THE WARS OF THE JEWS
OR
THE HISTORY OF THE DESTRUCTION OF JERUSALEM
Book II: Chapter 20
CESTIUS SENDS AMBASSADORS TO NERO. THE PEOPLE OF
DAMASCUS SLAY THOSE JEWS THAT LIVED WITH THEM. THE
PEOPLE OF JERUSALEM AFTER THEY HAD [LEFT OFF] PURSUING
CESTIUS, RETURN TO THE CITY AND GET THINGS READY FOR
ITS DEFENSE AND MAKE A GREAT MANY GENERALS FOR, THEIR
ARMIES AND PARTICULARLY JOSEPHUS THE WRITER OF THESE
BOOKS. SOME ACCOUNT OF HIS ADMINISTRATION.
1. AFTER
this calamity had befallen Cestius, many of the most
eminent of the Jews swam away from the city, as from a
ship when it was going to sink; Costobarus, therefore,
and Saul, who were brethren, together with Philip, the
son of Jacimus, who was the commander of king
Agrippa’s forces, ran away from the city, and went to
Cestius. But then how Antipas, who had been besieged
with them in the king’s palace, but would not fly away
with them, was afterward slain by the seditious, we
shall relate hereafter. However, Cestius sent Saul and
his friends, at their own desire, to Achaia, to Nero,
to inform him of the great distress they were in, and
to lay the blame of their kindling the war upon Florus,
as hoping to alleviate his own danger, by provoking
his indignation against Florus.
2. In the mean time, the people of Damascus, when
they were informed of the destruction of the Romans,
set about the slaughter of those Jews that were among
them; and as they had them already cooped up together
in the place of public exercises, which they had done
out of the suspicion they had of them, they thought
they should meet with no difficulty in the attempt;
yet did they distrust their own wives, which were
almost all of them addicted to the Jewish religion; on
which account it was that their greatest concern was,
how they might conceal these things from them; so they
came upon the Jews, and cut their throats, as being in
a narrow place, in number ten thousand, and all of
them unarmed, and this in one hour’s time, without any
body to disturb them.
3. But as to those who had pursued after Cestius,
when they were returned back to Jerusalem, they
overbore some of those that favored the
Romans by violence, and some them persuaded [by
en-treaties] to join with them, and got together in
great numbers in the temple, and appointeda great many
generals for the war. Joseph also, the son of Gorion,
31 and Ananus the high priest, were chosen as
governors of all affairs within the city, and with a
particular charge to repair the walls of the city; for
they did not ordain Eleazar the son of Simon to that
office, although he had gotten into his possession the
prey they had taken from the Romans, and the money
they had taken from Cestius, together with a great
part of the public treasures, because they saw he was
of a tyrannical temper, and that his followers were,
in their behavior, like guards about him. However, the
want they were in of Eleazar’s money, and the subtle
tricks used by him, brought all so about, that the
people were circumvented, and submitted themselves to
his authority in all public affairs.
4. They also chose other generals for Idumea;
Jesus, the son of Sapphias, one of the high priests;
and Eleazar, the son of Ananias, the high priest;they
also enjoined Niger, the then governor of Idumea, 32
who was of a family that belonged to Perea, beyond
Jordan, and was thence called the Peraite, that he
should be obedient to those fore-named commanders. Nor
did they neglect the care of other parts of the
country; but Joseph the son of Simon was sent as
general to Jericho, as was Manasseh to Perea, and
John, the Esscue, to the toparchy of Thamna; Lydda was
also added to his portion, and Joppa, and Emmaus. But
John, the son of Matthias, was made governor of the
toparchies of Gophnitica and Acrabattene; as was
Josephus, the son of Matthias, of both the Galilees.
Gamala also, which was the strongest city in those
parts, was put under his command.
5. So every one of the other commanders
administered the affairs of hisportion with that
alacrity and prudence they were masters of; but as to
Josephus, when he came into Galilee, his first care
was to gain the good-will of the people of that
country, as sensible that he should thereby have in
general good success, although he should fail in other
points. And being conscious to himself that if he
communicated part of his power to the great men, he
should make them his fast friends; and that he should
gain the same favor from the multitude, if he executed
his commands by persons of their own country, and with
whom they were well acquainted; he chose out seventy
of the most prudent men, and those elders in age, and
appointed them to be rulers of all Galilee, as he
chose seven judges in
every city to hear the lesser quarrels; for as to
the greater causes, and those wherein life and death
were concerned, he enjoined they should be broughtto
him and the seventy 33 elders.
6. Josephus also, when he had settled these rules
for determining causesby the law, with regard to the
people’s dealings one with another, betook himself to
make provisions for their safety against external
violence; and as he knew the Romans would fall upon
Galilee, he built walls in proper places about
Jotapata, and Bersabee, and Selamis; and besides
these, about Caphareccho, and Japha, and Sigo, and
what they call Mount Tabor, and Tarichee, and
Tiberias. Moreover, he built walls about the caves
near the lake of Gennesar, which places lay in the
Lower Galilee; the same he did to the places of Upper
Galilee, as well as to the rock called the Rock of the
Achabari, and to Seph, and Jamnith, and Meroth; and in
Gaulonitis he fortified Seleucia, and Sogane, and
Gamala; but as to those of Sepphoris, they were the
only people to whom he gave leave to build their own
walls, and this because he perceived they were rich
and wealthy, and ready to go to war, without standing
in need of any injunctions for that purpose. The case
was the same with Gischala, which had a wall built
about it by John the son of Levi himself, but with the
consent of Josephus; but for the building of the rest
of the fortresses, he labored together with all the
other builders, and was present to give all the
necessary orders for that purpose. He also got
together an army out of Galilee, of more than a
hundred thousand young men, all of which he armed with
the old weapons which he had collected together and
prepared for them.
7. And when he had considered that the Roman power
became invincible,chiefly by their readiness in
obeying orders, and the constant exercise of their
arms, he despaired of teaching these his men the use
of their arms, which was to be obtained by experience;
but observing that their readiness in obeying orders
was owing to the multitude of their officers, he made
his partitions in his army more after the Roman
manner, and appointed a great many subalterns. He also
distributed the soldiers into various classes, whom he
put under captains of tens, and captains of hundreds,
and then under captains of thousands; and besides
these, he had commanders of larger bodies of men. He
also taught them to give the signals one to another,
and to call and recall the soldiers by the trumpets,
how to expand the wings of an army, and make them
wheel about; and when one wing
hath had success, to turn again and assist those
that were hard set, and to join in the defense of what
had most suffered. He also continually instructed them
ill what concerned the courage of the soul, and the
hardiness of the body; and, above all, he exercised
them for war, by declaring to them distinctly the good
order of the Romans, and that they were to fight with
men who, both by the strength of their bodies and
courage of their souls, had conquered in a manner the
whole habitable earth. He told them that he should
make trial of the good order they would observe in
war, even before it came to any battle, in case they
would abstain from the crimes they used to indulge
themselves in, such as theft, and robbery, and rapine,
and from defrauding their own countrymen, and never to
esteem the harm done to those that were so near of kin
to them to be any advantage to themselves; for that
wars are then managed the best when the warriors
preserve a good conscience; but that such as are ill
men in private life will not only have those for
enemies which attack them, but God himself also for
their antagonist.
8. And thus did he continue to admonish them. Now
he chose for the warsuch an army as was sufficient,
i.e. sixty thousand footmen, and twohundred and fifty
horsemen; 34 and besides these, on which he put the
greatest trust, there were about four thousand five
hundred mercenaries; he had also six hundred men as
guards of his body. Now the cities easily maintained
the rest of his army, excepting the mercenaries, for
every one of the cities enumerated above sent out half
their men to the army, and retained the other half at
home, in order to get provisions for them; insomuch
that the one part went to the war, and the other part
to their work, and so those that sent out their corn
were paid for it by those that were in arms, by that
security which they enjoyed from them.
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