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Browsing named entities in Flavius Josephus, The Wars of the Jews (ed. William Whiston, A.M.).
Found 501 total hits in 154 results.
100 AD (search for this): book 2, section 277
107 AD (search for this): book 1, section 401
49 AD (search for this): book 2, section 247
52 AD (search for this): book 2, section 247
58 AD (search for this): book 2, section 247
65 AD (search for this): book 2, section 280
And truly, while Cestius Gallus was president of the province of
Syria, nobody durst do so much as send an embassage to him against Florus;
but when he was come to Jerusalem, upon the approach of the feast of unleavened
bread, the people came about him not fewer in number than three millions
Here we may note, that three millions of the Jews were present at the passover,
A.D. 65; which confirms what Josephus elsewhere informs us of, that at
a passover a little later they counted two hundred and fifty-six thousand
five hundred paschal lambs, which, at twelve to each lamb, which is no
immoderate calculation, come to three millions and seventy-eight thousand.
See B. VI. ch. 9. sect. 3. these
besought him to commiserate the calamities of their nation, and cried out
upon Florus as the bane of their country. But as he was present, and stood
by Cestius, he laughed at their words. However, Cestius, when he had quieted
the multitude, and had assured them that he would take care that Florus
shoul
66 AD (search for this): book 2, section 277
And although such was the character of Albinus, yet did Gessius Florus
Not long after this beginning of Florus, the wickedest of all the Roman
procurators of Judea, and the immediate occasion of the Jewish war, at
the twelfth year of Nero, and the seventeenth of Agrippa, or A.D. 66, the
history in the twenty books of Josephus's Antiquities ends, although Josephus
did not finish these books till the thirteenth of Domitian, or A.D. 93,
twenty-seven years afterward; as he did not finish their Appendix, containing
an account of his own life, till Agrippa was dead, which happened in the
third year of Trajan, or A. D. 100, as I have several times observed before. who
succeeded him, demonstrate him to have been a most excellent person, upon
the comparison; for the former did the greatest part of his rogueries in
private, and with a sort of dissimulation; but Gessius did his unjust actions
to the harm of the nation after a pompons manner; and as though he had
been sent as an executioner to pun
66 AD (search for this): book 6, section 93
70 AD (search for this): book 2, section 538
75 AD (search for this): book 1, section 1
I have already observed more than once, that this History of the Jewish
War was Josephus's first work, and published about A.D. 75, when he was
but thirty-eight years of age; and that when he wrote it, he was not thoroughly
acquainted with several circumstances of history from the days of Antiochus
Epiphanes, with which it begins, till near his own times, contained in
the first and former part of the second book, and so committed many involuntary
errors therein. That he published his Antiquities eighteen years afterward,
in the thirteenth year of Domitian, A.D. 93, when he was much more completely
acquainted with those ancient times, and after he had perused those most
authentic histories, the First Book of Maccabees, and the Chronicles of
the Priesthood of John Hyrcanus, etc. That accordingly he then reviewed
those parts of this work, and gave the public a more faithful, complete,
and accurate account of the facts therein related; and honestly corrected
the errors he bad before run in