Jean-Baptiste Humbert
Jean-Baptiste Humbert (born December 8, 1940) is a French archaeologist who has excavated in Jordan, Palestine, Iran and Israel. He is of the order of the Dominicans and is currently director of le laboratoire d’archéologie de l’École Biblique in Jerusalem.[1] He was responsible for publishing the notes and materials from the excavations of Qumran, which were under the direction of Roland de Vaux.
Career
Humbert was born in Mâcon (Saône-et-Loire). After school he studied at an art design school before fulfilling military obligations. In 1965 he became a novitiate of the Dominican order. He took seminars in archaeology while studying theology. In 1973 he received a degree in theology, after which he moved to the Ecole biblique in Jerusalem began to study archaeology at a higher level, completing various courses of study, which included fieldwork throughout the 1970s. He was professor of Palestinian Archaeology until 2004.
From 1988 to 1994 Humbert co-directed digs at the citadel of Amman. Until 1993 he directed the excavations at Khirbet es-Samra in Jordan. Since 1995 he has led a mission to Gaza, uncovering the Byzantine remains there.[2]
In 1986[3] the Ecole Biblique decided to publish the final report of the Qumran excavations carried out by Roland de Vaux and appointed Humbert to expedite the publication.[4] In 1993 he published the notes and photographs of de Vaux in collaboration with Alain Chambon. From then on he has published several articles of his own analysis of the archaeology of Qumran.
Publications
Among his Qumran works are:
- "L’espace sacré à Qumrân, propositions pour l’archéologie", Revue biblique 101, 1994, pp. 160–214, pl. I-III.
- J.-B. Humbert & J. Gunneweg (Eds.) Khirbet Qumrân et’Aïn Feshkha, II, Études d’anthropologie, de physique et de chimie. Studies of Anthropology, Physics and Chemistry, (Novum testamentum et Orbis Antiquus, Series Archæologica, 3), Academic Press, Fribourg (Suisse)/ Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, Göttingen, 2003.
- "Reconsideration of the Archaeological Interpretation", 419-424, in Humbert & Gunneweg.
- "The Chronology during the First Century B.C., de Vaux and his Method: a Debate", 425-444, in Humbert & Gunneweg.
- K. Galor, J.-B. Humbert & J. Zangenberg (Eds.) Qumran The Site of the Dead Sea Scrolls: Archaeological Interpretations and Debates, Proceedings of a Conference held at Brown University, Nov. 17-19, 2002, (Studies on the Texts of the Desert of Judah, 57), Koninklijke Brill, Leiden / Boston 2006.
- "Some Remarks on the Archaeology of Qumran," 19-39, in Galor, Humbert & Zangenberg.
Footnotes
- ↑ See note in French here, accessed 10.01.11.
- ↑ See Humbert's CV in French, accessed 10.01.11.
- ↑ VanderKam, James & Peter Flint, The Meaning of the Dead Sea Scrolls, New York: HarperSanFrancisco, 2002, p.48.
- ↑ Galor, Katharine & Juergen Zangenberg, "Qumran Archaeology in Search of a Consensus", in The Site of the Dead Sea Scrolls: Archaeological Interpretations and Debates, Leiden: Brill, 2006, ISBN 90-04-14504-4, p.2.
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