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[70]
At which time Titus, who was now returned, out of the indignation
he had at the destruction the Romans had undergone while he was absent,
took two hundred chosen horsemen and some footmen with him, and entered
without noise into the city. Now as the watch perceived that he was coming,
they made a noise, and betook themselves to their arms; and as that his
entrance was presently known to those that were in the city, some of them
caught hold of their children and their wives, and drew them after them,
and fled away to the citadel, with lamentations and cries, while others
of them went to meet Titus, and were killed perpetually; but so many of
them as were hindered from running up to the citadel, not knowing what
in the world to do, fell among the Roman guards, while the groans of those
that were killed were prodigiously great every where, and blood ran down
over all the lower parts of the city, from the upper. But then Vespasian
himself came to his assistance against those that had fled to the citadel,
and brought his whole army with him; now this upper part of the city was
every way rocky, and difficult of ascent, and elevated to a vast altitude,
and very full of people on all sides, and encompassed with precipices,
whereby the Jews cut off those that came up to them, and did much mischief
to others by their darts, and the large stones which they rolled down upon
them, while they were themselves so high that the enemy's darts could hardly
reach them. However, there arose such a Divine storm against them as was
instrumental to their destruction; this carried the Roman darts upon them,
and made those which they threw return back, and drove them obliquely away
from them; nor could the Jews indeed stand upon their precipices, by reason
of the violence of the wind, having nothing that was stable to stand upon,
nor could they see those that were ascending up to them; so the Romans
got up and surrounded them, and some they slew before they could defend
themselves, and others as they were delivering up themselves; and the remembrance
of those that were slain at their former entrance into the city increased
their rage against them now; a great number also of those that were surrounded
on every side, and despaired of escaping, threw their children and their
wives, and themselves also, down the precipices, into the valley beneath,
which, near the citadel, had been dug hollow to a vast depth; but so it
happened, that the anger of the Romans appeared not to be so extravagant
as was the madness of those that were now taken, while the Romans slew
but four thousand, whereas the number of those that had thrown themselves
down was found to be five thousand: nor did any one escape except two women,
who were the daughters of Philip, and Philip himself was the son of a certain
eminent man called Jacimus, who had been general of king Agrippa's army;
and these did therefore escape, because they lay concealed from the rage
of the Romans when the city was taken; for otherwise they spared not so
much as the infants, of which many were flung down by them from the citadel.
And thus was Gamala taken on the three and twentieth day of the month Hyperberetens,
[Tisri,] whereas the city had first revolted on the four and twentieth
day of the month Gorpieus [Elul].
1 THE SURRENDER OF GISCHALA; WHILE JOHN FLIES AWAY FROM IT TO JERUSALEM.
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