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47 of 54 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Author's Response,
By
This review is from: The Mystery of the Copper Scroll of Qumran: The Essene Record of the Treasure of Akhenaten (Paperback)
One of the reviews of my book, by an anonymous reader, states I have some responsibility for recent damage at Amarna by treasure hunters, because I suggest possible locations of treasure in my book. Firstly the recent damage was to boundary stelae, which I never suggested were treasure locations. Not even an idiot blows up a place where he or she is looking for valuables. This was clearly an act of vandalism in a region where political dissension and resentment has an ongoing history. Robbery at Amarna, and for that matter tombs and historical sites across Egypt has been going on for thousands of years, and is still going on. Am I responsible for these too? I deplore these acts. Patently it is nonsense and small minded to suggest anyone should stop indicating the possible location of artefacts. There are dozens of books and articles on the treasures of the Copper Scroll, citing possible places of treasures. Are they all to be withdrawn from publication - not to mention every other work that postulates potential new places where something important lies hidden. The nameless reader claims the book contains fabrications. I challenge him, or her, to say what has been fabricated. A number of eminent scholars, including Professor Harold Ellens, of Michigan University, Drs Minna and Kenneth Lonnqvist, University of Helsinki, and many more, have come out and backed my central theory and the evidence is pilling up that there was indeed a connection from Amarna to the Second Temple Israelite period, and specifically to the Qumran-Essenes.
42 of 51 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Convincing conjecture,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Mystery of the Copper Scroll of Qumran: The Essene Record of the Treasure of Akhenaten (Paperback)
How interesting to see the author of the book post his own review. It reminds you that an actual person was responsible for the words therein. I am currently working on a report about this book for my Seminary class on the Dead Sea Scrolls. "The Mystery of the Copper Scroll of Qumran" presents convincing arguments, and the proposed revision of speculated history makes sense, on the whole. I would guess that Mr. Feather's inferences that were based on actual scholarship (chapters 1-3) are mostly correct. This would include an original theory about the weights and numbering system of the Copper Scroll (which would fall into his area of expertise, metallurgy). Chapters 4-20, however, though not pure fabrication (ie The DaVinci Code) as an earlier reviewer suggested, can only be classified as conjecture based on
circumstantial evidence and human imagination. Are the conclusions possible? Yes. In fact, that's the extent of the evidence provided for some of these conclusions. Often times, he will preface an argument with something along the lines of "it's not inconceivable..." Chapter 20 is an absolute farce. Throughout my reading, I was looking forward to the "Academic and Scholarly Reaction", only to discover that most of the academic and scholarly reactions are from the author himself. Finally, a couple of scholars confirm that the ideas presented are "not unreasonable". The stated purpose of the book is to unlock the mystery of the copper scroll. In actuality, about three quarters of the book is devoted to proving that Judaism (and ultimately Christianity and Islam) came, not from God, but from Egyptian Pharaohs who passed their philosophies on to three patriarchs (Abraham, Jacob, and Joseph). Moses is stated to have been a non-Jewish Prince of Egypt, descended from an assumed sexual encounter generations earlier between Amenhotep I and Sarai (Abram's wife). He supposedly picked up a wife and side of monotheism in Ethiopia (when the Bible said he was in Midian), then returned to Egypt, recruited the entire nation of Israelites whom he purchased from the new Pharaoh, and took them, along with the former monotheistic priests who had been ousted by the resurgence of polytheism, to Canaan. Levite priests had a history of backsliding towards their polytheistic roots, but the line of Atenist (Aten was the name of the monotheistic god Akhenaten believed in) priests preserved the truth, ultimately from Qumran. The Copper Scroll, then, is a list of the locations of treasures from the Temple of Aten (in Akhetaten, present-day El-Amarna), and possibly some from Solomon's Temple. Mr. Feather explains where he believes each of the items that have not already been found might be buried. This chapter of nearly 50 pages (among several chapters with fewer than 10 pages) does not flow well. The only way to follow it without complete confusion is to keep a finger in the Appendix which gives the text of the Copper Scroll. Even still, he jumps back and forth, skipping lines he feels are unimportant. More maps and diagrams would also help the reader to picture in their mind and understand the various hypotheses. When the text does refer to supplemental "plates" and "figures", you have a treasure hunt of your own to find them. Editorial mistakes, uses of the word "penultimate", and theories based on possibility rather than evidence combine to outnumber points that can be considered scholarly. The entire thesis falls apart if many scholars are correct in dating the Exodus to the 15th century BC -- 100 years before Akhenaten -- or in dating Abram's lifetime to the 20th, 21st, or 22nd century BC -- almost half a millennium before Amenhotep I, who supposedly invented the concept of a single Supreme Being, Feather assumes that Abram was in Egypt around the turn of the 15th century BC, Joseph in the 14th century BC, and Moses in the 13th century BC. If the authority of the Bible (which Feather accepts only when it supports his thesis) is accepted, the connection between Egypt and Judaism as presented in this book is simply impossible to buy. There are, however, too many parallels to completely deny any connection (e.g. Psalm 104 compared with an ancient hymn to Aten that was found in a tomb in El-Amarna). If the author were more concerned with objective scholarship and less concerned with proving that which is "not inconceivable", he might provide a much more significant contribution to scholarship.
11 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Scholarly Page Turner,
By EGR (California) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Mystery of the Copper Scroll of Qumran: The Essene Record of the Treasure of Akhenaten (Paperback)
A must read for anyone interested in the mystery behind the Dead Sea Scrolls. Well researched and scholarly yet reads as easily as a good mystery novel. Establishes the Egyptian roots of Judaic monotheism. Though found at Qumran, the copper scroll lists treasures hidden in Akhenaten's city, modern Tel-el-Amarna, Egypt. As a metalurgist and scholar Feather brings intelligence and knowledge together to establish the Egyptian source of this enigmatic artifact. I highly recommend it.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Is Ahkenaten the founder of Essenism?,
By
This review is from: The Mystery of the Copper Scroll of Qumran: The Essene Record of the Treasure of Akhenaten (Paperback)
This book details Mr. Feather's research into the Copper Scroll. He builds a fairly strong argument for considering the Amarna period as the background for the rise of the Essenic tendency in Judiasm. Overall, I think his case has merits. There are a few errors, such as how he gets the name of Ahkenaten out of the Greek lettering on the scroll. His conclusion that the "g" is a reference to Mt. Gerizim, however, is unique and helpful. He should follow up on how the other Greek letters function as section headings, rather than how the name is embedded in the sequence.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Greatest Treasure Hunt,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Mystery of the Copper Scroll of Qumran: The Essene Record of the Treasure of Akhenaten (Paperback)
If you're the type of person who likes a good treasure hunt, than this is the book for you. Robert Feather has compiled a wealth of information about Egypt and the Holy lands in a nutshell. This book is valuable for both legitimate archaeological research organizations, or for amateurs like me who simply love to study the ancient texts. Robert Feather also gives full credit to John Allegro as few modern scholars do. It's disgraceful how many modern authors on Dead Sea Scroll topics never mention John Allegro or just include his name in a single footnote. As a scientist Robert Feather creates a matrix of the calendars, languages, writing systems, weights and measures, and many other attributes of the place and time. With this data properly organized he's able to correlate the exact amount of precious metal mentioned in the some of the copper scroll's inventory, with past archaeological discoveries. The framework created is elegant and harmonizes many other elements of the Holy Lands and Egypt. Bravo!
4 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Robert Feather Review,
This review is from: The Mystery of the Copper Scroll of Qumran: The Essene Record of the Treasure of Akhenaten (Paperback)
For some reason I always have trouble getting a review posted here. I've been trying all Summer to get posted.
...Anyway I will comment on Mister Feather rather than "Copper Scroll". After reading 'Jesus @ Qumran' and 'Copper Scroll', I realized that Robert Feather spends so much time in research that it's hard to believe that he writes so well and speaks to the layman in DSS study in such easily understandable language. I've read both books twice and am looking forward to a third venture in each one. I'll keep this review short so maybe it will get posted. ...I suggest that everyone read both books as soon as possible: the writing is magnetic, it draws you in to the "Big Picture". Hope this one gets posted, Mark Twang aka...Henry Parker ps...looking forward to any new writing.
2.0 out of 5 stars
A distraction for Copper Scroll enthusists,
This review is from: The Mystery of the Copper Scroll of Qumran: The Essene Record of the Treasure of Akhenaten (Paperback)
The copper scroll, is a burial list of gold, silver and other assets found 2km from Qumran near the Dead Sea. This book by Feather, it well researched about the facts of the Dead Sea Scrolls and the Copper Scroll. But his logic and conclusions don't follow archaeological evidence or the context of the events in 66 AD. They are way off in left field and try to tie into Egyptology. An amusing distraction, but if you want to learn about the copper scrolls, you can strike this book off your reading list.
Far better would be Copper Scroll Studies (Academic Paperback) or Secrets of the Dead Sea Scrolls
5.0 out of 5 stars
Copper Scrolls,
By
This review is from: The Mystery of the Copper Scroll of Qumran: The Essene Record of the Treasure of Akhenaten (Paperback)
I rate this book,at 5 stars!!! Anyone interested in the "Dead Sea Scrolls", ancient Egypt and Biblical history will find this book fascinating.What , I found very interesting was "the translation of the copper scroll", this appendix shows (Drawn) pictures of the scroll and the page across from it , its translation. The author has put a great deal of research into this book.Now, if only some of this artifacts could be found to answer the riddle?
10 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Where did akhenatens treasure GO??? By Queen Kiya wife no 2,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Mystery of the Copper Scroll of Qumran: The Essene Record of the Treasure of Akhenaten (Paperback)
I loved reading this book the author has done a lot of reserch about the subject, it was always intriguing it was like being on a mystical treasure hunt. If you like reading about akhehnaten this is something different from the usual akhenaten books. Well done Robert Feather.
5 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Egypt father of Judaism?,
By
This review is from: The Mystery of the Copper Scroll of Qumran: The Essene Record of the Treasure of Akhenaten (Paperback)
I find this book fascinating, because of the numerous connexions that the author makes between Akhenaten's monotheist religion and the birth of Judaism. The author also brings us on a journey of associations between the egyptian priests of exodus (the first Levites according to him) and the Qumran-Essenes. Although these connexions are intriguing in their own rights, the argument is sometimes confuse or highly hypothetical. This book is worth reading for it refreshing view on these subjects, while the treasure hypothesis itself is for me quite secondary.
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The Mystery of the Copper Scroll of Qumran: The Essene Record of the Treasure of Akhenaten by Robert Feather (Paperback - June 30, 2003)
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