Yes, by posting the quote I did, I wasn't meaning that they weren't into animal husbandy. Just that the fact that they were addicted to animal husbandry would not mean ruling out all other forms of work, including pottery. After all, they would have needed pots.Minimalist wrote:In Antiquities, Book XVIII, Chapter 5, 1 Josephus says:
yet is their course of life better than that of other men; and they entirely addict themselves to husbandry.
Well, it's all dated, Min... it's history after all!Minimalist wrote: Pliny the Elder never went to Judaea and his source for his writings on the area seems to be Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa, Octavian's most trusted lieutenant. Agrippa served as governor of Syria as late as 17 BC and died in 12 BC. So, Pliny's data about the Essenes was somewhat dated as compared to Josephus who was living with them in the first century AD.

I think the earlier the better in this case, because it gives us an earlier attestation than Josephus. It doesn't make it of less value than Josephus's. And it also gets us behind the 1 CE magic marker line - always a plus in my book - and it gets us a few miles down the road from where the Dead Sea Scrolls were found.