Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of illustrations
- Transliteration of Hebrew
- Acknowledgements
- Prologue
- PART I HISTORICAL EVALUATION
- PART II ACCOUNTS OF THE BATTLES: INTRODUCTION, TEXT AND COMMENTARY
- PART III APPENDICES
- A The infantry Royal Guard in the Seleucid army
- B ma'arāḵā (= formation) and fālanḵs in the Hebrew original of I Maccabees
- C Was a Seleucid military settlement established in Jerusalem?
- D The location and history of the Seleucid citadel (the Akra) in Jerusalem
- E The chronology of Antiochus Epiphanes' expedition to the eastern satrapies
- F Defensive war on the Sabbath according to the Books of the Maccabees
- G The ceremony at Mizpah and the chapter on ‘(the Priest) Anointed for Battle’ in the mishnaic tractate Sotah
- H The Babylonian Jews and the Galatians
- I The geographical background and chronological sequence of the clashes with Timotheus in the Second Book of the Maccabees
- J The negotiations between the Jews and the Seleucid authorities in the reigns of Antiochus Epiphanes and Antiochus Eupator
- K The chronology of Lysias' second expedition
- L The route of Bacchides' second expedition to Judaea
- EXCURSUS
- Plates
- Abbreviations
- References
- Indexe locorum
- General index
- Index of Greek terms
- Index of Hebrew words and phrases
D - The location and history of the Seleucid citadel (the Akra) in Jerusalem
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 August 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of illustrations
- Transliteration of Hebrew
- Acknowledgements
- Prologue
- PART I HISTORICAL EVALUATION
- PART II ACCOUNTS OF THE BATTLES: INTRODUCTION, TEXT AND COMMENTARY
- PART III APPENDICES
- A The infantry Royal Guard in the Seleucid army
- B ma'arāḵā (= formation) and fālanḵs in the Hebrew original of I Maccabees
- C Was a Seleucid military settlement established in Jerusalem?
- D The location and history of the Seleucid citadel (the Akra) in Jerusalem
- E The chronology of Antiochus Epiphanes' expedition to the eastern satrapies
- F Defensive war on the Sabbath according to the Books of the Maccabees
- G The ceremony at Mizpah and the chapter on ‘(the Priest) Anointed for Battle’ in the mishnaic tractate Sotah
- H The Babylonian Jews and the Galatians
- I The geographical background and chronological sequence of the clashes with Timotheus in the Second Book of the Maccabees
- J The negotiations between the Jews and the Seleucid authorities in the reigns of Antiochus Epiphanes and Antiochus Eupator
- K The chronology of Lysias' second expedition
- L The route of Bacchides' second expedition to Judaea
- EXCURSUS
- Plates
- Abbreviations
- References
- Indexe locorum
- General index
- Index of Greek terms
- Index of Hebrew words and phrases
Summary
The exact location of the Seleucid fortress in Jerusalem, which is of great importance for the understanding of the events in the city during the period of the persecutions and the Revolt, has been a matter of dispute for many years. The question is regarded as the most difficult in the geographical history of Jerusalem, and the identifications proposed are scattered over almost the entire area of city that was inhabited during the Second Temple period.
The evidence of the sources
The sources in fact give clear indications of the placement of the Akra: I Maccabees places the citadel in the City of David (14.36), and states more than once that the Seleucid garrison was concentrated in the City of David (1.33, 2 2.31, 7.32), while Josephus puts it in the Lower City (Bell. 1.39, 5.137; Ant. 12.252), both of them referring to the south-eastern hill, south of the Dung Gate.3 This location, however, does not seem to fit in with the tradition that the citadel hill dominated the Temple, and that only in the time of Simeon the Hasmonaean was it levelled so that the Temple hill would tower above it (Ant. 12.252, 362, 13.215, 217; Bell. 1.50, 5.139). The top of that hill is about 40 metres lower than the Temple Mount, and for archaeological-topographical reasons it is impossible to assume that until Simeon's time any part of it was considerably higher than it is today.
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- Judas MaccabaeusThe Jewish Struggle Against the Seleucids, pp. 445 - 465Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1989