Shrine of the Book: Difference between revisions
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{{quote|The Israel Museum opened in 1965 to worldwide praise as an important research facility. Of its many historical and religiously important collections, none are more famous than the Dead Sea Scrolls. The scrolls are contained in a wing called The Shrine of the Book. The Shrine's roof is an enormous white dome designed to imitate the clay pots in which the Scrolls were found. Those scrolls, discovered in 1947 by Bedouins in the Qumran caves on the Dead Sea, are said to date from 100 B.C., and area the oldest known Jewish manuscripts in existence.|'''Pamphlet'''|Mario is Missing! (PC)}} | {{quote|The Israel Museum opened in 1965 to worldwide praise as an important research facility. Of its many historical and religiously important collections, none are more famous than the Dead Sea Scrolls. The scrolls are contained in a wing called The Shrine of the Book. The Shrine's roof is an enormous white dome designed to imitate the clay pots in which the Scrolls were found. Those scrolls, discovered in 1947 by Bedouins in the Qumran caves on the Dead Sea, are said to date from 100 B.C., and area the oldest known Jewish manuscripts in existence.|'''Pamphlet'''|Mario is Missing! (PC)}} | ||
Revision as of 19:26, September 13, 2024
- “The Israel Museum opened in 1965 to worldwide praise as an important research facility. Of its many historical and religiously important collections, none are more famous than the Dead Sea Scrolls. The scrolls are contained in a wing called The Shrine of the Book. The Shrine's roof is an enormous white dome designed to imitate the clay pots in which the Scrolls were found. Those scrolls, discovered in 1947 by Bedouins in the Qumran caves on the Dead Sea, are said to date from 100 B.C., and area the oldest known Jewish manuscripts in existence.”
- —Pamphlet, Mario is Missing! (PC)
The Shrine of the Book (Hebrew: היכל הספר, Heikhal HaSefer) is a museum-sanctuary built in 1965. Located in Jerusalem, Israel, it is home to the Dead Sea Scrolls.
In the PC versions of Mario is Missing!, a Koopa Troopa stole the Dead Sea Scrolls from the Western Wall, forcing the shrine to close. Until Luigi returns the scrolls, the curator reopens the shrine.
Questions
To prove the scrolls' authenticity, Luigi must answer two of the following questions:
- The Dome of the Shrine of the Book resembles:
- the Dome at Capital Hill
- Qumran caves
- lids of clay pots
- caves on the Dead Sea
- The Dome of the Shrine is made of:
- porcelain
- scrolls
- marble
- clay
- the Second Temple
- Shrine of the Book contains the:
- Teapot Dome
- Dead Sea Scrolls
- Bedouins
- library books