By somebody | Thu, 12/12/2024 - 05:19 pm Classic Texts Printer-friendly version A Roman decurion (Ebutius) tries in vain to defeat Josephus (Flavius Josephus Autobiography) (Flavius Josephus) Aged 25, Josephus goes to Rome on behalf of his people (Flavius Josephus Autobiography) (Flavius Josephus) By a ruse, he disposes of his opponents in Tiberias (Flavius Josephus Autobiography) (Flavius Josephus) Dedication, to Epaphroditus (Flavius Josephus Autobiography) (Flavius Josephus) He also spares Tiberias from merited punishment (Flavius Josephus Autobiography) (Flavius Josephus) He averts the wrath of the other Galileans from the pro-Roman city of Sepphoris (Flavius Josephus Autobiography) (Flavius Josephus) He eases the fear of reprisals, in Sepphoris, a town allied to Rome (Flavius Josephus Autobiography) (Flavius Josephus) He fails to dissuade the Jews from revolt against Rome (Flavius Josephus Autobiography) (Flavius Josephus) He offers generous amnesty to John of Gischala's followers (Flavius Josephus Autobiography) (Flavius Josephus) He refuses to crush John of Gischala, and again seeks an end to bloodshed (Flavius Josephus Autobiography) (Flavius Josephus) He sends a Galilean delegation to Jerusalem, to support his claims (Flavius Josephus Autobiography) (Flavius Josephus) He survives the hostile plotting of John of Gischala (Flavius Josephus Autobiography) (Flavius Josephus) He tries and fails to persuade the people of Tiberias from revolting (Flavius Josephus Autobiography) (Flavius Josephus) He unmasks Jerusalem priests' plot to replace him as leader of Galilee (Flavius Josephus Autobiography) (Flavius Josephus) His activity under Vespasian and Titus; using his place, to favour fellow-Jews (Flavius Josephus Autobiography) (Flavius Josephus) In a dream, Josephus is urged to defend Galilee against the Romans (Flavius Josephus Autobiography) (Flavius Josephus) In vain, Josephus's loyalists urge him to destroy his enemies (Flavius Josephus Autobiography) (Flavius Josephus) Jerusalem's chief leaders support Josephus' rule in Galilee (Flavius Josephus Autobiography) (Flavius Josephus) Jesus of Tiberias stirs up rage against Josephus (Flavius Josephus Autobiography) (Flavius Josephus) John of Gischala & Philip of Gamala take opposite sides, about the revolt (Flavius Josephus Autobiography) (Flavius Josephus) John of Gischala tries to usurp Josephus' authority in Galilee (Flavius Josephus Autobiography) (Flavius Josephus) Josephus and two other priests are sent to calm things, in Galilee (Flavius Josephus Autobiography) (Flavius Josephus) Josephus convenes a peace conference in Galilee (Flavius Josephus Autobiography) (Flavius Josephus) Josephus defends religious liberty of non-Jewish refugees from Agrippa (Flavius Josephus Autobiography) (Flavius Josephus) Josephus faces down his would-be murderers, by a violent trick (Flavius Josephus Autobiography) (Flavius Josephus) Josephus fortifies Gamala and other cities in Galilee (against king Agrippa) (Flavius Josephus Autobiography) (Flavius Josephus) Josephus goes on a final visit to his aged father, in Jerusalem (Flavius Josephus Autobiography) (Flavius Josephus) Josephus is compelled to besiege Sepphoris and fight the Romans (Flavius Josephus Autobiography) (Flavius Josephus) Josephus is taken prisoner by the Romans, and released to serve them (Flavius Josephus Autobiography) (Flavius Josephus) Josephus organises for peaceful defence of Galilee; lauds his own probity (Flavius Josephus Autobiography) (Flavius Josephus) Josephus rebuts Justus' alternative history of these events (Flavius Josephus Autobiography) (Flavius Josephus) Josephus's intentions for using some �spoils of war� are misunderstood (Flavius Josephus Autobiography) (Flavius Josephus) Josephus's later career, in Rome, under Vespasian, Titus and Domitian (Flavius Josephus Autobiography) (Flavius Josephus) Justus tries to stir Tiberias to revolt against Rome (Flavius Josephus Autobiography) (Flavius Josephus) Origins: born in a distinguished priestly family (Flavius Josephus Autobiography) (Flavius Josephus) Other Galileans urge Josephus to subdue Tiberias (Flavius Josephus Autobiography) (Flavius Josephus) Procurator Gessius Florus is defeated by the rebels (Flavius Josephus Autobiography) (Flavius Josephus) Reluctantly, he is forced to expel the non-Jewish refugees from Agrippa (Flavius Josephus Autobiography) (Flavius Josephus) Selecting a philosophy: the Four Sects of the Jews (Flavius Josephus Autobiography) (Flavius Josephus) Sepphoris, loyal to Rome, tries to have Josephus assasinated (Flavius Josephus Autobiography) (Flavius Josephus) The Galileans' good opinion of him as their governor prevented his removal (Flavius Josephus Autobiography) (Flavius Josephus) The Jerusalem four still try to depose him as governor; his life is threatened (Flavius Josephus Autobiography) (Flavius Josephus) The people reject the false accusations of tyranny, levelled against Josephus (Flavius Josephus Autobiography) (Flavius Josephus) Vespasian arrives in Tyre, and supports king Agrippa; condemns Justus of Tiberias (Flavius Josephus Autobiography) (Flavius Josephus) Warring factions in Tiberias; Justus stirs up the revolt there (Flavius Josephus Autobiography) (Flavius Josephus) Without bloodshed, he brings the city of Tiberias under his control (Flavius Josephus Autobiography) (Flavius Josephus) Book traversal links for Autobiography Flavius Josephus ‹ Chapter 11. The excesses of Gessius Florus urge the Jews to take up arms against Roman rule. Conc... (Book 20. Years from procurator Fadus, to Florus (22 years)) (Antiquities of the Jews) (Flavius Josephus) Up A Roman decurion (Ebutius) tries in vain to defeat Josephus (Flavius Josephus Autobiography) (Flavius Josephus) ›