Difference between revisions of "Jotapata / Yodfat"

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#REDIRECT [[:Category:Jotapata (subject)]]
*SCHOLARLY AND FICTIONAL WORKS: see [[:Category:Jotapata (subject)]]
*ANCIENT SOURCES: see [[Jotapata (sources)]]
 
 
'''Jotapata / Yodfat''' was a Jewish town in Galilee.
 
==Overview==
 
The ancient Israelite settlement, destroyed by the Assyrians, was repopulated in the Hellenistic period. After [[Alexander Jannaeus]] brought it under Judean control (ca. 100  BCE), Jotapata became the Jewish administrative center for central Galilee.
 
During the [[Jewish War]], Josephus fortified the site, which was taken and totally destroyed by the Romans in 67 CE (see [[Siege of Jotapata]]). Josephus himself was captured there.
 
The city was reestablished after the war at a nearby site by refugees from Jerusalem.
 
==Jotapata in ancient sources==
 
====Josephus, Life====
188, 234, 332, 350-357, 412-414.
 
====Josephus, War====
2.57; 3.111-114, 141-339, 404-406.
 
==Jotapata in scholarship==
 
Jotapata was first identified by E. G. Schultz in 1847. Six excavation seasons were carried out at the site between 1992 and 2000, under the direction of [[Mordechai Aviam]] on behalf of the Israel Antiquities Authority and the University of Rochester.
 
==Jotapata in fiction==
 
==References==
 
*'''Jotapata''' / [[Mark A. Chancey]] / In: [[The Eerdmans Dictionary of Early Judaism (2010 Collins / Harlow), dictionary]], 842-843
 
==External links==
 
*[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yodfat Wikipedia (Yodfat)] / [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siege_of_Yodfat (Siege of Yodfat)]
 
 
[[Category:Places]]

Revision as of 15:34, 26 September 2011


Jotapata / Yodfat was a Jewish town in Galilee.

Overview

The ancient Israelite settlement, destroyed by the Assyrians, was repopulated in the Hellenistic period. After Alexander Jannaeus brought it under Judean control (ca. 100 BCE), Jotapata became the Jewish administrative center for central Galilee.

During the Jewish War, Josephus fortified the site, which was taken and totally destroyed by the Romans in 67 CE (see Siege of Jotapata). Josephus himself was captured there.

The city was reestablished after the war at a nearby site by refugees from Jerusalem.

Jotapata in ancient sources

Josephus, Life

188, 234, 332, 350-357, 412-414.

Josephus, War

2.57; 3.111-114, 141-339, 404-406.

Jotapata in scholarship

Jotapata was first identified by E. G. Schultz in 1847. Six excavation seasons were carried out at the site between 1992 and 2000, under the direction of Mordechai Aviam on behalf of the Israel Antiquities Authority and the University of Rochester.

Jotapata in fiction

References

External links