THE WARS OF THE JEWS
OR
THE HISTORY OF THE DESTRUCTION OF JERUSALEM
Book III: Chapter 7
VESPASIAN, WHEN HE HAD TAKEN THE CITY GADAEA
MARCHES TO JOTAPATA. AFTER A LONG SIEGE THE CITY IS
BETRAYED BY A DESERTER, AND TAKEN BY VESPASIAN.
1. SO Vespasian marched to the city Gadara, and
took it upon the first onset, because he found it
destitute of any considerable number of men grown up
and fit for war. He came then into it, and slew all
the youth, the Romans having no mercy on any age
whatsoever; and this was done out of the hatred they
bore the nation, and because of the iniquity they had
been guilty of in the affair of Cestius. He also set
fire not only to the city itself, but to all the
villas and small cities that were round about it; some
of them were quite destitute of inhabitants, and out
of some of them he carried the inhabitants as slaves
into captivity.
2. As to Josephus, his retiring to that city which
he chose as the most fit for his security, put it into
great fear; for the people of Tiberias did not imagine
that he would have run away, unless he had entirely
despaired of the success of the war. And indeed, as to
that point, they were not mistaken about his opinion;
for he saw whither the affairs of the Jews would tend
at last, and was sensible that they had but one way of
escaping, and that was by repentance. However,
although he expected that the Romans would forgive
him, yet did he chose to die many times over, rather
than to betray his country, and to dishonor that
supreme command of the army which had been intrusted
with him, or to live happily under those against whom
he was sent to fight. He determined, therefore, to
give an exact account of affairs to the principal men
at Jerusalem by a letter, that he might not, by too
much aggrandizing the power of the enemy, make them
too timorous; nor, by relating that their power
beneath the truth, might encourage them to stand out
when they were perhaps disposed to repentance. He also
sent them word, that if they thought of coming to
terms, they must suddenly write him an answer; or if
they resolved upon war, they must send him an army
sufficient to fight the
Romans. Accordingly, he wrote these things, and
sent messengers immediately to carry his letter to
Jerusalem.
3. Now Vespasian was very desirous of demolishing
Jotapata, for he had gotten intelligence that the
greatest part of the enemy had retired thither, and
that it was, on other accounts, a place of great
security to them. Accordingly, he sent both foot-men
and horsemen to level the road, which was mountainous
and rocky, not without difficulty to be traveled over
by footmen, but absolutely impracticable for horsemen.
Now these workmen accomplished what they were about in
four days’ time, and opened a broad way for the army.
On the fifth day, which was the twenty-first of the
month Artemisius, (Jyar,) Josephus prevented him, and
came from Tiberias, and went into Jotapata, and raised
the drooping spirits of the Jews. And a certain
deserter told this good news to Vespasian, that
Josephus had removed himself thither, which made him
make haste to the city, as supposing that with taking
that he should take all Judea, in case he could but
withal get Josephus under his power. So he took this
news to be of the vastest advantage to him, and
believed it to be brought about by the providence of
God, that he who appeared to be the most prudent man
of all their enemies, had, of his own accord, shut
himself up in a place of sure custody. Accordingly, he
sent Placidus with a thousand horsemen, and Ebutius a
decurion, a person that was of eminency both in
council and in action, to encompass the city round,
that Josephus might not escape away privately.
4. Vespasian also, the very next day, took his
whole army and followed them, and by marching till late
in the evening, arrived then at Jotapata; and bringing
his army to the northern side of the city, he pitched
his camp on a certain small hill which was seven
furlongs from the city, and still greatly endeavored
to be well seen by the enemy, to put them into a
consternation; which was indeed so terrible to the
Jews immediately, that no one of them durst go out
beyond the wall. Yet did the Romans put off the attack
at that time, because they had marched all the day,
although they placed a double row of battalions round
the city, with a third row beyond them round the
whole, which consisted of cavalry, in order to stop up
every way for an exit; which thing making the Jews
despair of escaping, excited them to act more boldly;
for nothing makes men fight so desperately in war as
necessity.
5. Now when the next day an assault was made by the
Romans, the Jews at first staid out of the walls and
opposed them, and met them, as having formed
themselves a camp before the city walls. But when
Vespasian had set against them the archers and
slingers, and the whole multitude that could throw to
a great distance, he permitted them to go to work,
while he himself, with the footmen, got upon an
acclivity, whence the city might easily be taken.
Josephus was then in fear for the city, and leaped
out, and all the Jewish multitude with him; these fell
together upon the Romans in great numbers, and drove
them away from the wall, and performed a great many
glorious and bold actions. Yet did they suffer as much
as they made the enemy suffer; for as despair of
deliverance encouraged the Jews, so did a sense of
shame equally encourage the Romans. These last had
skill as well as strength; the other had only courage,
which armed them, and made them fight furiously. And
when the fight had lasted all day, it was put an end
to by the coming on of the night. They had wounded a
great many of the Romans, and killed of them thirteen
men; of the Jews’ side seventeen were slain, and six
hundred wounded.
6. On the next day the Jews made another attack
upon the Romans, and went out of the walls and fought a
much more desperate battle with them titan before. For
they were now become more courageous than formerly,
and that on account of the unexpected good opposition
they had made the day before, as they found the Romans
also to fight more desperately; for a sense of shame
inflamed these into a passion, as esteeming their
failure of a sudden victory to be a kind of defeat.
Thus did the Romans try to make an impression upon the
Jews till the fifth day continually, while the people
of Jotapata made sallies out, and fought at the walls
most desperately; nor were the Jews affrighted at the
strength of the enemy, nor were the Romans discouraged
at the difficulties they met with in taking the city.
7. Now Jotapata is almost all of it built on a
precipice, having on all the other sides of it every
way valleys immensely deep and steep, insomuch that
those who would look down would have their sight fail
them before it reaches to the bottom. It is only to be
come at on the north side, where the utmost part of
the city is built on the mountain, as it ends
obliquely at a plain. This mountain Josephus had
encompassed with a wall when he fortified the city,
that its top might not be capable of being seized upon
by the enemies. The city is covered all round with
other mountains, and can
no way be seen till a man comes just upon it. And
this was the strong situation of Jotapata.
8. Vespasian, therefore, in order to try how he
might overcome the natural strength of the place, as
well as the bold defense of the Jews, made a
resolution to prosecute the siege with vigor. To that
end he called the commanders that were under him to a
council of war, and consulted with them which way the
assault might be managed to the best advantage. And
when the resolution was there taken to raise a bank
against that part of the wall which was practicable,
he sent his whole army abroad to get the materials
together. So when they had cut down all the trees on
the mountains that adjoined to the city, and had
gotten together a vast heap of stones, besides the
wood they had cut down, some of them brought hurdles,
in order to avoid the effects of the darts that were
shot from above them. These hurdles they spread over
their banks, under cover whereof they formed their
bank, and so were little or nothing hurt by the darts
that were thrown upon them from the wall, while others
pulled the neighboring hillocks to pieces, and
perpetually brought earth to them; so that while they
were busy three sorts of ways, nobody was idle.
However, the Jews cast great stones from the walls
upon the hurdles which protected the men, with all
sorts of darts also; and the noise of what could not
reach them was yet so terrible, that it was some
impediment to the workmen.
9. Vespasian then set the engines for throwing
stones and darts roundabout the city. The number of
the engines was in all a hundred and sixty, and bid
them fall to work, and dislodge those that were upon
the wall. At the same time such engines as were
intended for that purpose threw at once lances upon
them with a great noise, and stones of the weight of a
talent were thrown by the engines that were prepared
for that purpose, together with fire, and a vast
multitude of arrows, which made the wall so dangerous,
that the Jews durst not only not come upon it, but
durst not come to those part
s within the walls which
were reached by the engines; for the multitude of the
Arabian archers, as well also as all those that threw
darts and slung stones, fell to work at the same time
with the engines. Yet did not the otters lie still,
when they could not throw at the Romans from a higher
place; for they then made sallies out of the city,
like private robbers, by parties, and pulled away the
hurdles that covered the
workmen, and killed them when they were thus naked;
and when those workmen gave way, these cast away the
earth that composed the bank, and burnt the wooden
parts of it, together with the hurdles, till at length
Vespasian perceived that the intervals there were
between the works were of disadvantage to him; for
those spaces of ground afforded the Jews a place for
assaulting the Romans. So he united the hurdles, and
at the same time joined one part of the army to the
other, which prevented the private excursions of the
Jews.
10. And when the bank was now raised, and brought
nearer than ever to the battlements that belonged to
the walls, Josephus thought it would be entirely wrong
in him if he could make no contrivances in opposition
to theirs, and that might be for the city’s
preservation; so he got together his workmen, and
ordered them to build the wall higher; and while they
said that this was impossible to be done while so many
darts were thrown at them, he invented this sort of
cover for them: He bid them fix piles, and expand
before them the raw hides of oxen newly killed, that
these hides by yielding and hollowing themselves when
the stones were thrown at them might receive them, for
that the other darts would slide off them, and the
fire that was thrown would be quenched by the moisture
that was in them. And these he set before the workmen,
and under them these workmen went on with their works
in safety, and raised the wall higher, and that both
by day and by night, fill it was twenty cubits high.
He also built a good number of towers upon the wall,
and fitted it to strong battlements. This greatly
discouraged the Romans, who in their own opinions were
already gotten within the walls, while they were now
at once astonished at Josephus’s contrivance, and at
the fortitude of the citizens that were in the city.
11. And now Vespasian was plainly irritated at the
great subtlety of this stratagem, and at the boldness
of the citizens of Jotapata; for taking heart again
upon the building of this wall, they made fresh
sallies upon the Romans, and had every day conflicts
with them by parties, together with all such
contrivances, as robbers make use of, and with the
plundering of all that came to hand, as also with the
setting fire to all the other works; and this till
Vespasian made his army leave off fighting them, and
resolved to lie round the city, and to starve them
into a surrender, as supposing that either they would
be forced to petition him for mercy by want of
provisions, or if they should have the courage to
hold out till the last, they should perish by famine:
and he concluded he should conquer them the more
easily in fighting, if he gave them an interval, and
then fell upon them when they were weakened by famine;
but still he gave orders that they should guard
against their coming out of the city.
12. Now the besieged had plenty of corn within the
city, and indeed of all necessaries, but they wanted
water, because there was no fountain in the city, the
people being there usually satisfied with rain water;
yet is it a rare thing in that country to have rain in
summer, and at this season, during the siege, they
were in great distress for some contrivance to satisfy
their thirst; and they were very sad at this time
particularly, as if they were already in want of water
entirely, for Josephus seeing that the city abounded
with other necessaries, and that the men were of good
courage, and being desirous to protract the siege to
the Romans longer than they expected, ordered their
drink to be given them by measure; but this scanty
distribution of water by measure was deemed by them as
a thing more hard upon them than the want of it; and
their not being able to drink as much as they would
made them more desirous of drinking than they
otherwise had been; nay, they were as much
disheartened hereby as if they were come to the last
degree of thirst. Nor were the Romans unacquainted
with the state they were in, for when they stood over
against them, beyond the wall, they could see them
running together, and taking their water by measure,
which made them throw their javelins thither the place
being within their reach, and kill a great many of
them.
13. Hereupon Vespasian hoped that their receptacles
of water would in no long time be emptied, and that
they would be forced to deliver up the city to him;
but Josephus being minded to break such his hope, gave
command that they should wet a great many of their
clothes, and hang them out about the battlements, till
the entire wall was of a sudden all wet with the
running down of the water. At this sight the Romans
were discouraged, and under consternation, when they
saw them able to throw away in sport so much water,
when they supposed them not to have enough to drink
themselves. This made the Roman general despair of
taking the city by their want of necessaries, and to
betake himself again to arms, and to try to force them
to surrender, which was what the Jews greatly desired;
for as
they despaired of either themselves or their city
being able to escape, they preferred a death in battle
before one by hunger and thirst.
14. However, Josephus contrived another stratagem
besides the foregoing, to get plenty of what they
wanted. There was a certain rough and uneven place
that could hardly be ascended, and on that account was
not guarded by the soldiers; so Josephus sent out
certain persons along the western parts of the valley,
and by them sent letters to whom he pleased of the
Jews that were out of the city, and procured from them
what necessaries soever they wanted in the city in
abundance; he enjoined them also to creep generally
along by the watch as they came into the city, and to
cover their backs with such sheep-skins as had their
wool upon them, that if any one should spy them out in
the night time, they might be believed to be dogs.
This was done till the watch perceived their
contrivance, and encompassed that rough place about
themselves.
15. And now it was that Josephus perceived that the
city could not holdout long, and that his own life
would be in doubt if he continued in it; so he
consulted how he and the most potent men of the city
might fly out of it. When the multitude understood
this, they came all round about him, and begged of him
not to overlook them while they entirely depended on
him, and him alone; for that there was still hope of
the city’s deliverance, if he would stay with them,
because every body would undertake any pains with
great cheerfulness on his account, and in that case
there would be some comfort for them also, though they
should be taken: that it became him neither to fly
from his enemies, nor to desert his friends, nor to
leap out of that city, as out of a ship that was
sinking in a storm, into which he came when it was
quiet and in a calm; for that by going away he would
be the cause of drowning the city, because nobody
would then venture to oppose the enemy when he was
once gone, upon whom they wholly confided.
16. Hereupon Josephus avoided letting them know
that he was to go away to provide for his own safety,
but told them that he would go out of the city for
their sakes; for that if he staid with them, he should
be able to do them little good while they were in a
safe condition; and that if they were once taken, he
should only perish with them to no purpose; but that
if he were once gotten free from this siege, he should
be able to bring them very
great relief; for that he would then immediately
get the Galileans together, out of the country, in
great multitudes, and draw the Romans off their city
by another war. That he did not see what advantage he
could bring to them now, by staying among them, but
only provoke the Romans to besiege them more closely,
as esteeming it a most valuable thing to take him; but
that if they were once informed that he was fled out
of the city, they would greatly remit of their
eagerness against it. Yet did not this plea move the
people, but inflamed them the more to hang about him.
Accordingly, both the children and the old men, and
the women with their infants, came mourning to him,
and fell down before him, and all of them caught hold
of his feet, and held him fast, and besought him, with
great lamentations, that he would take his share with
them in their fortune; and I think they did this, not
that they envied his deliverance, but that they hoped
for their own; for they could not think they should
suffer any great misfortune, provided Josephus would
but stay with them.
17. Now Josephus thought, that if he resolved to
stay, it would be ascribed to their entreaties; and if
he resolved to go away by force, he should be put into
custody. His commiseration also of the people under
their lamentations had much broken that his eagerness
to leave them; so he resolved to stay, and arming
himself with the common despair of the citizens, he
said to them, “Now is the time to begin to fight in
earnest, when there is no hope of deliverance left. It
is a brave thing to prefer glory before life, and to
set about some such noble undertaking as may be
remembered by late posterity.” Having said this, he
fell to work immediately, and made a sally, and
dispersed the enemies’ out-guards, and ran as far as
the Roman camp itself, and pulled the coverings of
their tents to pieces, that were upon their banks, and
set fire to their works. And this was the manner in
which he never left off fighting, neither the next
day, nor the day after it, but went on with it for a
considerable number of both days and nights.
18. Upon this, Vespasian, when he saw the Romans
distressed by theses allies, (though they were ashamed
to be made to run away by the Jews; and when at any
time they made the Jews run away, their heavy armor
would not let them pursue them far; while the Jews,
when they had performed any action, and before they
could be hurt themselves, still retired into the
city,) ordered his armed men to avoid their onset, and
not
fight it out with men under desperation, while
nothing is more courageous than despair; but that
their violence would be quenched when they saw they
failed of their purposes, as fire is quenched when it
wants fuel; and that it was proper for the Romans to
gain their victories as cheap as they could, since
they are not forced to fight, but only to enlarge
their own dominions. So he repelled the Jews in great
measure by the Arabian archers, and the Syrian
slingers, and by those that threw stones at them, nor
was there any intermission of the great number of
their offensive engines. Now the Jews suffered greatly
by these engines, without being able to escape from
them; and when these engines threw their stones or
javelins a great way, and the Jews were within their
reach, they pressed hard upon the Romans, and fought
desperately, without sparing either soul or body, one
part succoring another by turns, when it was tired
down.
19. When, therefore, Vespasian looked upon himself
as in a manner besieged by these sallies of the Jews,
and when his banks were now not far from the walls, he
determined to make use of his battering ram. This
battering ram is a vast beam of wood like the mast of
a ship, its forepart is armed with a thick piece of
iron at the head of it, which is so carved as to be
like the head of a ram, whence its name is taken. This
ram is slung in the air by ropes passing over its
middle, and is hung like the balance in a pair of
scales from another beam, and braced by strong beams
that pass on both sides of it, in the nature of a
cross. When this ram is pulled backward by a great
number of men with united force, and then thrust
forward by the same men, with a mighty noise, it
batters the walls with that iron part which is
prominent. Nor is there any tower so strong, or walls
so broad, that can resist any more than its first
batteries, but all are forced to yield to it at last.
This was the experiment which the Roman general betook
himself to, when he was eagerly bent upon taking the
city; but found lying in the field so long to be to
his disadvantage, because the Jews would never let him
be quiet. So these Romans brought the several engines
for galling an enemy nearer to the walls, that they
might reach such as were upon the wall, and endeavored
to frustrate their attempts; these threw stones and
javelins at them; in the like manner did the archers
and slingers come both together closer to the wall.
This brought matters to such a pass that none of the
Jews durst mount the walls, and then it was that the
other Romans
brought the battering ram that was cased with
hurdles all over, and in the tipper part was secured
by skins that covered it, and this both for the
security of themselves and of the engine. Now, at the
very first stroke of this engine, the wall was shaken,
and a terrible clamor was raised by the people within
the city, as if they were already taken.
20. And now, when Josephus saw this ram still
battering the same place, and that the wall would
quickly be thrown down by it, he resolved to elude for
a while the force of the engine. With this design he
gave orders to fill sacks with chaff, and to hang them
down before that place where they saw the ram always
battering, that the stroke might be turned aside, or
that the place might feel less of the strokes by the
yielding nature of the chaff. This contrivance very
much delayed the attempts of the Romans, because, let
them remove their engine to what part they pleased,
those that were above it removed their sacks, and
placed them over against the strokes it made, insomuch
that the wall was no way hurt, and this by diversion
of the strokes, till the Romans made an opposite
contrivance of long poles, and by tying hooks at their
ends, cut off the sacks. Now when the battering ram
thus recovered its force, and the wall having been but
newly built, was giving way, Josephus and those about
him had afterward immediate recourse to fire, to
defend themselves withal; whereupon they took what
materials soever they had that were but dry, and made
a sally three ways, and set fire to the machines, and
the hurdles, and the banks of the Romans themselves;
nor did the Romans well know how to come to their
assistance, being at once under a consternation at the
Jews’ boldness, and being prevented by the flames from
coming to their assistance; for the materials being
dry with the bitumen and pitch that were among them,
as was brimstone also, the fire caught hold of every
thing immediately, and what cost the Romans a great
deal of pains was in one hour consumed.
21. And here a certain Jew appeared worthy of our
relation and commendation; he was the son of Sameas,
and was called Eleazar, and was born at Saab, in
Galilee. This man took up a stone of a vast bigness,
and threw it down from the wall upon the ram, and this
with so great a force, that it broke off the head of
the engine. He also leaped down, and took up the head
of the ram from the midst of them, and without any
concern carried it to the top of the wall, and this
while he stood as a fit mark to he pelted by all his
enemies. Accordingly, he received the strokes upon his
naked body, and was wounded with five darts; nor
did he mind any of them while he went up to the top of
the wall, where he stood in the sight of them all, as
an instance of the greatest boldness; after which he
drew himself on a heap with his wounds upon him, and
fell down together with the head of the ram. Next to
him, two brothers showed their courage; their names
were Netir and Philip, both of them of the village
Ruma, and both of them Galileans also; these men
leaped upon the soldiers of the tenth legion, and fell
upon the Romans with such a noise and force as to
disorder their ranks, and to put to flight all upon
whomsoever they made their assaults. 22. After these
men’s performances, Josephus, and the rest of
the multitude with him, took a great deal of fire, and
burnt both the machines and their coverings, with the
works belonging to the fifth and to the tenth legion,
which they put to flight; when others followed them
immediately, and buried those instruments and all
their materials under ground. However, about the
evening, the Romans erected the battering ram again,
against that part of the wall which had suffered
before; where a certain Jew that defended the city
from the Romans hit Vespasian with a dart in his foot,
and wounded him a little, the distance being so great,
that no mighty impression could be made by the dart
thrown so far off. However, this caused the greatest
disorder among the Romans; for when those who stood
near him saw his blood, they were disturbed at it, and
a report went abroad, through the whole army, that the
general was wounded, while the greatest part left the
siege, and came running together with surprise and
fear to the general; and before them all came Titus,
out of the concern he had for his father, insomuch
that the multitude were in great confusion, and this
out of the regard they had for their general, and by
reason of the agony that the son was in. Yet did the
father soon put an end to the son’s fear, and to the
disorder the army was under, for being superior to his
pains, and endeavoring soon to be seen by all that had
been in a fright about him, he excited them to fight
the Jews more briskly; for now every body was willing
to expose himself to danger immediately, in order to
avenge their general; and then they encouraged one
another with loud voices, and ran hastily to the
walls.
23. But still Josephus and those with him, although
they fell down dead one upon another by the darts and
stones which the engines threw upon them, yet did not
they desert the wall, but fell upon those who managed
the ram, under the protection of the hurdles, with
fire, and iron weapons, and stones; and these could do
little or nothing, but fell themselves perpetually,
while they were seen by those whom they could not see,
for the light of their own flame shone about them, and
made them a most visible mark to the enemy, as they
were in the day time, while the engines could not be
seen at a great distance, and so what was thrown at
them was hard to be avoided; for the force with which
these engines threw stones and darts made them hurt
several at a time, and the violent noise of the stones
that were cast by the engines was so great, that they
carried away the pinnacles of the wall, and broke off
the corners of the towers; for no body of men could be
so strong as not to be overthrown to the last rank by
the largeness of the stones. And any one may learn the
force of the engines by what happened this very night;
for as one of those that stood round about Josephus
was near the wall, his head was carried away by such a
stone, and his skull was flung as far as three
furlongs. In the day time also, a woman with child had
her belly so violently struck, as she was just come
out of her house, that the infant was carried to the
distance of half a furlong, so great was the force of
that engine. The noise of the instruments themselves
was very terrible, the sound of the darts and stones
that were thrown by them was so also; of the same sort
was that noise the dead bodies made, when they were
dashed against the wall; and indeed dreadful was the
clamor which these things raised in the women within
the city, which was echoed back at the same time by
the cries of such as were slain; while the whole space
of ground whereon they fought ran with blood, and the
wall might have been ascended over by the bodies of
the dead carcasses; the mountains also contributed to
increase the noise by their echoes; nor was there on
that night any thing of terror wanting that could
either affect the hearing or the sight: yet did a
great part of those that fought so hard for Jotapata
fall manfully, as were a great part of them wounded.
However, the morning watch was come ere the wall
yielded to the machines employed against it, though it
had been battered without intermission. However, those
within covered their bodies with their armor, and
raised works over against that part which was thrown
down, before
those machines were laid by which the Romans were
to ascend into the city.
24. In the morning Vespasian got his army together,
in order to take the city [by storm], after a little
recreation upon the hard pains they had been at the
night before; and as he was desirous to draw off those
that opposed him from the places where the wall had
been thrown down, he made the most courageous of the
horsemen get off their horses, and placed them in
three ranks over against those ruins of the wall, but
covered with their armor on every side, and with poles
in their hands, that so these might begin their ascent
as soon as the instruments for such ascent were laid;
behind them he placed the flower of the footmen; but
for the rest of the horse, he ordered them to extend
themselves over against the wall, upon the whole hilly
country, in order to prevent any from escaping out of
the city when it should be taken; and behind these he
placed the archers round about, and commanded them to
have their darts ready to shoot. The same command he
gave to the slingers, and to those that managed the
engines, and bid them to take up other ladders, and
have them ready to lay upon those parts of the wall
which were yet untouched, that the besieged might be
engaged in trying to hinder their ascent by them, and
leave the guard of the parts that were thrown down,
while the rest of them should be overborne by the
darts cast at them, and might afford his men an
entrance into the city.
25. But Josephus, understanding the meaning of
Vespasian’s contrivance, set the old men, together with
those that were tired out, at the sound parts of the
wall, as expecting no harm from those quarters, but
set the strongest of his men at the place where the
wall was broken down, and before them all six men by
themselves, among whom he took his share of the first
and greatest danger. He also gave orders, that when
the legions made a shout, they should stop their ears,
that they might not be affrighted at it, and that, to
avoid the multitude of the enemy’s darts, they should
bend down on their knees, and cover themselves with
their shields, and that they should retreat a little
backward for a while, till the archers should have
emptied their quivers; but that When the Romans should
lay their instruments for ascending the walls, they
should leap out on the sudden, and with their own
instruments should meet the enemy, and that every one
should strive to do his best, in order not to defend
his own city, as if it
were possible to be preserved, but in order to
revenge it, when it was already destroyed; and that
they should set before their eyes how their old men
were to be slain, and their children and wives were to
be killed immediately by the enemy; and that they
would beforehand spend all their fury, on account of
the calamities just coming upon them, and pour it out
on the actors.
26. And thus did Josephus dispose of both his
bodies of men; but then for the useless part of the
citizens, the women and children, when they saw their
city encompassed by a threefold army, (for none of the
usual guards that had been fighting before were
removed,) when they also saw, not only the walls
thrown down, but their enemies with swords in their
hands, as also the hilly country above them shining
with their weapons, d the darts in the hands of the
Arabian archers, they made a final and lamentable
outcry of the destruction, as if the misery were not
only threatened, but actually come upon them already.
But Josephus ordered the women to be shut up in their
houses, lest they should render the warlike actions of
the men too effeminate, by making them commiserate
their condition, and commanded them to hold their
peace, and threatened them if they did not, while he
came himself before the breach, where his allotment
was; for all those who brought ladders to the other
places, he took no notice of them, but earnestly
waited for the shower of arrows that was coming.
27. And now the trumpeters of the several Roman
legions sounded together, and the army made a terrible
shout; and the darts, as by order, flew so last, that
they intercepted the light. However, Josephus’s men
remembered the charges he had given them, they stopped
their ears at the sounds, and covered their bodies
against the darts; and as to the engines that were set
ready to go to work, the Jews ran out upon them,
before those that should have used them were gotten
upon them. And now, on the ascending of the soldiers,
there was a great conflict, and many actions of the
hands and of the soul were exhibited; while the Jews
did earnestly endeavor, in the extreme danger they
were in, not to show less courage than those who,
without being in danger, fought so stoutly against
them; nor did they leave struggling with the Romans
till they either fell down dead themselves, or killed
their antagonists. But the Jews grew weary with
defending themselves continually, and had not enough
to come in their places, and succor them; while, on
the side of the Romans, fresh men still
succeeded those that were tired; and still new men
soon got upon the machines for ascent, in the room of
those that were thrust down; those encouraging one
another, and joining side to side with their shields,
which were a protection to them, they became a body of
men not to be broken; and as this band thrust away the
Jews, as though they were themselves but one body,
they began already to get upon the wall.
28. Then did Josephus take necessity for his
counselor in this utmost distress, (which necessity is
very sagacious in invention when it is irritated by
despair,) and gave orders to pour scalding oil upon
those whose shields protected them. Whereupon they
soon got it ready, being many that brought it, and
what they brought being a great quantity also, and
poured it on all sides upon the Romans, and threw down
upon them their vessels as they were still hissing
from the heat of the fire: this so burnt the Romans,
that it dispersed that united band, who now tumbled
clown from the wall with horrid pains, for the oil did
easily run down the whole body from head to foot,
under their entire armor, and fed upon their flesh
like flame itself, its fat and unctuous nature
rendering it soon heated and slowly cooled; and as the
men were cooped up in their head-pieces and
breastplates, they could no way get free from this
burning oil; they could only leap and roll about in
their pains, as they fell down from the bridges they
had laid. And as they thus were beaten back, and
retired to their own party, who still pressed them
forward, they were easily wounded by those that were
behind them.
29. However, in this ill success of the Romans,
their courage did not fail them, nor did the Jews want
prudence to oppose them; for the Romans, although they
saw their own men thrown down, and in a miserable
condition, yet were they vehemently bent against those
that poured the oil upon them; while every one
reproached the man before him as a coward, and one
that hindered him from exerting himself; and while the
Jews made use of another stratagem to prevent their
ascent, and poured boiling fenugreek upon the boards,
in order to make them slip and fall down; by which
means neither could those that were coming up, nor
those that were going down, stand on their feet; but
some of them fell backward upon the machines on which
they ascended, and were trodden upon; many of them
fell down upon the bank they had raised, and when they
were fallen upon it were slain by the Jews; for when
the Romans could not keep their feet,
the Jews being freed from fighting hand to hand,
had leisure to throw their darts at them. So the
general called off those soldiers in the evening that
had suffered so sorely, of whom the number of the
slain was not a few, while that of the wounded was
still greater; but of the people of Jotapata no more
than six men were killed, although more than three
hundred were carried off wounded. This fight happened
on the twentieth day of the month Desius [Sivan].
30. Hereupon Vespasian comforted his army on
occasion of what happened, and as he found them angry
indeed, but rather wanting somewhat to do than any
further exhortations, he gave orders to raise the
banks still higher, and to erect three towers, each
fifty feet high, and that they should cover them with
plates of iron on every side, that they might be both
firm by their weight, and not easily liable to be set
on fire. These towers he set upon the banks, and
placed upon them such as could shoot darts and arrows,
with the lighter engines for throwing stones and darts
also; and besides these, he set upon them the stoutest
men among the slingers, who not being to be seen by
reason of the height they stood upon, and the
battlements that protected them, might throw their
weapons at those that were upon the wall, and were
easily seen by them. Hereupon the Jews, not being
easily able to escape those darts that were thrown
down upon their heads, nor to avenge themselves on
those whom they could not see, and perceiving that the
height of the towers was so great, that a dart which
they threw with their hand could hardly reach it, and
that the iron plates about them made it very hard to
come at them by fire, they ran away from the walls,
and fled hastily out of the city, and fell upon those
that shot at them. And thus did the people of Jotapata
resist the Romans, while a great number of them were
every day killed, without their being able to retort
the evil upon their enemies; nor could they keep them
out of the city without danger to themselves.
31. About this time it was that Vespasian sent out
Trajan against a city called Japha, that lay near to
Jotapata, and that desired innovations, and was puffed
up with the unexpected length of the opposition of
Jotapata. This Trajan was the commander of the tenth
legion, and to him Vespasian committed one thousand
horsemen, and two thousand footmen. When Trajan came
to the city, he found it hard to be taken, for besides
the natural strength of its situation, it was also
secured by a double wall; but
when he saw the people of this city coming out of
it, and ready to fight him, he joined battle with
them, and after a short resistance which they made, he
pursued after them; and as they fled to their first
wall, the Romans followed them so closely, that they
fell in together with them: but when the Jews were
endeavoring to get again within their second wall,
their fellow citizens shut them out, as being afraid
that the Romans would force themselves in with them.
It was certainly God therefore who brought the Romans
to punish the Galileans, and did then expose the
people of the city every one of them manifestly to be
destroyed by their bloody enemies; for they fell upon
the gates in great crowds, and earnestly calling to
those that kept them, and that by their names also,
yet had they their throats cut in the very midst of
their supplications; for the enemy shut the gates of
the first wall, and their own citizens shut the gates
of the second, so they were enclosed between two
walls, and were slain in great numbers together; many
of them were run through by swords of their own men,
and many by their own swords, besides an immense
number that were slain by the Romans. Nor had they any
courage to revenge themselves; for there was added to
the consternation they were in from the enemy, their
being betrayed by their own friends, which quite broke
their spirits; and at last they died, cursing not the
Romans, but their own citizens, till they were all
destroyed, being in number twelve thousand. So Trajan
gathered that the city was empty of people that could
fight, and although there should a few of them be
therein, he supposed that they would be too timorous
to venture upon any opposition; so he reserved the
taking of the city to the general. Accordingly, he
sent messengers to Vespasian, and desired him to send
his son Titus to finish the victory he had gained.
Vespasian hereupon imagining there might be some pains
still necessary, sent his son with an army of five
hundred horsemen, and one thousand footmen. So he came
quickly to the city, and put his army in order, and
set Trajan over the left wing, while he had the right
himself, and led them to the siege: and when the
soldiers brought ladders to be laid against the wall
on every side, the Galileans opposed them from above
for a while; but soon afterward they left the walls.
Then did Titus’s men leap into the city, and seized
upon it presently; but when those that were in it were
gotten together, there was a fierce battle between
them; for the men of power fell upon the Romans in the
narrow streets, and the women threw whatsoever came
next to hand at them, and sustained a fight with them
for six hours’ time; but when the fighting men were
spent, the rest of the multitude had their throats
cut, partly in the open air, and partly in their own
houses, both young and old together. So there were no
males now remaining, besides infants, which, with the
women, were carried as slaves into captivity; so that
the number of the slain, both now in the city and at
the former fight, was fifteen thousand, and the
captives were two thousand one hundred and thirty.
This calamity befell the Galileans on the twenty-fifth
day of the month Desius [Sivan.] 32. Nor did the
Samaritans escape their share of misfortunes at this
time; for they assembled themselves together upon file
mountain called Gerizzim, which is with them a holy
mountain, and there they remained; which collection of
theirs, as well as the courageous minds they showed,
could not but threaten somewhat of war; nor were they
rendered wiser by the miseries that had come upon
their neighboring cities. They also, notwithstanding
the great success the Romans had, marched on in an
unreasonable manner, depending on their own weakness,
and were disposed for any tumult upon its first
appearance. Vespasian therefore thought it best to
prevent their motions, and to cut off the foundation
of their attempts. For although all Samaria had ever
garrisons settled among them, yet did the number of
those that were come to Mount Gerizzim, and their
conspiracy together, give ground for fear what they
would be at; he therefore sent I thither Cerealis, the
commander of the fifth legion, with six hundred
horsemen, and three thousand footmen, who did not
think it safe to go up to the mountain, and give them
battle, because many of the enemy were on the higher
part of the ground; so he encompassed all the lower
part of the mountain with his army, and watched them
all that day. Now it happened that the Samaritans, who
were now destitute of water, were inflamed with a
violent heat, (for it was summer time, and the
multitude had not provided themselves with
necessaries,) insomuch that some of them died that
very day with heat, while others of them preferred
slavery before such a death as that was, and fled to
the Romans; by whom Cerealis understood that those
which still staid there were very much broken by their
misfortunes. So he went up to the mountain, and having
placed his forces round about the enemy, he, in the
first place, exhorted them to take the security of his
right hand, and come to terms with him, and thereby
save themselves; and assured them, that if they would
lay
down their arms, he would secure them from any
harm; but when he could not prevail with them, he fell
upon them and slew them all, being in number eleven
thousand and six hundred. This was done on the
twenty-seventh day of the month Desius [Sivan]. And
these were the calamities that befell the Samaritans
at this time.
33. But as the people of Jotapata still held out
manfully, and bore uptinder their miseries beyond all
that could be hoped for, on the forty-seventh day [of
the siege] the banks cast up by the Romans were become
higher than the wall; on which day a certain deserter
went to Vespasian, and told him how few were left in
the city, and how weak they were, and that they had
been so worn out with perpetual watching, and as
perpetual fighting, that they could not now oppose any
force that came against them, and that they might he
taken by stratagem, if any one would attack them; for
that about the last watch of the night, when they
thought they might have some rest from the hardships
they were under, and when a morning sleep used to come
upon them, as they were thoroughly weary, he said the
watch used to fall asleep; accordingly his advice was,
that they should make their attack at that hour. But
Vespasian had a suspicion about this deserter, as
knowing how faithful the Jews were to one another, and
how much they despised any punishments that could be
inflicted on them; this last because one of the people
of Jotapata had undergone all sorts of torments, and
though they made him pass through a fiery trial of his
enemies in his examination, yet would he inform them
nothing of the affairs within the city, and as he was
crucified, smiled at them. However, the probability
there was in the relation itself did partly confirm
the truth of what the deserter told them, and they
thought he might probably speak truth. However,
Vespasian thought they should be no great sufferers if
the report was a sham; so he commanded them to keep
the man in custody, and prepared the army for taking
the city.
34. According to which resolution they marched
without noise, at the hour that had been told them, to
the wall; and it was Titus himself that first got upon
it, with one of his tribunes, Domitius Sabinus, and
had a few of the fifteenth legion along with him. So
they cut the throats of the watch, and entered the
city very quietly. After these came Cerealis the
tribune, and Placidus, and led on those that were
tinder them. Now when the citadel was taken, and the
enemy were in the very midst of the city, and when it
was already day, yet was not the taking of the city
known by those that held it; for a great many of them
were fast asleep, and a great mist, which then by
chance fell upon the city, hindered those that got up
from distinctly seeing the case they were in, till the
whole Roman army was gotten in, and they were raised
up only to find the miseries they were under; and as
they were slaying, they perceived the city was taken.
And for the Romans, they so well remembered what they
had suffered during the siege, that they spared none,
nor pitied any, but drove the people down the
precipice from the citadel, and slew them as they
drove them down; at which time the difficulties of the
place hindered those that were still able to fight
from defending themselves; for as they were distressed
in the narrow streets, and could not keep their feet
sure along the precipice, they were overpowered with
the crowd of those that came fighting them down from
the citadel. This provoked a great many, even of those
chosen men that were about Josephus, to kill
themselves with their own hands; for when they saw
that they could kill none of the Romans, they resolved
to prevent being killed by the Romans, and got
together in great numbers in the utmost parts of the
city, and killed themselves.
35. However, such of the watch as at the first
perceived they were taken, and ran away as fast as they
could, went up into one of the towers on the north
side of the city, and for a while defended themselves
there; but as they were encompassed with a multitude
of enemies, they tried to use their right hands when
it was too late, and at length they cheerfully offered
their necks to be cut off by those that stood over
them. And the Romans might have boasted that the
conclusion of that siege was without blood [on their
side] if there had not been a centurion, Antonius, who
was slain at the taking of the city. His death was
occasioned by the following treachery; for there was
one of those that were fled into the caverns, which
were a great number, who desired that this Antonius
would reach him his right hand for his security, and
would assure him that he would preserve him, and give
him his assistance in getting up out of the cavern;
accordingly, he incautiously reached him his right
hand, when the other man prevented him, and stabbed
him under his loins with a spear, and killed him
immediately.
36. And on this day it was that the Romans slew all
the multitude that appeared openly; but on the
following days they searched the
hiding-places, and fell upon those that were under
ground, and in the caverns, and went thus through
every age, excepting the infants and the women, and of
these there were gathered together as captives twelve
hundred; and as for those that were slain at the
taking of the city, and in the former fights, they
were numbered to be forty thousand. So Vespasian gave
order that the city should be entirely demolished, and
all the fortifications burnt down. And thus was
Jotapata taken, in the thirteenth year of the reign of
Nero, on the first day of the month Panemus [Tamuz].
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