Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - The Siege of Masada
Episode Date: August 11, 2022Around the year 36 BC, the King of Judea, Herod the Great, built a fortress in the Judean desert overlooking the Dead Sea. Almost 100 years later, that fortress became the scene for what was one of th...e most dramatic moments in the history of the Jewish people. It was the final act in a rebellion against the Roman Empire, the ramifications of which are still felt in the world today. Learn more about the Last Stand at Masada and the end of the Judean Revolt on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Subscribe to the podcast! https://link.chtbl.com/EverythingEverywhere?sid=ShowNotes -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Darcy Adams Associate Producers: Peter Bennett & Thor Thomsen Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Update your podcast app at newpodcastapps.com Search Past Episodes at fathom.fm Discord Server: https://discord.gg/UkRUJFh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/EverythingEverywhere Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/everything-everywhere-daily-podcast/ Everything Everywhere is an Airwave Media podcast." or "Everything Everywhere is part of the Airwave Media podcast network Please contact sales@advertisecast.com to advertise on Everything Everywhere. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Around the year 36 BC, the King of Judea, Herod the Great, built a fortress in the Judean desert
overlooking the Dead Sea. Almost a hundred years later, that fortress became the scene for what
was one of the most dramatic moments in the history of the Jewish people. It was the final act
in a rebellion against the Roman Empire, the ramifications of which are still being felt in the
world today. Learn more about the siege of Masada and the end of the first Jewish-Roman
War on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily.
What if your perceptions about the past were wrong?
ThruLine is a podcast that takes you back in time to uncover the parts of the story that may have gone unnoticed.
It effectively turned day into night.
And how it shaped the world now.
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The conquest of the Levant by the Roman Empire began in the year 63 BC when the Romans conquered Syria.
Rather than conquer the land of the south, known as Judea, the Romans installed a puppet on the
Judean throne by the name of Herod, who ran the kingdom of Judea as a Roman vassal state.
The people who lived in this region were very different from all the other subjects who lived under
Roman rule. These people, known as Jews, practiced a very odd religion compared to the other
religions of the period. They didn't have a pantheon of gods like the Romans, Greeks, Egyptians,
or Gauls. They had just one god, and the practice of their religion was centered around
the city of Jerusalem. There they had a singular temple and practiced rights and dietary practices,
which, again, were very unlike the other people who were ruled by Rome. Roman rule of Judea
was always very tenuous as the Jews in the region didn't particularly like the Romans. There were
constant protests, minor rebellions, and uprising, but nothing got too out of hand. The Romans did
give the people of Judea a surprising amount of latitude to practice their religion and culture,
so long as they kept giving money to Rome.
Herod created a whole new monarchy and ruling class from scratch,
and was responsible for many large building projects,
including reconstructing the Second Temple and the creation of royal palaces.
Most importantly, Herod was a stabilizing force in Judea.
When he died somewhere between the year 4 BC and the year 1,
his kingdom was split between his sons,
which, as history tells us, is almost always a bad idea.
Just a few years later, in the year 4,
Judea went from being a vassal kingdom of Rome to being an official Roman province that was directly administered by a Roman governor appointed by the Roman emperor.
Without the stabilizing influence of Herod or his sons, Roman rule increased tensions in the region, and this eventually boiled over in the year 66.
What eventually became one of the most significant events in the history of the Jewish people began innocently enough with complaints about Greek merchants in the coastal town of Caesarea making sacrifices in front of a synagogue.
The Jews responded by ceasing saying prayers in front of the temple for the emperor,
targeting Romans in the region, and starting a tax revolt.
To paraphrase the great Ron Burgundy, things escalated quickly.
The Roman governor of Judea, Gessius Flores, took troops into the Jewish temple to raid the temple treasury to take money that he felt was owed in taxes.
He then sent Roman troops into Jerusalem the next day to round up senior Jewish officials.
Sending troops into the temple and arresting senior Jewish leaders was the last strong.
so it led to an armed uprising in the beginning of what is now known as the first Jewish-Roman war.
The governor of the province and other senior Roman officials fled Jerusalem,
and a legion was sent down from Syria to quell the uprising.
However, the Jewish rebels ambushed the legion and killed 6,000 Roman soldiers.
When something like this happened, Rome did not mess around.
They sent the experienced General Vespasian and four legions to Judea to subdue the province.
Eventually, Vespasian had to return back to Rome to become the new emperor, and the job of finishing off the rebellion fell to his son and future emperor, Titus.
I am skipping a lot here, but Titus eventually won. He destroyed the Jewish temple in the year 70 and expelled all of the Jews from Jerusalem.
This was the start of the great Jewish diaspora, which caused the Jews to flee to points around Europe, the Middle East, and North Africa.
I'm going to leave the fall of Jerusalem and a more in-depth treatment to the first Jewish-Roman war for another episode.
because my focus today is how the war ended.
With the destruction of Jerusalem in the temple, the Jewish rebels were now down to just a small group known as the Sakurai.
The Sakari got their names from the small knives they used to assassinate people during public gatherings, which made them hard to capture.
Once the Romans had quashed to the rebellion, the Sakharai fled to a mountain fortress in the Judean desert, which was occupied by a Roman garrison.
They killed everyone in the garrison and set up camp in what was probably the most impregnable fortification
in the entire Middle East. It was a fortification built by Herod the Great, known as Masada.
Masada was just the Hebrew word for fortress. You need to visit or at least look at some images
to understand just how well-fortified Masada is. It's built on the top of a rock mesa in the
Judean desert. In order to lay siege to it, you would first have to get there, which is very difficult,
then you'd need enough water to support you during the siege, of which there is almost none
as it's overlooking the Dead Sea.
Finally, you need to figure out a way to scale the cliffs surrounding the mesa on which it's situated.
Herod built two palaces on top of the mesa, as well as several large cisterns to store water.
Herod's plan was basically to use Masada as a place to flee in the event of a revolt,
and you may also have visited in the winter as temperatures there were a little bit warmer.
When the Sakari took Masada, they then began conducting raids on nearby towns,
including a massacre of 700 people in the nearby community of Aingeti.
By the year 72, the Sakurai located on Masada were the last rebels from the Jewish uprising.
There were a total of 960 men, women, and children hold up inside the fortress,
and they had enough food and water to last several years.
The Romans decided to lay siege to Masada and end the revolt once and for all.
The Roman governor, Lucius Flavius Silva, was tapped to lead the siege with 8,000 Romans at his disposal.
Again, if you're not familiar with Masada, I highly recommend you take a look at some photos or check it out on Google Earth.
It is a very well-defended position.
Herod chose what was probably the best location in his kingdom for a fortress.
When the Romans arrived, they realized that this siege would probably take a while.
So, the first order of business was to build a containment wall around the plateau.
This would ensure that none of the rebels in the fortress would be able to escape.
And the other thing they did, which every Roman Legion did, was a very Roman Legion did, was a
direct a camp. The only reason I'd bother mentioning the construction of a camp is that Masada is one of the only
places in the world where you can still see the outline of an actual Roman camp today. Camps
built by legions were designed to be temporary structures. What they all had in common was an earthen
wall that would surround the camp usually in the shape of a square. That square can still be seen
in the Judean desert today. Because the desert is so dry, almost nothing erodes. And also, given the
conditions in the desert, nobody has gone there for centuries, which preserved what would otherwise
have been a temporary structure. In fact, if you look at a satellite image of Masada,
go to the east of the plateau and you will see a very recognizable square on the ground. That
was where the Romans camped. With a wall built around Masada, the Sakari were now in a prison rather
than a fortress. It was just a matter of how and when the end would arrive. The Roman plan for
taking the fortress was pretty simple. They were going to build a giant,
ramp up to the top of the plateau and stormed the fortress. It was a very Roman solution to the
problem. Over the next several months, the Romans began construction of the ramp. It was mostly an
earthen ramp, which required moving a tremendous amount of dirt. The Sakari on the top of the
fortress could only look as they saw the ramp get larger day after day. Eventually, as the ramp got
close to the edge of the plateau, the Sakari were able to harass the troops on the ramp to keep
it from being completed. But the Romans eventually decided to build a siege tower with a back
ram that could be rolled up to the walls of the fortress to penetrate their final defenses.
On the evening of April 15, 73, the remaining rebels in Masada knew that the next day the Romans were going to break through.
The fate for everyone, including the women and children, was either going to be crucifixion or slavery.
Instead of allowing themselves to be enslaved or horribly executed, they decided to take their own lives.
Judaism prohibits suicide, so they drew lots among the men.
10 were chosen to kill everyone else.
The remaining 10 men then killed each other with only one left who had to kill himself.
The last man also set fire to all the buildings.
When the Romans finally entered, they did not find what they expected.
The Jewish Roman historian Flavius Josephus described the scene when the Romans entered.
He wrote, quote,
They the Romans, came within the palace and so met with the multitude of the slain,
but could take no pleasure in the fact, even though it were done to their enemies.
nor could they do other than wonder at the courage of their resolution and their immovable contempt of death,
which so great a number of them had shown when they went through with such an action that it was.
Of the original 960 people, the only survivors were two women and five children who were hidden in the water cisterns.
After the siege was over, Masada was abandoned for centuries.
It's in such an inhospitable place that there was no reason for anyone to go there.
It was one of the reasons why so much was so well preserved.
eventually an Orthodox Christian monastery was built on the site during the Byzantine era,
but it was abandoned after the Islamic Caliphate took over the region.
Then again for centuries, the site was simply abandoned,
as it was such a difficult place to live on top of the plateau, which was difficult to reach.
It was visited for the first time in the modern era in the 19th century,
and archaeological excavations were finally begun in the early 1960s.
They found lots of artifacts, including the remains of 28 people,
and a 2,000-year-old seed from a date palm,
which they managed to actually get to sprout in the year 2005.
The site was declared in Israeli National Park in 1966
and a UNESCO World Heritage site in 2001.
The Roman-built camp, the wall around the plateau,
and the ramp are all still there,
as are the ruins of the palace built by Herod.
If you visit, there's a cable car that can take you up to the top,
and there is a museum at the bottom near the entrance of the cable car.
In addition to being the last act of the first Jewish Roman war,
the siege of Masada has become a cultural reference point
for anyone who would rather face death
than suffer the ignominy of defeat or enslavement.
Everything Everywhere Daily is an Airwave Media podcast.
The executive producer is Darcy Adams.
The associate producers are Thor Thompson and Peter Bennett.
Today's review comes from listener Sir David Gabriel Joseph
over at Apple Podcasts in the United States.
He writes,
Amazing Podcast.
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Thanks, Sir David.
I would like to remind you that, as you leave this review from the U.S. version of Apple podcast,
that there is a constitutional prohibition on titles of nobility.
And that being said, as for uninteresting episodes,
I think someday I will put this to the test by releasing an episode with the title simply,
Dirt.
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