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The first Jewish
Roman War
The first
Jewish-Roman War
(66–73 CE),
sometimes called
the Great Jewish
Revolt, was the
first of three
major rebellions
by the Jews of
Iudaea Province
against the
Roman Empire
(the second was
the Kitos War in
115-117, the
third was Bar
Kokhba's revolt
in 132-135). It
began in 66,
sparked by
religious
violence between
the Jews and the
Hellenists; it
ended when
legions under
Titus besieged
and destroyed
Jerusalem,
looted and
burned Herod's
Temple (70) and
Jewish
strongholds
(notably Masada
in 73), and
enslaved or
massacred a
large part of
the Jewish
population. The
defeat of the
Jewish revolts
against the
Roman Empire
notably
contributed to
the numbers and
geography of the
Jewish Diaspora,
as many Jews
were scattered
after losing
their state or
were sold to
slavery
throughout the
empire.
The revolt began
in 66 in
Caesarea,
provoked by the
desecration of a
local synagogue
by Hellenists;
the
Greek-speaking
Roman garrison
did not
intercede.
In an
act of defiance,
the son of high
priest Eliezar
ben Hanania
ceased prayers
and sacrifices
for the Roman
Emperor at the
Temple and
subsequently led
a successful
attack on the
Roman garrison
stationed in
Jerusalem. The
pro-Roman king
Agrippa II and
his sister
Berenice fled
Jerusalem to
Galilee, where
later they gave
themselves up to
the Romans. Cestius Gallus,
the legate of
Syria, brought
reinforcements
to restore
order, but was
soundly defeated
(Legio XII
Fulminata lost
even its aquila)
at Beit-Horon
while
retreating.
Emperor Nero
appointed
general
Vespasian
instead of
Gallus to crush
the rebellion.
Vespasian made
Caesarea
Maritima his
headquarters and
with his legions
— X Fretensis
and V Macedonica,
60,000
professional
soldiers —
methodically
cleared the
coast and the
North. Some
towns gave up
without a fight.
By the year 68,
Jewish
resistance in
the North had
been crushed.
The leaders of
collapsed
Northern revolt,
John of Giscala
and Simon ben
Jair, managed to
escape to
Jerusalem.
Brutal civil war
erupted: the
Zealots and
Sicarii executed
anyone
advocating
surrender, and
by 68 the entire
leadership of
the southern
revolt was dead,
all killed by
the Jews, none
by the Romans.
After the death
of Nero and with
the backing of
the army, Vespasian was
proclaimed
emperor in 69
and left for
Rome to take the
throne from
Vitellius in a
brief Roman
civil war, the
so-called Year
of the four
emperors.
Titus Flavius,
Vespasian's son,
led the final
assault and
siege of
Jerusalem.
During the
infighting
inside the city
walls, a
stockpiled
supply of dry
food was
intentionally
burned to induce
the defenders to
fight against
the siege
instead of
negotiating
peace; as a
result many city
dwellers and
soldiers died of
starvation
during the
siege. Zealots
under Eleazar
ben Simon held
the Temple,
Sicarii led by
Simon ben Giora
held the upper
city. By the
summer of 70 the
Romans had
breached the
walls of
Jerusalem,
ransacking and
burning nearly
the entire city.
The Second
Temple was
destroyed on
Tisha B'Av
(August 29 or
August 30), 70.
John of Giscala
surrendered at
Agrippa II's
fortress of
Jotaphta and was
brought to Rome
for public
execution. The
famous Arch of
Titus still
stands in Rome:
it depicts Roman
legionaries
carrying off the
Temple of
Jerusalem's
treasuries,
including the
menorah. During
the spring of
71, Titus set
sail for Rome. A
new military
governor was
then appointed
from Rome,
Lucilius Bassus,
whose assigned
task was to
undertake the
"mopping-up"
operations in
Judaea. He used
X Fretensis to
oppose the few
remaining
fortresses that
still resisted.
Bassus took
Herodium, and
then crossed the
Jordan to
capture the
fortress of
Machaerus on the
shore of the
Dead Sea. Due to
illness, Bassus
did not live to
complete his
mission. Lucius
Flavius Silva
replaced him,
and moved
against the last
Jewish
stronghold,
Masada, in the
autumn of 72. He
used Legio X,
auxiliary
troops, and
thousands of
Jewish
prisoners. After
his orders for
surrender were
rejected, Silva
established
several base
camps and a wall
of
circumvolution
completely
around the
fortress.
According to
Josephus, when
the Romans
finally broke
through the
walls of this
citadel (73),
they discovered
that the 960
defenders had
preferred death
with a mass
suicide to
surrender (this
claim has been
challenged[1]).
Estimates of the
death toll range
from 600,000 to
1,300,000 Jews:
there was "no
room for crosses
and no crosses
for the bodies".
Over 100,000
died during the
siege, and
almost 100,000
were taken to
Rome as slaves.
Many fled to
areas around the
Mediterranean.
The Romans
hunted down and
slaughtered
entire clans,
such as
descendants of
the House of
David. On one
occasion, Titus
condemned 2,500
Jews to fight
with wild beasts
in the
amphitheater of
Caesarea in
celebration of
his brother
Domitian's
birthday. The
coins inscribed
Ivdaea Capta
(Judea Captured)
were issued
throughout the
Empire in order
to demonstrate
the futility of
possible future
rebellions.
Judea was
represented by a
crying woman.
Titus reportedly
refused to
accept a wreath
of victory, as
there is "no
merit in
vanquishing
people forsaken
by their own
God". (Philostratus,
Vita Apollonii).
Before
Vespasian's
departure, the
Pharisaic sage
and Rabbi
Yohanan ben
Zakkai attained
his permission
to establish a
Judaic school at
Yavne. Zakkai
was smuggled
away from
Jerusalem in a
coffin by his
students. Later
this school has
become a major
center of
Talmudic study.
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