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The Jewish Historian Flavius Josephus: A Biographical Investigation

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surroundings of the War and inserts it into a passage where there could be mention made of<br />

the intention to build walls for Tiberias; so in the Life this segment necessarily moves to<br />

section 156. Thus the complaint of the Tiberians, which was raised there, is nothing other than<br />

the modification of the theme of building the walls from War 2.638, which had become<br />

necessary for the Life. <strong>The</strong>refore this is the source, and for this reason also section 156 must be<br />

recognized as an added segment that was introduced into the context while the administrative<br />

report was being formulated into the Life.<br />

In fact, this paragraph [can] be easily removed from its surrounding [text], which gains<br />

clarity only by its extraction. Instead of many words I [shall] write down the original context:<br />

οἱ δὲ τὴν τῶν Τιβεριέων πόλιν κατοικοῦντες γράφουσιν πρὸς τὸν βασιλέα παρακαλοῦντες<br />

πέμψαι δύναμιν τὴν φυλάξουσαν αὐτῶν τήν χώραν· θέλειν γὰρ αὐτῷ προστίθεσθαι. // μετὰ δὲ<br />

τρίτην ἡμέραν // συνέβη τινὰς Ῥωμαίων ἱππεῖς οὐ πόρρωθεν τῆς πόλεως ὁδοιποροῦντας<br />

ὀφθῆναι, οἳ δόξαν παρέσχον τὴν παρὰ τοῦ βασιλέως δύναμιν ἥκειν. A glance at War 2.632 ff.,<br />

where a paraphrase of the idea just written [above] is present, shows that this context truly<br />

did exist. When <strong>Josephus</strong> then formulated the Life, he supplemented the text with two<br />

sentences in which he spoke about the walls of Tiberias in the sense identified above. But if the<br />

Tiberians were making complaints to him, then <strong>Josephus</strong> must be in Tiberias (156). Since this,<br />

however, did not fit into the continuation of the narrative, <strong>Josephus</strong> had to be brought again<br />

from Tiberias to Tarichea in section 157. Both passages, which essentially complement each<br />

other, are thus the indispensable result of the new view[point] of the theme of building the<br />

walls, and fall [into place] with it [chronologically]. In reality, the Life had [94] already<br />

pictured <strong>Josephus</strong> in Tarichea since section 127, so that the data from Life 159 connect<br />

smoothly to this, whereas the insertion of 156 and of [the segment] in 157 now disrupt this<br />

context as well. <strong>The</strong> additional consequence of this insertion is that the unsuspecting reader is<br />

due to calculate the date “after the third day” from <strong>Josephus</strong>’ presence in Tiberias whereas it<br />

refers factually to the dispatch of the written [message] to Agrippa.<br />

Thus the same result as in sections 1 and 2 has emerged for us by the stratification<br />

[Zergliederung] of this story as well: <strong>Josephus</strong>’ oldest report about the relevant events<br />

exists within the nucleus of the Life, the old administrative report; this was<br />

reworked with a definite bias by <strong>Josephus</strong> for his War, and finally <strong>Josephus</strong><br />

formulated the Life to [the text] that we [ currently] have.<br />

84

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