דוק ושאלת שלבי הירח בלוחות השנה מקומראן: ראיות חדשות ממסופוטמיה

Full title
דוק ושאלת שלבי הירח בלוחות השנה מקומראן: ראיות חדשות ממסופוטמיה
Updated By
Research notes

reader checked, HM|27/11/2013

Reference type
Author(s)
Ben-Dov, Jonathan
Editor(s)
Bar-Asher, Moshe
Dimant, Devorah
Year
2005
Journal / Book Title || Series Title
מגילות: מחקרים במגילות מדבר יהודה ג [ Meghillot: Studies in the Dead Sea Scrolls III ]
Translated title
Dwq and Lunar Phrases in Qumran Calendars: New Mesopotamian Evidence
Publisher
Haifa University and Bialik Institute
Place of Publication
Jerusalem
Pages
3-28
Work type
Language
Label
05/12/2005
Abstract

The aim of this study, based on joint research with Wayne Horowitz, is to explain the three recurring lunar phases recorded in 4Q320, 321, 321a (Calendrical Document Mishmarot A, B, C) with reference to our knowledge of the 364-day year and its sources. The history of ancient science constitutes a relevant analogue for the interpretation of Qumran materials, and the dependence of the Astronomical Book of Enoch on the seventh-century-BCE cuneiform composition Mul.Apin, proven in earlier research, serves as a departure point for this study. The Qumran calendars mention three lunar phenomena: (1) an unnamed phenomenon, usually referred to as X; (2) a phenomenon called dwq; and (3) the number of days in the previous month. After demonstrating the background to these lists in the early first-millennium Akkadian sources Mul.Apin and Enūma Anu Enlil XIV, the study proceeds to show that the closest parallel to the Qumranic triad is a Late Babylonian scientific method of recording 'the lunar three' in use in nonmathematical Babylonian astronomy during the Persian and Hellenistic periods The parallel presented comes from the second-century-BCE lunar text BM 32327 +. The conclusions are, firstly, that X should be interpreted as the last day on which the moon is visible, and dwq as the day after the full moon, which supports the view of Talmon–Knohl as opposed to the emerging consensus on this question. Secondly, this study showed that the lunar phases in Qumran bear no religious-cultic significance but are rather simply scientific facts. Thirdly, it demonstrates that cuneiform Babylonian culture was alive in the works of Jewish scholars deep into the Hellenistic era.

Primary Texts: Judean Desert Documents
Scroll / Document
Passage
1
Section type
Column
Scroll / Document
Passage
1 ii
Section type
Fragment
Scroll / Document
Passage
1 i
Section type
Fragment