A sosio-historical analysis of Jewish banditry in first ...

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A SOCIO–HISTORICAL ANALYSIS OF JEWISH BANDITRY IN FIRST CENTURY PALESTINE: 6 TO 70 CE By LAWRENCE RONALD LINCOLN Thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of MPhil (Ancient Cultures) at the University of Stellenbosch November 2005 SUPERVISOR Professor Johann Cook

Transcript of A sosio-historical analysis of Jewish banditry in first ...

Page 1: A sosio-historical analysis of Jewish banditry in first ...

A SOCIO–HISTORICAL ANALYSIS OF JEWISH

BANDITRY IN FIRST CENTURY PALESTINE:

6 TO 70 CE

By

LAWRENCE RONALD LINCOLN

Thes is submi t ted in par t ia l fu l f i lmen t o f the requ i rements fo r

the degree

o f MPh i l (Anc ien t Cu l tu res )

a t the

Un ivers i t y o f S te l lenbosch

November 2005

SUPERVISOR

Professor Johann Cook

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DECLARATION

I , Lawrence Rona ld L inco ln , the unders igned , hereby dec la re

tha t the work con ta ined in th i s thes is i s my own o r ig ina l work

and has no t p rev ious ly in i t s en t i re ty o r in par t been submi t ted

a t any un ive rs i t y fo r a degree .

S igna tu re : Da te :

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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

I am indeb ted to the fo l low ing persons fo r the i r uns t in t ing

suppor t and ass is tance dur ing the t ime i t took to research and

wr i te th i s thes is :

I am espec ia l l y indeb ted to Pro fessor Johann Cook fo r h is

ex t raord inary suppor t and pa t ience dur ing the t ime i t took to

wr i te th i s thes is . H is un fa i l i ng encouragement and scho la r l y

ass is tance as I g rapp led w i th the comp lex i t i es o f the chosen

theme was remarkab le and i s deep ly apprec ia ted .

Gra t i tude mus t a lso be ex tended to the Depar tment o f Anc ien t

S tud ies fo r the enr i ch ing p rogramme prov ided in the M. Ph i l

degree as we l l as the en thus ias t i c and f r iend ly lec tu r ing s ta f f

who opened one ’s eyes to the r i chness o f the anc ien t wor ld .

Las t , bu t no t leas t , my long-su f fe r ing fami l y , espec ia l l y my

w i fe , An thea , who unse l f i sh ly gave me the t ime and space to

see th is work th rough to i t s end .

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TABLE OF CONTENTS

PAGE

ABSTRACT 1

OPSOMMING 3

ABBREVIATIONS 6

1 CHAPTER 1 7

1 .1 In t roduc t ion 7

1 .2 The Research Prob lem 12

1 .3 Methodo logy 14

1 .4 Sources 19

1 .4 .1 Josephus 19

1 .4 .2 Josephus ’s re l iab i l i t y as an h is to r ian 20

1 .4 .3 O ther Sources 23

1 .5 The S ta te o f the Research 25

1 .6 Hobsbawm And Soc ia l Band i ts 28

1 .7 Hobsbawm: An Ana lys is o f the Mode l 29

1 .8 R ichard Hors ley and Jewish Soc ia l Band i ts 35

1 .9 Landsberger and Rura l P ro tes t Movements 37

2 CHAPTER 2 41

2 .1 The Lega l and Po l i t i ca l Background : Rome 41

2 .2 The Lega l Background : Jew ish Law 46

2 .3 Who became a band i t? 52

2 .4 Soc ia l Band i ts 60

2 .5 Band i ts and V io lence 64

2 .6 Po l i t i cs and Economics 66

2 .7 The Band i t as Revo lu t ionary 71

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3 CHAPTER 3 74

3 .1 H is to r i ca l Background 74

3 .2 The Or ig ins o f I s rae l i te Peasan t Soc ie ty 76

3 .3 A Po l i t i ca l , Economic , and Soc ia l H is to ry o f the Jewish Peasan t ry 81

3 .4 Roman In te rven t ion 85

3 .5 The Po l i t i ca l and Mi l i ta ry D imens ion 87

3 .6 The Economic S i tua t ion 94

4 CHAPTER 4 103

4 .1 Jewish Rebe ls and Band i t s 103

4 .2 The Band i ts and The i r Agenda 131

4 .3 Josephus and the Band i t s 134

5 CHAPTER 5 146

5 .1 Band i t ry and Peasan t Pro tes t Movements : An A l te rna t i ve V iew

146

5 .2 Pro tes t Movements 151

6 CHAPTER 6 159

6 .1 Conc lus ion 159

B IBL IOGRAPHY 169

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ABSTRACT

Th is thes is se ts ou t to examine , as fa r as poss ib le w i th in the

cons t ra in ts o f a l im i ted s tudy such as th i s , the na tu re o f the

Jew ish p ro tes t movement aga ins t the occupa t ion o f the i r

homeland by the Roman Empi re in the years a f te r the te r r i to ry

had become a d i rec t p rov ince o f the Empi re . These p ro tes ts

were ma in ly ins t iga ted by and in i t i a l l y l ed by Jew ish peasan ts

who exper ienced the wors t aspec ts o f becoming a par t o f the

la rger Roman wor ld . Th is s tudy w i l l a rgue tha t Roman ru le

fundamenta l l y th rea tened the su rv iva l o f the peasan t ry on a

number o f f ron ts : po l i t i ca l , economic , soc ia l and re l ig ious . I t

w i l l be fu r ther a rgued tha t the Jewish band i t s were no t un ique

in th i s respec t and tha t band i t r y and peasan t revo l t s were

common in the anc ien t wor ld and down to modern t imes .

The s tudy o f peasan t p ro tes t movements i s a re la t i ve ly new

f ie ld in h is to r i ca l / soc ia l s tud ies and there have been a few

a t tempts made to c rea te mode ls and f rameworks in o rder to

dea l w i th the complex i t i es o f t r y ing to exp la in and unders tand

how soc ie t ies d is in tegra te and resor t to ex t ra - lega l ac t i v i t i es

in cha l leng ing the s ta tus quo . An in te res t ing soc io log ica l

mode l was f i r s t p roposed by Er i c Hobsbawm wh ich he ca l led

soc ia l band i t ry in wh ich he typecas t ce r ta in k inds o f band i t s .

Th is thes is w i l l examine th is mode l aga ins t the background o f

the scan t in fo rmat ion ava i lab le and de te rmine whether th i s

mode l i s app l i cab le to the Jewish band i t s o f the f i r s t cen tu ry .

I t w i l l be fu r ther a rgued tha t the b r igandage and descen t in to

po l i t i ca l chaos and v io lence shou ld be seen no t mere ly as

i so la ted band i t a t tacks and p rovoca t ions , bu t aga ins t the

w ider backdrop o f a soc ie ty a t odds w i th i t se l f and i t s inab i l i t y

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t o adap t to the ex igenc ies imposed on i t by a fo re ign

occupy ing power .

Th is thes is w i l l l ook a t band i t r y f rom a b road h is to r i ca l

pe rspec t i ve in an t iqu i t y and then examine the p rec ise

h is to r i ca l , soc ia l , po l i t i ca l and re l ig ious c i rcumstances tha t

p reva i led in Pa les t ine p r io r to and a f te r the Romans imposed

d i rec t ru le ove r the Jewish te r r i to r ies . Band i t ry w i l l be

examined as a genera l phenomenon o f an t iqu i t y and the

Roman wor ld , i n par t i cu la r . In do ing so , i t w i l l be necessary t o

engage w i th the works o f Josephus who p rov ided a un ique ly

fu l l record o f these t imes , a lbe i t one tha t p resen ts i t own se ts

o f cha l lenges . Th is s tudy w i l l examine Josephus ’s nar ra t i ve in

re la t ion to the l i t e ra ry t rad i t i ons and conven t ions o f h is to ry

wr i t i ng o f h is age and a rgue tha t h is in te rp re ta t ion o f the

band i ts and the band i t g roups and the i r ac t ions matched those

o f o ther au thors f rom an t iqu i t y when dea l ing w i th cha l lenges

to s ta te power .

An a l te rna t i ve f ramework w i l l be used by wh ich i t w i l l be

sugges ted tha t the Jewish band i t s and the i r ac t i v i t i es shou ld

ra ther be seen as par t o f a p rocess o f a w idespread ru ra l

p ro tes t movement . A l though th is f ramework was deve loped fo r

use in examin ing modern peasant movements , i t w i l l be

demons t ra ted tha t i t i s remarkab ly app l i cab le to the po l i t i ca l ,

economic , soc ia l and ideo log ica l c i r cumstances o f f i r s t

cen tu ry Pa les t ine . Th is t hes is w i l l conc lude w i th a sec t ion in

wh ich modern band i t r y i s desc r ibed w i th the a im o f

demons t ra t ing tha t g iven the r igh t se t o f c i r cumstances ,

band i t r y as a phenomenon, w i th the consequen t b reakdown o f

c i v i l d i so rder , i s un ive rsa l th roughou t the wor ld and

th roughou t a l l t imes .

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OPSOMMING H ie rd ie tes is poog , om so ver moont l i k b inne d ie begrens inge

van ‘n beperk te s tud ie soos d ie , d ie aard van d ie Joodse

p ro tesbeweg ing teen d ie bese t t ing van hu l le tu i s land deur d ie

Romeinse Ryk te ondersoek in d ie ja re nada t d ie geb ied ‘n

d i rek te p rov ins ie van d ie Ryk geword he t . H ie rd ie p ro tes te i s

hoo fsaak l i k aangeh i ts en aanvank l i k ge le i deur Joodse

landbewoners wa t d ie e rgs te aspek te be lee f he t van dee l word

van d ie g ro te r Romeinse wêre ld . H ie rd ie s tud ies sa l aanvoer

da t d ie Romeinse Ryk d ie oor lew ing van d ie k le inboere

fundamentee l op ‘n aan ta l f ron te bedr ieg he t : po l i t i es ,

ekonomies , sos iaa l en re l ig ieus . D i t sa l ve rder aanvoer da t d ie

Joodse s t ru ik rowers n ie un iek in h ie rd ie aspek was n ie , maar

da t rowery en p la t te landse ops tande rede l i k a lgemeen was in

d ie an t ieke wêre ld en se l f s to t i n moderne tye .

D ie s tud ie van p ro tesbeweg ings onder landbewoners i s ‘n

re la t iewe nuwe ve ld in h is to r ies /sos ia le s tud ies en ‘n paar

pog ings i s aangewend om mode l le en raamwerke te skep om

met d ie komp leks i te i te te behande l ten e inde te p robeer

ve rdu ide l i k en te ve rs taan hoe samelew ings d is in tegreer en

hu l le na bu i tewet l i ke ak t iw i t i e te wend om d ie s ta tus quo u i t te

daag . ‘n In te ressan te sos io log iese mode l i s d ie eers te keer

deur Er i c Hobsbawn voorges te l ; hy he t d i t “ sos ia le rowery ”

genoem en sekere t ipes rowers daar in ge t ipeer . H ie rd ie tes is

sa l d ie mode l teen d ie ag te rg rond van d ie ka r ige in l ig t ing

besk ikbaar , ondersoek en bepaa l o f d i t toepas l i k i s op d ie

Joodse rowers van d ie eers te eeu . D i t sa l ve rder aanvoer da t

d ie s t ru ik rowery en verva l to t po l i t i eke chaos en gewe ld n ie

ne t as ge ïso leerde roweranva l le en u i t ta r t ing ges ien moet

word n ie , maar teen d ie wyer ag te rg rond van ‘n same lew ing in

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s t ryd met hu l lese l f en hu l le onvermoë om aan te pas by d ie

ve re is tes wa t deur ΄n v reemde besse t t ingsmag op hu l le

a fgedwing i s .

H ie rd ie tes is sa l rowery vanu i t ‘ n b reë h is to r iese perspek t ie f

i n d ie oudhe id bekyk en sa l dan d ie p res iese h is to r iese ,

sos ia le , po l i t i ese en ge loo fsomstand ighede ondersoek wa t in

Pa les t ina bes taan he t to t na d ie Romeine d i rek te beheer oor

d ie Joodse geb iede a fgedwing he t . Rowery sa l as ‘n a lgemene

verskynse l i n d ie oudhe id en spes i f i ek in d ie Romeinse wêre ld

ondersoek word . Sodoende sa l d i t nod ig wees om aan te s lu i t

by d ie werke van Josephus wat ‘n un ieke vo l led ige rekord

verska f van h ie rd ie t ye , a l i s d i t een wat sy e ie u i tdag ings

b ied . H ie rd ie s tud ie sa l Josephus se verhaa l in ve rhoud ing to t

d ie l i t e rê re t rad is ies en konvens ies van gesk iedkund ige

sk rywes van sy t yd ondersoek , en aanvoer da t sy

in te rp re tas ies van d ie rowers en rowergroepe en hu l le

op t redes ge lyks taande i s aan d ie van ander sk rywers van d ie

oudhe id wanneer s taa tsmag u i tgedaag i s .

‘ n A l te rna t iewe raamwerk sa l gebru ik word waar in d i t

voorges te l sa l word da t d ie Joodse rowers en hu l le ak t iw i t i e te

eerder ges ien moet word as ‘n p roses van wydverspre ide

lande l i ke p ro tesbeweg ings . A lhoewe l h ie rd ie raamwerk

on tw ikke l i s om ondersoek in te s te l na moderne

rowerbeweg ings , sa l d i t aangedu i word da t d i t opmerk l i k

toepas l i k i s op d ie po l i t i ese , ekonomiese , sos ia le en

ideo log iese omstand ighede van eers te eeuse Pa les t ina .

H ie rd ie tes is sa l e ind ig met ‘n a fde l ing waar moderne rowery

beskry f word met d ie doe l om te toon da t , gegewe d ie reg te

omstand ighede , rowery as ‘n ve rskynse l en d ie

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daaropvo lgende a fb reek van s i v ie le o rde deur a l le t ye

un ive rsee l i s .

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ABBREVIATIONS ANRW Au fs t ieg und N iedergang der Römischen Wel t .

CBQ Catho l i c B ib l i ca l Quar te r l y

DIG D iges ta

DSL De Spec ia l ibus Leg ibus

JRS Journa l o f Roman S tud ies

JSJ Journa l fo r the S tud ies o f Juda ism in t he Pers ian ,

Hel len is t i c and Roman Per iod

NTS New Tes tament S tud ies

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CHAPTER 1 1 .1 INTRODUCTION

The two s ign i f i can t even ts f rom f i r s t cen tu ry Pa les t ine tha t

had a p ro found impac t on h is to ry down to modern t imes , bo th

came abou t as the resu l t o f peasan t upr i s ings . I n the f i r s t ,

Jew ish peasan ts , f rus t ra ted by years o f po l i t i ca l and

economic ins tab i l i t y , toge ther w i th cons tan t a t tacks aga ins t

the i r re l i g ious sens ib i l i t i es , f i na l l y rose up aga ins t the migh t

o f Roman oppress ion in a b loody revo l t wh ich las ted f rom 66 -

70 CE. The second even t was se t in mot ion by the teach ings

o f Jesus , a Jew f rom Ga l i l ee , who insp i red h is fo l lowers a f te r

h is dea th to es tab l i sh a re l ig ion wh ich wou ld subsequent l y

become the dominan t fa i th o f the wes te rn t rad i t i on .

The war aga ins t Rome resu l ted in t he devas ta t ion o f

Pa les t ine , the des t ruc t ion o f the temp le and the end o f a

Jew ish homeland in Pa les t ine fo r more than two thousand

years . Wi thou t the temp le as i t s cen t ra l focus , the Jew ish fa i t h

recons t ruc ted i t se l f i n to a fo rm o f Ta lmud ic o r Rabb in ica l

Juda ism in o rder to con t inue the co l lec t i ve re l ig ious , cu l tu ra l

and lega l t rad i t i ons o f the Mosa ic code and the Hebrew

Scr ip tu res . The Chr is t ian movement even tua l l y tu rned i t s back

on i t s Jew ish roo ts and spread i t s un ique iden t i t y th roughou t

the Roman wor ld and beyond by teach ing the word o f Jesus

th rough i t s own se t o f re l ig ious l i t e ra tu re , the Gospe ls . Bo th

these h is to r i ca l l y c r i t i ca l even ts came abou t as the d i rec t

resu l t o f a long ser ies o f up r i s ings , revo l t s and d is tu rbances

by the Jewish peasan t ry .

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Notw i ths tand ing the g rea t dea l o f research tha t has gone in to

unders tand ing the Jewish revo l t and the second temp le per iod ,

much o f th i s research has focussed on the s tudy o f g roups ,

e l i tes and the minor i t y l i t e ra ry s t ra ta and in par t i cu la r , the

theo log ica l aspec ts concern ing th i s per iod . Our knowledge and

unders tand ing o f the la te second temp le per iod has been

t rad i t i ona l l y based on the h is to r i ca l works o f Josephus , the

Jewish sc r ip tu res , the Chr is t ian Gospe ls and an assor tment o f

re la t i ve ly lesse r impor tan t Graeco-Roman documenta ry

ev idence f rom the per iod . More recen t a rchaeo log ica l s tud ies ,

and in par t i cu la r the in te rp re ta t ions o f the Dead Sea Scro l l s

has g rea t l y expanded our knowledge o f the per iod .

However , the complex i t y o f Pa les t in ian Jewish soc ie ty as we l l

as the in t r i ca te se r ies o f even ts lead ing to the Jewish revo l t

has no t been adequate ly addressed un t i l fa i r l y recen t t imes .

The fac t i s tha t f i r s t cen tu ry Jewish Pa les t ine , a l though a

m inor ou tpos t on the edges o f t he Roman Empi re was very

d i f fe ren t i n many respec ts f rom the o ther te r r i to r ies under

Roman con t ro l and in f luence . The Jewish peop le were

un ique ly d i f fe ren t in many ways and Rome became

inc reas ing ly f rus t ra ted in i t s a t tempts to t r y and pac i f y t h i s

sma l l , heads t rong , and occas iona l l y rebe l l i ous peop le on the

per iphery o f i t s domains .

I t i s ve ry d i f f i cu l t to speak o f a Pa les t in ian Jewish peop le as

th i s te rm ser ious ly under -es t imates the in t r i cac ies o f wha t th i s

soc ie ty was composed o f . T rad i t i ona l t rea tments o f Jew ish

soc ie ty have focussed the i r e f fo r t s la rge ly on exp la in ing and

unders tand ing the p r ies t l y a r i s toc racy , the ma jo r g roup ings

such as the Phar i sees and the Sadducees , and the way these

g roups in te rac ted amongs t themse lves and as c l ien t ru le rs fo r

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the Romans . Never the less , demograph ica l l y these g roups

represen ted on ly a ve ry sma l l po r t ion o f Jew ish soc ie ty , as the

la rges t g roup was the Jewish peasan t ry wh ich compr ised some

90-95% o f the to ta l popu la t ion , as was the accep ted norm fo r

anc ien t agra r ian soc ie t ies (Hors ley 1993 : i x ) . Nor is i t

poss ib le to pa in t a coheren t p ic tu re o f Juda ism based on ly on

the l i t e ra ry ou tpu t o f a few ind iv idua ls and g roups who

represen ted a sma l l sec t ion o f the soc ia l s t ruc tu re .

The Jewish peasan t ry was la rge ly i l l i t e ra te , despera te ly poor ,

and inc reas ing ly land less and burdened by taxes tha t were

ma in ly spen t on suppor t ing the l i f es ty le o f the p r ies t l y e l i t es

and o ther a r i s toc ra t i c g roup ings . Ye t , i t was th is soc ia l g roup

tha t represen ted the dynamic fo rce wh ich p rov ided the

insp i ra t ion and energy to undermine and con f ron t the power o f

Rome, a t f i r s t by means o f a se r ies o f unconnec ted rebe l l i ous

ac t ions , and la te r by becoming par t o f the genera l ou tb reak o f

a fu l l sca le war in 66CE.

Anc ien t h is to r i ca l sources d id no t devo te themse lves to

ana ly t i ca l s tud ies o f peasan t l i f e and i f even aware o f the i r

ex is tence , genera l l y v iewed the “common peop le ” as no t

su f f i c ien t l y no tewor thy fo r a read ing aud ience tha t m i r ro red

the i r own p r i v i l eged l i t e ra ry pos i t i on . The anc ien ts d id no t

compar tmenta l i ze l i f e in to de f inab le sec to rs o f human

endeavour l i ke economics , po l i t i ca l , soc ia l and re l ig ious , bu t

saw a l l o f l i f e and i t s do ings as a un i f i ed who le . Scho la rs o f

an t iqu i t y a re cha l lenged to c rea te workab le mode ls tha t w i l l

make anc ien t soc ie t ies comprehens ib le in the p resen t .

I t was on ly in the 1950 ’s tha t soc ia l sc iences s ta r ted to pay

ser ious a t ten t ion to the na tu re o f peasan t soc ie t ies (Har land

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2002 : 511) . S ince then soc ia l sc ien t i f i c s tud ies tha t have had

an in f luence fo r scho la rs o f Juda ism and Chr is t ian i t y o f the

f i r s t cen tu ry have been , mos t no tab ly Rober t Red f ie ld ’s

Peasant Soc ie ty and Cu l tu re (1956) and Er i c Wo l f ’ s

an th ropo log ica l s tudy , Peasants (1966) , to name bu t a few

(Har land 2002 : 513) . The two recen t works tha t have

cha l lenged the conven t iona l v iews regard ing Jew ish band i t s

and the ru ra l p ro tes t movements have been by R ichard

Hors ley w i th John Hanson, Band i ts , P rophe ts and Mess iahs

(1985 , 1999) and Hors ley ’s Jesus and the Sp i ra l o f V io lence

(1987 , 1993) . In bo th these works , Hors ley has examined the

r i se and deve lopment o f the soc ia l con f l i c t i n Pa les t ine by

means o f a de ta i led examina t ion o f the h is to r i ca l na r ra t i ve o f

Josephus and re -eva lua ted these by means o f a soc io log ica l

approach us ing re la t i ve ly recen t modern ana ly t i ca l too ls in

o rder to a r r i ve a t a c leare r unders tand ing o f the na tu re o f the

con f l i c t and the peasan t popu la t ion who were the ma in

dynamic fo rce tha t led to the revo l t i n 66 CE.

The s tandard in te rp re ta t ion fo r the va r ious band i t movements

wh ich Josephus descr ibed as be ing one o f the ma jo r causes o f

the d is in tegra t ion o f Jew ish soc ie ty and cause o f the war

aga ins t Rome, have t rad i t i ona l l y been in te rp re ted as a w ide-

spread po l i t i ca l and re l ig ious movement ca l led the Zea lo ts . 1

Accord ing to th i s v iew, the zea lo ts can be t raced back in a

long l i ne to the ‘Four th Ph i losophy ’ wh ich was founded by

Judas the Ga l i l ean and who were descr ibed by Josephus a t

1 M. Henge l : (1961) has been the lead ing and mos t in f luen t ia l

commenta to r to ho ld th i s v iew in wh ich he uses the te rms band i ts , S ica r i i and zea lo ts as i f they were one and the same th ing .

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var ious t imes as band i t s , b r igands and S icar i i who consp i red

toge ther to b r ing abou t the revo l t aga ins t Roman ru le in 66

CE. Hors ley a rgues tha t th i s approach was used to p lace

e i the r a theo log ica l o r po l i t i ca l sp in on the even ts . On the one

hand i t meant tha t theo log ians and scho la rs cou ld separa te

Jesus f rom the accusa t ion o f be ing assoc ia ted w i th rebe ls ,

zea lo ts and b r igands and o thers in oppos i t i on to Roman and

Jewish au thor i t i es by dep ic t ing h im as a non-v io len t pac i f i s t ,

( ‘ l ove thy enemy ’ ) ; wh i le on the o ther hand i t a l so served as a

po l i t i ca l means o f l i nk ing the zea lo ts w i th more modern

movements fo r Jew ish l i be ra t ion , such as the Z ion is t

movement , and in o rder to es tab l i sh a power fu l metaphor fo r

Jew ish res i l i ence and b ravery aga ins t un to ld odds fo r co -

re l ig ion is ts who were p repared to lay down the i r l i ves fo r

f reedom and na t iona l l i be ra t ion , much l i ke the S icar i i were

a l leged to have done a t Masada (Hors ley 1993 : x ) .

Wh i le the re ex is ts an ex tens ive body o f l i t e ra tu re on one

sec to r o f anc ien t Jew ish Pa les t in ian soc ie ty , tha t i s the e l i t e

re l ig ious and ru l ing s t ra ta , the re i s a g rea t dea l tha t rema ins

to be researched abou t t he la rges t g roup o f the peop le , the

peasan ts . Th is work in tends to focus p r imar i l y on the ru ra l

p ro tes t movements ca r r ied ou t la rge ly by these peasan t

p ro tagon is ts tha t subsumed Pa les t ine in the years be tween 6

and 66 CE. These ru ra l revo l t s took on a number o f fo rms ,

amongs t wh ich a pecu l ia r fo rm known as soc ia l band i t r y , a

v iew la rge ly p romoted by Hors ley , p layed a lead ing par t i n

con t r ibu t ing to the b reakdown o f l aw and o rder in the

coun t rys ide . Wh i l s t th i s ce r ta in ly i s a fac to r to be dea l t w i th in

de ta i l , i t , on i t s own does no t p rov ide su f f i c ien t g rounds fo r

exp la in ing how unconnec ted band i t - l i ke ac t ions and unre la ted

p ro tes t even ts resu l ted in revo lu t ion . Th is work w i l l the re fo re

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at tempt to ana lyze the peasan t ru ra l up r i s ing on a number o f

f ron ts in o rder to adequa te l y address the h is to r i ca l

comp lex i t i es o f the s i tua t ion on the one hand and on the

o ther , a r r i ve a t an adequa te soc io log ica l unders tand ing o f

ru ra l soc ia l un res t in anc ien t peasan t soc ie t ies . A t ten t ion w i l l

a l so be focussed on the phenomenon o f band i t r y as i t

occur red in the Roman wor ld in genera l and the po l i t i ca l ,

m i l i t a ry and lega l reac t ions to i t , w i th spec ia l re fe rence to how

band i t ry was repor ted on and por t rayed by the l i t e ra te Graeco-

Roman wr i te rs o f the an t iqu i t y .

1.2 THE RESEARCH PROBLEM

Band i t ry in i t s va r ious fo rms i s the mos t p r im i t i ve fo rm o f

o rgan ized soc ia l p ro tes t by ru ra l peasan t popu la t ions

(Hobsbawm 1959 : 13) . Accord ing to Josephus , band i t ry was

one o f the ma jo r causes tha t l ed to the de te r io ra t ion in the

re la t ionsh ip be tween the ru ra l popu lace o f Pa les t ine and the

Jewish e l i tes on the one hand , and the Roman au thor i t i es , on

the o ther . Widespread ru ra l un res t became the cons tan t

backdrop in the years lead ing up to the war w i th Rome. 2

However , the l i t e ra tu re on th is per iod has la rge ly f ocussed on

s tud ies o f the l i f e and work o f Josephus , the h is to r i ca l

2 Examples o f occur rences o f modern va r ian ts o f soc ia l

band i t r y inc lude , amongs t o thers , nor th -eas te rn Braz i l where band i t ry reached ep idemic p ropor t ions in the 1870 ’s un t i l i t aba ted in 1940 ; a lso in Sou th Amer ica , band i t r y in Co lomb ia in the 1940 ’s became par t o f the anarchy lead ing to independence in tha t coun t ry ; Macedon ia in the ear l y par t o f the twen t ie th cen tu ry a lso had a la rge number o f band i t g roups ; the Anda lus ian res is tance to F ranco ’s reg ime a f te r the Span ish c iv i l war were rep le te w i th band i t s .

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nar ra t i ve , and the re l ig ious d imens ion . So , a l though we know

a g rea t dea l abou t the Phar i sees , fo r example , we know very

l i t t l e abou t the ru ra l peasan ts and the u rban poor , who fo rmed

the vanguard o f the s t rugg le aga ins t the oppress iveness o f

Roman ru le . I t i s on ly recen t l y tha t a number o f a t tempts have

been made to examine the h is to r i ca l , po l i t i ca l and soc ia l wor ld

o f band i t s and band i t ry in f i r s t cen tu ry Pa les t ine and the ro le

th is p layed in the d ramat ic per iod tha t l ed to the ou tb reak o f

hos t i l i t i es in 60 CE.

Excep t fo r R ichard Hors ley , who in a number o f impor tan t

works , a t tempts to exp la in the v io lence and unres t o f those

years , the re a re few o ther scho la rs who have dea l t w i th the

top ic o f Jew ish Pa les t in ian band i t r y o f the f i r s t cen tu ry per se ,

beyond devo t ing a chap te r o r two , a lbe i t tha t these may be

impor tan t con t r ibu t ions in themse lves . Band i t r y in e f fec t , can

be descr ibed as mere ly one o f the symptoms o f the fa i lu re o f a

soc ie ty in wh ich the po l i t i ca l , soc ia l and cu l tu ra l m i l i eu cou ld

no t adequa te ly address the compe l l i ng i ssues and c r i ses faced

by a na t ion undergo ing fundamenta l changes .

Th is work w i l l dea l l a rge ly w i th the top ic o f band i t ry in f i r s t

cen tu ry Pa les t ine , by a t tempt ing to con tex tua l i se i t as an

in t r ins ic par t o f a w idespread ru ra l p ro tes t movement tha t l ed

to the ou tb reak o f fo rma l hos t i l i t i es aga ins t Rome. The

po l i t i ca l , soc ia l and re l ig ious upheava ls tha t accompan ied

these even ts were comp lex p rocesses and in o rder to

unders tand the rea l i t y o f p ro tes t and revo l t amongs t the

peasan t popu la t ion o f those t imes , i t w i l l be necessary to

inves t iga te i t on a number o f f ron ts :

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1. How d id Rome perce ive c r ime and band i t r y and how d id

the Roman mi l i ta ry , po l i t i ca l and lega l sys tems dea l w i th

th is?

2 . Was there a d is t inc t l y Jew ish v iew on band i t r y and i f so ,

how d id they dea l w i th a s i tua t ion in wh ich they had l i t t l e

con t ro l o f even ts?

3 . A re the re ex is t ing soc io log ica l mode ls tha t a re ab le t o

e f fec t i ve ly exp la in the soc ia l rea l i t i es o f anc ien t

phenomenon l i ke band i t ry?

4 . Who were the Jewish band i t s and what mot i va ted la rge

sec t ions o f the ru ra l popu lace to par t i c ipa te in p ro tes t

and rebe l l i on aga ins t the mos t power fu l a rmy in the

wor ld?

5 . Las t l y , bu t pe rhaps mos t c ruc ia l l y , how d id Josephus

in te rp re t the inc iden ts o f Jew ish band i t ry in l i gh t o f h is

own exper iences as a par t i c ipan t o f the even ts tha t he

descr ibed and to wha t ex ten t was h is wr i t i ng i n f luenced

in th is by the w ider cu l tu ra l impac t o f the Roman mi l i eu

he l i ved in?

1 .3 METHODOLOGY

The approach p roposed fo r th i s s tudy w i l l be to ach ieve a

ba lance be tween the h is to r i ca l na r ra t i ve and the app l i ca t ion o f

appropr ia te ana ly t i ca l too ls in an a t tempt to unders tand the

soc ia l con f l i c t s tha t l ed to the r i se o f b r igandage among the

Jewish peasan t ry and the con t r ibu t ing fac to rs tha t l ed to the

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r i se o f peasan t movements as agen ts o f revo lu t ionary change

in Pa les t ine . As w i th mos t a t tempts a t a soc ia l h i s to ry o f

anc ien t soc ie t ies and in par t i cu la r , o f se lec ted soc ia l g roups

f rom an t iqu i t y , the re a re a number o f l im i t i ng fac to rs tha t

s tand in the way o f such a s tudy .

The f i r s t o f these i s the fac t tha t the Jew ish peasan t ry le f t no

l i t e ra tu re beh ind , excep t wha t can be g leaned f rom the

re l ig ious l i t e ra tu re and a few lesser impor tan t sources . The

on ly ma jo r non- re l ig ious source a t our d isposa l i s the works o f

Josephus . These a re immense ly p rob lemat i c and a f i e ld o f

s tudy in the i r own r igh t . The p r inc ipa l p rob lem w i th Josephus

i s h is apparen t b ias and lack o f ob jec t i v i t y , desp i te h is

persona l commi tment as an h is to r ian to te l l the t ru th in

accura te ly re la t ing the even ts he wro te abou t . To reassure h is

readers , he po in ted ly no ted tha t T i tus h imse l f had dec reed

tha t h is (Josephus ’s ) works shou ld become the o f f i c ia l ve rs ion

o f the Jewish War and he quo tes f rom a roya l re fe rence f rom

Agr ippa I , who in s i x ty - two le t te rs p ra ised h im fo r h is accuracy

in the re te l l i ng o f Jew ish h is to ry . (L i fe 360-366) . Josephus ’s

c la im to ob jec t i v i t y however , needs to be t rea ted w i th a g rea t

dea l o f c i r cumspec t ion as h is nar ra t i ve o f the war , and in

par t i cu la r tha t o f the revo lu t ionar ies , a re b iased and wr i t ten to

con fo rm to h is p ro -Roman and upper -c lass sympath ies . As

B i lde pu t i t , Josephus had a pass iona te in te res t i n h is to ry ,

a l though he in te rp re ted the top ics he dea l t w i th in l i ne w i th h is

own unders tand ing and in te rp re ta t ion , bu t one canno t on tha t

bas is a lone re jec t h i s h is to r i ca l accoun t o f the even ts tha t he

l i ved th rough and exper ienced (B i lde 1988 : 197-199) .

Josephus was no t un ique in te rms o f anc ien t h i s to r iog raphy as

the wr i t i ng o f h i s to r ies by con temporar ies who had

par t i c ipa ted in the po l i t i ca l and mi l i t a ry even ts o f the i r t ime

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became an accep ted genre , as was the case w i th Thucyd ides ,

Po lyb ius , Sa l lus t and Herodo tus , amongs t o thers (Ra jak 2002 :

5 ) . However , un l i ke the modern p receden t whereby po l i t i ca l

and mi l i t a ry memoi rs a re de r igueur , the accuracy o f these

even ts and the re l iab i l i t y , ve rac i t y and po ten t ia l b ias o f these

modern h is to r ians can be eas i l y checked ou t by a vas t amount

o f a l te rna t i ve sources (Ra jak 2002 : 5 ) . We do no t have th is

conven ience when dea l ing w i th Josephus , bu t a re s t i l l l e f t

never the less w i th meet ing the requ i rements o f the in junc t ion

to te l l ‘ how i t rea l l y was ’ (w ie es e igen t l i ch gewesen) , as

po ignan t l y s ta ted by the eminen t h is to r ian , Leopo ld von Ranke

(F in ley 1986 : 47) . Josephus ’s works rema in the s ing le mos t

comprehens ive l i t e ra ry source we have a t our d isposa l and

th is s tudy w i l l t he re fo re make ex tens ive use o f h is nar ra t i ve o f

the even ts and the g roups who par t i c ipa ted in them. By means

o f a p rocess o f ca re fu l read ing and ana lys is , suppor ted by

secondary l i t e ra tu re , Josephus ’s works w i l l be used as the

nar ra t i ve f ramework a round wh ich the tumu l tuous even ts o f

the Jewish war w i l l be cons t ruc ted .

There a re a number o f l im i t i ng fac to rs when dea l ing w i th a

soc ia l en t i t y such as the ‘peasan t ry ’ . The f i r s t i s tha t the s tudy

o f peasan t ry and the i r soc ia l ro les i s a re la t i ve ly recen t f i e ld

p robab ly s ta r t ing in earnes t in the 1950 ’s (Hors ley and Hanson

1999 : xxx i i ) . As a s ta r t ing po in t , i t w i l l be necessary to de f ine

peasan t ry as a soc ia l cons t ruc t , keep ing in m ind the h is to r i ca l

con tex t on the one hand and tha t we a re p ropos ing to ana lyze

the soc ia l rea l i t y o f the anc ien t wor ld by us ing modern

ana ly t i ca l methods and too ls . The f i r s t cha l lenge i s the te rm

‘peasan t ’ i t se l f , wh ich has become a use fu l l abe l fo r h is to r ians

and soc ia l sc ien t i s ts to app ly as an iden t i f i e r o f a spec i f i c

soc ia l g roup w i thou t regard fo r the in f in i te va r ie t ies o f soc ia l

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complex i t y and rea l i t y o f human soc ie ty . I t i s the equ iva len t o f

ca l l i ng a g roup ‘wea l thy . ’ The p rob lem is tha t the re a re

d i f fe ren t g rada t ions o f wea l th and there cou ld a lso be a range

o f de f in i t i ons to descr ibe those who a re ‘wea l thy . ’ 3 However ,

i n o rder to be p rac t i ca l , h i s to r ians and soc ia l sc ien t i s ts need

genera l accommodat ing te rms by means o f wh ich to descr ibe

b road genera l t rends , soc ia l g roups and movements tha t a re

eas i l y comprehens ib le and un ive rsa l l y app l i cab le .

In o rder to ana lyse and unders tand the Jewish peasan t ry as

cons t i tu t ing a movement fo r soc ia l and po l i t i ca l change in the

f i r s t cen tu ry th i s work w i l l t he re fo re need to focus on th ree

key a reas : the f i r s t w i l l be to inves t iga te peasan t ry as a soc ia l

phenomenon by means o f an appropr ia te ana lys is o f the

soc ia l , economic , po l i t i ca l and re l ig ious cond i t i ons tha t de f ine

a soc ia l cons t ruc t ca l led ‘peasan t ry ’ . Second ly , i t w i l l be

necessary to ana lyze the concep t o f a ‘ soc ia l movement ’ by

app ly ing a s t ruc tu red ana ly t i ca l f ramework as a bas is towards

exp la in ing the deve lopment o f band i t r y and i t s even tua l

cu lm ina t ion in to a b road f ron t fo r revo lu t ionary change . The

th i rd focus w i l l be on the h is to r i ca l con tex t , and in par t i cu la r

tha t o f the deve lopment and ex ten t to wh ich p ro tes t and

band i t ry p layed a ro le in Jew ish h is to ry , by re ly ing on the

works o f Josephus and secondary l i t e ra tu re as the nar ra t i ve

bas is fo r the h is to r i ca l con ten t .

F in ley descr ibed the s tudy o f h i s to ry as a s ing le sub jec t us ing

a va r ie t y o f techn iques tha t depend on par t i cu la r ques t ions

the h is to r ian i s t r y ing to answer by us ing ava i lab le ev idence

and a su i tab le method o f p resen ta t ion (F in ley 1986 : 59) . In

3 The p rob lem is fu r the r compounded by the fac t tha t de f in i t i ons a re a p roduc t o f the de f ine r : fo r example , a Marx is t vs . non-Marx is t wou ld d i f fe r subs tan t ia l l y on th is po in t .

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th i s case , the method o f p resen ta t ion w i l l ba lance h is to r i ca l

na r ra t i ve w i th a soc io log ica l ana lys is in o rder to p rov ide the

s t ruc tu re a round wh ich the ques t ions w i l l be answered .

Namely , d id Jew ish band i t r y con fo rm to a phenomenon

descr ibed as soc ia l band i t r y ; were the occur rences o f band i t ry

i so la ted inc iden ts o f peasan t unres t ; o r , were they

man i fes ta t ions o f ru ra l peasan t movements fo r change? In

te rms o f soc ia l band i t r y , the mode l dev ised by Er i c Hobsbawm

wi l l be used ex tens ive ly in o rder to i so la te and examine one

par t i cu la r fo rm o f b r igandage . Fo r the aspec t o f ru ra l p ro tes t

movements , a mode l p roposed by Henry Landsberger w i l l be

used in an a t tempt to por t ray the ru ra l movements in Pa les t ine

in a b roader con tex t t han mere peasan t ag i t a t ion and

rebe l l i on , bu t ra ther as a dynamic fo rce fo r revo lu t ionary

change .

The Jewish par ts o f Pa les t ine were in tegra ted in to the Roman

Empi re and governed e i the r d i rec t l y as a p rov ince o r a t

va r ious t imes under the tu te lage o f P ro -Roman regen ts . A f te r

the Hasmonaean per iod in wh ich the Jews ru led the i r own

a f fa i r s as an independen t s ta te fo r a per iod o f one hundred

years , the Jew ish te r r i to r ies los t the i r i ndependence and

en te red in to a per iod o f po l i t i ca l , soc ia l , economic , re l ig ious

and cu l tu ra l i ns tab i l i t y and uncer ta in ty when, in 63 BCE

Pompey asser ted Roman hegemony in the Near Eas t in o rder

to ensure the secur i t y o f the Eas te rn f ron t ie rs . Wi th in Juda ism

i t se l f the in f luence o f He l len iza t ion was par t l y respons ib le fo r

ideo log ica l d iv i s ions be tween He l len ized Jews and those who

wanted to ma in ta in the i r ances t ra l ways . The resu l t was tha t

by the second temp le per iod , Juda ism had become d iv ided

a long ideo log ica l l i nes as severa l ma jo r sec ts fough t fo r

con t ro l over the na t iona l des t iny and exacerba ted the po l i t i ca l

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and re l ig ious con f l i c t un t i l t he f ina l des t ruc t ion o f the Temple

b rough t abou t the demise o f a l l the sec ts , ba r one ,

Phar i see ism, wh ich con t inued the t rad i t i on as the de f in i t i ve

fo rm o f Juda ism t i l l cu r ren t t imes . G iven the fac t tha t the re

was no separa t ion in anc ien t t imes be tween re l ig ion and

secu la r l i f e , the re l ig ious d imens ion p layed a ma jo r ro le in

focus ing Jewish sen t iments and mob i l i z ing the Jewish

peasan ts in to ac t ion in the face o f con t inu ing p rovoca t ions by

a success ion o f Roman governors .

Band i t ry was endemic in the anc ien t wor ld and was a cons tan t

p rob lem tha t the Roman Empi re had to con tend w i th (McMul len

1967 : 256) . The Roman response to the unres t in Pa les t ine

was based on Roman lega l concep ts and p rac t i ce and i t w i l l

be necessary to examine these in o rder to unders tand the

po l i t i ca l and lega l con tex t wh ich fo rmed the bas is to the

Roman response . L ikew ise , i t w i l l a l so be necessary to touch

upon the Jewish lega l unders tand ing and bas is o f dea l ing w i th

band i t r y .

1.4 SOURCES

1.4 .1 Josephus

The on ly source o f no te fo r the even ts lead ing up to and

inc lud ing the revo l t , a re the co l lec ted works o f Josephus who

was born in 37 CE to a Jewish a r i s toc ra t i c fami l y o f p r ies t l y

descen t (L i fe : 1 -6 ) . He seems to have been a p recoc ious

you th who had a love fo r lea rn ing and in te rp re ta t ion o f the

Jewish laws and who, accord ing to h is au tob iograph ica l

de ta i l s , had exper imented w i th the var ious s t reams o f Juda ism

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of tha t t ime and by the age o f n ine teen , had commi t ted h imse l f

to the Phar isa ic movement (L i fe : 7 -12) . Josephus exper ienced

a t f i r s t hand many o f the even ts and con f l i c t s tha t even tua l l y

cu lm ina ted in the an t i -Roman revo l t i n t he years 66-73 CE.

Indeed , he became an ac t i ve par t i c ipan t in the war as

commander o f the Jewish fo rces in Ga l i l ee . Josephus had a

ves ted in te res t i n the ou tcome o f the war bo th as a commi t ted

Jew on the one hand , bu t a lso as an ind iv idua l who was w i l l i ng

to be par t o f the w ider Roman Empi re and the Roman wor ld .

Josephus ’s works record the h is to ry o f Pa les t ine f rom the t ime

o f the Herods , the years o f the Roman governors , the Dead

Sea Scro l l s and the fo rmat ion o f Rabb in ic Juda ism, o f John

the Bap t i s t and Jesus (Ra jak 2002 : 1 ) . As Ra jak descr ibes i t :

“H is (Josephus ’s ) ca reer embod ies in a d is t inc t way the

p r inc ip le themes and con f l i c t s o f the Roman Midd le Eas t

dur ing th is per iod : the tens ion be tween loca l pa t r io t i sm and

the c la ims o f the imper ia l o rder , be tween na t i ve cu l tu re and

the a l lu re o f Graeco-Roman c i v i l i za t ion , be tween Semi t i c

languages and Greek , be tween p ragmat i c f l ex ib i l i t y and

commi t ted sec ta r ian ism, be tween c lass loya l t y and g roup

loya l t y ” (Ra jak 2002 : 1 ) .

1.4 .2 Josephus’s re l iab i l i ty as an h is tor ian

Josephus h imse l f l a id g rea t s to re in the p r inc ip le o f accuracy

and t ru th in the wr i t i ng o f h i s to ry . 4 No tw i ths tand ing th is , a

g rea t dea l o f scho la r l y research has taken p lace in o rder to

de te rmine whether Josephus ’s h is to r iog raph ica l p rac t i ces

4 These p r inc ip les a re recorded severa l t imes , mos t no tab ly a t L i fe 336-339 ; 357-367 ; The Jewish War 1 .1 -6 ; 5 .20 and in Ant iqu i t i es 1 .1 -4 ; 16 .183-187 ; 20 .154-156 ; A. Ap ion 1 .1 -56 .

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con fo rmed to h is lo f t y idea ls o f accura te ly and t ru th fu l l y

record ing h is to ry as he so a rden t l y c la imed (L i fe 36 -66) .

Accord ing to B i lde , the re a re two c lear schoo ls o f though t on

th i s i ssue : the c lass ica l ve rs ion , in wh ich he was cas t ‘as poor

an h is to r ian as he was a person and a Jew ’ (B i lde 1988 : 192) .

B i lde p rov ides a b r ie f summary o f the scho la rs who advoca ted

th i s v iew, mos t o f them f rom the la t te r end o f the n ine teen th

cen tu ry un t i l t he m idd le o f the twen t ie th , when new research

s ta r ted to emerge . Bes ides B i lde , more recen t au thors have

adop ted a more pos i t i ve v iew o f Josephus . 5

B i lde suppor ts the v iew tha t Josephus , wh i le g iv ing h is

sources a d is t inc t l y He l len is t i c f l avour , never the less app l ies

them to h is work w i th ‘ cau t ion ’ and p rec is ion . However , he has

a tendency to d ramat i ze h is s to r ies in o rder to p lace them in a

con tex t tha t w i l l be su i tab le to a Graeco-Roman aud ience

(B i lde 1988 : 196) . Accord ing to Josephus h imse l f , he used the

twen ty two books o f the B ib le as a source fo r the na t iona l

h is to ry o f the Jewish peop le (Cont ra Ap ion 1 .38 -44) , f rom the

t ime o f the c rea t ion to the Pers ian per iod and the F i rs t Book

o f Maccabees . The His to ry of N ico laus o f Damascus was an

impor tan t and ma jo r source fo r the per iod o f Herod ’s re ign , as

i s acknowledged by Josephus (Ant iqu i t i es 14:9 ; 104 and 16 :

183-186) . Josephus a lso used the los t His to ry o f S t rabo

ex tens ive ly , espec ia l l y in An t iqu i t i es (Ant iqu i t ies 14 : 35 -36 ;

5 Scho la rs , who ma in ta in a nega t i ve v iew o f the h is to r i ca l ve rac i t y o f Josephus ’s work , were as l i s ted by B i lde : O t to W, 1913 and 1916 ; Ho lscher G 1904 ; Von Des t inon 1896 he ld tha t Josephus was a copy is t o f anonymous works . Henge l , 1976 sugges ts tha t the va lue o f Josephus ’s work depended on the accuracy o f h i s sources . Fe ldman, 1975 c la imed tha t Josephus cou ld no t be re l ied on in mat te rs where he h imse l f was invo lved . Tak ing a more pos i t i ve l i ne on Josephus ’s ve rac i t y as an h is to r ian i s , B loch A 1968 ; Korach L 1895 ; Thackeray H ST. J 1929 ; Shu t t RJH 1961 and Cohen SJD 1979 .

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14:111-118) . Josephus a lso re l ied on h is own knowledge o f

even ts f rom a per iod rough ly a genera t ion o r so f rom h is own

b i r th in 37 CE (B i lde 1988 : 196) .

The two ma jo r h is to r i ca l works a re The Jewish War and

Ant iqu i t i es o f the Jews. The Jewish War was h is f i r s t ma jo r

work in wh ich he descr ibes the course even ts lead ing up to

the revo l t , the revo l t i t se l f and i t s a f te rmath . The An t iqu i t i es

was wr i t ten a f te rwards and i s a b road h is to ry o f the Jewish

peop le f rom ear l y beg inn ings to the ou tb reak o f the war in

66CE. L i fe was wr i t ten to rebu t c la ims by Jus tus o f T ibe r ius

who was c r i t i ca l o f the ro le Josephus p layed in the War and

dea ls ma in ly w i th the per iod 66 CE and 67 CE. L i fe ag rees in

b road ou t l i ne w i th the even ts in War , bu t the re a re ma jo r

d i f fe rences when i t comes to ce r ta in de ta i l s (Grabbe 1992 :

372 ) . Con t ra Ap ion , wh ich was wr i t ten a f te r Ant iqu i t i es , was

composed by Josephus to de fend Juda ism aga ins t remarks

made by Ap ion who was a Greek o ra to r f rom A lexandr ia .

Josephus i s a con ten t ious and d i f f i cu l t h i s to r ian to come to

te rms w i th , pa r t l y because o f the vary ing range o f v iews tha t

have fo r cen tu r ies raged over h is re l iab i l i t y as an h is to r ian as

we l l as t he fac t tha t he was an ac t i ve par t i c ipan t in the a f fa i r s

o f h i s day , a t a t ime o f g rea t upheava l and s t ress fo r the

Jews . He adop ted a c lea r po l i t i ca l s tandpo in t tha t , i n sp i te o f

the ons laugh ts aga ins t key be l ie fs o f the Jewish fa i th and

t rad i t i on , i t wou ld never the less have been fu t i l e to cha l lenge

the power o f the Roman Empi re in tha t the on ly ou tcome wou ld

have been the des t ruc t ion and dec imat ion o f the Jewish

peop le . As th ings tu rned ou t , he was r igh t o f course , bu t he

persona l l y moved on a f te r the ca tac lysmic even ts o f 73 CE, to

become an h is to r ian who t r ied to exp la in the Jewish po in t o f

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v iew. He became v i l i f i ed by co- re l ig ion is ts and some

commenta to rs as an apo log is t and p ropagand is t fo r the Roman

imper ia l cause . Whether the re i s mer i t i n tha t a rgument o r no t ,

w i l l no t be dea l t w i th in t he amb i t o f th i s s tudy . Never the less ,

the works o f Josephus a re the on ly de ta i led and

comprehens ive work on the per iod upon wh ich to base a s tudy

o f band i t r y in Pa les t ine o f tha t e ra , espec ia l l y because

Josephus b lamed band i t r y as a ma jo r cause fo r the

de te r io ra t ing re la t ionsh ip be tween Jews and be tween the

Roman es tab l i shment and as one o f the ma jo r causes fo r the

war .

1.4 .3 Other Sources

Jewish L i tera ture

Ph i lo was a He l len ized Jew who he ld an impor tan t pos i t i on in

the Jewish A lexandr ian commun i ty . He was chosen to head a

de lega t ion to the Emperor Ca l igu la in 39 C.E . in o rder to

p lead fo r the cause o f the Jew ish peop le who were be ing

persecu ted by the Greek popu lace o f A lexandr ia . In one o f h is

works , Gaium , he descr ibes the p lan by Ca l igu la to p lace a

s ta tue o f h imse l f i n the Temple in Je rusa lem (7 .3 .6 ) As such ,

he p rov ides ano ther co r roba to ry source to th i s inc iden t

bes ides tha t descr ibed by Josephus (Wa r 2 : 184-203 ;

Ant iqu i t i es . 18 : 2 -9 ; 261-309) .

Other Jew ish wr i t i ngs o f th i s per iod p robab ly da te to the

per iod a f te r the des t ruc t ion o f Je rusa lem and do no t dea l

d i rec t l y w i th h is to r i ca l even ts o f the e ra and i t s re levance l i es

more in i t s impor tance to Jew ish re l ig ious though t (Grabbe

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1992: 375) . I t i s d i f f i cu l t to accura te ly da te these tex ts s ince

many surv ive as cop ies made by Chr i s t ians in languages o ther

than the o r ig ina l .

New Testament L i tera ture

Bo th the Gospe ls and the Ac ts o f the Apos t les a re impor tan t

fo r th row ing some add i t iona l l i gh t on Jew ish l i f e and

ins t i tu t ions o f the t ime , bu t need to be t rea ted cau t ious ly as

an h is to r i ca l source because they were p resumab ly composed

a f te r 70 C.E . and re f lec t a c lear an t ipa thy towards the Jews

and o ther enemies , bu t i t s ma in purpose i s tha t as a

theo log ica l body o f work ded ica ted to Chr i s t ian doc t r ine and

fa i th (Grabbe 1992 : 376) .

Graeco-Roman wr i ters

Tac i tus , mos t o f whose work i s no longer ex tan t , re fe rs on ly

b r ie f l y to the Jews . However , the por t ions tha t have been los t

a re known to us th rough the work o f Cass ius D io . The va lue o f

h is work i s no t so much as a record o f Jew ish h is to ry , bu t

more as a ma jo r source o f Roman h is to ry . Cass ius D io , mos t

o f whose work i s s t i l l ex tan t dea ls ex tens ive ly w i th the

Herod ian per iod . S t rabo , as we have seen , was in t u rn a ma jo r

source fo r Josephus . There a re o thers o f course , such as L ivy ,

P lu ta rch , Sue ton ius and App ian , whose in f luence i s

cons iderab ly less as h is to r ians o f Jew ish h is to ry and l i f e , bu t

a re never the less impor tan t as Graeco-Roman wr i te rs and

commenta to rs in the i r own r igh t .

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Archaeology

P r io r to the es tab l i shment o f the S ta te o f I s rae l i n 1948 , l i t t l e

e f fo r t wen t in to us ing a rchaeo logy as a means to va l ida t ing

Josephus ’s re l iab i l i t y as an h is to r ian . As more and more

a rchaeo log ica l exped i t i ons uncovered impor tan t anc ien t s i tes

in I s rae l and the ne ighbour ing te r r i to r ies , a re -eva lua t ion

regard ing the works o f Josephus occur red and th is fu r ther

se rved to con f i rm h is re l iab i l i t y as an h is to r ian o f f i r s t -cen tu ry

even ts in Pa les t ine (B i lde 1988 : 18 ; 199) . Excava t ions a t

Masada , Caesarea , Je r i cho and Jerusa lem, espec ia l l y the

Temple a rea and Herod ’s pa lace , con f i rmed many o f the

de ta i l s con ta ined in Josephus ’s works . In suppor t o f many o f

these conc lus ions a re numerous papyro log ica l rema ins , o f

wh ich the ev idence ex t rac ted f rom the caves o f Qumran

rema ins the mos t v i v id and bes t a t tes ted example .

1 .5 THE STATE OF THE RESEARCH

Thomas Grunewa ld in Band i t s in the Roman Empi re : My th and

Rea l i t y p rov ides a use fu l synops is o f the l i t e ra tu re and

research on band i t r y w i th in the Roman Empi re inc lud ing some

o f those wh ich occur red in Judea (Grunewa ld 2004 , 9 -13) . The

s tudy o f band i t r y in the anc ien t wor ld on ly came in to i t s own

as a f i e ld o f scho la r l y endeavou r a f te r the pub l i ca t ion o f R

McMul len ’s work , Enemies o f the Roman Order i n 1966 . He

dea ls w i th b r igandage in a b r ie f bu t impor tan t append ix in

wh ich he de f ines what the Romans unders tood by the te rm

band i t ( l a t ro ) . Un t i l then mos t o f the l i t e ra tu re on Roman

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h is to ry dea l t w i th band i t r y as no th ing more than random

co l lec t ions o f h i s to r i ca l mate r ia l and no t as a sub jec t wor thy

o f ana lys is and research in i t s own r igh t (Grunewa ld 2004 : 9 ) .

In the 1950 ’s t he soc ia l sc iences s ta r ted to pay ser ious

a t ten t ion to the na tu re o f peasan t soc ie t ies (Har land 2002 ,

511) .

McMul len however , was the f i r s t to dea l w i th how the Romans

regarded band i t s in the i r t ime and space , no t mere ly as

common c r im ina ls , bu t as ind iv idua ls and g roups who posed a

cons tan t th rea t to the po l i t i ca l we l l -be ing and secur i t y o f the

Roman s ta te (McMul len 1967 : 255 -68) . The s tudy o f band i t r y

in an t iqu i t y came in to i t s own as a leg i t ima te f i e ld o f research

there fo re on ly in the 1960 ’s . Marx is t h i s to r ians and soc ia l

sc ien t i s ts , no t su rp r i s ing ly , used d ia lec t i ca l mate r ia l i sm in an

a t tempt to in te rp re t band i t r y as a p rocess o f con t inuous c lass

con f l i c t be tween d i f fe ren t soc ia l c lasses .

E r i c Hobsbawm p ioneered the concep t o f the soc ia l band i t i n

h is to ry by d raw ing la rge ly on examples o f robber bands in the

modern e ra (Hobsbawm E: 1959 & 1969) . Desp i te th i s , h i s

work has had a s ign i f i can t impac t on subsequent s tud ies o f

band i t r y in an t iqu i t y , and in par t i cu la r , on the h is to ry o f

band i t r y o f f i r s t cen tu ry Pa les t ine . Accord ing to Hobsbawm,

soc ia l band i t s emanated f rom agra r ian soc ie t ies and the i r ac ts

o f c r im ina l i t y and v io lence were in response to soc io -economic

mot i va t ions and represen ted a fo rm o f i nd iv idua l o r m inor i t y

p ro tes t aga ins t the perce ived perpe t ra to rs o f the i r m is fo r tune .

R ichard Hors ley in a number o f semina l works on the sub jec t

o f the Jew ish band i t s and the ro le they p layed in the even ts

lead ing up to and dur ing the revo l t c la imed tha t the Jewish

band i ts con fo rmed nea t l y to the mode l o f soc ia l band i t r y as

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descr ibed by Hobsbawm. Because o f the con t r ibu t ion o f

Hobsbawm to the deba te on band i t s and the fac t tha t h is i s

one o f the on ly comple te soc io log ica l mode ls aga ins t wh ich a

t ype o f band i t ry can be measured and assessed , a spec i f i c

sec t ion devo ted to Hobsbawm’s mode l o f soc ia l band i t r y w i l l

fo l l ow.

However , the works by Hobsbawm insp i red a number o f c r i t i ca l

s tud ies , some o f wh ich u l t ima te ly re jec ted the no t ion o f the

soc ia l band i t as a par t icu la r soc ia l t ype . Foremos t , a re two

a r t i c les by Bren t Shaw (Shaw B.D. 1984 & 1993) . I n the

fo rmer , Shaw f i r s t dea ls w i th the i ssue o f the ub iqu i t y o f

band i t r y in the Roman Empi re and then ana lyzes who became

band i t s . He comes to the conc lus ion tha t band i t s were no t

on ly endemic bu t a lso an in tegra l pa r t o f Roman soc ie ty

th roughou t the Empi re tha t a t c r i t i ca l t imes th rea tened the

secur i t y o f the s ta te . An ton van Hoof f i n “Anc ien t Robbers ”

con t r ibu ted s ign i f i can t l y to the deba te on band i ts by

a t tempt ing to unders tand how the Romans saw and re la ted to

l a t rones (band i t s ) and l a t roc in ia (band i t r y ) (Van Hoof f 1988 :

105-124) . Grunewa ld on the o ther hand has pu t fo rward an

a l te rna t i ve hypo thes is on the soc ia l ro le o f the band i t .

Essen t ia l l y , he wr i tes , the band i t ex is ted on ly as a

con temporary percep t ion o f the f igu re o f the l a t ro and th is i s

in essence what cons t i tu tes the band i t as a soc ia l t ype . The

l a t ro and la t roc in ium i s the re fo re mere ly ‘an a r te fac t o f l i t e ra ry

imag ina t ion ’ (Grunewa ld 2002 :13) .

Th is then cons t i tu tes a b r ie f su rvey o f the lead ing modern

scho la rs who have con t r ibu ted to the s tudy o f band i t r y in the

anc ien t wor ld and who have impac ted in some way , to a

g rea te r o r lesser degree , on the f ie ld o f s tud ies in to Jewish

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band i t r y , pa r t i cu la r l y in the 60 years o r so tha t l ed up to the

revo l t aga ins t Roman domina t ion in 66 CE. The theory o f

soc ia l band i t r y deve loped by Hobsbawm in par t i cu la r p rov ided

a d i f fe ren t approach to ana lyz ing the ind iv idua ls and g roups

tha t p layed such an impor tan t par t i n con t r ibu t ing towards the

po l i t i ca l un res t and mayhem, so v iv id l y descr ibed by

Josephus . D id Jewish band i ts con fo rm to the mode l o f soc ia l

band i t ry? Cou ld they r igh t fu l l y be descr ibed as the on ly known

ins tance o f soc ia l band i t s who t rans fo rmed themse lves in to

revo lu t ionar ies?

1 .6 Hobsbawm And Socia l Bandi ts Er ic Hobsbawm, a Br i t i sh soc ia l h i s to r ian , was the f i r s t

scho la r to de f ine and exp la in soc ia l band i t r y as a spec ia l fo rm

o f p r im i t i ve p ro tes t and a phenomenon in i t s own r igh t . The

resu l t was the fo rmu la t ion o f a d is t inc t i ve soc io log ica l mode l

aga ins t wh ich anc ien t and modern rebe l l i ons cou ld be

compared and ana lyzed in o rder to exp la in some o f the

charac te r i s t i cs o f soc io -po l i t i ca l popu la r p ro tes t . He a t tempts

to p rov ide a c lear d is t inc t ion be tween the ac t i v i t i es o f mere

robber -c r im ina ls and soc ia l band i t s whom he ca tegor i zes as a

separa te soc io log ica l phenomenon a r i s ing as a resu l t o f

c lea r l y de f ined h is to r i ca l and soc io -economic c i r cumstances .

Hobsbawm prov ides a de f in i t i on o f soc ia l band i t r y tha t

desc r ibes i t as a un ive rsa l and unchang ing phenomenon, tha t

amounts to l i t t l e more than peasan t p ro tes t aga ins t oppress ion

and pover ty ; i t i s a fo rm o f vengeance aga ins t the r i ch and

o ther oppressors ; a vague d ream o f r igh t ing the wrongs o f the

p resen t and a re tu rn to a be t te r fo rm o f l i f e roo ted in some

myth ica l pas t (Hobsbawm 1959 : 5 )

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In th i s theory , Hobsbawm c i tes tha t soc ia l band i t r y a rose as a

fo rm o f p re -po l i t i ca l p ro tes t by agra r ian based peasan ts as

resu l t o f the oppress ive un jus t , economic and soc ia l

cond i t ions they endured . They were inex t r i cab ly l i nked to the

commun i t ies f rom wh ich they o r ig ina ted and were suppor ted

by the i r k ins fo lk who respec ted and admi red the i r ac t i v i t i es

and were thus no t regarded as common c r im ina ls . They

opera ted in sma l l gangs o f no more than twen ty ind iv idua ls .

They typ ica l l y had no p rogramme fo r soc ia l re fo rm and had no

in te res t i n the v io len t over th row o f the ru l ing government , bu t

ac ted mere ly to b r ing abou t a re tu rn to the t rad i t i ona l way o f

l i f e o f the peasan t in wh ich soc ia l and economic jus t i ce

p reva i led . Hobsbawm saw soc ia l band i t ry as par t o f a p rocess ,

a con t inuum wh ich a t some la te r s tage in the h is to r i ca l

p rocess became revo lu t ionary .

1 .7 HOBSBAWM: AN ANALYSIS OF THE MODEL

E r i c Hobsbawm prov ides a conceptua l mode l fo r band i t r y tha t

sugges ts a sub- type o f band i t fo r wh ich he gave the te rm

‘soc ia l band i t s . ’ These a re made up o f g roups o f peasan ts

f rom ma in ly remote ru ra l se t t l ements who engage in

b r igandage as a fo rm o f p r im i t i ve rebe l l i on aga ins t some k ind

o f po l i t i ca l , economic o r soc ia l i n jus t i ce .

Accord ing to the de f in i t i on o f the mode l , soc ia l band i t r y i s :

• A un ive rsa l and unchang ing phenomenon

• I t i s a p r im i t i ve fo rm o f o rgan ized soc ia l p ro tes t

• They a re regarded as c r im ina ls by the s t ruc tu res o f

au thor i t y , bu t no t by the i r l oca l k ins fo lk

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• They a re seen as avengers and heroes to the i r fe l l ow

peasan ts

• They a re peasan t re fo rmers , no t revo lu t ionar ies ,

a l though they cou ld become a l l i ed w i th those who a re

de te rmined to over th row the ex is t i ng o rder .

The focus o f Hobsbawm’s mode l i s la rge ly descr ip t i ve in tha t

he dea ls p r imar i l y w i th the reasons fo r the sp read o f band i t r y

in p r im i t i ve , p re - indus t r ia l commun i t ies . Hobsbawm sugges ts

tha t soc ia l band i t r y i s a fo rm o f p r im i t i ve p ro tes t conduc ted

ma in ly by the peasan ts and o ther ru ra l desperados , bu t he

dea ls on ly super f i c ia l l y w i th the wor ld o f the peasan ts and the

la rger soc ie t ies they a re a par t o f . I t the re fo re becomes

d i f f i cu l t to con tex tua l i ze the peasan t as a band i t i n re la t ion to

the la rger p rob lems o f a par t i cu la r soc ie ty . For ins tance ,

Hobsbawm uses the Co lomb ian s t rugg le o f the m id - twen t ie th

cen tu ry by ind igenous g roups fo r independence ex tens ive ly ,

bu t on ly as a means to descr ibe par t i cu la r k inds o f band i t s

and band i t ac t ion in o rder to suppor t h i s mode l . The reader

the re fo re lea rns tha t the ind igenous popu la t ion o f Co lomb ia

rebe l led in some fo rm o r ano ther , bu t canno t con tex tua l i ze

the i r ac t i v i t i es in re la t ion to the w ider po l i t i ca l s i tua t ion o f tha t

t ime. Th is v iew i s suppor ted by B lok , who s ta tes tha t band i t r y

o f any k ind canno t be unders tood w i thou t g i v ing due

cons idera t ion to the la rger soc ie ty in wh ich they ex is ted and

the pecu l ia r i t i es o f the ou ts ide wor ld tha t a f fec ted them (B lok ,

1974 : 497-8 ) . The p ic tu re tha t emerges there fo re in bo th

Pr imi t i ve Rebe ls and Band i ts i s one in wh ich i t i s d i f f i cu l t t o

con tex tua l i ze the soc ia l , po l i t i ca l and economic cond i t ions as

fac to rs wh ich were the ma jo r causes fo r the sp read o f band i t r y

in the anc ien t wor ld .

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There a re th ree aspec ts o f Hobsbawm’s work wh ich a re

p rob lemat i c . The f i r s t dea ls w i th the p remise tha t soc ia l

band i t r y i s a phenomenon o f t rad i t i ona l peasan t soc ie t ies . The

p rob lem is tha t Hobsbawm does no t p resen t a de f in i t i on o r

desc r ip t ion o f wha t cons t i tu tes ‘ the peasan t ry ’ o r wha t

cons t i tu tes a ‘ t rad i t i ona l wor ld ’ i n wh ich such peasan ts l i ved .

Hobsbawm app l ies a b lanke t descr ip t ion o f peasan ts to a l l the

s i tua t ions o f band i t r y , soc ia l o r o therw ise , w i th no h is to r i ca l -

con tex tua l background o r a l l ow ing fo r ch rono log ica l

d i f fe rences .

T ry ing to de f ine ‘peasan t ry ’ i s d i f f i cu l t and con fus ing even

among modern au thors who a re exper ts in the f i e ld

(Landsberger 1974 : 6 -7 ) . On the one hand , peasan ts cou ld be

de f ined as persons who own land , a re lega l l y subord ina te and

a re cu l tu ra l l y d is t inc t i ve (Moore 1996 ; 111) ; o r they cou ld be

c lassed as ru ra l cu l t i va to rs who a re exp lo i ted because they do

no t con t ro l the means o f p roduc t ion , bu t a re dependent on

o thers to d ispose o f su rp lus p roduc t ion (Wo l f 1966 :3 ) . O thers

fo r example have s t ressed the cu l tu ra l d imens ion as the

de f in ing e lement o f peasan t ry . 6 Peasan ts a re there fo re

de f inab ly d is t inc t as a soc ia l g roup , bu t may be au tonomous

on the one hand as a soc ia l en t i t y , bu t on the o ther a lso fo rm

par t o f a la rger soc ie ta l con tex t . Landsberger ca l l s th i s t he

‘b lu r r ing a t the edges ’ (Landsberger 1974 : 8 ) . Ano ther

d i f f i cu l t y w i th Hobsbawm is the c la im tha t soc ia l band i t r y

a rose on ly in p re -cap i ta l i s t and p re - indus t r ia l economic

env i ronments (Hobsbawm 1969:18) ; ye t he does no t con t r ibu te

6 O ther scho la rs who have fo l lowed th is t rend : Rober t Red f ie ld , ‘The Fo lk Soc ie ty , ’ Amer ican Journa l o f Soc io logy , vo l . L I I (1947) , 293-308 ; G.M. Fos te r , ‘Peasan t Soc ie ty and the Image o f the L im i ted Good, ’ Amer ican An th ropo log is t , vo l . 67 (1965) , pp . 293-315 ; A .L . K roeber , Anthropo logy , New York , 1948 .

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any a rgument as to why th is shou ld be the case , no r can he

exp la in the incons is tenc ies in th i s a rgument when he p rov ides

cop ious examples o f soc ia l band i t r y in cap i ta l i s t soc ie t ies ,

such as in twen t ie th cen tu ry I ta l y and Co lomb ia (O ’Ma l ley

1979 : 490-491) . Fo l low ing Hobsbawm’s a rgument , i t wou ld

mean tha t soc ia l band i t r y can on ly ex is t i n a soc ia l s t ruc tu re

tha t i s re la t i ve ly d isconnec ted and i so la ted f rom the w ider

economic and soc ia l ne tworks tha t ex is ted even in a rcha ic

soc ie t ies . O ’Ma l ley p roposes tha t soc ia l band i t r y cou ld ex is t i n

s i tua t ions where there i s no ‘ t rad i t i ona l peasan t ry nexus , bu t

more so where there i s ev idence o f a ‘ ch ron ic c lass s t rugg le ’

based on a shared sense o f con f l i c t and the ‘absence o f

e f fec t i ve ins t i tu t iona l i zed po l i t i ca l o rgan iza t ion o f the d i rec t

p roducers ’ fo r the a t ta inment o f the i r common ly sough t

ends ’ (O ’Ma l ley 1979 : 494) .

A th i rd p rob lem w i th Hobsbawm’s mode l i s tha t he based the

concep t o f soc ia l band i t r y on my th ica l charac te rs who

p resumab ly l i ved up to the idea l o f the Rob in Hood type o f

band i t , tha t i s , p ro tec t ing the poor and iden t i f y ing w i th the i r

s t rugg le aga ins t oppress ion and in jus t i ce .

‘…in many soc ie t ies i t i s regarded as such by the

poor , who consequent l y p ro tec t the band i t , regard

h im as the i r champion , idea l i ze h im, and tu rn h im

in to a my th : Rob in Hood in Eng land , Janos ik in

Po land and S lovak ia , D iego Cor r ien tes in Anda lus ia ,

who a re a l l p robab ly rea l f i gu res thus t ransmuted . In

re tu rn , the band i t h imse l f t r i es to l i ve up to h is ro le

even when he i s no t h imse l f a consc ious soc ia l

rebe l….However , someth ing l i ke an idea l t ype o f

soc ia l band i t r y ex is ts , and th is i s wha t I p ropose to

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d iscuss , even though few band i t s o f recorded

h is to ry , as d is t inc t f rom legend , co r respond

comple te ly to i t ’ (Hobsbawm 1959 : 13)

In h is la te r work , ‘Band i t s ’ , Hobsbawm dea ls in more de ta i l

w i th my th ica l band i t charac te rs f rom Aus t ra l ia , Ch ina , Turkey ,

As ia and Sou th Amer ica . In th i s work , as in the fo rmer ,

Hobsbawm s t resses tha t soc ia l band i t s a re necessary

c rea t ions by the peasan t ry fo r a f i gh te r who w i l l ded ica te h is

l i f e to f i gh t ing the i r cause aga ins t i n jus t i ce : ‘ t hey have a need

fo r h im, fo r he represen ts jus t i ce ’ (Hobsbawm 1969 : 13) .

Th is aspec t o f Hobsbawm mode l has come in fo r some harsh

c r i t i c i sm f rom a number o f scho la rs in the f ie ld . One o f these

i s An ton B lok , who wro te tha t ve ry few band i t s were in fac t

genu ine f igu reso f soc ia l p ro tes t . He cons idered band i t my ths

to be f lawed as a method o f exp la in ing the soc ia l band i t as an

express ion o f peasan t soc ia l p ro tes t . B lok ’s own researches

amongs t the Maf ia o f S ic i l y led h im to conc lude tha t the Rob in

Hood- l i ke band i t s were ’ v io len t , an t i soc ia l men who p reyed on

peasan ts whose in te res ts they were supposed to p ro tec t ’ (B lok

1972 : 496) . My ths a re too unre l iab le to use as ev idence o f the

h is to r i ca l soc ia l rea l i t y o f an even t o r an h is to r i ca l pe r iod

(B lok 1972 : 502) . I t i s wor th no t ing Hobsbawm’s reac t ion to

B lok ’s asser t ions . He sa id tha t wh i le he accep ted the fac t tha t

my th i s an unre l iab le measure o f soc ia l r ea l i t y as many o f the

band i ts may no t have been consc ious o f themse lves as soc ia l

p ro tes te rs , wha t was more impor tan t was what the peasan ts

bel ieved h im to be do ing (Hobsbawm 1972 : 503-5 ) .

Bren t Shaw agreed w i th B lok ’s a rgument and wro te tha t

Hobsbawm had based h is approach la rge ly on percep t ions by

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t he peasan t ry as to who bes t rep resen ted the i r i n te res ts .

Percep t ions d i f fe r and a re re la t i ve to who i s mak ing a c la im

fo r o r aga ins t a band i t cause . The fo l low ing quo te f rom the

second cen tu ry phys ic ian , Ga len , nea t l y i l l us t ra tes the

d i lemma peasan t commun i t ies cou ld f i nd themse lves in :

“On ano ther occas ion we saw the ske le ton o f a

band i t l y ing on r i s ing g round by the roads ide . He

had been k i l l ed by some t rave l le r repe l l i ng h is

a t tack . None o f the loca l i nhab i tan ts wou ld bury h im,

bu t in the i r ha t red o f h im were g lad enough to see

h is body consumed by the b i rds wh ich , in a coup le o f

days , a te h is f l esh , leav ing the ske le ton as i f fo r a

med ica l examina t ion . ” 7

I f pe rcep t ions d i f fe r , then how is i t poss ib le fo r the h is to r ian

to choose a ve rs ion tha t accura te ly dep ic ts the soc ia l rea l i t y?

Shaw con t inues tha t the p rob lem w i th re ly ing on myth as a

fo rm o f ev idence i s tha t i t even tua l l y becomes rea l i t y and , as

used by Hobsbawm, i t i s f l awed as a methodo logy , as the re i s

no c lea r cu t separa t ion be tween the my th and fac t . In o ther

words , a t wh ich po in t i s i t my th and when i s i t fac tua l? I t

wou ld the re fo re mean tha t i t i s the percep tua l re la t ionsh ip tha t

d i f fe ren t ia tes be tween the nob le band i t and the c r im ina l (Shaw

1984 : fn .4 -5 ) .

An oppos i te conc lus ion i s d rawn by Cheah Boon Kheng who

researched the soc ia l p ro tes t movements tha t took p lace in

the Ma lays ian s ta te o f Kedah be tween 1915 and 1920 . In th i s

s tudy he used Hobsbawm’s p remise tha t peasan t my ths a re a

7 Ga len , On Anatomica l P rocedures , 1 .2 (Kuhn , i i , 221-2 ) , t rans . C . S inger , Ox fo rd , 1956

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re f lec t ion o f the h is to r i ca l rea l i t y o f soc ia l band i t r y . He based

h is s tudy on a band i t ca l led Nayan b in Deran i who became a

genu ine peasan t band i t . Nayan became g lo r i f i ed as a Ma lay

fo lk hero , and accord ing to Kheng , demons t ra ted how cer ta in

economic and soc ia l cond i t ions gave r i se to band i t ry and

became durab le symbo ls o f peasan t soc ia l p ro tes t . The

conc lus ions he came to were tha t Hobsbawm was cor rec t i n

c la im ing tha t soc ia l band i t ry i s a un iversa l phenomenon.

However , i t i s on ly par t ia l l y t rue tha t soc ia l band i t s ac tua l l y

l i ved up to the i r l egends when measured aga ins t the h is to r i ca l

rea l i t y . Ned Ke l l y , Jesse James, Pancho V i l l a appear to be

examples o f such soc ia l band i t s whose h is to r i ca l rea l i t y

approx imated the myths bu i l t up a round the i r ca reers as

band i t s . In numerous o ther cases , such as tha t o f Sa lva to re

G iu l iano in I ta l y and Lampiao f rom Braz i l to ment ion bu t a few,

i l l us t ra ted tha t the under l y ing assumpt ions o f Hobsbawm’s

thes is i s f l awed (Cheah Boon Kheng 1985 : 1 -51) .

1.8 RICHARD HORSLEY AND JEWISH SOCIAL BANDITS The cen tu ry lead ing up to the Jewish revo l t i n 66 CE was a

per iod o f g rea t upheava l and change in many ways fo r the

Jewish peop le , i ndeed as i t was fo r the reg ion as a who le . As

in many o ther par ts o f the Roman Empi re , l a t roc in ium

(band i t r y ) was an endemic fea tu re o f da i l y l i f e . T ry ing to come

to te rms w i th the exac t na tu re and type o f band i t ac t i v i t y i s

comp lex and po ten t ia l l y con fus ing , tak ing in to accoun t too the

cau t ion by wh ich Josephus ’s t rea tment o f the sub jec t needs to

be approached .

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Richard Hors ley , in a number o f s tud ies has sugges ted tha t

the “Jew ish revo l t aga ins t Roman domina t ion may be the mos t

v i v id and bes t a t tes ted example f rom an t iqu i t y o f a ma jo r

peasan t revo l t p receded and par t l y l ed by b r igands” (Hors ley

and Hanson 1999 : 77) . I t i s Hors ley ’s v iew tha t a l l t he

inc iden ts o f b r igandage f rom approx imate ly the 150 years

be fo re the ou tb reak o f the revo l t pe r se , a re per fec t examples

o f soc ia l band i t r y as de f ined by the mode l dev ised by Er i c

Hobsbawm.

Fur ther in th i s work , I sha l l dea l i n more de ta i l w i t h Hors ley ’s

(and par t l y Hanson ’s ) v iews on how ind iv idua l band i t s and

band i t g roups f i t ted in to the scheme o f soc ia l band i t r y .

However , i t i s per t inen t to no te tha t Hors ley does no t p ropose

a l te rna t i ve mode ls o r theor ies as to how b r igands became

soc ia l band i t s , beyond the reasons pos i ted by Hobsbawm. I t i s

on ly by c loser inves t iga t ion o f Josephus ’s mot i ves and a

de ta i led examina t ion o f some o f the band i t s tha t Hors ley

be l ieves were typ ica l soc ia l band i t s , coup led w i th a

soc io log ica l ana lys is o f s im i la r t ypes o f band i t s and the i r

ac t i v i t i es f rom o ther per iods w i l l i t be poss ib le to compare the

Jewish band i t s f rom the f i r s t cen tu ry to the mode l o f soc ia l

band i t r y and thereby re fu te Hors ley ’s somewhat (w i th respec t )

has ty assumpt ion tha t a l l the Jew ish band i t s o f f i r s t cen tu ry

Pa les t ine c lose ly resembled Hobsbawm’s mode l .

1 .9 LANDSBERGER AND RURAL PROTEST MOVEMENTS

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Th is work w i l l endeavour to show tha t band i t ry became a by -

p roduc t o f a more comprehens ive movement o f p ro tes t , by

wh ich the peasan ts and the poor o f Pa les t ine engaged f rom

the dea th o f Herod onwards in a s t rugg le fo r j us t i ce and

even tua l l y f reedom f rom fo re ign domina t ion . Landsberger

p rov ides a rguab ly the mos t su i t ab le f ramework by wh ich the

ru ra l movements in Pa les t ine can be p laced in to a b roader

con tex t than mere peasan t ag i ta t ion and rebe l l i on and shown

to be ra ther as a dynamic fo r revo lu t ionary change .

Landsberger and o thers (Landsberger H .A . 1974) have app l ied

a va r ie ty o f soc io log ica l too ls to cons t ruc t an ana ly t i ca l

f ramework by wh ich ru ra l p ro tes t movements by peasan ts can

be ana lyzed and exp la ined . What i s in te res t ing i s t ha t

a l though the f ramework and methodo logy p roposed by

Landsberger et a l , was deve loped a round med ieva l and

modern no t ions o f peasan t ry and p ro tes t movements , the re

a re , in my op in ion , some charac te r i s t i cs tha t a re s ta r t l i ng ly

app l i cab le to ru ra l p ro tes t movements and revo l t s in ce r ta in

cases f rom the anc ien t wor ld and wh ich may he lp to

unders tand how w idespread d issa t i s fac t ion and enmi ty in the

coun t rys ide was ab le to sus ta in i t se l f fo r such a long per iod o f

t ime , and to even tua l l y coa lesce in to a revo lu t ionary

movement .

As a po in t o f depar tu re , i t w i l l be necessary to de f ine exac t l y

who i s re fe r red to by the te rm ‘peasan t ’ . Peasan t unres t has

been con t inuous in bo th space and t ime and has been

charac te r i s t i ca l l y common ac ross a w ide range o f ru ra l

soc ie t ies , bo th anc ien t and modern . How exac t l y d id band i t r y ,

such as i t ex is ted , f i t i n w i th peasan t p ro tes t and unres t? Was

i t a beg inn ing phase , and a t wha t po in t d id i t s l im i ted goa ls f i t

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i n w i th the w ider ob jec t i ves o f a movement? Er i c Wo l f c la ims

tha t i t i s imposs ib le to de f ine peasan t ry w i th exac t p rec is ion

(Wo l f 1974 : 7 ) . Landsberger agrees and goes fu r ther by

s ta t ing tha t the re i s too much ‘b lu r r ing ’ a t the edges when

t ry ing to p lace human be ings in to spec i f i c ca tegor ies . I s

someone in o r ou t? I s he a peasan t o r no t? He p roposes

ra ther to de f ine ru ra l cu l t i va to rs ( the one cer ta in ty everyone

can agree on) by means o f a b roader mode l tha t dea ls w i th a

number o f d imens ions (Landsberger 1974 : 8 -18) . The two mos t

impor tan t de f in ing c r i te r ia fo r peasan t ry a re po l i t i ca l and

economic d imens ions . In o rder to a r r i ve a t a more accura te

de f in i t i on , Landsberger p roposes tha t these two be measured

aga ins t t h ree add i t i ona l sub-d imens ions : how much economic

and po l i t i ca l con t ro ls a re exerc ised over the land and cap i ta l ;

how much con t ro l over t rans fo rming the land (e .g . dec id ing

what to g row and when) ; and what leve l o f persona l and g roup

secur i t y ex is ts . F in ley a lso speaks o f a ‘peasan t spec t rum’ in

wh ich the de f in ing c r i te r ion i s some fo rm o f a t i e to the land ,

be i t as a peasan t w i th a landho ld ing (co lon i ) , bu t exc lud ing

the pas to ra l i s ts (F in ley 1999 : 104 -5 ) . Th is schema a l lows fo r a

fa r b roader and more inc lus ive approach as to who fa l l s w i th in

the ca tegory o f ru ra l cu l t i va to r , o r no t .

L i ke the res t o f the Roman Empi re , the peasan t ry in Pa les t ine

inc luded sma l l l andowners who surv ived by subs is tence

fa rming , tenan ts who l i ved and worked the land owned by

wea l thy landowners and wage laboure rs who worked the fa rms

o f the wea l thy fo r a wage o r were compe l led to tu rn to

band i t ry when there was no work ava i lab le . (Har land 2002 :

515) . A l l th ree ca tegor ies o f peasan t in Pa les t ine in the f i r s t

cen tu ry the re fo re fa l l i n to Landsberger ’ s and F in ley ’s

de f in i t i on w i th the land own ing peasan t hav ing re la t i ve ly more

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secur i t y and the wage laboure r hav ing none , bu t s t i l l be ing

par t o f the ‘peasan t spec t rum’ iden t i f i ed as such by F in ley .

Th is mode l a lso exc ludes pas to ra l i s ts , the shepherds who

roamed be tween g raz ing a reas and were marg ina l i zed because

o f the i r p ro fess ion , bu t who were par t o f l i f e in the

coun t rys ide . We can a lso assume tha t the re was an e lement o f

mob i l i t y be tween the d i f fe ren t t ypes o f peasan ts in wh ich

landowners became tenan ts on fa rms o r worse , wage

laboure rs . Some became unemployed and roamed the

coun t rys ide in search fo r a means o f su rv iva l , w i th some

jo in ing up w i th b r igand bands . Na tu ra l d i sas te rs such as

d rough ts wou ld have added to the numbers o f despera te

peop le who tu rned to b r igandage and c r im ina l i t y . McMul len

desc r ibes cond i t i ons in the Empi re dur ing the four th cen tu ry ,

“ . . .And i t seems l i ke ly , t oo , tha t soc ia l mob i l i t y i n a

b road sense no t on ly took on a p redominan t l y ‘an t i ’

charac te r bu t a lso inc reased abso lu te ly . Many who

changed the i r p lace in l i f e became br igands – jus t

how many we canno t say , bu t peace in I saur ia , fo r

example , more o r less van ished , and t rave l was made

imposs ib le in Thrace and in par ts o f I ta l y in the las t

quar te r o f the fou r th cen tu ry ” (McMul len 1967 : 200) .

Turn ing once aga in to Landsberger ’ s schema, and w i thou t

engag ing w i th re levan t economic da ta , wh ich anyway doesn ’ t

ex is t , one can p ropose tha t the re la t i ve s ta tus o f the peasan t

popu la t ion ( in the b roades t sense) , was cha l lenged by

economic and po l i t i ca l even ts beyond the i r con t ro l . Those

g roups who had exper ienced rea l l osses in the remembered

pas t and the cons tan t th rea t o f con t inued and uncon t ro l lab le

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l oss in the p resen t and in to the fu tu re were mot i va ted to

par t i c ipa te in despera te measures (Landsberger 1974 : 18) .

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CHAPTER 2

BANDITS IN THE ROMAN WORLD 2 .1 THE LEGAL AND POLIT ICAL BACKGROUND: ROME

Shaw has acknowledged the comp lex i t y o f d i s t ingu ish ing

soc ia l band i t s f rom band i ts in the genera l sense in h is s tudy

on Band i ts in the Roman Empi re and p roposes an approach

tha t w i l l f i r s t examine band i t r y per se , as a genera l

phenomenon, be fo re a t tempt ing to dea l w i th the i ssue o f

soc ia l band i t r y (Shaw 1984 : 1 -5 ) .

I t was ax iomat i c o f the anc ien t wor ld tha t band i t s were never

regarded as s imp ly common c r im ina ls , bu t were seen as

ou t laws , bo th f igu ra t i ve ly and l i t e ra l l y , i n tha t they were

p laced in a pos i t i on ou ts ide o f t he law, as i t ex is ted . The

band i t became a ‘non-person , ’ tha t i s one who d id no t have

recourse to the norma l p ro tec t ions o f the law, bu t were

g rouped toge ther w i th s laves and the insane . Th is no t

su rp r i s ing ly became the bas is by wh ich the upper c lasses ,

inc lud ing ph i losophers and wr i te rs came to v iew band i ts , as

ou tcas ts f rom soc ie ty who were beyond the pa le (Shaw 1984 :

22-3 ) . I t can thus be a rgued by ex tens ion , tha t Josephus , an

upper -c lass and we l l educa ted Jew l i v ing in a Roman p rov ince

a t the per iphery o f Roman in f luence , was mere ly respond ing to

the p lague o f band i t r y in Pa les t ine accord ing to the lega l and

po l i t i ca l no rms o f h is e ra and background .

In Roman lega l t e rms , a band i t was de f ined as a l a t ro and the

ac t o f band i t r y as l a t roc in ium. Roman law however made

fu r ther d is t inc t ions be tween d i f fe ren t t ypes o f robbery :

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robbery was des igna ted as rap ina and robbery w i thou t any

v io lence was fu r ther de f ined as f u r tum , t he f t . To con fuse the

i ssue even more , techn ica l l y , anyone invo lved in rap ina , cou ld

be sa id to be a l a t ro , depend ing on c i rcumstances wh ich

means tha t no t in every case was a robber a lways a l a t ro .

What was no t in doub t was tha t those who commi t ted robbery

w i th the use o f weapons and w i th an e lement o f p remed i ta t ion

and th rough fo rming o f bands w i th a common purpose o f

p lunder , these were a lways cons idered as l a t rones (Grunewa ld

2002 : 16) . Roman lega l j u r i sp rudence the re fo re adop ted the

l i ne tha t any fo rm o f v io len t oppos i t i on to es tab l i shed

au thor i t y was an ac t o f l a t roc in ia w i th a lmos t no a t ten t ion pa id

to degrees o f v io lence tha t cou ld emanate f rom the concep t o f

l a t roc in ia . The on ly fo rm o f o rgan ized and leg i t imate ‘ s ta te ’

v io lence recogn ized by the Roman lega l sys tem was tha t o f

war fa re , o r be l lum, by i t s lega l te rm. Roman ju r i sp rudence and

po l i t i ca l p rac t i ce recogn ized on ly one type o f o rgan ized

v io lence as leg i t ima te war fa re , as tha t occur r ing be tween two

‘ l eg i t imate ly es tab l i shed ’ s ta tes and ‘ shar ing po l i t i ca l l y

man i fes t s t ruc tu res , ’ who engaged in con f l i c t conduc ted

‘accord ing to recogn ized fo rms o f combat ’ (Shaw 1984 : 6 ) .

Lega l l y , th i s s i tua t ion was te rmed ‘be l lum i us tum. ’ The

oppos i te o f be l lum ius tum de f ined a cond i t i on tha t i s i dea l l y

descr ibed as ‘ i r regu la r war fa re ’ o r war fa re conduc ted aga ins t

a foe tha t was unrecogn izab le , uns t ruc tu red and soc ia l l y

in fe r io r ( ib id 6 ) . I t became the lega l no rm there fo re to g roup

a l l t ypes o f i r regu la r war fa re (as opposed to be l lum ius tum )

under the des igna t ion o f l a t roc in ium.

Band i t r y was endemic to a lesser o r g rea te r degree in a l l pa r ts

o f the Empi re th roughou t i t s long h is to ry . T rave l by road was

f raugh t w i th g rea t danger and la rge numbers o f guard pos ts ,

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watch towers and o ther assor ted for t i f i ca t ions were cons t ruc ted

a t s t ra teg ic p laces in the Empi re , i nc lud ing Syro -Pa les t ine ,

no t on ly as de fens ive measures aga ins t ex te rna l enemies , bu t

a lso p resumab ly to o f fe r some p ro tec t ion fo r t rave l le rs us ing

the ne tworks o f roads (Shaw 1984 : 12) . 8

Band i t ry was so abhor ren t to the Romans tha t i t i nd i rec t l y

a f fec ted many lega l cond i t i ons . Many laws tha t dea l t w i t h

mar r iage , c i v i l con t rac ts , w i l l s and dowr ies , fo r i ns tance , had

spec ia l cond i t ions a t tached to them whereby b r igandage i s

spec i f i ca l l y ment ioned as a cond i t i ona l fac to r a f fec t ing the

s ta tus o f the con t rac t and the con t rac t ing par t ies . Even in the

mi l i ta ry sphere , the law tha t dea l t w i th so ld ie rs m iss ing

w i thou t leave d i f fe ren t ia ted be tween those who go miss ing on

the i r own accord as opposed to those who a re absen t th rough

no fau l t o f the i r own when de ta ined by band i t s wh i le on o f f i c ia l

l eave (Shaw 1984 : 9 -10) . 9

The s ta te thus had a mora l du ty t o p ro tec t i t s c i t i zens as we l l

as i t s te r r i to r ia l i n tegr i t y . I t was a governor ’ s express du ty to

de fend h is p rov ince f rom any fo rm o f un res t and law lessness .

Shaw quo tes an ap t passage f rom the Roman lega l Diges t on

an ins t ruc t ion concern ing the du t ies o f p rov inc ia l governors :

“ I t i s the du ty o f a good and ser ious governor to see

tha t the p rov ince he governs rema ins peace fu l and

8 There a re numerous re fe rences to peop le be ing a t tacked o r go ing miss ing never to be seen a l i ve aga in . For ins tance P l iny wr i tes o f a f r i end o f h is , Robus tus who, toge ther w i th a f r iend went m iss ing wh i l s t t rave l ing on the V ia F lamin ia , a ma jo r h ighway to Po in the nor th . (P l iny , Le t te rs 6.25) . 9 Diges t and Codex Jus t in ianus dea l w i th a who le range o f l ega l ac t s tha t spec i f i ca l l y ment ion band i t r y in one sense o r ano ther as an a f fec t ing agen t in law, 3 .1 .1 -5 ; 4 .2 .2 -2 .

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qu ie t . Th is i s no t a d i f f i cu l t task i f he sc rupu lous ly

r ids the p rov ince o f ev i l men, and ass iduous ly hun ts

them down. Indeed , he mus t hun t down desecra to rs

and p i l l agers o f sac red p roper ty , band i t s , k idnappers

and common th ieves , and pun ish each one in

accordance w i th h is m isdeeds . And he mus t use

fo rce aga ins t the i r co l labora to rs w i thou t whom the

band i t i s no t ab le to rema in h idden fo r long . ” (Shaw

2002 : 14) 10

Th is in junc t ion to governors there fo re reduced every ac t ion by

a common th ie f o r b r igand to the leve l o f a th rea t to the s ta te

(Shaw 1984 : 14) . In the absence o f an o rgan ized po l i ce fo rce

as in t he modern con tex t , the a rmy became the na tu ra l

en fo rcer o f l aw and o rder . What l i t t l e au thor i t y ex is ted a t the

loca l l eve l , i f any , d id no t have the consequent au thor i t y o r

power t o represen t any k ind o f l ong- te rm so lu t ion to

con t ro l l i ng band i t ry (Shaw 1984 : 18) . In the absence o f a

cen t ra l l y con t ro l led po l i ce fo rce , governors o f p rov inces w i th

l im i ted mi l i t a ry resources were a t t imes compe l led to use loca l

fo rces and ins t i t u t ions in o rder to cap tu re band i t s . The Roman

s ta te gave lega l j us t i f i ca t ion to such ind iv idua ls ( in the name

o f “ common peace” ) who took i t upon themse lves to cap tu re

band i t s and de l i ve r them to the au thor i t i es fo r t r i a l and

pun ishment . Th is po l i t i ca l exped iency a l lowed such a person

to pursue , in ju re and k i l l a l l eged band i ts w i thou t fea r o f

p rosecu t ion fo r t he i r deeds (Shaw 1984 : 19) . 11 Con tex tua l l y ,

th i s gave Judas and the par ty who accompan ied h im, the

au thor i t y to a f fec t a ‘ c i t i zen ’s a r res t ’ when they apprehended

10 Diges t , 1 .18 .13 11 The lega l sources a re Codex Jus t in ianus 3 .27 .1 -2 ; 9 .16 .3 and Diges t , 9 .2 .7

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Jesus in the Garden o f Gethsemane. Jesus response was ,

“have you come ou t as aga ins t a band i t , w i th swords and c lubs

to cap tu re me?” (Mark 14 :48) . Th is d ramat ic example , i f

any th ing , se rves no t on ly to i l l us t ra te the ub iqu i tous na tu re o f

band i t ry and i t s pervas iveness in the cu l tu re and norms o f

even non-Roman soc ie ty , bu t i t a l so shows how ind iv idua ls

and g roups cou ld bear a rms and lega l l y ac t i n the name o f the

s ta te . Th is inc iden t i s ev idence o f a ‘Roman ’ response to an

essen t ia l l y loca l i zed Jewish occur rence in Judea . To what

ex ten t d id a band i t rea l l y th rea ten the sa fe ty and we l l - be ing

o f the s ta te? In the Roman lega l sys tem law there was l i t t l e

d is t inc t ion be tween c iv i l and c r im ina l l aw so tha t when the

var ious laws were app l ied , they were done so in the absence

o f any inves t iga t ing , po l i c ing and p rosecu t ing au thor i t i es , i n

the modern sense , be ing invo lved . The weakness o f the s ta te

to dea l w i th b reaches o f c i v i l l aw and o f the ind iv idua l to c la im

redress aga ins t the s ta te and ind iv idua ls , meant tha t any

suspec ted subver te r o f the law, cou ld po ten t ia l l y be accused

o f th rea ten ing the who le soc ia l o rder . Men commi t t ing ac ts o f

v io lence immed ia te ly became ou t laws and were dea l t w i t h by

the co l lec t i ve ins t ruments o f s ta te power (Shaw 1984 : 21) .

Because l a t ro were seen as ou t laws and ‘enemies o f the

s ta te , ’ i t i s to be expec ted tha t the pena l t ies were d i f fe ren t to

those exac ted on common c r im ina ls and the na tu re o f the

pun ishments fo r the i r c r imes , were concomi tan t l y savage and

uncompromis ing ly harsh . Tor tu re was a lmos t rou t ine and qu i t e

o f ten per fo rmed on the spo t where they were a l leged to have

commi t ted the i r c r imes . Savage re t r ibu t ion was bo th expec ted

and regarded as we l l -deserved and conv ic ted band i t s cou ld

expec t to be burn t a l i ve , th rown to w i ld beas ts o r c ruc i f i ed

(Diges t 48 .19 .16 .10) . Such pun ishments were o f ten car r ied ou t

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pub l i c l y where a c lear s ta tement was made as a de te r ren t to

any one e lse f rom pursu ing any s im i la r ac t ion . As Shaw pu t i t ,

“ i t i s th i s pub l i c i t y o f pun ishment tha t makes them as men

apar t ” (Shaw 1984 : 21) .

Accord ing to Roman lega l though t , l a t roc in ium shou ld have

been used to deno te band i t r y o f a na tu re tha t wou ld have been

the equ iva len t o f i r regu la r war fa re , thus imp ly ing a po l i t i ca l

conno ta t ion to every such ac t ion . However , wha t i t bo i led

down to was tha t l a t roc in ium s imp ly came to be app l ied to a

who le range o f pe t ty deeds , o r as charac te r i zed by Grunewa ld

‘wrongdo ings ’ (Grunewa ld 2002 : 17) accompan ied by a s t rong

emot iona l b ias o f d isgus t and loa th ing abou t such ind iv idua ls

o r g roups .

2 .2 THE LEGAL BACKGROUND: JEWISH LAW

The two p r inc ipa l Hebrew words used in B ib l i ca l t imes to

deno te the f t were ganav and gaza l . I n the la te r Tanna i t i c e ra ,

the re was a c lea r cu t l ega l d is t inc t ion be tween what these

te rms ac tua l l y deno ted . The ganav was one who ac ted

sec re t l y , tha t i s by s tea l th , and the gaz lan was one who

robbed in the open and w i th an e lement o f v io lence assoc ia ted

w i th the ac t . However , i n the i r deve lopment , these two te rms

were never used cons is ten t l y in o rder to desc r ibe an t i soc ia l

and unaccep tab le ac t ions and they were used in te rchangeab ly

depend ing on c i rcumstances and the in te rp re ta t ion o f the t ime.

Ganav a lso desc r ibed the ac t ion o f an ind iv idua l , whereas

gaza l i n i t s p re -p rophe t i c con tex t , came to desc r ibe an ac t ion

usua l l y commi t ted by a g roup . Gaza l i n la te and pos t -B ib l i ca l

sources was la te r used as a lega l de f in i t i on fo r robbery

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(Jackson 1972 : 6 ) . In ear l y B ib l i ca l t imes , the word gaza l

c lea r l y was used to descr ibe a ra id by an o rgan ized g roup o f

men. The inhab i tan ts o f Shekhem p laced men on the mounta in

tops to p resumab ly rob the t rave l le rs f rom Av ime lekh w i th

whom they were in d ispu te (Judges 9 .25) . Band i t - l i ke

ac t i v i t i es o f th i s na tu re was an accep ted means o f po l i t i ca l

oppos i t i on amongs t anc ien t commun i t ies tha t had weak cen t ra l

government and con t ro l over ru ra l a reas (Jackson 1972 : 7 ) .

The ear l i es t B ib l i ca l l ega l code , the Covenant Code in Exodus

(Exodus 21-22) app l ies the ganav t o the in te rna l o f fender , i n

o ther words , a member o f the commun i ty . Jackson p rov ides a

s ta rk example o f the d i f fe rence be tween ganav and gaza l by

quo t ing f rom Hosea…. . ’They dea l fa l se ly , the th ie f (ganav)

b reaks in and the band i t s (gedud ) ra id w i thou t ’ (Hosea 7 .1 )

(Jackson 1972 : 9 . ) So too , the example o f the inc iden t in

wh ich Rache l s tea ls her fa ther ’ s househo ld gods ( te ra f im ) to

wh ich the deed i s asc r ibed to a ganav , i n the sense tha t i t was

an in te rna l o f fender , i n th i s case supposed ly a member o f

Laban ’s househo ld (Genes is 31 . 19 ; 32) .

The verb gaza l was used in the p re -Dav id ic e ra when cen t ra l

au thor i t y was weak and the dangers f rom ra id ing par t ies were

more common. As these th rea ts g radua l l y lessened , so the

te rm gaza l became more b lu r red and i t was adap ted to o ther

con tex ts (Jackson 1972 :4 ) . I sa iah used the verb gaza l i n o rder

to ra i l aga ins t the economic exp lo i ta t ion o f the poor as a

p rophe t i c warn ing aga ins t the excess ive ly harsh measures

used in the co l lec t ion o f unpa id deb t wh ich fu r ther ens laved

the poor ( I sa iah 3 .14 ; Psa lm 35 .10) . S im i la r l y Ezek ie l , who

c r ied ou t aga ins t fo rc ib le deb t co l lec t ion , even though th is

may have been done w i th in the con f ines o f the law o f the t ime

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(Ezek ie l 18 .7 -9 ) . Bes ides i t s lega l conno ta t ion , gaza l t ook on

an emot ive and p rophe t i c mean ing , p robab ly re f lec t ing the

po l i t i ca l and economic s i t ua t ion o f the t imes . Inc reas ing ly , t he

word was used less and less to re fe r to ra id ing g roups and i t

was a lso app l ied to ind iv idua l ac t s o f the f t o r robbery w i th the

resu l t tha t bo th ganav and gaza l was used in te rchangeab ly in

a lega l sense , in a number o f B ib l i ca l sources . 12

O ther anc ien t lega l sys tems fo l lowed a s im i la r te rm ino log ica l

pa t te rn . For ins tance , in the Code o f Hammurab i saraqu

denoted the f t by an ins ider f rom the commun i ty and haba tu f o r

tha t commi t ted by a ra id ing par t y . A s im i la r d is t inc t ion i s

found in the Nuz i documents as was the case in the h is to r i ca l

deve lopment o f ea r l y Roman law. Th is i s unders tandab le g iven

tha t ra id ing par t ies represen ted ser ious and cons tan t th rea ts

to the au thor i t y o f the s ta te in anc ien t t imes . Ra id ing par t ies

and band i t s cou ld no t the re fo re be dea l t w i th under the laws

o f the commun i ty , as they fe l l ou ts ide o f i t s p ro tec t ion and

came to be regarded as enemies who had dec la red war

aga ins t the au thor i t y o f the commun i ty s t ruc tu res and the

s ta te (Jackson 1972 : 12-14) . By pos t -b ib l i ca l t imes the s ta te ,

such as i t was , had s ta r ted to ga in con t ro l over un tamed a reas

and w i th th i s power came lega l j u r i sd ic t ion and the o f fences o f

ra id ing and band i t ry became an o f fence aga ins t the law o f the

land (Jackson 1972 : 16) .

B r igandage as a fo rm o f po l i t i ca l oppos i t i on represen ted a

ser ious po l i t i ca l th rea t to the govern ing au thor i t i es as

Josephus r igh t fu l l y perce ived , when he p laced a g rea t dea l o f

the b lame on the ac t i v i t i es o f b r igands in the b reak down o f

12 The Covenant Code (Exodus 21 .37 ; 22 .1 , 2 , 3 , 6 ) uses ganav and the Ho l iness Code (Lev . 19 .13) and Pr ies t l y Code (Lev . 5 .21 , 23 ) bo th make use o f the te rm gaza l .

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l aw o rde r in Pa les t ine , wh ich w i l l be dea l t w i th in g rea te r

de ta i l fu r ther on . However , i t i s the po lemica l con tex t wh ich i s

o f g rea t in te res t , i n tha t i t desc r ibes the concep tua l f ramework

a round b r igandage and the way in wh ich i t was recorded by

au thors f rom anc ien t soc ie t ies . Leav ing Josephus as ide fo r the

moment , the charac te r i za t ion o f i nd iv idua ls who opposed the

k ing o r ru l ing au thor i t y , as band i t s , was an accep ted l i t e ra ry

p rac t i ce . Jackson fo r i ns tance , p rov ides a de l igh t fu l cameo o f

a parab le by R . Me i r o f tw in b ro thers , one who became a k ing

and the o ther a band i t (Tos . Sanh . 9 .7 ) . The po lemica l usage

o f por t ray ing the b ro ther as a robber was to emphas ize tha t he

was a p re tender to the th rone and thus a po l i t i ca l th rea t and

was a t yp ica l example o f the type o f Roman po lemic wh ich

was adop ted by Jew ish wr i te rs (Jackson 1972 : 35) . The

connec t ion be tween b r igandage and an ima l husbandry i s a

cons tan t re f ra in in anc ien t t imes , p resumab ly because

shepherds and herdsman roamed f ree ly and were no t eas i l y

ass im i la ted in to the ma ins t ream o f commun i ty l i f e . The

Mishnah more spec i f i ca l l y adv ises aga ins t ce r ta in p ro fess ions

wh ich were ak in to tha t o f robbers ( l i s t im ) :

‘A man shou ld no t teach h is son to be an ass -d r i ve r

o r a came l d r i ve r , o r a barber o r a sa i lo r , o r a

herdsman o r a shopkeeper , fo r the i r c ra f t i s the c ra f t

o f robbers ’ (M. K idd . 4 .14)

Ano ther example o f Jew ish a t t i t udes towards band i t r y can be

der i ved f rom the d ic tum g iven by R. Judah tha t adv ised ,

p resumab ly fa thers , tha t ‘ he who does no t teach h is son a

c ra f t , teaches h im b r igandage ’ (M. K idd . 29a) .

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The lega l d i f fe rences be tween l i s t im on the one hand and the

ganav and gaza l on the o ther , were impor tan t as i t de te rmined

the ex ten t and sever i t y o f the pun ishments tha t cou ld be

imposed on a t ransgressor . The pun ishment fo r b r igandage,

espec ia l l y under Roman law, was usua l l y execu t ion wh ich was

qu i te o f ten conduc ted on the spo t as an example to o thers .

An impor tan t i ssue tha t needs cons ider ing i s the re la t i ve

len iency o f pun ishments imposed under Jew ish law fo r mat te rs

invo lv ing gne iva and geze i lu t . Accord ing to Jewish lega l

p rocesses , the robber was usua l l y on ly expec ted to res to re

the s to len p roper ty o r the equ iva len t va lue and i f the o f fender

con fessed w i l l i ng ly , then he wou ld be exempt f rom pun ishment

comp le te ly . Jackson be l ieves tha t the overwhe lm ing reason fo r

th i s len ien t approach to sanc t ions on o f fences invo lv ing the f t

and robbery was p r imar i l y due to the des i re o f the Rabb is to

keep the o f fender ou t o f reach o f Roman ju r i sd ic t ion (Jackson

1972 : 251) . As d iscussed e lsewhere , the Romans regarded

b r igandage as tan tamount to i r regu la r war fa re and dea l t w i t h i t

by m i l i t a ry means ra ther than the lega l rou te , usua l l y

demand ing tha t loca l i nhab i tan ts ass is t by g iv ing up

perpe t ra to rs o r ass is t ing in apprehend ing them. 13

I t i s a lso reasonab le to assume tha t the Roman ru l ing

s t ruc tu res in Pa les t ine were as l im i ted in manpower and

capac i t y as to have made i t un l i ke ly tha t they cou ld have had

much ju r i sd ic t iona l and mi l i ta ry con t ro l over mos t o f the

se t t lements . Judea was admin is t ra t i ve ly independent

(Sma l lwood 1981 : 145) and bes ides , the a rmy and

13 Dur ing the governorsh ip o f Cumanus an imper ia l s lave was robbed and Cumanus o rdered ne ighbour ing v i l l ages to ass is t i n cap tu r ing the o f fenders and then p roceeded to severe ly pun ish them when they were unab le o r unwi l l i ng to ca r ry ou t h is o rders (Jewish War 2 : 228-9 )

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admin is t ra t i ve func t ions cons is ted o f a few mi l i t a ry cohor ts

based mos t l y in Caesarea whose ch ie f func t ion was to

ma in ta in con t ro l over the who le popu la t ion (Goodman 2002 :

21) . I t i s sa fe to assume there fo re tha t the vas t ma jo r i t y o f

cases invo lv ing the f t and robbery were hand led by loca l

v i l l age and town au thor i t i es us ing Jewish lega l p rocesses

a l though , as Jackson has ind ica ted Roman in te rven t ion was

no t on ly l im i ted to dea l ing w i th b r igandage, bu t tha t they a lso

on occas ion became invo lved in dea l ing w i th ins tances o f

pe t ty the f t ( Jackson 1972 : 254-6 ) . There i s an example o f

one , R . E leazar , who ass is ted a Roman o f f i ce r in a r res t ing

some Jewish th ieves by sugges t ing to h im a method o f

f l ush ing ou t the o f fenders (B .M. 83B) . The a r res ted th ie f ( i n

th i s case , ganav) was la te r execu ted , wh ich cou ld poss ib ly

mean tha t the re was a po l i t i ca l con tex t to the inc iden t , o r tha t

he may have been invo lved in smugg l ing o r p i racy ( ib id ) . I

wou ld sugges t tha t the passage a lso ind ica tes a leve l o f co -

opera t ion be tween loca l i nhab i tan ts and the Roman

au thor i t i es . Poss ib ly , the so lu t ion l i es in a ca re fu l read ing o f

the open ing passage : “R . E leazar , son o f R S imeon, once met

an o f f i ce r o f the (Roman) government who had been sen t to

a r res t th ieves (ganave i ) ” Had the o f fence been a loca l mat te r

o f some pe t ty th iev ing , the p robab i l i t y wou ld have been tha t

the loca l town o r v i l l age e lders wou ld have d isposed o f the

mat te r be tween themse lves . However , he re i t spec i f i ca l l y

s ta tes tha t the Roman so ld ie r was sen t , bu t does no t say by

whom. There mus t have been a p r ima fac ie mot i ve s t rong

enough to have mot i va ted a Roman o f f i ce r to seek ou t and

hun t down an a l leged o f fender who i t can be assumed, to the

Roman way o f reckon ing th ings , p robab ly f e l l i n to the ca tegory

o f band i t and gave the s i tua t ion an over t l y po l i t i ca l

conno ta t ion . I t a l so ind ica tes the tenuous l i nk tha t ex is ted

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between what cons t i tu ted the f t / robbery and b r igandage and

how incons is ten t l y i t was app l ied in p rac t i ce .

Jackson a lso ment ions an inc iden t in wh ich a Roman o f f i ce r

wh ipped th ieves in Caesarea (Jackson 1972 : 256) . 14 There i s

insu f f i c ien t ev idence to d raw a f i rm conc lus ion tha t Roman

invo lvement in inc iden ts invo lv ing the f t and pe t ty c r ime

amongs t the Jew ish popu la t ion was w idespread , bu t tha t i t

cons t i tu ted more o f a po ten t ia l th rea t o f i n te r fe rence , tha t

p robab ly mot i va ted loca l Jew ish au thor i t i es to encourage

o f fenders to con fess and res to re the loss qu ie t l y amongs t

themse lves ra ther than ca l l i n the Roman au thor i t i es , wh ich

wou ld anyway have been rega rded as o f fens ive by the

commun i ty a t l a rge (Jackson 1972 : 260) .

2.3 WHO BECAME A BANDIT?

The ques t ion ra ised i s a t wha t po in t i n the h is to ry o f a rcha ic

s ta tes d id band i t r y become an iden t i f i ab le soc ia l t ype on i t s

own tha t mer i ted a lex icon and separa te iden t i t y? By the f i f t h

and s ix th cen tu r ies BCE, the te rms l es ta i and l es tes were

common ly emp loyed to deno te p i racy and band i t r y . P r io r to

tha t , these words d id no t have a nega t i ve conno ta t ion a t a l l ,

bu t descr ibed an accep ted way o f earn ing a l i ve l ihood by

means o f p lunder and boo ty (Shaw 1984 : 24-5 ) A r i s to t le in

descr ib ing the f i ve modes o f l i f e wh ich he be l ieved fo rmed

the bas is o f the s ta te , de f ined them as pas to ra l nomad ism,

hun t ing , f i sh ing , band i t ry and agr i cu l tu re . 15

14 Lev . Rabb . 6 .2 , a l though as conceded, the tex t i s doub t fu l ( Jackson 1972 : 256) . 15 Pol i t i cs , 1256 a -b : P la to descr ibed band i t r y as a sub- type o f hun t ing , bu t ca l led i t a ‘bad ’ t ype and on ly hun t ing on

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One o f the o ldes t occupa t ions in the anc ien t wor ld tha t

became a lmos t synonymous w i th band i t r y i s tha t o f the

shepherd . These were t ranshumant pas to ra l i s ts who inhab i ted

the mounta inous a reas remote f rom urban cen t res and mi l i t a r y

and po l i t i ca l con t ro l . As such they represen ted a soc ia l l y

homogenous g roup tha t were se ldom a f fec ted by s ta te

ins t i tu t ions and soc ia l s t ruc tu res o f the s ta te bu t were

never the less in tegra ted in to the w ider economic ne tworks ,

e i the r as t raders o f l i ves tock o r as th ieves who were

dependen t on agen ts and land lo rds fo r t rad ing l i ves tock and ,

p robab ly the p rocurement o f supp l ies . These were tough ,

hardy men fo r whom cons tan t v ig i lance and v io lence was a

way o f l i f e . The i r band i t ac t i v i t ies were la rge ly focussed on

the the f t o f l i ves tock o r rus t l i ng , (ab igea tus ) , an o f fence so

common under Roman law, t ha t i t was cons idered an

aggrava ted c r ime (Shaw 1984 : 31 ; MacMul len 1967 : 192 ;

256) . 16 H igh land band i t r y was endemic and con t inuous

th roughou t mos t reg ions o f the Empi re and the cen t ra l

government was a t mos t t imes power less to con t ro l i t . To

i l l us t ra te how d i f f i cu l t i t became to con t ro l i t i n I ta l y in the

f i f th cen tu ry CE, the au thor i t i es a t tempted to take away the

one advan tage en joyed by shepherd -band i t s , tha t o f the i r

f reedom o f movement , by pass ing laws tha t res t r ic ted the use

o f horses to everyone bu t h igh rank ing o f f i c ia l s and o ther

o f f i ce rs o f the s ta te and the mi l i t a ry (Shaw 1984 : 32 ) .

ho rseback was the ‘good ’ t ype : P la to Laws, 7 .823d ; Thucyd ides no ted tha t the re were many Greek commun i t ies fo r whom band i t ry was an accep tab le and honourab le pursu i t : Thucyd ides 1 .5 . 16 D ig . 47 .8 .2 .21 ; 47 .14 .1 .3 as we l l as the tex ts o f U lp ian and Ca l l i s t ra tus .

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That the re were many heav i l y popu la ted Jewish se t t lements in

mounta inous a reas o f Pa les t ine can be seen f rom the

a rchaeo log ica l rema ins o f v i l l age s i tes wh ich show tha t many

Roman per iod v i l l ages and se t t lements were bu i l t on h i l l s ides

o r spurs . Gamala , Jo tapa ta , G ischa la and Nazare th were

s i tua ted on s teep h i l l s , poss ib ly fo r de fens ive reasons , o f

wh ich p ro tec t ion f rom br igand gangs wou ld have been a p r ime

reason . However in the second cen tu ry the re i s a pa t te rn tha t

se t t lements were bu i l t on lower s lopes , e i t he r to be c loser to

wa te r sources o r because o f the a l te red secur i t y and po l i t i ca l

s i tua t ion in Pa les t ine a f te r the Second Revo l t (Anderson 1998 :

451) . Band i t ry f l ou r i shed in these remote ru ra l a reas fa r f rom

the loc i o f power and admin is t ra t i ve con t ro ls . The oppos i t e

ho lds t rue too , in tha t wherever ru ra l h in te r lands were opened

up by ne tworks o f roads and cen t ra l au thor i t y was es tab l i shed ,

so b r igand ac t i v i t y d im in ished .

The peasan t ry was a na tu ra l source o f band i t r y because o f the

na tu re o f the peasan t economy and the f i xed na tu re o f the

peasan t to the land . Th is f i x i t y i s based on the peasan ts ’

t rad i t i ona l roo ts to the land to wh ich he and h is o f f - sp r ing

were t ied . Hobsbawm and Shaw bo th concur tha t i t i s no t so

much the economic vu lnerab i l i t i es tha t impe l peasan ts to

become band i ts , bu t th i s immob i l i t y tha t t i es them permanent l y

to the land (Hobsbawm 1969 : 30-5 ; Shaw 1984 : 31) . Rura l

economies tha t were no t ab le to p rov ide jobs , o r expand

p roduc t ion e i the r because o f a lack o f su f f i c ien t l and fo r

d is t r ibu t ion amongs t ex tended fami l i es , o r s imp ly because o f

the na tu re o f pas to ra l fa rm ing in h igh land a reas , poor so i l and

weather cond i t i ons , resu l ted in a cons tan t s t ream o f su rp lus

labour f o rm ing w i th in loca l ru ra l economies . Ano ther fac to r

tha t wou ld have resu l ted in per iod ic unemployment i s the fac t

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tha t fo r long per iods o f t ime o f each year the land wou ld l i e

fa l l ow. The na tu ra l ou t le t fo r the unemployed ru ra l p ro le ta r ia t

wou ld have been to g rav i ta te towards jo in ing a rmed bands as

an a l te rna t i ve source o f i ncome, a t l eas t fo r ce r ta in per iods o f

the year when jobs were scarce . ‘No th ing i s more na tu ra l tha t

some o f them shou ld become band i t s , o r tha t mounta in and

pas to ra l reg ions in par t i cu la r shou ld be the c lass ica l zones fo r

such ou t lawry ’ (Hobsbawm 1969 : 31) . Hobsbawm s ta tes

fu r ther tha t t yp ica l band i t g roups cons is ted o f young men,

usua l l y under the age o f twen ty f i ve , w i th no permanent soc ia l

t i es o r fami l y ob l iga t ions , who roamed the coun t rys ide in

pursu i t o f oppor tun i t i es to seek ou t a l i ve l ihood , a lbe i t

temporary , o f ten by means o f pe t ty the f t and o ther m inor

c r im ina l ac t i v i t i es . P resumab ly , these you ths , whom

Hobsbawm charac te r i zes as the ‘mob i le marg in o f peasan t

soc ie ty wou ld m ig ra te back to the i r i so la ted v i l l ages a t some

po in t i n o rder to se t t le down and mar ry and become par t o f the

se t t led l i f e o f a peasan t fa rmer (Hobsbawm 1969 : 31) .

Pover ty and economic hardsh ip a re on the i r own insu f f i c ien t

reasons fo r the sp read o f band i t r y , pa r t i cu la r l y in ru ra l

economies (Shaw 1984 : 30) . What appear to be c r i t i ca l a re

two o ther de te rminan ts : famine and land lessness . Dea l ing w i th

the fo rmer f i r s t , famine was an ever -p resen t danger fo r the

ma jo r i t y o f peop le in the anc ien t wor ld . Poor management and

s ta te con t ro l over v i ta l resources , the vagar ies o f wea ther and

c l imat i c pa t te rns as we l l as po l i t i ca l i ns tab i l i t y , resu l ted in

per iod ic famines b reak ing ou t f rom t ime to t ime. MacMul len

p rov ides an en t i re append ix on the sub jec t in wh ich he l i s t s a

p rod ig ious amount o f ep ig raph ica l sources f rom the Roman

wor ld dea l ing w i th th is sub jec t (MacMul len 1967 : 249-254) .

Essen t ia l l y , wha t happened was tha t wha tever su rp luses were

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l e f t a f te r taxa t ion wen t to the c i t i es where these were hoarded

fo r the bene f i t o f the c i t y dwe l le rs . Peasan t fo l k in the ru ra l

h in te r land were le f t w i th l i t t l e e lse to ea t and had to subs is t

on unwho lesome foods tu f f s resu l t ing in nu t r i t i ona l d iseases

and s ta rva t ion . 17 In the th i r teen th year o f Herod ’s re ign there was a severe

famine in h is k ingdom. Josephus p rov ides a g raph ic

i l l us t ra t ion o f cond i t i ons tha t p reva i led due to th i s even t ,

i nc lud ing the fac t tha t peop le su f fe red f rom ma lnu t r i t i on and

d isease , “ th i s d is t ress they were in made them a lso ou t o f

necess i t y , to ea t many th ings tha t d id no t used to be ea ten . . . ”

(An t iqu i t ies 15 .303) . The ou tcome was despera t ion and

w idespread d issa t i s fac t ion fo r wh ich the peop le b lamed the

ru le r . “Nor had he ( the k ing) any peop le tha t were wor thy o f

h i s ass is tance , s ince th is m iserab le s ta te o f th ings had

p rocured h im the ha t red o f h i s sub jec ts ; fo r i t i s a cons tan t

ru le , tha t m is fo r tunes a re s t i l l l a id to the accoun t o f those tha t

govern . ” (Ant iqu i t i es 15 304) . I t i s poss ib le then to su rmise

tha t hunger and despera t ion d rove many to s tea l i n o rder to

su rv ive and tha t o rgan ized band i t r y , par t i cu la r l y by

economica l l y marg ina l i zed g roups mus t have been an ever -

p resen t rea l i t y in the anc ien t wor ld .

Josephus records de ta i l s o f ano ther famine wh ich occur red

dur ing the p rocura to rsh ip o f T iber ius A lexander 46? -48 CE.

However , i n th i s ins tance the generos i t y o f the roya l fami l y o f

Ad iabene he lped to aver t d i sas te r by purchas ing food supp l ies

f rom Cyprus and Egyp t (Ant iqu i t i es 20 .15) . Dur ing the s iege o f

Je rusa lem in the year 70CE, the g ra in c rops were des t royed

17 MacMul len R. 1967 : 253 , c i ted f rom a descr ip t ion g iven by Ga len o f a t yp ica l famine s i tua t ion in I ta l y f rom Mi l l a r F 1964 : a Study o f Cass ius D io , 174 .

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which led to a d isas t rous s i tua t ion in the c i t y , g i ven tha t the

Roman t roops had sur rounded the c i t y wa l l s (War 5 . 24 ) , a

s i tua t ion made worse , accord ing to Smal lwood , because the

years 68-69CE were sabba t i ca l years and by May-Apr i l 70 ,

Je rusa lem was a l ready under s iege wh ich meant tha t food

s tocks were a l ready in shor t supp ly be fo re the f i re b roke ou t

wh ich des t royed the rema in ing s tocks o f food (Sma l lwood

1981 : 316-7 ) .

The changes imp lemented by Pompey a f te r 63 BCE saw a

huge reduc t ion o f a rab le land ava i lab le to Jew ish fa rmers

when he b roke up the Hasmonaean k ingdom by separa t ing the

fo rmer ly Greek c i t i es o f the coas ta l p la in , Samar ia and

Trans jo rdan f rom Judea . A s ign i f i can t number o f Jew ish

fa rmers los t the i r l and and were fo rced to re loca te to Judea

dur ing a per iod when the Jewish popu la t ion o f Judea had

reached i t s zen i th and was s t i l l i nc reas ing in number

(App lebaum 1977 : 361 ; Anderson 1998 :451) . A rchaeo log ica l

su rveys o f Jew ish se t t lement s i tes have shown a subs tan t ia l

i nc rease in the number o f se t t l ements in t he Roman-Byzan t ine

per iod wh ich ind ica tes tha t the re mus t have been cons iderab le

demand fo r land and p ressure on the a l ready cu l t i vab le a reas

as popu la t ion dens i t y inc reased , espec ia l l y in the h i l l y and

mounta inous a reas where a rab le land was in shor t supp ly and

competed w i th g raz ing requ i rements fo r l i ves tock (Anderson

1998 : 451) . Sma l lho ld ings were ex t reme ly sma l l i n some o f the

a reas wh ich meant tha t peasan t fa rmers had to eke ou t

enough p roduce to feed themse lves , p roduce a su rp lus and

pay taxes f rom the i r ou tpu t f rom a minuscu le p iece o f a rab le

g round . App lebaum c i tes the example o f two Ga l i l ean k insmen

f rom the Ga l i l ee who each had to subs is t on 2 .39 hec ta res o f

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l and (App lebaum 1977 : 365) . 18 Wi th th i s s i tua t ion p reva i l i ng ,

one can deduce there fo re tha t la rge numbers o f ab le -bod ied

peop le e i the r m ig ra ted to the towns and c i t i es to seek

emp loyment the re , o r may have been tempted to jo in up w i th

g roups o f b r igand gangs as an a l te rna t i ve measure o f su rv iva l

(Goodman 1993 : 63) .

App lebaum sums i t up as fo l lows :

‘ …The Jewish peasan t a t the end o f the las t

cen tu ry BCE was su f fe r ing the e f fec ts o f

expropr ia t ion f rom the coas ta l p la in , Samar ia and

Trans jo rdan ; he had been a f f l i c ted by a

success ion o f wars and a rb i t ra ry impos i t i ons , was

despera te ly shor t o f l and and reserve cap i ta l , and

con t inued to exper ience g rue l l i ng taxa t ion

coup led , where a cons iderab le sec t ion o f h i s c lass

was concerned , w i th an oppress ive and

humi l ia t ing tenur ia l reg ime exacerba ted by deb t

and the non-Jewish o r p ro -Roman a t t i t ude o f i t s

admin is t ra to rs and land lo rds ’ (App lebaum 1977 :

378) .

As the Roman Empi re expanded, i t i nc reas ing ly made use o f

p ro fess iona l so ld ie rs . When these so ld ie rs re t i red f rom ac t i ve

m i l i t a ry se rv ice , i t o f ten happened tha t the i r accumula ted

sav ings and bonuses were insu f f i c ien t to fund an a l te rna t i ve

pos t - re t i rement ca reer , usua l l y as fa rmers . Many were no t

su i ted to a l i f e o f fa rm ing o r any o ther occupa t ion and i t was

eas ie r f o r them to con t inue w i th a l i f e o f v io lence , to wh ich

18 Heges ippus ap . Euseb . His t . Ecc les . , III , 20 , 1 -2 . Accord ing to Ha lakh ik t rad i t i on , the sma l les t d i v i s ib le p lo t had to be 0 .1 hec ta re .

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they had become inured over the years , as band i t s o r as men

o f v io lence in the emp loy o f l and lo rds (Shaw 1984 : 29) . I t was

indeed no t uncommon fo r band i t gangs to be h i red by s ta te

appo in ted o f f i ce rs and land lo rds fo r spec i f i c t asks . More

common were the deser te rs f rom army serv ice who d r i f ted in to

a l i f e o f band i t ry . The l i f e o f a so ld ie r in the Roman a rmy was

harsh and b ru ta l and deser t i ons were common occur rences .

There weren ’ t many a l te rna t i ves open to such ind iv idua ls who

had l i t t l e o r no sk i l l s o ther then so ld ie r ing , so i t became

common fo r many o f them to d r i f t i n to a l i f e o f band i t r y and

c r ime (Shaw 1984 : 30 ) .

Whenever s ta te power dec l ined th rough c iv i l wars and po l i t i ca l

upheava ls the re was an ebb and f low o f men who c rossed the

lega l boundar ies to become band i ts . Shaw sugges ts tha t the

na tu re o f the Roman s ta te made i t conduc ive to g roups o f

peop le who fe l l ou ts ide o f Roman soc ie ty to become

marg ina l i zed and fa l l ou ts ide o f i t s soc ia l and po l i t i ca l

s t ruc tu res . Roman soc ie t y cons is ted o f two d is t inc t en t i t i es

wh ich were never rea l l y in tegra ted comple te ly in to what can

be te rmed a Roman s ta te . The one was the ne twork o f

re la t ionsh ips tha t bound so ld ie rs , t raders , admin is t ra to rs ,

l and lo rds and o thers in to a fo rm o f a soc ia l sys tem. The o ther

was the po l i t i ca l sys tem. Th is e f fec t i ve ly meant tha t reg ions

tha t were geograph ica l l y d is tan t f rom the cen t ra l l oc i o f power

were ra re ly to ta l l y incorpora ted in to the Roman wor ld . La rge

g roups o f peop le tha t were under the domina t ion o f the Roman

po l i t i ca l and mi l i t a ry sys tem cou ld the re fo re be des igna ted as

band i t s , a lmos t as fo re ign enc laves w i th in the Roman Empi re .

Examples o f such peop les were the I saur ians who inhab i ted

the h igh land zones o f sou th -eas te rn Ana to l ia , the Sa tu r ian i o f

the la te r Emp i re , and the Mara tocupren i o f no r thern Syr ia and

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o f course , the band i t gangs o f Judea , who were p reva len t f rom

the midd le years o f the f i r s t cen tu ry (Shaw 1984 : 40-2 ) .

2 .4 SOCIAL BANDITS

A l though the concep tua l mode l o f soc ia l band i t ry as a spec ia l

t ype o f band i t i n i t se l f may be f lawed in many respec ts as a

descr ip t i ve too l , the re i s never the less a g rea t dea l o f

i n fo rmat ion as to the cond i t ions under wh ich band i t ry

f l ou r i shed in ru ra l reg ions and the economic and po l i t i ca l

charac te r i s t i cs tha t p romoted th is fo rm o f ac t i v i t y . Many o f the

fea tu res tha t Hobsbawm has de l inea ted as t yp ica l o f soc ia l

band i ts a re in fac t app l i cab le in some measure to band i t s and

band i t g roups in genera l .

Soc ia l band i t s a re roo ted in the coun t rys ide and the i r

ac t i v i t i es a re express ions o f peasan t rebe l l i on aga ins t the

loca l au thor i t i es . Hobsbawm s t resses th roughout tha t soc ia l

band i t s a re members o f peasan t commun i t ies who a re

regarded as heroes by the peop le l i v ing in those commun i t ies ,

bu t a re seen as ou t laws in the eyes o f the landho lder , l o rd o r

the s ta te au thor i t y . Soc ia l band i ts do no t p rey upon the poor

o r fe l l ow peasan ts , such as i s the case w i th common robbers

and bands o f p ro fess iona l ra iders who se ize any oppor tun i t y

to a t tack and s tea l f rom any g roup fo r purposes o f p lunder and

boo ty . What makes soc ia l band i t r y un ique i s tha t i t ex is ts as

“a un iversa l soc ia l phenomena” ; i t i s geograph ica l l y

w idespread and occurs in a l l t ypes o f human soc ie t y tha t has

evo lved f rom a t r iba l o r k insh ip phase to a cap i ta l i s t o r

i ndus t r ia l economic and soc ia l sys tem (Hobsbawm 1969 : 18-

19) .

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Desp i te the w idespread occur rence o f soc ia l band i t r y amongs t

a va r ie ty o f commun i t ies in d i f fe ren t con t inen ts and over a

cons iderab ly long per iod o f human h is to ry , the de f in ing

c r i te r ia a re amaz ing ly un i fo rm in na tu re , regard less o f the

spec i f i c ind iv idua l na tu re o f each ins tance . Pr im i t i ve soc ie t ies ,

espec ia l l y those w i th a tendency towards feud ing and ra id ing ,

wou ld a t some po in t deve lop more complex in te rna l soc ia l

s t ra t i f i ca t ion and soc ia l cohes ion and a consc iousness o f

be long ing to a d is t inc t i ve commun i ty w i th a de f ined iden t i t y

and common economic , re l ig ious and soc ia l i n te res ts wh ich

they wou ld r i se up to p ro tec t aga ins t such fo rces , i n te rna l o r

ex te rna l t r y ing to change the way o f l i f e they had fo rged fo r

themse lves . Accord ing to Hobsbawm, i t i s a t th i s po in t tha t

soc ia l band i t r y becomes rebe l l i on (Hobsbawm 1969 : 19) .

A l though soc ia l band i t r y was w idespread over many a reas o f

the wor ld , the numbers o f ac t i ve a rmed par t i c ipan ts were

un i fo rmly sma l l i n the ma jo r i t y o f cases . For example in the

c iv i l war in Co lomb ia dur ing the 1940 ’s t here were no more

than fo r ty d i f fe ren t bands o f rebe ls , each w i th be tween ten to

twen ty a rmed insurgen ts . Accord ing to Hobsbawm, the f i gu re

o f ten to twen ty men represen ts a norm fo r the s i ze o f t yp ica l

soc ia l band i t g roups th roughout a l l con t inen ts and h is to r i ca l

pe r iods . Tak ing th is as a base l i ne , band i t s wou ld no t have

exceeded more than 0 .1% o f the to ta l ru ra l popu la t ion

(Hobsbawm 1969 : 20) .

Fac to rs tha t encouraged the sp read o f band i t r y were per iods

o f g rea t economic s t ress b rough t on by na tu ra l d i sas te rs , c rop

fa i lu res , war , conques ts , oppress ive ru le and a b reakdown in

soc ia l and po l i t i ca l o rder . In the even t where soc ia l band i t ry

became par t o f ma jo r upheava ls in a soc ie ty , espec ia l l y in

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cases wh ich accompan ied the t rans i t i on f rom one soc ia l o rder

w i th ano ther , a t such moments in h is to ry soc ia l band i t r y cou ld

become par t o f a peasan t revo lu t ion . In Ch ina , fo r example ,

soc ia l band i t s ep i tomized a long t rad i t i on o f na t i ve popu la r

res is tance and w i th the demise o f dynas t i c imper ia l ru le , they

p layed a c r i t i ca l ro le in t he revo lu t ion as m i l l i ons o f peasants

became caugh t up in a revo lu t ionary ques t towards c rea t ing a

new soc ia l o rder .

The soc ia l band i t was a p roduc t o f the peasan t wor ld and the

vagar ies o f peasan t l i f e and he d id no t see h imse l f as a

revo lu t ionary t rans fo rmer o f h i s soc ie ty . Forced in to a

despera te s i tua t ion by economic c r i s i s , famine , war o r na tu ra l

d i sas te rs , the peasan t soc ia l band i t became an ou t law in o rder

to su rv ive o r de fend h is t rad i t i ona l peasan t way o f l i f e . They

typ ica l l y de fended what they knew and d id no t possess any

par t i cu la r ideo log ies o r p lans fo r soc ia l change . Accord ing to

Hobsbawm, the i r a ims were modes t in tha t they genera l l y

sough t s imp ly to res to re ‘ the t rad i t i ona l o rder o f th ings” ,

usua l l y based on some myth ica l cons t ruc t o f the pas t

(Hobsbawm 1969: 26) . A l though no t opposed to the r i ch , whom

they accep ted as par t o f the t rad i t i ona l o rder , they d id f i gh t

aga ins t undue and in to le rab le in jus t i ces perpe t ra ted by the

r i ch aga ins t the poor and the ru le r aga ins t the sub jec t . They

accep ted the fac t tha t the re wou ld be lo rds , k ings , r i ch and

poor , bu t w i th in the bounds o f wha t were deemed fa i r ,

to le rab le and mora l l y accep tab le fo r the t imes .

Hobsbawm a lso iden t i f i ed o ther marg ina l g roups who were

a t t rac ted to some fo rm o f band i t r y and who l i ved on the

per iphery o f ru ra l l i f e , such as demob i l i zed so ld ie rs , f reedmen

and mig ran ts who sough t resp i te f rom ev i l l and lo rds by mov ing

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to the coun t rys ide . He a lso c i tes herdsmen, tha t i s , i nd iv idua ls

who were par t o f peasan t l i f e , bu t l i ved a la rge ly i so la ted

ex is tence in the mounta ins , cu t o f f f rom the da i l y ebb and f low

o f v i l l age l i f e tha t iden t i f i ed w i th and suppor ted the band i t

g roups they came in to con tac t w i th and qu i te o f ten jo ined up

w i th them as ou t laws (Hobsbawm 1969 : 32-4 ) .

Bes ides ind iv idua ls who jo ined up as par t o f a g roup ,

Hobsbawm a lso makes ment ion o f men who d id no t meek ly

accep t the soc ia l i n jus t i ces o f the day , bu t took up a rms

aga ins t the in jus t i ces under wh ich the i r peop le l i ved . These

were ra re ind iv idua ls , the ‘Pancho V i l l as ’ o f the wor ld who

s tood up and fough t fo r a cause and thereby ga ined the

respec t o f the i r peers . They became the champions o f t he

underdog , the avengers and heroes a round whom myths were

c rea ted and kep t a l i ve fo r genera t ions . An example wou ld be

the Maf ios i o f S ic i l y , who carved ou t a n iche fo r themse lves as

s t rong men who moved f rom be ing mere band i t s t o respec ted

loca l over lo rds in the i r respec t i ve commun i t ies (Hobsbawm

1969 : 35-6 ) .

An impor tan t d is t inc t ion be tween peasan t band i t s and common

c r im ina ls was tha t peasan t band i t s shared the va lue sys tems

o f the peasan t soc ie ty o f wh ich they iden t i f i ed w i th and

be longed to . Cr im ina l robber bands , such as those o f cen t ra l

Europe and Ind ia o f the seven teen th and e igh teen th cen tu r ies

were composed o f members o f spec i f i c soc ia l cas tes , such as

the kn i fe–gr inders o f Germany and the hawkers and fa i rg round

peop le o f cen t ra l Europe . They lacked the soc ia l background

and common roo ts o f the peasan t and cou ld thus no t be

c lassed toge ther w i th the peasan t soc ia l band i t . These were

s imp ly jus t bands o f p ro fess iona l c r im ina ls , vagran ts and

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nomads who p reyed upon the peasan ts as we l l as the wea l thy

w i th in a w ider a rea o f ac t i v i t y than tha t o f the ru ra l peasan t

and soc ia l band i t (Hobsbawm 1969 : 39 ) . Some o f these

common c r im ina ls were somet imes idea l i zed in ins tances

when they robbed f rom the r i ch and avar i c ious merchan ts and

landowners who were t yp ica l l y desp ised by the poor . These

ind iv idua ls became the typ ica l med ieva l Rob in Hoods o f the i r

day and the myth ica l exp lo i t s o f these charac te rs were

perpe tua ted down the cen tu r ies in o ther par ts o f Europe . 19 Soc ia l band i t s were no t regarded as c r im ina ls by the i r k in fo lk

and were respec ted members o f the i r commun i t ies (Hobsbawm

1969 :47-8 ) . They genera l l y d id no t opera te fa r f rom the a rea

o f the i r v i l l age and they were ma in ta ined in food and supp l ies

by the i r peop le ou t o f a sense o f i den t i t y and commun i ty w i th

the i r goa ls . Hobsbawm makes the po in t tha t peasan t soc ie ty

made very c lear d is t inc t ions be tween soc ia l band i t s who

earned the i r approva l and those who d id no t (Hobsbawm 1969 :

49 ) . Soc ia l band i t s were thus no t revo lu t ionar ies who wanted

to over th row the s ta tus quo , bu t t yp ica l l y had ra ther modes t

ob jec t i ves : fa i rness , re -es tab l i shment o f the o ld ways o f the i r

ances to rs and soc ia l j us t i ce w i th in the paramete rs o f the

ex is t ing soc ia l o rder .

2.5 BANDITS AND VIOLENCE

The soc ia l band i t was no t a lways s imp ly jus t an avenger o f the

poor , robb ing f rom the r i ch and r igh t ing in jus t i ces perpe t ra ted

19 O ther such no tab le robbers were : D ick Turp in 1705 1739 ; Car touche 1693-1721 ; Johannes Peuck le r , who was a lso known “Sch inderhannes” , 1783-1803 and the French smugg le r , Rober t Mandr in , 1724-1755 .

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aga ins t the peasan ts . Excess ive v io lence and c rue l t y i s an

endemic ing red ien t o f band i t ry . As Hobsbawm pu ts i t , peasan t

band i ts ’ agendas were l im i ted and ranged be tween robber ies ,

in t im ida t ion and ac ts o f pe t ty v io lence . There were however

numerous examples o f band i t g roups who resor ted to ac ts o f

unbe l ievab le c rue l t y , i nc lud ing rape , murder , to r tu re and

who lesa le des t ruc t ion (Hobsbawm 1969: 65-6 ) . Hobsbawm

sugges ts two reasons fo r band i t s resor t ing to ex t reme fo rms o f

v io lence and savagery . The f i r s t i s tha t band i t s needed to

insp i re f ea r and te r ro r in the hear ts and minds o f the i r

oppressors and the second i s tha t vengeance and c rue l t y go

hand in hand w i th the in t im ida to ry tac t i cs and ob jec t i ves o f

band i t ac t i v i t y . Band i t gangs cou ld no t wreak vengeance on

the i r oppressors by us ing the s t ruc tu res o f wea l th , power and

soc ia l s tand ing , wh ich were a l l anyway in the hands o f the

wea l thy and p r i v i l eged . In the band i t ’ s v iew, the mos t e f fec t i ve

resources ava i lab le to ach ieve t he i r a ims were to in f l i c t u t te r

humi l ia t ion and c rue l t y on the i r v i c t ims , the reby de l i ve r ing a

c lear message o f oppos i t i on to and f rus t ra t ion w i th the

cond i t i ons under wh ich they and the i r commun i ty l i ved

(Hobsbawm 1969 : 63) . Examples o f ex t reme v io lence a re

found in g roups who a re par t i cu la r l y humi l i a ted and made to

fee l i n fe r io r , such as in ins tances o f ex t reme and pervas ive

rac ism as we l l as where minor i t i es a re b ru ta l l y oppressed by

ma jo r i t i es . The impover i shed peasan t Ind ian commun i t ies o f

Co lomb ia reac ted savage ly and ind isc r im ina te ly aga ins t the i r

wh i te oppressors dur ing the revo lu t ion o f the 1940 ’s .

There a re numerous examples o f peasan t rebe l l i ons tha t have

fa i led and le f t beh ind a las t ing legacy o f v io lence and

hope lessness tha t was passed on to fu tu re genera t ions . In

o rder to i l l us t ra te the dep ths o f u t te r despa i r he and h is

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peop le had endured , i t i s wor th quo t ing f rom an in te rv iew w i th

a Co lomb ian band i t ch ie f , Teo f i l o Ro jas , who a t the age o f

twen ty - two had been charged w i th abou t fou r hundred c r im ina l

charges rang ing f rom a l leged ly murder ing 110 peop le to o ther

assor ted ac ts o f v io lence and c rue l t y :

‘What has impressed you mos t?

See ing the houses burn .

What made you su f fe r mos t?

My mother and l i t t l e b ro thers weep ing fo r hunger on the

mounta in .

Have you been wounded?

Five t imes , a l l r i f l e sho ts .

What wou ld you l i ke mos t?

Let them leave me in peace and I sha l l work . I wan t to

lea rn to read .

Bu t a l l they want i s to k i l l me . I ’m no t one they w i l l l eave

a l i ve . ’ 20

2.6 POLIT ICS AND ECONOMICS

The band i t l ed a l i f e o f dua l ex is tence w i th in the soc ia l o rder :

On the one hand he was f ree f rom the cons t ra in ts o f no rma l

v i l l age commun i ty l i f e , wh i l s t a t t he same t ime he was no t ab le

to d ivo rce h imse l f en t i re l y f rom the s t ruc tu res and rea l i t i es o f

the loca l l andscape , o f wh ich he was by necess i t y , an in tegra l

pa r t . Accord ing to Hobsbawm, as much as the band i t i s apar t

f rom the norma l soc ia l o rder and conven t ions o f the da i l y l i f e

20 F rom Hobsbawm 1969 : 67 . Quot ing f rom Genaro Matos , ‘Operac iones I r regu la res a l Nor te de Ca jamarce ’ i n an in te rv iew conduc ted by Sa lamon V i l chez -Murga , Fus i les y Mache tes , a Loca l Source : 1968 , 390-398 : L ima.

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of the commun i ty , the ex is tence and surv iva l o f band i t g roups

depended on in te rac t ing and re la t i ng to the economic , po l i t i ca l

and soc ia l sys tems o f the reg ions in wh ich they opera ted

(Hobsbawm 1969 : 84 )

Band i t s a re par t o f the loca l economies in wh ich they ca r ry ou t

the i r ac t i v i t i es in the sense tha t they need to ob ta in f ood ,

supp l ies and a rms. They a lso need to d ispose o f the i r boo ty in

some way o r ano ther , e i the r by d is t r ibu t ing i t amongs t the

poor and needy , o r by se l l i ng i t to the loca l peop le fo r money

by wh ich to buy supp l ies , o r by bar te r and thereby con t r ibu te

to the f low o f goods and money in to loca l economies . I n

numerous cases , they cou ld a l so become a par t o f the w ider

moneta ry sys tem, beyond the l im i ted amb i t o f the i r l oca l

domains when they se l l and t rade the i r i l l -go t ten ga ins w i th

loca l merchan ts , such as inn -keepers , ca t t le t raders and o ther

commerc ia l m idd le -men o f ru ra l soc ie ty . Band i t g roups wou ld

need to s tay in touch w i th the loca l economic rea l i t i es o f the

marke ts in o rder to success fu l l y d ispose o f the i r boo ty , i n

much the same way as wou ld a t rader o r a fa rmer . Ca t t le

rus t le rs wou ld o f ten a lso become bona- f ide l i ves tock dea le rs

as occur red in the Ba lkans , and merchan t cap ta ins wou ld t r y

the i r hands as p i ra tes , o r v i ce ve rsa , o f ten w i th the knowing

conn ivance o f the i r governments , the reby becoming leg i t ima te

p r i va teers (Hobsbawm 1969 : 85) .

The rus t i c l i f e o f a peasan t band i t cou ld change in d ramat ic

ways i f he was ab le to w iden h is economic and soc ia l ho r i zons

by jo in ing band i t g roups . An ap t example i s tha t o f S ic i l y and

Cors ica , where ru ra l thugs and o ther d isa f fec ted you th s ta r ted

o f f as loca l th ieves and rus t le rs and even tua l l y ended up

domina t ing the loca l economies o f these reg ions . These band i t

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groups in t ime came to be known as the Maf ios i , whose

leaders and fo l lowers evo lved in to respec ted bus inessmen

who expanded the i r i l l ega l ac t i v i t i es in to a w ide range o f

c r im ina l deeds , wh i l s t a t the same t ime bu i ld ing and runn ing

leg i t ima te bus iness emp i res (Hobsbawm 1969 : 87) .

A success fu l band i t ch ie f l i ved a l i f e o f dua l ro les : tha t o f the

poor man, labour ing under a yoke o f oppress ion , an ou ts ider

and a rebe l , who , th rough cunn ing , b ru ta l i t y and s t reng th , se t

h imse l f up in oppos i t i on to the h ie ra rchy o f l oca l po l i t i cs . The

i rony i s tha t the more wea l thy and power fu l he became, the

more he became par t o f the leg i t ima te es tab l i shment wh i le a t

the same t ime he rema ined a champion o f the poor . He was

ab le to do tha t due to the re la t i ve i so la t ion o f ru ra l l i f e , where

con tac ts w i th tax -co l lec to rs , po l i ce and o ther government

o f f i c ia l s were in te rmi t ten t and ra re .

The i so la t ion o f ru ra l commun i t ies was idea l fo r the sp read

and ex is tence o f band i t ry . The band i t g roup became a po l i t i ca l

rea l i t y fo r the loca l i nhab i tan ts , w i th whom they had to fo rm an

e f fec t i ve re la t ionsh ip , the re be ing no o ther means o f

ma in ta in ing law and o rder . By ca l l i ng on ou ts ide au thor i t i es ,

peasan t commun i t ies wou ld have exposed themse lves to more

harm than in tended ; as ou ts ide mi l i t a ry fo rces were wont to

lay was te the coun t rys ide in dub ious endeavours to res to re

peace to the reg ion . The fo l low ing passage succ inc t l y

encapsu la tes the d i lemma ru ra l commun i t ies faced in the

absence o f a s t rong cen t ra l au thor i t y and in a reas where

band i t r y f l ou r i shed :

‘ I much p re fe r dea l ing w i th band i t s than the po l i ce , ’

sa id a Braz i l i an landowner a round 1930 . ‘The po l i ce

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are a bunch o f ‘dog-k i l l e rs ’ who come f rom the

cap i ta l w i th the idea tha t a l l the backwoodsmen

p ro tec t band i t s . They th ink we know a l l the i r escape

rou tes . So the i r ch ie f ob jec t i s to ge t con fess ions a t

a l l cos ts…. . I f we say we don ’ t know, they bea t us . I f

we te l l them, they s t i l l bea t us , because tha t p roves

tha t we have been t ied up w i th the band i t s…….The

backwoodsman can ’ t w in……and the band i ts? – Ah

the band i ts behave l i ke band i t s . M ind you , you have

to know how to hand le them so tha t they don ’ t cause

t roub le . S t i l l , l eav ing as ide a few o f the lads who

rea l l y a re c rue l , they cause no harm excep t when the

po l i ce a re on the i r t ra i l ’ (Hobsbawm 1969:89) . 21 The po l i t i cs o f remote ru ra l a reas encouraged the g rowth in

power and p res t ige o f l oca l l andowners and magna tes . I t was

a s imp le fac t o f the p re - indus t r ia l e ra tha t the cen t ra l au thor i t y

had l i t t l e in te res t o r capac i t y fo r tha t mat te r , to po l i ce and

ma in ta in o rder over inaccess ib le and fa r - f l ung par ts o f the i r

domin ions . In these i so la ted reg ions , lead ing fami l i es who in

some way o r ano ther were ab le to accumula te su f f i c ien t

power , a rms and in f luence , wou ld t yp ica l l y f i l l t hese func t ions .

Band i t ry f l ou r i shed under such cond i t ions , as they were used

in o rder to advance the in te res ts o f a par t i cu la r magnate o r

landowner by o f fe r ing the i r se rv ices as a f i gh t ing fo rce o r to

garner po l i t i ca l suppor t fo r the i r pa t ron . Band i t r y the re fo re

became an impor tan t and in tegra l pa r t o f the po l i t i ca l

s t ruc tu res o f p re - indus t r ia l commun i t ies . The on ly s i tua t ions in

wh ich band i t g roups d id no t fo rm bonds w i th loca l i n f luen t ia l

k insmen were when such ou t lawed g roups were so rebe l l i ous

21 Leonardo Mota , 1968 : No Tempo de Lamp iao , R io de Jane i ro , 54 .

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as to be too r i sky w i th wh ich to f o rm any sor t o f a l l i ance and

were be t te r o f f e l im ina ted than le f t to upse t the loca l po l i t i ca l

l andscape (Hobsbawm 1969 : 91- 93) .

Rura l po l i t i cs a re conduc ive to the spread o f band i t r y . Band i ts

a re p ro tec ted by the i r own peop le . Th is i s par t i cu la r l y so

where there i s weak o r no cen t ra l government in f luence over

the po l i t i ca l a f fa i r s and cond i t ions in ru ra l reg ions , espec ia l l y

in the remotes t and mos t inaccess ib le a reas . Power fu l l oca l

fami l i es made use o f band i t g roups to p romote the i r power

bases and p ro tec t t rade rou tes and per fo rm a hos t o f o ther

func t ions to conso l ida te the i r con t ro l over the loca l economy

and the i r po l i t i ca l power . However , as the wea l th and

in f luence o f such magnates inc reased , par t i cu la r l y as access

and t ranspor t rou tes opened up , they became in tegra ted , w i th

t ime , in to the leg i t ima te po l i t i ca l and economic s t ruc tu res o f

the s ta te . The a t t rac t ion o f u t i l i z ing band i t s fo r po l i t i ca l

pu rposes thereby g radua l l y d im in ished . A t such po in t , the

band i ts who had la rge ly been schoo led in v io lence and

c r im ina l i t y , came to be seen as a th rea t and were regarded

more as ou t laws who needed to be e rad ica ted . Ra ther than

con t inue to make use o f band i t g roups to p ro tec t the i r

i n te res ts , the “newly ” respec tab le loca l l eaders wou ld now

pre fe r to use regu la r po l i ce and a rmy un i t s to guard the i r l and ,

p roper ty and economic and po l i t i ca l i n te res ts . In the cour t o f

pub l i c op in ion , the image o f the band i t s as loca l “he roes , ”

changed , and they were inc reas ing ly seen as ou t laws to be

rev i led and k i l l ed .

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2.7 THE BANDIT AS REVOLUTIONARY

A d is t ingu ish ing d i f fe rence be tween common c r im ina l i t y and

genu ine soc ia l p ro tes t i s when band i ts become en thused w i th

va lues o f pa t r io t i sm and revo lu t ionary fe rvour to change the

soc ia l and po l i t i ca l cond i t i ons under wh ich they l i ve . Peasan t

band i t movements a re the re fo re par t i cu la r l y recep t i ve to

revo lu t ionary lean ings , g iven the r igh t cond i t i ons p reva i l i ng

fo r i t s sp read amongs t a d isa f fec ted popu lace . Cr im ina ls , w i th

a l im i ted agenda revo lv ing a round no th ing more than robbery

and o ther c r im ina l ac ts , on the o ther hand , feed o f f soc ie ty

and the i r ob jec t i ves a re no th ing more than a imed a t seek ing

persona l ga in and no to r ie ty . The ques t ion tha t begs to be

asked i s , a t wha t po in t does soc ia l band i t r y move beyond the

con f ines o f mere loca l p ro tes t in to a genera l movement fo r

revo lu t ion and genu ine soc ia l change? Accord ing to

Hobsbawm, band i t ry by i t s ve ry na tu re as a focus o f soc ia l

p ro tes t has w i th in i t the seeds f rom wh ich cou ld sp r ing the

beg inn ings o f w idespread revo l t . (Hobsbawm 1969 : 98 )

H is to ry has shown tha t many peasan t bands fo rmed a round

de te rmined b r igand leaders who a t t rac ted numerous adheren ts

un t i l t hey posed a cons iderab le th rea t aga ins t the s ta te ,

mob i l i z ing la rge numbers who were p repared to f i gh t fo r some

cause o r idea l , somet imes c lose ly re la ted to f reedom or a

re tu rn to some form o f a (o f ten myth ica l ) p rev ious way o f l i f e .

The Cossack peasan ts f l ed to S iber ia where they en joyed

some two hundred years o f au tonomy, un t i l t he t sa rs t r i ed to

incorpora te them in to the g rea te r Russ ian s ta te . These

Cossack ser fs , who g rea t l y va lued the i r f reedom, were jo ined

by numerous peasan t band i t g roups and la rge numbers o f

a rmy deser te rs who were unwi l l i ng to jo in the t sa r ’ s a rmy, as

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wel l as escaped p r i soners and o ther ma lcon ten ts , and

embarked on a mass ive revo l t to re -asser t the i r i ndependence

tha t las ted f rom 1670 to 1774 un t i l t hey were overwhe lmed by

the Russ ian a rmy . The band i t ch ie fs who led these rebe l l i ons

were h igh ly es teemed as heroes who were regarded by the

peop le as the ‘good ’ t sa rs who wou ld rep lace the ev i l nob les

and lo rds o f Russ ia . However they lacked any rea l i deo log ica l

and po l i t i ca l agenda beyond a des i re to b r ing back the pas t

g lo r ies o f Cossack f reedom and ended up embark ing on a

p rogramme o f murder , p i l l age and des t ruc t ion .

The in te rna l s t ruc tu res and work ings o f the typ ica l band i t

g roup made i t h igh ly un l i ke ly tha t such g roups cou ld

metamorphose in to la rge-sca le revo lu t ionary movements

a imed a t b r ing ing abou t a new po l i t i ca l o rder . Mos t band i t s

g roups a re sma l l i n numbers and lack the necessary

ideo log ica l bas is to represen t an en t i re soc ie ty , bu t shou ld

ra ther be seen as on ly one aspec t o f the numerous p rob lems a

soc ie ty may be exper ienc ing . Such rebe l l i on the re fo re rema ins

ma in ly an express ion o f peasan t d issa t i s fac t ion and i s on ly a

re f lec t ion o f the p ro tes t o f one par t o f the la rger mob i l i za t ion

in the soc ie ty . Peasan t band i t s rea l l y on ly unders tood the

wor ld o f the poor and consequent l y d id no t read i l y re la te to

the wor ld o f the power fu l and r i ch . The i r revo lu t ionary v i s ions

were l im i ted and Hobsbawm be l ieves tha t genera l l y they d id

no t asp i re to d reams o f l i be ra t ion and b ro therhood . The

success fu l Mex ican band i t , Pancho V i l l a , mere ly wan ted to be

a landowner and had no v is ions o f becoming a na t iona l l eader

(Hobsbawm 1969 : 108) .

In sp i te o f th i s , band i t r y has p layed a ro le in many modern

revo lu t ions . Soc ia l band i t s cou ld and d id iden t i f y w i th na t iona l

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yearn ings fo r loca l au tonomy and res is tance to fo re ign

conques t and i s one o f t he ma jo r reasons tha t band i t r y cou ld

become so much a par t o f a peop les ’ s t rugg le fo r change . A t

the mos t bas ic leve l , band i t s p rov ided a ready body o f men

who were a rmed and s teeped in a t rad i t i on o f f i gh t ing . Mao

Tse Tung ac t i ve ly rec ru i ted f rom the many band i t g roups

wh ich roamed th roughou t the remote r par ts o f Ch ina . He

recogn ized the i r wor th as f igh t ing men wh ich was based on a

long t rad i t i on o f na t i ve res is tance in p ro tec t ing loca l f reedoms

and surv iv ing cen tu r ies o f peasan t oppress ion . A t f i r s t th i s

f i gh t ing fo rce resembled an a rmy o f ‘ rov ing insurgen ts ’ and

was composed o f ‘ so ld ie rs , band i t s , beggars and p ros t i tu tes ’ ,

( i n Mao ’s own words) .These e lements were even tua l l y

ass im i la ted in to the Red Army, bu t no t be fo re they had p layed

a s ign i f i can t par t i n the commun is t revo lu t ion in Ch ina .

Hobsbawm s ta tes however , tha t no t too much mus t be made o f

band i t s ’ con t r ibu t ion to modern revo lu t ions . Band i ts t yp ica l l y

have l im i ted revo lu t ionary and po l i t i ca l amb i t ions as they have

a lmos t a lways found themse lves in the amb iguous pos i t i on

be tween the men o f power and the poor on the one hand , and

the fac t tha t they opera ted w i t h in the po l i t i ca l and soc ia l

s t ruc tu res o f the i r commun i t ies , ra ther than ac tua l l y aga ins t i t

(Hobsbawm 1969 : 107) . So wh i le they may have p layed some

ro le dur ing per iods o f soc ia l un res t and s t rugg le , the i r l ack o f

the necessary m i l i t a ry s t ruc tu res , o rgan iz ing ab i l i t y ,

i deo log ica l j us t i f i ca t ion , bureauc ra t i c s t ruc tu res and resources

fo r sus ta in ing a s t rugg le on any la rge sca le o r fo r any long

per iods o f t ime resu l ted in them s imp ly be ing e l im ina ted o r

absorbed in to the la rger and more power fu l movements . In the

example o f Ch inese band i t g roups , they s imp ly s topped be ing

band i t s and became par t o f the regu la r a rmy fo rmat ions .

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CHAPTER 3

3 .1 H ISTORICAL BACKGROUND

The s to ry o f the Jew ish peop le i s p r inc ipa l l y the h is to ry o f i t s

domina t ion by a success ion o f fo re ign powers s ince the fa l l o f

the k ingdom o f Dav id in 587 BCE. The coun t ry came under

Pers ian ru le in 538 BCE and then some two hundred years

la te r , Pa les t ine fe l l to A lexander who annexed the te r r i to ry in

332 . Smal lwood h igh l igh ts the p rob lem o f nomenc la tu re and

the incons is tenc ies by wh ich the te rms ‘Pa les t ine ’ and ‘ Judea ’

a re app l ied (Smal lwood 1981 : 1 ) In an t iqu i t y , Judea was used

to desc r ibe the a rea cen t red a round Jerusa lem in i t s

nar rowes t sense . I t was a lso used more w ide ly to deno te the

who le Jew ish and semi -Jewish a reas wh ich even tua l l y became

the Roman p rov ince and incorpora ted Judea , Samar ia and

Idumea. A f te r 44 CE the te r r i to r ies o f Ga l i l ee and Perea were

inc luded in the p rov inc ia l boundar ies . Pa les t ine became the

name o f f i c ia l l y o f these a reas a f te r 135 CE. For ease o f

conven ience I p ropose to fo l l ow the sugges t ion made by

Smal lwood to use the te rm ‘Judea ’ when dea l ing w i th the

te r r i to ry in and a round Jerusa lem and Pa les t ine when re fe r r ing

to the who le Jewish te r r i to ry (Smal lwood 1981 : 1 ) . The

te r r i to ry o f Sy ro -Pa les t ine fe l l under the sway o f the ru le rs o f

the P to lema ic Dynas ty o f Egyp t un t i l 200 BCE, when i t then

became par t o f the Syr ian Se leuc id House . The Jews fough t

va l ian t l y aga ins t a success ion o f Se leuc id ru le rs and

even tua l l y ga ined the i r i ndependence in 141 BCE. A f te r 80

years o f i ndependent Jew ish ru le under the Hasmonaean

Dynas ty , Pa les t ine fe l l under par t ia l Roman con t ro l as the

Roman Empi re aggress ive ly asse r ted i t s po l i t i ca l and mi l i ta ry

in f luence over a weak Syr ia in o rder to secure i t s Eas te rn

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f ron t ie rs . In 6 CE, Pa les t ine became a fu l l p rov ince o f the

Roman Empi re .

What was there in the na tu re o f the Jew ish Peop le tha t caused

them to revo l t th ree t imes in the las t th ree cen tu r ies? The f i r s t

aga ins t Se leuc ids in the Macabaean revo l t (168-165 BCE) ,

then aga ins t the Roman Empi re (60 -70 CE) and f ina l l y , the

Bar Kochba revo l t (132-135 CE) . What was so pecu l ia r i n the

charac te r o f the Jew ish Peop le tha t made them rebe l aga ins t

Roman ru le? Were Jews par t i cu la r l y revo lu t ionary as a resu l t

o f the i r ea r l i e r h i s to ry? Toynbee seems to th ink tha t the

fo rmat i ve years o f the ear l y K ingdoms o f Judah and Is rae l

were a p roduc t o f the revo lu t ionary o r ig ins o f the peop le who

even tua l l y came to be the Jews (Toynbee 1976 : 162) . Hors ley

and Hanson have sugges ted tha t the long h is to ry o f Jew ish

res is tance to t y ranny and oppress ion i s par t o f an anc ien t

t rad i t i on o f rebe l l i on go ing back to the o r ig ins o f the Jew ish

na t ion by the Jew ish peasan t ry d r i ven by a des i re to be f ree

and fue l led by an uncommon devo t ion to i t s fa i th and be l ie f i n

i t se l f as a separa te peop le under the sp i r i tua l gu idance o f a

s ing le God (Hors ley and Hanson 1999 : 4 ) .

“ I t i s by now a t ru ism in theo log ica l and b ib l i ca l

s tud ies tha t , fo r I s rae l i te and Jewish fa i th , the

peop le ’s h is to ry was a ma jor a rena in wh ich they

encoun te red and in te rac ted w i th God and God ’s

w i l l . There fo re , to unders tand the popu la r

movements and leaders among the peasan t ry in the

f i r s t centu ry CE, i t may be espec ia l l y impor tan t to

ske tch the h is to ry f rom wh ich they emerged , and

wh ich fo rmed the i r memor ies and shaped the i r

i dea ls . A t the same t ime, we shou ld keep in m ind

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the two c lass soc ia l s t ruc tu re tha t pers is ted f rom

b ib l i ca l I s rae l to Jew ish Pa les t ine . For such a

s t ruc tu re , when more than n ine ty percen t a re

peasan ts domina ted by a sma l l m inor i t y , i s sub jec t

to a lmos t inev i tab le tens ions tha t a re a ma jo r fac to r

in i t s h is to r i ca l deve lopment ” ( ib id ) .

I t i s wor thwh i le the re fo re to examine th is in more de ta i l i n

o rder to see i f a para l le l can be d rawn be tween the

revo lu t ionary tendenc ies o f ear l y Jew ish found ing h is to ry and

the rebe l l i ous charac te r o f the Jewish popu lace a t the t ime o f

Roman ru le in Pa les t ine in the f i r s t cen tu ry .

3.2 THE ORIGINS OF ISRAELITE PEASANT SOCIETY

The o r ig ins o f ear l y I s rae l has been an a rea o f i n tense deba te

and specu la t ion , however , i t i s genera l l y accep ted by mos t

scho la rs o f ear l y I s rae l i te h i s to ry tha t the p re -monarch ic

per iod had a s ign i f i can t normat i ve e f fec t on the deve lopment

and h is to ry o f l a te r I s rae l , even though the ev idence ava i lab le

i s a t bes t pa tch , specu la t i ve and incomple te (Chaney 1983 :

39 ) .

There a re many d i f fe ren t approaches , a l l o f them h igh ly

specu la t i ve and s t i l l f i e rce ly deba ted tha t have been p roposed

as to how ear l y I s rae l o r ig ina ted .

Three o f the mode ls bear fu r ther d iscuss ion as a means to

examin ing whether the re i s a l i nk be tween the ear l y

‘ revo lu t ionary ’ tendenc ies o f the peop le who even tua l l y

became the Jews , and the i r p roc l i v i t y t o rebe l l i ousness in

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l a te r h is to r i ca l pe r iods . By the ear l y par t o f the twen t ie th

cen tu ry , two bas ic approaches to the p rob lem had been

fo rmu la ted :

• The mi l i t a ry conques t mode l ( Jos . 1 -15) tha t advoca ted an

o rgan ized , sw i f t m i l i t a ry conques t f rom deser t g roups who

des t royed the Canaan i te C i t y S ta tes and se t t led in the

conquered a reas .

• Nomad ic in f i l t ra t ion (Jos 15 , Judges 1 ) by peace fu l

pas to ra l i s ts (who cou ld poss ib ly have been the Api ru o r

Shoshu) i n to the popu la ted reg ions o f the h i l l Coun t ry .

The a rchaeo log ica l da ta sugges t tha t these se t t lements o f

p re -monarch ic I s rae l were f ron t ie r te r r i to r ies wh ich

a t t rac ted the marg ina l e lements o f soc ie ty who had fa l len

in to d is favour w i th loca l o f f i c ia ldom or who chose to

w i thdraw f rom the ex is t ing agra r ian pa t te rns o f se t t l ement

(Chaney 1983 : 49 - 50 ) . Mendenha l l based th is mode l o f

peasan t revo l t a round the Amarna le t te rs wh ich cons is ted

o f a d ip lomat i c a rch ive f rom the four teen th cen tu ry BCE

and d iscovered a t E l -Amarna on the N i le . These le t te rs

dea l t w i th the rebe l l i ous ac t i v i t i es o f a g roup o f peop le

ca l led ap i ru , who d i rec ted the i r hos t i l i t y aga ins t the pe t ty

dynas ts o f Sy ro -Pa les t ine . L i t t l e e lse i s known abou t the

ap i ru beyond the p rob lems ment ioned in t hese despa tches

by the minor k ings o f Syro -Pa les t ine to the i r nomina l ru le r ,

the Pharaoh in Egyp t . The iden t i t y o f the ap i ru has been

the sub jec t o f i n tens ive scho la r l y research , ma in ly because

o f the poss ib le e tymo log ica l re la t ionsh ip to the word ‘ i b r i ’

o r “Hebrews” and “ I s rae l i tes ” o f the B ib le . Accord ing to

Chaney , wha t can be re l iab ly agreed on i s tha t the ap i ru

were geograph ica l l y assoc ia ted w i th Syro -Pa les t ine and

no t an ex te rna l nomad ic in f luence . The ap i ru i s no t an

e thn ic appe l la t ion , bu t re fe rs to e lements in the popu la t ion

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who were “dec lassed , fug i t i ve , up roo ted , o r who o therw ise

s tood ou ts ide the acknowledged soc ia l sys tem” (Chaney

1983 : 53) . However , a l l th ree te rms, ap i ru , “Hebrews” and

“ I s rae l i tes ” a re amb iguous and l i ngu is t i ca l l y they vary

accord ing to con tex t i n the sense tha t they deno te soc ia l

ro les , espec ia l l y dur ing the p re -monarch ic per iod (Chaney

1983 : 57) .

• In the 1960 ’s , the p rob lem was approached f rom a

soc io log ica l pe rspec t i ve . Th is approach advoca ted tha t the

I s rae l i tes were in fac t fug i t i ves f rom the lower c lasses who

rebe l led aga ins t the oppress ive Canaan i tes ru le rs by

means o f an a rmed s t rugg le . Th is schoo l re jec ts the

no t ion tha t the Is rae l i tes emerged as an ex te rna l f o rce and

con tends tha t they were a loca l i zed phenomenon f rom

w i th in the amb i t o f the Canaan i te te r r i to r ies .

Desp i te near l y a cen tu ry o f research and scho la rsh ip t he

ques t ion o f who the Is rae l i tes were , where they come f rom and

how to iden t i f y them e thn ica l l y rema ins unreso lved . The ma in

i ssue o f how to recons t ruc t the i r se t t l ement ( f rom Egyp t , the

S ina i Deser t , Urban Canaan o r the ru ra l h in te r land) and the i r

re la t ionsh ip to the Canaan i tes and the i r ne ighbours a re s t i l l

comp lex ques t ions tha t have no t been adequate ly answered by

the a rchaeo log ica l records o r the tex tua l rema ins .

Much la te r , w i th the S ina i covenan t se rv ing as an ideo log ica l

b lue p r in t , the commun i ty o f I s rae l i tes s ta r ted to become

a t t rac t i ve to those who were l i v ing under oppress ive reg imes .

‘Common loya l t y to a s ing le over lo rd , and ob l iga t ion

to a common and s imp le g roup o f no rms c rea ted the

commun i ty , a so l ida r i t y wh ich was a t t rac t i ve to a l l

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persons su f fe r ing under t he burden o f sub jec t ion to a

monopo ly o f power wh ich they had no par t i n

c rea t ing , and f rom wh ich they rece ived v i r tua l l y

no th ing bu t tax co l lec to rs . Consequen t l y , en t i re

g roups hav ing a c lan o r “ t r i ba l ” o rgan iza t ion jo ined

the newly - fo rmed commun i ty , i den t i f i ed themse lves

w i th the oppressed in Egyp t , and rece ived

de l i ve rance f rom bondage ’ (Mendenha l l 1970 : 108) . Th is commun i ty ex is ted fo r some two hundred years as a f ree

and independent peasan t ry w i thou t a ru l ing c lass excep t fo r

the Mosa ic code wh ich served as an ear l y fo rm o f a

cons t i tu t iona l p rogramme. As such th is ear l y commun i ty o f

I s rae l i tes , were ab le to fend o f f th rea ts to the i r ex is tence f rom

bo th w i th in and w i thou t , pa r t i cu la r l y f rom the Canaan i te k ings

who cou ld no t make e f fec t i ve use o f the i r char io ts in the h i l l y

a reas inhab i ted by the Is rae l i tes .

Accord ing to Hors ley and Hanson , i t was the co l lec t i ve

memory o f th i s commun i ty tha t was passed on to subsequent

genera t ions by means o f the B ib l i ca l na r ra t i ve . Th is became a

re fe rence po in t fo r fu tu re genera t ions who s t rove , a t va r ious

t imes , to re tu rn the commun i ty to an epoch when the Jewish

peasan t ry l i ved under the ru le o f God in a jus t and ega l i ta r ian

soc ie ty , w i thou t over lo rds , k ings o r ru le rs and f ree o f fo re ign

domina t ion (Hors ley and Hanson 1999 : 6 ) .

Dur ing the e leven th cen tu ry the Ph i l i s t i nes became a ma jo r

reg iona l power . On ly I s rae l was ab le to success fu l l y ma in ta in

the i r i ndependence by rad ica l l y res t ruc tu r ing the i r po l i t i ca l

env i ronment as a monarch ica l reg ime, based on the k ingsh ip

mode l o f the type the Is rae l i te s ta te , as i t was , had res is ted

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up to th is po in t . Dav id o rgan ized the resources and peop le

in to a cen t ra l i zed po l i t i co - re l ig ious s ta te . The monarchy under

Dav id as k ing now became the med ia t ing ins t i t u t ion be tween

the peop le and Yahweh, g iv ing the monarchy the d iv ine

sanc t ion and leg i t ima t ion to ru le . Dur ing the re ign o f So lomon,

the monarchy cen t ra l i zed the fa i t h in the temp le in Je rusa lem.

In I s rae l , the ma jo r i t y o f the peasan t ry found i t d i f f i cu l t t o

reconc i le i t se l f to the s t ruc tu res and au thor i t y o f a

monarch ica l sys tem and were suppor ted by p rophe ts l i ke

Hosea and Amos , who harsh ly c r i t i c i zed the k ings and ru l ing

c lasses fo r the oppress ion and in jus t i ces under wh ich the

common peop le l i ved and p red ic ted d iv ine re t r ibu t ion fo r the

na t ion un less they re tu rned to the i r fo rmer way o f l i f e . The

bas is fo r the i r c r i t i c i sm was deep ly roo ted in the p r inc ip les o f

the Mosa ic covenan t and the abhor rence o f oppress ion by a

ru l ing c lass and the soc ia l i nequa l i t i es o f monarch ica l ru le .

I s rae l was conquered by the Assyr ians in 722 BCE and Judah

fe l l to the Baby lon ians in 587 BCE.

The Pers ians conquered Baby lon in 539 BCE and a l lowed the

ex i led I s rae l i tes to re tu rn to the i r homeland and rebu i ld the i r

cap i ta l Je rusa lem and the Temple . The head o f the Judean

soc ie ty became the h igh p r ies t who was based in the temp le ,

toge ther w i th the h igh p r ies t l y fami l ies who became the de

fac to po l i t i ca l , re l ig ious and economic power s t ruc tu res as

we l l as the emergen t upper -c lass o f Jew ish soc ie t y . Wi th the

adven t o f He l len is t i c ru le and la te r the Roman Empi re , Judea

con t inued to func t ion as a temp le commun i ty , bu t under the

ex te rna l con t ro l o f an imper ia l government . The soc ia l and

economic rea l i t i es meant tha t a l though the peasan ts were ab le

to con t inue l i v ing under the i r Mosa ic t rad i t i ons , they became

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i nc reas ing ly a l iena ted f rom the ru l ing p r ies t l y au thor i t i es as

they were burdened by taxa t ion and o ther res t r i c t i ve measures

tha t marg ina l i zed the i r ex is tence .

3 .3 A POLIT ICAL, ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL HISTORY OF

THE JEWISH PEASANTRY IN THE HASMONAEAN ERA The o r ig ins o f a g rea t dea l o f the cond i t i ons under wh ich the

Jewish popu lace found themse lves in the f i r s t cen tu ry , had i t s

roo ts in the res is tance aga ins t Se leuc id domina t ion and the

subsequent r i se o f the Hasmonaean Dynas ty . Success ive

Se leuc id monarchs a t tempted to fo rc ib l y conver t the Jews

away f rom the mos t cher i shed tene ts o f the i r fa i th the reby

caus ing a popu la r g roundswe l l o f res is tance and rebe l l i on ,

wh ich was to cu lm ina te in the es tab l i shment o f an independent

Jew ish s ta te . Judas the Maccabee, one o f the sons o f a

p r ies t l y Hasmonaean fami l y led the revo l t as an underg round

movement and was so success fu l tha t they de fea ted a number

o f l a rge a rmies sen t aga ins t them. The peasan ts ’ res is tance

on ly inc reased when i t became c lear tha t the Se leuc ids ’

u l t ima te a im was to end the ex is tence o f the t rad i t i ona l way o f

l i f e o f Judean soc ie ty by con f i sca t ing the land , se l l i ng the

peop le in to s lavery and se t t l i ng non-Jews on to the con f i sca ted

land , ma in ly in o rder to repay the deb t the Se leuc ids owed to

Rome as overdue t r ibu te (1 Macc .4 .36-59) .

A f te r a leng thy s t rugg le , the peop le o f Judea succeeded in

the i r war o f na t iona l l i be ra t ion . The ou tcome however , was no t

a re tu rn to a t rad i t i ona l way o f l i f e based on a Mosa ic idea l ,

bu t the es tab l i shment o f a s ta te tha t was ind is t ingu ishab le

f rom any o f the o ther semi -He l len ized s ta tes in the reg ion

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(Hors ley and Hanson 1999 : 23) . In o rder to conso l ida te and

expand the amount o f l and unde r Jew ish con t ro l , a na t iona l

a rmy o f cons iderab le s ize was fo rmed. 22 The land expans ion

p rogramme was ach ieved by the conques t o f ne ighbour ing

te r r i to r ies , the fo rced convers ion o f non-Jews to the Jew ish

fa i th and the d isp lacement and expu ls ion o f thousands o f l oca l

i nhab i tan ts . A l though l i t t l e i s known exac t l y how the l i ves o f

the ru ra l peasan t ry changed as a resu l t o f the es tab l i shment

o f the Hasmonaean s ta te , a few fac to rs can be surmised : As

new land was won over by conques t , Jew ish fa rmers were

se t t led on these te r r i to r ies in o rder to c rea te a c lass o f l and

ho ld ing peasan t ry who wou ld be f ree f rom economic

exp lo i ta t ion . I t i s a l so poss ib le tha t in re tu rn fo r the land , the

peasan t ry wou ld have to make themse lves ava i lab le fo r

m i l i t a ry se rv ice , hence the capac i t y to rec ru i t a la rge na t iona l

m i l i t a ry (Schä fe r 2003 : 66) . Wi th regards to taxa t ion , Schä fe r

has sugges ted tha t the ha ted t r ibu te exac ted by the fo rmer

Se leuc id ru le rs was abo l i shed , the land tax was resc inded and

on ly app l ied to t he roya l es ta tes , l eav ing the re fo re on ly t he

po l l tax , cus toms du t ies and a poss ib le inc rease in the Temple

tax f rom one th i rd o f a sheke l to ha l f a sheke l (Schä fe r 2003 :

67) . 23 Less cer ta in i s to wha t ex ten t the land in the newly

es tab l i shed k ingdom was d iv ided ou t amongs t the members o f

the roya l fami l ies and how much was g ran ted to nob les and

o ther lead ing fami l i es o f the rea lm. App lebaum has sugges ted

tha t the re appears to be su f f i c ien t ev idence f rom Ta lmud ic

22 Jona than had 30 ,000 Jewish so ld ie rs a t h i s d isposa l accord ing to 1 Macc . 10 :36 and cou ld p rov ide fo r the h i r ing o f 3000 so ld ie rs to f i gh t aga ins t the rebe l l i ous so ld ie rs o f An t ioch (1 Macc . 11 : 42 -51) 23 For a more de ta i led assessment o f the land and tax i ssue dur ing the Hasmonaean and Roman per iods , see S . App lebaum (1977) . ‘ Judea as a Roman Prov ince : The Count rys ide as a Po l i t i ca l and Economic Fac to r ’ , ANRW I I .8 , 355-396 .

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sources and f rom Maccabees tha t the Hasmonaean ru le rs had

appropr ia ted la rge t rac ts o f l and fo r themse lves , as was the

cus tom and p rac t i ce in the o ther su r round ing He l len is t i c

monarch ies o f the reg ion (App lebaum 1977 : 358-9 ) . 24

“ I t the re fo re seems permiss ib le t o conc lude tha t on

the eve o f the Roman adven t the g rea te r pa r t o f the

Jewish peasan ts o f Judea had v ind ica ted the i r

t rad i t i ona l r i gh t t o be mas te rs o f the i r own lands , and

tha t the sma l l -ho lder was the p redominan t f i gu re on

the Jew ish agra r ian scene , a l though i t i s ev iden t t ha t

es ta tes o f the Hasmonaean nob i l i t y a l so ex is ted , and

roya l domains among them” (App lebaum 1977 : 360) .

Hav ing ach ieved i t s f reedom f rom fo re ign ru le rs , the Jew ish

peop le were now ab le to con t ro l the i r own des t iny . However ,

the c i r cumstances under wh ich the f ledg l ing s ta te won i t s

independence and the subsequent conduc t o f i t s ru l ing house

wou ld p rove d isas t rous . The Maccabaean movement had i t s

ideo log ica l roo ts in the par ty o f the Has id im which even tua l l y

became the Phar isees (Schä fe r 2003 : 70) . The i r en t i re f rame

o f re fe rence was based on the s t r i c tes t and unswerv ing

observance o f the Law in a l l mat te rs o f pub l i c and p r i va te l i f e .

However , once Jewish l i be r ty had been res to red , the

Maccabaean e l i te and ru l ing c lass sh i f ted i t s focus to the

po l i t i ca l sphere in o rder to advance the na t iona l i n te res t by

24 The sources a re : 1 Macc . 10 , 89 ; Josephus ’s Ant iqu i t i es o f the Jews 13 : 102 wh ich dea ls w i th the g ran t ing o f Ek ron to Jona than ; 1 Macc . 14 , 10 re fe rs to the v i l l ages o f t he P la in o f Esdra lon he ld by Hyrcanus I I as we l l as in Ant iqu i t i es 14 : 207 ; 14 : 208 dea ls w i th Hyrcanus ’s p roper ty r igh ts in Lydda ; B . G i t t i n 57a , regard ing A lexander Janneus ’s ownersh ip o f p roper ty in numerous v i l l ages in the “K ings ’ Coun t ry ” , and o ther Ta lmud ic re fe rences to no tab les possess ing land in th i s reg ion .

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fo l l ow ing p ragmat ic po l i c ies tha t were a imed a t ensur ing

economic and po l i t i ca l s tab i l i t y and re l ig ious compromise .

Th is meant rea l ignment away f rom the Phar i sees to the

Sadducaean par t y , wh ich was compr ised ma in ly o f the wea l thy

and p r ies t l y a r i s toc racy who were more inc l ined to iden t i f y

w i th and compromise w i th the He l len is t i c wor ld and i t s over t l y

secu la r in te res ts . The Phar isees , accord ing to Josephus , had

g rea t in f luence and c red ib i l i t y over the peop le and one can

p resume tha t by the t ime the Hasmonaean dynas ty had

es tab l i shed i t se l f , they were a ma jo r fo rce in Jew ish po l i t i cs

(War 2 . 162-166 ; Ant iqu i t ies 13 .171-173 ; An t iqu i t i es 18 . 11-

17) . The po l i t i ca l s i tua t ion thus can be charac te r i zed as

fo l lows : a f te r a long s t rugg le , Jew ish independence i s re -

asser ted . The leaders o f the movement fo r l i be r ty , the

Maccabees es tab l i shed a cen t ra l i zed monarch ica l k ingdom

and no t a s ta te based p r inc ipa l l y on theocra t i c p r inc ip les and

ins t i tu t ions . The ru l ing e l i t es adop ted He l len is t i c s ta te

fo rmat ions , con t ra ry to the w ishes o f the ma jo r i t y who became

a l iena ted f rom them and the ru l i ng ins t i t u t ions resu l t i ng in the

ou tb reak o f a p ro t rac ted and b loody in te rna l i nsur rec t ion . A

g rea t dea l o f the hos t i l i t y came abou t as a resu l t o f the

Hasmonaean House dec id ing to abroga te to themse lves the

t i t l e o f ‘ h igh p r ies ts ’ . (Sma l lwood 1976 : 16-20) Tha t the

po l i c ies o f the Hasmonaean monarchs , and in par t i cu la r those

o f A lexander Janneus , were deep ly repugnan t to much o f the

Jew ish popu lace can be a t tes ted to by the b loody s ix year

revo l t tha t b roke ou t t owards the end o f h i s long re ign .

Josephus p rov ides what i s p robab ly an apocrypha l ta le o f how,

on h is dea thbed , A lexander Janneus u rged h is w i fe to make

peace w i th the par ty o f the Phar isees in o rder to con t inue w i th

the dynas ty he had es tab l i shed (Ant iqu i t i es 13 .372-83 ; 399-

404 ; War 1 . 88 -98 . ) The ex ten t and fe roc i t y o f the revo l t i s

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graph ica l l y desc r ibed by Josephus , however what i s o f

pa r t i cu la r no te , i s tha t the ideo log ica l sch ism be tween the

Phar i sees and Sadducees had hardened , no t on ly on pure ly

re l ig ious g rounds , bu t a lso on the bas is o f who he ld the

po l i t i ca l r i gh t to lead the peop le . G iven tha t Jew ish soc ie t y

was f ragmented and p lu ra l i s t i c w i th se l f - con ta ined g roups ,

each w i th the i r own au thor i t y f igu res , these fau l t l i nes in

Jew ish soc ie ty , ca r r ied over to the Herod ian e ra and served as

a background to the con f l i c t tha t was to un fo ld la te r in the f i r s t

cen tu ry (Ra jak 2002 : 109) .

As a resu l t o f th i s s t rugg le , the coun t ry was sp l i t be tween

th ree ma jo r par t ies , the Phar i sees , the Sadducees and the

Essenes . Essen t ia l l y , th i s was the domest i c po l i t i ca l scene

wh ich the Romans encoun te red when they f ina l l y en te red

d i rec t l y in to the Syr ia -Pa les t i ne reg ion in o rder to conso l ida te

the i r con t ro l over the Eas te rn reaches o f the Empi re .

3.4 ROMAN INTERVENTION Before he d ied , the Hasmonaean ru le r , A lexander Janneus

bequeathed h is k ingdom to h is w idow, A lexandra Sa lome, who

in i t i a ted a per iod o f peace be tween the war r ing monarchy and

the Phar i sees . Th is however was shor t - l i ved , as soon a f te r her

dea th there a rose a per iod o f con t inuous con f l i c t and

ins tab i l i t y i n the k ingdom as her two sons , Hyrcanus and

Ar i s tobu lus , s t rugg led fo r power amongs t themse lves . In the ,

meanwh i le , Pompey had a r r i ved in Se leuc id te r r i to ry in 64

BCE and se t abou t fo rma l l y annex ing the reg ion in o rder to

secure Rome’s eas te rn borders f rom the con t inuous anarchy

wh ich p reva i led th roughout the Eas t . The con f l i c t be tween the

two war r ing Hasmonaean p r inces gave Pompey the p re tex t to

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i n te rvene in Pa les t ine os tens ib ly to p reven t the in te rna l

con f l i c t f rom caus ing fu r ther ins tab i l i t y i n the reg ion , bu t a l so

to f i rm ly secure Roman imper ia l i n te res ts th roughou t the

reg ion . The resu l t was the even tua l d i sso lu t ion o f the

Hasmonaean K ingdom and d ras t i c reduc t ion o f Jew ish

te r r i to ry . Pompey ’s a im was to ensure tha t Pa les t ine wou ld

become an ins ign i f i can t par t o f Sy r ia and wou ld no t be ab le to

mount a po l i t i ca l o r m i l i t a r y th rea t to the s tab i l i t y o f the reg ion

(Smal lwood 1981 : 27) . He s ta r ted by d ras t i ca l l y reduc ing the

ex ten t o f Jew ish te r r i to ry and res to red the fo rmer Greek c i t i es

o f the coas ta l p la in , Samar ia and Trans jo rdan , f rom Judea .

The rema in ing Jewish te r r i to r ies now cons is ted on ly o f

Ga l i l ee , Perea , Idumea and Judea . The who le a rea descended

in to tu rmo i l as r i va l Roman fac t ions fough t amongs t each

o ther , wh i le the con t inu ing con f l i c t and in te r r i va l ry amongs t

the Hasmonaeans raged on w i th Par th ian mi l i ta ry invo lvement

add ing to the chaos in the reg ion .

The e f fec ts on the Jewish popu lace were devas ta t ing . Mass ive

taxes were imposed on them, the land was ru ined and

w idespread soc ia l tu rmo i l became the o rder o f the day

(Hors ley and Hanson1999: 31 ; Grabbe 1992 : 334) .

By the year 6 CE when Rome s ta r ted to admin is te r Jew ish

Pa les t ine as a d i rec t co lony o f the Empi re , Josephus

descr ibed the s i tua t ion in the land as a genera l s i ckness

tha t… “So deep ly were they a l l i n fec ted and s t rove w i th one

ano ther in the i r s ing le capac i t y , and in the i r commun i t ies , who

shou ld run the g rea tes t leng ths in imp ie ty towards God, and in

un jus t ac t ions towards the i r ne ighbours , the men o f power

oppress ing the mu l t i tude and the mu l t i tude earnes t l y labour ing

to des t roy the men o f power ” (War 7 .260) . The havoc and

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i ns tab i l i t y in th is per iod led to g rea t soc ia l and economic

d is t ress amongs t the peasan ts on the land and the poor o f the

towns and c i t i es .

3 .5 THE POLIT ICAL AND MIL ITARY DIMENSION

In a t tempt ing to govern Judea as a p rov ince , the Romans

commi t ted themse lves to p ro tec t ing Jew ish re l ig ious l i be r ty ,

bu t f rom a po l i t i ca l v iewpo in t , were adamant l y opposed to any

na t iona l i s t asp i ra t ions among the Jewish popu lace . Accord ing

to Jew ish t rad i t i on and p rac t i ce there was concep tua l l y no

separa t ion be tween the po l i t i ca l sphere , the re l ig ious and

cu l tu ra l as they saw i t a l l as one and the same. There fo re , any

th rea t , rea l o r pe rce ived , towards any face t o f the i r fa i th ,

re l ig ious p rac t i ces and way o f l i f e , au tomat ica l l y qua l i f i ed

i t se l f as a po l i t i ca l th rea t to the i r ve ry ex is tence as a separa te

peop le w i th the i r own re l ig ious ideo logy . In the absence o f

modera te Jew ish op in ion be ing ab le to p reva i l fo r any leng th

o f t ime , the resu l t i ng be l l i ge ren t and mi l i tan t res is tance r igh t

a t the s ta r t o f d i rec t Roman ru le in 6 CE became the

fundamenta l cause fo r repea ted tu rmo i l over the nex t s i x ty

years tha t cu lm ina ted in the ou tb reak o f war in 66 CE.

One o f the p r imary ob jec t i ves o f Roman p rov inc ia l governors

was to ma in ta in the peace and s tab i l i t y in the p rov inces to

wh ich they had been ass igned . In the la rger and po l i t i ca l l y

more dangerous p rov inces , la rge a rmy un i t s were s ta t ioned

and on s tandby in case o f any ou tb reaks o f un res t . In less

s ign i f i can t p rov inces , and we can sa fe ly assume tha t Pa les t ine

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i n i t i a l l y fe l l i n to th i s ca tegory as i t was s i tua ted on the

per iphery o f the eas te rn par t o f the Empi re , the m i l i t a ry

p resence was ex t reme ly sma l l and l im i ted . Pa les t ine fe l l under

the m i l i t a ry and admin is t ra t i ve command o f a lega te o f

sena to r ia l rank s ta t ioned in Syr ia and who repor ted to the

Emperor wh i le Pa les t ine p roper , was in t u rn p laced under the

con t ro l o f a prae fec tus or a p rocura to r ( f rom C laud ius

onwards) , usua l l y o f eques t r ian rank and was no t seen as a

‘p lum’ pos t ing fo r a po l i t i ca l l y o r m i l i t a r i l y amb i t ious Roman.

Prov inces governed by a prae fec tus o r procura to r usua l l y had

on ly aux i l i a ry t roops (aux i l i a ) a t the i r command, as was the

case in Judea . These were composed o f so ld ie rs who were

rec ru i ted f rom the ind igenous popu la t ion who d id no t have

r igh ts to Roman c i t i zensh ip , (excep t fo r the o f f i ce rs ) . The i r

ma in du t ies were to man the gar r i sons and ma in ta in in te rna l

o rder . Jew ish c i t i zens o f Judea however , were exempt f rom

mi l i ta ry se rv ice . Bes ides ma in ta in ing o rde r , the governor was

en t rus ted w i th the task o f tax co l lec t ion and the admin is t ra t ion

o f j us t i ce .

Josephus ment ions a t the conc lus ion o f Ant iqu i t i es t ha t on the

dea th o f Arche laus the government changed f rom a

monarch ica l fo rm o f ru le to one based on ru le by an

a r i s toc ra t i c e l i te (An t iqu i t ies 20 .251) . The Jews re ta ined the

r igh t to admin is te r loca l l aws , accord ing to the i r cus tom and to

imp lement the cus tomary c i v i c and c r im ina l l aws , a l though

on ly Roman governors had the r igh t o f impos ing cap i ta l

pun ishment . F rom Josephus ’s observa t ion , i t can be

conc luded tha t Judea was once aga in a commun i ty ru led by an

a r i s toc racy o f h igh p r ies ts , a l though in p rac t i ce , the Romans

reserved the r igh t to themse lves to appo in t and depose the

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h igh p r ies ts , a r igh t they la te r ceded to the c l ien t k ings , Herod

o f Cha lc is and Agr ippa I I .

Accord ing to Goodman, the no t ion o f a soc ia l c lass based on

feuda l t i es o r on inheren t d is t inc t ions o f b i r th d id no t ex is t i n

Judean Jewish soc ie ty . Peop le d id no t au tomat ica l l y see

themse lves as peasan ts , fa rmers , c ra f t sman, landowners o r

merchan ts , o r o ther such g roups w i th c lear l y i den t i f i ab le

in te res ts . Peop le regarded themse lves as d is t ingu ishab le on ly

as ca tegor ies w i th in the con tex t o f Jew ish ideo logy and fa i th .

A person was born a Lev i t e , a p r ies t , an I s rae l i te o r a na tu ra l

bo rn Jew. The v ic t ims o f economic m is fo r tune d id no t con fuse

the i r p l i gh t w i th es tab l i shed Jewish soc ia l no rms, nor d id the

poor iden t i f y w i th o ther poor , and the resen tment towards the

r i ch and the exp lo i ta t ion they su f fe red rema ined un focussed

(Goodman 1993 : 67) . Wh i le c lass d is t inc t ions may have been

b lu r red because o f the cen t ra l ro le tha t re l ig ion p layed in the i r

l i ves , i t p resupposes tha t a l l Jews be l ieved equa l l y and in the

same measure in the tene ts o f the i r fa i th wh i le i t i s now

common ly accep ted tha t the re were a number o f

i n te rp re ta t ions o f Jew ish law, bes ides the in f luences o f

ex te rna l cu l tu res such as Roman He l len ism; in add i t i on one

can surmise tha t fo r the ex t reme ly despera te , the d ispar i t i es

o f wea l th and cond i t ions o f l i f e mus t have been on ly too

apparen t and focussed . Someone d ispossessed o f h is land

mus t su re ly have borne acu te resen tment towards the

d ispossessor .

When the Romans assumed con t ro l o f Pa les t ine they na tu ra l l y

app l ied a fo rm o f governance w i th wh ich they were fami l i a r

and had worked fo r them in o ther p rov inces in the Empi re .

Th is was based on the p rac t i ce o f l eav ing loca l i ns t i tu t ions

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i n tac t under the con t ro l o f the ex is t ing ru l ing e l i t es , such as

they were . In Judea , the s i tua t ion was d i f fe ren t , in tha t a f te r

the demise o f Herod ’s son , Arche laus , the monarch ica l fo rm o f

ru le had by then d isappeared and w i th i t the who le panop ly o f

a r i s toc racy as an ins t i tu t i on o f government . The Romans

there fo re had to ‘ i nven t ’ an a l te rna t i ve a r i s toc racy , and tu rned

to the o ld and venerab le ins t i tu t ion o f the h igh p r ies thood .

They c rea ted what Goodman ca l l s an ‘a r t i f i c ia l ’ a r i s toc racy

and the b lame fo r much o f wha t subsequen t l y wen t wrong can

be b lamed on th is fac t a lone (Goodman 1993 : 110) . The

p rob lem f rom the Jewish perspec t i ve was tha t the H igh

p r ies thood had become deva lued as an o f f i ce in the eyes o f

the Jewish peop le a f te r 37 BCE when Herod had appo in ted

ind iv idua ls to the o f f i ce who lacked au thor i t y and leg i t imacy

fo r the b road mass o f the popu la t ion . The p res t ige and

c red ib i l i t y o f the o f f i ce had so d im in ished by tha t s tage

a l ready , tha t when the Roman p rocura to rs took i t upon

themse lves to appo in t the h igh p r ies ts , the incumbents were

regarded as mere puppe ts o f the Roman governor . As fa r as

the b road mass o f the Jewish peop le were concerned , the h igh

p r ies thood was seen as co l l abora t ing w i th the Roman

au thor i t i es , wh i le a t the same t ime there ex is ted a g rea t dea l

o f con f l i c t be tween o rd inary p r ies ts , the h igh p r ies ts , the

sc r ibes and scho la rs who had a t ta ined a degree o f semi

independence w i th in the Temple and were consequent l y

hos t i l e t owards the Roman au thor i t i es (Hors ley 1993 : 130) .

There fo re as a rmed res is tance and unres t i nc reased in the

coun t rys ide in the years p r io r to the ou tb reak o f the revo l t i n

66 CE, the h igh p r ies ts based in t he Temple in Je rusa lem d id

l i t t l e to in te rvene in the con f l i c ts tha t a rose in the coun t rys ide

and peop le tu rned inc reas ing ly to p rophe ts and se l f -

p roc la imed mess iahs w i th fan tas t i ca l v i s ions o f a renewa l o f

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Jewish independence , f reedom and a re tu rn to a pas t

t rad i t i ons and way o f l i f e (Hors ley 1999 : 115) . The fau l t l i nes

in Judean soc ie ty can be summed up as a ser ies o f con f l i c t s

be tween the exp lo i ted peasan t ry and f rus t ra ted inhab i tan ts o f

Je rusa lem, on one s ide , and the h igh p r ies t l y a r i s toc racy and

Roman ru le rs on the o ther . The i l l eg i t imacy o f the h igh

p r ies thood and the i r a l iena t ion f rom the common peop le as

we l l as the res t o f the Temple h ie ra rchy resu l ted in the i r

i nab i l i t y to ru le e f fec t i ve ly . 25 The bas ic soc ia l fo rm o f anc ien t ru ra l soc ie t ies was the

househo ld and v i l l age commun i t ies . G iven the fac t tha t these

had undergone t raumat ic and i r re t r ievab le s t resses in the

years 63 BCE to 6 CE, they had exper ienced Roman conques t

and reconques t th ree t imes over the pas t s i x ty years . Roman

b ru ta l i t y , devas ta t ion and scorched ear th p rac t i ces d is loca ted

who le commun i t ies , up roo ted v i l l ages and caused la rge

numbers to f l ee to seeming ly more secure Jewish a reas o f

hab i ta t ion w i th in Ga l i l ee and Judea (Hors ley 2002 : 87) .

The o ther ins t i tu t ions wh ich may have been a key fac to r in

Judean po l i t i cs were a lso rendered re la t i ve ly ine f fec t i ve . The

f i r s t was the Sanhedr in , bu t ev idence o f i t s ro le in f i r s t

cen tu ry even ts a re ske tchy and second cen tu ry rabb in ica l

accoun ts a re con fus ing , espec ia l l y when eva lua ted aga ins t t he

ro le th is body p layed in New Tes tament accoun ts . Goodman

a lso c la ims tha t the supreme dec is ion mak ing ins t i tu t ion was

the popu la r assembly . Th is ins t i tu t ion was s teeped in re l ig ious

s ign i f i cance and p layed a dec is i ve ro le a t t imes o f g rea t

25 M. Goodman (1993) : The Ru l ing C lass o f Judea p rov ides a de ta i led and exce l len t ana lys is o f the ru l ing c lass in Judea and the i r fa i l u re to impose e f fec t i ve ru le a t a t ime when i t was mos t needed .

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impor t fo r the Jews. The theo log ica l bas is fo r th i s assembly

was based on the ga ther ing o f a l l the peop le to convene w i th

God a t Mount S ina i (Exodus 23 .14-17) . 26 The cus tom o f a

peop le ’s conven t ion was t ransmi t ted th rough the genera t ions

by the mass ga ther ing o f mu l t i tudes o f peop le in Je rusa lem fo r

the annua l Passover fes t i va l . These were h igh ly emot i ve

occas ions dur ing wh ich the Jewish yearn ing fo r i t s pas t l i be r ty

and f reedom f rom oppress ion was a r t i cu la ted . These

ga ther ings were h igh ly dangerous occas ions fo r the secu la r

au thor i t i es who were scared o f sporad ic and uncon t ro l led mob

v io lence (Goodman 1993 : 110) . “For when the mu l t i tude were

come toge ther to Je rusa lem, to the Feas t o f Un leavened

Bread , and a Roman cohor t s tood guard over the c lo is te rs o f

the Temple ( fo r they were a lways a rmed and kep t guard a t the

fes t i va ls , to p reven t any innova t ion wh ich the mu l t i tude thus

ga thered toge ther m igh t take) ” (War 2 .224) . However , popu la r

assembl ies were no t coun tenanced by the Romans and were

suppressed wherever Rome assumed power , o r emascu la ted

as rubber s tamp ing bod ies , where th i s was conven ien t and

exped ien t (Goodman 1993 : 110) .

The d iscuss ion so fa r has focussed la rge ly on Judea as the

t rad i t i ona l cen t ra l focus o f Jew ish a f fa i rs . However , Ga l i l ee ,

had i t s own un ique h is to ry and the un fo ld ing even ts p r io r to

the revo l t and dur ing the course o f the revo l t , deve loped

ra ther d i f fe ren t l y to tha t o f the Judean exper ience . Ga l i l ee

had , un t i l Hasmonaean t imes , been e i the r an independent

en t i t y , o r ru led as a separa te un i t o f imper ia l admin is t ra t ion

fo r e igh t hundred years . Hors ley remarks tha t the Judean

26 A t a Jewish assembly in 140 BCE, S imon Maccabee was con f i rmed as E thnarch (1 Macc . 14 .40) ; Herod con f i rmed h is he i rs to the th rone in 12 BCE dur ing a ga ther ing o f the peop le in the Temple (An t iqu i t i es 16 . 132-135) .

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exper iences and in te rac t ion w i th the Temple cu l t based in

Je rusa lem had no t a f fec ted Ga l i l ean Jewish soc ie ty to the

same ex ten t as i t had in Judea p roper nor , i s the re c lea r

ev idence tha t the re ex is ted any a t tempts a t b r idg ing the d iv ide

be tween the two Jewish ‘ fac t ions ’ (Hors ley 2002 : 88) . He

descr ibes the d i f fe rences as the “g rea t t rad i t ion ” person i f i ed

by the Jerusa lem-based e l i tes and the i r temp le -s ta te ve rs ion

o f Juda ism as opposed to the “ l i t t l e t rad i t i on ” exempl i f i ed by

an “ I s rae l i te popu la r t rad i t i on ” as found in the Ga l i l ean v i l l age

commun i t ies (Hors ley 2002 : 88) . I t i s p robab le tha t Ga l i l eans

may have he ld con f l i c t ing v iews to those p reva i l i ng amongs t

the Jewish e l i te in Je rusa lem. 27 The Roman mi l i t a ry d id no t t yp ica l l y en t rench la rge a rmies in

the sma l le r and less r i sky p rov inces . When a rebe l l i on d id

occur , they mus te red as much manpower as was ava i lab le to

con ta in i t , o f ten us ing numer ica l l y sma l l and poor l y equ ipped

fo rces as a show o f fo rce and to qu ick ly rega in the in i t i a t i ve

be fo re the s i tua t ion cou ld sp in ou t o f con t ro l . Th is w i l l i ngness

to face an enemy, even i f g ross ly ou tnumbered , was meant t o

show con tempt fo r the enemy and an unwaver ing be l ie f i n the

migh t and power o f the Roman mi l i ta ry to even tua l l y p reva i l . I f

th i s in i t i a l m i l i t a ry in te rven t ion was unsuccess fu l then a fu l l y

equ ipped a rmy w i th adequa te resources was sen t to que l l the

rebe l l i on . The Jew ish fo rces ach ieved an ear l y v i c to ry when

f igh t ing b roke ou t in 66 CE, when the Jews de fea ted a modes t

Roman fo rce under the command o f Ces t ius (War 2 .517-22) ;

(Go ldswor thy 2000 : 144) . The Roman fo rces tha t were p laced

27 Sean F reyne exp lo res the e f fec ts o f reg iona l i sm on the even ts lead ing up to the revo l t i n a shor t chap te r en t i t l ed , ‘The Revo l t f rom a Reg iona l Pe rspec t i ve . ’ Ber l i n and Overman (Eds) . (2002) . The F i rs t Jew ish revo l t : Archaeo logy , H is to ry and Ideo logy . London : Rou t ledge .

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i n Pa les t ine cons is ted o f two cohor ts in Je rusa lem wh ich were

s ta t ioned in the An ton ia fo r t ress cons is t ing o f abou t one

thousand men. Ano ther cohor t was based in Caesaraea , and

ano ther two cohor ts and one squadron o f cava l ry se rved

th roughou t the p rov ince . P rac t i ca l l y then , i f t he Jew ish ru l ing

c lass wanted to asser t i t s au thor i t y in response to the

endemic unres t , i t cou ld no t do so e f fec t i ve ly w i thou t an a rmy

o r m i l i t i a o f i t s own and was thus dependent on the Roman

mi l i ta ry , wh ich i t was re luc tan t to do anyway g iven the b ru ta l

na tu re and heavy-handedness o f the Roman a rmy. The on ly

avenue to dea l ing w i th the sporad ic ou tb reaks o f un res t , was

to use persuas ion ; bu t g iven the lack o f c red ib i l i t y towards the

Jerusa lem ru l ing c lass , th i s was a rou te tha t was d i f f i cu l t , and

in on ly a few ins tances , success fu l . 28

3 .6 THE ECONOMIC SITUATION

The economy o f Pa les t ine was s im i la r to those o f o ther

reg ions o f the Roman Empi re in tha t i t was la rge ly agra r ian in

na tu re w i th the peasan ts p roduc ing the food consumed in the

c i t i es and ru ra l commun i t ies . As ide f rom a few reg iona l

pecu l ia r i t i es , Pa les t ine was par t o f the la rger Roman economic

wor ld and there a re comparab le soc io -economic cond i t ions

tha t ex is ted e lsewhere in the Empi re (Har land 2002 : 515) .

The economy o f Pa les t ine was an underdeve loped and

agra r ian economy based on subs is tence leve l fa rm ing by the

peasan t ry . By means o f the payment o f ren ts and taxa t ion , the

28 The res is tance to the census imposed by the Roman admin is t ra t ion in 6 CE was med ia ted by the h igh p r ies t , Joazar , who conv inced the peop le to co -opera te . (An t iqu i t i es 18 1 -2 ) .

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peasan ts suppor ted the soc io -economic s t ruc tu re a l though th is

resu l ted in a g ross ly unequa l d is t r ibu t ion o f the wea l th in

favour o f the e l i tes who represen ted on ly a f rac t ion o f the

popu la t ion . The income genera ted in the fo rm o f the taxes and

ren ts the re fo re f l owed in to the c i t i es and were red is t r ibu ted

amongs t the wea l thy fo r the i r own par t i cu la r ends w i thou t

any th ing f l ow ing back in to the coun t rys ide , the reby keep ing

the ru ra l a reas perpe tua l l y under funded and in a s ta te o f

cons tan t penury . Dona ld Enge ls exp la ins tha t the peasan ts in

the anc ien t economy l i ved on the marg ins o f su rv iva l and had

v i r tua l l y no th ing le f t over a f te r pay ing the i r taxes and o r ren ts

and ma in tenance cos ts , so tha t any u rban exchange o f goods

and serv ices wou ld no t have been v iab le as the peasan t

s imp ly d id no t have enough money le f t over to se rve as

d isposab le income (Enge ls 1990 :1 ) . Th is , i n essence , la rge ly

cap tu res the sp i r i t o f the p r im i t i v i s t mode l o f the anc ien t

economy in wh ich F in ley has been the mos t in f luen t ia l . More

recen t s tud ies have revea led tha t a l though the Roman

economy was p re - indus t r ia l i n na tu re , i t never the less showed

s igns o f comp lex i t y , o rder and sys tems to an ex ten t tha t any

economic mode ls der i ved f rom ind iv idua l c i t i es need to be

care fu l l y qua l i f i ed (D ’ A rms 1981 : 59) . Doug las Edwards

a rgues tha t ru ra l v i l l ages in Ga l i l ee fo r ins tance , exper ienced

a v ib ran t in te rchange o f goods be tween u rban cen t res and

back to the v i l l ages . (Edwards 1992 : 58-62) . The v i l l age o f

K fa r Hananya p roduced h igh qua l i t y po t te ry wh ich was

d is t r ibu ted over a w ide rad ius , incorpora t ing v i l l ages and

u rban cen t res ac ross the Ga l i l ee , i nc lud ing Sepphor i s and

T iber ius , wh ich p robab ly se rved as the d is t r ibu t ion cen t res fo r

the ne ighbour ing v i l l ages (Bayewi tz 1985 : 243-253) .

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Desp i te the comment f rom Josephus tha t Pa les t ine was no t a

mar i t ime na t ion o r much in te res ted in t rade (Cont ra Ap ion

1 .60) , he re too some cau t ion needs to be app l ied as the

rea l i t y may have been d i f fe ren t . I t i s p robab le tha t th i s

comment der ives f rom the res t r i c t ions p laced on fo re ign t rade

by the rabb is , (wh ich cou ld poss ib ly exp la in why Josephus

may have wanted to downp lay th is ac t i v i t y ) as we l l as the

cus tom o f some c lass ica l au thors to dep ic t commerc ia l t rad ing

ac t i v i t i es in a hos t i l e l i gh t , i nc lud ing Ca to (Agr . 1 .2 -4 ) , C ice ro

(Of f . 1 .150-51) , Var ro (Rus t . 2 .10 .1 -3 ) and Co lume l la (Rus t .

1 .1 -17) , a p rac t i ce tha t Josephus may have been fo l l ow ing

(Har land 2002 : 518) . A rchaeo log ica l ev idence has revea led

tha t the re may have been qu i te ex tens ive impor ta t ion o f goods

in to Pa les t ine , desp i te comments to the con t ra ry (Har land

2002 : 518) .

The economic s t ruc tu re o f the Jew ish te r r i to r ies was one

based on v i l l ages , no t un l i ke mos t o f Roman Near Eas te rn

soc ie ty (M i l l a r 1993 : 350) , bu t w i t h la rge towns a round wh ich

they were anchored fo r purposes o f t rade and c iv i l

admin is t ra t ion . 29 However , Je rusa lem p layed an impor tan t ro le

in the Judean economy as i t was a cen t re o f cons iderab le

wea l th and in f luence (War 3 .54) . Je rusa lem became a wea l thy

c i t y because o f th ree fac to rs . We know tha t the coun t rys ide

was par t i cu la r l y p roduc t i ve and p roduced g ra in , wood , f ru i t

and ca t t le (War 3 .49-50) . The Temple spen t a cons iderab le

sum o f money purchas ing agr i cu l tu ra l and o ther goods f rom

the loca l economy tha t was used in sac r i f i ces and o ther

re l ig ious ceremon ies . The Temple a t t rac ted a g rea t number o f

p i lg r ims every year tha t spen t a g rea t dea l o f money in the

29 Josephus p rov ides an ex tens ive l i s t o f c i t i es , ne ighbour ing v i l l ages and Toparch ies in War 3 . 35 -38 .

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c i t y on accommodat ion and o ther se rv ices as we l l as by

dona t ing g i f t s to the Temple . Herod and h is descendan ts a lso

in jec ted huge sums o f money on bu i ld ing p ro jec ts and u rban

improvement schemes. Th is can be deduced f rom the la rge

number o f workmen who were kep t busy on these p ro jec ts and

on comple t ion in 64 CE were unemployed thereby caus ing

concern tha t they cou ld pose a th rea t to c i v i l o rder . Agr ippa

subsequent l y o rdered tha t they be emp loyed on a scheme to

pave the c i t y . (An t iqu i t i es 20 .222)

There were wea l thy fami l ies based in Jerusa lem and o ther

c i t i es whose p r imary source o f wea l th was ves ted in land

ownersh ip . Th is was par t i cu la r l y so in the case o f Je rusa lem,

where a rchaeo log ica l ev idence has revea led the rema ins o f

sumptuous p r i va te v i l l as . Goodman proposes tha t landowners

were l im i ted in the i r ab i l i t y to c rea te wea l th f rom the land on ly

by means o f su rp lus p roduc t ion as mos t o f i t was consumed

loca l l y . Nor was Judea ab le to c rea te an expor t based

economy o f no te . Wea l thy landowners and c i t y dwe l le rs who

had la rge reserves o f cap i ta l exp lo i t ed the oppor tun i t y

p resen ted by the de te r io ra t ing cond i t ions in the coun t rys ide by

becoming money lenders to despera te f reeho ld peasan ts and

impover i shed landowners o f sma l l ru ra l l andho ld ings

(Goodman 1993 : 57-64) . The loss o f l and , oppress ive taxa t ion

and the genera l impover i shment o f the Jew ish peasan t c lass

was a ma jo r source o f subsequen t c i v i l d i so rder , b r igandage

and w i thou t doub t , a con t r ibu to r to the revo lu t ionary fe rvour

wh ich swept th rough the coun t rys ide in the 60 ’s CE

(App lebaum 1977 : 379-380) .

What exac t l y led to the impover i shment o f the Jew ish fa rmer?

Pompey ’s reorgan iza t ion o f the Jew ish te r r i to r ies d ras t i ca l l y

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reduced the land a rea on wh ich Jews had se t t l ed , and

re tu rned these to the i r fo rmer Greek owners ; the Jewish

popu la t ion had been s tead i l y inc reas ing and reached i t s peak

in the f i r s t cen tu ry , the reby c rea t ing add i t i ona l p ressure on

what l i t t l e land was s t i l l ava i lab le fo r agr i cu l tu re (Goodman

1993 : 54) . A rchaeo log ica l ev idence f rom the Upper Ga l i l ee

has revea led tha t in the Roman Byzan t ine e ra there were 32

se t t lement s i tes in compar ison to the 19 f rom the Ear l y I ron

Age ; in Wes te rn Ga l i l ee 53 s i tes when compared w i th the 36

f rom He l len is t i c t imes ; in the Jordan Va l ley there were 36

Roman Byzan t ine s i tes compared to the 12 Ear l y I ron Age

s i tes ; i n the Go lan 182 s i tes in the Roman Byzan t ine per iod

compared to the 75 found fo r the He l len is t i c per iod (Anderson

1998 : 451) . App lebaum es t imates tha t the re were abou t 600

se t t lement s i tes in Judea and Samar ia and a popu la t ion o f

be tween 300 ,000 and 600 ,000 (App lebaum 1977 : 362) . La rge

c i t i es inc luded in the i r t e r r i to r ies m inor u rban cen t res wh ich

served a number o f ou t l y ing towns wh ich in tu rn se rved

v i l l ages (Anderson 1998 : 451) . Mos t o f the popu la t ion l i v ing in

ru ra l a reas were found in nuc lea ted v i l l ages e i the r on h i l l t ops

o r c lose to wa te r supp l ies and fo r reasons o f mutua l

ass is tance (App lebaum 1977 : 363) . The resu l t was tha t land

ho ld ings became too sma l l to suppor t the peasan t fa rmer .

Landho ld ing s izes ranged f rom 0 .1 hec ta re , wh ich was the

sma l les t recommended by Ha lakha (M. BB I , 6 ) ; un less

o therw ise agreed by the par t ies invo lved , some p lo ts had a

p lough leng th o f no more than 22 met res (Targ . Jona th . Ad

Sam. 14 , 14) . Rabb in ica l records speak o f ho ld ings o f be tween

0 .3 and 0 .35 hec ta res (App lebaum 1977 : 365-67) .

Goodman sugges ts tha t the r i s ing popu la t ion f igu res in Judea ,

and p resumab ly in the o ther Jew ish se t t led a reas was due to

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the inheren t na tu re o f the Jewish a t t i t ude towards fami l y and

car ing fo r o ther fe l l ow Jews. The Jews took the B ib l i ca l o rder

to be f ru i t fu l and mu l t ip l y l i t e ra l l y and ser ious ly wh ich meant

tha t con t racep t ion wou ld no t have been used . In add i t i on ,

abor t ion and in fan t i c ide was no t p rac t i ced (Cont ra Ap ion

2 .202) . In add i t i on , Jew ish a t t i tudes towards char i t y

(Tzeddakah ) as an ins t i tu t ion and as one o f the mos t

impor tan t p recep ts o f Jew ish l i f e (m i tzvo th ) ensured tha t sma l l

ch i ld ren and the ind igen t wou ld have a reasonab le chance to

su rv ive the depreda t ions o f pover ty and na tu ra l d i sas te rs tha t

be fe l l the reg ion f rom t ime to t ime (Goodman 1993 : 61 ) .

The p ressure on the ru ra l fa rmers to ma in ta in ownersh ip o f the

land and to fa rm i t p roduc t i ve ly mus t have been in tense . Th is

was espec ia l l y so a t the dea th o f the fa rm owner when the p lo t

s i ze , judg ing f rom a fo rement ioned da ta on the average s ize o f

l andho ld ings , made i t s imp ly imprac t i ca l t o d iv ide up the land

be tween a l l the descendants , g iven the fac t tha t la rge fami l ies

wou ld have been the norm. Under Jew ish law, the e ldes t son

wou ld have inher i ted a doub le por t ion , bu t th i s wou ld have

represen ted an un tenab le s i tua t ion fo r the inher i to r , who faced

a b leak fu tu re on a por t ion o f l and tha t was a l ready be ing

u t i l i zed to capac i t y and the need to p roduce add i t iona l

su rp luses wou ld no t have been easy o r even poss ib le . Fu tu re

p rospec ts o f fu r ther subd iv id ing the land fo r add i t i ona l

descendants on the inher i to r ’ s dea th (keep ing in m ind a lso the

p roc l i v i t y towards la rge fami l ies ) , posed a b leak p rospec t fo r

the peasan t landowner t r y ing to keep land and fami l y toge ther .

Cond i t i ons dur ing famines and d rough ts inc reased the

p ressure on the land to sus ta in the peop le l i v ing thereon

(Ant iqu i t ies 20 .51 ; 101) .

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There were few op t ions ava i lab le to the v ic t ims o f such

mis fo r tune . They cou ld have emig ra ted to o ther Jew ish

cen t res in the d iaspora , a l though i t i s un l i ke ly tha t they wou ld

have had the cap i ta l to under take such a move . For the

land less , an op t ion cou ld have been to move to the c i t i es t o

seek emp loyment the re . We know f rom the c r i s i s tha t was

p rec ip i ta ted by the comp le t ion o f the cons t ruc t ion work

under taken by Agr ippa in Jerusa lem tha t a cons iderab le

number o f workmen faced unemployment , e igh teen thousand ,

i f Josephus i s to be be l ieved . Agr ippa , fea r ing c iv i l un res t

shou ld the unemployed become res t i ve , engaged them on a

p ro jec t to pave the c i t y (Ant iqu i t i es 20 . 219-222) . O ther

land less ind iv idua ls wou ld have sough t work on the b ig

es ta tes o r the roya l domains as laboure rs . Goodman s ta tes

tha t the re was a l ready a la rge mass o f pe rmanent l y land less

peop le vy ing fo r the l im i ted jobs tha t were ava i lab le dur ing

harves t t imes (Goodman 1993 : 62) . I t was un l i ke ly t ha t

persons f rom a ru ra l and agr i cu l tu ra l background wou ld have

been ab le to en te r in to a c i t y based c ra f t , wh ich was

t rad i t i ona l l y handed down f rom one genera t ion to the nex t

(Goodman 1993 : 62) .

For despera te landowners there were few cho ices . The one

resor t was to lend f rom the wea l thy landowners and c i t y

dwe l le rs , the possessors o f spare cap i ta l , i n o rder to t i de

themse lves over bad harves ts o r na tu ra l d i sas te rs . The fac t

tha t the deb t a rch ives was burn t down dur ing the t ime tha t

F lo rus was p rocura to r , 64 -66 CE, i s ev idence tha t money

lend ing was a leg i t imate and p resumab ly w idespread ac t i v i t y

under taken by the possessors o f spare cap i ta l . Accord ing to

Josephus , the ‘ sed i t i ous par ty ’ d i d th i s in o rder to persuade

the ‘mu l t i tude ’ o f deb to rs and poor to jo in the i r cause in the

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mount ing insur rec t ion aga ins t F lo rus ’s ru le (War 2 .427) . I t i s

deba tab le o f course to wha t ex ten t the e f fec ts o f money

lend ing caused the who lesa le impover i shment o f the ru ra l poor

and the ex ten t to wh ich th is in i t se l f was a reason tha t a

‘mu l t i tude ’ wou ld take up a rms aga ins t the Roman au thor i t i es .

Tha t money lend ing had become an ins t i t u t ion o f the cap i ta l

and f inanc ia l marke ts o f Pa les t ine can p robab ly be gauged by

the fac t tha t the Jewish laws cance l l i ng the deb t in a Sabba th

year were amended, in a sense , so tha t deb to rs acknowledged

tha t the fu l l deb t wou ld s t i l l be repayab le desp i te the adven t

o f a Sabbath year dur ing the te rm o f the loan . 30

W i th th i s as the background , i t i s poss ib le to d raw the

conc lus ion tha t i t was un l i ke ly tha t those fa rmers who had

bor rowed heav i l y and were deep ly in deb t wou ld have found i t

easy o r even poss ib le to work themse lves ou t o f a per i l ous

s i tua t ion . Unab le to repay the i r l oans , the mos t l i ke ly ou tcome

was tha t they wou ld have fo r fe i ted the i r l ands to the i r

c red i to rs (Goodman 1993 : 51-57) . They e i t he r le f t the i r fo rmer

homes o r rema ined on the p roper ty as tenan t fa rmers , o r

worse , as laboure rs . Some may have been ab le to f i nd

emp loyment in Je rusa lem on cons t ruc t ion p ro jec ts , a l though i t

i s no t c lear whe ther these were d rawn f rom the u rban poor

and what percen tage were der i ved f rom the ru ra l poor who had

mig ra ted in to the c i t y look ing fo r an a l te rna t i ve l i ve l ihood

(Ant iqu i t ies 20 .219) .

30 A l though the Prosbu l (wh ich i s a t t r i bu ted to H i l l e l ) i s descr ibed in rabb in ica l t ex ts f rom the second cen tu ry CE, (m. Sheb i . 10 . 3 -7 ) , Goodman sugges ts tha t i t was p robab ly in p rac t i ce in the f i r s t cen tu ry a l ready as i t i s l i ke ly tha t i t wou ld have taken a wh i le fo r t he law to adap t a f te r a p rev ious ly f rowned upon cus tom wou ld become the norm (Goodman M. 1993 : 57-58) .

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The i ssue o f money lend ing by the r i ch to those in need o f

f i nanc ia l ass is tance , be they poor fa rmers , u rban dwe l le rs o r

even the po l i t i ca l l y amb i t ious , was no t a phenomenon

res t r i c ted to Pa les t ine , bu t was a common fea tu re o f the

economies o f the Graeco-Roman wor ld . Accord ing to F in ley ,

vas t amounts o f money were advanced as loans a t usur ious

in te res t ra tes to bor rowers in the towns and the coun t rys ide

(F in ley 1985 : 198) . Desp i te the fac t tha t the land was

p roduc t i ve (Wa r 3 . 49 -50) , one o f the more access ib le means

to wea l th fo r r i ch Jews was to lend money and acqu i re asse ts

in the fo rm o f con f i sca ted land o r money by charg ing in te res t

on loans , ra ther than by inves t ing in agr i cu l tu ra l g rowth o r

manufac tu r ing ou tpu t . As F in ley has a rgued , because o f the

absence o f a bank ing o r f iduc ia ry sys tem, accumula ted wea l th

ex is ted e i the r in the fo rm o f land o r co in , wh ich was hoarded

fo r persona l aggrand izement , bu t was no t used as a means fo r

na t iona l wea l th c rea t ion due to ‘power fu l soc ia l -psycho log ica l

p ressures aga ins t i t ’ (F in ley 1985 : 140) .

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CHAPTER 4

4 .1 JEWISH REBELS AND BANDITS

A good depar tu re po in t w i l l be to examine the per iod a f te r

Pompey had reorgan ized the reg ion as i t ushered in a per iod

o f po l i t i ca l and soc ia l tu rmo i l . Th is per iod o f fo re ign

domina t ion , land shor tage and economic and soc ia l upheava ls

i s the background to much o f the t roub le tha t took p lace f rom

64 BCE and ended on ly when the Jews were f ina l l y de fea ted

by Rome in 74 CE w i th the fa l l o f Masada.

4.1 .1 Hezek iah

In 47 BCE, Hezek iah , a b r igand ch ie f (arch i les tes ) te r ro r i zed

the border reg ion be tween Syr ia and Ga l i l ee . Herod I , near

the very beg inn ing o f h is re ign in 40 BCE, cap tu red h im and

had h im and some fe l low robbers summar i l y execu ted .

Josephus does no t p rov ide any more de ta i l than th is , o ther

than to say tha t Herod won the approva l o f the consu l o f

Syr ia , Caesar Sex tus , fo r a l lev ia t ing the p rob lem in the border

a reas (Wa r 1 . 204-5 ; Ant iqu i t i es 14 .159) . Grunewa ld sugges ts

tha t Hezek iah was more than a mere band i t and cou ld have

been a suppor te r o f the Hasmonaean dynas ty and there fo re a

poss ib le c la imant to the th rone ; nor , he adds , wou ld the

Syr ian governor have pa id as much a t ten t ion to h is demise as

he d id (Ant iqu i t i es 14 . 160) i f he was s imp ly a robber p lagu ing

the a rea (Grunewa ld 1999 : 95) . I t i s poss ib le tha t Josephus

used the te rm ‘band i t ’ as oppos i t e to ‘ k ing . ’ I t was common

p rac t i ce f rom the t ime a f te r the fa l l o f the repub l i c to use the

te rm l a t ro to descr ibe a po l i t i ca l opponen t . C ice ro was

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amongs t the f i r s t to emp loy th is word in h is campa ign to v i l i f y

and des t roy the career o f Ca t i l i ne . Th is t rad i t i on t rans fe r red

i t se l f to the Eas t and o ther par ts o f the Empi re where i t

became common to re fe r to se l f - s ty led loca l po ten ta tes o r

p re tenders to power who were unaccep tab le to the Roman

au thor i t i es , as ‘band i t s ’ (Grunewa ld 1999 : 1 -90) . 31 I f we

accep t tha t Hezek iah and h is fo l l owers were indeed a po ten t ia l

r i va l to Herod , then i t wou ld no t be p ruden t to c lass i f y them as

soc ia l band i ts w i th a l im i ted agenda a imed on ly a t oppos ing

peasan t oppress ion (F reyne : 1988 : 58) . Th is i s con t ra to

Hors ley who app l ied the Hobsbawm mode l o f soc ia l band i t r y

as a means to exp la in ing the ac t ions o f i nd iv idua ls l i ke

Hezek iah and h is fo l l owers (Hors ley and Hanson 1999 : 63-69) .

Be tween 39 and 38 BCE, Herod had to w in back the Ga l i l ee

wh ich appears to have s ided w i th An t igonus , who had been

p laced in power by the Par th ians in 40-39 BCE. Once he had

subdued Sepphor is , he then sen t h is t roops to subdue “ the

robbers tha t were in the caves , who over ran a g rea t par t o f

the coun t ry , and d id as g rea t a m isch ie f to i t s i nhab i tan ts as a

war cou ld have done” (War 1 .304) . Accord ing to Josephus ’ss

descr ip t ion , these b r igands were no t on ly o f a cons iderab le

number , bu t were a lso sk i l l ed in the a r ts o f f i gh t ing and i t took

qu i te a long t ime fo r Herod to de fea t them and sca t te r the

remnants ac ross the borders . Th is ep isode i s ind ica t i ve o f the

ex ten t and s t reng th o f the oppos i t i on to Herod and the

oppos i t i on to the oppress ion tha t the peop le were

exper ienc ing , espec ia l l y due to the aggress ive manner in

wh ich Herod se t abou t co l lec t ing the add i t i ona l taxes imposed

by the Romans . Hors ley c la ims tha t these band i t s shou ld no t

31 A lso T . Hab inek 1998 : The Po l i t i cs o f La t in L i te ra tu re . P r ince ton : Pr ince ton Un ivers i t y Press , 69-87 .

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be c lass i f i ed as mere suppor te rs o f An t igonus and hence

po l i t i ca l oppos i t ion to Herod , bu t shou ld be seen in the l i gh t o f

the ‘ soc ia l rea l i t y ’ o f band i t r y (Hors ley and Hanson 1999 : 64) .

I t seems tha t Hors ley i s imp ly ing tha t these g roups a re

iden t i f i ab le w i th the Hobsbawm mode l o f soc ia l band i t r y . The

on ly ev idence tha t he p rov ides to jus t i f y th i s i s tha t these

rebe ls were in oppos i t i on to the gen t ry , who then s ided w i th

Herod once he had r id the reg ion o f the band i t g roups . Tha t

may have been inev i tab le , g i ven tha t they represen ted the

landowners and were p robab ly v i c t ims o f the b r igands anyhow.

However , the dep th and scope o f the c i v i l d i s tu rbances were

o f fa r g rea te r na tu re , fe roc i t y and in tens i t y than tha t wh ich

wou ld qua l i f y i t to be te rmed soc ia l band i t r y . Soon a f te r Herod

had subdued the b r igands , many f led to inaccess ib le caves in

the v ic in i t y o f Arbe la t ha t were perched p recar ious ly on

mounta in s ides . I t took a g rea t dea l o f e f fo r t and gu i le to f l ush

ou t and k i l l t hese band i t s . Once comple ted , he le f t P to lemy in

charge and re tu rned to Samar ia in o rder to dea l w i t h

An t igonus . Hard ly had he gone , when the rebe ls fe l l on

P to lemy and k i l l ed h im, thereby p lung ing Ga l i l ee once aga in

in to chaos . Herod re tu rned and res to red the coun t ry to a

semb lance o f o rder (War 1 . 309-14) .

I t can be a rgued there fo re tha t the mode l o f soc ia l band i t r y

does no t adequa te ly cover the even ts tha t occur red in those

years and in par t i cu la r in th i s case . Ga l i l ee and i t s

ne ighbour ing te r r i to r ies were exper ienc ing w idespread c iv i l

un res t as a resu l t o f the po l i t i ca l changes and mi l i t a ry

conques ts combined w i th the in te rna l s t rugg les tha t were

tear ing a t the fabr i c o f the Roman Repub l i c . In 40 BCE the

Par th ians invaded the p rov ince o f Syr ia and the reg ion ,

inc lud ing Pa les t ine and was engu l fed in a wave o f f i e rce an t i -

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Roman sen t iment . An t igonus se ized the oppor tun i t y to t r y and

rega in t he th rone o f h is fa ther and the f igh t ing spread up to

Je rusa lem (War 1 .250) . The c iv i l d i so rder , p rope l led by the

f i e rce oppos i t i on to Rome, can on ly be descr ibed as a ma jo r

insur rec t ion aga ins t Herod and Rome, and to descr ibe the

par t i c ipan ts as soc ia l band i t s does no t e f fec t i ve ly cap tu re the

sca le and dep th o f th i s per iod o f ma jo r oppos i t i on to Rome.

We know l i t t l e beyond Josephus ’ss c rude descr ip t ion o f them

as band i t s ( l es ta i ) , however i t i s c lea r tha t they were p robab ly

a m ix o f peasan ts , suppor te rs o f the Hasmonaean dynas ts and

o ther ru ra l e lements un i ted under a common ha t red o f the

fo re ign oppressor , d i sp laced f rom the i r l and by the Roman

reorgan iza t ion in 64-3 BCE, buck l ing under c r ipp l ing taxa t ion

imposed by the Romans a t a t ime o f chao t i c c i v i l

admin is t ra t ion and po l i t i ca l upheava ls . G iven th is scenar io , i t

i s h igh ly un l i ke ly tha t these g roups cou ld be c lass i f i ed as

t yp ica l soc ia l band i t s , f i gh t ing aga ins t the un jus t possessors

o f wea l th and cap i ta l i n o rder to re tu rn to an idea l way o f l i f e

tha t ex is ted in the pas t . There i s no apparen t ev idence in

Josephus tha t these band i t s l i ved in caves o r were o rgan ized

as t yp ica l h igh land peop le based in remote mounta in la i r s . I t

wou ld be more l i ke ly , tha t they used the te r ra in to the i r

advan tage l i ke any guer r i l l a fo rce , e i the r as a re fuge o r fo r

o f fens ive reasons . A c loser read ing o f Josephus revea ls the

fo l l ow ing :

• The f igh te rs were mi l i ta r i l y o rgan ized by An t igonus ,

under h is command as an a rmy (War 1 . 295-7 ) . Th is

hard ly f i t s the l im i ted agenda o f soc ia l band i t s who

opera te in sma l l bands o f be tween ten and twen ty men

(wh ich Hobsbawm c la imed was the norm on a l l

con t inen ts and in a l l pe r iods ) who s imp ly rob and

a t tack by s tea l th (Hobsbawm 1969 : 20 ) .

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• An t igonus ’s men were ab le to man gar r i sons as a

de fens ive and tac t i ca l measure (War 1. 296) .

• The rebe l fo rces were ab le to engage Herod in a

p i t ched ba t t le (War 1 .305) .

• They were ab le to and d id bes iege fo r t resses a f te r

they had k i l l ed P to lemy, Herod ’s genera l , a l so

ind ica t ing tha t these g roups o f rebe ls were h igh ly

o rgan ized mi l i ta r i l y and under tac t i ca l l eadersh ip and

were no t s imp ly in ten t on random a t tacks fo r purposes

o f robbery (War 1 . 316) .

I t can be sugges ted tha t the s i tua t ion wh ich p reva i led was

the re fo re mos t l i ke ly ak in to a c i v i l war fough t by two oppos ing

po ten t ia l ru le rs . Tha t g roups o f b r igands poss ib ly took the

oppor tun i t y to jo in in the chaos caused by the oppos ing fo rces

vy ing fo r power i s ve ry l i ke ly . Bu t , the ques t ion tha t a r i ses i s ,

tha t wh i le Herod was f igh t ing o f f the th rea t posed by

An t igonus and wh i le t r y ing to conso l ida te h is power in Ga l i l ee ,

i nc lud ing oppos i t i on f rom urban cen t res l i ke Sepphor is (War

1 .304) , then i s i t no t un l i ke ly tha t he wou ld have bo thered to

use h is fo rces to combat common band i t g roups , espec ia l l y

those hang ing ou t in caves and remote a reas , i f they were no t

par t and parce l o f the same common th rea t to h is con t ro l o f

the reg ion?

4.1 .2 Judas Son of Hezek iah (c . 4BCE) , S imon (c .4BCE) and Athronges (c 4 -2BCE)

Th is sec t ion dea ls w i th th ree ind iv idua ls who a re iden t i f i ed by

Josephus as p re tender -k ings and no t as b r igands . Th is

occur red dur ing a t ime when Pa les t ine once aga in descended

in to ungovernab le chaos and was leader less a f te r the dea th o f

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Herod I . I t was dur ing a per iod when Herod ’s son , Arche laus ,

was t ry ing to con f i rm h is appo in tment as k ing by Augus tus in

Rome and a t ime when the Jews were in tumu l t fo l l ow ing the

dea th o f the ha ted fo rmer monarch and saw an oppor tun i t y to

redress some o f the in jus t i ces and b ru ta l i t i es o f h i s ru le as

we l l as reduce the pun i t i ve taxes tha t were lev ied dur ing h is

long re ign . Dur ing the Passove r ce lebra t ions , A rche laus ,

fea r ing tha t the mob wou ld become uncon t ro l lab le , un leashed

h is t roops on the tu rbu len t c rowds who had ga thered in

Je rusa lem and thousands were massacred (Ant iqu i t ies 17 .206-

18 ; War 2 .8 -14) . A rche laus le f t fo r Rome shor t l y the rea f te r to

so r t ou t h i s appo in tment w i th Augus tus . Wi th Arche laus ou t o f

the coun t ry , Sab inus , who was the imper ia l rep resen ta t i ve fo r

Sy r ian a f fa i rs on ly in f lamed Jewish anger even fu r ther by h is

rapac ious and insens i t i ve behav iour , so tha t when the fes t i va l

o f Pen tecos t came a round , thousands o f Jews s t reamed in to

Je rusa lem f rom Judea , Ga l i l ee , Idumea and f rom reg ions eas t

o f the Jordan and , in Josephus ’s words “a t the ind igna t ion a t

the madness o f Sab inus , and a t the in ju r ies he o f fe red

them….and were more zea lous than the o thers in mak ing an

assau l t on Sab inus , in o rder to be avenged on h im”

(Ant iqu i t ies 17 .254) . Wi th th i s as the background , w idespread

rebe l l i on b roke ou t , no t on ly in Je rusa lem, bu t th roughou t t he

coun t ry . As Josephus descr ibed i t , th i s was an a t tempt by the

Jewish masses “ fo r the recovery o f the i r coun t ry ’ s anc ien t

l i be r ty ” (Ant iqu i t i es 17 .267) . I t i s c lea r tha t Josephus regarded

these even ts as par t o f a w idespread war o f na t iona l l i be ra t ion

a imed a t “ res to r ing a f ree and ega l i ta r ian soc ie ty ” (Hors ley

and Hanson 1999 : 116) . The i r anger was d i rec ted a t the

ins t i tu t ions o f power in tha t they sacked the roya l pa laces in

Je r i cho and Sepphor is , o ther roya l res idences they came

across and the homes o f the r i ch and the landed gen t ry fo r

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these represen ted the symbo ls o f the i r oppress ion , bo th

po l i t i ca l and economic .

Josephus te l l s o f th ree o ther p ro tagon is ts who p layed a ro le in

the tu rmo i l i n the days a f te r Herod ’s re ign tha t Varus , the

Roman lega te o f Syr ia , had to con tend w i th be fo re he cou ld

res to re o rder aga in in the reg ion . A f te r the repress ive ru le o f

Herod , the re occur red a sudden power vacuum in government

c rea ted by the leng th o f t ime i t took Augus tus to reso lve the

success ion i ssues resu l t i ng f rom Herod ’s w i l l , du r ing wh ich

there was a spon taneous reac t ion to the b ru ta l i t y o f

A rche laus ’s ac t ions and those o f Sab inus in the in te r im. There

was an ou tpour ing o f anger and uncer ta in ty tha t resu l ted in

chaos th roughou t the coun t ry . Excep t fo r the a rea o f the

Nor thern T rans jo rdan and the d is t r i c t o f Samar ia , the res t o f

the coun t ry became submerged in b r igandage and guer r i l l a

war fa re as a number o f p re tenders to the th rone made the i r

c la ims to power . G iven th is se t t i ng , the peasan ts f l ocked to

suppor t any number o f these se l f - t i t l ed k ings . “However , the i r

end was no t t i l l a f te rward , wh i le a t p resen t they f i l l ed a l l o f

Judea w i th a p i ra t i c war ” (War 2 .65) .

4.1 .3 Judas

The f i r s t o f these was Judas , who was the son o f Hezek iah the

band i t , dea l t w i th above . Judas was based in Sepphor is in

Ga l i l ee and o rgan ized a la rge number o f ‘ despera te men ’ who

p i l l aged the pa lace and roya l a rmour ies and , accord ing to

Josephus , p lundered f rom and a t tacked anyone who came in

h is way (An t iqu i t i es 17 .271-2 ; War 2 .56 ) .

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4.1 .4 S imon

Ano ther wou ld -be k ing who a rose dur ing these tu rbu len t t imes

was S imon, a one- t ime roya l s teward o f Herod I . He was an

impos ing and phys ica l l y s t rong man. He o rgan ized some

fo l lowers who p roc la imed h im k ing and they des t royed the

Pa lace a t Je r i cho , a f te r hav ing f i r s t p lundered the goods tha t

had been taken f rom the peop le and s to red there . They a lso

p lundered o ther roya l res idences in o ther par ts o f the coun t ry .

Tha t S imon had a subs tan t ia l fo l l ow ing i s revea led by the

comment tha t they were j o ined by “a g rea t number o f Pereans”

(Ant iqu i t ies 17 .276) , and i t took a g rea t e f fo r t on the par t o f

Gra tus , the commander o f the roya l t roops to sca t te r th i s

g roup , cap tu re S imon and behead h im (Ant iqu i t i es 17 . 273-

76) .

4.1 .5 Athronges

The th i rd ind iv idua l who came to p rominence dur ing th is t ime

was A th ronges . He was a s t rong and impos ing shepherd who

c rowned h imse l f k ing . 32 He and h is men b ru ta l l y a t tacked roya l

and Roman t roops , s to le boo ty no t on ly f rom the a rmy, bu t

even f rom amongs t the i r own peop le , caus ing a g rea t dea l o f

chaos in the coun t rys ide un t i l he sur rendered la te r to

Arche laus . I t i s i n te res t ing to no te , tha t on ly a t th i s po in t ,

does Josephus ment ion , tha t Judea was in fes ted w i th band i t s .

32 Peop le who worked w i th an ima ls , such as shepherds , were regarded as synonymous w i th band i t s , accord ing to Jew ish t rad i t i on , (Jackson B .S . 1972 : 38) . In the Roman wor ld herdsmen (pas to r ) , were assoc ia ted w i th band i ts and became a recur r ing l i t e ra ry dev ice tha t se rved to assoc ia te the ind iv idua l w i th semi -barbar i c o r ig ins and consequent l y no t f i t fo r h igh o f f i ce (Grunewa ld T . 1999 : 35-37) . Hobsbawm c i tes tha t herdsmen were na tu ra l a l l i e s o f and rec ru i t s fo r band i t g roups (Hobsbawm E.J . 1969 : 32-34) .

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I t i s on ly now tha t he makes the connec t ion be tween

ind iv idua ls who c la im themse lves k ing , bu t end up caus ing

misery , b loodshed and g rea t d i s t ress amongs t the i r own

peop le (Ant iqu i t i es 17 .278-85) . Paren te observes however ,

tha t in the para l le l descr ip t ion in Ant iqu i t i es on ly a few

chap te rs ear l i e r (An t iqu i t ies 17 . 269-70) , Josephus seems to

lay mos t o f the b lame on Herod ’s ve te rans who fough t w i th

so ld ie rs s t i l l l oya l to the Herodon ian dynas ty and led by

Herod ’s cous in , Ach iabus , bu t in War he makes l i t t l e ment ion

o f th i s , bu t p laces th is inc iden t in Idumea and no t in Judea

(War 2 .55) ; (Paren te 1985 : 185) .

In many ways the even ts tha t be fe l l Pa les t ine fo l low ing on

Herod ’s dea th a re no t un l i ke the per iod p reced ing h is

assumpt ion o f the th rone . Once aga in , the re ex is ted a per iod

dur ing wh ich the po l i t i ca l au tho r i t y o f the land was be ing

con tes ted and as the e f fec ts o f Roman domina t ion on ly

worsened , the t ime seemed appropr ia te to t r y and reasser t

Jew ish independence . The res is tance tha t fo l lowed a f te r

Herod ’s dea th may a lso have been par t l y based on re l ig ious

mess ian ic movements tha t were deepened by fe rven t

escha to log ica l expec ta t ions (Rhoads 1976 : 84) . Hors ley

comments tha t Josephus s tud ious ly avo ids over t re fe rences to

fundamenta l Jew ish concep ts and ‘pa t te rns o f though t ’ when

descr ib ing the upr i s ings and we have to make do w i th the l i t t l e

in fo rmat ion we have a t hand (Hors ley and Hanson 1999 : 110) .

Hors ley ’s approach seems to award a g rea t dea l o f impor tance

to mess ian ic and escha to log ica l mot i va t ions fo r the upr i s ings

tha t occur red p r io r to the revo l t o f 66 CE tha t swept th rough

the Jew ish te r r i to r ies a t th i s t ime (Hors ley 1999 : 110-117) .

Ra jak takes a more p ragmat ic approach and cha l lenges those

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who p lace too much re l iance on mess ian ic be l ie fs in the

po l i t i ca l h i s to ry o f f i r s t cen tu ry Juda ism (Ra jak 1993 : 140-2 ) .

The t ru th poss ib ly l i es somewhere in be tween. The upr i s ings

tha t occur red a t th i s t ime came abou t a t a t ime o f in tense

po l i t i ca l , economic and soc ia l d i s loca t ion caus ing , one can

sa fe ly assume, fee l ings o f g rea t uncer ta in ty abou t the fu tu re

amongs t the Jewish popu lace . I t i s l i ke ly the re fo re , tha t a

g rea t many may have had expec ta t ions o f a renewa l fo r the

en t i re wor ld and the a r r i va l o f a mess ian ic age (Goodman

1993 : 91) . What i s ce r ta in i s t ha t the agenda was c lear l y

po l i t i ca l i n na tu re as was i t s in tended ou tcome: tha t i s the

remova l o f fo re ign domina t ion and i t s rep lacement w i th an

a l te rna t i ve who l l y led Jewish au thor i t y . The upr i s ing tha t

s ta r ted as a se r ies o f even ts f rom Herod I’s dea th , esca la ted

f rom tumu l tuous ga ther ings o f the peop le to w idespread

res is tance in the coun t rys ide in wh ich , the th ree p re tender -

k ings took the oppor tun i t y to o rgan ize suppor te rs , p roc la im

the i r k ingsh ip and un leash ep isodes o f b ru ta l i t y and

insur rec t ion amongs t the i r own k i th and k in and the Roman

fo rces . On th is bas is a lone , they had c lear po l i t i ca l a ims , and

fo r tha t reason a lone , they canno t be c lass i f i ed as soc ia l

band i ts o r even as l es ta i , but ra ther as usurpers ; i f they were

regarded as l es ta i , i t can on ly be because tha t i s how

Josephus descr ibes them (Grunewa ld 1999 : 95-6 ) . A lso , the

re fe rence by Josephus to A th ronges ’s g rea t s i ze and

superhuman s t reng th was a c l i ché used to descr ibe semi -

barbar ian ru le rs (Grunewa ld 1999 : 86) . I t became a common

l i te ra ry conven t ion , par t i cu la r l y o f l a te an t iqu i t y , to labe l

ups ta r ts and usurpers as band i ts and to imp ly tha t they were

semi -barbar i c . Grunewa ld p rov ides an example o f the Emperor

Max im inus Thrax who , accord ing to h is b iographer , was a

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good so ld ie r , was o f a huge s ize , i nc red ib ly b rave , un tamed,

rough and a r rogan t , bu t possessed o f a f i ne sense o f jus t i ce :

he cou ld take on s ix teen su t le rs o r seven o f the b raves t

so ld ie rs and he ha ted anyone o f nob le b i r th in h is p resence .

Th is s ty l i zed p ic tu re o f Max im inus on ly se rved to obscure the

ac tua l na tu re o f the man. (Grunewa ld 1999 : 84-5 ) . Con t ras t

th i s w i th the descr ip t ion o f A th ronges f rom Ant iqu i t i es 17 .278-

84 . He had been a shepherd and o f l ow ly b i r th ; he was ta l l

(h i s fou r b ro thers were a lso ta l l ) ; he was exceed ing ly s t rong ;

he was a competen t m i l i t a ry commander ; he had no sc rup les ;

and he ha ted the Romans and a t tacked them whenever he

cou ld . Farmer conc ludes tha t these ind iv idua ls who asp i red to

become k ings , Judas , S imon and A th ronges , were p robab ly

f rom Hasmonaean fami l i es and tha t Judas and S imon a re

t yp ica l Macabaean names (Farmer 1957 : 147-155) . 33

4.1 .6 Judas the Gal i lean

When the p rov ince o f Judea was fo rma l l y annexed in 6 CE, i t

became l iab le to pay the t r i bu tum cap i t i s , the persona l tax

tha t was pa id by a l l the inhab i tan ts o f the p rov inces . Th is tax

was in add i t ion to the tax on t he p roduce o f the land tha t had

been imposed in 63 BCE in o rde r to f i nance Roman mi l i ta ry

campa igns ; 34 the t r i bu tum so l i , a land tax as we l l as ind i rec t

33 The name Ath ronges i s p robab l y der i ved f rom the Hebrew word , eth rog , fo r the l imes tha t a re used dur ing the ce lebra t ion o f the Feas t o f the Tabernac les . Farmer W.R. ‘ Judas , S imon and A th ronges ’ , NTS 4 (1957-8 ) , pp .147-155 34 I t i s poss ib le tha t the tax was modera ted by Ju l ius Caesar in e i the r 48 o r 47 BCE by a decree : “Ga ius Caesar , Impera to r the second t ime, ha th o rda ined , tha t a l l the coun t ry o f the Jews, excep t ing Joppa , do pay a t r ibu te year l y fo r the c i t y Je rusa lem, excep t ing the seven th , wh ich they ca l l the sabba t i ca l year , because thereon they ne i ther rece ive the

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taxes , known as the vec t iga l ia , o f wh ich the por to r ia , t he

harbour dues were the mos t impor tan t .

Augus tus ins t ruc ted the Syr ian lega te , P . Su lp ic ius Qu i r in ius ,

w i th the ass is tance o f the newly appo in ted governor fo r Judea ,

Copon ius (6 -9 CE) to under take a census in the new prov ince

in o rder to a r r i ve a t a re l iab le es t imate o f i t s popu la t ion and

ex ten t o f i t s l andho ld ings . In o rder to a r r i ve a t the amount

payab le and by whom, i t was lev ied i n t he name o f a person in

h is home town o r c i t y , h i s s laves and on h is p roper ty . Once

th is was known, the tax was co l lec ted by the loca l au thor i t i es

us ing the toparch ic admin is t ra t i ve sys tem (Smal lwood 1981 :

152) . 35

There was immed ia te res is tance to the census based on wha t

can be asc r ibed to a na tu ra l unw i l l i ngness to pay add i t i ona l

taxes as we l l as in th is ins tance , os tens ib ly re l ig ious reasons .

As Josephus descr ibed i t , “bu t the Jews , a l though a t the

beg inn ing they took the repor t o f a taxa t ion he inous ly , ye t d id

they leave o f f any fu r ther oppos i t i on to i t ” (Ant iqu i t i es 18 .3 ) .

The res is tance movement aga ins t the census was led by

Judas the Ga l i l ean . 36 The oppos i t i on to the census was based

on the d iv ine p roh ib i t i on o f coun t ing the popu la t ion as th is

wou ld have meant t ransgress ing the p romise God made to

Abraham: “And I w i l l make thy seed as the dus t o f the ear th ;

so tha t i f anyone cou ld coun t the dus t o f the ear th , then thy

seed sha l l a l so be coun ted” (Gen. 13 .16) . Judas toge ther w i th

Saddok , a Phar i see con federa te , a rgued tha t the census wou ld

f ru i t s o f the i r t rees , no r do they sow the i r l and . ” (Ant iqu i t i es 14 .200) 35 Josephus l i s t s 9 Toparch ies . (War 3 . 54 -56) . 36 He i s named as such in War (2 .118) , o r “ Judas o f Gamala ” o r “Gau lan i t i s ” as he i s a l te rna t i ve ly ca l led in Ant iqu i t i es (18 .4 and 18 .23-25) , bu t i s doub t less one and the same person (Paren te F . 1985 : 191) .

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resu l t i n the ens lavement o f the peop le and tha t they wou ld be

compe l led to f i gh t fo r the i r l i be r ty , “and exhor ted the na t ion to

asser t the i r l i be r ty (Ant iqu i t i es 18 . 4 ) , and e lsewhere , “and

sa id they were cowards i f they wou ld endure to pay a tax to

the Romans , and wou ld a f te r God, submi t to mor ta l men as

the i r l o rds ” (War 2 .118) .

I t does no t appear f rom the sparse de ta i l s i n Josephus tha t

the res is tance to the census i t se l f was a l l tha t se r ious and i t

was qu ick ly suppressed . Joazar , the h igh p r ies t managed to

persuade the popu la t ion tha t res is tance was fu t i l e and to le t

the census take i t s course . As Smal lwood has observed , the

long te rm consequences were fa r g rea te r as , “ the ex t remis t

fee l ing thus un in ten t iona l l y c rys ta l l i zed by the Romans gave

b i r th to the na t iona l i s t pa r ty , he i r to the rebe ls o f 4 BCE and

ear l i e r , wh ich was to deve lop fo rm idab le d imens ions dur ing

the fo l low ing s ix t y years ” (Smal lwood 1981 : 153-54) .

What has made th is ep isode par t i cu la r l y in te res t ing i s tha t

Josephus a t th i s po in t revea ls the ex is tence o f wha t he ca l led

‘The Four th Ph i losophy , ’ the o ther th ree schoo ls o f though t

be ing the Phar isees , Sadducees and the Essenes . The Four th

Ph i losophy has g rea t l y engaged scho la rs who have t r ied to

connec t i t s o r ig ins and be l ie fs to the va r ious inc iden ts and

revo lu t ionary a tmosphere tha t u l t ima te ly ended in War .

Accord ing to Hors ley , the re i s no ev idence whatsoever tha t

t i es the o r ig ina to rs o f the Four th Ph i losophy , who were Judas

o f Ga l i l ee and Saddok , w i th the Zea lo ts , the S ica r i i o r fo r tha t

mat te r , even to the b r igands (Hors ley 1993 : 77-89) . The

zea lo ts and the S ica r i i on ly appeared on the scene in the

midd le o f the revo l t i n the mid 60 ’s . Accord ing to Hors ley the

c la im tha t the re was a connec t ion be tween Judas , Saddok and

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the Phar isees and the movements wh ich sprung up dur ing the

revo l t , has been made repea ted ly in Jew ish l i t e ra tu re and New

Tes tament s tud ies . Foremos t o f the modern genera t ion o f

scho la rs to make th is e r roneous c la im, accord ing to Hors ley ,

has been Mar t in Henge l . Hors ley in a f oo tno te a lso asser ts

tha t Rhoads had a lso mis read the tex t and tha t he too i s gu i l t y

o f the c la im tha t the adheren ts to The Four th Ph i losophy were

the d i rec t descendants to the zea lo ts (Hors ley 1993 :24 f n )

However , Rhoads c lear l y s ta tes tha t “a l though there i s no

ev idence tha t these Zea lo ts embraced the Four th Ph i losophy

o r were connec ted w i th Judas ’ sec t , they may have shared a

her i tage o f de te rmined res is tance reach ing back to the t ime o f

Judas ’s revo l t (Rhoads 1976 :60) .

Par t o f the deba te seems to revo lve a round Josephus ’s

s i lence on the Four th Ph i losophy a f te r the census i ssue was

reso lved spec i f i ca l l y because o f h i s unambiguous re fe rence to

the found ing o f a sec t . “Th is man was a teacher o f a pecu l ia r

sec t o f h is own, and was no t a t a l l l i ke the res t o f those o f

the i r l eaders ” (War 2 .118) . In the para l le l sec t ion in

Ant iqu i t i es , Josephus wr i tes , “bu t o f the four th sec t o f Jew ish

ph i losophy , Judas the Ga l i l ean was the au thor . These men

agree w i th a l l o ther th ings w i th the Phar i sa ic no t ion ; bu t they

have an inv io lab le a t tachment to l i be r ty ; and say tha t God i s

to be the i r on ly ru le r and Lord ” (Ant iqu i t ies 18 .23) . I f Judas

had founded a sec t based on d iv ine g rounds fo r res is t ing

Rome, then the impac t th i s wou ld have had on the in te r lock ing

even ts and persona l i t i es wou ld have p rov ided a compe l l i ng

ra ison d'et re fo r subsequent even ts and wou ld have exp la ined

the morb id fana t i c i sm o f the Jewish res is tance f igh te rs .

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Josephus does no t rea l l y expand on what the ‘new ’ ph i losophy

s tands fo r , bes ides i t s l ove o f l i be r ty . In Ant iqu i t i es he c la ims

tha t the “sys tem o f ph i losophy , wh ich we were be fo re

unacqua in ted w i tha l , ” bu t he does no t exp la in any fu r ther

spec i f i ca l l y wh ich par ts a re new to Jewish though t o r how th is

connec ted w i th the ex is t ing s t reams (An t iqu i t i es 18 .9 ) . As

Paren te has sugges ted tha t i f The Wars o f the Jews was

a imed a t a spec i f i ca l l y Roman aud ience , then i t wou ld have

su i ted Josephus to por t ray the founder o f the an t i -Roman

l i be ra t ion movement as a “soph is t ” ra ther than as an adheren t

o f one o f the ma ins t ream Jewish movements . I f Ant iqu i t i es o f

t he Jews was a imed fo r a Jew ish readersh ip w i th i t s

knowledge o f the Jewish movements , then he migh t have been

more inc l ined to admi t tha t the movement founded and led by

Judas , was a rad ica l o f f shoo t o f the Phar isees (Paren te 1985 :

192-93) .

There i s no spec i f i c name g iven to the sec t (Rhoads 1976 :

53) . The te rm Zea lo ts on ly appears as an iden t i f i e r o f a

spec i f i c g roup in the la te 60 ’s , as does the appe l la t ion , S ica r i i

wh ich on ly came in use in the 50 ’s by the Romans to descr ibe

a par t i cu la r t ype o f res is tance ( ib id 53) . However , beyond the

re fe rence tha t the Four th Ph i losophy was in some way

connec ted to Phar i sa ism, we know abso lu te ly no th ing abou t

how th is re la ted to the o ther s t reams w i th in Juda ism and mos t

impor tan t , how i t a l i gned the enemies o f Rome w i th in Juda ism

(Ra jak 2002 : 89) .

The on ly ev idence tha t can assoc ia te Judas w i th the

revo lu t ionar ies tha t a rose la te r , tenuous as i t may be , a re the

fami l y connec t ions tha t a re ment ioned in Josephus . Two o f

Judas ’ sons , S imon and James were cap tu red by T iber ius

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Alexander and c ruc i f i ed some t ime in 46 -48 CE (Ant iqu i t i es

20 .102) ; Menahem who s to le weapons f rom Herod ’s a rmoury

and took over the s iege in Je rusa lem as one o f i t s l eaders and

who a lso p roc la imed h imse l f a k ing was a son o f Judas (War

2 .433-34) ; then there was E leazar who commanded the S ica r i i

and accord ing to Josephus , was a lso a descendant o f Judas

(War 7 .253) . In sp i te o f the fac t tha t the re i s some ev idence o f

genea log ica l descen t o f Judas and h is d i rec t ances to rs w i th

some o f the la te r revo lu t ionar ies who par t i c ipa ted in the

rebe l l i on in some fo rm or ano ther , i t i s s t i l l deba tab le whe ther

a c la im can be made fo r an ideo log ica l re la t ionsh ip tha t

con t inued down the years to the ou tb reak o f hos t i l i t i es .

Rhoads c la ims tha t on face va lue there appears to be a s t rong

a rgument in favour o f an ideo log ica l connec t ion based on the

fac t tha t a f te r 6 CE un t i l 66 CE no ment ion i s made o f the sec t

o r any revo lu t ionary ac t i v i t y f rom 6 to 44 CE; nor i s the re

ment ion o f any ideo log ica l j us t i f i ca t ion g iven fo r the per iod 44

to 66 CE. As Rhoads has observed , th i s s i l ence in the

nar ra t i ve i s su rp r i s ing fo r the p re -war per iod espec ia l l y so as

Josephus spec i f i ca l l y t r i ed to b lame the war on a sma l l g roup

o f fana t i cs who fo l lowed a re l ig ious v iew tha t was an

‘ i nnova t ion ’ w i th in Juda ism; i f th is g roup there fo re had been

ac t i ve and had been caus ing unres t in the p re -war per iod ,

then p resumab ly , he wou ld have wr i t ten abou t i t (Rhoads

1976 : 56-8 ) .

The conc lus ions tha t can be d rawn on Judas and the tax revo l t

a re tha t the re i s l i t t l e to jus t i f y tha t the sec t he s ta r ted had

such a s t rong in f luence on the peop le ; ra ther i t appears to

have been a sma l l g roup and somewhat ine f fec t i ve . I t i s

poss ib le tha t the ra l l y ing c ry fo r na t iona l f reedom under one

God cou ld have been pu t on the agenda by Judas , bu t the

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i dea l o f f reedom f rom fo re ign domina t ion was no t new in

Jewish re l ig ious and po l i t i ca l t hough t (Rhoads 1976 : 60) . As

Hors ley s ta ted , “ the idea l o f f reedom was thus no t d is t inc t i ve

o f the Four th Ph i losophy , bu t i t was unders tandab ly an idea l

tha t they wou ld have shared w i th o ther Jews who took the i r

fa i th se r ious ly ” (Hors ley 1993 : 83) . 37

4.1 .7 E leazar ben Dina i (30 ’s to 50 ’s CE)

E leazar ben D ina i was a b r igand ch ie f who opera ted in the

mounta inous a reas be tween Judea and Samar ia . He became

invo lved in the inc iden t tha t a rose when some Ga l i l eans were

a t tacked by Samar i tans and k i l l ed in a v i l l age ca l led G inea ,

th rough wh ich they had to t rave l on the i r way to a re l ig ious

fes t i va l i n Je rusa lem. Josephus re la tes tha t the “p r inc ipa l o f

the Ga l i l eans” approached the Roman p rocura to r , Cumanus ,

fo r red ress and jus t i ce , bu t , as he had supposed ly been b r ibed

by the Samar i tans , the mat te r came to nough t (An t iqu i t i es

20 .118-124) . In War however , Josephus wr i tes tha t on ly one

person , “a Ga l i l ean” was k i l l ed (War 2 . 232) . The peop le were

deep ly d issa t i s f ied and wanted to take up a rms in o rder to

avenge the k i l l i ngs . One can in fe r tha t the long-he ld enmi ty

be tween the Jews and Samar i tans came to the sur face and as

these were border a reas , loca l r i va l r ies and an imos i t i es

poss ib ly fanned the f lames o f ex t remism. We read tha t the

Jews had cus tomary r igh t o f passage th rough Samar i tan

te r r i to ry , bu t we do no t know what caused the p rovoca t ion tha t

resu l ted in the dea th / s o f the Jew/s dur ing th is par t i cu la r

jou rney . One can p resume tha t the Samar i tans resen ted Jews

37 Ra jak comes to a s im i la r conc lus ion in tha t the Four th Ph i losophy had no th ing new to o f fe r than what was a l ready in the o ther th ree s t reams (Ra jak T 2002 : 89) .

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mov ing th rough the i r l and . 38 The Jews he ld ve ry nega t i ve

v iews abou t the Samar i tans and be l ieved tha t they were o f

pagan o r ig in . On the o ther hand , the Samar i tans however

be l ieved tha t they too came f rom a common ances t ra l fami l y

t ree and tha t a l though they fo l lowed the re l ig ion o f Moses , i t

d i f fe red in ce r ta in fundamenta l p rac t i ces in the i r fa i th , such as

worsh ip a t Mount Ger iz im ra ther than the Temple in Je rusa lem

and tha t the i r l i t u rgy and adap ta t ion o f the Pen ta teuch was

d i f fe ren t , amongs t o thers . 39

When the Jews who a t tended the fes t i va l heard tha t Cumanus

was re luc tan t to ge t invo lved they en l i s ted the he lp o f the

b r igand ch ie f , E leazar and a con federa te , A lexander , and in

sp i te o f t he “p r inc ipa l men” a t tempt ing to ca lm the c rowds and

take the mat te r fu r the r w i th Cumanus , E leazar subsequent l y

a t tacked severa l Samar i tan v i l l ages , k i l l ed the inhab i tan ts and

burn t them to the g round . Th is roused Cumanus to ac t ion and

he p roceeded aga ins t them dur ing wh ich t ime he k i l l ed some

Jews and cap tu red a number o f them. See ing mat te rs ge t t i ng

ou t o f hand , the mag is t ra tes o f Je rusa lem, assembled to

beseech the rema in ing men who had gone to seek vengeance

aga ins t t he Samar i tans , to des is t and re tu rn to the i r homes.

Mos t o f the Jews d ispersed , bu t a number o f them con t inued

to p i l l age a round the coun t rys ide . As observed by Rhoads ,

th i s inc iden t se rved as a tu rn ing po in t i n Jew ish-Roman

re la t ions (Rhoads 1976 : 73) , and Josephus comments tha t

‘A f te r th i s t ime the who le o f Judea was in fes ted w i th bands o f

b r igands (An t . 20 . 124) . ’

38 Luke 9 . 52-56 in wh ich Jesus exper ienced resen tment f rom the loca l towns fo lk when t rave l ing th rough a Samar i tan v i l l age . 39 The an t i -Samar i tan po lemic can be found in Second K ings 17 ; Ben S i ra 50 : 25 -26 ; Josephus ’s Ant iqu i t i es 11 .302-347 ; Second Maccabees 6 . 1 -2 .

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There a re a number o f i ssues tha t fo l l ow f rom th is inc iden t :

• The inc iden t d id no t have an ideo log ica l bas is . I t

a rose f rom the deep sea ted f rus t ra t ion w i th the

lack o f l eadersh ip f rom the Roman governor and

the percep t ion tha t he was no t even-handed

because , as the s to ry wen t , he accep ted a b r ibe

f rom the Samar i tans .

• The Jews had l i t t l e fa i th in the c red ib i l i t y o f the i r

own leadersh ip ( “p r inc ipa l men” ) , hence the

appea l to E leazar ben D ina i to a t tack the

Samar i tans . Ano ther i l l us t ra t ion o f th i s i s when

the Jews o f Perea took up a rms aga ins t the

peop le o f Ph i lade lph ia concern ing some border

d ispu te and k i l l ed some o f them “w i thou t the

consen t o f the i r p r inc ipa l men. ” When Fadus

became procura to r shor t l y the rea f te r , he was

ex t reme ly upse t tha t the mat te r had no t been

re fe r red to h im fo r cons idera t ion and he execu ted

one o f the r ing leaders and impr isoned the o thers

(Ant iqu i t ies 20 .2 -4 ) . I t a l so demons t ra ted the

obv ious lack o f c red ib i l i t y tha t loca l peop le had in

the Roman admin is t ra t ion to dea l competen t l y and

even-handed ly w i th loca l a f fa i r s .

• Bes ides the s t resses caused by Roman

oppress ion , loca l d ispu tes and vende t tas a lso

p layed a ro le in foment ing unres t , some o f these

b reak ing ou t i n band i t r y in the coun t rys ide .

• By the t ime o f th i s inc iden t , the re was a l ready

w idespread d issen t and c iv i l r es is tance in the

coun t rys ide , ind ica t ing tha t law and o rder had

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broken down comple te ly . In fac t , a f te r Cumanus

had w i thdrawn to Rome, the c iv i l d i s tu rbances

on ly became worse under the nex t p rocura to r ,

Fe l i x (52-60 CE) . F rom then on there a re

con t inuous desc r ip t ions o f b r igandage and c iv i l

un res t , r i gh t up to the per iod o f the revo l t , desp i te

the e f fo r t s o f a success ion o f Roman governors to

con ta in i t . “Bu t the re were s t i l l a g rea t number

who be took themse lves to robb ing , in hopes o f

impun i ty ; and rap ines and insur rec t ions o f the

bo lder sor t happened over the who le coun t ry . ”

(War 2 . 238) .

• The Jewish leadersh ip in Je rusa lem was acu te ly

aware o f the dangerous s i tua t ion tha t they had on

the i r hands and t r ied the i r bes t to pac i f y the

mu l t i tude . They rea l i zed the po l i t i ca l imp l i ca t ions

o f rebe l l i on in the coun t ry a reas sp i l l i ng over in to

the c i t i es and caus ing mass ive re ta l ia t ion f rom the

Roman au thor i t i es .

• The fac t tha t the mat te r was heard in the imper ia l

cour t i n Rome ind ica tes tha t the Roman

au thor i t i es a lso v iewed the Samar i tan inc iden t

and i t s a f te rmath as rebe l l i on and hence o f a

po l i t i ca l na tu re and no t jus t a case o f l oca l

band i t r y .

What abou t E leazar ben D ina i h imse l f? Accord ing to Hors ley ,

he embod ied the typ ica l fea tu res o f a soc ia l band i t , based on

the fac t tha t the peop le tu rned to a b r igand ch ie f fo r he lp ,

ra ther than the leg i t imate au thor i t i es (Hors ley and Hanson

1999 : 74) . We know tha t he opera ted in the mounta inous

a reas border ing on Ga l i l ee and Samar ia fo r a long t ime . We

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can a lso assume tha t he was h igh ly respec ted (even Josephus

a t t r i bu tes to h im the t i t l e o f arch i les tes , and no t the more

common l e i s tes ) o r the aggr ieved mu l t i tude wou ld no t have

asked fo r h is he lp . He was ab le to o rgan ize g roups o f men in to

a f i gh t ing fo rce , ind ica t ing tha t he had some f igh t ing

exper ience . However , I am no t so sure tha t in th i s inc iden t , he

to ta l l y f i t s the ca tegory o f soc ia l band i t . The inc iden t i t se l f

sparked a po l i t i ca l c r i s i s and the ac t ion under taken by E leazar

and A lexander was o f an over t l y po l i t i ca l na tu re , in tha t he

cha l lenged the leg i t imacy o f the Roman au thor i t i es . Tha t

robbery p robab ly took p lace i s ve ry l i ke ly , bu t i t was a lso an

ac t o f po l i t i ca l subvers ion and accord ing to the mode l o f

soc ia l band i t r y , the two do no t go toge ther (Grunewa ld 1999 :

97) . I wou ld sugges t fu r the rmore , tha t i t wou ld be h igh ly

un l i ke ly tha t fo r the twen ty years o r so tha t E leazar and h is

band opera ted as a band i t , as a l leged by Josephus , tha t he

d id so pure ly on the bas is o f ‘ s tea l ing f rom the r i ch to feed the

poor , ’ as some k ind o f my th ica l Rob in Hood f igu re ; o r tha t he

consc ious ly saw h imse l f as such . G iven the d i f f i cu l t y o f

po l i c ing the mounta inous and remote a reas o f Judea , the lack

o f a respec ted and c red ib le c i v i l au thor i t y , i t can be conc luded

tha t E leazar cou ld have been a loca l war lo rd who con t ro l led a

g iven a rea wh ich was par t o f a ne twork o f v i l l ages and loca l

commun i t ies and tha t one o f h i s ac t i v i t i es cou ld have been

robbery , espec ia l l y in l i gh t o f the de te r io ra t ing economic and

po l i t i ca l cond i t ions , in wh ich such ind iv idua ls t yp ica l l y took

the advan tage to bu i ld a power base , respec t and a fo l low ing

as s im i la r d i sadvan taged persons were a t t rac ted to h im and

h is ac t i v i t i es . Th is i s no t d iss im i la r to the a t t rac t ion tha t l oca l

p re tender - dynas ts had fo r the despera te , angry and poor , who

had l i t t l e o ther means o r capab i l i t i es o f dea l ing w i th the

con t inu ing in jus t i ces o f oppress ion and pover ty . I t i s h igh ly

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un l i ke ly tha t Josephus wou ld have por t rayed E leazar , and fo r

tha t mat te r any o f the o ther s im i la r f i gu res , i n any o ther l i gh t

than as b r igand ch ie fs as w i l l be seen in h is t rea tment o f John

o f G ischa la , and in l i ne w i th the common Roman lega l and

mi l i t a ry p rac t i ce o f c lass i f y ing any and a l l th rea ts to law and

o rder by ‘ cas t ing them beyond the pa le ’ i n the mos t

den ig ra t ing manner poss ib le , tha t i s , as l a t rones and the i r

deeds as l a t roc in ium .

Th is inc iden t and i t s a f te rmath a lso served to h igh l igh t the

comp lex na tu re o f the re la t ionsh ips tha t ex is ted in the

coun t rys ide be tween peasan t commun i t ies and band i t g roups .

Such g roups wou ld fo rm a par t o f the loca l economy and wou ld

need to bar te r w i th the i r goods , s to len o r o therw ise , and they

wou ld purchase goods f rom loca l t raders and merchan ts

(Hobsbawm 1969 : 85) . They a lso fo rmed a par t o f the soc ia l

s t ruc tu res o f the commun i t ies w i th in the i r base o f opera t ion

w i th fami l y and k insh ip t i es and w i th be l ie f sys tems based on

the cu l tu ra l d i s t inc t i veness o f peasan t l i f e , va lues and

percep t ions (Landsberger 1974 : 8 ) .

There fo l lows a success ion o f re fe rences to b r igand ch ie fs and

the i r ac t i v i t i es as the c iv i l d i s tu rbances , espec ia l l y in Judea

esca la ted in the two decades lead ing up to the war . One o f

these i s abou t a band i t ch ie f ca l led Tho lomeus , who ravaged

the te r r i to r ies o f the Idumeans and the Arab ians in the ear l y

40 ’s CE. He was soon caugh t by Fadus and s la in . Josephus

conc ludes th is ep isode by dec la r ing tha t Fadus was success fu l

i n c lea r ing Judea o f ac ts o f robbery and p i l l age (Ant iqu i t ies

20 .5 ) . Because o f a lack o f any o ther in fo rmat ion abou t

Tho lomeus and h is exp lo i t s , i t i s no t poss ib le to d raw any

conc lus ions abou t h im excep t to comment tha t he appears to

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have been ano ther example o f a power fu l l oca l ch ie f ta in , who

had carved ou t a te r r i to ry over wh ich he he ld sway .

The same canno t be sa id abou t Jesus son o f Sapph ias , who

Josephus descr ibed as “one o f t he mos t po ten t o f the men

among the sed i t i ous ” who s to le t he horses be long ing to the

envoy tha t Vespas ian had sen t to T iber ius to w in over the

peop le in tha t c i t y to h is s ide (War 3 . 450 ; 457-59) . I f t h i s i s

the same person tha t i s desc r ibed in L i fe , then he wou ld have

had a cons iderab le fo rce o f 800 men whose in f luence seems

to have been in the c i t i es ra ther than the coun t rys ide wh ich

wou ld immed ia te ly d isqua l i f y h im f rom be ing the leader o f a

g roup o f soc ia l band i t s . He cou ld have been the band i t ch ie f

tha t Josephus conv inces no t to a t tack the an t i -Roman par ty

and conv inces the c i t i es in the Ga l i l ee to pay them a sum o f

money in o rder to s top them f rom a t tack ing the Romans o r the

ne ighbour ing se t t lements (L i fe 77 -79) . In L i fe Josephus

iden t i f i es Jesus , “ the cap ta in o f those robbers who were in t he

con f ines o f P to lema is ” who i s p romised a g rea t dea l o f money

by the c i t i zens o f Sepphor i s to f i gh t on the i r s ide (L i fe 105) . I f

he was the same ind iv idua l , then h is m i l i t a ry and po l i t i ca l

i n f luence wou ld have s t re tched f rom Pto lema is on the coas t to

Sepphor is and T iber ius in the Eas t , mak ing h im a reg iona l

th rea t , and in tha t case , a leader o f rebe l fo rces o f some

in f luence .

4.1 .8 John of Gischala and S imon bar Giora

Josephus devo tes more space to John o f G ischa la and S imon

bar G io ra than any o f the o ther l es ta i i n h i s ch ron ic les . The

re la t ionsh ip be tween John and Josephus was an in tense ly

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persona l one and h is l i t e ra ry t rea tment o f John deserves

spec ia l a t ten t ion .

A f te r the ambush and de fea t o f Ces t ius Ga l lus , the governor

o f Sy r ia , near Be th Horon in Oc tober /November 66 CE, even

the rema in ing opponents o f the war became en thused w i th th is

in i t i a l m i l i t a ry v i c to ry and i t sen t ou t a s igna l tha t the re was a

chance o f ach iev ing a f i na l and las t ing conques t aga ins t the

ha ted Romans (War 2 .540-555) . The rebe l fo rces now began

fo r the f i r s t t ime to o rgan ize the conduc t o f the war in a more

sys temat i c manner and tha t meant appo in t ing reg iona l

commanders in a l l the Toparch ies who wou ld p rov ide s t ra teg ic

leadersh ip and o rgan ize the reg ions to p repare fo r the coming

war (War 2 . 562-568) .

I t was obv ious tha t the Romans wou ld move the i r fo rces down

f rom the nor th and they wou ld the re fo re a t tack Ga l i l ee f i r s t .

The task o f de fend ing and p repar ing the Ga l i l ee fo r the war in

th i s reg ion was g iven to Josephus . As a member o f the

a r i s toc racy , and one who had jus t re tu rned f rom Rome, h is

appo in tment was met w i th a lo t o f susp ic ion by the rad ica l

e lement in the leadersh ip in Je rusa lem. John o f G ischa la t oo ,

was scep t i ca l o f h i s mot i ves , and be l ieved tha t h is u l t imate

a im was to a r r i ve a t a nego t ia ted peace w i th the Romans

ra ther than the des t ined showdown in ba t t le .

Sepphor i s rema ined s taunch ly loya l to Rome f rom the ou tse t .

T iber ius on the o ther hand , was engrossed in fac t iona l

d i spu tes wh ich a re dea l t w i th in g rea t de ta i l by Josephus .

Essen t ia l l y wha t i t bo i led down to , was tha t the more urban

and p rosperous e l i tes in the town led by the c i t y counc i l , s ided

w i th the Romans , wh i le the res is tance e lement were d rawn

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main ly f rom the poor and the ru ra l i nhab i tan ts a round the

genera l a rea o f the c i t y . An i l l us t ra t ion o f th i s con f l i c t i s

p rov ided in L i fe when Josephus meets w i th the “p r inc ipa l men”

o f T iber ius headed by Cape l lus , to in fo rm them o f the dec is ion

taken by the leadersh ip in Je rusa lem to des t roy Agr ippa ’s

pa lace . However , Jesus son o f Sapph ias , whom Josephus

descr ibes as “one o f those whom we have a l ready ment ioned

as the leader o f a sed i t ious tumu l t o f mar ine rs and poor

peop le ” and who appears to have been the Archon o f T iber ius ,

bu t c lea r l y the leader o f a revo lu t ionary fac t ion , took mat te rs

in to the i r own hands and burn t down the pa lace , p resumab ly

no t t rus t ing Josephus ’s mot i ves o r tha t o f the res t o f the

leadersh ip fac t ion . As Josephus descr ibed th is inc iden t , Jesus

and h is men s imp ly wanted to take advan tage o f the s i tua t ion

by d iv id ing ou t the spo i l s amongs t themse lves fo r persona l

ga in . The fac t tha t Jesus son o f Sapph ias was A rchon on the

c i t y counc i l i nd ica tes tha t the revo lu t ionary par ty cons is ted o f

a m ix o f soc ia l , re l ig ious and less a f f luen t c i t i zens and tha t

the enmi ty and d is t rus t was in the d i f fe rences be tween the

soc ia l background o f the par t i c ipan ts (Schä fe r 2003 : 124) .

Be fo re the f i r s t ac tua l con f ron ta t ion be tween Jewish and

Roman fo rces cou ld take p lace near Sepphor i s , mos t o f

Josephus ’s men deser ted and Josephus h imse l f re t rea ted to

the fo r t ress a t Jo tapa ta where he was even tua l l y de fea ted by

Vespas ian . He managed to su rv ive the encoun te r and then

por t rayed h imse l f to Vespas ian as a messenger f rom God and

fo re to ld tha t he , tha t i s Vespas ian , w i l l one day become

emperor , “ thou , o Vespas ian , a r t Caesar and emperor , thou ,

and th is thy son” (War 3 .399-402) .

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Vespas ian was then ab le to de fea t a l l the o ther ma jo r u rban

cen t res and Ga l i l ee was f ina l l y subdued and in Roman hands

by the end o f 67 CE. John o f G ischa la su r rendered to the

Romans , bu t managed to f lee to Je rusa lem be fo re he cou ld be

cap tu red , where he jo ined up and led the rad ica l zea lo t

movement in Je rusa lem. Under John ’s leadersh ip , the zea lo ts

se ized power and se t abou t e l im ina t ing the p ro -Roman fac t ion

and the more modera te fac t ion o f the ru l ing c lass by e i the r

impr ison ing o r k i l l i ng the i r l eaders . They then conn ived to

over tu rn the p rac t i ce o f appo in t ing the h igh p r ies ts by b i r th

and managed to ge t the i r own loya l i s ts p laced in o f f i ce by

means o f the cas t ing o f a lo t .

The modera te fo rces , under the leadersh ip o f the Phar isee ,

S imon ben Gamal ie l and the h igh p r ies t Ananus were

even tua l l y ab le to expe l the zea lo ts , bu t th i s was shor t - l i ved

as John o f G ischa la smugg led Idumean fo rces in to the c i t y

who then imp lemented a re ign o f te r ro r and murdered the i r

modera te opponen ts . Wi th tha t the Zea lo ts were to ta l l y in

power under the leadersh ip o f John o f G ischa la .

In dea l ing w i th S imon bar G io ra , the re i s a s ingu la r lack o f the

in tense persona l invec t i ve tha t Josephus had used when

dea l ing w i th John o f G ischa la .

S imon was a se l f -appo in ted leader who commanded a g roup o f

ex t remis ts who had been ac t i ve in p lunder ing the Toparchy o f

Accraba tene in nor thern Judea (War 2 .652-54) . He caused so

much devas ta t ion tha t the leadersh ip in Je rusa lem had to send

ou t a fo rce to con t ro l h im. The Jerusa lem leadersh ip was wary

o f S imon ’s mot i ves , poss ib ly based on the fac t tha t S imon had

waged a campa ign o f te r ro r aga ins t the wea l thy , murder ing

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and s tea l ing f rom the r i ch as he went abou t h is campa ign tha t

s ta rk ly resembled a soc ia l revo lu t ion in favour o f the poor

(Smal lwood 1981 : 301) . He then f led w i th h is fo l lowers to

Masada to jo in up w i th t he S icar i i ho led up there where he

was rece ived w i th some susp ic ion . He and h is g roup however

con t inued to ra id in to Idumea and the su r round ing

coun t rys ide . I t can be deduced f rom the ac t i v i t i es o f John o f

G ischa la and S imon bar G io ra tha t na t iona l un i t y had no t ye t

been ach ieved and tha t fac t iona l con f l i c t s and persona l

amb i t ion became the o rder o f the day (Hayes and Mande l l

1990 : 192-195) . S imon had fa r l o f t ie r amb i t ions however , and

he wan ted to cha l lenge John fo r the leadersh ip pos i t i on o f t he

rad ica l fac t ion in Je rusa lem (War 4 . 509-514) . He d id th i s by

a t tack ing Idumea and was ab le to bu i ld up a s izeab le fo rce

toge ther w i th the Idumeans who came over to h is s ide and by

69 CE he se t t led in ou ts ide the wa l l s o f Je rusa lem. S imon ’s

scheme fe l l i n to p lace when he was admi t ted in to Je rusa lem

by the h igh p r ies t l y fac t ion tha t by now had become so fear fu l

o f the re ign o f te r ro r tha t John o f G ischa la and the zea lo ts

were wag ing , tha t they be l ieved tha t S imon wou ld represen t a

lesser ev i l . In o rder to ge t sense o f wha t th i s S imon was l i ke ,

and i f Josephus i s to be be l ieved , S imon ’s w i fe was cap tu red

by the zea lo t par ty and he ld cap t i ve in Jerusa lem. Th is so

enraged S imon tha t he encamped ou ts ide the wa l l s o f the c i t y

and in an uncon t ro l lab le rage he enac ted deeds o f g rea t

c rue l t y aga ins t any who came h is way . In Josephus ’s words :

“Accord ing ly , he caugh t a l l those tha t were come ou t o f the

c i t y ga tes , e i the r to ga ther herbs o r s t i cks , who were unarmed

and in years ; he then to rmented them and des t royed them, ou t

o f the immense rage he was in , and was a lmos t ready to tas te

the ve ry f l esh o f the i r bod ies . He a lso cu t o f f the hands o f a

ve ry g rea t many , and sen t them in to the c i t y to as ton ish h is

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enemies , and in o rder to make the peop le fa l l i n to a sed i t i on ,

and deser t those tha t had been the au thor ’ s o f h is w i fe ’s

se izu re ” (War 4 . 541-43) . Even i f one accep ts tha t the re i s

poss ib ly an e lement o f hyperbo le in th i s accoun t , S imon mus t

s t i l l have been a fe roc ious and d read fu l foe , bu t i t

never the less cap tu res the tenor and a tmosphere o f how b ru ta l

and despera te the s i tua t ion had become, no t because o f the

imminen t th rea t o f a t tack by the Roman fo rces , bu t because o f

how in te rna l fac t iona l i sm and persona l amb i t ion had now

become the d r i v ing fo rce o f the revo l t , ra ther than un i t y and

s t ra teg ic fo res igh t .

By the t ime tha t Vespas ian was ready to resume the war in 69

CE, he had to rega in the a reas he ld by S imon, in the nor th o f

Judea and Idumea. I t d id no t take long to ach ieve tha t and

then he tu rned h is a t ten t ion to Je rusa lem. The fo rces he faced

in the c i t y were by now bad ly d iv ided , t he p loy to b r ing in

S imon hav ing bad ly back f i red . There were now th ree separa te

fac t ions ho ld ing d i f fe ren t par ts o f the c i t y : the inner cour ts

were he ld by two thousand four hundred zea lo ts under the

command o f E leazar ; John o f G ischa la ’s fo rces were

en t renched in t he ou te r cour ts and numbered some s i x

thousand f igh te rs ; and S imon w i th b igges t fo rce o f some

f i f teen thousand con t ro l led mos t o f the upper and lower par ts

o f the c i t y (Smal lwood 1981 : 316) .

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4.2 THE BANDITS AND THEIR AGENDA

One o f the p rob lems w i th Josephus ’s accoun t o f the

insur rec t ionary ac t i v i t y bo th be fo re and dur ing the course o f

the war i s tha t i t i s d i f f i cu l t to d i f fe ren t ia te be tween the

ac t ions o f l a rge band i t g roups and ad hoc loca l rebe l ac t ions

(Hors ley 2002 : 99) . For ins tance , the ac t i v i t i es o f the band i t s

in Ga l i l ee represen ted one o f the few un ique ins tances where

band i t r y had led to w idespread peasan t revo l t . Numerous

re fe rences in Josephus pa in t a p ic tu re o f band i t r y be fo re the

ou tb reak o f the war tha t was c lea r l y ou t o f con t ro l in Judea

and Ga l i l ee . Termino log ica l l y , i t i s d i f f i cu l t to d is t ingu ish f rom

Josephus the exac t na tu re o f such upr i s ings as they a re a l l

l umped toge ther as ‘ robbery ’ o r ‘p lunder ’ , even when there a re

g roups engaged in c lea r revo lu t ionary ac t i v i t i es , such as in

the fo l low ing sec t ion :

“Now, when these were qu ie ted , i t happened, as i t

does in a d iseased body , tha t ano ther par t was

sub jec t to an in f lammat ion ; fo r a company o f

dece ive rs and robbers go t toge ther , and persuaded

the Jews to revo l t , and exhor ted them to asser t the i r

l i be r ty , i n f l i c t i ng dea th on those tha t con t inued in

the i r obed ience to the Roman government , and

say ing , tha t such as w i l l i ng ly chose s lavery ough t to

be fo rced f rom such the i r des i red inc l ina t ions ; fo r

they par ted themse lves in to d i f fe ren t bod ies , and lay

in wa i t up and down the coun t ry , and p lundered the

houses o f the g rea t men, and s lew the men

themse lves , and se t the v i l l ages on f i re ; and th is t i l l

a l l Judea was f i l l ed w i th the e f fec ts o f the i r

madness . And thus the f lame was every day more

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and more b lown up t i l l i t came to a d i rec t war ” (War

2 .264-265) .

As Ra jak has no ted , Josephus uses a vocabu la ry d rawn f rom

the Greek po l i t i ca l vocabu la ry to descr ibe the rebe ls and

rebe l l i on . Hence the te rms: ‘ sed i t i ous ’ , ‘ i nnova to rs ’ ,

‘ f o rmento rs o f c i v i l s t r i f e ’ , revo lu t ionar ies ’ , and fo r the i r

l eaders he uses the word , ‘ t y ran ts . ’ (War 2 .274 ; 325 ; 330 ;

407 ; 422 ; 442 ; 652) These a re genera l l y words wh ich s ign i f y

the v iews o f a po l i t i ca l opponen t (Ra jak 2002 : 86) .

What Josephus does no t over t l y dea l w i th i s tha t the band i t s

in the coun t rys ide may have had a po l i t i ca l agenda in o rder to

rec t i f y some o f the wors t aspec ts o f the i r l i ves . Th is in i t se l f

was no t unusua l in the Roman wor ld , where b r igandage was

an ever -p resen t rea l i t y . F rom the works o f Greek and Roman

wr i te rs le f t to us , i t i s no t easy to gauge the soc ia l aspec ts

wh ich in f luenced the i r c r im ina l behav iour . For Josephus , as

o ther wr i te rs o f an t iqu i t y , who were ma in ly se t t l ed , p roper t ied

and upper c lass , the re was no rea l unders tand ing o r sense o f

iden t i f i ca t ion w i th the oppressed and the des t i tu te (Ra jak

2002 : 85) .

We have a l ready seen tha t c r ipp l ing taxa t ion , indeb tedness ,

famine , po l i t i ca l oppress ion and f requen t leadersh ip changes ,

in Ga l i l ee in pa r t i cu la r , resu l ted in dec l in ing soc ia l and

economic cond i t i ons fo r the peasan t ry in the coun t rys ide , w i th

many tu rn ing to b r igandage as a means o f su rv iva l . Tha t some

o f these may have con fo rmed a t t imes to the de f in i t i on o f

soc ia l band i t s i s indeed poss ib le . O thers may s imp ly have

op ted ou t o f l eg i t ima te soc ie ty and se t themse lves up as

rov ing c r im ina l bands , feed ing o f f the poor as we l l as the r i ch .

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There i s su f f i c ien t ev idence f rom Josephus tha t c lea r l y

ind ica tes tha t be fo re the s t rugg le tu rned to the common

enemy, Rome, much o f the anger was de f lec ted aga ins t the

r i ch and the p roper t ied , (War 2 .265 ; Ant iqu i t i es 18 .7 ) and

even more so when these e l i t es chose a more modera te

course than ou t r igh t oppos i t i on to Rome. As the b reakdown o f

l aw and o rder acce le ra ted , f i r s t i n Ga l i l ee , then Judea and

Idumea, anarch ic cond i t i ons p reva i led , and the la rge b r igand

g roups tha t fo rmed a round power fu l l eaders , cou ld no t be

descr ibed , by any s t re tch o f the imag ina t ion , as soc ia l band i t s

(a ma jo r re -assessment o f p rev ious ly he ld v iews by Hors ley )

(Hors ley 2002 : 100) . On the o ther hand , Shaw con tends , tha t

the re may have been some band i t s who on occas ion cou ld

have ac ted as soc ia l band i t s , bu t tha t in i t se l f does no t

exp la in the phenomenon o f band i t ry o r i t s evo lu t ion in to a

fo rm o f soc ia l p ro tes t . The few examples tha t cou ld poss ib ly

f i t w i th the Hobsbawm mode l tend ra ther to con fo rm more to

an imag ina t i ve idea l , than ob jec t i ve rea l i t y (Shaw 1984 : 51) .

Shaw proposes tha t ins tead o f mere ly look ing a t i nd iv idua l

ac t ions by band i t s in o rder to de f ine the i r ro le as p r im i t i ve

rebe ls w i th in the po l i t i ca l economy o f the s ta te , i t wou ld be

be t te r to look a t the s t ruc tu ra l fo rm o f the soc ia l v io lence in

wh ich they were engaged (Shaw 1984 : 44-52) . He ques t ions

fu r ther the va lue o f ment ion ing i so la ted ins tances where in

band i ts a t tacked the houses and r i ches o f the wea l thy as th is

in i t se l f does no t fu l l y exp la in the ex ten t o f a band i t ’ s soc ia l

mot i va t ion in do ing so . Band i t s , l i ke o rd inary c r im ina ls ,

a t tacked a range o f pe rsons , rang ing f rom s ta te o f f i c ia l s , the

wea l thy , the poor , and as no ted by Josephus , women,

ch i ld ren , the e lder l y and in fac t anyone who came in the i r

way . Po l i t i ca l cond i t ions w i th in Ga l i l ee , and Idumea,

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par t i cu la r l y a f te r the dea th o f Herod , when the power o f the

s ta te was cons iderab ly weakened, c rea ted a s i tua t ion in wh ich

s ta te au thor i t y d id no t pene t ra te in to the remoter reg ions as

e f fec t i ve ly as p rev ious ly . Ga l i l ee fo r ins tance , exper ienced

severa l changes in ru le rs in the 40 ’ and 50 ’s , wh ich c rea ted

the ‘ space ’ w i th in wh ich loca l l eaders such as John o f

G ischa la were ab le to f i l l . F rom the t ime a f te r Pompey ’s

reorgan iza t ion up to the po in t where Herod f ina l l y

conso l ida ted h is pos i t i on as k ing , the re was a g rea t dea l o f

b r igandage tha t a rose under the weaker fo rms o f s ta te con t ro l .

T rachon i t i s and Aur in i t i s were f i l l ed w i th b r igands fo r many

years un t i l Herod b rough t them under h is con t ro l (Ant iqu i t ies

15 .343-53) . In such cond i t i ons , band i t gangs can en t rench

themse lves and ru le over la rge t rac ts o f te r r i to ry , sa fe in the

knowledge tha t the a rmy o r c i v i l admin is t ra t ion can do no th ing

to s top them. Th is phenomenon o f ‘ s t rong men ’ as loca l

l eaders i s espec ia l l y s ign i f i can t in Ga l i l ee and Judea. John o f

G ischa la , S imon bar G io ra , E leazar the a rch robber , Hezek iah ,

were a l l men o f cons iderab le power and in f luence in the i r

reg ions and were ab le to command la rge bod ies o f men by

ins t i tu t iona l i z ing the i r own power in the absence o f c red ib le

and power fu l s ta te s t ruc tu res and au thor i t y . Tha t they were

ab le to genera te a la rge fo l low ing i s due to the i r fo l l owers ’

despera te long ing fo r someone to save them f rom the i r

oppress ion and who cou ld p rov ide an a l t e rna t i ve soc ia l o rder

w i th in wh ich they cou ld f i nd some fo rm o f pe rsona l and soc ia l

i den t i t y .

4.3 JOSEPHUS AND THE BANDITS

Wi th the a fo rement ioned as a background to the even ts bo th

be fo re and dur ing the war , i t w i l l now be necessary to ana lyze

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Josephus ’s re la t ionsh ip and a t t i t ude towards the band i t s and

band i t r y in genera l . Because he devo ted so much space and

a t ten t ion to John o f G ischa la and S imon bar G io ra in

par t i cu la r , i t i s poss ib le to use these to examine Josephus ’s

po l i t i ca l and h is to r iog raph ica l c reden t ia l s f rom the v iewpo in t

o f a par t i c ipan t in the even ts he wro te abou t , and as a

Graeco-Roman wr i te r .

When Josephus became commander o f Ga l i l ee he seems to

in i t i a l l y have go t ten on we l l w i t h John and pa in ts a favourab le

p ic tu re o f h im. Josephus re la tes how John res t ra ined the

insurgen ts in G ischa la f rom v io len t ac t ion as loca l hos t i l i t i es

resu l ted in a t tacks f rom ne ighbour ing towns on G ischa la . John

a rmed h is men, fough t back and a f te rwards rebu i l t and

fo r t i f i ed the town (L i fe 43 -45) . Ear l i e r , i n War , Josephus

descr ibed how he gave h is agreement to John ’s p lan to bu i ld a

wa l l a round G ischa la (War 2 .575) . A l l o f wh ich seems to

ind ica te tha t in i t i a l l y the re was p ro fess iona l respec t and

cour tesy .

However , immed ia te ly fo l l ow ing on these favourab le

comments , Josephus does a comple te vo l te face i n the very

nex t chap te r and sudden ly un leashes an inc red ib le ve rba l

ons laugh t on the charac te r and in ten t ions o f John .

“Now, as Josephus was thus engaged in the

admin is t ra t ion o f the a f fa i r s o f Ga l i l ee , the re a rose

a t reacherous person , a man o f G ischa la , the son o f

Lev i , whose name was John . H is charac te r was tha t

o f a ve ry cunn ing and very knav ish person , beyond

the o rd inary ra te o f o ther men o f eminence there ;

and fo r w icked p rac t i ces he had no t h i s fe l l ow

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anywhere . Poor he was a t f i r s t , and fo r a long t ime

h is wan ts were a h indrance to h im in h is w icked

des igns . He was a ready l ia r , and ye t ve ry sharp in

ga in ing c red i t to h is f i c t ions ; he though t i t a po in t o f

v i r tue to de lude peop le , and wou ld de lude even

such as were the deares t to h im. He was a

hypocr i t i ca l p re tender to human i ty , bu t , where he

had hopes o f ga in , he spared no t the shedd ing o f

b lood : h is des i res were ever ca r r ied to g rea t th ings ,

and he encouraged h is hopes f rom those mean

t r i cks wh ich he was the au thor o f . He had a pecu l ia r

knack o f th iev ing ; bu t i n some t ime he go t ce r ta in

compan ions in h is impudent p rac t i ces : a t f i r s t they

were bu t few, bu t as he p roceeded on in h is ev i l

course , they became s t i l l more and more numerous”

(War 2 . 585-87) .

Josephus then c la ims tha t John ga thered a round h im a band

o f fou r hundred vagabonds w i th wh ich he la id was te a l l o f

Ga l i l ee (War 2 .588-589) . Con t ras t th i s w i th the descr ip t ion o f

John in L i fe : “…When John , the son o f Lev i , saw some o f the

c i t i zens much e leva ted upon the i r revo l t f rom the Romans , he

laboured to res t ra in them; and en t rea ted them tha t they wou ld

keep the i r a l l eg iance to them” (L i fe 43 ) , a much d i f fe ren t

p ic tu re o f the man, bu t wr i t ten a t a la te r t ime when Josephus

p resumab ly had had t ime to re f lec t on h is and John ’s ro le in

the h is to ry o f the t ime and i t s ou tcome (B i lde 1988 : 104-

106) . 40

40 B i l de p roposes tha t t he “Ant iqu i t i es o f t he Jews ” and “L i fe ” was a dua l work , ( ‘Ant . -V i ta ’ ) and bo th were comp le ted i n 93 -94 CE (B i l de 1988 : 105 ) . “For the Jew ish War” B i l de p roposes tha t t h i s was p robab ly wr i t t en and pub l i shed i n the 70 ’ s when Josephus was a l ready se t t l ed i n Rome (B i l de 1988 : 79 ) .

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By cas t ing John as a l es ta i , Josephus i s compe l led to dep ic t

h im as one o f low soc ia l s ta tus and c la ims tha t he was o f

“ low ly b i r th ” and f rom a pover ty s t r i cken background . Th is

does no t co r re la te w i th la te r de ta i l s where he i s dep ic ted as a

c lose assoc ia te o f the r i ch Phar i see , S imon ben Gamal ie l f rom

be fo re the war (L i fe 190-92) . He was wea l thy enough however

to c rea te a monopo ly in t he sa le o f Jew ish o l i ve o i l to t raders

in Caesarea Ph i l i pp i and Syr ia (Wa r 2 .591-92 ; L i fe 74 -76) .

Ano ther ind ica t ion o f h is s ta tus as a personage o f h igh b i r th i s

the way he was t rea ted as a rebe l l i ous a r i s toc ra t whom T i tus

was p repared to nego t ia te w i th as commander o f G ischa la

(War 4 .98-103) and a f te r the fa l l o f Je rusa lem he was

sen tenced to l i f e impr i sonment ra ther than c ruc i f i x ion , a f a te

common ly meted ou t to l es ta i (War 6 . 434) . Goodman

comments tha t one has to ignore the descr ip t ion o f John as a

band i t a t War 2 .585 - 589 and ra ther focus on the subsequen t

in fo rmat ion tha t fo l l ows , as i t i s d i f f i cu l t to accep t tha t a

pover ty -s t r i cken ind iv idua l wou ld have been ab le to have had

f inanc ia l and o ther dea l ings w i th the wea l thy c lasses o f

Ga l i l ee (Goodman 1993 : foo tno te 202) , a po in t tha t Grunewa ld

a lso makes (Grunewa ld 1999 : 100-106) . Grunewa ld goes

fu r the r and sugges ts tha t John may have been descended

f rom the o ld landed a r i s toc racy wh ich had become

impover i shed as a resu l t o f the economic changes b rough t

abou t by the Romans in the i r He l len is t i c reorgan iza t ion o f the

te r r i to ry (Grunewa ld 202 , foo tno te 69) . Hors ley makes a

s im i la r observa t ion tha t he may have been a member o f one o f

the lead ing fami l i es who had become impover i shed (Hors ley

1981 : 431) . I t i s wor th no t ing however , tha t i n an ear l i e r work ,

Hors ley c la imed tha t John was a loca l b r igand who s ta r ted ou t

on h is ca reer ‘as a lone band i t ’ (Hors ley 1979 : 59) .

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The fundamenta l na tu re o f the i r re la t ionsh ip was based on the

fac t tha t they were b i t te r po l i t i ca l r i va ls who were engaged in

a f i e rce s t rugg le fo r po l i t i ca l and mi l i t a ry con t ro l over the

Ga l i l ee (Grunewa ld 1999 : 102) . John appears to have had the

f inanc ia l suppor t o f the upper c lasses in the Ga l i l ee w i th

whom he consp i red to ge t r i d o f Josephus . The lead ing men

a round John a lso sen t h im two thousand f i ve hundred men and

eminen t spokesmen to persuade the peop le to w i thd raw the i r

suppor t f rom Josephus (War 2 .627-28) . Josephus managed to

rega in h is ho ld over h is command, bu t had to resor t to t r i cke ry

and f ina l l y cowed the leaders o f T iber ius to suppor t h im and

then p lundered Sepphor is and G ischa la in o rder to b r ing them

back under h is con t ro l (War 2 .632-46) .

By naming John w i th the ep i the t o f l es ta i , Josephus was

d raw ing on a long and we l l es tab l i shed Roman l i te ra ry

po l i t i ca l t rad i t i on in l i t e ra tu re tha t emp loyed a number o f

l i ngu is t i c and h is to r i ca l resources to d i f fe ren t ia te be tween

loya l and d is loya l c i t i zens . By us ing these dev ices , the a im i s

to f r i gh ten the reader , much as modern te r ro r i sm does today ,

in to suppor t ing the ru l ing e l i t es and avo id ing a l te rna t i ve

s t ruc tu res (Hab inek 1998 : 70) . Josephus there fo re had to

por t ray John h imse l f , and h is ro le in Ga l i l ee , as i l l eg i t ima te .

He i s descr ibed in the mos t rad i ca l te rms poss ib le in o rder to

d is tance h im and d i f fe ren t ia te h im f rom leg i t imate power

ho lders , i n o ther words , Josephus h imse l f .

Th is was a method o f po l i t i ca l d i scourse tha t was e f fec t i ve ly

used by C icero in h is fou r o ra t ions in descr ib ing the power

s t rugg le be tween h imse l f and Cat i l i ne in 63 BCE. The s t ra tegy

tha t C ice ro used was to ma l ign Cat i l i ne in the mos t damag ing

way poss ib le by cas t ing h im in the mou ld o f a band i t . By us ing

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band i t ry as an aspec t o f o ra to ry , C ice ro imp l ied tha t band i t ry

d i rec t l y opposed the ideo log ica l , economic , re l i g ious and

mi l i t a ry founda t ions o f the s ta te and by cas t ing the band i t i n

such a ro le i t meant tha t the mere use o f the te rm band i t

au tomat ica l l y exc luded an opponent f rom ra t iona l deba te o r

s tand ing w i th in t he commun i ty and he i s exc luded f rom the

ru les and p rocedures tha t app ly to leg i t ima te po l i t i ca l deba te ,

o r as Hab inek pu ts i t , “…Band i t ry , as the m i r ro r image o r ev i l

tw in o f the Roman a r i s toc ra t i c s ta te ” (Hab inek 1998 : 71) .

Josephus adop ted what Grunewa ld ca l l s a ‘ schemat ic

un i fo rmi ty ’ by wh ich he c lass i f i ed a l l the par t i c ipan ts o f a l l the

g roups tha t were invo lved w i th rebe l l i ous and sed i t ious

ac t i v i t i es , bo th be fo re and dur ing the even ts lead ing to the

revo l t , as l es ta i (Grunewa ld 1999 : 94) . Josephus thus tapped

in to a t rad i t i ona l i deo logy tha t a lways cas t band i t s as

ind iv idua ls who were opposed to the s ta te o r the ru l ing

au thor i t y . He a l ludes to John ’s low ly b i r th and o r ig ins in o rder

to spec i f i ca l l y exc lude h im f rom hav ing any re la t ionsh ip w i th

the loca l ru l i ng e l i tes . H is descr ip t ions o f John a re a imed a t a

la rge ly conserva t i ve read ing aud ience , who wou ld have shared

the same va lues as he had and by cas t ing doub t on John ’s

o r ig ins , he wou ld have been made to look l i ke a p re tender o r

usurper o f power . Josephus uses names l i ke ‘ knavery ’ ,

‘ cunn ing ’ , ‘w icked p rac t i ces ’ and s im i la r desc r ip t ions , w i th the

coup de g race , the u l t ima te invec t i ve be ing tha t John had

consp i red to ga ther a round h im a band o f men who p lundered

and la id was te a l l o f Ga l i l ee (War 2 . 588) .

Josephus was mis t rus ted f rom the ou tse t as many be l ieved

tha t he was go ing to be t ray them to the Romans a t some

po in t . “Now wh i le a l l Ga l i l ee was f i l l ed w i th th i s rumour , tha t

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the i r coun t ry was abou t to be be t rayed by me to the Romans ,

and when a l l men were exaspera ted aga ins t me…” qu i te

p robab ly l i es a t the hear t o f h i s hos t i l i t y aga ins t John . As

th ings tu rned ou t , Josephus d id indeed abandon the f igh t

aga ins t Rome and therea f te r worked toge ther w i th them to

d issuade the rema in ing rebe ls f rom con t inu ing the s t rugg le

aga ins t Rome, wh i le John went on to con t inue the f igh t i n

Je rusa lem. Th is earned Josephus the enmi ty o f h i s f e l l ow

Jews and in The Jewish War , one can assume, he was

mot i va ted to jus t i f y ( to a Jew ish readersh ip ) h is convers ion to

the Roman cause in the mos t log ica l manner poss ib le , by

por t ray ing h is own ro le as hero fo r the Jewish cause ; as

opposed to tha t o f John who was an ou t law and a band i t who

s to le , conn ived , p lundered and murdered . As Grunewa ld has

observed , “ I f John had ever had the oppor tun i t y to desc r ibe

the war as he remembered i t , one o f the par t i c ipan ts wou ld no

doub t have been a par t i cu la r l y v i l l a inous l e i s tes ca l l ed

Josephus” (Grunewa ld 1999 :100) .

The d ia t r ibe aga ins t John con t inued a f te r he had managed to

s l i p away f rom the sur round ing Roman fo rces and went to

Je rusa lem, where he jo ined the zea lo ts . However , when

Josephus descr ibes th i s ep isode , he does so in such a way as

to show John as t y rann ica l , t reacherous , un t rus twor thy and

conn iv ing and ou t to pursue on ly h is own ends . He ass igns to

h im the mos t t reacherous charge poss ib le dur ing war fa re , tha t

he was in fac t on ly p re tend ing to suppor t the h igh p r ies t

Ananus in o rder t o pass on in fo rmat ion to the zea lo ts . In o ther

words , John was a qu is l ing (Grunewa ld 1999 : 104) .

Was John o f G ischa la a soc ia l band i t? Hors ley a t f i r s t seemed

to th ink so . “The f ina l example o f soc ia l band i t r y to be

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d iscussed , tha t o f John , son o f Lev i , a l so i l l us t ra tes how, in

the c i r cumstances o f open rebe l l i on , a loca l b r igand cou ld r i se

to become one o f the p r inc ipa l l eaders o f the na t iona l revo l t .

He s ta r ted ou t mere ly as a lone band i t ” (Hors ley 1979 : 59) .

F rom the a fo rego ing , i t i s c lea r tha t John became invo lved in

the war o f na t iona l res is tance ; i t i s sa fe to c la im there fo re tha t

he was ne i the r a soc ia l band i t no r a robber . In a la te r a r t i c le ,

Hors ley p rov ides a percep t i ve ana lys is o f how br igand ac t i v i t y

deve loped in to rebe l l i on , bu t has d ropped the te rm ‘soc ia l

band i t r y ’ a l toge ther and in fac t , when he does re fe r to

Hobsbawm’s mode l , i t i s on ly in t he con tex t o f how peasan ts

and b r igand g roups wou ld jo in fo rces in a common f igh t

aga ins t oppress ion . He i s a lso less ce r ta in abou t John ’s

band i t o r ig ins , ra ther say ing tha t i t i s c red ib le t ha t he may

have come f rom such a background to become one o f the

lead ing f igu res in Ga l i l ean po l i t i cs (Hors ley 2002 : 95) .

In the case o f S imon bar G io ra , Josephus dea ls w i th h im

ex tens ive ly , bu t no t on a persona l p lane as was the case w i th

John o f G ischa la . Accord ing to Josephus , S imon ’s a im was

ty ranny , and a f te r the dea th o f Ananus he assembled a gang

in the mounta ins where he p romised f reedom fo r the s laves

and rewards to f reedmen who jo ined h is g roup . Th is cou ld

s imp ly have been a p loy to a t t rac t rec ru i t s to h is g roup , bu t i t

a l so ind ica tes tha t he had a soc ia l consc ience , wh ich , as

Grunewa ld has po in ted ou t , were in l i ne w i th the ega l i ta r ian

goa ls o f the S ica r i i (Grunewa ld 1999 : 203 , foo tno te 6 ) .

I t was no t uncommon in Roman h is to r iog raphy and s to ry

te l l i ng to den ig ra te an opponent o r h is to r i ca l f i gu re by

c la im ing tha t they conn ived w i th s laves and o ther lower fo rms

o f l i f e in Roman soc ie ty . Tac i tus re fe rs to the band i t

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Tac fa r inas , who was a Nor th A f r ican res is tance leader in the

per iod 17 -24 CE and whom he accuses o f consor t ing w i th

s laves . 41 I t i s p robab le tha t Josephus used a s im i la r tac t i c t o

ins t i l f ea r and hor ro r in the charac te r and a ims o f S imon

(Grunewa ld 1999 : 104) . Grunewa ld c la ims tha t the ca reer o f

S imon as to ld by Josephus i s s imp ly a f i c t ion and in l i ne w i th

the conven t ion o f por t ray ing po ten t ia l usurpers in a mos t

nega t i ve l i gh t , a lbe i t a lways w i th the same fo rmu la : so ld ie r -

deser te r -band i t . Th is i s a lso the fo rmu la tha t Josephus

app l ied in h is descr ip t ion o f t he r i se to power (o r in famy

accord ing to Josephus) , o f John o f G ischa la . Mate rnus w i th a

band o f a rmy deser te rs s ta r ted to ra id the coun t rys ide , bu i l t

up wea l th and a power base un t i l he was ab le to p resen t a

s ign i f i can t cha l lenge to the Roman a rmy in Spa in and Gau l . A

s im i la r s te reo type was app l ied in descr ip t ions o f the f i r s t

S ic i l i an s lave war by Herod ian . 42 Mate rnus was cas t as a

deser te r , wh ich in Roman eyes was synonymous w i th l a t ro , as

deser t ion was a c r ime o f d i shonour , a b reak ing o f a sac red

oa th and when the deser te r / l a t ro i s i nvo lved w i th rebe l l i on , no

m i t iga t ing fac to rs wou ld be cons idered . By means o f th i s k ind

o f l i t e ra ry a r t i f i ce , a “ l i t e ra ry s tock theme” i s app l ied in o rder

to make up fo r an au thor ’ s ignorance abou t wha t ac tua l l y

occur red and fo r an absence o f any th ing spec ia l to wr i te abou t

(Grunewa ld 1999 : 126) . The theme a lways c la ims tha t the

cunn ing and c rue l band i t ch ie f s ta r ted o f f h i s ca reer by f l ee ing

to the mounta ins , f rom where he imposed a re ign o f te r ro r by

robb ing and p lunder ing the ne ighbour ing v i l l ages and

co l lec t ing a round h imse l f c r im ina ls and o ther base ind iv idua ls .

The i r mot i ves a re a lways cas t as a lus t fo r boo ty . Even tua l l y

these band i t g roups a re s t rong enough to ven tu re f rom the i r

41 Tac i tus , Ann . 2 .52 f rom books 2 to 4 o f the Anna les . 42 Herod ian 1 .10 .1 and by A then ian fo r the Spar tacus s lave rebe l l i on (A then ian Flo r 2 .7 .10) .

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i naccess ib le s t rongho lds and they s ta r t to p lunder the la rger

towns un t i l they a re ab le to become a po l i t i ca l th rea t

(Grunewa ld 1999 : 105 :126) . By means o f th i s k ind o f f i c t i ona l

accoun t o f an opponent , he i s au tomat i ca l l y de leg i t im ized in

the eyes o f the Graeco-Roman upper c lass readersh ip .

S imon and h is fo l l owers were ab le to deve lop in to a s ign i f i can t

power base and a t t rac ted a w ide spec t rum o f adheren ts who ,

i f Josephus i s to be be l ieved on th is po in t , t rea ted h im l i ke a

k ing , “and s ince he was now become fo rmidab le to the c i t i es ,

many o f the men o f power were co r rup ted by h im; so tha t h i s

a rmy was no longer composed o f s laves and robbers , bu t a

g rea t many o f the popu lace were obed ien t to h im as the i r k ing ”

(War 4 . 510) . There was thus John o f G ischa la in the nor th o f

the coun t ry and S imon in the sou th o f Pa les t ine who had

es tab l i shed what amounted to a s ta te w i th in a s ta te . Tha t they

were no t regarded then as mere band i t s f i t on ly fo r c ruc i f i x ion

can be deduced f rom the fac t t ha t bo th S imon and John were

sen t to Rome by T i tus , wh ich as Grunewa ld has percep t i ve ly

observed , we see Josephus , as an a r i s toc ra t , desc r ib ing a

soc ia l equa l and no t a common band i t . S imon was g iven a

spec ia l p lace in T i tus ’s t r i umpha l march th rough the s t ree ts o f

Rome and la te r execu ted , (War 7 .154-155) , i nd ica t ing tha t he

was regarded as more impor tan t than John (Grunewa ld : 1999 :

105) .

S imon can there fo re a l so no t be c lass i f i ed as a soc ia l band i t .

Hors ley in fac t ca tegor i zes h im as a mess ian ic leader ,

toge ther w i th Menahem, A th ronges and Judas son o f

Hezek iah . Hors ley ’s a rgument i s tha t S imon can be compared

to K ing Dav id in l i ne w i th the t rad i t i on in Juda ism o f popu la r

k ingsh ip . L ike Dav id , S imon ga thered abou t h im a la rge a rmy

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and s ta r ted h is b id fo r power as a m i l i t a ry leader , who

sur rounded themse lves w i th ma lcon ten ts and v i l l a ins . L i ke

Dav id , S imon a lso had g rea t phys ica l s t reng th and peop le

looked to h im fo r leadersh ip , and even tua l l y , as in Dav id ’s

case , so too d id the peop le o f Je rusa lem. He a lso comments

tha t l i ke Dav id , S imon a lso had a soc ia l -economic agenda.

Hors ley amp l i f i es the fac t tha t S imon cap tu red Hebron , a c i t y

s teeped in Jew ish s ign i f i cance , bu t in th i s ins tan t , because

th is was the p lace where Dav id was o r ig ina l l y ano in ted

(Hors ley and Hanson 1999 : 118-27) . I t does no t appear tha t

Josephus de l ibe ra te ly records the r i se to power o f S imon as a

para l le l to tha t o f Dav id . Tha t su re ly wou ld have g iven even

more leg i t ima t ion to S imon ’s ro le in the war , a t l eas t amongs t

Jew ish readers , someth ing tha t Josephus wou ld have wanted

to avo id . By Hors ley ’s own accoun t , “ Josephus s tud ious ly

avo ids Jewish mess ian ic language in h is accoun ts , we can

never the less d iscern a number o f Dav id ic fea tu res in the r i se

o f S imon” (Hors ley and Hanson 1999 : 119) . Any p re tens ions to

k ingsh ip may on the o ther hand , have been p rac t i ca l . Ou ts ide

o f the Jewish and Roman po l i t i ca l and ins t i tu t iona l s t ruc tu res ,

someone who cons idered h imse l f to have ga ined su f f i c ien t

suppor t to become ‘o f f i c ia l l y ’ acc la imed as a leg i t ima te ru le r ,

d id no t have much cho ice in te rms o f te rm ino logy and type o f

pos i t i on in an t iqu i t y , bu t tha t o f be ing ca l led a k ing .

I t i s i ron ic in a sense , tha t the very band i t s tha t Josephus

v i l i f i ed in many par ts o f the nar ra t i ve were in fac t used by h im

in a s t ra tegy to reduce the con f l i c t i n Ga l i l ee and to se rve as

an a rmed vanguard in h is campa ign to con t ro l the reg ion . No t

hav ing an a rmy o f h is own, he co-op ted b r igands to h is s ide

and then he conv inced the peop le o f Ga l i l ee to pay them in

o rder to p reven t them f rom p lunder ing th roughou t the reg ion

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(L i fe 77 -78) . I t appears tha t the p rac t i ce o f us ing es tab l i shed

band i ts w i th the i r l eadersh ip ab i l i t y was a p rac t i ce emp loyed

by the upper c lass ru l ing e l i te . Sepphor i s too , bough t the

se rv ices o f Jesus and h is e igh t hundred men in o rder to

p reven t Josephus f rom us ing the Ga l i l ee as a base aga ins t the

expec ted Roman incurs ion (L i fe 105-6 ) . Josephus was ab le to

nu l l i f y th i s th rea t and by means o f a we l l p lanned ruse he was

ab le to w in Jesus and h is men over to h is s ide (L i fe 107-11) .

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CHAPTER 5 5 .1 BANDITRY AND PEASANT PROTEST MOVEMENTS: AN ALTERNATIVE VIEW

The h is to ry o f the Roman Empi re was f i l l ed w i th numerous

a t tempts a t revo l t aga ins t i t s ru le v i r tua l l y th roughou t i t s

ex is tence , bu t where these have been repor ted , the records o f

these , such as they ex is t i n the ex tan t l i t e ra tu re a t ou r

d isposa l , l ack any s ign i f i can t de ta i l s o r a re mere ly jus t

ment ioned in pass ing . There were more than n ine ty d i f fe ren t

p rov inc ia l up r i s ings , fo r example , in the ear ly imper ia l pe r iod

up to the re ign o f Commodus , o f wh ich we have de ta i led

records fo r on ly a f rac t ion o f them (Goodman 2002 : 21) .

However , i n the case o f the f i r s t cen tu ry con f l i c t be tween the

Jews and Rome in Pa les t ine we have an incomparab le amount

o f mate r ia l w i th wh ich to work , a lbe i t tha t mos t i s de r i ved f rom

one p r imary source on ly . Wh i le mos t scho la rs have accep ted

tha t the re were a number o f fac to rs tha t even tua l l y resu l ted in

a fu l l b lown war w i th Rome, some have iden t i f i ed one

par t i cu la r d imens ion as p lay ing a more impor tan t ro le than

o thers as the ca ta lys t tha t made the Jewish war un ique in the

Roman wor ld . Some o f the more recen t work in th i s f i e ld ( in

Eng l i sh ) can be summar ized as fo l lows :

• Goodman: the fa i lu re o f the ru l ing c lass to asser t

i t s au thor i t y du r ing t imes o f economic , re l i g ious

and soc ia l c r i s i s .

• B run t : because o f the re l ig ious d imens ion , c lass

con f l i c t tu rned in to revo lu t ion in Pa les t ine ,

d is t inc t f rom anywhere e lse in the Roman Empi re .

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• Mende ls : the revo l t was due to an i l l - de f ined

sense o f na t iona l i sm.

• Henge l : the unres t was fanned by the f lames o f

re l ig ious fana t i c i sm and the d i f fe ren t g roups in

the s t rugg le were a l l zea lo ts , i n a genera l sense .

• Co l l i ns and Horbury : Mess ian ic be l ie f s were

pervas ive be fo re and dur ing the revo l t and were

the c r i t i ca l fo rce wh ich impe l led the Jews towards

rebe l l i on .

• Hors ley : Mos t o f the band i t g roups , a t l eas t those

be fo re the ou tb reak o f the war , were

charac te r i s t i c o f soc ia l band i t s based on a

soc io log ica l mode l deve loped by Er i c Hobsbawm

to s ign i f y a spec i f i c t ype o f band i t r y separa te f rom

common c r im ina ls .

I t i s the re fo re obv ious tha t any a t tempt a t ana lyz ing the na tu re

o f Jew ish band i t r y as one o f the p r imary fac to rs in Pa les t ine

in the per iod lead ing up to the War aga ins t Rome, i s f raugh t

w i th immense complex i t y as i t rep resen ts one aspec t on ly o f

even ts and h is to r i ca l p rocesses . Par t o f the p rob lem is tha t

mos t s tud ies on f i r s t cen tu ry Judea a re f i l t e red th rough

Josephus ’s h is to r i ca l pe rspec t i ve . Josephus adop ted an

approach o f examin ing var ious inc iden ts in the s ix ty years

lead ing up to the war , exp la in ing them and then b laming

someone fo r them. (Goodman 2002 : 16) .

However , fa i l u res in the economic sys tem, soc ie ta l changes ,

re l ig ious fe rvour , oppress ive ru le , na t iona l i s t i c yearn ings and

an ine f fec t i ve ru l ing c lass do no t in themse lves exp la in how

band i t ry can become so w idespread and coa lesce in to a

power fu l movement tha t w i l l a t tempt to over th row the yo lk o f

oppress ion . (Shaw 1984 : 41) . The Jewish revo l t was a

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conca tena t ion o f i n te r - re la ted even ts and deve lopments w i th in

Jew ish soc ie ty i t se l f a t a t ime when i t had become a p rov ince

o f the Roman Empi re .

“There i s now subs tan t ia l ag reement tha t peasan t

upr i s ings a re (a ) invar iab ly , bu t (b ) in no way s imp ly

re la ted to economic and po l i t i ca l changes fa r more

p ro found than those a f fec t ing the peasan t ry a lone :

more p ro found even than deve lopments in the

agr i cu l tu ra l sec to r as a who le . Changes occur in the

ob jec t i ve cond i t i ons wh ich govern soc ie ty as a

who le , and la rge ly as a resu l t o f these changes

the re occur o thers wh ich u l t ima te ly p roduces the

s ta tus incongru i t i es , re la t i ve s ta tus losses and the

th rea t o f fu r ther losses to wh ich we have d rawn

a t ten t ion p rev ious ly . These d iscon ten ts a re , then the

immed ia te bu t o f course no t the more p ro found

cause o f un res t . One i s tempted to f i nd a s ing le ,

un ive rsa l l y p resen t u l t ima te cause , bu t

un fo r tuna te ly , th i s wou ld be mis taken” (Landsberger

1974 : 28) . {My i ta l i cs }

B r igandage, as i s p roposed above , was mere ly one sub tex t o f

a w ider p ro tes t movement wh ich spread f rom the ru ra l a reas

and even tua l l y in to the c i t i es . The who le o f Book 20 o f The

An t iqu i t i es o f the Jews , reads a lmos t l i ke a coun tdown to the

ou tb reak o f War in 66 CE. Wi th the a r r i va l o f Cusp ius Fadus

(44-46 CE) as p rocura to r , the re fo l l owed a success ion o f o ther

d read fu l p rocura to rs who d id l i t t le to govern and , in some

ins tances , were ins t rumenta l i n on ly in f laming the s i tua t ion

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even more . 43 A se r ies o f ac t ions by Roman governors who

were insens i t i ve to Jewish re l i g ious fee l ings deep ly a f fec ted

p ious Jews, such as the a t tempt by P i la te to b r ing mi l i ta ry

s tandards w i th g raven images on them in to t he Temple

p rec inc ts and thereby v io la t ing the p roh ib i t i on o f the

in junc t ion on the dep ic t ion o f human images , espec ia l l y in a

sac red p lace . Ga ius Ca l igu la ’s a t tempt to have a s ta tue o f

h imse l f e rec ted in the Temple g rounds , (a l though th is was no t

the ac t ion o f a governor ) , caused ex tens ive d is tu rbances

th roughout the coun t ry and were i t no t fo r the common sense

o f Pe t ron ius , the governor o f Syr ia , and the good fo r tune o f

Ca l igu la ’s t ime ly assass ina t ion , th is inc iden t cou ld have had

t rag ic consequences . Bru ta l i t y , rapac i t y , i ncompetence and an

unwi l l i ngness and inab i l i t y to unders tand the peop le they were

govern ing , marked the ru le o f the a fo rement ioned governors .

The hardsh ip caused by the burden o f doub le taxa t ion ( loca l

and Roman t r ibu te ) as we l l as the temp le tax , caused immense

su f fe r ing , espec ia l l y in t imes o f d rough t and famine , and i t s

u l t ima te e f fec t was to fo rce fa rmers w i th sma l l l andho ld ings

in to deb t and penury . The r i se o f a wea l thy Jewish c lass o f

l andowner and t rader on ly se rved to h igh l igh t how fa r the

Jew ish peop le had moved away f rom i t s ega l i ta r ian idea ls o f

the pas t . As Goodman has shown in The Ru l ing C lass o f

Judea , the men appo in ted by Rome to p rov ide loca l l eadersh ip

d id no t se rve the purpose o f ensur ing peace and secur i t y , as

the Roman p rac t i ce o f appo in t ing ind iv idua ls o f wea l th was

inappropr ia te to the c i rcumstances p reva i l i ng in Judea a t the

onse t o f d i rec t Roman ru le . The chosen e l i tes had no suppor t

43 These were T iber ius A lexander , 46 -48 CE; Ven t id ius

Cumanus , 48-52 CE; An ton ius Fe l i x , 52 -58 /9 CE; Lucce ius A lb inus , 62-64 CE and Gess ius F lo rus 64-66 CE.

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base and lacked c red ib i l i t y wh i l s t con f l i c t amongs t the

leadersh ip , p r imar i l y w i th in the h igh p r ies thood on ly se rved to

exacerba te an a l ready uns tab le s i tua t ion . Loca l r i va l r ies and

tens ions be tween c i t i es and commun i t ies , fo r example the

inc iden t be tween the Jewish and Syr ian c i t i zens o f Caesarea ,

and espec ia l l y in He l len ized commun i t ies , c rea ted add i t i ona l

i ns tab i l i t y . As mat te rs de te r io ra ted , g roups o f re l ig ious

fana t i cs a rose and p reached an apoca lyp t i c message o f a new

wor ld to come ou t o f the ashes o f the p resen t chao t i c s ta te .

Josephus p roc la imed tha t “Now as fo r the a f fa i r s o f the Jews ,

they g rew worse and worse con t inua l l y ; fo r the coun t ry was

aga in f i l l ed w i th robbers and impos to rs , who de luded the

mu l t i tude” (Ant iqu i t i es 20 .160) . Th is quo te becomes someth ing

o f a re f ra in th roughou t the course o f the even ts tha t l ead up to

the ou tb reak o f the war . A t f i r s t g lance , one can deduce tha t

the re was w idespread rebe l l i on in the coun t rys ide , wh ich

inc luded b r igandage ; i t i s o f ten no t c lea r who the impos to rs

were bu t p resumab ly they were ind iv idua ls o r g roups o f

i nd iv idua ls who were spread ing messages o f d i ssen t and

revo lu t ion amongs t the peasan ts and o ther ru ra l dwe l le rs , by

‘de lud ing ’ the mu l t i tude . Here , as in o ther ins tances , Josephus

dea ls w i th the ex te rna l f ocus o f a phenomenon o r h is to r i ca l

even t , bu t ra re ly does he re la te the in te rna l dynamics o f a

p rocess o r even t . The same occurs fo r ins tance , in h is

nar ra t i ve concern ing the Four th Ph i losophy , where we lea rn o f

the ex is tence o f th i s movement , where i t poss ib ly cou ld have

a r i sen f rom and i t s e f fec ts , bu t l i t t l e e lse concern ing i t s

in te rna l dynamics .

The responses to the oppress iveness o f Roman ru le and the

consequen t po l i t i ca l , economic , soc ia l and ideo log ica l

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s t resses tha t the ru ra l i nhab i tan ts exper ienced resu l ted in a

campa ign o f w idespread ru ra l p ro tes t , o f wh ich b r igandage , as

has been d iscussed , fo rmed on ly one aspec t o f a res is tance

movement . As no ted ear l i e r , the peasan ts o f an t iqu i t y d id no t

leave beh ind any tex tua l ev idence o f wha t they though t and

how they saw themse lves and the wor ld a round them. By us ing

modern too ls based on peasan t exper iences f rom re la t i ve ly

modern t imes , we can a t tempt to cons t ruc t a bas is fo r

examin ing and exp la in ing peasan t a t t i t udes and be l ie f sys tems

f rom the anc ien t wor ld .

5.2 PROTEST MOVEMENTS

A f te r the dea th o f Agr ippa I Judea again fe l l under d i rec t

Roman ru le in 54 CE. A l l the o ld hos t i l i t i es and apprehens ions

re tu rned and in tens i f i ed . Poor governance and re l ig ious

sens i t i v i t i es mere ly exacerba ted a worsen ing s i tua t ion and law

and o rder led to unres t o f anarch ica l p ropor t ions and

even tua l l y to open war fa re .

The t rad i t i on o f mass popu la r p ro tes t i ns t iga ted by and

conduc ted by ru ra l peasan t ry became a fea tu re o f Judea and

Ga l i l ee . There a re numerous inc iden ts recorded by Josephus

dea l ing w i th spec i f i c inc iden ts o f popu la r up r i s ings a f te r the

w ide-sca le campa ign o f res is tance to the Roman imposed

census o f 6 CE. In a l l o f these p ro tes ts , peop le f rom the

coun t rys ide p layed a lead ing ro le . Amongs t the ma in

p rovoca t ions tha t resu l ted in mass p ro tes t was the inc iden t o f

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the m i l i t a ry s tandards tha t were b rough t in to Je rusa lem, (War

2 .169-174 ; Ant iqu i t i es 18 .55-59) ; Josephus wro te : “meanwh i le ,

s t i r red by ind igna t ion o f the townspeop le , the peop le f rom the

coun t rys ide came toge ther in c rowds” ; when Jewish b r igands

a t tacked an imper ia l baggage t ra in Cumanus sen t so ld ie rs to

pun ish nearby v i l l ages dur ing wh ich a Torah sc ro l l was

desecra ted (War 2 .228-29 ; Ant iqu i t i es 20 .113-14) . The

subsequent mass upr i s ing o f the common peop le was on ly

de fused a f te r Cumanus had the o f fend ing so ld ie r execu ted

(War 2 .230-31) . Ga ius ’s a t tempt to have a s ta tue o f h imse l f

p laced in the p rec inc ts o f the Temple evoked a huge popu la r

upr i s ing in wh ich peasan ts were the lead ing fo rce ; Josephus

says “ robber ies wou ld g row up” i f the s ta tue was pu t in p lace

(Ant iqu i t ies 18 .274) and tha t the en t i re coun t ry cou ld have

been p lunged in to c r i s i s as the imminen t harves ts wou ld no t

have been co l lec ted , ind ica t ing thereby the ex ten t o f peasan t

invo lvement .

At some po in t the w idespread b r igandage and re la ted p ro tes t

ac t ions became a na t iona l fo rce o f res is tance aga ins t Roman

ru le . Th is , i f Josephus i s to be t rus ted , occur red dur ing the

ru le o f An ton ius Fe l i x (52 -59(? )CE) . Fe l i x ac t i ve ly pu rsued

band i t s th roughou t Judea , bu t a l so had to con tend w i th

va r ious p rophe ts and o ther revo lu t ionary bands . There was a

charac te r known as the Egyp t ian Jew who was go ing to lead a

g roup up on to the Mount o f O l i ves a f te r wh ich he c la imed the

wa l l s o f Je rusa lem wou ld fa l l down (War 2 . 261-262) .

Josephus summar ized the esca la t ion o f revo l t i n the te r r i to ry

w i th the fo l low ing words : “Now, when these were qu ie ted , i t happened, as i t

does in a d iseased body , tha t ano ther par t was

sub jec t to in f lammat ion ; fo r a company o f

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dece ivers and robbers go t toge ther , and persuaded

the Jews to revo l t , and exhor ted them to asser t

the i r l i be r ty , in f l i c t i ng dea th on those tha t

con t inued in obed ience to the Roman government ,

and say ing , tha t such as w i l l i ng ly chose s lavery

ough t t o be fo rced f rom such the i r des i red

inc l ina t ions ” (War 2 .264) .

Even i f th i s s ta tement concea ls an amount o f rhe to r i ca l

exaggera t ion , i t does ind ica te tha t dur ing th is per iod there

ex is ted a g rea t amount o f popu la r sen t iment fo r revo lu t ion

aga ins t Roman ru le , bo ls te red by re l ig ious teach ings ,

na t iona l i s t fe rvour and a yearn ing fo r be t te r t imes f rom the

pas t (Grabbe 1992 : 442) . A t th i s po in t i t i s poss ib le to d iscern

a coa l i t i on o f so r ts , be tween band i ts , peop le f rom the

coun t rys ide and a var ie ty o f o ther g roups coming toge ther to

fo rm a movement fo r na t iona l res is tance .

How do p r im i t i ve p ro tes t movements w i th a la rge ly ru ra l base

p rogress to becoming a w ider movement revo lu t ionary

change? Landsberger has sugges ted tha t when cons ider ing

peasan t movements , i t shou ld be done on the bas is o f the

re la t i ve ly low s ta tus under wh ich peasan ts l i ve and a

movement i s to be seen as “a co l lec t i ve reac t ion to such low

s ta tus ” (Landsberger 1974 : 18) .

The co l lec t i ve na tu re o f the many p ro tes ts by ru ra l peasan ts

and to a ce r ta in degree , the c i t y mob, was qu i te l i ke ly deep ly

roo ted in a common v is ion o f wha t l i f e was l i ke in the pas t .

When the var ious rebe l g roups and peasan ts came toge ther ,

th i s v i s ion was mos t l i ke ly shared by many , bu t the d issens ion

a rose as to how i t was to be ach ieved , the reby con t r ibu t ing to

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the c iv i l war amongs t the Jewish g roups . We wi l l o f course

never know what the peasan ts ac tua l l y though t and how they

ra t iona l i zed and jus t i f i ed the i r ac t ions . The i r goa ls were deep

enough to sus ta in the movement fo r a long per iod o f t ime , bu t

how these a ims were c rys ta l l i zed in to a revo lu t ionary fe rvour

fo r the over th row o f Roman domina t ion , can on ly be conc luded

f rom draw ing conc lus ions f rom modern revo lu t ions tha t were

in i t i a l l y d r i ven by peasan ts and resu l ted in the b i r th o f a new

soc ia l and po l i t i ca l o rder . I t i s poss ib le to conc lude tha t in the

f i r s t ha l f o f the cen tu ry , peasan t p ro tes ts were la rge ly

conserva t i ve in na tu re , i n tha t they s imp ly des i red to ‘ r i gh t a

wrong , ’ as was the case in wh ich Roman o f f i c ia l i nd isc re t ions

in f lamed popu la r sen t iment . When the peasan t and h is

commun i ty su f fe red some fo rm o f p rovoca t ion genera l l y t he

in i t i a l reac t ions were usua l l y no t v io len t o r revo lu t ionary

(Landsberger 1974 : 37) .

The g roups in Pa les t ine wh ich fe l l ou ts ide the revo lu t ionary

movement were the wea l thy and those p r ies ts who p re fe r red a

modera te course and who e i the r saw oppos i t i on aga ins t Rome

as fu t i l e o r wan ted to ma in ta in the i r p r i v i l eged s ta tus quo . As

po in ted ou t by Landsberger , i n o rder to qua l i f y as a co l lec t i ve

movement , the re needs to be cer ta in o ther mot i ves than jus t

mere ly reac t ing to low s ta tus , such as na t iona l i sm and a

combina t ion o f na t iona l i sm and re l ig ious mot i va t ions . These

were c lear l y the case w i th the Jew ish peasan t movements and

o ther g roups and the i r r eac t ions to many o f the p rovoca t ions

go ing as fa r back as Hasmonaean t imes , th rough to the Jew ish

revo l t o f 66CE. Ind iv idua l peasan ts , who had ‘m ig ra ted ’ to

b r igand g roups because o f the p reva i l i ng soc io -po l i t i ca l -

economic c l imate , wou ld have shared many o f t he common

v iews o f who the oppressors and the i r suppor te rs were ; and

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the reasons fo r oppress ion as we l l as a shared common goa l

as to the ac t ions tha t shou ld be taken . The soc ia l and

economic fac to rs on the i r own wou ld no t have been enough,

bu t the ex ten t to wh ich ideo logy and re l ig ion p layed a ro le in

mob i l i z ing the peasan ts i s deba tab le . Hobsbawm observes

tha t i t i s charac te r i s t i c o f p r im i t i ve movements o f na t iona l

res is tance to exh ib i t a m ix o f band i t ac t i v i t y and mi l l enn ia l

sec ta r ian ism aga ins t the occupy ing fo rces (Hobsbawm 1969 :

103) .

Peasan t movements a rose because o f p reced ing h is to r i ca l

changes . These may evo lve as a resu l t o f one o r more o f the

fo l l ow ing soc ie ta l changes : a los t war , new taxes , bad

harves ts , changes in the compos i t ion o f then ru l ing c lass ,

changes a f fec t ing the cond i t ions o f the h igher s ta tus peasan ts

and passed on to lower s ta tus peasan ts , changes in the

economic s i tua t ion and ideo log ica l fac to rs (Landsberger 1974 :

24) . A l l o f these fac to rs occur red in Pa les t ine to a lesser o r

l a rger degree , a l l ow ing fo r reg iona l d i f fe rences . In add i t ion ,

the Jewish peasan t movement emp loyed a range o f means and

methods bu i l t up over a long h is to ry o f res is tance and s t rugg le

aga ins t fo re ign domina t ion . These inc luded amongs t o thers ,

popu la r p ro tes ts , th rea ts to w i t hho ld the in -ga ther ing o f the

harves t , b r igandage , a t tacks aga ins t the homes o f wea l thy and

the e l i tes , even tua l l y end ing up in d i rec t assau l t s aga ins t the

Roman a rmy. As Goodman has demons t ra ted the lack o f an

e f fec t i ve and c red ib le Jewish ru l i ng c lass , fo rced peasan ts to

tu rn e lsewhere fo r gu idance when p rovoked .

In o rder to qua l i f y as a movement as opposed to a

d iso rgan ized rabb le , the re needs to be ev idence o f l eadersh ip

and d i rec t ion towards the common goa ls . Wh i le leadersh ip

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seems to have come f rom a number o f b r igand ch ie f s

(a rch i les tes ) , they a lso seem to have had d i rec t ion f rom loca l

s t rong men, such as John o f G ischa la ; bu t the leadersh ip ro le

changed as i t moved f rom a ma in ly p ro tes t -based movement

tha t resor ted to sporad ica l l y con f ron t ing the au thor i t i es by

means o f band i t - l i ke ra ids , amongs t o thers , towards a

coheren t mass-based o rgan iza t ion led by power fu l l eaders

who were ab le t o conso l ida te and focus the va r ious a rms o f

the movement and t rans la te i t i n to a p rogramme o f

revo lu t ionary ac t ion . Landsberger no tes tha t few genu ine

peasan t leaders have been work ing peasan ts ; i n fac t as

peasan t movements become ‘na t iona l ’ (as opposed to loca l o r

commun i ty cen t red) , so the leadersh ip ro les moves ou t o f the

hands o f peasan ts (Landsberger 1974 : 38) . An example o f tha t

wh ich was re fe r red to ear l i e r , i s tha t o f John o f G ischa la , who

i t seems, may no t have been o f peasan t o r ig ins , bu t was ab le

to o rgan ize d ive rse g roups a round h is leadersh ip in the

Ga l i l ee and la te r became one o f the es tab l i shed leaders who

p layed a much w ider ro le in the even ts tha t l a te r un fo lded in

Je rusa lem.

By the t ime tha t the var ious fac t ions had assembled in

Je rusa lem soon a f te r the ou tb reak o f the Revo l t , the re were

severa l l a rge a rmies w i th a cons iderab le number o f men a t

a rms based in Je rusa lem. Of the th ree la rge g roups , the

Idumeans had f i ve thousand t roops under the i r command,

S imon had ten thousand , John had s ix thousand and the

zea lo ts had two thousand four hundred loya l adheren ts (War

5 . 248-50) . Goodman does no t th ink tha t a common ideo logy

and jo in t pu rpose o f f i gh t ing the Roman enemy tha t p reva i led

amongs t a l l the fo l lowers o f the va r ious fac t ions wou ld have

been su f f i c ien t to ma in ta in the loya l t y o f the t roops to the i r

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po l i t i ca l l eaders . I t i s p robab le tha t John commanded f ie rce

loya l t y f rom cer ta in fac t ions w i th in the Ga l i l ee , bu t more so

was the p romise and expec ta t ion o f rewards tha t they wou ld

rece ive fo r the i r l oya l t y to h is s ide . The Idumeans i t seems

rema ined f ie rce ly loya l to the i r l oca l l eaders and re ta ined a

un ique and s tead fas t i den t i t y w i th the i r Idumean o r ig ins . L i ke -

w ise i t appears tha t S imon ’s char i smat i c leadersh ip ab i l i t i es

was enough to t i e h is men loya l l y to h is s ide . The Zea lo ts on

the o ther hand , d id no t have the suppor t o f the peasan ts f rom

the Judean coun t rys ide and had to h i re the serv ices o f the

band i t l eaders and the i r fo l l owers to f i gh t on the i r s ide

(Goodman 1993 : 223-225) . As a l ready observed , Josephus

h imse l f was a lso w i l l i ng to acc rue a rmed band i t gangs to

suppor t h i s e f fo r ts in the Ga l i l ee as a s t ra teg ic p loy to ach ieve

h is a ims as governor o f Ga l i l ee .

As loca l band i t l eaders and the i r fo l l owers became par t o f the

w ider movement , they became inc reas ing ly t i ed in to the w ider

po l i t i ca l and mi l i t a ry scene , and the po l i t i ca l e l i tes assumed

the ro le o f the leadersh ip in conduc t ing the revo lu t ionary a ims

o f the s t rugg le and the war aga ins t the Romans .

Hobsbawm no ted tha t band i t s lack the techn ica l , i n te rna l and

ideo log ica l o rgan iza t ion to lead revo lu t ionary movements . He

c i tes the example o f the Cossacks who had we l l es tab l i shed

and la rge commun i t ies and were ex t reme ly e f fec t i ve in the i r

ra id ing campa igns , w i th ve ry capab le leaders , bu t were no t

ab le to deve lop beyond th is in to the mode l requ i red to become

a na t iona l movement . As he con t inues : “band i t r y i s the re fo re

more l i ke ly to come in to peasan t revo lu t ions as one aspec t o f

a mu l t ip le mob i l i za t ion , knowing i t se l f to be a subord ina te

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aspec t , excep t in one way : i t p rov ides f igh t ing men and

f igh t ing leaders ” (Hobsbawm 1969 : 102) .

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CHAPTER 6 6 .1 CONCLUSION

Th is work has a t tempted to exp la in and unders tand the

dynamics o f the ro le p layed by Jew ish peasan t band i t s in t he

years lead ing up to the Jewish revo l t aga ins t Roman ru le in

the f i r s t cen tu ry . The changes b rough t on by the a r r i va l o f

Pompey in 64 BCE a f fec ted the who le o f Sy ro -Pa les t ine and

was p robab ly mos t keen ly fe l t by the Jew ish popu la t ion in the

then Jewish te r r i to r ies o f the reg ion . Mos t d ramat i c was the

loss o f the independent Jew ish na t ion s ta te led by the

Hasmonaean dynas ts and the resu l tan t even ts tha t cu lm ina ted

in Jew ish Pa les t ine becoming a p rov ince o f the Roman

Empi re .

However , wha t became apparen t wh i l s t conduc t ing the

requ i red read ing and research fo r th i s paper i s tha t i t i s no t

poss ib le , g i ven the cur ren t dear th o f sources and the

l im i ta t ions o f soc io log ica l too ls ava i lab le to the modern

h is to r ian , to come up w i th a de f in i t i ve , a l l -encompass ing

exp lana t ion and mode l tha t w i l l adequa te ly cover a l l aspec ts

o f peasan t revo l t s in Roman an t iqu i t y . The use o f modern

para l le l s as a means o f exp la in ing comp lex se ts o f soc ia l ,

po l i t i ca l and cu l tu ra l c i r cumstances f rom the anc ien t wor ld

poses a who le hos t o f p rob lems, and can on ly par t ia l l y exp la in

these even ts and there fo re need to be used c i rcumspec t l y .

Dyson has sugges ted tha t in o rder to unders tand peasan t

rebe l l i ons a t a loca l l eve l , i t i s impor tan t to s tudy the

phenomenon o f peasan t revo l t s as a con t inuous pa t te rn o f

c i v i l un res t in the Roman Empi re a t l a rge , in o rder to

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unders tand how ind iv idua l revo l t s evo lved aga ins t genera l

chang ing h is to r i ca l and soc ia l c i r cumstances in the d i f fe ren t

par ts and per iods o f Roman iza t ion (Dyson 1971 : 171) .

Band i t ry appears to have been a common fea tu re o f everyday

l i f e in many par ts o f the anc ien t wor ld , i nc lud ing the Jew ish

par ts o f Pa les t ine and par t i cu la r l y in those a reas where s ta te

power was a t i t s weakes t , much l i ke c r ime i s taken fo r g ran ted

as an accep tab le co ro l la r y to modern day l i f e . The awesome

power o f the Roman mi l i t a ry mach ine and pervas iveness o f i t s

c i v i l and admin is t ra t i ve ru le genera l l y encouraged mos t o f the

oppressed na t ions under i t s con t ro l to acqu iesce and accep t

the inev i tab i l i t y o f becoming par t o f the g rea te r Roman Empi re

(Dyson 1971 : 172) . However , the re seems to have been some

nexus a t wh ich po in t the excesses o f the impos i t i on o f Roman

ru le s imp ly became in to le rab le and resu l ted in mos t l y fu t i l e

a t tempts a t rebe l l i on . A s im i la r po in t can be made fo r

Pa les t ine , where Josephus has to ld o f band i t g roups who

inhab i ted the mounta inous a reas and go t on w i th the i r

ne fa r ious ac t i v i t i es as a genera l way o f l i f e . However , a po in t

was reached in the m id f i f t i es o f the f i r s t cen tu ry a t wh ich the

ex ten t and scope o f band i t r y became iden t i f i ab le w i th la rge

sca le d issen t and rebe l l i ousness by the mos t oppressed and

vu lnerab le o f the ru ra l commun i t ies , desp i te the t rad i t i ona l

j a rgon o f band i t r y tha t was emp loyed to desc r ibe the

d iss iden ts and the i r ac t ions . In modern te rms , these g roups o r

ind iv idua ls wou ld have been descr ibed as ‘ te r ro r i s ts , ’

‘ i nsurgen ts , ’ o r ‘ f reedom f igh te rs , ’ depend ing on your

v iewpo in t .

As a conc lus ion to the h is to r i ca l / soc ia l deba te on band i t r y and

peasan t rebe l l i on Dyson has p rov ided a use fu l summary o f the

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pr inc ipa l c r i te r ia , o r ‘ c r i s i s po in ts ’ wh ich mot i va ted peasan t

(and o ther poor and d isa f fec ted e lements in anc ien t soc ie t ies )

to jo in soc ia l p ro tes t movements and par t i c ipa te in ac t ions

aga ins t the e l i tes and the s ta te . These ‘ c r i s i s po in ts a rose

exac t l y because o f the p rocess o f Roman iza t ion i t se l f wh ich

p roduced the tens ions w i th in the conquered soc ie t ies tha t

d rove the loca l popu la t ions to repea ted ac ts o f rebe l l i on

(Dyson 1971 : 175) . These a re :

Taxat ion : Roman fo rms o f taxa t ion tha t had to be pa id

in co in f o rced sub juga ted commun i t ies to par t i c ipa te in

the Roman marke t economy, the reby caus ing tens ions

w i th in the es tab l i shed agr i cu l tu ra l economies . Judea

fo l lowed the pa t te rn o f many o ther conquered te r r i to r ies

in wh ich the ear l y exper ience o f Roman ru le was the

impos i t i on o f new tax reg imes resu l t i ng in w idespread

tens ion and revo l t .

Debt : The inc reased tax burden and exposure to

economic changes even tua l l y led to g row ing leve ls o f

deb t in o rder to su rv ive .

Landlessness : A resu l t o f r i s ing leve ls o f deb t and

penury was the loss o f l and and changes in the soc ia l

and economic s ta tus o f peasan t cu l t i va to rs .

Front ier Zones: soc ie t ies l i v ing ad jacen t to f ron t ie r

zones and remote h igh land a reas made e f fec t i ve con t ro l

o f l a rge swathes o f te r r i t o ry d i f f i cu l t to po l i ce and

admin is te r and p rov ided te r r i to ry to wh ich d iss iden t

g roups cou ld f l ee and con t inue to oppose Roman ru le

f rom the edges o f the Empi re . As Dyson sugges ts

“w i thou t th i s p rox im i t y o f the f ron t ie r , sus ta ined

res is tance i s more d i f f i cu l t a l though by no means

imposs ib le . ” (Dyson 1971 : 172) .

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The loca l ar is tocracy : A l though the Romans

ma in ta ined the loca l a r i s toc racy by co -op t ing them in to

the loca l po l i t i ca l sys tems in o rder to ass is t i n que l l i ng

res is tance , th i s s t ra tegy d id no t work success fu l l y i n

Jewish Pa les t ine .

Rel ig ion : A l though the Romans appear to have been

genera l l y accep t ing o f l oca l re l i g ions , as indeed i t was

in Judea and the o ther Jew ish te r r i to r ies in the f i r s t

cen tu ry , where the loca l popu lace were le f t to p rac t i ce

the i r t rad i t i ons re la t i ve ly f ree ly , Jew ish adherence to

the core p r inc ip les o f the Mosa ic code and i t s common

iden t i t y as a na t ion tha t reve l led in i t s f reedom, was a

ma jo r fac to r tha t mot i va ted , sus ta ined and imbued the

revo l t aga ins t Roman occupa t ion (Dyson 1971 : 170-

173) .

As a compara t i ve exerc ise , i t i s poss ib le to conc lude tha t the

h is to r i ca l c r i te r ia p roposed by Dyson c lose ly resemble and

con f i rm the e lements tha t Landsberger has pu t fo rward in h is

mode l fo r exp la in ing ru ra l res is tance movements , a lbe i t f rom a

modern soc io log ica l pe rspec t i ve . In Landsberger ’ s exp lana t ion ,

changes in the ob jec t i ve cond i t i ons tha t govern soc ie ty as a

who le take p lace , and as a resu l t o f these changes , a who le

conca tena t ion o f o ther changes occur tha t cause fu r ther losses

in the s ta tus o f the peasan t and o ther ru ra l p roducers , resu l t i ng

in the g rowth o f w idespread unhapp iness and a r i se in the

numbers o f i nd iv idua ls and g roups who a re p repared to oppose

the ru l ing e lements (Landsberger 1974 : 28-29) . In shor t , the

ob jec t i ve cond i t i ons can be summar ized as the d ramat ic loss o f

na t iona l i ndependence , the in t roduc t ion o f the Pa les t in ian

economy in to the w ider economic marke t o f the Empi re and the

d is in tegra t ion o f the p r ies thood as the de f in ing symbo l o f

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Jewish leadersh ip and sp i r i tua l au thor i t y and the

re l ig ious / ideo log ica l d imens ion .

The tempta t ion to c rea te d i f fe ren t band i t ‘ t ypes ’ as

exp lana to ry mechan isms i s appea l ing , bu t as th i s paper has

endeavoured to p rove , tha t band i t r y i s fa r more comp lex than

any one mode l and needs to be seen in the l i gh t o f h i s to r i ca l

c i r cumstance and p reva i l i ng po l i t i ca l and soc ia l and cu l tu ra l

rea l i t i es . The concep t o f soc ia l band i t r y has been pos i ted as a

l i ke ly exp lana t ion o f Jew ish d issen t lead ing even tua l l y to a l l -

ou t war , p r imar i l y by R ichard Hors ley . Hobsbawm’s no t ion o f

soc ia l band i t ry as a soc io log ica l descr ip t ion o f a phase o f

band i t r y o r t ype o f band i t , wh i le d isp lay ing some mer i t s as a

descr ip t ion o f an idea l i zed fo rm o f loca l i zed rebe l l i on , hard ly

su f f i ces , as th i s paper has in tended to show, as an adequa te

h is to r i ca l o r soc io log ica l too l fo r exp la in ing any th ing more

than minor ou t lawry and in mos t cases , in a my th ica l sense .

Tha t the Rob in Hood band i t f i gu re ex is ted in bo th rea l i t y and

my th , may we l l be , bu t th i s can hard ly be used to descr ibe and

exp la in the fo rmat ion o f movements fo r w idespread and

sus ta ined revo lu t ionary tendenc ies w i th in a soc ie ty

exper ienc ing fundamenta l changes to i t s ex is t ing and fu tu re

way o f l i f e . As Hobsbawm h imse l f admi t ted in the in t roduc to ry

words to the open ing chap te r on soc ia l band i t r y… ”We sha l l be

dea l ing w i th a fo rm o f ind iv idua l o r m inor i t y rebe l l i on w i th in

peasan t soc ie t ies . ” (Hobsbawm 1969 : 17) . Whether these

types o f legends sur rounded any o f the arch i les tes f rom the

p ro tagon is ts descr ibed by Josephus and whether these

in fo rmed peasan t pub l i c op in ion i s someth ing we w i l l never

know fo r su re (Grunewa ld 1999 : 93-94) . Modern research

conduc ted in the 1970 ’s a t tempted to match the behav iour o f

soc ia l band i t s as descr ibed by Hobsbawm to rea l band i t s f rom

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South Amer ica . One researcher , B i l l y Chand le r , examined the

l i f e and t imes o f Lampiao the Braz i l i an band i t . Chand le r ’ s

conc lus ions were tha t “…The ma jo r p rob lem is tha t h is

(Hobsbawm’s ) de f in i t i on o f a soc ia l band i t i s , i t seems,

inver ted . I t res ts no t so much on the ac tua l deeds o f the

band i ts as on what peop le though t them to be , o r , more

p recar ious ly , on how they were repor ted by ba l ladeers and

o ther popu la r s to ry te l le rs even genera t ions la te r ” (Chand le r

1978 : 241) .

In the case o f Josephus we have the ra ther un ique s i tua t ion

tha t he par t i c ipa ted in the even ts he wro te abou t and was

persona l l y invo lved w i th some o f the lead ing p ro tagon is ts . He

was a member o f the e l i te l i t e ra te m inor i t y who were o f ten the

p r ime v ic t ims o f b r igandage themse lves . A l though on tha t

po in t , i t mus t be s t ressed , tha t the ev idence f rom recen t

s tud ies on b r igandage in bo th anc ien t t imes and modern ,

c lear l y shows tha t band i t s ind isc r im ina te ly and b ru ta l l y k i l l ed

and robbed f rom the very r i ch and the poor regard less o f the i r

communa l o r ig ins o r fo l k lo r i c asp i ra t ions (Langer 1987 : 124) .

As has been demons t ra ted , Josephus ’s h is to r iog raph ica l

t rea tment o f band i t s matched the conven t ions and a t t i t udes o f

the Graeco-Roman t rad i t i ons o f h i s day . He was never the less

as tu te enough to have rea l i zed the fo l l y o f oppos ing the

m i l i t a ry m igh t o f the Roman Empi re and the consequences tha t

wou ld have fo l lowed thereon , wh i l s t a t the same t ime

consc ious o f h is Jew ish her i t age and background . Much has

been made abou t the apparen t b iases in h is nar ra t i ves and

espec ia l l y tha t he ended h is days l i v ing in Rome a t the behes t

and pa t ronage o f h i s F lav ian hos ts . F rom an overa l l

pe rspec t i ve however , Overman has po in ted ou t , tha t the

con f l i c t i n Judea dur ing the f i r s t cen tu ry shou ld be in te rp re ted

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as a par t o f the la rger po l i t i ca l s t rugg le in wh ich Vespas ian

and h is son T i tus was invo lved , in o rder to es tab l i sh the i r

bas is fo r supreme con t ro l over the Empi re and hence by

ex tens ion , tha t Josephus ’s wr i t i ng re f lec ted th i s

p ropagand is t i c b ias (Overman 2002 : 214) .

What re levance , i f any , i s the re in any o f th i s to the modern

wor ld? F rom a cu l tu ra l con tex t the my th o f the band i t he ro , the

ou t law as ep i tomized by Rob in Hood l i ves on in modern

memory and myth . F ic t iona l ou t laws tha t s tand up and f igh t fo r

the poor and the oppressed abound in l i t e ra tu re and in f i lm . In

some cases i t ca te rs fo r the pub l i c ’ s tas te fo r b lood and gore

o r as S la t ta has observed , “…The power and a l lu re o f these

images (o f band i t l i f e and deeds) come in par t f rom a seeming

need fo r even h igh ly u rban ized soc ie t ies to re t rea t to a

somet imes hero ic pas t ” (S la t ta 1987 : 23) . The fo lk lo re tha t

su r rounds many o f the we l l - known band i t charac te rs f rom

l i te ra tu re and f i lm imbue them w i th a repu ta t ion tha t i s usua l l y

a t odds w i th rea l i t y . Th is po in t re in fo rces the weakness in

many respec ts o f re l y ing on my th , o ra l t rad i t i on and legend as

a means to p rov ing the va l id i t y o f soc ia l band i t r y as a t ype o f

“ spec ia l ” band i t . I t i s wor th quo t ing in fu l l t he fo l low ing

sec t ion in o rder to i l l us t ra te the d i f f i cu l t i es o f dea l ing w i th

band i t charac te rs and how eas i l y rea l i t y can be d is to r ted :

“As par t o f a Federa l Wr i te rs ’ P ro jec t i n the 1930 ’s ,

i n te rv iewers ques t ioned New Mex ico res iden ts who

c la imed to have known B i l l y the K id . Some

respondents avowed persona l knowledge o f ep isodes

c rea ted by f i c t iona l wr i te rs . One person repor ted a

conversa t ion w i th B i l l y ’ s mother dur ing the spr ing o f

1877 . H is mother d ied some th ree years ear l i e r , on

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September 1874 . Fau l t y memory and v iv id

imag ina t ion shaped many reco l lec t ions….The K id

en joyed a g round swe l l o f rehab i l i t a t ing myth -mak ing

dur ing the 1930 ’s and 1940 ’s a l though b r ie f

i ns tances o f the K id ’s “nob le ” band i t charac te r i s t i cs

c ropped up in accoun ts in s to r ies be fo re the 1930 ’s ,

a ve r i tab le e rup t ion o f s to r ies occur red in the nex t

twen ty years p resen t ing the K id ’s a f f i n i t y w i th Rob in

Hood o r C laude Duva l ” (Ta tum 1982 : 98) .

A per fec t example f rom recen t t imes o f band i t r y and the

fo lk lo r i c my th bu i ld ing mach inery and fasc ina t ion fo r the

ou t law and the i r exp lo i t s i s tha t o f Phoo lan Dev i , the in famous

Ind ian c r im ina l who became known as the Band i t Queen to her

admi re rs . She came f rom a low-cas te fami l y and a f te r a v io len t

and unhappy ch i ldhood and mar r iage , f l ed to the mounta inous

par ts o f U t ta r Pradesh where she became invo lved w i th Daco i t

bands , Ind ia ’s modern day band i t gangs . Dev i became

in famous fo r he r dar ing and b loody exp lo i t s . In 1981 she

a t tacked and a l leged ly k i l l ed some twen ty - two H indu v i l l agers

f rom a h igh cas te landown ing commun i ty who had repor ted ly

k idnapped and raped her . She became na t iona l l y famous and

was wanted fo r f i f t y murders . She was impr isoned bu t never

conv ic ted . I ron ica l l y , she was e lec ted to par l i ament where she

success fu l l y represen ted the downt rodden , espec ia l l y women

and low-cas te H indus . A mov ie , the Band i t Queen e leva ted her

popu la r i t y and fu r ther embe l l i shed her repu ta t ion as some k ind

o f modern Rob in Hood l i ke charac te r . She was assass ina ted a t

the age o f 38 and to da te the reason beh ind her v io len t dea th

i s s t i l l unknown. The t ru th i s tha t be fo re her resur rec t ion as a

po l i t i c ian and champion o f t he poor , she was a v io len t and

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bru ta l gangs te r who spread mayhem and des t ruc t ion

th roughou t her na t i ve s ta te (Ma l l i k 2001 : 1 -3 ) .

Band i t ry i s s t i l l endemic in some lesser deve loped a reas in

Sou th Amer ica , Ind ia , A f r i ca and par ts o f As ia where

ind igenous inhab i tan ts a re f i gh t ing aga ins t l oss o f te r r i to ry

and rac ism and cu l tu ra l ob l i v ion , po l i t i ca l i ndependence and

oppress ion and espec ia l l y where cen t ra l s ta te con t ro l i s weak .

A s ta te loses i t s leg i t imacy and ab i l i t y to impose i t s au thor i t y

on s izeab le por t ions o f a soc ie ty when a c red ib le a l te rna t i ve

a r i ses and i s ab le to deny the s ta te and i t s o rgans access and

con t ro l to ce r ta in par ts o f i t s cons t i tu ted te r r i to r ies . A t yp ica l

example i s Somal ia in the Horn o f A f r i ca where band i t g roups

have been ab le to cause the d is in tegra t ion o f the s ta te in to

th ree f ie fdoms tha t a re based on a con federacy o f dominan t

c lans (Mburu 1999 : 90-92) . Fur ther sou th in Sudan, a long

t rad i t i on o f b r igandage has con t inued on in to modern t imes as

the modus operand i o f the var ious mi l i t i a fac t ions f igh t ing the

government in Khar toum or amongs t each o ther ( ib id ) .

The phenomenon o f band i t r y has been a round fo r m i l l enn ia as

a fo rm o f ou t lawed ac t i v i t y wherever soc ia l , po l i t i ca l and

economic in jus t i ce p reva i l s coup led w i th ine f fec t i ve s ta te

con t ro l . I t s pervas iveness and des t ruc t i veness on da i l y l i f e , as

c i ted in the examples above , a t tes t to i t s po tency as a fo rm o f

p ro tes t and i t s ab i l i t y to cha l lenge t rad i t i ona l and en t renched

ho lders o f power . Th is too , p roved to be the case in f i r s t

cen tu ry Pa les t ine , where the Jew ish ru ra l peasan t popu la t ion

re fused to accep t the in jus t i ces tha t came w i th be ing par t o f

the Roman Empi re and par t i c ipa ted in a s immer ing campa ign

o f c i v i l un res t wh ich inc luded numerous ac ts o f b r igandage

and o ther fo rms o f soc ia l p ro tes ts even tua l l y cu lm ina t ing in a

167

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war fo r f reedom and na t iona l i ndependence f rom fo re ign

occupa t ion . The shor t war ended in t ragedy fo r the Jew ish

na t ion and resu l ted in a huge loss o f l i f e and even tua l

d ispers ion and the end o f a s ign i f i can t Jew ish p resence in the

land o f the i r fo re fa thers fo r some two thousand years .

168

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