The Wars of the Jews
Preface
Ia
Ib IIa
IIb
III
IV
V
VI
VII
Book VII
FROM THE TAKING OF JERUSALEM BY TITUS TO THE SEDITION AT CYRENE
CHAPTER 1.
HOW THE ENTIRE CITY OF JERUSALEM WAS DEMOLISHED, EXCEPTING THREE
TOWERS; AND HOW TITUS COMMENDED HIS SOLDIERS IN A SPEECH MADE TO
THEM, AND DISTRIBUTED REWARDS TO THEM AND THEN DISMISSED MANY OF
THEM.
1. NOW as soon as the army had no more people to slay or to plunder,
because there remained none to be the objects of their fury, (for
they would not have spared any, had there remained any other work
to be done,) Caesar gave orders that they should now demolish the
entire city and temple, but should leave as many of the towers standing
as were of the greatest eminency; that is, Phasaelus, and Hippicus,
and Mariamne; and so much of the wall as enclosed the city on the
west side. This wall was spared, in order to afford a camp for such
as were to lie in garrison, as were the towers also spared, in order
to demonstrate to posterity what kind of city it was, and how well
fortified, which the Roman valor had subdued; but for all the rest
of the wall, it was so thoroughly laid even with the ground by those
that dug it up to the foundation, that there was left nothing to
make those that came thither believe it had ever been inhabited.
This was the end which Jerusalem came to by the madness of those
that were for innovations; a city otherwise of great magnificence,
and of mighty fame among all mankind. (1)
2. But Caesar resolved to leave there, as a guard, the tenth legion,
with certain troops of horsemen, and companies of footmen. So, having
entirely completed this war, he was desirous to commend his whole
army, on account of the great exploits they had performed, and to
bestow proper rewards on such as had signalized themselves therein.
He had therefore a great tribunal made for him in the midst of the
place where he had formerly encamped, and stood upon it with his
principal commanders about him, and spake so as to be heard by the
whole arrmy in the manner following: That he returned them abundance
of thanks for their good-will which they had showed to him: he commended
them for that ready obedience they had exhibited in this whole war,
which obedience had appeared in the many and great dangers which
they had courageously undergone; as also for that courage they had
shown, and had thereby augmented of themselves their country's power,
and had made it evident to all men, that neither the multitude of
their enemies, nor the strength of their places, nor the largeness
of their cities, nor the rash boldness and brutish rage of their
antagonists, were sufficient at any time to get clear of the Roman
valor, although some of them may have fortune in many respects on
their side. He said further, that it was but reasonable for them
to put an end to this war, now it had lasted so long, for that they
had nothing better to wish for when they entered into it; and that
this happened more favorably for them, and more for their glory,
that all the Romans had willingly accepted of those for their governors,
and the curators of their dominions, whom they had chosen for them,
and had sent into their own country for that purpose, which still
continued under the management of those whom they had pitched on,
and were thankful to them for pitching upon them. That accordingly,
although he did both admire and tenderly regard them all, because
he knew that every one of them had gone as cheerfully about their
work as their abilities and opportunities would give them leave;
yet, he said, that he would immediately bestow rewards and dignities
on those that had fought the most bravely, and with greater force,
and had signalized their conduct in the most glorious manner, and
had made his army more famous by their noble exploits; and that
no one who had been willing to take more pains than another should
miss of a just retribution for the same; for that he had been exceeding
careful about this matter, and that the more, because he had much
rather reward the virtues of his fellow soldiers than punish such
as had offended.
3. Hereupon Titus ordered those whose business it was to read the
list of all that had performed great exploits in this war, whom
he called to him by their names, and commended them before the company,
and rejoiced in them in the same manner as a man would have rejoiced
in his own exploits. He also put on their heads crowns of gold,
and golden ornaments about their necks, and gave them long spears
of gold,. and ensigns that were made of silver, and removed every
one of them to a higher rank; and besides this, he plentifully distributed
among them, out of the spoils, and the other prey they had taken,
silver, and gold, and garments. So when they had all these honors
bestowed on them, according to his own appointment made to every
one, and he had wished all sorts of happiness to the whole army,
he came down, among the great acclamations which were made to him,
and then betook himself to offer thank-offerings [to the gods],
and at once sacrificed a vast number of oxen, that stood ready at
the altars, and distributed them among the army to feast on. And
when he had staid three days among the principal commanders, and
so long feasted with them, he sent away the rest of his army to
the several places where they would be every one best situated;
but permitted the tenth legion to stay, as a guard at Jerusalem,
and did not send them away beyond Euphrates, where they had been
before. And as he remembered that the twelfth legion had given way
to the Jews, under Cestius their general, he expelled them out of
all Syria, for they had lain formerly at Raphanea, and sent them
away to a place called Meletine, near Euphrates, which is in the
limits of Armenia and Cappadocia; he also thought fit that two of
the legions should stay with him till he should go to Egypt. He
then went down with his army to that Cesarea which lay by the sea-side,
and there laid up the rest of his spoils in great quantities, and
gave order that the captives should he kept there; for the winter
season hindered him then from sailing into Italy.
CHAPTER 2.
HOW TITUS EXHIBITED ALL SORTS OF SHOWS AT CESAREA PHILIPPI. CONCERNING
SIMON THE TYRANT HOW HE WAS TAKEN, AND RESERVED FOR THE TRIUMPH.
1. NOW at the same time that Titus Caesar lay at the siege of Jerusalem,
did Vespasian go on board a merchantship and sailed from Alexandria
to Rhodes; whence he sailed away ,in ships with three rows of oars;
and as he touched at several cities that lay in his road, he was
joyfully received by them all, and so passed over from Ionia into
Greece; whence he set sail from Corcyra to the promontory of Iapyx,
whence he took his journey by land. But as for Titus, he marched
from that Cesarea which lay by the sea-side, and came to that which
is named Cesarea Philippi, and staid there a considerable time,
and exhibited all sorts of shows there. And here a great number
of the captives were destroyed, some being thrown to wild beasts,
and others in multitudes forced to kill one another, as if they
were their enemies. And here it was that Titus was informed of the
seizure of Simon the son of Gioras, which was made after the manner
following: This Simon, during the siege of Jerusalem, was in the
upper city; but when the Roman army was gotten within the walls,
and were laying the city waste, he then took the most faithful of
his friends with him, and among them some that were stone-cutters,
with those iron tools which belonged to their occupation, and as
great a quantity of provisions as would suffice them for a long
time, and let himself and all them down into a certain subterraneous
cavern that was not visible above ground. Now, so far as had been
digged of old, they went onward along it without disturbance; but
where they met with solid earth, they dug a mine under ground, and
this in hopes that they should be able to proceed so far as to rise
from under ground in a safe place, and by that means escape. But
when they came to make the experiment, they were disappointed of
their hope; for the miners could make but small progress, and that
with difficulty also; insomuch that their provisions, though they
distributed them by measure, began to fail them. And now Simon,
thinking he might be able to astonish and elude the Romans, put
on a white frock, and buttoned upon him a purple cloak, and appeared
out of the ground in the place where the temple had formerly been.
At the first, indeed, those that saw him were greatly astonished,
and stood still where they were; but afterward they came nearer
to him, and asked him who he was. Now Simon would not tell them,
but bid them call for their captain; and when they ran to call him,
Terentius Rufus (2) who was left to command the army there, came
to Simon, and learned of him the whole truth, and kept him in bonds,
and let Caesar know that he was taken. Thus did God bring this man
to be punished for what bitter and savage tyranny he had exercised
against his countrymen by those who were his worst enemies; and
this while he was not subdued by violence, but voluntarily delivered
himself up to them to be punished, and that on the very same account
that he had laid false accusations against many Jews, as if they
were falling away to the Romans, and had barbarously slain them
for wicked actions do not escape the Divine anger, nor is justice
too weak to punish offenders, but in time overtakes those that transgress
its laws, and inflicts its punishments upon the wicked in a manner,
so much more severe, as they expected to escape it on account of
their not being punished immediately. (3) Simon was made sensible
of this by falling under the indignation of the Romans. This rise
of his out of the ground did also occasion the discovery of a great
number of others Of the seditious at that time, who had hidden themselves
under ground. But for Simon, he was brought to Caesar in bonds,
when he was come back to that Cesarea which was on the seaside,
who gave orders that he should be kept against that triumph which
he was to celebrate at Rome upon this occasion.
CHAPTER 3.
HOW TITUS UPON THE CELEBRATION OF HIS BROTHERS AND FATHERS BIRTHDAYS
HAD MANY OF THE JEWS SLAIN. CONCERNING THE DANGER THE JEWS WERE
IN AT ANTIOCH, BY MEANS OF THE TRANSGRESSION AND IMPIETY OF ONE
ANTIOCHUS, A JEW.
1. WHILE Titus was at Cesarea, he solemnized the birthday of his
brother Domitian] after a splendid manner, and inflicted a great
deal of the punishment intended for the Jews in honor of him; for
the number of those that were now slain in fighting with the beasts,
and were burnt, and fought with one another, exceeded two thousand
five hundred. Yet did all this seem to the Romans, when they were
thus destroyed ten thousand several ways, to be a punishment beneath
their deserts. After this Caesar came to Berytus, (4) which is a
city of Phoenicia, and a Roman colony, and staid there a longer
time, and exhibited a still more pompous solemnity about his father's
birthday, both in the magnificence of the shows, and in the other
vast expenses he was at in his devices thereto belonging; so that
a great multitude of the captives were here destroyed after the
same manner as before.
2. It happened also about this time, that the Jews who remained
at Antioch were under accusations, and in danger of perishing, from
the disturbances that were raised against them by the Antiochians;
and this both on account of the slanders spread abroad at this time
against them, and on account of what pranks they had played not
long before; which I am obliged to describe without fail, though
briefly, that I may the better connect my narration of future actions
with those that went before.
3. For as the Jewish nation is widely dispersed over all the habitable
earth among its inhabitants, so it is very much intermingled with
Syria by reason of its neighborhood, and had the greatest multitudes
in Antioch by reason of the largeness of the city, wherein the kings,
after Antiochus, had afforded them a habitation with the most undisturbed
tranquillity; for though Antiochus, who was called Epiphanes, laid
Jerusalem waste, and spoiled the temple, yet did those that succeeded
him in the kingdom restore all the donations that were made of brass
to the Jews of Antioch, and dedicated them to their synagogue, and
granted them the enjoyment of equal privileges of citizens with
the Greeks themselves; and as the succeeding kings treated them
after the same manner, they both multiplied to a great number, and
adorned their temple gloriously by fine ornaments, and with great
magnificence, in the use of what had been given them. They also
made proselytes of a great many of the Greeks perpetually, and thereby
after a sort brought them to be a portion of their own body. But
about this time when the present war began, and Vespasian was newly
sailed to Syria, and all men had taken up a great hatred against
the Jews, then it was that a certain person, whose name was Antiochus,
being one of the Jewish nation, and greatly respected on account
of his father, who was governor of the Jews at Antioch (5) came
upon the theater at a time when the people of Antioch were assembled
together, and became an informer against his father, and accused
both him and others that they had resolved to burn the whole city
in one night; he also delivered up to them some Jews that were foreigners,
as partners in their resolutions. When the people heard this, they
could not refrain their passion, but commanded that those who were
delivered up to them should have fire brought to burn them, who
were accordingly all burnt upon the theater immediately. They did
also fall violently upon the multitude of the Jews, as supposing
that by punishing them suddenly they should save their own city.
As for Antiochus, he aggravated the rage they were in, and thought
to give them a demonstration of his own conversion, arm of his hatred
of the Jewish customs, by sacrificing after the manner of the Greeks;
he persuaded the rest also to compel them to do the same, because
they would by that means discover who they were that had plotted
against them, since they would not do so; and when the people of
Antioch tried the experiment, some few complied, but those that
would not do so were slain. As for Ailtiochus himself, he obtained
soldiers from the Roman commander, and became a severe master over
his own citizens, not permitting them to rest on the seventh day,
but forcing them to do all that they usually did on other days;
and to that degree of distress did he reduce them in this matter,
that the rest of the seventh day was dissolved not only at Antioch,
but the same thing which took thence its rise was done in other
cities also, in like manner, for some small time.
4. Now, after these misfortunes had happened to the Jews at Antioch,
a second calamity befell them, the description of which when we
were going about we premised the account foregoing; for upon this
accident, whereby the four-square market-place was burnt down, as
well as the archives, and the place where the public records were
preserved, and the royal palaces, (and it was not without difficulty
that the fire was then put a stop to, which was likely, by the fury
wherewith it was carried along, to have gone over the whole city,)
Antiochus accused the Jews as the occasion of all the mischief that
was done. Now this induced the people of Antioch, who were now under
the immediate persuasion, by reason of the disorder they were in,
that this calumny was true, and would have been under the same persuasion,
even though they had not borne an ill-will at the Jews before, to
believe this man's accusation, especially when they considered what
had been done before, and this to such a degree, that they all fell
violently upon those that were accused, and this, like madmen, in
a very furious rage also, even as if they had seen the Jews in a
manner setting fire themselves to the city; nor was it without difficulty
that one Cneius Collegas, the legate, could prevail with them to
permit the affairs to be laid before Caesar; for as to Cesennius
Petus, the president of Syria, Vespasian had already sent him away;
and so it happened that he was not yet come back thither. But when
Collegas had made a careful inquiry into the matter, he found out
the truth, and that not one of those Jews that were accused by Antiochus
had any hand in it, but that all was done by some vile persons greatly
in debt, who supposed that if they could once set fire to the market-place,
and burn the public records, they should have no further demands
made upon them. So the Jews were under great disorder and terror,
in the uncertain expectations of what would be the upshot of these
accusations against them.
CHAPTER 4.
HOW VESPASIAN WAS RECEIVED AT ROME; AS ALSO HOW THE GERMANS REVOLTED
FROM THE ROMANS, BUT WERE SUBDUED. THAT THE SARMATIANS OVERRAN MYSIA,
BUT WERE COMPELLED TO RETIRE TO THEIR OWN COUNTRY AGAIN.
1. AND now Titus Caesar, upon the news that was brought him concerning
his father, that
his coming was much desired by all the Italian cities, and that
Rome especially received him with great alacrity and splendor, betook
himself to rejoicing and pleasures to a great degree, as now freed
from the solicitude he had been under, after the most agreeable
manner. For all men that were in Italy showed their respects to
him in their minds before he came thither, as if he were already
come, as esteeming the very expectation they had of him to be his
real presence, on account of the great desires they had to see him,
and because the good-will they bore him was entirely free and unconstrained;
for it was, desirable thing to the senate, who well remembered the
calamities they had undergone in the late changes of their governors,
to receive a governor who was adorned with the gravity of old age,
and with the highest skill in the actions of war, whose advancement
would be, as they knew, for nothing else but for the preservation
of those that were to be governed. Moreover, the people had been
so harassed by their civil miseries, that they were still more earnest
for his coming immediately, as supposing they should then be firmly
delivered from their calamities, and believed they should then recover
their secure tranquillity and prosperity; and for the soldiery,
they had the principal regard to him, for they were chiefly apprized
of his great exploits in war; and since they had experienced the
want of skill and want of courage in other commanders, they were
very desirous to be free from that great shame they had undergone
by their means, and heartily wished to receive such a prince as
might be a security and an ornament to them. And as this good-will
to Vespasian was universal, those that enjoyed any remarkable dignities
could not have patience enough to stay in Rome, but made haste to
meet him at a very great distance from it; nay, indeed, none of
the rest could endure the delay of seeing him, but did all pour
out of the city in such crowds, and were so universally possessed
with the opinion that it was easier and better for them to go out
than to stay there, that this was the very first time that the city
joyfully perceived itself almost empty of its citizens; for those
that staid within were fewer than those that went out. But as soon
as the news was come that he was hard by, and those that had met
him at first related with what good humor he received every one
that came to him, then it was that the whole multitude that had
remained in the city, with their wives and children, came into the
road, and waited for him there; and for those whom he passed by,
they made all sorts of acclamations, on account of the joy they
had to see him, and the pleasantness of his countenance, and styled
him their Benefactor and Savior, and the only person who was worthy
to be ruler of the city of Rome. And now the city was like a temple,
full of garlands and sweet odors; nor was it easy for him to come
to the royal palace, for the multitude of the people that stood
about him, where yet at last he performed his sacrifices of thanksgiving
to his household gods for his safe return to the city. The multitude
did also betake themselves to feasting; which feasts and drink-offerings
they celebrated by their tribes, and their families, and their neighborhoods,
and still prayed God to grant that Vespasian, his sons, and all
their posterity, might continue in the Roman government for a very
long time, and that his dominion might be preserved from all opposition.
And this was the manner in which Rome so joyfully received Vespasian,
and thence grew immediately into a state of great prosperity.
2. But before this time, and while Vespasian was about Alexandria,
and Titus was lying at the siege of Jerusalem, a great multitude
of the Germans were in commotion, and tended to rebellion; and as
the Gauls in their neighborhood joined with them, they conspired
together, and had thereby great hopes of success, and that they
should free themselves from the dominion of the Romans. The motives
that induced the Germans to this attempt for a revolt, and for beginning
the war, were these: In the first place, the nature [of the people],
which was destitute of just reasonings, and ready to throw themselves
rashly into danger, upon small hopes; in the next place, the hatred
they bore to those that were their governors, while their nation
had never been conscious of subjection to any but to the Romans,
and that by compulsion only. Besides these motives, it was the opportunity
that now offered itself, which above all the rest prevailed with
them so to do; for when they saw the Roman government in a great
internal disorder, by the continual changes of its rulers, and understood
that every part of the habitable earth under them was in an unsettled
and tottering condition, they thought this was the best opportunity
that couldd afford itself for themselves to make a sedition, when
the state of the Romans was so ill. Classicus (6) also, and Vitellius,
two of their commanders, puffed them up with such hopes. These had
for a long time been openly desirous of such an innovation, and
were induced by the present opportunity to venture upon the declaration
of their sentiments; the multitude was also ready; and when these
men told them of what they intended to attempt, that news was gladly
received by them. So when a great part of the Germans had agreed
to rebel, and the rest were no better disposed, Vespasian, as guided
by Divine Providence, sent letters to Petilius Cerealis, who had
formerly had the command of Germany, whereby he declared him to
have the dignity of consul, and commanded him to take upon him the
government of Britain; so he went whither he was ordered to go,
and when he was informed of the revolt of the Germans, he fell upon
them as soon as they were gotten together, and put his army in battle-array,
and slew a great number of them in the fight, and forced them to
leave off their madness, and to grow wiser; nay, had he not fallen
thus suddenly upon them on the place, it had not been long ere they
would however have been brought to punishment; for as soon as ever
the news of their revolt was come to Rome, and Caesar Domitian was
made acquainted with it, he made no delay, even at that his age,
when he was exceeding young, but undertook this weighty affair.
He had a courageous mind from his father, and had made greater improvements
than belonged to such an age: accordingly he marched against the
barbarians immediately; whereupon their hearts failed them at the
very rumor of his approach, and they submitted themselves to him
with fear, and thought it a happy thing that they were brought under
their old yoke again without suffering any further mischiefs. When
therefore Domitian had settled all the affairs of Gaul in such good
order, that it would not be easily put into disorder any more, he
returned to Rome with honor and glory, as having performed such
exploits as were above his own age, but worthy of so great a father.
3. At the very same time with the forementioned revolt of the Germans
did the bold attempt of the Scythians against the Romans occur;
for those Scythians who are called Sarmatians, being a very numerous
people, transported themselves over the Danube into Mysia, without
being perceived; after which, by their violence, and entirely unexpected
assault, they slew a great many of the Romans that guarded the frontiers;
and as the consular legate Fonteius Agrippa came to meet them, and
fought courageously against them, he was slain by them. They then
overran all the region that had been subject to him, tearing and
rending every thing that fell in their way. But when Vespasian was
informed of what had happened, and how Mysia was laid waste, he
sent away Rubrius Gallus to punish these Sarmatians; by whose means
many of them perished in the battles he fought against them, and
that part which escaped fled with fear to their own country. So
when this general had put an end to the war, he provided for the
future security of the country also; for he placed more and more
numerous garrisons in the place, till he made it altogether impossible
for the barbarians to pass over the river any more. And thus had
this war in Mysia a sudden conclusion.
CHAPTER V.
CONCERNING THE SABBATIC RIVER WHICH TITUS SAW AS HE WAS JOURNEYING
THROUGH SYRIA; AND HOW THE PEOPLE OF ANTIOCH CAME WITH A PETITION
TO TITUS AGAINST THE JEWS BUT WERE REJECTED BY HIM; AS ALSO CONCERNING
TITUS'S AND VESPASIAN'S TRIUMPH.
1. NOW Titus Caesar tarried some time at Berytus, as we told you
before. He thence removed, and exhibited magnificent shows in all
those cities of Syria through which he went, and made use of the
captive Jews as public instances of the destruction of that nation.
He then saw a river as he went along, of such a nature as deserves
to be recorded in history; it runs in the middle between Arcea,
belonging to Agrippa's kingdom, and Raphanea. It hath somewhat very
peculiar in it; for when it runs, its current is strong, and has
plenty of water; after which its springs fail for six days together,
and leave its channel dry, as any one may see; after which days
it runs on the seventh day as it did before, and as though it had
undergone no change at all; it hath also been observed to keep this
order perpetually and exactly; whence it is that they call it the
Sabbatic River (7) that name being taken from the sacred seventh
day among the Jews.
2. But when the people of Antioch were informed that Titus was
approaching, they were so glad at it, that they could not keep within
their walls, but hasted away to give him the meeting; nay, they
proceeded as far as thirty furlongs, and more, with that intention.
These were not the men only, but a multitude of women also with
their children did the same; and when they saw him coming up to
them, they stood on both sides of the way, and stretched out their
right hands, saluting him, and making all sorts of acclamations
to him, and turned back together with him. They also, among all
the acclamations they made to him, besought him all the way they
went to eject the Jews out of their city; yet did not Titus at all
yield to this their petition, but gave them the bare hearing of
it quietly. However, the Jews were in a great deal of terrible fear,
under the uncertainty they were in what his opinion was, and what
he would do to them. For Titus did not stay at Antioch, but continued
his progress immediately to Zeugma, which lies upon the Euphrates,
whither came to him messengers from Vologeses king of Parthia, and
brought him a crown of gold upon the victory he had gained over
the Jews; which he accepted of, and feasted the king's messengers,
and then came back to Antioch. And when the senate and people of
Antioch earnestly entreated him to come upon their theater, where
their whole multitude was assembled, and expected him, he complied
with great humanity; but when they pressed him with much earnestness,
and continually begged of him that he would eject the Jews out of
their city, he gave them this very pertinent answer: How can this
be done, since that country of theirs, whither the Jews must be
obliged then to retire, is destroyed, and no place will receive
them besides?" Whereupon the people of Antioch, when they had
failed of success in this their first request, made him a second;
for they desired that he would order those tables of brass to be
removed on which the Jews' privileges were engraven. However, Titus
would not grant that neither, but permitted the Jews of Antioch
to continue to enjoy the very same privileges in that city which
they had before, and then departed for Egypt; and as he came to
Jerusalem in his progress, and compared the melancholy condition
he saw it then in, with the ancient glory of the city, and called
to mind the greatness of its present ruins, as well as its ancient
splendor, he could not but pity the destruction of the city, so
far was he from boasting that so great and goodly a city as that
was had been by him taken by force; nay, he frequently cursed those
that had been the authors of their revolt, and had brought such
a punishment upon the city; insomuch that it openly appeared that
he did not desire that such a calamity as this punishment of theirs
amounted to should be a demonstration of his courage. Yet was there
no small quantity of the riches that had been in that city still
found among its ruins, a great deal of which the Romans dug up;
but the greatest part was discovered by those who were captives,
and so they carried it away; I mean the gold and the silver, and
the rest of that most precious furniture which the Jews had, and
which the owners had treasured up under ground, against the uncertain
fortunes of war.
3. So Titus took the journey he intended into Egypt, and passed
over the desert very suddenly, and came to Alexandria, and took
up a resolution to go to Rome by sea. And as he was accompanied
by two legions, he sent each of them again to the places whence
they had before come; the fifth he sent to Mysia, and the fifteenth
to Pannonia: as for the leaders of the captives, Simon and John,
with the other seven hundred men, whom he had selected out of the
rest as being eminently tall and handsome of body, he gave order
that they should be soon carried to Italy, as resolving to produce
them in his triumph. So when he had had a prosperous voyage to his
mind, the city of Rome behaved itself in his reception, and their
meeting him at a distance, as it did in the case of his father.
But what made the most splendid appearance in Titus's opinion was,
when his father met him, and received him; but still the multitude
of the citizens conceived the greatest joy when they saw them all
three together, (8) as they did at this time; nor were many days
overpast when they determined to have but one triumph, that should
be common to both of them, on account of the glorious exploits they
had performed, although the senate had decreed each of them a separate
triumph by himself. So when notice had been given beforehand of
the day appointed for this pompous solemnity to be made, on account
of their victories, not one of the immense multitude was left in
the city, but every body went out so far as to gain only a station
where they might stand, and left only such a passage as was necessary
for those that were to be seen to go along it.
4. Now all the soldiery marched out beforehand by companies, and
in their several ranks, under their several commanders, in the night
time, and were about the gates, not of the upper palaces, but those
near the temple of Isis; for there it was that the emperors had
rested the foregoing night. And as soon as ever it was day, Vespasian
and Titus came out crowned with laurel, and clothed in those ancient
purple habits which were proper to their family, and then went as
far as Octavian's Walks; for there it was that the senate, and the
principal rulers, and those that had been recorded as of the equestrian
order, waited for them. Now a tribunal had been erected before the
cloisters, and ivory chairs had been set upon it, when they came
and sat down upon them. Whereupon the soldiery made an acclamation
of joy to them immediately, and all gave them attestations of their
valor; while they were themselves without their arms, and only in
their silken garments, and crowned with laurel: then Vespasian accepted
of these shouts of theirs; but while they were still disposed to
go on in such acclamations, he gave them a signal of silence. And
when every body entirely held their peace, he stood up, and covering
the greatest part of his head with his cloak, he put up the accustomed
solemn prayers; the like prayers did Titus put up also; after which
prayers Vespasian made a short speech to all the people, and then
sent away the soldiers to a dinner prepared for them by the emperors.
Then did he retire to that gate which was called the Gate of the
Pomp, because pompous shows do always go through that gate; there
it was that they tasted some food, and when they had put on their
triumphal garments, and had offered sacrifices to the gods that
were placed at the gate, they sent the triumph forward, and marched
through the theatres, that they might be the more easily seen by
the multitudes.
5. Now it is impossible to describe the multitude of the shows
as they deserve, and the magnificence of them all; such indeed as
a man could not easily think of as performed, either by the labor
of workmen, or the variety of riches, or the rarities of nature;
for almost all such curiosities as the most happy men ever get by
piece-meal were here one heaped on another, and those both admirable
and costly in their nature; and all brought together on that day
demonstrated the vastness of the dominions of the Romans; for there
was here to be seen a mighty quantity of silver, and gold, and ivory,
contrived into all sorts of things, and did not appear as carried
along in pompous show only, but, as a man may say, running along
like a river. Some parts were composed of the rarest purple hangings,
and so carried along; and others accurately represented to the life
what was embroidered by the arts of the Babylonians. There were
also precious stones that were transparent, some set in crowns of
gold, and some in other ouches, as the workmen pleased; and of these
such a vast number were brought, that we could not but thence learn
how vainly we imagined any of them to be rarities. The images of
the gods were also carried, being as well wonderful for their largeness,
as made very artificially, and with great skill of the workmen;
nor were any of these images of any other than very costly materials;
and many species of animals were brought, every one in their own
natural ornaments. The men also who brought every one of these shows
were great multitudes, and adorned with purple garments, all over
interwoven with gold; those that were chosen for carrying these
pompous shows having also about them such magnificent ornaments
as were both extraordinary and surprising. Besides these, one might
see that even the great number of the captives was not unadorned,
while the variety that was in their garments, and their fine texture,
concealed from the sight the deformity of their bodies. But what
afforded the greatest surprise of all was the structure of the pageants
that were borne along; for indeed he that met them could not but
be afraid that the bearers would not be able firmly enough to support
them, such was their magnitude; for many of them were so made, that
they were on three or even four stories, one above another. The
magnificence also of their structure afforded one both pleasure
and surprise; for upon many of them were laid carpets of gold. There
was also wrought gold and ivory fastened about them all; and many
resemblances of the war, and those in several ways, and variety
of contrivances, affording a most lively portraiture of itself.
For there was to be seen a happy country laid waste, and entire
squadrons of enemies slain; while some of them ran away, and some
were carried into captivity; with walls of great altitude and magnitude
overthrown and ruined by machines; with the strongest fortifications
taken, and the walls of most populous cities upon the tops of hills
seized on, and an army pouring itself within the walls; as also
every place full of slaughter, and supplications of the enemies,
when they were no longer able to lift up their hands in way of opposition.
Fire also sent upon temples was here represented, and houses overthrown,
and falling upon their owners: rivers also, after they came out
of a large and melancholy desert, ran down, not into a land cultivated,
nor as drink for men, or for cattle, but through a land still on
fire upon every side; for the Jews related that such a thing they
had undergone during this war. Now the workmanship of these representations
was so magnificent and lively in the construction of the things,
that it exhibited what had been done to such as did not see it,
as if they had been there really present. On the top of every one
of these pageants was placed the commander of the city that was
taken, and the manner wherein he was taken. Moreover, there followed
those pageants a great number of ships; and for the other spoils,
they were carried in great plenty. But for those that were taken
in the temple of Jerusalem, (9) they made the greatest figure of
them all; that is, the golden table, of the weight of many talents;
the candlestick also, that was made of gold, though its construction
were now changed from that which we made use of; for its middle
shaft was fixed upon a basis, and the small branches were produced
out of it to a great length, having the likeness of a trident in
their position, and had every one a socket made of brass for a lamp
at the tops of them. These lamps were in number seven, and represented
the dignity of the number seven among the Jews; and the last of
all the spoils, was carried the Law of the Jews. After these spoils
passed by a great many men, carrying the images of Victory, whose
structure was entirely either of ivory or of gold. After which Vespasian
marched in the first place, and Titus followed him; Domitian also
rode along with them, and made a glorious appearance, and rode on
a horse that was worthy of admiration.
6. Now the last part of this pompous show was at the temple of
Jupiter Capitolinus, whither when they were come, they stood still;
for it was the Romans' ancient custom to stay till somebody brought
the news that the general of the enemy was slain. This general was
Simon, the son of Gioras, who had then been led in this triumph
among the captives; a rope had also been put upon his head, and
he had been drawn into a proper place in the forum, and had withal
been tormented by those that drew him along; and the law of the
Romans required that malefactors condemned to die should be slain
there. Accordingly, when it was related that there was an end of
him, and all the people had set up a shout for joy, they then began
to offer those sacrifices which they had consecrated, in the prayers
used in such solemnities; which when they had finished, they went
away to the palace. And as for some of the spectators, the emperors
entertained them at their own feast; and for all the rest there
were noble preparations made for feasting at home; for this was
a festival day to the city of Rome, as celebrated for the victory
obtained by their army over their enemies, for the end that was
now put to their civil miseries, and for the commencement of their
hopes of future prosperity and happiness.
7. After these triumphs were over, and after the affairs of the
Romans were settled on the surest foundations, Vespasian resolved
to build a temple to Peace, which was finished in so short a time,
and in so glorious a manner, as was beyond all human expectation
and opinion: for he having now by Providence a vast quantity of
wealth, besides what he had formerly gained in his other exploits,
he had this temple adorned with pictures and statues; for in this
temple were collected and deposited all such rarities as men aforetime
used to wander all over the habitable world to see, when they had
a desire to see one of them after another; he also laid up therein
those golden vessels and instruments that were taken out of the
Jewish temple, as ensigns of his glory. But still he gave order
that they should lay up their Law, and the purple veils of the holy
place, in the royal palace itself, and keep them there.
CHAPTER 6.
CONCERNING MACHERUS, AND HOW LUCILIUS BASSUS TOOK THAT CITADEL,
AND OTHER PLACES.
1. NOW Lucilius Bassus was sent as legate into Judea, and there
he received the army from Cerealis Vitellianus, and took that citadel
which was in Herodium, together with the garrison that was in it;
after which he got together all the soldiery that was there, (which
was a large body, but dispersed into several parties,) with the
tenth legion, and resolved to make war upon Macherus; for it was
highly necessary that this citadel should be demolished, lest it
might be a means of drawing away many into a rebellion, by reason
of its strength; for the nature of the place was very capable of
affording the surest hopes of safety to those that possessed it,
as well as delay and fear to those that should attack it; for what
was walled in was itself a very rocky hill, elevated to a very great
height; which circumstance alone made it very hard to he subdued.
It was also so contrived by nature, that it could not be easily
ascended; for it is, as it were, ditched about with such valleys
on all sides, and to such a depth, that the eye cannot reach their
bottoms, and such as are not easily to be passed over, and even
such as it is impossible to fill up with earth. For that valley
which cuts it on the west extends to threescore furlongs, and did
not end till it came to the lake Asphaltitis; on the same side it
was also that Macherus had the tallest top of its hill elevated
above the rest. But then for the valleys that lay on the north and
south sides, although they be not so large as that already described,
yet it is in like manner an impracticable thing to think of getting
over them; and for the valley that lies on the east side, its depth
is found to be no less than a hundred cubits. It extends as far
as a mountain that lies over against Macherus, with which it is
bounded.
2. Now when Alexander [Janneus], the king of the Jews, observed
the nature of this place, he was the first who built a citadel here,
which afterwards was demolished by Gabinius, when he made war against
Aristobulus. But when Herod came to be king, he thought the place
to be worthy of the utmost regard, and of being built upon in the
firmest manner, and this especially because it lay so near to Arabia;
for it is seated in a convenient place on that account, and hath
a prospect toward that country; he therefore surrounded a large
space of ground with walls and towers, and built a city there, out
of which city there was a way that led up to the very citadel itself
on the top of the mountain; nay, more than this, he built a wall
round that top of the hill, and erected towers at the corners, of
a hundred and sixty cubits high; in the middle of which place he
built a palace, after a magnificent manner, wherein were large and
beautiful edifices. He also made a great many reservoirs for the
reception of water, that there might be plenty of it ready for all
uses, and those in the properest places that were afforded him there.
Thus did he, as it were, contend with the nature of the place, that
he might exceed its natural strength and security (which yet itself
rendered it hard to be taken) by those fortifications which were
made by the hands of men. Moreover, he put a large quantity of darts
and other machines of war into it, and contrived to get every thing
thither that might any way contribute to its inhabitants' security,
under the longest siege possible.
3. Now within this place there grew a sort of rue (10) that deserves
our wonder on account of its largeness, for it was no way inferior
to any fig tree whatsoever, either in height or in thickness; and
the report is, that it had lasted ever since the times of Herod,
and would probably have lasted much longer, had it not been cut
down by those Jews who took possession of the place afterward. But
still in that valley which encompasses the city on the north side
there is a certain place called Baaras, which produces a root of
the same name with itself (11) its color is like to that of flame,
and towards the evenings it sends out a certain ray like lightning.
It is not easily taken by such as would do it, but recedes from
their hands, nor will yield itself to be taken quietly, until either
the urine of a woman, or her menstrual blood, be poured upon it;
nay, even then it is certain death to those that touch it, unless
any one take and hang the root itself down from his hand, and so
carry it away. It may also be taken another way, without danger,
which is this: they dig a trench quite round about it, till the
hidden part of the root be very small, they then tie a dog to it,
and when the dog tries hard to follow him that tied him, this root
is easily plucked up, but the dog dies immediately, as if it were
instead of the man that would take the plant away; nor after this
need any one be afraid of taking it into their hands. Yet, after
all this pains in getting, it is only valuable on account of one
virtue it hath, that if it be only brought to sick persons, it quickly
drives away those called demons, which are no other than the spirits
of the wicked, that enter into men that are alive and kill them,
unless they can obtain some help against them. Here are also fountains
of hot water, that flow out of this place, which have a very different
taste one from the other; for some of them are bitter, and others
of them are plainly sweet. Here are also many eruptions of cold
waters, and this not only in the places that lie lower, and have
their fountains near one another, but, what is still more wonderful,
here is to be seen a certain cave hard by, whose cavity is not deep,
but it is covered over by a rock that is prominent; above this rock
there stand up two [hills or] breasts, as it were, but a little
distant one from another, the one of which sends out a fountain
that is very cold, and the other sends out one that is very hot;
which waters, when they are mingled together, compose a most pleasant
bath; they are medicinal indeed for other maladies, but especially
good for strengthening the nerves. This place has in it also mines
of sulfur and alum.
4. Now when Bassus had taken a full view of this place, he resolved
to besiege it, by filling up the valley that lay on the east side;
so he fell hard to work, and took great pains to raise his banks
as soon as possible, and by that means to render the siege easy.
As for the Jews that were caught in this place, they separated themselves
from the strangers that were with them, and they forced those strangers,
as an otherwise useless multitude, to stay in the lower part of
the city, and undergo the principal dangers, while they themselves
seized on the upper citadel, and held it, and this both on account
of its strength, and to provide for their own safety. They also
supposed they might obtain their pardon, in case they should [at
last] surrender the citadel. However, they were willing to make
trial, in the first place, whether the hopes they had of avoiding
a siege would come to any thing; with which intention they made
sallies every day, and fought with those that met them; in which
conflicts they were many of them slain, as they therein slew many
of the Romans. But still it was the opportunities that presented
themselves which chiefly gained both sides their victories; these
were gained by the Jews, when they fell upon the Romans as they
were off their guard; but by the Romans, when, upon the others'
sallies against their banks, they foresaw their coming, and were
upon their lard when they received them. But the conclusion of this
siege did not depend upon these bickerings; but a certain surprising
accident, relating to what was done in this siege, forced the Jews
to surrender the citadel. There was a certain young man among the
besieged, of great boldness, and very active of his hand, his name
was Eleazar; he greatly signalized himself in those sallies, and
encouraged the Jews to go out in great numbers, in order to hinder
the raising of the banks, and did the Romans a vast deal of mischief
when they came to fighting; he so managed matters, that those who
sallied out made their attacks easily, and returned back without
danger, and this by still bringing up the rear himself. Now it happened
that, on a certain time, when the fight was over, and both sides
were parted, and retired home, he, in way of contempt of the enemy,
and thinking that none of them would begin the fight again at that
time, staid without the gates, and talked with those that were upon
the wall, and his mind was wholly intent upon what they said. Now
a certain person belonging to the Roman camp, whose lame was Rufus,
by birth an Egyptian, ran upon him suddenly, when nobody expected
such a thing, and carried him off, with his armor itself; while,
in the mean time, those that saw it from the wall were under such
an amazement, that Rufus prevented their assistance, and carried
Eleazar to the Roman camp. So the general of the Romans ordered
that he should be taken up naked, set before the city to be seen,
and sorely whipped before their eyes. Upon this sad accident that
befell the young man, the Jews were terribly confounded, and the
city, with one voice, sorely lamented him, and the mourning proved
greater than could well be supposed upon the calamity of a single
person. When Bassus perceived that, he began to think of using a
stratagem against the enemy, and was desirous to aggravate their
grief, in order to prevail with them to surrender the city for the
preservation of that man. Nor did he fail of his hope; for he commanded
them to set up a cross, as if he were just going to hang Eleazar
upon it immediately; the sight of this occasioned a sore grief among
those that were in the citadel, and they groaned vehemently, and
cried out that they could not bear to see him thus destroyed. Whereupon
Eleazar besought them not to disregard him, now he was going to
suffer a most miserable death, and exhorted them to save themselves,
by yielding to the Roman power and good fortune, since all other
people were now conquered by them. These men were greatly moved
with what he said, there being also many within the city that interceded
for him, because he was of an eminent and very numerous family;
so they now yielded to their passion of commiseration, contrary
to their usual custom. Accordingly, they sent out immediately certain
messengers, and treated with the Romans, in order to a surrender
of the citadel to them, and desired that they might be permitted
to go away, and take Eleazar along with them. Then did the Romans
and their general accept of these terms; while the multitude of
strangers that were in the lower part of the city, hearing of the
agreement that was made by the Jews for themselves alone, were resolved
to fly away privately in the night time; but as soon as they had
opened their gates, those that had come to terms with Bassus told
him of it; whether it were that they envied the others' deliverance,
or whether it were done out of fear, lest an occasion should be
taken against them upon their escape, is uncertain. The most courageous,
therefore, of those men that went out prevented the enemy, and got
away, and fled for it; but for those men that were caught within
they
5. When Bassus had settled these affairs, he marched hastily to
the forest of Jarden, as it is called; for he had heard that a great
many of those that had fled from Jerusalem and Macherus formerly
were there gotten together. When he was therefore come to the place,
and understood that the former news was no mistake, he, in the first
place, surrounded the whole place with his horsemen, that such of
the Jews as had boldness enough to try to break through might have
no way possible for escaping, by reason of the situation of these
horsemen; and for the footmen, he ordered them to cut down the trees
that were in the wood whither they were fled. So the Jews were under
a necessity of performing some glorious exploit, and of greatly
exposing themselves in a battle, since they might perhaps thereby
escape. So they made a general attack, and with a great shout fell
upon those that surrounded them, who received them with great courage;
and so while the one side fought desperately, and the others would
not yield, the fight was prolonged on that account. But the event
of the battle did not answer the expectation of the assailants;
for so it happened, that no more than twelve fell on the Roman side,
with a few that were wounded; but not one of the Jews escaped out
of this battle, but they were all killed, being in the whole not
fewer in number than three thousand, together with Judas, the son
of Jairus, their general, concerning whom we have before spoken,
that he had been a captain of a certain band at the siege of Jerusalem,
and by going down into a certain vault under ground, had privately
made his escape.
6. About the same time it was that Caesar sent a letter to Bassus,
and to Liberius Maximus, who was the procurator [of Judea], and
gave order that all Judea should be exposed to sale (12) for he
did not found any city there, but reserved the country for himself.
However, he assigned a place for eight hundred men only, whom he
had dismissed from his army, which he gave them for their habitation;
it is called Emmaus, (13) and is distant from Jerusalem threescore
furlongs. He also laid a tribute upon the Jews wheresoever they
were, and enjoined every one of them to bring two drachmae every
year into the Capitol, as they used to pay the same to the temple
at Jerusalem. And this was the state of the Jewish affairs at this
time.
CHAPTER 7.
CONCERNING THE CALAMITY THAT BEFELL ANTIOCHUS, KING OF COMMAGENE.
AS ALSO CONCERNING THE ALANS AND WHAT GREAT MISCHIEFS THEY DID TO
THE MEDES AND ARMENIANS.
1. AND now, in the fourth year of the reign of Vespasian, it came
to pass that Antiochus, the king of Commagene, with all his family,
fell into very great calamities. The occasion was this: Cesennius
Petus, who was president of Syria at this time, whether it were
done out of regard to truth, or whether out of hatred to Antiochus,
(for which was the real motive was never thoroughly discovered,)
sent an epistle to Caesar, and therein told him that Antiochus,
with his son Epiphanes, had resolved to rebel against the Romans,
and had made a league with the king of Parthia to that purpose;
that it was therefore fit to prevent them, lest they prevent us,
and begin such a war as may cause a general disturbance in the Roman
empire. Now Caesar was disposed to take some care about the matter,
since this discovery was made; for the neighborhood of the kingdoms
made this affair worthy of greater regard; for Samoseta, the capital
of Commagene, lies upon Euphrates, and upon any such design could
afford an easy passage over it to the Parthians, and could also
afford them a secure reception. Petus was accordingly believed,
and had authority given him of doing what he should think proper
in the case; so he set about it without delay, and fell upon Commagene
before Antiochus and his people had the least expectation of his
coming: he had with him the tenth legion, as also some cohorts and
troops of horsemen. These kings also came to his assistance: Aristobulus,
king of the country called Chalcidene, and Sohemus, who was called
king of Emesa. Nor was there any opposition made to his forces when
they entered the kingdom; for no one of that country would so much
as lift up his hand against them. When Antiochus heard this unexpected
news, he could not think in the least of making war with the Romans,
but determined to leave his whole kingdom in the state wherein it
now was, and to retire privately, with his wife and children, as
thinking thereby to demonstrate himself to the Romans to be innocent
as to the accusation laid against him. So he went away from that
city as far as a hundred and twenty furlongs, into a plain, and
there pitched his tents.
2. Petus then sent some of his men to seize upon Samosate, and
by their means took possession of that city, while he went himself
to attack Antiochus with the rest of his army. However, the king
was not prevailed upon by the distress he was in to do any thing
in the way of war against the Romans, but bemoaned his own hard
fate, and endured with patience what he was not able to prevent.
But his sons, who were young, and unexperienced in war, but of strong
bodies, were not easily induced to bear this calamity without fighting.
Epiphanes, therefore, and Callinicus, betook themselves to military
force; and as the battle was a sore one, and lasted all the day
long, they showed their own valor in a remarkable manner, and nothing
but the approach of night put a period thereto, and that without
any diminution of their forces; yet would not Antiochus, upon this
conclusion of the fight, continue there by any means, but took his
wife and his daughters, and fled away with them to Cilicia, and
by so doing quite discouraged the minds of his own soldiers. Accordingly,
they revolted, and went over to the Romans, out of the despair they
were in of his keeping the kingdom; and his case was looked upon
by all as quite desperate. It was therefore necessary that Epiphanes
and his soldiers should get clear of their enemies before they became
entirely destitute of any confederates; nor were there any more
than ten horsemen with him, who passed with him over Euphrates,
whence they went undisturbed to Vologeses, the king of Parthie,
where they were not disregarded as fugitives, but had the same respect
paid them as if they had retained their ancient prosperity.
3. Now when Antiochus was come to Tarsus in Cilicia, Petus ordered
a centurion to go to him, and send him in bonds to Rome. However,
Vespasian could not endure to have a king brought to him in that
manner, but thought it fit rather to have a regard to the ancient
friendship that had been between them, than to preserve an inexorable
anger upon pretense of this war. Accordingly, he gave orders that
they should take off his bonds, while he was still upon the road,
and that he should not come to Rome, but should now go and live
at Lacedemon; he also gave him large revenues, that he might not
only live in plenty, but like a king also. When Epiphanes, who before
was in great fear for his father, was informed of this, their minds
were freed from that great and almost incurable concern they had
been under. He also hoped that Caesar would be reconciled to them,
upon the intercession of Vologeses; for although he lived in plenty,
he knew not how to bear living out of the Roman empire. So Caesar
gave him leave, after an obliging manner, and he came to Rome; and
as his father came quickly to him from Lacedemon, he had all sorts
of respect paid him there, and there he remained.
4. Now there was a nation of the Alans, which we have formerly
mentioned some where as being Scythians and inhabiting at the lake
Meotis. This nation about this time laid a design of falling upon
Media, and the parts beyond it, in order to plunder them; with which
intention they treated with the king of Hyrcania; for he was master
of that passage which king Alexander [the Great] shut up with iron
gates. This king gave them leave to come through them; so they came
in great multitudes, and fell upon the Medes unexpectedly, and plundered
their country, which they found full of people, and replenished
with abundance of cattle, while nobody durst make any resistance
against them; for Paeorus, the king of the country, had fled away
for fear into places where they could not easily come at him, and
had yielded up every thing he had to them, and had only saved his
wife and his concubines from them, and that with difficulty also,
after they had been made captives, by giving them a hundred talents
for their ransom. These Alans therefore plundered the country without
opposition, and with great ease, and proceeded as far as Armenia,
laying all waste before them. Now Tiridates was king of that country,
who met them, and fought them, but had like to have been taken alive
in the battle; for a certain man threw a net over him from a great
distance, and had soon drawn him to him, unless he had immediately
cut the cord with his sword, and ran away, and prevented it. So
the Alans, being still more provoked by this sight, laid waste the
country, and drove a great multitude of the men, and a great quantity
of the other prey they had gotten out of both kingdoms, along with
them, and then retreated back to their own country.
CHAPTER 8.
CONCERNING MASADA AND THOSE SICARII WHO KEPT IT; AND HOW SILVA
BETOOK HIMSELF TO FORM THE SIEGE OF THAT CITADEL. ELEAZAR'S SPEECHES
TO THE BESIEGED.
1. WHEN Bassus was dead in Judea, Flavius Silva succeeded him as
procurator there; who, when he saw that all the rest of the country
was subdued in this war, and that there was but one only strong
hold that was still in rebellion, he got all his army together that
lay in different places, and made an expedition against it. This
fortress was called Masada. It was one Eleazar, a potent man, and
the commander of these Sicarii, that had seized upon it. He was
a descendant from that Judas who had persuaded abundance of the
Jews, as we have formerly related, not to submit to the taxation
when Cyrenius was sent into Judea to make one; for then it was that
the Sicarii got together against those that were willing to submit
to the Romans, and treated them in all respects as if they had been
their enemies, both by plundering them of what they had, by driving
away their cattle, and by setting fire to their houses; for they
said that they differed not at all from foreigners, by betraying,
in so cowardly a manner, that freedom which Jews thought worthy
to be contended for to the utmost, and by owning that they preferred
slavery under the Romans before such a contention. Now this was
in reality no better than a pretense and a cloak for the barbarity
which was made use of by them, and to color over their own avarice,
which they afterwards made evident by their own actions; for those
that were partners with them in their rebellion joined also with
them in the war against the Romans, and went further lengths with
them in their impudent undertakings against them; and when they
were again convicted of dissembling in such their pretenses, they
still more abused those that justly reproached them for their wickedness.
And indeed that was a time most fertile in all manner of wicked
practices, insomuch that no kind of evil deeds were then left undone;
nor could any one so much as devise any bad thing that was new,
so deeply were they all infected, and strove with one another in
their single capacity, and in their communities, who should run
the greatest lengths in impiety towards God, and in unjust actions
towards their neighbors; the men of power oppressing the multitude,
and the multitude earnestly laboring to destroy the men of power.
The one part were desirous of tyrannizing over others, and the rest
of offering violence to others, and of plundering such as were richer
than themselves. They were the Sicarii who first began these transgressions,
and first became barbarous towards those allied to them, and left
no words of reproach unsaid, and no works of perdition untried,
in order to destroy those whom their contrivances affected. Yet
did John demonstrate by his actions that these Sicarii were more
moderate than he was himself, for he not only slew all such as gave
him good counsel to do what was right, but treated them worst of
all, as the most bitter enemies that he had among all the Citizens;
nay, he filled his entire country with ten thousand instances of
wickedness, such as a man who was already hardened sufficiently
in his impiety towards God would naturally do; for the food was
unlawful that was set upon his table, and he rejected those purifications
that the law of his country had ordained; so that it was no longer
a wonder if he, who was so mad in his impiety towards God, did not
observe any rules of gentleness and common affection towards men.
Again, therefore, what mischief was there which Simon the son of
Gioras did not do? or what kind of abuses did he abstain from as
to those very free-men who had set him up for a tyrant? What friendship
or kindred were there that did not make him more bold in his daily
murders? for they looked upon the doing of mischief to strangers
only as a work beneath their courage, but thought their barbarity
towards their nearest relations would be a glorious demonstration
thereof. The Idumeans also strove with these men who should be guilty
of the greatest madness! for they [all], vile wretches as they were,
cut the throats of the high priests, that so no part of a religious
regard to God. might be preserved; they thence proceeded to destroy
utterly the least remains of a political government, and introduced
the most complete scene of iniquity in all instances that were practicable;
under which scene that sort of people that were called zealots grew
up, and who indeed corresponded to the name; for they imitated every
wicked work; nor, if their memory suggested any evil thing that
had formerly been done, did they avoid zealously to pursue the same;
and although they gave themselves that name from their zeal for
what was good, yet did it agree to them only by way of irony, on
account of those they had unjustly treated by their wild and brutish
disposition, or as thinking the greatest mischiefs to be the greatest
good. Accordingly, they all met with such ends as God deservedly
brought upon them in way of punishment; for all such miseries have
been sent upon them as man's nature is capable of undergoing, till
the utmost period of their lives, and till death came upon them
in various ways of torment; yet might one say justly that they suffered
less than they had done, because it was impossible they could be
punished according to their deserving. But to make a lamentation
according to the deserts of those who fell under these men's barbarity,
this is not a proper place for it; - I therefore now return again
to the remaining part of the present narration.
2. For now it was that the Roman general came, and led his army
against Eleazar and those Sicarii who held the fortress Masada together
with him; and for the whole country adjoining, he presently gained
it, and put garrisons into the most proper places of it; he also
built a wall quite round the entire fortress, that none of the besieged
might easily escape; he also set his men to guard the several parts
of it; he also pitched his camp in such an agreeable place as he
had chosen for the siege, and at which place the rock belonging
to the fortress did make the nearest approach to the neighboring
mountain, which yet was a place of difficulty for getting plenty
of provisions; for it was not only food that was to be brought from
a great distance [to the army], and this with a great deal of pain
to those Jews who were appointed for that purpose, but water was
also to be brought to the camp, because the place afforded no fountain
that was near it. When therefore Silva had ordered these affairs
beforehand, he fell to besieging the place; which siege was likely
to stand in need of a great deal of skill and pains, by reason of
the strength of the fortress, the nature of which I will now describe.
3. There was a rock, not small in circumference, and very high.
It was encompassed with valleys of such vast depth downward, that
the eye could not reach their bottoms; they were abrupt, and such
as no animal could walk upon, excepting at two places of the rock,
where it subsides, in order to afford a passage for ascent, though
not without difficulty. Now, of the ways that lead to it, one is
that from the lake Asphaltiris, towards the sun-rising, and another
on the west, where the ascent is easier: the one of these ways is
called the Serpent, as resembling that animal in its narrowness
and its perpetual windings; for it is broken off at the prominent
precipices of the rock, and returns frequently into itself, and
lengthening again by little and little, hath much ado to proceed
forward; and he that would walk along it must first go on one leg,
and then on the other; there is also nothing but destruction, in
case your feet slip; for on each side there is a vastly deep chasm
and precipice, sufficient to quell the courage of every body by
the terror it infuses into the mind. When, therefore, a man hath
gone along this way for thirty furlongs, the rest is the top of
the hill - not ending at a small point, but is no other than a plain
upon the highest part of the mountain. Upon this top of the hill,
Jonathan the high priest first of all built a fortress, and called
it Masada: after which the rebuilding of this place employed the
care of king Herod to a great degree; he also built a wall round
about the entire top of the hill, seven furlongs long; it was composed
of white stone; its height was twelve, and its breadth eight cubits;
there were also erected upon that wall thirty-eight towers, each
of them fifty cubits high; out of which you might pass into lesser
edifices, which were built on the inside, round the entire wall;
for the king reserved the top of the hill, which was of a fat soil,
and better mould than any valley for agriculture, that such as committed
themselves to this fortress for their preservation might not even
there be quite destitute of food, in case they should ever be in
want of it from abroad. Moreover, he built a palace therein at the
western ascent; it was within and beneath the walls of the citadel,
but inclined to its north side. Now the wall of this palace was
very high and strong, and had at its four corners towers sixty cubits
high. The furniture also of the edifices, and of the cloisters,
and of the baths, was of great variety, and very costly; and these
buildings were supported by pillars of single stones on every side;
the walls and also the floors of the edifices were paved with stones
of several colors. He also had cut many and great pits, as reservoirs
for water, out of the rocks, at every one of the places that were
inhabited, both above and round about the palace, and before the
wall; and by this contrivance he endeavored to have water for several
uses, as if there had been fountains there. Here was also a road
digged from the palace, and leading to the very top of the mountain,
which yet could not be seen by such as were without [the walls];
nor indeed could enemies easily make use of the plain roads; for
the road on the east side, as we have already taken notice, could
not be walked upon, by reason of its nature; and for the western
road, he built a large tower at its narrowest place, at no less
a distance from the top of the hill than a thousand cubits; which
tower could not possibly be passed by, nor could it be easily taken;
nor indeed could those that walked along it without any fear (such
was its contrivance) easily get to the end of it; and after such
a manner was this citadel fortified, both by nature and by the hands
of men, in order to frustrate the attacks of enemies.
4. As for the furniture that was within this fortress, it was still
more wonderful on account of its splendor and long continuance;
for here was laid up corn in large quantities, and such as would
subsist men for a long time; here was also wine and oil in abundance,
with all kinds of pulse and dates heaped up together; all which
Eleazar found there, when he and his Sicarii got possession of the
fortress by treachery. These fruits were also fresh and full ripe,
and no way inferior to such fruits newly laid in, although they
were little short of a hundred years (14) from the laying in these
provisions [by Herod], till the place was taken by the Romans; nay,
indeed, when the Romans got possession of those fruits that were
left, they found them not corrupted all that while; nor should we
be mistaken, if we supposed that the air was here the cause of their
enduring so long; this fortress being so high, and so free from
the mixture of all terrain and muddy particles of matter. There
was also found here a large quantity of all sorts of weapons of
war, which had been treasured up by that king, and were sufficient
for ten thousand men; there was east iron, and brass, and tin, which
show that he had taken much pains to have all things here ready
for the greatest occasions; for the report goes how Herod thus prepared
this fortress on his own account, as a refuge against two kinds
of danger; the one for fear of the multitude of the Jews, lest they
should depose him, and restore their former kings to the government;
the other danger was greater and more terrible, which arose from
Cleopatra queen of Egypt, who did not conceal her intentions, but
spoke often to Antony, and desired him to cut off Herod, and entreated
him to bestow the kingdom of Judea upon her. And certainly it is
a great wonder that Antony did never comply with her commands in
this point, as he was so miserably enslaved to his passion for her;
nor should any one have been surprised if she had been gratified
in such her request. So the fear of these dangers made Herod rebuild
Masada, and thereby leave it for the finishing stroke of the Romans
in this Jewish war.
5. Since therefore the Roman commander Silva had now built a wall
on the outside, round about this whole place, as we have said already,
and had thereby made a most accurate provision to prevent any one
of the besieged running away, he undertook the siege itself, though
he found but one single place that would admit of the banks he was
to raise; for behind that tower which secured the road that led
to the palace, and to the top of the hill from the west; there was
a certain eminency of the rock, very broad and very prominent, but
three hundred cubits beneath the highest part of Masada; it was
called the White Promontory. Accordingly, he got upon that part
of the rock, and ordered the army to bring earth; and when they
fell to that work with alacrity, and abundance of them together,
the bank was raised, and became solid for two hundred cubits in
height. Yet was not this bank thought sufficiently high for the
use of the engines that were to be set upon it; but still another
elevated work of great stones compacted together was raised upon
that bank; this was fifty cubits, both in breadth and height. The
other machines that were now got ready were like to those that had
been first devised by Vespasian, and afterwards by Titus, for sieges.
There was also a tower made of the height of sixty cubits, and all
over plated with iron, out of which the Romans threw darts and stones
from the engines, and soon made those that fought from the walls
of the place to retire, and would not let them lift up their heads
above the works. At the same time Silva ordered that great battering
ram which he had made to be brought thither, and to be set against
the wall, and to make frequent batteries against it, which with
some difficulty broke down a part of the wall, and quite overthrew
it. However, the Sicarii made haste, and presently built another
wall within that, which should not be liable to the same misfortune
from the machines with the other; it was made soft and yielding,
and so was capable of avoiding the terrible blows that affected
the other. It was framed after the following manner: They laid together
great beams of wood lengthways, one close to the end of another,
and the same way in which they were cut: there were two of these
rows parallel to one another, and laid at such a distance from each
other as the breadth of the wall required, and earth was put into
the space between those rows. Now, that the earth might not fall
away upon the elevation of this bank to a greater height, they further
laid other beams over cross them, and thereby bound those beams
together that lay lengthways. This work of theirs was like a real
edifice; and when the machines were applied, the blows were weakened
by its yielding; and as the materials by such concussion were shaken
closer together, the pile by that means became firmer than before.
When Silva saw this, he thought it best to endeavor the taking of
this wall by setting fire to it; so he gave order that the soldiers
should throw a great number of burning torches upon it: accordingly,
as it was chiefly made of wood, it soon took fire; and when it was
once set on fire, its hollowness made that fire spread to a mighty
flame. Now, at the very beginning of this fire, a north wind that
then blew proved terrible to the Romans; for by bringing the flame
downward, it drove it upon them, and they were almost in despair
of success, as fearing their machines would be burnt: but after
this, on a sudden the wind changed into the south, as if it were
done by Divine Providence, and blew strongly the contrary way, and
carried the flame, and drove it against the wall, which was now
on fire through its entire thickness. So the Romans, having now
assistance from God, returned to their camp with joy, and resolved
to attack their enemies the very next day; on which occasion they
set their watch more carefully that night, lest any of the Jews
should run away from them without being discovered.
6. However, neither did Eleazar once think of flying away, nor
would he permit any one else to do so; but when he saw their wall
burned down by the fire, and could devise no other way of escaping,
or room for their further courage, and setting before their eyes
what the Romans would do to them, their children, and their wives,
if they got them into their power, he consulted about having them
all slain. Now as he judged this to be the best thing they could
do in their present circumstances, he gathered the most courageous
of his companions together, and encouraged them to take that course
by a speech (15) which he made to them in the manner following:
"Since we, long ago, my generous friends, resolved never to
be servants to the Romans, nor to any other than to God himself,
who alone is the true and just Lord of mankind, the time is now
come that obliges us to make that resolution true in practice. And
let us not at this time bring a reproach upon ourselves for self-contradiction,
while we formerly would not undergo slavery, though it were then
without danger, but must now, together with slavery, choose such
punishments also as are intolerable; I mean this, upon the supposition
that the Romans once reduce us under their power while we are alive.
We were the very first that revolted from them, and we are the last
that fight against them; and I cannot but esteem it as a favor that
God hath granted us, that it is still in our power to die bravely,
and in a state of freedom, which hath not been the case of others,
who were conquered unexpectedly. It is very plain that we shall
be taken within a day's time; but it is still an eligible thing
to die after a glorious manner, together with our dearest friends.
This is what our enemies themselves cannot by any means hinder,
although they be very desirous to take us alive. Nor can we propose
to ourselves any more to fight them, and beat them. It had been
proper indeed for us to have conjectured at the purpose of God much
sooner, and at the very first, when we were so desirous of defending
our liberty, and when we received such sore treatment from one another,
and worse treatment from our enemies, and to have been sensible
that the same God, who had of old taken the Jewish nation into his
favor, had now condemned them to destruction; for had he either
continued favorable, or been but in a lesser degree displeased with
us, he had not overlooked the destruction of so many men, or delivered
his most holy city to be burnt and demolished by our enemies. To
be sure we weakly hoped to have preserved ourselves, and ourselves
alone, still in a state of freedom, as if we had been guilty of
no sins ourselves against God, nor been partners with those of others;
we also taught other men to preserve their liberty. Wherefore, consider
how God hath convinced us that our hopes were in vain, by bringing
such distress upon us in the desperate state we are now in, and
which is beyond all our expectations; for the nature of this fortress
which was in itself unconquerable, hath not proved a means of our
deliverance; and even while we have still great abundance of food,
and a great quantity of arms, and other necessaries more than we
want, we are openly deprived by God himself of all hope of deliverance;
for that fire which was driven upon our enemies did not of its own
accord turn back upon the wall which we had built; this was the
effect of God's anger against us for our manifold sins, which we
have been guilty of in a most insolent and extravagant manner with
regard to our own countrymen; the punishments of which let us not
receive from the Romans, but from God himself, as executed by our
own hands; for these will be more moderate than the other. Let our
wives die before they are abused, and our children before they have
tasted of slavery; and after we have slain them, let us bestow that
glorious benefit upon one another mutually, and preserve ourselves
in freedom, as an excellent funeral monument for us. But first let
us destroy our money and the fortress by fire; for I am well assured
that this will be a great grief to the Romans, that they shall not
be able to seize upon our bodies, and shall fall of our wealth also;
and let us spare nothing but our provisions; for they will be a
testimonial when we are dead that we were not subdued for want of
necessaries, but that, according to our original resolution, we
have preferred death before slavery."
7. This was Eleazar's speech to them. Yet did not the opinions
of all the auditors acquiesce therein; but although some of them
were very zealous to put his advice in practice, and were in a manner
filled with pleasure at it, and thought death to be a good thing,
yet had those that were most effeminate a commiseration for their
wives and families; and when these men were especially moved by
the prospect of their own certain death, they looked wistfully at
one another, and by the tears that were in their eyes declared their
dissent from his opinion. When Eleazar saw these people in such
fear, and that their souls were dejected at so prodigious a proposal,
he was afraid lest perhaps these effeminate persons should, by their
lamentations and tears, enfeeble those that heard what he had said
courageously; so he did not leave off exhorting them, but stirred
up himself, and recollecting proper arguments for raising their
courage, he undertook to speak more briskly and fully to them, and
that concerning the immortality of the soul. So he made a lamentable
groan, and fixing his eyes intently on those that wept, he spake
thus: "Truly, I was greatly mistaken when I thought to be assisting
to brave men who struggled hard for their liberty, and to such as
were resolved either to live with honor, or else to die; but I find
that you are such people as are no better than others, either in
virtue or in courage, and are afraid of dying, though you be delivered
thereby from the greatest miseries, while you ought to make no delay
in this matter, nor to await any one to give you good advice; for
the laws of our country, and of God himself, have from ancient times,
and as soon as ever we could use our reason, continually taught
us, and our forefathers have corroborated the same doctrine by their
actions, and by their bravery of mind, that it is life that is a
calamity to men, and not death; for this last affords our souls
their liberty, and sends them by a removal into their own place
of purity, where they are to be insensible of all sorts of misery;
for while souls are tied clown to a mortal body, they are partakers
of its miseries; and really, to speak the truth, they are themselves
dead; for the union of what is divine to what is mortal is disagreeable.
It is true, the power of the soul is great, even when it is imprisoned
in a mortal body; for by moving it after a way that is invisible,
it makes the body a sensible instrument, and causes it to advance
further in its actions than mortal nature could otherwise do. However,
when it is freed from that weight which draws it down to the earth
and is connected with it, it obtains its own proper place, and does
then become a partaker of that blessed power, and those abilities,
which are then every way incapable of being hindered in their operations.
It continues invisible, indeed, to the eyes of men, as does God
himself; for certainly it is not itself seen while it is in the
body; for it is there after an invisible manner, and when it is
freed from it, it is still not seen. It is this soul which hath
one nature, and that an incorruptible one also; but yet it is the
cause of the change that is made in the body; for whatsoever it
be which the soul touches, that lives and flourishes; and from whatsoever
it is removed, that withers away and dies; such a degree is there
in it of immortality. Let me produce the state of sleep as a most
evident demonstration of the truth of what I say; wherein souls,
when the body does not distract them, have the sweetest rest depending
on themselves, and conversing with God, by their alliance to him;
they then go every where, and foretell many futurities beforehand.
And why are we afraid of death, while we are pleased with the rest
that we have in sleep? And how absurd a thing is it to pursue after
liberty while we are alive, and yet to envy it to ourselves where
it will be eternal! We, therefore, who have been brought up in a
discipline of our own, ought to become an example to others of our
readiness to die. Yet, if we do stand in need of foreigners to support
us in this matter, let us regard those Indians who profess the exercise
of philosophy; for these good men do but unwillingly undergo the
time of life, and look upon it as a necessary servitude, and make
haste to let their souls loose from their bodies; nay, when no misfortune
presses them to it, nor drives them upon it, these have such a desire
of a life of immortality, that they tell other men beforehand that
they are about to depart; and nobody hinders them, but every one
thinks them happy men, and gives them letters to be carried to their
familiar friends [that are dead], so firmly and certainly do they
believe that souls converse with one another [in the other world].
So when these men have heard all such commands that were to be given
them, they deliver their body to the fire; and, in order to their
getting their soul a separation from the body in the greatest purity,
they die in the midst of hymns of commendations made to them; for
their dearest friends conduct them to their death more readily than
do any of the rest of mankind conduct their fellow-citizens when
they are going a very long journey, who at the same time weep on
their own account, but look upon the others as happy persons, as
so soon to be made partakers of the immortal order of beings. Are
not we, therefore, ashamed to have lower notions than the Indians?
and by our own cowardice to lay a base reproach upon the laws of
our country, which are so much desired and imitated by all mankind?
But put the case that we had been brought up under another persuasion,
and taught that life is the greatest good which men are capable
of, and that death is a calamity; however, the circumstances we
are now in ought to he an inducement to us to bear such calamity
courageously, since it is by the will of God, and by necessity,
that we are to die; for it now appears that God hath made such a
decree against the whole Jewish nation, that we are to be deprived
of this life which [he knew] we would not make a due use of. For
do not you ascribe the occasion of our present condition to yourselves,
nor think the Romans are the true occasion that this war we have
had with them is become so destructive to us all: these things have
not come to pass by their power, but a more powerful cause hath
intervened, and made us afford them an occasion of their appearing
to be conquerors over us. What Roman weapons, I pray you, were those
by which the Jews at Cesarea were slain? On the contrary, when they
were no way disposed to rebel, but were all the while keeping their
seventh day festival, and did not so much as lift up their hands
against the citizens of Cesarea, yet did those citizens run upon
them in great crowds, and cut their throats, and the throats of
their wives and children, and this without any regard to the Romans
themselves, who never took us for their enemies till we revolted
from them. But some may be ready to say, that truly the people of
Cesarea had always a quarrel against those that lived among them,
and that when an opportunity offered itself, they only satisfied
the old rancor they had against them. What then shall we say to
those of Scythopolis, who ventured to wage war with us on account
of the Greeks? Nor did they do it by way of revenge upon the Romans,
when they acted in concert with our countrymen. Wherefore you see
how little our good-will and fidelity to them profiled us, while
they were slain, they and their whole families, after the most inhuman
manner, which was all the requital that was made them for the assistance
they had afforded the others; for that very same destruction which
they had prevented from falling upon the others did they suffer
themselves from them, as if they had been ready to be the actors
against them. It would be too long for me to speak at this time
of every destruction brought upon us; for you cannot but know that
there was not any one Syrian city which did not slay their Jewish
inhabitants, and were not more bitter enemies to us than were the
Romans themselves; nay, even those of Damascus, (16) when they were
able to allege no tolerable pretense against us, filled their city
with the most barbarous slaughters of our people, and cut the throats
of eighteen thousand Jews, with their wives and children. And as
to the multitude of those that were slain in Egypt, and that with
torments also, we have been informed they were more than sixty thousand;
those indeed being in a foreign country, and so naturally meeting
with nothing to oppose against their enemies, were killed in the
manner forementioned. As for all those of us who have waged war
against the Romans in our own country, had we not sufficient reason
to have sure hopes of victory? For we had arms, and walls, and fortresses
so prepared as not to be easily taken, and courage not to be moved
by any dangers in the cause of liberty, which encouraged us all
to revolt from the Romans. But then these advantages sufficed us
but for a short time, and only raised our hopes, while they really
appeared to be the origin of our miseries; for all we had hath been
taken from us, and all hath fallen under our enemies, as if these
advantages were only to render their victory over us the more glorious,
and were not disposed for the preservation of those by whom these
preparations were made. And as for those that are already dead in
the war, it is reasonable we should esteem them blessed, for they
are dead in defending, and not in betraying their liberty; but as
to the multitude of those that are now under the Romans, who would
not pity their condition? and who would not make haste to die, before
he would suffer the same miseries with them? Some of them have been
put upon the rack, and tortured with fire and whippings, and so
died. Some have been half devoured by wild beasts, and yet have
been reserved alive to be devoured by them a second time, in order
to afford laughter and sport to our enemies; and such of those as
are alive still are to be looked on as the most miserable, who,
being so desirous of death, could not come at it. And where is now
that great city, the metropolis of the Jewish nation, which vas
fortified by so many walls round about, which had so many fortresses
and large towers to defend it, which could hardly contain the instruments
prepared for the war, and which had so many ten thousands of men
to fight for it? Where is this city that was believed to have God
himself inhabiting therein? It is now demolished to the very foundations,
and hath nothing but that monument of it preserved, I mean the camp
of those that hath destroyed it, which still dwells upon its ruins;
some unfortunate old men also lie upon the ashes of the temple,
and a few women are there preserved alive by the enemy, for our
bitter shame and reproach. Now who is there that revolves these
things in his mind, and yet is able to bear the sight of the sun,
though he might live out of danger? Who is there so much his country's
enemy, or so unmanly, and so desirous of living, as not to repent
that he is still alive? And I cannot but wish that we had all died
before we had seen that holy city demolished by the hands of our
enemies, or the foundations of our holy temple dug up after so profane
a manner. But since we had a generous hope that deluded us, as if
we might perhaps have been able to avenge ourselves on our enemies
on that account, though it be now become vanity, and hath left us
alone in this distress, let us make haste to die bravely. Let us
pity ourselves, our children, and our wives while it is in our own
power to show pity to them; for we were born to die, (17) as well
as those were whom we have begotten; nor is it in the power of the
most happy of our race to avoid it. But for abuses, and slavery,
and the sight of our wives led away after an ignominious manner,
with their children, these are not such evils as are natural and
necessary among men; although such as do not prefer death before
those miseries, when it is in their power so to do, must undergo
even them, on account of their own cowardice. We revolted from the
Romans with great pretensions to courage; and when, at the very
last, they invited us to preserve ourselves, we would not comply
with them. Who will not, therefore, believe that they will certainly
be in a rage at us, in case they can take us alive? Miserable will
then be the young men who will be strong enough in their bodies
to sustain many torments! miserable also will be those of elder
years, who will not be able to bear those calamities which young
men might sustain! One man will be obliged to hear the voice of
his son implore help of his father, when his hands are bound. But
certainly our hands are still at liberty, and have a sword in them;
let them then be subservient to us in our glorious design; let us
die before we become slaves under our eneimies, and let us go out
of the world, together with our children and our wives, in a state
of freedom. This it is that our laws command us to do this it is
that our wives and children crave at our hands; nay, God himself
hath brought this necessity upon us; while the Romans desire the
contrary, and are afraid lest any of us should die before we are
taken. Let us therefore make haste, and instead of affording them
so much pleasure, as they hope for in getting us under their power,
let us leave them an example which shall at once cause their astonishment
at our death, and their admiration of our hardiness therein."
CHAPTER 9.
HOW THE PEOPLE THAT WERE IN THE FORTRESS WERE PREVAILED ON BY THE
WORDS OF ELEAZAR, TWO WOMEN AND FIVE CHILDREN ONLY EXCEPTED AND
ALL SUBMITTED TO BE KILLED BY ONE ANOTHER.
1. NOW as Eleazar was proceeding on in this exhortation, they all
cut him off short, and made haste to do the work, as full of an
unconquerable ardor of mind, and moved with a demoniacal fury. So
they went their ways, as one still endeavoring to be before another,
and as thinking that this eagerness would be a demonstration of
their courage and good conduct, if they could avoid appearing in
the last class; so great was the zeal they were in to slay their
wives and children, and themselves also! Nor indeed, when they came
to the work itself, did their courage fail them, as one might imagine
it would have done, but they then held fast the same resolution,
without wavering, which they had upon the hearing of Eleazar's speech,
while yet every one of them still retained the natural passion of
love to themselves and their families, because the reasoning they
went upon appeared to them to be very just, even with regard to
those that were dearest to them; for the husbands tenderly embraced
their wives, and took their children into their arms, and gave the
longest parting kisses to them, with tears in their eyes. Yet at
the same time did they complete what they had resolved on, as if
they had been executed by the hands of strangers; and they had nothing
else for their comfort but the necessity they were in of doing this
execution, to avoid that prospect they had of the miseries they
were to suffer from their enemies. Nor was there at length any one
of these men found that scrupled to act their part in this terrible
execution, but every one of them despatched his dearest relations.
Miserable men indeed were they! whose distress forced them to slay
their own wives and children with their own hands, as the lightest
of those evils that were before them. So they being not able to
bear the grief they were under for what they had done any longer,
and esteeming it an injury to those they had slain, to live even
the shortest space of time after them, they presently laid all they
had upon a heap, and set fire to it. They then chose ten men by
lot out of them to slay all the rest; every one of whom laid himself
down by his wife and children on the ground, and threw his arms
about them, and they offered their necks to the stroke of those
who by lot executed that melancholy office; and when these ten had,
without fear, slain them all, they made the same rule for casting
lots for themselves, that he whose lot it was should first kill
the other nine, and after all should kill himself. Accordingly,
all these had courage sufficient to be no way behind one another
in doing or suffering; so, for a conclusion, the nine offered their
necks to the executioner, and he who was the last of all took a
view of all the other bodies, lest perchance some or other among
so many that were slain should want his assistance to be quite despatched,
and when he perceived that they were all slain, he set fire to the
palace, and with the great force of his hand ran his sword entirely
through himself, and fell down dead near to his own relations. So
these people died with this intention, that they would not leave
so much as one soul among them all alive to be subject to the Romans.
Yet was there an ancient woman, and another who was of kin to Eleazar,
and superior to most women in prudence and learning, with five children,
who had concealed themselves in caverns under ground, and had carried
water thither for their drink, and were hidden there when the rest
were intent upon the slaughter of one another. Those others were
nine hundred and sixty in number, the women and children being withal
included in that computation. This calamitous slaughter was made
on the fifteenth day of the month Xanthicus [Nisan].
2. Now for the Romans, they expected that they should be fought
in the morning, when, accordingly, they put on their armor, and
laid bridges of planks upon their ladders from their banks, to make
an assault upon the fortress, which they did; but saw nobody as
an enemy, but a terrible solitude on every side, with a fire within
the place, as well as a perfect silence. So they were at a loss
to guess at what had happened. At length they made a shout, as if
it had been at a blow given by the battering ram, to try whether
they could bring any one out that was within; the women heard this
noise, and came out of their under-ground cavern, and informed the
Romans what had been done, as it was done; and the second of them
clearly described all both what was said and what was done, and
this manner of it; yet did they not easily give their attention
to such a desperate undertaking, and did not believe it could be
as they said; they also attempted to put the fire out, and quickly
cutting themselves a way through it, they came within the palace,
and so met with the multitude of the slain, but could take no pleasure
in the fact, though it were done to their enemies. Nor could they
do other than wonder at the courage of their resolution, and the
immovable contempt of death which so great a number of them had
shown, when they went through with such an action as that was.
CHAPTER 10.
THAT MANY OF THE SICARII FLED TO ALEXANDRIA ALSO AND WHAT DANGERS
THEY WERE IN THERE; ON WHICH ACCOUNT THAT TEMPLE WHICH HAD FORMERLY
BEEN BUILT BY ONIAS THE HIGH PRIEST WAS DESTROYED.
1. WHEN Masada was thus taken, the general left a garrison in the
fortress to keep it, and he himself went away to Cesarea; for there
were now no enemies left in the country, but it was all overthrown
by so long a war. Yet did this war afford disturbances and dangerous
disorders even in places very far remote from Judea; for still it
came to pass that many Jews were slain at Alexandria in Egypt; for
as many of the Sicarii as were able to fly thither, out of the seditious
wars in Judea, were not content to have saved themselves, but must
needs be undertaking to make new disturbances, and persuaded many
of those that entertained them to assert their liberty, to esteem
the Romans to be no better than themselves, and to look upon God
as their only Lord and Master. But when part of the Jews of reputation
opposed them, they slew some of them, and with the others they were
very pressing in their exhortations to revolt from the Romans; but
when the principal men of the senate saw what madness they were
come to, they thought it no longer safe for themselves to overlook
them. So they got all the Jews together to an assembly, and accused
the madness of the Sicarii, and demonstrated that they had been
the authors of all the evils that had come upon them. They said
also that "these men, now they were run away from Judea, having
no sure hope of escaping, because as soon as ever they shall be
known, they will be soon destroyed by the Romans, they come hither
and fill us full of those calamities which belong to them, while
we have not been partakers with them in any of their sins."
Accordingly, they exhorted the multitude to have a care, lest they
should be brought to destruction by their means, and to make their
apology to the Romans for what had been done, by delivering these
men up to them; who being thus apprized of the greatness of the
danger they were in, complied with what was proposed, and ran with
great violence upon the Sicarii, and seized upon them; and indeed
six hundred of them were caught immediately: but as to all those
that fled into Egypt (18) and to the Egyptian Thebes, it was not
long ere they were caught also, and brought back, whose courage,
or whether we ought to call it madness, or hardiness in their opinions,
every body was amazed at. For when all sorts of torments and vexations
of their bodies that could be devised were made use of to them,
they could not get any one of them to comply so far as to confess,
or seem to confess, that Caesar was their lord; but they preserved
their own opinion, in spite of all the distress they were brought
to, as if they received these torments and the fire itself with
bodies insensible of pain, and with a soul that in a manner rejoiced
under them. But what was most of all astonishing to the beholders
was the courage of the children; for not one of these children was
so far overcome by these torments, as to name Caesar for their lord.
So far does the strength of the courage [of the soul] prevail over
the weakness of the body.
2. Now Lupus did then govern Alexandria, who presently sent Caesar
word of this commotion; who having in suspicion the restless temper
of the Jews for innovation, and being afraid lest they should get
together again, and persuade some others to join with them, gave
orders to Lupus to demolish that Jewish temple which was in the
region called Onion, (19) and was in Egypt, which was built and
had its denomination from the occasion following: Onias, the son
of Simon, one of the Jewish high priests fled from Antiochus the
king of Syria, when he made war with the Jews, and came to Alexandria;
and as Ptolemy received him very kindly, on account of hatred to
Antiochus, he assured him, that if he would comply with his proposal,
he would bring all the Jews to his assistance; and when the king
agreed to do it so far as he was able, he desired him to give him
leave to build a temple some where in Egypt, and to worship God
according to the customs of his own country; for that the Jews would
then be so much readier to fight against Antiochus who had laid
waste the temple at Jerusalem, and that they would then come to
him with greater good-will; and that, by granting them liberty of
conscience, very many of them would come over to him.
3. So Ptolemy complied with his proposals, and gave him a place
one hundred and eighty furlongs distant from Memphis. (20) That
Nomos was called the Nomos of Hellopolls, where Onias built a fortress
and a temple, not like to that at Jerusalem, but such as resembled
a tower. He built it of large stones to the height of sixty cubits;
he made the structure of the altar in imitation of that in our own
country, and in like manner adorned with gifts, excepting the make
of the candlestick, for he did not make a candlestick, but had a
[single] lamp hammered out of a piece of gold, which illuminated
the place with its rays, and which he hung by a chain of gold; but
the entire temple was encompassed with a wall of burnt brick, though
it had gates of stone. The king also gave him a large country for
a revenue in money, that both the priests might have a plentiful
provision made for them, and that God might have great abundance
of what things were necessary for his worship. Yet did not Onias
do this out of a sober disposition, but he had a mind to contend
with the Jews at Jerusalem, and could not forget the indignation
he had for being banished thence. Accordingly, he thought that by
building this temple he should draw away a great number from them
to himself. There had been also a certain ancient prediction made
by [a prophet] whose name was Isaiah, about six hundred years before,
that this temple should be built by a man that was a Jew in Egypt.
And this is the history of the building of that temple.
4. And now Lupus, the governor of Alexandria, upon the receipt
of Caesar's letter, came to the temple, and carried out of it some
of the donations dedicated thereto, and shut up the temple itself.
And as Lupus died a little afterward, Paulinns succeeded him. This
man left none of those donations there, and threatened the priests
severely if they did not bring them all out; nor did he permit any
who were desirous of worshipping God there so much as to come near
the whole sacred place; but when he had shut up the gates, he made
it entirely inaccessible, insomuch that there remained no longer
the least footsteps of any Divine worship that had been in that
place. Now the duration of the time from the building of this temple
till it was shut up again was three hundred and forty-three years.
CHAPTER 11.
CONCERNING JONATHAN, ONE OF THE SICARII, THAT STIRRED UP A SEDITION
IN CYRENE, AND WAS A FALSE ACCUSER [OF THE INNOCENT].
1. AND now did the madness of the Sicarii, like a disease, reach
as far as the cities of Cyrene; for one Jonathan, a vile person,
and by trade a weaver, came thither and prevailed with no small
number of the poorer sort to give ear to him; he also led them into
the desert, upon promising them that he would show them signs and
apparitions. And as for the other Jews of Cyrene, he concealed his
knavery from them, and put tricks upon them; but those of the greatest
dignity among them informed Catullus, the governor of the Libyan
Pentapolis, of his march into the desert, and of the preparations
he had made for it. So he sent out after him both horsemen and footmen,
and easily overcame them, because they were unarmed men; of these
many were slain in the fight, but some were taken alive, and brought
to Catullus. As for Jonathan, the head of this plot, he fled away
at that time; but upon a great and very diligent search, which was
made all the country over for him, he was at last taken. And when
he was brought to Catullus, he devised a way whereby he both escaped
punishment himself, and afforded an occasion to Catullus of doing
much mischief; for he falsely accused the richest men among the
Jews, and said that they had put him upon what he did.
2. Now Catullus easily admitted of these his calumnies, and aggravated
matters greatly, and made tragical exclamations, that he might also
be supposed to have had a hand in the finishing of the Jewish war.
But what was still harder, he did not only give a too easy belief
to his stories, but he taught the Sicarii to accuse men falsely.
He bid this Jonathan, therefore, to name one Alexander, a Jew (with
whom he had formerly had a quarrel, and openly professed that he
hated him); he also got him to name his wife Bernice, as concerned
with him. These two Catullus ordered to be slain in the first place;
nay, after them he caused all the rich and wealthy Jews to be slain,
being no fewer in all than three thousand. This he thought he might
do safely, because he confiscated their effects, and added them
to Caesar's revenues.
3. Nay, indeed, lest any Jews that lived elsewhere should convict
him of his villainy, he extended his false accusations further,
and persuaded Jonathan, and certain others that were caught with
him, to bring an accusation of attempts for innovation against the
Jews that were of the best character both at Alexandria and at Rome.
One of these, against whom this treacherous accusation was laid,
was Josephus, the writer of these books. However, this plot, thus
contrived by Catullus, did not succeed according to his hopes; for
though he came himself to Rome, and brought Jonathan and his companions
along with him in bonds, and thought he should have had no further
inquisition made as to those lies that were forged under his government,
or by his means; yet did Vespasian suspect the matter and made an
inquiry how far it was true. And when he understood that the accusation
laid against the Jews was an unjust one, he cleared them of the
crimes charged upon them, and this on account of Titus's concern
about the matter, and brought a deserved punishment upon Jonathan;
for he was first tormented, and then burnt alive.
4. But as to Catullus, the emperors Were so gentle to him, that
he underwent no severe condemnation at this time; yet was it not
long before he fell into a complicated and almost incurable distemper,
and died miserably. He was not only afflicted in body, but the distemper
in his mind was more heavy upon him than the other; for he was terribly
disturbed, and continually cried out that he saw the ghosts of those
whom he had slain standing before him. Whereupon he was not able
to contain himself, but leaped out of his bed, as if both torments
and fire were brought to him. This his distemper grew still a great
deal worse and worse continually, and his very entrails were so
corroded, that they fell out of his body, and in that condition
he died. Thus he became as great an instance of Divine Providence
as ever was, and demonstrated that God punishes wicked men.
5. And here we shall put an end to this our history; wherein we
formerly promised to deliver the same with all accuracy, to such
as should be desirous of understanding after what manner this war
of the Romans with the Jews was managed. Of which history, how good
the style is, must be left to the determination of the readers;
but as for its agreement with the facts, I shall not scruple to
say, and that boldly, that truth hath been what I have alone aimed
at through its entire composition.
ENDNOTE
(1) Why the great Bochart should say, (De Phoenic. Colon. B. II.
ch. iv.,) that" there are in this clause of Josephus as many
mistakes as words," I do by no means understand. Josephus thought
Melchisedek first built, or rather rebuilt and adorned, this city,
and that it was then called Salem, as Psalm 76:2; afterwards came
to be called Jerusalem; and that Melchisedek, being a priest as
well as a king, built to the true God therein a temple, or place
for public Divine worship and sacrifice; all which things may be
very true for aught we know to the contrary. And for the word, or
temple, as if it must needs belong to the great temple built by
Solomon long afterward, Josephus himself uses, for the small tabernacle
of Moses, Antiq. B. III. ch. 6. sect. 4; see also Antiq. B. lit.
ch. 6. sect. 1; as he here presently uses, for a large and splendid
synagogue of the Jews at Antioch, B. VII. ch. 3. sect. 3.
(2) This Tereutius Rufus, as Reland in part observes here, is the
same person whom the Talmudists call Turnus Rufus; of whom they
relate, that "he ploughed up Sion as a field, and made Jerusalem
become as heaps, and the mountain of the house as the high Idaces
of a forest;" which was long before foretold by the prophet
Micah, ch. 3:12, and quoted from him in the prophecies of Jeremiah,
ch. 26:18.
(3) See Ecclesiastes 8:11.
(4) This Berytus was certainly a Roman colony, and has coins extant
that witness the same, as Hudson and Spanheim inform us. See the
note on Antiq. B. XVI: ch. 11. sect. 1.
(5) The Jews at Antioch and Alexandria, the two principal cities
in all the East, had allowed them, both by the Macedonians, and
afterwards by the Romans, a governor of their own, who was exempt
from the jurisdiction of the other civil governors. He was called
sometimes barely "governor," sometimes "ethnarch,"
and [at Alexandria] "alabarch," as Dr. Hudson takes notice
on this place out of Fuller's Miscellanies. They had the like governor
or governors allowed them at Babylon under their captivity there,
as the history of Susanna implies.
(6) This Classicus, and Civilis, and Cerealis are names well known
in Tacitus; the two former as moving sedition against the Romans,
and the last as sent to repress them by Vespasian, just as they
are here described in Josephus; which is the case also of Fontellis
Agrippa and Rubrius Gallup, i, sect. 3. But as to the very favorable
account presently given of Domitian, particularly as to his designs
in this his Gallic and German expedition, it is not a little contrary
to that in Suetonius, Vesp. sect. 7. Nor are the reasons unobvious
that might occasion this great diversity: Domitian was one of Josephus's
patrons, and when he published these books of the Jewish war, was
very young, and had hardly begun those wicked practices which rendered
him so infamous afterward; while Suetonius seems to have been too
young, and too low in life, to receive any remarkable favors from
him; as Domitian was certainly very lewd and cruel, and generally
hated, when Puetonius wrote about him.
(7) Since in these latter ages this Sabbatic River, once so famous,
which, by Josephus's account here, ran every seventh day, and rested
on six, but according to Pliny, Nat. Hist. 31. II, ran perpetually
on six days, and rested every seventh, (though it no way appears
by either of their accounts that the seventh day of this river was
the Jewish seventh day or sabbath,) is quite vanished, I shall add
no more about it: only see Dr. Hudson's note. In Varenius's Geography,
i, 17, the reader will find several instances of such periodical
fountains and. rivers, though none of their periods were that of
a just week as of old this appears to have been.
(8) Vespasian and his two sons, Titus and Domitian.
(9) See the representations of these Jewish vessels as they still
stand on Titus's triumphal arch at Rome, in Reland's very curious
book de Spoliis Ternpli, throughout. But what, things are chiefly
to be noted are these: (1.) That Josephus says the candlestick here
carried in this triumph was not thoroughly like that which was used
in the temple, which appears in the number of the little knobs and
flowers in that on the triumphal arch not well agreeing with Moses's
description, Exodus 25:31-36. (2.) The smallness of the branches
in Josephus compared with the thickness of those on that arch. (3.)
That the Law or Pentateuch does not appear on that arch at all,
though Josephus, an eye-witness, assures us that it was carried
in this procession. All which things deserve the consideration of
the inquisitive reader.
(10) Spanheim observes here, that in Graceia Major and Sicily they
had rue prodigiously great and durable, like this rue at Macherus,
(11) This strange account of the place and root Baaras seems to
have been taken from the magicians, and the root to have been made
use of in the days of Josephus, in that superstitious way of casting
out demons, supposed by him to have been derived from king Solomon;
of which we have already seen he had a great opinion, Antiq. B.
VIII. ch. 2. sect. 5. We also may hence learn the true notion Josephus
had of demons and demoniacs, exactly like that of the Jews and Christians
in the New Testament, and the first four centuries. See Antiq. B.
I. ch. 8. sect. 2; B. XI, ch. 2. sect. 3.
(12) It is very remarkable that Titus did not people this now desolate
country of Judea, but ordered it to be all sold; nor indeed is it
properly peopled at this day, but lies ready for its old inhabitants
the Jews, at their future restoration. See Literal Accomplishment
of Prophecies, p. 77.
(13) That the city Emmaus, or Areindus, in Josephus and others
which was the place of the government of Julius Africanus were slain,
to the number of one thousand seven hundred, as were the women and
the children made slaves. But as Bassus thought he must perform
the covenant he had made with those that had surrendered the citadel,
he let them go, and restored Eleazar to them, in the beginning of
the third century, and which he then procured to be rebuilt, and
after which rebuilding it was called Nicopolis, is entirely different
from that Emmaus which is mentioned by St. Luke 24;13; see Reland's
Paleestina, lib. II. p. 429, and under the name Ammaus also. But
he justly thinks that that in St. Luke may well be the same with
his Ammaus before us, especially since the Greek copies here usually
make it sixty furlongs distant from Jerusalem, as does St. Luke,
though the Latin copies say only thirty. The place also allotted
for these eight hundred soldiers, as for a Roman garrison, in this
place, would most naturally be not so remote from Jerusalem as was
the other Emmaus, or Nicopolis.
(14) Pliny and others confirm this strange paradox, that provisions
laid up against sieges will continue good for a hundred ears, as
Spanheim notes upon this place.
(15) The speeches in this and the next section, as introduced under
the person of this Eleazar, are exceeding remarkable, and oil the
noblest subjects, the contempt of death, and the dignity and immortality
of the soul; and that not only among the Jews, but among the Indians
themselves also; and are highly worthy the perusal of all the curious.
It seems as if that philosophic lady who survived, ch. 9. sect.
1, 2, remembered the substance of these discourses, as spoken by
Eleazar, and so Josephus clothed them in his own words: at the lowest
they contain the Jewish notions on these heads, as understood then
by our Josephus, and cannot but deserve a suitable regard from us.
(16) See B. II. ch. 20. sect. 2, where the number of the slain
is but 10,000.
(17) Reland here sets down a parallel aphorism of one of the Jewish
Rabbins, "We are born that we may die, and die that we may
live.'
(18) Since Josephus here informs us that some of these Sicarii,
or ruffians, went from Alexandria (which was itself in Egypt, in
a large sense) into Egypt, and Thebes there situated, Reland well
observes, from Vossius, that Egypt sometimes denotes Proper or Upper
Egypt, as distinct from the Delta, and the lower parts near Palestine.
Accordingly, as he adds, those that say it never rains in Egypt
must mean the Proper or Upper Egypt, because it does sometimes rain
in the other parts. See the note on Antiq. B. II. ch. 7. sect. 7,
and B. III. ch. 1. sect. 6.
(19) Of this temple of Onias's building in Egypt, see the notes
on Antiq. B. XIII. ch. 3. sect. 1. But whereas it is elsewhere,
both of the War, B. I. ch. 1. sect. 1, and in the Antiquities as
now quoted, said that this temple was like to that at Jerusalem,
and here that it was not like it, but like a tower, sect. 3, there
is some reason to suspect the reading here, and that either the
negative particle is here to be blotted out, or the word entirely
added.
(20) We must observe, that Josephus here speaks of Antiochus who
profaned the temple as now alive, when Onias had leave given them
by Philometer to build his temple; whereas it seems not to have
been actually built till about fifteen years afterwards. Yet, because
it is said in the Antiquities that Onias went to Philometer, B.
XII. ch. 9. sect. 7, during the lifetime of that Antiochus, it is
probable he petitioned, and perhaps obtained his leave then, though
it were not actually built or finished till fifteen years afterward.
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