CHAPTER 11. That Bacchides Was Again Sent Out Against Judas; And How Judas Fell As He Was Courageously Fighting.
1. But when Demetrius was informed of the death of Nicanor, and of the destruction of the army that was with him, he sent Bacchides again with an army into Judea, who marched out of Antioch, and came into Judea, and pitched his camp at Arbela, a city of Galilee; and having besieged and taken those that were there in caves, [for many of the people fled into such places,] he removed, and made all the haste he could to Jerusalem. And when he had learned that Judas had pitched his camp at a certain village whose name was Bethzetho, he led his army against him: they were twenty thousand foot-men, and two thousand horsemen. Now Judas had no more soldiers than one thousand. 29 When these saw the multitude of Bacchides's men, they were afraid, and left their camp, and fled all away, excepting eight hundred. Now when Judas was deserted by his own soldiers, and the enemy pressed upon him, and gave him no time to gather his army together, he was disposed to fight with Bacchides's army, though he had but eight hundred men with him; so he exhorted these men to undergo the danger courageously, and encouraged them to attack the enemy. And when they said they were not a body sufficient to fight so great an army, and advised that they should retire now, and save themselves and that when he had gathered his own men together, then he should fall upon the enemy afterwards, his answer was this: "Let not the sun ever see such a thing, that I should show my back to the enemy and although this be the time that will bring me to my end, and I must die in this battle, I will rather stand to it courageously, and bear whatsoever comes upon me, than by now running away bring reproach upon my former great actions, or tarnish their glory." This was the speech he made to those that remained with him, whereby he encouraged them to attack the enemy.
2. But Bacchldes drew his army out of their camp, and put them in array for the battle. He set the horsemen on both the wings, and the light soldiers and the archers he placed before the whole army, but he was himself on the right wing. And when he had thus put his army in order of battle, and was going to join battle with the enemy, he commanded the trumpeter to give a signal of battle, and the army to make a shout, and to fall on the enemy. And when Judas had done the same, he joined battle with them; and as both sides fought valiantly, and the battle continued till sun-set, Judas saw that Bacehides and the strongest part of the army was in the right wing, and thereupon took the most courageous men with him, and ran upon that part of the army, and fell upon those that were there, and broke their ranks, and drove them into the middle, and forced them to run away, and pursued them as far as to a mountain called Aza: but when those of the left wing saw that the right wing was put to flight, they encompassed Judas, and pursued him, and came behind him, and took him into the middle of their army; so being not able to fly, but encompassed round about with enemies, he stood still, and he and those that were with him fought; and when he had slain a great many of those that came against him, he at last was himself wounded, and fell and gave up the ghost, and died in a way like to his former famous actions. When Judas was dead, those that were with him had no one whom they could regard [as their commander]; but when they saw themselves deprived of such a general, they fled. But Simon and Jonathan, Judas's brethren, received his dead body by a treaty from the enemy, and carried it to the village of Modin, where their father had been buried, and there buried him; while the multitude lamented him many days, and performed the usual solemn rites of a funeral to him. And this was the end that Judas came to. He had been a man of valor and a great warrior, and mindful of the commands of their father Matrathins; and had undergone all difficulties, both in doing and suffering, for the liberty of his countrymen. And when his character was so excellent [while he was alive], he left behind him a glorious reputation and memorial, by gaining freedom for his nation, and delivering them from slavery under the Macedonians. And when he had retained the high priesthood three years, he died.
FOOTNOTES
1 (return)
[ Here Josephus uses the
very word koinopltagia, "eating things common," for "eating things
unclean;" as does our New Testament, Acts 10:14, 15, 28; 11:8, 9; Romans
14:14.]
2 (return)
[ The great number of these
Jews and Samaritans that were formerly carried into Egypt by Alexander,
and now by Ptolemy the son of Lagus, appear afterwards in the vast
multitude who as we shall see presently, were soon ransomed by
Philadelphus, and by him made free, before he sent for the seventy-two
interpreters; in the many garrisons and other soldiers of that nation in
Egypt; in the famous settlement of Jews, and the number of their
synagogues at Alexandria, long afterward; and in the vehement contention
between the Jews and Samatitans under Philometer, about the place
appointed for public worship in the law of Moses, whether at the Jewish
temple of Jerusalem, or at the Samaritan temple of Gerizzim; of all which
our author treats hereafter. And as to the Samaritans carried into Egypt
under the same princes, Scaliger supposes that those who have a great
synagogue at Cairo, as also those whom the Arabic geographer speaks of as
having seized on an island in the Red Sea, are remains of them at this
very day, as the notes here inform us.]
3 (return)
[ Of the translation of the
other parts of the Old Testament by seventy Egyptian Jews, in the reigns
of Ptolemy the son of Lagus, and Philadelphus; as also of the translation
of the Pentateuch by seventy-two Jerusalem Jews, in the seventh year of
Philadelphus at Alexandria, as given us an account of by Aristeus, and
thence by Philo and Josephus, with a vindication of Aristeus's history;
see the Appendix to Lit. Accorap. of Proph. at large, p. 117—152.]
4 (return)
[ Although this number one
hundred and twenty drachmeae [of Alexandria, or sixty Jewish shekels] be
here three times repeated, and that in all Josephus's copies, Greek and
Latin; yet since all the copies of Aristeus, whence Josephus took his
relation, have this sum several times, and still as no more than twenty
drachmae, or ten Jewish shekels; and since the sum of the talents, to be
set down presently, which is little above four hundred and sixty, for
somewhat more than one hundred thousand slaves, and is nearly the same in
Josephus and Aristeus, does better agree to twenty than to one hundred and
twenty drachmae; and since the value of a slave of old was at the utmost
but thirty shekels, or sixty drachmae; see Exodus 21:32; while in the
present circumstances of these Jewish slaves, and those so very numerous,
Philadelphus would rather redeem them at a cheaper than at a dearer rate;—there
is great reason to prefer here Aristeus's copies before Josephus's.]
5 (return)
[ We have a very great
encomium of this Simon the Just, the son of Onias, in the fiftieth chapter
of the Ecclesiasticus, through the whole chapter. Nor is it improper to
consult that chapter itself upon this occasion.]
6 (return)
[ When we have here and
presently mention made of Philadelphus's queen and sister Arsinoe, we are
to remember, with Spanheim, that Arsinoe was both his sister and his wife,
according to the old custom of Persia, and of Egypt at this very time;
nay, of the Assyrians long afterwards. See Antiq. B. XX. ch. 2. sect. 1.
Whence we have, upon the coins of Philadelphus, this known inscription,
"The divine brother and sister."]
7 (return)
[ The Talmudists say, that
it is not lawful to write the law in letters of gold, contrary to this
certain and very ancient example. See Hudson's and Reland's notes here.]
8 (return)
[ This is the most ancient
example I have met with of a grace, or short prayer, or thanksgiving
before meat; which, as it is used to be said by a heathen priest, was now
said by Eleazar, a Jewish priest, who was one of these seventy-two
interpreters. The next example I have met with, is that of the Essenes,
[Of the War, B. II. ch. 8. sect. 5,] both before and after it; those of
our Savior before it, Mark 8:6; John 6:11, 23; and St. Paul, Acts 27:35;
and a form of such a grace or prayer for Christians, at the end of the
fifth book of the Apostolical Constitutions, which seems to have been
intended for both times, both before and after meat.]
9 (return)
[ They were rather
political questions and answers, tending to the good and religious
government of mankind.]
10 (return)
[ This purification of
the interpreters, by washing in the sea, before they prayed to God every
morning, and before they set about translating, may be compared with the
like practice of Peter the apostle, in the Recognitions of Clement, B. IV.
ch. 3., and B. V. ch. 36., and with the places of the Proseuchre, or of
prayer, which were sometimes built near the sea or rivers also; of which
matter see Antiq. B. XIV. ch. 10. sect. 9,3; Acts 16:13. 16.]
11 (return)
[ The use of oil was much
greater, and the donatives of it much more valuable, in Judea, and the
neighboring countries, than it is amongst us. It was also, in the days of
Josephus, thought unlawful for Jews to make use of any oil that was
prepared by heathens, perhaps on account of some superstitions intermixed
with its preparation by those heathens. When therefore the heathens were
to make them a donative of oil,: they paid them money instead of it. See
Of the War, B. II. ch. 21. sect. 2; the Life of Josephus, sect. 13; and
Hudson's note on the place before us.]
12 (return)
[ This, and the like
great and just characters, of the justice, and equity, and generosity of
the old Romans, both to the Jews and other conquered nations, affords us a
very good reason why Almighty God, upon the rejection of the Jews for
their wickedness, chose them for his people, and first established
Christianity in that empire; of which matter see Josephus here, sect. 2;
as also Antiq. B. XIV. ch. 10. sect. 22, 23; B. XVI. ch. 2. sect. 4.]
13 (return)
[ The name of this place,
Phicol, is the very same with that of the chief captain of Abimelech's
host, in the days of Abraham, Genesis 21:22, and might possibly be the
place of that Phicol's nativity or abode, for it seems to have been in the
south part of Palestine, as that was.]
14 (return)
[ Whence it comes that
these Lacedemonians declare themselves here to be of kin to the Jews, as
derived from the same ancestor, Abraham, I cannot tell, unless, as Grotius
supposes, they were derived from Dores, that came of the Pelasgi. These
are by Herodotus called Barbarians, and perhaps were derived from the
Syrians and Arabians, the posterity of Abraham by Keturah. See Antiq. B.
XIV. ch. 10. sect. 22; and Of the War, B. I. ch. 26. sect. l; and Grot. on
1 Macc. 12:7. We may further observe from the Recognitions of Clement,
that Eliezer, of Damascus, the servant of Abraham, Genesis 15:2; 24., was
of old by some taken for his son. So that if the Lacedemonians were sprung
from him, they might think themselves to be of the posterity of Abraham,
as well as the Jews, who were sprung from Isaac. And perhaps this Eliezer
of Damascus is that very Damascus whom Trogus Pompeius, as abridged by
Justin, makes the founder of the Jewish nation itself, though he
afterwards blunders, and makes Azelus, Adores, Abraham, and Israel kings
of Judea, and successors to this Damascus. It may not be improper to
observe further, that Moses Chorenensis, in his history of the Armenians,
informs us, that the nation of the Parthians was also derived from Abraham
by Keturah and her children.]
15 (return)
[ This word" Gymnasium"
properly denotes a place where the exercises were performed naked, which
because it would naturally distinguish circumcised Jews from uncircumcised
Gentiles, these Jewish apostates endeavored to appear uncircumcised, by
means of a surgical operation, hinted at by St. Paul, 1 Corinthians 7:18,
and described by Celsus, B. VII. ch. 25., as Dr. Hudson here informs us.]
16 (return)
[ Hereabout Josephus
begins to follow the First Book of the Maccabees, a most excellent and
most authentic history; and accordingly it is here, with great fidelity
and exactness, abridged by him; between whose present copies there seem to
be fewer variations than in any other sacred Hebrew book of the Old
Testament whatsoever, [for this book also was originally written in
Hebrew,] which is very natural, because it was written so much nearer to
the times of Josephus than the rest were.]
17 (return)
[ This citadel, of which
we have such frequent mention in the following history, both in the
Maccabees and Josephus, seems to have been a castle built on a hill, lower
than Mount Zion, though upon its skirts, and higher than Mount Moriah, but
between them both; which hill the enemies of the Jews now got possession
of, and built on it this citadel, and fortified it, till a good while
afterwards the Jews regained it, demolished it, and leveled the hill
itself with the common ground, that their enemies might no more recover
it, and might thence overlook the temple itself, and do them such mischief
as they had long undergone from it, Antiq. B. XIII. ch. 6. sect. 6.]
18 (return)
[ This allegation of the
Samaritans is remarkable, that though they were not Jews, yet did they,
from ancient times, observe the Sabbath day, and, as they elsewhere
pretend, the Sabbatic year also, Antiq. B. XI. ch. 8. sect. 6.]
19 (return)
[ That this appellation
of Maccabee was not first of all given to Judas Maccabeus, nor was derived
from any initial letters of the Hebrew words on his banner, "Mi Kamoka Be
Elire, Jehovah?" ["Who is like unto thee among the gods, O Jehovah?"]
Exodus 15:11 as the modern Rabbins vainly pretend, see Authent. Rec. Part
I. p. 205, 206. Only we may note, by the way, that the original name of
these Maccabees, and their posterity, was Asamoneans; which was derived
from Asamoneus, the great-grandfather of Mattathias, as Josephus here
informs us.]
20 (return)
[ The reason why Bethshah
was called Scythopolis is well known from Herodotus, B. I. p. 105, and
Syncellus, p. 214, that the Scythians, when they overran Asia, in the days
of Josiah, seized on this city, and kept it as long as they continued in
Asia, from which time it retained the name of Scythopolis, or the City of
the Scythians.]
21 (return)
[ This most providential
preservation of all the religious Jews in this expedition, which was
according to the will of God, is observable often among God's people, the
Jews; and somewhat very like it in the changes of the four monarchies,
which were also providential. See Prideaux at the years 331, 333, and
334.]
22 (return)
[ Here is another great
instance of Providence, that when, even at the very time that Simon, and
Judas, and Jonathan were so miraculously preserved and blessed, in the
just defense of their laws and religion, these other generals of the Jews,
who went to fight for honor in a vain-glorious way, and without any
commission from God, or the family he had raised up to deliver them, were
miserably disappointed and defeated. See 1 Macc. 5:61, 62.]
23 (return)
[ Since St. Paul, a
Pharisee, confesses that he had not known concupiscence, or desires, to be
sinful, had not the tenth commandment said, "Thou shalt not covet," Romans
7:7, the case seems to have been much the same with our Josephus, who was
of the same sect, that he had not a deep sense of the greatness of any
sins that proceeded no further than the intention. However, since Josephus
speaks here properly of the punishment of death, which is not intended by
any law, either of God or man, for the bare intention, his words need not
to be strained to mean, that sins intended, but not executed, were no sins
at all.]
24 (return)
[ No wonder that Josephus
here describes Antiochus Eupator as young, and wanting tuition, when he
came to the crown, since Appian informs us [Footnote Syriac. p. 177: that
he was then but nine years old.]
25 (return)
[ It is no way probable
that Josephus would call Bacchidoa, that bitter and bloody enemy of the
Jews, as our present copies have it, a man good, or kind, and gentle, What
the author of the First Book of Maccabees, whom Josephus here follows,
instead of that character, says of him, is, that he was a great man in the
kingdom, and faithful to his king; which was very probably Josephus's
meaning also.]
26 (return)
[ Josephus's copies must
have been corrupted when they here give victory to Nicanor, contrary to
the words following, which imply that he who was beaten fled into the
citadel, which for certain belonged to the city of David, or to Mount
Zion, and was in the possession of Nicanor's garrison, and not of Judas's.
As also it is contrary to the express words of Josephus's original author,
1 Macc. 7:32, who says that Nicanor lost about five thousand men, and fled
to the city of David.]
27 (return)
[ This account of the
miserable death of Alcimus, or Jac-mus, the wicked high priest, [the first
that was not of the family of the high priests, and made by a vile
heathen, Lysias,] before the death of Judas, and of Judas's succession to
him as high priest, both here, and at the conclusion of this book,
directly contradicts 1 Macc. 9:54-57, which places his death after the
death of Judas, and says not a syllable of the high priesthood of Judas.
How well the Roman histories agree to this account of the conquests and
powerful condition of the Romans at this time, see the notes in
Havercamp's edition; only that the number of the senators of Rome was then
just three hundred and twenty, is, I think, only known from 1 Macc. 8:15.]
28 (return)
[ This subscription is
wanting 1 Macc. 8:17, 29, and must be the words of Josephus, who by
mistake thought, as we have just now seen, that Judas was at this time
high priest, and accordingly then reckoned his brother Jonathan to be the
general of the army, which yet he seems not to have been till after the
death of Judas.]
29 (return)
[ That this copy of
Josephus, as he wrote it, had here not one thousand, but three thousand,
with 1 Macc 9:5, is very plain, because though the main part ran away at
first, even in Josephus, as well as in 1 Macc. 9:6, yet, as there, so
here, eight hundred are said to have remained with Judas, which would be
absurd, if the whole number had been no more than one thousand.]
BOOK XIII. Containing The Interval Of Eighty-Two Years.—From The Death Of Judas Maccabeus To The Death Of Queen Alexandra.
CHAPTER 1. How Jonathan Took The Government After His Brother Judas; And How He, Together With His Brother Simon, Waged War Against Bacchides.
1. By what means the nation of the Jews recovered their freedom when they had been brought into slavery by the Macedonians, and what struggles, and how great battles, Judas, the general of their army, ran through, till he was slain as he was fighting for them, hath been related in the foregoing book; but after he was dead, all the wicked, and those that transgressed the laws of their forefathers, sprang up again in Judea, and grew upon them, and distressed them on every side. A famine also assisted their wickedness, and afflicted the country, till not a few, who by reason of their want of necessaries, and because they were not able to bear up against the miseries that both the famine and their enemies brought upon them, deserted their country, and went to the Macedonians. And now Bacchides gathered those Jews together who had apostatized from the accustomed way of living of their forefathers, and chose to live like their neighbors, and committed the care of the country to them, who also caught the friends of Judas, and those of his party, and delivered them up to Bacchides, who when he had, in the first place, tortured and tormented them at his pleasure, he, by that means, at length killed them. And when this calamity of the Jews was become so great, as they had never had experience of the like since their return out of Babylon, those that remained of the companions of Judas, seeing that the nation was ready to be destroyed after a miserable manner, came to his brother Jonathan, and desired him that he would imitate his brother, and that care which he took of his countrymen, for whose liberty in general he died also; and that he would not permit the nation to be without a governor, especially in those destructive circumstances wherein it now was. And where Jonathan said that he was ready to die for them, and esteemed no inferior to his brother, he was appointed to be the general of the Jewish army.
2. When Bacchides heard this, and was afraid that Jonathan might be very troublesome to the king and the Macedonians, as Judas had been before him, he sought how he might slay him by treachery. But this intention of his was not unknown to Jonathan, nor to his brother Simon; but when these two were apprized of it, they took all their companions, and presently fled into that wilderness which was nearest to the city; and when they were come to a lake called Asphar, they abode there. But when Bacchides was sensible that they were in a low state, and were in that place, he hasted to fall upon them with all his forces, and pitching his camp beyond Jordan, he recruited his army. But when Jonathan knew that Bacchides Was coming upon him, he sent his brother John, who was also called Gaddis, to the Nabatean Arabs, that he might lodge his baggage with them until the battle with Bacchides should be over, for they were the Jews' friends. And the sons of Ambri laid an ambush for John from the city Medaba, and seized upon him, and upon those that were with him, and plundered all that they had with them. They also slew John, and all his companions. However, they were sufficiently punished for what they now did by John's brethren, as we shall relate presently.
3. But when Bacchides knew that Jonathan had pitched his camp among the lakes of Jordan, he observed when their sabbath day came, and then assaulted him, [as supposing that he would not fight because of the law for resting on that day]: but he exhorted his companions [to fight]; and told them that their lives were at stake, since they were encompassed by the river, and by their enemies, and had no way to escape, for that their enemies pressed upon them from before, and the river was behind them. So after he had prayed to God to give them the victory, he joined battle with the enemy, of whom he overthrew many; and as he saw Bacchides coming up boldly to him, he stretched out his right hand to smite him; but the other foreseeing and avoiding the stroke, Jonathan with his companions leaped into the river, and swam over it, and by that means escaped beyond Jordan while the enemies did not pass over that river; but Bacchides returned presently to the citadel at Jerusalem, having lost about two thousand of his army. He also fortified many cities of Judea, whose walls had been demolished; Jericho, and Emmaus, and Betboron, and Bethel, and Tinma, and Pharatho, and Tecoa, and Gazara, and built towers in every one of these cities, and encompassed them with strong walls, that were very large also, and put garrisons into them, that they might issue out of them, and do mischief to the Jews. He also fortified the citadel at Jerusalem more than all the rest. Moreover, he took the sons of the principal Jews as pledges, and shut them up in the citadel, and in that manner guarded it.
4. About the same time one came to Jonathan, and to his brother Simon, and told them that the sons of Ambri were celebrating a marriage, and bringing the bride from the city Gabatha, who was the daughter of one of the illustrious men among the Arabians, and that the damsel was to be conducted with pomp, and splendor, and much riches: so Jonathan and Simon thinking this appeared to be the fittest time for them to avenge the death of their brother, and that they had forces sufficient for receiving satisfaction from them for his death, they made haste to Medaba, and lay in wait among the mountains for the coming of their enemies; and as soon as they saw them conducting the virgin, and her bridegroom, and such a great company of their friends with them as was to be expected at this wedding, they sallied out of their ambush, and slew them all, and took their ornaments, and all the prey that then followed them, and so returned, and received this satisfaction for their brother John from the sons of Ambri; for as well those sons themselves, as their friends, and wives, and children that followed them, perished, being in number about four hundred.
5. However, Simon and Jonathan returned to the lakes of the river, and abode there. But Bacchides, when he had secured all Judea with his garrisons, returned to the king; and then it was that the affairs of Judea were quiet for two years. But when the deserters and the wicked saw that Jonathan and those that were with him lived in the country very quietly, by reason of the peace, they sent to king Demetrius, and excited him to send Bacchides to seize upon Jonathan, which they said was to be done without any trouble, and in one night's time; and that if they fell upon them before they were aware, they might slay them all. So the king sent Bacchides, who, when he was come into Judea, wrote to all his friends, both Jews and auxiliaries, that they should seize upon Jonathan, and bring him to him; and when, upon all their endeavors, they were not able to seize upon Jonathan, for he was sensible of the snares they laid for him, and very carefully guarded against them, Bacchides was angry at these deserters, as having imposed upon him, and upon the king, and slew fifty of their leaders: whereupon Jonathan, with his brother, and those that were with him, retired to Bethagla, a village that lay in the wilderness, out of his fear of Bacchides. He also built towers in it, and encompassed it with walls, and took care that it should be safely guarded. Upon the hearing of which Bacchides led his own army along with him, and besides took his Jewish auxiliaries, and came against Jonathan, and made an assault upon his fortifications, and besieged him many days; but Jonathan did not abate of his courage at the zeal Bacchides used in the siege, but courageously opposed him. And while he left his brother Simon in the city to fight with Bacchides, he went privately out himself into the country, and got a great body of men together of his own party, and fell upon Bacchides's camp in the night time, and destroyed a great many of them. His brother Simon knew also of this his falling upon them, because he perceived that the enemies were slain by him; so he sallied out upon them, and burnt the engines which the Macedonians used, and made a great slaughter of them. And when Bacchides saw himself encompassed with enemies, and some of them before and some behind him, he fell into despair and trouble of mind, as confounded at the unexpected ill success of this siege. However, he vented his displeasure at these misfortunes upon those deserters who sent for him from the king, as having deluded him. So he had a mind to finish this siege after a decent manner, if it were possible for him so to do, and then to return home.
6. When Jonathan understood these his intentions, he sent ambassadors to him about a league of friendship and mutual assistance, and that they might restore those they had taken captive on both sides. So Bacchides thought this a pretty decent way of retiring home, and made a league of friendship with Jonathan, when they sware that they would not any more make war one against another. Accordingly, he restored the captives, and took his own men with him, and returned to the king at Antioch; and after this his departure, he never came into Judea again. Then did Jonathan take the opportunity of this quiet state of things, and went and lived in the city Michmash; and there governed the multitude, and punished the wicked and ungodly, and by that means purged the nation of them.
CHAPTER 2. How Alexander [Bala] In His War With Demetrius, Granted Jonathan Many Advantages And Appointed Him To Be High Priest And Persuaded Him To Assist Him Although Demetrius Promised Him Greater Advantages On The Other Side. Concerning The Death
Of Demetrius.
1. Now in the hundred and sixtieth year, it fell out that Alexander, the son of Antiochus Epiphanes, 1 came up into Syria, and took Ptolemais the soldiers within having betrayed it to him; for they were at enmity with Demetrius, on account of his insolence and difficulty of access; for he shut himself up in a palace of his that had four towers which he had built himself, not far from Antioch and admitted nobody. He was withal slothful and negligent about the public affairs, whereby the hatred of his subjects was the more kindled against him, as we have elsewhere already related. When therefore Demetrius heard that Alexander was in Ptolemais, he took his whole army, and led it against him; he also sent ambassadors to Jonathan about a league of mutual assistance and friendship, for he resolved to be beforehand with Alexander, lest the other should treat with him first, and gain assistance from him; and this he did out of the fear he had lest Jonathan should remember how ill Demetrius had formerly treated him, and should join with him in this war against him. He therefore gave orders that Jonathan should be allowed to raise an army, and should get armor made, and should receive back those hostages of the Jewish nation whom Baechides had shut up in the citadel of Jerusalem. When this good fortune had befallen Jonathan, by the concession of Demetrius, he came to Jerusalem, and read the king's letter in the audience of the people, and of those that kept the citadel. When these were read, these wicked men and deserters, who were in the citadel, were greatly afraid, upon the king's permission to Jonathan to raise an army, and to receive back the hostages. So he delivered every one of them to his own parents. And thus did Jonathan make his abode at Jerusalem, renewing the city to a better state, and reforming the buildings as he pleased; for he gave orders that the walls of the city should be rebuilt with square stones, that it might be more secure from their enemies. And when those that kept the garrisons that were in Judea saw this, they all left them, and fled to Antioch, excepting those that were in the city Bethsura, and those that were in the citadel of Jerusalem, for the greater part of these was of the wicked Jews and deserters, and on that account these did not deliver up their garrisons.
2. When Alexander knew what promises Demetrius had made Jonathan, and withal knew his courage, and what great things he had done when he fought the Macedonians, and besides what hardships he had undergone by the means of Demetrius, and of Bacchides, the general of Demetrius's army, he told his friends that he could not at present find any one else that might afford him better assistance than Jonathan, who was both courageous against his enemies, and had a particular hatred against Demetrius, as having both suffered many hard things from him, and acted many hard things against him. If therefore they were of opinion that they should make him their friend against Demetrius, it was more for their advantage to invite him to assist them now than at another time. It being therefore determined by him and his friends to send to Jonathan, he wrote to him this epistle: "King Alexander to his brother Jonathan, sendeth greeting. We have long ago heard of thy courage and thy fidelity, and for that reason have sent to thee, to make with thee a league of friendship and mutual assistance. We therefore do ordain thee this day the high priest of the Jews, and that thou beest called my friend. I have also sent thee, as presents, a purple robe and a golden crown, and desire that, now thou art by us honored, thou wilt in like manner respect us also."
3. When Jonathan had received this letter, he put on the pontifical robe at the time of the feast of tabernacles, 2 four years after the death of his brother Judas, for at that time no high priest had been made. So he raised great forces, and had abundance of armor got ready. This greatly grieved Demetrius when he heard of it, and made him blame himself for his slowness, that he had not prevented Alexander, and got the good-will of Jonathan, but had given him time so to do. However, he also himself wrote a letter to Jonathan, and to the people, the contents whereof are these: "King Demetrius to Jonathan, and to the nation of the Jews, sendeth greeting. Since you have preserved your friendship for us, and when you have been tempted by our enemies, you have not joined yourselves to them, I both commend you for this your fidelity, and exhort you to continue in the same disposition, for which you shall be repaid, and receive rewards from us; for I will free you from the greatest part of the tributes and taxes which you formerly paid to the kings my predecessors, and to myself; and I do now set you free from those tributes which you have ever paid; and besides, I forgive you the tax upon salt, and the value of the crowns which you used to offer to me 3 and instead of the third part of the fruits [of the field], and the half of the fruits of the trees, I relinquish my part of them from this day: and as to the poll-money, which ought to be given me for every head of the inhabitants of Judea, and of the three toparchies that adjoin to Judea, Samaria, and Galilee, and Peres, that I relinquish to you for this time, and for all time to come. I will also that the city of Jerusalem be holy and inviolable, and free from the tithe, and from the taxes, unto its utmost bounds. And I so far recede from my title to the citadel, as to permit Jonathan your high priest to possess it, that he may place such a garrison in it as he approves of for fidelity and good-will to himself, that they may keep it for us. I also make free all those Jews who have been made captives and slaves in my kingdom. I also give order that the beasts of the Jews be not pressed for our service; and let their sabbaths, and all their festivals, and three days before each of them, be free from any imposition. In the same manner, I set free the Jews that are inhabitants of my kingdom, and order that no injury be done them. I also give leave to such of them as are willing to list themselves in my army, that they may do it, and those as far as thirty thousand; which Jewish soldiers, wheresoever they go, shall have the same pay that my own army hath; and some of them I will place in my garrisons, and some as guards about mine own body, and as rulers over those that are in my court. I give them leave also to use the laws of their forefathers, and to observe them; and I will that they have power over the three toparchies that are added to Judea; and it shall be in the power of the high priest to take care that no one Jew shall have any other temple for worship but only that at Jerusalem. I bequeath also, out of my own revenues, yearly, for the expenses about the sacrifices, one hundred and fifty thousand [drachmae]; and what money is to spare, I will that it shall be your own. I also release to you those ten thousand drachmae which the kings received from the temple, because they appertain to the priests that minister in that temple. And whosoever shall fly to the temple at Jerusalem, or to the places thereto belonging, or who owe the king money, or are there on any other account, let them be set free, and let their goods be in safety. I also give you leave to repair and rebuild your temple, and that all be done at my expenses. I also allow you to build the walls of your city, and to erect high towers, and that they be erected at my charge. And if there be any fortified town that would be convenient for the Jewish country to have very strong, let it be so built at my expenses."
4. This was what Demetrius promised and granted to the Jews by this letter. But king Alexander raised a great army of mercenary soldiers, and of those that deserted to him out of Syria, and made an expedition against Demetrius. And when it was come to a battle, the left wing of Demetrius put those who opposed them to flight, and pursued them a great way, and slew many of them, and spoiled their camp; but the right wing, where Demetrius happened to be, was beaten; and as for all the rest, they ran away. But Demetrius fought courageously, and slew a great many of the enemy; but as he was in the pursuit of the rest, his horse carried him into a deep bog, where it was hard to get out, and there it happened, that upon his horse's falling down, he could not escape being killed; for when his enemies saw what had befallen him, they returned back, and encompassed Demetrius round, and they all threw their darts at him; but he, being now on foot, fought bravely. But at length he received so many wounds, that he was not able to bear up any longer, but fell. And this is the end that Demetrius came to, when he had reigned eleven years, 4 as we have elsewhere related.
- Footnotes - Chapter 3. The Friendship That Was Between Onias And Ptolemy Philometor; And How Onias Built A Temple In Egypt Like To That At Jerusalem.→
- Footnotes - Chapter 6. How, Upon Antiochus's Prohibition To The Jews To Make Use Of The Laws Of Their Country Mattathias, The Son Of Asamoneus, Alone Despised The King, And Overcame The Generals Of Antiochus's Army; As Also Concerning The Death Of Mattathias, And The Succession Of Judas.←