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The Jewish Historian Flavius Josephus: A Biographical Investigation

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managed to make his personal peace with Vespasian and Titus. Evidently it was desirable to<br />

them to keep the leader of the rebellion in hand; and from the outset <strong>Josephus</strong> appeared<br />

prepared to allow himself to be played in the service of Roman politics. On the other hand,<br />

however, the course of the war also teaches that after the defeat of Galilee, the Roman<br />

commanders did not directly continue to advance their attack, and it is reported to us<br />

believably that they hesitated in the hope that they Jews would bleed themselves to death in<br />

internal turmoil. From this it follows that the Romans actually faced a unified movement only<br />

in Galilee at first, and that it is totally incorrect when <strong>Josephus</strong> allows the impression to arise<br />

in the War that the war had already erupted before his posting and he himself departed for<br />

Galilee merely as one of the commanders with a specific mandate. If this had been the case,<br />

then the Romans would also have encountered a unified movement throughout the <strong>Jewish</strong><br />

territory and would have defeated these one by one, which they were in a military position to<br />

do. [254] As matter of fact, things were completely different; to be sure, there were “robbers”<br />

everywhere and nationally spirited Jews, but they at first exerted a decisive influence only in<br />

Galilee due to <strong>Josephus</strong>’ politics; here was the focus of the rebellion, which had to be<br />

extinguished by the Romans for that reason. When this had occurred, Vespasian’s task would<br />

have basically been settled; but the robbers now continued their agitation in other areas and<br />

they eventually managed to ignite a new second rebellion, as it were, in Jerusalem. <strong>The</strong> bloody<br />

events, which happened in Jerusalem during the winter of 67/68, brought out the rebellion<br />

movement in that place for the first time; the government was forcibly coerced by the zealots<br />

and it appeared once again here as well that it was not in the position to gain control of the<br />

warmongers without a means to power. Not until these events were the Romans induced to<br />

resume the war, and so the interval in Roman belligerence is explained from [the fact] that we<br />

are basically dealing with two movements, which admittedly are ultimately traced back to the<br />

same people: the one movement is the rebellion in Galilee under the leadership of <strong>Josephus</strong><br />

contingent upon his relationship with the robbers; the other is the rebellion of the zealots in<br />

Jerusalem, which did not break out until later.<br />

From this course of events it is explained historically as well that in the year 66<br />

<strong>Josephus</strong> could have had no idea that he stood within a great war against Rome; however, the<br />

modern historian also must from now on beware of following the perception of the War [and]<br />

86 <strong>The</strong> parallels with the Galatians are obvious here as well.<br />

222

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