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The Tikvah Podcast

Barry Strauss on the Jewish Conflict with Ancient Rome: Two Centuries of Rebellion

The Tikvah Podcast

Tikvah

Judaism, News, Politics, Religion & Spirituality

4.8658 Ratings

🗓️ 15 August 2025

⏱️ 48 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Between the year 63 before the Common Era, and the year 136 of the Common Era, the Jewish people waged three revolts against the mightiest empire in the world. In retrospect, we can see that these were not only local uprisings, but civilizational confrontations that would echo through history—struggles that pitted the Jewish people's fierce determination to live as a free nation in their ancestral homeland against Rome's inexorable drive to impose order across its vast dominions.

What makes these revolts so fascinating is not merely their military drama, but the profound questions they raise about how different civilizations remember and interpret the same events. Recall the way that Rome understood its purpose and its mission, the grand aspirations that fueled Rome's rise and Rome's bloodstained greatness. As Vergil puts it in the Book VI of the Aeneid (in John Dryden's poetic rendering):

But, Rome, 't is thine alone, with awful sway,

To rule mankind, and make the world obey,

Disposing peace and war by thy own majestic way;

To tame the proud, the fetter'd slave to free:

These are imperial arts, and worthy thee.

When Roman historians recorded these conflicts in Judea, they saw rebellious subjects disrupting the peace that Rome had brought to the world. They saw the Jews as ingrates and troublemakers, who refused to appreciate the benefits of imperial rule. But when Jewish historians look back on this period they tend to see something altogether different: a tragic tale of national resistance—a struggle for freedom—to defend the honor of God, His people, and His land. These competing narratives reveal something essential about the nature of historical memory, and the separate moral universes of these rival civilizational traditions.

To illuminate and explain this conflict, Mosaic's editor Jonathan Silver speaks with Barry Strauss, formerly a longtime professor of classics at Cornell University, and now a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution. His forthcoming book is Jews vs. Rome: Two Centuries of Rebellion Against the World's Mightiest Empire, to which he brings deep expertise in Roman military history, and also a keen appreciation for the strategic dimensions of these conflicts.

Transcript

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0:00.0

Between the year 66 before the Common Era and the Year 136 of the Common Era, the Jewish people

0:15.2

waged three revolts against the mightiest empire in the world. In retrospect, we can see that these were not only local uprisings.

0:22.6

They were civilizational confrontations that would echo in history.

0:26.6

Struggles that pitted the Jewish people's fierce determination to live as a free nation

0:31.6

in their ancestral homeland against Rome's inexorable drive to impose order across its vast dominions.

0:39.3

What makes these revolts so fascinating is not merely the military drama,

0:43.3

but the profound questions that they raise about how different civilizations remember

0:47.6

and how they interpret the same events.

0:50.2

Recall the way that Rome understands its purpose, its mission,

0:53.8

the grand aspiration that fuels,

0:56.1

Rome's rise, and its bloody greatness.

0:59.0

I always think of the way that Virgil puts it in the Inead, and here I'm going to quote

1:02.8

from John Dryden's poetic rendering from book six, but Rome, tis thine alone with awful sway

1:09.9

to rule mankind and make the world obey, disposing

1:13.9

peace and war by thine own majestic way, to tame the proud, the fettered slave to free.

1:20.9

These are imperial arts, and worthy thee.

1:24.7

When Roman historians recorded these conflicts in Judea, they only saw rebellious subjects

1:30.0

disrupting the peace that Rome had brought to the world.

1:32.9

They saw the Jews as ingrates and troublemakers, who refused to appreciate the benefits

1:37.5

of imperial rule.

1:39.1

When Jewish historians look back on this period, they see something else altogether different.

1:44.0

A tragic tale of national

...

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