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Or The History Of The Destruction Of Jerusalem
CONTAINING THE INTERVAL OF ONE HUNDRED AND SIXTY-SEVEN YEARS.
FROM THE TAKING OF JERUSALEM BY ANTIOCHUS EPIPHANES, TO THE DEATH OF HEROD THE
GREAT.
CHAPTER 1.
HOW THE CITY JERUSALEM WAS TAKEN, AND THE TEMPLE
PILLAGED [BY ANTIOCHUS EPIPHANES]. AS ALSO CONCERNING THE ACTIONS OF THE
MACCABEES, MATTHIAS AND JUDAS; AND CONCERNING THE DEATH OF JUDAS.
AT the same time that Antiochus, who was called Epiphanes, had a quarrel
with the sixth Ptolemy about his right to the whole country of Syria, a great
sedition fell among the men of power in Judea, and they had a contention about
obtaining the government; while each of those that were of dignity could not
endure to be subject to their equals. However, Onias, one of the high priests,
got the better, and cast the sons of Tobias out of the city; who fled to
Antiochus, and besought him to make use of them for his leaders, and to make an
expedition into Judea. The king being thereto disposed beforehand, complied with
them, and came upon the Jews with a great army, and took their city by force,
and slew a great multitude of those that favored Ptolemy, and sent out his
soldiers to plunder them without mercy. He also spoiled the temple, and put a
stop to the constant practice of offering a daily sacrifice of expiation for
three years and six months. But Onias, the high priest, fled to Ptolemy, and
received a place from him in the Nomus of Heliopolis, where he built a city
resembling Jerusalem, and a temple that was like its temple concerning which we
shall speak more in its proper place hereafter.
Now Antiochus was not satisfied either with his unexpected taking the
city, or with its pillage, or with the great slaughter he had made there; but
being overcome with his violent passions, and remembering what he had suffered
during the siege, he compelled the Jews to dissolve the laws of their country,
and to keep their infants uncircumcised, and to sacrifice swine's flesh upon the
altar; against which they all opposed themselves, and the most approved among
them were put to death. Bacchides also, who was sent to keep the fortresses,
having these wicked commands, joined to his own natural barbarity, indulged all
sorts of the extremest wickedness, and tormented the worthiest of the
inhabitants, man by man, and threatened their city every day with open
destruction, till at length he provoked the poor sufferers by the extremity of
his wicked doings to avenge themselves.
Accordingly Matthias, the son of Asamoneus, one of the priests who lived
in a village called Modin, armed himself, together with his own family, which
had five sons of his in it, and slew Bacchides with daggers; and thereupon, out
of the fear of the many garrisons [of the enemy], he fled to the mountains; and
so many of the people followed him, that he was encouraged to come down from the
mountains, and to give battle to Antiochus's generals, when he beat them, and
drove them out of Judea. So he came to the government by this his success, and
became the prince of his own people by their own free consent, and then died,
leaving the government to Judas, his eldest son.
Now Judas, supposing that Antiochus would not lie still, gathered an army
out of his own countrymen, and was the first that made a league of friendship
with the Romans, and drove Epiphanes out of the country when he had made a
second expedition into it, and this by giving him a great defeat there; and when
he was warmed by this great success, he made an assault upon the garrison that
was in the city, for it had not been cut off hitherto; so he ejected them out of
the upper city, and drove the soldiers into the lower, which part of the city
was called the Citadel. He then got the temple under his power, and cleansed the
whole place, and walled it round about, and made new vessels for sacred
ministrations, and brought them into the temple, because the former vessels had
been profaned. He also built another altar, and began to offer the sacrifices;
and when the city had already received its sacred constitution again, Antiochus
died; whose son Antiochus succeeded him in the kingdom, and in his hatred to the
Jews also.
So this Antiochus got together fifty thousand footmen, and five thousand
horsemen, and fourscore elephants, and marched through Judea into the
mountainous parts. He then took Bethsura, which was a small city; but at a place
called Bethzacharis, where the passage was narrow, Judas met him with his army.
However, before the forces joined battle, Judas's brother Eleazar, seeing the
very highest of the elephants adorned with a large tower, and with military
trappings of gold to guard him, and supposing that Antiochus himself was upon
him, he ran a great way before his own army, and cutting his way through the
enemy's troops, he got up to the elephant; yet could he not reach him who seemed
to be the king, by reason of his being so high; but still he ran his weapon into
the belly of the beast, and brought him down upon himself, and was crushed to
death, having done no more than attempted great things, and showed that he
preferred glory before life. Now he that governed the elephant was but a private
man; and had he proved to be Antiochus, Eleazar had performed nothing more by
this bold stroke than that it might appear he chose to die, when he had the bare
hope of thereby doing a glorious action; nay, this disappointment proved an omen
to his brother [Judas] how the entire battle would end. It is true that the Jews
fought it out bravely for a long time, but the king's forces, being superior in
number, and having fortune on their side, obtained the victory. And when a great
many of his men were slain, Judas took the rest with him, and fled to the
toparchy of Gophna. So Antiochus went to Jerusalem, and staid there but a few
days, for he wanted provisions, and so he went his way. He left indeed a
garrison behind him, such as he thought sufficient to keep the place, but drew
the rest of his army off, to take their winter-quarters in Syria.
Now, after the king was departed, Judas was not idle; for as many of his
own nation came to him, so did he gather those that had escaped out of the
battle together, and gave battle again to Antiochus's generals at a village
called Adasa; and being too hard for his enemies in the battle, and killing a
great number of them, he was at last himself slain also. Nor was it many days
afterward that his brother John had a plot laid against him by Antiochus's
party, and was slain by them.
CHAPTER 2.
CONCERNING THE SUCCESSORS OF JUDAS, WHO WERE JONATHAN AND
SIMON, AND JOHN HYRCANUS.
WHEN Jonathan, who was Judas's brother, succeeded him, he behaved himself
with great circumspection in other respects, with relation to his own people;
and he corroborated his authority by preserving his friendship with the Romans.
He also made a league with Antiochus the son. Yet was not all this sufficient
for his security; for the tyrant Trypho, who was guardian to Antiochus's son,
laid a plot against him; and besides that, endeavored to take off his friends,
and caught Jonathan by a wile, as he was going to Ptolemais to Antiochus, with a
few persons in his company, and put him in bonds, and then made an expedition
against the Jews; but when he was afterward driven away by Simon, who was
Jonathan's brother, and was enraged at his defeat, he put Jonathan to death.
However, Simon managed the public affairs after a courageous manner, and
took Gazara, and Joppa, and Jamnia, which were cities in his neighborhood. He
also got the garrison under, and demolished the citadel. He was afterward an
auxiliary to Antiochus, against Trypho, whom he besieged in Dora, before he went
on his expedition against the Medes; yet could not he make the king ashamed of
his ambition, though he had assisted him in killing Trypho; for it was not long
ere Antiochus sent Cendebeus his general with an army to lay waste Judea, and to
subdue Simon; yet he, though he was now in years, conducted the war as if he
were a much younger man. He also sent his sons with a band of strong men against
Antiochus, while he took part of the army himself with him, and fell upon him
from another quarter. He also laid a great many men in ambush in many places of
the mountains, and was superior in all his attacks upon them; and when he had
been conqueror after so glorious a manner, he was made high priest, and also
freed the Jews from the dominion of the Macedonians, after one hundred and
seventy years of the empire [of Seleucus].
This Simon also had a plot laid against him, and was slain at a feast by
his son-in-law Ptolemy, who put his wife and two sons into prison, and sent some
persons to kill John, who was also called Hyrcanus. But when the young man was
informed of their coming beforehand, he made haste to get to the city, as having
a very great confidence in the people there, both on account of the memory of
the glorious actions of his father, and of the hatred they could not but bear to
the injustice of Ptolemy. Ptolemy also made an attempt to get into the city by
another gate; but was repelled by the people, who had just then admitted of
Hyrcanus; so he retired presently to one of the fortresses that were about
Jericho, which was called Dagon. Now when Hyrcanus had received the high
priesthood, which his father had held before, and had offered sacrifice to God,
he made great haste to attack Ptolemy, that he might afford relief to his mother
and brethren.
So he laid siege to the fortress, and was superior to Ptolemy in other
respects, but was overcome by him as to the just affection [he had for his
relations]; for when Ptolemy was distressed, he brought forth his mother, and
his brethren, and set them upon the wall, and beat them with rods in every
body's sight, and threatened, that unless he would go away immediately, he would
throw them down headlong; at which sight Hyrcanus's commiseration and concern
were too hard for his anger. But his mother was not dismayed, neither at the
stripes she received, nor at the death with which she was threatened; but
stretched out her hands, and prayed her son not to be moved with the injuries
that she suffered to spare the wretch; since it was to her better to die by the
means of Ptolemy, than to live ever so long, provided he might be punished for
the injuries he done to their family. Now John's case was this: When he
considered the courage of his mother, and heard her entreaty, he set about his
attacks; but when he saw her beaten, and torn to pieces with the stripes, he
grew feeble, and was entirely overcome by his affections. And as the siege was
delayed by this means, the year of rest came on, upon which the Jews rest every
seventh year as they do on every seventh day. On this year, therefore, Ptolemy
was freed from being besieged, and slew the brethren of John, with their mother,
and fled to Zeno, who was also called Cotylas, who was tyrant of Philadelphia.
And now Antiochus was so angry at what he had suffered from Simon, that he
made an expedition into Judea, and sat down before Jerusalem and besieged Hyrcanus; but Hyrcanus opened the sepulcher of David, who was the richest of all
kings, and took thence about three thousand talents in money, and induced
Antiochus, by the promise of three thousand talents, to raise the siege.
Moreover, he was the first of the Jews that had money enough, and began to hire
foreign auxiliaries also.
However, at another time, when Antiochus was gone upon an expedition
against the Medes, and so gave Hyrcanus an opportunity of being revenged upon
him, he immediately made an attack upon the cities of Syria, as thinking, what
proved to be the case with them, that he should find them empty of god troops.
So he took Medaba and Samea, with the towns in their neighborhood, as also
Shechem, and Gerizzim; and besides these, [he subdued] the nation of the
Cutheans, who dwelt round about that temple which was built in imitation of the
temple at Jerusalem; he also took a great many other cities of Idumea, with
Adoreon and Marissa.
He also proceeded as far as Samaria, where is now the city Sebaste, which
was built by Herod the king, and encompassed it all round with a wall, and set
his sons, Aristobulus and Antigonus, over the siege; who pushed it on so hard,
that a famine so far prevailed within the city, that they were forced to eat
what never was esteemed food. They also invited Antiochus, who was called
Cyzicenus, to come to their assistance; whereupon he got ready, and complied
with their invitation, but was beaten by Aristobulus and Antigonus; and indeed
he was pursued as far as Scythopolis by these brethren, and fled away from them.
So they returned back to Samaria, and shut the multitude again within the wall;
and when they had taken the city, they demolished it, and made slaves of its
inhabitants. And as they had still great success in their undertakings, they did
not suffer their zeal to cool, but marched with an army as far as Scythopolis,
and made an incursion upon it, and laid waste all the country that lay within
Mount Carmel.
But then these successes of John and of his sons made them be envied, and
occasioned a sedition in the country; and many there were who got together, and
would not be at rest till they brake out into open war, in which war they were
beaten. So John lived the rest of his life very happily, and administered the
government after a most extraordinary manner, and this for thirty-three entire
years together. He died, leaving five sons behind him. He was certainly a very
happy man, and afforded no occasion to have any complaint made of fortune on his
account. He it was who alone had three of the most desirable things in the
world, - the government of his nation, and the high priesthood, and the gift of
prophecy. For the Deity conversed with him, and he was not ignorant of any thing
that was to come afterward; insomuch that he foresaw and foretold that his two
eldest sons would not continue masters of the government; and it will highly
deserve our narration to describe their catastrophe, and how far inferior these
men were to their father in felicity.
CHAPTER 3.
HOW ARISTOBULUS WAS THE FIRST THAT PUT A DIADEM ABOUT HIS
HEAD; AND AFTER HE HAD PUT HIS MOTHER AND BROTHER TO DEATH, DIED HIMSELF, WHEN
HE HAD REIGNED NO MORE THAN A YEAR.
FOR after the death of their father, the elder of them, Aristobulus,
changed the government into a kingdom, and was the first that put a diadem upon
his head, four hundred seventy and one years and three months after our people
came down into this country, when they were set free from the Babylonian
slavery. Now, of his brethren, he appeared to have an affection for Antigonus,
who was next to him, and made him his equal; but for the rest, he bound them,
and put them in prison. He also put his mother in bonds, for her contesting the
government with him; for John had left her to be the governess of public
affairs. He also proceeded to that degree of barbarity as to cause her to be
pined to death in prison.
But vengeance circumvented him in the affair of his brother Antigonus,
whom he loved, and whom he made his partner in the kingdom; for he slew him by
the means of the calumnies which ill men about the palace contrived against him.
At first, indeed, Aristobulus would not believe their reports, partly out of the
affection he had for his brother, and partly because he thought that a great
part of these tales were owing to the envy of their relaters: however, as
Antigonus came once in a splendid manner from the army to that festival, wherein
our ancient custom is to make tabernacles for God, it happened, in those days,
that Aristobulus was sick, and that, at the conclusion of the feast, Antigonus
came up to it, with his armed men about him; and this when he was adorned in the
finest manner possible; and that, in a great measure, to pray to God on the
behalf of his brother. Now at this very time it was that these ill men came to
the king, and told him in what a pompous manner the armed men came, and with
what insolence Antigonus marched, and that such his insolence was too great for
a private person, and that accordingly he was come with a great band of men to
kill him; for that he could not endure this bare enjoyment of royal honor, when
it was in his power to take the kingdom himself.
Now Aristobulus, by degrees, and unwillingly, gave credit to these
accusations; and accordingly he took care not to discover his suspicion openly,
though he provided to be secure against any accidents; so he placed the guards
of his body in a certain dark subterranean passage; for he lay sick in a place
called formerly the Citadel, though afterwards its name was changed to Antonia;
and he gave orders that if Antigonus came unarmed, they should let him alone;
but if he came to him in his armor, they should kill him. He also sent some to
let him know beforehand that he should come unarmed. But, upon this occasion,
the queen very cunningly contrived the matter with those that plotted his ruin,
for she persuaded those that were sent to conceal the king's message; but to
tell Antigonus how his brother had heard he had got a very the suit of armor
made with fine martial ornaments, in Galilee; and because his present sickness
hindered him from coming and seeing all that finery, he very much desired to see
him now in his armor; because, said he, in a little time thou art going away
from me.
As soon as Antigonus heard this, the good temper of his brother not
allowing him to suspect any harm from him, he came along with his armor on, to
show it to his brother; but when he was going along that dark passage which was
called Strato's Tower, he was slain by the body guards, and became an eminent
instance how calumny destroys all good-will and natural affection, and how none
of our good affections are strong enough to resist envy perpetually.
And truly any one would be surprised at Judas upon this occasion. He was
of the sect of the Essens, and had never failed or deceived men in his
predictions before. Now this man saw Antigonus as he was passing along by the
temple, and cried out to his acquaintance, (they were not a few who attended
upon him as his scholars,) "O strange!" said he, "it is good for me to die now,
since truth is dead before me, and somewhat that I have foretold hath proved
false; for this Antigonus is this day alive, who ought to hare died this day;
and the place where he ought to be slain, according to that fatal decree, was
Strato's Tower, which is at the distance of six hundred furlongs from this
place; and yet four hours of this day are over already; which point of time
renders the prediction impossible to be fill filled." And when the old man had
said this, he was dejected in his mind, and so continued. But in a little time
news came that Antigonus was slain in a subterraneous place, which was itself
also called Strato's Tower, by the same name with that Cesarea which lay by the
sea-side; and this ambiguity it was which caused the prophet's disorder.
Hereupon Aristobulus repented of the great crime he had been guilty of,
and this gave occasion to the increase of his distemper. He also grew worse and
worse, and his soul was constantly disturbed at the thoughts of what he had
done, till his very bowels being torn to pieces by the intolerable grief he was
under, he threw up a great quantity of blood. And as one of those servants that
attended him carried out that blood, he, by some supernatural providence,
slipped and fell down in the very place where Antigonus had been slain; and so
he spilt some of the murderer's blood upon the spots of the blood of him that
had been murdered, which still appeared. Hereupon a lamentable cry arose among
the spectators, as if the servant had spilled the blood on purpose in that
place; and as the king heard that cry, he inquired what was the cause of it; and
while nobody durst tell him, he pressed them so much the more to let him know
what was the matter; so at length, when he had threatened them, and forced them
to speak out, they told; whereupon he burst into tears, and groaned, and said,
"So I perceive I am not like to escape the all-seeing eye of God, as to the
great crimes I have committed; but the vengeance of the blood of my kinsman
pursues me hastily. O thou most impudent body! how long wilt thou retain a soul
that ought to die on account of that punishment it ought to suffer for a mother
and a brother slain! How long shall I myself spend my blood drop by drop? let
them take it all at once; and let their ghosts no longer be disappointed by a
few parcels of my bowels offered to them." As soon as he had said these words,
he presently died, when he had reigned no longer than a year.
CHAPTER 4.
WHAT ACTIONS WERE DONE BY ALEXANDER JANNEUS, WHO REIGNED
TWENTY-SEVEN YEARS.
AND now the king's wife loosed the king's brethren, and made Alexander
king, who appeared both elder in age, and more moderate in his temper than the
rest; who, when he came to the government, slew one of his brethren, as
affecting to govern himself; but had the other of them in great esteem, as
loving a quiet life, without meddling with public affairs.
Now it happened that there was a battle between him and Ptolemy, who was
called Lathyrus, who had taken the city Asochis. He indeed slew a great many of
his enemies, but the victory rather inclined to Ptolemy. But when this Ptolemy
was pursued by his mother Cleopatra, and retired into Egypt, Alexander besieged
Gadara, and took it; as also he did Amathus, which was the strongest of all the
fortresses that were about Jordan, and therein were the most precious of all the
possessions of Theodorus, the son of Zeno. Whereupon Theodopus marched against
him, and took what belonged to himself as well as the king's baggage, and slew
ten thousand of the Jews. However, Alexander recovered this blow, and turned his
force towards the maritime parts, and took Raphia and Gaza, with Anthedon also,
which was afterwards called Agrippias by king Herod.
But when he had made slaves of the citizens of all these cities, the
nation of the Jews made an insurrection against him at a festival; for at those
feasts seditions are generally begun; and it looked as if he should not be able
to escape the plot they had laid for him, had not his foreign auxiliaries, the Pisidians and Cilicians, assisted him; for as to the Syrians, he never admitted
them among his mercenary troops, on account of their innate enmity against the
Jewish nation. And when he had slain more than six thousand of the rebels, he
made an incursion into Arabia; and when he had taken that country, together with
the Gileadires and Moabites, he enjoined them to pay him tribute, and returned
to Areathus; and as Theodorus was surprised at his great success, he took the
fortress, and demolished it.
However, when he fought with Obodas, king of the Arabians, who had laid an
ambush for him near Golan, and a plot against him, he lost his entire army,
which was crowded together in a deep valley, and broken to pieces by the
multitude of camels. And when he had made his escape to Jerusalem, he provoked
the multitude, which hated him before, to make an insurrection against him, and
this on account of the greatness of the calamity that he was under. However, he
was then too hard for them; and, in the several battles that were fought on both
sides, he slew not fewer than fifty thousand of the Jews in the interval of six
years. Yet had he no reason to rejoice in these victories, since he did but
consume his own kingdom; till at length he left off fighting, and endeavored to
come to a composition with them, by talking with his subjects. But this
mutability and irregularity of his conduct made them hate him still more. And
when he asked them why they so hated him, and what he should do in order to
appease them, they said, by killing himself; for that it would be then all they
could do to be reconciled to him, who had done such tragical things to them,
even when he was dead. At the same time they invited Demetrius, who was called
Eucerus, to assist them; and as he readily complied with their requests, in
hopes of great advantages, and came with his army, the Jews joined with those
their auxiliaries about Shechem.
Yet did Alexander meet both these forces with one thousand horsemen, and
eight thousand mercenaries that were on foot. He had also with him that part of
the Jews which favored him, to the number of ten thousand; while the adverse
party had three thousand horsemen, and fourteen thousand footmen. Now, before
they joined battle, the kings made proclamation, and endeavored to draw off each
other's soldiers, and make them revolt; while Demetrius hoped to induce
Alexander's mercenaries to leave him, and Alexander hoped to induce the Jews
that were with Demetrius to leave him. But since neither the Jews would leave
off their rage, nor the Greeks prove unfaithful, they came to an engagement, and
to a close fight with their weapons. In which battle Demetrius was the
conqueror, although Alexander's mercenaries showed the greatest exploits, both
in soul and body. Yet did the upshot of this battle prove different from what
was expected, as to both of them; for neither did those that invited Demetrius
to come to them continue firm to him, though he was conqueror; and six thousand
Jews, out of pity to the change of Alexander's condition, when he was fled to
the mountains, came over to him. Yet could not Demetrius bear this turn of
affairs; but supposing that Alexander was already become a match for him again,
and that all the nation would [at length] run to him, he left the country, and
went his way.
However, the rest of the [Jewish] multitude did not lay aside their
quarrels with him, when the [foreign] auxiliaries were gone; but they had a
perpetual war with Alexander, until he had slain the greatest part of them, and
driven the rest into the city Berneselis; and when he had demolished that city,
he carried the captives to Jerusalem. Nay, his rage was grown so extravagant,
that his barbarity proceeded to the degree of impiety; for when he had ordered
eight hundred to be hung upon crosses in the midst of the city, he had the
throats of their wives and children cut before their eyes; and these executions
he saw as he was drinking and lying down with his concubines. Upon which so deep
a surprise seized on the people, that eight thousand of his opposers fled away
the very next night, out of all Judea, whose flight was only terminated by
Alexander's death; so at last, though not till late, and with great difficulty,
he, by such actions, procured quiet to his kingdom, and left off fighting any
more.
Yet did that Antiochus, who was also called Dionysius, become an origin of
troubles again. This man was the brother of Demetrius, and the last of the race
of the Seleucidse. Alexander was afraid of him, when he was marching against the
Arabians; so he cut a deep trench between Antipatris, which was near the
mountains, and the shores of Joppa; he also erected a high wall before the
trench, and built wooden towers, in order to hinder any sudden approaches. But
still he was not able to exclude Antiochus, for he burnt the towers, and filled
up the trenches, and marched on with his army. And as he looked upon taking his
revenge on Alexander, for endeavoring to stop him, as a thing of less
consequence, he marched directly against the Arabians, whose king retired into
such parts of the country as were fittest for engaging the enemy, and then on
the sudden made his horse turn back, which were in number ten thousand, and fell
upon Antiochus's army while they were in disorder, and a terrible battle ensued.
Antiochus's troops, so long as he was alive, fought it out, although a mighty
slaughter was made among them by the Arabians; but when he fell, for he was in
the forefront, in the utmost danger, in rallying his troops, they all gave
ground, and the greatest part of his army were destroyed, either in the action
or the flight; and for the rest, who fled to the village of Cana, it happened
that they were all consumed by want of necessaries, a few only excepted.
About this time it was that the people of Damascus, out of their hatred to
Ptolemy, the son of Menhens, invited Aretas [to take the government], and made
him king of Celesyria. This man also made an expedition against Judea, and beat
Alexander in battle; but afterwards retired by mutual agreement. But Alexander,
when he had taken Pella, marched to Gerasa again, out of the covetous desire he
had of Theodorus's possessions; and when he had built a triple wall about the
garrison, he took the place by force. He also demolished Golan, and Seleucia,
and what was called the Valley of Antiochus; besides which, he took the strong
fortress of Gamala, and stripped Demetrius, who was governor therein, of what he
had, on account of the many crimes laid to his charge, and then returned into
Judea, after he had been three whole years in this expedition. And now he was
kindly received of the nation, because of the good success he had. So when he
was at rest from war, he fell into a distemper; for he was afflicted with a
quartan ague, and supposed that, by exercising himself again in martial affairs,
he should get rid of this distemper; but by making such expeditions at
unseasonable times, and forcing his body to undergo greater hardships than it
was able to bear, he brought himself to his end. He died, therefore, in the
midst of his troubles, after he had reigned seven and twenty years.
CHAPTER 5.
ALEXANDRA REIGNS NINE YEARS, DURING WHICH TIME THE PHARISEES
WERE THE REAL RULERS OF THE NATION.
NOW Alexander left the kingdom to Alexandra his wife, and depended upon it
that the Jews would now very readily submit to her, because she had been very
averse to such cruelty as he had treated them with, and had opposed his
violation of their laws, and had thereby got the good-will of the people. Nor
was he mistaken as to his expectations; for this woman kept the dominion, by the
opinion that the people had of her piety; for she chiefly studied the ancient
customs of her country, and cast those men out of the government that offended
against their holy laws. And as she had two sons by Alexander, she made Hyrcanus
the elder high priest, on account of his age, as also, besides that, on account
of his inactive temper, no way disposing him to disturb the public. But she
retained the younger, Aristobulus, with her as a private person, by reason of
the warmth of his temper.
And now the Pharisees joined themselves to her, to assist her in the
government. These are a certain sect of the Jews that appear more religious than
others, and seem to interpret the laws more accurately. low Alexandra hearkened
to them to an extraordinary degree, as being herself a woman of great piety
towards God. But these Pharisees artfully insinuated themselves into her favor
by little and little, and became themselves the real administrators of the
public affairs: they banished and reduced whom they pleased; they bound and
loosed [men] at their pleasure; and, to say all at once, they had the enjoyment
of the royal authority, whilst the expenses and the difficulties of it belonged
to Alexandra. She was a sagacious woman in the management of great affairs, and
intent always upon gathering soldiers together; so that she increased the army
the one half, and procured a great body of foreign troops, till her own nation
became not only very powerful at home, but terrible also to foreign potentates,
while she governed other people, and the Pharisees governed her.
Accordingly, they themselves slew Diogenes, a person of figure, and one
that had been a friend to Alexander; and accused him as having assisted the king
with his advice, for crucifying the eight hundred men [before mentioned.] They
also prevailed with Alexandra to put to death the rest of those who had
irritated him against them. Now she was so superstitious as to comply with their
desires, and accordingly they slew whom they pleased themselves. But the
principal of those that were in danger fled to Aristobulus, who persuaded his
mother to spare the men on account of their dignity, but to expel them out of
the city, unless she took them to be innocent; so they were suffered to go
unpunished, and were dispersed all over the country. But when Alexandra sent out
her army to Damascus, under pretense that Ptolemy was always oppressing that
city, she got possession of it; nor did it make any considerable resistance. She
also prevailed with Tigranes, king of Armenia, who lay with his troops about
Ptolemais, and besieged Cleopatra, by agreements and presents, to go away.
Accordingly, Tigranes soon arose from the siege, by reason of those domestic
tumults which happened upon Lucullus's expedition into Armenia.
In the mean time, Alexandra fell sick, and Aristobulus, her younger son,
took hold of this opportunity, with his domestics, of which he had a great many,
who were all of them his friends, on account of the warmth of their youth, and
got possession of all the fortresses. He also used the sums of money he found in
them to get together a number of mercenary soldiers, and made himself king; and
besides this, upon Hyrcanus's complaint to his mother, she compassionated his
case, and put Aristobulus's wife and sons under restraint in Antonia, which was
a fortress that joined to the north part of the temple. It was, as I have
already said, of old called the Citadel; but afterwards got the name of Antonia,
when Antony was [lord of the East], just as the other cities, Sebaste and
Agrippias, had their names changed, and these given them from Sebastus and
Agrippa. But Alexandra died before she could punish Aristobulus for his
disinheriting his brother, after she had reigned nine years.
CHAPTER 6.
WHEN HYRCANUS WHO WAS ALEXANDER'S HEIR, RECEDED FROM HIS CLAIM
TO THE CROWN ARISTOBULUS IS MADE KING; AND AFTERWARD THE SAME HYRCANUS BY THE
MEANS OF ANTIPATER, IS BROUGHT BACK BY ABETAS. AT LAST POMPEY IS MADE THE
ARBITRATOR OF THE DISPUTE BETWEEN THE BROTHERS.
NOW Hyrcanus was heir to the kingdom, and to him did his mother commit it
before she died; but Aristobulus was superior to him in power and magnanimity;
and when there was a battle between them, to decide the dispute about the
kingdom, near Jericho, the greatest part deserted Hyrcanus, and went over to
Aristobulus; but Hyrcanus, with those of his party who staid with him, fled to
Antonia, and got into his power the hostages that might he for his preservation
(which were Aristobulus's wife, with her children); but they came to an
agreement before things should come to extremities, that Aristobulus should be
king, and Hyrcanus should resign that up, but retain all the rest of his
dignities, as being the king's brother. Hereupon they were reconciled to each
other in the temple, and embraced one another in a very kind manner, while the
people stood round about them; they also changed their houses, while Aristobulus
went to the royal palace, and Hyrcanus retired to the house of Aristobulus.
Now those other people which were at variance with Aristobulus were afraid
upon his unexpected obtaining the government; and especially this concerned
Antipater whom Aristobulus hated of old. He was by birth an Idumean, and one of
the principal of that nation, on account of his ancestors and riches, and other
authority to him belonging: he also persuaded Hyrcanus to fly to Aretas, the
king of Arabia, and to lay claim to the kingdom; as also he persuaded Aretas to
receive Hyrcanus, and to bring him back to his kingdom: he also cast great
reproaches upon Aristobulus, as to his morals, and gave great commendations to
Hyrcanus, and exhorted Aretas to receive him, and told him how becoming a filing
it would be for him, who ruled so great a kingdom, to afford his assistance to
such as are injured; alleging that Hyrcanus was treated unjustly, by being
deprived of that dominion which belonged to him by the prerogative of his birth.
And when he had predisposed them both to do what he would have them, he took
Hyrcanus by night, and ran away from the city, and, continuing his flight with
great swiftness, he escaped to the place called Petra, which is the royal seat
of the king of Arabia, where he put Hyrcanus into Aretas's hand; and by
discoursing much with him, and gaining upon him with many presents, he prevailed
with him to give him an army that might restore him to his kingdom. This army
consisted of fifty thousand footmen and horsemen, against which Aristobulus was
not able to make resistance, but was deserted in his first onset, and was driven
to Jerusalem; he also had been taken at first by force, if Scaurus, the Roman
general, had not come and seasonably interposed himself, and raised the siege.
This Scaurus was sent into Syria from Armenia by Pompey the Great, when he
fought against Tigranes; so Scaurus came to Damascus, which had been lately
taken by Metellus and Lollius, and caused them to leave the place; and, upon his
hearing how the affairs of Judea stood, he made haste thither as to a certain
booty.
As soon, therefore, as he was come into the country, there came
ambassadors from both the brothers, each of them desiring his assistance; but Aristobulus's three hundred talents had more weight with him than the justice of
the cause; which sum, when Scaurus had received, he sent a herald to Hyrcanus
and the Arabians, and threatened them with the resentment of the Romans and of
Pompey, unless they would raise the siege. So Aretas was terrified, and retired
out of Judea to Philadelphia, as did Scaurus return to Damascus again; nor was
Aristobulus satisfied with escaping [out of his brother's hands,] but gathered
all his forces together, and pursued his enemies, and fought them at a place
called Papyron, and slew about six thousand of them, and, together with them
Antipater's brother Phalion.
When Hyrcanus and Antipater were thus deprived of their hopes from the
Arabians, they transferred the same to their adversaries; and because Pompey had
passed through Syria, and was come to Damascus, they fled to him for assistance;
and, without any bribes, they made the same equitable pleas that they had used
to Aretas, and besought him to hate the violent behavior of Aristobulus, and to
bestow the kingdom on him to whom it justly belonged, both on account of his
good character and on account of his superiority in age. However, neither was
Aristobulus wanting to himself in this case, as relying on the bribes that
Scaurus had received: he was also there himself, and adorned himself after a
manner the most agreeable to royalty that he was able. But he soon thought it
beneath him to come in such a servile manner, and could not endure to serve his
own ends in a way so much more abject than he was used to; so he departed from
Diospolis.
At this his behavior Pompey had great indignation; Hyrcanus also and his
friends made great intercessions to Pompey; so he took not only his Roman
forces, but many of his Syrian auxiliaries, and marched against Aristobulus. But
when he had passed by Pella and Scythopolis, and was come to Corea, where you
enter into the country of Judea, when you go up to it through the Mediterranean
parts, he heard that Aristobulus was fled to Alexandrium, which is a strong hold
fortified with the utmost magnificence, and situated upon a high mountain; and
he sent to him, and commanded him to come down. Now his inclination was to try
his fortune in a battle, since he was called in such an imperious manner, rather
than to comply with that call. However, he saw the multitude were in great fear,
and his friends exhorted him to consider what the power of the Romans was, and
how it was irresistible; so he complied with their advice, and came down to
Pompey; and when he had made a long apology for himself, and for the justness of
his cause in taking the government, he returned to the fortress. And when his
brother invited him again [to plead his cause], he came down and spake about the
justice of it, and then went away without any hinderance from Pompey; so he was
between hope and fear. And when he came down, it was to prevail with Pompey to
allow him the government entirely; and when he went up to the citadel, it was
that he might not appear to debase himself too low. However, Pompey commanded
him to give up his fortified places, and forced him to write to every one of
their governors to yield them up; they having had this charge given them, to
obey no letters but what were of his own hand-writing. Accordingly he did what
he was ordered to do; but had still an indignation at what was done, and retired
to Jerusalem, and prepared to fight with Pompey.
But Pompey did not give him time to make any preparations [for a siege],
but followed him at his heels; he was also obliged to make haste in his attempt,
by the death of Mithridates, of which he was informed about Jericho. Now here is
the most fruitful country of Judea, which bears a vast number of palm trees
besides the balsam tree, whose sprouts they cut with sharp stones, and at the
incisions they gather the juice, which drops down like tears. So Pompey pitched
his camp in that place one night, and then hasted away the next morning to
Jerusalem; but Aristobulus was so aftrighted at his approach, that he came and
met him by way of supplication. He also promised him money, and that he would
deliver up both himself and the city into his disposal, and thereby mitigated
the anger of Pompey. Yet did not he perform any of the conditions he had agreed
to; for Aristobulus's party would not so much as admit Gabinius into the city,
who was sent to receive the money that he had promised.
CHAPTER 7.
HOW POMPEY HAD THE CITY OF JERUSALEM DELIVERED UP TO HIM BUT
TOOK THE TEMPLE BY FORCE. HOW HE WENT INTO THE HOLY OF HOLIES; AS ALSO WHAT WERE
HIS OTHER EXPLOITS IN JUDEA.
At this treatment Pompey was very angry, and took Aristobulus into
custody. And when he was come to the city, he looked about where he might make
his attack; for he saw the walls were so firm, that it would be hard to overcome
them; and that the valley before the walls was terrible; and that the temple,
which was within that valley, was itself encompassed with a very strong wall,
insomuch that if the city were taken, that temple would be a second place of
refuge for the enemy to retire to.
Now as be was long in deliberating about this matter, a sedition arose
among the people within the city; Aristobulus's party being willing to fight,
and to set their king at liberty, while the party of Hyrcanus were for opening
the gates to Pompey; and the dread people were in occasioned these last to be a
very numerous party, when they looked upon the excellent order the Roman
soldiers were in. So Aristobulus's party was worsted, and retired into the
temple, and cut off the communication between the temple and the city, by
breaking down the bridge that joined them together, and prepared to make an
opposition to the utmost; but as the others had received the Romans into the
city, and had delivered up the palace to him, Pompey sent Piso, one of his great
officers, into that palace with an army, who distributed a garrison about the
city, because he could not persuade any one of those that had fled to the temple
to come to terms of accommodation; he then disposed all things that were round
about them so as might favor their attacks, as having Hyrcanus's party very
ready to afford them both counsel and assistance.
But Pompey himself filled up the ditch that was oil the north side of the
temple, and the entire valley also, the army itself being obliged to carry the
materials for that purpose. And indeed it was a hard thing to fill up that
valley, by reason of its immense depth, especially as the Jews used all the
means possible to repel them from their superior situation; nor had the Romans
succeeded in their endeavors, had not Pompey taken notice of the seventh days,
on which the Jews abstain from all sorts of work on a religious account, and
raised his bank, but restrained his soldiers from fighting on those days; for
the Jews only acted defensively on sabbath days. But as soon as Pompey had
filled up the valley, he erected high towers upon the bank, and brought those
engines which they had fetched from Tyre near to the wall, and tried to batter
it down; and the slingers of stones beat off those that stood above them, and
drove them away; but the towers on this side of the city made very great
resistance, and were indeed extraordinary both for largeness and magnificence.
Now here it was that, upon the many hardships which the Romans underwent,
Pompey could not but admire not only at the other instances of the Jews'
fortitude, but especially that they did not at all intermit their religious
services, even when they were encompassed with darts on all sides; for, as if
the city were in full peace, their daily sacrifices and purifications, and every
branch of their religious worship, was still performed to God with the utmost
exactness. Nor indeed when the temple was actually taken, and they were every
day slain about the altar, did they leave off the instances of their Divine
worship that were appointed by their law; for it was in the third month of the
siege before the Romans could even with great difficulty overthrow one of the
towers, and get into the temple. Now he that first of all ventured to get over
the wall, was Faustus Cornelius the son of Sylla; and next after him were two
centurions, Furius and Fabius; and every one of these was followed by a cohort
of his own, who encompassed the Jews on all sides, and slew them, some of them
as they were running for shelter to the temple, and others as they, for a while,
fought in their own defense.
And now did many of the priests, even when they saw their enemies
assailing them with swords in their hands, without any disturbance, go on with
their Divine worship, and were slain while they were offering their
drink-offerings, and burning their incense, as preferring the duties about their
worship to God before their own preservation. The greatest part of them were
slain by their own countrymen, of the adverse faction, and an innumerable
multitude threw themselves down precipices; nay, some there were who were so
distracted among the insuperable difficulties they were under, that they set
fire to the buildings that were near to the wall, and were burnt together with
them. Now of the Jews were slain twelve thousand; but of the Romans very few
were slain, but a greater number was wounded.
But there was nothing that affected the nation so much, in the calamities
they were then under, as that their holy place, which had been hitherto seen by
none, should be laid open to strangers; for Pompey, and those that were about
him, went into the temple itself whither it was not lawful for any to enter but
the high priest, and saw what was reposited therein, the candlestick with its
lamps, and the table, and the pouring vessels, and the censers, all made
entirely of gold, as also a great quantity of spices heaped together, with two
thousand talents of sacred money. Yet did not he touch that money, nor any thing
else that was there reposited; but he commanded the ministers about the temple,
the very next day after he had taken it, to cleanse it, and to perform their
accustomed sacrifices. Moreover, he made Hyrcanus high priest, as one that not
only in other respects had showed great alacrity, on his side, during the siege,
but as he had been the means of hindering the multitude that was in the country
from fighting for Aristobulus, which they were otherwise very ready to have
done; by which means he acted the part of a good general, and reconciled the
people to him more by benevolence than by terror. Now, among the Captives,
Aristobulus's father-in-law was taken, who was also his uncle: so those that
were the most guilty he punished with decollatlon; but rewarded Faustus, and
those with him that had fought so bravely, with glorious presents, and laid a
tribute upon the country, and upon Jerusalem itself.
He also took away from the nation all those cities that they had formerly
taken, and that belonged to Celesyria, and made them subject to him that was at
that time appointed to be the Roman president there; and reduced Judea within
its proper bounds. He also rebuilt Gadara, that had been demolished by the Jews,
in order to gratify one Demetrius, who was of Gadara, and was one of his own
freed-men. He also made other cities free from their dominion, that lay in the
midst of the country, such, I mean, as they had not demolished before that time;
Hippos, and Scythopolis, as also Pella, and Samaria, and Marissa; and besides
these Ashdod, and Jamnia, and Arethusa; and in like manner dealt he with the
maritime cities, Gaza, and Joppa, and Dora, and that which was anciently called
Strato's Tower, but was afterward rebuilt with the most magnificent edifices,
and had its name changed to Cesarea, by king Herod. All which he restored to
their own citizens, and put them under the province of Syria; which province,
together with Judea, and the countries as far as Egypt and Euphrates, he
committed to Scaurus as their governor, and gave him two legions to support him;
while he made all the haste he could himself to go through Cilicia, in his way
to Rome, having Aristobulus and his children along with him as his captives.
They were two daughters and two sons; the one of which sons, Alexander, ran away
as he was going; but the younger, Antigonus, with his sisters, were carried to
Rome.
CHAPTER 8.
ALEXANDER, THE SON OF ARISTOBULUS, WHO RAN AWAY FROM POMPEY,
MAKES AN EXPEDITION AGAINST HYRCANUS; BUT BEING OVERCOME BY GABINIUS HE DELIVERS
UP THE FORTRESSES TO HIM. AFTER THIS ARISTOBULUS ESCAPES FROM ROME AND GATHERS
AN ARMY TOGETHER; BUT BEING BEATEN BY THE ROMANS, HE IS BROUGHT BACK TO ROME;
WITH OTHER THINGS RELATING TO GABINIUS, CRASSUS AND CASSIUS.
IN the mean time, Scaurus made an expedition into Arabia, but was stopped
by the difficulty of the places about Petra. However, he laid waste the country
about Pella, though even there he was under great hardship; for his army was
afflicted with famine. In order to supply which want, Hyrcanus afforded him some
assistance, and sent him provisions by the means of Antipater; whom also Scaurus
sent to Aretas, as one well acquainted with him, to induce him to pay him money
to buy his peace. The king of Arabia complied with the proposal, and gave him
three hundred talents; upon which Scaurus drew his army out of Arabia
But as for Alexander, that son of Aristobulus who ran away from Pompey, in
some time he got a considerable band of men together, and lay heavy upon
Hyrcanus, and overran Judea, and was likely to overturn him quickly; and indeed
he had come to Jerusalem, and had ventured to rebuild its wall that was thrown
down by Pompey, had not Gabinius, who was sent as successor to Scaurus into
Syria, showed his bravery, as in many other points, so in making an expedition
against Alexander; who, as he was afraid that he would attack him, so he got
together a large army, composed of ten thousand armed footmen, and fifteen
hundred horsemen. He also built walls about proper places; Alexandrium, and
Hyrcanium, and Machorus, that lay upon the mountains of Arabia.
However, Gabinius sent before him Marcus Antonius, and followed himself
with his whole army; but for the select body of soldiers that were about
Antipater, and another body of Jews under the command of Malichus and Pitholaus,
these joined themselves to those captains that were about Marcus Antonius, and
met Alexander; to which body came Oabinius with his main army soon afterward;
and as Alexander was not able to sustain the charge of the enemies' forces, now
they were joined, he retired. But when he was come near to Jerusalem, he was
forced to fight, and lost six thousand men in the battle; three thousand of
which fell down dead, and three thousand were taken alive; so he fled with the
remainder to Alexandrium.
Now when Gabinius was come to Alexandrium, because he found a great many
there en-camped, he tried, by promising them pardon for their former offenses,
to induce them to come over to him before it came to a fight; but when they
would hearken to no terms of accommodation, he slew a great number of them, and
shut up a great number of them in the citadel. Now Marcus Antonius, their
leader, signalized himself in this battle, who, as he always showed great
courage, so did he never show it so much as now; but Gabinius, leaving forces to
take the citadel, went away himself, and settled the cities that had not been
demolished, and rebuilt those that had been destroyed. Accordingly, upon his
injunctions, the following cities were restored: Scythopolis, and Samaria, and
Anthedon, and Apollonia, and Jamnia, and Raphia, and Mariassa, and Adoreus, and
Gamala, and Ashdod, and many others; while a great number of men readily ran to
each of them, and became their inhabitants.
When Gabinius had taken care of these cities, he returned to Alexandrium,
and pressed on the siege. So when Alexander despaired of ever obtaining the
government, he sent ambassadors to him, and prayed him to forgive what he had
offended him in, and gave up to him the remaining fortresses, Hyrcanium and
Macherus, as he put Alexandrium into his hands afterwards; all which Gabinius
demolished, at the persuasion of Alexander's mother, that they might not be
receptacles of men in a second war. She was now there in order to mollify
Gabinius, out of her concern for her relations that were captives at Rome, which
were her husband and her other children. After this Gabinius brought Hyrcanus to
Jerusalem, and committed the care of the temple to him; but ordained the other
political government to be by an aristocracy. He also parted the whole nation
into five conventions, assigning one portion to Jerusalem, another to Gadara,
that another should belong to Amathus, a fourth to Jericho, and to the fifth
division was allotted Sepphoris, a city of Galilee. So the people were glad to
be thus freed from monarchical government, and were governed for the future by
all aristocracy.
Yet did Aristobulus afford another foundation for new disturbances. He
fled away from Rome, and got together again many of the Jews that were desirous
of a change, such as had borne an affection to him of old; and when he had taken
Alexandrium in the first place, he attempted to build a wall about it; but as
soon as Gabinius had sent an army against him under Siscuria, and Antonius, and
Servilius, he was aware of it, and retreated to Macherus. And as for the
unprofitable multitude, he dismissed them, and only marched on with those that
were armed, being to the number of eight thousand, among whom was Pitholaus, who
had been the lieutenant at Jerusalem, but deserted to Aristobulus with a
thousand of his men; so the Romans followed him, and when it came to a battle,
Aristobulus's party for a long time fought courageously; but at length they were
overborne by the Romans, and of them five thousand fell down dead, and about two
thousand fled to a certain little hill, but the thousand that remained with
Aristobulus brake through the Roman army, and marched together to Macherus; and
when the king had lodged the first night upon its ruins, he was in hopes of
raising another army, if the war would but cease a while; accordingly, he
fortified that strong hold, though it was done after a poor manner. But the
Romans falling upon him, he resisted, even beyond his abilities, for two days,
and then was taken, and brought a prisoner to Gabinius, with Antigonus his son,
who had fled away together with him from Rome; and from Gabinius he was carried
to Rome again. Wherefore the senate put him under confinement, but returned his
children back to Judea, because Gabinius informed them by letters that he had
promised Aristobulus's mother to do so, for her delivering the fortresses up to
him.
But now as Gabinius was marching to the war against the Parthians, he was
hindered by Ptolemy, whom, upon his return from Euphrates, he brought back into
Egypt, making use of Hyrcanus and Antipater to provide every thing that was
necessary for this expedition; for Antipater furnished him with money, and
weapons, and corn, and auxiliaries; he also prevailed with the Jews that were
there, and guarded the avenues at Pelusium, to let them pass. But now, upon
Gabinius's absence, the other part of Syria was in motion, and Alexander, the
son of Aristobulus, brought the Jews to revolt again. Accordingly, he got
together a very great army, and set about killing all the Romans that were in
the country; hereupon Gabinius was afraid, (for he was come back already out of
Egypt, and obliged to come back quickly by these tumults,) and sent Antipater,
who prevailed with some of the revolters to be quiet. However, thirty thousand
still continued with Alexander, who was himself eager to fight also;
accordingly, Gabinius went out to fight, when the Jews met him; and as the
battle was fought near Mount Tabor, ten thousand of them were slain, and the
rest of the multitude dispersed themselves, and fled away. So Gabinius came to
Jerusalem, and settled the government as Antipater would have it; thence he
marched, and fought and beat the Nabateans: as for Mithridates and Orsanes, who
fled out of Parthin, he sent them away privately, but gave it out among the
soldiers that they had run away.
In the mean time, Crassus came as successor to Gabinius in Syria. He took
away all the rest of the gold belonging to the temple of Jerusalem, in order to
furnish himself for his expedition against the Parthians. He also took away the
two thousand talents which Pompey had not touched; but when he had passed over
Euphrates, he perished himself, and his army with him; concerning which affairs
this is not a proper time to speak [more largely].
But now Cassius, after Crassus, put a stop to the Parthians, who were
marching in order to enter Syria. Cassius had fled into that province, and when
he had taken possession of the same, he made a hasty march into Judea; and, upon
his taking Taricheae, he carried thirty thousand Jews into slavery. He also slew
Pitholaus, who had supported the seditious followers of Aristobulus; and it was
Antipater who advised him so to do. Now this Antipater married a wife of an
eminent family among the Arabisus, whose name was Cypros, and had four sons born
to him by her, Phasaelus and Herod, who was afterwards king, and, besides these,
Joseph and Pheroras; and he had a daughter whose name was Salome. Now as he made
himself friends among the men of power every where, by the kind offices he did
them, and the hospitable manner that he treated them; so did he contract the
greatest friendship with the king of Arabia, by marrying his relation; insomuch
that when he made war with Aristobulus, he sent and intrusted his children with
him. So when Cassius had forced Alexander to come to terms and to be quiet, he
returned to Euphrates, in order to prevent the Parthians from repassing it;
concerning which matter we shall speak elsewhere.
CHAPTER 9.
ARISTOBULUS IS TAKEN OFF BY POMPEY'S FRIENDS, AS IS HIS SON
ALEXANDER BY SCIPIO. ANTIPATER CULTIVATES A FRIENDSHIP WITH CAESAR, AFTER
POMPEY'S DEATH; HE ALSO PERFORMS GREAT ACTIONS IN THAT WAR, WHEREIN HE ASSISTED
MITHRIDATES.
NOW, upon the flight of Pompey and of the senate beyond the Ionian Sea,
Caesar got Rome and the empire under his power, and released Aristobulus from
his bonds. He also committed two legions to him, and sent him in haste into
Syria, as hoping that by his means he should easily conquer that country, and
the parts adjoining to Judea. But envy prevented any effect of Aristobulus's
alacrity, and the hopes of Caesar; for he was taken off by poison given him by
those of Pompey's party; and, for a long while, he had not so much as a burial
vouchsafed him in his own country; but his dead body lay [above ground],
preserved in honey, until it was sent to the Jews by Antony, in order to be
buried in the royal sepulchers.
His son Alexander also was beheaded by Sci-pio at Antioch, and that by the
command of Pompey, and upon an accusation laid against him before his tribunal,
for the mischiefs he had done to the Romans. But Ptolemy, the son of Menneus,
who was then ruler of Chalcis, under Libanus, took his brethren to him by
sending his son Philippio for them to Ascalon, who took Antigonus, as well as
his sisters, away from Aristobulus's wife, and brought them to his father; and
falling in love with the younger daughter, he married her, and was afterwards
slain by his father on her account; for Ptolemy himself, after he had slain his
son, married her, whose name was Alexandra; on the account of which marriage he
took the greater care of her brother and sister.
Now, after Pompey was dead, Antipater changed sides, and cultivated a
friendship with Caesar. And since Mithridates of Pergamus, with the forces he
led against Egypt, was excluded from the avenues about Pelusium, and was forced
to stay at Asealon, he persuaded the Arabians, among whom he had lived, to
assist him, and came himself to him, at the head of three thousand armed men. He
also encouraged the men of power in Syria to come to his assistance, as also of
the inhabitants of Libanus, Ptolemy, and Jamblicus, and another Ptolemy; by
which means the cities of that country came readily into this war; insomuch that
Mithridates ventured now, in dependence upon the additional strength that he had
gotten by Antipater, to march forward to Pelusium; and when they refused him a
passage through it, he besieged the city; in the attack of which place Antipater
principally signalized himself, for he brought down that part of the wall which
was over against him, and leaped first of all into the city, with the men that
were about him.
Thus was Pelusium taken. But still, as they were marching on, those
Egyptian Jews that inhabited the country called the country of Onias stopped
them. Then did Antipater not only persuade them not to stop them, but to afford
provisions for their army; on which account even the people about Memphis would
not fight against them, but of their own accord joined Mithridates. Whereupon he
went round about Delta, and fought the rest of the Egyptians at a place called
the Jews' Camp; nay, when he was in danger in the battle with all his right
wing, Antipater wheeled about, and came along the bank of the river to him; for
he had beaten those that opposed him as he led the left wing. After which
success he fell upon those that pursued Mithridates, and slew a great many of
them, and pursued the remainder so far that he took their camp, while he lost no
more than fourscore of his own men; as Mithridates lost, during the pursuit that
was made after him, about eight hundred. He was also himself saved unexpectedly,
and became an unreproachable witness to Caesar of the great actions of Antipater.
Whereupon Caesar encouraged Antipater to undertake other hazardous
enterprises for him, and that by giving him great commendations and hopes of
reward. In all which enterprises he readily exposed himself to many dangers, and
became a most courageous warrior; and had many wounds almost all over his body,
as demonstrations of his valor. And when Caesar had settled the affairs of
Egypt, and was returning into Syria again, he gave him the privilege of a Roman
citizen, and freedom from taxes, and rendered him an object of admiration by the
honors and marks of friendship he bestowed upon him. On this account it was that
he also confirmed Hyrcanus in the high priesthood.
CHAPTER 10.
CAESAR MAKES ANTIPATER PROCURATOR OF JUDEA; AS DOES ANTIPATER
APPOINT PHASAELUS TO BE GOVERNOR OF JERUSALEM, AND HEROD GOVERNOR OF GALILEE;
WHO, IN SOME TIME, WAS CALLED TO ANSWER FOR HIMSELF [BEFORE THE SANHEDRIM],
WHERE HE IS ACQUITTED. SEXTUS CAESAR IS TREACHEROUSLY KILLED BY BASSUS AND IS
SUCCEEDED BY MARCUS.
ABOUT this time it was that Antigonus, the son of Aristobulus, came to
Caesar, and became, in a surprising manner, the occasion of Antipater's further
advancement; for whereas he ought to have lamented that his father appeared to
have been poisoned on account of his quarrels with Pompey, and to have
complained of Scipio's barbarity towards his brother, and not to mix any
invidious passion when he was suing for mercy; besides those things, he came
before Caesar, and accused Hyrcanus and Antipater, how they had driven him and
his brethren entirely out of their native country, and had acted in a great many
instances unjustly and extravagantly with relation to their nation; and that as
to the assistance they had sent him into Egypt, it was not done out of good-will
to him, but out of the fear they were in from former quarrels, and in order to
gain pardon for their friendship to [his enemy] Pompey.
Hereupon Antipater threw away his garments, and showed the multitude of
the wounds he had, and said, that as to his good-will to Caesar, he had no
occasion to say a word, because his body cried aloud, though he said nothing
himself; that he wondered at Antigonus's boldness, while he was himself no other
than the son of an enemy to the Romans, and of a fugitive, and had it by
inheritance from his father to be fond of innovations and seditions, that he
should undertake to accuse other men before the Roman governor, and endeavor to
gain some advantages to himself, when he ought to be contented that he was
suffered to live; for that the reason of his desire of governing public affairs
was not so much because he was in want of it, but because, if he could once
obtain the same, he might stir up a sedition among the Jews, and use what he
should gain from the Romans to the disservice of those that gave it him.
When Caesar heard this, he declared Hyrcanus to be the most worthy of the
high priesthood, and gave leave to Antipater to choose what authority he
pleased; but he left the determination of such dignity to him that bestowed the
dignity upon him; so he was constituted procurator of all Judea, and obtained
leave, moreover, to rebuild those walls of his country that had been thrown
down. These honorary grants Caesar sent orders to have engraved in the Capitol,
that they might stand there as indications of his own justice, and of the virtue
of Antipater.
But as soon as Antipater had conducted Caesar out of Syria he returned to
Judea, and the first thing he did was to rebuild that wall of his own country
[Jerusalem] which Pompey had overthrown, and then to go over the country, and to
quiet the tumults that were therein; where he partly threatened, and partly
advised, every one, and told them that in case they would submit to Hyrcanus,
they would live happily and peaceably, and enjoy what they possessed, and that
with universal peace and quietness; but that in case they hearkened to such as
had some frigid hopes by raising new troubles to get themselves some gain, they
should then find him to be their lord instead of their procurator; and find
Hyrcanus to be a tyrant instead of a king; and both the Romans and Caesar to be
their enemies, instead of rulers; for that they would not suffer him to be
removed from the government, whom they had made their governor. And, at the same
time that he said this, he settled the affairs of the country by himself,
because he saw that Hyrcanus was inactive, and not fit to manage the affairs of
the kingdom. So he constituted his eldest son, Phasaelus, governor of Jerusalem,
and of the parts about it; he also sent his next son, Herod, who was very young,
with equal authority into Galilee.
Now Herod was an active man, and soon found proper materials for his
active spirit to work upon. As therefore he found that Hezekias, the head of the
robbers, ran over the neighboring parts of Syria with a great band of men, he
caught him and slew him, and many more of the robbers with him; which exploit
was chiefly grateful to the Syrians, insomuch that hymns were sung in Herod's
commendation, both in the villages and in the cities, as having procured their
quietness, and having preserved what they possessed to them; on which occasion
he became acquainted with Sextus Caesar, a kinsman of the great Caesar, and
president of Syria. A just emulation of his glorious actions excited Phasaelus
also to imitate him. Accordingly, he procured the good-will of the inhabitants
of Jerusalem, by his own management of the city affairs, and did not abuse his
power in any disagreeable manner; whence it came to pass that the nation paid
Antipater the respects that were due only to a king, and the honors they all
yielded him were equal to the honors due to an absolute lord; yet did he not
abate any part of that good-will or fidelity which he owed to Hyrcanus.
However, he found it impossible to escape envy in such his prosperity; for
the glory of these young men affected even Hyrcanus himself already privately,
though he said nothing of it to any body; but what he principally was grieved at
was the great actions of Herod, and that so many messengers came one before
another, and informed him of the great reputation he got in all his
undertakings. There were also many people in the royal palace itself who
inflamed his envy at him; those, I mean, who were obstructed in their designs by
the prudence either of the young men, or of Antipater. These men said, that by
committing the public affairs to the management of Antipater and of his sons, he
sat down with nothing but the bare name of a king, without any of its authority;
and they asked him how long he would so far mistake himself, as to breed up
kings against his own interest; for that they did not now conceal their
government of affairs any longer, but were plainly lords of the nation, and had
thrust him out of his authority; that this was the case when Herod slew so many
men without his giving him any command to do it, either by word of mouth, or by
his letter, and this in contradiction to the law of the Jews; who therefore, in
case he be not a king, but a private man, still ought to come to his trial, and
answer it to him, and to the laws of his country, which do not permit any one to
be killed till he hath been condemned in judgment.
Now Hyrcanus was, by degrees, inflamed with these discourses, and at
length could bear no longer, but he summoned Herod to take his trial.
Accordingly, by his father's advice, and as soon as the affairs of Galilee would
give him leave, he came up to [Jerusalem], when he had first placed garrisons in
Galilee; however, he came with a sufficient body of soldiers, so many indeed
that he might not appear to have with him an army able to overthrow Hyrcanus's
government, nor yet so few as to expose him to the insults of those that envied
him. However, Sextus Caesar was in fear for the young man, lest he should be
taken by his enemies, and brought to punishment; so he sent some to denounce
expressly to Hyrcanus that he should acquit Herod of the capital charge against
him; who acquitted him accordingly, as being otherwise inclined also so to do,
for he loved Herod.
But Herod, supposing that he had escaped punishment without the consent of
the king, retired to Sextus, to Damascus, and got every thing ready, in order
not to obey him if he should summon him again; whereupon those that were
evil-disposed irritated Hyrcanus, and told him that Herod was gone away in
anger, and was prepared to make war upon him; and as the king believed what they
said, he knew not what to do, since he saw his antagonist was stronger than he
was himself. And now, since Herod was made general of Coelesyria and Samaria by
Sextus Caesar, he was formidable, not only from the good-will which the nation
bore him, but by the power he himself had; insomuch that Hyrcanus fell into the
utmost degree of terror, and expected he would presently march against him with
his army.
Nor was he mistaken in the conjecture he made; for Herod got his army
together, out of the anger he bare him for his threatening him with the
accusation in a public court, and led it to Jerusalem, in order to throw Hyrcanus down from his kingdom; and this he had soon done, unless his father and
brother had gone out together and broken the force of his fury, and this by
exhorting him to carry his revenge no further than to threatening and
affrighting, but to spare the king, under whom he had been advanced to such a
degree of power; and that he ought not to be so much provoked at his being
tried, as to forget to be thankful that he was acquitted; nor so long to think
upon what was of a melancholy nature, as to be ungrateful for his deliverance;
and if we ought to reckon that God is the arbitrator of success in war, an
unjust cause is of more disadvantage than an army can be of advantage; and that
therefore he ought not to be entirely confident of success in a case where he is
to fight against his king, his supporter, and one that had often been his
benefactor, and that had never been severe to him, any otherwise than as he had
hearkened to evil counselors, and this no further than by bringing a shadow of
injustice upon him. So Herod was prevailed upon by these arguments, and supposed
that what he had already done was sufficient for his future hopes, and that he
had enough shown his power to the nation.
In the mean time, there was a disturbance among the Romans about Apamia,
and a civil war occasioned by the treacherous slaughter of Sextus Caesar, by
Cecilius Bassus, which he perpetrated out of his good-will to Pompey; he also
took the authority over his forces; but as the rest of Caesar's commanders
attacked Bassus with their whole army, in order to punish him for the murder of
Caesar, Antipater also sent them assistance by his sons, both on account of him
that was murdered, and on account of that Caesar who was still alive, both of
which were their friends; and as this war grew to be of a considerable length,
Marcus came out of Italy as successor to Sextus.
CHAPTER 11.
HEROD IS MADE PROCURATOR OF ALL SYRIA; MALICHUS IS AFRAID OF
HIM, AND TAKES ANTIPATER OFF BY POISON; WHEREUPON THE TRIBUNES OF THE SOLDIERS
ARE PREVAILED WITH TO KILL HIM.
THERE, was at this time a mighty war raised among the Romans upon the
sudden and treacherous slaughter of Caesar by Cassius and Brutus, after he had
held the government for three years and seven months. Upon this murder there
were very great agitations, and the great men were mightily at difference one
with another, and every one betook himself to that party where they had the
greatest hopes of their own, of advancing themselves. Accordingly, Cassius came
into Syria, in order to receive the forces that were at Apamia, where he
procured a reconciliation between Bassus and Marcus, and the legions which were
at difference with him; so he raised the siege of Apamia, and took upon him the
command of the army, and went about exacting tribute of the cities, and
demanding their money to such a degree as they were not able to bear.
So he gave command that the Jews should bring in seven hundred talents;
whereupon Antipater, out of his dread of Cassius's threats, parted the raising
of this sum among his sons, and among others of his acquaintance, and to be done
immediately; and among them he required one Malichus, who was at enmity with
him, to do his part also, which necessity forced him to do. Now Herod, in the
first place, mitigated the passion of Cassius, by bringing his share out of
Galilee, which was a hundred talents, on which account he was in the highest
favor with him; and when he reproached the rest for being tardy, he was angry at
the cities themselves; so he made slaves of Gophna and Emmaus, and two others of
less note; nay, he proceeded as if he would kill Malichus, because he had not
made greater haste in exacting his tribute; but Antipater prevented the ruin of
this man, and of the other cities, and got into Cassius's favor by bringing in a
hundred talents immediately.
However, when Cassius was gone Malichus forgot the kindness that Antipater
had done him, and laid frequent plots against him that had saved him, as making
haste to get him out of the way, who was an obstacle to his wicked practices;
but Antipater was so much afraid of the power and cunning of the man, that he
went beyond Jordan, in order to get an army to guard himself against his
treacherous designs; but when Malichus was caught in his plot, he put upon
Antipater's sons by his impudence, for he thoroughly deluded Phasaelus, who was
the guardian of Jerusalem, and Herod who was intrusted with the weapons of war,
and this by a great many excuses and oaths, and persuaded them to procure his
reconciliation to his father. Thus was he preserved again by Antipater, who
dissuaded Marcus, the then president of Syria, from his resolution of killing
Malichus, on account of his attempts for innovation.
Upon the war between Cassius and Brutus on one side, against the younger
Caesar [Augustus] and Antony on the other, Cassius and Marcus got together an
army out of Syria; and because Herod was likely to have a great share in
providing necessaries, they then made him procurator of all Syria, and gave him
an army of foot and horse. Cassius premised him also, that after the war was
over, he would make him king of Judea. But it so happened that the power and
hopes of his son became the cause of his perdition; for as Malichus was afraid
of this, he corrupted one of the king's cup-bearers with money to give a
poisoned potion to Antipater; so he became a sacrifice to Malichus's wickedness,
and died at a feast. He was a man in other respects active in the management of
affairs, and one that recovered the government to Hyrcanus, and preserved it in
his hands.
However, Malichus, when lie was suspected ef poisoning Antipater, and when
the multitude was angry with him for it, denied it, and made the people believe
he was not guilty. He also prepared to make a greater figure, and raised
soldiers; for he did not suppose that Herod would be quiet, who indeed came upon
him with an army presently, in order to revenge his father's death; but, upon
hearing the advice of his brother Phasaelus, not to punish him in an open
manner, lest the multitude should fall into a sedition, he admitted of
Malichus's apology, and professed that he cleared him of that suspicion; he also
made a pompous funeral for his father.
So Herod went to Samaria, which was then in a tumult, and settled the city
in peace; after which at the [Pentecost] festival, he returned to Jerusalem,
having his armed men with him: hereupon Hyrcanus, at the request of Malichus,
who feared his reproach, forbade them to introduce foreigners to mix themselves
with the people of the country while they were purifying themselves; but Herod
despised the pretense, and him that gave that command, and came in by night.
Upon which Malithus came to him, and bewailed Antipater; Herod also made him
believe [he admitted of his lamentations as real], although he had much ado to
restrain his passion at him; however, he did himself bewail the murder of his
father in his letters to Cassius, who, on other accounts, also hated Malichus.
Cassius sent him word back that he should avenge his father's death upon him,
and privately gave order to the tribunes that were under him, that they should
assist Herod in a righteous action he was about.
And because, upon the taking of Laodicea by Cassius, the men of power were
gotten together from all quarters, with presents and crowns in their hands,
Herod allotted this time for the punishment of Malichus. When Malichus suspected
that, and was at Tyre, he resolved to withdraw his son privately from among the
Tyrians, who was a hostage there, while he got ready to fly away into Judea; the
despair he was in of escaping excited him to think of greater things; for he
hoped that he should raise the nation to a revolt from the Romans, while Cassius
was busy about the war against Antony, and that he should easily depose Hyrcanus,
and get the crown for himself.
But fate laughed at the hopes he had; for Herod foresaw what he was so
zealous about, and invited both Hyrcanus and him to supper; but calling one of
the principal servants that stood by him to him, he sent him out, as though it
were to get things ready for supper, but in reality to give notice beforehand
about the plot that was laid against him; accordingly they called to mind what
orders Cassius had given them, and went out of the city with their swords in
their hands upon the sea-shore, where they encompassed Malichus round about, and
killed him with many wounds. Upon which Hyrcanus was immediately aftrighted,
till he swooned away and fell down at the surprise he was in; and it was with
difficulty that he was recovered, when he asked who it was that had killed
Malichus. And when one of the tribunes replied that it was done by the command
of Cassius," Then," said he, "Cassius hath saved both me and my country, by
cutting off one that was laying plots against them both." Whether he spake
according to his own sentiments, or whether his fear was such that he was
obliged to commend the action by saying so, is uncertain; however, by this
method Herod inflicted punishment upon Malichus.
CHAPTER 12.
PHASAELUS IS TOO HARD FOR FELIX; HEROD ALSO OVERCOMES
ANTIGONUS IN RATTLE; AND THE JEWS ACCUSE BOTH HEROD AND PHASAELUS BUT ANTONIUS
ACQUITS THEM, AND MAKES THEM TETRARCHS.
WHEN Cassius was gone out of Syria, another sedition arose at Jerusalem,
wherein Felix assaulted Phasaelus with an army, that he might revenge the death
of Malichus upon Herod, by falling upon his brother. Now Herod happened then to
be with Fabius, the governor of Damascus, and as he was going to his brother's
assistance, he was detained by sickness; in the mean time, Phasaelus was by
himself too hard for Felix, and reproached Hyrcanus on account of his
ingratitude, both for what assistance he had afforded Maliehus, and for
overlooking Malichus's brother, when he possessed himself of the fortresses; for
he had gotten a great many of them already, and among them the strongest of them
all, Masada.
However, nothing could be sufficient for him against the force of Herod,
who, as soon as he was recovered, took the other fortresses again, and drove him
out of Masada in the posture of a supplicant; he also drove away Marion, the
tyrant of the Tyrians, out of Galilee, when he had already possessed himself of
three fortified places; but as to those Tyrians whom he had caught, he preserved
them all alive; nay, some of them he gave presents to, and so sent them away,
and thereby procured good-will to himself from the city, and hatred to the
tyrant. Marion had indeed obtained that tyrannical power of Cassius, who set
tyrants over all Syria and out of hatred to Herod it was that he assisted
Antigonus, the son of Aristobulus, and principally on Fabius's account, whom
Antigonus had made his assistant by money, and had him accordingly on his side
when he made his descent; but it was Ptolemy, the kinsman of Antigonus, that
supplied all that he wanted.
When Herod had fought against these in the avenues of Judea, he was
conqueror in the battle, and drove away Antigonus, and returned to Jerusalem,
beloved by every body for the glorious action he had done; for those who did not
before favor him did join themselves to him now, because of his marriage into
the family of Hyrcanus; for as he had formerly married a wife out of his own
country of no ignoble blood, who was called Doris, of whom he begat Antipater;
so did he now marry Mariamne, the daughter of Alexander, the son of Aristobulus,
and the granddaughter of Hyrcanus, and was become thereby a relation of the
king.
But when Caesar and Antony had slain Cassius near Philippi, and Caesar was
gone to Italy, and Antony to Asia, amongst the rest of the cities which sent
ambassadors to Antony unto Bithynia, the great men of the Jews came also, and
accused Phasaelus and Herod, that they kept the government by force, and that
Hyrcanus had no more than an honorable name. Herod appeared ready to answer this
accusation; and having made Antony his friend by the large sums of money which
he gave him, he brought him to such a temper as not to hear the others speak
against him; and thus did they part at this time.
However, after this, there came a hundred of the principal men among the
Jews to Daphne by Antioch to Antony, who was already in love with Cleopatra to
the degree of slavery; these Jews put those men that were the most potent, both
in dignity and eloquence, foremost, and accused the brethren. But Messala
opposed them, and defended the brethren, and that while Hyrcanus stood by him,
on account of his relation to them. When Antony had heard both sides, he asked
Hyrcanus which party was the fittest to govern, who replied that Herod and his
party were the fittest. Antony was glad of that answer, for he had been formerly
treated in an hospitable and obliging manner by his father Antipater, when he
marched into Judea with Gabinius; so he constituted the brethren tetrarchs, and
committed to them the government of Judea.
But when the ambassadors had indignation at this procedure, Antony took
fifteen of them, and put them into custody, whom he was also going to kill
presently, and the rest he drove away with disgrace; on which occasion a still
greater tumult arose at Jerusalem; so they sent again a thousand ambassadors to
Tyre, where Antony now abode, as he was marching to Jerusalem; upon these men
who made a clamor he sent out the governor of Tyre, and ordered him to punish
all that he could catch of them, and to settle those in the administration whom
he had made tetrarchs.
But before this Herod, and Hyrcanus went out upon the sea-shore, and
earnestly desired of these ambassadors that they would neither bring ruin upon
themselves, nor war upon their native country, by their rash contentions; and
when they grew still more outrageous, Antony sent out armed men, and slew a
great many, and wounded more of them; of whom those that were slain were buried
by Hyrcanus, as were the wounded put under the care of physicians by him; yet
would not those that had escaped be quiet still, but put the affairs of the city
into such disorder, and so provoked Antony, that he slew those whom he had in
bonds also.
CHAPTER 13.
THE PARTHIANS BRING ANTIGONUS BACK INTO JUDEA, AND CAST
HYRCANUS AND PHASAELUS INTO PRISON. THE FLIGHT OF HEROD, AND THE TAKING OF
JERUSALEM AND WHAT HYRCANUS AND PHASAELUS SUFFERED.
Now two years afterward, when Barzapharnes, a governor among the Parthians,
and Paeorus, the king's son, had possessed themselves of Syria, and when
Lysanias had already succeeded upon the death of his father Ptolemy, the son of
Menneus, in the government [of Chalcis], he prevailed with the governor, by a
promise of a thousand talents, and five hundred women, to bring back Antigonus
to his kingdom, and to turn Hyrcanus out of it. Pacorus was by these means
induced so to do, and marched along the sea-coast, while he ordered Barzapharnes
to fall upon the Jews as he went along the Mediterranean part of the country;
but of the maritime people, the Tyrians would not receive Pacorus, although
those of Ptolemais and Sidon had received him; so he committed a troop of his
horse to a certain cup-bearer belonging to the royal family, of his own name [Pacorus],
and gave him orders to march into Judea, in order to learn the state of affairs
among their enemies, and to help Antigonus when he should want his assistance.
Now as these men were ravaging Carmel, many of the Jews ran together to Antigonus, and showed themselves ready to make an incursion into the country; so
he sent them before into that place called Drymus, [the woodland] to seize upon
the place; whereupon a battle was fought between them, and they drove the enemy
away, and pursued them, and ran after them as far as Jerusalem, and as their
numbers increased, they proceeded as far as the king's palace; but as Hyrcanus
and Phasaelus received them with a strong body of men, there happened a battle
in the market-place, in which Herod's party beat the enemy, and shut them up in
the temple, and set sixty men in the houses adjoining as a guard to them. But
the people that were tumultuous against the brethren came in, and burnt those
men; while Herod, in his rage for killing them, attacked and slew many of the
people, till one party made incursions on the other by turns, day by day, in the
way of ambushes, and slaughters were made continually among them.
3. Now when that festival which we call Pentecost was at hand, all the places
about the temple, and the whole city, was full of a multitude of people that
were come out of the country, and which were the greatest part of them armed
also, at which time Phasaelus guarded the wall, and Herod, with a few, guarded
the royal palace; and when he made an assault upon his enemies, as they were out
of their ranks, on the north quarter of the city, he slew a very great number of
them, and put them all to flight; and some of them he shut up within the city,
and others within the outward rampart. In the mean time, Antigonus desired that
Pacorus might be admitted to be a reconciler between them; and Phasaelus was
prevailed upon to admit the Parthian into the city with five hundred horse, and
to treat him in an hospitable manner, who pretended that he came to quell the
tumult, but in reality he came to assist Antigonus; however, he laid a plot for
Phasaelus, and persuaded him to go as an ambassador to Barzapharnes, in order to
put an end to the war, although Herod was very earnest with him to the contrary,
and exhorted him to kill the plotter, but not expose himself to the snares he
had laid for him, because the barbarians are naturally perfidious. However,
Pacorus went out and took Hyrcanus with him, that he might be the less
suspected; he also left some of the horsemen, called the Freemen, with Herod,
and conducted Phasaelus with the rest.
But now, when they were come to Galilee, they found that the people of
that country had revolted, and were in arms, who came very cunningly to their
leader, and besought him to conceal his treacherous intentions by an obliging
behavior to them; accordingly, he at first made them presents; and afterward, as
they went away, laid ambushes for them; and when they were come to one of the
maritime cities called Ecdippon, they perceived that a plot was laid for them;
for they were there informed of the promise of a thousand talents, and how
Antigonus had devoted the greatest number of the women that were there with
them, among the five hundred, to the Parthians; they also perceived that an
ambush was always laid for them by the barbarians in the night time; they had
also been seized on before this, unless they had waited for the seizure of Herod
first at Jerusalem, because if he were once informed of this treachery of
theirs, he would take care of himself; nor was this a mere report, but they saw
the guards already not far off them.
Nor would Phasaelus think of forsaking Hyrcanus and flying away, although
Ophellius earnestly persuaded him to it; for this man had learned the whole
scheme of the plot from Saramalla, the richest of all the Syrians. But Phasaelus
went up to the Parfilian governor, and reproached him to his face for laying
this treacherous plot against them, and chiefly because he had done it for
money; and he promised him that he would give him more money for their
preservation, than Antigonus had promised to give for the kingdom. But the sly
Parthian endeavored to remove all this suspicion by apologies and by oaths, and
then went [to the other] Pacorus; immediately after which those Parthians who
were left, and had it in charge, seized upon Phasaelus and Hyrcanus, who could
do no more than curse their perfidiousness and their perjury.
In the mean time, the cup-bearer was sent [back], and laid a plot how to
seize upon Herod, by deluding him, and getting him out of the city, as he was
commanded to do. But Herod suspected the barbarians from the beginning; and
having then received intelligence that a messenger, who was to bring him the
letters that informed him of the treachery intended, had fallen among the enemy,
he would not go out of the city; though Pacorus said very positively that he
ought to go out, and meet the messengers that brought the letters, for that the
enemy had not taken them, and that the contents of them were not accounts of any
plots upon them, but of what Phasaelus had done; yet had he heard from others
that his brother was seized; and Alexandra the shrewdest woman in the world,
Hyrcanus's daughter, begged of him that he would not go out, nor trust himself
to those barbarians, who now were come to make an attempt upon him openly.
Now as Pacorus and his friends were considering how they might bring their
plot to bear privately, because it was not possible to circumvent a man of so
great prudence by openly attacking him, Herod prevented them, and went off with
the persons that were the most nearly related to him by night, and this without
their enemies being apprized of it. But as soon as the Parthians perceived it,
they pursued after them; and as he gave orders for his mother, and sister, and
the young woman who was betrothed to him, with her mother, and his youngest
brother, to make the best of their way, he himself, with his servants, took all
the care they could to keep off the barbarians; and when at every assault he had
slain a great many of them, he came to the strong hold of Masada.
Nay, he found by experience that the Jews fell more heavily upon him than
did the Parthians, and created him troubles perpetually, and this ever since he
was gotten sixty furlongs from the city; these sometimes brought it to a sort of
a regular battle. Now in the place where Herod beat them, and killed a great
number of them, there he afterward built a citadel, in memory of the great
actions he did there, and adorned it with the most costly palaces, and erected
very strong fortifications, and called it, from his own name, Herodium. Now as
they were in their flight, many joined themselves to him every day; and at a
place called Thressa of Idumea his brother Joseph met him, and advised him to
ease himself of a great number of his followers, because Masada would not
contain so great a multitude, which were above nine thousand. Herod complied
with this advice, and sent away the most cumbersome part of his retinue, that
they might go into Idumea, and gave them provisions for their journey; but he
got safe to the fortress with his nearest relations, and retained with him only
the stoutest of his followers; and there it was that he left eight hundred of
his men as a guard for the women, and provisions sufficient for a siege; but he
made haste himself to Petra of Arabia.
As for the Parthians in Jerusalem, they betook themselves to plundering,
and fell upon the houses of those that were fled, and upon the king's palace,
and spared nothing but Hyrcanus's money, which was not above three hundred
talents. They lighted on other men's money also, but not so much as they hoped
for; for Herod having a long while had a suspicion of the perfidiousness of the
barbarians, had taken care to have what was most splendid among his treasures
conveyed into Idumea, as every one belonging to him had in like manner done
also. But the Parthians proceeded to that degree of injustice, as to fill all
the country with war without denouncing it, and to demolish the city Marissa,
and not only to set up Antigonus for king, but to deliver Phasaelus and Hyrcanus
bound into his. hands, in order to their being tormented by him. Antigonus
himself also bit off Hyrcanus's ears with his own teeth, as he fell down upon
his knees to him, that so he might never be able upon any mutation of affairs to
take the high priesthood again, for the high priests that officiated were to be
complete, and without blemish.
However, he failed in his purpose of abusing Phasaelus, by reason of his
courage; for though he neither had the command of his sword nor of his hands, he
prevented all abuses by dashing his head against a stone; so he demonstrated
himself to be Herod's own brother, and Hyrcanus a most degenerate relation, and
died with great bravery, and made the end of his life agreeable to the actions
of it. There is also another report about his end, viz. that he recovered of
that stroke, and that a surgeon, who was sent by Antigonus to heal him, filled
the wound with poisonous ingredients, and so killed him; whichsoever of these
deaths he came to, the beginning of it was glorious. It is also reported that
before he expired he was informed by a certain poor woman how Herod had escaped
out of their hands, and that he said thereupon, "I now die with comfort, since I
leave behind me one alive that will avenge me of mine enemies."
This was the death of Phasaelus; but the Parthians, although they had
failed of the women they chiefly desired, yet did they put the government of
Jerusalem into the hands of Antigonus, and took away Hyrcanus, and bound him,
and carried him to Parthia.
CHAPTER 14.
WHEN HEROD IS REJECTED IN ARABIA, HE MAKES HASTE TO ROME
WHERE ANTONY AND CAESAR JOIN THEIR INTEREST TO MAKE HIM KING .
NOW Herod did the more zealously pursue his journey into Arabia, as making
haste to get money of the king, while his brother was yet alive; by which money
alone it was that he hoped to prevail upon the covetous temper of the barbarians
to spare Phasaelus; for he reasoned thus with himself,: - that if the Arabian
king was too forgetful of his father's friendship with him, and was too covetous
to make him a free gift, he would however borrow of him as much as might redeem
his brother, and put into his hands, as a pledge, the son of him that was to be
redeemed. Accordingly he led his brother's son along with him, who was of the
age of seven years. Now he was ready to give three hundred talents for his
brother, and intended to desire the intercession of the Tyrians, to get them
accepted; however, fate had been too quick for his diligence; and since
Phasaelus was dead, Herod's brotherly love was now in vain. Moreover, he was not
able to find any lasting friendship among the Arabians; for their king, Malichus,
sent to him immediately, and commanded him to return back out of his country,
and used the name of the Parthians as a pretense for so doing, as though these
had denounced to him by their ambassadors to cast Herod out of Arabia; while in
reality they had a mind to keep back what they owed to Antipater, and not be
obliged to make requitals to his sons for the free gifts the father had made
them. He also took the impudent advice of those who, equally with himself, were
willing to deprive Herod of what Antipater had deposited among them; and these
men were the most potent of all whom he had in his kingdom.
So when Herod had found that the Arabians were his enemies, and this for
those very reasons whence he hoped they would have been the most friendly, and
had given them such an answer as his passion suggested, he returned back, and
went for Egypt. Now he lodged the first evening at one of the temples of that
country, in order to meet with those whom he left behind; but on the next day
word was brought him, as he was going to Rhinocurura, that his brother was dead,
and how he came by his death; and when he had lamented him as much as his
present circumstances could bear, he soon laid aside such cares, and proceeded
on his journey. But now, after some time, the king of Arabia repented of what he
had done, and sent presently away messengers to call him back: Herod had
prevented them, and was come to Pelusium, where he could not obtain a passage
from those that lay with the fleet, so he besought their captains to let him go
by them; accordingly, out of the reverence they bore to the fame and dignity of
the man, they conducted him to Alexandria; and when he came into the city, he
was received by Cleopatra with great splendor, who hoped he might be persuaded
to be commander of her forces in the expedition she was now about; but he
rejected the queen's solicitations, and being neither aftrighted at the height
of that storm which. then happened, nor at the tumults that were now in Italy,
he sailed for Rome.
But as he was in peril about Pamphylia, and obliged to cast out the
greatest part of the ship's lading, he with difficulty got safe to Rhodes, a
place which had been grievously harassed in the war with Cassius. He was there
received by his friends, Ptolemy and Sappinius; and although he was then in want
of money, he fitted up a three-decked ship of very great magnitude, wherein he
and his friends sailed to Brundusium, and went thence to Rome with all speed;
where he first of all went to Antony, on account of the friendship his father
had with him, and laid before him the calamities of himself and his family; and
that he had left his nearest relations besieged in a fortress, and had sailed to
him through a storm, to make supplication to him for assistance.
Hereupon Antony was moved to compassion at the change that had been made
in Herod's affairs, and this both upon his calling to mind how hospitably he had
been treated by Antipater, but more especially on account of Herod's own virtue;
so he then resolved to get him made king of the Jews, whom he had himself
formerly made tetrarch. The contest also that he had with Antigonus was another
inducement, and that of no less weight than the great regard he had for Herod;
for he looked upon Antigonus as a seditious person, and an enemy of the Romans;
and as for Caesar, Herod found him better prepared than Antony, as remembering
very fresh the wars he had gone through together with his father, the hospitable
treatment he had met with from him, and the entire good-will he had showed to
him; besides the activity which he saw in Herod himself. So he called the senate
together, wherein Messalas, and after him Atratinus, produced Herod before them,
and gave a full account of the merits of his father, and his own good-will to
the Romans. At the same time they demonstrated that Antigonus was their enemy,
not only because he soon quarreled with them, but because he now overlooked the
Romans, and took the government by the means of the Parthians. These reasons
greatly moved the senate; at which juncture Antony came in, and told them that
it was for their advantage in the Parthian war that Herod should be king; so
they all gave their votes for it. And when the senate was separated, Antony and
Caesar went out, with Herod between them; while the consul and the rest of the
magistrates went before them, in order to offer sacrifices, and to lay the
decree in the Capitol. Antony also made a feast for Herod on the first day of
his reign.
CHAPTER 15.
ANTIGONUS BESIEGES THOSE THAT WERE IN MASADA, WHOM HEROD
FREES FROM CONFINEMENT WHEN HE CAME BACK FROM ROME, AND PRESENTLY MARCHES TO
JERUSALEM WHERE HE FINDS SILO CORRUPTED BY BRIBES.
NOW during this time Antigonus besieged those that were in Masada, who had
all other necessaries in sufficient quantity, but were in want of water; on
which account Joseph, Herod's brother, was disposed to run away to the Arabians,
with two hundred of his own friends, because he had heard that Malichus repented
of his offenses with regard to Herod; and he had been so quick as to have been
gone out of the fortress already, unless, on that very night when he was going
away, there had fallen a great deal of rain, insomuch that his reservoirs were
full of water, and so he was under no necessity of running away. After which,
therefore, they made an irruption upon Antigonus's party, and slew a great many
of them, some in open battles, and some in private ambush; nor had they always
success in their attempts, for sometimes they were beaten, and ran away.
In the mean time Ventidius, the Roman general, was sent out of Syria, to
restrain the incursions of the Parthians; and after he had done that, he came
into Judea, in pretense indeed to assist Joseph and his party, but in reality to
get money of Antigonus;, and when he had pitched his camp very near to
Jerusalem, as soon as he had got money enough, he went away with the greatest
part of his forces; yet still did he leave Silo with some part of them, lest if
he had taken them all away, his taking of bribes might have been too openly
discovered. Now Antigonus hoped that the Parthians would come again to his
assistance, and therefore cultivated a good understanding with Silo in the mean
time, lest any interruption should be given to his hopes.
Now by this time Herod had sailed out of Italy, and was come to Ptolemais;
and as soon as he had gotten together no small army of foreigners, and of his
own countrymen, he marched through Galilee against Antigonus, wherein he was
assisted by Ventidius and Silo, both whom Dellius, a person sent by Antony,
persuaded to bring Herod [into his kingdom]. Now Ventidius was at this time
among the cities, and composing the disturbances which had happened by means of
the Parthians, as was Silo in Judea corrupted by the bribes that Antigonus had
given him; yet was not Herod himself destitute of power, but the number of his
forces increased every day as he went along, and all Galilee, with few
exceptions, joined themselves to him. So he proposed to himself to set about his
most necessary enterprise, and that was Masada, in order to deliver his
relations from the siege they endured. But still Joppa stood in his way, and
hindered his going thither; for it was necessary to take that city first, which
was in the enemies' hands, that when he should go to Jerusalem, no fortress
might be left in the enemies' power behind him. Silo also willingly joined him,
as having now a plausible occasion of drawing off his forces [from Jerusalem];
and when the Jews pursued him, and pressed upon him, [in his retreat,] Herod
made all excursion upon them with a small body of his men, and soon put them to
flight, and saved Silo when he was in distress.
After this Herod took Joppa, and then made haste to Masada to free his
relations. Now, as he was marching, many came in to him, induced by their
friendship to his father, some by the reputation he had already gained himself,
and some in order to repay the benefits they had received from them both; but
still what engaged the greatest number on his side, was the hopes from him when
he should be established in his kingdom; so that he had gotten together already
an army hard to be conquered. But Antigonus laid an ambush for him as he marched
out, in which he did little or no harm to his enemies. However, he easily
recovered his relations again that were in Masada, as well as the fortress Ressa,
and then marched to Jerusalem, where the soldiers that were with Silo joined
themselves to his own, as did many out of the city, from a dread of his power.
Now when he had pitched his camp on the west side of the city, the guards
that were there shot their arrows and threw their darts at them, while others
ran out in companies, and attacked those in the forefront; but Herod commanded
proclamation to be made at the wall, that he was come for the good of the people
and the preservation of the city, without any design to be revenged on his open
enemies, but to grant oblivion to them, though they had been the most obstinate
against him. Now the soldiers that were for Antigonus made a contrary clamor,
and did neither permit any body to hear that proclamation, nor to change their
party; so Antigonus gave order to his forces to beat the enemy from the walls;
accordingly, they soon threw their darts at them from the towers, and put them
to flight.
And here it was that Silo discovered he had taken bribes; for he set many
of the soldiers to clamor about their want of necessaries, and to require their
pay, in order to buy themselves food, and to demand that he would lead them into
places convenient for their winter quarters; because all the parts about the
city were laid waste by the means of Antigonus's army, which had taken all
things away. By this he moved the army, and attempted to get them off the siege;
but Herod went to the captains that were under Silo, and to a great many of the
soldiers, and begged of them not to leave him, who was sent thither by Caesar,
and Antony, and the senate; for that he would take care to have their wants
supplied that very day. After the making of which entreaty, he went hastily into
the country, and brought thither so great an abundance of necessaries, that he
cut off all Silo's pretenses; and in order to provide that for the following
days they should not want supplies, he sent to the people that were about
Samaria (which city had joined itself to him) to bring corn, and wine, and oil,
and cattle to Jericho. When Antigonus heard of this, be sent some of his party
with orders to hinder, and lay ambushes for these collectors of corn. This
command was obeyed, and a great multitude of armed men were gathered together
about Jericho, and lay upon the mountains, to watch those that brought the
provisions. Yet was Herod not idle, but took with him ten cohorts, five of them
were Romans, and five were Jewish cohorts, together with some mercenary troops
intermixed among them, and besides those a few horsemen, and came to Jericho;
and when he came, he found the city deserted, but that there were five hundred
men, with their wives and children, who had taken possession of the tops of the
mountains; these he took, and dismissed them, while the Romans fell upon the
rest of the city, and plundered it, having found the houses full of all sorts of
good things. So the king left a garrison at Jericho, and came back, and sent the
Roman army into those cities which were come over to him, to take their winter
quarters there, viz. into Judea, [or Idumea,] and Galilee, and Samaria.
Antigonus also by bribes obtained of Silo to let a part of his army be received
at Lydda, as a compliment to Antonius.
CHAPTER 16.
HEROD TAKES SEPPHORIS AND SUBDUES THE ROBBERS THAT WERE IN
THE CAVES ; HE AFTER THAT AVENGES HIMSELF UPON MACHERAS, AS UPON AN ENEMY OF HIS
AND GOES TO ANTONY AS HE WAS BESIEGING SAMOSATA.
SO the Romans lived in plenty of all things, and rested from war. However,
Herod did not lie at rest, but seized upon Idumea, and kept it, with two
thousand footmen, and four hundred horsemen; and this he did by sending his
brother Joseph thither, that no innovation might be made by Antigonus. He also
removed his mother, and all his relations, who had been in Masada, to Samaria;
and when he had settled them securely, he marched to take the remaining parts of
Galilee, and to drive away the garrisons placed there by Antigonus.
But when Herod had reached Sepphoris, in a very great snow, he took the
city without any difficulty; the guards that should have kept it flying away
before it was assaulted; where he gave an opportunity to his followers that had
been in distress to refresh themselves, there being in that city a great
abundance of necessaries. After which he hasted away to the robbers that were in
the caves, who overran a great part of the country, and did as great mischief to
its inhabitants as a war itself could have done. Accordingly, he sent beforehand
three cohorts of footmen, and one troop of horsemen, to the village Arbela, and
came himself forty days afterwards with the rest of his forces Yet were not the
enemy aftrighted at his assault but met him in arms; for their skill was that of
warriors, but their boldness was the boldness of robbers: when therefore it came
to a pitched battle, they put to flight Herod's left wing with their right one;
but Herod, wheeling about on the sudden from his own right wing, came to their
assistance, and both made his own left wing return back from its flight, and
fell upon the pursuers, and cooled their courage, till they could not bear the
attempts that were made directly upon them, and so turned back and ran away.
But Herod followed them, and slew them as he followed them, and destroyed
a great part of them, till those that remained were scattered beyond the river
[Jordan;] and Galilee was freed from the terrors they had been under, excepting
from those that remained, and lay concealed in caves, which required longer time
ere they could be conquered. In order to which Herod, in the first place,
distributed the fruits of their former labors to the soldiers, and gave every
one of them a hundred and fifty drachmae of silver, and a great deal more to
their commanders, and sent them into their winter quarters. He also sent to his
youngest brother Pheroas, to take care of a good market for them, where they
might buy themselves provisions, and to build a wall about Alexandrium; who took
care of both those injunctions accordingly.
In the mean time Antony abode at Athens, while Ventidius called for Silo
and Herod to come to the war against the Parthians, but ordered them first to
settle the affairs of Judea; so Herod willingly dismissed Silo to go to
Ventidius, but he made an expedition himself against those that lay in the
caves. Now these caves were in the precipices of craggy mountains, and could not
be come at from any side, since they had only some winding pathways, very
narrow, by which they got up to them; but the rock that lay on their front had
beneath it valleys of a vast depth, and of an almost perpendicular declivity;
insomuch that the king was doubtful for a long time what to do, by reason of a
kind of impossibility there was of attacking the place. Yet did he at length
make use of a contrivance that was subject to the utmost hazard; for he let down
the most hardy of his men in chests, and set them at the mouths of the dens. Now
these men slew the robbers and their families, and when they made resistance,
they sent in fire upon them [and burnt them]; and as Herod was desirous of
saving some of them, he had proclamation made, that they should come and deliver
themselves up to him; but not one of them came willingly to him; and of those
that were compelled to come, many preferred death to captivity. And here a
certain old man, the father of seven children, whose children, together with
their mother, desired him to give them leave to go out, upon the assurance and
right hand that was offered them, slew them after the following manner: He
ordered every one of them to go out, while he stood himself at the cave's mouth,
and slew that son of his perpetually who went out. Herod was near enough to see
this sight, and his bowels of compassion were moved at it, and he stretched out
his right hand to the old man, and besought him to spare his children; yet did
not he relent at all upon what he said, but over and above reproached Herod on
the lowness of his descent, and slew his wife as well as his children; and when
he had thrown their dead bodies down the precipice, he at last threw himself
down after them.
By this means Herod subdued these caves, and the robbers that were in
them. He then left there a part of his army, as many as he thought sufficient to
prevent any sedition, and made Ptolemy their general, and returned to Samaria;
he led also with him three thousand armed footmen, and six hundred horsemen,
against Antigonus. Now here those that used to raise tumults in Galilee, having
liberty so to do upon his departure, fell unexpectedly upon Ptolemy, the general
of his forces, and slew him; they also laid the country waste, and then retired
to the bogs, and to places not easily to be found. But when Herod was informed
of this insurrection, he came to the assistance of the country immediately, and
destroyed a great number of the seditions, and raised the sieges of all those
fortresses they had besieged; he also exacted the tribute of a hundred talents
of his enemies, as a penalty for the mutations they had made in the country.
By this time (the Parthians being already driven out of the country, and
Pacorus slain) Ventidius, by Antony's command, sent a thousand horsemen, and two
legions, as auxiliaries to Herod, against Antigonus. Now Antigonus besought
Macheras, who was their general, by letter, to come to his assistance, and made
a great many mournful complaints about Herod's violence, and about the injuries
he did to the kingdom; and promised to give him money for such his assistance;
but he complied not with his invitation to betray his trust, for he did not
contemn him that sent him, especially while Herod gave him more money [than the
other offered]. So he pretended friendship to Antigonus, but came as a spy to
discover his affairs; although he did not herein comply with Herod, who
dissuaded him from so doing. But Antigonus perceived what his intentions were
beforehand, and excluded him out of the city, and defended himself against him
as against an enemy, from the walls; till Macheras was ashamed of what he had
done, and retired to Emmaus to Herod; and as he was in a rage at his
disappointment, he slew all the Jews whom he met with, without sparing those
that were for Herod, but using them all as if they were for Antigonus.
Hereupon Herod was very angry at him, and was going to fight against Macheras as his enemy; but he restrained his indignation, and marched to Antony
to accuse Macheras of maladministration. But Macheras was made sensible of his
offenses, and followed after the king immediately, and earnestly begged and
obtained that he would be reconciled to him. However, Herod did not desist from
his resolution of going to Antony; but when he heard that he was besieging
Samosata with a great army, which is a strong city near to Euphrates, he made
the greater haste; as observing that this was a proper opportunity for showing
at once his courage, and for doing what would greatly oblige Antony. Indeed,
when he came, he soon made an end of that siege, and slew a great number of the
barbarians, and took from them a large prey; insomuch that Antony, who admired
his courage formerly, did now admire it still more. Accordingly, he heaped many
more honors upon him, and gave him more assured hopes that he should gain his
kingdom; and now king Antiochus was forced to deliver up Samosata.
CHAPTER 17.
THE DEATH OF JOSEPH [HEROD'S BROTHER] WHICH HAD BEEN
SIGNIFIED TO HEROD IN DREAMS. HOW HEROD WAS PRESERVED TWICE AFTER A WONDERFUL
MANNER. HE CUTS OFF THE HEAD OF PAPPUS, WHO WAS THE MURDERER OF HIS BROTHER AND
SENDS THAT HEAD TO [HIS OTHER BROTHER] PHERORAS, AND IN NO LONG TIME HE BESIEGES
JERUSALEM AND MARRIES MARIAMNE.
IN the mean time, Herod's affairs in Judea were in an ill state. He had
left his brother Joseph with full power, but had charged him to make no attempts
against Antigonus till his return; for that Macheras would not be such an
assistant as he could depend on, as it appeared by what he had done already; but
as soon as Joseph heard that his brother was at a very great distance, he
neglected the charge he had received, and marched towards Jericho with five
cohorts, which Macheras sent with him. This movement was intended for seizing on
the corn, as it was now in the midst of summer; but when his enemies attacked
him in the mountains, and in places which were difficult to pass, he was both
killed himself, as he was very bravely fighting in the battle, and the entire
Roman cohorts were destroyed; for these cohorts were new-raised men, gathered
out of Syria, and here was no mixture of those called veteran soldiers among
them, who might have supported those that were unskillful in war.
This victory was not sufficient for Antigonus; but he proceeded to that
degree of rage, as to treat the dead body of Joseph barbarously; for when he had
got possession of the bodies of those that were slain, he cut off his head,
although his brother Pheroras would have given fifty talents as a price of
redemption for it. And now the affairs of Galilee were put in such disorder
after this victory of Antigonus's, that those of Antigonus's party brought the
principal men that were on Herod's side to the lake, and there drowned them.
There was a great change made also in Idumea, where Macheras was building a wall
about one of the fortresses, which was called Gittha. But Herod had not yet been
informed of these things; for after the taking of Samosata, and when Antony had
set Sosius over the affairs of Syria, and had given him orders to assist Herod
against Antigonus, he departed into Egypt; but Sosius sent two legions before
him into Judea to assist Herod, and followed himself soon after with the rest of
his army.
Now when Herod was at Daphne, by Antioch, he had some dreams which clearly
foreboded his b |