Contemporary historian Flavius Josephus divided Judeans into three main groups:
Sadducees: The Sadducees were priestly and aristocratic families who interpreted the law more literally
than the Pharisees. They dominated the Temple worship and its rites, including the sacrificial cult. The
Sadducees only recognized precepts derived directly from the Torah as binding. They, therefore, denied
the concept of the immortality of the soul, the resurrection of the body, and the existence of angels. The
Sadducees were unpopular with the common people.
Pharisees: The Pharisees, unlike the Sadducees, maintained the validity of the oral as well as the written
law. They were flexible in their interpretations and willing to adapt the law to changing circumstances.
They believed in an afterlife and in the resurrection of the dead. By the first century C.E., the Pharisees
came to represent the beliefs and practices of the majority of Palestinian Jewry.
Essenes: The Essenes were a separatist group, some of whom formed an ascetic monastic community
and retreated to the wilderness of Judea. They shared material possessions and occupied themselves with
disciplined study, worship, and work. They practiced ritual immersion and ate their meals communally.
One branch did not marry.
In 6 C.E., Rome formed Judea, Samaria, and Idumea into one province governed by procurators. A
Judean revolt against Rome in 66 C.E. was quickly put down. Qumran fell to the Roman legions in ca.
68 C.E., the Temple in 70 C.E., and Masada in 73 C.E.
THE QUMRAN COMMUNITY
Like the scrolls themselves, the nature of the Qumran settlement has aroused much debate and differing opinions. Located on a barren terrace between the limestone cliffs of the Judean desert and the maritime bed along the Dead Sea, the Qumran site was excavated by PÅ re Roland de Vaux, a French Dominican, as part of his effort to find the habitation of those who deposited the scrolls in the nearby caves. The excavations uncovered a complex of structures, 262 by 328 feet which de Vaux suggested were communal in nature. In de Vaux's view the site was the wilderness retreat of the Essenes, a separatist Jewish sect of the Second Temple Period, a portion of whom had formed an ascetic monastic community. According to de Vaux, the sectarians inhabited neighboring locations, most likely caves, tents, and solid structures, but depended on the center for communal facilities such as stores of food and water.
Following de Vaux's interpretation and citing ancient historians as well as the nature of some scroll texts
for substantiation, many scholars believe the Essene community wrote, copied, or collected the scrolls at
Qumran and deposited them in the caves of the adjacent hills. Others dispute this interpretation, claiming