| The Wars Of The Jews
 Or
 The History Of The Destruction Of Jerusalem
 
 Book V
 
 CONTAINING THE INTERVAL OF NEAR SIX MONTHS.
 FROM THE COMING OF TITUS TO BESIEGE JERUSALEM, TO THE GREAT EXTREMITY TO 
		WHICH THE JEWS WERE REDUCED.
 
 
 CHAPTER 1.
 
 CONCERNING THE SEDITIONS AT JERUSALEM AND WHAT TERRIBLE MISERIES 
		AFFLICTED THE CITY BY THEIR MEANS.
 
 1. WHEN therefore Titus had marched over that desert which lies between 
		Egypt and Syria, in the manner forementioned, he came to Cesarea, having 
		resolved to set his forces in order at that place, before he began the 
		war. Nay, indeed, while he was assisting his father at Alexandria, in 
		settling that government which had been newly conferred upon them by 
		God, it so happened that the sedition at Jerusalem was revived, and 
		parted into three factions, and that one faction fought against the 
		other; which partition in such evil cases may be said to be a good 
		thing, and the effect of Divine justice. Now as to the attack the 
		zealots made upon the people, and which I esteem the beginning of the 
		city's destruction, it hath been already explained after an accurate 
		manner; as also whence it arose, and to how great a mischief it was 
		increased. But for the present sedition, one should not mistake if he 
		called it a sedition begotten by another sedition, and to be like a wild 
		beast grown mad, which, for want of food from abroad, fell now upon 
		eating its own flesh.
 
 2. For Eleazar, the son of Simon, who made the first separation of the 
		zealots from the people, and made them retire into the temple, appeared 
		very angry at John's insolent attempts, which he made everyday upon the 
		people; for this man never left off murdering; but the truth was, that 
		he could not bear to submit to a tyrant who set up after him. So he 
		being desirous of gaining the entire power and dominion to himself, 
		revolted from John, and took to his assistance Judas the son of Chelcias, 
		and Simon the son of Ezron, who were among the men of greatest power. 
		There was also with him Hezekiah, the son of Chobar, a person of 
		eminence. Each of these were followed by a great many of the zealots; 
		these seized upon the inner court of the temple (1) and laid their arms 
		upon the holy gates, and over the holy fronts of that court. And because 
		they had plenty of provisions, they were of good courage, for there was 
		a great abundance of what was consecrated to sacred uses, and they 
		scrupled not the making use of them; yet were they afraid, on account of 
		their small number; and when they had laid up their arms there, they did 
		not stir from the place they were in. Now as to John, what advantage he 
		had above Eleazar in the multitude of his followers, the like 
		disadvantage he had in the situation he was in, since he had his enemies 
		over his head; and as he could not make any assault upon them without 
		some terror, so was his anger too great to let them be at rest; nay, 
		although he suffered more mischief from Eleazar and his party than he 
		could inflict upon them, yet would he not leave off assaulting them, 
		insomuch that there were continual sallies made one against another, as 
		well as darts thrown at one another, and the temple was defiled every 
		where with murders.
 
 3. But now the tyrant Simon, the son of Gioras, whom the people had 
		invited in, out of the hopes they had of his assistance in the great 
		distresses they were in, having in his power the upper city, and a great 
		part of the lower, did now make more vehement assaults upon John and his 
		party, because they were fought against from above also; yet was he 
		beneath their situation when he attacked them, as they were beneath the 
		attacks of the others above them. Whereby it came to pass that John did 
		both receive and inflict great damage, and that easily, as he was fought 
		against on both sides; and the same advantage that Eleazar and his party 
		had over him, since he was beneath them, the same advantage had he, by 
		his higher situation, over Simon. On which account he easily repelled 
		the attacks that were made from beneath, by the weapons thrown from 
		their hands only; but was obliged to repel those that threw their darts 
		from the temple above him, by his engines of war; for he had such 
		engines as threw darts, and javelins, and stones, and that in no small 
		number, by which he did not only defend himself from such as fought 
		against him, but slew moreover many of the priests, as they were about 
		their sacred ministrations. For notwithstanding these men were mad with 
		all sorts of impiety, yet did they still admit those that desired to 
		offer their sacrifices, although they took care to search the people of 
		their own country beforehand, and both suspected and watched them; while 
		they were not so much afraid of strangers, who, although they had gotten 
		leave of them, how cruel soever they were, to come into that court, were 
		yet often destroyed by this sedition; for those darts that were thrown 
		by the engines came with that force, that they went over all the 
		buildings, and reached as far as the altar, and the temple itself, and 
		fell upon the priests, and those (2) that were about the sacred offices; 
		insomuch that many persons who came thither with great zeal from the 
		ends of the earth, to offer sacrifices at this celebrated place, which 
		was esteemed holy by all mankind, fell down before their own sacrifices 
		themselves, and sprinkled that altar which was venerable among all men, 
		both Greeks and Barbarians, with their own blood; till the dead bodies 
		of strangers were mingled together with those of their own country, and 
		those of profane persons with those of the priests, and the blood of all 
		sorts of dead carcasses stood in lakes in the holy courts themselves. 
		And now, "O must wretched city, what misery so great as this didst thou 
		suffer from the Romans, when they came to purify thee from thy intestine 
		hatred! 'For thou couldst be no longer a place fit for God, nor couldst 
		thou long continue in being, after thou hadst been a sepulcher for the 
		bodies of thy own people, and hadst made the holy house itself a 
		burying-place in this civil war of thine. Yet mayst thou again grow 
		better, if perchance thou wilt hereafter appease the anger of that God 
		who is the author of thy destruction." But I must restrain myself from 
		these passions by the rules of history, since this is not a proper time 
		for domestical lamentations, but for historical narrations; I therefore 
		return to the operations that follow in this sedition. (3)
 
 4. And now there were three treacherous factions in the city, the one 
		parted from the other. Eleazar and his party, that kept the sacred 
		first-fruits, came against John in their cups. Those that were with John 
		plundered the populace, and went out with zeal against Simon. This Simon 
		had his supply of provisions from the city, in opposition to the 
		seditious. When, therefore, John was assaulted on both sides, he made 
		his men turn about, throwing his darts upon those citizens that came up 
		against him, from the cloisters he had in his possession, while he 
		opposed those that attacked him from the temple by his engines of war. 
		And if at any time he was freed from those that were above him, which 
		happened frequently, from their being drunk and tired, he sallied out 
		with a great number upon Simon and his party; and this he did always in 
		such parts of the city as he could come at, till he set on fire those 
		houses that were full of corn, and of all other provisions. (4) The same 
		thing was done by Simon, when, upon the other's retreat, he attacked the 
		city also; as if they had, on purpose, done it to serve the Romans, by 
		destroying what the city had laid up against the siege, and by thus 
		cutting off the nerves of their own power. Accordingly, it so came to 
		pass, that all the places that were about the temple were burnt down, 
		and were become an intermediate desert space, ready for fighting on both 
		sides of it; and that almost all that corn was burnt, which would have 
		been sufficient for a siege of many years. So they were taken by the 
		means of the famine, which it was impossible they should have been, 
		unless they had thus prepared the way for it by this procedure.
 
 5. And now, as the city was engaged in a war on all sides, from these 
		treacherous crowds of wicked men, the people of the city, between them, 
		were like a great body torn in pieces. The aged men and the women were 
		in such distress by their internal calamities, that they wished for the 
		Romans, and earnestly hoped for an external war, in order to their 
		delivery from their domestical miseries. The citizens themselves were 
		under a terrible consternation and fear; nor had they any opportunity of 
		taking counsel, and of changing their conduct; nor were there any hopes 
		of coming to an agreement with their enemies; nor could such as had a 
		mind flee away; for guards were set at all places, and the heads of the 
		robbers, although they were seditious one against another in other 
		respects, yet did they agree in killing those that were for peace with 
		the Romans, or were suspected of an inclination to desert them, as their 
		common enemies. They agreed in nothing but this, to kill those that were 
		innocent. The noise also of those that were fighting was incessant, both 
		by day and by night; but the lamentations of those that mourned exceeded 
		the other; nor was there ever any occasion for them to leave off their 
		lamentations, because their calamities came perpetually one upon 
		another, although the deep consternation they were in prevented their 
		outward wailing; but being constrained by their fear to conceal their 
		inward passions, they were inwardly tormented, without daring to open 
		their lips in groans. :Nor was any regard paid to those that were still 
		alive, by their relations; nor was there any care taken of burial for 
		those that were dead; the occasion of both which was this, that every 
		one despaired of himself; for those that were not among the seditious 
		had no great desires of any thing, as expecting for certain that they 
		should very soon be destroyed; but for the seditious themselves, they 
		fought against each other, while they trod upon the dead bodies as they 
		lay heaped one upon another, and taking up a mad rage from those dead 
		bodies that were under their feet, became the fiercer thereupon. They, 
		moreover, were still inventing somewhat or other that was pernicious 
		against themselves; and when they had resolved upon any thing, they 
		executed it without mercy, and omitted no method of torment or of 
		barbarity. Nay, John abused the sacred materials, (5) and employed them 
		in the construction of his engines of war; for the people and the 
		priests had formerly determined to support the temple, and raise the 
		holy house twenty cubits higher; for king Agrippa had at a very great 
		expense, and with very great pains, brought thither such materials as 
		were proper for that purpose, being pieces of timber very well worth 
		seeing, both for their straightness and their largeness; but the war 
		coming on, and interrupting the work, John had them cut, and prepared 
		for the building him towers, he finding them long enough to oppose from 
		them those his adversaries that thought him from the temple that was 
		above him. He also had them brought and erected behind the inner court 
		over against the west end of the cloisters, where alone he could erect 
		them ; whereas the other sides of that court had so many steps as would 
		not let them come nigh enough the cloisters.
 
 6. Thus did John hope to be too hard for his enemies by these engines 
		constructed by his impiety; but God himself demonstrated that his pains 
		would prove of no use to him, by bringing the Romans upon him, before he 
		had reared any of his towers; for Titus, when he had gotten together 
		part of his forces about him, and had ordered the rest to meet him at 
		Jerusalem, marched out of Cesarea. He had with him those three legions 
		that had accompanied his father when he laid Judea waste, together with 
		that twelfth legion which had been formerly beaten with Cestius; which 
		legion, as it was otherwise remarkable for its valor, so did it march on 
		now with greater alacrity to avenge themselves on the Jews, as 
		remembering what they had formerly suffered from them. Of these legions 
		he ordered the fifth to meet him, by going through Emmaus, and the tenth 
		to go up by Jericho; he also moved himself, together with the rest; 
		besides whom, marched those auxiliaries that came from the kings, being 
		now more in number than before, together with a considerable number that 
		came to his assistance from Syria. Those also that had been selected out 
		of these four legions, and sent with Mucianus to Italy, had their places 
		filled up out of these soldiers that came out of Egypt with Titus; who 
		were two thousand men, chosen out of the armies at Alexandria. There 
		followed him also three thousand drawn from those that guarded the river 
		Euphrates; as also there came Tiberius Alexander, who was a friend of 
		his, most valuable, both for his good-will to him, and for his prudence. 
		He had formerly been governor of Alexandria, but was now thought worthy 
		to be general of the army [under Titus]. The reason of this was, that he 
		had been the first who encouraged Vespasian very lately to accept this 
		his new dominion, and joined himself to him with great fidelity, when 
		things were uncertain, and fortune had not yet declared for him. He also 
		followed Titus as a counselor, very useful to him in this war, both by 
		his age and skill in such affairs.
 
 
 CHAPTER 2.
 
 HOW TITUS MARCHED TO JERUSALEM, AND HOW HE WAS IN DANGER AS HE WAS 
		TAKING A VIEW O THE CITY OF THE PLACE ALSO WHERE HE PITCHED HIS CAMP
 
 1. NOW, as Titus was upon his march into the enemy's country, the 
		auxiliaries that were sent by the kings marched first, having all the 
		other auxiliaries with them; after whom followed those that were to 
		prepare the roads and measure out the camp; then came the commander's 
		baggage, and after that the other soldiers, who were completely armed to 
		support them; then came Titus himself, having with him another select 
		body; and then came the pikemen; after whom came the horse belonging to 
		that legion. All these came before the engines; and after these engines 
		came the tribunes and the leaders of the cohorts, with their select 
		bodies; after these came the ensigns, with the eagle; and before those 
		ensigns came the trumpeters belonging to them; next these came the main 
		body of the army in their ranks, every rank being six deep; the servants 
		belonging to every legion came after these; and before these last their 
		baggage; the mercenaries came last, and those that guarded them brought 
		up the rear. Now Titus, according to the Roman usage, went in the front 
		of the army after a decent manner, and marched through Samaria to Gophna, 
		a city that had been formerly taken by his father, and was then 
		garrisoned by Roman soldiers; and when he had lodged there one night, he 
		marched on in the morning; and when he had gone as far as a day's march, 
		he pitched his camp at that valley which the Jews, in their own tongue, 
		call "the Valley of Thorns," near a certain village called Gabaothsath, 
		which signifies "the Hill of Saul," being distant from Jerusalem about 
		thirty furlongs. (6) There it was that he chose out six hundred select 
		horsemen, and went to take a view of the city, to observe what strength 
		it was of, and how courageous the Jews were; whether, when they saw him, 
		and before they came to a direct battle, they would be affrighted and 
		submit; for he had been informed what was really true, that the people 
		who were fallen under the power of the seditious and the robbers were 
		greatly desirous of peace; but being too weak to rise up against the 
		rest, they lay still.
 
 2. Now, so long as he rode along the straight road which led to the wall 
		of the city, nobody appeared out of the gates; but when he went out of 
		that road, and declined towards the tower Psephinus, and led the band of 
		horsemen obliquely, an immense number of the Jews leaped out suddenly at 
		the towers called the "Women's Towers," through that gate which was over 
		against the monuments of queen Helena, and intercepted his horse; and 
		standing directly opposite to those that still ran along the road, 
		hindered them from joining those that had declined out of it. They 
		intercepted Titus also, with a few other. Now it was here impossible for 
		him to go forward, because all the places had trenches dug in them from 
		the wall, to preserve the gardens round about, and were full of gardens 
		obliquely situated, and of many hedges; and to return back to his own 
		men, he saw it was also impossible, by reason of the multitude of the 
		enemies that lay between them; many of whom did not so much as know that 
		the king was in any danger, but supposed him still among them. So he 
		perceived that his preservation must be wholly owing to his own courage, 
		and turned his horse about, and cried out aloud to those that were about 
		him to follow him, and ran with violence into the midst of his enemies, 
		in order to force his way through them to his own men. And hence we may 
		principally learn, that both the success of wars, and the dangers that 
		kings (7) are in, are under the providence of God; for while such a 
		number of darts were thrown at Titus, when he had neither his head-piece 
		on, nor his breastplate, (for, as I told you, he went out not to fight, 
		but to view the city,) none of them touched his body, but went aside 
		without hurting him; as if all of them missed him on purpose, and only 
		made a noise as they passed by him. So he diverted those perpetually 
		with his sword that came on his side, and overturned many of those that 
		directly met him, and made his horse ride over those that were 
		overthrown. The enemy indeed made a shout at the boldness of Caesar, and 
		exhorted one another to rush upon him. Yet did these against whom he 
		marched fly away, and go off from him in great numbers; while those that 
		were in the same danger with him kept up close to him, though they were 
		wounded both on their backs and on their sides; for they had each of 
		them but this one hope of escaping, if they could assist Titus in 
		opening himself a way, that he might not be encompassed round by his 
		enemies before he got away from them. Now there were two of those that 
		were with him, but at some distance; the one of which the enemy 
		compassed round, and slew him with their darts, and his horse also; but 
		the other they slew as he leaped down from his horse, and carried off 
		his horse with them. But Titus escaped with the rest, and came safe to 
		the camp. So this success of the Jews' first attack raised their minds, 
		and gave them an ill-grounded hope; and this short inclination of 
		fortune, on their side, made them very courageous for the future.
 
 3. But now, as soon as that legion that had been at Emmaus was joined to 
		Caesar at night, he removed thence, when it was day, and came to a place 
		called Seopus; from whence the city began already to be seen, and a 
		plain view might be taken of the great temple. Accordingly, this place, 
		on the north quarter of the city, and joining thereto, was a plain, and 
		very properly named Scopus, [the prospect,] and was no more than seven 
		furlongs distant from it. And here it was that Titus ordered a camp to 
		be fortified for two legions that were to be together; but ordered 
		another camp to be fortified, at three furlongs farther distance behind 
		them, for the fifth legion; for he thought that, by marching in the 
		night, they might be tired, and might deserve to be covered from the 
		enemy, and with less fear might fortify themselves; and as these were 
		now beginning to build, the tenth legion, who came through Jericho, was 
		already come to the place, where a certain party of armed men had 
		formerly lain, to guard that pass into the city, and had been taken 
		before by Vespasian. These legions had orders to encamp at the distance 
		of six furlongs from Jerusalem, at the mount called the Mount of Olives 
		(8) which lies over against the city on the east side, and is parted 
		from it by a deep valley, interposed between them, which is named Cedron.
 
 4. Now when hitherto the several parties in the city had been dashing 
		one against another perpetually, this foreign war, now suddenly come 
		upon them after a violent manner, put the first stop to their 
		contentions one against another; and as the seditious now saw with 
		astonishment the Romans pitching three several camps, they began to 
		think of an awkward sort of concord, and said one to another, "What do 
		we here, and what do we mean, when we suffer three fortified walls to be 
		built to coop us in, that we shall not be able to breathe freely? while 
		the enemy is securely building a kind of city in opposition to us, and 
		while we sit still within our own walls, and become spectators only of 
		what they are doing, with our hands idle, and our armor laid by, as if 
		they were about somewhat that was for our good and advantage. We are, it 
		seems, (so did they cry out,) only courageous against ourselves, while 
		the Romans are likely to gain the city without bloodshed by our 
		sedition." Thus did they encourage one another when they were gotten 
		together, and took their armor immediately, and ran out upon the tenth 
		legion, and fell upon the Romans with great eagerness, and with a 
		prodigious shout, as they were fortifying their camp. These Romans were 
		caught in different parties, and this in order to perform their several 
		works, and on that account had in great measure laid aside their arms; 
		for they thought the Jews would not have ventured to make a sally upon 
		them; and had they been disposed so to do, they supposed their sedition 
		would have distracted them. So they were put into disorder unexpectedly; 
		when some of hem left their works they were about, and immediately 
		marched off, while many ran to their arms, but were smitten and slain 
		before they could turn back upon the enemy. The Jews became still more 
		and more in number, as encouraged by the good success of those that 
		first made the attack; and while they had such good fortune, they seemed 
		both to themselves and to the enemy to be many more than they really 
		were. The disorderly way of their fighting at first put the Romans also 
		to a stand, who had been constantly used to fight skillfully in good 
		order, and with keeping their ranks, and obeying the orders that were 
		given them; for which reason the Romans were caught unexpectedly, and 
		were obliged to give way to the assaults that were made upon them. Now 
		when these Romans were overtaken, and turned back upon the Jews, they 
		put a stop to their career; yet when they did not take care enough of 
		themselves through the vehemency of their pursuit, they were wounded by 
		them; but as still more and more Jews sallied out of the city, the 
		Romans were at length brought into confusion, and put to fight, and ran 
		away from their camp. Nay, things looked as though the entire legion 
		would have been in danger, unless Titus had been informed of the case 
		they were in, and had sent them succors immediately. So he reproached 
		them for their cowardice, and brought those back that were running away, 
		and fell himself upon the Jews on their flank, with those select troops 
		that were with him, and slew a considerable number, and wounded more of 
		them, and put them all to flight, and made them run away hastily down 
		the valley. Now as these Jews suffered greatly in the declivity of the 
		valley, so when they were gotten over it, they turned about, and stood 
		over against the Romans, having the valley between them, and there 
		fought with them. Thus did they continue the fight till noon; but when 
		it was already a little after noon, Titus set those that came to the 
		assistance of the Romans with him, and those that belonged to the 
		cohorts, to prevent the Jews from making any more sallies, and then sent 
		the rest of the legion to the upper part of the mountain, to fortify 
		their camp.
 
 5. This march of the Romans seemed to the Jews to be a flight; and as 
		the watchman who was placed upon the wall gave a signal by shaking his 
		garment, there came out a fresh multitude of Jews, and that with such 
		mighty violence, that one might compare it to the running of the most 
		terrible wild beasts. To say the truth, none of those that opposed them 
		could sustain the fury with which they made their attacks; but, as if 
		they had been cast out of an engine, they brake the enemies' ranks to 
		pieces, who were put to flight, and ran away to the mountain; none but 
		Titus himself, and a few others with him, being left in the midst of the 
		acclivity. Now these others, who were his friends, despised the danger 
		they were in, and were ashamed to leave their general, earnestly 
		exhorting him to give way to these Jews that are fond of dying, and not 
		to run into such dangers before those that ought to stay before him; to 
		consider what his fortune was, and not, by supplying the place of a 
		common soldier, to venture to turn back upon the enemy so suddenly; and 
		this because he was general in the war, and lord of the habitable earth, 
		on whose preservation the public affairs do all depend. These 
		persuasions Titus seemed not so much as to hear, but opposed those that 
		ran upon him, and smote them on the face; and when he had forced them to 
		go back, he slew them: he also fell upon great numbers as they marched 
		down the hill, and thrust them forward; while those men were so amazed 
		at his courage and his strength, that they could not fly directly to the 
		city, but declined from him on both sides, and pressed after those that 
		fled up the hill; yet did he still fall upon their flank, and put a stop 
		to their fury. In the mean time, a disorder and a terror fell again upon 
		those that were fortifying their camp at the top of the hill, upon their 
		seeing those beneath them running away; insomuch that the whole legion 
		was dispersed, while they thought that the sallies of the Jews upon them 
		were plainly insupportable, and that Titus was himself put to flight; 
		because they took it for granted, that, if he had staid, the rest would 
		never have fled for it. Thus were they encompassed on every side by a 
		kind of panic fear, and some dispersed themselves one way, and some 
		another, till certain of them saw their general in the very midst of an 
		action, and being under great concern for him, they loudly proclaimed 
		the danger he was in to the entire legion; and now shame made them turn 
		back, and they reproached one another that they did worse than run away, 
		by deserting Caesar. So they used their utmost force against the Jews, 
		and declining from the straight declivity, they drove them on heaps into 
		the bottom of the valley. Then did the Jews turn about and fight them; 
		but as they were themselves retiring, and now, because the Romans had 
		the advantage of the ground, and were above the Jews, they drove them 
		all into the valley. Titus also pressed upon those that were near him, 
		and sent the legion again to fortify their camp; while he, and those 
		that were with him before, opposed the enemy, and kept them from doing 
		further mischief; insomuch that, if I may be allowed neither to add any 
		thing out of flattery, nor to diminish any thing out of envy, but to 
		speak the plain truth, Caesar did twice deliver that entire legion when 
		it was in jeopardy, and gave them a quiet opportunity of fortifying 
		their camp.
 
 
 CHAPTER 3.
 
 HOW THE SEDITION WAS AGAIN REVIVED WITHIN JERUSALEM AND YET THE JEWS 
		CONTRIVED SNARES FOR THE ROMANS. HOW TITUS ALSO THREATENED HIS SOLDIERS 
		FOR THEIR UNGOVERNABLE RASHNESS.
 
 1. AS now the war abroad ceased for a while, the sedition within was 
		revived; and on the feast of unleavened bread, which was now come, it 
		being the fourteenth day of the month Xanthicus, [Nisan,] when it is 
		believed the Jews were first freed from the Egyptians, Eleazar and his 
		party opened the gates of this [inmost court of the] temple, and 
		admitted such of the people as were desirous to worship God into it. (9) 
		But John made use of this festival as a cloak for his treacherous 
		designs, and armed the most inconsiderable of his own party, the greater 
		part of whom were not purified, with weapons concealed under their 
		garments, and sent them with great zeal into the temple, in order to 
		seize upon it; which armed men, when they were gotten in, threw their 
		garments away, and presently appeared in their armor. Upon which there 
		was a very great disorder and disturbance about the holy house; while 
		the people, who had no concern in the sedition, supposed that this 
		assault was made against all without distinction, as the zealots thought 
		it was made against themselves only. So these left off guarding the 
		gates any longer, and leaped down from their battlements before they 
		came to an engagement, and fled away into the subterranean caverns of 
		the temple; while the people that stood trembling at the altar, and 
		about the holy house, were rolled on heaps together, and trampled upon, 
		and were beaten both with wooden and with iron weapons without mercy. 
		Such also as had differences with others slew many persons that were 
		quiet, out of their own private enmity and hatred, as if they were 
		opposite to the seditious; and all those that had formerly offended any 
		of these plotters were now known, and were now led away to the 
		slaughter; and when they had done abundance of horrid mischief to the 
		guiltless, they granted a truce to the guilty, and let those go off that 
		came cut of the caverns. These followers of John also did now seize upon 
		this inner temple, and upon all the warlike engines therein, and then 
		ventured to oppose Simon. And thus that sedition, which had been divided 
		into three factions, was now reduced to two.
 
 2. But Titus, intending to pitch his camp nearer to the city than 
		Scopus, placed as many of his choice horsemen and footmen as he thought 
		sufficient opposite to the Jews, to prevent their sallying out upon 
		them, while he gave orders for the whole army to level the distance, as 
		far as the wall of the city. So they threw down all the hedges and walls 
		which the inhabitants had made about their gardens and groves of trees, 
		and cut down all the fruit trees that lay between them and the wall of 
		the city, and filled up all the hollow places and the chasms, and 
		demolished the rocky precipices with iron instruments; and thereby made 
		all the place level from Scopus to Herod's monuments, which adjoined to 
		the pool called the Serpent's Pool.
 
 3. Now at this very time the Jews contrived the following stratagem 
		against the Romans. The bolder sort of the seditious went out at the 
		towers, called the Women's Towers, as if they had been ejected out of 
		the city by those who were for peace, and rambled about as if they were 
		afraid of being assaulted by the Romans, and were in fear of one 
		another; while those that stood upon the wall, and seemed to be of the 
		people's side, cried out aloud for peace, and entreated they might have 
		security for their lives given them, and called for the Romans, 
		promising to open the gates to them; and as they cried out after that 
		manner, they threw stones at their own people, as though they would 
		drive them away from the gates. These also pretended that they were 
		excluded by force, and that they petitioned those that were within to 
		let them in; and rushing upon the Romans perpetually, with violence, 
		they then came back, and seemed to be in great disorder. Now the Roman 
		soldiers thought this cunning stratagem of theirs was to be believed 
		real, and thinking they had the one party under their power, and could 
		punish them as they pleased, and hoping that the other party would open 
		their gates to them, set to the execution of their designs accordingly. 
		But for Titus himself, he had this surprising conduct of the Jews in 
		suspicion; for whereas he had invited them to come to terms of 
		accommodation, by Josephus, but one day before, he could then receive no 
		civil answer from them; so he ordered the soldiers to stay where they 
		were. However, some of them that were set in the front of the works 
		prevented him, and catching up their arms ran to the gates; whereupon 
		those that seemed to have been ejected at the first retired; but as soon 
		as the soldiers were gotten between the towers on each side of the gate, 
		the Jews ran out and encompassed them round, and fell upon them behind, 
		while that multitude which stood upon the wall threw a heap of stones 
		and darts of all kinds at them, insomuch that they slew a considerable 
		number, and wounded many more; for it was not easy for the Romans to 
		escape, by reason those behind them pressed them forward; besides which, 
		the shame they were under for being mistaken, and the fear they were in 
		of their commanders, engaged them to persevere in their mistake; 
		wherefore they fought with their spears a great while, and received many 
		blows from the Jews, though indeed they gave them as many blows again, 
		and at last repelled those that had encompassed them about, while the 
		Jews pursued them as they retired, and followed them, and threw darts at 
		them as far as the monuments of queen Helena.
 
 4. After this these Jews, without keeping any decorum, grew insolent 
		upon their good fortune, and jested upon the Romans for being deluded by 
		the trick they bad put upon them, and making a noise with beating their 
		shields, leaped for gladness, and made joyful exclamations; while these 
		soldiers were received with threatenings by their officers, and with 
		indignation by Caesar himself, [who spake to them thus]: These Jews, who 
		are only conducted by their madness, do every thing with care and 
		circumspection; they contrive stratagems, and lay ambushes, and fortune 
		gives success to their stratagems, because they are obedient, and 
		preserve their goodwill and fidelity to one another; while the Romans, 
		to whom fortune uses to be ever subservient, by reason of their good 
		order, and ready submission to their commanders, have now had ill 
		success by their contrary behavior, and by not being able to restrain 
		their hands from action, they have been caught; and that which is the 
		most to their reproach, they have gone on without their commanders, in 
		the very presence of Caesar. "Truly," says Titus, "the laws of war 
		cannot but groan heavily, as will my father also himself, when he shall 
		be informed of this wound that hath been given us, since he who is grown 
		old in wars did never make so great a mistake. Our laws of war do also 
		ever inflict capital punishment on those that in the least break into 
		good order, while at this time they have seen an entire army run into 
		disorder. However, those that have been so insolent shall be made 
		immediately sensible, that even they who conquer among the Romans 
		without orders for fighting are to be under disgrace." When Titus had 
		enlarged upon this matter before the commanders, it appeared evident 
		that he would execute the law against all those that were concerned; so 
		these soldiers' minds sunk down in despair, as expecting to be put to 
		death, and that justly and quickly. However, the other legions came 
		round about Titus, and entreated his favor to these their fellow 
		soldiers, and made supplication to him, that he would pardon the 
		rashness of a few, on account of the better obedience of all the rest; 
		and promised for them that they should make amends for their present 
		fault, by their more virtuous behavior for the time to come.
 
 5. So Caesar complied with their desires, and with what prudence 
		dictated to him also; for he esteemed it fit to punish single persons by 
		real executions, but that the punishment of great multitudes should 
		proceed no further than reproofs; so he was reconciled to the soldiers, 
		but gave them a special charge to act more wisely for the future; and he 
		considered with himself how he might be even with the Jews for their 
		stratagem. And now when the space between the Romans and the wall had 
		been leveled, which was done in four days, and as he was desirous to 
		bring the baggage of the army, with the rest of the multitude that 
		followed him, safely to the camp, he set the strongest part of his army 
		over against that wall which lay on the north quarter of the city, and 
		over against the western part of it, and made his army seven deep, with 
		the foot-men placed before them, and the horsemen behind them, each of 
		the last in three ranks, whilst the archers stood in the midst in seven 
		ranks. And now as the Jews were prohibited, by so great a body of men, 
		from making sallies upon the Romans, both the beasts that bare the 
		burdens, and belonged to the three legions, and the rest of the 
		multitude, marched on without any fear. But as for Titus himself, he was 
		but about two furlongs distant from the wall, at that part of it where 
		was the corner (10) and over against that tower which was called 
		Psephinus, at which tower the compass of the wall belonging to the north 
		bended, and extended itself over against the west; but the other part of 
		the army fortified itself at the tower called Hippicus, and was distant, 
		in like manner, by two furlongs from the city. However, the tenth legion 
		continued in its own place, upon the Mount of Olives.
 
 
 CHAPTER 4.
 
 THE DESCRIPTION OF JERUSALEM.
 
 1. THE city of Jerusalem was fortified with three walls, on such parts 
		as were not encompassed with unpassable valleys; for in such places it 
		had but one wall. The city was built upon two hills, which are opposite 
		to one another, and have a valley to divide them asunder; at which 
		valley the corresponding rows of houses on both hills end. Of these 
		hills, that which contains the upper city is much higher, and in length 
		more direct. Accordingly, it was called the "Citadel," by king David; he 
		was the father of that Solomon who built this temple at the first; but 
		it is by us called the "Upper Market-place." But the other hill, which 
		was called "Acra," and sustains the lower city, is of the shape of a 
		moon when she is horned; over against this there was a third hill, but 
		naturally lower than Acra, and parted formerly from the other by a broad 
		valley. However, in those times when the Asamoneans reigned, they filled 
		up that valley with earth, and had a mind to join the city to the 
		temple. They then took off part of the height of Acra, and reduced it to 
		be of less elevation than it was before, that the temple might be 
		superior to it. Now the Valley of the Cheesemongers, as it was called, 
		and was that which we told you before distinguished the hill of the 
		upper city from that of the lower, extended as far as Siloam; for that 
		is the name of a fountain which hath sweet water in it, and this in 
		great plenty also. But on the outsides, these hills are surrounded by 
		deep valleys, and by reason of the precipices to them belonging on both 
		sides they are every where unpassable.
 
 2. Now, of these three walls, the old one was hard to be taken, both by 
		reason of the valleys, and of that hill on which it was built, and which 
		was above them. But besides that great advantage, as to the place where 
		they were situated, it was also built very strong; because David and 
		Solomon, and the following kings, were very zealous about this work. Now 
		that wall began on the north, at the tower called "Hippicus," and 
		extended as far as the "Xistus," a place so called, and then, joining to 
		the council-house, ended at the west cloister of the temple. But if we 
		go the other way westward, it began at the same place, and extended 
		through a place called "Bethso," to the gate of the Essens; and after 
		that it went southward, having its bending above the fountain Siloam, 
		where it also bends again towards the east at Solomon's pool, and 
		reaches as far as a certain place which they called "Ophlas," where it 
		was joined to the eastern cloister of the temple. The second wall took 
		its beginning from that gate which they called "Gennath," which belonged 
		to the first wall; it only encompassed the northern quarter of the city, 
		and reached as far as the tower Antonia. The beginning of the third wall 
		was at the tower Hippicus, whence it reached as far as the north quarter 
		of the city, and the tower Psephinus, and then was so far extended till 
		it came over against the monuments of Helena, which Helena was queen of 
		Adiabene, the daughter of Izates; it then extended further to a great 
		length, and passed by the sepulchral caverns of the kings, and bent 
		again at the tower of the corner, at the monument which is called the 
		"Monument of the Fuller," and joined to the old wall at the valley 
		called the "Valley of Cedron." It was Agrippa who encompassed the parts 
		added to the old city with this wall, which had been all naked before; 
		for as the city grew more populous, it gradually crept beyond its old 
		limits, and those parts of it that stood northward of the temple, and 
		joined that hill to the city, made it considerably larger, and 
		occasioned that hill, which is in number the fourth, and is called "Bezetha," 
		to be inhabited also. It lies over against the tower Antonia, but is 
		divided from it by a deep valley, which was dug on purpose, and that in 
		order to hinder the foundations of the tower of Antonia from joining to 
		this hill, and thereby affording an opportunity for getting to it with 
		ease, and hindering the security that arose from its superior elevation; 
		for which reason also that depth of the ditch made the elevation of the 
		towers more remarkable. This new-built part of the city was called "Bezetha," 
		in our language, which, if interpreted in the Grecian language, may be 
		called "the New City." Since, therefore, its inhabitants stood in need 
		of a covering, the father of the present king, and of the same name with 
		him, Agrippa, began that wall we spoke of; but he left off building it 
		when he had only laid the foundations, out of the fear he was in of 
		Claudius Caesar, lest he should suspect that so strong a wall was built 
		in order to make some innovation in public affairs; for the city could 
		no way have been taken if that wall had been finished in the manner it 
		was begun; as its parts were connected together by stones twenty cubits 
		long, and ten cubits broad, which could never have been either easily 
		undermined by any iron tools, or shaken by any engines. The wall was, 
		however, ten cubits wide, and it would probably have had a height 
		greater than that, had not his zeal who began it been hindered from 
		exerting itself. After this, it was erected with great diligence by the 
		Jews, as high as twenty cubits, above which it had battlements of two 
		cubits, and turrets of three cubits altitude, insomuch that the entire 
		altitude extended as far as twenty-five cubits.
 
 3. Now the towers that were upon it were twenty cubits in breadth, and 
		twenty cubits in height; they were square and solid, as was the wall 
		itself, wherein the niceness of the joints, and the beauty of the 
		stones, were no way inferior to those of the holy house itself. Above 
		this solid altitude of the towers, which was twenty cubits, there were 
		rooms of great magnificence, and over them upper rooms, and cisterns to 
		receive rain-water. They were many in number, and the steps by which you 
		ascended up to them were every one broad: of these towers then the third 
		wall had ninety, and the spaces between them were each two hundred 
		cubits; but in the middle wall were forty towers, and the old wall was 
		parted into sixty, while the whole compass of the city was thirty-three 
		furlongs. Now the third wall was all of it wonderful; yet was the tower 
		Psephinus elevated above it at the north-west corner, and there Titus 
		pitched his own tent; for being seventy cubits high it both afforded a 
		prospect of Arabia at sun-rising, as well as it did of the utmost limits 
		of the Hebrew possessions at the sea westward. Moreover, it was an 
		octagon, and over against it was the tower Hipplicus, and hard by two 
		others were erected by king Herod, in the old wall. These were for 
		largeness, beauty, and strength beyond all that were in the habitable 
		earth; for besides the magnanimity of his nature, and his magnificence 
		towards the city on other occasions, he built these after such an 
		extraordinary manner, to gratify his own private affections, and 
		dedicated these towers to the memory of those three persons who had been 
		the dearest to him, and from whom he named them. They were his brother, 
		his friend, and his wife. This wife he had slain, out of his love [and 
		jealousy], as we have already related; the other two he lost in war, as 
		they were courageously fighting. Hippicus, so named from his friend, was 
		square; its length and breadth were each twenty-five cubits, and its 
		height thirty, and it had no vacuity in it. Over this solid building, 
		which was composed of great stones united together, there was a 
		reservoir twenty cubits deep, over which there was a house of two 
		stories, whose height was twenty-five cubits, and divided into several 
		parts; over which were battlements of two cubits, and turrets all round 
		of three cubits high, insomuch that the entire height added together 
		amounted to fourscore cubits. The second tower, which he named from his 
		brother Phasaelus, had its breadth and its height equal, each of them 
		forty cubits; over which was its solid height of forty cubits; over 
		which a cloister went round about, whose height was ten cubits, and it 
		was covered from enemies by breast-works and bulwarks. There was also 
		built over that cloister another tower, parted into magnificent rooms, 
		and a place for bathing; so that this tower wanted nothing that might 
		make it appear to be a royal palace. It was also adorned with 
		battlements and turrets, more than was the foregoing, and the entire 
		altitude was about ninety cubits; the appearance of it resembled the 
		tower of Pharus, which exhibited a fire to such as sailed to Alexandria, 
		but was much larger than it in compass. This was now converted to a 
		house, wherein Simon exercised his tyrannical authority. The third tower 
		was Mariamne, for that was his queen's name; it was solid as high as 
		twenty cubits; its breadth and its length were twenty cubits, and were 
		equal to each other; its upper buildings were more magnificent, and had 
		greater variety, than the other towers had; for the king thought it most 
		proper for him to adorn that which was denominated from his wife, better 
		than those denominated from men, as those were built stronger than this 
		that bore his wife's name. The entire height of this tower was fifty 
		cubits.
 
 4. Now as these towers were so very tall, they appeared much taller by 
		the place on which they stood; for that very old wall wherein they were 
		was built on a high hill, and was itself a kind of elevation that was 
		still thirty cubits taller; over which were the towers situated, and 
		thereby were made much higher to appearance. The largeness also of the 
		stones was wonderful; for they were not made of common small stones, nor 
		of such large ones only as men could carry, but they were of white 
		marble, cut out of the rock; each stone was twenty cubits in length, and 
		ten in breadth, and five in depth. They were so exactly united to one 
		another, that each tower looked like one entire rock of stone, so 
		growing naturally, and afterward cut by the hand of the artificers into 
		their present shape and corners; so little, or not at all, did their 
		joints or connexion appear. low as these towers were themselves on the 
		north side of the wall, the king had a palace inwardly thereto adjoined, 
		which exceeds all my ability to describe it; for it was so very curious 
		as to want no cost nor skill in its construction, but was entirely 
		walled about to the height of thirty cubits, and was adorned with towers 
		at equal distances, and with large bed-chambers, that would contain beds 
		for a hundred guests a-piece, in which the variety of the stones is not 
		to be expressed; for a large quantity of those that were rare of that 
		kind was collected together. Their roofs were also wonderful, both for 
		the length of the beams, and the splendor of their ornaments. The number 
		of the rooms was also very great, and the variety of the figures that 
		were about them was prodigious; their furniture was complete, and the 
		greatest part of the vessels that were put in them was of silver and 
		gold. There were besides many porticoes, one beyond another, round 
		about, and in each of those porticoes curious pillars; yet were all the 
		courts that were exposed to the air every where green. There were, 
		moreover, several groves of trees, and long walks through them, with 
		deep canals, and cisterns, that in several parts were filled with brazen 
		statues, through which the water ran out. There were withal many 
		dove-courts (11) of tame pigeons about the canals. But indeed it is not 
		possible to give a complete description of these palaces; and the very 
		remembrance of them is a torment to one, as putting one in mind what 
		vastly rich buildings that fire which was kindled by the robbers hath 
		consumed; for these were not burnt by the Romans, but by these internal 
		plotters, as we have already related, in the beginning of their 
		rebellion. That fire began at the tower of Antonia, and went on to the 
		palaces, and consumed the upper parts of the three towers themselves.
 
 
 CHAPTER 5.
 
 A DESCRIPTION OF THE TEMPLE.
 
 1. NOW this temple, as I have already said, was built upon a strong 
		hill. At first the plain at the top was hardly sufficient for the holy 
		house and the altar, for the ground about it was very uneven, and like a 
		precipice; but when king Solomon, who was the person that built the 
		temple, had built a wall to it on its east side, there was then added 
		one cloister founded on a bank cast up for it, and on the other parts 
		the holy house stood naked. But in future ages the people added new 
		banks, (12) and the hill became a larger plain. They then broke down the 
		wall on the north side, and took in as much as sufficed afterward for 
		the compass of the entire temple. And when they had built walls on three 
		sides of the temple round about, from the bottom of the hill, and had 
		performed a work that was greater than could be hoped for, (in which 
		work long ages were spent by them, as well as all their sacred treasures 
		were exhausted, which were still replenished by those tributes which 
		were sent to God from the whole habitable earth,) they then encompassed 
		their upper courts with cloisters, as well as they [afterward] did the 
		lowest [court of the] temple. The lowest part of this was erected to the 
		height of three hundred cubits, and in some places more; yet did not the 
		entire depth of the foundations appear, for they brought earth, and 
		filled up the valleys, as being desirous to make them on a level with 
		the narrow streets of the city; wherein they made use of stones of forty 
		cubits in magnitude; for the great plenty of money they then had, and 
		the liberality of the people, made this attempt of theirs to succeed to 
		an incredible degree; and what could not be so much as hoped for as ever 
		to be accomplished, was, by perseverance and length of time, brought to 
		perfection.
 
 2. Now for the works that were above these foundations, these were not 
		unworthy of such foundations; for all the cloisters were double, and the 
		pillars to them belonging were twenty-five cubits in height, and 
		supported the cloisters. These pillars were of one entire stone each of 
		them, and that stone was white marble; and the roofs were adorned with 
		cedar, curiously graven. The natural magnificence, and excellent polish, 
		and the harmony of the joints in these cloisters, afforded a prospect 
		that was very remarkable; nor was it on the outside adorned with any 
		work of the painter or engraver. The cloisters [of the outmost court] 
		were in breadth thirty cubits, while the entire compass of it was by 
		measure six furlongs, including the tower of Antonia; those entire 
		courts that were exposed to the air were laid with stones of all sorts. 
		When you go through these [first] cloisters, unto the second [court of 
		the] temple, there was a partition made of stone all round, whose height 
		was three cubits: its construction was very elegant; upon it stood 
		pillars, at equal distances from one another, declaring the law of 
		purity, some in Greek, and some in Roman letters, that "no foreigner 
		should go within that sanctuary" for that second [court of the] temple 
		was called "the Sanctuary," and was ascended to by fourteen steps from 
		the first court. This court was four-square, and had a wall about it 
		peculiar to itself; the height of its buildings, although it were on the 
		outside forty cubits, (13) was hidden by the steps, and on the inside 
		that height was but twenty-five cubits; for it being built over against 
		a higher part of the hill with steps, it was no further to be entirely 
		discerned within, being covered by the hill itself. Beyond these 
		thirteen steps there was the distance of ten cubits; this was all plain; 
		whence there were other steps, each of five cubits a-piece, that led to 
		the gates, which gates on the north and south sides were eight, on each 
		of those sides four, and of necessity two on the east. For since there 
		was a partition built for the women on that side, as the proper place 
		wherein they were to worship, there was a necessity for a second gate 
		for them: this gate was cut out of its wall, over against the first 
		gate. There was also on the other sides one southern and one northern 
		gate, through which was a passage into the court of the women; for as to 
		the other gates, the women were not allowed to pass through them; nor 
		when they went through their own gate could they go beyond their own 
		wall. This place was allotted to the women of our own country, and of 
		other countries, provided they were of the same nation, and that 
		equally. The western part of this court had no gate at all, but the wall 
		was built entire on that side. But then the cloisters which were betwixt 
		the gates extended from the wall inward, before the chambers; for they 
		were supported by very fine and large pillars. These cloisters were 
		single, and, excepting their magnitude, were no way inferior to those of 
		the lower court.
 
 3. Now nine of these gates were on every side covered over with gold and 
		silver, as were the jambs of their doors and their lintels; but there 
		was one gate that was without the [inward court of the] holy house, 
		which was of Corinthian brass, and greatly excelled those that were only 
		covered over with silver and gold. Each gate had two doors, whose height 
		was severally thirty cubits, and their breadth fifteen. However, they 
		had large spaces within of thirty cubits, and had on each side rooms, 
		and those, both in breadth and in length, built like towers, and their 
		height was above forty cubits. Two pillars did also support these rooms, 
		and were in circumference twelve cubits. Now the magnitudes of the other 
		gates were equal one to another; but that over the Corinthian gate, 
		which opened on the east over against the gate of the holy house itself, 
		was much larger; for its height was fifty cubits; and its doors were 
		forty cubits; and it was adorned after a most costly manner, as having 
		much richer and thicker plates of silver and gold upon them than the 
		other. These nine gates had that silver and gold poured upon them by 
		Alexander, the father of Tiberius. Now there were fifteen steps, which 
		led away from the wall of the court of the women to this greater gate; 
		whereas those that led thither from the other gates were five steps 
		shorter.
 
 4. As to the holy house itself, which was placed in the midst [of the 
		inmost court], that most sacred part of the temple, it was ascended to 
		by twelve steps; and in front its height and its breadth were equal, and 
		each a hundred cubits, though it was behind forty cubits narrower; for 
		on its front it had what may be styled shoulders on each side, that 
		passed twenty cubits further. Its first gate was seventy cubits high, 
		and twenty-five cubits broad; but this gate had no doors; for it 
		represented the universal visibility of heaven, and that it cannot be 
		excluded from any place. Its front was covered with gold all over, and 
		through it the first part of the house, that was more inward, did all of 
		it appear; which, as it was very large, so did all the parts about the 
		more inward gate appear to shine to those that saw them; but then, as 
		the entire house was divided into two parts within, it was only the 
		first part of it that was open to our view. Its height extended all 
		along to ninety cubits in height, and its length was fifty cubits, and 
		its breadth twenty. But that gate which was at this end of the first 
		part of the house was, as we have already observed, all over covered 
		with gold, as was its whole wall about it; it had also golden vines 
		above it, from which clusters of grapes hung as tall as a man's height. 
		But then this house, as it was divided into two parts, the inner part 
		was lower than the appearance of the outer, and had golden doors of 
		fifty-five cubits altitude, and sixteen in breadth; but before these 
		doors there was a veil of equal largeness with the doors. It was a 
		Babylonian curtain, embroidered with blue, and fine linen, and scarlet, 
		and purple, and of a contexture that was truly wonderful. Nor was this 
		mixture of colors without its mystical interpretation, but was a kind of 
		image of the universe; for by the scarlet there seemed to be 
		enigmatically signified fire, by the fine flax the earth, by the blue 
		the air, and by the purple the sea; two of them having their colors the 
		foundation of this resemblance; but the fine flax and the purple have 
		their own origin for that foundation, the earth producing the one, and 
		the sea the other. This curtain had also embroidered upon it all that 
		was mystical in the heavens, excepting that of the [twelve] signs, 
		representing living creatures.
 
 5. When any persons entered into the temple, its floor received them. 
		This part of the temple therefore was in height sixty cubits, and its 
		length the same; whereas its breadth was but twenty cubits: but still 
		that sixty cubits in length was divided again, and the first part of it 
		was cut off at forty cubits, and had in it three things that were very 
		wonderful and famous among all mankind, the candlestick, the table [of 
		shew-bread], and the altar of incense. Now the seven lamps signified the 
		seven planets; for so many there were springing out of the candlestick. 
		Now the twelve loaves that were upon the table signified the circle of 
		the zodiac and the year; but the altar of incense, by its thirteen kinds 
		of sweet-smelling spices with which the sea replenished it, signified 
		that God is the possessor of all things that are both in the 
		uninhabitable and habitable parts of the earth, and that they are all to 
		be dedicated to his use. But the inmost part of the temple of all was of 
		twenty cubits. This was also separated from the outer part by a veil. In 
		this there was nothing at all. It was inaccessible and inviolable, and 
		not to be seen by any; and was called the Holy of Holies. Now, about the 
		sides of the lower part of the temple, there were little houses, with 
		passages out of one into another; there were a great many of them, and 
		they were of three stories high; there were also entrances on each side 
		into them from the gate of the temple. But the superior part of the 
		temple had no such little houses any further, because the temple was 
		there narrower, and forty cubits higher, and of a smaller body than the 
		lower parts of it. Thus we collect that the whole height, including the 
		sixty cubits from the floor, amounted to a hundred cubits.
 
 6. Now the outward face of the temple in its front wanted nothing that 
		was likely to surprise either men's minds or their eyes; for it was 
		covered all over with plates of gold of great weight, and, at the first 
		rising of the sun, reflected back a very fiery splendor, and made those 
		who forced themselves to look upon it to turn their eyes away, just as 
		they would have done at the sun's own rays. But this temple appeared to 
		strangers, when they were coming to it at a distance, like a mountain 
		covered with snow; for as to those parts of it that were not gilt, they 
		were exceeding white. On its top it had spikes with sharp points, to 
		prevent any pollution of it by birds sitting upon it. Of its stones, 
		some of them were forty-five cubits in length, five in height, and six 
		in breadth. Before this temple stood the altar, fifteen cubits high, and 
		equal both in length and breadth; each of which dimensions was fifty 
		cubits. The figure it was built in was a square, and it had corners like 
		horns; and the passage up to it was by an insensible acclivity. It was 
		formed without any iron tool, nor did any such iron tool so much as 
		touch it at any time. There was also a wall of partition, about a cubit 
		in height, made of fine stones, and so as to be grateful to the sight; 
		this encompassed the holy house and the altar, and kept the people that 
		were on the outside off from the priests. Moreover, those that had the 
		gonorrhea and the leprosy were excluded out of the city entirely; women 
		also, when their courses were upon them, were shut out of the temple; 
		nor when they were free from that impurity, were they allowed to go 
		beyond the limit before-mentioned; men also, that were not thoroughly 
		pure, were prohibited to come into the inner [court of the] temple; nay, 
		the priests themselves that were not pure were prohibited to come into 
		it also.
 
 7. Now all those of the stock of the priests that could not minister by 
		reason of some defect in their bodies, came within the partition, 
		together with those that had no such imperfection, and had their share 
		with them by reason of their stock, but still made use of none except 
		their own private garments; for nobody but he that officiated had on his 
		sacred garments; but then those priests that were without any blemish 
		upon them went up to the altar clothed in fine linen. They abstained 
		chiefly from wine, out of this fear, lest otherwise they should 
		transgress some rules of their ministration. The high priest did also go 
		up with them; not always indeed, but on the seventh days and new moons, 
		and if any festivals belonging to our nation, which we celebrate every 
		year, happened. When he officiated, he had on a pair of breeches that 
		reached beneath his privy parts to his thighs, and had on an inner 
		garment of linen, together with a blue garment, round, without seam, 
		with fringe work, and reaching to the feet. There were also golden bells 
		that hung upon the fringes, and pomegranates intermixed among them. The 
		bells signified thunder, and the pomegranates lightning. But that girdle 
		that tied the garment to the breast was embroidered with five rows of 
		various colors, of gold, and purple, and scarlet, as also of fine linen 
		and blue, with which colors we told you before the veils of the temple 
		were embroidered also. The like embroidery was upon the ephod; but the 
		quantity of gold therein was greater. Its figure was that of a stomacher 
		for the breast. There were upon it two golden buttons like small 
		shields, which buttoned the ephod to the garment; in these buttons were 
		enclosed two very large and very excellent sardonyxes, having the names 
		of the tribes of that nation engraved upon them: on the other part there 
		hung twelve stones, three in a row one way, and four in the other; a 
		sardius, a topaz, and an emerald; a carbuncle, a jasper, and a sapphire; 
		an agate, an amethyst, and a ligure; an onyx, a beryl, and a chrysolite; 
		upon every one of which was again engraved one of the forementioned 
		names of the tribes. A mitre also of fine linen encompassed his head, 
		which was tied by a blue ribbon, about which there was another golden 
		crown, in which was engraven the sacred name [of God]: it consists of 
		four vowels. However, the high priest did not wear these garments at 
		other times, but a more plain habit; he only did it when he went into 
		the most sacred part of the temple, which he did but once in a year, on 
		that day when our custom is for all of us to keep a fast to God. And 
		thus much concerning the city and the temple; but for the customs and 
		laws hereto relating, we shall speak more accurately another time; for 
		there remain a great many things thereto relating which have not been 
		here touched upon.
 
 8. Now as to the tower of Antonia, it was situated at the corner of two 
		cloisters of the court of the temple; of that on the west, and that on 
		the north; it was erected upon a rock of fifty cubits in height, and was 
		on a great precipice; it was the work of king Herod, wherein he 
		demonstrated his natural magnanimity. In the first place, the rock 
		itself was covered over with smooth pieces of stone, from its 
		foundation, both for ornament, and that any one who would either try to 
		get up or to go down it might not be able to hold his feet upon it. Next 
		to this, and before you come to the edifice of the tower itself, there 
		was a wall three cubits high; but within that wall all the space of the 
		tower of Antonia itself was built upon, to the height of forty cubits. 
		The inward parts had the largeness and form of a palace, it being parted 
		into all kinds of rooms and other conveniences, such as courts, and 
		places for bathing, and broad spaces for camps; insomuch that, by having 
		all conveniences that cities wanted, it might seem to be composed of 
		several cities, but by its magnificence it seemed a palace. And as the 
		entire structure resembled that of a tower, it contained also four other 
		distinct towers at its four corners; whereof the others were but fifty 
		cubits high; whereas that which lay upon the southeast corner was 
		seventy cubits high, that from thence the whole temple might be viewed; 
		but on the corner where it joined to the two cloisters of the temple, it 
		had passages down to them both, through which the guard (for there 
		always lay in this tower a Roman legion) went several ways among the 
		cloisters, with their arms, on the Jewish festivals, in order to watch 
		the people, that they might not there attempt to make any innovations; 
		for the temple was a fortress that guarded the city, as was the tower of 
		Antonia a guard to the temple; and in that tower were the guards of 
		those three (14). There was also a peculiar fortress belonging to the 
		upper city, which was Herod's palace; but for the hill Bezetha, it was 
		divided from the tower Antonia, as we have already told you; and as that 
		hill on which the tower of Antonia stood was the highest of these three, 
		so did it adjoin to the new city, and was the only place that hindered 
		the sight of the temple on the north. And this shall suffice at present 
		to have spoken about the city and the walls about it, because I have 
		proposed to myself to make a more accurate description of it elsewhere.
 
 
 CHAPTER 6.
 
 CONCERNING THE TYRANTS SIMON AND JOHN. HOW ALSO AS TITUS WAS GOING ROUND 
		THE WALL OF THIS CITY NICANOR WAS WOUNDED BY A DART; WHICH ACCIDENT 
		PROVOKED TITUS TO PRESS ON THE SIEGE.
 
 1. NOW the warlike men that were in the city, and the multitude of the 
		seditious that were with Simon, were ten thousand, besides the Idumeans. 
		Those ten thousand had fifty commanders, over whom this Simon was 
		supreme. The Idumeans that paid him homage were five thousand, and had 
		eight commanders, among whom those of greatest fame were Jacob the son 
		of Sosas, and Simon the son of Cathlas. Jotre, who had seized upon the 
		temple, had six thousand armed men under twenty commanders; the zealots 
		also that had come over to him, and left off their opposition, were two 
		thousand four hundred, and had the same commander that they had 
		formerly, Eleazar, together with Simon the son of Arinus. Now, while 
		these factions fought one against another, the people were their prey on 
		both sides, as we have said already; and that part of the people who 
		would not join with them in their wicked practices were plundered by 
		both factions. Simon held the upper city, and the great wall as far as 
		Cedron, and as much of the old wall as bent from Siloam to the east, and 
		which went down to the palace of Monobazus, who was king of the Adiabeni, 
		beyond Euphrates; he also held that fountain, and the Acra, which was no 
		other than the lower city; he also held all that reached to the palace 
		of queen Helena, the mother of Monobazus. But John held the temple, and 
		the parts thereto adjoining, for a great way, as also Ophla, and the 
		valley called "the Valley of Cedron;" and when the parts that were 
		interposed between their possessions were burnt by them, they left a 
		space wherein they might fight with each other; for this internal 
		sedition did not cease even when the Romans were encamped near their 
		very wall. But although they had grown wiser at the first onset the 
		Romans made upon them, this lasted but a while; for they returned to 
		their former madness, and separated one from another, and fought it out, 
		and did everything that the besiegers could desire them to do; for they 
		never suffered any thing that was worse from the Romans than they made 
		each other suffer; nor was there any misery endured by the city after 
		these men's actions that could be esteemed new. But it was most of all 
		unhappy before it was overthrown, while those that took it did it a 
		greater kindness for I venture to affirm that the sedition destroyed the 
		city, and the Romans destroyed the sedition, which it was a much harder 
		thing to do than to destroy the walls; so that we may justly ascribe our 
		misfortunes to our own people, and the just vengeance taken on them to 
		the Romans; as to which matter let every one determine by the actions on 
		both sides.
 
 2. Now when affairs within the city were in this posture, Titus went 
		round the city on the outside with some chosen horsemen, and looked 
		about for a proper place where he might make an impression upon the 
		walls; but as he was in doubt where he could possibly make an attack on 
		any side, (for the place was no way accessible where the valleys were, 
		and on the other side the first wall appeared too strong to be shaken by 
		the engines,) he thereupon thought it best to make his assault upon the 
		monument of John the high priest; for there it was that the first 
		fortification was lower, and the second was not joined to it, the 
		builders neglecting to build strong where the new city was not much 
		inhabited; here also was an easy passage to the third wall, through 
		which he thought to take the upper city, and, through the tower of 
		Antonia, the temple itself But at this time, as he was going round about 
		the city, one of his friends, whose name was Nicanor, was wounded with a 
		dart on his left shoulder, as he approached, together with Josephus, too 
		near the wall, and attempted to discourse to those that were upon the 
		wall, about terms of peace; for he was a person known by them. On this 
		account it was that Caesar, as soon as he knew their vehemence, that 
		they would not hear even such as approached them to persuade them to 
		what tended to their own preservation, was provoked to press on the 
		siege. He also at the same time gave his soldiers leave to set the 
		suburbs on fire, and ordered that they should bring timber together, and 
		raise banks against the city; and when he had parted his army into three 
		parts, in order to set about those works, he placed those that shot 
		darts and the archers in the midst of the banks that were then raising; 
		before whom he placed those engines that threw javelins, and darts, and 
		stones, that he might prevent the enemy from sallying out upon their 
		works, and might hinder those that were upon the wall from being able to 
		obstruct them. So the trees were now cut down immediately, and the 
		suburbs left naked. But now while the timber was carrying to raise the 
		banks, and the whole army was earnestly engaged in their works, the Jews 
		were not, however, quiet; and it happened that the people of Jerusalem, 
		who had been hitherto plundered and murdered, were now of good courage, 
		and supposed they should have a breathing time, while the others were 
		very busy in opposing their enemies without the city, and that they 
		should now be avenged on those that had been the authors of their 
		miseries, in case the Romans did but get the victory.
 
 3. However, John staid behind, out of his fear of Simon, even while his 
		own men were earnest in making a sally upon their enemies without. Yet 
		did not Simon lie still, for he lay near the place of the siege; he 
		brought his engines of war, and disposed of them at due distances upon 
		the wall, both those which they took from Cestius formerly, and those 
		which they got when they seized the garrison that lay in the tower 
		Antonia. But though they had these engines in their possession, they had 
		so little skill in using them, that they were in great measure useless 
		to them; but a few there were who had been taught by deserters how to 
		use them, which they did use, though after an awkward manner. So they 
		cast stones and arrows at those that were making the banks; they also 
		ran out upon them by companies, and fought with them. Now those that 
		were at work covered themselves with hurdles spread over their banks, 
		and their engines were opposed to them when they made their excursions. 
		The engines, that all the legions had ready prepared for them, were 
		admirably contrived; but still more extraordinary ones belonged to the 
		tenth legion: those that threw darts and those that threw stones were 
		more forcible and larger than the rest, by which they not only repelled 
		the excursions of the Jews, but drove those away that were upon the 
		walls also. Now the stones that were cast were of the weight of a 
		talent, and were carried two furlongs and further. The blow they gave 
		was no way to be sustained, not only by those that stood first in the 
		way, but by those that were beyond them for a great space. As for the 
		Jews, they at first watched the coming of the stone, for it was of a 
		white color, and could therefore not only be perceived by the great 
		noise it made, but could be seen also before it came by its brightness; 
		accordingly the watchmen that sat upon the towers gave them notice when 
		the engine was let go, and the stone came from it, and cried out aloud, 
		in their own country language, THE STONE COMETH (15) so those that were 
		in its way stood off, and threw themselves down upon the ground; by 
		which means, and by their thus guarding themselves, the stone fell down 
		and did them no harm. But the Romans contrived how to prevent that by 
		blacking the stone, who then could aim at them with success, when the 
		stone was not discerned beforehand, as it had been till then; and so 
		they destroyed many of them at one blow. Yet did not the Jews, under all 
		this distress, permit the Romans to raise their banks in quiet; but they 
		shrewdly and boldly exerted themselves, and repelled them both by night 
		and by day.
 
 4. And now, upon the finishing the Roman works, the workmen measured the 
		distance there was from the wall, and this by lead and a line, which 
		they threw to it from their banks; for they could not measure it any 
		otherwise, because the Jews would shoot at them, if they came to measure 
		it themselves; and when they found that the engines could reach the 
		wall, they brought them thither. Then did Titus set his engines at 
		proper distances, so much nearer to the wall, that the Jews might not be 
		able to repel them, and gave orders they should go to work; and when 
		thereupon a prodigious noise echoed round about from three places, and 
		that on the sudden there was a great noise made by the citizens that 
		were within the city, and no less a terror fell upon the seditious 
		themselves; whereupon both sorts, seeing the common danger they were in, 
		contrived to make a like defense. So those of different factions cried 
		out one to another, that they acted entirely as in concert with their 
		enemies; whereas they ought however, notwithstanding God did not grant 
		them a lasting concord, in their present circumstances, to lay aside 
		their enmities one against another, and to unite together against the 
		Romans. Accordingly, Simon gave those that came from the temple leave, 
		by proclamation, to go upon the wall; John also himself, though he could 
		not believe Simon was in earnest, gave them the same leave. So on both 
		sides they laid aside their hatred and their peculiar quarrels, and 
		formed themselves into one body; they then ran round the walls, and 
		having a vast number of torches with them, they threw them at the 
		machines, and shot darts perpetually upon those that impelled those 
		engines which battered the wall; nay, the bolder sort leaped out by 
		troops upon the hurdles that covered the machines, and pulled them to 
		pieces, and fell upon those that belonged to them, and beat them, not so 
		much by any skill they had, as principally by the boldness of their 
		attacks. However, Titus himself still sent assistance to those that were 
		the hardest set, and placed both horsemen and archers on the several 
		sides of the engines, and thereby beat off those that brought the fire 
		to them; he also thereby repelled those that shot stones or darts from 
		the towers, and then set the engines to work in good earnest; yet did 
		not the wall yield to these blows, excepting where the battering ram of 
		the fifteenth legion moved the corner of a tower, while the wall itself 
		continued unhurt; for the wall was not presently in the same danger with 
		the tower, which was extant far above it; nor could the fall of that 
		part of the tower easily break down any part of the wall itself together 
		with it.
 
 5. And now the Jews intermitted their sallies for a while; but when they 
		observed the Romans dispersed all abroad at their works, and in their 
		several camps, (for they thought the Jews had retired out of weariness 
		and fear,) they all at once made a sally at the tower Hippicus, through 
		an obscure gate, and at the same time brought fire to burn the works, 
		and went boldly up to the Romans, and to their very fortifications 
		themselves, where, at the cry they made, those that were near them came 
		presently to their assistance, and those farther off came running after 
		them; and here the boldness of the Jews was too hard for the good order 
		of the Romans; and as they beat those whom they first fell upon, so they 
		pressed upon those that were now gotten together. So this fight about 
		the machines was very hot, while the one side tried hard to set them on 
		fire, and the other side to prevent it; on both sides there was a 
		confused cry made, and many of those in the forefront of the battle were 
		slain. However, the Jews were now too hard for the Romans, by the 
		furious assaults they made like madmen; and the fire caught hold of the 
		works, and both all those works, and the engines themselves, had been in 
		danger of being burnt, had not many of these select soldiers that came 
		from Alexandria opposed themselves to prevent it, and had they not 
		behaved themselves with greater courage than they themselves supposed 
		they could have done; for they outdid those in this fight that had 
		greater reputation than themselves before. This was the state of things 
		till Caesar took the stoutest of his horsemen, and attacked the enemy, 
		while he himself slew twelve of those that were in the forefront of the 
		Jews; which death of these men, when the rest of the multitude saw, they 
		gave way, and he pursued them, and drove them all into the city, and 
		saved the works from the fire. Now it happened at this fight that a 
		certain Jew was taken alive, who, by Titus's order, was crucified before 
		the wall, to see whether the rest of them would be aftrighted, and abate 
		of their obstinacy. But after the Jews were retired, John, who was 
		commander of the Idumeans, and was talking to a certain soldier of his 
		acquaintance before the wall, was wounded by a dart shot at him by an 
		Arabian, and died immediately, leaving the greatest lamentation to the 
		Jews, and sorrow to the seditious. For he was a man of great eminence, 
		both for his actions and his conduct also.
 
 
 CHAPTER 7.
 
 HOW ONE OF THE TOWERS ERECTED BY THE ROMANS FELL DOWN OF ITS OWN ACCORD; 
		AND HOW THE ROMANS AFTER GREAT SLAUGHTER HAD BEEN MADE GOT POSSESSION OF 
		THE FIRST WALL. HOW ALSO TITUS MADE HIS ASSAULTS UPON THE SECOND WALL; 
		AS ALSO CONCERNING LONGINUS THE ROMAN, AND CASTOR THE JEW.
 
 1. NOW, on the next night, a surprising disturbance fell upon the 
		Romans; for whereas Titus had given orders for the erection of three 
		towers of fifty cubits high, that by setting men upon them at every 
		bank, he might from thence drive those away who were upon the wall, it 
		so happened that one of these towers fell down about midnight; and as 
		its fall made a very great noise, fear fell upon the army, and they, 
		supposing that the enemy was coming to attack them, ran all to their 
		arms. Whereupon a disturbance and a tumult arose among the legions, and 
		as nobody could tell what had happened, they went on after a 
		disconsolate manner; and seeing no enemy appear, they were afraid one of 
		another, and every one demanded of his neighbor the watchword with great 
		earnestness, as though the Jews had invaded their camp. And now were 
		they like people under a panic fear, till Titus was informed of what had 
		happened, and gave orders that all should be acquainted with it; and 
		then, though with some difficulty, they got clear of the disturbance 
		they had been under.
 
 2. Now these towers were very troublesome to the Jews, who otherwise 
		opposed the Romans very courageously; for they shot at them out of their 
		lighter engines from those towers, as they did also by those that threw 
		darts, and the archers, and those that flung stones. For neither could 
		the Jews reach those that were over them, by reason of their height; and 
		it was not practicable to take them, nor to overturn them, they were so 
		heavy, nor to set them on fire, because they were covered with plates of 
		iron. So they retired out of the reach of the darts, and did no longer 
		endeavor to hinder the impression of their rams, which, by continually 
		beating upon the wall, did gradually prevail against it; so that the 
		wall already gave way to the Nico, for by that name did the Jews 
		themselves call the greatest of their engines, because it conquered all 
		things. And now they were for a long while grown weary of fighting, and 
		of keeping guards, and were retired to lodge in the night time at a 
		distance from the wall. It was on other accounts also thought by them to 
		be superfluous to guard the wall, there being besides that two other 
		fortifications still remaining, and they being slothful, and their 
		counsels having been ill concerted on all occasions; so a great many 
		grew lazy and retired. Then the Romans mounted the breach, where Nico 
		had made one, and all the Jews left the guarding that wall, and 
		retreated to the second wall; so those that had gotten over that wall 
		opened the gates, and received all the army within it. And thus did the 
		Romans get possession of this first wall, on the fifteenth day of the 
		siege, which was the seventh day of the month Artemisius, [Jyar,] when 
		they demolished a great part of it, as well as they did of the northern 
		parts of the city, which had been demolished also by Cestius formerly.
 
 3. And now Titus pitched his camp within the city, at that place which 
		was called "the Camp of the Assyrians," having seized upon all that lay 
		as far as Cedron, but took care to be out of the reach of the Jews' 
		darts. He then presently began his attacks, upon which the Jews divided 
		themselves into several bodies, and courageously defended that wall; 
		while John and his faction did it from the tower of Antonia, and from 
		the northern cloister of the temple, and fought the Romans before the 
		monuments of king Alexander; and Sireoh's army also took for their share 
		the spot of ground that was near John's monument, and fortified it as 
		far as to that gate where water was brought in to the tower Hippicus. 
		However, the Jews made violent sallies, and that frequently also, and in 
		bodies together out of the gates, and there fought the Romans; and when 
		they were pursued all together to the wall, they were beaten in those 
		fights, as wanting the skill of the Romans. But when they fought them 
		from the walls, they were too hard for them; the Romans being encouraged 
		by their power, joined to their skill, as were the Jews by their 
		boldness, which was nourished by the fear they were in, and that 
		hardiness which is natural to our nation under calamities; they were 
		also encouraged still by the hope of deliverance, as were the Romans by 
		their hopes of subduing them in a little time. Nor did either side grow 
		weary; but attacks and rightings upon the wall, and perpetual sallies 
		out in bodies, were there all the day long; nor were there any sort of 
		warlike engagements that were not then put in use. And the night itself 
		had much ado to part them, when they began to fight in the morning; nay, 
		the night itself was passed without sleep on both sides, and was more 
		uneasy than the day to them, while the one was afraid lest the wall 
		should be taken, and the other lest the Jews should make sallies upon 
		their camps; both sides also lay in their armor during the night time, 
		and thereby were ready at the first appearance of light to go to the 
		battle. Now among the Jews the ambition was who should undergo the first 
		dangers, and thereby gratify their commanders. Above all, they had a 
		great veneration and dread of Simon; and to that degree was he regarded 
		by every one of those that were under him, that at his command they were 
		very ready to kill themselves with their own hands. What made the Romans 
		so courageous was their usual custom of conquering and disuse of being 
		defeated, their constant wars, and perpetual warlike exercises, and the 
		grandeur of their dominion; and what was now their chief encouragement 
		-Titus who was present every where with them all; for it appeared a 
		terrible thing to grow weary while Caesar was there, and fought bravely 
		as well as they did, and was himself at once an eye-witness of such as 
		behaved themselves valiantly, and he who was to reward them also. It 
		was, besides, esteemed an advantage at present to have any one's valor 
		known by Caesar; on which account many of them appeared to have more 
		alacrity than strength to answer it. And now, as the Jews were about 
		this time standing in array before the wall, and that in a strong body, 
		and while both parties were throwing their darts at each other, 
		Longinus, one of the equestrian order, leaped out of the army of the 
		Romans, and leaped into the very midst of the army of the Jews; and as 
		they dispersed themselves upon the attack, he slew two of their men of 
		the greatest courage; one of them he struck in his mouth as he was 
		coming to meet him, the other was slain by him by that very dart which 
		he drew out of the body of the other, with which he ran this man through 
		his side as he was running away from him; and when he had done this, he 
		first of all ran out of the midst of his enemies to his own side. So 
		this man signalized himself for his valor, and many there were who were 
		ambitious of gaining the like reputation. And now the Jews were 
		unconcerned at what they suffered themselves from the Romans, and were 
		only solicitous about what mischief they could do them; and death itself 
		seemed a small matter to them, if at the same time they could but kill 
		any one of their enemies. But Titus took care to secure his own soldiers 
		from harm, as well as to have them overcome their enemies. He also said 
		that inconsiderate violence was madness, and that this alone was the 
		true courage that was joined with good conduct. He therefore commanded 
		his men to take care, when they fought their enemies, that they received 
		no harm from them at the same time, and thereby show themselves to be 
		truly valiant men.
 
 4. And now Titus brought one of his engines to the middle tower of the 
		north part of the wall, in which a certain crafty Jew, whose name was 
		Castor, lay in ambush, with ten others like himself, the rest being fled 
		away by reason of the archers. These men lay still for a while, as in 
		great fear, under their breastplates; but when the tower was shaken, 
		they arose, and Castor did then stretch out his hand, as a petitioner, 
		and called for Caesar, and by his voice moved his compassion, and begged 
		of him to have mercy upon them; and Titus, in the innocency of his 
		heart, believing him to be in earnest, and hoping that the Jews did now 
		repent, stopped the working of the battering ram, and forbade them to 
		shoot at the petitioners, and bid Castor say what he had a mind to say 
		to him. He said that he would come down, if he would give him his right 
		hand for his security. To which Titus replied, that he was well pleased 
		with such his agreeable conduct, and would be well pleased if all the 
		Jews would be of his mind, and that he was ready to give the like 
		security to the city. Now five of the ten dissembled with him, and 
		pretended to beg for mercy, while the rest cried out aloud that they 
		would never be slaves to the Romans, while it was in their power to die 
		in a state of freedom. Now while these men were quarrelling for a long 
		while, the attack was delayed; Castor also sent to Simon, and told him 
		that they might take some time for consultation about what was to be 
		done, because he would elude the power of the Romans for a considerable 
		time. And at the same time that he sent thus to him, he appeared openly 
		to exhort those that were obstinate to accept of Titus's hand for their 
		security; but they seemed very angry at it, and brandished their naked 
		swords upon the breast-works, and struck themselves upon their breast, 
		and fell down as if they had been slain. Hereupon Titus, and those with 
		him, were amazed at the courage of the men; and as they were not able to 
		see exactly what was done, they admired at their great fortitude, and 
		pitied their calamity. During this interval, a certain person shot a 
		dart at Castor, and wounded him in his nose; whereupon he presently 
		pulled out the dart, and showed it to Titus, and complained that this 
		was unfair treatment; so Caesar reproved him that shot the dart, and 
		sent Josephus, who then stood by him, to give his right hand to Castor. 
		But Josephus said that he would not go to him, because these pretended 
		petitioners meant nothing that was good; he also restrained those 
		friends of his who were zealous to go to him. But still there was one 
		Eneas, a deserter, who said he would go to him. Castor also called to 
		them, that somebody should come and receive the money which he had with 
		him; this made Eneas the more earnestly to run to him with his bosom 
		open. Then did Castor take up a great stone, and threw it at him, which 
		missed him, because he guarded himself against it; but still it wounded 
		another soldier that was coining to him. When Caesar understood that 
		this was a delusion, he perceived that mercy in war is a pernicious 
		thing, because such cunning tricks have less place under the exercise of 
		greater severity. So he caused the engine to work more strongly than 
		before, on account of his anger at the deceit put upon him. But Castor 
		and his companions set the tower on fire when it began to give way, and 
		leaped through the flame into a hidden vault that was under it, which 
		made the Romans further suppose that they were men of great courage, as 
		having cast themselves into the fire.
 
 
 CHAPTER 8.
 
 HOW THE ROMANS TOOK THE SECOND WALL TWICE, AND GOT ALL READY FOR TAKING 
		THE THIRD WALL.
 
 1. NOW Caesar took this wall there on the fifth day after he had taken 
		the first; and when the Jews had fled from him, he entered into it with 
		a thousand armed men, and those of his choice troops, and this at a 
		place where were the merchants of wool, the braziers, and the market for 
		cloth, and where the narrow streets led obliquely to the wall. 
		Wherefore, if Titus had either demolished a larger part of the wall 
		immediately, or had come in, and, according to the law of war, had laid 
		waste what was left, his victory would not, I suppose, have been mixed 
		with any loss to himself. But now, out of the hope he had that he should 
		make the Jews ashamed of their obstinacy, by not being willing, when he 
		was able, to afflict them more than he needed to do, he did not widen 
		the breach of the wall, in order to make a safer retreat upon occasion; 
		for he did not think they would lay snares for him that did them such a 
		kindness. When therefore he came in, he did not permit his soldiers to 
		kill any of those they caught, nor to set fire to their houses neither; 
		nay, he gave leave to the seditious, if they had a mind, to fight 
		without any harm to the people, and promised to restore the people's 
		effects to them; for he was very desirous to preserve the city for his 
		own sake, and the temple for the sake of the city. As to the people, he 
		had them of a long time ready to comply with his proposals; but as to 
		the fighting men, this humanity of his seemed a mark of his weakness, 
		and they imagined that he made these proposals because he was not able 
		to take the rest of the city. They also threatened death to the people, 
		if they should any one of them say a word about a surrender. They 
		moreover cut the throats of such as talked of a peace, and then attacked 
		those Romans that were come within the wall. Some of them they met in 
		the narrow streets, and some they fought against from their houses, 
		while they made a sudden sally out at the upper gates, and assaulted 
		such Romans as were beyond the wall, till those that guarded the wall 
		were so aftrighted, that they leaped down from their towers, and retired 
		to their several camps: upon which a great noise was made by the Romans 
		that were within, because they were encompassed round on every side by 
		their enemies; as also by them that were without, because they were in 
		fear for those that were left in the city. Thus did the Jews grow more 
		numerous perpetually, and had great advantages over the Romans, by their 
		full knowledge of those narrow lanes; and they wounded a great many of 
		them, and fell upon them, and drove them out of the city. Now these 
		Romans were at present forced to make the best resistance they could; 
		for they were not able, in great numbers, to get out at the breach in 
		the wall, it was so narrow. It is also probable that all those that were 
		gotten within had been cut to pieces, if Titus had not sent them 
		succors; for he ordered the archers to stand at the upper ends of these 
		narrow lakes, and he stood himself where was the greatest multitude of 
		his enemies, and with his darts he put a stop to them; as with him did 
		Domitius Sabinus also, a valiant man, and one that in this battle 
		appeared so to be. Thus did Caesar continue to shoot darts at the Jews 
		continually, and to hinder them from coming upon his men, and this until 
		all his soldiers had retreated out of the city.
 
 2. And thus were the Romans driven out, after they had possessed 
		themselves of the second wall. Whereupon the fighting men that were in 
		the city were lifted up in their minds, and were elevated upon this 
		their good success, and began to think that the Romans would never 
		venture to come into the city any more; and that if they kept within it 
		themselves, they should not be any more conquered. For God had blinded 
		their minds for the transgressions they had been guilty of, nor could 
		they see how much greater forces the Romans had than those that were now 
		expelled, no more than they could discern how a famine was creeping upon 
		them; for hitherto they had fed themselves out of the public miseries, 
		and drank the blood of the city. But now poverty had for a long time 
		seized upon the better part, and a great many had died already for want 
		of necessaries; although the seditious indeed supposed the destruction 
		of the people to be an easement to themselves; for they desired that 
		none others might be preserved but such as were against a peace with the 
		Romans, and were resolved to live in opposition to them, and they were 
		pleased when the multitude of those of a contrary opinion were consumed, 
		as being then freed from a heavy burden. And this was their disposition 
		of mind with regard to those that were within the city, while they 
		covered themselves with their armor, and prevented the Romans, when they 
		were trying to get into the city again, and made a wall of their own 
		bodies over against that part of the wall that was cast down. Thus did 
		they valiantly defend themselves for three days; but on the fourth day 
		they could not support themselves against the vehement assaults of Titus 
		but were compelled by force to fly whither they had fled before; so he 
		quietly possessed himself again of that wall, and demolished it 
		entirely. And when he had put a garrison into the towers that were on 
		the south parts of the city, he contrived how he might assault the third 
		wall.
 
 
 CHAPTER 9.
 
 TITUS WHEN THE JEWS WERE NOT AT ALL MOLLIFIED BY HIS LEAVING OFF THE 
		SIEGE FOR A WHILE, SET HIMSELF AGAIN TO PROSECUTE THE SAME; BUT SOON 
		SENT JOSEPHUS TO DISCOURSE WITH HIS OWN COUNTRYMEN ABOUT PEACE.
 
 1. A RESOLUTION was now taken by Titus to relax the siege for a little 
		while, and to afford the seditious an interval for consideration, and to 
		see whether the demolishing of their second wall would not make them a 
		little more compliant, or whether they were not somewhat afraid of a 
		famine, because the spoils they had gotten by rapine would not be 
		sufficient for them long; so he made use of this relaxation in order to 
		compass his own designs. Accordingly, as the usual appointed time when 
		he must distribute subsistence money to the soldiers was now come, he 
		gave orders that the commanders should put the army into battle-array, 
		in the face of the enemy, and then give every one of the soldiers their 
		pay. So the soldiers, according to custom, opened the cases wherein 
		their arms before lay covered, and marched with their breastplates on, 
		as did the horsemen lead their horses in their fine trappings. Then did 
		the places that were before the city shine very splendidly for a great 
		way; nor was there any thing so grateful to Titus's own men, or so 
		terrible to the enemy, as that sight. For the whole old wall, and the 
		north side of the temple, were full of spectators, and one might see the 
		houses full of such as looked at them; nor was there any part of the 
		city which was not covered over with their multitudes; nay, a very great 
		consternation seized upon the hardiest of the Jews themselves, when they 
		saw all the army in the same place, together with the fineness of their 
		arms, and the good order of their men. And I cannot but think that the 
		seditious would have changed their minds at that sight, unless the 
		crimes they had committed against the people had been so horrid, that 
		they despaired of forgiveness from the Romans; but as they believed 
		death with torments must be their punishment, if they did not go on in 
		the defense of the city, they thought it much better to die in war. Fate 
		also prevailed so far over them, that the innocent were to perish with 
		the guilty, and the city was to be destroyed with the seditious that 
		were in it.
 
 2. Thus did the Romans spend four days in bringing this 
		subsistence-money to the several legions. But on the fifth day, when no 
		signs of peace appeared to come from the Jews, Titus divided his 
		legions, and began to raise banks, both at the tower of Antonia and at 
		John's monument. Now his designs were to take the upper city at that 
		monument, and the temple at the tower of Antonia; for if the temple were 
		not taken, it would be dangerous to keep the city itself; so at each of 
		these parts he raised him banks, each legion raising one. As for those 
		that wrought at John's monument, the Idumeans, and those that were in 
		arms with Simon, made sallies upon them, and put some stop to them; 
		while John's party, and the multitude of zealots with them, did the like 
		to those that were before the tower of Antonia. These Jews were now too 
		hard for the Romans, not only in direct fighting, because they stood 
		upon the higher ground, but because they had now learned to use their 
		own engines; for their continual use of them one day after another did 
		by degrees improve their skill about them; for of one sort of engines 
		for darts they had three hundred, and forty for stones; by the means of 
		which they made it more tedious for the Romans to raise their banks. But 
		then Titus, knowing that the city would be either saved or destroyed for 
		himself, did not only proceed earnestly in the siege, but did not omit 
		to have the Jews exhorted to repentance; so he mixed good counsel with 
		his works for the siege. And being sensible that exhortations are 
		frequently more effectual than arms, he persuaded them to surrender the 
		city, now in a manner already taken, and thereby to save themselves, and 
		sent Josephus to speak to them in their own language; for he imagined 
		they might yield to the persuasion of a countryman of their own.
 
 3. So Josephus went round about the wall, and tried to find a place that 
		was out of the reach of their darts, and yet within their hearing, and 
		besought them, in many words, to spare themselves, to spare their 
		country and their temple, and not to be more obdurate in these cases 
		than foreigners themselves; for that the Romans, who had no relation to 
		those things, had a reverence for their sacred rites and places, 
		although they belonged to their enemies, and had till now kept their 
		hands off from meddling with them; while such as were brought up under 
		them, and, if they be preserved, will be the only people that will reap 
		the benefit of them, hurry on to have them destroyed. That certainly 
		they have seen their strongest walls demolished, and that the wall still 
		remaining was weaker than those that were already taken. That they must 
		know the Roman power was invincible, and that they had been used to 
		serve them; for, that in case it be allowed a right thing to fight for 
		liberty, that ought to have been done at first; but for them that have 
		once fallen under the power of the Romans, and have now submitted to 
		them for so many long years, to pretend to shake off that yoke 
		afterward, was the work of such as had a mind to die miserably, not of 
		such as were lovers of liberty. Besides, men may well enough grudge at 
		the dishonor of owning ignoble masters over them, but ought not to do so 
		to those who have all things under their command; for what part of the 
		world is there that hath escaped the Romans, unless it be such as are of 
		no use for violent heat, or for violent cold? And evident it is that 
		fortune is on all hands gone over to them; and that God, when he had 
		gone round the nations with this dominion, is now settled in Italy. 
		That, moreover, it is a strong and fixed law, even among brute beasts, 
		as well as among men, to yield to those that are too strong for them; 
		and to stiffer those to have the dominion who are too hard for the rest 
		in war; for which reason it was that their forefathers, who were far 
		superior to them, both in their souls and bodies, and other advantages, 
		did yet submit to the Romans, which they would not have suffered, had 
		they not known that God was with them. As for themselves, what can they 
		depend on in this their opposition, when the greatest part of their city 
		is already taken? and when those that are within it are under greater 
		miseries than if they were taken, although their walls be still 
		standing? For that the Romans are not unacquainted with that famine 
		which is in the city, whereby the people are already consumed, and the 
		fighting men will in a little time be so too; for although the Romans 
		should leave off the siege, and not fall upon the city with their swords 
		in their hands, yet was there an insuperable war that beset them within, 
		and was augmented every hour, unless they were able to wage war with 
		famine, and fight against it, or could alone conquer their natural 
		appetites. He added this further, how right a thing it was to change 
		their conduct before their calamities were become incurable, and to have 
		recourse to such advice as might preserve them, while opportunity was 
		offered them for so doing; for that the Romans would not be mindful of 
		their past actions to their disadvantage, unless they persevered in 
		their insolent behavior to the end; because they were naturally mild in 
		their conquests, and preferred what was profitable, before what their 
		passions dictated to them; which profit of theirs lay not in leaving the 
		city empty of inhabitants, nor the country a desert; on which account 
		Caesar did now offer them his right hand for their security. Whereas, if 
		he took the city by force, he would not save any of them, and this 
		especially, if they rejected his offers in these their utmost 
		distresses; for the walls that were already taken could not but assure 
		them that the third wall would quickly be taken also. And though their 
		fortifications should prove too strong for the Romans to break through 
		them, yet would the famine fight for the Romans against them.
 
 4. While Josephus was making this exhortation to the Jews, many of them 
		jested upon him from the wall, and many reproached him; nay, some threw 
		their darts at him: but when he could not himself persuade them by such 
		open good advice, he betook himself to the histories belonging to their 
		own nation, and cried out aloud, "O miserable creatures! are you so 
		unmindful of those that used to assist you, that you will fight by your 
		weapons and by your hands against the Romans? When did we ever conquer 
		any other nation by such means? and when was it that God, who is the 
		Creator of the Jewish people, did not avenge them when they had been 
		injured? Will not you turn again, and look back, and consider whence it 
		is that you fight with such violence, and how great a Supporter you have 
		profanely abused? Will not you recall to mind the prodigious things done 
		for your forefathers and this holy place, and how great enemies of yours 
		were by him subdued under you? I even tremble myself in declaring the 
		works of God before your ears, that are unworthy to hear them; however, 
		hearken to me, that you may be informed how you fight not only against 
		the Romans, but against God himself. In old times there was one Necao, 
		king of Egypt, who was also called Pharaoh; he came with a prodigious 
		army of soldiers, and seized queen Sarah, the mother of our nation. What 
		did Abraham our progenitor then do? Did he defend himself from this 
		injurious person by war, although he had three hundred and eighteen 
		captains under him, and an immense army under each of them? Indeed he 
		deemed them to be no number at all without God's assistance, and only 
		spread out his hands towards this holy place, (16) which you have now 
		polluted, and reckoned upon him as upon his invincible supporter, 
		instead of his own army. Was not our queen sent back, without any 
		defilement, to her husband, the very next evening? - while the king of 
		Egypt fled away, adoring this place which you have defiled by shedding 
		thereon the blood of your own countrymen; and he also trembled at those 
		visions which he saw in the night season, and bestowed both silver and 
		gold on the Hebrews, as on a people beloved by God. Shall I say nothing, 
		or shall I mention the removal of our fathers into Egypt, who, (17) when 
		they were used tyrannically, and were fallen under the power of foreign 
		kings for four hundred ears together, and might have defended themselves 
		by war and by fighting, did yet do nothing but commit themselves to God! 
		Who is there that does not know that Egypt was overrun with all sorts of 
		wild beasts, and consumed by all sorts of distempers? how their land did 
		not bring forth its fruit? how the Nile failed of water? how the ten 
		plagues of Egypt followed one upon another? and how by those means our 
		fathers were sent away under a guard, without any bloodshed, and without 
		running any dangers, because God conducted them as his peculiar 
		servants? Moreover, did not Palestine groan under the ravage the 
		Assyrians made, when they carried away our sacred ark? as did their idol 
		Dagon, and as also did that entire nation of those that carried it away, 
		how they were smitten with a loathsome distemper in the secret parts of 
		their bodies, when their very bowels came down together with what they 
		had eaten, till those hands that stole it away were obliged to bring it 
		back again, and that with the sound of cymbals and timbrels, and other 
		oblations, in order to appease the anger of God for their violation of 
		his holy ark. It was God who then became our General, and accomplished 
		these great things for our fathers, and this because they did not meddle 
		with war and fighting, but committed it to him to judge about their 
		affairs. When Sennacherib, king of Assyria, brought along with him all 
		Asia, and encompassed this city round with his army, did he fall by the 
		hands of men? were not those hands lifted up to God in prayers, without 
		meddling with their arms, when an angel of God destroyed that prodigious 
		army in one night? when the Assyrian king, as he rose the next day, 
		found a hundred fourscore and five thousand dead bodies, and when he, 
		with the remainder of his army, fled away from the Hebrews, though they 
		were unarmed, and did not pursue them. You are also acquainted with the 
		slavery we were under at Babylon, where the people were captives for 
		seventy years; yet were they not delivered into freedom again before God 
		made Cyrus his gracious instrument in bringing it about; accordingly 
		they were set free by him, and did again restore the worship of their 
		Deliverer at his temple. And, to speak in general, we can produce no 
		example wherein our fathers got any success by war, or failed of success 
		when without war they committed themselves to God. When they staid at 
		home, they conquered, as pleased their Judge; but when they went out to 
		fight, they were always disappointed: for example, when the king of 
		Babylon besieged this very city, and our king Zedekiah fought against 
		him, contrary to what predictions were made to him by Jeremiah the 
		prophet, he was at once taken prisoner, and saw the city and the temple 
		demolished. Yet how much greater was the moderation of that king, than 
		is that of your present governors, and that of the people then under 
		him, than is that of you at this time! for when Jeremiah cried out 
		aloud, how very angry God was at them, because of their transgressions, 
		and told them they should be taken prisoners, unless they would 
		surrender up their city, neither did the king nor the people put him to 
		death; but for you, (to pass over what you have done within the city, 
		which I am not able to describe as your wickedness deserves,) you abuse 
		me, and throw darts at me, who only exhort you to save yourselves, as 
		being provoked when you are put in mind of your sins, and cannot bear 
		the very mention of those crimes which you every day perpetrate. For 
		another example, when Antiochus, who was called Epiphanes, lay before 
		this city, and had been guilty of many indignities against God, and our 
		forefathers met him in arms, they then were slain in the battle, this 
		city was plundered by our enemies, and our sanctuary made desolate for 
		three years and six months. And what need I bring any more examples? 
		Indeed what can it be that hath stirred up an army of the Romans against 
		our nation? Is it not the impiety of the inhabitants? Whence did our 
		servitude commence? Was it not derived from the seditions that were 
		among our forefathers, when the madness of Aristobulus and Hyrcanus, and 
		our mutual quarrels, brought Pompey upon this city, and when God reduced 
		those under subjection to the Romans who were unworthy of the liberty 
		they had enjoyed? After a siege, therefore, of three months, they were 
		forced to surrender themselves, although they had not been guilty of 
		such offenses, with regard to our sanctuary and our laws, as you have; 
		and this while they had much greater advantages to go to war than you 
		have. Do not we know what end Antigonus, the son of Aristobulus, came 
		to, under whose reign God provided that this city should be taken again 
		upon account of the people's offenses? When Herod, the son of Antipater, 
		brought upon us Sosius, and Sosius brought upon us the Roman army, they 
		were then encompassed and besieged for six months, till, as a punishment 
		for their sins, they were taken, and the city was plundered by the 
		enemy. Thus it appears that arms were never given to our nation, but 
		that we are always given up to be fought against, and to be taken; for I 
		suppose that such as inhabit this holy place ought to commit the 
		disposal of all things to God, and then only to disregard the assistance 
		of men when they resign themselves up to their Arbitrator, who is above. 
		As for you, what have you done of those things that are recommended by 
		our legislator? and what have you not done of those things that he hath 
		condemned? How much more impious are you than those who were so quickly 
		taken! You have not avoided so much as those sins that are usually done 
		in secret; I mean thefts, and treacherous plots against men, and 
		adulteries. You are quarrelling about rapines and murders, and invent 
		strange ways of wickedness. Nay, the temple itself is become the 
		receptacle of all, and this Divine place is polluted by the hands of 
		those of our own country; which place hath yet been reverenced by the 
		Romans when it was at a distance from them, when they have suffered many 
		of their own customs to give place to our law. And, after all this, do 
		you expect Him whom you have so impiously abused to be your supporter? 
		To be sure then you have a right to be petitioners, and to call upon Him 
		to assist you, so pure are your hands! Did your king [Hezekiah] lift up 
		such hands in prayer to God against the king of Assyria, when he 
		destroyed that great army in one night? And do the Romans commit such 
		wickedness as did the king of Assyria, that you may have reason to hope 
		for the like vengeance upon them? Did not that king accept of money from 
		our king on this condition, that he should not destroy the city, and 
		yet, contrary to the oath he had taken, he came down to burn the temple? 
		while the Romans do demand no more than that accustomed tribute which 
		our fathers paid to their fathers; and if they may but once obtain that, 
		they neither aim to destroy this city, nor to touch this sanctuary; nay, 
		they will grant you besides, that your posterity shall be free, and your 
		possessions secured to you, and will preserve our holy laws inviolate to 
		you. And it is plain madness to expect that God should appear as well 
		disposed towards the wicked as towards the righteous, since he knows 
		when it is proper to punish men for their sins immediately; accordingly 
		he brake the power of the Assyrians the very first night that they 
		pitched their camp. Wherefore, had he judged that our nation was worthy 
		of freedom, or the Romans of punishment, he had immediately inflicted 
		punishment upon those Romans, as he did upon the Assyrians, when Pompey 
		began to meddle with our nation, or when after him Sosius came up 
		against us, or when Vespasian laid waste Galilee, or, lastly, when Titus 
		came first of all near to this city; although Magnus and Sosius did not 
		only suffer nothing, but took the city by force; as did Vespasian go 
		from the war he made against you to receive the empire; and as for 
		Titus, those springs that were formerly almost dried up when they were 
		under your power (18) since he is come, run more plentifully than they 
		did before; accordingly, you know that Siloam, as well as all the other 
		springs that were without the city, did so far fail, that water was sold 
		by distinct measures; whereas they now have such a great quantity of 
		water for your enemies, as is sufficient not only for drink both for 
		themselves and their cattle, but for watering their gardens also. The 
		same wonderful sign you had also experience of formerly, when the 
		forementioned king of Babylon made war against us, and when he took the 
		city, and burnt the temple; while yet I believe the Jews of that age 
		were not so impious as you are. Wherefore I cannot but suppose that God 
		is fled out of his sanctuary, and stands on the side of those against 
		whom you fight. Now even a man, if he be but a good man, will fly from 
		an impure house, and will hate those that are in it; and do you persuade 
		yourselves that God will abide with you in your iniquities, who sees all 
		secret things, and hears what is kept most private? Now what crime is 
		there, I pray you, that is so much as kept secret among you, or is 
		concealed by you? nay, what is there that is not open to your very 
		enemies? for you show your transgressions after a pompous manner, and 
		contend one with another which of you shall be more wicked than another; 
		and you make a public demonstration of your injustice, as if it were 
		virtue. However, there is a place left for your preservation, if you be 
		willing to accept of it; and God is easily reconciled to those that 
		confess their faults, and repent of them. O hard-hearted wretches as you 
		are! cast away all your arms, and take pity of your country already 
		going to ruin; return from your wicked ways, and have regard to the 
		excellency of that city which you are going to betray, to that excellent 
		temple with the donations of so many countries in it. Who could bear to 
		be the first that should set that temple on fire? who could be willing 
		that these things should be no more? and what is there that can better 
		deserve to be preserved? O insensible creatures, and more stupid than 
		are the stones themselves! And if you cannot look at these things with 
		discerning eyes, yet, however, have pity upon your families, and set 
		before every one of your eyes your children, and wives, and parents, who 
		will be gradually consumed either by famine or by war. I am sensible 
		that this danger will extend to my mother, and wife, and to that family 
		of mine who have been by no means ignoble, and indeed to one that hath 
		been very eminent in old time; and perhaps you may imagine that it is on 
		their account only that I give you this advice; if that be all, kill 
		them; nay, take my own blood as a reward, if it may but procure your 
		preservation; for I am ready to die, in case you will but return to a 
		sound mind after my death."
 
 
 CHAPTER 10.
 
 HOW A GREAT MANY OF THE PEOPLE EARNESTLY ENDEAVORED TO DESERT TO THE 
		ROMANS; AS ALSO WHAT INTOLERABLE THINGS THOSE THAT STAID BEHIND SUFFERED 
		BY FAMINE, AND THE SAD CONSEQUENCES THEREOF.
 
 1. AS Josephus was speaking thus with a loud voice, the seditious would 
		neither yield to what he said, nor did they deem it safe for them to 
		alter their conduct; but as for the people, they had a great inclination 
		to desert to the Romans; accordingly, some of them sold what they had, 
		and even the most precious things that had been laid up as treasures by 
		them, for every small matter, and swallowed down pieces of gold, that 
		they might not be found out by the robbers; and when they had escaped to 
		the Romans, went to stool, and had wherewithal to provide plentifully 
		for themselves; for Titus let a great number of them go away into the 
		country, whither they pleased. And the main reasons why they were so 
		ready to desert were these: That now they should be freed from those 
		miseries which they had endured in that city, and yet should not be in 
		slavery to the Romans: however, John and Simon, with their factions, did 
		more carefully watch these men's going out than they did the coming in 
		of the Romans; and if any one did but afford the least shadow of 
		suspicion of such an intention, his throat was cut immediately.
 
 2. But as for the richer sort, it proved all one to them whether they 
		staid in the city, or attempted to get out of it; for they were equally 
		destroyed in both cases; for every such person was put to death under 
		this pretense, that they were going to desert, but in reality that the 
		robbers might get what they had. The madness of the seditious did also 
		increase together with their famine, and both those miseries were every 
		day inflamed more and more; for there was no corn which any where 
		appeared publicly, but the robbers came running into, and searched men's 
		private houses; and then, if they found any, they tormented them, 
		because they had denied they had any; and if they found none, they 
		tormented them worse, because they supposed they had more carefully 
		concealed it. The indication they made use of whether they had any or 
		not was taken from the bodies of these miserable wretches; which, if 
		they were in good case, they supposed they were in no want at all of 
		food; but if they were wasted away, they walked off without searching 
		any further; nor did they think it proper to kill such as these, because 
		they saw they would very soon die of themselves for want of food. Many 
		there were indeed who sold what they had for one measure; it was of 
		wheat, if they were of the richer sort; but of barley, if they were 
		poorer. When these had so done, they shut themselves up in the inmost 
		rooms of their houses, and ate the corn they had gotten; some did it 
		without grinding it, by reason of the extremity of the want they were 
		in, and others baked bread of it, according as necessity and fear 
		dictated to them: a table was no where laid for a distinct meal, but 
		they snatched the bread out of the fire, half-baked, and ate it very 
		hastily.
 
 3. It was now a miserable case, and a sight that would justly bring 
		tears into our eyes, how men stood as to their food, while the more 
		powerful had more than enough, and the weaker were lamenting [for want 
		of it.] But the famine was too hard for all other passions, and it is 
		destructive to nothing so much as to modesty; for what was otherwise 
		worthy of reverence was in this case despised; insomuch that children 
		pulled the very morsels that their fathers were eating out of their very 
		mouths, and what was still more to be pitied, so did the mothers do as 
		to their infants; and when those that were most dear were perishing 
		under their hands, they were not ashamed to take from them the very last 
		drops that might preserve their lives: and while they ate after this 
		manner, yet were they not concealed in so doing; but the seditious every 
		where came upon them immediately, and snatched away from them what they 
		had gotten from others; for when they saw any house shut up, this was to 
		them a signal that the people within had gotten some food; whereupon 
		they broke open the doors, and ran in, and took pieces of what they were 
		eating almost up out of their very throats, and this by force: the old 
		men, who held their food fast, were beaten; and if the women hid what 
		they had within their hands, their hair was torn for so doing; nor was 
		there any commiseration shown either to the aged or to the infants, but 
		they lifted up children from the ground as they hung upon the morsels 
		they had gotten, and shook them down upon the floor. But still they were 
		more barbarously cruel to those that had prevented their coming in, and 
		had actually swallowed down what they were going to seize upon, as if 
		they had been unjustly defrauded of their right. They also invented 
		terrible methods of torments to discover where any food was, and they 
		were these to stop up the passages of the privy parts of the miserable 
		wretches, and to drive sharp stakes up their fundaments; and a man was 
		forced to bear what it is terrible even to hear, in order to make him 
		confess that he had but one loaf of bread, or that he might discover a 
		handful of barley-meal that was concealed; and this was done when these 
		tormentors were not themselves hungry; for the thing had been less 
		barbarous had necessity forced them to it; but this was done to keep 
		their madness in exercise, and as making preparation of provisions for 
		themselves for the following days. These men went also to meet those 
		that had crept out of the city by night, as far as the Roman guards, to 
		gather some plants and herbs that grew wild; and when those people 
		thought they had got clear of the enemy, they snatched from them what 
		they had brought with them, even while they had frequently entreated 
		them, and that by calling upon the tremendous name of God, to give them 
		back some part of what they had brought; though these would not give 
		them the least crumb, and they were to be well contented that they were 
		only spoiled, and not slain at the same time.
 
 4. These were the afflictions which the lower sort of people suffered 
		from these tyrants' guards; but for the men that were in dignity, and 
		withal were rich, they were carried before the tyrants themselves; some 
		of whom were falsely accused of laying treacherous plots, and so were 
		destroyed; others of them were charged with designs of betraying the 
		city to the Romans; but the readiest way of all was this, to suborn 
		somebody to affirm that they were resolved to desert to the enemy. And 
		he who was utterly despoiled of what he had by Simon was sent back again 
		to John, as of those who had been already plundered by Jotre, Simon got 
		what remained; insomuch that they drank the blood of the populace to one 
		another, and divided the dead bodies of the poor creatures between them; 
		so that although, on account of their ambition after dominion, they 
		contended with each other, yet did they very well agree in their wicked 
		practices; for he that did not communicate what he got by the miseries 
		of others to the other tyrant seemed to be too little guilty, and in one 
		respect only; and he that did not partake of what was so communicated to 
		him grieved at this, as at the loss of what was a valuable thing, that 
		he had no share in such barbarity.
 
 5. It is therefore impossible to go distinctly over every instance of 
		these men's iniquity. I shall therefore speak my mind here at once 
		briefly: - That neither did any other city ever suffer such miseries, 
		nor did any age ever breed a generation more fruitful in wickedness than 
		this was, from the beginning of the world. Finally, they brought the 
		Hebrew nation into contempt, that they might themselves appear 
		comparatively less impious with regard to strangers. They confessed what 
		was true, that they were the slaves, the scum, and the spurious and 
		abortive offspring of our nation, while they overthrew the city 
		themselves, and forced the Romans, whether they would or no, to gain a 
		melancholy reputation, by acting gloriously against them, and did almost 
		draw that fire upon the temple, which they seemed to think came too 
		slowly; and indeed when they saw that temple burning from the upper 
		city, they were neither troubled at it, nor did they shed any tears on 
		that account, while yet these passions were discovered among the Romans 
		themselves; which circumstances we shall speak of hereafter in their 
		proper place, when we come to treat of such matters.
 
 
 CHAPTER 11.
 
 HOW THE JEWS WERE CRUCIFIED BEFORE THE WALLS OF THE CITY CONCERNING 
		ANTIOCHUS EPIPHANES; AND HOW THE JEWS OVERTHREW THE BANKS THAT HAD BEEN 
		RAISED BY THE ROMANS,
 
 1. SO now Titus's banks were advanced a great way, notwithstanding his 
		soldiers had been very much distressed from the wall. He then sent a 
		party of horsemen, and ordered they should lay ambushes for those that 
		went out into the valleys to gather food. Some of these were indeed 
		fighting men, who were not contented with what they got by rapine; but 
		the greater part of them were poor people, who were deterred from 
		deserting by the concern they were under for their own relations; for 
		they could not hope to escape away, together with their wives and 
		children, without the knowledge of the seditious; nor could they think 
		of leaving these relations to be slain by the robbers on their account; 
		nay, the severity of the famine made them bold in thus going out; so 
		nothing remained but that, when they were concealed from the robbers, 
		they should be taken by the enemy; and when they were going to be taken, 
		they were forced to defend themselves for fear of being punished; as 
		after they had fought, they thought it too late to make any 
		supplications for mercy; so they were first whipped, and then tormented 
		with all sorts of tortures, before they died, and were then crucified 
		before the wall of the city. This miserable procedure made Titus greatly 
		to pity them, while they caught every day five hundred Jews; nay, some 
		days they caught more: yet it did not appear to be safe for him to let 
		those that were taken by force go their way, and to set a guard over so 
		many he saw would be to make such as great deal them useless to him. The 
		main reason why he did not forbid that cruelty was this, that he hoped 
		the Jews might perhaps yield at that sight, out of fear lest they might 
		themselves afterwards be liable to the same cruel treatment. So the 
		soldiers, out of the wrath and hatred they bore the Jews, nailed those 
		they caught, one after one way, and another after another, to the 
		crosses, by way of jest, when their multitude was so great, that room 
		was wanting for the crosses, and crosses wanting for the bodies. (19)
 
 2. But so far were the seditious from repenting at this sad sight, that, 
		on the contrary, they made the rest of the multitude believe otherwise; 
		for they brought the relations of those that had deserted upon the wall, 
		with such of the populace as were very eager to go over upon the 
		security offered them, and showed them what miseries those underwent who 
		fled to the Romans; and told them that those who were caught were 
		supplicants to them, and not such as were taken prisoners. This sight 
		kept many of those within the city who were so eager to desert, till the 
		truth was known; yet did some of them run away immediately as unto 
		certain punishment, esteeming death from their enemies to be a quiet 
		departure, if compared with that by famine. So Titus commanded that the 
		hands of many of those that were caught should be cut off, that they 
		might not be thought deserters, and might be credited on account of the 
		calamity they were under, and sent them in to John and Simon, with this 
		exhortation, that they would now at length leave off [their madness], 
		and not force him to destroy the city, whereby they would have those 
		advantages of repentance, even in their utmost distress, that they would 
		preserve their own lives, and so find a city of their own, and that 
		temple which was their peculiar. He then went round about the banks that 
		were cast up, and hastened them, in order to show that his words should 
		in no long time be followed by his deeds. In answer to which the 
		seditious cast reproaches upon Caesar himself, and upon his father also, 
		and cried out, with a loud voice, that they contemned death, and did 
		well in preferring it before slavery; that they would do all the 
		mischief to the Romans they could while they had breath in them; and 
		that for their own city, since they were, as he said, to be destroyed, 
		they had no concern about it, and that the world itself was a better 
		temple to God than this. That yet this temple would be preserved by him 
		that inhabited therein, whom they still had for their assistant in this 
		war, and did therefore laugh at all his threatenings, which would come 
		to nothing, because the conclusion of the whole depended upon God only. 
		These words were mixed with reproaches, and with them they made a mighty 
		clamor.
 
 3. In the mean time Antiochus Epiphanes came to the city, having with 
		him a considerable number of other armed men, and a band called the 
		Macedonian band about him, all of the same age, tall, and just past 
		their childhood, armed, and instructed after the Macedonian manner, 
		whence it was that they took that name. Yet were many of them unworthy 
		of so famous a nation; for it had so happened, that the king of 
		Commagene had flourished more than any other kings that were under the 
		power of the Romans, till a change happened in his condition; and when 
		he was become an old man, he declared plainly that we ought not to call 
		any man happy before he is dead. But this son of his, who was then come 
		thither before his father was decaying, said that he could not but 
		wonder what made the Romans so tardy in making their attacks upon the 
		wall. Now he was a warlike man, and naturally bold in exposing himself 
		to dangers; he was also so strong a man, that his boldness seldom failed 
		of having success. Upon this Titus smiled, and said he would share the 
		pains of an attack with him. However, Antiochus went as he then was, and 
		with his Macedonians made a sudden assault upon the wall; and, indeed, 
		for his own part, his strength and skill were so great, that he guarded 
		himself from the Jewish darts, and yet shot his darts at them, while yet 
		the young men with him were almost all sorely galled; for they had so 
		great a regard to the promises that had been made of their courage, that 
		they would needs persevere in their fighting, and at length many of them 
		retired, but not till they were wounded; and then they perceived that 
		true Macedonians, if they were to be conquerors, must have Alexander's 
		good fortune also.
 
 4. Now as the Romans began to raise their banks on the twelfth day of 
		the month Artemisius, [Jyar,] so had they much ado to finish them by the 
		twenty-ninth day of the same month, after they had labored hard for 
		seventeen days continually. For there were now four great banks raised, 
		one of which was at the tower Antonia; this was raised by the fifth 
		legion, over against the middle of that pool which was called Struthius. 
		Another was cast up by the twelfth legion, at the distance of about 
		twenty cubits from the other. But the labors of the tenth legion, which 
		lay a great way off these, were on the north quarter, and at the pool 
		called Amygdalon; as was that of the fifteenth legion about thirty 
		cubits from it, and at the high priest's monument. And now, when the 
		engines were brought, John had from within undermined the space that was 
		over against the tower of Antonia, as far as the banks themselves, and 
		had supported the ground over the mine with beams laid across one 
		another, whereby the Roman works stood upon an uncertain foundation. 
		Then did he order such materials to be brought in as were daubed over 
		with pitch and bitumen, and set them on fire; and as the cross beams 
		that supported the banks were burning, the ditch yielded on the sudden, 
		and the banks were shaken down, and fell into the ditch with a 
		prodigious noise. Now at the first there arose a very thick smoke and 
		dust, as the fire was choked with the fall of the bank; but as the 
		suffocated materials were now gradually consumed, a plain flame brake 
		out; on which sudden appearance of the flame a consternation fell upon 
		the Romans, and the shrewdness of the contrivance discouraged them; and 
		indeed this accident coming upon them at a time when they thought they 
		had already gained their point, cooled their hopes for the time to come. 
		They also thought it would be to no purpose to take the pains to 
		extinguish the fire, since if it were extinguished, the banks were 
		swallowed up already [and become useless to them].
 
 5. Two days after this, Simon and his party made an attempt to destroy 
		the other banks; for the Romans had brought their engines to bear there, 
		and began already to make the wall shake. And here one Tephtheus, of 
		Garsis, a city of Galilee, and Megassarus, one who was derived from some 
		of queen Mariamne's servants, and with them one from Adiabene, he was 
		the son of Nabateus, and called by the name of Chagiras, from the ill 
		fortune he had, the word signifying "a lame man," snatched some torches, 
		and ran suddenly upon the engines. Nor were there during this war any 
		men that ever sallied out of the city who were their superiors, either 
		in their boldness, or in the terror they struck into their enemies. For 
		they ran out upon the Romans, not as if they were enemies, but friends, 
		without fear or delay; nor did they leave their enemies till they had 
		rushed violently through the midst of them, and set their machines on 
		fire. And though they had darts thrown at them on every side, and were 
		on every side assaulted with their enemies' swords, yet did they not 
		withdraw themselves out of the dangers they were in, till the fire had 
		caught hold of the instruments; but when the flame went up, the Romans 
		came running from their camp to save their engines. Then did the Jews 
		hinder their succors from the wall, and fought with those that 
		endeavored to quench the fire, without any regard to the danger their 
		bodies were in. So the Romans pulled the engines out of the fire, while 
		the hurdles that covered them were on fire; but the Jews caught hold of 
		the battering rams through the flame itself, and held them fast, 
		although the iron upon them was become red hot; and now the fire spread 
		itself from the engines to the banks, and prevented those that came to 
		defend them; and all this while the Romans were encompassed round about 
		with the flame; and, despairing of saying their works from it, they 
		retired to their camp. Then did the Jews become still more and more in 
		number by the coming of those that were within the city to their 
		assistance; and as they were very bold upon the good success they had 
		had, their violent assaults were almost irresistible; nay, they 
		proceeded as far as the fortifications of the enemies' camp, and fought 
		with their guards. Now there stood a body of soldiers in array before 
		that camp, which succeeded one another by turns in their armor; and as 
		to those, the law of the Romans was terrible, that he who left his post 
		there, let the occasion be whatsoever it might be, he was to die for it; 
		so that body of soldiers, preferring rather to die in fighting 
		courageously, than as a punishment for their cowardice, stood firm; and 
		at the necessity these men were in of standing to it, many of the others 
		that had run away, out of shame, turned back again; and when they had 
		set the engines against the wall, they put the multitude from coming 
		more of them out of the city, [which they could the more easily do] 
		because they had made no provision for preserving or guarding their 
		bodies at this time; for the Jews fought now hand to hand with all that 
		came in their way, and, without any caution, fell against the points of 
		their enemies' spears, and attacked them bodies against bodies; for they 
		were now too hard for the Romans, not so much by their other warlike 
		actions, as by these courageous assaults they made upon them; and the 
		Romans gave way more to their boldness than they did to the sense of the 
		harm they had received from them.
 
 6. And now Titus was come from the tower of Antonia, whither he was gone 
		to look out for a place for raising other banks, and reproached the 
		soldiers greatly for permitting their own walls to be in danger, when 
		they had taken the wails of their enemies, and sustained the fortune of 
		men besieged, while the Jews were allowed to sally out against them, 
		though they were already in a sort of prison. He then went round about 
		the enemy with some chosen troops, and fell upon their flank himself; so 
		the Jews, who had been before assaulted in their faces, wheeled about to 
		Titus, and continued the fight. The armies also were now mixed one among 
		another, and the dust that was raised so far hindered them from seeing 
		one another, and the noise that was made so far hindered them from 
		hearing one another, that neither side could discern an enemy from a 
		friend. However, the Jews did not flinch, though not so much from their 
		real strength, as from their despair of deliverance. The Romans also 
		would not yield, by reason of the regard they had to glory, and to their 
		reputation in war, and because Caesar himself went into the danger 
		before them; insomuch that I cannot but think the Romans would in the 
		conclusion have now taken even the whole multitude of the Jews, so very 
		angry were they at them, had these not prevented the upshot of the 
		battle, and retired into the city. However, seeing the banks of the 
		Romans were demolished, these Romans were very much east down upon the 
		loss of what had cost them so long pains, and this in one hour's time. 
		And many indeed despaired of taking the city with their usual engines of 
		war only.
 
 
 CHAPTER 12.
 
 TITUS THOUGHT FIT TO ENCOMPASS THE CITY ROUND WITH A WALL; AFTER WHICH 
		THE FAMINE CONSUMED THE PEOPLE BY WHOLE HOUSES AND FAMILIES TOGETHER.
 
 1. AND now did Titus consult with his commanders what was to be done. 
		Those that were of the warmest tempers thought he should bring the whole 
		army against the city and storm the wall; for that hitherto no more than 
		a part of their army had fought with the Jews; but that in case the 
		entire army was to come at once, they would not be able to sustain their 
		attacks, but would be overwhelmed by their darts. But of those that were 
		for a more cautious management, some were for raising their banks again; 
		and others advised to let the banks alone, but to lie still before the 
		city, to guard against the coming out of the Jews, and against their 
		carrying provisions into the city, and so to leave the enemy to the 
		famine, and this without direct fighting with them; for that despair was 
		not to be conquered, especially as to those who are desirous to die by 
		the sword, while a more terrible misery than that is reserved for them. 
		However, Titus did not think it fit for so great an army to lie entirely 
		idle, and that yet it was in vain to fight with those that would be 
		destroyed one by another; he also showed them how impracticable it was 
		to cast up any more banks, for want of materials, and to guard against 
		the Jews coming out still more impracticable; as also, that to encompass 
		the whole city round with his army was not very easy, by reason of its 
		magnitude, and the difficulty of the situation, and on other accounts 
		dangerous, upon the sallies the Jews might make out of the city. For 
		although they might guard the known passages out of the place, yet would 
		they, when they found themselves under the greatest distress, contrive 
		secret passages out, as being well acquainted with all such places; and 
		if any provisions were carried in by stealth, the siege would thereby be 
		longer delayed. He also owned that he was afraid that the length of time 
		thus to be spent would diminish the glory of his success; for though it 
		be true that length of time will perfect every thing, yet that to do 
		what we do in a little time is still necessary to the gaining 
		reputation. That therefore his opinion was, that if they aimed at 
		quickness joined with security, they must build a wall round about the 
		whole city; which was, he thought, the only way to prevent the Jews from 
		coming out any way, and that then they would either entirely despair of 
		saving the city, and so would surrender it up to him, or be still the 
		more easily conquered when the famine had further weakened them; for 
		that besides this wall, he would not lie entirely at rest afterward, but 
		would take care then to have banks raised again, when those that would 
		oppose them were become weaker. But that if any one should think such a 
		work to be too great, and not to be finished without much difficulty, he 
		ought to consider that it is not fit for Romans to undertake any small 
		work, and that none but God himself could with ease accomplish any great 
		thing whatsoever.
 
 2. These arguments prevailed with the commanders. So Titus gave orders 
		that the army should be distributed to their several shares of this 
		work; and indeed there now came upon the soldiers a certain divine fury, 
		so that they did not only part the whole wall that was to be built among 
		them, nor did only one legion strive with another, but the lesser 
		divisions of the army did the same; insomuch that each soldier was 
		ambitious to please his decurion, each decurion his centurion, each 
		centurion his tribune, and the ambition of the tribunes was to please 
		their superior commanders, while Caesar himself took notice of and 
		rewarded the like contention in those commanders; for he went round 
		about the works many times every day, and took a view of what was done. 
		Titus began the wall from the camp of the Assyrians, where his own camp 
		was pitched, and drew it down to the lower parts of Cenopolis; thence it 
		went along the valley of Cedron, to the Mount of Olives; it then bent 
		towards the south, and encompassed the mountain as far as the rock 
		called Peristereon, and that other hill which lies next it, and is over 
		the valley which reaches to Siloam; whence it bended again to the west, 
		and went down to the valley of the Fountain, beyond which it went up 
		again at the monument of Ananus the high priest, and encompassing that 
		mountain where Pompey had formerly pitched his camp, it returned back to 
		the north side of the city, and was carried on as far as a certain 
		village called "The House of the Erebinthi;" after which it encompassed 
		Herod's monument, and there, on the east, was joined to Titus's own 
		camp, where it began. Now the length of this wall was forty furlongs, 
		one only abated. Now at this wall without were erected thirteen places 
		to keep garrison in, whose circumferences, put together, amounted to ten 
		furlongs; the whole was completed in three days; so that what would 
		naturally have required some months was done in so short an interval as 
		is incredible. When Titus had therefore encompassed the city with this 
		wall, and put garrisons into proper places, be went round the wall, at 
		the first watch of the night, and observed how the guard was kept; the 
		second watch he allotted to Alexander; the commanders of legions took 
		the third watch. They also cast lots among themselves who should be upon 
		the watch in the night time, and who should go all night long round the 
		spaces that were interposed between the garrisons.
 
 3. So all hope of escaping was now cut off from the Jews, together with 
		their liberty of going out of the city. Then did the famine widen its 
		progress, and devoured the people by whole houses and families; the 
		upper rooms were full of women and children that were dying by famine, 
		and the lanes of the city were full of the dead bodies of the aged; the 
		children also and the young men wandered about the market-places like 
		shadows, all swelled with the famine, and fell down dead, wheresoever 
		their misery seized them. As for burying them, those that were sick 
		themselves were not able to do it; and those that were hearty and well 
		were deterred from doing it by the great multitude of those dead bodies, 
		and by the uncertainty there was how soon they should die themselves; 
		for many died as they were burying others, and many went to their 
		coffins before that fatal hour was come. Nor was there any lamentations 
		made under these calamities, nor were heard any mournful complaints; but 
		the famine confounded all natural passions; for those who were just 
		going to die looked upon those that were gone to rest before them with 
		dry eyes and open mouths. A deep silence also, and a kind of deadly 
		night, had seized upon the city; while yet the robbers were still more 
		terrible than these miseries were themselves; for they brake open those 
		houses which were no other than graves of dead bodies, and plundered 
		them of what they had; and carrying off the coverings of their bodies, 
		went out laughing, and tried the points of their swords in their dead 
		bodies; and, in order to prove what metal they were made of they thrust 
		some of those through that still lay alive upon the ground; but for 
		those that entreated them to lend them their right hand and their sword 
		to despatch them, they were too proud to grant their requests, and left 
		them to be consumed by the famine. Now every one of these died with 
		their eyes fixed upon the temple, and left the seditious alive behind 
		them. Now the seditious at first gave orders that the dead should be 
		buried out of the public treasury, as not enduring the stench of their 
		dead bodies. But afterwards, when they could not do that, they had them 
		cast down from the walls into the valleys beneath.
 
 4. However, when Titus, in going his rounds along those valleys, saw 
		them full of dead bodies, and the thick putrefaction running about them, 
		he gave a groan; and, spreading out his hands to heaven, called God to 
		witness that this was not his doing; and such was the sad case of the 
		city itself. But the Romans were very joyful, since none of the 
		seditious could now make sallies out of the city, because they were 
		themselves disconsolate, and the famine already touched them also. These 
		Romans besides had great plenty of corn and other necessaries out of 
		Syria, and out of the neighboring provinces; many of whom would stand 
		near to the wall of the city, and show the people what great quantities 
		of provisions they had, and so make the enemy more sensible of their 
		famine, by the great plenty, even to satiety, which they had themselves. 
		However, when the seditious still showed no inclinations of yielding, 
		Titus, out of his commiseration of the people that remained, and out of 
		his earnest desire of rescuing what was still left out of these 
		miseries, began to raise his banks again, although materials for them 
		were hard to he come at; for all the trees that were about the city had 
		been already cut down for the making of the former banks. Yet did the 
		soldiers bring with them other materials from the distance of ninety 
		furlongs, and thereby raised banks in four parts, much greater than the 
		former, though this was done only at the tower of Antonia. So Caesar 
		went his rounds through the legions, and hastened on the works, and 
		showed the robbers that they were now in his hands. But these men, and 
		these only, were incapable of repenting of the wickednesses they had 
		been guilty of; and separating their souls from their bodies, they used 
		them both as if they belonged to other folks, and not to themselves. For 
		no gentle affection could touch their souls, nor could any pain affect 
		their bodies, since they could still tear the dead bodies of the people 
		as dogs do, and fill the prisons with those that were sick.
 
 
 CHAPTER 13.
 
 THE GREAT SLAUGHTERS AND SACRILEGE THAT WERE IN JERUSALEM.
 
 1. ACCORDINGLY Simon would not suffer Matthias, by whose means he got 
		possession of the city, to go off without torment. This Matthias was the 
		son of Boethus, and was one of the high priests, one that had been very 
		faithful to the people, and in great esteem with them; he, when the 
		multitude were distressed by the zealots, among whom John was numbered, 
		persuaded the people to admit this Simon to come in to assist them, 
		while he had made no terms with him, nor expected any thing that was 
		evil from him. But when Simon was come in, and had gotten the city under 
		his power, he esteemed him that had advised them to admit him as his 
		enemy equally with the rest, as looking upon that advice as a piece of 
		his simplicity only; so he had him then brought before him, and 
		condemned to die for being on the side of the Romans, without giving him 
		leave to make his defense. He condemned also his three sons to die with 
		him; for as to the fourth, he prevented him by running away to Titus 
		before. And when he begged for this, that he might be slain before his 
		sons, and that as a favor, on account that he had procured the gates of 
		the city to be opened to him, he gave order that he should be slain the 
		last of them all; so he was not slain till he had seen his sons slain 
		before his eyes, and that by being produced over against the Romans; for 
		such a charge had Simon given to Artanus, the son of Bamadus, who was 
		the most barbarous of all his guards. He also jested upon him, and told 
		him that he might now see whether those to whom he intended to go over 
		would send him any succors or not; but still he forbade their dead 
		bodies should be buried. After the slaughter of these, a certain priest, 
		Ananias, the son of Masambalus, a person of eminency, as also Aristens, 
		the scribe of the sanhedrim, and born at Emmaus, and with them fifteen 
		men of figure among the people, were slain. They also kept Josephus's 
		father in prison, and made public proclamation, that no citizen 
		whosoever should either speak to him himself, or go into his company 
		among others, for fear he should betray them. They also slew such as 
		joined in lamenting these men, without any further examination.
 
 2. Now when Judas, the son of Judas, who was one of Simon's under 
		officers, and a person intrusted by him to keep one of the towers, saw 
		this procedure of Simon, he called together ten of those under him, that 
		were most faithful to him, (perhaps this was done partly out of pity to 
		those that had so barbarously been put to death, but principally in 
		order to provide for his own safety,) and spoke thus to them: "How long 
		shall we bear these miseries? or what hopes have we of deliverance by 
		thus continuing faithful to such wicked wretches? Is not the famine 
		already come against us? Are not the Romans in a manner gotten within 
		the city? Is not Simon become unfaithful to his benefactors? and is 
		there not reason to fear he will very soon bring us to the like 
		punishment, while the security the Romans offer us is sure? Come on, let 
		us surrender up this wall, and save ourselves and the city. Nor will 
		Simon be very much hurt, if, now he despairs of deliverance, he be 
		brought to justice a little sooner than he thinks on." Now these ten 
		were prevailed upon by those arguments; so he sent the rest of those 
		that were under him, some one way, and some another, that no discovery 
		might be made of what they had resolved upon. Accordingly, he called to 
		the Romans from the tower about the third hour; but they, some of them 
		out of pride, despised what he said, and others of them did not believe 
		him to be in earnest, though the greatest number delayed the matter, as 
		believing they should get possession of the city in a little time, 
		without any hazard. But when Titus was just coming thither with his 
		armed men, Simon was acquainted with the matter before he came, and 
		presently took the tower into his own custody, before it was 
		surrendered, and seized upon these men, and put them to death in the 
		sight of the Romans themselves; and when he had mangled their dead 
		bodies, he threw them down before the wall of the city.
 
 3. In the mean time, Josephus, as he was going round the city, had his 
		head wounded by a stone that was thrown at him; upon which he fell down 
		as giddy. Upon which fall of his the Jews made a sally, and he had been 
		hurried away into the city, if Caesar had not sent men to protect him 
		immediately; and as these men were fighting, Josephus was taken up, 
		though he heard little of what was done. So the seditious supposed they 
		had now slain that man whom they were the most desirous of killing, and 
		made thereupon a great noise, in way of rejoicing. This accident was 
		told in the city, and the multitude that remained became very 
		disconsolate at the news, as being persuaded that he was really dead, on 
		whose account alone they could venture to desert to the Romans. But when 
		Josephus's mother heard in prison that her son was dead, she said to 
		those that watched about her, That she had always been of opinion, since 
		the siege of Jotapata, [that he would be slain,] and she should never 
		enjoy him alive any more. She also made great lamentation privately to 
		the maid-servants that were about her, and said, That this was all the 
		advantage she had of bringing so extraordinary a person as this son into 
		the world; that she should not be able even to bury that son of hers, by 
		whom she expected to have been buried herself. However, this false 
		report did not put his mother to pain, nor afford merriment to the 
		robbers, long; for Josephus soon recovered of his wound, and came out, 
		and cried out aloud, That it would not be long ere they should be 
		punished for this wound they had given him. He also made a fresh 
		exhortation to the people to come out upon the security that would be 
		given them. This sight of Josephus encouraged the people greatly, and 
		brought a great consternation upon the seditious.
 
 4. Hereupon some of the deserters, having no other way, leaped down from 
		the wall immediately, while others of them went out of the city with 
		stones, as if they would fight them; but thereupon they fled away to the 
		Romans. But here a worse fate accompanied these than what they had found 
		within the city; and they met with a quicker despatch from the too great 
		abundance they had among the Romans, than they could have done from the 
		famine among the Jews; for when they came first to the Romans, they were 
		puffed up by the famine, and swelled like men in a dropsy; after which 
		they all on the sudden overfilled those bodies that were before empty, 
		and so burst asunder, excepting such only as were skillful enough to 
		restrain their appetites, and by degrees took in their food into bodies 
		unaccustomed thereto. Yet did another plague seize upon those that were 
		thus preserved; for there was found among the Syrian deserters a certain 
		person who was caught gathering pieces of gold out of the excrements of 
		the Jews' bellies; for the deserters used to swallow such pieces of 
		gold, as we told you before, when they came out, and for these did the 
		seditious search them all; for there was a great quantity of gold in the 
		city, insomuch that as much was now sold [in the Roman camp] for twelve 
		Attic [drams], as was sold before for twenty-five. But when this 
		contrivance was discovered in one instance, the fame of it filled their 
		several camps, that the deserters came to them full of gold. So the 
		multitude of the Arabians, with the Syrians, cut up those that came as 
		supplicants, and searched their bellies. Nor does it seem to me that any 
		misery befell the Jews that was more terrible than this, since in one 
		night's time about two thousand of these deserters were thus dissected.
 
 5. When Titus came to the knowledge of this wicked practice, he had like 
		to have surrounded those that had been guilty of it with his horse, and 
		have shot them dead; and he had done it, had not their number been so 
		very great, and those that were liable to this punishment would have 
		been manifold more than those whom they had slain. However, he called 
		together the commanders of the auxiliary troops he had with him, as well 
		as the commanders of the Roman legions, (for some of his own soldiers 
		had been also guilty herein, as he had been informed,) and had great 
		indignation against both sorts of them, and said to them, "What! have 
		any of my own soldiers done such things as this out of the uncertain 
		hope of gain, without regarding their own weapons, which are made of 
		silver and gold? Moreover, do the Arabians and Syrians now first of all 
		begin to govern themselves as they please, and to indulge their 
		appetites in a foreign war, and then, out of their barbarity in 
		murdering men, and out of their hatred to the Jews, get it ascribed to 
		the Romans?" for this infamous practice was said to be spread among some 
		of his own soldiers also. Titus then threatened that he would put such 
		men to death, if any of them were discovered to be so insolent as to do 
		so again; moreover, he gave it in charge to the legions, that they 
		should make a search after such as were suspected, and should bring them 
		to him. But it appeared that the love of money was too hard for all 
		their dread of punishment, and a vehement desire of gain is natural to 
		men, and no passion is so venturesome as covetousness; otherwise such 
		passions have certain bounds, and are subordinate to fear. But in 
		reality it was God who condemned the whole nation, and turned every 
		course that was taken for their preservation to their destruction. This, 
		therefore, which was forbidden by Caesar under such a threatening, was 
		ventured upon privately against the deserters, and these barbarians 
		would go out still, and meet those that ran away before any saw them, 
		and looking about them to see that no Roman spied them, they dissected 
		them, and pulled this polluted money out of their bowels; which money 
		was still found in a few of them, while yet a great many were destroyed 
		by the bare hope there was of thus getting by them, which miserable 
		treatment made many that were deserting to return back again into the 
		city.
 
 6. But as for John, when he could no longer plunder the people, he 
		betook himself to sacrilege, and melted down many of the sacred 
		utensils, which had been given to the temple; as also many of those 
		vessels which were necessary for such as ministered about holy things, 
		the caldrons, the dishes, and the tables; nay, he did not abstain from 
		those pouring vessels that were sent them by Augustus and his wife; for 
		the Roman emperors did ever both honor and adorn this temple; whereas 
		this man, who was a Jew, seized upon what were the donations of 
		foreigners, and said to those that were with him, that it was proper for 
		them to use Divine things, while they were fighting for the Divinity, 
		without fear, and that such whose warfare is for the temple should live 
		of the temple; on which account he emptied the vessels of that sacred 
		wine and oil, which the priests kept to be poured on the 
		burnt-offerings, and which lay in the inner court of the temple, and 
		distributed it among the multitude, who, in their anointing themselves 
		and drinking, used [each of them] above an hin of them. And here I 
		cannot but speak my mind, and what the concern I am under dictates to 
		me, and it is this: I suppose, that had the Romans made any longer delay 
		in coming against these villains, that the city would either have been 
		swallowed up by the ground opening upon them, or been overflowed by 
		water, or else been destroyed by such thunder as the country of Sodom 
		(20) perished by, for it had brought forth a generation of men much more 
		atheistical than were those that suffered such punishments; for by their 
		madness it was that all the people came to be destroyed.
 
 7. And, indeed, why do I relate these particular calamities? while 
		Manneus, the son of Lazarus, came running to Titus at this very time, 
		and told him that there had been carried out through that one gate, 
		which was intrusted to his care, no fewer than a hundred and fifteen 
		thousand eight hundred and eighty dead bodies, in the interval between 
		the fourteenth day of the month Xanthieus, [Nisan,] when the Romans 
		pitched their camp by the city, and the first day of the month Panemus [Tamuz]. 
		This was itself a prodigious multitude; and though this man was not 
		himself set as a governor at that gate, yet was he appointed to pay the 
		public stipend for carrying these bodies out, and so was obliged of 
		necessity to number them, while the rest were buried by their relations; 
		though all their burial was but this, to bring them away, and cast them 
		out of the city. After this man there ran away to Titus many of the 
		eminent citizens, and told him the entire number of the poor that were 
		dead, and that no fewer than six hundred thousand were thrown out at the 
		gates, though still the number of the rest could not be discovered; and 
		they told him further, that when they were no longer able to carry out 
		the dead bodies of the poor, they laid their corpses on heaps in very 
		large houses, and shut them up therein; as also that a medimnus of wheat 
		was sold for a talent; and that when, a while afterward, it was not 
		possible to gather herbs, by reason the city was all walled about, some 
		persons were driven to that terrible distress as to search the common 
		sewers and old dunghills of cattle, and to eat the dung which they got 
		there; and what they of old could not endure so much as to see they now 
		used for food. When the Romans barely heard all this, they commiserated 
		their case; while the seditious, who saw it also, did not repent, but 
		suffered the same distress to come upon themselves; for they were 
		blinded by that fate which was already coming upon the city, and upon 
		themselves also.
 
 
 
 ENDNOTE
 
 (1) This appears to be the first time that the zealots ventured to 
		pollute this most sacred court of the temple, which was the court of the 
		priests, wherein the temple itself and the altar stood. So that the 
		conjecture of those that would interpret that Zacharias, who was slain 
		"between the temple and the altar" several months before, B. IV. ch. 5. 
		sect. 4, as if he were slain there by these zealots, is groundless, as I 
		have noted on that place already.
 
 (2) The Levites.
 
 (3) This is an excellent reflection of Josephus, including his hopes of 
		the restoration of the Jews upon their repentance, See Antiq. B. IV. ch. 
		8. sect. 46, which is the grand "Hope of Israel," as Manasseh-ben-Israel, 
		the famous Jewish Rabbi, styles it, in his small but remarkable treatise 
		on that subject, of which the Jewish prophets are every where full. See 
		the principal of those prophecies collected together at the end of the 
		Essay on the Revelation, p. 822, etc.
 
 (4) This destruction of such a vast quantity of corn and other 
		provisions, as was sufficient for many years. was the direct occasion of 
		that terrible famine, which consumed incredible numbers of Jews in 
		Jerusalem during its siege. Nor probably could the Romans have taken 
		this city, after all, had not these seditious Jews been so infatuated as 
		thus madly to destroy, what Josephus here justly styles, "The nerves of 
		their power."
 
 (5) This timber, we see, was designed for the rebuilding those twenty 
		additional cubits of the holy house above the hundred, which had fallen 
		down some years before. See the note on Antiq. B. XV. ch. 11. sect. 3.
 
 (6) There being no gate on the west, and only on the west, side of the 
		court of the priests, and so no steps there, this was the only side that 
		the seditious, under this John of Gischala, could bring their engines 
		close to the cloisters of that court end-ways, though upon the floor of 
		the court of Israel. See the scheme of that temple, in the description 
		of the temples hereto belonging.
 
 (7) We may here note, that Titus is here called "a king," and "Caesar," 
		by Josephus, even while he was no more than the emperor's son, and 
		general of the Roman army, and his father Vespasian was still alive; 
		just as the New Testament says "Archelaus reigned," or "was king," 
		Matthew 2:22, though he was properly no more than ethnarch, as Josephus 
		assures us, Antiq. B. XVII. ch. 11. sect. 4; Of the War, B. II. ch. 6. 
		sect. 3. Thus also the Jews called the Roman emperors "kings," though 
		they never took that title to themselves:" We have no king but Caesar," 
		John 19:15. "Submit to the king as supreme," 1 Peter 2:13, 17; which is 
		also the language of the Apostolical Constitutions, II. II, 31; IV. 13; 
		V. 19; VI. 2, 25; VII. 16; VIII. 2, 13; and elsewhere in the New 
		Testament, Matthew 10:18; 17:25; 1 Timothy 2:2; and in Josephus also; 
		though I suspect Josephus particularly esteemed Titus as joint king with 
		his father ever since his divine dreams that declared them both such, B. 
		III. ch. 8. sect. 9.
 
 (8) This situation of the Mount of Olives, on the east of Jerusalem, at 
		about the distance of five or six furlongs, with the valley of Cedron 
		interposed between that mountain and the city, are things well known 
		both in the Old and New Testament, in Josephus elsewhere, and in all the 
		descriptions of Palestine.
 
 (9) Here we see the true occasion of those vast numbers of Jews that 
		were in Jerusalem during this siege by Titus, and perished therein; that 
		the siege began at the feast of the passover, when such prodigious 
		multitudes of Jews and proselytes of the gate were come from all parts 
		of Judea, and from other countries, in order to celebrate that great 
		festival. See the note B. VI. ch. 9. sect. 3. Tacitus himself informs 
		us, that the number of men, women, and children in Jerusalem, when it 
		was besieged by the Romans, as he had been informed. This information 
		must have been taken from the Romans: for Josephus never recounts the 
		numbers of those that were besieged, only he lets us know, that of the 
		vulgar, carried dead out of the gates, and buried at the public charges, 
		was the like number of 600,000, ch. viii. sect. 7. However, when Cestius 
		Gallus came first to the siege, that sum in Tacitus is no way 
		disagreeable to Josephus's history, though they were become much more 
		numerous when Titus encompassed the city at the passover. As to the 
		number that perished during this siege, Josephus assures us, as we shall 
		see hereafter, they were 1,100,000, besides 97,000 captives. But 
		Tacitus's history of the last part of this siege is not now extant; so 
		we cannot compare his parallel numbers with those of Josephus.
 
 (10) Perhaps, says Dr. Hudson, here was that gate, called the "Gate of 
		the Corner," in 2 Chronicles 26:9. See ch. 4. sect. 2
 
 (11) These dove-courts in Josephus, built by Herod the Great, are, in 
		the opinion of Reland, the very same that are mentioned by the 
		Talmudists, and named by them "Herod's dove courts." Nor is there any 
		reason to suppose otherwise, since in both accounts they were expressly 
		tame pigeons which were kept in them.
 
 (12) See the description of the temples hereto belonging, ch. 15. But 
		note, that what Josephus here says of the original scantiness of this 
		Mount Moriah, that it was quite too little for the temple, and that at 
		first it held only one cloister or court of Solomon's building, and that 
		the foundations were forced to be added long afterwards by degrees, to 
		render it capable of the cloisters for the other courts, etc., is 
		without all foundation in the Scriptures, and not at all confirmed by 
		his exacter account in the Antiquities. All that is or can be true here 
		is this, that when the court of the Gentiles was long afterward to be 
		encompassed with cloisters, the southern foundation for these cloisters 
		was found not to be large or firm enough, and was raised, and that 
		additional foundation supported by great pillars and arches under 
		ground, which Josephus speaks of elsewhere, Antiq. B. XV. ch. 11. sect. 
		3, and which Mr. Maundrel saw, and describes, p. 100, as extant under 
		ground at this day.
 
 (13) What Josephus seems here to mean is this: that these pillars, 
		supporting the cloisters in the second court, had their foundations or 
		lowest parts as deep as the floor of the first or lowest court; but that 
		so far of those lowest parts as were equal to the elevation of the upper 
		floor above the lowest were, and must be, hidden on the inside by the 
		ground or rock itself, on which that upper court was built; so that 
		forty cubits visible below were reduced to twenty-five visible above, 
		and implies the difference of their heights to be fifteen cubits. The 
		main difficulty lies here, how fourteen or fifteen steps should give an 
		ascent of fifteen cubits, half a cubit seeming sufficient for a single 
		step. Possibly there were fourteen or fifteen steps at the partition 
		wall, and fourteen or fifteen more thence into the court itself, which 
		would bring the whole near to the just proportion. See sect. 3, infra. 
		But I determine nothing.
 
 (14) These three guards that lay in the tower of Antonia must be those 
		that guarded the city, the temple, and the tower of Antonia.
 
 (15) What should be the meaning of this signal or watchword, when the 
		watchmen saw a stone coming from the engine, "The Stone Cometh," or what 
		mistake there is in the reading, I cannot tell. The MSS., both Greek and 
		Latin, all agree in this reading; and I cannot approve of any groundless 
		conjectural alteration of the text from ro to lop, that not the son or a 
		stone, but that the arrow or dart cometh; as hath been made by Dr. 
		Hudson, and not corrected by Havercamp. Had Josephus written even his 
		first edition of these books of the war in pure Hebrew, or had the Jews 
		then used the pure Hebrew at Jerusalem, the Hebrew word for a son is so 
		like that for a stone, ben and eben, that such a correction might have 
		been more easily admitted. But Josephus wrote his former edition for the 
		use of the Jews beyond Euphrates, and so in the Chaldee language, as he 
		did this second edition in the Greek language; and bar was the Chaldee 
		word for son, instead of the Hebrew ben, and was used not only in 
		Chaldea, etc. but in Judea also, as the New Testament informs us. Dio 
		lets us know that the very Romans at Rome pronounced the name of Simon 
		the son of Giora, Bar Poras for Bar Gioras, as we learn from Xiphiline, 
		p. 217. Reland takes notice, "that many will here look for a mystery, as 
		though the meaning were, that the Son of God came now to take vengeance 
		on the sins of the Jewish nation;" which is indeed the truth of the 
		fact, but hardly what the Jews could now mean; unless possibly by way of 
		derision of Christ's threatening so often made, that he would come at 
		the head of the Roman army for their destruction. But even this 
		interpretation has but a very small degree of probability. If I were to 
		make an emendation by mere conjecture, I would read instead of, though 
		the likeness be not so great as in lo; because that is the word used by 
		Josephus just before, as has been already noted on this very occasion, 
		while, an arrow or dart, is only a poetical word, and never used by 
		Josephus elsewhere, and is indeed no way suitable to the occasion, this 
		engine not throwing arrows or darts, but great stones, at this time.
 
 (16) Josephus supposes, in this his admirable speech to the Jews, that 
		not Abraham only, but Pharaoh king of Egypt, prayed towards a temple at 
		Jerusalem, or towards Jerusalem itself, in which were Mount Sion and 
		Mount Moriah, on which the tabernacle and temple did afterwards stand; 
		and this long before either the Jewish tabernacle or temple were built. 
		Nor is the famous command given by God to Abraham, to go two or three 
		days' journey, on purpose to offer up his son Isaac there, unfavorable 
		to such a notion.
 
 (17) Note here, that Josephus, in this his same admirable speech, calls 
		the Syrians, nay, even the Philistines, on the most south part of Syria, 
		Assyrians; which Reland observes as what was common among the ancient 
		writers. Note also, that Josephus might well put the Jews in mind, as he 
		does here more than once, of their wonderful and truly miraculous 
		deliverance from Sennacherib, king of Assyria, while the Roman army, and 
		himself with them, were now encamped upon and beyond that very spot of 
		ground where the Assyrian army lay seven hundred and eighty years 
		before, and which retained the very name of the Camp of the Assyrians to 
		that very day. See chap. 7. sect. 3, and chap. 12. sect. 2.
 
 (18) This drying up of the Jerusalem fountain of Siloam when the Jews 
		wanted it, and its flowing abundantly when the enemies of the Jews 
		wanted it, and these both in the days of Zedekiah and of Titus, (and 
		this last as a certain event well known by the Jews at that time, as 
		Josephus here tells them openly to their faces,) are very remarkable 
		instances of a Divine Providence for the punishment of the Jewish 
		nation, when they were grown very wicked, at both those times of the 
		destruction of Jerusalem.
 
 (19) Reland very properly takes notice here, how justly this judgment 
		came upon the Jews, when they were crucified in such multitudes 
		together, that the Romans wanted room for the crosses, and crosses for 
		the bodies of these Jews, since they had brought this judgment on 
		themselves by the crucifixion of their Messiah.
 
 (20) Josephus, both here and before, B. IV. ch. 8. sect. 4, esteems the 
		land of Sodom, not as part of the lake Asphaltiris, or under its waters, 
		but near it only, as Tacitus also took the same notion from him, Hist. 
		V. ch. 6. 7, which the great Reland takes to be the very truth, both in 
		his note on this place, and in his Palestina, tom. I. p. 254-258; though 
		I rather suppose part of that region of Pentapolis to be now under the 
		waters of the south part of that sea, but perhaps not the whole country.
 
 Back To The Table Of Contents
 |