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| The Calamities of the Jews during Trajan's Reign. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter
II.—The Calamities of the Jews during
Trajan’s Reign.
1. The
teaching and the Church of our Saviour flourished greatly and made
progress from day to day; but the calamities of the Jews increased, and
they underwent a constant succession of evils. In the eighteenth year
of Trajan’s reign973 there was
another disturbance of the Jews, through which a great multitude of
them perished.974
974 Closs says: “According to Dion Cassius, LXVIII. 32, they
slew in Cyrene 220,000 persons with terrible cruelty. At the same time
there arose in Cyprus a disturbance of the Jews, who were very numerous
in that island. According to Dion, 240,000 of the inhabitants were
slain there. Their leader was Artemion.” Compare Dion Cassius,
Hist. Rom. LXVIII. 32, and LXIX. 12 sq. The Jews and the Greeks
that dwelt together in different cities were constantly getting into
trouble. The Greeks scorned the Jews, and the Jews in return hated the
Greeks and stirred up many bloody commotions against them. See
Jost’s Geschichte der Israeliten, chap. III. p. 181 sq.
The word “another” in this passage is used apparently with
reference to the Jewish war under Vespasian, of which Eusebius has
spoken at length in the early part of the third Book. |
2. For in Alexandria and in the
rest of Egypt, and also in Cyrene,975 as if incited
by some terrible and factious spirit, they rushed into seditious
measures against their fellow-inhabitants, the Greeks. The insurrection
increased greatly, and in the following year, while Lupus was governor
of all Egypt,976
976 Lupus is, to me at least, an otherwise unknown
character. | it developed into a war of no mean
magnitude.
3. In the first attack it
happened that they were victorious over the Greeks, who fled to
Alexandria and imprisoned and slew the Jews that were in the city. But
the Jews of Cyrene, although deprived of their aid, continued to
plunder the land of Egypt and to devastate its districts,977
977 νόμοι. See Bk.
II. chap. 17, note 10. | under the leadership of Lucuas.978
978 Lucuas is called by Dion Cassius (LXVIII. 32) Andreas. Münter
suggests that he may have borne a double name, a Jewish and a Roman, as
did many of the Jews of that time. | Against them the emperor sent Marcius
Turbo979
979 Marcius Turbo was one of the most distinguished of the Roman
generals under Trajan and Hadrian, and finally became prætorian
prefect under Hadrian. See Dion Cassius, LXIX. 18, and Spartian,
Hadr. 4–9, 15. | with a foot and naval force and also with
a force of cavalry.
4. He carried on the war against
them for a long time and fought many battles, and slew many thousands of
Jews, not only of those of Cyrene, but also of those who dwelt in Egypt
and had come to the assistance of their king Lucuas.
5. But the emperor, fearing that
the Jews in Mesopotamia would also make an attack upon the inhabitants
of that country, commanded Lucius Quintus980
980 Lucius Quintus was an independent Moorish chief, who served
voluntarily in the Roman army and became one of Trajan’s favorite
generals. He was made governor of Judea by Trajan, and was afterward
raised to the consulship. According to Themistius (Orat. XVI.),
Trajan at one time intended to make him his successor. See Dion
Cassius, LXVIII. 8, 22, 30, 32; LXIX. 2; Spartian, Hadr. 5, 7,
and cf. Valesius’ note on this passage. | to
clear the province of them. And he having marched against them slew a
great multitude of those that dwelt there; and in consequence of his
success he was made governor of Judea by the emperor. These events are
recorded also in these very words by the Greek historians that have
written accounts of those times.981
981 The
language of Eusebius might imply that he had other sources than the
Greek writers, but this does not seem to have been the case. He
apparently followed Dion Cassius for the most part, but evidently had
some other source (the same which Orosius afterward followed), for he
differs from Dion in the name of the Jewish leader, calling him Lucuas
instead of Andreas. The only extant accounts of these affairs by Greek
historians are those of Dion Cassius and Orosius, but there were
evidently others in Eusebius’ time. | E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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