Qumran Caves
Cave 4
This most famous of the Dead Sea Scroll caves is also the most significant in terms of finds. More than 15,000 fragments from over 200 books were found in this cave, nearly all by Bedouin thieves. One hundred and twenty-two biblical scrolls (or fragments) were found in this cave. From all 11 Qumran caves, every Old Testament book is represented except Esther. No New Testament books or fragments have been found.
Cave 5 (foreground)
This eroded cave was discovered by the archaeologists (Bedouin found caves 1, 2, 4, 6, 11). It is one of those in the marl terrace close to the site of Qumran (also caves 4, 7, 8, 9, 10). Archaeologists estimate that there were originally 30–40 caves in the marl terrace. Fragments of 25 scrolls were found in this cave.
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Related Websites
For related pages, see Qumran and the Dead Sea. For historical images of Bedouin, see Life in the Holy Land.
The Dead Sea Scrolls (Israel Antiquities Authority official page) The official introduction to all things related to the Dead Sea Scrolls.
Dead Sea Scrolls (West Semitic Research Project) A list of several of the most important DSS finds, with links to photos and further information about them.
Inventory of Manuscripts from Qumran (bibliotecapleyades.net) Includes a list of what scrolls were found in each cave.
Picture of the Week: Qumran Caves (BiblePlaces Blog) An explanation of the numbering of the caves and one photo showing 7 caves.
Caves and Contents (Cave 4) (Bible History Daily) Includes links to the primary caves, and in this article, looks specifically at Cave 4, linking to further reading.
Qumran Caves 1 and 2 (BiblePlaces Blog) An explanation of how to find the first two caves where Dead Sea Scrolls were discovered.
Psalm 151 and the Dead Sea Scrolls (Bible Odyssey) An illustrated introduction to this intriguing scroll discovery.
See Qumran for many related websites.