History
- The Diaspora
The Jewish state comes to
an end in 70 AD, when the Romans begin to actively drive Jews from the
home they had lived in for over a millennium. But the Jewish Diaspora ("diaspora"
="dispersion, scattering") had begun long before the Romans had even
dreamed of Judaea. When the Assyrians conquered Israel in 722, the
Hebrew inhabitants were scattered all over the Middle East; these early
victims of the dispersion disappeared utterly from the pages of history.
However, when Nebuchadnezzar deported the Judaeans in 597 and 586 BC, he
allowed them to remain in a unified community in Babylon. Another group
of Judaeans fled to Egypt, where they settled in the Nile delta. So from
597 onwards, there were three distinct groups of Hebrews: a group in
Babylon and other parts of the Middle East, a group in Judaea, and
another group in Egypt. Thus, 597 is considered the beginning date of
the Jewish Diaspora. While Cyrus the Persian allowed the Judaeans to
return to their homeland in 538 BC, most chose to remain in Babylon. A
large number of Jews in Egypt became mercenaries in Upper Egypt on an
island called the Elephantine. All of these Jews retained their
religion, identity, and social customs; both under the Persians and the
Greeks, they were allowed to run their lives under their own laws. Some
converted to other religions; still others combined the Yahweh cult with
local cults; but the majority clung to the Hebraic religion and its
new-found core document, the Torah.
In 63 BC, Judaea became a protectorate of Rome. Coming under the
administration of a governor, Judaea was allowed a king; the governor's
business was to regulate trade and maximize tax revenue. While the Jews
despised the Greeks, the Romans were a nightmare. Governorships were
bought at high prices; the governors would attempt to squeeze as much
revenue as possible from their regions and pocket as much as they could.
Even with a Jewish king, the Judaeans revolted in 70 AD, a desperate
revolt that ended tragically. In 73 AD, the last of the revolutionaries
were holed up in a mountain fort called Masada; the Romans had besieged
the fort for two years, and the 1,000 men, women, and children inside
were beginning to starve. In desperation, the Jewish revolutionaries
killed themselves rather than surrender to the Romans. The Romans then
destroyed Jerusalem, annexed Judaea as a Roman province, and
systematically drove the Jews from Palestine. After 73 AD, Hebrew
history would only be the history of the Diaspora as the Jews and their
world view spread over Africa, Asia, and Europe
From:
http://www.wsu.edu:8080/~dee/HEBREWS/HEBREWS.HTM
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