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In August of AD 70 the city of Jerusalem was destroyed by Roman forces after a six-month siege. This was the disastrous outcome of a Jewish revolt against Roman domination which began in AD 66 with some early success, but soon became mired in factional conflict. The war ended in the destruction of the famous Jewish Temple (rebuilt by Herod the Great a century before).
The remarkable story of the war is narrated by an eye-witness and participant, Josephus. He was at first a rebel commander, then after his capture, supported Titus in the final assault on Jerusalem. Josephus spares no detail of a horrific conflict - atrocities on both sides, the reign of terror in Jerusalem, the appalling conditions of the siege, and the final mass suicide at Masada. His vivid narrative is our prime source for this period of history. It is a dramatic story, which resonates to the present day.
Introduction
Select Bibliiography
Chronology
Maps
The Jewish Wars
Notes
Index
Martin Hammondretired as the Headmaster of Tonbridge School in 2005. He has previously translated Arrian'sAlexander the Great(2013) and Thucydides'The Peloponnesian War(2009) for Oxford World's Classics, as well as Homer'sIliad(Penguin, 1987) andOdyssey(Bloomsbury, 2014). His translation of Procopius'The Secret Historyfor Oxford World's Classics is forthcoming.
Martin Goodmanis President of the Oxford Centre for Hebrew and Jewish Studies and Reader in Jewish Studies at the University of Oxford. He has edited a number of books includingRabbinic Texts and the History of Late-Roman Palestine(BA/OUP, 2011),The Oxford Handbook of Jewish Studies(OUP, 2002), andRepresentations of Empire: Rome and the Mediterranean World(BA/OUP, 2002). His authored books includeRome and Jerusalem: the clash of ancient civilizations(Allen Lane, 2007) andJudaism in the Roman World: Collc
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