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The Jewish Historian Flavius Josephus: A Biographical Investigation

The Jewish Historian Flavius Josephus: A Biographical Investigation

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assertion from which the only possible conclusion that can be drawn from its ultimate<br />

deliberation [Durchdenkung] is that <strong>Josephus</strong> never existed at all, but only his source; because<br />

who can guarantee to us that the Autobiography and all the other passages that report about<br />

<strong>Josephus</strong> really have him in mind and not his source?<br />

It is obvious, after all, that 16.187 reports about the very same man who forms the<br />

subject of the Autobiography. <strong>The</strong> author of 16.187 affirms, with reference to his ancestry, that<br />

he is closely related to the Hasmonean kings, but <strong>Josephus</strong> says of himself not only, as Otto<br />

thinks, that his family belongs to the first of the 24 priestly courses, but he adds to this that on<br />

his mother’s side he belongs within the family of the Hasmoneans from which she stems (Life<br />

2). But in addition: the author of 16.187 accounts for his unconditional love of historical truth<br />

by his priestly descent, and from <strong>Josephus</strong> himself we know that he derived his suitability as a<br />

historian from his priestly descent and he wrote his self-portrayal to prove just this (cf. page<br />

34). Under such circumstances it is absolutely definite that in 16.186/7 no one other than<br />

<strong>Josephus</strong> is speaking about himself. But now, since <strong>Josephus</strong> explicitly contrasts himself here<br />

to the presentation of Nicolaus of Damascus, which was positively inclined towards the<br />

Herodians, and his [132] contrast to it does not derive from some contradictory sources, but<br />

rather from his personal attitude towards the Herodians on the one hand and the Hasmoneans<br />

on the other, so it follows that <strong>Josephus</strong> was induced by his own personal opinion to give his<br />

Antiquities an anti-Herodian trend, be it that he chose for himself a source to this purpose,<br />

which followed the same bias, be it that he himself imposed an anti-Herodian bias into a source<br />

that was otherwise oriented. But the main point, which has has until now been<br />

completely unrecognized, is this: <strong>Josephus</strong> covers the direction of his work<br />

with his person; that by pushing the Tendenzen back exclusively onto the<br />

sources one follows the wrong path entirely.<br />

And this incredibly important discovery corresponds perfectly indeed with what we<br />

have determined about the War and the Life: whereas the presentation of the War was tailored<br />

completely to the personality of the Herodian Agrippa, the later additions and revisions<br />

showed an attitude that was inimical to Agrippa. Here, however, in the relationship of<br />

<strong>Josephus</strong> to Agrippa it is impossible from the outset that any intervening sources could have<br />

been swept in; furthermore, we could reveal time and again that <strong>Josephus</strong> only reworked his<br />

original material in order to bring his new bias into the work. And if, in the historical parts<br />

116

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