Amos 3:4–5
“This fragment was found in Cave 4 in 1952 by a bedouin family, who sold it to a Bethlehem antiquities dealer known as Kando. It remained in the hands of
Ludvik A. Kjeldsberg, Årstein Justnes and Martin Stomnås
Since 2002, more than 100 “new” Dead Sea Scrolls-like fragments have appeared on the antiquities market. The researchers in the Lying Pen of Scribes have made great efforts in cataloguing these fragments.
“This fragment was found in Cave 4 in 1952 by a bedouin family, who sold it to a Bethlehem antiquities dealer known as Kando. It remained in the hands of