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