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Affichage des articles dont le libellé est Romans. Afficher tous les articles

Horrors of 2nd Temple and Jerusalem Destruction in 70 CE

Nadene Goldfoot                                                                       
The rebuilding of 2nd Temple in Jerusalem in 349 BCE 


2,000 years ago there were 8 million Jews throughout the world compared to the 14 million of today. Inside the Roman Empire, Jews made up 6-9% of the population.  Today we make up 0.02% of the world population.  The eastern half of the Roman Empire made up 20% of the the people.  Josephus wrote, "Men of Jewish blood in great numbers are diffused among the native populations all over the world, especially in SYRIA, where the 2 nations are neighbors."  It was in 349 BCE that the 2nd Temple was rebuilt being the 1st Temple had been destroyed.  It stood for 420 years, destroyed by the Romans soldiers along with thousands and thousands of Jewish lives.
                                                                   
Destruction of 2nd Temple and Jerusalem in September 70 CE
Like Nazis destroying Warsaw in WWII, the Romans were attacking Jerusalem in 70 CE.  First, the Romans built a high earthen barricade around Jerusalem to keep Jews inside and unable to escape.  The Romans practiced crucifixion on all their enemies, so crucified Jews they found.  They placed crosses atop the hill to terrorize those watching from inside the city.  500 were crucified in one day.  The Romans' siege of the city brought about starvation in Jerusalem.  In this terrible siege of Jerusalem according to Josephus, 1,100,000 Jews were slain.  He often exaggerated numbers, but this appears to be the correct number during this Passover. .  At this time, Jerusalem usually had a population of about 120,000, BUT at the time of this event, the city and its surrounding area could accommodate 2,500,000, the number Josephus reported to have been trapped by the Roman siege during that year's Passover pilgrimage.  Tacitus, a true Roman historian, reported 600,000 slain.

An additional 114,000 Jews were taken captive and out of them, 17,000 were slaughtered in bloody shows as the Romans brought them to Rome by way of Syria.
                                                                             
Josephus Flavius (Yoseph ben Mattityahu ha-Cohen (38-100 CE) Palestinian Jew of a priestly family.
In 64 CE he went to Rome on a semi-public mission.  Jews had revolted and had temporarily gained their independence in 66, and Josephus was regarded as an expert in political affairs and was sent as a representative of the Revolutionary Government to Galilee where he assumed the supreme military command.  Romans attacked Galilee in 67.  He was head of resistance then.  He went over to the Romans in 70, calling himself Flavius.  In the end, he lived in Rome.  
Josephus was a Jewish general who surrendered to the Romans and collaborated with them by being the historian for the Romans.  One must remember that his audience were the Romans of the day.  He later recorded the times vividly in his book, "The Jewish War."  He wrote, "In the city, famine raged.  It's victims dropped dead in countless numbers, and the horrors were unspeakable."

Titus's Roman legions used flaming torches of wood to set fire to the Temple and other buildings in the final battle. Wrote Josephus, "Through the roar of the flames as the Romans swept relentlessly on could be heard the groans of the falling...the entire city seemed to be on fire.  The Temple Hill, enveloped in flames from top to bottom, appeared to be boiling up from its very roots."

The Romans "were so avaricious that they pushed on, climbing over the piles of corpses;  for many valuable were found in the passages and all scruples were silenced by the prospect of gain."  The Romans took so much gold from the Jews that its price fell by half in Syria.

Romans sent thousands of Jewish captives to work on projects in Egypt.  Titus had thousands of Jewish captives killed in gladiatorial contests and staged fights between them and wild beasts to celebrate his victory and, once, his brother's birthday; and Vespasian, the Roman Emperor, had Jews who couldn't swim shackled with their hands behind them and thrown into the deepest parts of the Dead Sea to test the theory that no one could sink in the heavily salted water.
                                                                           
Masada where Jews held out for 3 years against Roman soldiers
THREE YEARS after destroying Jerusalem, the Romans had to put down the final Jewish revolt of the war by capturing Masada, the high mountain holding King Herod's palace where Jews had held out and finally committed suicide as a group rather than suffer in being taken alive.  They knew the cruelty of the Romans!
                                                               
Bar Kokhba d: 135 CE. 
By 132 CE, a Jewish Aluf (General), Bar Kokhba (Ben Kosiba Simeon, nephew of Rabbi Eleazar of Modiin and of Davidic descent, thought by some to be the Messiah,   took Jerusalem back and held out for 3 years before being killed by the Romans.  By 135 CE, Romans were so angry that they changed the name of the city and the land to Palaestina (Palestine).  The Roman counterattack against the Jews was the army of 35,000 under Hadrian and the commander, Julius Severus.  The Romans took their 50 fortresses and 985 villages, and of 580,000 Jewish casualties besides those who died of hunger and disease.  All this caused Judea to fall into desolation.  The population was  annihilated, and Jerusalem was turned into a heathen city, barred to Jews!  Those Jews who did survive had to find a way out of the city without being seen as only death awaited them from the Romans.
                                                                           
Note that the fall of the 2nd Temple was so terrible for the Jewish people that we remember this date every year since with a fast during Tisha B'Av.  This year the remembrance starts the evening of Saturday, August 13th and lasts until Sunday, August 14th.  On the Hebrew calendar this is the 9th of Av.  The fast is a 24 hour fast, sundown to sundown.  It was a most terrible experience for the people.  No other people  has suffered a devastation comparable in the ancient world.  "No destruction ever wrought by G-d or man approached the wholesale carnage of this war," said Josephus.
                                                                     
Arch of Titus seen in Rome even today
Titus returned to Rome leading a procession of Jewish slaves.  Rome then had a Jewish population of 50,000.  The city held 11 synagogues.

So with so many of us slaughtered back in 70 CE, how did we survive?  For several hundred years before, more Jews had been living outside Israel than inside.  By this year, more Jews were living in Alexandria, Egypt than in the capital of Jerusalem!  Jews were still living in Babylonia. 250,000 were living there.   This is where the famous Babylonian Talmud was written that is still referred to today. 1 million Jews were living in Babylonia at this time.  Only 120,000 Jews  had been living in Jerusalem.

  By 1000 CE, Jews had moved into France and the Rhineland.  In fact, Jews were in today's France before 70 CE.  Organized communities existed there made up of Jews in the period of the Roman Empire.  Their position deteriorated with the triumph of Christianity.  Church Councils took steps to enforce the conventional anti-Jewish codes.  Jews lived in Cologne, Germany by 321 CE because the Emperor Constantine had issued regulations then which indicate the existence of an organized Jewish community with rabbis and elders there.  They probably had settled in other places on the Rhineland at the time.  We know a big community of Jews lived in Worms, Germany early on.
Edited 9:37pm Sunday. 
Resource:  THE JEWISH CONNECTION, book by M. Hirsh Goldberg, 1977.pp34-38.
http://www.chabad.org/library/article_cdo/aid/913023/jewish/The-Second-Temple.htm
http://www.chabad.org/library/article_cdo/aid/671903/jewish/When-is-the-Ninth-of-Av-in-2016-and-2017.htm
The New Standard Jewish Encyclopedia-Josephus
http://jewishfactsfromportland.blogspot.com/2016/02/roman-destruction-of-2nd-temple-and.html
http://goldfoot_genealogy.blogspot.com/2015/07/after-2nd-temple-was-destroyed-in-70-ce.html

Syria-Palaestina, How It Got the Name of Palestine

Nadene Goldfoot
                                                                         
Herodotus, b: 484 BCE in
 
HalicarnassusCaria (modern-day BodrumTurkey
When people talked about "Palestine,"  what were they talking about?

From the time of Herodotus, Greeks had been calling the Jewish Homeland "Syria-Palaestina" or as we called it, Palestine from the Philistines, enemies of the Jewish people such as King Saul and King David.  "The first clear use of the term Palestine to refer to the entire area between Phoenicia and Egypt was in 5th century BC E Ancient Greecewhen Herodotus wrote of a "district of Syria, called Palaistinê" in The Histories, which included the Judean mountains and the Jordan Rift Valley In the treatise Meteorology . 
                                                                       
The Philistines had been a thorn in the side of the family of Abraham ever since the first period.  They came in waves.   They believed in multiple gods, and Dagon, seen in the form of statue, was the leading one. Others were Astarte and Baal.  The Canaanites of the land were using their gods as well.   Canaanite religion was polytheistic, and in some cases monolatristic. Dagon was also their god.  "
  • Dagon, god of crop fertility and grain, father of Ba'al Hadad

1. Pre-patriarchal period and settled south of Beersheba in Gerar where they conflicted with Abraham and Isaac.   Could have been slightly different from the following Philistines that entered later.                                                              
Rameses II 
2. Second period:  They came from Crete (Greek island, probably the biblical Caphtor) after being repulsed from Egypt by Rameses II in 1194 BCE.  They seized the southern coastal area of Palestine where they founded 5 principalities of 1. Gaza, 2. Ascalon (Ashkelon) , 3, Ashdod, 4. Ekron, 5. Gath of which Achish was king, friend of David.  By nature, they were a fighting people.  They dominated parts of Judah in the period of the Judges.  King Saul at first won battles but was ultimately defeated.  King David ended their era of domination and overran Philistia. (Read Samuel I.)

Note: It was in the ancient Egyptian city of Raameses in the Nile Delta where Jacob and his family settled, told in Gen. 47:11, 27.  Their descendants were compelled to build storehouses for the Egyptian king.  Raameses was the point of departure for the Exodus.
                                                                         
Moses and Ten Commandments (5 things to do and 5 things not to do.)
 1-5: one G-d, no other G-ds, G-d name sacred, Shabbat-day of rest; honor parents
6-10: not to murder, commit adultery, steal, bear false witness,  nor covet anything.
Imagine what people were like before this list of 10 rules to follow.   
Note: Moses led the Exodus from Egypt at age 80 for 40 years, about from 1311 BCE to 1271 BCE and so entered Canaan in 1271 BCE, superceding the 2nd wave of Philistines by some 77 years by my math.  Philistines were not native Canaanites, but had been a Mediterranean people, thought to have originated from Asia Minor and Greek localities.

3. Third period: Persian and Greek Periods; foreign settlers from the Mediterranean islands, overran the Philistine districts.
                                                                                 
Herod, selected by the Romans to be King of Judea
4. Fourth Roman Period from 63 BCE. Roman invaded and took Syria.  " Herod the Great, Antipater's son, was designated "King of the Jews" by the Roman Senate in 40 BCE: "  So Roman soldiers were in the city of Jerusalem and thereabouts.  Judea had been overcome by Rome for a good 130 years before it fell to them in 70 CE.  That's at least 5 generations of Jews living under oppression.  They could only talk about their own state of Judea in their great great grandfather's days.  It would be like Jews in 1950 talking about their great great grandparents of 1820.  Note how time had changed between just 130 years!  From covered wagons to automobiles and planes for us in this time change, but for our biblical ancestors, not much could have changed except their thinking.

From 6 CE, Rome had become the administrators of Judea, Samaria and Idumea.  .

Judah's " revenue was of little importance to the Roman treasury, but it controlled the land and coastal sea routes to the bread basket Egypt and was a border province against the Parthian Empire because of the Jewish connections to Babylonia (since the Babylonian exile). The capital was at Caesarea (Maritima), not Jerusalem."
                                                                       
Roman Emperor Hadrian (117-138 CE) gave the name officially to the former land of Judah in 135 CE after fighting General Bar Kokhba for 3 years who had re-taken Jerusalem.  He did this out of anger to get even with the Jews.  He also renamed Jerusalem as Aelia Capitolina. This emperor decided to Hellenize the land and had outlawed circumcision amongst other things,  which brought on the rebellion of the Jewish General (Aluf) Bar Kokhba and the war from 132-135.  After winning against the Jews, he received the title of Imperator.  Judea was made a consular province called SYRIA-PALAESTINA.  .  The ruins of Jerusalem were re-built into a pagan city and a statue of Hadrian was erected on the site of THE HOLY OF HOLIES , the inner sanctum which was the most sacred place in the temple, meant only for Aaron and following Cohen  priests.
                                                                       
1920 Palestine
A state of Palestine?  Never.  At the time of the end of World War I in 1917, the Ottoman Empire, who fought against the allies with the Germans, were the losers, and thus lost all their land to the allies.  This was a WORLD-WIDE WAR, and the allies had already decided to give this land to the Jews who had been in meetings with them about it.  Most of the land had no value to anyone.  It was hot there, and either swampy, full of weeds, or a dry desert.  Not many people lived there.  There were Jews whose ancestors had never left after the destruction of Jerusalem in 70 CE.  Then there were more recent Jews who had come mainly from Russia in the 1880s and on, who were building up the land and creating Tel Aviv.   There were Bedouins riding camels and horses, the Princes of the desert, who were mainly raiders of others, and only a few bedraggled landowners who had had a hard existence with the Ottoman Empire representatives who picked up tax money from them.
                                                             
Mehmed VI, last Sultan of Ottoman Empire
from 1918 to 1922
Who were Palestinians?  From the end of WWI to May 14, 1948 when Israel was announced as being born, both Jews and Arabs were Palestinians.  Jews had lost Judea and Arabs had lost nothing but the Ottoman Empire's holdings, and they were only subjects of the Ottoman Empire.  It was the Turks who were working for the Empire and had been for the past 400 years.  .

Resource: The New Standard Jewish Encyclopedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philistines (religion).
 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Judea_(Roman_province)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancient_Canaanite_religion#Pantheon
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mehmed_VI
Update: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_the_name_%22Palestine%22#cite_note-FOOTNOTEJacobson1999-9
Read:  THE Settlers by MEYER LEVIN,  an epic novel following a family's return to the Jewish homeland-once Palestine, now Israel, always Eretz Yisroel.  Set in Palestine at the turn of the century to the Balfour Declaration, covers 1/4 of a century.  Turkish overlords, Jewish pioneers, Arabs.

Egypt's Self-Hating Jewish Family; Tiberius Julius Alexander; Who Razed Jerusalem

Nadene Goldfoot                                                        


Antiochus
Immediately upon assuming power, he decided to pursue 
the conquest of Egypt,
 which no other Seleucid king had been able to accomplish.
 In setting the scene, Antiochus was a Greek king.  In the 1st century CE, the Jewish population was large, and many gentiles attended Jewish worship.  At the time of the revolt against Rome from 66 to 70, conditions deteriorated, and for a time, Jewish observances were suppressed.  
                                                                              
One of the Greek Kings was another Antiochus who had transferred 
2,000 Jewish families from Babylon to Lydia and Phrygia. 
Image result for lydia babylon egypt
 He captured Jerusalem in 198 BCE and treated the Jews with understanding.  Along came another Antiochus IV Epiphanes who reigned from 175 to 163 BCE and he occupied Jerusalem, but plundered the Temple treasure and hellenized Judea by force in order to convert it into reliable frontier-province. This started an uprising which he suppressed with great cruelty; thousands of Jews were killed and many were sold into slavery.   He brought in Genitle settlers into Jerusalem and turned Acra into a Hellenizing stronghold to dominate the city.  Then he began to attack Judaism and forgade curcumcision and Sabbath rest.  He desecrated the Temple altar and set up pagan altars in the surrounding towns.  He compelled the Jews to participate in pagan ceremonies.  His excesses caused the Hasmonean uprising that we remember today as Chanukah.  The Jewish homeland had to deal with the generations of Antiochus  down to Antiochus IX Cyzicenus who reigned from 125 to 94 who fought the Jewish army from Samaria in 107.  This was the state of the remains of Israel when Egypt's Jews were becoming immersed into another culture.  
                                     
Sacking of Jerusalem 70 CE by Romans 

Our Jewish Temple, built first by King Solomon,  (961-920 BCE), was being razed by fire in 70 CE by a Roman Jew, of all people.  Tiberius Julius Alexander owed his allegiance only to the Roman Empire.  In studying Bernie Sanders of today, I see similarities in that Bernie has very little good things to say about our present Israel. He fell into Noam Chomsky's philosophy and political feelings about Israel and who was also another self-hating Jew.  

Alexander served Rome from before the year 46 CE to 70 CE when Jerusalem was destroyed by the invading Romans who had been taking over Jerusalem as occupiers for over 100 years.  This very assimilated Jew was the ruling Praetorian prefect of the Romans.  He had served in the Roman-Parthian War of 58 to 63, the Battle of Delta, Alexandria of about 68, and then the Siege of Jerusalem in 70.  
                                                                                
Vitellius- Roman emperor for 8 months in 69.  "Once he realized his support was wavering, Vitellius prepared to abdicate in favor of Vespasian but was executed in Rome by Vespasian's soldiers on 22 December 69.  They had had 4 emperors during his period of service.  

Alexander served as the equestrian governor and general in the Roman Empire.  He was born into a wealthy Jewish family of Alexandria, Egypt.  He had either neglected or completely abandoned his Jewish faith as he rose to become procurator of Judea in about 46 to 48 CE. while under Claudius.  He became Prefect of Egypt from 66 to 69 when he had his legions fight against the Alexandrian Jews in a brutal response to ethnic violence.Nero had appointed him in May 66.  When he took the office, outbreak of the 1st Jewish-Roman War happened in Judea which spilled over into Alexandria.  The Greeks took prisoners and the violence had escalated which lead to the Jewish side threatening to burn the Greeks there to death.  Alexander sent mediators to calm the Jews and told them he could have used the Roman legions if violence continued.  Josephus, famous Jewish-Roman historian,  has described the outcome in his writings.  Alexander did bring in 2 Roman legions who brought 2,000 soldiers from Libya and let them kill the Jews and plunder their property and burn down their houses.  The Jews stood shoulder to shoulder with their most heavily armed men in the front and held their ground, but when the line gave, they were completely demolished.  . The Romans slaughtered the Jews, feeling nothing even for the infants or aged.  All were slaughtered.  50,000 were killed.  Finally Alexander gave the order to stop.   

  He was the instrumental in Emperor Vespasian's rise to power.  Then in 70, he fought in the Siege of Jerusalem as Titus' 2nd in command.  Who would think a Jew would help bring down Jerusalem!!
                                                                       
Alexander's son was Livius Julius Alexander Jr. " Tiberius Julius Alexander was born as the son of a rich Jew from Alexandria, who was also called Tiberius Julius Alexander.Father Alexander served as chief customs officer and had offered financial help to the mother of the emperor Claudius;  Antonia. His brother was the philosopher Philo (c.15-c.50), and his younger son was Marcus, the husband of  princess Berenice, the daughter of the Jewish king Herod Agrippa. In other words, the younger Tiberius Julius Alexander belonged to one of the most influential families in the Roman East, a family that stood in three cultural traditions: Jewish, Greek, and Roman. They had the status of Roman knights." 

Tiberius Alexander was born in about the year 14 during the reign of Emperor Tiberius. His father was also named Alexander, an Alexandrian Jew who held the office of Alabarch, which could have been a senior customs official.  His father was a Roman citizen which was a rare privilege among the Jews of Alexandria-or anywhere then for that matter.  This was passed on to his sons.  

His father also had business connections with Agrippa, grandson of Herod the Great, and with Antonia, mother of the emperor Claudius. 

 Another family member that gained importance was his uncle, the philosopher, Philo (20 BCE-after 40 CE).  He made a visit to Eretz Yisrael (it wasn't called Palestine yet till after 135 CE).  

He had participated in the deputation of Alexandrian Jews to Caligula during the anti-Jewish outbreaks in 40.  His family was one of the wealthiest in Egypt.  He had a Hellenistic education and his writings showed his familiarity with Greek literature, philosophy, etc.  He spoke Greek well from his acquaintance with their philosophers, especially PLATO. 
Image result for lydia babylon egypt
 He had just a touch of Jewish education and is doubtful if he could read Hebrew.  His knowledge of the Bible seems to come from the Septuagint and from Hellenistic commentaries current among Alexandrian Jewry.  These commentaries were allegorical and he adopted this approach in his own writing.  He wrote much including metaphysics, ethics, and Bible commentary.  He also wrote a historical work of which some things still survive.  He wrote about the persecution by and retribution of Flaccus, governor of Egypt during the anti-Jewish riots, and in a vivid description of the deputation to Caligula.  

Philo taught that God created the world from external matter with much influence.  The logos mediates between G-d and the world.  The human soul comes from the Divine Source, capable of attaining a conception of the nature of Divinity by self-immersion by mystic mediation or spirit of prophecy.  He thought that Judaism holds the instrument enabling man to attain moral and philosophical perfection and the Torah opens the way to union with the Divine.  Philo felt that Jewish law was the purest  revelation of Divinity.  He fused Greek and Jewish elements into one system.  His teaching affected not Jewish thought but the Church Fathers and in Neoplatonism.   

This is what can happen in any age when our own people become ill educated and are enveloped in another culture who wants to take over Jewish land, ideas and properly,  ending with a destruction of our people.  Beware. 

Resource:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tiberius_Julius_Alexander
 http://www.livius.org/articles/person/julius-alexander-jr/
www.myjewishlearning.com409 × 600Search by image  Antiochus 
http://jewishbubba.blogspot.com/2013/11/when-greeks-owned-syria-and-attacked.html
http://www.jpost.com/Blogs/Past-Imperfect-Confronting-Jewish-History/Tiberius-Julius-Alexander-The-Jew-Who-Destroyed-Jerusalem-436073