AI Redates the Dead Sea Scrolls, Suggesting They’re Older Than Previously Believed


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by Emmitt Barry, with reporting from Worthy News Jerusalem Bureau Staff

(Worthy News) – A groundbreaking new study using artificial intelligence has re-dated many of the Dead Sea Scrolls to significantly earlier periods, challenging long-held views of ancient Judaism, the development of Hebrew script, and the roots of early Christianity.

The research, published in the journal PLOS ONE, combines radiocarbon dating with handwriting analysis and machine learning to reassess the age of over 100 scrolls. The AI model—dubbed “Enoch” by its creators—analyzed ink patterns and character shapes from digitized fragments and produced date predictions that, in many cases, are decades or even centuries older than traditional estimates based on paleographic methods.

“It is very exciting to set a significant step into solving the dating problem of the Dead Sea Scrolls and also creating a new tool that could be used to study other partially dated manuscript collections from history,” said study co-author Dr. Mladen Popović of the University of Groningen.

Rethinking the Scrolls’ Timeline

The Dead Sea Scrolls, discovered in caves near Qumran beginning in 1947, comprise approximately 1,000 manuscripts written in Hebrew, Aramaic, and Greek. Among them are the oldest known versions of many biblical texts. Until now, most scholars dated the scrolls from around 250 B.C. to 100 A.D., based on handwriting style comparisons. But those methods have been subjective and imprecise.

Enoch, trained on 24 scrolls with confirmed radiocarbon dates, examined 135 undated scrolls and achieved a dating accuracy of nearly 80%. In one case, the Book of Daniel fragment 4Q114 was found to date between 230 and 160 B.C., matching the time of the book’s presumed authorship.

“The new model integrates physical and geometric data to produce probabilistic estimates, moving the field from art to science,” said AI scholars Thea Sommerschield and Yannis Assael, who praised the study’s “technical precision and historical value.”

Prophetic Timing and the Isaiah Scroll

The prophetic significance of the Dead Sea Scrolls’ discovery in 1947 has not been lost on Bible scholars and historians. Among the first and most complete scrolls found was the Great Isaiah Scroll, containing all 66 chapters — including Isaiah 53, a controversial and deeply messianic passage that describes a “suffering servant” who bears the sins of many. The discovery of this chapter, written centuries before the birth of Jesus, offered powerful support to the Christian interpretation of Old Testament prophecy.

Remarkably, the discovery came just months before the United Nations voted to partition British Mandate Palestine on November 29, 1947–paving the way for the rebirth of the modern state of Israel in 1948. Many see the timing as providential: a hidden witness to the ancient Jewish roots of the land, unveiled just as Israel prepared to return to the world stage.

“The convergence of prophetic Scripture being uncovered from the dust of history at the same time the Jewish people were being regathered to their ancient homeland is more than a coincidence,” said one Israeli archaeologist familiar with the scrolls.

Implications for Jewish and Christian Origins

The study’s results suggest that scribal activity and intellectual culture in Judea began flourishing earlier than the rise of the Hasmonaean kingdom, which many scholars had assumed was the catalyst for such developments. Notably, the model dated copies of key sectarian and biblical texts, such as Ecclesiastes and Isaiah, to the early second or even third century B.C., placing them closer to the period of their original composition.

These revelations could shift scholarly consensus about when and how Jewish religious movements—including those linked to the roots of Christianity—emerged and evolved.

A New Era in Manuscript Studies

Beyond the Dead Sea Scrolls, the Enoch model opens the door to AI-driven research on other ancient texts lacking fixed dates. The team emphasized that their approach doesn’t replace expert knowledge but enhances it by removing subjectivity and providing data-backed dating estimates.

“AI doesn’t eliminate the need for human historians,” said Sommerschield and Assael. “It amplifies their ability to uncover the truth.”

The study’s authors believe that as more manuscripts are added to Enoch’s training database, the model will grow even more accurate, potentially rewriting further chapters of history.

As the integration of AI and archaeology advances, antiquity scholars are poised to enter what some are calling a new “golden age” of historical discovery—one where the past is not only preserved but reinterpreted through the lens of modern technology.

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