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Moses Wilhelm Shapira

Moses Wilhelm Shapira (Hebrew: מוזס וילהלם שפירא; 1830 – March 9, 1884) was a Jerusalem antiquities dealer and purveyor of both authentic and forged Semitic antiquities, including some allegedly Biblical artifacts, the most high profile of which was the Shapira Scroll.[1][2][3] The shame brought about by accusations that he was involved in the forging of ancient biblical texts drove him to suicide in 1884. Recent scholarship by Idan Dershowitz says Shapira may have found a predecessor to the canonical book of Deuteronomy.[4]

Moses Wilhelm Shapira
Born1830
DiedMarch 9, 1884(1884-03-09) (aged 53–54)
Hotel Willemsbrug in Rotterdam, Netherlands
CitizenshipRussian
Prussian
OccupationAntiquities dealer
Known forHis role in the possibly forged or authentic manuscripts of the biblical book of Deuteronomy known as Shapira Scroll
Children2, including Myriam Harry

Early life and career edit

Moses Shapira was born in 1830 to Polish-Jewish parents in Kamenets-Podolski, which at the time was part of Russian-annexed Poland (in modern-day Ukraine). Shapira's father emigrated to Ottoman Palestine without Moses. Later, in 1856, at the age of 25, Moses Shapira followed his father to the Holy Land.[5] His grandfather, who accompanied him, died en route.

On the way, while in Bucharest, Moses Shapira converted to Christianity[6] and applied for Prussian citizenship, adding Wilhelm to his name. Once in Jerusalem, he joined the community of Protestant missionaries and converts[7] who met at Christ Church,[6] and in 1869 opened a store[citation needed] in the Street of the Christians, today's Christian Quarter Road. He sold the usual religious souvenirs enjoyed by pilgrims, as well as ancient pots he acquired from Arab farmers. While a patient in the German Lutheran congregation of Deaconess sisters, Shapira met a nurse, Deaconess Rosette Jöckel, who became his wife.[5][8]

Antiquities dealer and alleged forger edit

In addition to selling souvenirs to tourists, Shapira also sold a variety of antiquities, some of it legitimate, and some of it fake, becoming the pre-eminent antiquities dealer for European collectors.[6]

Shapira attempted to sell a fake "coffin of Samson" in London, but it was exposed by Adolf Neubauer after he realized the epitaph had misspelled the name as "Sampson."[9][10]

After one lucrative deal in which he sold 1,700 fake figurines to a Berlin museum, Shapira was able to move outside the old city walls of Jerusalem with his family into an elegant villa on what is today Rav Kook Street, today known as Beit Ticho (Ticho House).[5]

Moabite forgeries edit

Shapira became interested in biblical artifacts after the appearance of the so-called Moabite Stone, also known as the Mesha Stele. He witnessed the huge interest around it and may have had a hand in negotiating on behalf of the German representatives. France eventually got the fragments of the original stone, leaving the British and the Germans rather frustrated.

The squeeze which helped reconstruct the shattered Mesha Stele was taken on behalf of the French scholar and diplomat Charles Clermont-Ganneau by a Christian Arab painter and dragoman (tour-guide), Salim al-Khouri, better known as Salim al-Kari, "the reader", a nickname apparently given to him by the Bedouin due to his work with ancient alphabets. Salim soon became Shapira's associate and provided connections to Arab craftsmen who, along with Salim himself, produced for Shapira's shop large amounts of fake Moabite artifacts – large stone-made human heads, but mainly clay objects: vessels, figurines and erotic pieces, generously covered with inscriptions based chiefly on the signs Salim had copied from the Mesha Stele. To modern scholars, the products seem clumsy – inscriptions do not translate to anything legible, for one – but at the time there was little with which to compare them. Shapira even organized an expedition to Moab for potential buyers, to sites where he had Salim's Bedouin associates bury more forgeries. Some scholars began to base theories on these pieces, and the term Moabitica was coined for this entirely new category of "Moabite" artifacts.

Since German archaeologists had not gained possession of the Moabite Stone, they rushed to buy the Shapira Collection ahead of their rivals. Berlin's Altes Museum bought 1700 artifacts for the cost of 22,000 thalers in 1873. Other private collectors followed suit. One of them was Horatio Kitchener, a not yet famous British lieutenant, who bought eight pieces for the Palestine Exploration Fund. Shapira was able to move to the luxurious Aga Rashid property (modern-day Ticho House), outside Jerusalem's squalid Old City, with his wife and two daughters.

Still various people, including Charles Clermont-Ganneau, had their doubts. Clermont-Ganneau suspected Salim al-Kari, questioned him and in time found the man who supplied him with clay, a stonemason who worked for him, and other accomplices. He published his findings in the Athenaeum newspaper in London and declared all "Moabitica" to be forgeries, a conclusion with which even the German scholars eventually concurred (cf. Emil Friedrich Kautzsch and Albert Socin, Die Echtheit der moabitischen Altertümer geprüft, 1876).[citation needed] Shapira defended his collection vigorously until his rivals presented more evidence against them. He placed the entire blame on Salim al-Kari, convinced almost everyone that he was just an innocent victim, and continued to do a considerable trade especially in genuine old Hebrew manuscripts from Yemen.[11]

Manuscript affair edit

 
1883 Punch magazine cartoon of Shapira and Ginsburg

In 1870, Shapira sold five scrolls written on leather to Edward Yorke McCauley; these were discovered in 1884 to have been artificially aged.[12][13]

In 1883, Shapira presented what is now known as the Shapira Strips, a supposedly ancient scroll written on leather strips which he claimed had been found near the Dead Sea. The Hebrew text hinted at a different version of Deuteronomy, including a surprising alternate commandment ("Thou shalt not hate thy brother in thy heart: I am God, thy God"). Shapira sought to sell them to the British Museum for a million pounds, and allowed them to exhibit two of the 15 strips. The exhibition was attended by thousands.

However, Clermont-Ganneau also attended the exhibition; Shapira had denied him access to the other 13 strips. After close examination, Clermont-Ganneau declared them to be forgeries. Soon afterward British biblical scholar Christian David Ginsburg came to the same conclusion. Later Clermont-Ganneau showed that the leather of the Deuteronomy scroll was quite possibly cut from the margin of a genuine Yemenite scroll that Shapira had previously sold to the Museum.

Following the rejection of the scroll by a large range of scholars, Punch ridiculed Shapira with a cartoon using anti-Semitic stereotypes.[14][15][16]

Shapira fled London in despair, his name ruined and all of his hopes crushed. Having spent some time in a hotel in Bloemendaal (Netherlands), in hotel Adler in Rotterdam, he shot himself in Hotel Willemsbrug in Rotterdam on March 9, 1884.[17] He was buried in the poor men's part of the Crooswijk cemetery.

The Shapira Strips disappeared and then reappeared a couple of years later in a Sotheby's auction, where they were sold for 10 guineas. Although it is now known that the strips were not destroyed by fire in 1899 as had previously been suggested, the fact that their current whereabouts is unknown leaves room for speculation.[18]

In light of the discovery of the Dead Sea scrolls in 1947, some scholars have called for a re-examination of the forgery charges.[19][20][21][22][23][24][2][25][26]

Heritage edit

Shapira "Moabitica" fakes still exist in museums and private collections around the world but are rarely displayed. By now they have become desirable collectibles in their own right.

The exact location of Shapira's shop on Christian Quarter Road in Jerusalem has now been identified.[27]

Personal life edit

Shapira was married to Rosette Jöckel and had two daughters with her; Maria Rosette Shapira (pen name: Myriam Harry) and Augusta Louisa Wilhelmina Shapira.[8]

In literature edit

Shapira's life is the subject of the novel Ke-heres Ha-nishbar (As a Broken Vessel - Keter, Jerusalem, 1984) by Shulamit Lapid, translated into German as Er begab sich in die Hand des Herrn.

References edit

  1. ^ Allegro, John Marco (1965). The Shapira affair. Doubleday.
  2. ^ a b Vermès, Géza (2010). The story of the scrolls: the miraculous discovery and true significance of the Dead Sea scrolls. Penguin. ISBN 978-0-14-104615-0.
  3. ^ Press 2023.
  4. ^ https://scholar.harvard.edu/sites/scholar.harvard.edu/files/dershowitz/files/the-valediction-of-moses-open-access.pdf
  5. ^ a b c Aviva and Shmuel Bar-Am. "In the footsteps of a master forger". Times of Israel. Retrieved 2019-11-10.
  6. ^ a b c "Chanan Tigay's Search for Answers About an Ancient Set of (Possibly Fake) Scrolls". Tablet Magazine. 2016-04-11. Retrieved 2019-11-10.
  7. ^   Singer, Isidore; Jacobs, Joseph (1905). "SHAPIRA, M. W.". In Singer, Isidore; et al. (eds.). The Jewish Encyclopedia. Vol. 11. New York: Funk & Wagnalls. pp. 232–233.
  8. ^ a b "Harry, Myriam (1869–1958) | Encyclopedia.com". www.encyclopedia.com. Retrieved 2019-11-17.
  9. ^ "Sacramento Daily Union 10 October 1883 — California Digital Newspaper Collection". cdnc.ucr.edu. Retrieved 2021-03-11.
  10. ^ "FRIDAY EVENING". Berrows Worcester Journal. September 1, 1883.
  11. ^ Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Shapira, M. W." . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 24 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 803.
  12. ^ Adler, Cyrus (1969). I have considered the days. Burning Bush Press. OCLC 7969.
  13. ^ Macdowell, Mississippi Fred (2010-02-23). . On the Main Line. Archived from the original on 2011-10-18. Retrieved 2021-03-12.
  14. ^ Oskar K. Rabinowicz (July 1965). "The Shapira Scroll: An nineteenth-century forgery". The Jewish Quarterly Review. New Series. 56 (1): 1–21. doi:10.2307/1453329. JSTOR 1453329.
  15. ^ . Punch. September 1883. Archived from the original on 2014-12-19. Retrieved 2014-12-06.
  16. ^ Press, Michael (July 1214). ""The Lying Pen of the Scribes": A Nineteenth-Century Dead Sea Scroll". The Appendix. 2 (3). Retrieved 2014-12-08.
  17. ^ Newspaper "Het Vaderland", March 12, 1884.
  18. ^ James R. Davila (2013-11-03). "The Shapira forgeries raise their moldering heads again". Retrieved 2014-12-06.
  19. ^ "Dead Sea Scroll Traced to Jew Who Committed Suicide 70 Years Ago - Jewish Telegraphic Agency". www.jta.org. 1956-08-14. from the original on 19 March 2021. Retrieved 4 March 2018.
  20. ^ ייבין, שמואל (1956-04-20). "המגילות הגנוזות". הארץ (in Hebrew). p. 9.
  21. ^ J. L. Teicher "The Genuineness of the Shapira Manuscripts," Times Literary Supplement, 22 March 1957.
  22. ^ Allegro, John Marco (1965). The Shapira affair. Doubleday. ISBN 9789120009094. OCLC 543413.
  23. ^ Jefferson, Helen (1968). "The Shapira Manuscript and the Qumran Scrolls". Revue de Qumrân. 6 (3): 391–399.
  24. ^ Guil, Shlomo (2017). "The Shapira Scroll was an Authentic Dead Sea Scroll". Palestine Exploration Quarterly. 149 (1): 6–27. doi:10.1080/00310328.2016.1185895. S2CID 165114970.
  25. ^ Dershowitz, Idan (March 10, 2021). "The Valediction of Moses: New Evidence on the Shapira Deuteronomy Fragments". Zeitschrift für die alttestamentliche Wissenschaft. 133 (1): 1–22. doi:10.1515/zaw-2021-0001. S2CID 232162477.
  26. ^ Dershowitz, Idan (2021). The Valediction of Moses A Proto-Biblical Book (PDF). Mohr Siebeck Tübingen. ISBN 978-3-16-160644-1.
  27. ^ Guil, Shlomo (June 2012). "In the Footsteps of the Concealed Shop". Et Mol. 223. Online reference https://www.academia.edu/2127379/In_Search_of_the_Shop_of_Moses_Wilhelm_Shapira_the_Leading_Figure_of_the_19TH_Century_Archaeological_Enigma
  • Press, Michael (2023). "The Career of Moses Shapira, Bookseller and Antiquarian". Palestine Exploration Quarterly. 155 (3): 230–253. doi:10.1080/00310328.2022.2050075. hdl:11250/3015076. ISSN 0031-0328.

Further reading edit

  • E. F. Kautzsch and A. Socin, Die Echtheit der moabitischen Altertümer geprüft (1876)
  • "Faking it" - Radio piece on Shapira produced by Israel story podcast for Tablet Magazine , 18 August 2014.
  • Nichols, Ross K. (2021). The Moses Scroll: Reopening the Most Controversial Case in the History of Biblical Scholarship, Horeb Press, St. Francisville, LA. ISBN 978-1-7366134-0-5.
  • Tigay, Chanan, The Lost Book of Moses (2016) ISBN 0062206419
  • Sabo, Yoram (2014). Shapira & I. A documentary film. In the footsteps of Shapira and his scroll.
  • Sabo, Yoram (2018). The Scroll Merchant, In Search Of Moses Wilhelm Shapira's Lost Jewish Treasure. (Hebrew) Hakibbutz Hameuchad.

External links edit

  • Sutro Library, San Francisco, CA finding aid for Hebraica collection which once belonged to Shapira.

moses, wilhelm, shapira, hebrew, מוזס, וילהלם, שפירא, 1830, march, 1884, jerusalem, antiquities, dealer, purveyor, both, authentic, forged, semitic, antiquities, including, some, allegedly, biblical, artifacts, most, high, profile, which, shapira, scroll, sham. Moses Wilhelm Shapira Hebrew מוזס וילהלם שפירא 1830 March 9 1884 was a Jerusalem antiquities dealer and purveyor of both authentic and forged Semitic antiquities including some allegedly Biblical artifacts the most high profile of which was the Shapira Scroll 1 2 3 The shame brought about by accusations that he was involved in the forging of ancient biblical texts drove him to suicide in 1884 Recent scholarship by Idan Dershowitz says Shapira may have found a predecessor to the canonical book of Deuteronomy 4 Moses Wilhelm ShapiraBorn1830Kamenets Podolski Russian Empire now Ukraine DiedMarch 9 1884 1884 03 09 aged 53 54 Hotel Willemsbrug in Rotterdam NetherlandsCitizenshipRussianPrussianOccupationAntiquities dealerKnown forHis role in the possibly forged or authentic manuscripts of the biblical book of Deuteronomy known as Shapira ScrollChildren2 including Myriam Harry Contents 1 Early life and career 2 Antiquities dealer and alleged forger 3 Moabite forgeries 4 Manuscript affair 5 Heritage 6 Personal life 7 In literature 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksEarly life and career editMoses Shapira was born in 1830 to Polish Jewish parents in Kamenets Podolski which at the time was part of Russian annexed Poland in modern day Ukraine Shapira s father emigrated to Ottoman Palestine without Moses Later in 1856 at the age of 25 Moses Shapira followed his father to the Holy Land 5 His grandfather who accompanied him died en route On the way while in Bucharest Moses Shapira converted to Christianity 6 and applied for Prussian citizenship adding Wilhelm to his name Once in Jerusalem he joined the community of Protestant missionaries and converts 7 who met at Christ Church 6 and in 1869 opened a store citation needed in the Street of the Christians today s Christian Quarter Road He sold the usual religious souvenirs enjoyed by pilgrims as well as ancient pots he acquired from Arab farmers While a patient in the German Lutheran congregation of Deaconess sisters Shapira met a nurse Deaconess Rosette Jockel who became his wife 5 8 Antiquities dealer and alleged forger editIn addition to selling souvenirs to tourists Shapira also sold a variety of antiquities some of it legitimate and some of it fake becoming the pre eminent antiquities dealer for European collectors 6 Shapira attempted to sell a fake coffin of Samson in London but it was exposed by Adolf Neubauer after he realized the epitaph had misspelled the name as Sampson 9 10 After one lucrative deal in which he sold 1 700 fake figurines to a Berlin museum Shapira was able to move outside the old city walls of Jerusalem with his family into an elegant villa on what is today Rav Kook Street today known as Beit Ticho Ticho House 5 Moabite forgeries editShapira became interested in biblical artifacts after the appearance of the so called Moabite Stone also known as the Mesha Stele He witnessed the huge interest around it and may have had a hand in negotiating on behalf of the German representatives France eventually got the fragments of the original stone leaving the British and the Germans rather frustrated The squeeze which helped reconstruct the shattered Mesha Stele was taken on behalf of the French scholar and diplomat Charles Clermont Ganneau by a Christian Arab painter and dragoman tour guide Salim al Khouri better known as Salim al Kari the reader a nickname apparently given to him by the Bedouin due to his work with ancient alphabets Salim soon became Shapira s associate and provided connections to Arab craftsmen who along with Salim himself produced for Shapira s shop large amounts of fake Moabite artifacts large stone made human heads but mainly clay objects vessels figurines and erotic pieces generously covered with inscriptions based chiefly on the signs Salim had copied from the Mesha Stele To modern scholars the products seem clumsy inscriptions do not translate to anything legible for one but at the time there was little with which to compare them Shapira even organized an expedition to Moab for potential buyers to sites where he had Salim s Bedouin associates bury more forgeries Some scholars began to base theories on these pieces and the term Moabitica was coined for this entirely new category of Moabite artifacts Since German archaeologists had not gained possession of the Moabite Stone they rushed to buy the Shapira Collection ahead of their rivals Berlin s Altes Museum bought 1700 artifacts for the cost of 22 000 thalers in 1873 Other private collectors followed suit One of them was Horatio Kitchener a not yet famous British lieutenant who bought eight pieces for the Palestine Exploration Fund Shapira was able to move to the luxurious Aga Rashid property modern day Ticho House outside Jerusalem s squalid Old City with his wife and two daughters Still various people including Charles Clermont Ganneau had their doubts Clermont Ganneau suspected Salim al Kari questioned him and in time found the man who supplied him with clay a stonemason who worked for him and other accomplices He published his findings in the Athenaeum newspaper in London and declared all Moabitica to be forgeries a conclusion with which even the German scholars eventually concurred cf Emil Friedrich Kautzsch and Albert Socin Die Echtheit der moabitischen Altertumer gepruft 1876 citation needed Shapira defended his collection vigorously until his rivals presented more evidence against them He placed the entire blame on Salim al Kari convinced almost everyone that he was just an innocent victim and continued to do a considerable trade especially in genuine old Hebrew manuscripts from Yemen 11 Manuscript affair editMain article Shapira Scroll nbsp 1883 Punch magazine cartoon of Shapira and GinsburgIn 1870 Shapira sold five scrolls written on leather to Edward Yorke McCauley these were discovered in 1884 to have been artificially aged 12 13 In 1883 Shapira presented what is now known as the Shapira Strips a supposedly ancient scroll written on leather strips which he claimed had been found near the Dead Sea The Hebrew text hinted at a different version of Deuteronomy including a surprising alternate commandment Thou shalt not hate thy brother in thy heart I am God thy God Shapira sought to sell them to the British Museum for a million pounds and allowed them to exhibit two of the 15 strips The exhibition was attended by thousands However Clermont Ganneau also attended the exhibition Shapira had denied him access to the other 13 strips After close examination Clermont Ganneau declared them to be forgeries Soon afterward British biblical scholar Christian David Ginsburg came to the same conclusion Later Clermont Ganneau showed that the leather of the Deuteronomy scroll was quite possibly cut from the margin of a genuine Yemenite scroll that Shapira had previously sold to the Museum Following the rejection of the scroll by a large range of scholars Punch ridiculed Shapira with a cartoon using anti Semitic stereotypes 14 15 16 Shapira fled London in despair his name ruined and all of his hopes crushed Having spent some time in a hotel in Bloemendaal Netherlands in hotel Adler in Rotterdam he shot himself in Hotel Willemsbrug in Rotterdam on March 9 1884 17 He was buried in the poor men s part of the Crooswijk cemetery The Shapira Strips disappeared and then reappeared a couple of years later in a Sotheby s auction where they were sold for 10 guineas Although it is now known that the strips were not destroyed by fire in 1899 as had previously been suggested the fact that their current whereabouts is unknown leaves room for speculation 18 In light of the discovery of the Dead Sea scrolls in 1947 some scholars have called for a re examination of the forgery charges 19 20 21 22 23 24 2 25 26 Heritage editShapira Moabitica fakes still exist in museums and private collections around the world but are rarely displayed By now they have become desirable collectibles in their own right The exact location of Shapira s shop on Christian Quarter Road in Jerusalem has now been identified 27 Personal life editShapira was married to Rosette Jockel and had two daughters with her Maria Rosette Shapira pen name Myriam Harry and Augusta Louisa Wilhelmina Shapira 8 In literature editShapira s life is the subject of the novel Ke heres Ha nishbar As a Broken Vessel Keter Jerusalem 1984 by Shulamit Lapid translated into German as Er begab sich in die Hand des Herrn References edit Allegro John Marco 1965 The Shapira affair Doubleday a b Vermes Geza 2010 The story of the scrolls the miraculous discovery and true significance of the Dead Sea scrolls Penguin ISBN 978 0 14 104615 0 Press 2023 https scholar harvard edu sites scholar harvard edu files dershowitz files the valediction of moses open access pdf a b c Aviva and Shmuel Bar Am In the footsteps of a master forger Times of Israel Retrieved 2019 11 10 a b c Chanan Tigay s Search for Answers About an Ancient Set of Possibly Fake Scrolls Tablet Magazine 2016 04 11 Retrieved 2019 11 10 nbsp Singer Isidore Jacobs Joseph 1905 SHAPIRA M W In Singer Isidore et al eds The Jewish Encyclopedia Vol 11 New York Funk amp Wagnalls pp 232 233 a b Harry Myriam 1869 1958 Encyclopedia com www encyclopedia com Retrieved 2019 11 17 Sacramento Daily Union 10 October 1883 California Digital Newspaper Collection cdnc ucr edu Retrieved 2021 03 11 FRIDAY EVENING Berrows Worcester Journal September 1 1883 Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Shapira M W Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 24 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 803 Adler Cyrus 1969 I have considered the days Burning Bush Press OCLC 7969 Macdowell Mississippi Fred 2010 02 23 A 19th century Protestant Semitics professor s Goral ha gra bibliomancy also uncovering a Shapira fraudulent Hebrew manuscript On the Main Line Archived from the original on 2011 10 18 Retrieved 2021 03 12 Oskar K Rabinowicz July 1965 The Shapira Scroll An nineteenth century forgery The Jewish Quarterly Review New Series 56 1 1 21 doi 10 2307 1453329 JSTOR 1453329 Mr Sharp Eye Ra cartoon Punch September 1883 Archived from the original on 2014 12 19 Retrieved 2014 12 06 Press Michael July 1214 The Lying Pen of the Scribes A Nineteenth Century Dead Sea Scroll The Appendix 2 3 Retrieved 2014 12 08 Newspaper Het Vaderland March 12 1884 James R Davila 2013 11 03 The Shapira forgeries raise their moldering heads again Retrieved 2014 12 06 Dead Sea Scroll Traced to Jew Who Committed Suicide 70 Years Ago Jewish Telegraphic Agency www jta org 1956 08 14 Archived from the original on 19 March 2021 Retrieved 4 March 2018 ייבין שמואל 1956 04 20 המגילות הגנוזות הארץ in Hebrew p 9 J L Teicher The Genuineness of the Shapira Manuscripts Times Literary Supplement 22 March 1957 Allegro John Marco 1965 The Shapira affair Doubleday ISBN 9789120009094 OCLC 543413 Jefferson Helen 1968 The Shapira Manuscript and the Qumran Scrolls Revue de Qumran 6 3 391 399 Guil Shlomo 2017 The Shapira Scroll was an Authentic Dead Sea Scroll Palestine Exploration Quarterly 149 1 6 27 doi 10 1080 00310328 2016 1185895 S2CID 165114970 Dershowitz Idan March 10 2021 The Valediction of Moses New Evidence on the Shapira Deuteronomy Fragments Zeitschrift fur die alttestamentliche Wissenschaft 133 1 1 22 doi 10 1515 zaw 2021 0001 S2CID 232162477 Dershowitz Idan 2021 The Valediction of Moses A Proto Biblical Book PDF Mohr Siebeck Tubingen ISBN 978 3 16 160644 1 Guil Shlomo June 2012 In the Footsteps of the Concealed Shop Et Mol 223 Online reference https www academia edu 2127379 In Search of the Shop of Moses Wilhelm Shapira the Leading Figure of the 19TH Century Archaeological Enigma Press Michael 2023 The Career of Moses Shapira Bookseller and Antiquarian Palestine Exploration Quarterly 155 3 230 253 doi 10 1080 00310328 2022 2050075 hdl 11250 3015076 ISSN 0031 0328 Further reading editE F Kautzsch and A Socin Die Echtheit der moabitischen Altertumer gepruft 1876 Faking it Radio piece on Shapira produced by Israel story podcast for Tablet Magazine 18 August 2014 Nichols Ross K 2021 The Moses Scroll Reopening the Most Controversial Case in the History of Biblical Scholarship Horeb Press St Francisville LA ISBN 978 1 7366134 0 5 Tigay Chanan The Lost Book of Moses 2016 ISBN 0062206419 Sabo Yoram 2014 Shapira amp I A documentary film In the footsteps of Shapira and his scroll Sabo Yoram 2018 The Scroll Merchant In Search Of Moses Wilhelm Shapira s Lost Jewish Treasure Hebrew Hakibbutz Hameuchad External links editSutro Library San Francisco CA finding aid for Hebraica collection which once belonged to Shapira Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Moses Wilhelm Shapira amp oldid 1216152964, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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