RT Article T1 A Palaeographic and Codicological (Re)assessment of the Opisthograph 4Q433a/4Q255 JF Dead Sea discoveries VO 26 IS 2 SP 170 OP 188 A1 Aksu, Ayhan LA English PB Brill YR 2019 UL https://www.ixtheo.de/Record/168368804X AB A consideration of both the palaeographic and material features of a scroll provides scholars the opportunity to investigate the scribal culture in which a particular manuscript emerged. This article examines the papyrus opisthograph from Qumran containing 4QpapHodayot-like Text B, 4Q433a, and 4QpapSerekh ha-Yaḥada, 4Q255, on either side. There has been scholarly disagreement about this opisthograph with regard to a number of questions: (1) which of the two compositions was inscribed on the recto, (2) how the two compositions should be dated, and (3) which of the two texts was written first. This article looks at both compositions by means of palaeography and codicology. From this combined approach I deduce that 4Q433a was written first, on the recto of this papyrus manuscript. 4Q255 was added later, on the verso. Both compositions can be dated to the early first century BCE. This reconstruction makes it plausible that 4Q255 was a personal copy. K1 Dead Sea Scrolls K1 Codicology K1 opisthograph K1 Palaeography K1 personal copy K1 Scribal Practices DO 10.1163/15685179-12341501