The Wars of the Maccabees
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The Wars of the Maccabees

  1. 224 pages
  2. English
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eBook - ePub

The Wars of the Maccabees

About this book

An "extraordinary" account of the wars conducted by and against the Maccabean family of rulers in Palestine in the second and first centuries BC ( Midwest Book Review ).

By the early second century BC, Israel had long been under the rule of the Hellenistic Seleucid Empire. But the policy of deliberate Hellenization and suppression of Jewish religious practices by Antiochus IV, sparked a revolt in 167 BC which was led initially by Judah Maccabee and later by his brothers and their descendants. Relying on guerrilla tactics the growing insurrection repeatedly took on the sophisticated might of the Seleucid army with mixed, but generally successful, results, establishing the Maccabees as the Hasmonean Dynasty of rulers over a once-more independent Israel. (It is Judah Maccabee's ritual cleansing of the Temple after his victories over the Seleucids that is celebrated by Jews every year at Hannukah). Internal disputes weakened the revived state, however, and it eventually fell victim to the Romans who replaced the Seleucids as the local superpower. 

John D. Grainger explains the causes of the revolt and traces the course of the various campaigns of the Maccabees, first against the Seleucids and then the Romans who captured Jerusalem in 63BC and partitioned the kingdom. The last chapters consider the continued Jewish resistance to Roman rule and factional fighting, until the crowning of Herod, marked the end of the Hasmonean dynasty.

"By writing this book, John Grainger took on an almost impossible challenge. This is to summarize 130 years of wars and political conflicts between the Jews themselves and between the Jews and all their neighbours from BC 167 to BC 37 within a single volume." — Israel Book Review

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Chapter 1

The Dispute

The problem that developed into the Jewish revolt in Palestine began with an argument over the tenure of the office of high priest of the temple in Jerusalem. This had been hereditary in the same family since the beginning of the Persian period, in the sixth century BC, though it would seem that the king had the right of confirmation in return for a tribute of, apparently, twenty talents. (The power of confirmation was thus with the Great King of Persia, then Alexander of Macedon, then the Ptolemaic kings, and finally with the Seleukid kings from 200BC onwards; there is no sign earlier than the 170s that this caused any problem.) The high priest was the religious chief of the temple but he was also the effective head of the community of the Jews in Judaea, and was the man who was consulted by kings and their officials when necessary. This, in effect, made Judaea a tributary autonomous state within the overall kingdom.1
The ruling kingdom had been that of the Ptolemies in Egypt during the third century BC, but then the whole of Palestine had been conquered by the Seleukid king Antiochos III, a conquest confirmed by a peace treaty in 195, which was ratified by the marriage between Ptolemy V and Antiochos’ daughter Kleopatra in that year.2 Antiochos formally confirmed the status of Judaea as an autonomous community,3 and his son Seleukos IV, who succeeded in 187, continued that arrangement.
During the period of early Seleukid rule, however, tension developed within Jewish society in Judaea over the acceptance of the customs and practices of Greek culture and society. Judaea was virtually surrounded by communities that were Greek or had become hellenized. These communities had developed relatively slowly during the time of the Ptolemaic rule, but the greater openness of the Seleukid kingdom seems to have encouraged a greater Hellenic consciousness. The Seleukid kings had long been known for their encouragement of urban development, founding new cities, and helping the growth of existing ones. Their Ptolemaic rivals had been less encouraging, so after the Seleukid conquest of Palestine, the confidence of the Greek and Macedonian and hellenized inhabitants of the region grew.4
On their remote highlands the Jews had received such influences later than those peoples near the coast or in the lowlands north of Judaea, or even in the lands beyond the Jordan. In all these areas Ptolemaic and Seleukid kings had established new cities or had encouraged older settlements to become self-governing ones, moulding them into cities of Greek type. To anyone outside, Judaea looked to be a prime candidate for hellenization. Jerusalem, the only urban centre in the highland area, could be organized as a Greek city, with Judaea around it as its chora, its territory.
This was a project of a group of men in Judaea, especially in Jerusalem. However, this would cause the high priesthood to suffer a loss of prestige and power–unless it was the high priest himself who took the lead. The high priest in office in Seleukos IV’s reign, Onias III, resisted such a development. He is described by II Maccabees as ‘a zealot for the laws’–that is, the particular Jewish law, the Torah.5 He was, no doubt, supported in this by the council of elders, which was also given the Greek name of gerousia, though how firm that support was is unknown. Indeed, as will have been seen by the language in this paragraph, much of this is not at all certain.
The new Seleukid king, Antiochos IV, was approached in 174 by a group of men from Jerusalem asking that they be allowed to organize themselves as ‘the Antiochenes in Jerusalem’, to be able to establish a gymnasium and a corps of ephebes–young men receiving a Greek education–and to be separated from the authority of the high priest. In order for this to take place it was necessary that Onias III be replaced, since any high priest who was ‘a zealot for the laws’ would certainly oppose the reduction in his power that these innovations implied. Onias’ brother Jesus–or Jason as he preferred to be known, in Greek–was appointed to replace Onias, who was thus deposed. Jesus/Jason also promised an increased tribute, which his enemies, needless to say, described as a bribe.6 Jason was thus installed, and the ‘Antiochenes’ established themselves and their gymnasium.
The gymnasium was important, for it was a central institution of any Greek city, combining education, sports and religion. To be able to participate in events at the gymnasium it was necessary for a man to have had a Greek education–hence the corps of ephebes–to speak Greek, and to be able to converse intelligently on such Greek subjects as philosophy and music. All this was done in part to honour Greek gods. Here was an obvious area of dispute. The fact that there were enough men in Jerusalem in 174 to be able to do all this and qualify as ‘Antiochenes’ must mean that there had been some Greek immigration and settlement, but also that a fair number of Jews had received a Greek education. For the present, this group was essentially a private, if very obvious, organization within the predominantly Jewish town, but it consisted of the wealthier parts of the population, and, of course, had the general support of the high priest.
It is possible that the ultimate intention of the ‘Antiochenes in Jerusalem’ was to gain control of the city and convert it into a fully organized Greek polis (city-state); they may also have been content with what they had already gained. The problem was that the means they had to use to gain their ends began the process of destabilizing Judaean society. Having a high priest at its head meant that Judaea was a theocratic community, so that wider aims could not be realized without much disruption. For perhaps three years the gymnasium operated, and became popular even with some of the priests of the temple, beneath, and close to which, it had been established.7
This suggests that the regime of Jesus/Jason maintained an interesting and difficult balance between Jewish beliefs and practices and the incoming Greek ideas and practices. So we can distinguish three groups in Jerusalem at the time–and probably only there, and not as yet in the countryside. These were: in the political centre, so to speak, the party of Jason; to one side there were the traditionalist Jews; and on the other there was a group keen to expand Greek influence further, whom it is customary to call the ‘hellenizers’.8 It was this third group that took the next step. Impatient with the slow progress of the hellenization they wished for, they adopted Jason’s tactics, but went one stage beyond. A delegation went to King Antiochos and persuaded him to replace Jason as high priest with a man called Menelaos. A larger tribute was promised, described as a bribe, of course, this time with perhaps more justification, and so the change was ordered.9 (The repeated mention of money in these negotiations leads to the assumption that the king was ‘bribed’, and such was the accusation at the time. But a fee was always paid by a new high priest; given that they were asking for an exceptional favour, an increased tribute is to be expected.) It was also, of course, a demonstration of the authority of the king–Antiochos IV was a usurper and such demonstrations were necessary for him. At the same time the old practice of confirming the accession of a new high priest had now become actively replacing one with another. This all took place without protest in Judaea, so far as can be seen, but in terms of the government of Judaea it was actually a coup d’état.
Jason, like Onias III, fled from Judaea to escape his enemies. Onias had gone to Antioch, where he had sought sanctuary in the grove of Apollo at Daphne,10 a move that makes it clear he was personally in fear. At the same time his presence near Antioch suggests that his prospects of persuading Antiochos IV to reinstate him were not negligible. Jason, on the other hand, took refuge across the Jordan in Ammanitis,11 in all probability with Hyrkanos, the head of the Jewish Tobiad family, who had established a temple of Jewish type at Iraq el-Amir, twenty kilometres east of the Jordan. Hyrkanos was a hellenizer, related to the high priestly clan, very rich, and locally powerful.12
The existence of three living high priests is indicative of the divisions in Jewish society. But it may also be a sign, perhaps, of the king’s contempt. Until the reign of Antiochos IV, the succession of high priests had been orderly. Now it was confused, and Menelaos was not even a member of the high priestly family, though he was certainly a priest. Antiochos’ attitude meant that the incumbent high priest could not feel safe, for it might seem that some other pretender could bend the king’s ear and persuade him to appoint a new man, just as Menelaos himself had. The deposed Onias and Jason would be prime candidates to replace him. This must be the explanation for the next move by Menelaos’ faction. They went one stage further than before, by organizing the murder of the deposed Onias III, enticing him out of the sanctuary at Daphne to do so.13
It must be emphasized that all these changes produced no obvious opposition by anyone in Jerusalem, though it was not, as the sequel of it showed, wholly or universally accepted. The extremists–the Menelaos group–had, abetted by the king, seized control from the moderates, the Jason group. As hellenizers, the Menelaos faction disregarded local customs and prejudices, finding them unpalatable. The higher tribute Menelaos had promised the king came from the temple treasury, and would have to be replaced from taxation. He profaned some of the temple furniture, at least according to his opponents.14 That is, having seized power, the hellenizers were implementing their programme. The description is from accounts written by his and their political enemies–but this does not necessarily mean that the change was unacceptable to everyone.
The situation in Jerusalem, at least according to II Maccabees, was uneasy. Menelaos organized an armed guard, said to be 3,000 strong, who were attacked in a riot. Their numbers and arms did not avail them against a disorganized crowd armed with blocks of wood, stones, and handfuls of ashes, which strongly suggests that the number and power of the guard is much exaggerated.15 The story is probably distorted, but it reflects the problem Menelaos and his people had in imposing their will on a population that they had not carried with them in their changes. These were exactly the conditions for a counter-coup. The ex-high priest Onias had been eliminated–possibly another cause for local anger–but Jason, representing a more moderate strand among the hellenizers, was close by, just across the Jordan with Hyrkanos the Tobiad. At such a place, he was clearly another target.
Jason may well have realized that he must either flee and hide or return to Jerusalem and resume his office. Apollo and Antioch and the proximity of the king had not saved Onias. Indeed, Onias’ murder was attributed to a notorious thug called Andronikos, who was also responsible for killing the king’s stepson Antiochos the young king (but then acting on Antiochos’ orders). So, for Jason, hiding with Hyrkanos across the Jordan was not a safe option. He returned to Jerusalem and resumed the office of high priest. Menelaos escaped into the citadel.16
Jason clearly had substantial support within the city, and he must have calculated that his counter-coup could be made acceptable to the king, probably by another hefty payment of tribute, particularly since the king had now become involved in that most expensive of royal activities, a war. A new contribution from the temple treasury in Jerusalem would no doubt be most welcome.
This war is what is now termed the Sixth Syrian War.17 It was initiated by the regents for the child king Ptolemy VI of Egypt largely for reasons of internal Egyptian politics, for the reconquest of Palestine and Syria was a potentially unifying cause. They also expected to receive a welcome in Palestine, where it was only a generation since the Ptolemaic king had ruled there, and some at least of the inhabitants were nostalgic for this. (The Tobiads in Ammanitis had gained their wealth as Ptolemaic tax-officials; such people might well be pleased at a Ptolemaic return.) The general situation was thus somewhat delicate, but the Ptolemaic preparations were so clumsy and incompetent that Antiochos was fully warned and given plenty of time to prepare his response. He brought his army into coastal Palestine to await the attack, being careful to stay well within his own territory so as to avoid any charge of preventive or provocative aggression.18 He thus had considerable forces close to Jerusalem in 171–170, but apparently did not intervene. Either he did not want to be distracted from the bigger problem with Egypt, or he did not see the Jerusalem problem as worth his attention. He was able to invade Egypt and gain control of Pelusion, the fortress that gave access from the Sinai desert road into the Delta. The incompetent regents were swiftly removed, but Antiochos found it difficult to find anyone in Egypt with whom it was possible to make an enduring peace.
The war lasted two years. At the end of the first campaign, in 169, Antiochos returned to Syria with his army, leaving a garrison at Pelusion to guarantee his ability to reinvade Egypt if necessary. It was while he was in Egypt on this first campaign that Jason returned to Jerusalem and deposed Menelaos. This was reported to Antiochos while he was in Egypt and he interpreted Jason’s action as a rebellion, and as a rebellion in support of Ptolemy at that–exactly the situation he must have feared all along. (Jason’s connection with the Tobiads was no doubt an element in this interpretation.)
Menelaos had been Antiochos’ (latest) appointee as high priest, no matter what sums of money had been paid or promised. To overthrow the authority of one of the king’s officials, as Jason had done, was clearly rebellion. Perhaps Jason did not see it that way, for he had been Antiochos’ appointee also, but he and his supporters seem to have been a majority of the Jerusalemites–the Menelaos regime had collapsed very easily. When Antiochos returned from Egypt, therefore, he believed he had to deal with a rebel regime in a fortified city on the flank of his line of march. The rebels may have been friendly with the enemy regime in Egypt, but even if not, the fact of a rebellion against him left an opening that could be exploited by whatever authority eventually emerged in control in Egypt. From Antiochos’ point of view it had to be dealt with quickly, before the Ptolemaic regime could recover and exploit the situation.
He took his army up into the hills, seized Jerusalem, and looted the temple treasures. Needless to say, he was opposed, and an unknown number of people in the city were killed. The first book of Maccabees characteristically lists in detail the items taken from the temple, but recounts the violence against the people in a brief phrase. Josephus is more specific, saying that the king ‘killed many of those who were in opposition’, which means Jason’s supporters.19 The vagueness of both in reckoning casualties suggests that exaggeration is at work.
Menelaos was then reinstated as high priest,20 while Jason fled across the Jordan once more, where the Nabataean king Aretas held him prisoner for a time, perhaps until he could see the result of the crisis, then he was allowed to go on to Egypt. It seems that Hyrkanos the Tobiad died at about this time, no doubt as a result of this crisis.21 Antiochos’ invasion of Egypt next year seems to have persuaded Jason to move on further, and he is said to have taken refuge in Sparta, where he died.22
The restored regime of Menelaos was now subjected to a closer royal supervision, for the king left one of his men, Philip the Phrygian, in the city.23 These measures ensured that Jerusalem remained quiet during Antiochos’ second Egyptian expedition in 168, when at last, and with Roman help, he succeeded in extracting a viable peace agreement from a more or less stable Ptolemaic government. When C. Popillius Laenas, the Roman envoy, drew his circle in the sand and bade Antiochos make his decision on making peace with Egypt there and then, he was in effect guaranteeing that the Ptolemaic government would accept the cession of Palestine and Phoenicia to the Seleukid king, which the deposed regents had challenged.24 Since this peace was to be in the names of the kings (not a group of regents or usurpers who could be overthrown at any moment, and whose undertakings could therefore be repudiated) that agreement would hold until one of the signatory kings died. Antiochos was therefore free to attend to other problems, in particular he could march off to the east without fearing a Ptolemaic attack while he was away.
In Jerusalem, following the restoration of Menelaos and the final elimination of the threats from both Onias and Jason–and Hyrkanos–the most determined hellenizers were once again in control. But the repeated ...

Table of contents

  1. Title Page
  2. Copyright Page
  3. Table of Contents
  4. List of Tables
  5. Genealogical Tables
  6. Abbreviations
  7. Introduction
  8. Chapter 1 - The Dispute
  9. Chapter 2 - Terrorism and Guerrilla War
  10. Chapter 3 - Victories
  11. Chapter 4 - The Beginnings of Imperialism
  12. Chapter 5 - Defeat
  13. Chapter 6 - Achieving Independence
  14. Chapter 7 - The Defence of Independence
  15. Chapter 8 - Early Conquests
  16. Chapter 9 - The Samarian War
  17. Chapter 10 - Internal Upheavals and the Ptolemaic War
  18. Chapter 11 - Gadora and Gaza
  19. Chapter 12 - War in the East
  20. Chapter 13 - The First Civil War
  21. Chapter 14 - The Second Eastern War
  22. Chapter 15 - A War for Damascus
  23. Chapter 16 - The Second Civil War
  24. Chapter 17 - The First Roman War
  25. Chapter 18 - The Second Roman War
  26. Chapter 19 - The Parthian War–and Herod
  27. Chapter 20 - Conclusion: a Belligerent Dynasty
  28. Notes
  29. Bibliography
  30. Index