"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 III
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," 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. 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, 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, 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. 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.
Proceed directly to
"The Wars of the Jews or
The History of the Destruction of Jerusalem", Book IV, Chapter
IV
Proceed to
"The Wars of the Jews or The
History of the Destruction of Jerusalem" - Table of Contents
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