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The Jewish Historian Flavius Josephus: A Biographical Investigation

The Jewish Historian Flavius Josephus: A Biographical Investigation

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alleged defection of the Jews to Hyrcanus and the attempt at bribery by Aristobulus and<br />

Hyrcanus – Schürer (294), Wellhausen (292), Ewald (519 f.), Renan (145), Holtzmann (213) and<br />

Lehmann-Haupt (208) subscribe to [the reading in] the Antiquities, while the other researchers<br />

beat around the bush about these matters. In view of this, [let us] briefly outline the<br />

progression [of events] here as well: Aretas forces Aristobulus back to Jerusalem and besieges<br />

him in the city, which would have undoubtedly fallen too, if Scaurus had not intervened.<br />

Envoys from both brothers appear before the Roman commander who decided in favour of<br />

Aristobulus 53 and issued the order to Hyrcanus and the Arabians to withdraw from Jerusalem.<br />

Aristobulus sets out after his retreating opponents and defeats them decisively at Papyron.<br />

4. Hyrcanus and Aristobulus before Pomp ey<br />

with supplementary information about <strong>The</strong>ophanes of Mytilene<br />

War 131 - 132 = Ant. 34 - 47<br />

<strong>The</strong> ruling that Scaurus passed was only temporary, because Pompey himself arrived in<br />

Damascus in the spring of 63. Both parties called on the Roman imperator, whereupon it finally<br />

came to an open rift between Pompey and Aristobulus. – First of all, in the Antiquities the<br />

citation from Strabo, which is already formally bracketed [verzahnt] by doublets (ἧκον παρ’<br />

αὐτὸν πρέσβεις = ἧκον πάλιν πρέσβεις πρὸς αὐτὸν) is to be omitted; the basic conception<br />

therefore reads: When Pompey came to Damascus [146] and Colesyria, ἧκον παρ’ αὐτὸν<br />

πρέσβεις // Ἀντίπατρος μὲν ὑπὲρ Ὑρκανοῦ, Νικόδημος δὲ ὑπὲρ Ἀριστοβούλου (34a, 37b). Hence<br />

it follows that <strong>Josephus</strong> himself saw [a work of] Strabo or one that was reworked, extracted an<br />

excerpt [from it] and incorporated this into his [own] work.<br />

<strong>The</strong> [text] that is now remaining shows us some very interesting facts with respect to<br />

the War; according to War 131 Hyrcanus and Antipater call on Pompey in Damascus and beg<br />

him “without having brought any gifts, trusting in the justice of their cause” to reinstate<br />

Hyrcanus. Aristobulus, on the other hand, trusted in the gifts that he had previously given to<br />

Scaurus, and appears in regal robes. But since he could not bring himself to appear upon<br />

53 <strong>The</strong> source of the War attempts to promote Antipater; consequently it can attribute Scaurus’<br />

supporting Antipater’s side only to bribery. No one will be able to determine today whether<br />

Scaurus really was bribed, or whether he actually joined Aristobulus’ side, which is the second<br />

128

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