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Is the Truth About Masada Less Romantic?
History Network ^ | June 12, 2006 | Kim Stubbs

Posted on 06/12/2006 10:48:30 AM PDT by robowombat

Is the Truth About Masada Less Romantic? By Kim Stubbs

Kim Stubbs is an Australian freelance writer specialising in ancient and early medieval history.

It is the spring of 73 AD and the revolt that has raged in the Roman province of Judea for eight years is about to reach its bloody and tragic conclusion. On an isolated rock overlooking the Dead Sea at the edge of the Judean Desert 967 men, women and children - the last remnants of Jewish resistance to Imperial Rome - await their fate. The spectacular natural redoubt that has become their final refuge is called Masada, from the Hebrew mezuda meaning “fortress” or “stronghold.”

For two years the inhabitants of Masada have waged a successful guerrilla war against the Romans, but now the Roman governor of Judea, Flavius Silva, has arrived with his army. After moving thousands of tons of earth and stone to construct a rampart 375 feet high abutting the western approach to Masada he begins to batter the stronghold’s walls with ballistae and catapult fire. Rather than allow themselves and their families to fall into enemy hands the brave but doomed defenders of Masada choose to commit mass suicide. When the Roman army finally breaks into the stronghold they find only an eerie silence and the bodies of the dead.

This is the version of the Masada story generally accepted today. However at least one Israeli academic, Nachman Ben-Yehuda, 1 suggests that the truth may be somewhat less romantic and heroic.

“When we carefully examine ……. the Great Revolt and Masada, a portrait of heroism …… is simply not provided. On the contrary. The narrative conveys the story of a doomed (and questionable) revolt, of a majestic failure and destruction of the Second Temple and of Jerusalem, of large-scale massacres of the Jews, of different factions of Jews fighting and killing each other, of collective suicide (an act not viewed favourably by the Jewish faith) by a group of terrorists and assassins whose “fighting spirit” may have been questionable.” 2

Understandably views such as these have raised the hackles of many Jewish historians. But is Ben-Yehuda’s interpretation of events correct? How much of the Masada story is history and how much is myth?

There are two major sources we can refer to in order to analyse this question. The first is the only contemporary account of the siege written by the Jewish historian Josephus. The second is the archaeological evidence that was unearthed by the Israeli archaeologist Yigael Yadin during his major excavation of the site between 1963 and 1965.

Both sources agree on the basic storyline. Jewish rebels seized the fortress around 66 BC (by treachery, according to Jospehus 3), and killed the Roman garrison. Josephus tells us that another group of rebels under the leadership of Eleazar ben Yair fled to Masada after the fall of Jerusalem in 70 AD. Yadin’s excavations support this period of occupation by way of numerous small finds including scrolls, pottery, weapons, clothes and Jewish coins dating up to the year of the siege. 4

The fact that there was a siege is also beyond doubt – the remains of the Roman circumvallation and siege camp, along with the great ramp Silva had constructed abutting the western approach to Masada, are still visible.

From this point, however, the “facts” are open to interpretation. Were the defenders of Masada a group of religious zealots who fought a heroic but doomed guerrilla war against an overwhelmingly superior adversary? Certainly Josephus’s account does not reflect this view. In fact he shows nothing but contempt for the defenders of the fortress, whom he describes as Sicarii – an extremist group that committed murder in order to obtain their political objectives. They took their name from the “sicae” or small daggers concealed under their cloaks with which they stabbed their opponents - almost exclusively fellow Jews who they perceived as too moderate or openly sympathetic to Roman rule. 5 These Sicarii, Josephus states, “strove with one another in their single capacity, and in their communities, who should run the greatest lengths in impiety towards God and in unjust actions towards their neighbors”.

Nowhere in his account of the Masada siege does Josephus make any reference to the defenders taking the initiative against the Roman army, even though many contemporary versions credit them with waging a guerilla war against the Romans for up to three years. This omission cannot be attributed to pro-Roman bias on Josephus’s part - he includes stories of Jewish attacks against the Romans at both Jerusalem and Machaerus in other parts of his narrative. The most likely reason that there is no mention of attacks being launched against the Romans at Masada is because the defenders never launched any. In fact the only military action of any size that he attributes to them is a raid on the nearby Jewish settlement of Ein-Gedi during which they slaughtered more than 700 of their co-religionists, many of them woman and children. 6

Regarding the conduct of the siege, Josephus tells us that Silva set his army to work moving thousands of tons of earth and stone to construct a rampart 375 high abutting the western approach to Masada. Excavations at the site, however, indicate that Josephus may be mistaken or deliberately misleading on this point as there is an extant spur of rock that the Roman’s used as a foundation for their construction. This meant they only had to add 25 to 30 feet to this natural feature in order to raise the ramp to the level of the fortress’ walls. The time required to complete this engineering feat would have been significantly less than building it from the ground up, which would have a resulting impact on the length of the siege itself. Rather than being a long and heroic resistance, the whole episode may have been over in as little a month.

Josephus is quite specific about how the defenders of Masada met their end. When the Romans had completed their siege works and defeat was inevitable they chose to kill themselves rather than fall into captivity. Each man first executed his own wife and children, then ten men were chosen by lot to kill the survivors. These remaining ten then drew lots to establish which among them would kill the other nine.

Yadin’s excavations uncovered a cluster of eleven small ostraca in front of the palace. Each of these was inscribed with a single name; including one that reads “Ben Yair”. Yadin believed these to be the lots used by the last survivors to decide which of their number would kill the others before ending his own life. However if this is the case it begs the question; why are there eleven names inscribed instead of the ten specified by Jospehus?

Having dispatched his compatriots the sole survivor is stated to have set fire to the fortress - with the exception of the well supplied store houses that, according to Josephus, were left intact to show the Romans that the defenders had not been “subdued for want of necessaries”. 7 This appears to contradict the archaeological evidence. When the storerooms were excavated the original floor was covered with a thick layer of ash indicating that they were also put to the torch.

Josephus was specific about the number of people besieged at Masada – 967 men, women and children. He also states that with the exception of two women and five children who hid themselves in the caverns beneath the citadel that they all perished. He is equally specific about where they died; the royal palace. Yadin’s excavations uncovered the remains of only 28 people, however, and of these only three were discovered under the debris of the palace. The remainder were discovered in a cave at the base of the cliff.

Yadin proposed that the remains were those of Masada’s defenders, and went so far as to state that the three skeletons found in the palace “undoubtedly represent the remains of an important commander of Masada and his family”. He even went so far as to suggest that the man might have been the last warrior who, having killed his comrades, committed suicide next to the bodies of his wife and child. 8 This interpretation appears to have been based solely on the fact that some armour was found near the remains. The theory was further weakened by one of Yadin’s own team, an anthropologist, who estimated the man’s age as between 20 and 22, the woman’s between 17 and 18, and the child’s about 11 or 12 years old at the time of death. If these estimations are correct the grouping could not possibly constitute a nuclear family. 9 The whereabouts of the remaining 932 bodies remains a mystery.

Josephus makes no mention of the 25 bodies in the cave so their origin is open to conjecture. Were they, as Shaye Cohen 10 believes, the “remains of Jews who attempted to hide from the Romans but were discovered and killed” (which contradicts the popularly held belief that the entire population of Masada willingly committed mass suicide), or are they the bodies of Christians who inhabited Masada during Byzantine times as some scholars have suggested?

Joseph Zias of Jerusalem’s Rockefeller Museum has yet another theory. After carbon dating samples of textiles found with the remains indicated that they appeared to be contemporaneous with the period of the Revolt, he postulated that they could in fact be of Roman origin. Yadin admitted in 1982 that he had found pig bones alongside the remains – a highly unlikely combination if they were indeed those of zealous Jews to whom the pig is an unclean animal. But Zias notes that Romans sacrificed pigs at burials. Fourteen of the skeletons were adult males, 6 of whom were described as between 35-50, powerfully built and of a “distinctively different physical type from the rest”. 12 Could these be the remains of members of the Legion Tenth Fretensis who conducted the siege of Masada and occupied it after its recapture? 11 As one of the emblems of this legion was the boar this would be a quite reasonable interpretation.

A government committee overruled Yadin’s suggestion that all these remains be interred in the cave where they were found. Instead they were buried at Masada with full military honours on July 7, 1969.

There are many apparent anomalies in the Masada story, and many of these can be traced to Yigael Yadin and his interpretation of the archaeological remains. Although a revered figure in Israel, he has been accused of interpreting his finds to fit with the heroic mythos of Masada. As to his motives for doing this, Ben-Yehuda suggests “nationalistic, ideological motivation played a very major part in the decision to excavate Masada”. 12 He also argues that a nation needs myths to help it “shape a central process of nation and state-building….to shape identities and create cohesion by fostering a strong sense of a shared past”. 13 This is particularly true of Israel at the time of Yadin’s dig. Less than two decades old and surrounded on all sides by enemies dedicated to her destruction, Israel needed “a new type of Jew, somebody that was willing to fight and die for his own country”. 14 Yadin interpreted the events at Masada in a way that provided the requisite role model.

Wherever the truth lies, the Masada story still resonates strongly today both as an enduring symbol of the Jewish state’s struggle for existence and of human courage in the face of insurmountable opposition. In December 2001 UNESCO’s World Heritage Committee inscribed the Masada site on the World Heritage List stating that it was:

“…a symbol of the ancient Jewish Kingdom of Israel, of its violent destruction in the later 1st century CE, and of the subsequent Diaspora.

”The tragic events during the last days of the Jewish refugees who occupied the fortress and palace of Masada make it a symbol both of Jewish cultural identity and, more universally, of the continuing human struggle between oppression and liberty.”

Bibliography The Jewish war – Flavius Josephus

Sacrificing Truth: Archaeology and the Masada Myth – Nachman Ben-Yehuda, Prometheus Books, 2002

Apocalypse – The Great Jewish Revolt Against Rome, Neil Faulkner, Tempus Publishing, UK, 2002

Masada : Cave 2001/2002 – Dr James D Tabor

Flavius Josephus Eyewitness to Rome’s First-Century Conquest of Judea – Mireille Hadas-Lebel

Masada – The Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs Website

Masada ; Literary Tradition, Archaeological Remains and the Credibility of Jospehus – Shaye Cohen

Masada Martyrs – Haim Watzman, Archaeological Institute of America – Volume 50 Number 6, November/December 1997

Israeli Icon Under Fire, Chronicle of Higher Education Dec 6, 2002 – Richard Monastersky

UNESCO World Heritage Committee Meeting Minutes, Dec 2001

1 Dean of the Faculty of Sociology at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem and author of “The Masada Myth: Collective Memory and Mythmaking in Israel”

2 The Masada Myth – Nachman Ben-Yehuda

3 The Wars of the Jews, Book II, Chapter 17 - Josephus

4 Israeli Icon Under Fire – Richard Monastersky

5 Jewish Encyclopedia – entry by Richard Gottheil and Samuel Kraus

6 Jewish War 4:401-4 - Jospehus

7 Josephus

8 Israeli Icon Under Fire, Richard Monastersky

9 Israeli Icon Under Fire, Richard Monastersky

10 Masada; Literary Tradition, Archaeological Remains and the Credibility of Josephus

12 Masada Cave 2001/2002 – James D Tabor

11 Masada Martyrs – Haim Watzman, Archaeological Institute of America

12 Interview of Nachman Ben-Yehuda moderated by Richard Monastersky, Chronicle of Higher Education

13 Sacrificing Truth: Archaeology and the Masada Myth – Nachman Ben-Yehuda

14 Israeli Icon Under Fire, Richard Monastersky


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Israel; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: godsgravesglyphs; masada; romanempire
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To: 1st-P-In-The-Pod; A_Conservative_in_Cambridge; af_vet_rr; agrace; ahayes; albyjimc2; ...
Masada is hardly mentioned in Talmud and other post-biblical religious sources. It was considered an insignificant event in the larger context of the Destruction of the Temple and the exile of millions of Jews.

FRmail me to be added or removed from this Judaic/pro-Israel/Russian Jewry ping list.

Warning! This is a high-volume ping list.

21 posted on 06/12/2006 12:33:39 PM PDT by Alouette (Psalms of the Day: 79-82)
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To: Larry Lucido

I'll see your ancient and medieval history and say that I bet ALL history is less romantic than it might seem.

Marking to read when I have a bit.


22 posted on 06/12/2006 12:37:19 PM PDT by pollyannaish
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To: silverleaf
It's a fascinating place. I have been there.

We were able to go up in the cable car when we were there this year. As you know, you can still see the Roman "ramp" built up to the fortress, which took three years to construct. It's large, and one can see easily how a self-contained city could be sustained there. Water had to be brought up on the backs of donkeys.

23 posted on 06/12/2006 12:38:03 PM PDT by sinkspur (Today, we settled all family business.)
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To: Suzy Quzy

Indeed. The Rev. Jim Jones took about 900 people with him and no one considers that heroic in the least.


24 posted on 06/12/2006 12:39:43 PM PDT by Junior (Identical fecal matter, alternate diurnal period)
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To: sinkspur

I have heard that there was a water system built into Masada. Water cisterns two-thirds of the way up the cliff drain the nearby wadis by an elaborate water system, which explains how the rebels managed to have enough water for such a long time.


25 posted on 06/12/2006 12:42:21 PM PDT by garbageseeker
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To: robowombat
small daggers concealed under their cloaks with which they stabbed their opponents - almost exclusively fellow Jews who they perceived as too moderate or openly sympathetic to Roman rule.

The Middle East, eh? Plus ca change . . .

26 posted on 06/12/2006 12:48:06 PM PDT by jordan8
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To: Alouette

Do you know the answer to my #20?? I know you are a good religious Jew, so I thank you in advance.


27 posted on 06/12/2006 12:50:26 PM PDT by Suzy Quzy ("When Cabals Go Kaboom"....upcoming book on Mary McCarthy's Coup-Plotters.)
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To: robowombat

Gee, with skeptical accounts like this, it gets to be pretty easy to imagine how the NYT would have covered the story, had they been there....


28 posted on 06/12/2006 12:54:42 PM PDT by Wiseghy ("You want to break this army? Then break your word to it.")
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To: Suzy Quzy

Suicide is frowned upon in Judaism as well.

I guess that by the point the suicide happened that the fear was that women would be raped and sold into slavery and that the men would be tortured and the death by suicide was a preferable exit.

When I think of the Jewish Revolts, I always think of that meeting in Life or Brian. Reg asks, "what have the Romans ever given us?" but it is asked rhetorically. Then the members of the JPF proceed to list:

The aquaduct? What? The aquaduct
Reg:Oh yeah, yeah, they did give us that, that's true.
And sanitation. Yes, the sanitation, remember what the city used to be like, Reg.
Reg:Yes OK, I'll grant you, the aquaduct and sanitation are two things the Romans HAVE done. And the roads! Well yes obviously the roads, I mean the roads go without saying, don't they! But apart from the sanitation, the aquaduct and the roads... Irrigation! Medicine! Education! Yeah, all right, fair enough. And the wine... Yes, that's something we'd really miss if the Romans left. Public baths! And it's safe to walk the streets at night now Reg. Yes, they certainly know how to keep order. Only ones who could in a place like this! All right. But APART from the sanitation, medicine, education, wine, public order, irrigation, roads, a fresh water system and public health, what have the Romans ever done for us?! Brought peace!


29 posted on 06/12/2006 12:55:18 PM PDT by Skywalk (Transdimensional Jihad!)
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To: robowombat
My husband and I were talking about that yesterday. The Jews who were in the camps during the Holocaust are now mostly dead and "never again" has become "well, maybe." So many of the Jews seem intent on killing themselves and their nation by bowing to the Arabs.

Carolyn

30 posted on 06/12/2006 12:58:47 PM PDT by CDHart ("It's too late to work within the system and too early to shoot the b@#$%^&s."--Claire Wolfe)
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To: sinkspur

When we were there my son wanted to try the "goat trail". Glad we did not, still managed to get mild heatstroke and of course, there is no such thing as a "refreshing" dip in the Dead Sea. We did stay at the kibbutz at Ein Gedi, wonderful pool and wonderful vegetarian food and managed to bump into another person I knew.

I have been reading a semi-fictionalized book about the life of Herod and how he fled to Masada with Mariamne and her family during a revolt in Jerusalem.

Did you see the Herodian mosaic set in the floor of his palace? Is it still virtually intact?


31 posted on 06/12/2006 1:21:13 PM PDT by silverleaf (Fasten your seat belts- it's going to be a BUMPY ride.)
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To: Suzy Quzy; robowombat

Masada has become a symbol of "Give me liberty or give me death". Masada has significance in the Israeli mindset and in the strategy many expect will be used, should any nation ever attempt to attack Israel with a nuclear weapon....or even as a preemptive strategy if such an attack is presumed imminent.

http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/Judaism/masada.html


32 posted on 06/12/2006 1:26:05 PM PDT by silverleaf (Fasten your seat belts- it's going to be a BUMPY ride.)
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To: silverleaf
We didn't get to go in his palace. We were in a tour group and weren't even offered the option.

My wife took a dip in the Dead Sea and, yep, you guessed it, insisted on putting some of the mud on her face, which promptly caused the temporary loss of eyesight due to the salt.

She had to be led out of the water by a kind gentleman. We had a wonderful experience in Israel, and recommend that everyone try to go there at least once in their lives.

The produce is the best and fresh vegetables are served even at breakfast.

33 posted on 06/12/2006 1:36:37 PM PDT by sinkspur (Today, we settled all family business.)
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To: rmlew
1. Thanks for the correction.

2. Not all rebels were Zealots, were they?
34 posted on 06/12/2006 2:14:58 PM PDT by kenavi (Save romance. Stop teen sex.)
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To: sinkspur; All

Oops, my memory goofed, the "goat trail" was actually the "snake path".

The Herodian "palace" is actually one of the terraces that juts out of the hillside. There was a rather treacherous walkway to get there...perhaps tour groups don't go down there. I can't rememebr how many slaves they said died building this fortress to Herods' specifications for safety and for luxury.

I found more pictures and history: being atop the actual scenery defies description.

http://www.netours.com/2003/masada.htm


35 posted on 06/12/2006 2:54:51 PM PDT by silverleaf (Fasten your seat belts- it's going to be a BUMPY ride.)
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To: Suzy Quzy
Do you know the answer to my #20??

The answer is yeharog ve'al yavor ("Die and do not sin")

They committed suicide rather than be taken captive and sold into slavery by the Romans. Since Roman slaves were frequently coerced into perversions, it was considered more honorable to commit suicide than be forced into immorality.

36 posted on 06/12/2006 3:55:44 PM PDT by Alouette (Psalms of the Day: 79-82)
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To: robowombat

I keep coming down to 'these people are so alienated that they really are Jews who hate being Jewish. They truly are self hating and seem to implicitly have a death wish. Something that is really dangerous for Jews to embrace.

Not much different really, than some americans.


37 posted on 06/12/2006 4:03:36 PM PDT by tet68 ( " We would not die in that man's company, that fears his fellowship to die with us...." Henry V.)
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To: goldstategop

Exactly.


38 posted on 06/12/2006 4:05:01 PM PDT by MrCruncher
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To: robowombat

There is a moderately entertaining novel by author Kathy Reichs, "Cross Bones," about some of the archaeological discoveries at Masada. Unfortunately she also throws in some "Da Vinci Code" conspiracy crap but other than that is a pretty good read.


39 posted on 06/12/2006 4:07:13 PM PDT by Alouette (Psalms of the Day: 79-82)
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To: tet68

The left wing is the left wing, wherever it is.

The goal is to destroy their own country.


40 posted on 06/12/2006 4:07:57 PM PDT by MrCruncher
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