Hershel Shanks

Hershel Shanks was born March 8, 1930 in Sharon, Pennsylvania, United States) where his father owned a shoe store.[1] He graduated from Haverford College (English), Columbia University (sociology) and Harvard Law School. After over three decades of legal practice, he became interested in archaelology during a year spent in Jerusalem.

In 1974 he founded the Biblical Archaeology Society and in 1975 the Biblical Archaeology Review, which he edited until transitioning to Editor Emeritus in 2018.[2] He has written and edited numerous works on biblical archaeology including the Dead Sea Scrolls.

For more than forty years, Shanks has communicated the world of biblical archaeology to general readers by magazines, books, and conferences. Shanks is "probably the world's most influential amateur Biblical archaeologist," according to The New York Times book critic Richard Bernstein.[3]

In a famous legal case before the Israeli Supreme Court in 1993, Shanks and others were successfully sued by leading Dead Sea Scrolls scholar Elisha Qimron for breach of copyright when Shanks, without permission, published material written by Qimron in A Facsimile Edition of the Dead Sea Scrolls. In 2000, Shanks had his appeal dismissed against the earlier decision.[4]

Shanks was the editor of Moment Magazine for 15 years from 1987.[5]

Shanks's television appearances include Who Wrote the Bible? (1996), The Naked Archaeologist (2005), and Mysteries of the Bible.[6]

He used the pseudonym "Adam Mikaya" for a few articles published in the Biblical Archaeology Review.[7]

Works

Books

  • Shanks, Hershel (1973). The City of David: A guide to Biblical Jerusalem. Tel Aviv, Israel: Bazak Israel Guidebook Publishers. ISBN 9780960709212. OCLC 2378283.
  • (1993). In the Temple of Solomon and the Tomb of Caiaphas. Washington, DC: Biblical Archaeology Society. ISBN 9781880317112. OCLC 645662424.
  • (1995). Jerusalem: An Archaeological Biography. New York: Random House. ISBN 9780679445265. OCLC 32778599.
  • (1998). The Mystery and Meaning of the Dead Sea Scrolls. New York: Random House. ISBN 9780679457572. OCLC 37499858.
  • (1999). 101 Best Jewish Jokes. Illustrated by Dave Clark. Washington, DC: Moment Publications. ISBN 9780967163208. OCLC 1026500545.
  • ; Witherington III, Ben (2003). The Brother of Jesus: The Dramatic Story & Meaning of the First Archaeological Link to Jesus & His Family. San Francisco: HarperSanFrancisco. ISBN 9780060556600. OCLC 51865713.

Edited by

  • ; Mazar, Benjamin, eds. (1984). Recent Archaeology in the Land of Israel. Washington, DC: Biblical Archaeology Society. ISBN 9780961308902. OCLC 10802842.
  • , ed. (1988). Ancient Israel: A Short History from Abraham to the Roman Destruction of the Temple. Washington, DC: Biblical Archaeology Society. ISBN 9781880317532. OCLC 40395711.
  • Hershel Shanks, editor, Early Israel, Biblical Archaeology Society 1990, ISBN 0-685-45487-8
  • Hershel Shanks, editor, Christianity and Rabbinic Judaism: A Parallel History of Their Origins and Early Development, Biblical Archaeology Society 1992, ISBN 1-880317-08-7
  • Hershel Shanks, editor, Understanding the Dead Sea Scrolls: A Reader From the Biblical Archaeology Review, Vintage Press reprint 1993, ISBN 0-679-74445-2
  • Hershel Shanks and Suzanne F. Singer, editors, Cancel My Subscription: The Best of Queries and Comments from Letters to Biblical Archaeology Review, Biblical Archaeology Society 1995, ISBN 1-880317-44-3
  • Hershel Shanks, editor, Abraham & Family: New Insights into the Patriarchal Narratives, Biblical Archaeology Society 2000, ISBN 1-880317-57-5
  • Hershel Shanks, editor, City of David: Revisiting Early Excavations, English translations of Reports by Raymond Weill and Louis-Hugues Vincent, Notes and Comments by Ronny Reich, Biblical Archaeology Society 2004, ISBN 1-880317-70-2

Memoir

  • (2010). Freeing the Dead Sea Scrolls and Other Adventures of an Archaeology Outsider. Continuum. ISBN 978-1-4411-5217-6.
gollark: For those you want it to be very slow and best done on general purpose CPUs, to stop bruteforcing.
gollark: They don't entirely succeed in having these properties, SHA-*1* is semibroken now, but SHA-2 fixes the relevant mistakes in that apparently.
gollark: And fancy chemical whatever.
gollark: No, the output is a totally different value.
gollark: I don't know what you mean. Hash functions are just, well, mathematical functions, which take some arbitrary length value and output a fixed length output.

References

  1. "10 fun facts about Hershel Shanks". Biblical Archaeology Review. 44 (2&3): 14. 2018.
  2. Laden, Susan (2018). "Raising the BAR: the history of the Biblical Archaeology Society". Biblical Archaelogy Review. 44 (2 & 3): 17–23, 86.
  3. Bernstein, Richard (April 1, 1998). "Looking for Jesus and Jews in the Dead Sea Scrolls". The New York Times. Retrieved December 23, 2008.
  4. Abegg, Martin (2018). "He who freed the Dead Sea Scrolls". Biblical Archaeology Review. 44 (2 & 3): 24–28.
  5. "Shanks, Hershel". Jewishvirtuallibrary.org. Retrieved 2015-05-15.
  6. imdb.com Shanks on the Internet Movie Database
  7. "David Noel Freedman (1922–2008)". Archived from the original on 5 July 2010. Retrieved 30 May 2010.
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