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Hardcover Flavius Josephus: Eyewitness to Rome's First-Century Conquest of Judea Book

ISBN: 0025471619

ISBN13: 9780025471610

Flavius Josephus: Eyewitness to Rome's First-Century Conquest of Judea

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Format: Hardcover

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Book Overview

Richard Miller translates this narration of an eye-witness account of Rome's first-century conquest of Judea. Through the eyes of a Jewish priest, general, Roman captive, and historian, Miereille... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

3 ratings

FLAVIUS JOSEPHUS -

Real nice analysis of the man named Joseph son of Mathias. As the author concludes, for Josephus it was a matter of survival in a time of sure destruction. Josephus was an intelligent individual, as well as, part of the elite class of Jewish society. He knew the war against the Romans was hopeless and therefore decided to go over to the Roman side. Yes, he was a traitor to his people, but has left us an eye witness account, that would have been lost, of the war between Rome and Judea. His ethics were unworthy of a man from such an honorable line of Jewish priests. However, he was also proud of the heritage of his people and being a Jew! Who knows how one would have behaved in his same situation ? Great book!

Five stars if you haven't read Josephus...

perhaps three or four if you already have. This book is essentially a summary of Josephus's books (especially his Jewish War). If you have not read those works, this is an excellent guide to Josephus. If you have read Josephus, this book will add a little bit to your understanding, but obviously not as much. What Lebel does best is add emotion to Josephus's relatively dry account: that is, she tries to explain the passions that drove both Josephus and the Jewish rebels. On the one hand, Josephus believed that the Jewish rebellion was suicidal, and that the destruction of the Second Temple may have even been Divine punishment for the rebels' murderous tactics. Lebel speculates that the rebels were driven not just by nationalism but by the hope of divine intervention. Even seemingly insane behavior (e.g. the rebels' destruction of food that Jerusalemites needed to survive the Roman siege) makes sense if the rebels believed that their bravery would be rewarded with a miracle. Indeed, some language in Josephus' own work supports this view: for example, Josephus quotes one rebel as stating: "Even had they wings, the Romans would never surmount the walls of Jerusalem."

Good Starting Place for researching the Jewish Revolt

I concur with the previous reviewer's disappointment over the lack of summarizing appendices. I found Professor Hadas-Lebel'saccount quite adequate, even stimulating as an introductory text on the twin research controversies over Josephus and the revolt to which Josephus is virtually the sole eyewitness/contemporary account (unless one counts the tantalizing fragments of Tacitus). I wish that the author had included a bibliography or a discussion of the conflicting modern academic or religious studies. Nonetheless, this book is both a good summary of the debate and a solid introcution to Josephus, the events he desribes and his predicament in the context of a hostile world. Particularly valuable is Hadas-Lebel's review of Josephus' legacy in art, music, literature and judicial polemics -- mock courts-martial and the like. I am pleased to see this book available again in paperback. I ordered expecting that some of the above defects would have been remedied. I hope that English-speakers might soon find translations of some of the author's other more recent work on the Jewish Revolt.
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