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    The Judean War - A Historical Novel of Josephus, Imperial Rome and the Fall of Judea and the Second Temple

    Flávio Josefo

    MaKoM Publications
    2013
    510 páginas
    17h 0m
    ISBN-10: 0615855210
    4
    3 avaliações
    Leram1Lendo0Querem2Relendo0Abandonos0Resenhas0
    Favoritos1Desejados2Avaliaram3

    Der jüdische Krieg (1932) von Lion Feuchtwanger [aka] La guerra de los judíos: vida de Flavio Josefo: novela [aka] The Judean War: A Historical Novel of Flavius Josephus, Imperial Rome and the Fall of Judea and the Second Temple (The Josephus Trilogy #1) -- Thruout his career Feuchtwanger was drawn to the theme of Jewishness. In his Josephus Trilogy (Josephus, '32; The Jew of Rome, '35; & Josephus & the Emperor, or The Day Will Come, '42) he deals with the theme of nationalism versus cosmopolitanism by describing the development of Flavius Josephus, a Jewish historian of the 1st century. Toward the his life's end he took up the theme by writing about Raquel, the Jewess of Toledo ('55), who for seven years prevented Alfonso VIII of Castile from warring against the Moors. In Jefta & His Daughter ('57) he wrote about a man from the Hebrew bible who kept an oath to god by sacrificing his daughter. |...| [Goodreads reviews]: Joseph ben Matthias, Judaean aristocrat and Jerusalem Temple priest of the first rank, steps out into the boundless, magnificent city of Rome. He's clever, handsome, feted by his Jewish hosts, and on a righteous mission to free three venerable old Jews wrongfully imprisoned as rebels. Joseph secures an audience with Nero's beautiful young Empress, Poppaea. Charmed by Joseph's zeal, she asks the Minister of Oriental Affairs to release the prisoners. The Minister seizes the opportunity to trade his assent for an edict guaranteed to outrage and mobilize the Jews of Judaea; Rome needs an excuse to comprehensively crush ongoing Jewish resistance. His scheme bears fruit. In the year 66 Judaea revolts. Led by canny old commander Vespasian, Roman forces prevail until only the fortified city of Jerusalem remains in the hands of Jewish rebels. Vespasian is acclaimed Emperor and returns to Rome, leaving the siege to his son Titus. Weeks drag by. Jerusalem, with its lofty, magnificent Temple, becomes to the besieging Romans a symbol of obdurate Jewish arrogance to be overthrown. Rebel commander, Roman captive and Flavian protege, Josephus, long reviled as a traitor and Roman toady, is portrayed by Feuchtwanger with clear-eyed empathy as a complex, brilliant man whose desire to become a "citizen of the world" conflicts with his Jewish identity. It was Joseph's destiny, however, to become a fierce defender in Rome of the unique importance of Jewish contribution to humanity, and to become known as the first-century historian Flavius Josephus and the author of "The Jewish War."

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    Yosef Ben Matityahu, Titus Flavius Josephus profile picture

    Yosef Ben Matityahu, Titus Flavius Josephus

    Flávio Josefo, ou apenas Josefo (em latim Flavius Josephus; 37 ou 38 – c. 100 d.C.), também conhecido pelo seu nome hebraico Yosef ben Matityahu (יוסף בן מתתיהו, "José, filho de Matias") e, após se tornar um cidadão romano, como Tito Flávio Josefo (latim: Titus Flavius Josephus),foi um historiador e apologista judaico-romano, descendente de uma linhagem de importantes sacerdotes e reis, que registrou in loco a destruição de Jerusalém, em 70 d.C., pelas tropas do imperador romano Vespasiano, comandadas por seu filho Tito, futuro imperador. As obras de Josefo fornecem um importante panorama do judaísmo no século I.

    19 Livros
    30 Seguidores
    Judeia, Império Romano

    Yosef Ben Matityahu, Titus Flavius Josephus