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Jewish revolt against Heraclius

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Jewish revolt against Heraclius
Part of the Byzantine–Sassanid War of 602–628
Date614-629
Location
Result
  • temporal rule of Persians and Jews over Palaestina
  • mutual massacres of Christians and Jews
  • brief restoration of Byzantine rule 625–634
  • expulsion of Jews from the region
Territorial
changes
Palaestina Prima temporarily annexed to the Persian Empire as the Sassanid Jewish Commonwealth, but abandoned by Persians within 5 years and surrendered back to the Byzantines in 625.
Belligerents
Byzantine Empire Sassanid Empire,
Jewish allies
Commanders and leaders
Emperor Heraclius
Patriarch Zacharias
Abba Modestus
Shahrbaraz
Nehemiah ben Hushiel
Benjamin of Tiberias
Strength

Greek contingent of Jerusalem[citation needed]

Byzantine Army
Persian forces;
26,000 Jewish rebels
Casualties and losses
tens of thousands tens of thousands

The revolt against Heraclius was a Jewish insurrection against the Byzantine Empire across the Levant, coming to the aid of the Sassanids (Persians) during the Byzantine–Sassanid War of 602–628. The revolt began with the Battle of Antioch (613), culminating with the conquest of Jerusalem in 614 by Persian and Jewish forces and establishment of Jewish autonomy. The revolt ended with the departure of the Persian troops and an eventual surrender of Jewish rebels to the Byzantines in the year 625 (or 628).

Background

During an early stage of Byzantine–Sassanid War of 602–628, Khosrau II decided on a tactical move to establish a military alliance with the Jewish population of the Sassanid Empire, with a promise to re-establish Jewish rule over the Land of Israel (Palaestina province of Byzantine Empire at that time).[citation needed] Following Khosrau II's pact with Nehemiah, son of Jewish Exilarch, a Jewish army, about 20,000 strong, was recruited in Persia and was put in march together with Persian troops towards the Levant.[citation needed]

Revolt

Following the victory in Antioch, joint Sassanid-Jewish army, commanded by Shahrbaraz, arrived to Palaestina Prima and conquered Caesaria Maritima. Nehemiah's Jewish troops and the Sassanid Persians, commanded by Shahrbaraz, were joined by Benjamin of Tiberias (according to Jewish sources – a man of immense wealth), who enlisted and armed additional soldiers from Tiberias, Nazareth and the mountain cities of Galilee and together they marched on Jerusalem. Later, they were joined by the Jews of the southern parts of the country and supported by a band of Arabs, the united forces took Jerusalem on July 614, after a 20 day siege. According to Antiochus Strategos, tens of thousands of Christians, the lowest estimate is 30,000, were massacred during the conquest of the city.[1] 37,000 were reportedly deported by the Persians and many more thousands sold as slaves to the Jews. Strategos reports that Jews purchased Christians to kill then.[2]

The Sassanid Jewish Commonwealth

Though there are limited sources on what happened in the following years,[3] it appears Jews were given permission to run the city and they effectively did so for the next five years. The Jews of Jerusalem gained complete control over the city, and much of Judea and Galilee became an autonomous Jewish province of the Sassanid Empire. At the time 150,000 Jews were living in 43 settlements throughout the territory.[citation needed]

According to Jewish sources, after the conquest of Jerusalem, Nehemiah ben Hushiel had been appointed the ruler of Jerusalem. He began the work of making arrangements of the rebuilding of the Temple, and sorting out genealogies to established a new High Priesthood. Approximately five years later the Persians gave control of the province to the Christians.[4]

Aftermath

Restoration of Byzantine rule

The sources greatly diverge on what happened in the aftermath of the revolt. According to some, in 625, the Byzantine army reconquered the territory and amnesty was granted to Benjamin of Tiberias and the Jews who had joined the Persians. In 628, after the defeat and death of Khosrau II, Heraclius came as victor into Jerusalem. The Jews of Tiberias and Nazareth, under the leadership of Benjamin of Tiberias, changed sides and joined him. It is even claimed that Benjamin accompanied the Emperor Heraclius himself during his entry into the city of Jerusalem.

According to other sources, Byzantine return was not peaceful since the very beginning, directly resulting in execution of Benjamin of Tiberias and other revolutionaries by Theodosius in 625.[5]

Invasion by Arab Islamic armies

After the defeat of the Persian Empire, a new threat, the Arab Islamic Empire, had emerged in the region. Heraclius sought to consolidate and secure his gains. Though he had previously granted the Jews amnesty for their revolt, he would not risk another likely revolt in a war with the Arabs.

Heraclius experienced a most exquisite triumph as he knelt in the rebuilt church to receive the blessings of the patriarch that extraordinary day. Apologists would say afterwards that only because of the adamant demands of the patriarch and the local clergy did the Emperor rescind his pledge of amnesty and reluctantly authorize the forced baptism and massacre of the Empire's Jews.[6]

In 638, the Byzantine Empire completely lost control of Judea to the Arabs. The Arab Islamic Empire under Caliph Umar conquered Jerusalem and the lands of Mesopotamia, Levant, and Egypt.

In literature

The events of the Persian-Byzantine struggle in the Levant and the consequent Arab conquest had insipred several apocaliptic Jewish writings of the early Middle Ages.[citation needed] Among those one can find the Apocalypse of Zerubbabel, which partly is attributed to the events of Jewish conquest of Palaestina in 614.

See also

References

  1. ^ Antiochus Strategos, The Capture of Jerusalem by the Persians in 614 AD, F. C. Conybeare, English Historical Review 25 (1910) pp. 502–517.
  2. ^ Elliott S. Horowitz,Reckless Rites: Purim and the Legacy of Jewish Violence, Princeton University Press 2006 p.241
  3. ^ G.J.Reinink et.al. The Reign of Heraclius: 610–641 crisis and confrontation. p.103. [1]
  4. ^ Sharkansky, Ira (1996). Governing Jerusalem: Again on the world's agenda. Detroit: Wayne State University Press. p. 63.
  5. ^ A History of the Jewish People, by Hayim Ben-Sasson (Editor), Harvard University Press, 1985
  6. ^ David Lewis. God's Crucible: Islam and the Making of Europe, 570–1215, publisher Norton, 2008: p.69

Sources