto thy children, and thou shalt talk with them when thou sittest in the house, and when thou walkest by the way, and when thou liest down, (and) [lower-alpha 26] when thou liest down, and when thou risest up. 6:6–7
וקשרתם אתם לאות על ידך והיו לתתהות [lower-alpha 27] בין עינך וכתב[תם] על מזזת בתך ושערךAnd thou shalt bind [them] for a sign upon thine hand, they shall be as frontlets between thine eyes, and thou shalt write [them] upon the posts of thy house and on the thy gates. 6:8–9
כי אלהם כרת עמך ברת בחרב ביום הקהל ואנך עמדתי בין אלהם ובי[נכם] [lower-alpha 28] . . . בעת הזאת כי פחדת(ם) [lower-alpha 29] מפני האש ולא . . . ההר להגד לכם דבר אלהכם לאמרFor God made a covenant with thee in Horeb in the day of the assembly, and I stood between God and between you ... at that time, for ye were afraid by reason of the fire, and [went] not [up] ... to show you the word of your God, saying-- 5:2–5
אנך . אלהם . אלהך . אשר . החרתך [lower-alpha 30] . מארץ . מצרם . מבת . עבדם . לא יהיה . לכם [lower-alpha 31] . אלהם . אחרם . לא תעשה . לכם . פסל . וכל . תמנה . אשר . בשמם . ואשר . בארץ . מתחת . ואשר . במים . מתחת . לארץ . לא תשתחו [lower-alpha 31] . להם . ולא תעבדם . אנך . אלהם . אלהך .I am God, thy God, who liberated [lower-alpha 30] you from the land of Egypt, from the house of bondage. Ye shall have no other God. [lower-alpha 31] Ye shall not make for you any hewn image, or any likeness of anything that is in the sky above, or that is in the earth beneath, or that is in the waters beneath the earth: Ye shall not bow down yourself [lower-alpha 31] to them, nor serve them: I am God, thy God. 5:6–9
שת . ימם . עשתי . את השמם . ואת הארץ . וכל . אשר . בם . ושבתי [lower-alpha 32] . .ביום . השבעי . על . כן . תשבת . גם . אתה .ובהמתך [lower-alpha 33] . וכל . אשר . לך [lower-alpha 34] . אנך . אלהם . אלהך .In six days I made sky and earth, and all that in them is, and I rested [lower-alpha 32] the seventh day: so you also will rest, you, and your cattle [lower-alpha 33] and all that you have. [lower-alpha 34] I am God, thy God. 5:13–14
כבד. את אבך . ואת אמך (. למען . יארכן . ימך) [lower-alpha 35] . אנך . אלהם . אלהך .Honor your father and your mother (that thy days may be prolonged). [lower-alpha 35] I am God, thy God. 5:16
לא תר[צח. את נ]פשי. אחך. [lower-alpha 36] אנך . אלהם . אלהך.Thou shalt not kill the soul of your brother. [lower-alpha 36] I am God, thy God. 5:17–19
לא תנאף . את אשת . רעך . אנך . אלהם . אלהך .Thou shalt not commit adultery with the wife of your neighbor. I am God, thy God.
לא תגנב . את הן [lower-alpha 37] . אחך [lower-alpha 38] . אנך . אלהם . אלהך .Thou shalt not steal the property [lower-alpha 37] of your brother. I am God, thy God. [lower-alpha 39]
לא תשבע . בשמי . לשקר . כי . אנך . אקנא [lower-alpha 40] . את עון . אבת [lower-alpha 41] . על . בנם . על . שלשם . ועל .רבעם . לנשא [lower-alpha 42] . שמי . לשקר . אנך . אלהם . אלהךThou shalt not swear by my name falsely for I will visit [lower-alpha 40] with zealous anger the iniquity of the father upon the children to the third and fourth generation of those who take [lower-alpha 42] my name falsely. I am God, thy God. 5:11, 9
לא תענו [lower-alpha 43] . באחך . עדת [lower-alpha 44] . שקר . אנך .אלהם . אלהך .Thou shalt not bear false witness [lower-alpha 44] against your brother. I am God, thy God. 5:11
לא. תחמד . אשת .... עבדו . ואמתו . וכל . אשר . לו [lower-alpha 34] . אנך . אלהם . אלהך.Thou shalt not desire the wife of . . . your brother, his man-servant, or his maidservant, or anything that is his. [lower-alpha 34] I am God, thy God. 5:18
לא תשנא . את אחך . בל[בבך] . אנך .אלהם . אלהך. את עשרת הדברם האלה דבר אלהם ...Thou shalt not hate your brother in your heart. I am God, thy God. These ten words (or commandments) God spake ... 5:19
שמע ישראל אתם עברם היום את הירדן לבא לרשת גוים רבם ועצמם ערם גדלת ובצרת חמהHear, O Israel, ye are to pass over Jordan this day to go in to possess many nations and mighty ones, cities great and with fenced walls 9:1
לא תאמרו בלבבכם רבם המה הגוים האלה לא נכל להרשם לא תרא מהםSpeak not ye in your hearts, these nations are many, we cannot dispossess them, Thou shalt not be afraid of them. 9:4
זכר את אשר עשה אלהם לפרעה ולכל מצרם כן יעשה אלהם לכל איבך כי אלהם הוא העבר לפנך אש אכלה הוא [lower-alpha 45] הוא ישמדם ויכנעם מחרה לפנךRemember what God did unto Pharaoh and unto all Egypt, so shall God do unto all thine enemies, for God it is He which goeth over thee, He is a consuming fire, He shall destroy them, and He shall bring them down before thy face quickly. 9:3
גם את ה..צרעת ישלח אלהם בם עד אבד יאבד הנסתרם הנשארם מלפנךMoreover God will send the hornet among them, until they that hide themselves and are left before thee be utterly destroyed.
רק אם תשמרו את מצותו ומשפטו וחקתו אשר אנך מצוך היוםOnly if ye keep his commandments and His judgements and His statutes which I command thee this day.
וידעת היום כי לא בצדקתך אלהם אלהך נתן לפנך את הארץ הזאת לרשתה כי עם קשה ערף הית [lower-alpha 46] מן היום אשר יצאת ממצרם עד היוםSo understand this day, that God, thy God gives not before you this land on account of your righteousness to possess it, for you have been a stiff-necked people from the day that you did depart out of Egypt until this day. 9:12–13
ממרם היתם את אלהם אלהך . בחרב ביום עלתי ההר לקחת את שני לחת האבנם ועלהם כתבם כל הדברם אשר דבר אלהם עמכם בהר מתך האש ביום הקהלYou have been rebellious against God, thy God. In Horeb on the day when I had gone up into the mount to receive the two tablets of stone, and on them were written all the words that God spoke with you in the mount out of the midst of the fire in the day of the assembly. 9:7–10
קצפתם את אלהם ועשתם לכם עגל מסכהYou provoked your God to wrath, and you made you a molten calf. 9:16
ואתנפל לפני אלהם בהר הבער כאש . . . ושני לחת בידיAnd I fell down before God in the mount that burned with fire: and the two tablets were in my hands. 9:15
וארא חטאתכם ואשבר את שני לחת לעינכם ואתפלל בעדכם בעת ההוא ארבעם יום וארבעם ללהAnd I beheld your sins, and I broke the two tablets before your eyes, and I prayed for you at the same time forty days and forty nights. 9:16
ובתבערה ובמסה ובקברת התאוה ממרים היתם את אלהכםAnd at Taberah, and at Massah, and at Kivroth-hattah'avah, you rebelled against your God. 9:22
בעת ההוא אמר אלהם אלי פסל לך שני לחת אבנם כראשנם ועלה אלי ההרהAt that time God said to me, Cut out two tablets of stone like to the first, and come up to me into the mount. 10:1
ואעל ההרה ושני [ה]לחת בידי. ויכתכ אלהם על הלחת את עשרת הדברם אשר דבר אלכם בהר ביום הקהל ויתנם אלי והנם בארן אשר עשיתיAnd I went up into the mount, having the two tablets in my hand. And God wrote on the tablets the Ten Words that he spoke to you in the mount in the day of the assembly. And he gave them to me, and look, they are in the ark that I had made. 10:3–4
ובקדש ברנע באמר אלי אלהם עלו ורשו את הארץ ממרם היתם את אלהכם ולא עלתס ולא שמעתם בקלו ויאמר אלהם להשמדכםAnd at Kadesh-barnea when God said to me, Go up and possess the land; you rebelled against your God and you went not up nor listened. And God said he would destroy you. 9:23–25
ואתפלל בעדכם בעמד בהר ארבעם יום וארבעם ללה בעדכם וישמע אלהם גם בפעם ההוא ולא השחת אתכם כרגעSo I prayed for you when I stayed in the mount forty days and forty nights. And God listened at that time also, and he did not destroy you in a moment. 9:26
לא בצדקתך אלהך נתן לך כח לעשת חיל . . . [רק חשק אלהם] באבתכם לאהבה אתם ויבחר בזרעם אחרהם מכל העמם [כי אלהם] אלהכם הוא אלה אלהם ואדני האדנם האל הגבר והנראNot for your righteousness has your God given you power to get wealth. Only God had a delight in your fathers to love them, and he chose their seed after them, even above all peoples or God, thy God is God of all gods, and Governor of governors, a mighty God, and a terrible one. 9:5–6
הוא תהלתך והוא אשר עשה אתך את הגדלת ואת הנראת . בשבעם נפש ירדו אבתכם למצרם [ו]עתה הית לעם עצם ורב .He is your praise, and he it is who has done for you these great and terrible things. Your fathers went down into Egypt with seventy souls; and now you have become a people mighty and populous. 10:21
כי אך [אם] תשמר[ו את] כל המצוה אשר אנך מצוה היום לעשת לאהבה את אלהכם ללכת בכל דרכו ובכל חקתו והרש אלהם את כל אנשי המקם כל אשר תדרך כף רגלכם בוFor if you will only keep all the commands that I command this day to do, to love your God, to walk in all his ways, and in all his statutes, then God will drive out all the men of the place, and every place upon which the soles of your feet will tread. 11:24
לא יתיצב אי[ש] לפניכם כ[י פ]חדכם ומראכם יהיה על פני כל הארץ אש[ר ת]דרכו בוThere will no man be able to stand before you; for the fear of you and the dread of you will be upon all the land that you will tread upon. 11:25
ראה אנך נתן לפנכם היום ברכה וקללה את הברכה אם תשמעו אל מצות[י וחקתי] והקללה אם לא תשמעו וסרתם מהדרך אשר אנך מצוה אתכם היוםLook, I set before you this day a blessing and a curse; a blessing, if you obey my commands and my statutes, a curse, if thou shalt not obey but turn aside out of the way that I command you this day. 11:26–28
ן[היה כי י]באך אלהם אל הארץ אשר אתה בא שמה לרשתה ונתת את הברכה על הר [גרזם] והקללה על הר עבל הלא [המה] בעבר הירדן דרך מבא השמש בארץ הכנעני [נג]ד גלגל אצל אלני מראAnd it will come to pass, when God has brought you into the land where you go to possess it, that you will put the blessing upon Mount Gerizim and the curse upon Mount Eyval. Are they not on the other side of the Yarden, by the way where the sun goes down, in the land of the Kena'anim, over against Gilgal, beside the plains of Moreh? 11:29–30
ואלה יעמדו על ה[ר עבל] ראובן זבולן [ו]גד אשר דן ונפתלי . ואלה יעמדו על הר גרזם שמען ויהודה ושכר מנשה ואפרם ובנימיןAnd these will stand upon Mount Eyval; Reuben, Zebulun and Gad, Asher, Dan and Naphtali. And these will stand upon Mount Gerizim; Simeon, and Judah, and Issachar, Manasseh and Ephraim and Benjamin. 27:12–13
ועמדו הלוים נגד הר גרזם ו[ענ]ו ואמרו בקל רםAnd the Levites will stand before Mount Gerizim and will speak, and say with a loud voice: 27:14
ברך האיש אשר יאהב אלהם אלהנו ולו לבדו ישתחו ואתו לבדו יעבר וענו כל הע[ם] ואמרו אמן. ברך הא[יש אשר יקדש את י]ום השבעי וישבת בו ויענו כל העם ואמרו אמןBlessed be the man who loves God, thy God and bows down to him only and serves him only. And all the people will answer and say, Amen. Blessed be the man who consecrates the seventh day and rests thereon. And all the people will answer and say, Amen.
ברך האיש מכבד אבו ואמו וענו כל העם ואמרו אמן ברך [ה]איש אשר לא יקם ולא יטר את נפש אחו וענו אמן . ברך האיש אשר לא יטמא את אשת רעהו וענו כל העם ואמרו אמןBlessed be the man who honors his father and his mother. And all the people will answer and say, Amen. Blessed be the man who avenges not nor bears any grudge against the soul of his brother. And all the people will answer and say, Amen. Blessed be the man who defiles not the wife of his neighbor. And all the people will answer and say, Amen.
ברך האיש אשר לא [ינ]ה את רעהו וענו [כל העם ואמרו אמן . ב]רך האיש אשר לא ישבע ב [ש]מי לשקר וענו כל העם ואמרו אמן ברך האיש אשר לא יכחש ול[א י]שקר ברעהו וענו כל העם ואמרו אמן .Blessed be the man who oppresses not his neighbor. And all the people will answer and say, Amen. Blessed be the man who swears not by my name falsely. And all the people will answer and say, Amen. Blessed be the man who deals not falsely nor lies against his neighbor. And all the people will answer and say, Amen.
ברך [האיש] אשר לא נשא עינו אל ח[ר]כש רעהו וענו כל העם ואמרו אמן . ברך האיש אשר יאהב את רעהו [וענו] כל העם ואמרו אמן ברך האיש אשר יקם את כל דברי התרה ה[זאת ל]עשת [א]תם וענו כל העם אמןBlessed be the man who sets not his eye upon his neighbor's goods. And all the people will answer and say, Amen. Blessed be the man who loves his neighbor. And all the people will answer and say, Amen. Blessed be the man who confirms all the words of this Law to do them. And all the people will answer and say, Amen.
ויספו הלוים ויענו [ויאמרו ב]קל רם ראה אם שמע תשמע בקל אלהך לשמר לעש[ת א]ת כל מצותו ובאו עלך כל הברכת האלה ברך אתה בער ברך אתה בשדהAnd you will answer further and say with a loud voice. Look, if you will hearken diligently to the voice of your God, to observe and to do all his commands, then all these blessings will come upon you. Blessed will you be in the city, and blessed will you be in the field. 28:3
ברך טנאך ושארתך ברך פרי בטנך ופרי אדמתך שגר [א]לפך ועשתרת צאנך ברך אתה בבאך וברך אתה בצאתךBlessed will be your basket and your store. Blessed will be the fruit of your body, and the fruit of your ground, the increase of your kine and the flocks of your sheep. Blessed will you be when you come in, and blessed will you be when you go out. 28:4–6
יתן אלהך את איבך נגפם לפנך יצו אלהם את הברכה בכל מעשה ידך יקמך אלהם לו לעם קדש וראו כל עמי הארץ ויראו ממךYour God will cause your enemies to be smitten before your face. God will command the blessing upon all the works of your hand. God will establish you a people set-apart to himself. And all the people of the earth will see and will be afraid of you. 28:7–9
יפתח אלהם לך את השמם לתת מ[טר] ארצך בע[ת]ו ו[ה]ל[ו]ת גוים [רב]ם ו[אתה ל]א [ת]לוה והית [למעלה] ולא תהיה [ל]מטהGod will open to you your sky to give the rain to your land in his season; and you will lend to many nations, and thou shalt not borrow. And you will be above, and thou shalt not be beneath ... 28:12
ויסבו הל[ו]ים את פ[נ]הם [נ]גד הר עבל ויענו ו[יאמ]רו [ב]קל ר[ם]And the Levites will turn their faces towards Mount Eyval, and will answer and say with a loud voice: 28:14
ארר ה[אי]ש אשר [יעש]ה פ[ס]ל ומסכה מעש[ה] י[ד]י חרש וענו כל העם ו[אמרו א]מן אר[ר האיש א]שר יעשה מלאכה ביום השבעי לחללו וענו כל העם וא[מרו אמן]Cursed be the man who makes any graven or molten image, the work of the hands of the craftsman. And all the people will answer and say, Amen. Cursed be the man who does any work on the seventh day to profane it. And all the people will answer and say, Amen. 27:14–26
ארר מקלה אבו ואמו וענו כל העם ואמרו אמן : ארר מכה רעהו בסתר וענו כל העם ואמרו אמןCursed be he who sets light by his father or his mother. And all the people will answer and say, Amen. Cursed be he who smites his neighbor secretly. And all the people will answer and say, Amen.
ארר האיש אשר יקרב אל כל שאר בשרו ואשר ינאף את אשת רעהו ואשר יבעל עם כל בהמה [lower-alpha 47] וענו כל העם ואמרו אמן : ארר מ[ס]ג גבל רעהו וענו כל העם ואמרו אמןCursed be the man who approaches to any who is near of kin to him or who commits adultery with the wife of his neighbor, or who lies [lower-alpha 47] with any manner of beast. And all the people will answer and say, Amen. Cursed be he who removes his neighbor's landmark. And all the people will answer and say, Amen.
ארר האיש אשר ישבע בשמי לשקר וענו כל העם ואמרו אמן : ארר לקח שחד לה[עד עד] שקר בעמתו וענו כל העם ואמרו אמןCursed be the man who swears by my name falsely. And all the people will answer and say, Amen. Cursed be he who takes reward to testify falsely against his neighbor. And all the people will answer and say, Amen.
ארר האיש אשר י[שא עינ]ו אל אשת רעהו ואל בתו ואל אמ[תו] ולכל אשר לו וענו כל העם ואמרו אמן : ארר האיש אשר ישנא את אחו בלבו וענו כל העם ואמרו אמן : ארר האיש אשר לא י[ק]ם את כל דברי הת[ר]ה ה[זא]ת לעשת אתם וענו כל העם ואמרו אמןCursed be the man who lifts up his eye to his neighbor's wife or to his daughter or to his maidservant or to anything that is his. And all the people will answer and say, Amen. Cursed be the man who hates his brother in his heart. And all the people will answer and say, Amen. Cursed be he who confirms not all the words of this Law to do them. And all the people will answer and say, Amen.
וי[ס]פו הלוים לקרא בקל רם ויאמרו , והיה אם לא תשמע בקל אלהך [לש]מר לעשת את כל מצותו ו[ח]קתו ובאו עלך כל הקללת האלהAnd the Levites also will call with a loud voice and say, And it will come to pass, if thou wilt not hearken to the voice of your God, to observe to do all his commands and his statutes; that all these curses will come upon you.
ארר אתה בער ואר[ר] אתה בשדה ארר [ט]נאך ושארתך ארר פרי בטנך ופרי אדמתך שגר אלפך ועשתרת [צאנך] ארר אתה בבאך וארר אתה בצאתךCursed will you be in the city, and cursed will you be in the field. Cursed will be your basket and your store. Cursed will be the fruit of your body, and the fruit of your land, the increase of your kine, and the flocks of your sheep. Cursed will you be when you come in, and cursed will you be when you go out. 28:16–19
יתנך אלהם נ[גף לפ]ני איב[ך] ישלח אלהם את המארה בכל מעשה ידך יתנך אלהם לשמה [ל]משל ולשננה בכל עמי הארץ יעצר אלהם את השמםGod will cause you to be smitten before your enemies. God will send cursing upon all the works of your hand. God will make you a scandal, a proverb, and a byword, among all nations of the earth. God will restrain the skies. 28:30–45
הגר אש[ר בקר]בך יעלה מעלה מעלה וא[תה] תרד מטה מטה יליך ואת[ה לא תלו]נו יאבד וי[שמ]ד אלהם את[ך מעל פני הא]דמה אשר אתה בא ש[מ]ה [ל]רשתהThe stranger who is within you will get up very high above you; and you will come down very low. He will lend to you, and thou shalt not lend to him. God will make you perish, and will consume you from off the face of the land, wherever you may go-forth to possess.
כן מאה ועש[ר]ם [שנה אנך ה]יום לא אכל לצאת ולבא לפנכם ואלהם אמר אלי לא תעבר את הירדן יהשע העמד לפנך [הוא] יעבר את הירדן והוא יבא אתכם אל הארץ הטבה אשר .... . שמה לרשתה חזקו ואמצו אל תראו ואל תחפדו כי אלהם אלהכם הוא ההלך . . . . הזאת . . . לפנכם . . . . . . כיI am an hundred and twenty years old this day; I can no more go out come in before you. And God said to me, thou shalt not go over this Yarden. Joshua, who stands before you, he will go over Yarden, and he will come with you to the good land where you go to possess. Be strong and of a good courage, fear not, nor be afraid: for God, thy God he is the one who goes before you. 34:7
. אלה הדברם אשר צוה משה לכל בני ישראל על פי יהוה בערבת מאב לפני מתוThese are the words that Moshe commanded all the children of Israel, according to the mouth of the LORD, in the plains of Moab before his death. 33:1, 34:5

Notes

  1. The total number of commandments remains ten because I and II have been combined, as in the masoretic division into paragraphs, the ta'am ha-elyon in some versions, or the modern Catholic tradition.
  2. In the Masoretic version, Deut. 5:11–16 (III–V) describe God in the third person.
  3. In England, Shapira claimed Schröder had pronounced the manuscript genuine and asked to purchase it. Guthe says that Carlo von Landberg authenticated this claim, but Schroder later denied it in a letter to the London Times.
  4. In England, Shapira claimed Lepsius had not reached a definitive conclusion and that Erman believed it authentic.
  5. Shapira stopped in Halle and Leipzig on the way to Berlin, but could not convince Guthe to form a larger symposium. In England, Shapira claimed Guthe had concluded the manuscript was genuine.
  6. According to the Times of London ; Hermann Strack wrote on August 31st that "Lepsius ... absolutely refused to purchase the manuscript."
  7. Equivalent to $173 million in 2021.
  8. Conder felt pressure to refute Shapira's claims that Conder had also encountered the story of the scroll in Palestine. He wrote that he had never heard of it there and, upon seeing Shapira's scroll in England, he had not hesitated "in concluding that they were deliberate forgeries". Conder's account is confirmed by Walter Besant (Autobiography, p. 162-3, cf. his General Work of the Society, p. 37-39), who records that Conder "Observe[d] that all the points objected to by German critics have vanished in this new and epoch-making trouvaille. The geography is not confused, and Moses does not record his own death . . . and I know, I believe, all the caves of Moab and they are all damp and earthy", concluding that it was a fake, immediately after inspecting the scroll on July 24.
  9. Ginsburg wrote to his daughter on September 3rd that he "was sure the first week of [his] examination that it was a forgery".
  10. Ebers himself, Meyer's mentor, helped pen a German satire of the forgery. [44]
  11. A possible exception is Eduard Meyer, who wrote to Georg Ebers [lower-alpha 10] on 8 July, saying the paleography of the strips appeared genuine and reporting that Franz Adolf Hofmann's examination of the leather found nothing suspicious.[ failed verification ] However, Meyer never published this opinion and never contested his partner Guthe's conclusion that the strips were forged based on separate linguistic evidence. Guthe published his and Meyer's transcription and his analysis weeks later and is careful to note several differences between his and Meyer's analysis, which were apparently all minor. [45] [46]
  12. Yom is consistently spelled plene. Neubauer, Löwy, and others found this suspicious.
  13. 1 2 Ginsburg notes: "The compiler of the text, who was a tolerable adept in writing Hebrew, could not have been familiar with the Phoenician characters exhibited in these slips . . . he would have especially noticed the transposition of the two letters in the predicate applied to God, which, instead of saying He was 'angry', declares that He 'committed adultery'".
  14. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Ginsburg suggests the author used me'olam instead of the Masoretic lefanim because the word me'olam appears on the Mesha stele. Cf. Mesha's "The men of Gad lived in the land of Ataroth me'olam".
  15. Ungrammatical; ישבו would be expected.
  16. 1 2 3 4 Löwy: "The forger had eliminated from the text nearly all the waws & yods which serve as matres lectionis, in order to bring his work in harmony with the ancient Phoenician inscriptions. But he had forgotten to be consistent. For example, Sihon is written with a yod after the samekh".
  17. 1 2 Ginsburg suggests that the forger listed Moab, Aroer, Jahaz, and Jabbok because these four locations are mentioned in the Mesha stele, omitting the other Masoretic locations, which are not.
  18. 1 2 In form apparently a QaTaLTaL reduplication of the second and third radicals, however the root עזמ does not exist. Deut. 2:20 has זמזמים Zamzummim from זממ meaning "to devise" or connected to زَمْزَمَ "talk gibberish". Perhaps the same group as Gen. 14:5's זוזים Zuzzim, from זוז "to move". Cf. Gesenius' reconstruction of Azazel, עזלזל Azalzal.
  19. Original reads לקדאתנו, but this is a clear printing error.
  20. חבל in the MT, suggesting to Ginsburg etc. an author with a modern Ashkenazic accent wherein ח and כ are not distinguished.
  21. Guthe reads מחג[*]הן for the same meaning.
  22. ותאכלו, misspelled.
  23. Another kaph/heth flip reflecting a modern accent. Here מנסכהן is intended.
  24. Guthe parses שביה רבה.
  25. אשר אתם עברם would be expected grammatically.
  26. 1 2 Also transcribed without the waw.
  27. Intent unclear. MT reads לטטפות. Possibly evidence of a modern accent which did not distinguish between ט and ת.
  28. Guthe transcribes without the yod, in keeping with the scroll's defective pattern.
  29. Only some transcriptions contain the final mem.
  30. 1 2 Neubauer: "The usual verbs employed for liberating from Egypt and from the house of bondage, in the historical as well as in the prophetical books of the Bible, are either yatsa in the Hiphil form (as the received text has it here) or padah. The roots harah or hur are not used as verbs in the Old Testament, but only in the Targum, and in the Talmud, and then not in the Hiphil form, or with the particle min. It is difficult to understand how both texts of the Decalogue, in Exodus as well as in Deuteronomy, should have no trace of such a word, but employ uniformly instead of it the root yatsa," Ginsburg: "[It] is not taken from the Targum, but from ancient Hebrew coins, where חרות, liberty, liberation, is used in the legend."
  31. 1 2 3 4 Neubauer: "In all the other Commandments of the Moabite text, Israel is addressed in the second person singular; why, then, do we find in the First Commandment 'Ye shall not have,' 'Ye shall not bow down'?'"
  32. 1 2 Neubauer: "[There is a grammatical mistake] in the Second Commandment, which refers to the keeping of the Sabbath. It runs thus: 'Sanctify . . . for in six days I have made the heaven and the earth, and all that is therein, and rested the seventh day, therefore rest thou, also thee, and the cattle, and all that thou hast. 'ושבתי' 'and I rested,' is ungrammatical; it ought to be 'ואשבת'. Evidently the Moabite writer did not make use of Dr. Driver's excellent work on the Hebrew tenses. The root shaboth does not mean 'to rest,' but 'to cease from work,' and in this sense only it is found in the Old Testament. The forger made a blunder in not leaving the root noah as in the received text."
  33. 1 2 Neubauer: "The word gam ought to be repeated according to classical Hebrew: cf. Exod. [xii], 31, 32, and elsewhere."
  34. 1 2 3 4 Neubauer: "The expressions 'and all thou hast' and 'anything that is his' are not classical Hebrew."
  35. 1 2 Present in one of two MSS. Ginsburg writes, "This is either due to an omission on the part of the scribe, or indicates that it is intended as a different recension".
  36. 1 2 Neubauer: "This is not Hebrew, as can be seen from the passage urzaho nefesh (Deut. xxii, 26). Here a clumsy use has been made of the Chaldee paraphrase."
  37. 1 2 Neubauer: "Hon is not to be found in the Pentateuch, the word hail being employed there instead of it in the sense of 'wealth'."
  38. This is the line in its final form. However, an earlier draft had been struck through, reading: לא . . . מן . מ . . הן . רעך . אנך . אלהם . אלהך . Ginsburg notes, "On maturer consideration the forger was evidently displeased with him Hebrew composition of this commandment. He therefore cancelled it, and substituted for it what is now his sixth commandment. This is one of the strongest of the proofs which brand the document as a forgery".
  39. This is the line in its final form. However, an earlier draft had been struck through, translated: "[Thou shalt] not [steal] aught of . . . the property of thy neighbor. I am God, thy God." Ginsburg notes, "On maturer consideration the forger was evidently displeased with him Hebrew composition of this commandment. He therefore cancelled it, and substituted for it what is now his sixth commandment. This is one of the strongest of the proofs which brand the document as a forgery".
  40. 1 2 Neubauer calls this use of kana "impossible".
  41. One MS has אבם.
  42. 1 2 Neubauer: "I have already pointed out the strange—I should rather say the impossible —use of the root kana; but the expression lenosey is rabbinical; in classical Hebrew we would expect laish asher yissa. The word eduth, 'witness,' is equally a rabbinical form. Such is the grammatical and idiomatic character of the new Moabite text of the Decalogue".
  43. Ginsburg "The expression תענו, bear false witness . . . is not the plural from ענה . . . but is intended to be the second person singular from the root ענו, in imitation of the archaic form on the Moabite stone, where it occurs twice."
  44. 1 2 Neubauer: "The word eduth . . . is a Rabbinical form." Eduth is found Biblically meaning "law" or "testimony (of things)" and not the later "testimony (of people)". Dershowitz suggests the reading adath for "judicial decision" (construct); this word is completely unattested.
  45. Original is misprinted חוה
  46. Misprinted חית
  47. 1 2 בעל is transitive in Biblical Hebrew and never used with the preposition עם. It is also not used to denote intercourse in Biblical Hebrew, only possession and marriage, though it acquires that meaning in Rabbinic Hebrew. Cf. Deut. 27:20's שכב, which the Bible often uses with the preposition עם and to denote intercourse.

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Masoretic Text</span> Authoritative text of the Tanakh in Rabbinic Judaism

The Masoretic Text is the authoritative Hebrew and Aramaic text of the 24 books of the Hebrew Bible (Tanakh) in Rabbinic Judaism. The Masoretic Text defines the Jewish canon and its precise letter-text, with its vocalization and accentuation known as the mas'sora. Referring to the Masoretic Text, masorah specifically means the diacritic markings of the text of the Jewish scriptures and the concise marginal notes in manuscripts of the Tanakh which note textual details, usually about the precise spelling of words. It was primarily copied, edited, and distributed by a group of Jews known as the Masoretes between the 7th and 10th centuries of the Common Era (CE). The oldest known complete copy, the Leningrad Codex, dates from the early 11th century CE.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Samaritan Pentateuch</span> Samaritan version of the Torah

The Samaritan Pentateuch, also called the Samaritan Torah, is the sacred scripture of the Samaritans. Written in the Samaritan script, it dates back to one of the ancient versions of the Torah that existed during the Second Temple period, and constitutes the entire biblical canon in Samaritanism.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Dead Sea Scrolls</span> Ancient Jewish manuscripts

The Dead Sea Scrolls, also called the Qumran Caves Scrolls, are a set of ancient Jewish manuscripts from the Second Temple period. They were discovered over a period of 10 years, between 1946 and 1956, at the Qumran Caves near Ein Feshkha in the West Bank, on the northern shore of the Dead Sea. Dating from the 3rd century BCE to the 1st century CE, the Dead Sea Scrolls include the oldest surviving manuscripts of entire books later included in the biblical canons, along with extra-biblical and deuterocanonical manuscripts from late Second Temple Judaism. At the same time, they cast new light on the emergence of Christianity and of Rabbinic Judaism. Almost all of the 15,000 scrolls and scroll fragments are held in the Shrine of the Book at the Israel Museum, located in the city of Jerusalem. The Israeli government's custody of the Dead Sea Scrolls is disputed by Jordan and the Palestinian Authority on territorial, legal, and humanitarian grounds—they were mostly discovered following the Jordanian annexation of the West Bank and were acquired by Israel after Jordan lost the 1967 Arab–Israeli War—whilst Israel's claims are primarily based on historical and religious grounds, given their significance in Jewish history and in the heritage of Judaism.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Moses Wilhelm Shapira</span> 19th century antiquities dealer

Moses Wilhelm Shapira was a Jerusalem antiquities dealer and purveyor of both authentic and forged Semitic antiquities, including some allegedly Biblical artifacts, the most high profile of which was the Shapira Scroll. The shame brought about by accusations that he was involved in the forging of that specific allegedly ancient biblical text and the difficult situation created by the scandal drove him to suicide in 1884. Recent scholarship by Idan Dershowitz says that the Shapira Scroll may have been authentic and a predecessor to the canonical book of Deuteronomy.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mesha Stele</span> Moabite stele commemorating Meshas victory over Israel (c. 840 BCE)

The Mesha Stele, also known as the Moabite Stone, is a stele dated around 840 BCE containing a significant Canaanite inscription in the name of King Mesha of Moab. Mesha tells how Chemosh, the god of Moab, had been angry with his people and had allowed them to be subjugated to the Kingdom of Israel, but at length, Chemosh returned and assisted Mesha to throw off the yoke of Israel and restore the lands of Moab. Mesha also describes his many building projects. It is written in a variant of the Phoenician alphabet, closely related to the Paleo-Hebrew script.

The Hebrew Bible is considered a holy text in most Abrahamic religions. It records a large number of events and laws that are endorsed or proscribed by the God of Israel. Judaism teaches that the Torah contains 613 commandments, many of which deal with crime and punishment, but only the Noahide Laws apply to humanity in general. Most Christian denominations have also adopted some of these directives, such as the Ten Commandments and Great Commandment, while a minority believes all Old Covenant laws have been abrogated.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Charles Simon Clermont-Ganneau</span> French orientalist and archaeologist (1846–1923)

Charles Simon Clermont-Ganneau was a noted French Orientalist and archaeologist.

The Paleo-Hebrew script, also Palaeo-Hebrew, Proto-Hebrew or Old Hebrew, is the writing system found in Canaanite and Aramaic inscriptions, including pre-Biblical and Biblical Hebrew, from southern Canaan, also known as the biblical kingdoms of Israel (Samaria) and Judah. It is considered to be the script used to record the original texts of the Bible due to its similarity to the Samaritan script; the Talmud states that the Samaritans still used this script. The Talmud described it as the "Livonaʾa script", translated by some as "Lebanon script". However, it has also been suggested that the name is a corrupted form of "Neapolitan", i.e. of Nablus. Use of the term "Paleo-Hebrew alphabet" is due to a 1954 suggestion by Solomon Birnbaum, who argued that "[t]o apply the term Phoenician [from Northern Canaan, today's Lebanon] to the script of the Hebrews [from Southern Canaan, today's Israel-Palestine] is hardly suitable". The Paleo-Hebrew and Phoenician alphabets are two slight regional variants of the same script.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Nash Papyrus</span> Jewish Hebrew manuscript

The Nash Papyrus is a collection of four papyrus fragments acquired in Egypt in 1902, inscribed with a Hebrew text which mainly contains the Ten Commandments and the first part of the Shema Yisrael prayer, in a form that differs substantially from the later, canonical Masoretic text and is in parts more similar to the chronologically closer Septuagint. It has been suggested that the text might have been the daily worship of a Jew living in Egypt at the time. The fragments comprise a single sheet and are not part of a scroll. The papyrus is of unknown provenance, although it is allegedly from Fayyum. The text was first described by Stanley A. Cook in 1903. Though dated by Cook to the 2nd century CE, subsequent reappraisals have pushed the date of the fragments back to about 150–100 BCE. The papyrus was by far the oldest Hebrew manuscript fragment known at that time, before the discovery of the Dead Sea Scrolls in 1947.

Discoveries in the Judaean Desert (DJD) is the official 40-volume publication that serves as the editio princeps for the Dead Sea Scrolls. It is published by Oxford University Press.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mount Horeb</span> Location in the Hebrew Bible

Mount Horeb is the mountain at which the Ten Commandments were given to Moses by God, according to the Book of Deuteronomy in the Hebrew Bible. It is described in two places as הַר הָאֱלֹהִים the "Mountain of Elohim". The mountain is also called the Mountain of YHWH.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Joshua 6</span> Book of Joshua chapter

Joshua 6 is the sixth chapter of the Book of Joshua in the Hebrew Bible or in the Old Testament of the Christian Bible. According to Jewish tradition the book was attributed to Joshua, with additions by the high priests Eleazar and Phinehas, but modern scholars view it as part of the Deuteronomistic History, which spans the books of Deuteronomy to 2 Kings, attributed to nationalistic and devotedly Yahwistic writers during the time of the reformer Judean king Josiah in 7th century BCE. This chapter focuses on the Battle of Jericho under the leadership of Joshua, a part of a section comprising Joshua 5:13–12:24 about the conquest of Canaan.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">1 Kings 8</span> 1 Kings, chapter 8

1 Kings 8 is the eighth chapter of the Books of Kings in the Hebrew Bible or the First Book of Kings in the Old Testament of the Christian Bible. The book is a compilation of various annals recording the acts of the kings of Israel and Judah by a Deuteronomic compiler in the seventh century BCE, with a supplement added in the sixth century BCE. This chapter belongs to the section focusing on the reign of Solomon over the unified kingdom of Judah and Israel. The focus of this chapter is the dedication of Solomon's Temple in Jerusalem.

4Q41 or 4QDeuteronomyn, also known as the All Souls Deuteronomy, is a Hebrew Bible manuscript from the first century BC containing two passages from the Book of Deuteronomy. Discovered in 1952 in a cave at Qumran, near the Dead Sea, it preserves the oldest existing copy of the Ten Commandments.

Ancient Hebrew writings are texts written in Biblical Hebrew using the Paleo-Hebrew alphabet before the destruction of the Second Temple in 70 CE.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Gary A. Rendsburg</span> American professor (born 1954)

Gary A. Rendsburg is a professor of biblical studies, Hebrew language, and ancient Judaism at Rutgers University in New Brunswick, New Jersey. He holds the rank of Distinguished Professor and serves as the Blanche and Irving Laurie Chair of Jewish History at Rutgers University (2004–present), with positions in the Department of Jewish Studies and the Department of History.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2 Kings 3</span> 2 Kings, chapter 3

2 Kings 3 is the third chapter in the second part of the Books of Kings in the Hebrew Bible or the Second Book of Kings in the Old Testament of the Christian Bible. The book is a compilation of various annals recording the acts of the kings of Israel and Judah by a Deuteronomic compiler in the seventh century BCE, with a supplement added in the sixth century BCE. After a short introduction to the reign of the last king of Israel from the Omride, Jehoram of Israel, the son of Ahab, this chapter records the war of the coalition of the kings of Israel, Judah, and Edom, against Mesha the king of Moab with some contribution of Elisha the prophet. Another view of the events in this chapter is notably provided by the inscription on the Mesha Stele made by the aforementioned king of Moab in c. 840 BCE.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Joshua 1</span> Book of Joshua, chapter 1

Joshua 1 is the first chapter of the Book of Joshua in the Hebrew Bible or in the Old Testament of the Christian Bible. According to Jewish tradition the book was attributed to the Joshua, with additions by the high priests Eleazar and Phinehas, but modern scholars view it as part of the Deuteronomistic History, which spans the books of Deuteronomy to 2 Kings, attributed to nationalistic and devotedly Yahwistic writers during the time of the reformer Judean king Josiah in 7th century BCE. This chapter focuses on the commission of Joshua as the leader of Israel after the death of Moses, a part of a section comprising Joshua 1:1–5:12 about the entry to the land of Canaan.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Joshua 5</span> Book of Joshua, chapter 5

Joshua 5 is the fifth chapter of the Book of Joshua in the Hebrew Bible or in the Old Testament of the Christian Bible. According to Jewish tradition, the book was attributed to the Joshua, with additions by the high priests Eleazar and Phinehas, but modern scholars view it as part of the Deuteronomistic History, which spans the books of Deuteronomy to 2 Kings, attributed to nationalistic and devotedly Yahwistic writers during the time of the reformer Judean king Josiah in 7th century BCE. This chapter focuses on the circumcision and Passover of the Israelites after crossing the Jordan River under the leadership of Joshua, a part of a section comprising Joshua 1:1–5:12 about the entry to the land of Canaan, and the meeting of Joshua with the Commander of the Lord's army near

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 Rabinowicz, Oskar K. "The Shapira Forgery Mystery". Jewish Quarterly Review . New Series (47 [1956–7]): 170–183.
  2. 1 2 Palestine Exploration Fund Quarterly Statement for 1883
  3. 1 2 Schroeder, Paul (20 September 1883). "The Shapira Manuscript". Times of London .
  4. Guil 2017, p. 9.
  5. "HOW THE MOST RECENT BIBLICAL DISCOVERY WAS MADE". Western Mail (Cardiff, Wales). 15 August 1883.
  6. 1 2 3 The Shapira Manuscripts. Palestine Exploration Fund. October 1883. pp. 195–209 [195–198]. Archived from the original on 19 March 2021. Retrieved 13 March 2021.{{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  7. 1 2 3 4 Mansoor 1958, p. 225.
  8. Saat auf Hoffnung: organ der Evangelisch-Lutherischen Missionsvereine für Israel in Sachsen und Bayern (in German). In Commission von Justus Naumann's Buchhandlung. 1880.
  9. Delitzch, Franz (1883). "Schapira's Pseudo-Deuteronomium" in Allgemeine Evangelisch-Lutherische Kirchenzeitung vol. XVI (in German). Leipzig: Dörffling u. Franke. pp. 844–6, 869–71, 893–4, 914–6.
  10. 1 2 Reiner, Fred N. (28 June 2011). Standing at Sinai: Sermons and Writings. AuthorHouse. p. 302. ISBN   978-1-4567-6507-1. Archived from the original on 19 March 2021. Retrieved 13 March 2021.
  11. Clermont-Ganneau, Revue politique et littéraire , 29 September 1883
  12. William St. Chad Boscawen, Scientific American Supplement, October 27, 1883.
  13. 1 2 3 4 Dershowitz, Idan (2021). "The Valediction of Moses: New Evidence on the Shapira Deuteronomy Fragments". Zeitschrift für die alttestamentliche Wissenschaft. 133 (1): 1–22. doi: 10.1515/zaw-2021-0001 . ISSN   1613-0103.
  14. 1 2 Guthe, Hermann (1883). Fragmente einer Lederhandschrift enthaltend Mose's letzte Rede an die Kinder Israel (in German). Breitkopf & Härtel. Archived from the original on 19 March 2021. Retrieved 13 March 2021.
  15. Besant, Walter (1902). Autobiography of Sir Walter Besant. New York: Dodd, Mead & Co. pp. 161–163. ISBN   9780598674418. Archived from the original on 19 March 2021. Retrieved 13 March 2021.
  16. 1 2 Reiner 1995, pp. 109, 115, 116.
  17. Guil, Shlomo (2017). "The Shapira Scroll was an Authentic Dead Sea Scroll". Palestine Exploration Quarterly. 149 (1): 6–27. doi:10.1080/00310328.2016.1185895. S2CID   165114970.
  18. Neubauer, Adolf (18 August 1883). The Shapira MSS. of Deuteronomy. Vol. 589. London: J. Murray. p. 116. Archived from the original on 19 March 2021. Retrieved 13 March 2021.{{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  19. Neubauer, Adolf (25 August 1883). The Shapira MSS. of Deuteronomy. Vol. 590. London: J. Murray. pp. 130–131. Archived from the original on 19 March 2021. Retrieved 13 March 2021.{{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  20. Browne, Rev. G. F. (1885). Archaeological Frauds in Palestine. Vol. No. 26–April, 1885. London: W. H. Allen & Co. pp. 190–206 [204–5]. Archived from the original on 19 March 2021. Retrieved 13 March 2021.{{cite book}}: |volume= has extra text (help); |work= ignored (help)
  21. 1 2 3 4 Press, Michael (11 September 2014). "'The Lying Pen of the Scribes': A Nineteenth-Century Dead Sea Scroll". The Appendix . Archived from the original on 19 March 2021. Retrieved 4 April 2018.
  22. "Miscellaneous". Leed's Times (Leeds, England). 25 August 1883.
  23. "From Our Paris Correspondent". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 31 August 1883.
  24. Löwy, Rev. A. (1884). Proceedings, 6 November 1883. London: Society of Biblical Archæology. Archived from the original on 19 March 2021. Retrieved 13 March 2021.{{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  25. "Multiple News Items". Bury and Norwich Post. 28 August 1883.
  26. "The New Deuteronomy". Grantham Journal. 25 August 1883.
  27. "OUR LONDON CORRESPONDENCE". Glasgow Herald. 27 August 1883.
  28. Palestine Exploration Fund Quarterly Statement for 1883, pp. 207–208
  29. Reiner 1995, p. 110.
  30. 1 2 Reiner 1995.
  31. Newspaper "Het Vaderland", March 12, 1884.
  32. Moshe Goshen-Gottstein "Dead Sea Scrolls and Shapira Forgery." Jewish Advocate (1909–1990), Apr 11 1957, p. 1. ProQuest. Web. 16 Mar. 2021 .
  33. 1 2 Crown 1970, pp. 421–423.
  34. Tigay, Chanan. "Was this the first Dead Sea Scroll?". BBC. Retrieved 4 March 2018.
  35. Guil 2017, p. 25: "Surprisingly, contrary to the belief held for the last forty five years, the Shapira scroll was not destroyed in a fire that erupted in the house of Sir Charles Nicholson, near London. We presently know that it was Dr. Philip Brookes Mason of Burton-on-Trent, Staffordshire, who acquired the Shapira scroll in 1888 or beginning of 1889 and probably held it until his death in 1903. There are indications that, after his death, his wife sold his life's collection at an auction. Some good detective work might lead to the rediscovery of the Shapira scroll."
  36. OBITUARY NOTICE OF PHILIP BROOKES MASON, by The Rev. CHAS. F. THORNEWILL; Read before the Society, September 14, 1904, Journal of Conchology, VOL XI, 1904 — 1906, p.105 "It is not generally known that Mr. Mason became the eventual possessor of the notorious 'Shapira' manuscript, which for a time deceived some of the most experienced authorities on such matters, but was at length discovered to be a remarkably clever forgery."
  37. "THE SHAPIRA LEATHERS." The American Hebrew (1879-1902), Aug 24 1883, p. 16. ProQuest. Web. 16 Mar. 2021 .
  38. Chemical tests of the originals by Dr. Walter Flight at the British Museum suggested that the black stuff was not in fact asphalt: The black colouring matter, taken from the back and front of the skins, does not appear to be asphaltum but rather wax, like bees-wax, of a very impure dirty kind. It leaves an ash amounting to 10 to 15 percent. It readily melts and, when destroyed by further heating, does not emit the smell of asphaltum (Nichols, p. 97).
  39. Millard, A. R. (1 March 1970). ""Scriptio Continua" in Early Hebrew: Ancient Practice or Modern Surmise?". Journal of Semitic Studies. 15 (1): 2–15. doi:10.1093/jss/15.1.2. ISSN   0022-4480.
  40. "Scientific American. v.16 1883". HathiTrust. Archived from the original on 19 March 2021. Retrieved 16 March 2021.
  41. "Paleography's Verdict: They're Fakes!". The BAS Library. 24 August 2015. Retrieved 21 March 2021.
  42. 1 2 3 The Athenæum: A Journal of Literature, Science, the Fine Arts, Music, and the Drama. J. Francis. 1883. Archived from the original on 19 March 2021. Retrieved 16 March 2021.
  43. 1 2 Suchard, Benjamin (2022). "The "Valediction of Moses" is not a proto-Deuteronomy: evidence from the verbal system". Academia Letters.
  44. Publishers Weekly, Volume 26
  45. Bardtke, Hans. "Qumran und seine Funde" [Qumran and its Findings]. Theologische Rundschau (30. Jahrgang Heft 4 (April 1965)): 281–315 [290].
  46. Sabo, Yoram (2018). סוחר המגילות: מסע בעקבות האוצר היהודי האבוד[The Scroll Merchant: In Search of Moses Wilhelm Shapira's Lost Jewish Treasure] (in Hebrew). Bnei Brak [Tel-Aviv]: Hakibbutz Hameuchad. p. 90.
  47. Guil 2017, pp. 6–27.
  48. "Dead Sea Scroll Traced to Jew Who Committed Suicide 70 Years Ago". Jewish Telegraphic Agency. 14 August 1956. Archived from the original on 19 March 2021. Retrieved 4 March 2018.
  49. Reiner 1997, p. Endnote 2.
  50. J. L. Teicher "The Genuineness of the Shapira Manuscripts," Times Literary Supplement, 22 March 1957.
  51. Shemuel Yeivin in Hillaby, John (13 August 1956). "American Revives Biblical Scroll Case". New York Times.
  52. Allegro, John Marco (1965). The Shapira affair. Doubleday. ISBN   9789120009094. OCLC   543413.
  53. Jefferson, Helen (1968). "The Shapira Manuscript and the Qumran Scrolls". Revue de Qumrân. 6 (3): 391–399.
  54. Gordon, Cyrus (1974). Riddles in History. Crown.
  55. Stegemann, Hartmut (1978). "Religionsgeschichtliche Erwägungen zu den Gottesbezeichnungen in den Qumrantexten". In Delcor, M. (ed.). Qumrân: sa piété, sa théologie et son milieu.
  56. Silberman, Neil Asher (1998). "Power, politics and the past: The social construction of antiquity in the Holy Land". In Levy, Thomas Evan (ed.). The Archaeology of Society in the Holy Land. London: Leicester University Press.
  57. Guil 2017.
  58. Dershowitz, Idan (2021). The Valediction of Moses A Proto-Biblical Book (PDF). Mohr Siebeck Tübingen. ISBN   978-3-16-160644-1.
  59. Nichols, Ross (24 February 2021). The Moses Scroll: Reopening the Most Controversial Case in the History of Biblical Scholarship. St. Francisville, LA: Horeb Press. ISBN   978-1-7366134-0-5.
  60. Dershowitz, Idan; Pat-El, Na'ama (2021). "The Linguistic Profile of V". The Valediction of Moses. A Proto-Biblical Book. doi: 10.1628/978-3-16-160645-8 . ISBN   9783161606458. S2CID   234273321.
  61. Sass, Benjamin (2021). "Can a Unique Letterform Clinch the Authenticity of the Shapira Leather Manuscripts? A Rejoinder to Matthieu Richelle". Semitica. 63: 223–242.
  62. Tabor, James (Winter 2021). "The Shapira Scrolls: The Case for Authenticity". Biblical Archeological Review.
  63. Israel Finkelstein in Finkelstein, Israel; Sass, Benjamin. "Idan Dershowitz's V and Paleography" . Retrieved 29 December 2021.
  64. Bar Ilan, Meir (2021). "Review by Meir Bar-Ilan of Dershowitz on Shapirah".
  65. Shapira, David (5 August 2021). "מזויף או אמיתי ?! תעלומה סביב מגילות שפירא בעקבות מחקרו של ד"ר עידן דרשוביץ - עם ד"ר דוד שפירא" (in Hebrew). YouTube . Retrieved 29 December 2021.
  66. Nodet, Etienne (2022). "Review of The Valediction of Moses. A Proto-Biblical Book, by Idan Dershowitz". Revue Biblique: 290–291.
  67. Rollston, Christopher. "Deja Vu all over Again: The Antiquities Market, the Shapira Strips, Menahem Mansoor, and Idan Dershowitz". Rollston Epigraphy. Retrieved 20 December 2021.
  68. "The Myth of Moses Shapira". ANCIENT JEW REVIEW. September 2021. Retrieved 20 December 2021.
  69. Suchard, Benjamin D. (2021). "A Valediction to Moses W. Shapira's Deuteronomy Document". Bibliotheca Orientalis. 78 (3–4): 364–387. doi:10.2143/BIOR.78.3.3289918.
  70. Richelle, Matthieu (2021). "The Shapira Strips in Light of Paleography: Six Impossible Things before Breakfast". Semitica. 63: 243–294. doi:10.2143/SE.63.0.3289905.
  71. Hendel, Ronald (1 June 2021). "Notes on the Orthography of the Shapira Manuscripts: The Forger's Marks". Zeitschrift für die alttestamentliche Wissenschaft (in German). 133 (2): 225–230. doi:10.1515/zaw-2021-2008. ISSN   1613-0103. S2CID   235219521.
  72. Klawans, Jonathan (18 March 2021). "The Shapira Fragments". Bible History Daily. Biblical Archaeology Society. Retrieved 20 December 2021.
  73. Samuel, Harald (7 May 2021). "A Reply to Idan Dershowitz and Na'ama Pat-El's 'Response to Benjamin Suchard'". Academia Letters.
  74. Richelle, Matthieu; Hendel, Ron (2021). "The Shapira Scrolls: The Case for Forgery" . Biblical Archaeology Review. 47 (4): 39–46.
  75. Klawans, Jonathan (2022). "Shapira's Deuteronomy, Its Decalogue, and Dead Sea Scrolls Authentic and Forged". Dead Sea Discoveries. 29 (2): 199–227. doi:10.1163/15685179-bja10032. ISSN   0929-0761.
  76. Stackert, Jeffrey (2023). "A Text That Was but Isn't: On the Contribution of Literary Evidence in the Assessment of Shapira Deuteronomy". Maarav. 27 (1–2): 74–90. doi:10.1086/726572. ISSN   0149-5712.
  77. van Bekkum, Koert (2022). "Moses Wilhelm Shapira's 'Deuteronomy' between Epigraphy and Literary Criticism". In Averbeck, Richard E.; Hoffmeier, James K.; Howard, J. Caleb; Zwickel, Wolfgang (eds.). 'Now These Records are Ancient': Studies in Ancient Near Eastern and Biblical History, Language and Culture in Honor of K. Lawson Younger, Jr. Zaphon. pp. 53–59. ISBN   978-3-96327-191-5.
  78. "האומנם נוסח קדום של ספר דברים?". הארץ (in Hebrew). Retrieved 28 December 2021.
  79. "בכל זאת זיוף". הארץ (in Hebrew). Retrieved 28 December 2021.
  80. "שפירא-מאניה". הזמן הזה (in Hebrew). 1 August 2021. Retrieved 28 December 2021.

Bibliography

Further reading

Original scholarly papers

Initial reappraisal (1956–1958)

Modern scholarship (1965–)

Primary sources