The Roman siege of Jerusalem ended with the sack of the city and destruction the Second Temple.
Calamity and slaughter followed.
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The roots of the revolt lay in the deadly mix of religious tension between polytheistic Romans & monotheistic Jews, and as discontent over the oppressive rule of the governors of Judea which caused anti-taxation protests which turned into riots which were violently crushed
The Roman governor arrested several leading Jewish figures and seized money from the Second Temple, the most important temple in the Jewish world, built around 516 BC to replace Solomonโs Temple.
This caused outrage amongst the Jews and led to widespread rebellion.
The Roman garrison was captured and the governor and other leading figures escaped.
The governor of Syria, Cestius Gallus took the XII legion & auxiliaries into Judea to crush the rebellion but the force was massacred at the Battle of Beth Horon in AD 66 with 6000 Romans dead
A provisional government was formed with the Jewish military led by Flavius Josephus, an important historical source for the conflict
The emperor Nero ordered Vespasian to invade with four legions in AD 67. After a few months he had already taken Galilee, Jodapatha and Tarichaea.
There were several factions among the Jewish rebels. Two of which were the Zealots and Sadducees. After the loss of Galilee thousands of Zealots and other Jews fled to Jerusalem where they came into conflict with the Sadducees.
In AD 69 Vespasian became emperor and left for Rome.
He left his son Titus to besiege Jerusalem.
During the seven month siege, infighting between the Zealots and Sedducees resulted in the cityโs food supply being burned. Leaving the defenders with no real hope of victory.
In July of AD 70, after a brutal seven month siege, the Romans breached the walls and poured into the city.
All of the defenders died. Josephus wrote of great number of deaths that the Romans enslaved 97,000.
Titus was initially moderate in attacking the city. He decided that the 500 year old temple would be spared. Josephus writes that it was Jews who first used fire to halt the Roman progress through the city and only then did the Romans themselves burn the city.
Josephus, who was far from impartial, wrote:
The Jews were killed or enslaved.
The city was looted.
A few strongholds remained but those were soon crushed too.
Titus was granted a triumph in Rom for his victory and became emperor nine years later.
Today his victory arch still stands in Rome, greeting all visitors to the Forum with a scene from the looting of Jerusalem
โข โข โข
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No doubt the crowning moment in Caesarโs career, the battle of Alesia sealed the fate of Vercingetorix.
Vercingetorix had gathered a large army of Gauls inside Alesia and Caesar marched with between around 70,000 men.
After recent strong action from the Gauls, Caesar was content to simply starve them out. A move Vercingetorix was happy with as he knew Caesar would be trapped between Alesia and Gallic relief army.
But Caesar anticipated this too.
In a month of siege, Caesar constructed 25 miles of fortifications including trenches filled with traps, a moat, and walls with towers at regular intervals.
Crucially, he added a second line of defences to defend attacks from Alesia and from a relief army.
Julius Caesarโs army had been ambushed by a barbarian host!
When he saw his men close to breaking, he snatched a shield and rushed to the front line, calling his remaining centurions by name, and ordering them to advance with him!
At the battle of Sabis!
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During his Gallic campaign in the winter of 58 BC, Caesar learned that the Belgae were forming alliances in anticipation of Roman interference.
These tribes attacked the Gallic fortified settlement at Bibracte which Caesar successfully defended. The Belgic alliance split and Caesar now faced down the most die-hard belligerents from the alliance, the Nervii and their allies.
In 57 BC, Caesar camped on the slope of a hill facing the Sabis river while the rest of his force arrived and sent scouts across who were engaged by some Nervii in a skirmish.
The rest of the Nervii lay in wait, hidden in the woods. When Caesarโs baggage train appeared, the Nervii rushed at the Romans! They ran through the shallow river at full speed and overrun Caesarโs men while they were still constructing their camp!
When the Scottish Border Reiver Kinmont Willie Armstrong was unjustly arrested, a band of his comrades broke into Carlisle Castle to break him out of jail!
Kinmont Willie attended court during the truce and in violation of the truce Kinmont Willie was chased and arrested by deputies of the English warden Lord Scrope and locked up in Carlisle Castle!
The ๐๐๐ญ๐ญ๐ฅ๐ ๐จ๐ ๐๐๐ง๐ณ๐ข๐ค๐๐ซ๐ญ was a defeat which plunged the Roman Empire into a civil war and brought it down to depths of despair never known before!
A tale of disaster and betrayalโฆ
[Thread]๐งต
At the beginning of the 11th Century, the Roman Empire was at the height of its medieval power thanks to the indomitable spirit and military capability of Basil II Boulgaroktรณnos who extended the empireโs borders on all fronts.
However, the empire began to face new threats in Italy and on its Balkan borders around the middle of the century under Emperor Constantine IX which coincided with the coming of the Seljuk Turks who broke into the empire under Alp Arslan when they invaded Iberia in the 1060s!
England won a devastating victory over the Frenchโฆ
โWhen Cressy battle fatally was struck,
And all our princes captived by the hand
๐๐ ๐ญ๐ก๐๐ญ ๐๐ฅ๐๐๐ค ๐ง๐๐ฆ๐, ๐๐๐ฐ๐๐ซ๐, ๐๐ฅ๐๐๐ค ๐๐ซ๐ข๐ง๐๐ ๐จ๐ ๐๐๐ฅ๐๐ฌ.โ
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Since the Norman conquest, tensions had been rising between the Kings of England and France due to the dual role of the English Kings: equal as a fellow monarch but subject to the French king as the Duke of French territory.
During the reign Edward III, these tensions boiled over. In the 1330s, King Philip of France had gathered a large fleet in Marseille for a crusade.
However, the crusade was abandoned & Philipโs attention was now intensively focused on England and Scotland.
When he moved his fleet into the English Channel, King Edward sent his fleet to destroy Philipsโs fleet at Sluys!
The Spanish Armada sent to conquer England in 1588 is well known!
But did you know there were three more Spanish Armadas in 1596, 1597, and 1601?
[Thread]๐งต
โข ๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐! โข
When Queen Mary I died, many Catholics in England wanted her 1st cousin once removed, the Catholic Mary Queen of Scots to succeed her instead of Elizabeth. This was also the desire of the Catholic powers of Spain and France.
Elizabeth became Queen of England in 1558 and Mary became Queen of France in 1559, a marriage arranged by her incredibly powerful French relatives.
When she was widowed, Mary eventually returned to Scotland and was deposed by a Protestant faction and replaced with her infant son, James, whose regent was Maryโs Protestant half-brother.
When she fled from Scotland to England, she was detained by Elizabeth who eventually executed her for her alleged involvement in a plot to kill Elizabeth before a Catholic invasion.
The continental Catholic reaction to Maryโs execution was furious.
Philip II, King of Spain and former King of England through his marriage to Queen Mary, invaded in response to Maryโs execution and Elizabethโs support for the Dutch rebellion against Spanish rule in the Netherlands.
The story of the first Spanish Armada is well known. The large Spanish fleet of 137 ships and 55,000 men arrived in the Channel only to be harried by the smaller and more manoeuvrable English merchant ships.
Sir Francis Drake sailed his ship Revenge up to the Nuestra Seรฑora del Rosario and captured it at night, forcing the surrender of Pedro de Valdรฉs, the commander of the Squadron of Andalusia.
Then fire shops savaged the Spanish fleet at Calais and ultimately the Spanish sailed home but were forced to sail around Britain en route to Spain and lost more ships in the process.