Difference between revisions of "Category:Vespasian (subject)"

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==Vespasian in ancient sources==
==Vespasian in ancient sources==


Vespasian led the Roman army in the initial stages of the Jewish War, crashed the Jewish resistance in Galilee (where he captured Josephus), and besieged Jerusalem. When he became emperor in 69, he left the command to his son Titus, who finished the job, by conquering Jerusalem. According to Eusebius, Vespasian ordered all descendants of the royal line of David to be hunted down, causing the Jews to be persecuted from province to province. What we know from Josephus and Suetonius is that Vespasian eagerly applied to himself the prophecy about a king rising to power "from the sun (=the East)".  
Vespasian led the Roman army in the initial stages of the Jewish War, crashed the Jewish resistance in Galilee (where he captured Josephus), and besieged Jerusalem. When he became emperor in 69, he left the command to his son Titus, who finished the job, by conquering Jerusalem. According to Eusebius, Vespasian ordered all descendants of the royal line of David to be hunted down, causing the Jews to be persecuted from province to province. What we know from Josephus and Suetonius is that Vespasian eagerly applied to himself the prophecy about a king rising to power "from the sun (=the East)" and received support by influential member of the Herodian familyand their allies, such as [[:Category:Berenice (subject)|Berenice]], [[:Category:Herod Agrippa II (subject)|Herod Agrippa II]], [[:Category:Tiberius Alexander (subject)|Tiberius Alexander]], and [[:Category:Josephus (subject)|Josephus]].


==Vespasian in Scholarship==
==Vespasian in Scholarship==

Revision as of 08:01, 20 June 2010

Vespasian (Titus Flavius Domitianus; 9-79) was the ninth Roman Emperor--the first ruler of the Flavian dynasty. He reigned from 69 (after the Year of the Four Emperors) to 79 (followed by Titus).

Vespasian in ancient sources

Vespasian led the Roman army in the initial stages of the Jewish War, crashed the Jewish resistance in Galilee (where he captured Josephus), and besieged Jerusalem. When he became emperor in 69, he left the command to his son Titus, who finished the job, by conquering Jerusalem. According to Eusebius, Vespasian ordered all descendants of the royal line of David to be hunted down, causing the Jews to be persecuted from province to province. What we know from Josephus and Suetonius is that Vespasian eagerly applied to himself the prophecy about a king rising to power "from the sun (=the East)" and received support by influential member of the Herodian familyand their allies, such as Berenice, Herod Agrippa II, Tiberius Alexander, and Josephus.

Vespasian in Scholarship

Vespasian in Fiction

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