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open access: yes, 2008
Spencer, Carole Dale
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The Damascus Document

Ancient Near Eastern Studies, 2021
The Damascus Document is an ancient Hebrew text that is one of the longest, oldest, and most important of the ancient scrolls found near Khirbet (ruins of) Qumran, usually referred to collectively as the Dead Sea Scrolls for the proximity of the Qumran settlement and eleven nearby caves to the Dead Sea.
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Eschatological Identities In The Damascus Document

2008
The part of eschatology in the Damascus Document which has been most intensively discussed consists of the references to, among other eschatological figures, the ?messiah of Israel and Aaron? (CD-A 12:23?13:1; 14:19 [= 4QD a 10 i 12]; CD-B 19:10?11; 20:1).
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Chapter Two. The Damascus Document

2007
Recovered at the end of the nineteenth century from the Ben Ezra Synagogue in Old Cairo, the Damascus Document and its contents were first published in 1910 by the Talmud scholar Solomon Schechter. Prior to the publication of the texts from Qumran, it was generally believed that the Damascus Document had very little to say on the subject of ritual ...
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Historiography in the Damascus Document

Deuterocanonical and Cognate Literature Yearbook, 2006
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