Bibliography


Title: Jerusalem under siege. The collapse of the Jewish state 66-70 C. E.
Secondary Title: Brill's Series in Jewish Studies 3
Author: Price, Jonathan J.
Type: Generic
Year: 1992
Abstract: "The revised version of a doctoral dissertation, this history of the Jewish War in Jerusalem between A.D. 66 and 70 contends that ""the revolution grew partly out of faction, weakened and sputtered from the start because of faction, and changed course ineffectively and without purpose because of faction, exhausting and consuming its own people."" The seven chapters concern rebels and aristocrats, coalition, the first regime, the coup d'état, civil war, the siege, and the destruction of Jerusalem. Also included are fourteen appendixes: Josephus' Jewish War as a historical source, sources other than Josephus, numbers, chronological problems in War, etc. - // An internal history of the four tragic years of the Jewish rebellion, which began with militant optimism in the year 66 and ended with the destruction of the Temple and city of Jerusalem four years later. The main theme is internal collapse: from the decades before the war, when deepening factionalism throughout Jewish society contributed to the ultimate outbreak of revolution, to the Temple meeting of 66, when an alliance among competing factions was insecurely riveted together and an ""army"" with conflicting enthusiasms was formed, from the toppling of the disintegration of the second regime from 68 to 70, and from the siege, during which the famine fell on different segments of the population with sadly unequal weight, to desertion, the patterns of which provide a negative image of the constantly shifting political fortunes of revolutionary partners. Classical, rabbinic, archaeological and numismatic evidence is brought to bear on a new interpretation of Josephus' Bellum Judaicum. Readership: students and specialists of classical and Jewish history (second temple), specialists on Josephus."
Keywords: History of the Judean War (66-73)