Antiquities of the Jews
Preface
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Book XVIII
FROM THE BANISHMENT OF ARCHELUS TO THE DEPARTURE FROM BABYLON.
CHAPTER 1.
HOW CYRENIUS WAS SENT BY CAESAR TO MAKE A TAXATION OF SYRIA AND
JUDEA; AND HOW COPONIUS WAS SENT TO BE PROCURATOR OF JUDEA; CONCERNING
JUDAS OF GALILEE AND CONCERNING THE SECTS THAT WERE AMONG THE JEWS.
1. NOW Cyrenius, a Roman senator, and one who had gone through
other magistracies, and had passed through them till he had been
consul, and one who, on other accounts, was of great dignity, came
at this time into Syria, with a few others, being sent by Caesar
to he a judge of that nation, and to take an account of their substance.
Coponius also, a man of the equestrian order, was sent together
with him, to have the supreme power over the Jews. Moreover, Cyrenius
came himself into Judea, which was now added to the province of
Syria, to take an account of their substance, and to dispose of
Archelaus's money; but the Jews, although at the beginning they
took the report of a taxation heinously, yet did they leave off
any further opposition to it, by the persuasion of Joazar, who was
the son of Beethus, and high priest; so they, being over-pesuaded
by Joazar's words, gave an account of their estates, without any
dispute about it. Yet was there one Judas, a Gaulonite, (1) of a
city whose name was Gamala, who, taking with him Sadduc, (2) a Pharisee,
became zealous to draw them to a revolt, who both said that this
taxation was no better than an introduction to slavery, and exhorted
the nation to assert their liberty; as if they could procure them
happiness and security for what they possessed, and an assured enjoyment
of a still greater good, which was that of the honor and glory they
would thereby acquire for magnanimity. They also said that God would
not otherwise be assisting to them, than upon their joining with
one another in such councils as might be successful, and for their
own advantage; and this especially, if they would set about great
exploits, and not grow weary in executing the same; so men received
what they said with pleasure, and this bold attempt proceeded to
a great height. All sorts of misfortunes also sprang from these
men, and the nation was infected with this doctrine to an incredible
degree; one violent war came upon us after another, and we lost
our friends which used to alleviate our pains; there were also very
great robberies and murder of our principal men. This was done in
pretense indeed for the public welfare, but in reality for the hopes
of gain to themselves; whence arose seditions, and from them murders
of men, which sometimes fell on those of their own people, (by the
madness of these men towards one another, while their desire was
that none of the adverse party might be left,) and sometimes on
their enemies; a famine also coming upon us, reduced us to the last
degree of despair, as did also the taking and demolishing of cities;
nay, the sedition at last increased so high, that the very temple
of God was burnt down by their enemies' fire. Such were the consequences
of this, that the customs of our fathers were altered, and such
a change was made, as added a mighty weight toward bringing all
to destruction, which these men occasioned by their thus conspiring
together; for Judas and Sadduc, who excited a fourth philosophic
sect among us, and had a great many followers therein, filled our
civil government with tumults at present, and laid the foundations
of our future miseries, by this system of philosophy, which we were
before unacquainted withal, concerning which I will discourse a
little, and this the rather because the infection which spread thence
among the younger sort, who were zealous for it, brought the public
to destruction.
2. The Jews had for a great while had three sects of philosophy
peculiar to themselves; the sect of the Essens, and the sect of
the Sadducees, and the third sort of opinions was that of those
called Pharisees; of which sects, although I have already spoken
in the second book of the Jewish War, yet will I a little touch
upon them now.
3. Now, for the Pharisees, they live meanly, and despise delicacies
in diet; and they follow the conduct of reason; and what that prescribes
to them as good for them they do; and they think they ought earnestly
to strive to observe reason's dictates for practice. They also pay
a respect to such as are in years; nor are they so bold as to contradict
them in any thing which they have introduced; and when they determine
that all things are done by fate, they do not take away the freedom
from men of acting as they think fit; since their notion is, that
it hath pleased God to make a temperament, whereby what he wills
is done, but so that the will of man can act virtuously or viciously.
They also believe that souls have an immortal rigor in them, and
that under the earth there will be rewards or punishments, according
as they have lived virtuously or viciously in this life; and the
latter are to be detained in an everlasting prison, but that the
former shall have power to revive and live again; on account of
which doctrines they are able greatly to persuade the body of the
people; and whatsoever they do about Divine worship, prayers, and
sacrifices, they perform them according to their direction; insomuch
that the cities give great attestations to them on account of their
entire virtuous conduct, both in the actions of their lives and
their discourses also.
4. But the doctrine of the Sadducees is this: That souls die with
the bodies; nor do they regard the observation of any thing besides
what the law enjoins them; for they think it an instance of virtue
to dispute with those teachers of philosophy whom they frequent:
but this doctrine is received but by a few, yet by those still of
the greatest dignity. But they are able to do almost nothing of
themselves; for when they become magistrates, as they are unwillingly
and by force sometimes obliged to be, they addict themselves to
the notions of the Pharisees, because the multitude would not otherwise
bear them.
5. The doctrine of the Essens is this: That all things are best
ascribed to God. They teach the immortality of souls, and esteem
that the rewards of righteousness are to be earnestly striven for;
and when they send what they have dedicated to God into the temple,
they do not offer sacrifices (3) because they have more pure lustrations
of their own; on which account they are excluded from the common
court of the temple, but offer their sacrifices themselves; yet
is their course of life better than that of other men; and they
entirely addict themselves to husbandry. It also deserves our admiration,
how much they exceed all other men that addict themselves to virtue,
and this in righteousness; and indeed to such a degree, that as
it hath never appeared among any other men, neither Greeks nor barbarians,
no, not for a little time, so hath it endured a long while among
them. This is demonstrated by that institution of theirs, which
will not suffer any thing to hinder them from having all things
in common; so that a rich man enjoys no more of his own wealth than
he who hath nothing at all. There are about four thousand men that
live in this way, and neither marry wives, nor are desirous to keep
servants; as thinking the latter tempts men to be unjust, and the
former gives the handle to domestic quarrels; but as they live by
themselves, they minister one to another. They also appoint certain
stewards to receive the incomes of their revenues, and of the fruits
of the ground; such as are good men and priests, who are to get
their corn and their food ready for them. They none of them differ
from others of the Essens in their way of living, but do the most
resemble those Dacae who are called Polistae (4) [dwellers in cities].
6. But of the fourth sect of Jewish philosophy, Judas the Galilean
was the author. These men agree in all other things with the Pharisaic
notions; but they have an inviolable attachment to liberty, and
say that God is to be their only Ruler and Lord. They also do not
value dying any kinds of death, nor indeed do they heed the deaths
of their relations and friends, nor can any such fear make them
call any man lord. And since this immovable resolution of theirs
is well known to a great many, I shall speak no further about that
matter; nor am I afraid that any thing I have said of them should
be disbelieved, but rather fear, that what I have said is beneath
the resolution they show when they undergo pain. And it was in Gessius
Florus's time that the nation began to grow mad with this distemper,
who was our procurator, and who occasioned the Jews to go wild with
it by the abuse of his authority, and to make them revolt from the
Romans. And these are the sects of Jewish philosophy.
CHAPTER 2.
NOW HEROD AND PHILIP BUILT SEVERAL CITIES IN HONOR OF CAESAR. CONCERNING
THE SUCCESSION OF PRIESTS AND PROCURATORS; AS ALSO WHAT BEFELL PHRAATES
AND THE PARTHIANS.
1. WHEN Cyrenius had now disposed of Archelaus's money, and when
the taxings were come to a conclusion, which were made in the thirty-seventh
year of Caesar's victory over Antony at Actium, he deprived Joazar
of the high priesthood, which dignity had been conferred on him
by the multitude, and he appointed Ananus, the son of Seth, to be
high priest; while Herod and Philip had each of them received their
own tetrarchy, and settled the affairs thereof. Herod also built
a wall about Sepphoris, (which is the security of all Galilee,)
and made it the metropolis of the country. He also built a wall
round Betharamphtha, which was itself a city also, and called it
Julias, from the name of the emperor's wife. When Philip also had
built Paneas, a city at the fountains of Jordan, he named it Cesarea.
He also advanced the village Bethsaids, situate at the lake of Gennesareth,
unto the dignity of a city, both by the number of inhabitants it
contained, and its other grandeur, and called it by the name of
Julias, the same name with Caesar's daughter.
2. As Coponius, who we told you was sent along with Cyrenius, was
exercising his office of procurator, and governing Judea, the following
accidents happened. As the Jews were celebrating the feast of unleavened
bread, which we call the Passover, it was customary for the priests
to open the temple-gates just after midnight. When, therefore, those
gates were first opened, some of the Samaritans came privately into
Jerusalem, and threw about dead men's bodies, in the cloisters;
on which account the Jews afterward excluded them out of the temple,
which they had not used to do at such festivals; and on other accounts
also they watched the temple more carefully than they had formerly
done. A little after which accident Coponius returned to Rome, and
Marcus Ambivius came to be his successor in that government; under
whom Salome, the sister of king Herod, died, and left to Julia,
[Caesar's wife,] Jamnia, all its toparchy, and Phasaelis in the
plain, and Arehelais, where is a great plantation of palm trees,
and their fruit is excellent in its kind. After him came Annius
Rufus, under whom died Caesar, the second emperor of the Romans,
the duration of whose reign was fifty-seven years, besides six months
and two days (of which time Antonius ruled together with him fourteen
years; but the duration of his life was seventy-seven years); upon
whose death Tiberius Nero, his wife Julia's son, succeeded. He was
now the third emperor; and he sent Valerius Gratus to be procurator
of Judea, and to succeed Annius Rufus. This man deprived Ananus
of the high priesthood, and appointed Ismael, the son of Phabi,
to be high priest. He also deprived him in a little time, and ordained
Eleazar, the son of Ananus, who had been high priest before, to
be high priest; which office, when he had held for a year, Gratus
deprived him of it, and gave the high priesthood to Simon, the son
of Camithus; and when he had possessed that dignity no longer than
a year, Joseph Caiaphas was made his successor. When Gratus had
done those things, he went back to Rome, after he had tarried in
Judea eleven years, when Pontius Pilate came as his successor.
3. And now Herod the tetrarch, who was in great favor with Tiberius,
built a city of the same name with him, and called it Tiberias.
He built it in the best part of Galilee, at the lake of Gennesareth.
There are warm baths at a little distance from it, in a village
named Emmaus. Strangers came and inhabited this city; a great number
of the inhabitants were Galileans also; and many were necessitated
by Herod to come thither out of the country belonging to him, and
were by force compelled to be its inhabitants; some of them were
persons of condition. He also admitted poor people, such as those
that were collected from all parts, to dwell in it. Nay, some of
them were not quite free-men, and these he was benefactor to, and
made them free in great numbers; but obliged them not to forsake
the city, by building them very good houses at his own expenses,
and by giving them land also; for he was sensible, that to make
this place a habitation was to transgress the Jewish ancient laws,
because many sepulchers were to be here taken away, in order to
make room for the city Tiberias (5) whereas our laws pronounce that
such inhabitants are unclean for seven days. (6)
4. About this time died Phraates, king of the Parthians, by the
treachery of Phraataces his son, upon the occasion following: When
Phraates had had legitimate sons of his own, he had also an Italian
maid-servant, whose name was Thermusa, who had been formerly sent
to him by Julius Caesar, among other presents. He first made her
his concubine; but he being a great admirer of her beauty, in process
of time having a son by her, whose name was Phraataces, he made
her his legitimate wife, and had a great respect for her. Now she
was able to persuade him to do any thing that she said, and was
earnest in procuring the government of Parthia for her son; but
still she saw that her endeavors would not succeed, unless she could
contrive how to remove Phraates's legitimate sons [out of the kingdom;]
so she persuaded him to send those his sons as pledges of his fidelity
to Rome; and they were sent to Rome accordingly, because it was
not easy for him to contradict her commands. Now while Phraataces
was alone brought up in order to succeed in the government, he thought
it very tedious to expect that government by his father's donation
[as his successor]; he therefore formed a treacherous design against
his father, by his mother's assistance, with whom, as the report
went, he had criminal conversation also. So he was hated for both
these vices, while his subjects esteemed this [wicked] love of his
mother to be no way inferior to his parricide; and he was by them,
in a sedition, expelled out of the country before he grew too great,
and died. But as the best sort of Parthians agreed together that
it was impossible they should be governed without a king, while
also it was their constant practice to choose one of the family
of Arsaces, [nor did their law allow of any others; and they thought
this kingdom had been sufficiently injured already by the marriage
with an Italian concubine, and by her issue,] they sent ambassadors,
and called Orodes [to take the crown]; for the multitude would not
otherwise have borne them; and though he was accused of very great
cruelty, and was of an untractable temper, and prone to wrath, yet
still he was one of the family of Arsaces. However, they made a
conspiracy against him, and slew him, and that, as some say, at
a festival, and among their sacrifices; (for it is the universal
custom there to carry their swords with them;) but, as the more
general report is, they slew him when they had drawn him out a hunting.
So they sent ambassadors to Rome, and desired they would send one
of those that were there as pledges to be their king. Accordingly,
Vonones was preferred before the rest, and sent to them (for he
seemed capable of such great fortune, which two of the greatest
kingdoms under the sun now offered him, his own and a foreign one).
However, the barbarians soon changed their minds, they being naturally
of a mutable disposition, upon the supposal that this man was not
worthy to be their governor; for they could not think of obeying
the commands of one that had been a slave, (for so they called those
that had been hostages,) nor could they bear the ignominy of that
name; and this was the more intolerable, because then the Parthians
must have such a king set over them, not by right of war, but in
time of peace. So they presently invited Artabanus, king of Media,
to be their king, he being also of the race of Arsaces. Artabanus
complied with the offer that was made him, and came to them with
an army. So Vonones met him; and at first the multitude of the Parthians
stood on this side, and he put his army in array; but Artabanus
was beaten, and fled to the mountains of Media. Yet did he a little
after gather a great army together, and fought with Vonones, and
beat him; whereupon Vonones fled away on horseback, with a few of
his attendants about him, to Seleucia [upon Tigris]. So when Artabanus
had slain a great number, and this after he had gotten the victory
by reason of the very great dismay the barbarians were in, he retired
to Ctesiphon with a great number of his people; and so he now reigned
over the Parthians. But Vonones fled away to Armenia; and as soon
as he came thither, he had an inclination to have the government
of the country given him, and sent ambassadors to Rome [for that
purpose]. But because Tiberius refused it him, and because he wanted
courage, and because the Parthian king threatened him, and sent
ambassadors to him to denounce war against him if he proceeded,
and because he had no way to take to regain any other kingdom, (for
the people of authority among the Armenians about Niphates joined
themselves to Artabanus,) he delivered up himself to Silanus, the
president of Syria, who, out of regard to his education at Rome,
kept him in Syria, while Artabanus gave Armenia to Orodes, one of
his own sons.
5. At this time died Antiochus, the king of Commagene; whereupon
the multitude contended with the nobility, and both sent ambassadors
to [Rome]; for the men of power were desirous that their form of
government might be changed into that of a [Roman] province; as
were the multitude desirous to be under kings, as their fathers
had been. So the senate made a decree that Germanicus should be
sent to settle the affairs of the East, fortune hereby taking a
proper opportunity for depriving him of his life; for when he had
been in the East, and settled all affairs there, his life was taken
away by the poison which Piso gave him, as hath been related elsewhere.
(7)
CHAPTER 3.
SEDITION OF THE JEWS AGAINST PONTIUS PILATE. CONCERNING CHRIST,
AND WHAT BEFELL PAULINA AND THE JEWS AT ROME,
1. BUT now Pilate, the procurator of Judea, removed the army from
Cesarea to Jerusalem, to take their winter quarters there, in order
to abolish the Jewish laws. So he introduced Caesar's effigies,
which were upon the ensigns, and brought them into the city; whereas
our law forbids us the very making of images; on which account the
former procurators were wont to make their entry into the city with
such ensigns as had not those ornaments. Pilate was the first who
brought those images to Jerusalem, and set them up there; which
was done without the knowledge of the people, because it was done
in the night time; but as soon as they knew it, they came in multitudes
to Cesarea, and interceded with Pilate many days that he would remove
the images; and when he would not grant their requests, because
it would tend to the injury of Caesar, while yet they persevered
in their request, on the sixth day he ordered his soldiers to have
their weapons privately, while he came and sat upon his judgment-seat,
which seat was so prepared in the open place of the city, that it
concealed the army that lay ready to oppress them; and when the
Jews petitioned him again, he gave a signal to the soldiers to encompass
them routed, and threatened that their punishment should be no less
than immediate death, unless they would leave off disturbing him,
and go their ways home. But they threw themselves upon the ground,
and laid their necks bare, and said they would take their death
very willingly, rather than the wisdom of their laws should be transgressed;
upon which Pilate was deeply affected with their firm resolution
to keep their laws inviolable, and presently commanded the images
to be carried back from Jerusalem to Cesarea.
2. But Pilate undertook to bring a current of water to Jerusalem,
and did it with the sacred money, and derived the origin of the
stream from the distance of two hundred furlongs. However, the Jews
(8) were not pleased with what had been done about this water; and
many ten thousands of the people got together, and made a clamor
against him, and insisted that he should leave off that design.
Some of them also used reproaches, and abused the man, as crowds
of such people usually do. So he habited a great number of his soldiers
in their habit, who carried daggers under their garments, and sent
them to a place where they might surround them. So he bid the Jews
himself go away; but they boldly casting reproaches upon him, he
gave the soldiers that signal which had been beforehand agreed on;
who laid upon them much greater blows than Pilate had commanded
them, and equally punished those that were tumultuous, and those
that were not; nor did they spare them in the least: and since the
people were unarmed, and were caught by men prepared for what they
were about, there were a great number of them slain by this means,
and others of them ran away wounded. And thus an end was put to
this sedition.
3. Now there was about this time Jesus, a wise man, if it be lawful
to call him a man; for he was a doer of wonderful works, a teacher
of such men as receive the truth with pleasure. He drew over to
him both many of the Jews and many of the Gentiles. He was [the]
Christ. And when Pilate, at the suggestion of the principal men
amongst us, had condemned him to the cross, (9) those that loved
him at the first did not forsake him; for he appeared to them alive
again the third day; (10) as the divine prophets had foretold these
and ten thousand other wonderful things concerning him. And the
tribe of Christians, so named from him, are not extinct at this
day.
4. About the same time also another sad calamity put the Jews into
disorder, and certain shameful practices happened about the temple
of Isis that was at Rome. I will now first take notice of the wicked
attempt about the temple of Isis, and will then give an account
of the Jewish affairs. There was at Rome a woman whose name was
Paulina; one who, on account of the dignity of her ancestors, and
by the regular conduct of a virtuous life, had a great reputation:
she was also very rich; and although she was of a beautiful countenance,
and in that flower of her age wherein women are the most gay, yet
did she lead a life of great modesty. She was married to Saturninus,
one that was every way answerable to her in an excellent character.
Decius Mundus fell in love with this woman, who was a man very high
in the equestrian order; and as she was of too great dignity to
be caught by presents, and had already rejected them, though they
had been sent in great abundance, he was still more inflamed with
love to her, insomuch that he promised to give her two hundred thousand
Attic drachmae for one night's lodging; and when this would not
prevail upon her, and he was not able to bear this misfortune in
his amours, he thought it the best way to famish himself to death
for want of food, on account of Paulina's sad refusal; and he determined
with himself to die after such a manner, and he went on with his
purpose accordingly. Now Mundus had a freed-woman, who had been
made free by his father, whose name was Ide, one skillful in all
sorts of mischief. This woman was very much grieved at the young
man's resolution to kill himself, (for he did not conceal his intentions
to destroy himself from others,) and came to him, and encouraged
him by her discourse, and made him to hope, by some promises she
gave him, that he might obtain a night's lodging with Paulina; and
when he joyfully hearkened to her entreaty, she said she wanted
no more than fifty thousand drachmae for the entrapping of the woman.
So when she had encouraged the young man, and gotten as much money
as she required, she did not take the same methods as had been taken
before, because she perceived that the woman was by no means to
be tempted by money; but as she knew that she was very much given
to the worship of the goddess Isis, she devised the following stratagem:
She went to some of Isis's priests, and upon the strongest assurances
[of concealment], she persuaded them by words, but chiefly by the
offer of money, of twenty-five thousand drachmae in hand, and as
much more when the thing had taken effect; and told them the passion
of the young man, and persuaded them to use all means possible to
beguile the woman. So they were drawn in to promise so to do, by
that large sum of gold they were to have. Accordingly, the oldest
of them went immediately to Paulina; and upon his admittance, he
desired to speak with her by herself. When that was granted him,
he told her that he was sent by the god Anubis, who was fallen in
love with her, and enjoined her to come to him. Upon this she took
the message very kindly, and valued herself greatly upon this condescension
of Anubis, and told her husband that she had a message sent her,
and was to sup and lie with Anubis; so he agreed to her acceptance
of the offer, as fully satisfied with the chastity of his wife.
Accordingly, she went to the temple, and after she had supped there,
and it was the hour to go to sleep, the priest shut the doors of
the temple, when, in the holy part of it, the lights were also put
out. Then did Mundus leap out, (for he was hidden therein,) and
did not fail of enjoying her, who was at his service all the night
long, as supposing he was the god; and when he was gone away, which
was before those priests who knew nothing of this stratagem were
stirring, Paulina came early to her husband, and told him how the
god Anubis had appeared to her. Among her friends, also, she declared
how great a value she put upon this favor, who partly disbelieved
the thing, when they reflected on its nature, and partly were amazed
at it, as having no pretense for not believing it, when they considered
the modesty and the dignity of the person. But now, on the third
day after what had been done, Mundus met Paulina, and said, "Nay,
Paulina, thou hast saved me two hundred thousand drachmae, which
sum thou sightest have added to thy own family; yet hast thou not
failed to be at my service in the manner I invited thee. As for
the reproaches thou hast laid upon Mundus, I value not the business
of names; but I rejoice in the pleasure I reaped by what I did,
while I took to myself the name of Anubis." When he had said
this, he went his way. But now she began to come to the sense of
the grossness of what she had done, and rent her garments, and told
her husband of the horrid nature of this wicked contrivance, and
prayed him not to neglect to assist her in this case. So he discovered
the fact to the emperor; whereupon Tiberius inquired into the matter
thoroughly by examining the priests about it, and ordered them to
be crucified, as well as Ide, who was the occasion of their perdition,
and who had contrived the whole matter, which was so injurious to
the woman. He also demolished the temple of Isis, and gave order
that her statue should be thrown into the river Tiber; while he
only banished Mundus, but did no more to him, because he supposed
that what crime he had committed was done out of the passion of
love. And these were the circumstances which concerned the temple
of Isis, and the injuries occasioned by her priests. I now return
to the relation of what happened about this time to the Jews at
Rome, as I formerly told you I would.
5. There was a man who was a Jew, but had been driven away from
his own country by an accusation laid against him for transgressing
their laws, and by the fear he was under of punishment for the same;
but in all respects a wicked man. He, then living at Rome, professed
to instruct men in the wisdom of the laws of Moses. He procured
also three other men, entirely of the same character with himself,
to be his partners. These men persuaded Fulvia, a woman of great
dignity, and one that had embraced the Jewish religion, to send
purple and gold to the temple at Jerusalem; and when they had gotten
them, they employed them for their own uses, and spent the money
themselves, on which account it was that they at first required
it of her. Whereupon Tiberius, who had been informed of the thing
by Saturninus, the husband of Fulvia, who desired inquiry might
be made about it, ordered all the Jews to be banished out of Rome;
at which time the consuls listed four thousand men out of them,
and sent them to the island Sardinia; but punished a greater number
of them, who were unwilling to become soldiers, on account of keeping
the laws of their forefathers. (11) Thus were these Jews banished
out of the city by the wickedness of four men.
CHAPTER 4.
HOW THE SAMARITANS MADE A TUMULT AND PILATE DESTROYED MANY OF THEM;
HOW PILATE WAS ACCUSED AND WHAT THINGS WERE DONE BY VITELLIUS RELATING
TO THE JEWS AND THE PARTHIANS.
1. BUT the nation of the Samaritans did not escape without tumults.
The man who excited them to it was one who thought lying a thing
of little consequence, and who contrived every thing so that the
multitude might be pleased; so he bid them to get together upon
Mount Gerizzim, which is by them looked upon as the most holy of
all mountains, and assured them, that when they were come thither,
he would show them those sacred vessels which were laid under that
place, because Moses put them there (12) So they came thither armed,
and thought the discourse of the man probable; and as they abode
at a certain village, which was called Tirathaba, they got the rest
together to them, and desired to go up the mountain in a great multitude
together; but Pilate prevented their going up, by seizing upon file
roads with a great band of horsemen and foot-men, who fell upon
those that were gotten together in the village; and when it came
to an action, some of them they slew, and others of them they put
to flight, and took a great many alive, the principal of which,
and also the most potent of those that fled away, Pilate ordered
to be slain.
2. But when this tumult was appeased, the Samaritan senate sent
an embassy to Vitellius, a man that had been consul, and who was
now president of Syria, and accused Pilate of the murder of those
that were killed; for that they did not go to Tirathaba in order
to revolt from the Romans, but to escape the violence of Pilate.
So Vitellius sent Marcellus, a friend of his, to take care of the
affairs of Judea, and ordered Pilate to go to Rome, to answer before
the emperor to the accusations of the Jews. So Pilate, when he had
tarried ten years in Judea, made haste to Rome, and this in obedience
to the orders of Vitellius, which he durst not contradict; but before
he could get to Rome Tiberius was dead.
3. But Vitellius came into Judea, and went up to Jerusalem; it
was at the time of that festival which is called the Passover. Vitellius
was there magnificently received, and released the inhabitants of
Jerusalem from all the taxes upon the fruits that were bought and
sold, and gave them leave to have the care of the high priest's
vestments, with all their ornaments, and to have them under the
custody of the priests in the temple, which power they used to have
formerly, although at this time they were laid up in the tower of
Antonia, the citadel so called, and that on the occasion following:
There was one of the [high] priests, named Hyrcanus; and as there
were many of that name, he was the first of them; this man built
a tower near the temple, and when he had so done, he generally dwelt
in it, and had these vestments with him, because it was lawful for
him alone to put them on, and he had them there reposited when he
went down into the city, and took his ordinary garments; the same
things were continued to be done by his sons, and by their sons
after them. But when Herod came to be king, he rebuilt this tower,
which was very conveniently situated, in a magnificent manner; and
because he was a friend to Antonius, he called it by the name of
Antonia. And as he found these vestments lying there, he retained
them in the same place, as believing, that while he had them in
his custody, the people would make no innovations against him. The
like to what Herod did was done by his son Archelaus, who was made
king after him; after whom the Romans, when they entered on the
government, took possession of these vestments of the high priest,
and had them reposited in a stone-chamber, under the seal of the
priests, and of the keepers of the temple, the captain of the guard
lighting a lamp there every day; and seven days before a festival
(13) they were delivered to them by the captain of the guard, when
the high priest having purified them, and made use of them, laid
them up again in the same chamber where they had been laid up before,
and this the very next day after the feast was over. This was the
practice at the three yearly festivals, and on the fast day; but
Vitellius put those garments into our own power, as in the days
of our forefathers, and ordered the captain of the guard not to
trouble himself to inquire where they were laid, or when they were
to be used; and this he did as an act of kindness, to oblige the
nation to him. Besides which, he also deprived Joseph, who was also
called Caiaphas, of the high priesthood, and appointed Jonathan
the son of Ananus, the former high priest, to succeed him. After
which, he took his journey back to Antioch.
4. Moreover, Tiberius sent a letter to Vitellius, and commanded
him to make a league of friendship with Artabanus, the king of Parthia;
for while he was his enemy, he terrified him, because he had taken
Armenia away from him, lest he should proceed further, and told
him he should no otherwise trust him than upon his giving him hostages,
and especially his son Artabanus. Upon Tiberius's writing thus to
Vitellius, by the offer of great presents of money, he persuaded
both the king of Iberia and the king of Albania to make no delay,
but to fight against Artabanus; and although they would not do it
themselves, yet did they give the Scythians a passage through their
country, and opened the Caspian gates to them, and brought them
upon Artabanus. So Armenia was again taken from the Parthians, and
the country of Parthis was filled with war, and the principal of
their men were slain, and all things were in disorder among them:
the king's son also himself fell in these wars, together with. many
ten thousands of his army. Vitellius had also sent such great sums
of money to Artabanus's father's kinsmen and friends, that he had
almost procured him to be slain by the means of those bribes which
they had taken. And when Artabanus perceived that the plot laid
against him was not to be avoided, because it was laid by the principal
men, and those a great many in number, and that it would certainly
take effect, — when he had estimated the number of those that
were truly faithful to him, as also of those who were already corrupted,
but were deceitful in the kindness they professed to him, and were
likely, upon trial, to go over to his enemies, he made his escape
to the upper provinces, where he afterwards raised a great army
out of the Dahae and Sacre, and fought with his enemies, and retained
his principality.
5. When Tiberius had heard of these things, he desired to have
a league of friendship made between him and Artabanus; and when,
upon this invitation, he received the proposal kindly, Artabanus
and Vitellius went to Euphrates, and as a bridge was laid over the
river, they each of them came with their guards about them, and
met one another on the midst of the bridge. And when they had agreed
upon the terms of peace Herod, the tetrarch erected a rich tent
on the midst of the passage, and made them a feast there. Artabanus
also, not long afterward, sent his son Darius as an hostage, with
many presents, among which there was a man seven cubits tall, a
Jew he was by birth, and his name was Eleazar, who, for his tallness,
was called a giant. After which Vitellius went to Antioch, and Artabanus
to Babylon; but Herod [the tetrarch] being desirous to give Caesar
the first information that they had obtained hostages, sent posts
with letters, wherein he had accurately described all the particulars,
and had left nothing for the consular Vitellius to inform him of.
But when Vitellius's letters were sent, and Caesar had let him know
that he was acquainted with the affairs already, because Herod had
given him an account of them before, Vitellius was very much troubled
at it; and supposing that he had been thereby a greater sufferer
than he really was, he kept up a secret anger upon this occasion,
till he could be revenged on him, which he was after Caius had taken
the government.
6. About this time it was that Philip, Herod's ' brother, departed
this life, in the twentieth year of the reign of Tiberius, (14)
after he had been tetrarch of Trachonitis and Gaulanitis, and of
the nation of the Bataneans also, thirty-seven years. He had showed
himself a person of moderation and quietness in the conduct of his
life and government; he constantly lived in that country which was
subject to him; he used to make his progress with a few chosen friends;
his tribunal also, on which he sat in judgment, followed him in
his progress; and when any one met him who wanted his assistance,
he made no delay, but had his tribunal set down immediately, wheresoever
he happened to be, and sat down upon it, and heard his complaint:
he there ordered the guilty that were convicted to be punished,
and absolved those that had been accused unjustly. He died at Julias;
and when he was carried to that monument which he had already erected
for himself beforehand, he was buried with great pomp. His principality
Tiberius took, (for he left no sons behind him,) and added it to
the province of Syria, but gave order that the tributes which arose
from it should be collected, and laid up in his tetrachy.
CHAPTER 5.
HEROD THE TETRARCH MAKES WAR WITH ARETAS, THE KING OF ARABIA, AND
IS BEATEN BY HIM AS ALSO CONCERNING THE DEATH OF JOHN THE BAPTIST.
HOW VITELLIUS WENT UP TO JERUSALEM; TOGETHER WITH SOME ACCOUNT OF
AGRIPPA AND OF THE POSTERITY OF HEROD THE GREAT.
1. ABOUT this time Aretas (the king of Arabia Petres) and Herod
had a quarrel on the account following: Herod the tetrarch had,
married the daughter of Aretas, and had lived with her a great while;
but when he was once at Rome, he lodged with Herod, (15) who was
his brother indeed, but not by the same mother; for this Herod was
the son of the high priest Sireoh's daughter. However, he fell in
love with Herodias, this last Herod's wife, who was the daughter
of Aristobulus their brother, and the sister of Agrippa the Great.
This man ventured to talk to her about a marriage between them;
which address, when she admitted, an agreement was made for her
to change her habitation, and come to him as soon as he should return
from Rome: one article of this marriage also was this, that he should
divorce Aretas's daughter. So Antipus, when he had made this agreement,
sailed to Rome; but when he had done there the business he went
about, and was returned again, his wife having discovered the agreement
he had made with Herodias, and having learned it before he had notice
of her knowledge of the whole design, she desired him to send her
to Macherus, which is a place in the borders of the dominions of
Aretas and Herod, without informing him of any of her intentions.
Accordingly Herod sent her thither, as thinking his wife had not
perceived any thing; now she had sent a good while before to Macherus,
which was subject to her father and so all things necessary for
her journey were made ready for her by the general of Aretas's army;
and by that means she soon came into Arabia, under the conduct of
the several generals, who carried her from one to another successively;
and she soon came to her father, and told him of Herod's intentions.
So Aretas made this the first occasion of his enmity between him
and Herod, who had also some quarrel with him about their limits
at the country of Gamalitis. So they raised armies on both sides,
and prepared for war, and sent their generals to fight instead of
themselves; and when they had joined battle, all Herod's army was
destroyed by the treachery of some fugitives, who, though they were
of the tetrarchy of Philip, joined with Aretas's army.. So Herod
wrote about these affairs to Tiberius, who being very angry at the
attempt made by Aretas, wrote to Vitellius to make war upon him,
and either to take him alive, and bring him to him in bonds, or
to kill him, and send him his head. This was the charge that Tiberius
gave to the president of Syria.
2. Now some of the Jews thought that the destruction of Herod's
army came from God, and that very justly, as a punishment of what
he did against John, that was called the Baptist: for Herod slew
him, who was a good man, and commanded the Jews to exercise virtue,
both as to righteousness towards one another, and piety towards
God, and so to come to baptism; for that the washing [with water]
would be acceptable to him, if they made use of it, not in order
to the putting away [or the remission] of some sins [only], but
for the purification of the body; supposing still that the soul
was thoroughly purified beforehand by righteousness. Now when [many]
others came in crowds about him, for they were very greatly moved
[or pleased] by hearing his words, Herod, who feared lest the great
influence John had over the people might put it into his power and
inclination to raise a rebellion, (for they seemed ready to do any
thing he should advise,) thought it best, by putting him to death,
to prevent any mischief he might cause, and not bring himself into
difficulties, by sparing a man who might make him repent of it when
it would be too late. Accordingly he was sent a prisoner, out of
Herod's suspicious temper, to Macherus, the castle I before mentioned,
and was there put to death. Now the Jews had an opinion that the
destruction of this army was sent as a punishment upon Herod, and
a mark of God's displeasure to him.
3. So Vitellius prepared to make war with Aretas, having with him
two legions of armed men; he also took with him all those of light
armature, and of the horsemen which belonged to them, and were drawn
out of those kingdoms which were under the Romans, and made haste
for Petra, and came to Ptolemais. But as he was marching very busily,
and leading his army through Judea, the principal men met him, and
desired that he would not thus march through their land; for that
the laws of their country would not permit them to overlook those
images which were brought into it, of which there were a great many
in their ensigns; so he was persuaded by what they said, and changed
that resolution of his which he had before taken in this matter.
Whereupon he ordered the army to march along
the great plain, while he himself, with Herod the tetrarch and
his friends, went up to Jerusalem to offer sacrifice to God, an
ancient festival of the Jews being then just approaching; and when
he had been there, and been honorably entertained by the multitude
of the Jews, he made a stay there for three days, within which time
he deprived Jonathan of the high priesthood, and gave it to his
brother Theophilus. But when on the fourth day letters came to him,
which informed him of the death of Tiberius, he obliged the multitude
to take an oath of fidelity to Caius; he also recalled his army,
and made them every one go home, and take their winter quarters
there, since, upon the devolution of the empire upon Caius, he had
not the like authority of making this war which he had before. It
was also reported, that when Aretas heard of the coming of Vitellius
to fight him, he said, upon his consulting the diviners, that it
was impossible that this army of Vitellius's could enter Petra;
for that one of the rulers would die, either he that gave orders
for the war, or he that was marching at the other's desire, in order
to be subservient to his will, or else he against whom this army
is prepared. So Vitellius truly retired to Antioch; but Agrippa,
the son of Aristobulus, went up to Rome, a year before the death
of Tiberius, in order to treat of some affairs with the emperor,
if he might be permitted so to do. I have now a mind to describe
Herod and his family, how it fared with them, partly because it
is suitable to this history to speak of that matter, and partly
because this thing is a demonstration of the interposition of Providence,
how a multitude of children is of no advantage, no more than any
other strength that mankind set their hearts upon, besides those
acts of piety which are done towards God; for it happened, that,
within the revolution of a hundred years, the posterity of Herod,
which were a great many in number, were, excepting a few, utterly
destroyed. (16) One may well apply this for the instruction of mankind,
and learn thence how unhappy they were: it will also show us the
history of Agrippa, who, as he was a person most worthy of admiration,
so was he from a private man, beyond all the expectation of those
that knew him, advanced to great power and authority. I have said
something of them formerly, but I shall now also speak accurately
about them.
4. Herod the Great had two daughters by Mariamne, the [grand] daughter
of Hyrcanus; the one was Salampsio, who was married to Phasaelus,
her first cousin, who was himself the son of Phasaelus, Herod's
brother, her father making the match; the other was Cypros, who
was herself married also to her first cousin Antipater, the son
of Salome, Herod's sister. Phasaelus had five children by Salampsio;
Antipater, Herod, and Alexander, and two daughters, Alexandra and
Cypros; which last Agrippa, the son of Aristobulus, married; and
Timius of Cyprus married Alexandra; he was a man of note, but had
by her no children. Agrippa had by Cypros two sons and three daughters,
which daughters were named Bernice, Mariarune, and Drusius; but
the names of the sons were Agrippa and Drusus, of which Drusus died
before he came to the years of puberty; but their father, Agrippa,
was brought up with his other brethren, Herod and Aristobulus, for
these were also the sons of the son of Herod the Great by Bernice;
but Bernice was the daughter of Costobarus and of Salome, who was
Herod's sister. Aristobulus left these infants when he was slain
by his father, together with his brother Alexander, as we have already
related. But when they were arrived at years of puberty, this Herod,
the brother of Agrippa, married Mariamne, the daughter of Olympias,
who was the daughter of Herod the king, and of Joseph, the son of
Joseph, who was brother to Herod the king, and had by her a son,
Aristobulus; but Aristobulus, the third brother of Agrippa, married
Jotape, the daughter of Sampsigeramus, king of Emesa; they had a
daughter who was deaf, whose name also was Jotape; and these hitherto
were the children of the male line. But Herodias, their sister,
was married to Herod [Philip], the son of Herod the Great, who was
born of Mariamne, the daughter of Simon the high priest, who had
a daughter, Salome; after whose birth Herodias took upon her to
confound the laws of our country, and divorced herself from her
husband while he was alive, and was married to Herod [Antipas],
her husband's brother by the father's side, he was tetrarch of Galilee;
but her daughter Salome was married to Philip, the son of Herod,
and tetrarch of Trachonitis; and as he died childless, Aristobulus,
the son of Herod, the brother of Agrippa, married her; they had
three sons, Herod, Agrippa, and Aristobulus; and this was the posterity
of Phasaelus and Salampsio. But the daughter of Antipater by Cypros
was Cypros, whom Alexas Selcias, the son of Alexas, married; they
had a daughter, Cypros; but Herod and Alexander, who, as we told
you, were the brothers of Antipater, died childless. As to Alexander,
the son of Herod the king, who was slain by his father, he had two
sons, Alexander and Tigranes, by the daughter of Archelaus, king
of Cappadocia. Tigranes, who was king of Armenia, was accused at
Rome, and died childless; Alexander had ason of the same name with
his brother Tigranes, and was sent to take possession of the kingdom
of Armenia by Nero; he had a son, Alexander, who married Jotape,
(17) the daughter of Antiochus, the king of Commagena; Vespasian
made him king of an island in Cilicia. But these descendants of
Alexander, soon after their birth, deserted the Jewish religion,
and went over to that of the Greeks. But for the rest of the daughters
of Herod the king, it happened that they died childless. And as
these descendants of Herod, whom we have enumerated, were in being
at the same time that Agrippa the Great took the kingdom, and I
have now given an account of them, it now remains that I relate
the several hard fortunes which befell Agrippa, and how he got clear
of them, and was advanced to the greatest height of dignity and
power.
CHAPTER 6.
OF THE NAVIGATION OF KING AGRIPPA TO ROME, TO TIBERIUS CAESAR;
AND NOW UPON HIS BEING ACCUSED BY HIS OWN FREED-MAN, HE WAS BOUND;
HOW ALSO HE, WAS SET AT LIBERTY BY CAIUS, AFTER TIBERIUS’S
DEATH AND WAS MADE KING OF THE TETRARCHY OF PHILIP.
1. A LITTLE before the death of Herod the king, Agrippa lived at
Rome, and was generally brought up and conversed with Drusus, the
emperor Tiberius's son, and contracted a friendship with Antonia,
the wife of Drusus the Great, who had his mother Bernice in great
esteem, and was very desirous of advancing her son. Now as Agrippa
was by nature magnanimous and generous in the presents he made,
while his mother was alive, this inclination of his mind did not
appear, that he might be able to avoid her anger for such his extravagance;
but when Bernice was dead, and he was left to his own conduct, he
spent a great deal extravagantly in his daily way of living, and
a great deal in the immoderate presents he made, and those chiefly
among Caesar's freed-men, in order to gain their assistance, insomuch
that he was, in a little time, reduced to poverty, and could not
live at Rome any longer. Tiberius also forbade the friends of his
deceased son to come into his sight, because on seeing them he should
be put in mind of his son, and his grief would thereby be revived.
2. For these reasons he went away from Rome, and sailed to Judea,
but in evil circumstances, being dejected with the loss of that
money which he once had, and because he had not wherewithal to pay
his creditors, who were many in number, and such as gave him no
room for escaping them. Whereupon he knew not what to do; so, for
shame of his present condition, he retired to a certain tower, at
Malatha, in Idumea, and had thoughts of killing himself; but his
wife Cypros perceived his intentions, and tried all sorts of methods
to divert him from his taking such a course; so she sent a letter
to his sister Herodias, who was now the wife of Herod the tetrarch,
and let her know Agrippa's present design, and what necessity it
was which drove him thereto, and desired her, as a kinswoman of
his, to give him her help, and to engage her husband to do the same,
since she saw how she alleviated these her husband's troubles all
she could, although she had not the like wealth to do it withal.
So they sent for him, and allotted him Tiberias for his habitation,
and appointed him some income of money for his maintenance, and
made him a magistrate of that city, by way of honor to him. Yet
did not Herod long continue in that resolution of supporting him,
though even that support was not sufficient for him; for as once
they were at a feast at Tyre, and in their cups, and reproaches
were cast upon one another, Agrippa thought that was not to be borne,
while Herod hit him in the teeth with his poverty, and with his
owing his necessary food to him. So he went to Flaccus, one that
had been consul, and had been a very great friend to him at Rome
formerly, and was now president of Syria.
3. Hereupon Flaccus received him kindly, and he lived with him.
Flaccus had also with him there Aristobulus, who was indeed Agrippa's
brother, but was at variance with him; yet did not their enmity
to one another hinder the friendship of Flaccus to them both, but
still they were honorably treated by him. However, Aristobulus did
not abate of his ill-will to Agrippa, till at length he brought
him into ill terms with Flaccus; the occasion of bringing on which
estrangement was this: The Damascens were at difference with the
Sidonians about their limits, and when Flaccus was about to hear
the cause between them, they understood that Agrippa had a mighty
influence upon him; so they desired that he would be of their side,
and for that favor promised him a great deal of money; so he was
zealous in assisting the Damascens as far as he was able. Now Aristobulus
had gotten intelligence of this promise of money to him, and accused
him to Flaccus of the same; and when, upon a thorough examination
of the matter, it appeared plainly so to be, he rejected Agrippa
out of the number of his friends. So he was reduced to the utmost
necessity, and came to Ptolemais; and because he knew not where
else to get a livelihood, he thought to sail to Italy; but as he
was restrained from so doing by want of money, he desired Marsyas,
who was his freed-man, to find some method for procuring him so
much as he wanted for that purpose, by borrowing such a sum of some
person or other. So Marsyas desired of Peter, who was the freed-man
of Bernice, Agrippa's mother, and by the right of her testament
was bequeathed to Antonia, to lend so much upon Agrippa's own bond
and security; but he accused Agrippa of having defrauded him of
certain sums of money, and so obliged Marsyas, when he made the
bond of twenty thousand Attic drachmae, to accept of twenty-five
hundred drachma as (18) less than what he desired, which the other
allowed of, because he could not help it. Upon the receipt of this
money, Agrippa came to Anthedon, and took shipping, and was going
to set sail; but Herennius Capito, who was the procurator of Jamhis,
sent a band of soldiers to demand of him three hundred thousand
drachmae of silver, which were by him owing to Caesar's treasury
while he was at Rome, and so forced him to stay. He then pretended
that he would do as he bid him; but when night came on, he cut his
cables, and went off, and sailed to Alexandria, where he desired
Alexander the alabarch (19) to lend him two hundred thousand drachmae;
but he said he would not lend it to him, but would not refuse it
to Cypros, as greatly astonished at her affection to her husband,
and at the other instances of her virtue; so she undertook to repay
it. Accordingly, Alexander paid them five talents at Alexandria,
and promised to pay them the rest of that sum at Dicearchia [Puteoli];
and this he did out of the fear he was in that Agrippa would soon
spend it. So this Cypros set her husband free, and dismissed him
to go on with his navigation to Italy, while she and her children
departed for Judea.
4. And now Agrippa was come to Puteoli, whence he wrote a letter
to Tiberius Caesar, who then lived at Capreae, and told him that
he was come so far in order to wait on him, and to pay him a visit;
and desired that he would give him leave to come over to Caprein:
so Tiberius made no difficulty, but wrote to him in an obliging
way in other respects; and withal told him he was glad of his safe
return, and desired him to come to Capreae; and when he was come,
he did not fail to treat him as kindly as he had promised him in
his letter to do. But the next day came a letter to Caesar from
Herennius Capito, to inform him that Agrippa had borrowed three
hundred thousand drachmae, and not pad it at the time appointed;
but when it was demanded of him, he ran away like a fugitive, out
of the places under his government, and put it out of his power
to get the money of him. When Caesar had read this letter, he was
much troubled at it, and gave order that Agrippa should be excluded
from his presence until he had paid that debt: upon which he was
no way daunted at Caesar's anger, but entreated Antonia, the mother
of Germanicus, and of Claudius, who was afterward Caesar himself,
to lend him those three hundred thousand drachmae, that he might
not be deprived of Tiberius's friendship; so, out of regard to the
memory of Bernice his mother, (for those two women were very familiar
with one another,) and out of regard to his and Claudius's education
together, she lent him the money; and, upon the payment of this
debt, there was nothing to hinder Tiberius's friendship to him.
After this, Tiberius Caesar recommended to him his grandson, (20)
and ordered that he should always accompany him when he went abroad.
But upon Agrippa's kind reception by Antonia, he betook him to pay
his respects to Caius, who was her grandson, and in very high reputation
by reason of the good-will they bare his father. Now there was one
Thallus, a freed-man of Caesar, of whom he borrowed a million of
drachmae, and thence repaid Antonia the debt he owed her; and by
sending the overplus in paying his court to Caius, became a person
of great authority with him.
5. Now as the friendship which Agrippa had for Caius was come to
a great height, there happened some words to pass between them,
as they once were in a chariot together, concerning Tiberius; Agrippa
praying [to God] (for they two sat by themselves) that Tiberius
might soon go off the stage, and leave the government to Caius,
who was in every respect more worthy of it. Now Eutychus, who was
Agrippa's freed-man, and drove his chariot, heard these words, and
at that time said nothing of them; but when Agrippa accused him
of stealing some garments of his, (which was certainly true,) he
ran away from him; but when he was caught, and brought before Piso,
who was governor of the city, and the man was asked why he ran away,
be replied, that he had somewhat to say to Caesar, that tended to
his security and preservation: so Piso bound him, and sent him to
Capreae. But Tiberius, according to his usual custom, kept him still
in bonds, being a delayer of affairs, if ever there was any other
king or tyrant that was so; for he did not admit ambassadors quickly,
and no successors were despatched away to governors or procurators
of the provinces that had been formerly sent, unless they were dead;
whence it was that he was so negligent in hearing the causes of
prisoners; insomuch that when he was asked by his friends what was
the reason of his delay in such cases, he said that he delayed to
hear ambassadors, lest, upon their quick dismission, other ambassadors
should be appointed, and return upon him; and so he should bring
trouble upon himself in their public reception and dismission: that
he permitted those governors who had been sent once to their government
[to stay there a long while], out of regard to the subjects that
were under them; for that all governors are naturally disposed to
get as much as they can; and that those who are not to fix there,
but to stay a short time, and that at an uncertainty when they shall
be turned out, do the more severely hurry themselves on to fleece
the people; but that if their government be long continued to them;
they are at last satiated with the spoils, as having gotten a vast
deal, and so become at length less sharp in their pillaging; but
that if successors are sent quickly, the poor subjects, who are
exposed to them as a prey, will not be able to bear the new ones,
while they shall not have the same time allowed them wherein their
predecessors had filled themselves, and so grew more unconcerned
about getting more; and this because they are removed before they
have had time [for their oppressions]. He gave them an example to
show his meaning: A great number of flies came about the sore places
of a man that had been wounded; upon which one of the standers-by
pitied the man's misfortune, and thinking he was not able to drive
those flies away himself, was going to drive them away for him;
but he prayed him to let them alone: the other, by way of reply,
asked him the reason of such a preposterous proceeding, in preventing
relief from his present misery; to which he answered, "If thou
drivest these flies away, thou wilt hurt me worse; for as these
are already full of my blood, they do not crowd about me, nor pain
me so much as before, but are somewhat more remiss, while the fresh
ones that come almost famished, and find me quite tired down already,
will be my destruction. For this cause, therefore, it is that I
am myself careful not to send such new governors perpetually to
those my subjects, who are already sufficiently harassed by many
oppressions, as may, like these flies, further distress them; and
so, besides their natural desire of gain, may have this additional
incitement to it, that they expect to be suddenly deprived of that
pleasure which they take in it." And, as a further attestation
to what I say of the dilatory nature of Tiberius, I appeal to this
his practice itself; for although he was emperor twenty-two years,
he sent in all but two procurators to govern the nation of the Jews,
Gratus, and his successor in the government, Pilate. Nor was he
in one way of acting with respect to the Jews, and in another with
respect to the rest of his subjects. He further informed them, that
even in the hearing of the causes of prisoners, he made such delays,
because immediate death to those that must be condemned to die would
be an alleviation of their present miseries, while those wicked
wretches have not deserved any such favor; "but I do it, that,
by being harassed with the present calamity, they may undergo greater
misery."
6. On this account it was that Eutychus could not obtain a bearing,
but was kept still in prison. However, some time afterward, Tiberius
came from Capreae to Tusculanum, which is about a hundred furlongs
from Rome. Agrippa then desired of Antonia that she would procure
a hearing for Eutychus, let the matter whereof he accused him prove
what it would. Now Antonia was greatly esteemed by Tiberius on all
accounts, from the dignity of her relation to him, who had been
his brother Drusus's wife, and from her eminent chastity; (21) for
though she was still a young woman, she continued in her widowhood,
and refused all other matches, although Augustus had enjoined her
to be married to somebody else; yet did she all along preserve her
reputation free from reproach. She had also been the greatest benefactress
to Tiberius, when there was a very dangerous plot laid against him
by Sejanus, a man who had been her husband's friend, and wire had
the greatest authority, because he was general of the army, and
when many members of the senate and many of the freed-men joined
with him, and the soldiery was corrupted, and the plot was come
to a great height. Now Sejanus had certainly gained his point, had
not Antonia's boldness been more wisely conducted than Sejanus's
malice; for when she had discovered his designs against Tiberius,
she wrote him an exact account of the whole, and gave the letter
to Pallas, the most faithful of her servants, and sent him to Caprere
to Tiberius, who, when he understood it, slew Sejanus and his confederates;
so that Tiberius, who had her in great esteem before, now looked
upon her with still greater respect, and depended upon her in all
things. So when Tiberius was desired by this Antonia to examine
Eutychus, he answered, "If indeed Eutychus hath falsely accused
Agrippa in what he hath said of him, he hath had sufficient punishment
by what I have done to him already; but if, upon examination, the
accusation appears to be true, let Agrippa have a care, lest, out
of desire of punishing his freed-man, he do not rather bring a punishment
upon himself." Now when Antonia told Agrippa of this, he was
still much more pressing that the matter might be examined into;
so Antonia, upon Agrippa's lying hard at her continually to beg
this favor, took the following opportunity: As Tiberius lay once
at his ease upon his sedan, and was carried about, and Caius, her
grandson, and Agrippa, were before him after dinner she walked by
the sedan, and desired him to call Eutychus, and have him examined;
to which he replied, "O Antonia! the gods are my witnesses
that I am induced to do what I am going to do, not by my own inclination,
but because I am forced to it by thy prayers." When he had
said this, he ordered Macro, who succeeded Sejanus, to bring Eutychus
to him; accordingly, without any delay, he was brought. Then Tiberius
asked him what he had to say against a man who had given him his
liberty. Upon which he said, "O my lord! this Caius, and Agrippa
with him, were once riding in a chariot, when I sat at their feet,
and, among other discourses that passed, Agrippa said to Caius,
Oh that the day would once come when this old fellow will dies and
name thee for the governor of the habitable earth! for then this
Tiberius, his grandson, would be no hinderance, but would be taken
off by thee, and that earth would be happy, and I happy also."
Now Tiberius took these to be truly Agrippa's words, and bearing
a grudge withal at Agrippa, because, when he had commanded him to
pay his respects to Tiberius, his grandson, and the son of Drusus,
Agrippa had not paid him that respect, but had disobeyed his commands,
and transferred all his regard to Caius; he said to Macro, "Bind
this man." But Macro, not distinctly knowing which of them
it was whom he bid him bind, and not expecting that he would have
any such thing done to Agrippa, he forbore, and came to ask more
distinctly what it was that he said. But when Caesar had gone round
the hippodrome, he found Agrippa standing: "For certain,"
said he, "Macro, this is the man I meant to have bound;"
and when he still asked, "Which of these is to be bound?"
he said "Agrippa." Upon which Agrippa betook himself to
make supplication for himself, putting him in mind of his son, with
whom he was brought up, and of Tiberius [his grandson] whom he had
educated; but all to no purpose; for they led him about bound even
in his purple garments. It was also very hot weather, and they had
but little wine to their meal, so that he was very thirsty; he was
also in a sort of agony, and took this treatment of him heinously:
as he therefore saw one of Caius's slaves, whose name was Thaumastus,
carrying some water in a vessel, he desired that he would let him
drink; so the servant gave him some water to drink, and he drank
heartily, and said, "O thou boy! this service of thine to me
will be for thy advantage; for if I once get clear of these my bonds,
I will soon procure thee thy freedom of Caius who has not been wanting
to minister to me now I am in bonds, in the same manner as when
I was in my former state and dignity." Nor did he deceive him
in what he promised him, but made him amends for what he had now
done; for when afterward Agrippa was come to the kingdom, he took
particular care of Thaumastus, and got him his liberty from Caius,
and made him the steward over his own estate; and when he died,
he left him to Agrippa his son, and to Bernice his daughter, to
minister to them in the same capacity. The man also grew old in
that honorable post, and therein died. But all this happened a good
while later.
7. Now Agrippa stood in his bonds before the royal palace, and
leaned on a certain tree for grief, with many others,. who were
in bonds also; and as a certain bird sat upon the tree on which
Agrippa leaned, (the Romans call this bird bubo,) [an owl,] one
of those that were bound, a German by nation, saw him, and asked
a soldier who that man in purple was; and when he was informed that
his name was Agrippa, and that he was by nation a Jew, and one of
the principal men of that nation, he asked leave of the soldier
to whom he was bound, (22) to let him come nearer to him, to speak
with him; for that he had a mind to inquire of him about some things
relating to his country; which liberty, when he had obtained, and
as he stood near him, he said thus to him by an interpreter: "This
sudden change of thy condition, O young man! is grievous to thee,
as bringing on thee a manifold and very great adversity; nor wilt
thou believe me, when I foretell how thou wilt get clear of this
misery which thou art now under, and how Divine Providence will
provide for thee. Know therefore (and I appeal to my own country
gods, as well as to the gods of this place, who have awarded these
bonds to us) that all I am going to say about thy concerns shall
neither be said for favor nor bribery, nor out of an endeavor to
make thee cheerful without cause; for such predictions, when they
come to fail, make the grief at last, and in earnest, more bitter
than if the party had never heard of any such thing. However, though
I run the hazard of my own self, I think it fit to declare to thee
the prediction of the gods. It cannot be that thou shouldst long
continue in these bonds; but thou wilt soon be delivered from them,
and wilt be promoted to the highest dignity and power, and thou
wilt be envied by all those who now pity thy hard fortune; and thou
wilt be happy till thy death, and wilt leave thine happiness to
the children whom thou shalt have. But do thou remember, when thou
seest this bird again, that thou wilt then live but five days longer.
This event will be brought to pass by that God who hath sent this
bird hither to be a sign unto thee. And I cannot but think it unjust
to conceal from thee what I foreknow concerning thee, that, by thy
knowing beforehand what happiness is coming upon thee, thou mayst
not regard thy present misfortunes. But when this happiness shall
actually befall thee, do not forget what misery I am in myself,
but endeavor to deliver me." So when the German had said this,
he made Agrippa laugh at him as much as he afterwards appeared worthy
of admiration. But now Antonia took Agrippa's misfortune to heart:
however, to speak to Tiberius on his behalf, she took to be a very
difficult thing, and indeed quite impracticable, as to any hope
of success; yet did she procure of Macro, that the soldiers that
kept him should be of a gentle nature, and that the centurion who
was over them and was to diet with him, should be of the same disposition,
and that he might have leave to bathe himself every day, and that
his freed-men and friends might come to him, and that other things
that tended to ease him might be indulged him. So his friend Silas
came in to him, and two of his freed-men, Marsyas and Stechus, brought
him such sorts of food as he was fond of, and indeed took great
care of him; they ,also brought him garments, under pretense of
selling them; and when night came on, they laid them under him;
and the soldiers assisted them, as Macro had given them order to
do beforehand. And this was Agrippa's condition for six months'
time, and in this case were his affairs.
8. But for Tiberius, upon his return to Caprein, he fell sick.
At first his distemper was but gentle; but as that distemper increased
upon him, he had small or no hopes of recovery. Hereupon he bid
Euodus, who was that freed-man whom he most of all respected, to
bring the children (23) to him, for that he wanted to talk to them
before he died. Now he had at present no sons of his own alive for
Drusus, who was his only son, was dead; but Drusus's son Tiberius
was still living, whose additional name was Gemellus: there was
also living Caius, the son of Germanicus, who was the son (24) of
his brother [Drusus]. He was now grown up, and had a liberal education,
and was well improved by it, and was in esteem and favor with the
people, on account of the excellent character of his father Germanicus,
who had attained the highest honor among the multitude, by the firmness
of his virtuous behavior, by the easiness and agreeableness of his
conversing with the multitude, and because the dignity he was in
did not hinder his familiarity with them all, as if they were his
equals; by which behavior he was not only greatly esteemed by the
people and the senate, but by every one of those nations that were
subject to the Romans; some of which were affected when they came
to him with the gracefulness of their reception by him, and others
were affected in the same manner by the report of the others that
had been with him; and, upon his death, there was a lamentation
made by all men; not such a one as was to be made in way of flattery
to their rulers, while they did but counterfeit sorrow, but such
as was real; while every body grieved at his death, as if they had
lost one that was near to them. And truly such had been his easy
conversation with men, that it turned greatly to the advantage of
his son among all; and, among others, the soldiery were so peculiarly
affected to him, that they reckoned it an eligible thing, if need
were, to die themselves, if he might but attain to the government.
9. But when Tiberius had given order to Euodus to bring the children
to him the next day in the morning, he prayed to his country gods
to show him a manifest signal which of those children should come
to the government; being very desirous to leave it to his son's
son, but still depending upon what God should foreshow concerning
them more than upon his own opinion and inclination; so he made
this to be the omen, that the government should be left to him who
should come to him first the next day. When he had thus resolved
within himself, he sent to his grandson's tutor, and ordered him
to bring the child to him early in the morning, as supposing that
God would permit him to be made emperor. But God proved opposite
to his designation; for while Tiberius was thus contriving matters,
and as soon as it was at all day, he bid Euodus to call in that
child which should be there ready. So he went out, and found Caius
before the door, for Tiberius was not yet come, but staid waiting
for his breakfast; for Euodus knew nothing of what his lord intended;
so he said to Caius, "Thy father calls thee," and then
brought him in. As soon as Tiberius saw Caius, and not before, he
reflected on the power of God, and how the ability of bestowing
the government on whom he would was entirely taken from him; and
thence he was not able to establish what he had intended. So he
greatly lamented that his power of establishing what he had before
contrived was taken from him, and that his grandson Tiberius was
not only to lose the Roman empire by his fatality, but his own safety
also, because his preservation would now depend upon such as would
be more potent than himself, who would think it a thing not to be
borne, that a kinsman should live with them, and so his relation
would not be able to protect him; but he would be feared and bated
by him who had the supreme authority, partly on account of his being
next to the empire, and partly on account of his perpetually contriving
to get the government, both in order to preserve himself, and to
be at the head of affairs also. Now Tiberius had been very much
given to astrology, (25) and the calculation of nativities, and
had spent his life in the esteem of what predictions had proved
true, more than those whose profession it was. Accordingly, when
he once saw Galba coming in to him, he said to his most intimate
friends, that there came in a man that would one day have the dignity
of the Roman empire. So that this Tiberius was more addicted to
all such sorts of diviners than any other of the Roman emperors,
because he had found them to have told him truth in his own affairs.
And indeed he was now in great distress upon this accident that
had befallen him, and was very much grieved at the destruction of
his son's son, which he foresaw, and complained of himself, that
he should have made use of such a method of divination beforehand,
while it was in his power to have died without grief by this knowledge
of futurity; whereas he was now tormented by his foreknowledge of
the misfortune of such as were dearest to him, and must die under
that torment. Now although he was disordered at this unexpected
revolution of the government to those for whom he did not intend
it, he spake thus to Caius, though unwillingly, and against his
own inclination: "O child! although Tiberius be nearer related
to me than thou art, I, by my own determination, and the conspiring
suffrage of the gods, do give and put into thy hand the Roman empire;
and I desire thee never to be unmindful when thou comest to it,
either of my kindness to thee, who set thee in so high a dignity,
or of thy relation to Tiberius. But as thou knowest that I am, together
with and after the gods, the procurer of so great happiness to thee;
so I desire that thou wilt make me a return for my readiness to
assist thee, and wilt take care of Tiberius because of his near
relation to thee. Besides which, thou art to know, that while Tiberius
is alive, he will be a security to thee, both as to empire and as
to thy own preservation; but if he die, that will be but a prelude
to thy own misfortunes; for to be alone under the weight of such
vast affairs is very dangerous; nor will the gods suffer those actions
which are unjustly done, contrary to that law which directs men
to act otherwise, to go off unpunished." This was the speech
which Tiberius made, which did not persuade Caius to act accordingly,
although he promised so to do; but when he was settled in the government,
he took off this Tiberius, as was predicted by the other Tiberius;
as he was also himself, in no long time afterward, slain by a secret
plot laid against him.
10. So when Tiberius had at this time appointed Caius to be his
successor, he outlived but a few days, and then died, after he had
held the government twenty-two years five months and three days.
Now Caius was the fourth emperor. But when the Romans understood
that Tiberius was dead, they rejoiced at the good news, but had
not courage to believe it; not because they were unwilling it should
be true, for they would have given huge sums of money that it might
be so, but because they were afraid, that if they had showed their
joy when the news proved false, their joy should be openly known,
and they should be accused for it, and be thereby undone. For this
Tiberius had brought a vast number of miseries on the best families
of the Romans, since he was easily inflamed with passion in all
cases, and was of such a temper as rendered his anger irrevocable,
till he had executed the same, although he had taken a hatred against
men without reason; for he was by nature fierce in all the sentences
he gave, and made death the penalty for the lightest offenses; insomuch
that when the Romans heard the rumor about his death gladly, they
were restrained from the enjoyment of that pleasure by the dread
of such miseries as they foresaw would follow, if their hopes proved
ill-grounded. Now Marsyas, Agrippa's freed-man, as soon as he heard
of Tiberius's death, came running to tell Agrippa the news; and
finding him going out to the bath, he gave him a nod, and said,
in the Hebrew tongue, "The lion (26) is dead;" who, understanding
his meaning, and being ovejoyed at the news, "Nay," said
he, "but all sorts of thanks and happiness attend thee for
this news of thine; only I wish that what thou sayest may prove
true." Now the centurion who was set to keep Agrippa, when
he saw with what haste Marsyas came, and what joy Agrippa had from
what he said, he had a suspicion that his words implied some great
innovation of affairs, and he asked them about what was said. They
at first diverted the discourse; but upon his further pressing,
Agrippa, without more ado, told him, for he was already become his
friend; so he joined with him in that pleasure which this news occasioned,
because it would be fortunate to Agrippa, and made him a supper.
But as they were feasting, and the cups went about, there came one
who said that Tiberius was still alive, and would return to the
city ill a few days. At which news the centurion was exceedingly
troubled, because he had done what might cost him his life, to have
treated so joyfully a prisoner, and this upon the news of the death
of Caesar; so he thrust Agrippa from the couch whereon he lay, and
said, "Dost thou think to cheat me by a lie about the emperor
without punishment? and shalt not thou pay for this thy malicious
report at the price of thine head?" When he had so said, he
ordered Agrippa to be bound again, (for he had loosed him before,)
and kept a severer guard over him than formerly, and in that evil
condition was Agrippa that night; but the next day the rumor increased
in the city, and confirmed the news that Tiberius was certainly
dead; insomuch that men durst now openly and freely talk about it;
nay, some offered sacrifices on that account. Several letters also
came from Caius; one of them to the senate, which informed them
of the death of Tiberius, and of his own entrance on the government;
another to Piso, the governor of the city, which told him the same
thing. He also gave order that Agrippa should be removed out of
the camp, and go to that house where he lived before he was put
in prison; so that he was now out of fear as to his own affairs;
for although he was still in custody, yet it was now with ease to
his own affairs. Now, as soon as Caius was come to Rome, and had
brought Tiberius's dead body with him, and had made a sumptuous
funeral for him, according to the laws of his country, he was much
disposed to set Agrippa at liberty that very day; but Antonia hindered
him, not out of any ill-will to the prisoner, but out of regard
to decency in Caius, lest that should make men believe that he received
the death of Tiberius with pleasure, when he loosed one whom he
had bound immediately. However, there did not many days pass ere
he sent for him to his house, and had him shaved, and made him change
his raiment; after which he put a diadem upon his head, and appointed
him to be king of the tetrarchy of Philip. He also gave him the
tetrarchy of Lysanias, (27) and changed his iron chain for a golden
one of equal weight. He also sent Marullus to be procurator of Judea.
11. Now, in the second year of the reign of Caius Caesar, Agrippa
desired leave to be given him to sail home, and settle the affairs
of his government; and he promised to return again, when he had
put the rest in order, as it ought to be put. So, upon the emperor's
permission, he came into his own country, and appeared to them all
unexpectedly as asking, and thereby demonstrated to the men that
saw him the power of fortune, when they compared his former poverty
with his present happy affluence; so some called him a happy man,
and others could not well believe that things were so much changed
with him for the better.
CHAPTER 7.
HOW HEROD THE TETRARCH WAS BANISHED.
1. BUT Herodias, Agrippa's sister, who now lived as wife to that
Herod who was tetrarch of Galilee and Peres, took this authority
of her brother in an envious manner, particularly when she saw that
he had a greater dignity bestowed on him than her husband had; since,
when he ran away, it was because he was not able to pay his debts;
and now he was come back, he was in a way of dignity, and of great
good fortune. She was therefore grieved and much displeased at so
great a mutation of his affairs; and chiefly when she saw him marching
among the multitude with the usual ensigns of royal authority, she
was not able to conceal how miserable she was, by reason of the
envy she had towards him; but she excited her husband, and desired
him that he would sail to Rome, to court honors equal to his; for
she said that she could not bear to live any longer, while Agrippa,
the son of that Aristobulus who was condemned to die by his father,
one that came to her husband in such extreme poverty, that the necessaries
of life were forced to be entirely supplied him day by day; and
when he fled away from his creditors by sea, he now returned a king;
while he was himself the son of a king, and while the near relation
he bare to royal authority called upon him to gain the like dignity,
he sat still, and was contented with a privater life. "But
then, Herod, although thou wast formerly not concerned to be in
a lower condition than thy father from whom thou wast derived had
been, yet do thou now seek after the dignity which thy kinsman hath
attained to; and do not thou bear this contempt, that a man who
admired thy riches should he in greater honor than thyself, nor
suffer his poverty to show itself able to purchase greater things
than our abundance; nor do thou esteem it other than a shameful
thing to be inferior to one who, the other day, lived upon thy charity.
But let us go to Rome, and let us spare no pains nor expenses, either
of silver or gold, since they cannot be kept for any better use
than for the obtaining of a kingdom."
2. But for Herod, he opposed her request at this time, out of the
love of ease, and having a suspicion of the trouble he should have
at Rome; so he tried to instruct her better. But the more she saw
him draw back, the more she pressed him to it, and desired him to
leave no stone unturned in order to be king; and at last she left
not off till she engaged him, whether he would or not, to be of
her sentiments, because he could no otherwise avoid her importunity.
So he got all things ready, after as sumptuous a manner as he was
able, and spared for nothing, and went up to Rome, and took Herodias
along with him. But Agrippa, when he was made sensible of their
intentions and preparations, he also prepared to go thither; and
as soon as he heard they set sail, he sent Fortunatus, one of his
freed-men, to Rome, to carry presents to the emperor, and letters
against Herod, and to give Caius a particular account of those matters,
if he should have any opportunity. This man followed Herod so quick,
and had so prosperous a voyage, and came so little after Herod,
that while Herod was with Caius, he came himself, and delivered
his letters; for they both sailed to Dicearchia, and found Caius
at Bairn, which is itself a little city of Campania, at the distance
of about five furlongs from Dicearchia. There are in that place
royal palaces, with sumptuous apartments, every emperor still endeavoring
to outdo his predecessor's magnificence; the place ,also affords
warm baths, that spring out of the ground of their own accord, which
are of advantage for the recovery of the health of those that make
use of them; and, besides, they minister to men's luxury also. Now
Caius saluted Herod, for he first met with him, and then looked
upon the letters which Agrippa had sent him, and which were written
in order to accuse Herod; wherein he accused him, that he had been
in confederacy with Sejanus against Tiberius's and that he was now
confederate with Artabanus, the king of Parthia, in opposition to
the government of Caius; as a demonstration of which he alleged,
that he had armor sufficient for seventy thousand men ready in his
armory. Caius was moved at this information, and asked Herod whether
what was said about the armor was true; and when he confessed there
was such armor there, for he could not deny the same, the truth
of it being too notorious, Caius took that to be a sufficient proof
of the accusation, that he intended to revolt. So he took away from
him his tetrarchy, and gave it by way of addition to Agrippa's kingdom;
he also gave Herod's money to Agrippa, and, by way of punishment,
awarded him a perpetual banishment, and appointed Lyons, a city
of Gaul, to be his place of habitation. But when he was informed
that Herodias was Agrippa's sister, he made her a present of what
money was her own, and told her that it was her brother who prevented
her being put under the same calamity with her husband. But she
made this reply: "Thou, indeed, O emperor! actest after a magnificent
manner, and as becomes thyself in what thou offerest me; but the
kindness which I have for my husband hinders me from partaking of
the favor of thy gift; for it is not just that I, who have been
made a partner in his prosperity, should forsake him in his misfortunes."
Hereupon Caius was angry at her, and sent her with Herod into banishment,
and gave her estate to Agrippa. And thus did God punish Herodias
for her envy at her brother, and Herod also for giving ear to the
vain discourses of a woman. Now Caius managed public affairs with
great magnanimity during the first and second year of his reign,
and behaved himself with such moderation, that he gained the good-will
of the Romans themselves, and of his other subjects. But, in process
of time, he went beyond the bounds of human nature in his conceit
of himself, and by reason of the vastness of his dominions made
himself a god, and took upon himself to act in all things to the
reproach of the Deity itself.
CHAPTER 8.
CONCERNING THE EMBASSAGE OF THE JEWS TO CAIUS; (28) AND HOW CAIUS
SENT PETRONIUS INTO SYRIA TO MAKE WAR AGAINST THE JEWS, UNLESS THEY
WOULD RECEIVE HIS STATUE.
1. THERE was now a tumult arisen at Alexandria, between the Jewish
inhabitants and the Greeks; and three ambassadors were chosen out
of each party that were at variance, who came to Caius. Now one
of these ambassadors from the people of Alexandria was Apion, (29)
who uttered many blasphemies against the Jews; and, among other
things that he said, he charged them with neglecting the honors
that belonged to Caesar; for that while all who were subject to
the Roman empire built altars and temples to Caius, and in other
regards universally received him as they received the gods, these
Jews alone thought it a dishonorable thing for them to erect statues
in honor of him, as well as to swear by his name. Many of these
severe things were said by Apion, by which he hoped to provoke Caius
to anger at the Jews, as he was likely to be. But Philo, the principal
of the Jewish embassage, a man eminent on all accounts, brother
to Alexander the alabarch, (30) and one not unskillful in philosophy,
was ready to betake himself to make his defense against those accusations;
but Caius prohibited him, and bid him begone; he was also in such
a rage, that it openly appeared he was about to do them some very
great mischief. So Philo being thus affronted, went out, and said
to those Jews who were about him, that they should be of good courage,
since Caius's words indeed showed anger at them, but in reality
had already set God against himself.
2. Hereupon Caius, taking it very heinously that he should be thus
despised by the Jews alone, sent Petronius to be president of Syria,
and successor in the government to Vitellius, and gave him order
to make an invasion into Judea, with a great body of troops; and
if they would admit of his statue willingly, to erect it in the
temple of God; but if they were obstinate, to conquer them by war,
and then to do it. Accordingly, Petronius took the government of
Syria, and made haste to obey Caesar's epistle. He got together
as great a number of auxiliaries as he possibly could, and took
with him two legions of the Roman army, and came to Ptolemais, and
there wintered, as intending to set about the war in the spring.
He also wrote word to Caius what he had resolved to do, who commended
him for his alacrity, and ordered him to go on, and to make war
with them, in case they would not obey his commands. But there came
many ten thousands of the Jews to Petronius, to Ptolemais, to offer
their petitions to him, that he would not compel them to transgress
and violate the law of their forefathers; "but if," said
they, "thou art entirely resolved to bring this statue, and
erect it, do thou first kill us, and then do what thou hast resolved
on; for while we are alive we cannot permit such things as are forbidden
us to be done by the authority of our legislator, and by our forefathers'
determination that such prohibitions are instances of virtue."
But Petronius was angry at them, and said, "If indeed I were
myself emperor, and were at liberty to follow my own inclination,
and then had designed to act thus, these your words would be justly
spoken to me; but now Caesar hath sent to me, I am under the necessity
of being subservient to his decrees, because a disobedience to them
will bring upon me inevitable destruction." Then the Jews replied,
"Since, therefore, thou art so disposed, O Petronius! that
thou wilt not disobey Caius's epistles, neither will we transgress
the commands of our law; and as we depend upon the excellency of
our laws, and, by the labors of our ancestors, have continued hitherto
without suffering them to be transgressed, we dare not by any means
suffer ourselves to be so timorous as to transgress those laws out
of the fear of death, which God hath determined are for our advantage;
and if we fall into misfortunes, we will bear them, in order to
preserve our laws, as knowing that those who expose themselves to
dangers have good hope of escaping them, because God will stand
on our side, when, out of regard to him, we undergo afflictions,
and sustain the uncertain turns of fortune. But if we should submit
to thee, we should be greatly reproached for our cowardice, as thereby
showing ourselves ready to transgress our law; and we should incur
the great anger of God also, who, even thyself being judge, is superior
to Caius."
3. When Petronius saw by their words that their determination was
hard to be removed, and that, without a war, he should not be able
to be subservient to Caius in the dedication of his statue, and
that there must be a great deal of bloodshed, he took his friends,
and the servants that were about him, and hasted to Tiberias, as
wanting to know in what posture the affairs of the Jews were; and
many ten thousands of the Jews met Petronius again, when he was
come to Tiberias. These thought they must run a mighty hazard if
they should have a war with the Romans, but judged that the transgression
of the law was of much greater consequence, and made supplication
to him, that he would by no means reduce them to such distresses,
nor defile their city with the dedication of the statue. Then Petronius
said to them, "Will you then make war with Caesar, without
considering his great preparations for war, and your own weakness?"
They replied, "We will not by any means make war with him,
but still we will die before we see our laws transgressed."
So they threw themselves down upon their faces, and stretched out
their throats, and said they were ready to be slain; and this they
did for forty days together, and in the mean time left off the tilling
of their ground, and that while the season of the year required
them to sow it. (31) Thus they continued firm in their resolution,
and proposed to themselves to die willingly, rather than to see
the dedication of the statue.
4. When matters were in this state, Aristobulus, king Agrippa's
brother, and Heleias the Great, and the other principal men of that
family with them, went in unto Petronius, and besought him, that
since he saw the resolution of the multitude, he would not make
any alteration, and thereby drive them to despair; but would write
to Caius, that the Jews had an insuperable aversion to the reception
of the statue, and how they continued with him, and left of the
tillage off their ground: that they were not willing to go to war
with him, because they were not able to do it, but were ready to
die with pleasure, rather than suffer their laws to be transgressed:
and how, upon the land's continuing unsown, robberies would grow
up, on the inability they would be under of paying their tributes;
and that Caius might be thereby moved to pity, and not order any
barbarous action to be done to them, nor think of destroying the
nation: that if he continues inflexible in his former opinion to
bring a war upon them, he may then set about it himself. And thus
did Aristobulus, and the rest with him, supplicate Petronius. So
Petronius, (32) partly on account of the pressing instances which
Aristobulus and the rest with him made, and because of the great
consequence of what they desired, and the earnestness wherewith
they made their supplication, — partly on account of the firmness
of the opposition made by the Jews, which he saw, while he thought
it a terrible thing for him to be such a slave to the madness of
Caius, as to slay so many ten thousand men, only because of their
religious disposition towards God, and after that to pass his life
in expectation of punishment; Petronius, I say, thought it much
better to send to Caius, and to let him know how intolerable it
was to him to bear the anger he might have against him for not serving
him sooner, in obedience to his epistle, for that perhaps he might
persuade him; and that if this mad resolution continued, he might
then begin the war against them; nay, that in case he should turn
his hatred against himself, it was fit for virtuous persons even
to die for the sake of such vast multitudes of men. Accordingly,
he determined to hearken to the petitioners in this matter.
5. He then called the Jews together to Tiberias, who came many
ten thousands in number; he also placed that army he now had with
him opposite to them; but did not discover his own meaning, but
the commands of the emperor, and told them that his wrath would,
without delay, be executed on such as had the courage to disobey
what he had commanded, and this immediately; and that it was fit
for him, who had obtained so great a dignity by his grant, not to
contradict him in any thing: — “yet," said he,
"I do not think it just to have such a regard to my own safety
and honor, as to refuse to sacrifice them for your preservation,
who are so many in number, and endeavor to preserve the regard that
is due to your law; which as it hath come down to you from your
forefathers, so do you esteem it worthy of your utmost contention
to preserve it: nor, with the supreme assistance and power of God,
will I be so hardy as to suffer your temple to fall into contempt
by the means of the imperial authority. I will, therefore, send
to Caius, and let him know what your resolutions are, and will assist
your suit as far as I am able, that you may not be exposed to suffer
on account of the honest designs you have proposed to yourselves;
and may God be your assistant, for his authority is beyond all the
contrivance and power of men; and may he procure you the preservation
of your ancient laws, and may not he be deprived, though without
your consent, of his accustomed honors. But if Caius be irritated,
and turn the violence of his rage upon me, I will rather undergo
all that danger and that affliction that may come either on my body
or my soul, than see so many of you to perish, while you are acting
in so excellent a manner. Do you, therefore, every one of you, go
your way about your own occupations, and fall to the cultivation
of your ground; I will myself send to Rome, and will not refuse
to serve you in all things, both by myself and by my friends."
6. When Petronius had said this, and had dismissed rite assembly
of the Jews, he desired the principal of them to take care of their
husbandry, and to speak kindly to the people, and encourage them
to have good hope of their affairs. Thus did he readily bring the
multitude to be cheerful again. And now did God show his presence
to Petronius, and signify to him that he would afford him his assistance
in his whole design; for he had no sooner finished the speech that
he made to the Jews, but God sent down great showers of rain, contrary
to human expectation; (33) for that day was a clear day, and gave
no sign, by the appearance of the sky, of any rain; nay, the whole
year had been subject to a great drought, and made men despair of
any water from above, even when at any time they saw the heavens
overcast with clouds; insomuch that when such a great quantity of
rain came, and that in an unusual manner, and without any other
expectation of it, the Jews hoped that Petronius would by no means
fail in his petition for them. But as to Petronius, he was mightily
surprised when he perceived that God evidently took care of the
Jews, and gave very plain signs of his appearance, and this to such
a degree, that those that were in earnest much inclined to the contrary
had no power left to contradict it. This was also among those other
particulars which he wrote to Caius, which all tended to dissuade
him, and by all means to entreat him not to make so many ten thousands
of these men go distracted; whom, if he should slay, (for without
war they would by no means suffer the laws of their worship to be
set aside,) he would lose the revenue they paid him, and would be
publicly cursed by them for all future ages. Moreover, that God,
who was their Governor, had shown his power most evidently on their
account, and that such a power of his as left no room for doubt
about it. And this was the business that Petronius was now engaged
in.
7. But king Agrippa, who now lived at Rome, was more and more in
the favor of Caius; and when he had once made him a supper, and
was careful to exceed all others, both in expenses and in such preparations
as might contribute most to his pleasure; nay, it was so far from
the ability of others, that Caius himself could never equal, much
less exceed it (such care had he taken beforehand to exceed all
men, and particularly. to make all agreeable to Caesar); hereupon
Caius admired his understanding and magnificence, that he should
force himself to do all to please him, even beyond such expenses
as he could bear, and was desirous not to be behind Agrippa in that
generosity which he exerted in order to please him. So Caius, when
he had drank wine plentifully, and was merrier than ordinary, said
thus during the feast, when Agrippa had drunk to him: "I knew
before now how great a respect thou hast had for me, and how great
kindness thou hast shown me, though with those hazards to thyself,
which thou underwentest under Tiberius on that account; nor hast
thou omitted any thing to show thy good-will towards us, even beyond
thy ability; whence it would be a base thing for me to be conquered
by thy affection. I am therefore desirous to make thee amends for
every thing in which I have been formerly deficient; for all that
I have bestowed on thee, that may be called my gifts, is but little.
Everything that may contribute to thy happiness shall be at thy
service, and that cheerfully, and so far as my ability will reach."
(34) And this was what Caius said to Agrippa, thinking be would
ask for some large country, or the revenues of certain cities. But
although he had prepared beforehand what he would ask, yet had he
not discovered his intentions, but made this answer to Caius immediately:
That it was not out of any expectation of gain that he formerly
paid his respects to him, contrary to the commands of Tiberius,
nor did he now do any thing relating to him out of regard to his
own advantage, and in order to receive any thing from him; that
the gifts he had already bestowed upon him were great, and beyond
the hopes of even a craving man; for although they may be beneath
thy power, [who art the donor,] yet are they greater than my inclination
and dignity, who am the receiver. And as Caius was astonished at
Agrippa's inclinations, and still the more pressed him to make his
request for somewhat which he might gratify him with, Agrippa replied,
"Since thou, O my lord! declarest such is thy readiness to
grant, that I am worthy of thy gifts, I will ask nothing relating
to my own felicity; for what thou hast already bestowed on me has
made me excel therein; but I desire somewhat which may make thee
glorious for piety, and render the Divinity assistant to thy designs,
and may be for an honor to me among those that inquire about it,
as showing that I never once fail of obtaining what I desire of
thee; for my petition is this, that thou wilt no longer think of
the dedication of that statue which thou hast ordered to be set
up in the Jewish temple by Petronius."
8. And thus did Agrippa venture to cast the die upon this occasion,
so great was the affair in his opinion, and in reality, though he
knew how dangerous a thing it was so to speak; for had not Caius
approved of it, it had tended to no less than the loss of his life.
So Caius, who was mightily taken with Agrippa's obliging behavior,
and on other accounts thinking it a dishonorable thing to be guilty
of falsehood before so many witnesses, in points wherein he had
with such alacrity forced Agrippa to become a petitioner, and that
it would look as if he had already repented of what he had said,
and because he greatly admired Agrippa's virtue, in not desiring
him at all to augment his own dominions, either with larger revenues,
or other authority, but took care of the public tranquillity, of
the laws, and of the Divinity itself, he granted him what he had
requested. He also wrote thus to Petronius, commending him for his
assembling his army, and then consulting him about these affairs.
"If therefore," said' he," thou hast already erected
my statue, let it stand; but if thou hast not yet dedicated it,
do not trouble thyself further about it, but dismiss thy army, go
back, and take care of those affairs which I sent thee about at
first, for I have now no occasion for the erection of that statue.
This I have granted as a favor to Agrippa, a man whom I honor so
very greatly, that I am not able to contradict what he would have,
or what he desired me to do for him." And this was what Caius
wrote to Petronius, which was before he received his letter, informing
him that the Jews were very ready to revolt about the statue, and
that they seemed resolved to threaten war against the Romans, and
nothing else. When therefore Caius was much displeased that any
attempt should be made against his government as he was a slave
to base and vicious actions on all occasions, and had no regard
to What was virtuous and honorable, and against whomsoever he resolved
to show his anger, and that for any cause whatsoever, he suffered
not himself to be restrained by any admonition, but thought the
indulging his anger to be a real pleasure, he wrote thus to Petronius:
"Seeing thou esteemest the presents made thee by the Jews to
be of greater value than my commands, and art grown insolent enough
to be subservient to their pleasure, I charge thee to become thy
own judge, and to consider what thou art to do, now thou art under
my displeasure; for I will make thee an example to the present and
to all future ages, that they. may not dare to contradict the commands
of their emperor."
9. This was the epistle which Caius wrote to. Petronius; but Petronius
did not receive it while Caius was alive, that ship which carried
it sailing so slow, that other letters came to Petronius before
this, by which he understood that Caius was dead; for God would
not forget the dangers Petronius had undertaken on account of the
Jews, and of his own honor. But when he had taken Caius away, out
of his indignation of what he had so insolently attempted in assuming
to himself divine worship, both Rome and all that dominion conspired
with Petronius, especially those that were of the senatorian order,
to give Caius his due reward, because he had been unmercifully severe
to them; for he died not long after he had written to Petronius
that epistle which threatened him with death. But as for the occasion
of his death, and the nature of the plot against him, I shall relate
them in the progress of this narration. Now that epistle which informed
Petronius of Caius's death came first, and a little afterward came
that which commanded him to kill himself with his own hands. Whereupon
he rejoiced at this coincidence as to the death of Caius, and admired
God's providence, who, without the least delay, and immediately,
gave him a reward for the regard he had to the temple, and the assistance
he afforded the Jews for avoiding the dangers they were in. And
by this means Petronius escaped that danger of death, which he could
not foresee.
CHAPTER 9.
WHAT BEFELL THE JEWS THAT WERE IN BABYLON ON OCCASION OF ASINEUS
AND ANILEUS, TWO BRETHREN,
1. A VERY sad calamity now befell the Jews that were in Mesopotamia,
and especially those that dwelt in Babylonia. Inferior it was to
none of the calamities which had gone before, and came together
with a great slaughter of them, and that greater than any upon record
before; concerning all which I shall speak accurately, and shall
explain the occasions whence these miseries came upon them. There
was a city of Babylonia called Neerda; not only a ver populous one,
but one that had a good and a large territory about it, and, besides
its other advantages, full of men also. It was, besides, not easily
to be assaulted by enemies, from the river Euphrates encompassing
it all round, and from the wails that were built about it. There
was also the city Nisibis, situate on the same current of the river.
For which reason the Jews, depending on the natural strength of
these places, deposited in them that half shekel which every one,
by the custom of our country, offers unto God, as well as they did
other things devoted to him; for they made use of these cities as
a treasury, whence, at a proper time, they were transmitted to Jerusalem;
and many ten thousand men undertook the carriage of those donations,
out of fear of the ravages of the Parthians, to whom the Babylonians
were then subject. Now there were two men, Asineus and Anileus,
of the city Neerda by birth, and brethren to one another. They were
destitute of a father, and their mother put them to learn the art
of weaving curtains, it not being esteemed ,disgrace among them
for men to be weavers of cloth. Now he that taught them that art,
and was set over them, complained that they came too late to their
work, and punished them with stripes; but they took this just punishment
as an affront, and carried off all the weapons which were kept in
that house, which were not a few, and went into a certain place
where was a partition of the rivers, and was a place naturally very
fit for the feeding of cattle, and for preserving such fruits as
were usually laid up against winter. The poorest sort of the young
men also resorted to them, whom they armed with the weapons they
had gotten, and became their captains; and nothing hindered them
from being their leaders into mischief; for as soon as they were
become invincible, and had built them a citadel, they sent to such
as fed cattle, and ordered them to pay them so much tribute out
of them as might be sufficient for their maintenance, proposing
also that they would be their friends, if they would submit to them,
and that they would defend them from all their other enemies on
every side, but that they would kill the cattle of those that refused
to obey them. So they hearkened to their proposals, (for they could
do nothing else,) and sent them as many sheep as were required of
them; whereby their forces grew greater, and they became lords over
all they pleased, because they marched suddenly, and did them a
mischief, insomuch that every body who had to do with them chose
to pay them respect; and they became formidable to such as came
to assault them, till the report about them came to the ears of
the king of Parthia himself.
2. But when the governor of Babylonia understood this, and had
a mind to put a stop to them before they grew greater, and before
greater mischiefs should arise from them, he got together as great
an army as he could, both of Parthians and Babylonians, and marched
against them, thinking to attack them and destroy them before any
one should carry them the news that he had got an army together.
He then encamped at a lake, and lay still; but on the next day (it
was the sabbath, which is among the Jews a day of rest from all
sorts of work) he supposed that the enemy would not dare to fight
him thereon, but that he would take them and carry them away prisoners,
without fighting. He therefore proceeded gradually, and thought
to fall upon them on the sudden. Now Asineus was sitting with the
rest, and their weapons lay by them; upon which he said, "Sirs,
I hear a neighing of horses; not of such as are feeding, but such
as have men on their backs; I also hear such a noise of their bridles,
that I am afraid that some enemies are coming upon us to encompass
us round. However, let somebody go to look about, and make report
of what reality there is in the present state of things; and may
what I have said prove a false alarm." And when he had said
this, some of them went out to spy out what was the matter; and
they came again immediately, and said to him, that "neither
hast thou been mistaken in telling us what our enemies were doing,
nor will those enemies permit us to be injurious to people any longer.
We are caught by their intrigues like brute beasts, and there is
a large body of cavalry marching upon us, while we are destitute
of hands to defend ourselves withal, because we are restrained from
doing it by the prohibition of our law, which obliges us to rest
[on this day]." But Asiueus did not by any means agree with
the opinion of his spy as to what was to be done, but thought it
more agreeable to the law to pluck up their spirits in this necessity
they were fallen into, and break their law by avenging themselves,
although they should die in the action, than by doing nothing to
please their enemies in submitting to be slain by them. Accordingly,
he took up his weapons, and infused courage into those that were
with him to act as courageously as himself. So they fell upon their
enemies, and slew a great many of them, because they despised them
and came as to a certain victory, and put the rest to flight.
3. But when the news of this fight came to the king of Parthia,
he was surprised at the boldness of these brethren, and was desirous
to see them, and speak with them. He therefore sent the most trusty
of all his guards to say thus to them: "That king Artsbanus,
although he had been unjustly treated by you, who have made an attempt
against his government, yet hath he more regard to your courageous
behavior, than to the anger he bears to you, and hath sent me to
give you his right hand (35) and security; and he permits you to
come to him safely, and without any violence upon the road; and
he wants to have you address yourselves to him as friends, without
meaning any guile or deceit to you. He also promises to make you
presents, and to pay you those respects which will make an addition
of his power to your courage, and thereby be of advantage to you."
Yet did Asineus himself put off his journey thither, but sent his
brother Anileus with all such presents as he could procure. So he
went, and was admitted to the king's presence; and when Artabanus
saw Anileus coming alone, he inquired into the reason why Asineus
avoided to come along with him; and when he understood that he was
afraid, and staid by the lake, he took an oath, by the gods of his
country, that he would do them no harm, if they came to him upon
the assurances he gave them, and gave him his right hand. This is
of the greatest force there with all these barbarians, and affords
a firm security to those who converse with them; for none of them
will deceive you when once they have given you their right hands,
nor will any one doubt of their fidelity, when that is once given,
even though they were before suspected of injustice. When Artabanus
had done this, he sent away Anileus to persuade his brother to come
to him. Now this the king did, because he wanted to curb his own
governors of provinces by the courage of these Jewish brethren,
lest they should make a league with them; for they were ready for
a revolt, and were disposed to rebel, had they been sent on an expedition
against them. He was also afraid, lest when he was engaged in a
war, in order to subdue those governors of provinces that had revolted,
the party of Asineus, and those in Babylonia, should be augmented,
and either make war upon him, when they should hear of that revolt,
or if they should be disappointed in that case, they would not fail
of doing further mischief to him.
4. When the king had these intentions, he sent away Anileus, and
Anileus prevailed on his brother [to come to the king], when he
had related to him the king's good-will, and the oath that he had
taken. Accordingly, they made haste to go to Artsbanus, who received
them when they were come with pleasure, and admired Asineus's courage
in the actions he had done, and this because he was a little man
to see to, and at first sight appeared contemptible also, and such
as one might deem a person of no value at all. He also said to his
friends, how, upon the comparison, he showed his soul to be in all
respects superior to his body; and when, as they were drinking together,
he once showed Asineus to Abdagases, one of the generals of his
army, and told him his name, and described the great courage he
was of in war, and Abdagases had desired leave to kill him, and
thereby to inflict on him a punishment for those injuries he had
done to the Parthian government, the king replied, "I will
never give thee leave to kill a man who hath depended on my faith,
especially not after I have sent him my right hand, and endeavored
to gain his belief by oaths made by the gods. But if thou be a truly
warlike man, thou standest not in need of my perjury. Go thou then,
and avenge the Parthian government; attack this man, when he is
returned back, and conquer him by the forces that are under thy
command, without my privity." Hereupon the king called for
Asineus, and said to him, "It is time for thee, O thou young
man! to return home, and not provoke the indignation of my generals
in this place any further, lest they attempt to murder thee, and
that without my approbation. I commit to thee the country of Babylonia
in trust, that it may, by thy care, be preserved free from robbers,
and from other mischiefs. I have kept my faith inviolable to thee,
and that not in trifling affairs, but in those that concerned thy
safety, and do therefore deserve thou shouldst be kind to me."
When he had said this, and given Asineus some presents, he sent
him away immediately; who, when he was come home, built fortresses,
and became great in a little time, and managed things with such
courage and success, as no other person, that had no higher a beginning,
ever did before him. Those Parthian governors also, who were sent
that way, paid him great respect; and the honor that was paid him
by the Babylonians seemed to them too small, and beneath his deserts,
although he were in no small dignity and power there; nay, indeed,
all the affairs of Mesopotamia depended upon him, and he more and
more flourished in this happy condition of his for fifteen years.
5. But as their affairs were in so flourishing a state, there sprang
up a calamity among them on the following occasion. When once they
had deviated from that course of virtue whereby they had gained
so great power, they affronted and transgressed the laws of their
forefathers, and fell under the dominion of their lusts and pleasures.
A certain Parthian, who came as general of an army into those parts,
had a wife following him, who had a vast reputation for other accomplishments,
and particularly was admired above all other women for her beauty.
Anileus, the brother of Asineus, either heard of that her beauty
from others, or perhaps saw her himself also, and so became at once
her lover and her enemy; partly because he could not hope to enjoy
this woman but by obtaining power over her as a captive, and partly
because he thought he could not conquer his inclinations for her.
As soon therefore as her husband had been declared an enemy to them,
and was fallen in the battle, the widow of the deceased was married
to this her lover. However, this woman did not come into their house
without producing great misfortunes, both to Anileus himself, and
to Asineus also; but brought great mischiefs upon them on the occasion
following. Since she was led away captive, upon the death of her
husband, she concealed the images of those gods which were their
country gods, common to her husband and to herself: now it was the
custom (36) of that country for all to have the idols they worship
in their own houses, and to carry them along with them when they
go into a foreign land; agreeable to which custom of theirs she
carried her idols with her. Now at first she performed her worship
to them privately; but when she was become Anileus's married wife,
she worshipped them in her accustomed manner, and with the same
appointed ceremonies which she used in her former husband's days;
upon which their most esteemed friends blamed him at first, that
he did not act after the manner of the Hebrews, nor perform what
was agreeable to their laws, in marrying a foreign wife, and one
that transgressed the accurate appointments of their sacrifices
and religious ceremonies; that he ought to consider, lest, by allowing
himself in many pleasures of the body, he might lose his principality,
on account of the beauty of a wife, and that high authority which,
by God's blessing, he had arrived at. But when they prevailed not
at all upon him, he slew one of them for whom he had the greatest
respect, because of the liberty he took with him; who, when he was
dying, out of regard to the laws, imprecated a punishment upon his
murderer Anileus, and upon Asineus also, and that all their companions
might come to a like end from their enemies; upon the two first
as the principal actors of this wickedness, and upon the rest as
those that would not assist him when he suffered in the defense
of their laws. Now these latter were sorely grieved, yet did they
tolerate these doings, because they remembered that they had arrived
at their present happy state by no other means than their fortitude.
But when they also heard of the worship of those gods whom the Parthians
adore, they thought the injury that Anileus offered to their laws
was to be borne no longer; and a greater number of them came to
Asineus, and loudly complained of Aniteus, and told him that it
had been well that he had of himself seen what was advantageous
to them; but that however it was now high time to correct what had
been done amiss, before the crime that had been committed proved
the ruin of himself and all the rest of them. They added, that the
marriage of this woman was made without their consent, and without
a regard to their old laws; and that the worship which this woman
paid [to her gods] was a reproach to the God whom they worshipped.
Now Asineus was sensible of his brother's offense, that it had been
already the cause of great mischiefs, and would be so for the time
to come; yet did he tolerate the same from the good-will he had
to so near a relation, and forgiving it to him, on account that
his brother was quite overborne by his wicked inclinations. But
as more and more still came about him every day, and the clamors
about it became greater, he at length spake to Anileus about these
clamors, reproving him for his former actions, and desiring him
for the future to leave them off, and send the woman back to her
relations. But nothing was gained by these reproofs; for as the
woman perceived what a tumult was made among the people on her account,
and was afraid for Anileus, lest he should come to any harm for
his love to her, she infused poison into Asineus's food, and thereby
took him off, and was now secure of prevailing, when her lover was
to be judge of what should be done about her.
6. So Anileus took the government upon himself alone, and led his
army against the villages of Mithridates, who was a man of principal
authority in Parthin, and had married king Artabanus's daughter;
he also plundered them, and among that prey was found much money,
and many slaves, as also a great number of sheep, and many other
things, which, when gained, make men's condition happy. Now when
Mithridates, who was there at this time, heard that his villages
were taken, he was very much displeased to find that Anileus had
first begun to injure him, and to affront him in his present dignity,
when he had not offered any injury to him beforehand; and he got
together the greatest body of horsemen he was able, and those out
of that number which were of an age fit for war, and came to fight
Anileus; and when he was arrived at a certain village of his own,
he lay still there, as intending to fight him on the day following,
because it was the sabbath, the day on which the Jews rest. And
when Anileus was informed of this by a Syrian stranger of another
village, who not only gave him an exact account of other circumstances,
but told him where Mithridates would have a feast, he took his supper
at a proper time, and marched by night, with an intent of falling
upon the Parthians while they were unaprrized what they should do;
so he fell upon them about the fourth watch of the night, and some
of them he slew while they were asleep, and others he put to flight,
and took Mithridates alive, and set him naked upon an ass (37) which,
among the Parthians, is esteemed the greatest reproach possible.
And when he had brought him into a wood with such a resolution,
and his friends desired him to kill Mithridates, he soon told them
his own mind to the contrary, and said that it was not right to
kill a man who was of one of the principal families among the Parthians,
and greatly honored with matching into the royal family; that so
far as they had hitherto gone was tolerable; for although they had
injured Mithridates, yet if they preserved his life, this benefit
would be remembered by him to the advantage of those that gave it
him; but that if be were once put to death, the king would not be
at rest till he had made a great slaughter of the Jews that dwelt
at Babylon; "to whose safety we ought to have a regard, both
on account of our relation to them, and because if any misfortune
befall us, we have no other place to retire to, since he hath gotten
the flower of their youth under him." By this thought, and
this speech of his made in council, he persuaded them to act accordingly;
so Mithridates was let go. But when he was got away, his wife reproached
him, that although he was son-in-law to the king, he neglected to
avenge himself on those that had injured him, while he took no care
about it, but was contented to have been made a captive by the Jews,
and to have escaped them; and she bid him either to go back like
a man of courage, or else she sware by the gods of their royal family
that she would certainly dissolve her marriage with him. Upon which,
partly because he could not bear the daily trouble of her taunts,
and partly because he was afraid of her insolence, lest she should
in earnest dissolve their marriage, he unwillingly, and against
his inclinations, got together again as great an army as he could,
and marched along with them, as himself thinking it a thing not
to be borne any longer, that he, a Parthian, should owe his preservation
to the Jews, when they had been too hard for him in the war.
7. But as soon as Anileus understood that Mithridates was marching
with a great army against him, he thought it too ignominious a thing
to tarry about the lakes, and not to take the first opportunity
of meeting his enemies, and he hoped to have the same success, and
to beat their enemies as they did before; as also he ventured boldly
upon the like attempts. Accordingly, he led out his army, and a
great many more joined themselves to that army, in order to betake
themselves to plunder the people, and in order to terrify the enemy
again by their numbers. But when they had marched ninety furlongs,
while the road had been through dry [and sandy] places, and about
the midst of the day, they were become very thirsty; and Mithridates
appeared, and fell upon them, as they were in distress for want
of water, on which account, and on account of the time of the day,
they were not able to bear their weapons. So Anileus and his men
were put to an ignominious rout, while men in despair were to attack
those that were fresh and in good plight; so a great slaughter was
made, and many ten thousand men fell. Now Anileus, and all that
stood firm about him, ran away as fast as they were able into a
wood, and afforded Mithridates the pleasure of having gained a great
victory over them. But there now came in to Anileus a conflux of
bad men, who regarded their own lives very little, if they might
but gain some present ease, insomuch that they, by thus coming to
him, compensated the multitude of those that perished in the fight.
Yet were not these men like to those that fell, because they were
rash, and unexercised in war; however, with these he came upon the
villages of the Babylonians, and a mighty devastation of all things
was made there by the injuries that Anileus did them. So the Babylonians,
and those that had already been in the war, sent to Neerda to the
Jews there, and demanded Anileus. But although they did not agree
to their demands, (for if they had been willing to deliver him up,
it was not in their power so to do,) yet did they desire to make
peace with them. To which the other replied, that they also wanted
to settle conditions of peace with them, and sent men together with
the Babylonians, who discoursed with Anileus about them. But the
Babylonians, upon taking a view of his situation, and having learned
where Anileus and his men lay, fell secretly upon them as they were
drunk and fallen asleep, and slew all that they caught of them,
without any fear, and killed Anileus himself also.
8. The Babylonians were now freed from Anileus's heavy incursions,
which had been a great restraint to the effects of that hatred they
bore to the Jews; for they were almost always at variance, by reason
of the contrariety of their laws; and which party soever grew boldest
before the other, they assaulted the other: and at this time in
particular it was, that upon the ruin of Anileus's party, the Babylonians
attacked the Jews, which made those Jews so, vehemently to resent
the injuries they received from the Babylonians, that being neither
able to fight them, nor bearing to live with them, they went to
Seleucia, the principal city of those parts, which was built by
Seleucus Nicator. It was inhabited by many of the Macedonians, but
by more of the Grecians; not a few of the Syrians also dwelt there;
and thither did the Jews fly, and lived there five years, without
any misfortunes. But on the sixth year, a pestilence came upon these
at Babylon, which occasioned new removals of men's habitations out
of that city; and because they came to Seleucia, it happened that
a still heavier calamity came upon them on that account which I
am going to relate immediately.
9. Now the way of living of the people of Seleucia, which were
Greeks and Syrians, was commonly quarrelsome, and full of discords,
though the Greeks were too hard for the Syrians. When, therefore,
the Jews were come thither, and dwelt among them, there arose a
sedition, and the Syrians were too hard for the other, by the assistance
of the Jews, who are men that despise dangers, and very ready to
fight upon any occasion. Now when the Greeks had the worst in this
sedition, and saw that they had but one way of recovering their
former authority, and that was, if they could prevent the agreement
between the Jews and the Syrians, they every one discoursed with
such of the Syrians as were formerly their acquaintance, and promised
they would be at peace and friendship with them. Accordingly, they
gladly agreed so to do; and when this was done by the principal
men of both nations, they soon agreed to a reconciliation; and when
they were so agreed, they both knew that the great design of such
their union would be their common hatred to the Jews. Accordingly,
they fell upon them, and slew about fifty thousand of them; nay,
the Jews were all destroyed, excepting a few who escaped, either
by the compassion which their friends or neighbors afforded them,
in order to let them fly away. These retired to Ctesiphon, a Grecian
city, and situate near to Seleucia, where the king [of Parthia]
lives in winter every year, and where the greatest part of his riches
are reposited; but the Jews had here no certain settlement, those
of Seleucia having little concern for the king's honor. Now the
whole nation of the Jews were in fear both of the Babylonians and
of the Seleucians, because all the Syrians that live in those places
agreed with the Seleucians in the war against the Jews; so the most
of them gathered themselves together, and went to Neerda and Nisibis,
and obtained security there by the strength of those cities; besides
which their inhabitants, who were a great many, were all warlike
men. And this was the state of the Jews at this time in Babylonia.
ENDNOTE
(1) Since St. Luke once, Acts 5:37, and Josephus four several times,
once here, sect. 6; and B. XX. ch. 5. sect. 2; Of the War, B. II.
ch. 8. sect. 1; and ch. 17. sect. 8, calls this Judas, who was the
pestilent author of that seditious doctrine and temper which brought
the Jewish nation to utter destruction, a Galilean; but here (sect.
1) Josephus calls him a Gaulonite, of the city of Gamala; it is
a great question where this Judas was born, whether in Galilee on
the west side, or in Gaulonitis on the east side, of the river Jordan;
while, in the place just now cited out of the Antiquities, B. XX.
ch. 5. sect. 2, he is not only called a Galilean, but it is added
to his story, "as I have signified in the books that go before
these," as if he had still called him a Galilean in those Antiquities
before, as well as in that particular place, as Dean Aldrich observes,
Of the War, B. II. ch. 8. sect. 1. Nor can one well imagine why
he should here call him a Gaulonite, when in the 6th sect. following
here, as well as twice Of the War, he still calls him a Galilean.
As for the city of Gamala, whence this Judas was derived, it determines
nothing, since there were two of that name, the one in Gaulonitis,
the other in Galilee. See Reland on the city or town of that name.
(2) It seems not very improbable to me that this Sadduc, the Pharisee,
was the very same man of whom the Rabbins speak, as the unhappy,
but undesigning, occasion of the impiety or infidelity of the Sadducees;
nor perhaps had the men this name of Sadducees till this very time,
though they were a distinct sect long before. See the note on B.
XIII. ch. 10. sect 5; and Dean Prideaux, as there quoted. Nor do
we, that I know of, find the least footsteps of such impiety or
infidelity of these Sadducees before this time, the Recognitions
assuring us that they began about the days of John the Baptist;
B. 1. ch. 54. See note above.
(3) It seems by what Josephus says here, and Philo himself elsewhere,
Op. p. 679, that these Essens did not use to go to the Jewish festivals
at Jerusalem, or to offer sacrifices there, which may be one great
occasion why they are never mentioned in the ordinary books of the
New Testament; though, in the Apostolical Constitutions, they are
mentioned as those that observed the customs of their forefathers,
and that without any such ill character laid upon them as is there
laid upon the other sects among that people.
(4) Who these Polistae in Josephus, or in Strabo. among the Pythagoric
Dacae, were, it is not easy to determine. Scaliger offers no improbable
conjecture, that some of these Dacae lived alone, like monks, in
tents or caves; but that others of them lived together in built
cities, and thence were called by such names as implied the same.
(5) We may here take notice, as well as in the parallel parts of
the books Of the War, B. II. ch. 9. sect. 1, that after the death
of Herod the Great, and the succession of Archclaus, Josephus is
very brief in his accounts of Judea, till near his own time. I suppose
the reason is, that after the large history of Nicolaus of Damascus,
including the life of Herod, and probably the succession and first
actions of his sons, he had but few good histories of those times
before him.
(6) Numbers 19:11-14.
(7) This citation is now wanting.
(8) These Jews, as they are here called, whose blood Pilate shed
on this occasion, may very well be those very Galilean Jews, "whose
blood Pilate had mingled with their sacrifices," Luke 13:1,
2; these tumults being usually excited at some of the Jews' great
festivals, when they slew abundance of sacrifices, and the Galileans
being commonly much more busy in such tumults than those of Judea
and Jerusalem, as we learn from the history of Archelaus, Antiq.
B. XVII. ch. 9. sect. 3 and ch. 10. sect. 2, 9; though, indeed,
Josephus's present copies say not one word of "those eighteen
upon whom the tower in Siloam fell, and slew them," which the
4th verse of the same 13th chapter of St. Luke informs us of. But
since our gospel teaches us, Luke 23:6, 7, that "when Pilate
heard of Galilee, he asked whether Jesus were a Galilean. And as
soon as he knew that he belonged to Herod's jurisdiction, he sent
him to Herod ;" and ver. 12, "The same day Pilate and
Herod were made friends together for before they had been at enmity
between themselves;" take the very probable key of this matter
in the words of the learned Noldius, de Herod. No. 219: "The
cause of the enmity between Herod and Pilate (says he) seems to
have been this, that Pilate had intermeddled with the tetrarch's
jurisdiction, and had slain some of his Galilean subjects, Luke
13:1; and, as he was willing to correct that error, he sent Christ
to Herod at this time."
(9) A.D. 33, April 3.
(10) April 5.
(11) Of the banishment of these four thousand Jews into Sardinia
by Tiberius, see Suetonlus in Tiber. sect. 36. But as for Mr. Reland's
note here, which supposes that Jews could not, consistently with
their laws, be soldiers, it is contradicted by one branch of the
history before us, and contrary to innumerable instances of their
fighting, and proving excellent soldiers in war; and indeed many
of the best of them, and even under heathen kings themselves, did
so; those, I mean, who allowed them their rest on the sabbath day,
and other solemn festivals, and let them live according to their
own laws, as Alexander the Great and the Ptolemies of Egypt did.
It is true, they could not always obtain those privileges, and then
they got executed as well as they could, or sometimes absolutely
refused to fight, which seems to have been the case here, as to
the major part of the Jews now banished, but nothing more. See several
of the Roman decrees in their favor as to such matters, B. XIV.
ch. 10.
(12) Since Moses never came himself beyond Jordan, nor particularly
to Mount Gerizzim, and since these Samaritans have a tradition among
them, related here by Dr. Hudson, from Reland, who was very skillful
in Jewish and Samaritan learning, that in the days of Uzzi or Ozis
the high priest, 1 Chronicles 6:6; the ark and other sacred vessels
were, by God's command, laid up or hidden in Mount Gerizzim, it
is highly probable that this was the foolish foundation the present
Samaritans went upon, in the sedition here described.
(13) This mention of the high priest's sacred garments received
seven days before a festival, and purified in those days against
a festival, as having been polluted by being in the custody of heathens,
in Josephus, agrees well with the traditions of the Talmudists,
as Reland here observes. Nor is there any question but the three
feasts here mentioned were the passover, pentecost, and feast of
tabernacles; and the fast so called by way of distinction, as Acts
27:9, was the great day of expiation.
(14) This calculation, from all Josephus's Greek copies, is exactly
right; for since Herod died about September, in the fourth year
before the Christian era, and Tiberius began, as is well known,
Aug. 19, A.D. 14, it is evident that the thirty-seventh year of
Philip, reckoned from his father's death, was the twentieth of Tiberius,
or near the end of A.D. 33, [the very year of our Savior's death
also,] or, however, in the beginning of the next year, A.D. 34.
This Philip the tetrarch seems to have been the best of all the
posterity of Herod, for his love of peace, and his love of justice.
An excellent example this.
(15) This Herod seems to have had the additional name of Philip,
as Antipus was named Herod-Antipas: and as Antipus and Antipater
seem to be in a manner the very same name, yet were the names of
two sons of Herod the Great; so might Philip the tetrarch and this
Herod-Philip be two different sons of the same father, all which
Grotias observes on Matthew 14:3. Nor was it, as I with Grotias
and others of the Philip the tetrarch, but this Herod-Philip, whose
wife Herod the tetrarch had married, and that in her first husband's
lifetime, and when her first husband had issue by her-; for which
adulterous and incestuous marriage John the Baptist justly reproved
Herod the tetrarch, and for which reproof Salome, the daughter of
Herodias by her first husband Herod-Philip, who was still alive,
occasioned him to be unjustly beheaded.
(16) Whether this sudden extinction of almost the entire lineage
of Herod the Great, which was very numerous, as we are both here
and in the next section informed, was not in part as a punishment
for the gross incests they were frequently guilty of, in marrying
their own nephews and nieces, well deserves to be considered. See
Leviticus 18:6, 7; 21:10; and Noldius, De Herod, No. 269, 270.
(17) There are coins still extant of this Eraess, as Spanheim informs
us. Spanheim also informs us of a coin still extant of this Jotape,
daughter of the king of Commageus.
(18) Spanheim observes, that we have here an instance of the Attic
quantity of use-money, which was the eighth part of the original
sum, or 12 per cent., for such is the proportion of 2500 to 20,000.
(19) The governor of the Jews there.
(20) Tiberius, junior of Germanicus.
(21) This high commendation of Antonia for marrying but once, given
here, and supported elsewhere; Antiq. B. XVII. ch. 13. sect. 4,
and this, notwithstanding the strongest temptations, shows how honorable
single marriages were both among the Jews and Romans, in the days
of Josephus and of the apostles, and takes away much of that surprise
which the modern Protestants have at those laws of the apostles,
where no widows, but those who had been the wives of one husband
only, are taken into the church list; and no bishops, priests, or
deacons are allowed to marry more than once, without leaving off
to officiate as clergymen any longer. See Luke 2:36; 1 Timothy 5:11,
12; 3:2, 12; Titus 1:10; Constit. Apost. B. II. sect. 1, 2; B. VI.
sect. 17; Can. B. XVII,; Grot. in Luc. ii. 36; and Resports. ad
Consult. Cassand. p. 44; and Cotelet. in Constit. B. VI. sect. 17.
And note, that Tertullian owns this law against second marriages
of the clergy had been once at least executed in his time; and heavily
complains elsewhere, that the breach thereof had not been always
punished by the catholics, as it ought to have been. Jerome, speaking
of the ill reputation of marrying twice, says, that no such person
could be chosen into the clergy in his days; which Augustine testifies
also; and for Epiphanius, rather earlier, he is clear and full to
the same purpose, and says that law obtained over the whole catholic
church in his days,--as the places in the forecited authors inform
us.
(22) Dr. Hudson here takes notice, out of Seneca, Epistle V. that
this was the custom of Tiberius, to couple the prisoner and the
soldier that guarded him together in the same chain.
(23) Tiberius his own grandson, and Caius his brother Drusus's
grandson.
(24) So I correct Josephus's copy, which calls Germanicus his brother,
who was his brother's son.
(25) This is a known thing among the Roman historians and poets,
that Tiberius was greatly given to astrology and divination.
(26) This name of a lion is often given to tyrants, especially
by the such Agrippa, and probably his freed-man Marsyas, in effect
were, Ezekiel 19:1, 9; Esther 4:9 2 Timothy 4:17. They are also
sometimes compared to or represented by wild beasts, of which the
lion is the principal, Daniel 7:3, 8; Apoc. 13:1, 2.
(27) Although Caius now promised to give Agrippa the tetrarchy
of Lysanias, yet was it not actually conferred upon him till the
reign of Claudius, as we learn, Antiq. B. XIX, ch. 5. sect. 1.
(28) Regarding instances of the interpositions of Providence, as
have been always very rare among the other idolatrous nations, but
of old very many among the posterity of Abraham, the worshippers
of the true God; nor do these seem much inferior to those in the
Old Testament, which are the more remarkable, because, among all
their other follies and vices, the Jews were not at this time idolaters;
and the deliverances here mentioned were done in order to prevent
their relapse into that idolatry.
(29) Josephus here assures us that the ambassadors from Alexandria
to Caius were on each part no more than three in number, for the
Jews, and for the Gentiles, which are but six in all; whereas Philo,
who was the principal ambassador from the Jews, as Josephus here
confesses, (as was Apion for the Gentiles,) says, the Jews' ambassadors
were themselves no fewer than live, towards the end of his legation
to Caius; which, if there be no mistake in the copies, must be supposed
the truth; nor, in that case, would Josephus have contradicted so
authentic a witness, had he seen that account of Philo's; which
that he ever did does not appear.
(30) This Alexander, the alabarch, or governor of the Jews, at
Alexandria, and brother to Philo, is supposed by Bishop Pearson,
in Act. Apost. p. 41,42, to be the same with that Alexander who
is mentioned by St. Luke, as of the kindred of the high priests,
Acts 4:6.
(31) What Josephus here, and sect. 6, relates as done by the Jews
seed time, is in Philo, "not far off the time when the corn
was ripe," who, as Le Clerc notes, differ here one from the
other. This is another indication that Josephus, when he wrote this
account, had not seen Philo's Legat. ad Caiurn, otherwise he would
hardly trove herein differed from him.
(32) This. Publius Petronius was after this still president of
Syria, under Cladius, and, at the desire of Agrippa, published a
severe decree against the inhabitants of Dora, who, in a sort of
intitation of Caius, had set op a statue of Claudius in a Jewish
synagogue there. This decree is extant, B. XIX. ch. 6. sect. 3,
and greatly confirms the present accounts of Josephus, as do the
other decrees of Claudius, relating to the like Jewish affairs,
B. XIX. ch. 5. sect. 2, 3, to which I refer the inquisitive reader.
(33) Josephus here uses the solemn New Testament words, the presence
and appearance of God, for the extraordinary manifestation of his
power and providence to Petronius, by sending rain in a time of
distress, immediately upon the resolution he had taken to preserve
the temple unpolluted, at the hazard of his own life, without any
other miraculous appearance at all in that case; which well deserves
to be taken notice of here, and greatly illustrates several texts,
both in the Old and New Testament.
(34) This behavior of Caius to Agrippa is very like that of Herod
Antipas, his uncle, to Herodias, Agrippa's sister, about it John
the Baptist, Matthew 14:6--11.
(35) The joining of the right hands was esteemed among the Peoians
[and Parthians] in particular a most inviolable obligation to fidelity,
as Dr. Hudson here observes, and refers to the commentary on Justin,
B. XI. ch. 15., for its confirmation. We often meet with the like
use of it in Josephus.
(36) This custom of the Mesopotamians to carry their household
gods along with them wherever they traveled is as old as the days
of Jacob, when Rachel his wife did the same, Genesis 31:19, 30-35;
nor is it to pass here unobserved, what great miseries came on these
Jews, because they suffered one of their leaders to marry an idolatrous
wife, contrary to the law of Moses. Of which matter see the note
on B. XIX. ch. 5. sect. 3.
(37) This custom, in Syria and Mesopotamia, of setting men upon
an ass, by way of disgrace, is still kept up at Damascus in Syria;
where, in order to show their despite against the Christians, the
Turks will not suffer them to hire horses, but asses only, when
they go abroad to see the country, as Mr. Maundrell assures us,
p. 128.
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