From the First Jewish Revolt to Bar Kokhba (66-135 CE)

 

On the way he called at Jerusalem. There he contrasted the grievous desolation that met his eyes with the splendor of the city that was, and calling to mind the mighty structures in ruins now but once so beautiful… –Josephus, The Jewish War 8, 113

The First Jewish Revolt against Rome of 66-74 CE was a turning point in the history of the Jews and Judaism. The great debates about the place of Judaism in the Roman Empire were momentarily silenced by the war. The question facing the Jews was no longer how to live under Roman domination, but how to get out from under it. Those Jews who prided themselves on having “One Temple to the One God” found life under the Roman Empire unbearable. The incompetence of Roman governors and their unwillingness to accommodate the unique ways of Judaism, the influence of extreme anti-Romanism, and possible messianic and apocalyptic elements, led the Jews and Romans into the abyss of war in 66 CE. It is significant that the “symbol” for this break was the discontinuation of sacrifices on behalf of the Emperor in the Temple. While other nations had been required to sacrifice to the deified Emperor himself as the unifying god of the Empire, wise Roman administrators required that Jews only sacrifice to the God of Israel on behalf of the Emperor. With the outbreak of war, even this compromise broke down, and the protection of Israel’s God was withdrawn from the “evil empire.”

The great historian of the Jewish War was Joseph, son of Mattathias, a priest and Jewish general of the Galilee during the revolt. Josephus realized early in the war the futility of resistance, arguing that Judaea was doomed, owing to the excesses of Jewish fanaticism. He survived the war as court historian and propagandist for both the eventual Emperor, Vespasian, and his general, son and successor, Titus, championing a moderate Jewish voice. Thanks to the writings of Josephus, principally The Jewish War, scholars have considerable evidence of this conflagration at their disposal. For Vespasian and his sons, the Jewish War provided legitimacy to their rather shaky imperial dynasty. In defeating the Jews they restored the elusive Pax Romana, the “Roman Peace,” within the Empire. This war became the cause célèbre of the Flavians; memorialized in coinage (Judea Capta), monumental arches (of which only the Arch of Titus survives), a “Temple of Peace” that housed trophies of the war (most prominently the golden Menorah of the Temple), and the greatest stadium ever built, the Coliseum, built with funds taken from the Temple of the Jews.

The destruction of the Jerusalem Temple and desolation of Judaea wrought by the war had frightful effects upon Judaism, effects that reverberate to this day. The loss of the Temple left Judaism without its sacred center. Though anguish over the loss of the Temple overcame many, the desire to rebuild it came to permeate Jewish thought and ritual for the following two millennia. The variety of Jewish practices and beliefs that characterized the Second Temple period dissolved, as only two Jewish groups survived the destruction, the Jesus sect and the Pharisees. As a result, the destruction of Jerusalem had major implications for both the history of Judaism and Christianity. While the Jesus sect found its place in the non-Jewish world, the spiritual descendents of the Pharisees, now called Rabbis, began the reconstruction of Judaism. Building upon the popular prestige of the Pharisees, the Rabbis took on leadership roles and began to imagine ways to maintain Judaism in a world without the Temple. With this pivotal moment came the end of the Second Temple period, and on its ashes, the beginning of the age of the Rabbis.

Overview

Artifacts

    1. The Jewish War by Josephus Flavius, c. 75 CE
    2. Euclid’s Elements of Geometry
    3. Pliny the Elder’s Natural History, 77 CE
    4. Mount Vesuvius Eruption, 79 BCE
    5. Banias Coin, c. 80 CE
    6. Coin of Titus, 80 CE
    7. Arch of Titus, 85 CE
    8. Coin of Herod Agrippa II, 81-96 CE
    9. Coin of Nerva, 90 CE
    10. The Babatha Archive, 93-132 CE
    11. The Antiquities of the Jews by Josephus Flavius, c. 94 CE
    12. Coins of Trajan, 98-117 CE
    13. Roman Statue of a Woman, 2nd century CE
    14. Chorazin, 2nd century CE
    15. Moses Seat, 2nd century CE
    16. Naval Coins from Gadara, 2nd century CE
    17. Hammat Gadar Roman Baths, 2nd century CE
    18. Aphrodite, 2nd century CE
    19. Coin from Sepphoris, 2nd century CE
    20. Letter from Niger and Brocchus, 2nd century CE
    21. Statue of Vibia Sabina, 2nd century CE
    22. Maritime Theater, 2nd century CE
    23. Roman Boxer, 2nd-3rd century CE
    24. Beth Shearim Catacombs, 2nd-4th century CE
    25. Statue of Trajan, 100-110 CE
    26. Papyrus Census Order, 104 CE
    27. Cameo of Trajan and Plotina, 105-115 CE
    28. Bust of Trajan, 108-117 CE
    29. Pliny the Younger- Persecution of Christians, c. 112 CE
    30. Relief of Trajan, c. 115 CE
    31. Jewish Revolt against Trajan, 115-117 CE
    32. The Pantheon, 117-125 CE
    33. Statue of Hadrian, c. 117 BCE
    34. Bust of Hadrian, 118-130 CE
    35. Hadrian’s Wall, 122 CE
    36. Bronze Head of Hadrian, c. 122 CE
    37. Coin of Hadrian, c. 132-134 CE
    38. Jerusalem Renamed Aelia Capitolina
    39. Bar Kokhba Coin, 132-135 CE
    40. Bar Kokhba Letter, 132-135 CE
    41. Bar Kokhba Weight, 132-135 CE
    42. Coins Bearing the Name Shimon, 132-135 CE
    43. Coin Depicting the Temple, 132-135 CE
    44. Table of the Shewbread Coin, 132-135 CE
    45. Bar Kokhba Coins from Masada, 132-135 CE
    46. Empress Sabrina Aelia Capitolina Coin, c. 133-134 CE
    47. Silver Shekel from the Second Jewish Revolt, 133-135 CE
    48. Aelia Capitolina Coin, 135 CE
    49. Aelia Capitoliana Coin Hoards, 135-200 CE
    50. Aelia Capitolina Gate, c. 135 CE
    51. The Jerusalem Cardo, c. 135 CE
    52. Statue of Hadrian, 135 CE
    53. Gospel of John, 135 CE
    54. Bronze Hoard from the Cave of Letters

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