The Flavian Dynasty was a short-lived, though influential, line of Roman Emperors famous for their war with Judea and construction of the coliseum. Vespasian (69 CE - 79 CE) Titus (79 - 81) Domitian (81 - 96)
79 CE
They were expelled from the land of Israel in 70 CE. The Romans then renamed their land "Palestine" after the Phillistines (Israel's enemy).Answer:The Romans did not force the Jews out of Judea in a single expulsion. Rather, the Romans expelled them from Jerusalem only; and the rest of Judea lost most of its Jews slowly, over a period of centuries, as conditions in Judea became too harsh. Even then, we have records of Jewish communities who lived in Judea (Palestine) pretty continuously.
The Romans drove the Israelites out of their homeland in 135 CE.Answer:in the year 156ac Answer:The Romans drove the Jews out of Jerusalem in 135 CE. Answer:The Romans never drove all of the Jews out of Judea. While they killed and exiled millions of Jews and depopulated parts of the land, many more were permitted to remain, especially in the Galilee region.
At least three or four million. We know that one million Jews died in the Second Destruction (68 CE), hundreds of thousands were enslaved or displaced, and hundreds of thousands remained in the northern region of Israel (Judea). To these must be added the Jewish communities of Rome, Cyrene, Alexandria, Constantinople, etc., all of which were long-established at that time.
The date usually given is that of the destruction of the Temple in Jerusalem by the Romans in 70 CE, when they were suppressing a Jewish revolt against Roman rule.However, the Romans did not force the Jews out of Judea in a single expulsion. Rather, the Romans expelled them from Jerusalem only; and the rest of Judea lost its Jews slowly, over a period of centuries, as living there became too harsh.
The year 135 AD or CE marked the end of the revolt against the Roman empire that was led by the Jewish leader Bar Cocheba. Some historians say he claimed to be the Messiah. For three years Bar Cocheba fought the Roman legions. The end of the revolt in 135 AD/CE forced most Jews out of Judea. At that time there was no political movement such as "Zionism" to form a new Jewish state in Judea, which was a part of the Roman province of Syria.
In 68 CE, the Romans destroyed the Second Temple. The Romans did not force the Jews out of Judea in a single expulsion. Rather, the Romans expelled them from Jerusalem only; and the rest of Judea lost its Jews slowly, over a period of centuries, as living there became too harsh. Even then, we have records of Jewish communities who lived in Judea (Palestine) during the entire period of the last two millenia. (See:History of the Jews in Israel)Those Jews who left Judea went to southern Europe, North Africa, Arabia, the Near East, and (slowly) further afield (especially throughout Europe).See also:Jewish history timelineWhere do Jews live today?
79 C.E 79 years after the birth of christ
In 68 CE, the Romans destroyed the Second Temple. The Romans did not force the Jews out of Judea in a single expulsion. Rather, the Romans expelled them from Jerusalem only; and the rest of Judea lost its Jews slowly, over a period of centuries, as living there became too harsh.
1) The Assyrian Empire exiled the Ten Tribes in 555 BCE (according to traditional chronology). 2) The Babylonian Empire exiled the Jews of Judea (Israel) in 422 BCE (traditional chronolgy). 3) The Roman Empire destroyed the Second Temple in 68 CE. Contrary to popular misconception, the Romans did not force the Jews out of Judea in a single expulsion. Rather, the Romans expelled them from Jerusalem only; and the rest of Judea lost its Jews slowly, over a period of centuries, as conditions in Judea became too harsh. Even then, we have records of Jewish communities who lived in Judea (Palestine) pretty continuously. 4) There have been expulsions elsewhere. The Jews were expelled at various times from France, England, Spain, Portugal etc.
The Jewish-Roman War happened which led to the destruction of the Temple in 70 AD.