enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Beheading of John the Baptist - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beheading_of_John_the_Baptist

    John the Baptist, in prison, heard about Jesus' deeds, sent some disciples to ask if Jesus was the awaited one. Jesus listed his miracles and said: 'Blessed is he who does not reject me'. The disciples returned to John the Baptist. Herod wanted to kill John, but was afraid of the people.

  3. Josephus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Josephus

    An autobiographical text written by Josephus in approximately 94–99 CE – possibly as an appendix to his Antiquities of the Jews (cf. Life 430) – where the author for the most part re-visits the events of the War and his tenure in Galilee as governor and commander, apparently in response to allegations made against him by Justus of ...

  4. Siege of Yodfat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siege_of_Yodfat

    Josephus' role as leader of the defenders of Yodfat, his subsequent collaboration with the Romans and his servitude to the Flavians have all made his account of the siege of Yodfat suspect. As the sole account of the battle, as well as of many events of the Great Revolt, the credibility of Josephus has been a central subject of historical inquiry.

  5. Maccabean Revolt - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maccabean_Revolt

    In comparison, Josephus did not want to offend Greek pagan readers of his work, and is ambivalent toward the Maccabees. [ 68 ] [ 69 ] The book of 1 Maccabees is considered mostly reliable, as it was seemingly written by an eyewitness early in the reign of the Hasmoneans, most likely during John Hyrcanus's reign.

  6. The Jewish War - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Jewish_War

    Josephus was always accessible in the Greek-reading Eastern Mediterranean. The Jewish War was translated into Latin ( Bellum Judaicum ) in the fourth century by Pseudo-Hegesippus in abbreviated form as well as by an unknown other in full, and both versions were widely distributed throughout the Western Roman Empire and its successor states.

  7. Sicarii - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sicarii

    In Josephus' The Jewish War (vii), after the fall of the Temple in AD 70, the sicarii became the dominant revolutionary Hebrew faction, scattered abroad. Josephus particularly associates them with the mass suicide at Masada in AD 73 and to the subsequent refusal "to submit to the taxation census when Cyrenius was sent to Judea to make one," as ...

  8. Justus of Tiberias - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Justus_of_Tiberias

    Justus of Tiberias (Tiberias, c. 35 AD – Galilee, c. 100 AD) was a 1st century Jewish author and historiographer. All that we know of his life comes from the Vita which Flavius Josephus apparently wrote in response to the assertions made by Justus in his History of the Jewish War, published around 93/94 or shortly after 100.

  9. Against Apion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Against_Apion

    Against Apion 1:8 also defines which books Josephus viewed as being in the Hebrew Scriptures: . For we have not an innumerable multitude of books among us, disagreeing from and contradicting one another, [as the Greeks have,] but only twenty-two books, which contain the records of all the past times; which are justly believed to be divine; and of them five belong to Moses, which contain his ...