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