First Jewish–Roman War

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Template:Short description Template:Good article Template:Use dmy dates {{#invoke:Infobox military conflict|main}} Template:Campaignbox First Jewish–Roman War Template:Campaignbox Jewish–Roman wars

The First Jewish–Roman War (66–74 CE), also known as the Great Jewish Revolt,Template:Efn the First Jewish Revolt, the War of Destruction,Template:Sfn or the Jewish War,Template:SfnTemplate:Efn was the first of three major Jewish rebellions against the Roman Empire. Fought in the province of Judaea, it resulted in the destruction of Jerusalem and the Jewish Temple, mass displacement, land appropriation, and the dissolution of the Jewish polity.

Judaea, once independent under the Hasmoneans, fell to Rome in the first century BCE. Initially a client kingdom, it later became a directly ruled province, marked by the rule of oppressive governors, socioeconomic divides, nationalist aspirations, and rising religious and ethnic tensions. In 66 CE, under Nero, unrest flared when a local Greek sacrificed a bird at the entrance of a Caesarea synagogue. Tensions escalated as Governor Gessius Florus looted the temple treasury and massacred Jerusalem's residents, sparking an uprising in which rebels killed the Roman garrison while pro-Roman officials fled.

To quell the unrest, Cestius Gallus, the governor of Syria, invaded Judaea but was defeated at Bethoron and a provisional government, led by Ananus ben Ananus, was established in Jerusalem. In 67 CE, commander Vespasian was sent to suppress the revolt, invading the Galilee and capturing Yodfat, Tarichaea, and Gamla. As rebels and refugees fled to Jerusalem, the government was overthrown, leading to infighting between Eleazar ben Simon, John of Gischala and Simon bar Giora. After Vespasian subdued most of the province, Nero's death prompted him to depart for Rome to claim the throne. His son Titus led the siege of Jerusalem, which fell in the summer of 70 CE, resulting in the Temple's destruction and the city's razing. In 71, they celebrated a triumph in Rome, and Legio X Fretensis remained in Judaea to suppress the last pockets of resistance, culminating in the fall of Masada in 73/74 CE.

The war had profound consequences for the Jewish people, with many killed, displaced, or sold into slavery. The sages emerged as leading figures and established a rabbinic center in Yavneh, marking a key moment in the development of Rabbinic Judaism as it adapted to the post-Temple reality. These events in Jewish history signify the transition from the Second Temple period to the Rabbinic period. The victory also strengthened the new Flavian dynasty, which commemorated it through monumental constructions and coinage, imposed a punitive tax on all Jews, and increased military presence in the region. The Jewish–Roman wars culminated in the Bar Kokhba revolt (132–136 CE), the last major attempt to restore Jewish independence, which resulted in even more catastrophic consequences.

Ante bellumEdit

Judaea under the RomansEdit

Template:See alsoTemplate:Further In 63 BCE, the kingdom of Judaea was conquered by the Roman Republic, ending Jewish independence under the Hasmonean dynasty.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Roman general Pompey intervened in a civil war between Hyrcanus and Aristobolus, who vied for the throne after the death of their mother, Queen Salome Alexandra.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn After capturing Jerusalem, Pompey entered the Temple's Holy of HoliesTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn—an act of desecration,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn as only the High Priest was permitted to enter.Template:Sfn The Jewish monarchy was abolished, Hyrcanus was appointed to serve exclusively as High Priest,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn and parts of the kingdom were transferred to Hellenistic cities or to the Roman province of Syria.Template:Sfn

Recognizing the nationalist character of Hasmonean rule, the Romans sought to suppress it by instituting a new, loyal dynasty.Template:Sfn In 40 BCE, Antigonus II Mattathias, Aristobolus' son, briefly regained the throne with Parthian support,Template:Sfn but was deposed by in 37 BCE by Herod, who had been appointed "King of the Jews" by the Roman Senate.Template:Sfn Herod ruled Judaea as a client kingdom,Template:Sfn taxed heavily, murdered family members, controlled Jewish institutions, and fueled resentment.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn After his death in 4 BCE, realm was divided among his sons:Template:Sfn Archelaus served as ethnarch of Judea, Samaria, and Idumaea, while Herod Antipas governed Galilee and Perea.Template:Sfn Archelaus's misrule led to his deposition in 6 CE, and the Roman Empire annexed his territories as the province of Judaea.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn

File:First century Iudaea province.gif
Judaea in the first century CE

In the following decades, Jewish–Roman relations in Judaea faced repeated crises.Template:Sfn With the onset of direct Roman rule, the census of Quirinius, instituted by the governor of Syria, triggered an uprising led by Judas of Galilee. Judas led the "fourth philosophy",Template:Sfn a movement that recognized God as the only king and rejected foreign rule. Under Pilate (c. 26–36 CE), incidents such as the introduction of military standards into Jerusalem, the diversion of Temple funds for an aqueduct, and a soldier's indecent exposure near the Temple provoked unrest and bloodshed.Template:Sfn Conflicts escalated during pilgrim festivals, as the influx of worshippers often fueled nationalistic sentiments.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Under Emperor Caligula's reign (37–41 CE), Roman policy in Judaea underwent a brief disruption.Template:Sfn His insistence on the imperial cult intensified anti-Jewish sentiment, leading to violent outbreaks in Alexandria in 38 CE.Template:Sfn Tensions escalated following a dispute at Yavneh (Jamnia), where the Jewish community dismantled a pagan altar. In response, Caligula ordered a statue of himself to be placed in the Temple, provoking widespread outrage.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn His death averted open conflict, but the episode further deepened Jewish resentment toward Roman rule.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

In 41 CE, with Emperor Claudius's support, Herod Agrippa unified the territories once ruled by his grandfather, Herod, as a client king.Template:Sfn This briefly restored Jewish self-governance, but after his death in 44 CE, Judaea reverted to direct Roman rule, expanding to include Judea, Samaria, Idumaea, Galilee, and Perea.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn His son, Agrippa II, ruled Chalcis and oversaw the Temple, including appointing and removing High Priests.Template:Sfn

The second provincial era began stably but soon fell into disorder. Around 48 CE, the Romans crucified Jacob and Simon, sons of Judas of Galilee.<ref>Antiquities of the Jews, XX, 102</ref>Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Clashes erupted between Jews and Samaritans, and by the early 50s CE, the SicariiTemplate:Efn (a group of Jewish radicals) began exploiting pilgrim festivals in Jerusalem for assassinations and intimidation.Template:Sfn They also targeted rural landowners, destroying property to deter cooperation with Rome.Template:Sfn Religious fanaticism grew, inspiring figures like Theudas, who tried to part the Jordan but was executed by procurator Fadus,Template:Sfn and "The Egyptian", whose followers were dispersed by Antonius Felix.Template:Sfn

In 64 CE, Gessius Florus became procurator, securing the role through his wife, a friend of the wife of Emperor Nero.Template:Sfn His ties to the imperial family gave him considerable freedom in governance.Template:Sfn Tacitus saw him as unfit,<ref name=":3">Tactius, Annals, 5.10</ref> while Josephus—a Jewish commander who became a historian after his capture by the Romans—portrayed him as a ruthless official who plundered the region and imposed harsh punishments.<ref>The Jewish War, II, 277</ref>Template:Sfn The worsening situation under Florus led many to flee the region.<ref>Antiquities of the Jews, XX, 256; The Jewish War, II, 279</ref>Template:Sfn

Causes and motivationsEdit

Most scholars regard the Jewish War as a prime example of ancient Jewish nationalism.Template:Sfn The revolt was driven by the pursuit of freedom, the removal of Roman control and the establishment of an independent Jewish state.Template:Sfn Aspiration for independence grew following Herod's death and particularly after the establishment of direct imperial rule. This desire was partially fueled by memories of the successful Maccabean revolt against the Seleucids, which fostered the belief that a similar victory over Rome could be achievable.Template:Sfn The Hasmonean-led Jewish state, a rare instance of indigenous sovereignty in this period, strengthened Jewish nationalistic awareness and aspirations for independence.Template:Sfn Historian David Goodblatt points to similarities between the rebels' actions and ideology and those of modern national liberation movements, citing the rebels' struggle to free Judaea, their minting of coins inscribed with "Israel," and their adoption of the "freedom of Israel" era as examples.Template:Sfn

Jewish discontent was fueled by the harsh suppression of unrest and widespread perception of Roman rule as oppressive.Template:Sfn Many Roman officials were corrupt, brutal, or inept,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn fueling unrest even under competent governors.Template:Sfn Florus's governorship is described by ancient sources as the tipping point that sparked the revolt. Roman historian Tacitus attributed the war to Roman misgovernance rather than Jewish rebelliousness; he noted that Jews showed restraint under harsh governors but lost patience due to Florus' actions.<ref name=":3" />Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Similarly, Josephus wrote that the Jews preferred to die in battle rather than endure prolonged suffering under Florus' governance.<ref>Antiquities of the Jews, XX, 257</ref>Template:Sfn

The concept of "zeal"—a total commitment to God's will and law,Template:Sfn rooted in figures like Phinehas, Elijah, and Mattathias,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn and driven by a belief in Israel's electionTemplate:Sfn—is often seen as a key driver of the revolt.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn While Eleazar ben Simon's faction was the only one to explicitly call itself "Zealots,"Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Efn historian Martin Hengel maintained that all factions rejecting foreign rule in the name of God's sole sovereignty could rightfully be included under this designation.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Hengel traced this view to the intensification of Torah concepts,Template:Sfn such as God's kingship,Template:Sfn first manifested by Judas' "Fourth Philosophy".Template:Sfn This ideology resurfaced in the revolt, especially among the Sicarii, who were led by Judas' descendants.Template:Sfn Judaic scholar Philip Alexander similarly described the Zealots as a coalition of factions, united by a shared form of nationalism and the goal of liberating Israel by force.Template:Sfn

Historian Jonathan Price wrote that apocalyptic beliefs played a role in fueling the revolt, with many rebels envisioning a divinely sanctioned cosmic struggle inspired by prophetic texts, such as the Book of Daniel, which foretold the fall of the fourth imperial power, which people believed was Rome.Template:Sfn Historian Tessa Rajak, however, asserted that there is no evidence to suggest the insurgents were driven by messianic or end-of-days aspirations.Template:Sfn

Marxist scholars, notably Heinz Kreißig, interpreted the revolt as a class struggle between social strata, though critics such as Jonathan Price argued that argued this prioritizes political theory over evidence.Template:Sfn The burning of debt records by the rebels is often cited as proof of socio-economic motives,Template:Sfn but this view is also disputed by Price, who notes there is little evidence of economic grievances.Template:Sfn He argues that rebel leaders lacked class loyalty—Simon bar Giora freed slaves and targeted the wealthy but also had aristocratic support, while others had no social agenda.Template:Sfn He sees the burning of debt records as a tactic for popular support, not ideology.Template:Sfn Classicist Guy McLean Rogers adds that debt was routine and neither a key cause nor a unifying rallying point for the rebels.Template:Sfn

Historian Uriel Rappaport wrote that hostility between Jews and surrounding Greek cities was the decisive factor that made the revolt inevitable, as Rome failed to address the tensions.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The provincial Roman garrison was mainly drawn from Hellenistic cities, while Greek-speaking eastern provincials held key administrative roles, heightening tensions.Template:Sfn Historian Martin Goodman, however, argued that since Jews had chosen to live in Greek cities, deep hostility was not a long-standing issue, and the violence of 66 CE was a consequence of rising tensions rather than the root cause of the revolt.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Instead, Goodman argued that the revolt was driven by the inability of the local elite to address economic and societal discontent. This failure was linked to their lack of legitimacy, as their authority depended on the Herodians and Romans, both of whom were often despised by the populace.Template:Sfn He argues that elite involvement made Rome view the uprising as a full rebellion and deepened divisions within the rebel state.Template:Sfn

Initial stages of warEdit

Outbreak of the rebellionEdit

Template:Further informationIn May 66 CE, violence erupted in the city of Caesarea over a land dispute. Local Jews sought to buy land beside their synagogue from its Greek owner, but despite offering well above its value, he refused and built workshops that blocked access to the synagogue.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn When young Jews resisted, Florus backed the Greek.Template:Sfn Prominent Jews paid Florus eight talents to stop the construction, but he took the money and left without intervening, allowing the work to continue.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn On Shabbat, a Greek desecrated the synagogue entrance by sacrificing a bird on a chamber pot, sparking violence between the communities.<ref>The Jewish War, II, 289–292</ref>Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn Local cavalry failed to intervene, and Jews who complained to Florus were arrested.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Afterwards, Florus arrived in Jerusalem and seized 17 talents from the Temple treasury, claiming it was for "governmental purposes."Template:Sfn Mass protests ensued, with crowds mocking him by passing around a basket to collect alms as if he were a beggar.<ref>The Jewish War, II, 293–295</ref>Template:Sfn When the Sanhedrin—the Jewish high court—refused to surrender the offenders, Florus ordered his troops to sack the Upper Agora, reportedly killing over 3,600 people. Among the victims were wealthy Jews of the equestrian order, who, despite being Roman citizens and exempt from such punishment, were not spared.<ref name="Wars 2.14.9">The Jewish War, II, 14.9</ref>Template:Sfn His soldiers exceeded orders, looting and taking prisoners.Template:Sfn Jewish princess Berenice, who was visiting the city, pleaded for restraint but was threatened by legionaries.Template:Sfn A second massacre occurred when Jews greeting two arriving cohorts were met with silence. Angered, some reacted, prompting soldiers to charge, causing a stampede toward the Antonia Fortress.Template:Sfn Florus fled the city, leaving a cohort behind to serve as a garrison.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

File:19 Shrine of the Book 005 (cropped).jpg
Scale model reconstruction of the Temple Mount during the first century CE, with the Second Temple in the center and the Antonia Fortress to the upper right

Agrippa II hurried from Alexandria to calm the unrest,Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn while Cestius Gallus, the Roman governor of Syria, sent an emissary who found Jerusalem loyal to Rome but opposed to Florus.Template:Sfn Agrippa then delivered a public speech to the people of Jerusalem alongside his sister Berenice, acknowledging the failures of Roman administration but urging restraint. He argued that a small nation could not challenge the might of the Roman Empire.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn At first, the crowd agreed, reaffirming allegiance to the emperor. They restored damaged structures and paid the tax owed.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn However, when he urged patience with Florus until a new governor was appointed, the crowd turned on him, forcing him and Berenice to flee the city.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Eleazar ben Hanania, the Temple's captain and son of an ex-High Priest, convinced the priests to cease accepting offerings from foreigners.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn This act ended the practice of offering sacrifices on behalf of Rome and its emperor. According to Josephus, this event marked the foundation of the war.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Efn Around this time, a faction of Sicarii led by Menahem ben Judah, a descendant of Judas of Galilee,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn launched a surprise assault on the desert fortress of Masada, capturing it and killing the Roman garrison.Template:Sfn The seized weapons were transported to Jerusalem.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn

After failing to pacify the rebels, Jerusalem's moderate leaders sought military assistance from Florus and Agrippa. In response, Agrippa dispatched 2,000 cavalrymen from Auranitis, Batanaea, and Trachonitis.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn These forces reinforced the moderates, who controlled the Upper City, while Eleazar ben Hanania's followers controlled the Lower City and Temple Mount.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn After a few days of fighting, the rebels captured the Upper City, forcing the moderates into Herod's Palace, while others fled or hid.Template:Sfn They burned the house of ex-High Priest Ananias, the royal palaces, and the public archives, where debt records were kept,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn likely to win support from Jerusalem's poor.<ref>The Jewish War, II, 427</ref>Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

The rebels then captured the Antonia Fortress, seizing artillery and massacring the Roman garrison.Template:Sfn With reinforcements from the Sicarii, they captured Herod's Palace, then agreed to a ceasefire with the moderates, but refused to make peace with the Roman soldiers.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn The Romans retreated to the towers of Phasael, Hippicus, and Mariamne, where they held out for eleven more days.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn During this time, the Sicarii captured and killed Ananias and his brother.Template:Sfn In mid-September,Template:Sfn the besieged soldiers surrendered for safe passage, but the rebels killed them all except commander Metilius, who pledged to convert to Judaism and undergo circumcision.Template:Sfn After appearing in royal attire in public, Menahem was captured, tortured, and executed by Eleazar ben Hanania's faction, while many of his Sicarii followers were killed or scattered.Template:Sfn Others, including Menahem's relative Eleazar ben Yair, withdrew to Masada.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Ethnic violence spread across the region. Around the time of the garrison massacre, according to Josephus,Template:Sfn non-Jews in Caesarea carried out an ethnic cleansing, killing about 20,000 Jews. The survivors were arrested by Florus.Template:Sfn Hundreds of Jews were reportedly killed in Ascalon and Akko-Ptolemais, while in Tyre, Hippos, and Gadara, many were executed or imprisoned.Template:Sfn The Jews of Scythopolis initially assisted their fellow townspeople in defending the city from Jewish attackers. However, they were later relocated with their families to a grove outside the town, where they were massacred by those who had fought alongside them.<ref>The Jewish War, II, 466</ref>Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn In Antioch, Sidon, and Apamea, the local residents spared the Jewish communities, and in Gerasa, they even escorted those who chose to leave all the way to the city's border.<ref>The Jewish War, II, 479–480</ref>Template:Sfn News of the massacre prompted Jewish groups to attack nearby villages and cities, especially in the Decapolis, including Philadelphia, Heshbon, Gerasa and Pella.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn Cedasa, Hippos, Akko-Ptolemais, Gaba, and Caesarea were also targeted.Template:Sfn Archaeological evidence confirms destruction in Gerasa and Gadara,Template:Sfn while Josephus describes Sebaste, Ashkelon, Anthedon, and Gaza as destroyed by fire, this account may be exaggerated.Template:Sfn

Violence also broke out in Alexandria, Egypt, when Greeks attacked Jews, capturing some alive and provoking retaliation.Template:Sfn Roman governor Tiberius Julius Alexander—a Jew who had renounced his ancestral traditionTemplate:Sfn—attempted mediation but failed, and his troops killed tens of thousands.Template:Sfn In Judaea, Jewish forces seized the fortresses of Cypros near Jericho and Machaerus in Perea.Template:Sfn

Gallus' campaign and defeatEdit

Template:Further information

At this point, Gallus marched from Antioch to Judaea with Legio XII Fulminata, 2,000 troops from each of Syria's three other legions, six infantry cohorts, and four cavalry units.Template:Sfn He was joined by two to three legions from vassal kings Antiochus IV of Commagene, Agrippa II, and Sohaemus of Emesa, adding thousands of cavalry and infantry to his forces.Template:Sfn Irregular forces from cities like Berytus, driven by anti-Jewish sentiment, were also recruited.<ref>The Jewish War, II, 18, 9</ref>Template:Sfn

From his base in Akko-Ptolemais,Template:Sfn Gallus launched a campaign in the Galilee, burning Chabulon and nearby villages before marching to Caesarea.Template:Sfn His forces captured Jaffa, massacred its people, and torched the city.Template:Sfn Cavalry units were also dispatched to ravage the toparchy (district) of Narbata, near Caesarea.Template:Sfn The residents of Sepphoris welcomed the Romans and pledged their support.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Gallus then advanced toward Jerusalem, leaving destruction in his wake. The town of Lydda, largely deserted as most residents had gone to Jerusalem for the festival of Sukkot (around September–October), was destroyed, and those who remained were killed.Template:Sfn As the army continued through Bethoron and Gabaon, it was ambushed by Jewish forces, suffering heavy losses. Among the Jewish fighters were Niger the PereanTemplate:Sfn Simon bar Giora,Template:Sfn and Adiabenian princes Monobazus and Candaios.Template:Sfn Agrippa made a final attempt at peace, but failed.Template:Sfn

In late Tishrei (September/October), Gallus encamped on Mount Scopus overlooking Jerusalem.Template:Sfn This drove the rebels into the inner city and Temple complex.Template:Sfn Upon entering, Gallus set fire to the Bezetha district and Timber Market to intimidate the population.Template:Sfn For unclear reasons, he lifted the siege and retreated.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Josephus suggested that Gallus could have captured the city with more determination.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Historian Menahem Stern suggested that Gallus, facing strong resistance, doubted he could seize the city.Template:Sfn Historian E. Mary Smallwood proposed that Gallus may have been concerned about the approaching winter, lack of siege equipment, the risk of ambushes in the hills, and the potential insincerity of the moderates' offer to open the gates.Template:Sfn

Gallus' retreat turned into a rout, resulting in the loss of 5,300 infantry and 480 cavalry.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn At the steep, narrow Bethoron pass, the Roman force fell into an ambush by archers positioned on the surrounding cliffs. Some escaped under cover of darkness but at the cost of hundreds of men.Template:Sfn Pursued to Antipatris, the Roman forces abandoned supplies, including artillery and battering rams, which the rebels seized.Template:Sfn Suetonius claimed the Romans lost their legionary eagle.<ref>Suetonius, Vespasian, 4.5</ref>Template:Sfn Gallus died soon after, possibly by suicide.<ref>Histories, 5.10.1</ref>Template:Sfn Scholars note the rarity of this defeat as a decisive Roman loss in a provincial uprising.Template:Sfn

The unexpected victory boosted pro-revolt factions, increasing their confidence, while many others were swept up in the enthusiasm.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Some elite moderates fled to the Romans, while others stayed and joined the rebels.<ref>The Jewish War, II, 556</ref>Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Among those fleeing were Costobar and Saul, members of the Herodian royalty, as well as Philip, son of Iacimus, the prefect of Agrippa's army.Template:Sfn Around the same time, a pogrom broke out in Damascus. The city's men, fearing betrayal by their wives who had converted to Judaism, locked the Jewish population in a gymnasium and, according to Josephus, killed thousands within hours.Template:Sfn

Judean provisional governmentEdit

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File:Half Shekel.jpg
A coin issued by the rebels in 68, using the Paleo-Hebrew alphabet. Obverse: "Shekel, Israel. Year 3." Reverse: "Jerusalem the Holy"

After Gallus' defeat, a popular assembly convened at the Jerusalem Temple and established a provisional government. Ananus ben Ananus, a former High Priest, was appointed as one of the government heads alongside Joseph ben Gurion.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn The new government divided the country into military districts. Josephus was appointed commander of Galilee and Gaulanitis,Template:SfnTemplate:Efn while Joseph ben Shimon commanded Jericho.Template:Sfn John the Essene led the districts of Jaffa, Lydda, Emmaus, and Thamna,Template:Sfn and Eleazar ben Ananias and Jesus ben Sappha oversaw Idumaea, with Niger the Perean, a hero of the Gallus campaign, under their command. Menasseh commanded Perea in Transjordan, and John ben Ananias was tasked with Gophna and Acrabetta.Template:Sfn Eleazar ben Simon, who had played a role in Gallus' defeat and seized large amounts of money and spoils, was denied any formal position.Template:Sfn Simon bar Giora, another leading figure in the victory over Gallus, was likewise overlooked.Template:Sfn Citing the exclusion of the Zealots, scholars such as Richard Horsley argue that the government may have only feigned support for the revolt, instead seeking a compromise with Rome.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Following the Temple meeting,Template:Sfn Jerusalem's priestly leadershipTemplate:Sfn began minting coins—an assertion of financial autonomy and rejection of foreign rule.Template:Sfn The coins bore Hebrew inscriptions with slogans like "Jerusalem the Holy" and "For the Freedom of Zion",Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn later changed in the fourth year to "For the Redemption of Zion".Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Dated using a new revolutionary calendar (years one to five), they marked the start of a new era of independence.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The silver coins—the first of their kind in Jewish history—were labeled as the "shekel of Israel",Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn with "Israel" possibly denoting the state's name.Template:Sfn Their denominations (shekel, half-shekel, quarter-shekel)Template:Sfn revived the biblical weight system, evoking ancient sovereignty,Template:Sfn while the use of Hebrew symbolized Jewish nationalism and statehood.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Efn

The new government ordered the destruction of Herod Antipas' palace in Tiberias due to its display of images forbidden by Jewish law, possibly to demonstrate zeal or appease rebels.<ref>Josephus, Life, 65</ref>Template:Sfn Envoys were sent to Jews in the Parthian Empire to seek support against Rome.Template:Sfn In Jerusalem, the unfinished Third Wall protecting the northern flank was completed.Template:Sfn With no regular army since the Hasmoneans, the government struggled to build one, as most military-age men had joined rebel factions.Template:Sfn Rebels acquired arms by stripping the dead and captured, raiding fortresses, commissioning local blacksmiths in Jerusalem, and possibly buying from suppliers connected to the Roman army.Template:Sfn

During Hanukkah, Niger the Perean and John the Essene led an assault on Ashkelon,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn a city that remained under Roman control.Template:Sfn Two successive attacks were repelled, forcing a retreat.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn In Galilee, John of Gischala, a wealthy olive oil trader, emerged as a key rebel leader.Template:Sfn Initially opposed to the war,Template:Sfn he changed his stance after his hometown Gush Halav was attacked by the people of Tyre and Gadara.Template:Sfn Leading a group of peasants, refugees, and brigands,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn he became Josephus' main adversary, but failed to displace him.Template:Sfn Meanwhile, Simon bar Giora led attacks on the wealthy in northern Judea. Expelled from Acrabetene, he fled to Masada,Template:Sfn where rebels first distrusted but later accepted him into their raids.Template:Sfn

Vespasian's campaignsEdit

Vespasian's Galilee campaignEdit

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After Gallus's defeat, Nero appointed Vespasian—a former consul and seasoned commander—to lead the war effort.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Vespasian, a man of humble origins, was chosen—according to Suetonius—for both his military effectiveness and his obscure background,<ref>Vespasian 4.5–6</ref>Template:Sfn which made him a politically safe choice to suppress the revolt without posing a threat to the emperor.Template:Sfn He traveled from Corinth to Syria,Template:Sfn assembling Legions V Macedonica and X Fretensis, while Titus, his eldest son, marched XV Apollinaris from Alexandria to Akko-Ptolemais.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn The Roman force was reinforced by 23 auxiliary Template:Transliteration and six Template:Transliteration of cavalry, likely drawn from Syria. Local rulers, including Antiochus IV of Commagene, Agrippa II, Sohaemus of Emesa, and Malchus II of Nabatea, contributed additional infantry and cavalry.Template:Sfn

In early summer 67 CE, Vespasian established his base at Akko-Ptolemais before launching an offensive on the Galilee, a heavily populated Jewish region in the north of the province.Template:Sfn Josephus claimed to have assembled 100,000 men, though this figure is clearly exaggerated.Template:Sfn Additionally, people of Sepphoris–Galilee's capitalTemplate:Sfn and the second-largest Jewish city in the country after JerusalemTemplate:Sfn–surrendered and pledged loyalty to Rome.Template:Sfn Nevertheless, the Romans faced a significant challenge,Template:Sfn as Jewish forces withdrew into fortified cities and villages, forcing the Romans into prolonged sieges.Template:Sfn The Romans captured Gabara in the first assault, with Josephus reporting that all the men were killed—reportedly out of animosity toward the Jews and in retaliation for Gallus' defeat.Template:Sfn The town and surrounding villages were set on fire, and survivors were enslaved.<ref>The Jewish War, III, 132–134</ref>Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn Around the same time, Titus destroyed the nearby village of Iaphia, where all the men were reportedly slain and the women and children sold into slavery.Template:Sfn Cerialis, who commanded Legio V Macedonica, was dispatched to fight a large group of Samaritans who had gathered atop Mount Gerizim, the site of their ruined temple, killing many.Template:Sfn

Vespasian then besieged the town of Yodfat (Yodefat/Iotapata),Template:Sfn which fell in June or July after a 47-day siege.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Under Josephus's command, the defenders used various materials to absorb Roman attacks and countered with boulders and boiling oil—the earliest known use of this tactic.Template:Sfn Arrowheads and ballista stones have been found at the site.Template:Sfn When the city fell, the Romans massacred those outside and hunted survivors in hiding.Template:Sfn Josephus reported 40,000 deaths, though modern research estimates around 2,000 killed and 1,200 women and infants captured.Template:Sfn Josephus recounts that after the town's fall, he and 40 others hid in a deep pit and agreed to commit suicide by drawing lots.Template:Sfn Left among the last two, Josephus chose to surrender rather than die.Template:Sfn He prophesied Vespasian's rise to emperor, prompting Vespasian to spare him.Template:Sfn Vespasian and Titus then took a 20-day respite in Caesarea Philippi (Panias), Agrippa's capital.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn

As military operations resumed, Tiberias, a Jewish-majority city in Agrippa's realm,Template:Sfn surrendered without resistance as pro-Roman factions prevailed.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn By contrast, the nearby Tarichaea mounted a fierce defense. According to Josephus, the residents did not initially want to fight, but the influx of outsiders into the city made them more determined to resist after a decisive defeat outside the walls.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn After the town's fall, surviving rebels took to the Sea of Galilee, engaging the Romans in naval skirmishes that resulted in heavy losses for the Jews.Template:Sfn Josephus reports 6,700 killed, leaving the lake red with blood and filled with bodies.Template:Sfn Afterward, Vespasian separated local prisoners from "foreign instigators," executing 1,200 in Tiberias.Template:Sfn 6,000 were sent to work on the Corinth Canal in Greece,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn some were given to Agrippa II, and 30,400 were sold into slavery.<ref>The Jewish War, III, 540</ref>Template:Sfn

File:Gamla ruin.jpg
Gamla, a fortified town in the Golan, fell to Roman forces in 67 CE. The image shows the main breach in the town's wall

The next target was Gamla, a fortified city on a steep rocky promontory in the southern Golan.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Archaeological finds at the site include pieces of armor, arrowheads and hundreds of ballista and catapult stones.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Gamla's synagogue was seemingly repurposed into a refuge area, as indicated by fireplaces, cookpots, and storage jars buried under ballista stones.Template:Sfn Despite heavy casualties, the Romans eventually seized the town in October, and it was never resettled.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn According to Josephus, only two women survived, with the rest either throwing themselves into ravines or being killed by the Romans.Template:Sfn

John of Gischala negotiated a surrender at Gush Halav, but fled with his followers during a Shabbat truce offered by Titus. The city capitulated upon Titus's return.Template:Sfn The Romans also captured the fortress on Mount TaborTemplate:Sfn and, in a separate campaign, recaptured Jaffa, ending rebel piracy that had disrupted naval routes and grain supplies; a storm helped by destroying the rebel fleet.Template:Sfn

Civil war and coup in JerusalemEdit

{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}}

As the Galilee campaign ended, Jerusalem descended into chaos, overcrowded with refugees and rebels.Template:Sfn The Zealots, led by Eleazar ben Simon and Zachariah ben Avkilus, opposed the moderate government, continuing the anti-Roman stance of Eleazar ben Hananiah.Template:Sfn Allied with John of Gischala, who likely arrived in late 67 CE,Template:Sfn they executed suspected collaborators, seized the Temple, and appointed Phannias ben Samuel—an unqualified villager without priestly lineage—as high priest by lot.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn In response, moderate leader Ananus ben Ananus rallied popular support to confront the Zealots. Though the Zealots launched a preemptive attack, they were overpowered and forced to retreat into the Temple.Template:Sfn Urged by John, they summoned the Idumeans,Template:Efn who entered the city during a storm and, alongside the Zealots, massacred Ananus's forces and civilians alike.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Through the winter of 67/68, the Zealots consolidated control via terror, staged tribunals, and executions of moderates, killing Ananus, Joshua ben Gamla, Niger the Perean, and Joseph ben Gurion.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Many Idumeans later withdrew, while others joined Simon bar Giora.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Upon hearing of the events from deserters,Template:Efn Vespasian decided against marching on Jerusalem, reasoning that the God of the Jews was delivering them into Roman hands without any effort, and that it was wiser to let them destroy one another.<ref>The Jewish War, IV, 370–371</ref>Template:Sfn In Spring, during the Passover feast, the Sicarii descended from Masada and raided the wealthy village of Ein Gedi on the southwestern shore of the Dead Sea.Template:Sfn They killed 700 women and children, looted homes, and seized crops before returning to the fort.Template:Sfn Similar raids on nearby villages devastated the area and attracted new recruits.Template:Sfn

Vespasian's campaign in JudeaEdit

In January 68, the leaders of Gadara in Perea sent a delegation to Vespasian to offer their surrender. As he advanced, opponents of the surrender killed a leading citizen and fled. The remaining residents dismantled the city walls, allowing Roman forces to enter and establish a garrison.Template:Sfn Meanwhile, fugitives attempted to rally support in nearby Bethennabris, but were defeated by Roman forces. The survivors, seeking refuge in Jericho, were massacred near the Jordan River, where over 15,000 were reportedly killed, and many drowned or were captured.Template:Sfn

In spring 68, Vespasian systematically subdued settlements en route to Jerusalem,Template:Sfn delaying the siege to gather supplies from the spring harvest and to let internal factions weaken.Template:Sfn After capturing Antipatris, Vespasian advanced, burning and destroying nearby towns. He reduced the district of Thamna and resettled Lydda and Yavneh with surrendered inhabitants.Template:Sfn At Emmaus, he stationed Legio V by April 68.Template:Sfn From there, he advanced to Bethleptepha, burning the area and parts of Idumaea, before capturing Betabris and Caphartoba, reportedly killing over 10,000 people and taking 1,000 prisoners.Template:Sfn By May–June, he camped at Corea, passed through Mabartha (later Flavia Neapolis) in Samaria,Template:Sfn and advanced to Jericho, joining the force that took Perea. Perea's survivors fled to Jericho but abandoned it as the Romans approached, leaving it empty. The Romans then stationed garrisons in Jericho and Adida, east of Lydda.Template:Sfn

Vespasian visited the Dead Sea and tested its buoyancy by throwing bound non-swimmers into the water.Template:Sfn Archaeological evidence indicates that around this time, the Qumran community, commonly linked to the Essenes,Template:Sfn was destroyed,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn with some members possibly joining the rebels at Masada.Template:Sfn Following this, commander Lucius Annius was sent to Gerasa (likely a textual error for Gezer), where after capturing the city, he executed many young men, enslaved women and children, plundered and burned the homes, and destroyed surrounding villages, slaughtering those who could not escape.Template:Sfn

Simon bar Giora gained strength outside Jerusalem, extending his influence over Judea. He plundered the wealthy, freed slaves, and promised gifts to his followers.Template:Sfn After defeating a Zealot army,Template:Sfn he reached a stalemate with an Idumaean force before withdrawing to Nain, preparing to invade Idumaea.Template:Sfn In Teqoa, he failed to capture Herodium,Template:Sfn and at Alurus, an Idumaean officer betrayed his army, leading them to surrender without a fight.Template:Sfn Simon's subsequent successes, including the capture of Hebron,Template:Sfn prompted the Zealots to ambush him. When they captured his wife, Simon retaliated by torturing captives, threatening to destroy Jerusalem's walls unless she was returned.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The Zealots complied, and Simon paused his campaign.Template:Sfn

Simon enters Jerusalem, and a succession war in RomeEdit

Template:Further information

File:Year of the Four Emperors.jpg
Coins from the Year of the Four Emperors. Following Nero's death in June 68, a delay of about a year occurred, during which Vespasian left Judaea to contest the imperial throne

As the war progressed, major political upheavals were taking place in Rome. In June 68, Nero fled Rome and committed suicide,Template:Sfn sparking a war of succession known as the "Year of the Four Emperors".Template:Sfn After only a few months in power, Emperor Galba was murdered by supporters of his rival, Otho.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Meanwhile, in Jerusalem, the Galilean Zealots plundered the homes of the wealthy, murdered men, and raped women.Template:Sfn Following this, they reportedly began to adopt the attire and behaviors of women, imitating both their ornaments and their desires, as Josephus notes, engaging in what he describes as "unlawful pleasures".Template:SfnTemplate:Efn Those who fled the city were killed by Simon bar Giora and his followers outside the walls.Template:Sfn

In April 69, the rivals of John of Gischala opened Jerusalem's gates for Simon ben Giora.Template:Sfn Simon took control over much of the city, including the Upper City, with his base at the Phasael Tower, much of the Lower City, and the northern suburbs.Template:Sfn He failed, however, to dislodge John, who retained control over the Temple area.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Simon's forces grew as the Idumaeans and nobles joined him.Template:Sfn

In June 69, Vespasian subdued the toparchies of Gophna and Acrabetta and captured the cities of Bethel and Ephraim.Template:Sfn He then approached Jerusalem's walls, killing many and capturing others, marking his closest approach to the city.Template:Sfn Meanwhile, Cerialis led a scorched-earth campaign in northern Idumaea, burning Caphethra and capturing Capharabis, whose residents surrendered to the Romans with olive branches, sparing the town from destruction. The Romans then destroyed Hebron and slaughtered its inhabitants.<ref>The Jewish War, IV, 550–555</ref>Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Infighting in Jerusalem persisted throughout the summer of 69.Template:Sfn The rival factions burned the city's food supplies to weaken their opponents, severely depleting the resources needed to withstand the impending siege.Template:Sfn According to Tacitus, "There were constant battles, treachery and arson among them, and a large store of grain was burnt."<ref>Histories, V, 12.3</ref>Template:Sfn According to rabbinic sources, extremists set fire to the supplies in order to compel the people to fight the Romans.<ref>Lamentations Rabbah, 1.31; Ecclesiastes Rabbah, 7.12; Avot de-Rabbi Natan (Version A, c. 6; Version B: c. 7)</ref>Template:EfnTemplate:Efn The destruction of supplies led to widespread starvation.Template:Sfn

According to Josephus, Vespasian was proclaimed emperor by his troops in Caesarea in mid-69 CE, though the official account places his first acclamation on 1 July in Alexandria.Template:Sfn After reluctantly accepting, he secured the support of Egypt, followed by Syria and other provinces.Template:Sfn With military operations in Judaea paused,Template:Sfn he traveled to Alexandria in autumn 69 and remained there with Titus through the winter.Template:Sfn With Vitellius, the reigning emperor, dead on 20 December 69, the Senate conferred imperial authority on Vespasian the next day.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Command in Judaea was transferred to Titus,Template:Sfn while Vespasian stayed in Egypt until later summer 70, when he sailed to Rome to secure the throne.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Siege of Jerusalem and conclusion of the warEdit

Siege of JerusalemEdit

{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}}By the winter of 69/70 CE, Titus returned to Judaea with over 48,000 troops, establishing his base in Caesarea.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn His forces included legions V Macedonica, X Fretensis, XV Apollinaris, XII Fulminata, auxiliaries from Egypt and vassal kingdoms, and Arab allies reportedly driven by long-standing hostility toward the Jews.Template:Sfn In early Nisan (March/April) 70, Titus camped near Gibeah, north of Jerusalem,Template:Sfn choosing to attack from the north, where the terrain lacked natural defenses.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Jerusalem, then swelled by Passover pilgrims and refugeesTemplate:Sfn—faced mounting pressure as Roman forces approached. The warring factions only united as the Romans battered its walls.Template:Sfn Titus narrowly escaped an ambush during reconnaissance, then established camps at Mount Scopus and the Mount of Olives, repelling a Jewish surprise attack during the latter's construction.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn

On 14 Nisan, with the onset of Passover, the Romans exploited a halt in Jewish attacks to position their siege forces.Template:Sfn Meanwhile, John's faction infiltrated the Temple's inner courtyards and subdued the Zealots.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn

After fifteen days, the Romans breached the Third Wall and captured the northern suburbs.Template:Sfn The Second Wall was breached soon after; though initially unable to hold the area,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn the Romans later secured it, destroyed northern Jerusalem,Template:Sfn and paraded their forces for psychological effect.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn A famine ravaged the city,Template:SfnTemplate:Efn with Josephus describing mass suffering and even cannibalism.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Attempted escapees were executed by both rebels and Romans,Template:Sfn as Arab and Syrian auxiliaries disemboweled refugees while searching for hidden valuables.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn By Sivan (May/June), the Romans completed a circumvallation wall to cut off supplies and escape routes.Template:Sfn The defenders destroyed the siege engines targeting the Antonia Fortress by tunneling beneath them and setting them ablaze, but the fortress eventually fell, leading the Romans to turn their assault toward the Temple.Template:Sfn The defenders burned the porticoes linking the sanctuary to the fortress to block Roman access and took refuge in the courtyards.Template:Sfn On the eighth day of Av (July/August), the sanctuary's outer court was breached.Template:Sfn

On 10 Av, a Roman soldier hurled a burning object into the Temple, sparking a blaze that consumed the structure.<ref>The Jewish War, VI, 254–259</ref>Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn According to Josephus, Titus intended to preserve the Temple as a symbol of Roman rule,<ref>The Jewish War, VI, 237–243</ref>Template:Sfn and when it caught fire, he reportedly rushed from a nap and ordered the flames extinguished, but his soldiers ignored or did not hear him.Template:Sfn In contrast, 4th-century historian Sulpicius Severus claims Titus ordered the destruction.<ref>Sulpicius Severus, Chronica 2.30, 6–7</ref>Template:Sfn Amid the fire, chaos reigned—mass suicides and indiscriminate slaughter followed.Template:EfnTemplate:Sfn The remaining structures on the Temple Mount were razed.<ref>The Jewish War, VI, 280–284</ref>Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Titus ordered the destruction of several districts, including the Acra and the Ophel,Template:Sfn followed by the entire Lower City.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn On 20 Av, the Upper City was stormed.Template:Sfn Soldiers massacred people in their homes and streets, and many who fled into tunnels were either killed or captured.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn According to Josephus, Titus spared only three towers of Herod's palace and a portion of Jerusalem's western wall for a Roman garrison, while the rest of the city was systematically razed.<ref>The Jewish War, VII, 1–3</ref>Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn The archeological record confirms widespread destruction and burning across the city in 70 CE.Template:Sfn

File:Davidson Center - Jerusalem Archaeological Park - The Western Wall overground 2.jpg
A pile of stones beneath the Western Wall, thrown down by Roman legionaries from the Temple Mount during its destruction, now preserved in the Jerusalem Archaeological Park

After the city's fall, the elderly and infirm were killed against Titus's orders,Template:Sfn while younger survivors were sorted: rebels executed, the strongest sent to Titus' triumph, those over 17 enslaved or executed across the empire, and children sold into slavery.Template:Sfn John of Gischala surrendered and was sentenced to life imprisonment,Template:Sfn while Simon bar Giora, captured after emerging from a tunnel, was brought in chains before Titus.Template:Sfn

Triumph in RomeEdit

File:The Triumph of Titus Alma Tadema.jpg
The Triumph of Titus, painting by Lawrence Alma-Tadema, 1885

After Jerusalem's fall, Titus toured Judaea and southern Syria, funding spectacles with Jewish captives.<ref name="tjw">The Jewish War, VII, 96</ref>Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Efn In Caesarea Philippi, he staged executions, gladiatorial combat, and wild animal killings. For his brother Domitian's birthday, celebrated in Caesarea Maritima, 2,500 captives were slaughtered in similar games.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn More executions followed during Vespasian's birthday in Berytus.Template:Sfn

In the summer of 71 CE, a triumph was celebrated in Rome to mark the victory in Judaea—the only imperial triumph ever held for the subjugation of a provincial population already under Roman rule.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The event, witnessed by hundreds of thousands of spectators,Template:Sfn featured Vespasian and Titus riding in chariots.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The procession featured treasures and artworks, including tapestries, gemstones, statues, and animals.Template:Sfn Among the treasures carried in the procession were the Temple's menorah, a golden table, possibly that of the Showbread, and "the law of the Jews," likely sacred texts taken from the Temple.Template:Sfn Jewish captives were paraded "to display their own destruction",<ref name="tjw" />Template:Sfn while multi-story scaffolds showcased ivory and gold craftsmanship, illustrating scenes of the war, including ruined cities, destroyed fortresses, and defeated enemies.Template:Sfn Simon bar Giora was paraded in the procession and, upon its end on Capitoline Hill, scourged and taken to the Mamertine Prison, where he was executed by hanging.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Last strongholdsEdit

Template:Further information In the spring of 71, Titus departed for Rome, leaving three fortresses still under rebel control.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Sextus Lucilius Bassus, the new legate of Judaea, was tasked with their conquest.Template:Sfn Herodium, located south of Jerusalem,Template:Sfn fell rapidly, with Josephus offering only a brief mention of its surrender.<ref>The Jewish War, VII, 163</ref>Template:Sfn Bassus then crossed the Jordan River to besiege Machaerus, constructing a circumvallation wall, siege camps, and an incomplete assault ramp, traces of which still exist today.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The rebels capitulated after Eleazar, a young man from a prominent Jewish family who had ventured outside the fort, was captured, stripped, and scourged in full view of the defenders in preparation for crucifixion. The insurgents then negotiated their surrender, securing assurances of safe passage for the Jewish defenders.<ref>The Jewish War, VII, 200–205</ref>Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The Romans slaughtered all non-Jews at the site, except for a few who escaped.Template:Sfn Bassus then pursued rebels led by Judah ben Ari in the forest of Jardes.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn Roman cavalry surrounded the forest while infantry cut down trees and overpowered the outmatched rebels; 3,000 were reportedly killed.Template:Sfn Bassus then died of uncertain causes.Template:Sfn

Template:Multiple image Lucius Flavius Silva succeeded Bassus and, in 72/73 or 73/74 CE,Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn led 8,000 troops—including Legio X Fretensis and auxiliaries—to besiege Masada, the last rebel stronghold.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn When its defenders refused to surrender, he established siege camps and a circumvallation wall around the fort, along with a siege ramp, features that remain among the best-preserved examples of Roman siegecraft.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The siege lasted between two and six months during the winter season.Template:Sfn According to Josephus, when it became evident that the last fortification would fall, Eleazar ben Yair, the leader of the rebels, delivered a speech advocating for collective suicide.Template:Sfn He argued that this act would preserve their freedom, spare them from slavery, and deny their enemies a final victory.<ref>The Jewish War, VII, 334–336, 388</ref>Template:Sfn The rebels carried out the plan, with each man killing his own family before taking his own life.Template:Sfn When the Romans entered the fortress, they found that 960 of the 967 inhabitants had committed suicide. Only two women and five children survived, having concealed themselves in a cistern.<ref>The Jewish War, VII, 399–400</ref>Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Archaeological work at Masada uncovered eleven ostraca (one of which contained the name of Ben Yair, possibly used to determine the order of suicide), twenty-five skeletons of the defenders, ritual baths and a synagogue.Template:Sfn Findings at the site support Josephus' account of the siege, though the mass suicide's historicity remains debated.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Efn

ConsequencesEdit

Destruction and displacement in JudaeaEdit

The revolt's suppression had a profound impact on the Jews of Judaea. Many died in battles, sieges, and famine, while cities, towns, and villages across the region suffered varying degrees of destruction.Template:Sfn The Jewish capital of Jerusalem—praised by Pliny the Elder as "by far the most famous city of the East"<ref>Pliny, Naturalis Historia, v. 70</ref>Template:Sfn—was systematically destroyed,Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn with much of its population massacred or enslaved.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn Tacitus described the siege as involving "six hundred thousand" besieged people of all ages and both sexes, remarking: "Both men and women showed the same determination; and if they were to be forced to change their home, they feared life more than death."<ref name=":1">Tacitus, Histories, V, XIII</ref>Template:Sfn Josephus claimed that 1.1 million people died in Jerusalem, including pilgrims present for Passover—a figure widely considered exaggerated. Historian Seth Schwartz estimates the population of Judaea at roughly 1 million (half Jewish), noting that large Jewish communities survived the war. Rogers similarly interprets Josephus' number as intended to flatter the Romans and instead suggests 20,000–30,000 deaths in Jerusalem.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Classicist Charles Murison suggests the 1.1 million may refer to total war losses.Template:Sfn

Aside from Jerusalem itself, Judea proper experienced the most severe devastation, particularly in the Judaean Mountains.Template:Sfn In contrast, cities like Lod, Yavneh and their surroundings remained relatively intact.Template:Sfn In the Galilee, Tarichaea (likely Magdala) and Gabara were destroyed, but Sepphoris and Tiberias reconciled with the Romans and escaped major harm.Template:Sfn Mixed cities saw the elimination of their Jewish populations, and the impact extended into parts of Transjordan.Template:Sfn Furthermore, large numbers of Jews were taken captive. Josephus' report of 97,000 captives has been accepted by several scholars.Template:Efn Many faced harsh treatment, execution, or forced labor. Strong young men were sent into gladiatorial combat across the empire; others were sold into slavery or sent to brothels, with the majority exiled abroad.Template:Sfn

Historian Moshe David Herr estimates that one-quarter of Judaea's Jewish population died due to warfare, civil strife, famine, disease and massacres in the mixed cities.Template:Sfn A further tenth were captured. In total, he concludes that roughly one-third of the Jewish population of Judaea was effectively erased.Template:Sfn Despite the devastating losses, Jewish life recovered and continued to flourish in Judaea.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Jews remained a relative majority in the region,Template:Sfn and Jewish society eventually regained enough strength to rise in revolt again during the Bar Kokhba revolt (132–136 CE). That rebellion's suppression, however, proved even more catastrophic, leading to the widespread destruction and depopulation of Judea proper.Template:Sfn

Economic and social ramificationsEdit

The uprising effectively ended the already limited Jewish political and social autonomy under Rome.Template:Sfn The social impact was profound, particularly for the classes closely associated with the temple. The aristocracy, including the High Priesthood, who held significant influence and amassed great wealth, collapsed entirely.Template:Sfn Their fall, along with that of the Sanhedrin, created a leadership vacuum.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

The revolt significantly impacted Judaea's economy, and to a lesser extent, the broader Jewish world. The influx of pilgrims concentrated vast wealth in Jerusalem, but its destruction ended this prosperity.Template:Sfn The Romans confiscated and auctioned the land of Jews who participated in the insurrection, affecting many landowners in Judea proper.Template:Sfn The date and balsam groves of Jericho and Ein Gedi, along with other "royal lands," were incorporated into Vespasian's estate.Template:Sfn The countryside was devastated; Josephus reports that all trees around Jerusalem were felled during the siege, leaving the land barren.Template:Sfn Only a small number of Jews remained in Jerusalem's vicinity, which Pliny the Elder now referred to as the toparchy of Orine.Template:Sfn The emperor took control of the area, and the Jews were forced to work it as quasi-tenants.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

File:Greek ostrakon – receipt of payment of the Jewish tax (MAK-AS-2782-74).jpg
After the revolt, a new tax, the Fiscus Judaicus, was imposed on all Jews in the Empire. Pictured is a receipt of payment from Edfu

Following the destruction of Jerusalem, the Romans imposed a new tax, the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, on all Jews across the Empire.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Efn This tax required Jews to pay an annual sum of two drachmas, replacing the half-shekel previously donated to the Temple. The funds were redirected to the rebuilding and maintenance of the Temple of Jupiter Capitolinus in Rome, which had been destroyed during the civil war of 69 CE.<ref>The Jewish War, VII, 218</ref>Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn The tax implicitly held all Jews in the Roman Empire responsible for the revolt, even though most had no role in the conflict.Template:Sfn Under Domitian, tax enforcement worsened.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn Suetonius writes that Domitian extended the tax to those who lived as Jews without openly acknowledging it and to those who hid their Jewish background.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn His successor, Nerva, reformed the tax system, applying it only to Jews who observed their ancestral customs.Template:Sfn

Establishment of Roman garrisons and coloniesEdit

File:Samuel and Saidye Bronfman Archaeology WingDSCN5046.JPG
An inscription referencing Legio X Fretensis, a legion stationed on Jerusalem's ruins

Following the revolt, Jerusalem's ruins were garrisoned by Legio X Fretensis, which remained stationed there for nearly two centuries.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The Roman forces also included cavalry Template:Transliteration and infantry Template:Transliteration.Template:Sfn This increased presence prompted changes in the province's administrative structure, requiring the appointment of a governor ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}}) of ex-praetorian rank.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Within this new framework, the regions of Judea and Idumaea were designated as a military zone ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}}) under the command of officers from Legio X.Template:Sfn

Former soldiers, along with other Roman citizens, established themselves in Judaea.Template:Sfn Vespasian settled 800 veterans in Motza, which became a colony named {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} or {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn He also granted colony status to Caesarea, renaming it {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} and settling many veterans there.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn A large odeon was reportedly built in the city on the site of a former synagogue, using war spoils.<ref name=":0">John Malalas, Chronicle, 10, 261</ref>Template:Sfn The devastated port town of Jaffa was re-founded,Template:Sfn and a new city, Flavia Neapolis, was founded in Samaritis, near the ruins of Shechem.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

In the Jewish diasporaEdit

The revolt led to the revocation of many privileges previously enjoyed by Jews in the diaspora.Template:Sfn Roman authorities took measures to quell possible uprisings in diaspora communities, focusing on individuals deemed troublemakers in Egypt and Cyrenaica,Template:Sfn which had absorbed thousands of refugees and insurgents from Judaea.Template:Sfn According to Josephus, a group of Sicarii fled to these regions, where they tried to incite rebellion and, even under torture, refused to acknowledge the emperor as "lord."<ref>The Jewish War, VII, 410, 418–19</ref>Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Jewish institutions were now seen as potential sources of rebellion,Template:Sfn leading to the closure of the Jewish temple at Leontopolis in Egypt in 72 CE.<ref>The Jewish War, VII, 420–436</ref>Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

In spring 71 CE, upon arriving in Antioch, Titus faced demands to expel the Jews but refused, stating that the Jews' country was destroyed and no other place would take them.<ref>The Jewish War, VII, 100–109</ref>Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The crowd then sought removal of tablets inscribed with the Jews' rights, but Titus again declined.<ref>The Jewish War, VII, 110–11; Antiquities of the Jews, XII, 121–24.</ref>Template:Sfn In 73 CE, the Jewish aristocracy in Cyrenaica was massacred. While Vespasian did not openly approve, he implicitly endorsed it by treating the responsible Roman governor leniently.Template:Sfn

In the wake of the revolt, thousands of Jewish slaves were brought to the Italian Peninsula.Template:Sfn A tombstone from Puteoli, near Naples, mentions a captive woman from Jerusalem named Claudia Aster, with the name Aster believed to be derived from Esther.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn The Roman poet Martial references a Jewish slave of his, described as originating from "Jerusalem destroyed by fire."Template:Sfn Jewish slaves brought to Italy after the war are also evidenced by graffiti in Pompeii and other places in Campania, as well as possibly by Habinnas, a character who may have been Jewish, in Petronius' Satyricon.Template:Sfn Similar to Josephus, there are records of other Jews bearing the Template:Transliteration "Flavius", possibly indicating descent from freed captives.Template:Sfn Rome itself experienced a significant influx of Jewish slaves.Template:Sfn

The destruction of Jerusalem also brought Jews to the Arabian Peninsula, leading to the establishment of settlements in southern Yemen, along the coast of Ḥaḍramawt, and most notably in the Hejaz, particularly in Yathrib (later Medina), where they became prominent representatives of monotheism in pre-Islamic Arabia.Template:Sfn Around the same period, Jews also began settling in Hispania (modern Spain and Portugal) and Gaul (modern France).Template:Sfn

Roman commemoration of the victoryEdit

Vespasian, who came from a relatively modest background,Template:Sfn leveraged his victory to solidify his claim to the emperorship, elevate Rome's prestige, and redirect attention from the civil war that had brought him to power,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn heralding an era of peace reminiscent of Augustus' reign.Template:Sfn His dynasty framed its legitimacy on triumph over a foreign enemy.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Multiple image

The Flavians issued a series of coins inscribed with the title {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} ("Judaea has been conquered") to commemorate the subjugation of the province.Template:Sfn Issued over a 10–12-year period, the series marked a rare instance of a provincial defeat being celebrated in Roman coinage and served as a key component of Flavian propaganda.Template:Sfn The obverse of the coins typically featured portraits of Titus or Vespasian,Template:Sfn while the reverse depicted symbolic imagery, including a mourning woman, representing the Jewish people, seated beneath a date palm, a symbol of Judaea.Template:Sfn Variations in the designs included depictions of the woman bound, kneeling, or blindfolded before Nike (or Victoria), personifications of victory.Template:Sfn

Rome's city center was reshaped with victory monuments,Template:Sfn including two triumphal arches: the Arch of Titus in the Forum, completed after his death in 81 CE, and another at the Circus Maximus, finished earlier that year.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn The first, still standing, is widely attributed to Domitian, was dedicated by the Senate and People of Rome to the divine Vespasian and Titus.Template:Sfn It features reliefs of soldiers carrying Temple spoils and Titus in a quadriga during the triumph.Template:Sfn The second arch's inscription proclaims Titus "subdued the Jewish people and destroyed the city of Jerusalem, a thing either sought in vain by all generals, kings and peoples before him or untried entirely."Template:SfnTemplate:Efn

File:Rome (Italy, October 2019) - 157 (50589726552).jpg
Rome's Arch of Titus (front) features reliefs of the triumph, including the display of Temple vessels, while the Colosseum (back) was financed "from the spoils of the war."

The Temple spoils, including the menorah, were displayed in the newly built Temple of Peace, alongside other masterpieces of art.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn The temple, dedicated to Pax, the Roman goddess of peace,Template:Sfn symbolized the restoration of peace throughout the Empire.Template:Sfn Additionally, the Colosseum, initiated by Vespasian and completed under Titus, was financed "{{#invoke:Lang|lang}}" (from the spoils of war), as noted in an inscription, tying its funding to the Jewish War.Template:Sfn

Construction works commemorating the victory seem to have also taken place in Syria. John Malalas, a 6th-century Byzantine chronicler, writes that a synagogue in Daphne, near Antioch, was destroyed during the war and replaced by Vespasian with a theater, an inscription of which claimed it was founded "from the spoils of Judaea."<ref name=":0" />Template:Sfn He also describes a gate of cherubs in Antioch, established by Titus from the spoils of the Temple.Template:Sfn

LegacyEdit

Impact on JudaismEdit

Yavneh, ben Zakkai, and the transformation of JudaismEdit

Template:Further information

The destruction of the Second Temple, as a symbol of God's presence which was central to Jewish life,Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn created a deep religious and societal void.Template:Sfn It ended sacrificial offerings,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn terminated the High Priesthood's lineage,Template:Sfn and led to the disappearance of Jewish sectarianism.Template:Sfn The Sadducees, whose authority depended on the Temple, dissolved due to the loss of their power base, role in the revolt, land confiscations, and the collapse of Jewish self-governance.Template:Sfn The Essenes, including the community of Qumran, also vanished.Template:Efn In contrast, the Pharisees—who had largely opposed the revolt—survived. Their spiritual successors,Template:Efn the rabbinic sages, emerged as the dominant force in Judaism through the rise of the rabbinic movement,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn which reoriented Jewish life around Torah study and acts of loving-kindness.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

According to rabbinic sources,Template:Efn Rabban Yohanan ben Zakkai ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}}), a prominent Pharisaic sage,Template:Sfn was smuggled out of besieged Jerusalem in a coffin by his students. After prophesying Vespasian's rise to emperor,Template:Efn he secured permission to establish a rabbinic center in Yavneh.Template:Efn There, a system of rabbinic scholarship began to form,Template:Efn laying the foundation for Rabbinic Judaism as the dominant form of Judaism in later centuries.Template:Sfn Under Ben Zakkai and his successor Gamaliel II,Template:Sfn various enactments adapted Jewish life to post-Temple reality, including extending Temple-related practices for observance outside the Temple.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn For example, the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} of taking the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} was extended to all seven days of Sukkot everywhere, whereas it had previously been observed only in the Temple.Template:Sfn The {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} was also permitted to be sounded in any courtyard when the New Year coincided with Shabbat.Template:Sfn Additionally, the prayer liturgy was formalized, including the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, which was established to be recited three times daily as a substitute for the sacrificial offerings.<ref>Jerusalem Talmud, Berakhot 4, 1, 7b; Babylonian Talmud, Berakhot 26b</ref>Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The rabbinic reconstitution of Judaism continued over the subsequent centuries, culminating in the compilation of the Mishnah and later the two Talmuds, which became foundational texts of Jewish law.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

The synagogue increasingly became the center of Jewish worship and community life.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Rabbinic literature describes it as a "diminished sanctuary",Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn stating that divine presence resides there, especially during prayer or study.Template:Sfn Traditional synagogue worship—including sermons and scripture readings—was preserved, while new forms such as {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} (liturgical poetry) and organized prayer also emerged.Template:Sfn Rabbinic instruction maintained that certain rituals remained exclusive to the Temple,Template:Sfn and most synagogues are faced toward its site.Template:Sfn

Jewish responses to the destructionEdit

File:PikiWiki Israel 44784 Tisha BAv at the Western Wall.JPG
Jews praying at the Western Wall during Tisha B'Av, a fast day commemorating the Temple's destruction

The Temple's destruction is commemorated in Judaism on Tisha B'Av, a major fast day that also marks the destruction of the First Temple alongside other tragedies in Jewish history.Template:Sfn The Western Wall, a remnant of the temple, had become a symbol of the homeland's destruction and the hope for its restoration.Template:Sfn Following the destruction, some Jews reportedly mourned the loss by abstaining from meat and wine, while others withdrew to caves, awaiting redemption.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn In late antiquity, some communities even adopted the year of the Temple's destruction as a reference point for life events.Template:Sfn

Jewish apocalyptic literature experienced a resurgence,Template:Sfn mourning the Temple's destruction while offering explanations for the events.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The Apocalypse of Baruch and Fourth Ezra interpreted the destruction of the Second Temple through the lens of the First, reusing its figures, historical setting, and biblical motifs to portray contemporary events as divinely ordained and heralding the end times.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Drawing on the biblical precedent of Jerusalem's restoration after the Babylonian exile, they prophesied Rome's fall and Jerusalem's renewal.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn Both works affirmed Jewish continuity through the Torah and the enduring validity of the covenant with God.Template:Sfn Book 4 of the Sibylline Oracles—a collection of Jewish and later Christian propheciesTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn—likely written after the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in 79 CE,Template:Sfn links the destruction to the Roman civil war, retroactively prophesying a Roman leader who would burn the Temple and devastate the land of the Jews.<ref>Sibylline Oracles, IV, 123–136</ref> It also foretells Nero's return as divine retribution against Rome and the Flavians.Template:Sfn

The rabbinic response to Jerusalem's destruction is reflected in tales, traditions and exegetical writings integrated into rabbinic literature.Template:Sfn Early rabbinic works convey profound grief and anguish,Template:Sfn as exemplified by the Mishnah, which states that since the destruction, "there has been no day without its curse."<ref>Mishnah, Sotah, 9:12</ref>Template:Sfn Some texts attribute the destruction to punishment for Israel's sins and societal failings, such as weak leadership, internal divisions, misuse of wealth, and a lack of communal care.Template:Sfn One text explains that while the First Temple was destroyed due to idolatry, immorality, and bloodshed, the Second Temple fell because of the equally grave issue of groundless hatred.<ref>Babylonian Talmud, Yoma, 9b</ref>Template:Sfn The tale of Kamsa and Bar Kamsa recounts a banquet where the host mistakenly invites Bar Kamsa instead of Kamsa. When Bar Kamsa is dishonored by being denied a seat, he becomes an informer to the Romans, triggering a series of events that lead to the war.Template:Sfn

Impact on Jewish national identityEdit

Moshe and David Aberbach argued that the revolt's suppression left Jews "deprived of the territorial, social, and political bases of their nationalism", forcing them to base their identity and hopes for survival on cultural and moral power.Template:Sfn Adrian Hastings writes that following the revolt, Jews ceased to be a political entity resembling a nation-state for almost two millennia. Despite this, they preserved their national identity through collective memory, religion, and sacred texts, remaining a nation rather than just an ethnic group, eventually leading to the rise of Zionism and the establishment of modern Israel.Template:Sfn

Impact on ChristianityEdit

The revolt has been identified by several scholars as one of the stages in the gradual separation between Christianity and Judaism.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn It led to the destruction or dispersal of the Jerusalem church, the original center of the Christian community.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn According to later Christian sources like Eusebius and Epiphanius, Jerusalem's Christians fled to Pella prior to the war following divine guidance, though the historicity of this tradition remains debated.<ref>Eusebius, Ecclesiastical History, III, 5.3; Epiphanius, Panarion, 1.29.7.7-8, 30.2.7; On Weights and Measures, 15</ref>Template:Sfn Scholar of Judaism Philip S. Alexander argues that, in the aftermath of the Temple's destruction, Christianity attempted to appeal to Jews in Judaea but failed due to its radical doctrines and the success of the rabbinic movement.Template:Sfn Meanwhile, Christian groups in Asia Minor and the Aegean continued to grow, relatively insulated from the war's effects.Template:Sfn Theologian Jörg Frey contends that the Temple's destruction had only a limited impact on Christian identity, which was shaped more significantly by the development of Christology.Template:Sfn Over the following decades, Christianity became predominantly gentile in composition and theology, ceased to observe Jewish law, and adopted an increasingly elevated view of Jesus.Template:Sfn

Theologically, the destruction of the Temple was interpreted by early Christians as divine punishment for the Jewish rejection of Jesus. This idea appears in the New Testament Gospels,Template:Sfn which include prophecies attributed to Jesus about the destruction of Jerusalem; the Gospel of Matthew may also allude to the burning of the city by Titus.Template:Sfn The Epistle of Barnabas attributes the destruction to the Jews' role in bringing about the war,Template:Sfn and presents it as evidence that God rejected the physical Temple in favor of a spiritual one, embodied in the faith of Gentile believers.Template:Sfn By the 4th century, Church Fathers like EusebiusTemplate:Sfn and John ChrysostomTemplate:Sfn had fully integrated this view, portraying the destruction as both retribution and the symbolic beginning of the apostolic mission to the wider world.Template:Sfn

Later Jewish–Roman relationsEdit

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Two further Jewish revolts against Rome occurred in the second century. In 115 CE, the Diaspora Revolt erupted, with large-scale uprisings in multiple provinces and limited activity in Judaea. The causes were rooted in the Temple's destruction and the Jewish Tax.Template:Sfn Refugees and traders from Judaea are believed to have spread the ideas from the first revolt, as evidenced by the discovery of revolt coinage in these areas.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The revolt's suppression led to the near-total annihilation of Jewish communities in Cyprus, Egypt, and Libya.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

In 132, the Jews of Judaea launched their last major effort to regain independence—the Bar Kokhba revolt—triggered by the establishment of Aelia Capitolina, a Roman colony on Jerusalem's ruins.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn The revolt led to widespread destruction and the near-total depopulation of Judea, with many Jews killed or sold into slavery and transported abroad.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn After the fall of Betar in 135 CE, Hadrian imposed harsh anti-Jewish laws to dismantle Jewish nationalism,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn banned Jews from Jerusalem, and renamed the province Syria Palaestina,Template:Sfn ending Jewish aspirations for national independence.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The Jewish population had significantly declined, with most Jews concentrated in the Galilee.Template:Sfn By the time of Judah ha-Nasi later in the century, Jews had reached a pragmatic coexistence with Rome.Template:Sfn

SourcesEdit

The main primary source for the revolt is Josephus (37/38–c. 100 CETemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn), born {{#invoke:Lang|lang}},Template:Sfn a Jewish historian of priestly descent and a native of Jerusalem.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Appointed commander of Galilee in 66 CE, he was tasked with preparing the region for the revolt but surrendered after the siege of Yodfat in 67 CE. Escaping a suicide pact, he saved his life by prophesying Vespasian's rise to emperor.Template:Sfn Held captive for two years, he later gained freedom after Vespasian's accession in 69 CE,Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn and accompanied Titus during the siege of Jerusalem in 70 CE.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn In 71 CE, he moved to Rome, where he received Roman citizenship and the name Flavius Josephus.Template:Sfn He spent his later years writing historical works,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn living under imperial patronage.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

File:Jewish war, josephus flavius 1559.jpg
A 16th-century copy of The Jewish War, written by Josephus in the years following the revolt

Josephus' first work and primary account of the revolt, The Jewish War, completed by 79 CE,Template:Sfn chronicles the revolt in seven volumes.Template:Sfn Originally in his native language, probably Aramaic,Template:Sfn he later rewrote it in Greek with assistance.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn The first volume covers events in the two centuries preceding the revolt, while the rest detail the war and its aftermath.Template:Sfn Claiming to correct biased accounts,Template:Sfn Josephus also sought to deter future revolts.Template:Sfn<ref>The Jewish War, III, 108</ref> His firsthand experience, supplemented by accounts from deserters and Roman records, shaped his narrative.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn He minimized the collective responsibility of the Jewish people for the revolt,Template:Sfn blaming a rebellious minority,Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Efn corrupt and brutal Roman governors,Template:Sfn and divine will.Template:Sfn Taking pride in receiving endorsement from Vespasian and Titus for the accuracy of his writings;<ref>Life, 361–363</ref> he was likely compelled to present his account in a manner that aligned with their messages or, at the very least, did not contradict them.Template:Efn At the same time, his experience as a participant and eyewitness, as well as his knowledge of both Jewish and Roman worlds, renders his account an invaluable historical source.Template:Sfn

Josephus' later autobiography, Life, written as an appendix to another work, Antiquities of the Jews, focuses on his role in the Galilee.Template:Sfn It was a rebuttal to the now-lost A History of the Jewish War by Justus of Tiberias, which was published twenty years after the revolt,Template:Sfn and which challenged Josephus's earlier narrative and religiosity.Template:Sfn In Life, Josephus provides a detailed account of the events of 66–67 CE, which contrasts with his first work, revealing differences in the portrayal of events.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Aside from Josephus, the written sources for the revolt are limited.Template:Sfn Tacitus' Histories, written in the early 2nd century CE, offers a detailed Jewish history in Book 5 as a prelude to the revolt,Template:Sfn though his siege narrative is incomplete.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Cassius Dio's account in Book 66 survives only in epitomes, while Suetonius provides occasional remarks.Template:Sfn These sources complement and sometimes contradict Josephus, helping to refine and corroborate his account where its reliability is debated.Template:Sfn Rabbinic literature offers insights into the war but presents challenges for historians, as it was primarily legal and theological, not historical.Template:Sfn Oral transmission often embellished events for religious or ethical reasons,Template:Sfn though some descriptions, like those of the famine in Jerusalem, align with external sources, confirming parts of the historical narrative.Template:Sfn

More information on the revolt can be deduced from archaeological, numismatic, and documentary evidence.Template:Sfn Excavations at sites destroyed during the war reveal military tactics, preparations, and the impact of the sieges and battles.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Jewish revolt coins reflect rebel ideology, messaging, and aims.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn Texts such as the documents from Wadi Murabba'at, featuring dating formulas and phrases similar to revolt coinage, shed light on daily life and legal matters during the uprising.Template:Sfn

See alsoEdit

Jewish–Roman warsEdit

Later Jewish and Samaritan revoltsEdit

Related topicsEdit

NotesEdit

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ReferencesEdit

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Ancient sourcesEdit

Modern sourcesEdit

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Further readingEdit

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External linksEdit

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