BIBLE HISTORY DAILY

What Is the Judean Desert?

A place of wandering and refuge

Judean desert

The caves at Qumran in the Judean Desert. Courtesy Nathan Steinmeyer, BAS.

Also known as the Wilderness of Judah, the Judean Desert is only mentioned by name a few times in the Bible. However, it played an important role in several biblical and non-biblical events, including as a refuge for David, a place of temptation for Jesus, and the last stand of Jewish rebels against Rome. With steep mountain slopes to the west and the lowest place on earth (the Dead Sea) to the east, the Judean Desert is one of the Holy Land’s more unique and awe-inspiring regions.


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Wilderness Wanderings

Hiking through the wadi at Ein Gedi. Courtesy Nathan Steinmeyer, BAS.

The Judean Desert consists not of rolling sand dunes but instead is a rocky plateau cut by cavernous valleys (wadis) that ends abruptly in a steep escarpment dropping down hundreds of feet to the Dead Sea and the Jordan Valley to the east. Largely lacking vegetation except for seasonal grasses, the Judean Desert is home to ibexes, rock hyraxes, and a variety of reptiles and birds. The area has been sparsely inhabited throughout history, with most of its settlements being located near wadis and desert springs, such as Ein Gedi.

The Judean Desert features many caves along its wadis and the steep escarpment that abuts the Dead Sea and the Jordan Rift Valley. It was in these caves that David hid from King Saul and cut off a corner of his robe (1 Samuel 24). Throughout history, people have hid both themselves and their possessions in these caves. This includes important archaeological finds such as the Dead Sea Scrolls (also known as the Judean Desert Scrolls), which were discovered in both man-made and natural caves throughout the region. Archaeologists have also discovered caches of Roman swords, cultic objects, and much more. The rugged and secluded beauty of the region also made it an ideal place for Christian monasteries, with several dozen having been built from the Byzantine period (fourth to seventh centuries CE) to more recent times.

St. George Monastery in Wadi Qelt. Dr. Avishai Teicher Pikiwiki Israel, CC BY 2.5, via Wikimedia Commons.

Beyond its caves and ravines, the desert is also home to several important mountains, including the Mount of Temptation, which towers above the nearby city of Jericho and is widely associated with the narrative of Jesus’s 40-day wandering in the wilderness (Mark 1). In addition, Masada was a mountaintop fortress first built by the Hasmonean ruler Alexander Jannaeus and later turned into a palace by Herod the Great. It was also at Masada that some of the last Jewish rebels famously sought refuge during the First Jewish Revolt (66–72 CE).

View of the Dead Sea from on top of Masada. Courtesy Nathan Steinmeyer, BAS.


Related reading in Bible History Daily

What Is the Negev?

What Is the Shephelah?

All-Access members, read more in the BAS Library

New Scrolls from the Judean Desert

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Masada Shall Never Fail (to Surprise) Again

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