Hershel Shanks

Hershel Shanks (born March 8, 1930, Sharon, Pennsylvania, United States) is the American founder of the Biblical Archaeology Society and the editor of the Biblical Archaeology Review and has written and edited numerous works on Biblical archaeology including the Dead Sea Scrolls.

Shanks communicates the world of biblical archaeology to general readers through his magazines, books, and conferences. Hershel Shanks is "probably the world's most influential amateur Biblical archaeologist," wrote New York Times book critic Richard Bernstein.[1]

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 published material written by Qimron in A Facsimile Edition of the Dead Sea Scrolls without Qimron's permission. In 2000 Shanks' appeal against the earlier decision was dismissed.

Shanks was the editor of Moment Magazine for fifteen years, beginning in 1987.[2]

Shanks' television appearances include Who Wrote the Bible? (1996), The Naked Archaeologist (2005) and 'Mysteries of the Bible.[3]

He used the pseudonym "Adam Mikaya" for a few articles published in the Biblical Archaeology Review.[4]

Publications

Memoir

References

  1. Bernstein, Richard (April 1, 1998). "Looking for Jesus and Jews in the Dead Sea Scrolls". The New York Times. Retrieved December 23, 2008.
  2. "Shanks, Hershel". Jewishvirtuallibrary.org. Retrieved 2015-05-15.
  3. imdb.com Shanks on the Internet Movie Database
  4. "David Noel Freedman (1922–2008)". Retrieved 30 May 2010.

External links

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