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<h3> CHAPTER 8. How Ten Men Of The Citizens [Of Jerusalem] Made A Conspiracy Against Herod, For The Foreign Practices He Had Introduced, Which Was A Transgression Of The Laws Of Their Country. Concerning The Building Of Sebaste And Cesarea, And Other Edifices Of Herod. </h3>
<p>1. On this account it was that Herod revolted from the laws of his
country, and corrupted their ancient constitution, by the introduction of
foreign practices, which constitution yet ought to have been preserved
inviolable; by which means we became guilty of great wickedness afterward,
while those religious observances which used to lead the multitude to
piety were now neglected; for, in the first place, he appointed solemn
games to be celebrated every fifth year, in honor of Caesar, and built a
theater at Jerusalem, as also a very great amphitheater in the plain. Both
of them were indeed costly works, but opposite to the Jewish customs; for
we have had no such shows delivered down to us as fit to be used or
exhibited by us; yet did he celebrate these games every five years, in the
most solemn and splendid manner. He also made proclamation to the
neighboring countries, and called men together out of every nation. The
wrestlers also, and the rest of those that strove for the prizes in such
games, were invited out of every land, both by the hopes of the rewards
there to be bestowed, and by the glory of victory to be there gained. So
the principal persons that were the most eminent in these sorts of
exercises were gotten together, for there were very great rewards for
victory proposed, not only to those that performed their exercises naked,
but to those that played the musicians also, and were called Thymelici;
and he spared no pains to induce all persons, the most famous for such
exercises, to come to this contest for victory. He also proposed no small
rewards to those who ran for the prizes in chariot races, when they were
drawn by two, or three, or four pair of horses. He also imitated every
thing, though never so costly or magnificent, in other nations, out of an
ambition that he might give most public demonstration of his grandeur.
Inscriptions also of the great actions of Caesar, and trophies of those
nations which he had conquered in his wars, and all made of the purest
gold and silver, encompassed the theater itself; nor was there any thing
that could be subservient to his design, whether it were precious
garments, or precious stones set in order, which was not also exposed to
sight in these games. He had also made a great preparation of wild beasts,
and of lions themselves in great abundance, and of such other beasts as
were either of uncommon strength, or of such a sort as were rarely seen.
These were prepared either to fight with one another, or that men who were
condemned to death were to fight with them. And truly foreigners were
greatly surprised and delighted at the vastness of the expenses here
exhibited, and at the great dangers that were here seen; but to natural
Jews, this was no better than a dissolution of those customs for which
they had so great a veneration. <SPAN href="#link15note-13"
name="link15noteref-13" id="link15noteref-13"><small>13</small></SPAN> It
appeared also no better than an instance of barefaced impiety, to throw
men to wild beasts, for the affording delight to the spectators; and it
appeared an instance of no less impiety, to change their own laws for such
foreign exercises: but, above all the rest, the trophies gave most
distaste to the Jews; for as they imagined them to be images, included
within the armor that hung round about them, they were sorely displeased
at them, because it was not the custom of their country to pay honors to
such images.</p>
<p>2. Nor was Herod unacquainted with the disturbance they were under; and as
he thought it unseasonable to use violence with them, so he spake to some
of them by way of consolation, and in order to free them from that
superstitious fear they were under; yet could not he satisfy them, but
they cried out with one accord, out of their great uneasiness at the
offenses they thought he had been guilty of, that although they should
think of bearing all the rest yet would they never bear images of men in
their city, meaning the trophies, because this was disagreeable to the
laws of their country. Now when Herod saw them in such a disorder, and
that they would not easily change their resolution unless they received
satisfaction in this point, he called to him the most eminent men among
them, and brought them upon the theater, and showed them the trophies, and
asked them what sort of things they took these trophies to be; and when
they cried out that they were the images of men, he gave order that they
should be stripped of these outward ornaments which were about them, and
showed them the naked pieces of wood; which pieces of wood, now without
any ornament, became matter of great sport and laughter to them, because
they had before always had the ornaments of images themselves in derision.</p>
<p>3. When therefore Herod had thus got clear of the multitude, and had
dissipated the vehemency of passion under which they had been, the
greatest part of the people were disposed to change their conduct, and not
to be displeased at him any longer; but still some of them continued in
their displeasure against him, for his introduction of new customs, and
esteemed the violation of the laws of their country as likely to be the
origin of very great mischiefs to them, so that they deemed it an instance
of piety rather to hazard themselves [to be put to death], than to seem as
if they took no notice of Herod, who, upon the change he had made in their
government, introduced such customs, and that in a violent manner, which
they had never been used to before, as indeed in pretense a king, but in
reality one that showed himself an enemy to their whole nation; on which
account ten men that were citizens [of Jerusalem] conspired together
against him, and sware to one another to undergo any dangers in the
attempt, and took daggers with them under their garments [for the purpose
of killing Herod]. Now there was a certain blind man among those
conspirators who had thus sworn to one another, on account of the
indignation he had against what he heard to have been done; he was not
indeed able to afford the rest any assistance in the undertaking, but was
ready to undergo any suffering with them, if so be they should come to any
harm, insomuch that he became a very great encourager of the rest of the
undertakers.</p>
<p>4. When they had taken this resolution, and that by common consent, they
went into the theater, hoping that, in the first place, Herod himself
could not escape them, as they should fall upon him so unexpectedly; and
supposing, however, that if they missed him, they should kill a great many
of those that were about him; and this resolution they took, though they
should die for it, in order to suggest to the king what injuries he had
done to the multitude. These conspirators, therefore, standing thus
prepared beforehand, went about their design with great alacrity; but
there was one of those spies of Herod, that were appointed for such
purposes, to fish out and inform him of any conspiracies that should be
made against him, who found out the whole affair, and told the king of it,
as he was about to go into the theater. So when he reflected on the hatred
which he knew the greatest part of the people bore him, and on the
disturbances that arose upon every occasion, he thought this plot against
him not to be improbable. Accordingly, he retired into his palace, and
called those that were accused of this conspiracy before him by their
several names; and as, upon the guards falling upon them, they were caught
in the very fact, and knew they could not escape, they prepared themselves
for their ends with all the decency they could, and so as not at all to
recede from their resolute behavior, for they showed no shame for what
they were about, nor denied it; but when they were seized, they showed
their daggers, and professed that the conspiracy they had sworn to was a
holy and pious action; that what they intended to do was not for gain, or
out of any indulgence to their passions, but principally for those common
customs of their country, which all the Jews were obliged to observe, or
to die for them. This was what these men said, out of their undaunted
courage in this conspiracy. So they were led away to execution by the
king's guards that stood about them, and patiently underwent all the
torments inflicted on them till they died. Nor was it long before that spy
who had discovered them was seized on by some of the people, out of the
hatred they bore to him; and was not only slain by them, but pulled to
pieces, limb from limb, and given to the dogs. This execution was seen by
many of the citizens, yet would not one of them discover the doers of it,
till upon Herod's making a strict scrutiny after them, by bitter and
severe tortures, certain women that were tortured confessed what they had
seen done; the authors of which fact were so terribly punished by the
king, that their entire families were destroyed for this their rash
attempt; yet did not the obstinacy of the people, and that undaunted
constancy they showed in the defense of their laws, make Herod any easier
to them, but he still strengthened himself after a more secure manner, and
resolved to encompass the multitude every way, lest such innovations
should end in an open rebellion.</p>
<p>5. Since, therefore, he had now the city fortified by the palace in which
he lived, and by the temple which had a strong fortress by it, called
Antonia, and was rebuilt by himself, he contrived to make Samaria a
fortress for himself also against all the people, and called it Sebaste,
supposing that this place would be a strong hold against the country, not
inferior to the former. So he fortified that place, which was a day's
journey distant from Jerusalem, and which would be useful to him in
common, to keep both the country and the city in awe. He also built
another fortress for the whole nation; it was of old called Strato's
Tower, but was by him named Cesarea. Moreover, he chose out some select
horsemen, and placed them ill the great plain; and built [for them] a
place in Galilee, called Gaba with Hesebonitis, in Perea. And these were
the places which he particularly built, while he always was inventing
somewhat further for his own security, and encompassing the whole nation
with guards, that they might by no means get from under his power, nor
fall into tumults, which they did continually upon any small commotion;
and that if they did make any commotions, he might know of it, while some
of his spies might be upon them from the neighborhood, and might both be
able to know what they were attempting, and to prevent it. And when he
went about building the wall of Samaria, he contrived to bring thither
many of those that had been assisting to him in his wars, and many of the
people in that neighborhood also, whom he made fellow citizens with the
rest. This he did out of an ambitious desire of building a temple, and out
of a desire to make the city more eminent than it had been before; but
principally because he contrived that it might at once be for his own
security, and a monument of his magnificence. He also changed its name,
and called it Sebaste. Moreover, he parted the adjoining country, which
was excellent in its kind, among the inhabitants of Samaria, that they
might be in a happy condition, upon their first coming to inhabit. Besides
all which, he encompassed the city with a wall of great strength, and made
use of the acclivity of the place for making its fortifications stronger;
nor was the compass of the place made now so small as it had been before,
but was such as rendered it not inferior to the most famous cities; for it
was twenty furlongs in circumference. Now within, and about the middle of
it, he built a sacred place, of a furlong and a half [in circuit], and
adorned it with all sorts of decorations, and therein erected a temple,
which was illustrious on account of both its largeness and beauty. And as
to the several parts of the city, he adorned them with decorations of all
sorts also; and as to what was necessary to provide for his own security,
he made the walls very strong for that purpose, and made it for the
greatest part a citadel; and as to the elegance of the building, it was
taken care of also, that he might leave monuments of the fineness of his
taste, and of his beneficence, to future ages.</p>
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<h3> CHAPTER 9. Concerning The Famine That Happened In Judea And Syria; And How Herod, After He Had Married Another Wife, Rebuilt Cesarea, And Other Grecian Cities. </h3>
<p>1. Now on this very year, which was the thirteenth year of the reign of
Herod, very great calamities came upon the country; whether they were
derived from the anger of God, or whether this misery returns again
naturally in certain periods of time <SPAN href="#link15note-14"
name="link15noteref-14" id="link15noteref-14"><small>14</small></SPAN> for,
in the first place, there were perpetual droughts, and for that reason the
ground was barren, and did not bring forth the same quantity of fruits
that it used to produce; and after this barrenness of the soil, that
change of food which the want of corn occasioned produced distempers in
the bodies of men, and a pestilential disease prevailed, one misery
following upon the back of another; and these circumstances, that they
were destitute both of methods of cure and of food, made the pestilential
distemper, which began after a violent manner, the more lasting. The
destruction of men also after such a manner deprived those that survived
of all their courage, because they had no way to provide remedies
sufficient for the distresses they were in. When therefore the fruits of
that year were spoiled, and whatsoever they had laid up beforehand was
spent, there was no foundation of hope for relief remaining, but the
misery, contrary to what they expected still increased upon them; and this
not only on that year, while they had nothing for themselves left [at the
end of it], but what seed they had sown perished also, by reason of the
ground not yielding its fruits on the second year. <SPAN href="#link15note-15"
name="link15noteref-15" id="link15noteref-15"><small>15</small></SPAN> This
distress they were in made them also, out of necessity, to eat many things
that did not use to be eaten; nor was the king himself free from this
distress any more than other men, as being deprived of that tribute he
used to have from the fruits of the ground, and having already expended
what money he had, in his liberality to those whose cities he had built;
nor had he any people that were worthy of his assistance, since this
miserable state of things had procured him the hatred of his subjects: for
it is a constant rule, that misfortunes are still laid to the account of
those that govern.</p>
<p>2. In these circumstances he considered with himself how to procure some
seasonable help; but this was a hard thing to be done, while their
neighbors had no food to sell them; and their money also was gone, had it
been possible to purchase a little food at a great price. However, he
thought it his best way, by all means, not to leave off his endeavors to
assist his people; so he cut off the rich furniture that was in his
palace, both of silver and gold, insomuch that he did not spare the finest
vessels he had, or those that were made with the most elaborate skill of
the artificers, but sent the money to Petronius, who had been made prefect
of Egypt by Caesar; and as not a few had already fled to him under their
necessities, and as he was particularly a friend to Herod, and desirous to
have his subjects preserved, he gave leave to them in the first place to
export corn, and assisted them every way, both in purchasing and exporting
the same; so that he was the principal, if not the only person, who
afforded them what help they had. And Herod taking care the people should
understand that this help came from himself, did thereby not only remove
the ill opinion of those that formerly hated him, but gave them the
greatest demonstration possible of his good-will to them, and care of
them; for, in the first place, as for those who were able to provide their
own food, he distributed to them their proportion of corn in the exactest
manner; but for those many that were not able, either by reason of their
old age, or any other infirmity, to provide food for themselves, he made
this provision for them, the bakers should make their bread ready for
them. He also took care that they might not be hurt by the dangers of
winter, since they were in great want of clothing also, by reason of the
utter destruction and consumption of their sheep and goats, till they had
no wool to make use of, nor any thing else to cover themselves withal. And
when he had procured these things for his own subjects, he went further,
in order to provide necessaries for their neighbors, and gave seed to the
Syrians, which thing turned greatly to his own advantage also, this
charitable assistance being afforded most seasonably to their fruitful
soil, so that every one had now a plentiful provision of food. Upon the
whole, when the harvest of the land was approaching, he sent no fewer than
fifty thousand men, whom he had sustained, into the country; by which
means he both repaired the afflicted condition of his own kingdom with
great generosity and diligence, and lightened the afflictions of his
neighbors, who were under the same calamities; for there was nobody who
had been in want that was left destitute of a suitable assistance by him;
nay, further, there were neither any people, nor any cities, nor any
private men, who were to make provision for the multitudes, and on that
account were in want of support, and had recourse to him, but received
what they stood in need of, insomuch that it appeared, upon a computation,
that the number of cori of wheat, of ten attic medimni apiece, that were
given to foreigners, amounted to ten thousand, and the number that was
given in his own kingdom was about fourscore thousand. Now it happened
that this care of his, and this seasonable benefaction, had such influence
on the Jews, and was so cried up among other nations, as to wipe off that
old hatred which his violation of some of their customs, during his reign,
had procured him among all the nation, and that this liberality of his
assistance in this their greatest necessity was full satisfaction for all
that he had done of that nature, as it also procured him great fame among
foreigners; and it looked as if these calamities that afflicted his land,
to a degree plainly incredible, came in order to raise his glory, and to
be to his great advantage; for the greatness of his liberality in these
distresses, which he now demonstrated beyond all expectation, did so
change the disposition of the multitude towards him, that they were ready
to suppose he had been from the beginning not such a one as they had found
him to be by experience, but such a one as the care he had taken of them
in supplying their necessities proved him now to be.</p>
<p>3. About this time it was that he sent five hundred chosen men out of the
guards of his body as auxiliaries to Caesar, whom Aelius Gallus <SPAN href="#link15note-16" name="link15noteref-16" id="link15noteref-16"><small>16</small></SPAN>
led to the Red Sea, and who were of great service to him there. When
therefore his affairs were thus improved, and were again in a flourishing
condition, he built himself a palace in the upper city, raising the rooms
to a very great height, and adorning them with the most costly furniture
of gold, and marble scats, and beds; and these were so large that they
could contain very many companies of men. These apartments were also of
distinct magnitudes, and had particular names given them; for one
apartment was called Caesar's, another Agrippa's. He also fell in love
again, and married another wife, not suffering his reason to hinder him
from living as he pleased. The occasion of this his marriage was as
follows: There was one Simon, a citizen of Jerusalem, the son of one
Boethus, a citizen of Alexandria, and a priest of great note there; this
man had a daughter, who was esteemed the most beautiful woman of that
time; and when the people of Jerusalem began to speak much in her
commendation, it happened that Herod was much affected with what was said
of her; and when he saw the damsel, he was smitten with her beauty, yet
did he entirely reject the thoughts of using his authority to abuse her,
as believing, what was the truth, that by so doing he should be
stigmatized for violence and tyranny; so he thought it best to take the
damsel to wife. And while Simon was of a dignity too inferior to be allied
to him, but still too considerable to be despised, he governed his
inclinations after the most prudent manner, by augmenting the dignity of
the family, and making them more honorable; so he immediately deprived
Jesus, the son of Phabet, of the high priesthood, and conferred that
dignity on Simon, and so joined in affinity with him [by marrying his
daughter].</p>
<p>4. When this wedding was over, he built another citadel in that place
where he had conquered file Jews when he was driven out of his government,
and Antigonus enjoyed it. This citadel is distant from Jerusalem about
threescore furlongs. It was strong by nature, and fit for such a building.
It is a sort of a moderate hill, raised to a further height by the hand of
man, till it was of the shape of a woman's breast. It is encompassed with
circular towers, and hath a strait ascent up to it, which ascent is
composed of steps of polished stones, in number two hundred. Within it are
royal and very rich apartments, of a structure that provided both for
security and for beauty. About the bottom there are habitations of such a
structure as are well worth seeing, both on other accounts, and also on
account of the water which is brought thither from a great way off, and at
vast expenses, for the place itself is destitute of water. The plain that
is about this citadel is full of edifices, not inferior to any city in
largeness, and having the hill above it in the nature of a castle.</p>
<p>5. And now, when all Herod's designs had succeeded according to his hopes,
he had not the least suspicion that any troubles could arise in his
kingdom, because he kept his people obedient, as well by the fear they
stood in of him, for he was implacable in the infliction of his
punishments, as by the provident care he had showed towards them, after
the most magnanimous manner, when they were under their distresses. But
still he took care to have external security for his government as a
fortress against his subjects; for the orations he made to the cities were
very fine, and full of kindness; and he cultivated a seasonable good
understanding with their governors, and bestowed presents on every one of
them, inducing them thereby to be more friendly to him, and using his
magnificent disposition so as his kingdom might be the better secured to
him, and this till all his affairs were every way more and more augmented.
But then this magnificent temper of his, and that submissive behavior and
liberality which he exercised towards Caesar, and the most powerful men of
Rome, obliged him to transgress the customs of his nation, and to set
aside many of their laws, and by building cities after an extravagant
manner, and erecting temples,—not in Judea indeed, for that would
not have been borne, it being forbidden for us to pay any honor to images,
or representations of animals, after the manner of the Greeks; but still
he did thus in the country [properly] out of our bounds, and in the cities
thereof <SPAN href="#link15note-17" name="link15noteref-17" id="link15noteref-17"><small>17</small></SPAN> The apology which he made to
the Jews for these things was this: That all was done, not out of his own
inclinations, but by the commands and injunctions of others, in order to
please Caesar and the Romans, as though he had not the Jewish customs so
much in his eye as he had the honor of those Romans, while yet he had
himself entirely in view all the while, and indeed was very ambitious to
leave great monuments of his government to posterity; whence it was that
he was so zealous in building such fine cities, and spent such vast sums
of money upon them.</p>
<p>6. Now upon his observation of a place near the sea, which was very proper
for containing a city, and was before called Strato's Tower, he set about
getting a plan for a magnificent city there, and erected many edifices
with great diligence all over it, and this of white stone. He also adorned
it with most sumptuous palaces and large edifices for containing the
people; and what was the greatest and most laborious work of all, he
adorned it with a haven, that was always free from the waves of the sea.
Its largeness was not less than the Pyrmum [at Athens], and had towards
the city a double station for the ships. It was of excellent workmanship;
and this was the more remarkable for its being built in a place that of
itself was not suitable to such noble structures, but was to be brought to
perfection by materials from other places, and at very great expenses.
This city is situate in Phoenicia, in the passage by sea to Egypt, between
Joppa and Dora, which are lesser maritime cities, and not fit for havens,
on account of the impetuous south winds that beat upon them, which rolling
the sands that come from the sea against the shores, do not admit of ships
lying in their station; but the merchants are generally there forced to
ride at their anchors in the sea itself. So Herod endeavored to rectify
this inconvenience, and laid out such a compass towards the land as might
be sufficient for a haven, wherein the great ships might lie in safety;
and this he effected by letting down vast stones of above fifty feet in
length, not less than eighteen in breadth, and nine in depth, into twenty
fathom deep; and as some were lesser, so were others bigger than those
dimensions. This mole which he built by the sea-side was two hundred feet
wide, the half of which was opposed to the current of the waves, so as to
keep off those waves which were to break upon them, and so was called
Procymatia, or the first breaker of the waves; but the other half had upon
it a wall, with several towers, the largest of which was named Drusus, and
was a work of very great excellence, and had its name from Drusus, the
son-in-law of Caesar, who died young. There were also a great number of
arches where the mariners dwelt. There was also before them a quay, [or
landing place,] which ran round the entire haven, and was a most agreeable
walk to such as had a mind to that exercise; but the entrance or mouth of
the port was made on the north quarter, on which side was the stillest of
the winds of all in this place: and the basis of the whole circuit on the
left hand, as you enter the port, supported a round turret, which was made
very strong, in order to resist the greatest waves; while on the right
hand, as you enter, stood two vast stones, and those each of them larger
than the turret, which were over against them; these stood upright, and
were joined together. Now there were edifices all along the circular
haven, made of the politest stone, with a certain elevation, whereon was
erected a temple, that was seen a great way off by those that were sailing
for that haven, and had in it two statues, the one of Rome, the other of
Caesar. The city itself was called Cesarea, which was also itself built of
fine materials, and was of a fine structure; nay, the very subterranean
vaults and cellars had no less of architecture bestowed on them than had
the buildings above ground. Some of these vaults carried things at even
distances to the haven and to the sea; but one of them ran obliquely, and
bound all the rest together, that both the rain and the filth of the
citizens were together carried off with ease, and the sea itself, upon the
flux of the tide from without, came into the city, and washed it all
clean. Herod also built therein a theater of stone; and on the south
quarter, behind the port, an amphitheater also, capable of holding a vast
number of men, and conveniently situated for a prospect to the sea. So
this city was thus finished in twelve years; <SPAN href="#link15note-18"
name="link15noteref-18" id="link15noteref-18"><small>18</small></SPAN> during
which time the king did not fail to go on both with the work, and to pay
the charges that were necessary.</p>
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