The First Jewish Revolt

66–73

Trace the causes and battles of the First Jewish Revolt, from the siege of Jerusalem to the destruction of the Temple and the fall of Masada.

Ancient, weathered stone relief showing people in robes carrying a large menorah and other objects in a procession.
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Judea under Roman Rule

Tellingly, Josephus begins his account of the First Jewish Revolt with the rise of the Hasmonean dynasty, the demise of which was the direct result of Roman ambition and involvement in Judean affairs. After the Romans expelled the Parthians with Herod’s help, they installed Herod as king of Judea in 37 BCE, and for the duration of his reign he maintained friendly relations with the Roman Empire, even as he ruled Judea primarily through threat of force. Upon Herod’s death, there was much competition between the claimants to the throne. And, in any case, Rome did not grant the title of king to any of Herod’s sons. After the deposition and expulsion of Herod’s son Archelaus in 6 CE, Judea was made into a Roman province—even as Herod’s descendants continued to influence Judean politics in subsequent decades.

For decades before the outbreak of the war in 66 CE, Jews throughout the Roman world had lived peacefully. In Judaea itself—a relatively unimportant province and one that did not register as a threat to the empire—the Romans allowed the Jews the unique privilege of traveling to the Temple in Jerusalem in large numbers three times each year for their pilgrimage festivals. Nevertheless, Josephus characterizes these decades in Judea as a time of widespread chaos fueled at once by Roman violations of Jewish ancestral traditions and by violence perpetrated by multiple rebel factions. According to Josephus’ telling, by the time Herod’s grandson Agrippa I became king in 37 CE, Judea was in a continuous state of chaos. The relationship between Roman governors and the governed populace was incurably fraught.

Josephus points to many causes of the outbreak of war. These include that some Roman governors stoked it—either through their obliviousness of Jewish cultural mores or quite wittingly—and a vacuum of leadership that presented the opportunity for many competing parties to fight among themselves and so for rebellion to grow. 

Prelude to War

Often referred to as the Great Revolt or the First Jewish Revolt, the rebellion against Rome that broke out in Jerusalem in 66 CE and spread throughout Judea was a transformative event in the history of the Jewish people. (See the map of the First Jewish Revolt, 66–73 CE.) Tensions between the Romans and the Jews had been gradually escalating as the Romans installed corrupt and incompetent administrators in Judea.

In many places where Jews and Greeks lived side by side, including the coastal cities of Palestine, the mid-60s was a period of turbulence and rioting. While Roman officials usually tried to maintain a semblance of order, their political preference for Greeks pushed Jews in many places into a corner. In overwhelmingly Jewish districts, like Judea and Galilee, this was hardly an issue, but Jewish leaders even there were keenly aware both of crystallizing Roman policy and of the activities of the Roman procurators of Palestine. The conflict between Jews and Greeks at Caesarea, which Josephus describes as precipitating the war, reveals deep tensions within Judea’s provincial populations. Josephus’ historical account also emphasizes the role played by corrupt Roman governors and by disagreement and competition among Jewish factions.

The Revolt

In 66 CE, when Gessius Florus, then procurator of Judea, visited Jerusalem to insist that the Jews hand over unpaid taxes, news of a near-war in Caesarea Maritima and of Florus’ ineptitude in handling it led to mass demonstrations in the city. Around the same time, a group of young priests decided to cease offering the daily sacrifice on behalf of the emperor. These events might have remained a temporary local disturbance, however, if not for a single decision by a Roman general. Cestius Gallus, the Roman governor of Syria, marched on Jerusalem with one of his three legions, but after arriving, he decided to return home without intervening in an increasingly tense situation. His retreating legion was attacked and many of its members massacred by Judean guerrillas; Roman rule in Palestine simply collapsed. The Great Revolt was, it seems, hardly a revolt at all. The priestly authorities in Jerusalem attempted to patch together a state, Josephus writes, but this seems to have been successful only in Judea proper; Galilee and Idumaea had their own leadership and their own social structures.

Roman Response

It took Nero a year to realize that he had lost a province and to assemble an army, led by a distinguished elderly senator, Titus Flavius Vespasianus, to reconquer it. The army turned out to be exceedingly large: three full legions, an equal number of auxiliaries, and a large force drawn from the private armies of the local client kings, including that of the Jewish king Agrippa II (the great-grandson of Herod and last ruler of the Herodian dynasty). There were, in total, as many as sixty thousand troops.

When Vespasian’s forces landed at the southern Phoenician port of Ptolemais-Akko in 67, the countryside of Galilee quickly yielded. Those hill fortresses that offered resistance, especially Iotapata and Gamala, were quickly reduced. Significantly, Vespasian made no attempt to come to terms with local grandees, like John of Gischala, from upper Galilee; he regarded them as enemies of Rome. John, who was probably not initially anti-Roman, took his followers and fled to Jerusalem. The same pattern was repeated throughout the country.

Vespasian’s progress was slow. The highly unstable situation at Rome, following the suicide of Nero, was irresistibly distracting to him. He spent at least a year of nearly complete inactivity in Palestine before deciding to leave the province in the charge of his son, Titus. He then assembled more troops at Alexandria and marched on the capital to seize the imperial throne in the summer of 69.

The Rebellion is Crushed and the Temple Destroyed

By 69, all but Judea was back under Roman control. Rebel groups from all over and Judeans from the countryside, fleeing the renewed Roman advance, crowded into Jerusalem, where the Roman siege began in the spring of 70. Although even now the rebel groups could not join forces, they offered fierce resistance to the Romans. But the city was ill equipped to withstand a long siege, especially when so disastrously packed with refugees. The besieged soon began to starve. By midsummer, the sacrificial cult came to a halt. The Romans soon breached the walls, but even so they continued to meet fierce resistance. Finally overcoming the city, they burned down the Temple. The war was over. The fall of the last Jewish stronghold at Masada in the Judean desert in 73/74 CE marked the end of the revolt.

In other provinces, rebellions were often a matter of local, partly Romanized, aristocrats having one last fling before settling down to a privileged place within the Roman system. No one ever mistook the Romans for gentle. The Romans treated the Jews with unusual harshness. In Jewish Palestine, members of the aristocratic stratum were mainly not on the road to successful Romanization, and Rome had no interest in rehabilitating them. No local aristocrats returned to Rome’s embrace; instead, they were slaughtered or taken into captivity and put on the slave market or put to work in Rome’s silver mines or as rowers in the fleet. Even the impeccably pro-Roman Agrippa II, whose sister Berenice had been Titus’ lover, gradually faded from view, and he was never absorbed into the Roman senatorial aristocracy.

The Aftermath

In the wake of the revolt, the province was completely reorganized. It received a legionary garrison and along with it a proper Roman senatorial governor. The Roman state had expropriated all land from Jews, though some were in the position to repurchase it. Others, if they had survived the war and avoided captivity, were presumably reduced to tenancy on their own land. Jews throughout the empire were required to pay a special tax: the two denarii per annum they had previously been allowed to send to the Jerusalem Temple were now paid into a fund, the fiscus Iudaicus, dedicated to Jupiter Optimus Maximus, chief god of the Roman pantheon. Jerusalem remained desolate, with a Roman legion encamped near its ruins. The entire structure of late Second Temple Judaism was swept away. The Romans slaughtered and enslaved the Jewish leadership. Judea was now a Roman province, with Roman officials, Roman courts, and Roman cities of Hellenic culture. Many Jews remained, even in Judea, but they were expected to live not under their own alternative constitution (the Torah), as before 66, but simply as Roman subjects.

Jewish Life without the Temple

The destruction of the Temple was traumatic for the Jews of Roman Palestine, so much so that the tannaitic rabbis active at the time had almost nothing to say about it directly. Strikingly, the Mishnah is enmeshed in the Temple, sacrifice, and related concerns, barely reflecting the Temple’s destruction. Nevertheless, festivals, sacrifices, and other observances that had previously been centered on the Temple shifted to new forms and settings after 70 CE. Communal worship and synagogues emerged as the locus of this new Judaism. Many of the Jewish sects that had existed in the first century CE simply disappeared. But in addition to the early rabbis, groups with messianic hopes also persisted into the second century, waiting for an opportunity to rebuild the Temple.

Historical Sources

For historical reconstruction of these events, we are reliant mainly on Josephus, a Jerusalem priest and a leader in the early stages of the revolt, before he went over to the Roman side. Josephus was not only an eyewitness to many of the events, but in the immediate aftermath of the war, in Rome, he wrote The Jewish War, under the patronage of the emperor Vespasian. His Life of Josephus also recounts his military career and the events of the war, though there are discrepancies between the two accounts.

Related Primary Sources

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Pilate Imports Standards to Jerusalem

The Jewish War 2.169–177
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Pilate was sent by Tiberius to Judaea as procurator, and in a covert operation at night he smuggled into Jerusalem under wraps those portrait plaques of the emperor which are called standards. When…

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Roman Exposure, Tragedy, and Burning of the Law

The Jewish War 2.223–231
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After the death of Herod the king of Chalcis, Claudius appointed to the kingship his nephew Agrippa (the son of Herod’s brother Agrippa). As procurator of the rest of the province Tiberius Alexander…

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The Sicarii

The Jewish War 2.254–257

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The countryside may thus have been swept clear, but a new breed of terrorists was growing like a cancer in Jerusalem, the so-called Sicarii who murdered people right in the middle of the city in broad…

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Sica Dagger

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These short swords were used by the Sicarii, who, according to Josephus, would pull them from their cloaks at public gatherings to attack Romans and alleged Roman sympathizers.

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The Rise of False Prophets and Messiahs

The Jewish War 2.258–265

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As well as these [the Sicarii] another group of criminals came into being, less bloodstained in action but with a more blasphemous agenda, who ruined the calm of the city…

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Racial Conflict in Caesarea

The Jewish War 2.266–270

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Another disturbance broke out at Caesarea, with racial conflict between the Jewish element of the population and the Syrian inhabitants. The Jews claimed the city as theirs on the grounds that its…

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Roman Corruption

The Jewish War 2.271–283
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Felix’s successor as procurator, Festus, set out to deal with the main plague affecting the country: he captured large numbers of the terrorizing bandits, and put a good many to death. But his…

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The First Flames of War

The Jewish War 2.284–332 (selections)

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Meanwhile the Greeks of Caesarea had won their case at Rome, and came back with the document recording Nero’s decision to award them control…

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Outbreak of the Revolt

The Jewish War 2.406–421, 433–448

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So for the time being Agrippa managed to hold off the threat of war [he gave advice to the people to rebuild the Temple colonnade and pay the tribute], but…

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Coins from the First Jewish Revolt

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After Jewish rebels captured Jerusalem in the early days of the revolt against Rome, they took advantage of their access to the Temple and its treasury to mint a new set of Jewish coins, emphasizing…

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Revolt in the Galilee

The Jewish War 2.562–568
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When the Jews who had pursued Cestius returned to Jerusalem, they either forced or persuaded any remaining pro-Romans to join their movement, and held a mass meeting at the temple to appoint further…

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Nero Appoints Vespasian to Suppress Revolt

The Jewish War 3.1–7
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News of the reverses in Judaea naturally came as a fearful shock to Nero, though he concealed it well. His public reaction was one of dismissive irritation, claiming as he did that what had happened…

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Josephus Goes over to the Romans

The Jewish War 3.379–408
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“Our best course then, my friends, is to take the sensible view and not compound our human predicament with impiety towards the God who created…

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Battle at Gamala

The Jewish War 4.1–29, 49–81
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The defeat at Tarichaeae brought the surrender of those Galileans who had still remained in revolt…

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Factional Infighting in Jerusalem

The Jewish War 5.1–39 (selections)
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So Titus made his way as described across the desert from north Egypt to Syria…

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Titus Marches toward Jerusalem

The Jewish War 5.40–288 (selections)
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Titus was now on the march from Caesarea, having concentrated part of his forces there…

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Roman Tactics against the Jewish Revolt

Histories 5.10–13
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Still the Jews’ patience lasted until Gessius Florus became procurator: in his time war began. When Cestius Gallus, governor of Syria, tried to stop it, he suffered varied fortunes and met defeat more…

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A Thwarted Plot to Surrender to the Romans

The Jewish War 5.527–540
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[Matthias] had given Simon his possession of the city, and yet Simon had him not only killed but tortured as well. Matthias was the son of Boethus, a member of a high-priestly family, and absolutely…

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Josephus Rescued from the City

The Jewish War 5.541–547
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Meanwhile Josephus, still insistently going round outside the city to reiterate his appeals, was struck on the head by a stone and dropped senseless on the spot. The Jews made a dash for his body, and…

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Famine and Desertion

The Jewish War 5.420–427
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For all this emotional appeal by Josephus, the insurgents would not budge, and thought it far from safe to change their course. The people, though, took it as a spur to desertion. Some sold their…

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Titus Besieges Jerusalem

The Jewish War 5.491–501, 508–522
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Titus now held a conference with his officers. The more bullish recommended bringing up…

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The Fate of Those Who Escape

The Jewish War 5.548–557
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Of those now deserting some had no choice but to move quickly and jump down from the wall: others sallied out with stones in their hands as if to do battle, and then fled to the Romans. But desertion…

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A Mother's Infanticide

The Jewish War 6.193–217
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Meanwhile in the city the victims of famine were dropping in their thousands, and there was suffering beyond description. In every house the mere flicker of…

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The Temple Falls

The Jewish War 6.228, 232, 237–266
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Titus, now realizing that his attempt to spare a foreign temple was only causing injury and death to his own men, gave orders for the gates…

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Destruction of the Temple of Jerusalem

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Hayez’s painting imagines the chaos and violence of the destruction of the Temple by the Roman army in 70 CE. The theft of the menorah in the foreground and the flight of a group of angels at the top…

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The Temple’s Fate Realized

The Jewish War 6.267–295, 315–317
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While there must be deep mourning for the loss of this marvellous building—a monument more…

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The Sack of Jerusalem

The Jewish War 6.403–408, 414–419

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Now masters of the walls, the Romans planted their standards on the towers and clapped and sang in joyful celebration of their victory. They had found the final stages of the war much easier…

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Triumphal Procession in Rome

The Jewish War 7.123–162
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While it was still night all the military had marched out under their officers by companies and cohorts, and taken up their position, which was not on this occasion round the gates of the Upper Palace…

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Arch of Titus

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This arch was constructed by the emperor Domitian to commemorate the victory of his older brother, Titus, over the Jewish rebels in Judea. It is located on the Via Sacra in Rome and depicts the…

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Flavian Amphitheater (Colosseum)

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Also known as the Colosseum, the amphitheater was built as a monument to Rome’s military victories and served as an arena for gladiatorial events and other festivities. Construction of the…

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Invasive Tax Enforcement

Domitian 12.2
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Besides other taxes, that on the Jews was levied with the utmost rigour, and those were prosecuted who without publicly acknowledging that faith yet lived as Jews, as well as those who concealed their…

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An Annual Tribute to Jupiter Capitolinus

Roman History 65.7.2
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Thus was Jerusalem destroyed on the very day of Saturn, the day which even now the Jews reverence most. From that time forth it was ordered that the Jews who continued to observe their ancestral…

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The Fortress at Masada

The Jewish War 7.275–303
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So the Roman general arrived with his forces to take on Eleazar and the Sicarii occupying Masada with him. Silva quickly established control of the whole…

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Collective Suicide at Masada

The Jewish War 7.304–336, 389–406

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With the investing wall which I have mentioned now completed round the entire site, and the strictest precautions taken to prevent any escape, the Roman commander…

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