Episodes

Israel-Palestine: When Judea Burned (Part 1)

Published
Duration
51:31
Israel-Palestine: When Judea Burned (Part 1)
Double Helix: Blueprint of Nations
0:00 51:31

Jerusalem, August 70 CE. The Second Temple — the holiest site in the Jewish world, the place where God was believed to physically dwell — is burning. Roman soldiers under Titus are dismantling a civilization. Priests perform the final sacrifice as flames consume the ceiling above them. And in the destruction of this single building, two futures are set in motion: a longing for return that will survive twenty centuries and eventually create the modern state of Israel, and a vacancy on a land that will be continuously inhabited by the people who become the Palestinians.

In the first episode of our five-part series on Israel and Palestine, we go back to the beginning — the real beginning. Before the Balfour Declaration, before Zionism, before the British Mandate, there is this: the moment Rome tried to erase the Jewish people from their homeland, and the extraordinary reinvention that kept Jewish identity alive across two thousand years of exile. We trace the Great Jewish Revolt, the siege of Jerusalem, the fall of the Temple, the rabbinic reinvention of Judaism at Yavne, the Bar Kokhba revolt, and Emperor Hadrian's attempt to erase Judea from the map by renaming it Syria Palaestina — a name chosen to sever Jews from their land that would, over centuries, become the identity of the people who lived there in their absence.

This is a story of right versus right. Two peoples, one land, and competing claims that are both ancient, both legitimate, and both irreconcilable. If you want to understand why this conflict resists every attempt at resolution, you have to start here — in the flames.

Content note: This episode includes Josephus's account of extreme famine conditions during the siege of Jerusalem, including an act of filicide and cannibalism. The passage is historically significant and is presented with appropriate gravity.



Suggested Sources for Listeners

These are accessible starting points for anyone who wants to go deeper into the history covered in this episode. I've focused on works that are readable, well-regarded, and available in English.


Primary Source

Josephus, The Jewish War (translated by Martin Hammond, Oxford World's Classics, 2017) The essential primary source for the Great Revolt, the siege of Jerusalem, and the destruction of the Temple. Josephus is a complicated narrator — a Jewish general who defected to Rome — and his biases are part of the story. The Hammond translation is modern and readable. If you want to go straight to the siege, start with Books V and VI.


General Histories

Martin Goodman, Rome and Jerusalem: The Clash of Ancient Civilizations (2007) The definitive account of the relationship between Rome and Judea, written by one of the leading scholars in the field. Goodman covers politics, religion, culture, and identity across several centuries. Dense but rewarding — this is the book that tells you why the conflict between Rome and the Jews was unlike anything else in the ancient world.

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