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Old 06-30-2007, 02:54 PM   #21
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Eusebius tends to be the first mention now known to us of all sorts of things

And the most likely reason for that is that he was forger.
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Old 06-30-2007, 03:00 PM   #22
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In fact to the best of my knowledge only two authors before Eusebius show any knowledge of the second decade, in which it is located: Julius Africanus, and Origen.
I regret to correct you, dear Roger.

Stephen and Ben have noticed that Tacitus used Josephus as a source for the vision many Jews had just before the war against the Romans; compare Histories 5:13 with WJ 6:297-298. Actually, Tacitus followed War of the Jews for the whole narrative of the siege of Jerusalem: Histories 5:11-13 quotes different passages of Books 1, 5 and 6 of WJ.

Tacitus, beyond any doubt, also read the second decade of Antiquities of the Jews, as attested by his quoting Vonones’s history; compare Annals 2:1-4 with AJ 18:39-52. Take notice, in particular, of facts and circumstances, and the order in which they are told, and take notice, too, how the appearance of Silanus makes a turning point at which Annals changes to follow Roman sources.

In other words, Tacitus quoted Josephus as a default source for events in Palestine and beyond - places in which Jewish communities of either the homeland or the Diaspora could make more or less reliable informers - whenever a Roman source was lacking.
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Old 06-30-2007, 03:30 PM   #23
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In fact to the best of my knowledge only two authors before Eusebius show any knowledge of the second decade, in which it is located: Julius Africanus, and Origen.
... Tacitus used Josephus ....
I ought to add that I was referring to quotations, about which there can be no argument. Source-hunting tends to be a speculative, subjective game otherwise. From where do you derive your comments?

It is certainly possible for Tacitus to have known and used Josephus -- why not? -- but he never quotes him or names him as a source, which leaves it all rather open.

But perhaps others would care to comment? This idea that Tacitus used Josephus is new to me, and, while I am sceptical that this can be shown, I am certainly interested to hear about it.

Here is the passage from Annals 2:1-4.

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[2.1] In the consulship of Sisenna Statilius Taurus and Lucius Libo there was a commotion in the kingdoms and Roman provinces of the East. It had its origin among the Parthians, who disdained as a foreigner a king whom they had sought and received from Rome, though he was of the family of the Arsacids. This was Vonones, who had been given as an hostage to Augustus by Phraates. For although he had driven before him armies and generals from Rome, Phraates had shown to Augustus every token of reverence and had sent him some of his children, to cement the friendship, not so much from dread of us as from distrust of the loyalty of his countrymen.

[2.2] After the death of Phraates and the succeeding kings in the bloodshed of civil wars, there came to Rome envoys from the chief men of Parthia, in quest of Vonones, his eldest son. Caesar thought this a great honour to himself, and loaded Vonones with wealth. The barbarians, too, welcomed him with rejoicing, as is usual with new rulers. Soon they felt shame at Parthians having become degenerate, at their having sought a king from another world, one too infected with the training of the enemy, at the throne of the Arsacids now being possessed and given away among the provinces of Rome. "Where," they asked, "was the glory of the men who slew Crassus, who drove out Antonius, if Caesar's drudge, after an endurance of so many years' slavery, were to rule over Parthians." Vonones himself too further provoked their disdain, by his contrast with their ancestral manners, by his rare indulgence in the chase, by his feeble interest in horses, by the litter in which he was carried whenever he made a progress through their cities, and by his contemptuous dislike of their national festivities. They also ridiculed his Greek attendants and his keeping under seal the commonest household articles. But he was easy of approach; his courtesy was open to all, and he had thus virtues with which the Parthians were unfamiliar, and vices new to them. And as his ways were quite alien from theirs they hated alike what was bad and what was good in him.

[2.3] Accordingly they summoned Artabanus, an Arsacid by blood, who had grown to manhood among the Dahae, and who, though routed in the first encounter, rallied his forces and possessed himself of the kingdom. The conquered Vonones found a refuge in Armenia, then a free country, and exposed to the power of Parthia and Rome, without being trusted by either, in consequence of the crime of Antonius, who, under the guise of friendship, had inveigled Artavasdes, king of the Armenians, then loaded him with chains, and finally murdered him. His son, Artaxias, our bitter foe because of his father's memory, found defence for himself and his kingdom in the might of the Arsacids. When he was slain by the treachery of kinsmen, Caesar gave Tigranes to the Armenians, and he was put in possession of the kingdom under the escort of Tiberius Nero. But neither Tigranes nor his children reigned long, though, in foreign fashion, they were united in marriage and in royal power.

[2.4] Next, at the bidding of Augustus, Artavasdes was set on the throne, nor was he deposed without disaster to ourselves. Caius Caesar was then appointed to restore order in Armenia. He put over the Armenians Ariobarzanes, a Mede by birth, whom they willingly accepted, because of his singularly handsome person and noble spirit. On the death of Ariobarzanes through a fatal accident, they would not endure his son. Having tried the government of a woman named Erato and having soon afterwards driven her from them, bewildered and disorganised, rather indeed without a ruler than enjoying freedom, they received for their king the fugitive Vonones. When, however, Artabanus began to threaten, and but feeble support could be given by the Armenians, or war with Parthia would have to be undertaken, if Vonones was to be upheld by our arms, the governor of Syria, Creticus Silanus, sent for him and kept him under surveillance, letting him retain his royal pomp and title. How Vonones meditated an escape from this mockery, I will relate in the proper place.
I was unable to find online which passage corresponds to Ant. 18:39-52. Perhaps you would add it, and we can compare the two.

All the best,

Roger Pearse
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Old 06-30-2007, 04:50 PM   #24
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I was unable to find online which passage corresponds to Ant. 18:39-52. Perhaps you would add it, and we can compare the two.
In William Winston's translation it is AJ 18.2.4:

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4. About this time died Phraates, king of the Parthians, by the treachery of Phraataces his son, upon the occasion following: When Phraates had had legitimate sons of his own, he had also an Italian maid-servant, whose name was Thermusa, who had been formerly sent to him by Julius Caesar, among other presents. He first made her his concubine; but he being a great admirer of her beauty, in process of time having a son by her, whose name was Phraataces, he made her his legitimate wife, and had a great respect for her. Now she was able to persuade him to do any thing that she said, and was earnest in procuring the government of Parthia for her son; but still she saw that her endeavors would not succeed, unless she could contrive how to remove Phraates's legitimate sons [out of the kingdom;] so she persuaded him to send those his sons as pledges of his fidelity to Rome; and they were sent to Rome accordingly, because it was not easy for him to contradict her commands. Now while Phraataces was alone brought up in order to succeed in the government, he thought it very tedious to expect that government by his father's donation [as his successor]; he therefore formed a treacherous design against his father, by his mother's assistance, with whom, as the report went, he had criminal conversation also. So he was hated for both these vices, while his subjects esteemed this [wicked] love of his mother to be no way inferior to his parricide; and he was by them, in a sedition, expelled out of the country before he grew too great, and died. But as the best sort of Parthians agreed together that it was impossible they should be governed without a king, while also it was their constant practice to choose one of the family of Arsaces, [nor did their law allow of any others; and they thought this kingdom had been sufficiently injured already by the marriage with an Italian concubine, and by her issue,] they sent ambassadors, and called Orodes [to take the crown]; for the multitude would not otherwise have borne them; and though he was accused of very great cruelty, and was of an untractable temper, and prone to wrath, yet still he was one of the family of Arsaces. However, they made a conspiracy against him, and slew him, and that, as some say, at a festival, and among their sacrifices; (for it is the universal custom there to carry their swords with them; ) but, as the more general report is, they slew him when they had drawn him out a hunting. So they sent ambassadors to Rome, and desired they would send one of those that were there as pledges to be their king. Accordingly, Vonones was preferred before the rest, and sent to them (for he seemed capable of such great fortune, which two of the greatest kingdoms under the sun now offered him, his own and a foreign one). However, the barbarians soon changed their minds, they being naturally of a mutable disposition, upon the supposal that this man was not worthy to be their governor; for they could not think of obeying the commands of one that had been a slave, (for so they called those that had been hostages,) nor could they bear the ignominy of that name; and this was the more intolerable, because then the Parthians must have such a king set over them, not by right of war, but in time of peace. So they presently invited Artabanus, king of Media, to be their king, he being also of the race of Arsaces. Artabanus complied with the offer that was made him, and came to them with an army. So Vonones met him; and at first the multitude of the Parthians stood on this side, and he put his army in array; but Artabanus was beaten, and fled to the mountains of Media. Yet did he a little after gather a great army together, and fought with Vonones, and beat him; whereupon Vonones fled away on horseback, with a few of his attendants about him, to Seleucia [upon Tigris]. So when Artabanus had slain a great number, and this after he had gotten the victory by reason of the very great dismay the barbarians were in, he retired to Ctesiphon with a great number of his people; and so he now reigned over the Parthians. But Vonones fled away to Armenia; and as soon as he came thither, he had an inclination to have the government of the country given him, and sent ambassadors to Rome [for that purpose]. But because Tiberius refused it him, and because he wanted courage, and because the Parthian king threatened him, and sent ambassadors to him to denounce war against him if he proceeded, and because he had no way to take to regain any other kingdom, (for the people of authority among the Armenians about Niphates joined themselves to Artabanus,) he delivered up himself to Silanus, the president of Syria, who, out of regard to his education at Rome, kept him in Syria, while Artabanus gave Armenia to Orodes, one of his own sons.
A comparison of both narratives throws light on two issues. In the first place, Tacitus borrowed most, if not all, of the information on Vonones from Josephus; next, Tacitus penned the information in such a shape as to suit his own political agenda, which was fairly different from Josephus’.

The story begins with king Phraates of Armenia, who sent several of his sons to Rome. According to Josephus, they were sent as hostages under the instigation of a woman with whom the king was in love; this woman gave Phraates another son, by name Phraataces, whom she wished to see in the throne. Tacitus ignores the gossip explanation and gives another, typically Roman one: the king distrusted his barbarian countrymen. This initial divergence sets up the different approach of both narratives. Josephus focuses on the preponderance of domestic affairs, while Tacitus emphasizes the role of Rome - actual or perceived - as protector of its civilized friends worldwide.

A crisis starts at the moment Phraates dies. Josephus quite clearly affirms that he was assassinated by the son and his mother. Tacitus just takes notice of the death without any comment, instead. A detailed account of how Phraataces was expelled by the Parthians, and of how Orodes, a brief-reigning king, was assassinated on his turn, is reduced by Tacitus to a summary of a few words. Then, Vonones appears in the narrative. Desiring to be ruled by a member of the legitimate dynasty, the Parthians sent envoys or ambassadors to Rome so as to get the apparent heir, Vonones, back in Parthia.

Very soon, however, the Parthians decided that they did not want to be ruled by one that had been a slave. This is a climax in the narratives by both authors. Josephus parenthetically explains that the Parthians called those that had been hostages, “slaves.” Tacitus quotes what seems to be a popular argument, and within the quotation he also calls hostageship, a “slavery.” In addition, Tacitus enumerates what might be the standard preferences of a Roman patrician - litters, educated conversation, and expensive furniture and cutlery - and compares them with the standard preferences assumed in barbarians - chase, horses, and indulgence in brutal activities during festivals - as a further explanation of Vonones’ divorce from the Parthians. (This is one of the infrequent passages in which Tacitus dwells in a detailed account that exceeds of the source rather than summarizes it.)

Next, the Parthians called for Artabanus, king of Media, to be their king, for he belonged to the Arsaces or Arsacids, the royal bloodline in Armenia. To this basic account, Tacitus adds that Artabanus had grown to manhood among the Dahae - a detail he could have learnt from another source, since Artabanus ruled for a very long time and the Romans had occasion to get acquainted with him.

A clash between Vonones and Artabanus followed in which the former had the latter beaten. In returning to his homeland in Media, Artabanus rallied a greater army, challenged Vonones again, and this time won. Leaving Artabanus the master of Parthia, defeated Vonones first fled away to Seleucia, and then to Armenia. (Tacitus adds a geopolitical remark about the condition of Armenia as a buffer kingdom between Parthia and Rome, which rendered the former an easy prey to either of the latter.)

Close to the end of the story the first name alien to Josephus’ narrative appears in Tacitus’. While Josephus just says that Vonones intrigued to be given the crown of Armenia, Tacitus explains that his wishes were fulfilled on account of the previous failure of a queen, by name Erato. This name Tacitus must have borrowed from another source, and its mention at this point heralds Tacitus’ subsequent substitution of alternative sources for Josephus, so as to go on in the description of the increasing trouble as between Rome and the emergent power consisting of the union of Parthia and Media.

The last act of the drama begins with Vonones’ asking his former hosts for protection, while Tiberius refuses on account of threats by Artabanus. Finally, we see Vonones kept under surveillance by the Syrian legate, Silanus. In Josephus’ account, Vonones delivers up himself to the Romans; in Tacitus’, Silanus sents for him. Again, a difference of interpretation is explained by diverse political agendas as entertained by Josephus and Tacitus.

Despite of such differences of interpretation, the succession of the facts is identical. Not only do events coincide in the two narratives, but also the chronological order is the same in both. All the names mentioned by Tacitus - but for Erato, the queen of the Armenians previous to Vonones last attempt to become a king - are mentioned by Josephus, and the latter still mentions a few more - like Thermusa, Phraataces, and Orodes - that Tacitus omits. On the whole, Tacitus’ narrative appears as a summary of Josephus’.

The significance of Vonones’ story for a history of Rome in the first century is fairly clear. While Phartia was an independent kingdom, ruled by a superficially Hellenized aristocracy, all went good for its relationship to Rome; Parthia was strong enough to defeat Roman attempts, like in Carras, but it paid for it to keep in good terms with a stronger power. At a moment, however, the Parthian nobility had to choose as between civilized Rome and barbarian Media. They chose to be barbarians. Media compounded Parthia to make up a very strong power, quite able to challenge Rome in that part of the world. According to Tacitus, Tiberius described, before the Senate these affairs as “the commotions in the East” - motum Orientem (Annals 2:43). Josephus’ narrative afforded a reasonable account (for a Roman) of how the commotion came to happen.

Vonones’ story might also be of some import because he took a part, though marginal and possibly involuntary, in the death of Germanicus. Tacitus records his friendship to Cneius Piso, governor of Syria, - charged with Germanicus’ assessination, - who felt as an affront the removal of Vonones to Cilicia (Annals 2:58).

It is of note that no sooner was Vonones put under surveillance in Syria, Tacitus’ narrative remarkably departs from Josephus’ - another source is borrowed from. Thus, Tacitus says that Germanicus crowned Zeno, a client of Rome (Annals 2:56). Josephus instead says that it was Artabanus that gave the kingdom of Armenia to Orodes, one of his sons. Nor is a major coincidence of Tacitus with Josephus to be found in the subsequent narratives of the Parthian/Armenian affairs. After the Senate was presented with trouble in the East, Romans began regularly to take notice of what was going on there. Even the rest of Vonones’ life as an exile is accounted for by Tacitus’ borrowing from sources other than Josephus. Thus, for instance, so as to satisfy Artabanus request in exchange for an alliance with Rome, Vonones is removed from Syria and placed at Pompeiopolis, a city in the coast of Cilicia (Annals 2:58), of which Josephus says absolutely nothing.
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Old 07-01-2007, 06:14 AM   #25
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Hi Ben,

Thanks for this list.
I was just following the list given by S.C. Carlson given in an earlier post.

Are you sure that these are actual quotes of the Testamonium or are they just references? Can you give the book titles and/or original text or translations? References could just suggest familiarity with Eusebius' Church History. While actual quotes would suggest, more probably, familiarity with Josephus' text.




Warmly,

Philosopher Jay





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Originally Posted by Ben C Smith View Post
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Originally Posted by PhilosopherJay
We have just 2 or posibly 3 quotes over the next 500 years after Eusebius....
By my count, unless you are for some reason excluding some of these, we have about 7 quotes between Eusebius and circa 800:

1. Gregory, century IV.
2. Pseudo-Hegesippus, century IV.
3. Jerome, century V.
4. Sozomen, century V.
5. Isidorus, century V.
6. Scripta anonyma adversus Iudaeos, century V or VI.
7. The Religious Dialogue, century V or VI.

(If you stated or implied somewhere a reason why you were excluding some of these texts, I apologize; I missed it.)

Ben.
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Old 07-01-2007, 12:49 PM   #26
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Thanks for this list.
I was just following the list given by S.C. Carlson given in an earlier post.
Stephen was not claiming to be exhaustive (and in fact explicitly limited his list to Greek witnesses), whereas the point you made seems to require that the list be exhaustive.

Quote:
Are you sure that these are actual quotes of the Testamonium or are they just references? Can you give the book titles and/or original text or translations?
Sure. Here is the list again:

1. Gregory, century IV.
2. Pseudo-Hegesippus, century IV.
3. Jerome, century V.
4. Sozomen, century V.
5. Isidorus, century V.
6. Scripta anonyma adversus Iudaeos, century V or VI.
7. The Religious Dialogue, century V or VI.

Stephen gave Gregory, Isidorus, and the scripta anonyma. The rest can be found on one of my Testimonium pages. Please note that a couple of these are paraphrases or even abridgements; but they are certainly more than mere references.

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References could just suggest familiarity with Eusebius' Church History. While actual quotes would suggest, more probably, familiarity with Josephus' text.
Actually, I disagree. I think even actual quotes sometimes owe themselves entirely to Eusebius. Such is the case, I tend to be persuaded, with Jerome; I tend to think he is dependent almost entirely on Eusebius, not directly on Josephus.

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Originally Posted by ynquirer
Stephen and Ben have noticed that Tacitus used Josephus as a source for the vision many Jews had just before the war against the Romans; compare Histories 5:13 with WJ 6:297-298. Actually, Tacitus followed War of the Jews for the whole narrative of the siege of Jerusalem: Histories 5:11-13 quotes different passages of Books 1, 5 and 6 of WJ.
To be fair, there are some (many?) who doubt that Tacitus ever read Josephus. They suppose that where Tacitus overlaps with Josephus it is because both are dependent upon the memoirs of Vespasian.

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Old 07-01-2007, 04:15 PM   #27
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Default Who Really Read Josephus After Eusebius?

Hi Ben,

Thanks for the reference page. It is quite helpful.

I agree that Jerome appears to take the Testamonium from Eusebius. It also appears to me that Pseudo-Heggesipus, Sozomen and Isodorus are dependent on Eusebius for their knowledge of Josephus and the Testimonium. So who is the first writer that seems to have knowledge of the text of Josephus, independent of things that he could find in Eusebius' Church History?

We have thousands of pages of writings of dozens of Church Fathers from the 4th-9th centuries. If copies of Josephus' Antiquities were in circulation, as the only Jewish description of the time of Christ, we should be able to find some, if not a multitude of quotes.

So who can we be reasonably sure knows the Testimonium and/or the text of Josephus independent of Eusebius?

If we cannot find anybody, it seems that the logical conclusion is that copies of Josephus were not in circulation for a number of centuries after Eusebius.

Warmly,

Philosopher Jay



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Originally Posted by PhilosopherJay View Post
Thanks for this list.
I was just following the list given by S.C. Carlson given in an earlier post.
Stephen was not claiming to be exhaustive (and in fact explicitly limited his list to Greek witnesses), whereas the point you made seems to require that the list be exhaustive.



Sure. Here is the list again:

1. Gregory, century IV.
2. Pseudo-Hegesippus, century IV.
3. Jerome, century V.
4. Sozomen, century V.
5. Isidorus, century V.
6. Scripta anonyma adversus Iudaeos, century V or VI.
7. The Religious Dialogue, century V or VI.

Stephen gave Gregory, Isidorus, and the scripta anonyma. The rest can be found on one of my Testimonium pages. Please note that a couple of these are paraphrases or even abridgements; but they are certainly more than mere references.



Actually, I disagree. I think even actual quotes sometimes owe themselves entirely to Eusebius. Such is the case, I tend to be persuaded, with Jerome; I tend to think he is dependent almost entirely on Eusebius, not directly on Josephus.

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Originally Posted by ynquirer
Stephen and Ben have noticed that Tacitus used Josephus as a source for the vision many Jews had just before the war against the Romans; compare Histories 5:13 with WJ 6:297-298. Actually, Tacitus followed War of the Jews for the whole narrative of the siege of Jerusalem: Histories 5:11-13 quotes different passages of Books 1, 5 and 6 of WJ.
To be fair, there are some (many?) who doubt that Tacitus ever read Josephus. They suppose that where Tacitus overlaps with Josephus it is because both are dependent upon the memoirs of Vespasian.

Ben.
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Old 07-01-2007, 06:09 PM   #28
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To be fair, there are some (many?) who doubt that Tacitus ever read Josephus. They suppose that where Tacitus overlaps with Josephus it is because both are dependent upon the memoirs of Vespasian.
That there was of the Jewish War a memorabilia by Vespasian appears quite clear from Josephus himself - Life 342. Also there must have been another one by Titus - Against Apion 56. Most probably, Vespasian wrote, while commander-in-chief of the Roman armies in Judea, a report for Nero, and Titus wrote, while in the same post, another for Vespasian. When one talks of the siege of Jerusalem and a possible Roman report, the obvious writer must have been Titus, because Vespasian at the time was far away in Rome. No-one with a little knowledge of the topic may think that Josephus, who was a prominent actor of the siege drama - according to his own deposition - would have followed a hypothetical narrative of Vespasian, who was not there.

Titus’ report quite probably was followed by Cassius Dio’s Roman History, written in 200-220, that is, almost one and a half centuries after the War. One can find Dio’s summary in the Book 65 of his History. It is a sketch of the siege of Jerusalem very different from Josephus’ - and Tacitus’ btw. While Tacitus says that the Jews soon “were driven within the walls by continual defeats,” and that “the Romans then prepare for an assault,” the only dilemma for them being whether “to await the result of famine,” Dio speaks of a protracted preparatory phase during which “the Jews were assisted by many of their countrymen from the region round about and by many who professed the same religion, not only from the Roman empire but also from beyond the Euphrates.” Dio goes on in the same mood:

Quote:
They also made sallies both night and day, whenever occasion offered, set fire to the siege engines, slew many of their assailants, and undermined the Romans' mounds by removing the earth through tunnels driven under the wall As for the battering-rams, sometimes they threw ropes around them and broke them off, sometimes they pulled them up with hooks, and again they used thick planks fastened together and strengthened with iron, which they let down in front of the wall and thus fended off the blow of still others. But the Romans suffered most hardship from the lack of water; for their supply was of poor quality and had to be brought from a distance. The Jews found in their underground passages a source of strength; for they had these tunnels dug from inside the city and extending out under the walls to distant points in the country, and going out through them, they would attack the Romans' water-carriers and harass any scattered detachments. (Roman History 65.4.4-5)
While Josephus and Tacitus’ account of “continual defeats” emphasizes the perfidy of the insurrects, who were being punished by the Jewish god, Dio’s account highlights the difficulties of the campaign - and, accordingly, the merit of the commander-in-chief. Titus’ personal pains and contribution are several times mentioned. The source most probably is a report penned by Titus himself.

Tacitus’ account does not at all resemble Dio’s and tightly follows Josephus in many passages, instead.

I’m ready to grant, however, that the fact that Vespasian’s and Titus’ reports are missing furnishes a good pretext for loose thinking.

On the other hand, I must apologize for saying you have supported the notion that Tacitus took Josephus as a source, if you really don't support it.
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Old 07-01-2007, 06:26 PM   #29
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I agree that Jerome appears to take the Testamonium from Eusebius. It also appears to me that Pseudo-Heggesipus, Sozomen and Isodorus are dependent on Eusebius for their knowledge of Josephus and the Testimonium.
I think you are mistaken about pseudo-Hegesippus. He obviously gets a lot more from Josephus than Eusebius provides. The story of Paulina and Mundus, for example, in 2.4. That did not come from Eusebius, did it?

Quote:
So who is the first writer that seems to have knowledge of the text of Josephus, independent of things that he could find in Eusebius' Church History?

....

So who can we be reasonably sure knows the Testimonium and/or the text of Josephus independent of Eusebius?
If you mean the text of the Testimonium in Josephus, that would be pseudo-Hegesippus, who has modelled much of his work on the Jewish War and also imported certain episodes from the Antiquities, including the Testimonium. Of course, he could still have conceivably gotten the Testimonium from Eusebius; but with all that Josephan material in his text that is quite independent of Eusebius, how would you go about showing it? It is far easier to suppose that he got it from Josephus, just like all the other fodder for his text.

Quote:
We have thousands of pages of writings of dozens of Church Fathers from the 4th-9th centuries. If copies of Josephus' Antiquities were in circulation, as the only Jewish description of the time of Christ, we should be able to find some, if not a multitude of quotes.
Your expectations may be too high.

Nevertheless, I think that Eusebius was far more popular than even Josephus, at least among the church historians. That is why so much information about Josephus during this period may have come through Eusebius.

But so far on this thread we have discussed only one Josephan passage. How can one extrapolate from quotations of that single passage how far and wide the works of Josephus were known at this time?

Ben.
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Old 07-01-2007, 06:37 PM   #30
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That there was of the Jewish War a memorabilia by Vespasian appears quite clear from Josephus himself - Life 342. Also there must have been another one by Titus - Against Apion 56.
Agreed. In fact, I had thought I mentioned the memoirs of Vespasian and Titus. I see now that I mentioned only Vespasian.

Quote:
When one talks of the siege of Jerusalem and a possible Roman report, the obvious writer must have been Titus, because Vespasian at the time was far away in Rome. No-one with a little knowledge of the topic may think that Josephus, who was a prominent actor of the siege drama - according to his own deposition - would have followed a hypothetical narrative of Vespasian, who was not there.
Vespasian started out as commander for the war, and you yourself wrote about Tacitus using Josephus for events that had actually occurred a bit before the war.

Quote:
Titus’ report quite probably was followed by Cassius Dio’s Roman History, written in 200-220, that is, almost one and a half centuries after the War. One can find Dio’s summary in the Book 65 of his History.

....

The source most probably is a report penned by Titus himself.
Those are excellent points, and well worth looking into.

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I’m ready to grant, however, that the fact that Vespasian’s and Titus’ reports are missing furnishes a good pretext for loose thinking.


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On the other hand, I must apologize for saying you have supported the notion that Tacitus took Josephus as a source, if you really don't support it.
No, I do support it. I think that is where Tacitus got a lot of his information about the war. I was just trying to let it be known that there is another side to the issue.

Ben.
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