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<h2> CHAPTER 21. </h2>
<p>Of The [Temple And] Cities That Were Built By Herod And<br/>
Erected From The Very Foundations; As Also Of Those Other<br/>
Edifices That Were Erected By Him; And What Magnificence He<br/>
Showed To Foreigners; And How Fortune Was In All Things<br/>
Favorable To Him.<br/></p>
<p>1. Accordingly, in the fifteenth year of his reign, Herod rebuilt the
temple, and encompassed a piece of land about it with a wall, which land
was twice as large as that before enclosed. The expenses he laid out upon
it were vastly large also, and the riches about it were unspeakable. A
sign of which you have in the great cloisters that were erected about the
temple, and the citadel which was on its north side. The cloisters he
built from the foundation, but the citadel <SPAN href="#linknote-32"
name="linknoteref-32" id="linknoteref-32">32</SPAN> he repaired at a vast
expense; nor was it other than a royal palace, which he called Antonia, in
honor of Antony. He also built himself a palace in the Upper city,
containing two very large and most beautiful apartments; to which the holy
house itself could not be compared [in largeness]. The one apartment he
named Caesareum, and the other Agrippium, from his [two great] friends.</p>
<p>2. Yet did he not preserve their memory by particular buildings only, with
their names given them, but his generosity went as far as entire cities;
for when he had built a most beautiful wall round a country in Samaria,
twenty furlongs long, and had brought six thousand inhabitants into it,
and had allotted to it a most fruitful piece of land, and in the midst of
this city, thus built, had erected a very large temple to Caesar, and had
laid round about it a portion of sacred land of three furlongs and a half,
he called the city Sebaste, from Sebastus, or Augustus, and settled the
affairs of the city after a most regular manner.</p>
<p>3. And when Caesar had further bestowed upon him another additional
country, he built there also a temple of white marble, hard by the
fountains of Jordan: the place is called Panium, where is a top of a
mountain that is raised to an immense height, and at its side, beneath, or
at its bottom, a dark cave opens itself; within which there is a horrible
precipice, that descends abruptly to a vast depth; it contains a mighty
quantity of water, which is immovable; and when any body lets down any
thing to measure the depth of the earth beneath the water, no length of
cord is sufficient to reach it. Now the fountains of Jordan rise at the
roots of this cavity outwardly; and, as some think, this is the utmost
origin of Jordan: but we shall speak of that matter more accurately in our
following history.</p>
<p>4. But the king erected other places at Jericho also, between the citadel
Cypros and the former palace, such as were better and more useful than the
former for travelers, and named them from the same friends of his. To say
all at once, there was not any place of his kingdom fit for the purpose
that was permitted to be without somewhat that was for Caesar's honor; and
when he had filled his own country with temples, he poured out the like
plentiful marks of his esteem into his province, and built many cities
which he called Cesareas.</p>
<p>5. And when he observed that there was a city by the sea-side that was
much decayed, [its name was Strato's Tower,] but that the place, by the
happiness of its situation, was capable of great improvements from his
liberality, he rebuilt it all with white stone, and adorned it with
several most splendid palaces, wherein he especially demonstrated his
magnanimity; for the case was this, that all the sea-shore between Dora
and Joppa, in the middle, between which this city is situated, had no good
haven, insomuch that every one that sailed from Phoenicia for Egypt was
obliged to lie in the stormy sea, by reason of the south winds that
threatened them; which wind, if it blew but a little fresh, such vast
waves are raised, and dash upon the rocks, that upon their retreat the sea
is in a great ferment for a long way. But the king, by the expenses he was
at, and the liberal disposal of them, overcame nature, and built a haven
larger than was the Pyrecum <SPAN href="#linknote-33" name="linknoteref-33" id="linknoteref-33">33</SPAN> [at Athens]; and in the inner retirements of
the water he built other deep stations [for the ships also].</p>
<p>6. Now although the place where he built was greatly opposite to his
purposes, yet did he so fully struggle with that difficulty, that the
firmness of his building could not easily be conquered by the sea; and the
beauty and ornament of the works were such, as though he had not had any
difficulty in the operation; for when he had measured out as large a space
as we have before mentioned, he let down stones into twenty fathom water,
the greatest part of which were fifty feet in length, and nine in depth,
and ten in breadth, and some still larger. But when the haven was filled
up to that depth, he enlarged that wall which was thus already extant
above the sea, till it was two hundred feet wide; one hundred of which had
buildings before it, in order to break the force of the waves, whence it
was called Procumatia, or the first breaker of the waves; but the rest of
the space was under a stone wall that ran round it. On this wall were very
large towers, the principal and most beautiful of which was called
Drusium, from Drusus, who was son-in-law to Caesar.</p>
<p>7. There were also a great number of arches, where the mariners dwelt; and
all the places before them round about was a large valley, or walk, for a
quay [or landing-place] to those that came on shore; but the entrance was
on the north, because the north wind was there the most gentle of all the
winds. At the mouth of the haven were on each side three great Colossi,
supported by pillars, where those Colossi that are on your left hand as
you sail into the port are supported by a solid tower; but those on the
right hand are supported by two upright stones joined together, which
stones were larger than that tower which was on the other side of the
entrance. Now there were continual edifices joined to the haven, which
were also themselves of white stone; and to this haven did the narrow
streets of the city lead, and were built at equal distances one from
another. And over against the mouth of the haven, upon an elevation, there
was a temple for Caesar, which was excellent both in beauty and largeness;
and therein was a Colossus of Caesar, not less than that of Jupiter
Olympius, which it was made to resemble. The other Colossus of Rome was
equal to that of Juno at Argos. So he dedicated the city to the province,
and the haven to the sailors there; but the honor of the building he
ascribed to Caesar, <SPAN href="#linknote-34" name="linknoteref-34" id="linknoteref-34">34</SPAN> and named it Cesarea accordingly.</p>
<p>8. He also built the other edifices, the amphitheater, and theater, and
market-place, in a manner agreeable to that denomination; and appointed
games every fifth year, and called them, in like manner, Caesar's Games;
and he first himself proposed the largest prizes upon the hundred
ninety-second olympiad; in which not only the victors themselves, but
those that came next to them, and even those that came in the third place,
were partakers of his royal bounty. He also rebuilt Anthedon, a city that
lay on the coast, and had been demolished in the wars, and named it
Agrippeum. Moreover, he had so very great a kindness for his friend
Agrippa, that he had his name engraved upon that gate which he had himself
erected in the temple.</p>
<p>9. Herod was also a lover of his father, if any other person ever was so;
for he made a monument for his father, even that city which he built in
the finest plain that was in his kingdom, and which had rivers and trees
in abundance, and named it Antipatris. He also built a wall about a
citadel that lay above Jericho, and was a very strong and very fine
building, and dedicated it to his mother, and called it Cypros. Moreover,
he dedicated a tower that was at Jerusalem, and called it by the name of
his brother Phasaelus, whose structure, largeness, and magnificence we
shall describe hereafter. He also built another city in the valley that
leads northward from Jericho, and named it Phasaelis.</p>
<p>10. And as he transmitted to eternity his family and friends, so did he
not neglect a memorial for himself, but built a fortress upon a mountain
towards Arabia, and named it from himself, Herodium <SPAN href="#linknote-35"
name="linknoteref-35" id="linknoteref-35">35</SPAN> and he called that hill
that was of the shape of a woman's breast, and was sixty furlongs distant
from Jerusalem, by the same name. He also bestowed much curious art upon
it, with great ambition, and built round towers all about the top of it,
and filled up the remaining space with the most costly palaces round
about, insomuch that not only the sight of the inner apartments was
splendid, but great wealth was laid out on the outward walls, and
partitions, and roofs also. Besides this, he brought a mighty quantity of
water from a great distance, and at vast charges, and raised an ascent to
it of two hundred steps of the whitest marble, for the hill was itself
moderately high, and entirely factitious. He also built other palaces
about the roots of the hill, sufficient to receive the furniture that was
put into them, with his friends also, insomuch that, on account of its
containing all necessaries, the fortress might seem to be a city, but, by
the bounds it had, a palace only.</p>
<p>11. And when he had built so much, he showed the greatness of his soul to
no small number of foreign cities. He built palaces for exercise at
Tripoli, and Damascus, and Ptolemais; he built a wall about Byblus, as
also large rooms, and cloisters, and temples, and market-places at Berytus
and Tyre, with theatres at Sidon and Damascus. He also built aqueducts for
those Laodiceans who lived by the sea-side; and for those of Ascalon he
built baths and costly fountains, as also cloisters round a court, that
were admirable both for their workmanship and largeness. Moreover, he
dedicated groves and meadows to some people; nay, not a few cities there
were who had lands of his donation, as if they were parts of his own
kingdom. He also bestowed annual revenues, and those for ever also, on the
settlements for exercises, and appointed for them, as well as for the
people of Cos, that such rewards should never be wanting. He also gave
corn to all such as wanted it, and conferred upon Rhodes large sums of
money for building ships; and this he did in many places, and frequently
also. And when Apollo's temple had been burnt down, he rebuilt it at his
own charges, after a better manner than it was before. What need I speak
of the presents he made to the Lycians and Samnians? or of his great
liberality through all Ionia? and that according to every body's wants of
them. And are not the Athenians, and Lacedemonians, and Nicopolitans, and
that Pergamus which is in Mysia, full of donations that Herod presented
them withal? And as for that large open place belonging to Antioch in
Syria, did not he pave it with polished marble, though it were twenty
furlongs long? and this when it was shunned by all men before, because it
was full of dirt and filthiness, when he besides adorned the same place
with a cloister of the same length.</p>
<p>12. It is true, a man may say, these were favors peculiar to those
particular places on which he bestowed his benefits; but then what favors
he bestowed on the Eleans was a donation not only in common to all Greece,
but to all the habitable earth, as far as the glory of the Olympic games
reached. For when he perceived that they were come to nothing, for want of
money, and that the only remains of ancient Greece were in a manner gone,
he not only became one of the combatants in that return of the fifth-year
games, which in his sailing to Rome he happened to be present at, but he
settled upon them revenues of money for perpetuity, insomuch that his
memorial as a combatant there can never fail. It would be an infinite task
if I should go over his payments of people's debts, or tributes, for them,
as he eased the people of Phasaelis, of Batanea, and of the small cities
about Cilicia, of those annual pensions they before paid. However, the
fear he was in much disturbed the greatness of his soul, lest he should be
exposed to envy, or seem to hunt after greater filings than he ought,
while he bestowed more liberal gifts upon these cities than did their
owners themselves.</p>
<p>13. Now Herod had a body suited to his soul, and was ever a most excellent
hunter, where he generally had good success, by the means of his great
skill in riding horses; for in one day he caught forty wild beasts: <SPAN href="#linknote-36" name="linknoteref-36" id="linknoteref-36">36</SPAN> that
country breeds also bears, and the greatest part of it is replenished with
stags and wild asses. He was also such a warrior as could not be
withstood: many men, therefore, there are who have stood amazed at his
readiness in his exercises, when they saw him throw the javelin directly
forward, and shoot the arrow upon the mark. And then, besides these
performances of his depending on his own strength of mind and body,
fortune was also very favorable to him; for he seldom failed of success in
his wars; and when he failed, he was not himself the occasion of such
failings, but he either was betrayed by some, or the rashness of his own
soldiers procured his defeat.</p>
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<h2> CHAPTER 22. </h2>
<p>The Murder Of Aristobulus And Hyrcanus, The High Priests, As<br/>
Also Of Mariamne The Queen.<br/></p>
<p>1. However, fortune was avenged on Herod in his external great successes,
by raising him up domestical troubles; and he began to have wild disorders
in his family, on account of his wife, of whom he was so very fond. For
when he came to the government, he sent away her whom he had before
married when he was a private person, and who was born at Jerusalem, whose
name was Doris, and married Mariamne, the daughter of Alexander, the son
of Aristobulus; on whose account disturbances arose in his family, and
that in part very soon, but chiefly after his return from Rome. For, first
of all, he expelled Antipater the son of Doris, for the sake of his sons
by Mariamne, out of the city, and permitted him to come thither at no
other times than at the festivals. After this he slew his wife's
grandfather, Hyrcanus, when he was returned out of Parthin to him, under
this pretense, that he suspected him of plotting against him. Now this
Hyrcanus had been carried captive to Barzapharnes, when he overran Syria;
but those of his own country beyond Euphrates were desirous he would stay
with them, and this out of the commiseration they had for his condition;
and had he complied with their desires, when they exhorted him not to go
over the river to Herod, he had not perished: but the marriage of his
granddaughter [to Herod] was his temptation; for as he relied upon him,
and was over-fond of his own country, he came back to it. Herod's
provocation was this,—not that Hyrcanus made any attempt to gain the
kingdom, but that it was fitter for him to be their king than for Herod.</p>
<p>2. Now of the five children which Herod had by Mariamne, two of them were
daughters, and three were sons; and the youngest of these sons was
educated at Rome, and there died; but the two eldest he treated as those
of royal blood, on account of the nobility of their mother, and because
they were not born till he was king. But then what was stronger than all
this was the love that he bare to Mariamne, and which inflamed him every
day to a great degree, and so far conspired with the other motives, that
he felt no other troubles, on account of her he loved so entirely. But
Mariamne's hatred to him was not inferior to his love to her. She had
indeed but too just a cause of indignation from what he had done, while
her boldness proceeded from his affection to her; so she openly reproached
him with what he had done to her grandfather Hyrcanus, and to her brother
Aristobulus; for he had not spared this Aristobulus, though he were but a
child; for when he had given him the high priesthood at the age of
seventeen, he slew him quickly after he had conferred that dignity upon
him; but when Aristobulus had put on the holy vestments, and had
approached to the altar at a festival, the multitude, in great crowds,
fell into tears; whereupon the child was sent by night to Jericho, and was
there dipped by the Galls, at Herod's command, in a pool till he was
drowned.</p>
<p>3. For these reasons Mariamne reproached Herod, and his sister and mother,
after a most contumelious manner, while he was dumb on account of his
affection for her; yet had the women great indignation at her, and raised
a calumny against her, that she was false to his bed; which thing they
thought most likely to move Herod to anger. They also contrived to have
many other circumstances believed, in order to make the thing more
credible, and accused her of having sent her picture into Egypt to Antony,
and that her lust was so extravagant, as to have thus showed herself,
though she was absent, to a man that ran mad after women, and to a man
that had it in his power to use violence to her. This charge fell like a
thunderbolt upon Herod, and put him into disorder; and that especially,
because his love to her occasioned him to be jealous, and because he
considered with himself that Cleopatra was a shrewd woman, and that on her
account Lysanias the king was taken off, as well as Malichus the Arabian;
for his fear did not only extend to the dissolving of his marriage, but to
the danger of his life.</p>
<p>4. When therefore he was about to take a journey abroad, he committed his
wife to Joseph, his sister Salome's husband, as to one who would be
faithful to him, and bare him good-will on account of their kindred; he
also gave him a secret injunction, that if Antony slew him, he should slay
her. But Joseph, without any ill design, and only in order to demonstrate
the king's love to his wife, how he could not bear to think of being
separated from her, even by death itself, discovered this grand secret to
her; upon which, when Herod was come back, and as they talked together,
and he confirmed his love to her by many oaths, and assured her that he
had never such an affection for any other woman as he had for her—"Yes,"
says she, "thou didst, to be sure, demonstrate thy love to me by the
injunctions thou gavest Joseph, when thou commandedst him to kill me." <SPAN href="#linknote-37" name="linknoteref-37" id="linknoteref-37">37</SPAN></p>
<p>5. When he heard that this grand secret was discovered, he was like a
distracted man, and said that Joseph would never have disclosed that
injunction of his, unless he had debauched her. His passion also made him
stark mad, and leaping out of his bed, he ran about the palace after a
wild manner; at which time his sister Salome took the opportunity also to
blast her reputation, and confirmed his suspicion about Joseph; whereupon,
out of his ungovernable jealousy and rage, he commanded both of them to be
slain immediately; but as soon as ever his passion was over, he repented
of what he had done, and as soon as his anger was worn off, his affections
were kindled again. And indeed the flame of his desires for her was so
ardent, that he could not think she was dead, but would appear, under his
disorders, to speak to her as if she were still alive, till he were better
instructed by time, when his grief and trouble, now she was dead, appeared
as great as his affection had been for her while she was living.</p>
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