THE WARS OF THE JEWS
OR
THE HISTORY OF THE DESTRUCTION OF JERUSALEM
Book III: Chapter 2
A GREAT SLAUGHTER ABOUT ASCALON. VESPASIAN COMES
TO PTOLEMAIS.
1. Now the Jews, after they had beaten Cestius, were so much elevated with their unexpected
success, that they could not govern their zeal, but,
like people blown up into a flame by their good
fortune, carried the war to remoter places.
Accordingly, they presently got together a great
multitude of all their most hardy soldiers, and
marched away for Ascalon. This is an ancient city that
is distant from Jerusalem five hundred and twenty
furlongs, and was always an enemy to the Jews; on
which account they determined to make their first
effort against it, and to make their approaches to it
as near as possible. This excursion was led on by
three men, who were the chief of them all, both for
strength and sagacity; Niger, called the Persite,
Silas of Babylon, and besides them John the Essene.
Now Ascalon was strongly walled about, but had almost
no assistance to be relied on [near them], for the
garrison consisted of one cohort of footmen, and one
troop of horsemen, whose captain was Antonius.
2. These Jews, therefore, out of their anger,
marched faster than ordinary, and, as if they had come
but a little way, approached very near the city, and
were come even to it; but Antonius, who was not
unapprized of the attack they were going to make upon
the city, drew out his horsemen beforehand, and being
neither daunted at the multitude, nor at the courage
of the enemy, received their first attacks with great
bravery; and when they crowded to the very walls, he
beat them off. Now the Jews were unskillful in war,
but were to fight with those who were skillful
therein; they were footmen to fight with horsemen;
they were in disorder, to fight those that were united
together; they were poorly armed, to fight those that
were completely so; they were to fight more by their
rage than by sober counsel, and were exposed to
soldiers that were exactly obedient; and did every
thing they were bidden upon the least intimation. So
they were easily beaten; for as soon as ever their
first ranks were once in disorder, they were put to
flight by the enemy’s cavalry, and those of
them that came behind such as crowded to the wall
fell upon their own party’s weapons, and became one
another’s enemies; and this so long till they were all
forced to give way to the attacks of the horsemen, and
were dispersed all the plain over, which plain was
wide, and all fit for the horsemen; which circumstance
was very commodious for the Romans, and occasioned the
slaughter of the greatest number of the Jews; for such
as ran away, they could overrun them, and make them
turn back; and when they had brought them back after
their flight, and driven them together, they ran them
through, and slew a vast number of them, insomuch that
others encompassed others of them, and drove them
before them whithersoever they turned themselves, and
slew them easily with their arrows; and the great
number there were of the Jews seemed a solitude to
themselves, by reason of the distress they were in,
while the Romans had such good success with their
small number, that they seemed to themselves to be the
greater multitude. And as the former strove zealously
under their misfortunes, out of the shame of a sudden
flight, and hopes of the change in their success, so
did the latter feel no weariness by reason of their
good fortune; insomuch that the fight lasted till the
evening, till ten thousand men of the Jews’ side lay
dead, with two of their generals, John and Silas, and
the greater part of the remainder were wounded, with
Niger, their remaining general, who fled away together
to a small city of Idumea, called Sallis. Some few
also of the Romans were wounded in this battle.
3. Yet were not the spirits of the Jews broken by
so great a calamity, butthe losses they had sustained
rather quickened their resolution for other attempts;
for, overlooking the dead bodies which lay under their
feet, they were enticed by their former glorious
actions to venture on a second destruction; so when
they had lain still so little a while that their
wounds were not yet thoroughly cured, they got
together all their forces, and came with greater fury,
and in much greater numbers, to Ascalon. But their
former ill fortune followed them, as the consequence
of their unskilfulness, and other deficiencies in war;
for Antonius laid ambushes for them in the passages
they were to go through, where they fell into snares
unexpectedly, and where they were encompassed about
with horsemen, before they could form themselves into
a regular body for fighting, and were above eight
thousand of them slain; so all the rest of them ran
away, and with them Niger, who still did a great many
bold exploits in his flight.
However, they were driven along together by the
enemy, who pressed hard upon them, into a certain
strong tower belonging to a village called Bezedeh
However, Antonius and his party, that they might
neither spend any considerable time about this tower,
which was hard to be taken, nor suffer their
commander, and the most courageous man of them all, to
escape from them, they set the wall on fire; and as
the tower was burning, the Romans went away rejoicing,
as taking it for granted that Niger was destroyed; but
he leaped out of the tower into a subterraneous cave,
in the innermost part of it, and was preserved; and on
the third day afterward he spake out of the ground to
those that with great lamentation were searching for
him, in order to give him a decent funeral; and when
he was come out, he filled all the Jews with an
unexpected joy, as though he were preserved by God’s
providence to be their commander for the time to come.
4. And now Vespasian took along with him his army
from Antioch, (whichis the metropolis of Syria, and
without dispute deserves the place of thethird city in
the habitable earth that was under the Roman empire, 2
both in magnitude, and other marks of prosperity,)
where he found king Agrippa, with all his forces,
waiting for his coming, and marched to Ptolemais. At
this city also the inhabitants of Sepphoris of Galilee
met him, who were for peace with the Romans. These
citizens had beforehand taken care of their own
safety, and being sensible of the power of the Romans,
they had been with Cestius Gallus before Vespasian
came, and had given their faith to him, and received
the security of his right hand, and had received a
Roman garrison; and at this time withal they received
Vespasian, the Roman general, very kindly, and readily
promised that they would assist him against their own
countrymen. Now the general delivered them, at their
desire, as many horsemen and footmen as he thought
sufficient to oppose the incursions of the Jews, if
they should come against them. And indeed the danger
of losing Sepphoris would be no small one, in this war
that was now beginning, seeing it was the largest city
of Galilee, and built in a place by nature very
strong, and might be a security of the whole nation’s
[fidelity to the Romans].
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