Rating: Not rated
Tags: History, Jews, Lang:en
Summary
Parallel Lives, Parallel Nations, is a narrative history of
Rome & the Jews, their relations and their worlds from 161
BC to 135 AD. The time frame effectively covers the rise and
fall of Roman-Jewish relations, beginning with the first Jewish
delegation sent to Rome by the Maccabees, and culminating with
the bloody Bar-Kochba Revolt some three hundred years later
during the reign of Hadrian. The book covers in depth
Rome’s fall as a republic and rise as an empire alongside
the parallel rise, fall, and eventual destruction of the Jewish
national state. Largely set in the first centuries BC and AD,
the work addresses two extremely personality-driven centuries
in which the most familiar figures of antiquity---Julius
Caesar, Cleopatra, Herod, Jesus---all appeared upon the
historical scene. A political era driven by very
individualistic and even operatic events, this history, while
wholly factual, reads like a non-fiction novel, with each
chapter ending in a suspenseful fashion. Volume Two finds Rome
set on its steady course as an empire under the aegis of
Augustus while little Judea struggles under Herod's weak-willed
successor. In order to quell unrest, and by appeal from many of
its own people, Judea is eventually annexed and made a
province. Augustus meanwhile wrestles with the dilemma of
succession, which turns out badly. The peculiar personalities
and behavior of the next four emperors, from the dour Tiberius
to the bizarre Nero, bring Rome's foreign policy regarding
Judea to an all time low. Wracked by religious schisms, chronic
banditry, and a steady line of either inept, corrupt, or
indifferent governors, forces within Judea eventually decide to
revolt and break away from the Empire. Standing alone and
without any allies, Judea takes on the full weight and angry
onslaught of Rome, leading to the destruction of the Temple and
Jerusalem. Even then the fires of rebellion continue to
smolder, and the conflict between the Romans and the Jews
doesn't flare up and finally burn out for another 60 years. **