THE WARS OF THE JEWS
OR
THE HISTORY OF THE DESTRUCTION OF JERUSALEM
Book VI: Chapter 1
CONTAINING THE INTERVAL OF ABOUT ONE MONTH.
FROM THE GREAT EXTREMITY TO WHICH
THE JEWS WERE REDUCED TO THE TAKING OF JERUSALEM BY
TITUS.
CHAPTER 1.
THAT THE MISERIES STILL GREW WORSE;
AND HOW THE ROMANS MADE AN ASSAULT UPON THE TOWER OF
ANTONIA.
1. THUS did the miseries of Jerusalem grow worse
and worse every day, and the seditious were still more
irritated by the calamities they were under, even
while the famine preyed upon themselves, after it had
preyed upon the people. And indeed the multitude of
carcasses that lay in heaps one upon another was a
horrible sight, and produced a pestilential stench,
which was a hinderance to those that would make
sallies out of the city, and fight the enemy: but as
those were to go in battle-array, who had been already
used to ten thousand murders, and must tread upon
those dead bodies as they marched along, so were not
they terrified, nor did they pity men as they marched
over them; nor did they deem this affront offered to
the deceased to be any ill omen to themselves; but as
they had their right hands already polluted with the
murders of their own countrymen, and in that condition
ran out to fight with foreigners, they seem to me to
have cast a reproach upon God himself, as if he were
too slow in punishing them; for the war was not now
gone on with as if they had any hope of victory; for
they gloried after a brutish manner in that despair of
deliverance they were already in. And now the Romans,
although they were greatly distressed in getting
together their materials, raised their banks in one
and twenty days, after they had cut down all the trees
that were in the country that adjoined to the city,
and that for ninety furlongs round about, as I have
already related. And truly the very view itself of the
country was a melancholy thing; for those places which
were before adorned with trees and pleasant gardens
were now become a desolate country every way, and its
trees were all cut down: nor could any foreigner that
had formerly seen Judea and the most beautiful suburbs
of the city, and now saw it as a desert, but lament
and mourn sadly at so great a change: for the war had
laid all the signs of beauty quite waste: nor if any
one that had known the place before, had come on a
sudden to it now, would he have known it again; but
though he were at the city itself, yet would he have
inquired for it notwithstanding.
2. And now the banks were finished, they afforded a
foundation for fear both to the Romans and to the
Jews; for the Jews expected that the city would be
taken, unless they could burn those banks, as did the
Romans expect that, if these were once burnt down,
they should never be able to take it; for there was a
mighty scarcity of materials, and the bodies of the
soldiers began to fail with such hard labors, as did
their souls faint with so many instances of ill
success; nay, the very calamities themselves that were
in the city proved a greater discouragement to the
Romans than those within the city; for they found the
fighting men of the Jews to be not at all mollified
among such their sore afflictions, while they had
themselves perpetually less and less hopes of success,
and their banks were forced to yield to the stratagems
of the enemy, their engines to the firmness of their
wall, and their closest fights to the boldness of
their attack; and, what was their greatest
discouragement of all, they found the Jews' courageous
souls to be superior to the multitude of the miseries
they were under, by their sedition, their famine, and
the war itself; insomuch that they were ready to
imagine that the violence of their attacks was
invincible, and that the alacrity they showed would
not be discouraged by their calamities; for what would
not those be able to bear if they should be fortunate,
who turned their very misfortunes to the improvement
of their valor! These considerations made the Romans
to keep a stronger guard about their banks than they
formerly had done.
3. But now John and his party took care for
securing themselves afterward, even in case this wall
should be thrown down, and fell to their work before
the battering rams were brought against them. Yet did
they not compass what they endeavored to do, but as
they were gone out with their torches, they came back
under great discouragement before they came near to
the banks; and the reasons were these: that, in the
first place, their conduct did not seem to be
unanimous, but they went out in distinct parties, and
at distinct intervals, and after a slow manner, and
timorously, and, to say all in a word, without a
Jewish courage; for they were now defective in what is
peculiar to our nation, that is, in boldness, in
violence of assault, and in running upon the enemy all
together, and in persevering in what they go about,
though they do not at first succeed in it; but they
now went out in a more languid manner than usual, and
at the same time found the Romans set in array, and
more courageous than ordinary, and that they guarded
their banks both with their bodies and their entire
armor, and this to such a degree on all sides, that
they left no room for the fire to get among them, and
that every one of their souls was in such good
courage, that they would sooner die than desert their
ranks; for besides their notion that all their hopes
were cut off, in case these their works were once
burnt, the soldiers were greatly ashamed that subtlety
should quite be too hard for courage, madness for
armor, multitude for skill, and Jews for Romans. The
Romans had now also another advantage, in that their
engines for sieges co-operated with them in throwing
darts and stones as far as the Jews, when they were
coming out of the city; whereby the man that fell
became an impediment to him that was next to him, as
did the danger of going farther make them less zealous
in their attempts; and for those that had run under
the darts, some of them were terrified by the good
order and closeness of the enemies' ranks before they
came to a close fight, and others were pricked with
their spears, and turned back again; at length they
reproached one another for their cowardice, and
retired without doing any thing. This attack was made
upon the first day of the month Panemus [Tamuz.] So
when the Jews were retreated, the Romans brought their
engines, although they had all the while stones thrown
at them from the tower of Antonia, and were assaulted
by fire and sword, and by all sorts of darts, which
necessity afforded the Jews to make use of; for
although these had great dependence on their own wall,
and a contempt of the Roman engines, yet did they
endeavor to hinder the Romans from bringing them. Now
these Romans struggled hard, on the contrary, to bring
them, as deeming that this zeal of the Jews was in
order to avoid any impression to be made on the tower
of Antonia, because its wall was but weak, and its
foundations rotten. However, that tower did not yield
to the blows given it from the engines; yet did the
Romans bear the impressions made by the enemies' darts
which were perpetually cast at them, and did not give
way to any of those dangers that came upon them from
above, and so they brought their engines to bear. But
then, as they were beneath the other, and were sadly
wounded by the stones thrown down upon them, some of
them threw their shields over their bodies, and partly
with their hands, and partly with their bodies, and
partly with crows, they undermined its foundations,
and with great pains they removed four of its stones.
Then night came upon both sides, and put an end to
this struggle for the present; however, that night the
wall was so shaken by the battering rams in that place
where John had used his stratagem before, and had
undermined their banks, that the ground then gave way,
and the wall fell down suddenly.
4. When this accident had unexpectedly happened,
the minds of both parties were variously affected; for
though one would expect that the Jews would be
discouraged, because this fall of their wall was
unexpected by them, and they had made no provision in
that case, yet did they pull up their courage, because
the tower of Antonia itself was still standing; as was
the unexpected joy of the Romans at this fall of the
wall soon quenched by the sight they had of another
wall, which John and his party had built within it.
However, the attack of this second wall appeared to be
easier than that of the former, because it seemed a
thing of greater facility to get up to it through the
parts of the former wall that were now thrown down.
This new wall appeared also to be much weaker than the
tower of Antonia, and accordingly the Romans imagined
that it had been erected so much on the sudden, that
they should soon overthrow it: yet did not any body
venture now to go up to this wall; for that such as
first ventured so to do must certainly be killed.
5. And now Titus, upon consideration that the
alacrity of soldiers in war is chiefly excited by
hopes and by good words, and that exhortations and
promises do frequently make men to forget the hazards
they run, nay, sometimes to despise death it
self, got
together the most courageous part of his army, and
tried what he could do with his men by these methods.
"O fellow soldiers," said he, "to make an exhortation
to men to do what hath no peril in it, is on that very
account inglorious to such to whom that exhortation is
made; and indeed so it is in him that makes the
exhortation, an argument of his own cowardice also. I
therefore think that such exhortations ought then only
to be made use of when affairs are in a dangerous
condition, and yet are worthy of being attempted by
every one themselves; accordingly, I am fully of the
same opinion with you, that it is a difficult task to
go up this wall; but that it is proper for those that
desire reputation for their valor to struggle with
difficulties in such cases will then appear, when I
have particularly shown that it is a brave thing to
die with glory, and that the courage here necessary
shall not go unrewarded in those that first begin the
attempt. And let my first argument to move you to it
be taken from what probably some would think
reasonable to dissuade you, I mean the constancy and
patience of these Jews, even under their ill
successes; for it is unbecoming you, who are Romans
and my soldiers, who have in peace been taught how to
make wars, and who have also been used to conquer in
those wars, to be inferior to Jews, either in action
of the hand, or in courage of the soul, and this
especially when you are at the conclusion of your
victory, and are assisted by God himself; for as to
our misfortunes, they have been owing to the madness
of the Jews, while their sufferings have been owing to
your valor, and to the assistance God hath afforded
you; for as to the seditions they have been in, and
the famine they are under, and the siege they now
endure, and the fall of their walls without our
engines, what can they all be but demonstrations of
God's anger against them, and of his assistance
afforded us? It will not therefore be proper for you,
either to show yourselves inferior to those to whom
you are really superior, or to betray that Divine
assistance which is afforded you. And, indeed, how can
it be esteemed otherwise than a base and unworthy
thing, that while the Jews, who need not be much
ashamed if they be deserted, because they have long
learned to be slaves to others, do yet despise death,
that they may be so no longer; and do make sallies
into the very midst of us frequently, no in hopes of
conquering us, but merely for a demonstration of their
courage; we, who have gotten possession of almost all
the world that belongs to either land or sea, to whom
it will be a great shame if we do not conquer them, do
not once undertake any attempt against our enemies
wherein there is much danger, but sit still idle, with
such brave arms as we have, and only wait till the
famine and fortune do our business themselves, and
this when we have it in our power, with some small
hazard, to gain all that we desire! For if we go up to
this tower of Antonia, we gain the city; for if there
should be any more occasion for fighting against those
within the city, which I do not suppose there will,
since we shall then be upon the top of the hill and be
upon our enemies before they can have taken breath,
these advantages promise us no less than a certain and
sudden victory. As for myself, I shall at present wave
any commendation of those who die in war, and omit to
speak of the immortality of those men who are slain in
the midst of their martial bravery; yet cannot I
forbear to imprecate upon those who are of a contrary
disposition, that they may die in time of peace, by
some distemper or other, since their souls are
condemned to the grave, together with their bodies.
For what man of virtue is there who does not know,
that those souls which are severed from their fleshly
bodies in battles by the sword are received by the
ether, that purest of elements, and joined to that
company which are placed among the stars; that they
become good demons, and propitious heroes, and show
themselves as such to their posterity afterwards?
while upon those souls that wear away in and with
their distempered bodies comes a subterranean night to
dissolve them to nothing, and a deep oblivion to take
away all the remembrance of them, and this
notwithstanding they be clean from all spots and
defilements of this world; so that, in this ease, the
soul at the same time comes to the utmost bounds of
its life, and of its body, and of its memorial also.
But since he hath determined that death is to come of
necessity upon all men, a sword is a better instrument
for that purpose than any disease whatsoever. Why is
it not then a very mean thing for us not to yield up
that to the public benefit which we must yield up to
fate? And this discourse have I made, upon the
supposition that those who at first attempt to go upon
this wall must needs be killed in the attempt, though
still men of true courage have a chance to escape even
in the most hazardous undertakings. For, in the first
place, that part of the former wall that is thrown
down is easily to be ascended; and for the new-built
wall, it is easily destroyed. Do you, therefore, many
of you, pull up your courage, and set about this work,
and do you mutually encourage and assist one another;
and this your bravery will soon break the hearts of
your enemies; and perhaps such a glorious undertaking
as yours is may be accomplished without bloodshed. For
although it be justly to be supposed that the Jews
will try to hinder you at your first beginning to go
up to them; yet when you have once concealed
yourselves from them, and driven them away by force,
they will not be able to sustain your efforts against
them any longer, though but a few of you prevent them,
and get over the wall. As for that person who first
mounts the wall, I should blush for shame if I did not
make him to be envied of others, by those rewards I
would bestow upon him. If such a one escape with his
life, he shall have the command of others that are now
but his equals; although it be true also that the
greatest rewards will accrue to such as die in the
attempt."
6. Upon this speech of Titus, the rest of the
multitude were aftrighted at so great a danger. But
there was one, whose name was Sabinus, a soldier that
served among the cohorts, and a Syrian by birth, who
appeared to be of very great fortitude, both in the
actions he had done, and the courage of his soul he
had shown; although any body would have thought,
before he came to his work, that he was of such a weak
constitution of body, that he was not fit to be a
soldier; for his color was black, his flesh was lean
and thin, and lay close together; but there was a
certain heroic soul that dwelt in this small body,
which body was indeed much too narrow for that
peculiar courage which was in him. Accordingly he was
the first that rose up, when he thus spake: "I readily
surrender up myself to thee, O Caesar; I first ascend
the wall, and I heartily wish that my fortune may
follow my courage and my resolution And if some ill
fortune grudge me the success of my undertaking, take
notice that my ill success will not be unexpected, but
that I choose death voluntarily for thy sake." When he
had said this, and had spread out his sheild over his
head with his left hand, and hill, with his right
hand, drawn his sword, he marched up to the wall, just
about the sixth hour of the day. There followed him
eleven others, and no more, that resolved to imitate
his bravery; but still this was the principal person
of them all, and went first, as excited by a divine
fury. Now those that guarded the wall shot at them
from thence, and cast innumerable darts upon them from
every side; they also rolled very large stones upon
them, which overthrew some of those eleven that were
with him. But as for Sabinus himself, he met the darts
that were cast at him and though he was overwhelmed
with them, yet did he not leave off the violence of
his attack before he had gotten up on the top of the
wall, and had put the enemy to flight. For as the Jews
were astonished at his great strength, and the bravery
of his soul, and as, withal, they imagined more of
them had got upon the wall than really had, they were
put to flight. And now one cannot but complain here of
fortune, as still envious at virtue, and always
hindering the performance of glorious achievements:
this was the case of the man before us, when he had
just obtained his purpose; for he then stumbled at a
certain large stone, and fell down upon it headlong,
with a very great noise. Upon which the Jews turned
back, and when they saw him to be alone, and fallen
down also, they threw darts at him from every side.
However. be got upon his knee, and covered himself
with his shield, and at the first defended himself
against them, and wounded many of those that came near
him; but he was soon forced to relax his right hand,
by the multitude of the wounds that had been given
him, till at length he was quite covered over with
darts before he gave up the ghost. He was one who
deserved a better fate, by reason of his bravery; but,
as might be expected, he fell under so vast an
attempt. As for the rest of his partners, the Jews
dashed three of them to pieces with stones, and slew
them as they were gotten up to the top of the wall;
the other eight being wounded, were pulled down, and
carried back to the camp. These things were done upon
the third day of the month Panemus [Tamuz].
7. Now two days afterward twelve of those men that
were on the forefront, and kept watch upon the banks,
got together, and called to them the standard-bearer
of the fifth legion, and two others of a troop of
horsemen, and one trumpeter; these went without noise,
about the ninth hour of the night, through the ruins,
to the tower of Antonia; and when they had cut the
throats of the first guards of the place, as they were
asleep, they got possession of the wall, and ordered
the trumpeter to sound his trumpet. Upon which the
rest of the guard got up on the sudden, and ran away,
before any body could see how many they were that were
gotten up; for, partly from the fear they were in, and
partly from the sound of the trumpet which they heard,
they imagined a great number of the enemy were gotten
up. But as soon as Caesar heard the signal, he ordered
the army to put on their armor immediately, and came
thither with his commanders, and first of all
ascended, as did the chosen men that were with him.
And as the Jews were flying away to the temple, they
fell into that mine which John had dug under the Roman
banks. Then did the seditious of both the bodies of
the Jewish army, as well that belonging to John as
that belonging to Simon, drive them away; and indeed
were no way wanting as to the highest degree of force
and alacrity; for they esteemed themselves entirely
ruined if once the Romans got into the temple, as did
the Romans look upon the same thing as the beginning
of their entire conquest. So a terrible battle was
fought at the entrance of the temple, while the Romans
were forcing their way, in order to get possession of
that temple, and the Jews were driving them back to
the tower of Antonia; in which battle the darts were
on both sides useless, as well as the spears, and both
sides drew their swords, and fought it out hand to
hand. Now during this struggle the positions of the
men were undistinguished on both sides, and they
fought at random, the men being intermixed one with
another, and confounded, by reason of the narrowness
of the place; while the noise that was made fell on
the ear after an indistinct manner, because it was so
very loud. Great slaughter was now made on both sides,
and the combatants trod upon the bodies and the armor
of those that were dead, and dashed them to pieces.
Accordingly, to which side soever the battle inclined,
those that had the advantage exhorted one another to
go on, as did those that were beaten make great
lamentation. But still there was no room for flight,
nor for pursuit, but disorderly revolutions and
retreats, while the armies were intermixed one with
another; but those that were in the first ranks were
under the necessity of killing or being killed,
without any way for escaping; for those on both sides
that came behind forced those before them to go on,
without leaving any space between the armies. At
length the Jews' violent zeal was too hard for the
Romans' skill, and the battle already inclined
entirely that way; for the fight had lasted from the
ninth hour of the night till the seventh hour of the
day, While the Jews came on in crowds, and had the
danger the temple was in for their motive; the Romans
having no more here than a part of their army; for
those legions, on which the soldiers on that side
depended, were not come up to them. So it was at
present thought sufficient by the Romans to take
possession of the tower of Antonia.
8. But there was one Julian, a centurion, that came
from Eithynia, a man he was of great reputation, whom
I had formerly seen in that war, and one of the
highest fame, both for his skill in war, his strength
of body, and the courage of his soul. This man, seeing
the Romans giving ground, and ill a sad condition,
(for he stood by Titus at the tower of Antonia,)
leaped out, and of himself alone put the Jews to
flight, when they were already conquerors, and made
them retire as far as the corner of the inner court of
the temple; from him the multitude fled away in
crowds, as supposing that neither his strength nor his
violent attacks could be those of a mere man.
Accordingly, he rushed through the midst of the Jews,
as they were dispersed all abroad, and killed those
that he caught. Nor, indeed, was there any sight that
appeared more wonderful in the eyes of Caesar, or more
terrible to others, than this. However, he was himself
pursued by fate, which it all not possible that he,
who was but a mortal man, should escape; for as he had
shoes all full of thick and sharp nails as had every
one of the other soldiers, so when he ran on the
pavement of the temple, he slipped, and fell down upon
his back with a very great noise, which was made by
his armor. This made those that were running away to
turn back; whereupon those Romans that were in the
tower of Antonia set up a great shout, as they were in
fear for the man. But the Jews got about him in
crowds, and struck at him with their spears and with
their swords on all sides. Now he received a great
many of the strokes of these iron weapons upon his
shield, and often attempted to get up again, but was
thrown down by those that struck at him; yet did he,
as he lay along, stab many of them with his sword. Nor
was he soon killed, as being covered with his helmet
and his breastplate in all those parts of his body
where he might be mortally wounded; he also pulled his
neck close to his body, till all his other limbs were
shattered, and nobody durst come to defend him, and
then he yielded to his fate. Now Caesar was deeply
affected on account of this man of so great fortitude,
and especially as he was killed in the sight of so
many people; he was desirous himself to come to his
assistance, but the place would not give him leave,
while such as could have done it were too much
terrified to attempt it. Thus when Julian had
struggled with death a great while, and had let but
few of those that had given him his mortal wound go
off unhurt, he had at last his throat cut, though not
without some difficulty, and left behind him a very
great fame, not only among the Romans, and with Caesar
himself, but among his enemies also; then did the Jews
catch up his dead body, and put the Romans to flight
again, and shut them up in the tower of Antonia. Now
those that most signalized themselves, and fought most
zealously in this battle of the Jewish side, were one
Alexas and Gyphtheus, of John's party, and of Simon's
party were Malachias, and Judas the son of Merto, and
James the son of Sosas, the commander of the Idumeans;
and of the zealots, two brethren, Simon and Judas, the
sons of Jairus.
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