"The Wars of the Jews
or The History of the Destruction of Jerusalem"
by Flavius Josephus
"The Wars of the Jews
or The History of the Destruction of Jerusalem"
by Flavius Josephus
Book IV, Chapter I
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,
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 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].
Proceed directly to
"The Wars of the Jews or
The History of the Destruction of Jerusalem", Book IV, Chapter
II
Proceed to
"The Wars of the Jews or The
History of the Destruction of Jerusalem" - Table of Contents
Return to the
Christians Standing with Israel
*******************************************************************
Christians Standing with Israel
About Christians Standing with Israel
Israel Resources
Israel Media
Israel News
Israel Blog
Israel Pictures
Friends of Israel
Contact Christians Standing with Israel
site map
http://www.christiansstandingwithisrael.com/