BOOK IV
CONTAINING THE INTERVAL OF ABOUT ONE YEAR.
FROM THE SIEGE OF GAMALA TO THE COMING OF TITUS TO BESIEGE
JERUSALEM.
CHAPTER 1
THE SIEGE AND TAKING OF GAMALA.
1. NOW all those Galileans who, after the taking of Jotapata,
had revolted from the Romans, did, upon the conquest of Taricheae,
deliver themselves up to them again. And the Romans received all
the fortresses and the cities, excepting Gischala and those that
had seized upon Mount Tabor; Gamala also, which is a city ever
against Tarichem, but on the other side of the lake, conspired
with them. This city lay Upon the borders of Agrippa's kingdom,
as also did Sogana and Scleucia. And these were both parts of
Gaulanitis; for Sogana was a part of that called the Upper Gaulanitis,
as was Gamala of the Lower; while Selcucia was situated at the
lake Semechouitis, which lake is thirty furlongs in breadth, and
sixty in length; its marshes reach as far as the place Daphne,
which in other respects is a delicious place, and hath such fountains
as supply water to what is called Little Jordan, under the temple
of the golden calf, (1) where it is sent into Great Jordan. Now
Agrippa had united Sogana and Seleucia by leagues to himself,
at the very beginning of the revolt from the Romans; yet did not
Gamala accede to them, but relied upon the difficulty of the place,
which was greater than that of Jotapata, for it was situated upon
a rough ridge of a high mountain, with a kind of neck in the middle:
where it begins to ascend, it lengthens itself, and declines as
much downward before as behind, insomuch that it is like a camel
in figure, from whence it is so named, although the people of
the country do not pronounce it accurately. Both on the side and
the face there are abrupt parts divided from the rest, and ending
in vast deep valleys; yet are the parts behind, where they are
joined to the mountain, somewhat easier of ascent than the other;
but then the people belonging to the place have cut an oblique
ditch there, and made that hard to be ascended also. On its acclivity,
which is straight, houses are built, and those very thick and
close to one another. The city also hangs so strangely, that it
looks as if it would fall down upon itself, so sharp is it at
the top. It is exposed to the south, and its southern mount, which
reaches to an immense height, was in the nature of a citadel to
the city; and above that was a precipice, not walled about, but
extending itself to an immense depth. There was also a spring
of water within the wall, at the utmost limits of the city.
2. As this city was naturally hard to be taken, so had Josephus,
by building a wall about it, made it still stronger, as also by
ditches and mines under ground. The people that were in it were
made more bold by the nature of the place than the people of Jotapata
had been, but it had much fewer fighting men in it; and they had
such a confidence in the situation of the place, that they thought
the enemy could not be too many for them; for the city had been
filled with those that had fled to it for safety, on account of
its strength; on which account they had been able to resist those
whom Agrippa sent to besiege it for seven months together.
3. But Vespasian removed from Emmaus, where he had last pitched
his camp before the city Tiberias, (now Emmaus, if it be interpreted,
may be rendered "a warm bath," for therein is a spring
of warm water, useful for healing,) and came to Gamala; yet was
its situation such that he was not able to encompass it all round
with soldiers to watch it; but where the places were practicable,
he set men to watch it, and seized upon the mountain which was
over it. And as the legions, according to their usual custom,
were fortifying their camp upon that mountain, he began to cast
up banks at the bottom, at the part towards the east, where the
highest tower of the whole city was, and where the fifteenth legion
pitched their camp; while the fifth legion did duty over against
the midst of the city, and whilst the tenth legion filled up the
ditches and the valleys. Now at this time it was that as king
Agrippa was come nigh the walls, and was endeavoring to speak
to those that were on the walls about a surrender, he was hit
with a stone on his right elbow by one of the slingers; he was
then immediately surrounded with his own men. But the Romans were
excited to set about the siege, by their indignation on the king's
account, and by their fear on their own account, as concluding
that those men would omit no kinds of barbarity against foreigners
and enemies, who where so enraged against one of their own nation,
and one that advised them to nothing but what was for their own
advantage.
4. Now when the banks were finished, which was done on the sudden,
both by the multitude of hands, and by their being accustomed
to such work, they brought the machines; but Chares and Joseph,
who were the most potent men in the city, set their armed men
in order, though already in a fright, because they did not suppose
that the city could hold out long, since they had not a sufficient
quantity either of water, or of other necessaries. However, these
their leaders encouraged them, and brought them out upon the wall,
and for a while indeed they drove away those that were bringing
the machines; but when those machines threw darts and stones at
them, they retired into the city; then did the Romans bring battering
rams to three several places, and made the wall shake [and fall].
They then poured in over the parts of the wall that were thrown
down, with a mighty sound of trumpets and noise of armor, and
with a shout of the soldiers, and brake in by force upon those
that were in the city; but these men fell upon the Romans for
some time, at their first entrance, and prevented their going
any further, and with great courage beat them back; and the Romans
were so overpowered by the greater multitude of the people, who
beat them on every side, that they were obliged to run into the
upper parts of the city. Whereupon the people turned about, and
fell upon their enemies, who had attacked them, and thrust them
down to the lower parts, and as they were distressed by the narrowness
and difficulty of the place, slew them; and as these Romans could
neither beat those back that were above them, nor escape the force
of their own men that were forcing their way forward, they were
compelled to fly into their enemies' houses, which were low; but
these houses being thus full, of soldiers, whose weight they could
not bear, fell down suddenly; and when one house fell, it shook
down a great many of those that were under it, as did those do
to such as were under them. By this means a vast number of the
Romans perished; for they were so terribly distressed, that although
they saw the houses subsiding, they were compelled to leap upon
the tops of them; so that a great many were ground to powder by
these ruins, and a great many of those that got from under them
lost some of their limbs, but still a greater number were suffocated
by the dust that arose from those ruins. The people of Gamala
supposed this to be an assistance afforded them by God, and without
regarding what damage they suffered themselves, they pressed forward,
and thrust the enemy upon the tops of their houses; and when they
stumbled in the sharp and narrow streets, and were perpetually
falling down, they threw their stones or darts at them, and slew
them. Now the very ruins afforded them stones enow; and for iron
weapons, the dead men of the enemies' side afforded them what
they wanted; for drawing the swords of those that were dead, they
made use of them to despatch such as were only half dead; nay,
there were a great number who, upon their falling down from the
tops of the houses, stabbed themselves, and died after that manner;
nor indeed was it easy for those that were beaten back to fly
away; for they were so unacquainted with the ways, and the dust
was so thick, that they wandered about without knowing one another,
and fell down dead among the crowd.
5. Those therefore that were able to find the ways out of the
city retired. But now Vespasian always staid among those that
were hard set; for he was deeply affected with seeing the ruins
of the city falling upon his army, and forgot to take care of
his own preservation. He went up gradually towards the highest
parts of the city before he was aware, and was left in the midst
of dangers, having only a very few with him; for even his son
Titus was not with him at that time, having been then sent into
Syria to Mucianus. However, he thought it not safe to fly, nor
did he esteem it a fit thing for him to do; but calling to mind
the actions he had done from his youth, and recollecting his courage,
as if he had been excited by a divine fury, he covered himself
and those that were with him with their shields, and formed a
testudo over both their bodies and their armor, and bore up against
the enemy's attacks, who came running down from the top of the
city; and without showing any dread at the multitude of the men
or of their darts, he endured all, until the enemy took notice
of that divine courage that was within him, and remitted of their
attacks; and when they pressed less zealously upon him, he retired,
though without showing his back to them till he was gotten out
of the walls of the city. Now a great number of the Romans fell
in this battle, among whom was Ebutius, the decurion, a man who
appeared not only in this engagement, wherein he fell, but every
where, and in former engagements, to be of the truest courage,
and one that had done very great mischief to the Jews. But there
was a centurion whose name was Gallus, who, during this disorder,
being encompassed about, he and ten other soldiers privately crept
into the house of a certain person, where he heard them talking
at supper, what the people intended to do against the Romans,
or about themselves (for both the man himself and those with him
were Syrians). So he got up in the night time, and cut all their
throats, and escaped, together with his soldiers, to the Romans.
6. And now Vespasian comforted his army, which was much dejected
by reflecting on their ill success, and because they had never
before fallen into such a calamity, and besides this, because
they were greatly ashamed that they had left their general alone
in great dangers. As to what concerned himself, he avoided to
say any thing, that he might by no means seem to complain of it;
but he said that "we ought to bear manfully what usually
falls out in war, and this, by considering what the nature of
war is, and how it can never be that we must conquer without bloodshed
on our own side; for there stands about us that fortune which
is of its own nature mutable; that while they had killed so many
ten thousands of the Jews, they had now paid their small share
of the reckoning to fate; and as it is the part of weak people
to be too much puffed up with good success, so is it the part
of cowards to be too much aftrighted at that which is ill; for
the change from the one to the other is sudden on both sides;
and he is the best warrior who is of a sober mind under misfortunes,
that he may continue in that temper, and cheerfully recover what
had been lost formerly; and as for what had now happened, it was
neither owing to their own effeminacy, nor to the valor of the
Jews, but the difficulty of the place was the occasion of their
advantage, and of our disappointment. Upon reflecting on which
matter one might blame your zeal as perfectly ungovernable; for
when the enemy had retired to their highest fastnesses, you ought
to have restrained yourselves, and not, by presenting yourselves
at the top of the city, to be exposed to dangers; but upon your
having obtained the lower parts of the city, you ought to have
provoked those that had retired thither to a safe and settled
battle; whereas, in rushing so hastily upon victory, you took
no care of your safety. But this incautiousness in war, and this
madness of zeal, is not a Roman maxim. While we perform all that
we attempt by skill and good order, that procedure is the part
of barbarians, and is what the Jews chiefly support themselves
by. We ought therefore to return to our own virtue, and to be
rather angry than any longer dejected at this unlucky misfortune,
and let every one seek for his own consolation from his own hand;
for by this means he will avenge those that have been destroyed,
and punish those that have killed them. For myself, I will endeavor,
as I have now done, to go first before you against your enemies
in every engagement, and to be the last that retires from it."
7. So Vespasian encouraged his army by this speech; but for the
people of Gamala, it happened that they took courage for a little
while, upon such great and unaccountable success as they had had.
But when they considered with themselves that they had now no
hopes of any terms of accommodation, and reflecting upon it that
they could not get away, and that their provisions began already
to be short, they were exceedingly cast down, and their courage
failed them; yet did they not neglect what might be for their
preservation, so far as they were able, but the most courageous
among them guarded those parts of the wall that were beaten down,
while the more infirm did the same to the rest of the wall that
still remained round the city. And as the Romans raised their
banks, and attempted to get into the city a second time, a great
many of them fled out of the city through impracticable valleys,
where no guards were placed, as also through subterraneous caverns;
while those that were afraid of being caught, and for that reason
staid in the city, perished for want of food; for what food they
had was brought together from all quarters, and reserved for the
fighting men.
8. And these were the hard circumstances that the people of Gamala
were in. But now Vespasian went about other work by the by, during
this siege, and that was to subdue those that had seized upon
Mount Tabor, a place that lies in the middle between the great
plain and Scythopolis, whose top is elevated as high as thirty
furlongs (2) and is hardly to be ascended on its north side; its
top is a plain of twenty-six furlongs, and all encompassed with
a wall. Now Josephus erected this so long a wall in forty days'
time, and furnished it with other materials, and with water from
below, for the inhabitants only made use of rain water. As therefore
there was a great multitude of people gotten together upon this
mountain, Vespasian sent Placidus with six hundred horsemen thither.
Now, as it was impossible for him to ascend the mountain, he invited
many of them to peace, by the offer of his right hand for their
security, and of his intercession for them. Accordingly they came
down, but with a treacherous design, as well as he had the like
treacherous design upon them on the other side; for Placidus spoke
mildly to them, as aiming to take them, when he got them into
the plain; they also came down, as complying with his proposals,
but it was in order to fall upon him when he was not aware of
it: however, Placidus's stratagem was too hard for theirs; for
when the Jews began to fight, he pretended to run away, and when
they were in pursuit of the Romans, he enticed them a great way
along the plain, and then made his horsemen turn back; whereupon
he beat them, and slew a great number of them, and cut off the
retreat of the rest of the multitude, and hindered their return.
So they left Tabor, and fled to Jerusalem, while the people of
the country came to terms with him, for their water failed them,
and so they delivered up the mountain and themselves to Placidus.
9. But of the people of Gamala, those that were of the bolder
sort fled away and hid themselves, while the more infirm perished
by famine; but the men of war sustained the siege till the two
and twentieth day of the month Hyperberetmus, [Tisri,] when three
soldiers of the fifteenth legion, about the morning watch, got
under a high tower that was near them, and undermined it, without
making any noise; nor when they either came to it, which was in
the night time, nor when they were under it, did those that guarded
it perceive them. These soldiers then upon their coming avoided
making a noise, and when they had rolled away five of its strongest
stones, they went away hastily; whereupon the tower fell down
on a sudden, with a very great noise, and its guard fell headlong
with it; so that those that kept guard at other places were under
such disturbance, that they ran away; the Romans also slew many
of those that ventured to oppose them, among whom was Joseph,
who was slain by a dart, as he was running away over that part
of the wall that was broken down: but as those that were in the
city were greatly aftrighted at the noise, they ran hither and
thither, and a great consternation fell upon them, as though all
the enemy had fallen in at once upon them. Then it was that Chares,
who was ill, and under the physician's hands, gave up the ghost,
the fear he was in greatly contributing to make his distemper
fatal to him. But the Romans so well remembered their former ill
success, that they did not enter the city till the three and twentieth
day of the forementioned month.
10. At which time Titus, who was now returned, out of the indignation
he had at the destruction the Romans had undergone while he was
absent, took two hundred chosen horsemen and some footmen with
him, and entered without noise into the city. Now as the watch
perceived that he was coming, they made a noise, and betook themselves
to their arms; and as that his entrance was presently known to
those that were in the city, some of them caught hold of their
children and their wives, and drew them after them, and fled away
to the citadel, with lamentations and cries, while others of them
went to meet Titus, and were killed perpetually; but so many of
them as were hindered from running up to the citadel, not knowing
what in the world to do, fell among the Roman guards, while the
groans of those that were killed were prodigiously great every
where, and blood ran down over all the lower parts of the city,
from the upper. But then Vespasian himself came to his assistance
against those that had fled to the citadel, and brought his whole
army with him; now this upper part of the city was every way rocky,
and difficult of ascent, and elevated to a vast altitude, and
very full of people on all sides, and encompassed with precipices,
whereby the Jews cut off those that came up to them, and did much
mischief to others by their darts, and the large stones which
they rolled down upon them, while they were themselves so high
that the enemy's darts could hardly reach them. However, there
arose such a Divine storm against them as was instrumental to
their destruction; this carried the Roman darts upon them, and
made those which they threw return back, and drove them obliquely
away from them; nor could the Jews indeed stand upon their precipices,
by reason of the violence of the wind, having nothing that was
stable to stand upon, nor could they see those that were ascending
up to them; so the Romans got up and surrounded them, and some
they slew before they could defend themselves, and others as they
were delivering up themselves; and the remembrance of those that
were slain at their former entrance into the city increased their
rage against them now; a great number also of those that were
surrounded on every side, and despaired of escaping, threw their
children and their wives, and themselves also, down the precipices,
into the valley beneath, which, near the citadel, had been dug
hollow to a vast depth; but so it happened, that the anger of
the Romans appeared not to be so extravagant as was the madness
of those that were now taken, while the Romans slew but four thousand,
whereas the number of those that had thrown themselves down was
found to be five thousand: nor did any one escape except two women,
who were the daughters of Philip, and Philip himself was the son
of a certain eminent man called Jacimus, who had been general
of king Agrippa's army; and these did therefore escape, because
they lay concealed from the rage of the Romans when the city was
taken; for otherwise they spared not so much as the infants, of
which many were flung down by them from the citadel. And thus
was Gamala taken on the three and twentieth day of the month Hyperberetens,
[Tisri,] whereas the city had first revolted on the four and twentieth
day of the month Gorpieus [Elul].
CHAPTER 2.
THE SURRENDER OF GISCHALA; WHILE JOHN FLIES AWAY FROM IT TO
JERUSALEM.
1. NOW no place of Galilee remained to be taken but the small
city of Gischala, whose multitude yet were desirous of peace;
for they were generally husbandmen, and always applied themselves
to cultivate the fruits of the earth. However, there were a great
number that belonged to a band of robbers, that were already corrupted,
and had crept in among them, and some of the governing part of
the citizens were sick of the same distemper. It was John, the
son of a certain man whose name was Levi, that drew them into
this rebellion, and encouraged them in it. He was a cunning knave,
and of a temper that could put on various shapes; very rash in
expecting great things, and very sagacious in bringing about what
he hoped for. It was known to every body that he was fond of war,
in order to thrust himself into authority; and the seditious part
of the people of Gischala were under his management, by whose
means the populace, who seemed ready to send ambassadors in order
to a surrender, waited for the coming of the Romans in battle-array.
Vespasian sent against them Titus, with a thousand horsemen, but
withdrew the tenth legion to Scythopolis, while he returned to
Cesarea with the two other legions, that he might allow them to
refresh themselves after their long and hard campaign, thinking
withal that the plenty which was in those cities would improve
their bodies and their spirits, against the difficulties they
were to go through afterwards; for he saw there would be occasion
for great pains about Jerusalem, which was not yet taken, because
it was the royal city, and the principal city of the whole nation,
and because those that had run away from the war in other places
got all together thither. It was also naturally strong, and the
walls that were built round it made him not a little concerned
about it. Moreover, he esteemed the men that were in it to be
so courageous and bold, that even without the consideration of
the walls, it would be hard to subdue them; for which reason he
took care of and exercised his soldiers beforehand for the work,
as they do wrestlers before they begin their undertaking.
2. Now Titus, as he rode ut to Gischala, found it would be easy
for him to take the city upon the first onset; but knew withal,
that if he took it by force, the multitude would be destroyed
by the soldiers without mercy. (Now he was already satiated with
the shedding of blood, and pitied the major part, who would then
perish, without distinction, together with the guilty.) So he
was rather desirous the city might be surrendered up to him on
terms. Accordingly, when he saw the wall full of those men that
were of the corrupted party, he said to them, - That he could
not but wonder what it was they depended on, when they alone staid
to fight the Romans, after every other city was taken by them,
especially when they have seen cities much better fortified than
theirs is overthrown by a single attack upon them; while as many
as have intrusted themselves to the security of the Romans' right
hands, which he now offers to them, without regarding their former
insolence, do enjoy their own possessions in safety; for that
while they had hopes of recovering their liberty, they might be
pardoned; but that their continuance still in their opposition,
when they saw that to be impossible, was inexcusable; for that
if they will not comply with such humane offers, and right hands
for security, they should have experience of such a war as would
spare nobody, and should soon be made sensible that their wall
would be but a trifle, when battered by the Roman machines; in
depending on which they demonstrate themselves to be the only
Galileans that were no better than arrogant slaves and captives.
3. Now none of the populace durst not only make a reply, but durst
not so much as get upon the wall, for it was all taken up by the
robbers, who were also the guard at the gates, in order to prevent
any of the rest from going out, in order to propose terms of submission,
and from receiving any of the horsemen into the city. But John
returned Titus this answer: That for himself he was content to
hearken to his proposals, and that he would either persuade or
force those that refused them. Yet he said that Titus ought to
have such regard to the Jewish law, as to grant them leave to
celebrate that day, which was the seventh day of the week, on
which it was unlawful not only to remove their arms, but even
to treat of peace also; and that even the Romans were not ignorant
how the period of the seventh day was among them a cessation from
all labors; and that he who should compel them to transgress the
law about that day would be equally guilty with those that were
compelled to transgress it: and that this delay could be of no
disadvantage to him; for why should any body think of doing any
thing in the night, unless it was to fly away? which he might
prevent by placing his camp round about them; and that they should
think it a great point gained, if they might not be obliged to
transgress the laws of their country; and that it would be a right
thing for him, who designed to grant them peace, without their
expectation of such a favor, to preserve the laws of those they
saved inviolable. Thus did this man put a trick upon Titus, not
so much out of regard to the seventh day as to his own preservation,
for he was afraid lest he should be quite deserted if the city
should be taken, and had his hopes of life in that night, and
in his flight therein. Now this was the work of God, who therefore
preserved this John, that he might bring on the destruction of
Jerusalem; as also it was his work that Titus was prevailed with
by this pretense for a delay, and that he pitched his camp further
off the city at Cydessa. This Cydessa was a strong Mediterranean
village of the Tyrians, which always hated and made war against
the Jews; it had also a great number of inhabitants, and was well
fortified, which made it a proper place for such as were enemies
to the Jewish nation.
4. Now, in the night time, when John saw that there was no Roman
guard about the city, he seized the opportunity directly, and,
taking with him not only the armed men that where about him, but
a considerable number of those that had little to do, together
with their families, he fled to Jerusalem. And indeed, though
the man was making haste to get away, and was tormented with fears
of being a captive, or of losing his life, yet did he prevail
with himself to take out of the city along with him a multitude
of women and children, as far as twenty furlongs; but there he
left them as he proceeded further on his journey, where those
that were left behind made sad lamentations; for the farther every
one of them was come from his own people, the nearer they thought
themselves to be to their enemies. They also affrighted themselves
with this thought, that those who would carry them into captivity
were just at hand, and still turned themselves back at the mere
noise they made themselves in this their hasty flight, as if those
from whom they fled were just upon them. Many also of them missed
their ways, and the earnestness of such as aimed to outgo the
rest threw down many of them. And indeed there was a miserable
destruction made of the women and children; while some of them
took courage to call their husbands and kinsmen back, and to beseech
them, with the bitterest lamentations, to stay for them; but John's
exhortation, who cried out to them to save themselves, and fly
away, prevailed. He said also, that if the Romans should seize
upon those whom they left behind, they would be revenged on them
for it. So this multitude that run thus away was dispersed abroad,
according as each of them was able to run, one faster or slower
than another.
5. Now on the next day Titus came to the wall, to make the agreement;
whereupon the people opened their gates to him, and came out to
him, with their children and wives, and made acclamations of joy
to him, as to one that had been their benefactor, and had delivered
the city out of custody; they also informed him of John's flight,
and besought him to spare them, and to come in, and bring the
rest of those that were for innovations to punishment. But Titus,
not so much regarding the supplications of the people, sent part
of his horsemen to pursue after John, but they could not overtake
him, for he was gotten to Jerusalem before; they also slew six
thousand of the women and children who went out with him, but
returned back, and brought with them almost three thousand. However,
Titus was greatly displeased that he had not been able to bring
this John, who had deluded him, to punishment; yet he had captives
enough, as well as the corrupted part of the city, to satisfy
his anger, when it missed of John. So he entered the city in the
midst of acclamations of joy; and when he had given orders to
the soldiers to pull down a small part of the wall, as of a city
taken in war, he repressed those that had disturbed the city rather
by threatenings than by executions; for he thought that many would
accuse innocent persons, out of their own private animosities
and quarrels, if he should attempt to distinguish those that were
worthy of punishment from the rest; and that it was better to
let a guilty person alone in his fears, that to destroy with him
any one that did not deserve it; for that probably such a one
might be taught prudence, by the fear of the punishment he had
deserved, and have a shame upon him for his former offenses, when
he had been forgiven; but that the punishment of such as have
been once put to death could never be retrieved. However, he placed
a garrison in the city for its security, by which means he should
restrain those that were for innovations, and should leave those
that were peaceably disposed in greater security. And thus was
all Galilee taken, but this not till after it had cost the Romans
much pains before it could be taken by them.
CHAPTER 3.
CONCERNING JOHN OF GISCHALA. CONCERNING THE ZEALOTS AND THE
HIGH PRIEST ANANUS; AS ALSO HOW THE JEWS RAISE SEDITIONS ONE AGAINST
ANOTHER [IN JERUSALEM].
1. NOW upon John's entry into Jerusalem, the whole body of the
people were in an uproar, and ten thousand of them crowded about
every one of the fugitives that were come to them, and inquired
of them what miseries had happened abroad, when their breath was
so short, and hot, and quick, that of itself it declared the great
distress they were in; yet did they talk big under their misfortunes,
and pretended to say that they had not fled away from the Romans,
but came thither in order to fight them with less hazard; for
that it would be an unreasonable and a fruitless thing for them
to expose themselves to desperate hazards about Gischala, and
such weak cities, whereas they ought to lay up their weapons and
their zeal, and reserve it for their metropolis. But when they
related to them the taking of Gischala, and their decent departure,
as they pretended, from that place, many of the people understood
it to be no better than a flight; and especially when the people
were told of those that were made captives, they were in great
confusion, and guessed those things to be plain indications that
they should be taken also. But for John, he was very little concerned
for those whom he had left behind him, but went about among all
the people, and persuaded them to go to war, by the hopes he gave
them. He affirmed that the affairs of the Romans were in a weak
condition, and extolled his own power. He also jested upon the
ignorance of the unskillful, as if those Romans, although they
should take to themselves wings, could never fly over the wall
of Jerusalem, who found such great difficulties in taking the
villages of Galilee, and had broken their engines of war against
their walls.
2. These harangues of John's corrupted a great part of the young
men, and puffed them up for the war; but as to the more prudent
part, and those in years, there was not a man of them but foresaw
what was coming, and made lamentation on that account, as if the
city was already undone; and in this confusion were the people.
But then it must be observed, that the multitude that came out
of the country were at discord before the Jerusalem sedition began;
for Titus went from Gischala to Cesates, and Vespasian from Cesarea
to Jamnia and Azotus, and took them both; and when he had put
garrisons into them, he came back with a great number of the people,
who were come over to him, upon his giving them his right hand
for their preservation. There were besides disorders and civil
wars in every city; and all those that were at quiet from the
Romans turned their hands one against another. There was also
a bitter contest between those that were fond of war, and those
that were desirous for peace. At the first this quarrelsome temper
caught hold of private families, who could not agree among themselves;
after which those people that were the dearest to one another
brake through all restraints with regard to each other, and every
one associated with those of his own opinion, and began already
to stand in opposition one to another; so that seditions arose
every where, while those that were for innovations, and were desirous
of war, by their youth and boldness, were too hard for the aged
and prudent men. And, in the first place, all the people of every
place betook themselves to rapine; after which they got together
in bodies, in order to rob the people of the country, insomuch
that for barbarity and iniquity those of the same nation did no
way differ from the Romans; nay, it seemed to be a much lighter
thing to be ruined by the Romans than by themselves.
3. Now the Roman garrisons, which guarded the cities, partly out
of their uneasiness to take such trouble upon them, and partly
out of the hatred they bare to the Jewish nation, did little or
nothing towards relieving the miserable, till the captains of
these troops of robbers, being satiated with rapines in the country,
got all together from all parts, and became a band of wickedness,
and all together crept into Jerusalem, which was now become a
city without a governor, and, as the ancient custom was, received
without distinction all that belonged to their nation; and these
they then received, because all men supposed that those who came
so fast into the city came out of kindness, and for their assistance,
although these very men, besides the seditions they raised, were
otherwise the direct cause of the city's destruction also; for
as they were an unprofitable and a useless multitude, they spent
those provisions beforehand which might otherwise have been sufficient
for the fighting men. Moreover, besides the bringing on of the
war, they were the occasions of sedition and famine therein.
4. There were besides these other robbers that came out of the
country, and came into the city, and joining to them those that
were worse than themselves, omitted no kind of barbarity; for
they did not measure their courage by their rapines and plunderings
only, but preceded as far as murdering men; and this not in the
night time or privately, or with regard to ordinary men, but did
it openly in the day time, and began with the most eminent persons
in the city; for the first man they meddled with was Antipas,
one of the royal lineage, and the most potent man in the whole
city, insomuch that the public treasures were committed to his
care; him they took and confined; as they did in the next place
to Levias, a person of great note, with Sophas, the son of Raguel,
both which were of royal lineage also. And besides these, they
did the same to the principal men of the country. This caused
a terrible consternation among the people, and everyone contented
himself with taking care of his own safety, as they would do if
the city had been taken in war.
5. But these were not satisfied with the bonds into which they
had put the men forementioned; nor did they think it safe for
them to keep them thus in custody long, since they were men very
powerful, and had numerous families of their own that were able
to avenge them. Nay, they thought the very people would perhaps
be so moved at these unjust proceedings, as to rise in a body
against them; it was therefore resolved to have them slain accordingly,
they sent one John, who was the most bloody-minded of them all,
to do that execution: this man was also called "the son of
Dorcas," (3) in the language of our country. Ten more men
went along with him into the prison, with their swords drawn,
and so they cut the throats of those that were in custody there.
The grand lying pretence these men made for so flagrant an enormity
was this, that these men had had conferences with the Romans for
a surrender of Jerusalem to them; and so they said they had slain
only such as were traitors to their common liberty. Upon the whole,
they grew the more insolent upon this bold prank of theirs, as
though they had been the benefactors and saviors of the city.
6. Now the people were come to that degree of meanness and fear,
and these robbers to that degree of madness, that these last took
upon them to appoint high priests. (4) So when they had disannulled
the succession, according to those families out of which the high
priests used to be made, they ordained certain unknown and ignoble
persons for that office, that they might have their assistance
in their wicked undertakings; for such as obtained this highest
of all honors, without any desert, were forced to comply with
those that bestowed it on them. They also set the principal men
at variance one with another, by several sorts of contrivances
and tricks, and gained the opportunity of doing what they pleased,
by the mutual quarrels of those who might have obstructed their
measures; till at length, when they were satiated with the unjust
actions they had done towards men, they transferred their contumelious
behavior to God himself, and came into the sanctuary with polluted
feet.
7. And now the multitude were going to rise against them already;
for Ananus, the ancientest of the high priests, persuaded them
to it. He was a very prudent man, and had perhaps saved the city
if he could but have escaped the hands of those that plotted against
him. These men made the temple of God a strong hold for them,
and a place whither they might resort, in order to avoid the troubles
they feared from the people; the sanctuary was now become a refuge,
and a shop of tyranny. They also mixed jesting among the miseries
they introduced, which was more intolerable than what they did;
for in order to try what surprise the people would be under, and
how far their own power extended, they undertook to dispose of
the high priesthood by casting lots for it, whereas, as we have
said already, it was to descend by succession in a family. The
pretense they made for this strange attempt was an ancient practice,
while they said that of old it was determined by lot; but in truth,
it was no better than a dissolution of an undeniable law, and
a cunning contrivance to seize upon the government, derived from
those that presumed to appoint governors as they themselves pleased.
8. Hereupon they sent for one of the pontifical tribes, which
is called Eniachim, (5) and cast lots which of it should be the
high priest. By fortune the lot so fell as to demonstrate their
iniquity after the plainest manner, for it fell upon one whose
name was Phannias, the son of Samuel, of the village Aphtha. He
was a man not only unworthy of the high priesthood, but that did
not well know what the high priesthood was, such a mere rustic
was he ! yet did they hail this man, without his own consent,
out of the country, as if they were acting a play upon the stage,
and adorned him with a counterfeit thee; they also put upon him
the sacred garments, and upon every occasion instructed him what
he was to do. This horrid piece of wickedness was sport and pastime
with them, but occasioned the other priests, who at a distance
saw their law made a jest of, to shed tears, and sorely lament
the dissolution of such a sacred dignity.
9. And now the people could no longer bear the insolence of this
procedure, but did all together run zealously, in order to overthrow
that tyranny; and indeed they were Gorion the son of Josephus,
and Symeon the son of Gamaliel, (6) who encouraged them, by going
up and down when they were assembled together in crowds, and as
they saw them alone, to bear no longer, but to inflict punishment
upon these pests and plagues of their freedom, and to purge the
temple of these bloody polluters of it. The best esteemed also
of the high priests, Jesus the son of Gamalas, and Ananus the
son of Ananus when they were at their assemblies, bitterly reproached
the people for their sloth, and excited them against the zealots;
for that was the name they went by, as if they were zealous in
good undertakings, and were not rather zealous in the worst actions,
and extravagant in them beyond the example of others.
10. And now, when the multitude were gotten together to an assembly,
and every one was in indignation at these men's seizing upon the
sanctuary, at their rapine and murders, but had not yet begun
their attacks upon them, (the reason of which was this, that they
imagined it to be a difficult thing to suppress these zealots,
as indeed the case was,) Ananus stood in the midst of them, and
casting his eyes frequently at the temple, and having a flood
of tears in his eyes, he said, "Certainly it had been good
for me to die before I had seen the house of God full of so many
abominations, or these sacred places, that ought not to be trodden
upon at random, filled with the feet of these blood-shedding villains;
yet do I, who am clothed with the vestments of the high priesthood,
and am called by that most venerable name [of high priest], still
live, and am but too fond of living, and cannot endure to undergo
a death which would be the glory of my old age; and if I were
the only person concerned, and as it were in a desert, I would
give up my life, and that alone for God's sake; for to what purpose
is it to live among a people insensible of their calamities, and
where there is no notion remaining of any remedy for the miseries
that are upon them? for when you are seized upon, you bear it!
and when you are beaten, you are silent! and when the people are
murdered, nobody dare so much as send out a groan openly! O bitter
tyranny that we are under! But why do I complain of the tyrants?
Was it not you, and your sufferance of them, that have nourished
them? Was it not you that overlooked those that first of all got
together, for they were then but a few, and by your silence made
them grow to be many; and by conniving at them when they took
arms, in effect armed them against yourselves? You ought to have
then prevented their first attempts, when they fell a reproaching
your relations; but by neglecting that care in time, you have
encouraged these wretches to plunder men. When houses were pillaged,
nobody said a word, which was the occasion why they carried off
the owners of those houses; and when they were drawn through the
midst of the city, nobody came to their assistance. They then
proceeded to put those whom you have betrayed into their hands
into bonds. I do not say how many and of what characters those
men were whom they thus served; but certainly they were such as
were accused by none, and condemned by none; and since nobody
succored them when they were put into bonds, the consequence was,
that you saw the same persons slain. We have seen this also; so
that still the best of the herd of brute animals, as it were,
have been still led to be sacrificed, when yet nobody said one
word, or moved his right hand for their preservation. Will you
bear, therefore, will you bear to see your sanctuary trampled
on? and will you lay steps for these profane wretches, upon which
they may mount to higher degrees of insolence? Will not you pluck
them down from their exaltation? for even by this time they had
proceeded to higher enormities, if they had been able to overthrow
any thing greater than the sanctuary. They have seized upon the
strongest place of the whole city; you may call it the temple,
if you please, though it be like a citadel or fortress. Now, while
you have tyranny in so great a degree walled in, and see your
enemies over your heads, to what purpose is it to take counsel?
and what have you to support your minds withal? Perhaps you wait
for the Romans, that they may protect our holy places: are our
matters then brought to that pass? and are we come to that degree
of misery, that our enemies themselves are expected to pity us?
O wretched creatures! will not you rise up and turn upon those
that strike you? which you may observe in wild beasts themselves,
that they will avenge themselves on those that strike them. Will
you not call to mind, every one of you, the calamities you yourselves
have suffered? nor lay before your eyes what afflictions you yourselves
have undergone? and will not such things sharpen your souls to
revenge? Is therefore that most honorable and most natural of
our passions utterly lost, I mean the desire of liberty? Truly
we are in love with slavery, and in love with those that lord
it over us, as if we had received that principle of subjection
from our ancestors; yet did they undergo many and great wars for
the sake of liberty, nor were they so far overcome by the power
of the Egyptians, or the Medes, but that still they did what they
thought fit, notwithstanding their commands to the contrary. And
what occasion is there now for a war with the Romans? (I meddle
not with determining whether it be an advantageous and profitable
war or not.) What pretense is there for it? Is it not that we
may enjoy our liberty? Besides, shall we not bear the lords of
the habitable earth to be lords over us, and yet bear tyrants
of our own country? Although I must say that submission to foreigners
may be borne, because fortune hath already doomed us to it, while
submission to wicked people of our own nation is too unmanly,
and brought upon us by our own consent. However, since I have
had occasion to mention the Romans, I will not conceal a thing
that, as I am speaking, comes into my mind, and affects me considerably;
it is this, that though we should be taken by them, (God forbid
the event should be so!) yet can we undergo nothing that will
be harder to be borne than what these men have already brought
upon us. How then can we avoid shedding of tears, when we see
the Roman donations in our temple, while we withal see those of
our own nation taking our spoils, and plundering our glorious
metropolis, and slaughtering our men, from which enormities those
Romans themselves would have abstained? to see those Romans never
going beyond the bounds allotted to profane persons, nor venturing
to break in upon any of our sacred customs; nay, having a horror
on their minds when they view at a distance those sacred walls;
while some that have been born in this very country, and brought
up in our customs, and called Jews, do walk about in the midst
of the holy places, at the very time when their hands are still
warm with the slaughter of their own countrymen. Besides, can
any one be afraid of a war abroad, and that with such as will
have comparatively much greater moderation than our own people
have? For truly, if we may suit our words to the things they represent,
it is probable one may hereafter find the Romans to be the supporters
of our laws, and those within ourselves the subverters of them.
And now I am persuaded that every one of you here comes satisfied
before I speak that these overthrowers of our liberties deserve
to be destroyed, and that nobody can so much as devise a punishment
that they have not deserved by what they have done, and that you
are all provoked against them by those their wicked actions, whence
you have suffered so greatly. But perhaps many of you are aftrighted
at the multitude of those zealots, and at their audaciousness,
as well as at the advantage they have over us in their being higher
in place than we are; for these circumstances, as they have been
occasioned by your negligence, so will they become still greater
by being still longer neglected; for their multitude is every
day augmented, by every ill man's running away to those that are
like to themselves, and their audaciousness is therefore inflamed,
because they meet with no obstruction to their designs. And for
their higher place, they will make use of it for engines also,
if we give them time to do so; but be assured of this, that if
we go up to fight them, they will be made tamer by their own consciences,
and what advantages they have in the height of their situation
they will lose by the opposition of their reason; perhaps also
God himself, who hath been affronted by them, will make what they
throw at us return against themselves, and these impious wretches
will be killed by their own darts: let us but make our appearance
before them, and they will come to nothing. However, it is a right
thing, if there should be any danger in the attempt, to die before
these holy gates, and to spend our very lives, if not for the
sake of our children and wives, yet for God's sake, and for the
sake of his sanctuary. I will assist you both with my counsel
and with my hand; nor shall any sagacity of ours be wanting for
your support; nor shall you see that I will be sparing of my body
neither."
11. By these motives Ananus encouraged the multitude to go against
the zealots, although he knew how difficult it would be to disperse
them, because of their multitude, and their youth, and the courage
of their souls; but chiefly because of their consciousness of
what they had done, since they would not yield, as not so much
as hoping for pardon at the last for those their enormities. However,
Ananus resolved to undergo whatever sufferings might come upon
him, rather than overlook things, now they were in such great
confusion. So the multitude cried out to him, to lead them on
against those whom he had described in his exhortation to them,
and every one of them was most readily disposed to run any hazard
whatsoever on that account.
12. Now while Ananus was choosing out his men, and putting those
that were proper for his purpose in array for fighting, the zealots
got information of his undertaking, (for there were some who went
to them, and told them all that the people were doing,) and were
irritated at it, and leaping out of the temple in crowds, and
by parties, spared none whom they met with. Upon this Ananus got
the populace together on the sudden, who were more numerous indeed
than the zealots, but inferior to them in arms, because they had
not been regularly put into array for fighting; but the alacrity
that every body showed supplied all their defects on both sides,
the citizens taking up so great a passion as was stronger than
arms, and deriving a degree of courage from the temple more forcible
than any multitude whatsoever; and indeed these citizens thought
it was not possible for them to dwell in the city, unless they
could cut off the robbers that were in it. The zealots also thought
that unless they prevailed, there would be no punishment so bad
but it would be inflicted on them. So their conflicts were conducted
by their passions; and at the first they only cast stones at each
other in the city, and before the temple, and threw their javelins
at a distance; but when either of them were too hard for the other,
they made use of their swords; and great slaughter was made on
both sides, and a great number were wounded. As for the dead bodies
of the people, their relations carried them out to their own houses;
but when any of the zealots were wounded, he went up into the
temple, and defiled that sacred floor with his blood, insomuch
that one may say it was their blood alone that polluted our sanctuary.
Now in these conflicts the robbers always sallied out of the temple,
and were too hard for their enemies; but the populace grew very
angry, and became more and more numerous, and reproached those
that gave back, and those behind would not afford room to those
that were going off, but forced them on again, till at length
they made their whole body to turn against their adversaries,
and the robbers could no longer oppose them, but were forced gradually
to retire into the temple; when Ananus and his party fell into
it at the same time together with them. (7) This horribly affrighted
the robbers, because it deprived them of the first court; so they
fled into the inner court immediately, and shut the gates. Now
Ananus did not think fit to make any attack against the holy gates,
although the other threw their stones and darts at them from above.
He also deemed it unlawful to introduce the multitude into that
court before they were purified; he therefore chose out of them
all by lot six thousand armed men, and placed them as guards in
the cloisters; so there was a succession of such guards one after
another, and every one was forced to attend in his course; although
many of the chief of the city were dismissed by those that then
took on them the government, upon their hiring some of the poorer
sort, and sending them to keep the guard in their stead.
13. Now it was John who, as we told you, ran away from Gischala,
and was the occasion of all these being destroyed. He was a man
of great craft, and bore about him in his soul a strong passion
after tyranny, and at a distance was the adviser in these actions;
and indeed at this time he pretended to be of the people's opinion,
and went all about with Ananus when he consulted the great men
every day, and in the night time also when he went round the watch;
but he divulged their secrets to the zealots, and every thing
that the people deliberated about was by his means known to their
enemies, even before it had been well agreed upon by themselves.
And by way of contrivance how he might not be brought into suspicion,
he cultivated the greatest friendship possible with Ananus, and
with the chief of the people; yet did this overdoing of his turn
against him, for he flattered them so extravagantly, that he was
but the more suspected; and his constant attendance every where,
even when he was not invited to be present, made him strongly
suspected of betraying their secrets to the enemy; for they plainly
perceived that they understood all the resolutions taken against
them at their consultations. Nor was there any one whom they had
so much reason to suspect of that discovery as this John; yet
was it not easy to get quit of him, so potent was he grown by
his wicked practices. He was also supported by many of those eminent
men, who were to be consulted upon all considerable affairs; it
was therefore thought reasonable to oblige him to give them assurance
of his good-will upon oath; accordingly John took such an oath
readily, that he would be on the people's side, and would not
betray any of their counsels or practices to their enemies, and
would assist them in overthrowing those that attacked them, and
that both by his hand and his advice. So Ananus and his party
believed his oath, and did now receive him to their consultations
without further suspicion; nay, so far did they believe him, that
they sent him as their ambassador into the temple to the zealots,
with proposals of accommodation; for they were very desirous to
avoid the pollution of the temple as much as they possibly could,
and that no one of their nation should be slain therein.
14. But now this John, as if his oath had been made to the zealots,
and for confirmation of his good-will to them, and not against
them, went into the temple, and stood in the midst of them, and
spake as follows: That he had run many hazards o, their accounts,
and in order to let them know of every thing that was secretly
contrived against them by Ananus and his party; but that both
he and they should be cast into the most imminent danger, unless
some providential assistance were afforded them; for that Ananus
made no longer delay, but had prevailed with the people to send
ambassadors to Vespasian, to invite him to come presently and
take the city; and that he had appointed a fast for the next day
against them, that they might obtain admission into the temple
on a religious account, or gain it by force, and fight with them
there; that he did not see how long they could either endure a
siege, or how they could fight against so many enemies. He added
further, that it was by the providence of God he was himself sent
as an ambassador to them for an accommodation; for that Artanus
did therefore offer them such proposals, that he might come upon
them when they were unarmed; that they ought to choose one of
these two methods, either to intercede with those that guarded
them, to save their lives, or to provide some foreign assistance
for themselves; that if they fostered themselves with the hopes
of pardon, in case they were subdued, they had forgotten what
desperate things they had done, or could suppose, that as soon
as the actors repented, those that had suffered by them must be
presently reconciled to them; while those that have done injuries,
though they pretend to repent of them, are frequently hated by
the others for that sort of repentance; and that the sufferers,
when they get the power into their hands, are usually still more
severe upon the actors; that the friends and kindred of those
that had been destroyed would always be laying plots against them;
and that a large body of people were very angry on account of
their gross breaches of their laws, and [illegal] judicatures,
insomuch that although some part might commiserate them, those
would be quite overborne by the majority.
CHAPTER 4.
THE IDUMEANS BEING SENT FOR BY THE ZEALOTS, CAME IMMEDIATELY
TO JERUSALEM; AND WHEN THEY WERE EXCLUDED OUT OF THE CITY, THEY
LAY ALL NIGHT THERE. JESUS ONE OF THE HIGH PRIESTS MAKES A SPEECH
TO THEM; AND SIMON THE IDUMEAN MAKES A REPLY TO IT.
1. NOW, by this crafty speech, John made the zealots afraid; yet
durst he not directly name what foreign assistance he meant, but
in a covert way only intimated at the Idumeans. But now, that
he might particularly irritate the leaders of the zealots, he
calumniated Ananus, that he was about a piece of barbarity, and
did in a special manner threaten them. These leaders were Eleazar,
the son of Simon, who seemed the most plausible man of them all,
both in considering what was fit to be done, and in the execution
of what he had determined upon, and Zacharias, the son of Phalek;
both of whom derived their families from the priests. Now when
these two men had heard, not only the common threatenings which
belonged to them all, but those peculiarly leveled against themselves;
and besides, how Artanus and his party, in order to secure their
own dominion, had invited the Romans to come to them, for that
also was part of John's lie; they hesitated a great while what
they should do, considering the shortness of the time by which
they were straitened; because the people were prepared to attack
them very soon, and because the suddenness of the plot laid against
them had almost cut off all their hopes of getting any foreign
assistance; for they might be under the height of their afflictions
before any of their confederates could be informed of it. However,
it was resolved to call in the Idumeans; so they wrote a short
letter to this effect: That Ananus had imposed on the people,
and was betraying their metropolis to the Romans; that they themselves
had revolted from the rest, and were in custody in the temple,
on account of the preservation of their liberty; that there was
but a small time left wherein they might hope for their deliverance;
and that unless they would come immediately to their assistance,
they should themselves be soon in the power of Artanus, and the
city would be in the power of the Romans. They also charged the
messengers to tell many more circumstances to the rulers of the
Idumeans. Now there were two active men proposed for the carrying
this message, and such as were able to speak, and to persuade
them that things were in this posture, and, what was a qualification
still more necessary than the former, they were very swift of
foot; for they knew well enough that these would immediately comply
with their desires, as being ever a tumultuous and disorderly
nation, always on the watch upon every motion, delighting in mutations;
and upon your flattering them ever so little, and petitioning
them, they soon take their arms, and put themselves into motion,
and make haste to a battle, as if it were to a feast. There was
indeed occasion for quick despatch in the carrying of this message,
in which point the messengers were no way defective. Both their
names were Ananias; and they soon came to the rulers of the Idumeans.
2. Now these rulers were greatly surprised at the contents of
the letter, and at what those that came with it further told them;
whereupon they ran about the nation like madmen, and made proclamation
that the people should come to war; so a multitude was suddenly
got together, sooner indeed than the time appointed in the proclamation,
and every body caught up their arms, in order to maintain the
liberty of their metropolis; and twenty thousand of them were
put into battle-array, and came to Jerusalem, under four commanders,
John, and Jacob the son of Sosas; and besides these were Simon,
the son of Cathlas, and Phineas, the son of Clusothus.
3. Now this exit of the messengers was not known either to Ananus
or to the guards, but the approach of the Idumeans was known to
him; for as he knew of it before they came, he ordered the gates
to be shut against them, and that the walls should be guarded.
Yet did not he by any means think of fighting against them, but,
before they came to blows, to try what persuasions would do. Accordingly,
Jesus, the eldest of the high priests next to Artanus, stood upon
the tower that was over against them, and said thus: "Many
troubles indeed, and those of various kinds, have fallen upon
this city, yet in none of them have I so much wondered at her
fortune as now, when you are come to assist wicked men, and this
after a manner very extraordinary; for I see that you are come
to support the vilest of men against us, and this with so great
alacrity, as you could hardly put on the like, in case our metropolis
had called you to her assistance against barbarians. And if I
had perceived that your army was composed of men like unto those
who invited them, I had not deemed your attempt so absurd; for
nothing does so much cement the minds of men together as the alliance
there is between their manners. But now for these men who have
invited you, if you were to examine them one by one, every one
of them would be found to have deserved ten thousand deaths; for
the very rascality and offscouring of the whole country, who have
spent in debauchery their own substance, and, by way of trial
beforehand, have madly plundered the neighboring villages and
cities, in the upshot of all, have privately run together into
this holy city. They are robbers, who by their prodigious wickedness
have profaned this most sacred floor, and who are to be now seen
drinking themselves drunk in the sanctuary, and expending the
spoils of those whom they have slaughtered upon their unsatiable
bellies. As for the multitude that is with you, one may see them
so decently adorned in their armor, as it would become them to
be had their metropolis called them to her assistance against
foreigners. What can a man call this procedure of yours but the
sport of fortune, when he sees a whole nation coming to protect
a sink of wicked wretches? I have for a good while been in doubt
what it could possibly be that should move you to do this so suddenly;
because certainly you would not take on your armor on the behalf
of robbers, and against a people of kin to you, without some very
great cause for your so doing. But we have an item that the Romans
are pretended, and that we are supposed to be going to betray
this city to them; for some of your men have lately made a clamor
about those matters, and have said they are come to set their
metropolis free. Now we cannot but admire at these wretches in
their devising such a lie as this against us; for they knew there
was no other way to irritate against us men that were naturally
desirous of liberty, and on that account the best disposed to
fight against foreign enemies, but by framing a tale as if we
were going to betray that most desirable thing, liberty. But you
ought to consider what sort of people they are that raise this
calumny, and against what sort of people that calumny is raised,
and to gather the truth of things, not by fictitious speeches,
but out of the actions of both parties; for what occasion is there
for us to sell ourselves to the Romans, while it was in our power
not to have revolted from them at the first, or when we had once
revolted, to have returned under their dominion again, and this
while the neighboring countries were not yet laid waste? whereas
it is not an easy thing to be reconciled to the Romans, if we
were desirous of it, now they have subdued Galilee, and are thereby
become proud and insolent; and to endeavor to please them at the
time when they are so near us, would bring such a reproach upon
us as were worse than death. As for myself, indeed, I should have
preferred peace with them before death; but now we have once made
war upon them, and fought with them, I prefer death, with reputation,
before living in captivity under them. But further, whether do
they pretend that we, who are the rulers of the people, have sent
thus privately to the Romans, or hath it been done by the common
suffrages of the people? If it be ourselves only that have done
it, let them name those friends of ours that have been sent, as
our servants, to manage this treachery. Hath any one been caught
as he went out on this errand, or seized upon as he came back?
Are they in possession of our letters? How could we be concealed
from such a vast number of our fellow citizens, among whom we
are conversant every hour, while what is done privately in the
country is, it seems, known by the zealots, who are but few in
number, and under confinement also, and are not able to come out
of the temple into the city. Is this the first time that they
are become sensible how they ought to be punished for their insolent
actions? For while these men were free from the fear they are
now under, there was no suspicion raised that any of us were traitors.
But if they lay this charge against the people, this must have
been done at a public consultation, and not one of the people
must have dissented from the rest of the assembly; in which case
the public fame of this matter would have come to you sooner than
any particular indication. But how could that be? Must there not
then have been ambassadors sent to confirm the agreements? And
let them tell us who this ambassador was that was ordained for
that purpose. But this is no other than a pretense of such men
as are loath to die, and are laboring to escape those punishments
that hang over them; for if fate had determined that this city
was to be betrayed into its enemies' hands, no other than these
men that accuse us falsely could have the impudence to do it,
there being no wickedness wanting to complete their impudent practices
but this only, that they become traitors. And now you Idumeans
are come hither already with your arms, it is your duty, in the
first place, to be assisting to your metropolis, and to join with
us in cutting off those tyrants that have infringed the rules
of our regular tribunals, that have trampled upon our laws, and
made their swords the arbitrators of right and wrong; for they
have seized upon men of great eminence, and under no accusation,
as they stood in the midst of the market-place, and tortured them
with putting them into bonds, and, without bearing to hear what
they had to say, or what supplications they made, they destroyed
them. You may, if you please, come into the city, though not in
the way of war, and take a view of the marks still remaining of
what I now say, and may see the houses that have been depopulated
by their rapacious hands, with those wives and families that are
in black, mourning for their slaughtered relations; as also you
may hear their groans and lamentations all the city over; for
there is nobody but hath tasted of the incursions of these profane
wretches, who have proceeded to that degree of madness, as not
only to have transferred their impudent robberies out of the country,
and the remote cities, into this city, the very face and head
of the whole nation, but out of the city into the temple also;
for that is now made their receptacle and refuge, and the fountain-head
whence their preparations are made against us. And this place,
which is adored by the habitable world, and honored by such as
only know it by report, as far as the ends of the earth, is trampled
upon by these wild beasts born among ourselves. They now triumph
in the desperate condition they are already in, when they hear
that one people is going to fight against another people, and
one city against another city, and that your nation hath gotten
an army together against its own bowels. Instead of which procedure,
it were highly fit and reasonable, as I said before, for you to
join with us in cutting off these wretches, and in particular
to be revenged on them for putting this very cheat upon you; I
mean, for having the impudence to invite you to assist them, of
whom they ought to have stood in fear, as ready to punish them.
But if you have some regard to these men's invitation of you,
yet may you lay aside your arms, and come into the city under
the notion of our kindred, and take upon you a middle name between
that of auxiliaries and of enemies, and so become judges in this
case. However, consider what these men will gain by being called
into judgment before you, for such undeniable and such flagrant
crimes, who would not vouchsafe to hear such as had no accusations
laid against them to speak a word for themselves. However, let
them gain this advantage by your coming. But still, if you will
neither take our part in that indignation we have at these men,
nor judge between us, the third thing I have to propose is this,
that you let us both alone, and neither insult upon our calamities,
nor abide with these plotters against their metropolis; for though
you should have ever so great a suspicion that some of us have
discoursed with the Romans, it is in your power to watch the passages
into the city; and in case any thing that we have been accused
of is brought to light, then to come and defend your metropolis,
and to inflict punishment on those that are found guilty; for
the enemy cannot prevent you who are so near to the city. But
if, after all, none of these proposals seem acceptable and moderate,
do not you wonder that the gates are shut against you, while you
bear your arms about you."
4. Thus spake Jesus; yet did not the multitude of the Idumeans
give any attention to what he said, but were in a rage, because
they did not meet with a ready entrance into the city. The generals
also had indignation at the offer of laying down their arms, and
looked upon it as equal to a captivity, to throw them away at
any man's injunction whomsoever. But Simon, the son of Cathlas,
one of their commanders, with much ado quieted the tumult of his
own men, and stood so that the high priests might hear him, and
said as follows: "I can no longer wonder that the patrons
of liberty are under custody in the temple, since there are those
that shut the gates of our common city (8) to their own nation,
and at the same time are prepared to admit the Romans into it;
nay, perhaps are disposed to crown the gates with garlands at
their coming, while they speak to the Idumeans from their own
towers, and enjoin them to throw down their arms which they have
taken up for the preservation of its liberty. And while they will
not intrust the guard of our metropolis to their kindred, profess
to make them judges of the differences that are among them; nay,
while they accuse some men of having slain others without a legal
trial, they do themselves condemn a whole nation after an ignominious
manner, and have now walled up that city from their own nation,
which used to be open to even all foreigners that came to worship
there. We have indeed come in great haste to you, and to a war
against our own countrymen; and the reason why we have made such
haste is this, that we may preserve that freedom which you are
so unhappy as to betray. You have probably been guilty of the
like crimes against those whom you keep in custody, and have,
I suppose, collected together the like plausible pretenses against
them also that you make use of against us; after which you have
gotten the mastery of those within the temple, and keep them in
custody, while they are only taking care of the public affairs.
You have also shut the gates of the city in general against nations
that are the most nearly related to you; and while you give such
injurious commands to others, you complain that you have been
tyrannized over by them, and fix the name of unjust governors
upon such as are tyrannized over by yourselves. Who can bear this
your abuse of words, while they have a regard to the contrariety
of your actions, unless you mean this, that those Idumeans do
now exclude you out of your metropolis, whom you exclude from
the sacred offices of your own country? One may indeed justly
complain of those that are besieged in the temple, that when they
had courage enough to punish those tyrants whom you call eminent
men, and free from any accusations, because of their being your
companions in wickedness, they did not begin with you, and thereby
cut off beforehand the most dangerous parts of this treason. But
if these men have been more merciful than the public necessity
required, we that are Idumeans will preserve this house of God,
and will fight for our common country, and will oppose by war
as well those that attack them from abroad, as those that betray
them from within. Here will we abide before the walls in our armor,
until either the Romans grow weary in waiting for you, or you
become friends to liberty, and repent of what you have done against
it."
5. And now did the Idumeans make an acclamation to what Simon
had said; but Jesus went away sorrowful, as seeing that the Idumeans
were against all moderate counsels, and that the city was besieged
on both sides. Nor indeed were the minds of the Idumeans at rest;
for they were in a rage at the injury that had been offered them
by their exclusion out of the city; and when they thought the
zealots had been strong, but saw nothing of theirs to support
them, they were in doubt about the matter, and many of them repented
that they had come thither. But the shame that would attend them
in case they returned without doing any thing at all, so far overcame
that their repentance, that they lay all night before the wall,
though in a very bad encampment; for there broke out a prodigious
storm in the night, with the utmost violence, and very strong
winds, with the largest showers of rain, with continued lightnings,
terrible thunderings, and amazing concussions and bellowings of
the earth, that was in an earthquake. These things were a manifest
indication that some destruction was coming upon men, when the
system of the world was put into this disorder; and any one would
guess that these wonders foreshowed some grand calamities that
were coming.
6. Now the opinion of the Idumeans and of the citizens was one
and the same. The Idumeans thought that God was angry at their
taking arms, and that they would not escape punishment for their
making war upon their metropolis. Ananus and his party thought
that they had conquered without fighting, and that God acted as
a general for them; but truly they proved both ill conjectures
at what was to come, and made those events to be ominous to their
enemies, while they were themselves to undergo the ill effects
of them; for the Idumeans fenced one another by uniting their
bodies into one band, and thereby kept themselves warm, and connecting
their shields over their heads, were not so much hurt by the rain.
But the zealots were more deeply concerned for the danger these
men were in than they were for themselves, and got together, and
looked about them to see whether they could devise any means of
assisting them. The hotter sort of them thought it best to force
their guards with their arms, and after that to fall into the
midst of the city, and publicly open the gates to those that came
to their assistance; as supposing the guards would be in disorder,
and give way at such an unexpected attempt of theirs, especially
as the greater part of them were unarmed and unskilled in the
affairs of war; and that besides the multitude of the citizens
would not be easily gathered together, but confined to their houses
by the storm: and that if there were any hazard in their undertaking,
it became them to suffer any thing whatsoever themselves, rather
than to overlook so great a multitude as were miserably perishing
on their account. But the more prudent part of them disapproved
of this forcible method, because they saw not only the guards
about them very numerous, but the walls of the city itself carefully
watched, by reason of the Idumeans. They also supposed that Ananus
would be every where, and visit the guards every hour; which indeed
was done upon other nights, but was omitted that night, not by
reason of any slothfulness of Ananus, but by the overbearing appointment
of fate, that so both he might himself perish, and the multitude
of the guards might perish with him; for truly, as the night was
far gone, and the storm very terrible, Ananus gave the guards
in the cloisters leave to go to sleep; while it came into the
heads of the zealots to make use of the saws belonging to the
temple, and to cut the bars of the gates to pieces. The noise
of the wind, and that not inferior sound of the thunder, did here
also conspire with their designs, that the noise of the saws was
not heard by the others.
7. So they secretly went out of the temple to the wall of the
city, and made use of their saws, and opened that gate which was
over against the Idumeans. Now at first there came a fear upon
the Idumeans themselves, which disturbed them, as imagining that
Ananus and his party were coming to attack them, so that every
one of them had his right hand upon his sword, in order to defend
himself; but they soon came to know who they were that came to
them, and were entered the city. And had the Idumeans then fallen
upon the city, nothing could have hindered them from destroying
the people every man of them, such was the rage they were in at
that time; but as they first of all made haste to get the zealots
out of custody, which those that brought them in earnestly desired
them to do, and not to overlook those for whose sakes they were
come, in the midst of their distresses, nor to bring them into
a still greater danger; for that when they had once seized upon
the guards, it would be easy for them to fall upon the city; but
that if the city were once alarmed, they would not then be able
to overcome those guards, because as soon as they should perceive
they were there, they would put themselves in order to fight them,
and would hinder their coming into the temple.
CHAPTER V.
THE CRUELTY OF THE IDUMEANS WHEN THEY WERE GOTTEN INTO THE
TEMPLE DURING THE STORM; AND OF THE ZEALOTS. CONCERNING THE SLAUGHTER
OF ANANUS, AND JESUS, AND ZACHARIAS; AND HOW THE IDUMEANS RETIRED
HOME.
1. THIS advice pleased the Idumeans, and they ascended through
the city to the temple. The zealots were also in great expectation
of their coming, and earnestly waited for them. When therefore
these were entering, they also came boldly out of the inner temple,
and mixing themselves among the Idumeans, they attacked the guards;
and some of those that were upon the watch, but were fallen asleep,
they killed as they were asleep; but as those that were now awakened
made a cry, the whole multitude arose, and in the amazement they
were in caught hold of their arms immediately, and betook themselves
to their own defense; and so long as they thought they were only
the zealots who attacked them, they went on boldly, as hoping
to overpower them by their numbers; but when they saw others pressing
in upon them also, they perceived the Idumeans were got in; and
the greatest part of them laid aside their arms, together with
their courage, and betook themselves to lamentations. But some
few of the younger sort covered themselves with their armor, and
valiantly received the Idumeans, and for a while protected the
multitude of old men. Others, indeed, gave a signal to those that
were in the city of the calamities they were in; but when these
were also made sensible that the Idumeans were come in, none of
them durst come to their assistance, only they returned the terrible
echo of wailing, and lamented their misfortunes. A great howling
of the women was excited also, and every one of the guards were
in danger of being killed. The zealots also joined in the shouts
raised by the Idumeans; and the storm itself rendered the cry
more terrible; nor did the Idumeans spare any body; for as they
are naturally a most barbarous and bloody nation, and had been
distressed by the tempest, they made use of their weapons against
those that had shut the gates against them, and acted in the same
manner as to those that supplicated for their lives, and to those
that fought them, insomuch that they ran through those with their
swords who desired them to remember the relation there was between
them, and begged of them to have regard to their common temple.
Now there was at present neither any place for flight, nor any
hope of preservation; but as they were driven one upon another
in heaps, so were they slain. Thus the greater part were driven
together by force, as there was now no place of retirement, and
the murderers were upon them; and, having no other way, threw
themselves down headlong into the city; whereby, in my opinion,
they underwent a more miserable destruction than that which they
avoided, because that was a voluntary one. And now the outer temple
was all of it overflowed with blood; and that day, as it came
on, they saw eight thousand five hundred dead bodies there.
2. But the rage of the Idumeans was not satiated by these slaughters;
but they now betook themselves to the city, and plundered every
house, and slew every one they met; and for the other multitude,
they esteemed it needless to go on with killing them, but they
sought for the high priests, and the generality went with the
greatest zeal against them; and as soon as they caught them they
slew them, and then standing upon their dead bodies, in way of
jest, upbraided Ananus with his kindness to the people, and Jesus
with his speech made to them from the wall. Nay, they proceeded
to that degree of impiety, as to cast away their dead bodies without
burial, although the Jews used to take so much care of the burial
of men, that they took down those that were condemned and crucified,
and buried them before the going down of the sun. I should not
mistake if I said that the death of Ananus was the beginning of
the destruction of the city, and that from this very day may be
dated the overthrow of her wall, and the ruin of her affairs,
whereon they saw their high priest, and the procurer of their
preservation, slain in the midst of their city. He was on other
accounts also a venerable, and a very just man; and besides the
grandeur of that nobility, and dignity, and honor of which he
was possessed, he had been a lover of a kind of parity, even with
regard to the meanest of the people; he was a prodigious lover
of liberty, and an admirer of a democracy in government; and did
ever prefer the public welfare before his own advantage, and preferred
peace above all things; for he was thoroughly sensible that the
Romans were not to be conquered. He also foresaw that of necessity
a war would follow, and that unless the Jews made up matters with
them very dexterously, they would be destroyed; to say all in
a word, if Ananus had survived, they had certainly compounded
matters; for he was a shrewd man in speaking and persuading the
people, and had already gotten the mastery of those that opposed
his designs, or were for the war. And the Jews had then put abundance
of delays in the way of the Romans, if they had had such a general
as he was. Jesus was also joined with him; and although he was
inferior to him upon the comparison, he was superior to the rest;
and I cannot but think that it was because God had doomed this
city to destruction, as a polluted city, and was resolved to purge
his sanctuary by fire, that he cut off these their great defenders
and well-wishers, while those that a little before had worn the
sacred garments, and had presided over the public worship; and
had been esteemed venerable by those that dwelt on the whole habitable
earth when they came into our city, were cast out naked, and seen
to be the food of dogs and wild beasts. And I cannot but imagine
that virtue itself groaned at these men's case, and lamented that
she was here so terribly conquered by wickedness. And this at
last was the end of Ananus and Jesus.
3. Now after these were slain, the zealots and the multitude of
the Idumeans fell upon the people as upon a flock of profane animals,
and cut their throats; and for the ordinary sort, they were destroyed
in what place soever they caught them. But for the noblemen and
the youth, they first caught them and bound them, and shut them
up in prison, and put off their slaughter, in hopes that some
of them would turn over to their party; but not one of them would
comply with their desires, but all of them preferred death before
being enrolled among such wicked wretches as acted against their
own country. But this refusal of theirs brought upon them terrible
torments; for they were so scourged and tortured, that their bodies
were not able to sustain their torments, till at length, and with
difficulty, they had the favor to be slain. Those whom they caught
in the day time were slain in the night, and then their bodies
were carried out and thrown away, that there might be room for
other prisoners; and the terror that was upon the people was so
great, that no one had courage enough either to weep openly for
the dead man that was related to him, or to bury him; but those
that were shut up in their own houses could only shed tears in
secret, and durst not even groan without great caution, lest any
of their enemies should hear them; for if they did, those that
mourned for others soon underwent the same death with those whom
they mourned for. Only in the night time they would take up a
little dust, and throw it upon their bodies; and even some that
were the most ready to expose themselves to danger would do it
in the day time: and there were twelve thousand of the better
sort who perished in this manner.
4. And now these zealots and Idumeans were quite weary of barely
killing men, so they had the impudence of setting up fictitious
tribunals and judicatures for that purpose; and as they intended
to have Zacharias (9) the son of Baruch, one of the most eminent
of the citizens, slain, - so what provoked them against him was,
that hatred of wickedness and love of liberty which were so eminent
in him: he was also a rich man, so that by taking him off, they
did not only hope to seize his effects, but also to get rid of
a mall that had great power to destroy them. So they called together,
by a public proclamation, seventy of the principal men of the
populace, for a show, as if they were real judges, while they
had no proper authority. Before these was Zacharias accused of
a design to betray their polity to the Romans, and having traitorously
sent to Vespasian for that purpose. Now there appeared no proof
or sign of what he was accused; but they affirmed themselves that
they were well persuaded that so it was, and desired that such
their affirmation might he taken for sufficient evidence. Now
when Zacharias clearly saw that there was no way remaining for
his escape from them, as having been treacherously called before
them, and then put in prison, but not with any intention of a
legal trial, he took great liberty of speech in that despair of
his life he was under. Accordingly he stood up, and laughed at
their pretended accusation, and in a few words confuted the crimes
laid to his charge; after which he turned his speech to his accusers,
and went over distinctly all their transgressions of the law,
and made heavy lamentation upon the confusion they had brought
public affairs to: in the mean time, the zealots grew tumultuous,
and had much ado to abstain from drawing their swords, although
they designed to preserve the appearance and show of judicature
to the end. They were also desirous, on other accounts, to try
the judges, whether they would be mindful of what was just at
their own peril. Now the seventy judges brought in their verdict
that the person accused was not guilty, as choosing rather to
die themselves with him, than to have his death laid at their
doors; hereupon there arose a great clamor of the zealots upon
his acquittal, and they all had indignation at the judges for
not understanding that the authority that was given them was but
in jest. So two of the boldest of them fell upon Zacharias in
the middle of the temple, and slew him; and as he fell down dead,
they bantered him, and said, "Thou hast also our verdict,
and this will prove a more sure acquittal to thee than the other."
They also threw him down from the temple immediately into the
valley beneath it. Moreover, they struck the judges with the backs
of their swords, by way of abuse, and thrust them out of the court
of the temple, and spared their lives with no other design than
that, when they were dispersed among the people in the city, they
might become their messengers, to let them know they were no better
than slaves.
5. But by this time the Idumeans repented of their coming, and
were displeased at what had been done; and when they were assembled
together by one of the zealots, who had come privately to them,
he declared to them what a number of wicked pranks they had themselves
done in conjunction with those that invited them, and gave a particular
account of what mischiefs had been done against their metropolis.
- He said that they had taken arms, as though the high priests
were betraying their metropolis to the Romans, but had found no
indication of any such treachery; but that they had succored those
that had pretended to believe such a thing, while they did themselves
the works of war and tyranny, after an insolent manner. It had
been indeed their business to have hindered them from such their
proceedings at the first, but seeing they had once been partners
with them in shedding the blood of their own countrymen, it was
high time to put a stop to such crimes, and not continue to afford
any more assistance to such as are subverting the laws of their
forefathers; for that if any had taken it ill that the gates had
been shut against them, and they had not been permitted to come
into the city, yet that those who had excluded them have been
punished, and Ananus is dead, and that almost all those people
had been destroyed in one night's time. That one may perceive
many of themselves now repenting for what they had done, and might
see the horrid barbarity of those that had invited them, and that
they had no regard to such as had saved them; that they were so
impudent as to perpetrate the vilest things, under the eyes of
those that had supported them, and that their wicked actions would
be laid to the charge of the Idumeans, and would be so laid to
their charge till somebody obstructs their proceedings, or separates
himself from the same wicked action; that they therefore ought
to retire home, since the imputation of treason appears to be
a Calumny, and that there was no expectation of the coming of
the Romans at this time, and that the government of the city was
secured by such walls as cannot easily be thrown down; and, by
avoiding any further fellowship with these bad men, to make some
excuse for themselves, as to what they had been so far deluded,
as to have been partners with them hitherto.
CHAPTER 6.
HOW THE ZEALOTS WHEN THEY WERE FREED FROM THE IDUMEANS, SLEW
A GREAT MANY MORE OF THE CITIZENS; AND HOW VESPASIAN DISSUADED
THE ROMANS WHEN THEY WERE VERY EARNEST TO MARCH AGAINST THE JEWS
FROM PROCEEDING IN THE WAR AT THAT TIME.
1. THE Idumeans complied with these persuasions; and, in the first
place, they set those that were in the prisons at liberty, being
about two thousand of the populace, who thereupon fled away immediately
to Simon, one whom we shall speak of presently. After which these
Idumeans retired from Jerusalem, and went home; which departure
of theirs was a great surprise to both parties; for the people,
not knowing of their repentance, pulled up their courage for a
while, as eased of so many of their enemies, while the zealots
grew more insolent not as deserted by their confederates, but
as freed from such men as might hinder their designs, and plat
some stop to their wickedness. Accordingly, they made no longer
any delay, nor took any deliberation in their enormous practices,
but made use of the shortest methods for all their executions
and what they had once resolved upon, they put in practice sooner
than any one could imagine. But their thirst was chiefly after
the blood of valiant men, and men of good families; the one sort
of which they destroyed out of envy, the other out of fear; for
they thought their whole security lay in leaving no potent men
alive; on which account they slew Gorion, a person eminent in
dignity, and on account of his family also; he was also for democracy,
and of as great boldness and freedom of spirit as were any of
the Jews whosoever; the principal thing that ruined him, added
to his other advantages, was his free speaking. Nor did Niger
of Peres escape their hands; he had been a man of great valor
in their war with the Romans, but was now drawn through the middle
of the city, and, as he went, he frequently cried out, and showed
the scars of his wounds; and when he was drawn out of the gates,
and despaired of his preservation, he besought them to grant him
a burial; but as they had threatened him beforehand not to grant
him any spot of earth for a grave, which he chiefly desired of
them, so did they slay him [without permitting him to be buried].
Now when they were slaying him, he made this imprecation upon
them, that they might undergo both famine and pestilence in this
war, and besides all that, they might come to the mutual slaughter
of one another; all which imprecations God confirmed against these
impious men, and was what came most justly upon them, when not
long afterward. they tasted of their own madness in their mutual
seditions one against another. So when this Niger was killed,
their fears of being overturned were diminished; and indeed there
was no part of the people but they found out some pretense to
destroy them; for some were therefore slain, because they had
had differences with some of them; and as to those that had not
opposed them in times of peace, they watched seasonable opportunities
to gain some accusation against them; and if any one did not come
near them at all, he was under their suspicion as a proud man;
if any one came with boldness, he was esteemed a contemner of
them; and if any one came as aiming to oblige them, he was supposed
to have some treacherous plot against them; while the only punishment
of crimes, whether they were of the greatest or smallest sort,
was death. Nor could any one escape, unless he were very inconsiderable,
either on account of the meanness of his birth, or on account
of his fortune.
2. And now all the rest of the commanders of the Romans deemed
this sedition among their enemies to be of great advantage to
them, and were very earnest to march to the city, and they urged
Vespasian, as their lord and general in all cases, to make haste,
and said to him, that "the providence of God is on our side,
by setting our enemies at variance against one another; that still
the change in such cases may be sudden, and the Jews may quickly
be at one again, either because they may be tired out with their
civil miseries, or repent them of such doings." But Vespasian
replied, that they were greatly mistaken in what they thought
fit to be done, as those that, upon the theater, love to make
a show of their hands, and of their weapons, but do it at their
own hazard, without considering, what was for their advantage,
and for their security; for that if they now go and attack the
city immediately, they shall but occasion their enemies to unite
together, and shall convert their force, now it is in its height,
against themselves. But if they stay a while, they shall have
fewer enemies, because they will be consumed in this sedition:
that God acts as a general of the Romans better than he can do,
and is giving the Jews up to them without any pains of their own,
and granting their army a victory without any danger; that therefore
it is their best way, while their enemies are destroying each
other with their own hands, and falling into the greatest of misfortunes,
which is that of sedition, to sit still as spectators of the dangers
they run into, rather than to fight hand to hand with men that
love murdering, and are mad one against another. But if any one
imagines that the glory of victory, when it is gotten without
fighting, will be more insipid, let him know this much, that a
glorious success, quietly obtained, is more profitable than the
dangers of a battle; for we ought to esteem these that do what
is agreeable to temperance and prudence no less glorious than
those that have gained great reputation by their actions in war:
that he shall lead on his army with greater force when their enemies
are diminished, and his own army refreshed after the continual
labors they had undergone. However, that this is not a proper
time to propose to ourselves the glory of victory; for that the
Jews are not now employed in making of armor or building of walls,
nor indeed in getting together auxiliaries, while the advantage
will be on their side who give them such opportunity of delay;
but that the Jews are vexed to pieces every day by their civil
wars and dissensions, and are under greater miseries than, if
they were once taken, could be inflicted on them by us. Whether
therefore any one hath regard to what is for our safety, he ought
to suffer these Jews to destroy one another; or whether he hath
regard to the greater glory of the action, we ought by no means
to meddle with those men, now they are afflicted with a distemper
at home; for should we now conquer them, it would be said the
conquest was not owing to our bravery, but to their sedition."
(10)
3. And now the commanders joined in their approbation of what
Vespasian had said, and it was soon discovered how wise an opinion
he had given. And indeed many there were of the Jews that deserted
every day, and fled away from the zealots, although their flight
was very difficult, since they had guarded every passage out of
the city, and slew every one that was caught at them, as taking
it for granted they were going over to the Romans; yet did he
who gave them money get clear off, while he only that gave them
none was voted a traitor. So the upshot was this, that the rich
purchased their flight by money, while none but the poor were
slain. Along all the roads also vast numbers of dead bodies lay
in heaps, and even many of those that were so zealous in deserting
at length chose rather to perish within the city; for the hopes
of burial made death in their own city appear of the two less
terrible to them. But these zealots came at last to that degree
of barbarity, as not to bestow a burial either on those slain
in the city, or on those that lay along the roads; but as if they
had made an agreement to cancel both the laws of their country
and the laws of nature, and, at the same time that they defiled
men with their wicked actions, they would pollute the Divinity
itself also, they left the dead bodies to putrefy under the sun;
and the same punishment was allotted to such as buried any as
to those that deserted, which was no other than death; while he
that granted the favor of a grave to another would presently stand
in need of a grave himself. To say all in a word, no other gentle
passion was so entirely lost among them as mercy; for what were
the greatest objects of pity did most of all irritate these wretches,
and they transferred their rage from the living to those that
had been slain, and from the dead to the living. Nay, the terror
was so very great, that he who survived called them that were
first dead happy, as being at rest already; as did those that
were under torture in the prisons, declare, that, upon this comparison,
those that lay unburied were the happiest. These men, therefore,
trampled upon all the laws of men, and laughed at the laws of
God; and for the oracles of the prophets, they ridiculed them
as the tricks of jugglers; yet did these prophets foretell many
things concerning [the rewards of] virtue, and [punishments of]
vice, which when these zealots violated, they occasioned the fulfilling
of those very prophecies belonging to their own country; for there
was a certain ancient oracle of those men, that the city should
then be taken and the sanctuary burnt, by right of war, when a
sedition should invade the Jews, and their own hand should pollute
the temple of God. Now while these zealots did not [quite] disbelieve
these predictions, they made themselves the instruments of their
accomplishment.
CHAPTER 7.
HOW JOHN TYRANNIZED OVER THE REST; AND WHAT MISCHIEFS THE ZEALOTS
DID AT MASADA. HOW ALSO VESPASIAN TOOK GADARA; AND WHAT ACTIONS
WERE PERFORMED BY PLACIDUS.
1. BY this time John was beginning to tyrannize, and thought it
beneath him to accept of barely the same honors that others had;
and joining to himself by degrees a party of the wickedest of
them all, he broke off from the rest of the faction. This was
brought about by his still disagreeing with the opinions of others,
and giving out injunctions of his own, in a very imperious manner;
so that it was evident he was setting up a monarchical power.
Now some submitted to him out of their fear of him, and others
out of their good-will to him; for he was a shrewd man to entice
men to him, both by deluding them and putting cheats upon them.
Nay, many there were that thought they should be safer themselves,
if the causes of their past insolent actions should now be reduced
to one head, and not to a great many. His activity was so great,
and that both in action and in counsel, that he had not a few
guards about him; yet was there a great party of his antagonists
that left him; among whom envy at him weighed a great deal, while
they thought it a very heavy thing to be in subjection to one
that was formerly their equal. But the main reason that moved
men against him was the dread of monarchy, for they could not
hope easily to put an end to his power, if he had once obtained
it; and yet they knew that he would have this pretense always
against them, that they had opposed him when he was first advanced;
while every one chose rather to suffer any thing whatsoever in
war, than that, when they had been in a voluntary slavery for
some time, they should afterward perish. So the sedition was divided
into two parts, and John reigned in opposition to his adversaries
over one of them: but for their leaders, they watched one another,
nor did they at all, or at least very little, meddle with arms
in their quarrels; but they fought earnestly against the people,
and contended one with another which of them should bring home
the greatest prey. But because the city had to struggle with three
of the greatest misfortunes, war, and tyranny, and sedition, it
appeared, upon the comparison, that the war was the least troublesome
to the populace of them all. Accordingly, they ran away from their
own houses to foreigners, and obtained that preservation from
the Romans which they despaired to obtain among their own people.
2. And now a fourth misfortune arose, in order to bring our nation
to destruction. There was a fortress of very great strength not
far from Jerusalem, which had been built by our ancient kings,
both as a repository for their effects in the hazards of war,
and for the preservation of their bodies at the same time. It
was called Masada. Those that were called Sicarii had taken
possession of it formerly, but at this time they overran the neighboring
countries, aiming only to procure to themselves necessaries; for
the fear they were then in prevented their further ravages. But
when once they were informed that the Roman army lay still, and
that the Jews were divided between sedition and tyranny, they
boldly undertook greater matters; and at the feast of unleavened
bread, which the Jews celebrate in memory of their deliverance
from the Egyptian bondage, when they were sent back into the country
of their forefathers, they came down by night, without being discovered
by those that could have prevented them, and overran a certain
small city called Engaddi:--in which expedition they prevented
those citizens that could have stopped them, before they could
arm themselves, and fight them. They also dispersed them, and
cast them out of the city. As for such as could not run away,
being women and children, they slew of them above seven hundred.
Afterward, when they had carried every thing out of their houses,
and had seized upon all the fruits that were in a flourishing
condition, they brought them into Masada. And indeed these men
laid all the villages that were about the fortress waste, and
made the whole country desolate; while there came to them every
day, from all parts, not a few men as corrupt as themselves. At
that time all the other regions of Judea that had hitherto been
at rest were in motion, by means of the robbers. Now as it is
in a human body, if the principal part be inflamed, all the members
are subject to the same distemper; so, by means of the sedition
and disorder that was in the metropolis,. had the wicked men that
were in the country opportunity to ravage the same. Accordingly,
when every one of them had plundered their own villages, they
then retired into the desert; yet were these men that now got
together, and joined in the conspiracy by parties, too small for
an army, and too many for a gang of thieves: and thus did they
fall upon the holy places (11) and the cities; yet did it now
so happen that they were sometimes very ill treated by those upon
whom they fell with such violence, and were taken by them as men
are taken in war: but still they prevented any further punishment
as do robbers, who, as soon as their ravages [are discovered],
run their way. Nor was there now any part of Judea that was not
in a miserable condition, as well as its most eminent city also.
3. These things were told Vespasian by deserters; for although
the seditious watched all the passages out of the city, and destroyed
all, whosoever they were, that came thither, yet were there some
that had concealed themselves, and when they had fled to the Romans,
persuaded their general to come to their city's assistance, and
save the remainder of the people; informing him withal, that it
was upon account of the people's good-will to the Romans that
many of them were already slain, and the survivors in danger of
the same treatment. Vespasian did indeed already pity the calamities
these men were in, and arose, in appearance, as though he was
going to besiege Jerusalem, but in reality to deliver them from
a [worse] siege they were already under. However, he was obliged
first to overthrow what remained elsewhere, and to leave nothing
out of Jerusalem behind him that might interrupt him in that siege.
Accordingly, he marched against Gadara, the metropolis of Perea,
which was a place of strength, and entered that city on the fourth
day of the month Dystrus [Adar]; for the men of power had sent
an embassage to him, without the knowledge of the seditious, to
treat about a surrender; which they did out of the desire they
had of peace, and for saving their effects, because many of the
citizens of Gadara were rich men. This embassy the opposite party
knew nothing of, but discovered it as Vespasian was approaching
near the city. However, they despaired of keeping possession of
the city, as being inferior in number to their enemies who were
within the city, and seeing the Romans very near to the city;
so they resolved to fly, but thought it dishonorable to do it
without shedding some blood, and revenging themselves on the authors
of this surrender; so they seized upon Dolesus, (a person not
only the first in rank and family in that city, but one that seemed
the occasion of sending such an embassy,) and slew him, and treated
his dead body after a barbarous manner, so very violent was their
anger at him, and then ran out of the city. And as now the Roman
army was just upon them, the people of Gadara admitted Vespasian
with joyful acclamations, and received from him the security of
his right hand, as also a garrison of horsemen and footmen, to
guard them against the excursions of the runagates; for as to
their wall, they had pulled it down before the Romans desired
them so to do, that they might thereby give them assurance that
they were lovers of peace, and that, if they had a mind, they
could not now make war against them.
4. And now Vespasian sent Placidus against those that had fled
from Gadara, with five hundred horsemen, and three thousand footmen,
while he returned himself to Cesarea, with the rest of the army.
But as soon as these fugitives saw the horsemen that pursued them
just upon their backs, and before they came to a close fight,
they ran together to a certain village, which was called Bethennabris,
where finding a great multitude of young men, and arming them,
partly by their own consent, partly by force, they rashly and
suddenly assaulted Placidus and the troops that were with him.
These horsemen at the first onset gave way a little, as contriving
to entice them further off the wall; and when they had drawn them
into a place fit for their purpose, they made their horse encompass
them round, and threw their darts at them. So the horsemen cut
off the flight of the fugitives, while the foot terribly destroyed
those that fought against them; for those Jews did no more than
show their courage, and then were destroyed; for as they fell
upon the Romans when they were joined close together, and, as
it were, walled about with their entire armor, they were not able
to find any place where the darts could enter, nor were they any
way able to break their ranks, while they were themselves run
through by the Roman darts, and, like the wildest of wild beasts,
rushed upon the point of others' swords; so some of them were
destroyed, as cut with their enemies' swords upon their faces,
and others were dispersed by the horsemen.
5. Now Placidus's concern was to exclude them |