BOOK II.
BOOK I
1. I Suppose that by my books of
the Antiquity of the Jews, most excellent Epaphroditus,2have made it evident to those who peruse them, that our
Jewish nation is of very great antiquity, and had a distinct
subsistence of its own originally; as also, I have therein declared
how we came to inhabit this country wherein we now live. Those
Antiquities contain the history of five thousand years, and are
taken out of our sacred books, but are translated by me into the
Greek tongue. However, since I observe a considerable number of
people giving ear to the reproaches that are laid against us by
those who bear ill-will to us, and will not believe what I have
written concerning the antiquity of our nation, while they take it
for a plain sign that our nation is of a late date, because they
are not so much as vouchsafed a bare mention by the most famous
historiographers among the Grecians. I therefore have thought
myself under an obligation to write somewhat briefly about these
subjects, in order to convict those that reproach us of spite and
voluntary falsehood, and to correct the ignorance of others, and
withal to instruct all those who are desirous of knowing the truth
of what great antiquity we really are. As for the witnesses whom I
shall produce for the proof of what I say, they shall be such as
are esteemed to be of the greatest reputation for truth, and the
most skillful in the knowledge of all antiquity by the Greeks
themselves. I will also show, that those who have written so
reproachfully and falsely about us are to be convicted by what they
have written themselves to the contrary. I shall also endeavor to
give an account of the reasons why it hath so happened, that there
have not been a great number of Greeks who have made mention of our
nation in their histories. I will, however, bring those Grecians to
light who have not omitted such our history, for the sake of those
that either do not know them, or pretend not to know them
already.2. And now, in the first place, I cannot but greatly wonder
at those men, who suppose that we must attend to none but Grecians,
when we are inquiring about the most ancient facts, and must inform
ourselves of their truth from them only, while we must not believe
ourselves nor other men; for I am convinced that the very reverse
is the truth of the case. I mean this,—if we will not be led by
vain opinions, but will make inquiry after truth from facts
themselves; for they will find that almost all which concerns the
Greeks happened not long ago; nay, one may say, is of yesterday
only. I speak of the building of their cities, the inventions of
their arts, and the description of their laws; and as for their
care about the writing down of their histories, it is very near the
last thing they set about. However, they acknowledge themselves so
far, that they were the Egyptians, the Chaldeans, and the
Phoenicians (for I will not now reckon ourselves among them) that
have preserved the memorials of the most ancient and most lasting
traditions of mankind; for almost all these nations inhabit such
countries as are least subject to destruction from the world about
them; and these also have taken especial care to have nothing
omitted of what was [remarkably] done among them; but their history
was esteemed sacred, and put into public tables, as written by men
of the greatest wisdom they had among them. But as for the place
where the Grecians inhabit, ten thousand destructions have
overtaken it, and blotted out the memory of former actions; so that
they were ever beginning a new way of living, and supposed that
every one of them was the origin of their new state. It was also
late, and with difficulty, that they came to know the letters they
now use; for those who would advance their use of these letters to
the greatest antiquity pretend that they learned them from the
Phoenicians and from Cadmus; yet is nobody able to demonstrate that
they have any writing preserved from that time, neither in their
temples, nor in any other public monuments. This appears, because
the time when those lived who went to the Trojan war, so many years
afterward, is in great doubt, and great inquiry is made, whether
the Greeks used their letters at that time; and the most prevailing
opinion, and that nearest the truth, is, that their present way of
using those letters was unknown at that time. However, there is not
any writing which the Greeks agree to be genuine among them
ancienter than Homer's Poems, who must plainly he confessed later
than the siege of Troy; nay, the report goes, that even he did not
leave his poems in writing, but that their memory was preserved in
songs, and they were put together afterward, and that this is the
reason of such a number of variations as are found in them.3As
for those who set themselves about writing their histories, I mean
such as Cadmus of Miletus, and Acusilaus of Argos, and any others
that may be mentioned as succeeding Acusilaus, they lived but a
little while before the Persian expedition into Greece. But then
for those that first introduced philosophy, and the consideration
of things celestial and divine among them, such as Pherceydes the
Syrian, and Pythagoras, and Thales, all with one consent agree,
that they learned what they knew of the Egyptians and Chaldeans,
and wrote but little And these are the things which are supposed to
be the oldest of all among the Greeks; and they have much ado to
believe that the writings ascribed to those men are
genuine.3. How can it then be other than an absurd thing, for the
Greeks to be so proud, and to vaunt themselves to be the only
people that are acquainted with antiquity, and that have delivered
the true accounts of those early times after an accurate manner?
Nay, who is there that cannot easily gather from the Greek writers
themselves, that they knew but little on any good foundation when
they set to write, but rather wrote their histories from their own
conjectures? Accordingly, they confute one another in their own
books to purpose, and are not ashamed. to give us the most
contradictory accounts of the same things; and I should spend my
time to little purpose, if I should pretend to teach the Greeks
that which they know better than I already, what a great
disagreement there is between Hellanicus and Acusilaus about their
genealogies; in how many eases Acusilaus corrects Hesiod: or after
what manner Ephorus demonstrates Hellanicus to have told lies in
the greatest part of his history; as does Timeus in like manner as
to Ephorus, and the succeeding writers do to Timeus, and all the
later writers do to Herodotus nor could Timeus agree with Antiochus
and Philistius, or with Callias, about the Sicilian History, no
more than do the several writers of the Athide follow one another
about the Athenian affairs; nor do the historians the like, that
wrote the Argolics, about the affairs of the Argives. And now what
need I say any more about particular cities and smaller places,
while in the most approved writers of the expedition of the
Persians, and of the actions which were therein performed, there
are so great differences? Nay, Thucydides himself is accused of
some as writing what is false, although he seems to have given us
the exactest history of the affairs of his own time.44. As for the occasions of so great disagreement of theirs,
there may be assigned many that are very probable, if any have a
mind to make an inquiry about them; but I ascribe these
contradictions chiefly to two causes, which I will now mention, and
still think what I shall mention in the first place to be the
principal of all. For if we remember that in the beginning the
Greeks had taken no care to have public records of their several
transactions preserved, this must for certain have afforded those
that would afterward write about those ancient transactions the
opportunity of making mistakes, and the power of making lies also;
for this original recording of such ancient transactions hath not
only been neglected by the other states of Greece, but even among
the Athenians themselves also, who pretend to be Aborigines, and to
have applied themselves to learning, there are no such records
extant; nay, they say themselves that the laws of Draco concerning
murders, which are now extant in writing, are the most ancient of
their public records; which Draco yet lived but a little before the
tyrant Pisistratus.5For as to
the Arcadians, who make such boasts of their antiquity, what need I
speak of them in particular, since it was still later before they
got their letters, and learned them, and that with difficulty
also.65. There must therefore naturally arise great differences
among writers, when they had no original records to lay for their
foundation, which might at once inform those who had an inclination
to learn, and contradict those that would tell lies. However, we
are to suppose a second occasion besides the former of these
contradictions; it is this: That those who were the most zealous to
write history were not solicitous for the discovery of truth,
although it was very easy for them always to make such a
profession; but their business was to demonstrate that they could
write well, and make an impression upon mankind thereby; and in
what manner of writing they thought they were able to exceed
others, to that did they apply themselves, Some of them betook
themselves to the writing of fabulous narrations; some of them
endeavored to please the cities or the kings, by writing in their
commendation; others of them fell to finding faults with
transactions, or with the writers of such transactions, and thought
to make a great figure by so doing. And indeed these do what is of
all things the most contrary to true history; for it is the great
character of true history that all concerned therein both speak and
write the same things; while these men, by writing differently
about the same things, think they shall be believed to write with
the greatest regard to truth. We therefore [who are Jews] must
yield to the Grecian writers as to language and eloquence of
composition; but then we shall give them no such preference as to
the verity of ancient history, and least of all as to that part
which concerns the affairs of our own several countries.6. As to the care of writing down the records from the
earliest antiquity among the Egyptians and Babylonians; that the
priests were intrusted therewith, and employed a philosophical
concern about it; that they were the Chaldean priests that did so
among the Babylonians; and that the Phoenicians, who were mingled
among the Greeks, did especially make use of their letters, both
for the common affairs of life, and for the delivering down the
history of common transactions, I think I may omit any proof,
because all men allow it so to be. But now as to our forefathers,
that they took no less care about writing such records, [for I will
not say they took greater care than the others I spoke of,] and
that they committed that matter to their high priests and to their
prophets, and that these records have been written all along down
to our own times with the utmost accuracy; nay, if it be not too
bold for me to say it, our history will be so written hereafter;—I
shall endeavor briefly to inform you.7. For our forefathers did not only appoint the best of these
priests, and those that attended upon the Divine worship, for that
design from the beginning, but made provision that the stock of the
priests should continue unmixed and pure; for he who is partaker of
the priesthood must propagate of a wife of the same nation, without
having any regard to money, or any other dignities; but he is to
make a scrutiny, and take his wife's genealogy from the ancient
tables, and procure many witnesses to it.7And this is
our practice not only in Judea, but wheresoever any body of men of
our nation do live; and even there an exact catalogue of our
priests' marriages is kept; I mean at Egypt and at Babylon, or in
any other place of the rest of the habitable earth, whithersoever
our priests are scattered; for they send to Jerusalem the ancient
names of their parents in writing, as well as those of their
remoter ancestors, and signify who are the witnesses also. But if
any war falls out, such as have fallen out a great many of them
already, when Antiochus Epiphanes made an invasion upon our
country, as also when Pompey the Great and Quintilius Varus did so
also, and principally in the wars that have happened in our own
times, those priests that survive them compose new tables of
genealogy out of the old records, and examine the circumstances of
the women that remain; for still they do not admit of those that
have been captives, as suspecting that they had conversation with
some foreigners. But what is the strongest argument of our exact
management in this matter is what I am now going to say, that we
have the names of our high priests from father to son set down in
our records for the interval of two thousand years; and if any of
these have been transgressors of these rules, they are prohibited
to present themselves at the altar, or to be partakers of any other
of our purifications; and this is justly, or rather necessarily
done, because every one is not permitted of his own accord to be a
writer, nor is there any disagreement in what is written; they
being only prophets that have written the original and earliest
accounts of things as they learned them of God himself by
inspiration; and others have written what hath happened in their
own times, and that in a very distinct manner also.8. For we have not an innumerable multitude of books among
us, disagreeing from and contradicting one another, [as the Greeks
have,] but only twenty-two books,8which
contain the records of all the past times; which are justly
believed to be divine; and of them five belong to Moses, which
contain his laws and the traditions of the origin of mankind till
his death. This interval of time was little short of three thousand
years; but as to the time from the death of Moses till the reign of
Artaxerxes king of Persia, who reigned after Xerxes, the prophets,
who were after Moses, wrote down what was done in their times in
thirteen books. The remaining four books contain hymns to God, and
precepts for the conduct of human life. It is true, our history
hath been written since Artaxerxes very particularly, but hath not
been esteemed of the like authority with the former by our
forefathers, because there hath not been an exact succession of
prophets since that time; and how firmly we have given credit to
these books of our own nation is evident by what we do; for during
so many ages as have already passed, no one has been so bold as
either to add any thing to them, to take any thing from them, or to
make any change in them; but it is become natural to all Jews
immediately, and from their very birth, to esteem these books to
contain Divine doctrines, and to persist in them, and, if occasion
be willingly to die for them. For it is no new thing for our
captives, many of them in number, and frequently in time, to be
seen to endure racks and deaths of all kinds upon the theatres,
that they may not be obliged to say one word against our laws and
the records that contain them; whereas there are none at all among
the Greeks who would undergo the least harm on that account, no,
nor in case all the writings that are among them were to be
destroyed; for they take them to be such discourses as are framed
agreeably to the inclinations of those that write them; and they
have justly the same opinion of the ancient writers, since they see
some of the present generation bold enough to write about such
affairs, wherein they were not present, nor had concern enough to
inform themselves about them from those that knew them; examples of
which may be had in this late war of ours, where some persons have
written histories, and published them, without having been in the
places concerned, or having been near them when the actions were
done; but these men put a few things together by hearsay, and
insolently abuse the world, and call these writings by the name of
Histories.9. As for myself, I have composed a true history of that
whole war, and of all the particulars that occurred therein, as
having been concerned in all its transactions; for I acted as
general of those among us that are named Galileans, as long as it
was possible for us to make any opposition. I was then seized on by
the Romans, and became a captive. Vespasian also and Titus had me
kept under a guard, and forced me to attend them continually. At
the first I was put into bonds, but was set at liberty afterward,
and sent to accompany Titus when he came from Alexandria to the
siege of Jerusalem; during which time there was nothing done which
escaped my knowledge; for what happened in the Roman camp I saw,
and wrote down carefully; and what informations the deserters
brought [out of the city], I was the only man that understood them.
Afterward I got leisure at Rome; and when all my materials were
prepared for that work, I made use of some persons to assist me in
learning the Greek tongue, and by these means I composed the
history of those transactions. And I was so well assured of the
truth of what I related, that I first of all appealed to those that
had the supreme command in that war, Vespasian and Titus, as
witnesses for me, for to them I presented those books first of all,
and after them to many of the Romans who had been in the war. I
also sold them to many of our own men who understood the Greek
philosophy; among whom were Julius Archelaus, Herod [king of
Chalcis], a person of great gravity, and king Agrippa himself, a
person that deserved the greatest admiration. Now all these men
bore their testimony to me, that I had the strictest regard to
truth; who yet would not have dissembled the matter, nor been
silent, if I, out of ignorance, or out of favor to any side, either
had given false colors to actions, or omitted any of
them.10. There have been indeed some bad men, who have attempted
to calumniate my history, and took it to be a kind of scholastic
performance for the exercise of young men. A strange sort of
accusation and calumny this! since every one that undertakes to
deliver the history of actions truly ought to know them accurately
himself in the first place, as either having been concerned in them
himself, or been informed of them by such as knew them. Now both
these methods of knowledge I may very properly pretend to in the
composition of both my works; for, as I said, I have translated the
Antiquities out of our sacred books; which I easily could do, since
I was a priest by my birth, and have studied that philosophy which
is contained in those writings: and for the History of the War, I
wrote it as having been an actor myself in many of its
transactions, an eye-witness in the greatest part of the rest, and
was not unacquainted with any thing whatsoever that was either said
or done in it. How impudent then must those deserve to be esteemed
that undertake to contradict me about the true state of those
affairs! who, although they pretend to have made use of both the
emperors' own memoirs, yet could not they he acquainted with our
affairs who fought against them.11. This digression I have been obliged to make out of
necessity, as being desirous to expose the vanity of those that
profess to write histories; and I suppose I have sufficiently
declared that this custom of transmitting down the histories of
ancient times hath been better preserved by those nations which are
called Barbarians, than by the Greeks themselves. I am now willing,
in the next place, to say a few things to those that endeavor to
prove that our constitution is but of late time, for this reason,
as they pretend, that the Greek writers have said nothing about us;
after which I shall produce testimonies for our antiquity out of
the writings of foreigners; I shall also demonstrate that such as
cast reproaches upon our nation do it very unjustly.12. As for ourselves, therefore, we neither inhabit a
maritime country, nor do we delight in merchandise, nor in such a
mixture with other men as arises from it; but the cities we dwell
in are remote from the sea, and having a fruitful country for our
habitation, we take pains in cultivating that only. Our principal
care of all is this, to educate our children well; and we think it
to be the most necessary business of our whole life to observe the
laws that have been given us, and to keep those rules of piety that
have been delivered down to us. Since, therefore, besides what we
have already taken notice of, we have had a peculiar way of living
of our own, there was no occasion offered us in ancient ages for
intermixing among the Greeks, as they had for mixing among the
Egyptians, by their intercourse of exporting and importing their
several goods; as they also mixed with the Phoenicians, who lived
by the sea-side, by means of their love of lucre in trade and
merchandise. Nor did our forefathers betake themselves, as did some
others, to robbery; nor did they, in order to gain more wealth,
fall into foreign wars, although our country contained many ten
thousands of men of courage sufficient for that purpose. For this
reason it was that the Phoenicians themselves came soon by trading
and navigation to be known to the Grecians, and by their means the
Egyptians became known to the Grecians also, as did all those
people whence the Phoenicians in long voyages over the seas carried
wares to the Grecians. The Medes also and the Persians, when they
were lords of Asia, became well known to them; and this was
especially true of the Persians, who led their armies as far as the
other continent [Europe]. The Thracians were also known to them by
the nearness of their countries, and the Scythians by the means of
those that sailed to Pontus; for it was so in general that all
maritime nations, and those that inhabited near the eastern or
western seas, became most known to those that were desirous to be
writers; but such as had their habitations further from the sea
were for the most part unknown to them which things appear to have
happened as to Europe also, where the city of Rome, that hath this
long time been possessed of so much power, and hath performed such
great actions in war, is yet never mentioned by Herodotus, nor by
Thucydides, nor by any one of their contemporaries; and it was very
late, and [...]