Read [Gaius Valerius Verrens 06] - Scourge of Rome Online
Authors: Douglas Jackson
Tags: #Historical
When his soldiers made up his mind for him by hailing him Emperor, he handed over command to his son Titus, who had already distinguished himself and proved an able commander of the Fifteenth legion. With an army of four legions and tens of thousands of auxiliaries at his command, Titus forced the rebels back until they were concentrated in the city of Jerusalem. The fate of the Passover pilgrims is just one area of contention in the Jerusalem story. Roman emperors – and Titus would become one – are not known for their compassion, but starving to death hundreds of thousands of women and children appears out of character for a man whom Suetonius describes as ‘kind and gracious’ (though he does throw in cruel to the mix as well). The likely answer seems to be that Titus regarded the pilgrims as a weapon of war in his campaign to starve the rebels into an early surrender, and used them accordingly.
In this aim, the rebels, or at least one of their leaders, John of Gischala, went out of their way to help. The three rebel factions in Jerusalem, led by John, Eleazar and Simon bar Giora, were keener on shedding each other’s blood than Roman and were at odds right until the final stages. John’s men burned tons of grain Simon had stored for the siege and raided the temple and killed Eleazar and his key supporters. For narrative reasons I have truncated the events of the siege, particularly the latter part where action that took weeks is compressed into days, but most of the key scenes happened as described here, or as near as my imagination can make them. Hezekiah’s Conduit exists and you can take a tour should you visit Jerusalem, but I doubt it was put to the clandestine use I have portrayed here.
Of the key figures in the book, Titus, his lover Queen Berenice and King Sohaemus of Emesa all existed and I’ve tried to remain true to the historical record. The one to whom I probably owe an apology – or perhaps not – is Joseph Ben Mahtityahu, later famous as the Jewish historian Flavius Josephus. Virtually everything we know about the siege of Jerusalem and the Great Revolt is a result of his wonderfully detailed account,
The Judaean War
. But just how reliable a narrator is he? After all, this is a man who led the revolt at the start, survived the siege of Jotapata when no one else did, somehow charmed Vespasian into sparing his life when his compatriots were being butchered or sold into slavery, turned his back on his former comrades, and finally prospered under the Emperor’s patronage. The one thing I think we can say with any certainty is that Josephus didn’t conspire with John and Simon to save the only copy of the
Book of Enoch
, the purely fictional conspiracy at the heart of this novel.
Of course, the greatest point of contention is whether Titus deliberately meant to destroy the Great Temple, the centre of the Jewish religion and one of the architectural wonders of the age. Josephus says the burning of the temple was an accident, and that Titus did everything he could to save it. My own view is that the temple was a legitimate military objective, an enormously strong defensive position (a fortress within a fortress, as I’ve described it here) and one that, because of its status, would have been defended to the last. Ancient peoples had plenty of examples of what would happen if a city was taken by siege. What is beyond debate is that Titus’s legions flattened the temple and the rest of Jerusalem with a brutal efficiency which cannot have been anything but premeditated.
I’m grateful to my editor Simon Taylor and his team at Transworld for helping me make
Scourge of Rome
the book it is, and to my agent Stan, of Jenny Brown Associates in Edinburgh, for all his advice and encouragement. As always my wife Alison and my children, Kara, Nikki and Gregor, have been the rocks on which this book has been built.
A journalist by profession,
Douglas Jackson
transformed a lifelong fascination for Rome and the Romans into his first two highly-praised novels,
Caligula
and
Claudius
. He confirmed his place as one of the UK’s finest historical novelists with his third novel,
Hero of Rome
, which introduced readers to his series hero, Gaius Valerius Verrens. Four more acclaimed novels followed –
Defender of Rome
,
Avenger of Rome
,
Sword of Rome
and
Enemy of Rome
. Writing as James Douglas, he is also the author of four top-selling adventure thrillers featuring art recovery expert Jamie Saintclair –
The Doomsday Testament
,
The Isis Covenant
,
The Excalibur Codex
and
The Samurai Inheritance
.
An active member of the Historical Writers’ Association and the Historical Novels Society, Douglas Jackson lives near Stirling in Scotland.
To find out more visit
www.douglas-jackson.net
CALIGULA
CLAUDIUS
HERO OF ROME
DEFENDER OF ROME
AVENGER OF ROME
SWORD OF ROME
ENEMY OF ROME
For more information on Douglas Jackson and his books, see his website at
www.douglas-jackson.net
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