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Old 07-16-2012, 01:19 AM   #11
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you do understand that the site is 36 acres

and you can get 20,000 to 30,000 on a acre
See other thread and let's keep it there for both our sanities' sakes.
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Old 07-16-2012, 04:13 AM   #12
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with a possible 400,000 people in attendance in a corrupted temple, these possible witnesses upset with the corruption, surley would have remembered the man who stood up against them and died for it.
400,000 people in Roman Jerusalem is logistically impossible. Please stop quoting that number. It actually is ridiculous.
Hmmm,

The way I figured it:

Jerusalem @ passover As Stated 50% 10% FT Pop. 100% 50% 10% 1
                1 = min, 2 = max
Lambs 256,500 128,250 25,650          
persons per lamb 10              
Participants 2,565,000 1,282,500 256,500 36,800 70 35 7 = magnitude of population increase for festival
all the rest (estim) 1.5              
Total Present 3,847,500 1,923,750 384,750 36,800 105 52 10 = magnitude of population increase for festival
                 
Max pop density min max area min max      
                 
Hectare 400 500            
Acre 160 200 230 36,800 46,000      
Dunam 40 50            

and

Jerusalem @ passover As Stated 50% 10% FT Pop. 100% 50% 10% 2
                1 = min, 2 = max
Lambs 256,500 128,250 25,650          
persons per lamb 10              
Participants 2,565,000 1,282,500 256,500 46,000 56 28 6 = magnitude of population increase for festival
all the rest (estim) 1.5              
Total Present 3,847,500 1,923,750 384,750 46,000 84 42 8 = magnitude of population increase for festival
                 
Max pop density min max area min max      
                 
Hectare 400 500            
Acre 160 200 230 36,800 46,000      
Dunam 40 50            

If one supposed Josephus exaggerated the attendance by a factor of 10, the population at the fastival would have been 384,750 inclusive of women & children. Based on the minimum year-round population of 160/acre the population during the fastival increased by a factor of 10. If you assume the year-round population was 200/acre, the increase during the festival was a factor of 8. This assumes the area of the city was 230 acres in that period.

Perhaps you could provide some specifics for why this is not reasonable, seeing that Sander's estimate is very close to the one I used.

DCH
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Old 07-16-2012, 05:58 AM   #13
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it could also be said that the temple incident with up to 400,000 paying jews was big big money for the Saducees and romans. This was the temples big payday.
The modern population of Israel with modern agriculture, infrastructure and sanitation is ~7 million. The population of Rome probably could never have gotten to half a Million. Jerusalem was an inland city with limited water.

The historical account would have you believe 400,000 were on the Temple Mount, which is probably more than lived in the city of Rome. That would be as large as Woodstock, which crippled the infrastructure of its environs days in advance.

If 400,000 people got onto the Temple Mount at one time, they'd likely have been standing on one another's heads a couple layers deep.

In other words, the received numbers are slightly exaggerated. 4000 on the Temple Mount is much more likely.
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The population of Rome probably could never have gotten to half a Million
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From the foregoing evidence we may observe that the amount of grain allotted to a man did not vary considerably and that, though our figures range from 3 to 5 modii a month, the average clearly seems to be 4. If we use 4 modii as our average, we arrive at the estimate of 1,250,000 as the population of Rome for the reign of Augustus

http://penelope.uchicago.edu/Thayer/..._of_Rome*.html
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Old 07-16-2012, 06:32 AM   #14
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Perhaps you could provide some specifics for why this is not reasonable, seeing that Sander's estimate is very close to the one I used.
See Eleazer thread.
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Old 07-16-2012, 06:37 AM   #15
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From the foregoing evidence we may observe that the amount of grain allotted to a man did not vary considerably and that, though our figures range from 3 to 5 modii a month, the average clearly seems to be 4. If we use 4 modii as our average, we arrive at the estimate of 1,250,000 as the population of Rome for the reign of Augustus
Fair enough, but Rome was much MUCH larger than Jerusalem and had two things going for it that Jerusalem does not. The Tiber and Ostia. Jerusalem doesn't have an unlimited supply of drinking water and it has to bring in grain overland.
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Old 07-16-2012, 08:04 AM   #16
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While we're at it, Hong Kong Island is one of the world's most densely populated areas. It has a population of 1.3 Million and a area of 31 square miles for a population density of ~42,500 per square mile or 66 per acre.

Manhattan is 1.6 million on 23 square miles, a population density of 69,500 per square mile or 109 per acre.

Shanghai and Tokyo have larger populations but much more area, so there is something like one tenth the population density.

That is with modern building techniques and sanitation.

You are assuming 160-200 permanent residents of second temple Jerusalem per acre on what basis?

Jerusalem didn't have the materials to build multi-story insula tenements like in Rome, there were simply not enough trees.

An acre is 43,560 square feet. If we're extremely generous and assume that every acre in Jerusalem was given over to a three story insula with a footprint of one acre, and pretend that walls take up no space, you have 130,680 square feet of living space for your 200 people, which is 653 square feet per person to live in.

That looks reasonable, a family of 4 would have 2,500 square feet of living space, which is about twice the size of my rather comfortable suburban apartment... but not all acreage can be given over to living space. Even ignoring walls, you have a large amount of streets, businesses, warehouses, stables, taverns and inns, public buildings, and the oversized homes of wealthy Sadducees and the like. Once you account for that, I'd say space per person dwindles to 100-200 square feet per person, which is about twice the size of my bathroom.

That's a breeding pit for disease.

Sorry but given the limited building height and the large amount of space given over to infrastructure, commercial uses or luxury housing, and the limits of sanitation, I don't think more than 15-20 per acre is reasonable.

If nothing else, your 200 people on an acre are going to put out a ton of shit per week, and that will fill up the outhouses very VERY fast.

That puts the 230 acres of old Jerusalem to a population of 5000 max within the walls. I'll grant that ten times that number or so could reside outside the walls.
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Old 07-16-2012, 08:56 AM   #17
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From the foregoing evidence we may observe that the amount of grain allotted to a man did not vary considerably and that, though our figures range from 3 to 5 modii a month, the average clearly seems to be 4. If we use 4 modii as our average, we arrive at the estimate of 1,250,000 as the population of Rome for the reign of Augustus
Fair enough, but Rome was much MUCH larger than Jerusalem and had two things going for it that Jerusalem does not. The Tiber and Ostia. Jerusalem doesn't have an unlimited supply of drinking water and it has to bring in grain overland.
Tacitus, Histories 5:13 say that
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I have heard that the total number of the besieged, of every age and both sexes, amounted to six hundred thousand
Tacitus’ is obviously a wild guess; in part because many people would have swelled the resident population of peacetime Jerusalem and the magnitude of this influx into the city cannot be estimated within a narrow band.


The influx of population into Jerusalem during the festival would also increase the resident population by a significant number.

Tacitus exaggeration is helpful as a guide in the sense that he seems to have found nothing particularly odd with such a large population of 600000, which suggests that the size of the population of Jerusalem appeared to have been routinely estimated to be about 400000 during festivals.
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Old 07-16-2012, 09:21 AM   #18
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Fair enough, but Rome was much MUCH larger than Jerusalem and had two things going for it that Jerusalem does not. The Tiber and Ostia. Jerusalem doesn't have an unlimited supply of drinking water and it has to bring in grain overland.
Tacitus, Histories 5:13 say that
Quote:
I have heard that the total number of the besieged, of every age and both sexes, amounted to six hundred thousand
Tacitus’ is obviously a wild guess; in part because many people would have swelled the resident population of peacetime Jerusalem and the magnitude of this influx into the city cannot be estimated within a narrow band.


The influx of population into Jerusalem during the festival would also increase the resident population by a significant number.

Tacitus exaggeration is helpful as a guide in the sense that he seems to have found nothing particularly odd with such a large population of 600000, which suggests that the size of the population of Jerusalem appeared to have been routinely estimated to be about 400000 during festivals.
and lets not forget Josephas who places the population at this event in the millions.

while historians all go for the more conservative number
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Old 07-16-2012, 09:23 AM   #19
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From the foregoing evidence we may observe that the amount of grain allotted to a man did not vary considerably and that, though our figures range from 3 to 5 modii a month, the average clearly seems to be 4. If we use 4 modii as our average, we arrive at the estimate of 1,250,000 as the population of Rome for the reign of Augustus
Fair enough, but Rome was much MUCH larger than Jerusalem and had two things going for it that Jerusalem does not. The Tiber and Ostia. Jerusalem doesn't have an unlimited supply of drinking water and it has to bring in grain overland.

they had plenty of water.

do you know what Pilate did and who he stole from regarding water??
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Old 07-16-2012, 09:36 AM   #20
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If nothing else, your 200 people on an acre are going to put out a ton of shit per week, and that will fill up the outhouses very VERY fast
um you do know romans had a sewer system
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