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| Vespasian commands the Descendants of David to be sought. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter XII.—Vespasian commands
the Descendants of David to be sought.
He also
relates that Vespasian after the conquest of Jerusalem gave orders that
all that belonged to the lineage of David should be sought out, in
order that none of the royal race might be left among the Jews; and in
consequence of this a most terrible persecution again hung over the
Jews.697
697 It
is not certain that Eusebius intends to give Hegesippus as his
authority for the statements of this chapter, inasmuch as he does not
mention his name. He gives the account, however, upon the authority of
some one else, and not as a direct historical statement, for the verb
is in the infinitive, and it is much more natural to supply
῾Ηγήσιππος
ἱστορεῖ,
the last words of the preceding chapter, than to supply any other
phrase, such as λόγος
κατέχει,
which occurs two chapters earlier. The translators are divided as to
the words that are to be supplied, but it seems to me beyond doubt that
this account rests upon the same authority as that of the previous
chapter. There is in any case nothing at all unlikely in the report, as
Vespasian and his successors kept a very close watch upon the Jews, and
this would have been a very natural method of endeavoring to prevent
future revolutions. The same course was pursued also by Domitian; see
below, chaps. 19 and 20. We hear from no other source of a persecution
raised against the Jews by Vespasian, and we may therefore conclude
that it cannot have amounted to much, if indeed it deserves to be
called a persecution at all. | E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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