In this episode of Hebrew Voices, Looking Under the Hood of a Torah Scroll: Part 1, Nehemia and research assistant Nelson Calvillo launch a series on the oldest (nearly) complete surviving Torah. They unpack Nehemia’s lecture at the World Congress of Jewish Studies in Jerusalem presented to the top scholars in the field of Biblical Studies. In part 1, they discuss the background of the scroll and its significance, the ways in which it’s been damaged and preserved, and the marks and lines the scribes used to write it.
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VIDEO CHAPTERS
00:00 Intro
13:00 Parchment vs. leather
19:16 The age and significance of the scroll
21:37 Destruction and preservation
29:17 Pricking marks & ruling lines
VERSES MENTIONED
Exodus 15
Genesis 33:4
OTHER LINKSDr. Gordon’s PhD dissertation:The Writing, Erasure, and Correction of the Tetragrammaton in Medieval Hebrew Bible Manuscripts
MgKeter Database
The Institute for Hebrew Bible Manuscript Research
RELATED EPISODESThe other three parts of the lecture - SOONHebrew Voices #98 - Toilets in Ancient IsraelHebrew Voices #139 - Society of Biblical Literature Reactions 2021Hebrew Voices #145 – Decorative DoohickeysHebrew Voices #107 - The Mishnah and the New TestamentHebrew Voices #128 - Why Study HebrewSupport Team Study - Unicorns in the BibleSupport Team Study - The Mistake That Got It Right Part 1Support Team Study - The Mistake That Got It Right Part 2