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Hasmonean rule came to an end and the Land became a
province of the Roman Empire |
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The Herodian
Temple from the model of Jerusalem in the Second Temple Period (Courtesy: Israel
Museum, Jerusalem) |
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Coin
inscribed IVDAEA CAPTA (Judea Captured) issued by the Romans after the
destruction of Jerusalem in 70 CE (Israel Antiquities Authority) |
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Tetradrachm
of year 3 of the 2nd century Bar Kochba Revolt inscribed Simeon/for the Freedom
of Jerusalem (Israel Antiquities Authority) |
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Roman Rule (63 BCE-313
CE)
When the Romans replaced the Seleucids as the great power in the region, they
granted the Hasmonean king, Hyrcanus II, had limited authority under the Roman
governor of Damascus. The Jews were hostile to the new regime, and the following
years witnessed frequent insurrections. A last attempt to restore the former
glory of the Hasmonean dynasty was made by Mattathias Antigonus, whose defeat
and death brought Hasmonean rule to an end (40 BCE), and the Land became a
province of the Roman Empire.
In 37 BCE Herod, a son-in-law of Hyrcanus II, was appointed King of Judea by
the Romans. Granted almost unlimited autonomy in the country’s internal affairs,
he became one of the most powerful monarchs in the eastern part of the Roman
Empire. A great admirer of Greco-Roman culture, Herod launched a massive
construction program, which included the cities of Caesarea and Sebaste and the
fortresses at Herodium and Masada. He also remodeled the Temple into one of the
most magnificent buildings of its time. But despite his many achievements, Herod
failed to win the trust and support of his Jewish subjects.
Ten years after Herod’s death (4 BCE), Judea came under direct Roman
administration. Growing anger against increased Roman suppression of Jewish life
resulted in sporadic violence which escalated into a full-scale revolt in 66 CE.
Superior Roman forces led by Titus were finally victorious, razing Jerusalem to
the ground (70 CE) and defeating the last Jewish outpost at Masada (73 CE).
The total destruction of Jerusalem and the Second Temple was catastrophic for
the Jewish people. According to the contemporary historian Josephus Flavius,
hundreds of thousands of Jews perished in the siege of Jerusalem and elsewhere
in the country, and many thousands more were sold into slavery.
A last brief period of Jewish sovereignty followed the revolt of Shimon Bar
Kochba (132 CE), during which Jerusalem and Judea were regained. However, given
the overwhelming power of the Romans, the outcome was inevitable. Three years
later, in conformity with Roman custom, Jerusalem was "plowed up with a yoke of
oxen," Judea was renamed Palaestina and Jerusalem, Aelia Capitolina.
Although the Temple had been destroyed and Jerusalem burned to the ground,
the Jews and Judaism survived the encounter with Rome. The supreme legislative
and judicial body, the Sanhedrin (successor of the Knesset Hagedolah) was
reconvened in Yavneh (70 CE), and later in Tiberias.
Without the unifying framework of a state and the Temple, the small remaining
Jewish community gradually recovered, reinforced from time to time by returning
exiles. Institutional and communal life was renewed, priests were replaced by
rabbis and the synagogue became the focus of the Jewish communities, as
evidenced by remnants of synagogues found at Capernaum, Korazin, Bar’am, Gamla,
and elsewhere. Halakhah (Jewish religious law) served as the common bond among
the Jews and was passed on from generation to generation.
Masada: Nearly 1,000 Jewish men, women and children, who had
survived the destruction of Jerusalem, occupied and fortified King Herod's
mountaintop palace complex of Masada near the Dead Sea, where they held out for
three years against repeated Roman attempts to dislodge them. When the Romans
finally scaled Masada and broke through its walls, they found that the defenders
and their families had chosen to die by their own hands rather than be
enslaved.
Halakhah is the body of law which has guided Jewish life all
over the world since post-biblical times. It deals with the religious
obligations of Jews, both in interpersonal relations and in ritual observances,
and encompasses practically all aspects of human behavior - birth and marriage,
joy and grief, agriculture and commerce, ethics and theology. Rooted in the
Bible, halakhic authority is based on the Talmud, a body of Jewish law and lore
(completed c. 400), which incorporates the Mishna, the first written compilation
of the Oral Law (codified c.210),and the Gemara, an elaboration of the Mishna.
To provide practical guidance to the Halakhah, concise, systematic digests
were authored by religious scholars beginning in the first and second centuries.
Among the most authoritative of these codifications is the Shulhan
Arukh, written by Joseph Caro in Safed (Tzfat) in the 16th
century.
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