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According
to Josephus the death of the 960 inhabitants of Masada and the destruction
of the palace and the possessions were the premeditated acts of all the
people acting in unison. But the archaeological remains cannot be reconciled
with this view. Josephus says that all the possessions were gathered together
in one large pile and set on fire but archaeology shows many piles and
many fires (in various rooms of the casemate wall in some of the storerooms
in the western palace etc.). Josephus says that Eleazar ordered his men
to destroy everything except the foodstuffs but archaeology shows that
many storerooms which contained provisions were burnt. (In addition Josephus
reports that the Romans found arms sufficient for ten thousand men as well
as iron brass and lead -- why weren't these valuable commodities destroyed?)
Josephus says that the last surviving Jew set fire to the palace but archaeology
shows that all the public buildings had been set ablaze. Josephus implies
that all the murders took place in the palace (unless the women and children
after being killed obliged their menfolk and the narrator by marching to
the palace) but the northern palace is too small for an assembly of almost
a thousand people.
Professor Yadin discovered three skeletons in the lower terrace
of the northern palace and twenty-five in a cave on the southern slope
of the cliff. He suggests that the twenty-five skeletons were tossed there
"irreverently" by the Romans but this suggestion will not do. If as Josephus
says the Romans found 960 corpses in the palace they would not have dragged
twenty-five of them across the plateau in order to lower them carefully
into a cave located on a slope where one false step meant death. This is
not irreverence this is foolishness. The obvious and simple procedure for
the Romans was to take the corpses out of the palace and toss them over
the nearest cliff. No, the twenty-five skeletons in the cave must be the
remains of Jews who attempted to hide from the Romans hut were discovered
and killed. (Or did they commit suicide?) At the very least, then, archaeology
reveals that Josephus' narrative is incomplete and inaccurate. The skeletons
in the cave and the numerous separate fires cast doubt on Josephus' theory
of unanimity of purpose and unity of action among the Sicarii in their
final hours. Perhaps archaeology confirms other aspects of Josephus' narrative
especially his description of the site but on these important points it
contradicts him.
But even without the benefit of the archaeological discoveries
we would know that something is wrong with Josephus' story. According to
the historian, when the Jews saw that the Roman ram was about to breach
the wall, they hurriedly built an inner wall out of wood and earth which
could absorb the force of the ram. When they broke through the outer wall,
the Romans tried the ram on the inner wall but without success. Therefore
they set it on fire. So far the narrative is plausible and probably true.
The use of soft pliable material to blunt the effects of a ram and the
construction of an inner wall to replace an outer one which is about to
be destroyed were standard techniques in ancient siege warfare. The fact
that the combination of these two techniques (the construction of an inner
wall out of pliable material) is not readily paralleled elsewhere is double
testimony to its veracity. Josephus cannot be accused of enriching his
narrative with a tactic cribbed from a poliorketic manual and the Sicarii
are credited with a manoeuvre which befits their inexperience in siege
warfare--who builds a wall out of wood? Further confirmation may come from
archaeology. Some large wooden beams were stripped from the Herodian palace
before its destruction by fire perhaps to be used in the construction of
this futile gesture. Confirmed or not the story is at least credible.
But the story soon loses its plausibility. After being blown about
by the wind, the fire takes hold of the inner wall. At this point the Roman
assault should have begun. The wall was breached, the inner wall was rapidly
being consumed, the army was ready. Instead, the Romans withdraw, postponing
the assault until the following morning. Their only activity that night
was to maintain a careful watch lest any of the Jews escape. This is incredible.
Why withdraw when victory was so close? Even if it was late afternoon or
evening when the fire finally took to the wall, a point which Josephus
does not make clear, Silva could have stormed the fortress by night, just
as Vespasian did at Jotapata. Why wait? Furthermore, since the wall was
breached, the Romans will have had to maintain a careful guard not only
in their camps but especially on the ramp, in order to prevent the Jews
from attacking the tower and the other siege machines. And yet, according
to Josephus, the Roman soldiers positioned both on the ramp and on the
tower, the former only a few feet from the inside of the fortress, the
latter able to survey all of Masada, were oblivious to the activities of
that eventful night. They did not notice that 960 men, women, and children
were slain, and that at least two large fires were set, one destroying
the accumulated possessions of the Sicarii, the other destroying the palace
and cremating the corpses. They did not hear the shrieks of the women and
children or see that the plateau was ablaze or sense that anything unusual
was afoot. When the Romans stormed the fortress the next morning, they
suspected nothing. They expected a battle but found silence. Very dramatic
but utterly incredible.
Drama was not the only reason for Josephus' invention of a premature Roman
withdrawal and a careful Roman watch which saw and heard nothing. Josephus
wanted Eleazar, the leader of the Sicarii, to make a speech in which he
would publicly confess that he and his followers, those who had formented
the war, had erred and were now receiving condign punishment from God for
their sins. Josephus even has Eleazar declare that God has condemned the
"tribe of the Jews" to destruction because he wanted the Jewish readers
of the Jewish War to realize that the way of the Sicarii is the
way of death and that the theology of the Sicarii leads to renunciation
of one of the core doctrines of Judaism, the eternal election of Israel.
In order to allow Eleazar to confess his guilt and to display his rhetorical
skills, and in order to allow the Sicarii to follow Eleazar's instructions
and to destroy themselves in an orderly fashion, Josephus inserted a crucial
but inexplicable pause in the Roman assault.
Eleazar made a second speech too. Entitled "On the Immortality
of the Soul", it had for its major themes not Israel, God, and sin, but
soul, death, and suicide. Its purpose was purely literary, to correspond
to the speech which Josephus himself allegedly delivered at Jotapata under
similar circumstances. Josephus gives us a logos and an antilogos,
a speech in book III condemning suicide and a speech in book VII lauding
it. The parallel between the incidents at Jotapata and Masada was developed
further by the transference of the lottery motif from the former to the
latter. If, as I have attempted to show, the occasion, content, and impact
of Eleazar's speeches are fictitious, then the use of lots as described
by Josephus must be fictitious too. Perhaps some of the Sicarii slew themselves
in accordance with a lottery (see below), but it is most unlikely that
all of them did so. They had neither the opportunity nor the unanimity
required for such an action. The idea that all of them did so was derived
by the historian from his (very suspect) account of the episode at Jotapata.
Josephus needs no apology for these inventions and embellishments
since practically all the historians of antiquity did such things. But
if an apology were demanded, Josephus could respond that his narrative
required inventiveness. If, upon storming the fortress, the Romans had
discovered that the Sicarii had slain themselves, neither Josephus nor
Flavius Silva nor anyone else could have known exactly what had transpired,
since all the participants in the event were dead. Even the seven survivors,
who are said to have reported to the Romans "everything that was said and
done", could have known little. They were not present (though some might
have been eavesdropping) when Eleazar exhibited his oratory--only the "manliest
of his comrades" were invited. Before or during the actual killing they
hid. Who could have told the Romans about the ten men drawn by lot and
about the actions of the last man who set fire to the palace? Certainly
not the women, safely ensconced in their cistern. If the Sicarii committed
suicide according to Josephus' description, then that description must
be a combination of fiction (inspired by literary and polemical motives)
and conjecture. Surveying the corpses on the plateau, the Romans deduced
that the Sicarii had killed themselves. Josephus, or his Roman informant,
advanced more adventurous conjectures too. These conjectures may be true
or false--ancient conjectures have no greater likelihood of being true
than their modern counterparts--and we have seen already that some of them,
at least, are false. The food supplies laid up by Herod the Great were
discovered intact. Somebody, perhaps Josephus, believing that the food
was still edible, conjectured that the Sicarii had intentionally spared
their food from the destruction. Noticing a large pile of destroyed possessions
and remembering some of the cases discussed above, someone conjectured
that the Sicarii had gathered all their belongings in one place, oblivious
to the fact that the fires and the smoke hid the remains of many such piles.
The other conjectures can be neither verified nor refuted. Perhaps the
Romans, like Professor Yadin, saw lots scattered about and deduced that
a sortition played a role in the process of death. In addition to these
motivated fictions and historical conjectures, Josephus' account also contains
simple mistakes.
Is there any truth at all in this Josephan farrago of fiction,
conjecture, and error? Did the Sicarii commit suicide? Did the Romans discover
corpses when they arrived at the summit? The twenty-five skeletons in the
cave show that Josephus' account is incomplete at best, but our question
is whether any of the Sicarii preferred a self- inflicted death to flight,
battle, or surrender. We might suggest that the Sicarii were captured by
the Romans and massacred, or that they fought the Romans and were killed,
and that Josephus, whose fondness for literary commonplaces and types is
well known, substituted a collective suicide story for the truth. Perhaps.
These conjectures, like those of Josephus himself, can be neither verified
nor refuted, but we may readily believe that the Josephan story has a basis
in fact. First, it is plausible. Many Jews committed suicide during the
crucial moments of the war of 66-70, and, as we have seen above, many non-Jews
also committed suicide rather than face their enemies. Second, the Masada
story is too complex to be dismissed as a literary topos. It combines
motifs from the two major patterns of collective suicide stories with motifs
from the Jotapata episode. The whole is enriched with Josephus' own inventions.
Finally, why should Josephus have invented such a story? He wished to show
that the way of the Sicarii is the way of death, but death comes in many
forms, and the Sicarii did not have to commit suicide to make this point
clear. Death in battle would have served just as well. Had the Romans massacred
the Sicarii, Josephus would have had no reason to disguise this fact. From
the Roman point of view, the Sicarii deserved death, since they had participated
in the siege of the royal palace in Jerusalem in 66 CE, killing some Roman
soldiers. And if Silva refused to take any prisoners, no one could have
argued with his wisdom, for who would want a slave who could not be trusted
with the kitchen cutlery? From the Jewish point of view, the Sicarii deserved
death since they had raided the towns near Masada and had killed 700 women
and children in the Jewish town of En Geddi. From Josephus' point of view,
the Sicarii were guilty of all sorts of nefarious crimes, not the least
of which was the launching of the war against Rome. If the Romans had massacred
the Sicarii, Josephus would have been pleased.
The essential historicity of the narrative is confirmed not only
by its plausibility but also by its setting. Contrary to the accepted view,
it is likely that BJ 1-6 was completed in the reign of Titus (79-81 CE),
not Vespasisn, and that BJ 7 was completed early in the reign of Domitian
(81-96 CE). One of the two first consuls (consules ordinarii) in
81 CE was none other than Flavius Silva, thus putting him in Rome at
the very time Josephus was there writing the final books of the Jewish
War. Silva, no doubt, could appreciate rhetorical historiography as
much as any educated Roman, but his presence in Rome must have been an
incentive for Josephus to restrain his imagination and tell the truth.
Of course, it was also an incentive to tilt the narrative in the Romans'
favour, but Josephus did not have to tilt it very far to make the Romans
look good since, as archaeology demonstrates, Silva did his work efficiently
and expertly. In fact, Silva's consulship was his reward for a job well
done in Judaea. Since the Temple had already been destroyed and the Roman
triumph had already been celebrated, Silva did not have to become another
Titus pleading with the Jews to surrender and commiserating with them on
their misfortunes.
Josephus did, however, restrain his imagination when writing the
Masada narrative. In stark contrast to his descriptions of the falls of
Jotapata, Jerusalem, Machaerus, and Jardes forest and in stark contrast
to the historiographical tradition concerning collective suicides, Josephus'
description of the fall of Masada does not refer to the bravery or military
prowess of the defenders. Not a single Roman or Jewish casualty is mentioned.
In only one passage does Josephus imply that the Sicarii actually fought
against the Romans," and he does not have them employ any of the standard
tricks for prolonging a siege, tricks recounted with inflated detail at
the siege of Jotapata. The one tactic they adopt was rather ineffective.
Josephus certainly did not want the Sicarii to seem as heroic as he claimed
to have been at Jotapata, but his silence is remarkable nonetheless. The
Romans had no reason to suppress references to the military actions of
the Jews--a desperate defence by the Sicarii would have made the Roman
victory all the more impressive. The most likely explanation is that the
Sicarii did not put up a great resistance to the Romans. They had no catapults
or other torsion weaponry. They had little experience in siege warfare,
most of them not having participated in the defence of Jerusalem, or in
fighting the Romans--they had concentrated their murderous attacks on their
fellow-Jews. The only defences available to them were stones and arrows,
but the Romans knew how to protect themselves from such projectiles. The
failure of the Sicarii to mount an effective defence is not as amazing
as Josephus' failure to invent one for them.
I conclude, then, that Josephus attempted to be reasonably accurate
in matters which were verifiable by Silva and the Romans. He refrained
from inventing glorious military actions for the Sicarii, and, we may assume,
had some basis in fact for the ascription of murder-suicide to them. At
least some of the Sicarii killed themselves rather than face the Romans.
This fact was exaggerated and embellished. Silva could not object--Livy
had done worse.
We do not know what happened on the summit of Masada on the fifteenth
of Xanthicus in 74 CE. The archaeological discoveries of Professor Yadin
show that Masada was besieged by the Romans in the fashion described by
Josephus, but they do not tell us how the defenders of Masada were killed.
For this and for all the other details of Masada's history, we are dependent
upon Josephus alone.
Masada was captured by the Sicarii at the outbreak of the war
in 66 CE. Taking arms from Herod's storehouse, Menahem, the leader of the
Sicarii, marched on Jerusalem. There he attempted to gain control of the
revolt by directing the siege of the royal palace. After his followers
had assassinated the high priest Ananias and his brother Ezechias, Menahem
himself was killed by Eleazar and the priestly revolutionary party. Some
of the Sicarii, including Eleazar ben Yair, fled to Masada. Between the
events of 66 CE and 74 CE, Josephus has little to narrate about Masada
and its inhabitants. It served as a refuge for Simon bar Giora, fleeing
from the priestly party in control of Jerusalem. From their haven at Masada
the Sicarii raided the surrounding countryside, once venturing as far north
as En Geddi. The objective of these raids was to obtain supplies --who
wanted to eat the one-hundred-year-old Herodian food which filled Masada's
storerooms?-- and the victims were the Judeans of En Geddi and the Idumeans
of the countryside, all of them Jews. The Sicarii could attack these people
(over seven hundred women and children were killed at En Geddi, their greatest
success) because in their eyes they were wicked and doomed to perdition.
Not being members of the sectarian elect, they could be robbed and killed
with impunity. This attitude explains the silence of the Sicarii during
the siege of Jerusalem. No raids on the Romans from the rear, no feints
to distract the Romans and to alleviate the pressure of the siege, no attempt
to aid the city in its time of crisis. For the Sicarii, the Jews of Jerusalem
(who had killed Mernahem) and the Romans besieging it were different categories
of wicked people who would be destroyed when God would inaugurate the End
and bring glory to his chosen. True, the Sicarii did accept converts,"
but their overall attitude is clear.
Finally, in late 73 CE Flavius Silva approached Masada. The Sicarii
were still awaiting the End, which they thought would be presaged by heavenly
chariots, not Roman legions. It is likely that some Sicarii fled from Masada
and the countryside to Egypt when Silva approached, for it is remarkable
that immediately after the fall of Masada Josephus tells of Sicarii in
Egypt and Cyrene, although he had given no hint of any such agitation there
previously. In any case, Flavius Silva arrived and set to work. His siege
works, the circumvallation, the camps, and the ramp, remain in a remarkable
state of preservation. His troops, mainly the tenth legion, were experienced
in this sort of activity, having had plenty of practice during the protracted
siege of Jerusalem, and the work seems to have progressed quickly. The
Sicarii were unable to mount any serious resistance, having neither the
equipment nor the experience required for a defence against seasoned veterans.
Finally, all was ready. A tower and a ram were hauled up the ramp. Some
of the stones hurled by the ballistae from the tower and the ground
below were discovered by Professor Yadin in the western casemate wall.
The ram brought down a portion of the wall. The Roman assault was hindered
briefly by a second inner wall which had been hastily constructed by the
Sicarii, but its wooden framework was easily destroyed by fire.
At this point we know what did not happen. We know that
Josephus' account is false. Silva did not order a premature withdrawal,
Eleazar did not have an opportunity for two magnificent orations, the Jews
did not have a long evening for the leisurely slaughter of their wives
and children, the deliberate collection of all their possessions in one
pile and the methodical murder of all the remaining men. This scenario
is implausible, contradicted by the archaeological discoveries, and motivated
in part by Josephus' polemical and literary concerns. What did happen,
then? Rather than simply admit ignorance, I offer the following conjectures.
As the Romans were storming through the wall, some of the Jews slew
their families, burnt their possessions, and set the public buildings on
fire. All(?) the granaries were burnt, except those containing the stale
food stored by Herod. In the confusion, the Sicarii either forgot, or were
unable, to destroy Herod's armoury, thus granting the Romans a modest reward
for their labours. Having destroyed what they could, some Jews killed themselves,
some fought to the death, and some attempted to hide and escape. The Romans
were in no mood to take prisoners and massacred all whom hey found. After
the smoke had cleared, the Romans inspected the fortress and discovered
the corpses of those who had committed suicide. They also found two women
and five children in one of the cisterns and twenty-five people in a cave
on the southern slope. The former were spared (?), the latter killed (or
did they commit suicide when discovered?). The corpses on the plateau were
probably tossed over the cliff and the site was garrisoned. The battle
and the war were over.
The evidence for this reconstruction is uneven. We have no reason
to doubt that at least some of the Sicarii killed themselves and their
families, even if they did not perform the deed with the deliberation and
concord alleged by Josephus. Archaeology shows that portions of all the
public buildings on Masada were set ablaze, and since it is unlikely that
the Romans would destroy their own loot, we may assume that this was the
spontaneous act of the Jews. That some of the Sicarii sought death through
battle with the Romans is a suggestion based merely on plausibility. That
some of the Sicarii tried to escape is confirmed by the twenty-five skeletons
in the cave.
Sitting in his study in Rome, Josephus improved on this story.
He wanted Eleazar, the leader of the Sicarii, to take full responsibility
for the war, to admit that his policies were wrong, to confess that he
and his followers had sinned, and to utter the blasphemous notion that
God had not only punished but also had rejected his people. Condemned by
his own words, Eleazar and all his followers killed themselves, symbolizing
the fate of all those who would follow in their footsteps and resist Rome.
This was the work of Josephus the apologist for the Jewish people and the
polemicist against Jewish revolutionaries. Josephus the rhetorical historian
realized that the murder-suicide of some of the Sicarii at Masada would
be far more dramatic and compelling if it became the murder-suicide of
all the Sicarii. (Many historians before Josephus had similarly exaggerated
collective suicides.) Josephus modeled the Masada narrative in part on
his own description of the Jotapata episode, in part on the Greco-Roman
historiographical tradition. Inspired by the former, he gave Eleazar a
second speech, an antilogos to the speech which he claimed to have
himself delivered at Jotapata, and invented (or exaggerated) the use of
lots in the suicide process. Inspired by the latter, he had each Jew kill
his wife and children (a motif derived from Greco-Roman stories of one
pattern) and contribute his possessions to one large pile which was then
set ablaze (a motif derived from stories of another pattern). Most important,
Josephus learned from the (Greco-Roman tradition that collective suicide
was to be an object of amazement, almost admiration, an attitude he failed
to reconcile with his condemnation of the Sicarii. Out of these
strantis-historical truth, a fertile imagination, a flair for drama and
exaggeration, polemic against the Sicarii, and iliterary borrowings from
other instances of collective suicide-Josephus created his Masada story.
We do not know whether Flavius Silva, who was in Rome while Josephus
was writing the final books of the Jewish War, read or heard this
narrative, hut we may he sure that he enjoyed it if he did. After all,
some of the Sicarii had committed suicide, and Silva must have known that
an historian was entitled to exaggeration and simplification. .Josephus
shows clearly that Silva himself and the Roman soldiers performed their
task with professionalism and dispatch. Furthermore, the story is wonderfully
told. As we read it, we almost forget that these Sicarii had failed to
aid their brethren in Jerusalem during the long siege. We almost forget
that they had massacred seven hundred Jewish women and children at En Geddi.
Even Josephus forgot that he wished to heap opprobrium, not approbation,
on them One does not have to be a Jew, a Zionist, or a citizen of the state
of Israel to be swept away by the rhetoric which Josephus derived from
the classical tradition: "Live free or die!"' The Masada myth does not
begin in the twentieth century.
Chart
of the fortress at Masada.
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