Early Accounts of the Temple of Jerusalem – Sources     HomeSourcesTopicsViews


THE WARS OF THE JEWS
The History Of The Destruction Of Jerusalem
Book I, Chapter XXI
Flavius Josephus, 75 C.E.

Translated from the Greek, William Whiston, 1737  



Bk. I. Chp. XXI.  Of the Temple and Cities that were built by Herod

§1. ACCORDINGLY, in the fifteenth year of his reign, Herod rebuilt the temple, and encompassed a piece of land about it with a wall, which land was twice as large as that before enclosed. The expenses he laid out upon it were vastly large also, and the riches about it were unspeakable. A sign of which you have in the great cloisters that were erected about the temple, and the citadel which was on its north side. The cloisters he built from the foundation, but the citadel he repaired at a vast expense; nor was it other than a royal palace, which he called Antonia, in honor of Antony. He also built himself a palace in the Upper city, containing two very large and most beautiful apartments; to which the holy house itself could not be compared [in largeness]. The one apartment he named Caesareum, and the other Agrippium, from his [two great] friends.


















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