|
Front Matter
Roman Eagles and Ensigns.
|
Preface
In
this story I have followed the narrative of Josephus, making many omissions but no other change of importance.
It did not fall within the scope of my work to estimate his veracity and trustworthiness; but I may here say
that a close acquaintance with his history will not incline the reader to put much confidence in his narrative
on any point where interest or vanity may have tempted him to depart from the truth. In one matter, which is of
such interest and importance that an account of it may be given here, he seems to have deliberately falsified
history. The ingenuity of a German critic, Jacob von Bernays, detected in the Chronicle of
Sulpicius Severus (a Christian writer, A.D. 350—420) a very slightly disguised quotation from one of the lost
books of the History of Tacitus. The passage may be thus translated.
"Titus is said to have called a council of war, and then put to it the question whether he ought to destroy so
grand a structure as the Temple. Some thought that a sacred building, more famous than any that stood upon the
earth, ought not to be destroyed. If it were preserved, it would be a proof of Roman moderation; if destroyed,
it would brand the Empire for ever with the stigma of cruelty. On the other hand there were some, and among
these Titus himself, who considered that the destruction of the Temple was an absolute necessity, if there was
to be a complete eradication of the Jewish and Christian religions. These superstitions, opposed as they were
to each other, had sprung from the same origin; the Christians had come forth from among the Jews; remove the
root and the stem would speedily perish."
In the interest, doubtless, of his Imperial patrons, the family of Vespasian,
Josephus represents the destruction of the Temple as having been accomplished against the will of Titus.
I have to express my obligations to Dean Milman's History of the Jews, and to the article, "Jerusalem,"
by Mr. Ferguson, in the Dictionary of the Bible.
Contents
Chap. | | Page |
I. | Of the Beginnings of the Jewish War | 7 |
II. | Of the Doings of Cestius | 13 |
III. | Of Josephus and the Besieging of Jotapata | 21 |
IV. | Of the Marvellous Escape of Josephus | 37 |
V. | Of the Troubles in Jerusalem | 43 |
VI. | Of the First Coming of the Romans | 52 |
VII. | The Beginning of the Siege | 60 |
VIII. | Of the Walls of Jerusalem | 70 |
IX. | The Siege | 74 |
X. | The Siege (continued) | 80 |
XI. | The Siege (continued) | 87 |
XII. | The Taking of the City | 98 |
XIII. | The End | 110 |
List of Illustrations
Roman Eagles and Ensigns | ii |
The tortoise. | 15 |
Horse soldiers. | 31 |
A hand-to-hand engagement. | 65 |
A council of war. | 85 |
Besiegers felling trees. | 91 |
Roman general addressing his troops. | 101 |
Spoils of the temple carried in triumph. | 121 |
|