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The Wars Of
The Jews or
The History Of The
Destruction Of Jerusalem
Book VI
CONTAINING THE INTERVAL OF ABOUT ONE MONTH.
FROM THE GREAT EXTREMITY TO WHICH THE JEWS WERE REDUCED TO THE TAKING OF
JERUSALEM BY TITUS.
CHAPTER 1.
THAT THE MISERIES STILL GREW WORSE; AND HOW THE ROMANS MADE AN ASSAULT
UPON THE TOWER OF ANTONIA.
1. THUS did the miseries of Jerusalem grow worse and worse every day, and the
seditious were still more irritated by the calamities they were under, even
while the famine preyed upon themselves, after it had preyed upon the people.
And indeed the multitude of carcasses that lay in heaps one upon another was a
horrible sight, and produced a pestilential stench, which was a hinderance to
those that would make sallies out of the city, and fight the enemy: but as those
were to go in battle-array, who had been already used to ten thousand murders,
and must tread upon those dead bodies as they marched along, so were not they
terrified, nor did they pity men as they marched over them; nor did they deem
this affront offered to the deceased to be any ill omen to themselves; but as
they had their right hands already polluted with the murders of their own
countrymen, and in that condition ran out to fight with foreigners, they seem to
me to have cast a reproach upon God himself, as if he were too slow in punishing
them; for the war was not now gone on with as if they had any hope of victory;
for they gloried after a brutish manner in that despair of deliverance they were
already in. And now the Romans, although they were greatly distressed in getting
together their materials, raised their banks in one and twenty days, after they
had cut down all the trees that were in the country that adjoined to the city,
and that for ninety furlongs round about, as I have already related. And truly
the very view itself of the country was a melancholy thing; for those places
which were before adorned with trees and pleasant gardens were now become a
desolate country every way, and its trees were all cut down: nor could any
foreigner that had formerly seen Judea and the most beautiful suburbs of the
city, and now saw it as a desert, but lament and mourn sadly at so great a
change: for the war had laid all the signs of beauty quite waste: nor if any one
that had known the place before, had come on a sudden to it now, would he have
known it again; but though he were at the city itself, yet would he have
inquired for it notwithstanding.
2. And now the banks were finished, they afforded a foundation for fear both
to the Romans and to the Jews; for the Jews expected that the city would be
taken, unless they could burn those banks, as did the Romans expect that, if
these were once burnt down, they should never be able to take it; for there was
a mighty scarcity of materials, and the bodies of the soldiers began to fail
with such hard labors, as did their souls faint with so many instances of ill
success; nay, the very calamities themselves that were in the city proved a
greater discouragement to the Romans than those within the city; for they found
the fighting men of the Jews to be not at all mollified among such their sore
afflictions, while they had themselves perpetually less and less hopes of
success, and their banks were forced to yield to the stratagems of the enemy,
their engines to the firmness of their wall, and their closest fights to the
boldness of their attack; and, what was their greatest discouragement of all,
they found the Jews' courageous souls to be superior to the multitude of the
miseries they were under, by their sedition, their famine, and the war itself;
insomuch that they were ready to imagine that the violence of their attacks was
invincible, and that the alacrity they showed would not be discouraged by their
calamities; for what would not those be able to bear if they should be
fortunate, who turned their very misfortunes to the improvement of their valor!
These considerations made the Romans to keep a stronger guard about their banks
than they formerly had done.
3. But now John and his party took care for securing themselves afterward,
even in case this wall should be thrown down, and fell to their work before the
battering rams were brought against them. Yet did they not compass what they
endeavored to do, but as they were gone out with their torches, they came back
under great discouragement before they came near to the banks; and the reasons
were these: that, in the first place, their conduct did not seem to be
unanimous, but they went out in distinct parties, and at distinct intervals, and
after a slow manner, and timorously, and, to say all in a word, without a Jewish
courage; for they were now defective in what is peculiar to our nation, that is,
in boldness, in violence of assault, and in running upon the enemy all together,
and in persevering in what they go about, though they do not at first succeed in
it; but they now went out in a more languid manner than usual, and at the same
time found the Romans set in array, and more courageous than ordinary, and that
they guarded their banks both with their bodies and their entire armor, and this
to such a degree on all sides, that they left no room for the fire to get among
them, and that every one of their souls was in such good courage, that they
would sooner die than desert their ranks; for besides their notion that all
their hopes were cut off, in case these their works were once burnt, the
soldiers were greatly ashamed that subtlety should quite be too hard for
courage, madness for armor, multitude for skill, and Jews for Romans. The Romans
had now also another advantage, in that their engines for sieges co-operated
with them in throwing darts and stones as far as the Jews, when they were coming
out of the city; whereby the man that fell became an impediment to him that was
next to him, as did the danger of going farther make them less zealous in their
attempts; and for those that had run under the darts, some of them were
terrified by the good order and closeness of the enemies' ranks before they came
to a close fight, and others were pricked with their spears, and turned back
again; at length they reproached one another for their cowardice, and retired
without doing any thing. This attack was made upon the first day of the month
Panemus [Tamuz.] So when the Jews were retreated, the Romans brought their
engines, although they had all the while stones thrown at them from the tower of
Antonia, and were assaulted by fire and sword, and by all sorts of darts, which
necessity afforded the Jews to make use of; for although these had great
dependence on their own wall, and a contempt of the Roman engines, yet did they
endeavor to hinder the Romans from bringing them. Now these Romans struggled
hard, on the contrary, to bring them, as deeming that this zeal of the Jews was
in order to avoid any impression to be made on the tower of Antonia, because its
wall was but weak, and its foundations rotten. However, that tower did not yield
to the blows given it from the engines; yet did the Romans bear the impressions
made by the enemies' darts which were perpetually cast at them, and did not give
way to any of those dangers that came upon them from above, and so they brought
their engines to bear. But then, as they were beneath the other, and were sadly
wounded by the stones thrown down upon them, some of them threw their shields
over their bodies, and partly with their hands, and partly with their bodies,
and partly with crows, they undermined its foundations, and with great pains
they removed four of its stones. Then night came upon both sides, and put an end
to this struggle for the present; however, that night the wall was so shaken by
the battering rams in that place where John had used his stratagem before, and
had undermined their banks, that the ground then gave way, and the wall fell
down suddenly.
4. When this accident had unexpectedly happened, the minds of both parties
were variously affected; for though one would expect that the Jews would be
discouraged, because this fall of their wall was unexpected by them, and they
had made no provision in that case, yet did they pull up their courage, because
the tower of Antonia itself was still standing; as was the unexpected joy of the
Romans at this fall of the wall soon quenched by the sight they had of another
wall, which John and his party had built within it. However, the attack of this
second wall appeared to be easier than that of the former, because it seemed a
thing of greater facility to get up to it through the parts of the former wall
that were now thrown down. This new wall appeared also to be much weaker than
the tower of Antonia, and accordingly the Romans imagined that it had been
erected so much on the sudden, that they should soon overthrow it: yet did not
any body venture now to go up to this wall; for that such as first ventured so
to do must certainly be killed.
5. And now Titus, upon consideration that the alacrity of soldiers in war is
chiefly excited by hopes and by good words, and that exhortations and promises
do frequently make men to forget the hazards they run, nay, sometimes to despise
death itself, got together the most courageous part of his army, and tried what
he could do with his men by these methods. "O fellow soldiers," said he, "to
make an exhortation to men to do what hath no peril in it, is on that very
account inglorious to such to whom that exhortation is made; and indeed so it is
in him that makes the exhortation, an argument of his own cowardice also. I
therefore think that such exhortations ought then only to be made use of when
affairs are in a dangerous condition, and yet are worthy of being attempted by
every one themselves; accordingly, I am fully of the same opinion with you, that
it is a difficult task to go up this wall; but that it is proper for those that
desire reputation for their valor to struggle with difficulties in such cases
will then appear, when I have particularly shown that it is a brave thing to die
with glory, and that the courage here necessary shall not go unrewarded in those
that first begin the attempt. And let my first argument to move you to it be
taken from what probably some would think reasonable to dissuade you, I mean the
constancy and patience of these Jews, even under their ill successes; for it is
unbecoming you, who are Romans and my soldiers, who have in peace been taught
how to make wars, and who have also been used to conquer in those wars, to be
inferior to Jews, either in action of the hand, or in courage of the soul, and
this especially when you are at the conclusion of your victory, and are assisted
by God himself; for as to our misfortunes, they have been owing to the madness
of the Jews, while their sufferings have been owing to your valor, and to the
assistance God hath afforded you; for as to the seditions they have been in, and
the famine they are under, and the siege they now endure, and the fall of their
walls without our engines, what can they all be but demonstrations of God's
anger against them, and of his assistance afforded us? It will not therefore be
proper for you, either to show yourselves inferior to those to whom you are
really superior, or to betray that Divine assistance which is afforded you. And,
indeed, how can it be esteemed otherwise than a base and unworthy thing, that
while the Jews, who need not be much ashamed if they be deserted, because they
have long learned to be slaves to others, do yet despise death, that they may be
so no longer; and do make sallies into the very midst of us frequently, no in
hopes of conquering us, but merely for a demonstration of their courage; we, who
have gotten possession of almost all the world that belongs to either land or
sea, to whom it will be a great shame if we do not conquer them, do not once
undertake any attempt against our enemies wherein there is much danger, but sit
still idle, with such brave arms as we have, and only wait till the famine and
fortune do our business themselves, and this when we have it in our power, with
some small hazard, to gain all that we desire! For if we go up to this tower of
Antonia, we gain the city; for if there should be any more occasion for fighting
against those within the city, which I do not suppose there will, since we shall
then be upon the top of the hill (1) and be upon
our enemies before they can have taken breath, these advantages promise us no
less than a certain and sudden victory. As for myself, I shall at present wave
any commendation of those who die in war, (2)
and omit to speak of the immortality of those men who are slain in the midst of
their martial bravery; yet cannot I forbear to imprecate upon those who are of a
contrary disposition, that they may die in time of peace, by some distemper or
other, since their souls are condemned to the grave, together with their bodies.
For what man of virtue is there who does not know, that those souls which are
severed from their fleshly bodies in battles by the sword are received by the
ether, that purest of elements, and joined to that company which are placed
among the stars; that they become good demons, and propitious heroes, and show
themselves as such to their posterity afterwards? while upon those souls that
wear away in and with their distempered bodies comes a subterranean night to
dissolve them to nothing, and a deep oblivion to take away all the remembrance
of them, and this notwithstanding they be clean from all spots and defilements
of this world; so that, in this ease, the soul at the same time comes to the
utmost bounds of its life, and of its body, and of its memorial also. But since
he hath determined that death is to come of necessity upon all men, a sword is a
better instrument for that purpose than any disease whatsoever. Why is it not
then a very mean thing for us not to yield up that to the public benefit which
we must yield up to fate? And this discourse have I made, upon the supposition
that those who at first attempt to go upon this wall must needs be killed in the
attempt, though still men of true courage have a chance to escape even in the
most hazardous undertakings. For, in the first place, that part of the former
wall that is thrown down is easily to be ascended; and for the new-built wall,
it is easily destroyed. Do you, therefore, many of you, pull up your courage,
and set about this work, and do you mutually encourage and assist one another;
and this your bravery will soon break the hearts of your enemies; and perhaps
such a glorious undertaking as yours is may be accomplished without bloodshed.
For although it be justly to be supposed that the Jews will try to hinder you at
your first beginning to go up to them; yet when you have once concealed
yourselves from them, and driven them away by force, they will not be able to
sustain your efforts against them any longer, though but a few of you prevent
them, and get over the wall. As for that person who first mounts the wall, I
should blush for shame if I did not make him to be envied of others, by those
rewards I would bestow upon him. If such a one escape with his life, he shall
have the command of others that are now but his equals; although it be true also
that the greatest rewards will accrue to such as die in the attempt."
(3)
6. Upon this speech of Titus, the rest of the multitude were aftrighted at so
great a danger. But there was one, whose name was Sabinus, a soldier that served
among the cohorts, and a Syrian by birth, who appeared to be of very great
fortitude, both in the actions he had done, and the courage of his soul he had
shown; although any body would have thought, before he came to his work, that he
was of such a weak constitution of body, that he was not fit to be a soldier;
for his color was black, his flesh was lean and thin, and lay close together;
but there was a certain heroic soul that dwelt in this small body, which body
was indeed much too narrow for that peculiar courage which was in him.
Accordingly he was the first that rose up, when he thus spake: "I readily
surrender up myself to thee, O Caesar; I first ascend the wall, and I heartily
wish that my fortune may follow my courage and my resolution And if some ill
fortune grudge me the success of my undertaking, take notice that my ill success
will not be unexpected, but that I choose death voluntarily for thy sake." When
he had said this, and had spread out his sheild over his head with his left
hand, and hill, with his right hand, drawn his sword, he marched up to the wall,
just about the sixth hour of the day. There followed him eleven others, and no
more, that resolved to imitate his bravery; but still this was the principal
person of them all, and went first, as excited by a divine fury. Now those that
guarded the wall shot at them from thence, and cast innumerable darts upon them
from every side; they also rolled very large stones upon them, which overthrew
some of those eleven that were with him. But as for Sabinus himself, he met the
darts that were cast at him and though he was overwhelmed with them, yet did he
not leave off the violence of his attack before he had gotten up on the top of
the wall, and had put the enemy to flight. For as the Jews were astonished at
his great strength, and the bravery of his soul, and as, withal, they imagined
more of them had got upon the wall than really had, they were put to flight. And
now one cannot but complain here of fortune, as still envious at virtue, and
always hindering the performance of glorious achievements: this was the case of
the man before us, when he had just obtained his purpose; for he then stumbled
at a certain large stone, and fell down upon it headlong, with a very great
noise. Upon which the Jews turned back, and when they saw him to be alone, and
fallen down also, they threw darts at him from every side. However. be got upon
his knee, and covered himself with his shield, and at the first defended himself
against them, and wounded many of those that came near him; but he was soon
forced to relax his right hand, by the multitude of the wounds that had been
given him, till at length he was quite covered over with darts before he gave up
the ghost. He was one who deserved a better fate, by reason of his bravery; but,
as might be expected, he fell under so vast an attempt. As for the rest of his
partners, the Jews dashed three of them to pieces with stones, and slew them as
they were gotten up to the top of the wall; the other eight being wounded, were
pulled down, and carried back to the camp. These things were done upon the third
day of the month Panemus [Tamuz].
7. Now two days afterward twelve of those men that were on the forefront, and
kept watch upon the banks, got together, and called to them the standard-bearer
of the fifth legion, and two others of a troop of horsemen, and one trumpeter;
these went without noise, about the ninth hour of the night, through the ruins,
to the tower of Antonia; and when they had cut the throats of the first guards
of the place, as they were asleep, they got possession of the wall, and ordered
the trumpeter to sound his trumpet. Upon which the rest of the guard got up on
the sudden, and ran away, before any body could see how many they were that were
gotten up; for, partly from the fear they were in, and partly from the sound of
the trumpet which they heard, they imagined a great number of the enemy were
gotten up. But as soon as Caesar heard the signal, he ordered the army to put on
their armor immediately, and came thither with his commanders, and first of all
ascended, as did the chosen men that were with him. And as the Jews were flying
away to the temple, they fell into that mine which John had dug under the Roman
banks. Then did the seditious of both the bodies of the Jewish army, as well
that belonging to John as that belonging to Simon, drive them away; and indeed
were no way wanting as to the highest degree of force and alacrity; for they
esteemed themselves entirely ruined if once the Romans got into the temple, as
did the Romans look upon the same thing as the beginning of their entire
conquest. So a terrible battle was fought at the entrance of the temple, while
the Romans were forcing their way, in order to get possession of that temple,
and the Jews were driving them back to the tower of Antonia; in which battle the
darts were on both sides useless, as well as the spears, and both sides drew
their swords, and fought it out hand to hand. Now during this struggle the
positions of the men were undistinguished on both sides, and they fought at
random, the men being intermixed one with another, and confounded, by reason of
the narrowness of the place; while the noise that was made fell on the ear after
an indistinct manner, because it was so very loud. Great slaughter was now made
on both sides, and the combatants trod upon the bodies and the armor of those
that were dead, and dashed them to pieces. Accordingly, to which side soever the
battle inclined, those that had the advantage exhorted one another to go on, as
did those that were beaten make great lamentation. But still there was no room
for flight, nor for pursuit, but disorderly revolutions and retreats, while the
armies were intermixed one with another; but those that were in the first ranks
were under the necessity of killing or being killed, without any way for
escaping; for those on both sides that came behind forced those before them to
go on, without leaving any space between the armies. At length the Jews' violent
zeal was too hard for the Romans' skill, and the battle already inclined
entirely that way; for the fight had lasted from the ninth hour of the night
till the seventh hour of the day, While the Jews came on in crowds, and had the
danger the temple was in for their motive; the Romans having no more here than a
part of their army; for those legions, on which the soldiers on that side
depended, were not come up to them. So it was at present thought sufficient by
the Romans to take possession of the tower of Antonia.
8. But there was one Julian, a centurion, that came from Eithynia, a man he
was of great reputation, whom I had formerly seen in that war, and one of the
highest fame, both for his skill in war, his strength of body, and the courage
of his soul. This man, seeing the Romans giving ground, and ill a sad condition,
(for he stood by Titus at the tower of Antonia,) leaped out, and of himself
alone put the Jews to flight, when they were already conquerors, and made them
retire as far as the corner of the inner court of the temple; from him the
multitude fled away in crowds, as supposing that neither his strength nor his
violent attacks could be those of a mere man. Accordingly, he rushed through the
midst of the Jews, as they were dispersed all abroad, and killed those that he
caught. Nor, indeed, was there any sight that appeared more wonderful in the
eyes of Caesar, or more terrible to others, than this. However, he was himself
pursued by fate, which it all not possible that he, who was but a mortal man,
should escape; for as he had shoes all full of thick and sharp nails
(4) as had every one of the other soldiers, so
when he ran on the pavement of the temple, he slipped, and fell down upon his
back with a very great noise, which was made by his armor. This made those that
were running away to turn back; whereupon those Romans that were in the tower of
Antonia set up a great shout, as they were in fear for the man. But the Jews got
about him in crowds, and struck at him with their spears and with their swords
on all sides. Now he received a great many of the strokes of these iron weapons
upon his shield, and often attempted to get up again, but was thrown down by
those that struck at him; yet did he, as he lay along, stab many of them with
his sword. Nor was he soon killed, as being covered with his helmet and his
breastplate in all those parts of his body where he might be mortally wounded;
he also pulled his neck close to his body, till all his other limbs were
shattered, and nobody durst come to defend him, and then he yielded to his fate.
Now Caesar was deeply affected on account of this man of so great fortitude, and
especially as he was killed in the sight of so many people; he was desirous
himself to come to his assistance, but the place would not give him leave, while
such as could have done it were too much terrified to attempt it. Thus when
Julian had struggled with death a great while, and had let but few of those that
had given him his mortal wound go off unhurt, he had at last his throat cut,
though not without some difficulty, and left behind him a very great fame, not
only among the Romans, and with Caesar himself, but among his enemies also; then
did the Jews catch up his dead body, and put the Romans to flight again, and
shut them up in the tower of Antonia. Now those that most signalized themselves,
and fought most zealously in this battle of the Jewish side, were one Alexas and
Gyphtheus, of John's party, and of Simon's party were Malachias, and Judas the
son of Merto, and James the son of Sosas, the commander of the Idumeans; and of
the zealots, two brethren, Simon and Judas, the sons of Jairus.
CHAPTER 2.
HOW TITUS GAVE ORDERS TO DEMOLISH THE TOWER OF ANTONIA AND THEN PERSUADED
JOSEPHUS TO EXHORT THE JEWS AGAIN [TO A SURRENDER].
1. AND now Titus gave orders to his soldiers that were with him to dig up the
foundations of the tower of Antonia, and make him a ready passage for his army
to come up; while he himself had Josephus brought to him, (for he had been
informed that on that very day, which was the seventeenth day
(5) of Panemus, [Tamuz,] the sacrifice called
"the Daily Sacrifice" had failed, and had not been offered to God, for want of
men to offer it, and that the people were grievously troubled at it,) and
commanded him to say the same things to John that he had said before, that if he
had any malicious inclination for fighting, he might come out with as many of
his men as he pleased, in order to fight, without the danger of destroying
either his city or temple; but that he desired he would not defile the temple,
nor thereby offend against God. That he might, if he pleased, offer the
sacrifices which were now discontinuned by any of the Jews whom he should pitch
upon. Upon this Josephus stood in such a place where he might be heard, not by
John only, but by many more, and then declared to them what Caesar had given him
in charge, and this in the Hebrew language. (6)
So he earnestly prayed them to spare their own city, and to prevent that fire
which was just ready to seize upon the temple, and to offer their usual
sacrifices to God therein. At these words of his a great sadness and silence
were observed among the people. But the tyrant himself cast many reproaches upon
Josephus, with imprecations besides; and at last added this withal, that he did
never fear the taking of the city, because it was God's own city. In answer to
which Josephus said thus with a loud voice: "To be sure thou hast kept this city
wonderfully pure for God's sake; the temple also continues entirely unpolluted!
Nor hast thou been guilty of ally impiety against him for whose assistance thou
hopest! He still receives his accustomed sacrifices! Vile wretch that thou art!
if any one should deprive thee of thy daily food, thou wouldst esteem him to be
an enemy to thee; but thou hopest to have that God for thy supporter in this war
whom thou hast deprived of his everlasting worship; and thou imputest those sins
to the Romans, who to this very time take care to have our laws observed, and
almost compel these sacrifices to be still offered to God, which have by thy
means been intermitted! Who is there that can avoid groans and lamentations at
the amazing change that is made in this city? since very foreigners and enemies
do now correct that impiety which thou hast occasioned; while thou, who art a
Jew, and wast educated in our laws, art become a greater enemy to them than the
others. But still, John, it is never dishonorable to repent, and amend what hath
been done amiss, even at the last extremity. Thou hast an instance before thee
in Jechoniah, (7) the king of the Jews, if thou
hast a mind to save the city, who, when the king of Babylon made war against
him, did of his own accord go out of this city before it was taken, and did
undergo a voluntary captivity with his family, that the sanctuary might not be
delivered up to the enemy, and that he might not see the house of God set on
fire; on which account he is celebrated among all the Jews, in their sacred
memorials, and his memory is become immortal, and will be conveyed fresh down to
our posterity through all ages. This, John, is an excellent example in such a
time of danger, and I dare venture to promise that the Romans shall still
forgive thee. And take notice that I, who make this exhortation to thee, am one
of thine own nation; I, who am a Jew, do make this promise to thee. And it will
become thee to consider who I am that give thee this counsel, and whence I am
derived; for while I am alive I shall never be in such slavery, as to forego my
own kindred, or forget the laws of our forefathers. Thou hast indignation at me
again, and makest a clamor at me, and reproachest me; indeed I cannot deny but I
am worthy of worse treatment than all this amounts to, because, in opposition to
fate, I make this kind invitation to thee, and endeavor to force deliverance
upon those whom God hath condemned. And who is there that does not know what the
writings of the ancient prophets contain in them, - and particularly that oracle
which is just now going to be fulfilled upon this miserable city? For they
foretold that this city should be then taken when somebody shall begin the
slaughter of his own countrymen. And are not both the city and the entire temple
now full of the dead bodies of your countrymen? It is God, therefore, it is God
himself who is bringing on this fire, to purge that city and temple by means of
the Romans, (8) and is going to pluck up this
city, which is full of your pollutions."
2. As Josephus spoke these words, with groans and tears in his eyes, his
voice was intercepted by sobs. However, the Romans could not but pity the
affliction he was under, and wonder at his conduct. But for John, and those that
were with him, they were but the more exasperated against the Romans on this
account, and were desirous to get Josephus also into their power: yet did that
discourse influence a great many of the better sort; and truly some of them were
so afraid of the guards set by the seditious, that they tarried where they were,
but still were satisfied that both they and the city were doomed to destruction.
Some also there were who, watching a proper opportunity when they might quietly
get away, fled to the Romans, of whom were the high priests Joseph and Jesus,
and of the sons of high priests three, whose father was Ishmael, who was
beheaded in Cyrene, and four sons of Matthias, as also one son of the other
Matthias, who ran away after his father's death, (9)
and whose father was slain by Simon the son of Gioras, with three of his sons,
as I have already related; many also of the other nobility went over to the
Romans, together with the high priests. Now Caesar not only received these men
very kindly in other respects, but, knowing they would not willingly live after
the customs of other nations, he sent them to Gophna, and desired them to remain
there for the present, and told them, that when he was gotten clear of this war,
he would restore each of them to their possessions again; so they cheerfully
retired to that small city which was allotted them, without fear of any danger.
But as they did not appear, the seditious gave out again that these deserters
were slain by the Romans, which was done in order to deter the rest from running
away, by fear of the like treatment. This trick of theirs succeeded now for a
while, as did the like trick before; for the rest were hereby deterred from
deserting, by fear of the like treatment.
3. However, when Titus had recalled those men from Gophna, he gave orders
that they should go round the wall, together with Josephus, and show themselves
to the people; upon which a great many fled to the Romans. These men also got in
a great number together, and stood before the Romans, and besought the
seditious, with groans and tears in their eyes, in the first place to receive
the Romans entirely into the city, and save that their own place of residence
again; but that, if they would not agree to such a proposal, they would at least
depart out of the temple, and save the holy house for their own use; for that
the Romans would not venture to set the sanctuary on fire but under the most
pressing necessity. Yet did the seditious still more and more contradict them;
and while they cast loud and bitter reproaches upon these deserters, they also
set their engines for throwing of darts, and javelins, and stones upon the
sacred gates of the temple, at due distances from one another, insomuch that all
the space round about within the temple might be compared to a burying-ground,
so great was the number of the dead bodies therein; as might the holy house
itself be compared to a citadel. Accordingly, these men rushed upon these holy
places in their armor, that were otherwise unapproachable, and that while their
hands were yet warm with the blood of their own people which they had shed; nay,
they proceeded to such great transgressions, that the very same indignation
which Jews would naturally have against Romans, had they been guilty of such
abuses against them, the Romans now had against Jews, for their impiety in
regard to their own religious customs. Nay, indeed, there were none of the Roman
soldiers who did not look with a sacred horror upon the holy house, and adored
it, and wished that the robbers would repent before their miseries became
incurable.
4. Now Titus was deeply affected with this state of things, and reproached
John and his party, and said to them, "Have not you, vile wretches that you are,
by our permission, put up this partition-wall before your sanctuary? Have not
you been allowed to put up the pillars thereto belonging, at due distances, and
on it to engrave in Greek, and in your own letters, this prohibition, that no
foreigner should go beyond that wall. (10) Have
not we given you leave to kill such as go beyond it, though he were a Roman? And
what do you do now, you pernicious villains? Why do you trample upon dead bodies
in this temple? and why do you pollute this holy house with the blood of both
foreigners and Jews themselves? I appeal to the gods of my own country, and to
every god that ever had any regard to this place; (for I do not suppose it to be
now regarded by any of them;) I also appeal to my own army, and to those Jews
that are now with me, and even to yourselves, that I do not force you to defile
this your sanctuary; and if you will but change the place whereon you will
fight, no Roman shall either come near your sanctuary, or offer any affront to
it; nay, I will endeavor to preserve you your holy house, whether you will or
not." (11)
5. As Josephus explained these things from the mouth of Caesar, both the
robbers and the tyrant thought that these exhortations proceeded from Titus's
fear, and not from his good-will to them, and grew insolent upon it. But when
Titus saw that these men were neither to be moved by commiseration towards
themselves, nor had any concern upon them to have the holy house spared, he
proceeded unwillingly to go on again with the war against them. He could not
indeed bring all his army against them, the place was so narrow; but choosing
thirty soldiers of the most valiant out of every hundred, and committing a
thousand to each tribune, and making Cerealis their commander-in-chief, he gave
orders that they should attack the guards of the temple about the ninth hour of
that night. But as he was now in his armor, and preparing to go down with them,
his friends would not let him go, by reason of the greatness of the danger, and
what the commanders suggested to them; for they said that he would do more by
sitting above in the tower of Antonia, as a dispenser of rewards to those
soldiers that signalized themselves in the fight, than by coming down and
hazarding his own person in the forefront of them; for that they would all fight
stoutly while Caesar looked upon them. With this advice Caesar complied, and
said that the only reason he had for such compliance with the soldiers was this,
that he might be able to judge of their courageous actions, and that no valiant
soldier might lie concealed, and miss of his reward, and no cowardly soldier
might go unpunished; but that he might himself be an eye-witness, and able to
give evidence of all that was done, who was to be the disposer of punishments
and rewards to them. So he sent the soldiers about their work at the hour
forementioned, while he went out himself to a higher place in the tower of
Antonia, whence he might see what was done, and there waited with impatience to
see the event.
6. However, the soldiers that were sent did not find the guards of the temple
asleep, as they hoped to have done; but were obliged to fight with them
immediately hand to hand, as they rushed with violence upon them with a great
shout. Now as soon as the rest within the temple heard that shout of those that
were upon the watch, they ran out in troops upon them. Then did the Romans
receive the onset of those that came first upon them; but those that followed
them fell upon their own troops, and many of them treated their own soldiers as
if they had been enemies; for the great confused noise that was made on both
sides hindered them from distinguishing one another's voices, as did the
darkness of the night hinder them from the like distinction by the sight,
besides that blindness which arose otherwise also from the passion and the fear
they were in at the same time; for which reason it was all one to the soldiers
who it was they struck at. However, this ignorance did less harm to the Romans
than to the Jews, because they were joined together under their shields, and
made their sallies more regularly than the others did, and each of them
remembered their watch-word; while the Jews were perpetually dispersed abroad,
and made their attacks and retreats at random, and so did frequently seem to one
another to be enemies; for every one of them received those of their own men
that came back in the dark as Romans, and made an assault upon them; so that
more of them were wounded by their own men than by the enemy, till, upon the
coming on of the day, the nature of the right was discerned by the eye
afterward. Then did they stand in battle-array in distinct bodies, and cast
their darts regularly, and regularly defended themselves; nor did either side
yield or grow weary. The Romans contended with each other who should fight the
most strenuously, both single men and entire regiments, as being under the eye
of Titus; and every one concluded that this day would begin his promotion if he
fought bravely. What were the great encouragements of the Jews to act vigorously
were, their fear for themselves and for the temple, and the presence of their
tyrant, who exhorted some, and beat and threatened others, to act courageously.
Now, it so happened, that this fight was for the most part a stationary one,
wherein the soldiers went on and came back in a short time, and suddenly; for
there was no long space of ground for either of their flights or pursuits. But
still there was a tumultuous noise among the Romans from the tower of Antonia,
who loudly cried out upon all occasions to their own men to press on
courageously, when they were too hard for the Jews, and to stay when they were
retiring backward; so that here was a kind of theater of war; for what was done
in this fight could not be concealed either from Titus, or from those that were
about him. At length it appeared that this fight, which began at the ninth hour
of the night, was not over till past the fifth hour of the day; and that, in the
same place where the battle began, neither party could say they had made the
other to retire; but both the armies left the victory almost in uncertainty
between them; wherein those that signalized themselves on the Roman side were a
great many, but on the Jewish side, and of those that were with Simon, Judas the
son of Merto, and Simon the son of Josas; of the Idumeans, James and Simon, the
latter of whom was the son of Cathlas, and James was the son of Sosas; of those
that were with John, Gyphtheus and Alexas; and of the zealots, Simon the son of
Jairus.
7. In the mean time, the rest of the Roman army had, in seven days' time,
overthrown [some] foundations of the tower of Antonia, and had made a ready and
broad way to the temple. Then did the legions come near the first court,
(12) and began to raise their banks. The one
bank was over against the north-west corner of the inner temple
(13) another was at that northern edifice which
was between the two gates; and of the other two, one was at the western cloister
of the outer court of the temple; the other against its northern cloister.
However, these works were thus far advanced by the Romans, not without great
pains and difficulty, and particularly by being obliged to bring their materials
from the distance of a hundred furlongs. They had further difficulties also upon
them; sometimes by their over-great security they were in that they should
overcome the Jewish snares laid for them, and by that boldness of the Jews which
their despair of escaping had inspired them withal; for some of their horsemen,
when they went out to gather wood or hay, let their horses feed without having
their bridles on during the time of foraging; upon which horses the Jews sallied
out in whole bodies, and seized them. And when this was continually done, and
Caesar believed what the truth was, that the horses were stolen more by the
negligence of his own men than by the valor of the Jews, he determined to use
greater severity to oblige the rest to take care of their horses; so he
commanded that one of those soldiers who had lost their horses should be
capitally punished; whereby he so terrified the rest, that they preserved their
horses for the time to come; for they did not any longer let them go from them
to feed by themselves, but, as if they had grown to them, they went always along
with them when they wanted necessaries. Thus did the Romans still continue to
make war against the temple, and to raise their banks against it.
8. Now after one day had been interposed since the Romans ascended the
breach, many of the seditious were so pressed by the famine, upon the present
failure of their ravages, that they got together, and made an attack on those
Roman guards that were upon the Mount of Olives, and this about the eleventh
hour of the day, as supposing, first, that they would not expect such an onset,
and, in the next place, that they were then taking care of their bodies, and
that therefore they should easily beat them. But the Romans were apprized of
their coming to attack them beforehand, and, running together from the
neighboring camps on the sudden, prevented them from getting over their
fortification, or forcing the wall that was built about them. Upon this came on
a sharp fight, and here many great actions were performed on both sides; while
the Romans showed both their courage and their skill in war, as did the Jews
come on them with immoderate violence and intolerable passion. The one part were
urged on by shame, and the other by necessity; for it seemed a very shameful
thing to the Romans to let the Jews go, now they were taken in a kind of net;
while the Jews had but one hope of saving themselves, and that was in case they
could by violence break through the Roman wall; and one whose name was Pedanius,
belonging to a party of horsemen, when the Jews were already beaten and forced
down into the valley together, spurred his horse on their flank with great
vehemence, and caught up a certain young man belonging to the enemy by his
ankle, as he was running away; the man was, however, of a robust body, and in
his armor; so low did Pedanius bend himself downward from his horse, even as he
was galloping away, and so great was the strength of his right hand, and of the
rest of his body, as also such skill had he in horsemanship. So this man seized
upon that his prey, as upon a precious treasure, and carried him as his captive
to Caesar; whereupon Titus admired the man that had seized the other for his
great strength, and ordered the man that was caught to be punished [with death]
for his attempt against the Roman wall, but betook himself to the siege of the
temple, and to pressing on the raising of the banks.
9. In the mean time, the Jews were so distressed by the fights they had been
in, as the war advanced higher and higher, and creeping up to the holy house
itself, that they, as it were, cut off those limbs of their body which were
infected, in order to prevent the distemper's spreading further; for they set
the north-west cloister, which was joined to the tower of Antonia, on fire, and
after that brake off about twenty cubits of that cloister, and thereby made a
beginning in burning the sanctuary; two days after which, or on the
twenty-fourth day of the forenamed month, [Panemus or Tamuz,] the Romans set
fire to the cloister that joined to the other, when the fire went fifteen cubits
farther. The Jews, in like manner, cut off its roof; nor did they entirely leave
off what they were about till the tower of Antonia was parted from the temple,
even when it was in their power to have stopped the fire; nay, they lay still
while the temple was first set on fire, and deemed this spreading of the fire to
be for their own advantage. However, the armies were still fighting one against
another about the temple, and the war was managed by continual sallies of
particular parties against one another.
10. Now there was at this time a man among the Jews, low of stature he was,
and of a despicable appearance; of no character either as to his family, or in
other respects: his flame was Jonathan. He went out at the high priest John's
monument, and uttered many other insolent things to the Romans, a challenged the
best of them all to a single combat.But many of those that stood there in the
army huffed him, and many of them (as they might well be) were afraid of him.
Some of them also reasoned thus, and that justly enough: that it was not fit to
fight with a man that desired to die, because those that utterly despaired of
deliverance had, besides other passions, a violence in attacking men that could
not be opposed, and had no regard to God himself; and that to hazard oneself
with a person, whom, if you overcome, you do no great matter, and by whom it is
hazardous that you may be taken prisoner, would be an instance, not of manly
courage, but of unmanly rashness. So there being nobody that came out to accept
the man's challenge, and the Jew cutting them with a great number of reproaches,
as cowards, (for he was a very haughty man in himself, and a great despiser of
the Romans,) one whose name was Pudens, of the body of horsemen, out of his
abomination of the other's words, and of his impudence withal, and perhaps out
of an inconsiderate arrogance, on account of the other's lowness of stature, ran
out to him, and was too hard for him in other respects, but was betrayed by his
ill fortune; for he fell down, and as he was down, Jonathan came running to him,
and cut his throat, and then, standing upon his dead body, he brandished his
sword, bloody as it was, and shook his shield with his left hand, and made many
acclamations to the Roman army, and exulted over the dead man, and jested upon
the Romans; till at length one Priscus, a centurion, shot a dart at him as he
was leaping and playing the fool with himself, and thereby pierced him through;
upon which a shout was set up both by the Jews and the Romans, though on
different accounts. So Jonathan grew giddy by the pain of his wounds, and fell
down upon the body of his adversary, as a plain instance how suddenly vengeance
may come upon men that have success in war, without any just deserving the same.
CHAPTER 3.
CONCERNING A STRATAGEM THAT WAS DEVISED BY THE JEWS, BY WHICH THEY BURNT
MANY OF THE ROMANS; WITH ANOTHER DESCRIPTION OF THE TERRIBLE FAMINE THAT WAS IN
THE CITY.
1. BUT now the seditious that were in the temple did every day openly
endeavor to beat off the soldiers that were upon the banks, and on the
twenty-seventh day of the forenamed month [Panemus or Tamuz] contrived such a
stratagem as this: They filled that part of the western cloister
(14) which was between the beams, and the roof
under them, with dry materials, as also with bitumen and pitch, and then retired
from that place, as though they were tired with the pains they had taken; at
which procedure of theirs, many of the most inconsiderate among the Romans, who
were carried away with violent passions, followed hard after them as they were
retiring, and applied ladders to the cloister, and got up to it suddenly; but
the prudent part of them, when they understood this unaccountable retreat of the
Jews, stood still where they were before. However, the cloister was full of
those that were gone up the ladders; at which time the Jews set it all on fire;
and as the flame burst out every where on the sudden, the Romans that were out
of the danger were seized with a very great consternation, as were those that
were in the midst of the danger in the utmost distress. So when they perceived
themselves surrounded with the flames, some of them threw themselves down
backwards into the city, and some among their enemies [in the temple]; as did
many leap down to their own men, and broke their limbs to pieces; but a great
number of those that were going to take these violent methods were prevented by
the fire; though some prevented the fire by their own swords. However, the fire
was on the sudden carried so far as to surround those who would have otherwise
perished. As for Caesar himself, he could not, however, but commiserate those
that thus perished, although they got up thither without any order for so doing,
since there was no way of giving the many relief. Yet was this some comfort to
those that were destroyed, that every body might see that person grieve, for
whose sake they came to their end; for he cried out openly to them, and leaped
up, and exhorted those that were about him to do their utmost to relieve them;
So every one of them died cheerfully, as carrying along with him these words and
this intention of Caesar as a sepulchral monument. Some there were indeed who
retired into the wall of the cloister, which was broad, and were preserved out
of the fire, but were then surrounded by the Jews; and although they made
resistance against the Jews for a long time, yet were they wounded by them, and
at length they all fell down dead.
2. At the last a young man among them, whose name was Longus, became a
decoration to this sad affair, and while every one of them that perished were
worthy of a memorial, this man appeared to deserve it beyond all the rest. Now
the Jews admired this man for his courage, and were further desirous of having
him slain; so they persuaded him to come down to them, upon security given him
for his life. But Cornelius his brother persuaded him on the contrary, not to
tarnish his own glory, nor that of the Roman army. He complied with this last
advice, and lifting up his sword before both armies, he slew himself. Yet there
was one Artorius among those surrounded by the fire who escaped by his subtlety;
for when he had with a loud voice called to him Lucius, one of his fellow
soldiers that lay with him in the same tent, and said to him, "I do leave thee
heir of all I have, if thou wilt come and receive me." Upon this he came running
to receive him readily; Artorius then threw himself down upon him, and saved his
own life, while he that received him was dashed so vehemently against the stone
pavement by the other's weight, that he died immediately. This melancholy
accident made the Romans sad for a while, but still it made them more upon their
guard for the future, and was of advantage to them against the delusions of the
Jews, by which they were greatly damaged through their unacquaintedness with the
places, and with the nature of the inhabitants. Now this cloister was burnt down
as far as John's tower, which he built in the war he made against Simon over the
gates that led to the Xystus. The Jews also cut off the rest of that cloister
from the temple, after they had destroyed those that got up to it. But the next
day the Romans burnt down the northern cloister entirely, as far as the east
cloister, whose common angle joined to the valley that was called Cedron, and
was built over it; on which account the depth was frightful. And this was the
state of the temple at that time.
3. Now of those that perished by famine in the city, the number was
prodigious, and the miseries they underwent were unspeakable; for if so much as
the shadow of any kind of food did any where appear, a war was commenced
presently, and the dearest friends fell a fighting one with another about it,
snatching from each other the most miserable supports of life. Nor would men
believe that those who were dying had no food, but the robbers would search them
when they were expiring, lest any one should have concealed food in their
bosoms, and counterfeited dying; nay, these robbers gaped for want, and ran
about stumbling and staggering along like mad dogs, and reeling against the
doors of the houses like drunken men; they would also, in the great distress
they were in, rush into the very same houses two or three times in one and the
same day. Moreover, their hunger was so intolerable, that it obliged them to
chew every thing, while they gathered such things as the most sordid animals
would not touch, and endured to eat them; nor did they at length abstain from
girdles and shoes; and the very leather which belonged to their shields they
pulled off and gnawed: the very wisps of old hay became food to some; and some
gathered up fibres, and sold a very small weight of them for four Attic
[drachmae]. But why do I describe the shameless impudence that the famine
brought on men in their eating inanimate things, while I am going to relate a
matter of fact, the like to which no history relates,
(15) either among the Greeks or Barbarians? It
is horrible to speak of it, and incredible when heard. I had indeed willingly
omitted this calamity of ours, that I might not seem to deliver what is so
portentous to posterity, but that I have innumerable witnesses to it in my own
age; and besides, my country would have had little reason to thank me for
suppressing the miseries that she underwent at this time.
4. There was a certain woman that dwelt beyond Jordan, her name was Mary; her
father was Eleazar, of the village Bethezob, which signifies the house of
Hyssop. She was eminent for her family and her wealth, and had fled away to
Jerusalem with the rest of the multitude, and was with them besieged therein at
this time. The other effects of this woman had been already seized upon, such I
mean as she had brought with her out of Perea, and removed to the city. What she
had treasured up besides, as also what food she had contrived to save, had been
also carried off by the rapacious guards, who came every day running into her
house for that purpose. This put the poor woman into a very great passion, and
by the frequent reproaches and imprecations she east at these rapacious
villains, she had provoked them to anger against her; but none of them, either
out of the indignation she had raised against herself, or out of commiseration
of her case, would take away her life; and if she found any food, she perceived
her labors were for others, and not for herself; and it was now become
impossible for her any way to find any more food, while the famine pierced
through her very bowels and marrow, when also her passion was fired to a degree
beyond the famine itself; nor did she consult with any thing but with her
passion and the necessity she was in. She then attempted a most unnatural thing;
and snatching up her son, who was a child sucking at her breast, she said, "O
thou miserable infant! for whom shall I preserve thee in this war, this famine,
and this sedition? As to the war with the Romans, if they preserve our lives, we
must be slaves. This famine also will destroy us, even before that slavery comes
upon us. Yet are these seditious rogues more terrible than both the other. Come
on; be thou my food, and be thou a fury to these seditious varlets, and a
by-word to the world, which is all that is now wanting to complete the
calamities of us Jews." As soon as she had said this, she slew her son, and then
roasted him, and eat the one half of him, and kept the other half by her
concealed. Upon this the seditious came in presently, and smelling the horrid
scent of this food, they threatened her that they would cut her throat
immediately if she did not show them what food she had gotten ready. She replied
that she had saved a very fine portion of it for them, and withal uncovered what
was left of her son. Hereupon they were seized with a horror and amazement of
mind, and stood astonished at the sight, when she said to them, "This is mine
own son, and what hath been done was mine own doing! Come, eat of this food; for
I have eaten of it myself! Do not you pretend to be either more tender than a
woman, or more compassionate than a mother; but if you be so scrupulous, and do
abominate this my sacrifice, as I have eaten the one half, let the rest be
reserved for me also." After which those men went out trembling, being never so
much aftrighted at any thing as they were at this, and with some difficulty they
left the rest of that meat to the mother. Upon which the whole city was full of
this horrid action immediately; and while every body laid this miserable case
before their own eyes, they trembled, as if this unheard of action had been done
by themselves. So those that were thus distressed by the famine were very
desirous to die, and those already dead were esteemed happy, because they had
not lived long enough either to hear or to see such miseries.
5. This sad instance was quickly told to the Romans, some of whom could not
believe it, and others pitied the distress which the Jews were under; but there
were many of them who were hereby induced to a more bitter hatred than ordinary
against our nation. But for Caesar, he excused himself before God as to this
matter, and said that he had proposed peace and liberty to the Jews, as well as
an oblivion of all their former insolent practices; but that they, instead of
concord, had chosen sedition; instead of peace, war; and before satiety and
abundance, a famine. That they had begun with their own hands to burn down that
temple which we have preserved hitherto; and that therefore they deserved to eat
such food as this was. That, however, this horrid action of eating an own child
ought to be covered with the overthrow of their very country itself, and men
ought not to leave such a city upon the habitable earth to be seen by the sun,
wherein mothers are thus fed, although such food be fitter for the fathers than
for the mothers to eat of, since it is they that continue still in a state of
war against us, after they have undergone such miseries as these. And at the
same time that he said this, he reflected on the desperate condition these men
must be in; nor could he expect that such men could be recovered to sobriety of
mind, after they had endured those very sufferings, for the avoiding whereof it
only was probable they might have repented.
CHAPTER 4.
WHEN THE BANKS WERE COMPLETED AND THE BATTERING RAMS BROUGHT, AND COULD DO
NOTHING, TITUS GAVE ORDERS TO SET FIRE TO THE GATES OF THE TEMPLE; IN NO LONG
TIME AFTER WHICH THE HOLY HOUSE ITSELF WAS BURNT DOWN, EVEN AGAINST HIS CONSENT.
1. AND now two of the legions had completed their banks on the eighth day of
the month Lous [Ab]. Whereupon Titus gave orders that the battering rams should
be brought, and set over against the western edifice of the inner temple; for
before these were brought, the firmest of all the other engines had battered the
wall for six days together without ceasing, without making any impression upon
it; but the vast largeness and strong connexion of the stones were superior to
that engine, and to the other battering rams also. Other Romans did indeed
undermine the foundations of the northern gate, and after a world of pains
removed the outermost stones, yet was the gate still upheld by the inner stones,
and stood still unhurt; till the workmen, despairing of all such attempts by
engines and crows, brought their ladders to the cloisters. Now the Jews did not
interrupt them in so doing; but when they were gotten up, they fell upon them,
and fought with them; some of them they thrust down, and threw them backwards
headlong; others of them they met and slew; they also beat many of those that
went down the ladders again, and slew them with their swords before they could
bring their shields to protect them; nay, some of the ladders they threw down
from above when they were full of armed men; a great slaughter was made of the
Jews also at the same time, while those that bare the ensigns fought hard for
them, as deeming it a terrible thing, and what would tend to their great shame,
if they permitted them to be stolen away. Yet did the Jews at length get
possession of these engines, and destroyed those that had gone up the ladders,
while the rest were so intimidated by what those suffered who were slain, that
they retired; although none of the Romans died without having done good service
before his death. Of the seditious, those that had fought bravely in the former
battles did the like now, as besides them did Eleazar, the brother's son of
Simon the tyrant. But when Titus perceived that his endeavors to spare a foreign
temple turned to the damage of his soldiers, and then be killed, he gave order
to set the gates on fire.
2. In the mean time, there deserted to him Ananus, who came from Emmaus, the
most bloody of all Simon's guards, and Archelaus, the son of Magadatus, they
hoping to be still forgiven, because they left the Jews at a time when they were
the conquerors. Titus objected this to these men, as a cunning trick of theirs;
and as he had been informed of their other barbarities towards the Jews, he was
going in all haste to have them both slain. He told them that they were only
driven to this desertion because of the utmost distress they were in, and did
not come away of their own good disposition; and that those did not deserve to
be preserved, by whom their own city was already set on fire, out of which fire
they now hurried themselves away. However, the security he had promised
deserters overcame his resentments, and he dismissed them accordingly, though he
did not give them the same privileges that he had afforded to others. And now
the soldiers had already put fire to the gates, and the silver that was over
them quickly carried the flames to the wood that was within it, whence it spread
itself all on the sudden, and caught hold on the cloisters. Upon the Jews seeing
this fire all about them, their spirits sunk together with their bodies, and
they were under such astonishment, that not one of them made any haste, either
to defend himself or to quench the fire, but they stood as mute spectators of it
only. However, they did not so grieve at the loss of what was now burning, as to
grow wiser thereby for the time to come; but as though the holy house itself had
been on fire already, they whetted their passions against the Romans. This fire
prevailed during that day and the next also; for the soldiers were not able to
burn all the cloisters that were round about together at one time, but only by
pieces.
3. But then, on the next day, Titus commanded part of his army to quench the
fire, and to make a road for the more easy marching up of the legions, while he
himself gathered the commanders together. Of those there were assembled the six
principal persons: Tiberius Alexander, the commander [under the general] of the
whole army; with Sextus Cerealis, the commander of the fifth legion; and Larcius
Lepidus, the commander of the tenth legion; and Titus Frigius, the commander of
the fifteenth legion: there was also with them Eternius, the leader of the two
legions that came from Alexandria; and Marcus Antonius Julianus, procurator of
Judea: after these came together all the rest of the procurators and tribunes.
Titus proposed to these that they should give him their advice what should be
done about the holy house. Now some of these thought it would be the best way to
act according to the rules of war, [and demolish it,] because the Jews would
never leave off rebelling while that house was standing; at which house it was
that they used to get all together. Others of them were of opinion, that in case
the Jews would leave it, and none of them would lay their arms up in it, he
might save it; but that in case they got upon it, and fought any more, he might
burn it; because it must then be looked upon not as a holy house, but as a
citadel; and that the impiety of burning it would then belong to those that
forced this to be done, and not to them. But Titus said, that "although the Jews
should get upon that holy house, and fight us thence, yet ought we not to
revenge ourselves on things that are inanimate, instead of the men themselves;"
and that he was not in any case for burning down so vast a work as that was,
because this would be a mischief to the Romans themselves, as it would be an
ornament to their government while it continued. So Fronto, and Alexander, and
Cerealis grew bold upon that declaration, and agreed to the opinion of Titus.
Then was this assembly dissolved, when Titus had given orders to the commanders
that the rest of their forces should lie still; but that they should make use of
such as were most courageous in this attack. So he commanded that the chosen men
that were taken out of the cohorts should make their way through the ruins, and
quench the fire.
4. Now it is true that on this day the Jews were so weary, and under such
consternation, that they refrained from any attacks. But on the next day they
gathered their whole force together, and ran upon those that guarded the outward
court of the temple very boldly, through the east gate, and this about the
second hour of the day. These guards received that their attack with great
bravery, and by covering themselves with their shields before, as if it were
with a wall, they drew their squadron close together; yet was it evident that
they could not abide there very long, but would be overborne by the multitude of
those that sallied out upon them, and by the heat of their passion. However,
Caesar seeing, from the tower of Antonia, that this squadron was likely to give
way, he sent some chosen horsemen to support them. Hereupon the Jews found
themselves not able to sustain their onset, and upon the slaughter of those in
the forefront, many of the rest were put to flight. But as the Romans were going
off, the Jews turned upon them, and fought them; and as those Romans came back
upon them, they retreated again, until about the fifth hour of the day they were
overborne, and shut themselves up in the inner [court of the] temple.
5. So Titus retired into the tower of Antonia, and resolved to storm the
temple the next day, early in the morning, with his whole army, and to encamp
round about the holy house. But as for that house, God had, for certain, long
ago doomed it to the fire; and now that fatal day was come, according to the
revolution of ages; it was the tenth day of the month Lous, [Ab,] upon which it
was formerly burnt by the king of Babylon; although these flames took their rise
from the Jews themselves, and were occasioned by them; for upon Titus's
retiring, the seditious lay still for a little while, and then attacked the
Romans again, when those that guarded the holy house fought with those that
quenched the fire that was burning the inner [court of the] temple; but these
Romans put the Jews to flight, and proceeded as far as the holy house itself. At
which time one of the soldiers, without staying for any orders, and without any
concern or dread upon him at so great an undertaking, and being hurried on by a
certain divine fury, snatched somewhat out of the materials that were on fire,
and being lifted up by another soldier, he set fire to a golden window, through
which there was a passage to the rooms that were round about the holy house, on
the north side of it. As the flames went upward, the Jews made a great clamor,
such as so mighty an affliction required, and ran together to prevent it; and
now they spared not their lives any longer, nor suffered any thing to restrain
their force, since that holy house was perishing, for whose sake it was that
they kept such a guard about it.
6. And now a certain person came running to Titus, and told him of this fire,
as he was resting himself in his tent after the last battle; whereupon he rose
up in great haste, and, as he was, ran to the holy house, in order to have a
stop put to the fire; after him followed all his commanders, and after them
followed the several legions, in great astonishment; so there was a great clamor
and tumult raised, as was natural upon the disorderly motion of so great an
army. Then did Caesar, both by calling to the soldiers that were fighting, with
a loud voice, and by giving a signal to them with his right hand, order them to
quench the fire. But they did not hear what he said, though he spake so loud,
having their ears already dimmed by a greater noise another way; nor did they
attend to the signal he made with his hand neither, as still some of them were
distracted with fighting, and others with passion. But as for the legions that
came running thither, neither any persuasions nor any threatenings could
restrain their violence, but each one's own passion was his commander at this
time; and as they were crowding into the temple together, many of them were
trampled on by one another, while a great number fell among the ruins of the
cloisters, which were still hot and smoking, and were destroyed in the same
miserable way with those whom they had conquered; and when they were come near
the holy house, they made as if they did not so much as hear Caesar's orders to
the contrary; but they encouraged those that were before them to set it on fire.
As for the seditious, they were in too great distress already to afford their
assistance [towards quenching the fire]; they were every where slain, and every
where beaten; and as for a great part of the people, they were weak and without
arms, and had their throats cut wherever they were caught. Now round about the
altar lay dead bodies heaped one upon another, as at the steps
(16) going up to it ran a great quantity of
their blood, whither also the dead bodies that were slain above [on the altar]
fell down.
7. And now, since Caesar was no way able to restrain the enthusiastic fury of
the soldiers, and the fire proceeded on more and more, he went into the holy
place of the temple, with his commanders, and saw it, with what was in it, which
he found to be far superior to what the relations of foreigners contained, and
not inferior to what we ourselves boasted of and believed about it. But as the
flame had not as yet reached to its inward parts, but was still consuming the
rooms that were about the holy house, and Titus supposing what the fact was,
that the house itself might yet he saved, he came in haste and endeavored to
persuade the soldiers to quench the fire, and gave order to Liberalius the
centurion, and one of those spearmen that were about him, to beat the soldiers
that were refractory with their staves, and to restrain them; yet were their
passions too hard for the regards they had for Caesar, and the dread they had of
him who forbade them, as was their hatred of the Jews, and a certain vehement
inclination to fight them, too hard for them also. Moreover, the hope of plunder
induced many to go on, as having this opinion, that all the places within were
full of money, and as seeing that all round about it was made of gold. And
besides, one of those that went into the place prevented Caesar, when he ran so
hastily out to restrain the soldiers, and threw the fire upon the hinges of the
gate, in the dark; whereby the flame burst out from within the holy house itself
immediately, when the commanders retired, and Caesar with them, and when nobody
any longer forbade those that were without to set fire to it. And thus was the
holy house burnt down, without Caesar's approbation.
8. Now although any one would justly lament the destruction of such a work as
this was, since it was the most admirable of all the works that we have seen or
heard of, both for its curious structure and its magnitude, and also for the
vast wealth bestowed upon it, as well as for the glorious reputation it had for
its holiness; yet might such a one comfort himself with this thought, that it
was fate that decreed it so to be, which is inevitable, both as to living
creatures, and as to works and places also. However, one cannot but wonder at
the accuracy of this period thereto relating; for the same month and day were
now observed, as I said before, wherein the holy house was burnt formerly by the
Babylonians. Now the number of years that passed from its first foundation,
which was laid by king Solomon, till this its destruction, which happened in the
second year of the reign of Vespasian, are collected to be one thousand one
hundred and thirty, besides seven months and fifteen days; and from the second
building of it, which was done by Haggai, in the second year of Cyrus the king,
till its destruction under Vespasian, there were six hundred and thirty-nine
years and forty-five days.
CHAPTER 5.
THE GREAT DISTRESS THE JEWS WERE IN UPON THE CONFLAGRATION OF THE HOLY
HOUSE. CONCERNING A FALSE PROPHET, AND THE SIGNS THAT PRECEDED THIS DESTRUCTION.
1. WHILE the holy house was on fire, every thing was plundered that came to
hand, and ten thousand of those that were caught were slain; nor was there a
commiseration of any age, or any reverence of gravity, but children, and old
men, and profane persons, and priests were all slain in the same manner; so that
this war went round all sorts of men, and brought them to destruction, and as
well those that made supplication for their lives, as those that defended
themselves by fighting. The flame was also carried a long way, and made an echo,
together with the groans of those that were slain; and because this hill was
high, and the works at the temple were very great, one would have thought the
whole city had been on fire. Nor can one imagine any thing either greater or
more terrible than this noise; for there was at once a shout of the Roman
legions, who were marching all together, and a sad clamor of the seditious, who
were now surrounded with fire and sword. The people also that were left above
were beaten back upon the enemy, and under a great consternation, and made sad
moans at the calamity they were under; the multitude also that was in the city
joined in this outcry with those that were upon the hill. And besides, many of
those that were worn away by the famine, and their mouths almost closed, when
they saw the fire of the holy house, they exerted their utmost strength, and
brake out into groans and outcries again: Pera (17)
did also return the echo, as well as the mountains round about [the city,] and
augmented the force of the entire noise. Yet was the misery itself more terrible
than this disorder; for one would have thought that the hill itself, on which
the temple stood, was seething hot, as full of fire on every part of it, that
the blood was larger in quantity than the fire, and those that were slain more
in number than those that slew them; for the ground did no where appear visible,
for the dead bodies that lay on it; but the soldiers went over heaps of those
bodies, as they ran upon such as fled from them. And now it was that the
multitude of the robbers were thrust out [of the inner court of the temple by
the Romans,] and had much ado to get into the outward court, and from thence
into the city, while the remainder of the populace fled into the cloister of
that outer court. As for the priests, some of them plucked up from the holy
house the spikes (18) that were upon it, with
their bases, which were made of lead, and shot them at the Romans instead of
darts. But then as they gained nothing by so doing, and as the fire burst out
upon them, they retired to the wall that was eight cubits broad, and there they
tarried; yet did two of these of eminence among them, who might have saved
themselves by going over to the Romans, or have borne up with courage, and taken
their fortune with the others, throw themselves into the fire, and were burnt
together with the holy house; their names were Meirus the son of Belgas, and
Joseph the son of Daleus.
2. And now the Romans, judging that it was in vain to spare what was round
about the holy house, burnt all those places, as also the remains of the
cloisters and the gates, two excepted; the one on the east side, and the other
on the south; both which, however, they burnt afterward. They also burnt down
the treasury chambers, in which was an immense quantity of money, and an immense
number of garments, and other precious goods there reposited; and, to speak all
in a few words, there it was that the entire riches of the Jews were heaped up
together, while the rich people had there built themselves chambers [to contain
such furniture]. The soldiers also came to the rest of the cloisters that were
in the outer [court of the] temple, whither the women and children, and a great
mixed multitude of the people, fled, in number about six thousand. But before
Caesar had determined any thing about these people, or given the commanders any
orders relating to them, the soldiers were in such a rage, that they set that
cloister on fire; by which means it came to pass that some of these were
destroyed by throwing themselves down headlong, and some were burnt in the
cloisters themselves. Nor did any one of them escape with his life. A false
prophet (19) was the occasion of these people's
destruction, who had made a public proclamation in the city that very day, that
God commanded them to get upon the temple, and that there they should receive
miraculous signs of their deliverance. Now there was then a great number of
false prophets suborned by the tyrants to impose on the people, who denounced
this to them, that they should wait for deliverance from God; and this was in
order to keep them from deserting, and that they might be buoyed up above fear
and care by such hopes. Now a man that is in adversity does easily comply with
such promises; for when such a seducer makes him believe that he shall be
delivered from those miseries which oppress him, then it is that the patient is
full of hopes of such his deliverance.
3. Thus were the miserable people persuaded by these deceivers, and such as
belied God himself; while they did not attend nor give credit to the signs that
were so evident, and did so plainly foretell their future desolation, but, like
men infatuated, without either eyes to see or minds to consider, did not regard
the denunciations that God made to them. Thus there was a star
(20) resembling a sword, which stood over the
city, and a comet, that continued a whole year. Thus also before the Jews'
rebellion, and before those commotions which preceded the war, when the people
were come in great crowds to the feast of unleavened bread, on the eighth day of
the month Xanthicus, (21) [Nisan,] and at the
ninth hour of the night, so great a light shone round the altar and the holy
house, that it appeared to be bright day time; which lasted for half an hour.
This light seemed to be a good sign to the unskillful, but was so interpreted by
the sacred scribes, as to portend those events that followed immediately upon
it. At the same festival also, a heifer, as she was led by the high priest to be
sacrificed, brought forth a lamb in the midst of the temple. Moreover, the
eastern gate of the inner (22) [court of the]
temple, which was of brass, and vastly heavy, and had been with difficulty shut
by twenty men, and rested upon a basis armed with iron, and had bolts fastened
very deep into the firm floor, which was there made of one entire stone, was
seen to be opened of its own accord about the sixth hour of the night. Now those
that kept watch in the temple came hereupon running to the captain of the
temple, and told him of it; who then came up thither, and not without great
difficulty was able to shut the gate again. This also appeared to the vulgar to
be a very happy prodigy, as if God did thereby open them the gate of happiness.
But the men of learning understood it, that the security of their holy house was
dissolved of its own accord, and that the gate was opened for the advantage of
their enemies. So these publicly declared that the signal foreshowed the
desolation that was coming upon them. Besides these, a few days after that
feast, on the one and twentieth day of the month Artemisius, [Jyar,] a certain
prodigious and incredible phenomenon appeared: I suppose the account of it would
seem to be a fable, were it not related by those that saw it, and were not the
events that followed it of so considerable a nature as to deserve such signals;
for, before sun-setting, chariots and troops of soldiers in their armor were
seen running about among the clouds, and surrounding of cities. Moreover, at
that feast which we call Pentecost, as the priests were going by night into the
inner [court of the temple,] as their custom was, to perform their sacred
ministrations, they said that, in the first place, they felt a quaking, and
heard a great noise, and after that they heard a sound as of a great multitude,
saying, "Let us remove hence." But, what is still more terrible, there was one
Jesus, the son of Ananus, a plebeian and a husbandman, who, four years before
the war began, and at a time when the city was in very great peace and
prosperity, came to that feast whereon it is our custom for every one to make
tabernacles to God in the temple, (23) began on
a sudden to cry aloud, "A voice from the east, a voice from the west, a voice
from the four winds, a voice against Jerusalem and the holy house, a voice
against the bridegrooms and the brides, and a voice against this whole people!"
This was his cry, as he went about by day and by night, in all the lanes of the
city. However, certain of the most eminent among the populace had great
indignation at this dire cry of his, and took up the man, and gave him a great
number of severe stripes; yet did not he either say any thing for himself, or
any thing peculiar to those that chastised him, but still went on with the same
words which he cried before. Hereupon our rulers, supposing, as the case proved
to be, that this was a sort of divine fury in the man, brought him to the Roman
procurator, where he was whipped till his bones were laid bare; yet he did not
make any supplication for himself, nor shed any tears, but turning his voice to
the most lamentable tone possible, at every stroke of the whip his answer was,
"Woe, woe to Jerusalem!" And when Albinus (for he was then our procurator) asked
him, Who he was? and whence he came? and why he uttered such words? he made no
manner of reply to what he said, but still did not leave off his melancholy
ditty, till Albinus took him to be a madman, and dismissed him. Now, during all
the time that passed before the war began, this man did not go near any of the
citizens, nor was seen by them while he said so; but he every day uttered these
lamentable words, as if it were his premeditated vow, "Woe, woe to Jerusalem!"
Nor did he give ill words to any of those that beat him every day, nor good
words to those that gave him food; but this was his reply to all men, and indeed
no other than a melancholy presage of what was to come. This cry of his was the
loudest at the festivals; and he continued this ditty for seven years and five
months, without growing hoarse, or being tired therewith, until the very time
that he saw his presage in earnest fulfilled in our siege, when it ceased; for
as he was going round upon the wall, he cried out with his utmost force, "Woe,
woe to the city again, and to the people, and to the holy house!" And just as he
added at the last, "Woe, woe to myself also!" there came a stone out of one of
the engines, and smote him, and killed him immediately; and as he was uttering
the very same presages he gave up the ghost.
4. Now if any one consider these things, he will find that God takes care of
mankind, and by all ways possible foreshows to our race what is for their
preservation; but that men perish by those miseries which they madly and
voluntarily bring upon themselves; for the Jews, by demolishing the tower of
Antonia, had made their temple four-square, while at the same time they had it
written in their sacred oracles, "That then should their city be taken, as well
as their holy house, when once their temple should become four-square." But now,
what did the most elevate them in undertaking this war, was an ambiguous oracle
that was also found in their sacred writings, how," about that time, one from
their country should become governor of the habitable earth." The Jews took this
prediction to belong to themselves in particular, and many of the wise men were
thereby deceived in their determination. Now this oracle certainly denoted the
government of Vespasian, who was appointed emperor in Judea. However, it is not
possible for men to avoid fate, although they see it beforehand. But these men
interpreted some of these signals according to their own pleasure, and some of
them they utterly despised, until their madness was demonstrated, both by the
taking of their city and their own destruction.
CHAPTER 6.
HOW THE ROMANS CARRIED THEIR ENSIGNS TO THE TEMPLE, AND MADE JOYFUL
ACCLAMATIONS TO TITUS. THE SPEECH THAT TITUS MADE TO THE JEWS WHEN THEY MADE
SUPPLICATION FOR MERCY. WHAT REPLY THEY MADE THERETO; AND HOW THAT REPLY MOVED
TITUS'S INDIGNATION AGAINST THEM.
1. AND now the Romans, upon the flight of the seditious into the city, and
upon the burning of the holy house itself, and of all the buildings round about
it, brought their ensigns to the temple (24)
and set them over against its eastern gate; and there did they offer sacrifices
to them, and there did they make Titus imperator
(25) with the greatest acclamations of joy. And now all the soldiers had
such vast quantities of the spoils which they had gotten by plunder, that in
Syria a pound weight of gold was sold for half its former value. But as for
those priests that kept themselves still upon the wall of the holy house,
(26) there was a boy that, out of the thirst he
was in, desired some of the Roman guards to give him their right hands as a
security for his life, and confessed he was very thirsty. These guards
commiserated his age, and the distress he was in, and gave him their right hands
accordingly. So he came down himself, and drank some water, and filled the
vessel he had with him when he came to them with water, and then went off, and
fled away to his own friends; nor could any of those guards overtake him; but
still they reproached him for his perfidiousness. To which he made this answer:
"I have not broken the agreement; for the security I had given me was not in
order to my staying with you, but only in order to my coming down safely, and
taking up some water; both which things I have performed, and thereupon think
myself to have been faithful to my engagement." Hereupon those whom the child
had imposed upon admired at his cunning, and that on account of his age. On the
fifth day afterward, the priests that were pined with the famine came down, and
when they were brought to Titus by the guards, they begged for their lives; but
he replied, that the time of pardon was over as to them, and that this very holy
house, on whose account only they could justly hope to be preserved, was
destroyed; and that it was agreeable to their office that priests should perish
with the house itself to which they belonged. So he ordered them to be put to
death.
2. But as for the tyrants themselves, and those that were with them, when
they found that they were encompassed on every side, and, as it were, walled
round, without any method of escaping, they desired to treat with Titus by word
of mouth. Accordingly, such was the kindness of his nature, and his desire of
preserving the city from destruction, joined to the advice of his friends, who
now thought the robbers were come to a temper, that he placed himself on the
western side of the outer [court of the] temple; for there were gates on that
side above the Xystus, and a bridge that connected the upper city to the temple.
This bridge it was that lay between the tyrants and Caesar, and parted them;
while the multitude stood on each side; those of the Jewish nation about Sinran
and John, with great hopes of pardon; and the Romans about Caesar, in great
expectation how Titus would receive their supplication. So Titus charged his
soldiers to restrain their rage, and to let their darts alone, and appointed an
interpreter between them, which was a sign that he was the conqueror, and first
began the discourse, and said, "I hope you, sirs, are now satiated with the
miseries of your country, who have not bad any just notions, either of our great
power, or of your own great weakness, but have, like madmen, after a violent and
inconsiderate manner, made such attempts, as have brought your people, your
city, and your holy house to destruction. You have been the men that have never
left off rebelling since Pompey first conquered you, and have, since that time,
made open war with the Romans. Have you depended on your multitude, while a very
small part of the Roman soldiery have been strong enough for you? Have you
relied on the fidelity of your confederates? And what nations are there, out of
the limits of our dominion, that would choose to assist the Jews before the
Romans? Are your bodies stronger than ours? nay, you know that the [strong]
Germans themselves are our servants. Have you stronger walls than we have? Pray,
what greater obstacle is there than the wall of the ocean, with which the
Britons are encompassed, and yet do adore the arms of the Romans. Do you exceed
us in courage of soul, and in the sagacity of your commanders? Nay, indeed, you
cannot but know that the very Carthaginians have been conquered by us. It can
therefore be nothing certainly but the kindness of us Romans which hath excited
you against us; who, in the first place, have given you this land to possess;
and, in the next place, have set over you kings of your own nation; and, in the
third place, have preserved the laws of your forefathers to you, and have withal
permitted you to live, either by yourselves, or among others, as it should
please you: and, what is our chief favor of all we have given you leave to
gather up that tribute which is paid to God (27)
with such other gifts that are dedicated to him; nor have we called those that
carried these donations to account, nor prohibited them; till at length you
became richer than we ourselves, even when you were our enemies; and you made
preparations for war against us with our own money; nay, after all, when you
were in the enjoyment of all these advantages, you turned your too great plenty
against those that gave it you, and, like merciless serpents, have thrown out
your poison against those that treated you kindly. I suppose, therefore, that
you might despise the slothfulness of Nero, and, like limbs of the body that are
broken or dislocated, you did then lie quiet, waiting for some other time,
though still with a malicious intention, and have now showed your distemper to
be greater than ever, and have extended your desires as far as your impudent and
immense hopes would enable you to do it. At this time my father came into this
country, not with a design to punish you for what you had done under Cestius,
but to admonish you; for had he come to overthrow your nation, he had run
directly to your fountain-head, and had immediately laid this city waste;
whereas he went and burnt Galilee and the neighboring parts, and thereby gave
you time for repentance; which instance of humanity you took for an argument of
his weakness, and nourished up your impudence by our mildness. When Nero was
gone out of the world, you did as the wickedest wretches would have done, and
encouraged yourselves to act against us by our civil dissensions, and abused
that time, when both I and my father were gone away to Egypt, to make
preparations for this war. Nor were you ashamed to raise disturbances against us
when we were made emperors, and this while you had experienced how mild we had
been, when we were no more than generals of the army. But when the government
was devolved upon us, and all other people did thereupon lie quiet, and even
foreign nations sent embassies, and congratulated our access to the government,
then did you Jews show yourselves to be our enemies. You sent embassies to those
of your nation that are beyond Euphrates to assist you in your raising
disturbances; new walls were built by you round your city, seditions arose, and
one tyrant contended against another, and a civil war broke out among you; such
indeed as became none but so wicked a people as you are. I then came to this
city, as unwillingly sent by my father, and received melancholy injunctions from
him. When I heard that the people were disposed to peace, I rejoiced at it; I
exhorted you to leave off these proceedings before I began this war; I spared
you even when you had fought against me a great while; I gave my right hand as
security to the deserters; I observed what I had promised faithfully. When they
fled to me, I had compassion on many of those that I had taken captive; I
tortured those that were eager for war, in order to restrain them. It was
unwillingly that I brought my engines of war against your walls; I always
prohibited my soldiers, when they were set upon your slaughter, from their
severity against you. After every victory I persuaded you to peace, as though I
had been myself conquered. When I came near your temple, I again departed from
the laws of war, and exhorted you to spare your own sanctuary, and to preserve
your holy house to yourselves. I allowed you a quiet exit out of it, and
security for your preservation; nay, if you had a mind, I gave you leave to
fight in another place. Yet have you still despised every one of my proposals,
and have set fire to your holy house with your own hands. And now, vile
wretches, do you desire to treat with me by word of mouth? To what purpose is it
that you would save such a holy house as this was, which is now destroyed? What
preservation can you now desire after the destruction of your temple? Yet do you
stand still at this very time in your armor; nor can you bring yourselves so
much as to pretend to be supplicants even in this your utmost extremity. O
miserable creatures! what is it you depend on? Are not your people dead? is not
your holy house gone? is not your city in my power? and are not your own very
lives in my hands? And do you still deem it a part of valor to die? However, I
will not imitate your madness. If you throw down your arms, and deliver up your
bodies to me, I grant you your lives; and I will act like a mild master of a
family; what cannot be healed shall be punished, and the rest I will preserve
for my own use."
3. To that offer of Titus they made this reply: That they could not accept of
it, because they had sworn never to do so; but they desired they might have
leave to go through the wall that had been made about them, with their wives and
children; for that they would go into the desert, and leave the city to him. At
this Titus had great indignation, that when they were in the case of men already
taken captives, they should pretend to make their own terms with him, as if they
had been conquerors. So he ordered this proclamation to be made to them, That
they should no more come out to him as deserters, nor hope for any further
security; for that he would henceforth spare nobody, but fight them with his
whole army; and that they must save themselves as well as they could; for that
he would from henceforth treat them according to the laws of war. So he gave
orders to the soldiers both to burn and to plunder the city; who did nothing
indeed that day; but on the next day they set fire to the repository of the
archives, to Acra, to the council-house, and to the place called Ophlas; at
which time the fire proceeded as far as the palace of queen Helena, which was in
the middle of Acra; the lanes also were burnt down, as were also those houses
that were full of the dead bodies of such as were destroyed by famine.
4. On the same day it was that the sons and brethren of Izates the king,
together with many others of the eminent men of the populace, got together
there, and besought Caesar to give them his right hand for their security; upon
which, though he was very angry at all that were now remaining, yet did he not
lay aside his old moderation, but received these men. At that time, indeed, he
kept them all in custody, but still bound the king's sons and kinsmen, and led
them with him to Rome, in order to make them hostages for their country's
fidelity to the Romans.
CHAPTER 7.
WHAT AFTERWARD BEFELL THE SEDITIOUS WHEN THEY HAD DONE A GREAT DEAL OF
MISCHIEF, AND SUFFERED MANY MISFORTUNES; AS ALSO HOW CAESAR BECAME MASTER OF THE
UPPER CITY,
1. AND now the seditious rushed into the royal palace, into which many had
put their effects, because it was so strong, and drove the Romans away from it.
They also slew all the people that had crowded into it, who were in number about
eight thousand four hundred, and plundered them of what they had. They also took
two of the Romans alive; the one was a horseman, and the other a footman. They
then cut the throat of the footman, and immediately had him drawn through the
whole city, as revenging themselves upon the whole body of the Romans by this
one instance. But the horseman said he had somewhat to suggest to them in order
to their preservation; whereupon he was brought before Simon; but he having
nothing to say when he was there, he was delivered to Ardalas, one of his
commanders, to be punished, who bound his hands behind him, and put a riband
over his eyes, and then brought him out over against the Romans, as intending to
cut off his head. But the man prevented that execution, and ran away to the
Romans, and this while the Jewish executioner was drawing out his sword. Now
when he was gotten away from the enemy, Titus could not think of putting him to
death; but because he deemed him unworthy of being a Roman soldier any longer,
on account that he had been taken alive by the enemy, he took away his arms, and
ejected him out of the legion whereto he had belonged; which, to one that had a
sense of shame, was a penalty severer than death itself.
2. On the next day the Romans drove the robbers out of the lower city, and
set all on fire as far as Siloam. These soldiers were indeed glad to see the
city destroyed. But they missed the plunder, because the seditious had carried
off all their effects, and were retired into the upper city; for they did not
yet at all repent of the mischiefs they had done, but were insolent, as if they
had done well; for, as they saw the city on fire, they appeared cheerful, and
put on joyful countenances, in expectation, as they said, of death to end their
miseries. Accordingly, as the people were now slain, the holy house was burnt
down, and the city was on fire, there was nothing further left for the enemy to
do. Yet did not Josephus grow weary, even in this utmost extremity, to beg of
them to spare what was left of the city; he spake largely to them about their
barbarity and impiety, and gave them his advice in order to their escape; though
he gained nothing thereby more than to be laughed at by them; and as they could
not think of surrendering themselves up, because of the oath they had taken, nor
were strong enough to fight with the Romans any longer upon the square, as being
surrounded on all sides, and a kind of prisoners already, yet were they so
accustomed to kill people, that they could not restrain their right hands from
acting accordingly. So they dispersed themselves before the city, and laid
themselves in ambush among its ruins, to catch those that attempted to desert to
the Romans; accordingly many such deserters were caught by them, and were all
slain; for these were too weak, by reason of their want of food, to fly away
from them; so their dead bodies were thrown to the dogs. Now every other sort of
death was thought more tolerable than the famine, insomuch that, though the Jews
despaired now of mercy, yet would they fly to the Romans, and would themselves,
even of their own accord, fall among the murderous rebels also. Nor was there
any place in the city that had no dead bodies in it, but what was entirely
covered with those that were killed either by the famine or the rebellion; and
all was full of the dead bodies of such as had perished, either by that sedition
or by that famine.
3. So now the last hope which supported the tyrants, and that crew of robbers
who were with them, was in the caves and caverns under ground; whither, if they
could once fly, they did not expect to be searched for; but endeavored, that
after the whole city should be destroyed, and the Romans gone away, they might
come out again, and escape from them. This was no better than a dream of theirs;
for they were not able to lie hid either from God or from the Romans. However,
they depended on these under-ground subterfuges, and set more places on fire
than did the Romans themselves; and those that fled out of their houses thus set
on fire into the ditches, they killed without mercy, and pillaged them also; and
if they discovered food belonging to any one, they seized upon it and swallowed
it down, together with their blood also; nay, they were now come to fight one
with another about their plunder; and I cannot but think that, had not their
destruction prevented it, their barbarity would have made them taste of even the
dead bodies themselves.
CHAPTER 8.
HOW CAESAR RAISED BANKS ROUND ABOUT THE UPPER CITY [MOUNT ZION] AND WHEN
THEY WERE COMPLETED, GAVE ORDERS THAT THE MACHINES SHOULD BE BROUGHT. HE THEN
POSSESSED HIMSELF OF THE WHOLE CITY.
1. NOW when Caesar perceived that the upper city was so steep that it could
not possibly be taken without raising banks against it, he distributed the
several parts of that work among his army, and this on the twentieth day of the
month Lous [Ab]. Now the carriage of the materials was a difficult task, since
all the trees, as I have already told you, that were about the city, within the
distance of a hundred furlongs, had their branches cut off already, in order to
make the former banks. The works that belonged to the four legions were erected
on the west side of the city, over against the royal palace; but the whole body
of the auxiliary troops, with the rest of the multitude that were with them,
[erected their banks] at the Xystus, whence they reached to the bridge, and that
tower of Simon which he had built as a citadel for himself against John, when
they were at war one with another.
2. It was at this time that the commanders of the Idumeans got together
privately, and took counsel about surrendering up themselves to the Romans.
Accordingly, they sent five men to Titus, and entreated him to give them his
right hand for their security. So Titus thinking that the tyrants would yield,
if the Idumeans, upon whom a great part of the war depended, were once withdrawn
from them, after some reluctancy and delay, complied with them, and gave them
security for their lives, and sent the five men back. But as these Idumeans were
preparing to march out, Simon perceived it, and immediately slew the five men
that had gone to Titus, and took their commanders, and put them in prison, of
whom the most eminent was Jacob, the son of Sosas; but as for the multitude of
the Idumeans, who did not at all know what to do, now their commanders were
taken from them, he had them watched, and secured the walls by a more numerous
garrison, Yet could not that garrison resist those that were deserting; for
although a great number of them were slain, yet were the deserters many more in
number. They were all received by the Romans, because Titus himself grew
negligent as to his former orders for killing them, and because the very
soldiers grew weary of killing them, and because they hoped to get some money by
sparing them; for they left only the populace, and sold the rest of the
multitude, (28) with their wives and children,
and every one of them at a very low price, and that because such as were sold
were very many, and the buyers were few: and although Titus had made
proclamation beforehand, that no deserter should come alone by himself, that so
they might bring out their families with them, yet did he receive such as these
also. However, he set over them such as were to distinguish some from others, in
order to see if any of them deserved to be punished. And indeed the number of
those that were sold was immense; but of the populace above forty thousand were
saved, whom Caesar let go whither every one of them pleased.
3. But now at this time it was that one of the priests, the son of Thebuthus,
whose name was Jesus, upon his having security given him, by the oath of Caesar,
that he should be preserved, upon condition that he should deliver to him
certain of the precious things that had been reposited in the temple
(29) came out of it, and delivered him from the
wall of the holy house two candlesticks, like to those that lay in the holy
house, with tables, and cisterns, and vials, all made of solid gold, and very
heavy. He also delivered to him the veils and the garments, with the precious
stones, and a great number of other precious vessels that belonged to their
sacred worship. The treasurer of the temple also, whose name was Phineas, was
seized on, and showed Titus the coats and girdles of the priests, with a great
quantity of purple and scarlet, which were there reposited for the uses of the
veil, as also a great deal of cinnamon and cassia, with a large quantity of
other sweet spices, (30) which used to be mixed
together, and offered as incense to God every day. A great many other treasures
were also delivered to him, with sacred ornaments of the temple not a few; which
things thus delivered to Titus obtained of him for this man the same pardon that
he had allowed to such as deserted of their own accord.
4. And now were the banks finished on the seventh day of the month Gorpieus,
[Elul,] in eighteen days' time, when the Romans brought their machines against
the wall. But for the seditious, some of them, as despairing of saving the city,
retired from the wall to the citadel; others of them went down into the
subterranean vaults, though still a great many of them defended themselves
against those that brought the engines for the battery; yet did the Romans
overcome them by their number and by their strength; and, what was the principal
thing of all, by going cheerfully about their work, while the Jews were quite
dejected, and become weak. Now as soon as a part of the wall was battered down,
and certain of the towers yielded to the impression of the battering rams, those
that opposed themselves fled away, and such a terror fell upon the tyrants, as
was much greater than the occasion required; for before the enemy got over the
breach they were quite stunned, and were immediately for flying away. And now
one might see these men, who had hitherto been so insolent and arrogant in their
wicked practices, to be cast down and to tremble, insomuch that it would pity
one's heart to observe the change that was made in those vile persons.
Accordingly, they ran with great violence upon the Roman wall that encompassed
them, in order to force away those that guarded it, and to break through it, and
get away. But when they saw that those who had formerly been faithful to them
had gone away, (as indeed they were fled whithersoever the great distress they
were in persuaded them to flee,) as also when those that came running before the
rest told them that the western wall was entirely overthrown, while others said
the Romans were gotten in, and others that they were near, and looking out for
them, which were only the dictates of their fear, which imposed upon their
sight, they fell upon their face, and greatly lamented their own mad conduct;
and their nerves were so terribly loosed, that they could not flee away. And
here one may chiefly reflect on the power of God exercised upon these wicked
wretches, and on the good fortune of the Romans; for these tyrants did now
wholly deprive themselves of the security they had in their own power, and came
down from those very towers of their own accord, wherein they could have never
been taken by force, nor indeed by any other way than by famine. And thus did
the Romans, when they had taken such great pains about weaker walls, get by good
fortune what they could never have gotten by their engines; for three of these
towers were too strong for all mechanical engines whatsoever, concerning which
we have treated above.
5. So they now left these towers of themselves, or rather they were ejected
out of them by God himself, and fled immediately to that valley which was under
Siloam, where they again recovered themselves out of the dread they were in for
a while, and ran violently against that part of the Roman wall which lay on that
side; but as their courage was too much depressed to make their attacks with
sufficient force, and their power was now broken with fear and affliction, they
were repulsed by the guards, and dispersing themselves at distances from each
other, went down into the subterranean caverns. So the Romans being now become
masters of the walls, they both placed their ensigns upon the towers, and made
joyful acclamations for the victory they had gained, as having found the end of
this war much lighter than its beginning; for when they had gotten upon the last
wall, without any bloodshed, they could hardly believe what they found to be
true; but seeing nobody to oppose them, they stood in doubt what such an unusual
solitude could mean. But when they went in numbers into the lanes of the city
with their swords drawn, they slew those whom they overtook without and set fire
to the houses whither the Jews were fled, and burnt every soul in them, and laid
waste a great many of the rest; and when they were come to the houses to plunder
them, they found in them entire families of dead men, and the upper rooms full
of dead corpses, that is, of such as died by the famine; they then stood in a
horror at this sight, and went out without touching any thing. But although they
had this commiseration for such as were destroyed in that manner, yet had they
not the same for those that were still alive, but they ran every one through
whom they met with, and obstructed the very lanes with their dead bodies, and
made the whole city run down with blood, to such a degree indeed that the fire
of many of the houses was quenched with these men's blood. And truly so it
happened, that though the slayers left off at the evening, yet did the fire
greatly prevail in the night; and as all was burning, came that eighth day of
the month Gorpieus [Elul] upon Jerusalem, a city that had been liable to so many
miseries during this siege, that, had it always enjoyed as much happiness from
its first foundation, it would certainly have been the envy of the world. Nor
did it on any other account so much deserve these sore misfortunes, as by
producing such a generation of men as were the occasions of this its overthrow.
CHAPTER 9.
WHAT INJUNCTIONS CAESAR GAVE WHEN HE WAS COME WITHIN THE CITY. THE NUMBER
OF THE CAPTIVES AND OF THOSE THAT PERISHED IN THE SIEGE; AS ALSO CONCERNING
THOSE THAT HAD ESCAPED INTO THE SUBTERRANEAN CAVERNS, AMONG WHOM WERE THE
TYRANTS SIMON AND JOHN THEMSELVES.
1. Now when Titus was come into this [upper] city, he admired not only some
other places of strength in it, but particularly those strong towers which the
tyrants in their mad conduct had relinquished; for when he saw their solid
altitude, and the largeness of their several stones, and the exactness of their
joints, as also how great was their breadth, and how extensive their length, he
expressed himself after the manner following: "We have certainly had God for our
assistant in this war, and it was no other than God who ejected the Jews out of
these fortifications; for what could the hands of men or any machines do towards
overthrowing these towers?" At which time he had many such discourses to his
friends; he also let such go free as had been bound by the tyrants, and were
left in the prisons. To conclude, when he entirely demolished the rest of the
city, and overthrew its walls, he left these towers as a monument of his good
fortune, which had proved his auxiliaries, and enabled him to take what could
not otherwise have been taken by him.
2. And now, since his soldiers were already quite tired with killing men, and
yet there appeared to be a vast multitude still remaining alive, Caesar gave
orders that they should kill none but those that were in arms, and opposed them,
but should take the rest alive. But, together with those whom they had orders to
slay, they slew the aged and the infirm; but for those that were in their
flourishing age, and who might be useful to them, they drove them together into
the temple, and shut them up within the walls of the court of the women; over
which Caesar set one of his freed-men, as also Fronto, one of his own friends;
which last was to determine every one's fate, according to his merits. So this
Fronto slew all those that had been seditious and robbers, who were impeached
one by another; but of the young men he chose out the tallest and most
beautiful, and reserved them for the triumph; and as for the rest of the
multitude that were above seventeen years old, he put them into bonds, and sent
them to the Egyptian mines (31) Titus also sent
a great number into the provinces, as a present to them, that they might be
destroyed upon their theatres, by the sword and by the wild beasts; but those
that were under seventeen years of age were sold for slaves. Now during the days
wherein Fronto was distinguishing these men, there perished, for want of food,
eleven thousand; some of whom did not taste any food, through the hatred their
guards bore to them; and others would not take in any when it was given them.
The multitude also was so very great, that they were in want even of corn for
their sustenance.
3. Now the number (32) of those that were
carried captive during this whole war was collected to be ninety-seven thousand;
as was the number of those that perished during the whole siege eleven hundred
thousand, the greater part of whom were indeed of the same nation [with the
citizens of Jerusalem], but not belonging to the city itself; for they were come
up from all the country to the feast of unleavened bread, and were on a sudden
shut up by an army, which, at the very first, occasioned so great a straitness
among them, that there came a pestilential destruction upon them, and soon
afterward such a famine, as destroyed them more suddenly. And that this city
could contain so many people in it, is manifest by that number of them which was
taken under Cestius, who being desirous of informing Nero of the power of the
city, who otherwise was disposed to contemn that nation, entreated the high
priests, if the thing were possible, to take the number of their whole
multitude. So these high priests, upon the coming of that feast which is called
the Passover, when they slay their sacrifices, from the ninth hour till the
eleventh, but so that a company not less than ten
(33) belong to every sacrifice, (for it is not lawful for them to feast
singly by themselves,) and many of us are twenty in a company, found the number
of sacrifices was two hundred and fifty-six thousand five hundred; which, upon
the allowance of no more than ten that feast together, amounts to two millions
seven hundred thousand and two hundred persons that were pure and holy; for as
to those that have the leprosy, or the gonorrhea, or women that have their
monthly courses, or such as are otherwise polluted, it is not lawful for them to
be partakers of this sacrifice; nor indeed for any foreigners neither, who come
hither to worship.
4. Now this vast multitude is indeed collected out of remote places, but the
entire nation was now shut up by fate as in prison, and the Roman army
encompassed the city when it was crowded with inhabitants. Accordingly, the
multitude of those that therein perished exceeded all the destructions that
either men or God ever brought upon the world; for, to speak only of what was
publicly known, the Romans slew some of them, some they carried captives, and
others they made a search for under ground, and when they found where they were,
they broke up the ground and slew all they met with. There were also found slain
there above two thousand persons, partly by their own hands, and partly by one
another, but chiefly destroyed by the famine; but then the ill savor of the dead
bodies was most offensive to those that lighted upon them, insomuch that some
were obliged to get away immediately, while others were so greedy of gain, that
they would go in among the dead bodies that lay on heaps, and tread upon them;
for a great deal of treasure was found in these caverns, and the hope of gain
made every way of getting it to be esteemed lawful. Many also of those that had
been put in prison by the tyrants were now brought out; for they did not leave
off their barbarous cruelty at the very last: yet did God avenge himself upon
them both, in a manner agreeable to justice. As for John, he wanted food,
together with his brethren, in these caverns, and begged that the Romans would
now give him their right hand for his security, which he had often proudly
rejected before; but for Simon, he struggled hard with the distress he was in,
fill he was forced to surrender himself, as we shall relate hereafter; so he was
reserved for the triumph, and to be then slain; as was John condemned to
perpetual imprisonment. And now the Romans set fire to the extreme parts of the
city, and burnt them down, and entirely demolished its walls.
CHAPTER 10.
THAT WHEREAS THE CITY OF JERUSALEM HAD BEEN FIVE TIMES TAKEN FORMERLY,
THIS WAS THE SECOND TIME OF ITS DESOLATION. A BRIEF ACCOUNT OF ITS HISTORY.
1. AND thus was Jerusalem taken, in the second year of the reign of Vespasian,
on the eighth day of the month Gorpeius [Elul]. It had been taken five
(34) times before, though this was the second
time of its desolation; for Shishak, the king of Egypt, and after him Antiochus,
and after him Pompey, and after them Sosius and Herod, took the city, but still
preserved it; but before all these, the king of Babylon conquered it, and made
it desolate, one thousand four hundred and sixty-eight years and six months
after it was built. But he who first built it. Was a potent man among the
Canaanites, and is in our own tongue called [Melchisedek], the Righteous King,
for such he really was; on which account he was [there] the first priest of God,
and first built a temple [there], and called the city Jerusalem, which was
formerly called Salem. However, David, the king of the Jews, ejected the
Canaanites, and set-tied his own people therein. It was demolished entirely by
the Babylonians, four hundred and seventy-seven years and six months after him.
And from king David, who was the first of the Jews who reigned therein, to this
destruction under Titus, were one thousand one hundred and seventy-nine years;
but from its first building, till this last destruction, were two thousand one
hundred and seventy-seven years; yet hath not its great antiquity, nor its vast
riches, nor the diffusion of its nation over all the habitable earth, nor the
greatness of the veneration paid to it on a religious account, been sufficient
to preserve it from being destroyed. And thus ended the siege of Jerusalem.
ENDNOTE
(1) Reland notes here, very pertinently, that
the tower of Antonia stood higher than the floor of the temple or court
adjoining to it; and that accordingly they descended thence into the temple, as
Josephus elsewhere speaks also. See Book VI. ch. 2. sect. 5.
(2) In this speech of Titus we may clearly
see the notions which the Romans then had of death, and of the happy state of
those who died bravely in war, and the contrary estate of those who died ignobly
in their beds by sickness. Reland here also produces two parallel passages, the
one out of Atonia Janus Marcellinus, concerning the Alani, lib. 31, that "they
judged that man happy who laid down his life in battle ;" the other of Valerius
Maximus, lib. 11. ch. 6, who says, "that the Cimbri and Celtiberi exulted for
joy in the army, as being to go out of the world gloriously and happily."
(3) See the note on p. 809.
(4) No wonder that this Julian, who had so
many nails in his shoes, slipped upon the pavement of the temple, which was
smooth, and laid with marble of different colors.
(5) This was a remarkable day indeed, the
seventeenth of Paneruns. [Tamuz,] A.D. 70, when, according to Daniel's
prediction, six hundred and six years before, the Romans "in half a week caused
the sacrifice and oblation to cease," Daniel 9:27. For from the month of
February, A.D. 66, about which time Vespasian entered on this war, to this very
time, was just three years and a half. See Bishop Lloyd's Tables of Chronology,
published by Mr. Marshall, on this year. Nor is it to be omitted, what year
nearly confirms this duration of the war, that four years before the war begun
was somewhat above seven years five months before the destruction of Jerusalem,
ch. 5. sect. 3.
(6) The same that in the New Testament is
always so called, and was then the common language of the Jews in Judea, which
was the Syriac dialect.
(7) Our present copies of the Old Testament
want this encomium upon king Jechoniah or Jehoiachim, which it seems was in
Josephus's copy.
(8) Of this oracle, see the note on B. IV. ch.
6. sect. 3. Josephus, both here and in many places elsewhere, speaks so, that it
is most evident he was fully satisfied that God was on the Romans' side, and
made use of them now for the destruction of that wicked nation of the Jews;
which was for certain the true state of this matter, as the prophet Daniel
first, and our Savior himself afterwards, had clearly foretold. See Lit. Accompl.
of Proph. p. 64, etc.
(9) Josephus had before told us, B. V. ch.
13. sect. 1, that this fourth son of Matthias ran away to the Romans "before"
his father's and brethren's slaughter, and not "after" it, as here. The former
account is, in all probability, the truest; for had not that fourth son escaped
before the others were caught and put to death, he had been caught and put to
death with them. This last account, therefore, looks like an instance of a small
inadvertence of Josephus in the place before us.
(10) Of this partition-wall separating Jews
and Gentiles, with its pillars and inscription, see the description of the
temples, ch. 15.
(11) That these seditious Jews were the
direct occasions of their own destruction, and of the conflagration of their
city and temple, and that Titus earnestly and constantly labored to save both,
is here and every where most evident in Josephus.
(12) Court of the Gentiles.
(13) Court of Israel.
(14) Of the court of the Gentiles.
(15) What Josephus observes here, that no
parallel examples had been recorded before this time of such sieges, wherein
mothers were forced by extremity of famine to eat their own children, as had
been threatened to the Jews in the law of Moses, upon obstinate disobedience,
and more than once fulfilled, (see my Boyle's Lectures, p. 210-214,) is by Dr.
Hudson supposed to have had two or three parallel examples in later ages. He
might have had more examples, I suppose, of persons on ship-board, or in a
desert island, casting lots for each others' bodies; but all this was only in
cases where they knew of no possible way to avoid death themselves but by
killing and eating others. Whether such examples come up to the present case may
be doubted. The Romans were not only willing, but very desirous, to grant those
Jews in Jerusalem both their lives and their liberties, and to save both their
city and their temple. But the zealots, the rubbers, and the seditious would
hearken to no terms of submission. They voluntarily chose to reduce the citizens
to that extremity, as to force mothers to this unnatural barbarity, which, in
all its circumstances, has not, I still suppose, been hitherto paralleled among
the rest of mankind.
(16) These steps to the altar of
burnt-offering seem here either an improper and inaccurate expression of
Josephus, since it was unlawful to make ladder steps; (see description of the
temples, ch. 13., and note on Antiq. B. IV. ch. 8. sect. 5;) or else those steps
or stairs we now use were invented before the days of Herod the Great, and had
been here built by him; though the later Jews always deny it, and say that even
Herod's altar was ascended to by an acclivity only.
(17) This Perea, if the word be not mistaken
in the copies, cannot well be that Perea which was beyond Jordan, whose
mountains were at a considerable distance from Jordan, and much too remote from
Jerusalem to join in this echo at the conflagration of the temple; but Perea
must be rather some mountains beyond the brook Cedron, as was the Mount of
Olives, or some others about such a distance from Jerusalem; which observation
is so obvious, that it is a wonder our commentators here take no notice of it.
(18) Reland I think here judges well, when
he interprets these spikes (of those that stood on the top of the holy house)
with sharp points; they were fixed into lead, to prevent the birds from sitting
there, and defiling the holy house; for such spikes there were now upon it, as
Josephus himself hath already assured us, B. V. ch. 5. sect. 6.
(19) Reland here takes notice, that these
Jews, who had despised the true Prophet, were deservedly abused and deluded by
these false ones.
(20) Whether Josephus means that this star
was different from that comet which lasted a whole year, I cannot certainly
determine. His words most favor their being different one from another.
(21) Since Josephus still uses the Syro-Macedonian
month Xanthicus for the Jewish month Nisan, this eighth, or, as Nicephorus reads
it, this ninth of Xanthicus or Nisan was almost a week before the passover, on
the fourteenth; about which time we learn from St. John that many used to go
"out of the country to Jerusalem to purify themselves," John 11:55, with 12:1;
in agreement with Josephus also, B. V. ch. 3. sect. 1. And it might well be,
that in the sight of these this extraordinary light might appear.
(22) This here seems to be the court of the
priests.
(23) Both Reland and Havercamp in this place
alter the natural punctuation and sense of Josephus, and this contrary to the
opinion of Valesilus and Dr. Hudson, lest Josephus should say that the Jews
built booths or tents within the temple at the feast of tabernacles; which the
later Rabbins will not allow to have been the ancient practice: but then, since
it is expressly told us in Nehemiah, ch. 8:16, that in still elder times "the
Jews made booths in the courts of the house of God" at that festival, Josephus
may well be permitted to say the same. And indeed the modern Rabbins are of very
small authority in all such matters of remote antiquity.
(24) Take Havercamp's note here: "This (says
he) is a remarkable place; and Tertullian truly says in his Apologetic, ch. 16.
p. 162, that the entire religion of the Roman camp almost consisted in
worshipping the ensigns, in swearing by the ensigns, and in preferring the
ensigns before all the [other] gods." See what Havercamp says upon that place of
Tertullian.
(25) This declaring Titus imperator by the
soldiers, upon such signal success, and the slaughter of such a vast number of
enemies, was according to the usual practice of the Romans in like cases, as
Reland assures us on this place.
(26) The Jews of later times agree with
Josephus, that there were hiding-places or secret chambers about the holy house,
as Reland here informs us, where he thinks he has found these very walls
described by them.
(27) Spanheim notes here, that the Romans
used to permit the Jews to collect their sacred tribute, and send it to
Jerusalem; of which we have had abundant evidence in Josephus already on other
occasions.
(28) This innumerable multitude of Jews that
were "sold" by the Romans was an eminent completion of God's ancient threatening
by Moses, that if they apostatized from the obedience to his laws, they should
be "sold unto their enemies for bond-men and bond-women," Deuteronomy 28;68. See
more especially the note on ch. 9. sect. 2. But one thing is here peculiarly
remarkable, that Moses adds, Though they should be "sold" for slaves, yet "no
man should buy them;" i.e. either they should have none to redeem them from this
sale into slavery; or rather, that the slaves to be sold should be more than
were the purchasers for them, and so they should be sold for little or nothing;
which is what Josephus here affirms to have been the case at this time.
(29) What became of these spoils of the
temple that escaped the fire, see Josephus himself hereafter, B. VII. ch. 5.
sect. 5, and Reland de Spoliis Templi, p. 129-138.
(30) These various sorts of spices, even
more than those four which Moses prescribed, Exodus 31:34, we see were used in
their public worship under Herod's temple, particularly cinnamon and cassia;
which Reland takes particular notice of, as agreeing with the latter testimony
of the Talmudists.
(31) See the several predictions that the
Jews, if they became obstinate in their idolatry and wickedness, should be sent
again or sold into Egypt for their punishment, Deuteronomy 28:68; Jeremiah 44:7;
Hosea 8:13; 9:3; 9:4, 5; 2 Samuel 15:10-13; with Authentic Records, Part I. p.
49, 121; and Reland Painest And, tom. II. p. 715.
(32) The whole multitude of the Jews that
were destroyed during the entire seven years before this time, in all the
countries of and bordering on Judea, is summed up by Archbishop Usher, from
Lipsius, out of Josephus, at the year of Christ 70, and amounts to 1,337,490.
Nor could there have been that number of Jews in Jerusalem to be destroyed in
this siege, as will be presently set down by Josephus, but that both Jews and
proselytes of justice were just then come up out of the other countries of
Galilee, Samaria, Judea, and Perea and other remoter regions, to the passover,
in vast numbers, and therein cooped up, as in a prison, by the Roman army, as
Josephus himself well observes in this and the next section, and as is exactly
related elsewhere, B. V. ch. 3. sect. 1 and ch. 13. sect. 7.
(33) This number of a company for one
paschal lamb, between ten and twenty, agrees exactly with the number thirteen,
at our Savior's last passover. As to the whole number of the Jews that used to
come up to the passover, and eat of it at Jerusalem, see the note on B. II. ch.
14. sect. 3. This number ought to be here indeed just ten times the number of
the lambs, or just 2,565,(D0, by Josephus's own reasoning; whereas it is, in his
present copies, no less than 2,700,(D0, which last number is, however, nearest
the other number in the place now cited, which is 3,000,000. But what is here
chiefly remarkable is this, that no foreign nation ever came thus to destroy the
Jews at any of their solemn festivals, from the days of Moses till this time,
but came now upon their apostasy from God, and from obedience to him. Nor is it
possible, in the nature of things, that in any other nation such vast numbers
should be gotten together, and perish in the siege of any one city whatsoever,
as now happened in Jerusalem.
(34) This is the proper place for such as
have closely attended to these latter books of the War to peruse, and that with
equal attention, those distinct and plain predictions of Jesus of Nazareth, in
the Gospels thereto relating, as compared with their exact completions in
Josephus's history; upon which completions, as Dr: Whitby well observes, Annot.
on Matthew 24:2, no small part of the evidence for the truth of the Christian
religion does depend; and as I have step by step compared them together in my
Literal Accomplishment of Scripture Prophecies. The reader is to observe
further, that the true reason why I have so seldom taken notice of those
completions in the course of these notes, notwithstanding their being so very
remarkable, and frequently so very obvious, is this, that I had entirely
prevented myself in that treatise beforehand; to which therefore I must here,
once for all, seriously refer every inquisitive reader. Besides these five here
enumerated, who had taken Jerusalem of old, Josephus, upon further recollection,
reckons a sixth, Antiq. B. XII. ch. 1. sect. 1, who should have been here
inserted in the second place; I mean Ptolemy, the son of Lagus.
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