Hadrian’s Legion
Encamped on the Temple Mount
After the Romans destroyed the Temple and burned Jerusalem in 70 C.E., the Xth Legion (Fretensis) of the Roman army camped on the southwestern hill of the city, in the area known today as the Citadel, by Jaffa Gate.1 This was not, however, enough to stifle the resurgence of Jewish nationalism. In 132 C.E. what is known as the Second Jewish Revolt (the so-called Bar-Kochba Revolt) erupted, only to be suppressed, like the First Jewish Revolt, by the Roman army, this time led by the Emperor Hadrian. But it took him three years and many men. At its end, Hadrian ordered the city razed. Jews were forbidden to enter the city except once a year to mourn the destruction of their temple. In the report of his victory to the Roman Senate, however, Hadrian omitted the customary salutation: “I and the army are well.”
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SearchBrowse by Publication![]() BAR 32:06, Nov/Dec 2006
Table of Contents
Features
By Jeremy McInerney
By Hershel Shanks
By Eilat Mazar
By Manfred Bietak
Departments
By Hershel Shanks
By Leonard J. Greenspoon
By Mary Joan Winn Leith
By Shelley Wachsmann
![]() Further ReadingHadrianMazar, Benjamin
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