CHAPTER 22.
Gioras, Falls To Plundering.
1. And thus were the disturbances of Galilee quieted, when, upon their ceasing to prosecute their civil dissensions, they betook themselves to make preparations for the war with the Romans. Now in Jerusalem the high priest Artanus, and as many of the men of power as were not in the interest of the Romans, both repaired the walls, and made a great many warlike instruments, insomuch that in all parts of the city darts and all sorts of armor were upon the anvil. Although the multitude of the young men were engaged in exercises, without any regularity, and all places were full of tumultuous doings; yet the moderate sort were exceedingly sad; and a great many there were who, out of the prospect they had of the calamities that were coming upon them, made great lamentations. There were also such omens observed as were understood to be forerunners of evils by such as loved peace, but were by those that kindled the war interpreted so as to suit their own inclinations; and the very state of the city, even before the Romans came against it, was that of a place doomed to destruction. However, Ananus's concern was this, to lay aside, for a while, the preparations for the war, and to persuade the seditious to consult their own interest, and to restrain the madness of those that had the name of zealots; but their violence was too hard for him; and what end he came to we shall relate hereafter.
2. But as for the Acrabbene toparchy, Simon, the son of Gioras, got a great number of those that were fond of innovations together, and betook himself to ravage the country; nor did he only harass the rich men's houses, but tormented their bodies, and appeared openly and beforehand to affect tyranny in his government. And when an army was sent against him by Artanus, and the other rulers, he and his band retired to the robbers that were at Masada, and staid there, and plundered the country of Idumea with them, till both Ananus and his other adversaries were slain; and until the rulers of that country were so afflicted with the multitude of those that were slain, and with the continual ravage of what they had, that they raised an army, and put garrisons into the villages, to secure them from those insults. And in this state were the affairs of Judea at that time.
1 (return)
[ Hear Dean Aldrich's note
on this place: "The law or Custom of the Jews [says he] requires seven
days' mourning for the dead," Antiq. B. XVII. ch. 8. sect. 4; whence the
author of the Book of Ecclesiasticus, ch. 22:12, assigns seven days as the
proper time of mourning for the dead, and, ch. 38:17, enjoins men to mourn
for the dead, that they may not be evil spoken of; for, as Josephus says
presently, if any one omits this mourning [funeral feast], he is not
esteemed a holy person. How it is certain that such a seven days' mourning
has been customary from times of the greatest antiquity, Genesis 1:10.
Funeral feasts are also mentioned as of considerable antiquity, Ezekiel
24:17; Jeremiah 16:7; Prey. 31:6; Deuteronomy 26:14; Josephus, Of the War
B. III. ch. 9. sect. 5.]
2 (return)
[ This holding a council in
the temple of Apollo, in the emperor's palace at Rome, by Augustus, and
even the building of this temple magnificently by himself in that palace,
are exactly agreeable to Augustus, in his elder years, as Aldrich and from
Suttonius and Propertius.]
3 (return)
[ Here we have a strong
confirmation that it was Xerxes, and not Artaxerxes, under whom the main
part of the Jews returned out of the Babylonian captivity, i.e. in the
days of Ezra and Nehemiah. The same thing is in the Antiquities, B. XI.
ch.6]
4 (return)
[ This practice of the
Essens, in refusing to swear, and esteeming swearing in ordinary occasions
worse than perjury, is delivered here in general words, as are the
parallel injunctions of our Savior, Matthew 6:34; 23:16; and of St. James,
5:12; but all admit of particular exceptions for solemn causes, and on
great and necessary occasions. Thus these very Essens, who here do so
zealously avoid swearing, are related, in the very next section, to admit
none till they take tremendous oaths to perform their several duties to
God, and to their neighbor, without supposing they thereby break this
rule, Not to swear at all. The case is the same in Christianity, as we
learn from the Apostolical Constitutions, which although they agree with
Christ and St. James, in forbidding to swear in general, ch. 5:12; 6:2, 3;
yet do they explain it elsewhere, by avoiding to swear falsely, and to
swear often and in vain, ch. 2:36; and again, by "not swearing at all,"
but withal adding, that "if that cannot be avoided, to swear truly," ch.
7:3; which abundantly explain to us the nature of the measures of this
general injunction.]
5 (return)
[ This mention of the "names
of angels," so particularly preserved by the Essens, [if it means more
than those "messengers" which were employed to bring, them the peculiar
books of their Sect,] looks like a prelude to that "worshipping of
angels," blamed by St. Paul, as superstitious and unlawful, in some such
sort of people as these Essens were, Colossians 2:8; as is the prayer to
or towards the sun for his rising every morning, mentioned before, sect.
5, very like those not much later observances made mention of in the
preaching of Peter, Authent. Rec. Part II. p. 669, and regarding a kind of
worship of angels, of the month, and of the moon, and not celebrating the
new moons, or other festivals, unless the moon appeared. Which, indeed,
seems to me the earliest mention of any regard to the phases in fixing the
Jewish calendar, of which the Talmud and later Rabbins talk so much, and
upon so very little ancient foundation.]
6 (return)
[ Of these Jewish or Essene
[and indeed Christian] doctrines concerning souls, both good and bad, in
Hades, see that excellent discourse, or homily, of our Josephus concerning
Hades, at the end of the volume.]
7 (return)
[ Dean Aldrich reckons up
three examples of this gift of prophecy in several of these Essens out of
Josephus himself, viz. in the History of the War, B. I. ch. 3. sect. 5,
Judas foretold the death of Antigonus at Strato's Tower; B. II. ch. 7.
sect. 3, Simon foretold that Archelaus should reign but nine or ten years;
and Antiq. B. XV. ch. 10. sect. 4, 5, Menuhem foretold that Herod should
be king, and should reign tyrannically, and that for more than twenty or
even thirty years. All which came to pass accordingly.]
8 (return)
[ There is so much more here
about the Essens than is cited from Josephus in Porphyry and Eusebius, and
yet so much less about the Pharisees and Sadducees, the two other Jewish
sects, than would naturally be expected in proportion to the Essens or
third sect, nay, than seems to be referred to by himself elsewhere, that
one is tempted to suppose Josephus had at first written less of the one,
and more of the two others, than his present copies afford us; as also,
that, by some unknown accident, our present copies are here made up of the
larger edition in the first case, and of the smaller in the second. See
the note in Havercamp's edition. However, what Josephus says in the name
of the Pharisees, that only the souls of good men go out of one body into
another, although all souls be immortal, and still the souls of the bad
are liable to eternal punishment; as also what he says afterwards, Antiq.
B. XVIII. ch. 1. sect. 3, that the soul's vigor is immortal, and that
under the earth they receive rewards or punishments according as their
lives have been virtuous or vicious in the present world; that to the bad
is allotted an eternal prison, but that the good are permitted to live
again in this world; are nearly agreeable to the doctrines of
Christianity. Only Josephus's rejection of the return of the wicked into
other bodies, or into this world, which he grants to the good, looks
somewhat like a contradiction to St. Paul's account of the doctrine of the
Jews, that they "themselves allowed that there should be a resurrection of
the dead, both of the just and unjust," Acts 24:15. Yet because Josephus's
account is that of the Pharisees, and St. Patti's that of the Jews in
general, and of himself the contradiction is not very certain.]
9 (return)
[ We have here, in that
Greek MS. which was once Alexander Petavius's, but is now in the library
at Leyden, two most remarkable additions to the common copies, though
declared worth little remark by the editor; which, upon the mention of
Tiberius's coming to the empire, inserts first the famous testimony of
Josephus concerning Jesus Christ, as it stands verbatim in the
Antiquities, B. XVIII. ch. 3. sect. 3, with some parts of that excellent
discourse or homily of Josephus concerning Hades, annexed to the work. But
what is here principally to be noted is this, that in this homily,
Josephus having just mentioned Christ, as "God the Word, and the Judge of
the world, appointed by the Father," etc., adds, that "he had himself
elsewhere spoken about him more nicely or particularly."]
10 (return)
[ This use of corban, or
oblation, as here applied to the sacred money dedicated to God in the
treasury of the temple, illustrates our Savior's words, Mark 7:11, 12.]
11 (return)
[ Tacitus owns that Caius
commanded the Jews to place his effigies in their temple, though he be
mistaken when he adds that the Jews thereupon took arms.]
12 (return)
[ This account of a place
near the mouth of the river Belus in Phoenicia, whence came that sand out
of which the ancients made their glass, is a known thing in history,
particularly in Tacitus and Strabo, and more largely in Pliny.]
13 (return)
[ This Memnon had several
monuments, and one of them appears, both by Strabo and Diodorus, to have
been in Syria, and not improbably in this very place.]
14 (return)
[ Reland notes here, that
the Talmud in recounting ten sad accidents for which the Jews ought to
rend their garments, reckons this for one, "When they hear that the law of
God is burnt."]
15 (return)
[ This Ummidius, or
Numidius, or, as Tacitus calls him, Vinidius Quadratus, is mentioned in an
ancient inscription, still preserved, as Spanhelm here informs us, which
calls him Urnmidius Quadratus.]
16 (return)
[ Take the character of
this Felix [who is well known from the Acts of the Apostles, particularly
from his trembling when St. Paul discoursed of "righteousness, chastity,
and judgment to come,"] Acts 24:5; and no wonder, when we have elsewhere
seen that he lived in adultery with Drusilla, another man's wife, [Antiq.
B. XX. ch. 7. sect. 1: in the words of Tacitus, produced here by Dean
Aldrich: "Felix exercised," says Tacitas, "the authority of a king, with
the disposition of a slave, and relying upon the great power of his
brother Pallas at court, thought he might safely be guilty of all kinds of
wicked practices." Observe also the time when he was made procurator, A.D.
52; that when St. Paul pleaded his cause before him, A.D. 58, he might
have been "many years a judge unto that nation," as St. Paul says he had
then been, Acts 24:10. But as to what Tacitus here says, that before the
death of Cumanus, Felix was procurator over Samaria only, does not well
agree with St. Paul's words, who would hardly have called Samaria a Jewish
nation. In short, since what Tacitus here says is about countries very
remote from Rome, where he lived; since what he says of two Roman
procurators, the one over Galilee, the other over Samaria at the same
time, is without example elsewhere; and since Josephus, who lived at that
very time in Judea, appears to have known nothing of this procuratorship
of Felix, before the death of Cumanus; I much suspect the story itself as
nothing better than a mistake of Tacitus, especially when it seems not
only omitted, but contradicted by Josephus; as any one may find that
compares their histories together. Possibly Felix might have been a
subordinate judge among the Jews some time before under Cumanus, but that
he was in earnest a procurator of Samaria before I do not believe. Bishop
Pearson, as well as Bishop Lloyd, quote this account, but with a doubtful
clause: confides Tacito, "If we may believe Tacitus." Pears. Anhal.
Paulin. p. 8; Marshall's Tables, at A.D. 49.]
17 (return)
[ i.e. Herod king of
Chalcis.]
18 (return)
[ Not long after this
beginning of Florus, the wickedest of all the Roman procurators of Judea,
and the immediate occasion of the Jewish war, at the twelfth year of Nero,
and the seventeenth of Agrippa, or A.D. 66, the history in the twenty
books of Josephus's Antiquities ends, although Josephus did not finish
these books till the thirteenth of Domitian, or A.D. 93, twenty-seven
years afterward; as he did not finish their Appendix, containing an
account of his own life, till Agrippa was dead, which happened in the
third year of Trajan, or A. D. 100, as I have several times observed
before.]
19 (return)
[ Here we may note, that
three millions of the Jews were present at the passover, A.D. 65; which
confirms what Josephus elsewhere informs us of, that at a passover a
little later they counted two hundred and fifty-six thousand five hundred
paschal lambs, which, at twelve to each lamb, which is no immoderate
calculation, come to three millions and seventy-eight thousand. See B. VI.
ch. 9. sect. 3.]
20 (return)
[ Take here Dr. Hudson's
very pertinent note. "By this action," says he, "the killing of a bird
over an earthen vessel, the Jews were exposed as a leprous people; for
that was to be done by the law in the cleansing of a leper, Leviticus 14.
It is also known that the Gentiles reproached the Jews as subject to the
leprosy, and believed that they were driven out of Egypt on that account.
This that eminent person Mr. Reland suggested to me."]
21 (return)
[ Here we have examples of
native Jews who were of the equestrian order among the Romans, and so
ought never to have been whipped or crucified, according to the Roman
laws. See almost the like case in St. Paul himself, Acts 22:25-29.]
22 (return)
[ This vow which Bernice
[here and elsewhere called queen, not only as daughter and sister to two
kings, Agrippa the Great, and Agrippa junior, but the widow of Herod king
of Chalcis] came now to accomplish at Jerusalem was not that of a
Nazarite, but such a one as religious Jews used to make, in hopes of any
deliverance from a disease, or other danger, as Josephus here intimates.
However, these thirty days' abode at Jerusalem, for fasting and
preparation against the oblation of a proper sacrifice, seems to be too
long, unless it were wholly voluntary in this great lady. It is not
required in the law of Moses relating to Nazarites, Numbers 6., and is
very different from St. Paul's time for such preparation, which was but
one day, Acts 21:26. So we want already the continuation of the
Antiquities to afford us light here, as they have hitherto done on so many
occasions elsewhere. Perhaps in this age the traditions of the Pharisees
had obliged the Jews to this degree of rigor, not only as to these thirty
days' preparation, but as to the going barefoot all that time, which here
Bernice submitted to also. For we know that as God's and our Savior's yoke
is usually easy, and his burden comparatively light, in such positive
injunctions, Matthew 11:30, so did the scribes and Pharisees sometimes
"bind upon men heavy burdens, and grievous to be borne," even when they
themselves "would not touch them with one of their fingers," Matthew 23:4;
Luke 11:46. However, Noldius well observes, De Herod. No. 404, 414, that
Juvenal, in his sixth satire, alludes to this remarkable penance or
submission of this Bernice to Jewish discipline, and jests upon her for
it; as do Tacitus, Dio, Suetonius, and Sextus Aurelius mention her as one
well known at Rome.—Ibid.]
23 (return)
[ I take this Bezetha to
be that small hill adjoining to the north side of the temple, whereon was
the hospital with five porticoes or cloisters, and beneath which was the
sheep pool of Bethesda; into which an angel or messenger, at a certain
season, descended, and where he or they who were the "first put into the
pool" were cured, John 5:1 etc. This situation of Bezetha, in Josephus, on
the north side of the temple, and not far off the tower Antonia, exactly
agrees to the place of the same pool at this day; only the remaining
cloisters are but three. See Maundrel, p. 106. The entire buildings seem
to have been called the New City, and this part, where was the hospital,
peculiarly Bezetha or Bethesda. See ch. 19. sect. 4.]
24 (return)
[ In this speech of king
Agrippa we have an authentic account of the extent and strength of the
Roman empire when the Jewish war began. And this speech with other
circumstances in Josephus, demonstrate how wise and how great a person
Agrippa was, and why Josephus elsewhere calls him a most wonderful or
admirable man, Contr. Ap. I. 9. He is the same Agrippa who said to Paul,
"Almost thou persuadest me to be a Christian," Acts 26;28; and of whom St.
Paul said, "He was expert in all the customs and questions of the Jews,"
yet. 3. See another intimation of the limits of the same Roman empire, Of
the War, B. III. ch. 5. sect. 7. But what seems to me very remarkable here
is this, that when Josephus, in imitation of the Greeks and Romans, for
whose use he wrote his Antiquities, did himself frequently he into their
they appear, by the politeness of their composition, and their flights of
oratory, to be not the real speeches of the persons concerned, who usually
were no orators, but of his own elegant composure, the speech before us is
of another nature, full of undeniable facts, and composed in a plain and
unartful, but moving way; so it appears to be king Agrippa's own speech,
and to have been given Josephus by Agrippa himself, with whom Josephus had
the greatest friendship. Nor may we omit Agrippa's constant doctrine here,
that this vast Roman empire was raised and supported by Divine Providence,
and that therefore it was in vain for the Jews, or any others, to think of
destroying it. Nor may we neglect to take notice of Agrippa's solemn
appeal to the angels here used; the like appeals to which we have in St.
Paul, 1 Timothy 5:22, and by the apostles in general, in the form of the
ordination of bishops, Constitut. Apost. VIII. 4.]
25 (return)
[ Julius Caesar had
decreed that the Jews of Jerusalem should pay an annual tribute to the
Romans, excepting the city Joppa, and for the sabbatical year; as Spanheim
observes from the Antiq. B. XIV. ch. 10. sect. 6.]
26 (return)
[ Of this Sohemus we have
mention made by Tacitus. We also learn from Dio that his father was king
of the Arabians of Iturea, [which Iturea is mentioned by St. Luke, ch.
3:1.] both whose testimonies are quoted here by Dr. Hudson. See Noldius,
No. 371.]
27 (return)
[ Spanheim notes on the
place, that this later Antiochus, who was called Epiphaues, is mentioned
by Dio, LIX. p. 645, and that he is mentioned by Josephus elsewhere twice
also, B.V. ch. 11. sect. 3; and Antiq. B. XIX. ch. 8. sect. I.]
28 (return)
[ Here we have an eminent
example of that Jewish language, which Dr. Wail truly observes, we several
times find used in the sacred writings; I mean, where the words "all" or
"whole multitude," etc. are used for much the greatest part only; but not
so as to include every person, without exception; for when Josephus had
said that "the whole multitude" [Footnote all the males] of Lydda were
gone to the feast of tabernacles, he immediately adds, that, however, no
fewer than fifty of them appeared, and were slain by the Romans. Other
examples somewhat like this I have observed elsewhere in Josephus, but, as
I think, none so remarkable as this. See Wall's Critical Observations on
the Old Testament, p. 49, 50.]
29 (return)
[ We have also, in this
and the next section, two eminent facts to be observed, viz. the first
example, that I remember, in Josephus, of the onset of the Jews' enemies
upon their country when their males were gone up to Jerusalem to one of
their three sacred festivals; which, during the theocracy, God had
promised to preserve them from, Exodus 34:24. The second fact is this, the
breach of the sabbath by the seditions Jews in an offensive fight,
contrary to the universal doctrine and practice of their nation in these
ages, and even contrary to what they themselves afterward practiced in the
rest of this war. See the note on Antiq. B. XVI. ch. 2. sect. 4.]
30 (return)
[ There may another very
important, and very providential, reason be here assigned for this strange
and foolish retreat of Cestius; which, if Josephus had been now a
Christian, he might probably have taken notice of also; and that is, the
affording the Jewish Christians in the city an opportunity of calling to
mind the prediction and caution given them by Christ about thirty-three
years and a half before, that "when they should see the abomination of
desolation" [the idolatrous Roman armies, with the images of their idols
in their ensigns, ready to lay Jerusalem desolate] "stand where it ought
not;" or, "in the holy place;" or, "when they should see Jerusalem any one
instance of a more unpolitic, but more providential, compassed with
armies;" they should then "flee to the mound conduct than this retreat of
Cestius visible during this whole rains." By complying with which those
Jewish Christians fled I siege of Jerusalem; which yet was providentially
such a "great to the mountains of Perea, and escaped this destruction. See
tribulation, as had not been from the beginning of the world to that time;
no, Lit. Accompl. of Proph. p. 69, 70. Nor was there, perhaps, nor ever
should be."—Ibid. p. 70, 71.]
31 (return)
[ From this name of Joseph
the son of Gorion, or Gorion the son of Joseph, as B. IV. ch. 3. sect. 9,
one of the governors of Jerusalem, who was slain at the beginning of the
tumults by the zealots, B. IV. ch. 6. sect. 1, the much later Jewish
author of a history of that nation takes his title, and yet personates our
true Josephus, the son of Matthias; but the cheat is too gross to be put
upon the learned world.]
32 (return)
[ We may observe here,
that the Idumeans, as having been proselytes of justice since the days of
John Hyrcanus, during about one hundred and ninety-five years, were now
esteemed as part of the Jewish nation, and these provided of a Jewish
commander accordingly. See the note upon Antiq. B. XIII.. ch. 9. sect. 1.]
33 (return)
[ We see here, and in
Josephus's account of his own life, sect. 14, how exactly he imitated his
legislator Moses, or perhaps only obeyed what he took to be his perpetual
law, in appointing seven lesser judges, for smaller causes, in particular
cities, and perhaps for the first hearing of greater causes, with the
liberty of an appeal to seventy-one supreme judges, especially in those
causes where life and death were concerned; as Antiq. B. IV. ch. 8. sect.
14; and of his Life, sect. 14. See also Of the War, B. IV. ch. 5. sect. 4.
Moreover, we find, sect. 7, that he imitated Moses, as well as the Romans,
in the number and distribution of the subaltern officers of his army, as
Exodus 18:25; Deuteronomy 1:15; and in his charge against the offenses
common among soldiers, as Denteronomy 13:9; in all which he showed his
great wisdom and piety, and skillful conduct in martial affairs. Yet may
we discern in his very high character of Artanus the high priest, B. IV.
ch. 5. sect. 2, who seems to have been the same who condemned St. James,
bishop of Jerusalem, to be stoned, under Albinus the procurator, that when
he wrote these books of the War, he was not so much as an Ebionite
Christian; otherwise he would not have failed, according to his usual
custom, to have reckoned this his barbarous murder as a just punishment
upon him for that his cruelty to the chief, or rather only Christian
bishop of the circumcision. Nor, had he been then a Christian, could he
immediately have spoken so movingly of the causes of the destruction of
Jerusalem, without one word of either the condemnation of James, or
crucifixion of Christ, as he did when he was become a Christian
afterward.]
34 (return)
[ I should think that an
army of sixty thousand footmen should require many more than two hundred
and fifty horsemen; and we find Josephus had more horsemen under his
command than two hundred and fifty in his future history. I suppose the
number of the thousands is dropped in our present copies.]
35 (return)
[ I cannot but think this
stratagem of Josephus, which is related both here and in his Life, sect.
32, 33, to be one of the finest that ever was invented and executed by any
warrior whatsoever.]
BOOK III.
From Vespasian's Coming To Subdue The Jews To The Taking Of
Gamala.
CHAPTER 1.
With The Jews.
1. When Nero was informed of the Romans' ill success in Judea, a concealed consternation and terror, as is usual in such cases, fell upon him; although he openly looked very big, and was very angry, and said that what had happened was rather owing to the negligence of the commander, than to any valor of the enemy: and as he thought it fit for him, who bare the burden of the whole empire, to despise such misfortunes, he now pretended so to do, and to have a soul superior to all such sad accidents whatsoever. Yet did the disturbance that was in his soul plainly appear by the solicitude he was in [how to recover his affairs again].
2. And as he was deliberating to whom he should commit the care of the East, now it was in so great a commotion, and who might be best able to punish the Jews for their rebellion, and might prevent the same distemper from seizing upon the neighboring nations also,—he found no one but Vespasian equal to the task, and able to undergo the great burden of so mighty a war, seeing he was growing an old man already in the camp, and from his youth had been exercised in warlike exploits: he was also a man that had long ago pacified the west, and made it subject to the Romans, when it had been put into disorder by the Germans; he had also recovered to them Britain by his arms, which had been little known before 1 whereby he procured to his father Claudius to have a triumph bestowed on him without any sweat or labor of his own.
3. So Nero esteemed these circumstances as favorable omens, and saw that Vespasian's age gave him sure experience, and great skill, and that he had his sons as hostages for his fidelity to himself, and that the flourishing age they were in would make them fit instruments under their father's prudence. Perhaps also there was some interposition of Providence, which was paving the way for Vespasian's being himself emperor afterwards. Upon the whole, he sent this man to take upon him the command of the armies that were in Syria; but this not without great encomiums and flattering compellations, such as necessity required, and such as might mollify him into complaisance. So Vespasian sent his son Titus from Achaia, where he had been with Nero, to Alexandria, to bring back with him from thence the fifth and the tenth legions, while he himself, when he had passed over the Hellespont, came by land into Syria, where he gathered together the Roman forces, with a considerable number of auxiliaries from the kings in that neighborhood.
CHAPTER 2.
Ptolemais.
1. Now the Jews, after they had beaten Cestius, were so much elevated with their unexpected success, that they could not govern their zeal, but, like people blown up into a flame by their good fortune, carried the war to remoter places. Accordingly, they presently got together a great multitude of all their most hardy soldiers, and marched away for Ascalon. This is an ancient city that is distant from Jerusalem five hundred and twenty furlongs, and was always an enemy to the Jews; on which account they determined to make their first effort against it, and to make their approaches to it as near as possible. This excursion was led on by three men, who were the chief of them all, both for strength and sagacity; Niger, called the Persite, Silas of Babylon, and besides them John the Essene. Now Ascalon was strongly walled about, but had almost no assistance to be relied on [near them], for the garrison consisted of one cohort of footmen, and one troop of horsemen, whose captain was Antonius.
2. These Jews, therefore, out of their anger, marched faster than ordinary, and, as if they had come but a little way, approached very near the city, and were come even to it; but Antonius, who was not unapprized of the attack they were going to make upon the city, drew out his horsemen beforehand, and being neither daunted at the multitude, nor at the courage of the enemy, received their first attacks with great bravery; and when they crowded to the very walls, he beat them off. Now the Jews were unskillful in war, but were to fight with those who were skillful therein; they were footmen to fight with horsemen; they were in disorder, to fight those that were united together; they were poorly armed, to fight those that were completely so; they were to fight more by their rage than by sober counsel, and were exposed to soldiers that were exactly obedient; and did every thing they were bidden upon the least intimation. So they were easily beaten; for as soon as ever their first ranks were once in disorder, they were put to flight by the enemy's cavalry, and those of them that came behind such as crowded to the wall fell upon their own party's weapons, and became one another's enemies; and this so long till they were all forced to give way to the attacks of the horsemen, and were dispersed all the plain over, which plain was wide, and all fit for the horsemen; which circumstance was very commodious for the Romans, and occasioned the slaughter of the greatest number of the Jews; for such as ran away, they could overrun them, and make them turn back; and when they had brought them back after their flight, and driven them together, they ran them through, and slew a vast number of them, insomuch that others encompassed others of them, and drove them before them whithersoever they turned themselves, and slew them easily with their arrows; and the great number there were of the Jews seemed a solitude to themselves, by reason of the distress they were in, while the Romans had such good success with their small number, that they seemed to themselves to be the greater multitude. And as the former strove zealously under their misfortunes, out of the shame of a sudden flight, and hopes of the change in their success, so did the latter feel no weariness by reason of their good fortune; insomuch that the fight lasted till the evening, till ten thousand men of the Jews' side lay dead, with two of their generals, John and Silas, and the greater part of the remainder were wounded, with Niger, their remaining general, who fled away together to a small city of Idumea, called Sallis. Some few also of the Romans were wounded in this battle.
3. Yet were not the spirits of the Jews broken by so great a calamity, but the losses they had sustained rather quickened their resolution for other attempts; for, overlooking the dead bodies which lay under their feet, they were enticed by their former glorious actions to venture on a second destruction; so when they had lain still so little a while that their wounds were not yet thoroughly cured, they got together all their forces, and came with greater fury, and in much greater numbers, to Ascalon. But their former ill fortune followed them, as the consequence of their unskilfulness, and other deficiencies in war; for Antonius laid ambushes for them in the passages they were to go through, where they fell into snares unexpectedly, and where they were encompassed about with horsemen, before they could form themselves into a regular body for fighting, and were above eight thousand of them slain; so all the rest of them ran away, and with them Niger, who still did a great many bold exploits in his flight. However, they were driven along together by the enemy, who pressed hard upon them, into a certain strong tower belonging to a village called Bezedeh However, Antonius and his party, that they might neither spend any considerable time about this tower, which was hard to be taken, nor suffer their commander, and the most courageous man of them all, to escape from them, they set the wall on fire; and as the tower was burning, the Romans went away rejoicing, as taking it for granted that Niger was destroyed; but he leaped out of the tower into a subterraneous cave, in the innermost part of it, and was preserved; and on the third day afterward he spake out of the ground to those that with great lamentation were searching for him, in order to give him a decent funeral; and when he was come out, he filled all the Jews with an unexpected joy, as though he were preserved by God's providence to be their commander for the time to come.
4. And now Vespasian took along with him his army from Antioch, [which is the metropolis of Syria, and without dispute deserves the place of the third city in the habitable earth that was under the Roman empire, 2 both in magnitude, and other marks of prosperity,] where he found king Agrippa, with all his forces, waiting for his coming, and marched to Ptolemais. At this city also the inhabitants of Sepphoris of Galilee met him, who were for peace with the Romans. These citizens had beforehand taken care of their own safety, and being sensible of the power of the Romans, they had been with Cestius Gallus before Vespasian came, and had given their faith to him, and received the security of his right hand, and had received a Roman garrison; and at this time withal they received Vespasian, the Roman general, very kindly, and readily promised that they would assist him against their own countrymen. Now the general delivered them, at their desire, as many horsemen and footmen as he thought sufficient to oppose the incursions of the Jews, if they should come against them. And indeed the danger of losing Sepphoris would be no small one, in this war that was now beginning, seeing it was the largest city of Galilee, and built in a place by nature very strong, and might be a security of the whole nation's [fidelity to the Romans].
CHAPTER 3.
1. Now Phoenicia and Syria encompass about the Galilees, which are two, and called the Upper Galilee and the Lower. They are bounded toward the sun-setting, with the borders of the territory belonging to Ptolemais, and by Carmel; which mountain had formerly belonged to the Galileans, but now belonged to the Tyrians; to which mountain adjoins Gaba, which is called the City of Horsemen, because those horsemen that were dismissed by Herod the king dwelt therein; they are bounded on the south with Samaria and Scythopolis, as far as the river Jordan; on the east with Hippeae and Gadaris, and also with Ganlonitis, and the borders of the kingdom of Agrippa; its northern parts are bounded by Tyre, and the country of the Tyrians. As for that Galilee which is called the Lower, it, extends in length from Tiberias to Zabulon, and of the maritime places Ptolemais is its neighbor; its breadth is from the village called Xaloth, which lies in the great plain, as far as Bersabe, from which beginning also is taken the breadth of the Upper Galilee, as far as the village Baca, which divides the land of the Tyrians from it; its length is also from Meloth to Thella, a village near to Jordan.
2. These two Galilees, of so great largeness, and encompassed with so many nations of foreigners, have been always able to make a strong resistance on all occasions of war; for the Galileans are inured to war from their infancy, and have been always very numerous; nor hath the country been ever destitute of men of courage, or wanted a numerous set of them; for their soil is universally rich and fruitful, and full of the plantations of trees of all sorts, insomuch that it invites the most slothful to take pains in its cultivation, by its fruitfulness; accordingly, it is all cultivated by its inhabitants, and no part of it lies idle. Moreover, the cities lie here very thick, and the very many villages there are here are every where so full of people, by the richness of their soil, that the very least of them contain above fifteen thousand inhabitants.
3. In short, if any one will suppose that Galilee is inferior to Perea in magnitude, he will be obliged to prefer it before it in its strength; for this is all capable of cultivation, and is every where fruitful; but for Perea, which is indeed much larger in extent, the greater part of it is desert and rough, and much less disposed for the production of the milder kinds of fruits; yet hath it a moist soil [in other parts], and produces all kinds of fruits, and its plains are planted with trees of all sorts, while yet the olive tree, the vine, and the palm tree are chiefly cultivated there. It is also sufficiently watered with torrents, which issue out of the mountains, and with springs that never fail to run, even when the torrents fail them, as they do in the dog-days. Now the length of Perea is from Machaerus to Pella, and its breadth from Philadelphia to Jordan; its northern parts are bounded by Pella, as we have already said, as well as its Western with Jordan; the land of Moab is its southern border, and its eastern limits reach to Arabia, and Silbonitis, and besides to Philadelphene and Gerasa.
4. Now as to the country of Samaria, it lies between Judea and Galilee; it begins at a village that is in the great plain called Ginea, and ends at the Acrabbene toparchy, and is entirely of the same nature with Judea; for both countries are made up of hills and valleys, and are moist enough for agriculture, and are very fruitful. They have abundance of trees, and are full of autumnal fruit, both that which grows wild, and that which is the effect of cultivation. They are not naturally watered by many rivers, but derive their chief moisture from rain-water, of which they have no want; and for those rivers which they have, all their waters are exceeding sweet: by reason also of the excellent grass they have, their cattle yield more milk than do those in other places; and, what is the greatest sign of excellency and of abundance, they each of them are very full of people.
5. In the limits of Samaria and Judea lies the village Anuath, which is also named Borceos. This is the northern boundary of Judea. The southern parts of Judea, if they be measured lengthways, are bounded by a Village adjoining to the confines of Arabia; the Jews that dwell there call it Jordan. However, its breadth is extended from the river Jordan to Joppa. The city Jerusalem is situated in the very middle; on which account some have, with sagacity enough, called that city the Navel of the country. Nor indeed is Judea destitute of such delights as come from the sea, since its maritime places extend as far as Ptolemais: it was parted into eleven portions, of which the royal city Jerusalem was the supreme, and presided over all the neighboring country, as the head does over the body. As to the other cities that were inferior to it, they presided over their several toparchies; Gophna was the second of those cities, and next to that Acrabatta, after them Thamna, and Lydda, and Emmaus, and Pella, and Idumea, and Engaddi, and Herodium, and Jericho; and after them came Jamnia and Joppa, as presiding over the neighboring people; and besides these there was the region of Gamala, and Gaulonitis, and Batanea, and Trachonitis, which are also parts of the kingdom of Agrippa. This [last] country begins at Mount Libanus, and the fountains of Jordan, and reaches breadthways to the lake of Tiberias; and in length is extended from a village called Arpha, as far as Julias. Its inhabitants are a mixture of Jews and Syrians. And thus have I, with all possible brevity, described the country of Judea, and those that lie round about it.