The Works
of
Flavius Josephus
Translated by
William Whiston
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in The Works of Flavius Josephus
The Antiquities of the Jews
Preface to the Antiquities of the Jews
Book I -- From Creation to the Death of Isaac
Book II -- From the Death of Isaac to the Exodus
out of Egypt
Book III -- From the Exodus out of Ehypt to the
Rejection of the Generation
Book IV -- From the Rejection of that Generation
to the Death of Moses
Book V -- From the Death of Moses to the Death
of Eli
Book VI -- From the Death of Eli to the Death of
Saul
Book VII -- From the Death of Saul to the Death
of David
Book VIII -- From the Death of David to the Death
of Ahab
Book IX -- From the Death of Ahab to the Captivity
of the Ten Tribes
Book X -- From the Captivity of the Ten Tribes
to the First Year of Cyrus
Book XI -- From the First Year of Cyrus to the
Death of Alexander the Great
Book XII -- From the Death of Alexander the Great
to the Death of Judas Maccabeus
Book XIII -- From the Death of Judas Maccabeus
to the Death of Queen Alexandra
Book XIV -- From the Death of Queen Alexandra
to the Death of Antigonus
Book XV -- From the Death of Antigonus to the
Finishing of the Temple by Herod
Book XVI -- From the Finishing of the Temple by
Herod to the Death of Alexander and Aristobulus
Book XVII -- From the Death of Alexander and Aristobulus
to the Banishment of Archelaus
Book XVIII -- From the Banishment of Archelaus
to the Departure of the Jews from Babylon
Book XIX -- From the Departure of the Jews from
Babylon to FAdus the Roman Procurator
Book XX -- From Fadus the Procurator to Florus
The War of the Jews
Preface to the War of the Jews
Book I -- From the Taking of Jerusalem by Antiochus
Epiphanes to the Death of Herod the Great
Book II -- From the Death of Herod till Vespasian
was sent to subdue the Jews by Nero
Book III -- From Vespasian's coming to Subdue the
Jews to the Taking of Gamala
Book IV -- From the Siege of Gamala to the Coming
of Titus to besiege Jerusalem
Book V -- From the Coming of Titus to besiege Jerusalem
to the Great Extremity to which the Jews were reduced
Book VI -- From the Great Extremity to which the
Jews were reduced to the taking of Jerusalem by Titus
Book VII -- From the Taking of Jerusalem by Titus
to the Sedition of the Jews at Cyrene
The Life of Flavius Josephus - Autobiography
Josephus's Discourse to the Greeks concerning Hades
Flavius Josephus Against Apion
Book I
Book II
Flavius Josephus
Josephus' first work, Bellum Judaicum (History of the Jewish War), was written in seven books between AD 75 and 79, toward the end of Vespasian's reign. The original Aramaic has been lost, but the extant Greek version was prepared under Josephus' personal direction. After briefly sketching Jewish history from the mid-2nd century BC, Josephus presents a detailed account of the great revolt of AD 66-70. He stressed the invincibility of the Roman legions, and apparently one of his purposes in the works was to convince the Diasporan Jews in Mesopotamia, who may have been contemplating revolt, that resistance to Roman arms was pure folly. The work has much narrative brilliance, particularly the description of the siege of Jerusalem; its fluent Greek contrasts sharply with the clumsier idiom of Josephus' later works and attests the influence of his Greek assistants. In this work, Josephus is extremely hostile to the Jewish patriots and remarkably callous to their fate. The Jewish War not only is the principal source for the Jewish revolt but is especially valuable for its description of Roman military tactics and strategy.
In Rome, Josephus had been granted citizenship and a pension. He was a favourite at the courts of the emperors Vespasian, Titus, and Domitian, and he enjoyed the income from a tax-free estate in Judaea. He had divorced his third wife, married an aristocratic heiress from Crete, and given Roman names to his children. He had written an official history of the revolt and was loathed by the Jews as a turncoat and traitor. Yet despite all of this, Josephus had by no means abandoned his Judaism. His greatest work, Antiquitates Judaicae (The Antiquities of the Jews), completed in 20 books in AD 93, traces the history of the Jews from creation to just before the outbreak of the revolt of AD 66-70. It was an attempt to present Judaism to the Hellenistic world in a favourable light. By virtually ignoring the Prophets, by embellishing biblical narratives, and by stressing the rationality of Judaic laws and institutions, he stripped Judaism of its fanaticism and made it appealing to the cultivated and reasonable man. Historically, the coverage is patchy and shows the fatigue of the author, then in his middle 50s. But throughout, sources are preserved that otherwise would have been lost, and, for Jewish history during the period of the Second Commonwealth, the work is invaluable.
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