Most people became polytheistic
Answer:
The above answer is mistaken. Idolatry had completely died out among the Israelites centuries before the Second Destruction of 66-68 CE. Rather, the result of the ill-advised rebellion was that the Romans destroyed the Second Temple, razed Jerusalem, and made life even harsher for the Jews.
The Second Temple was destroyed.
The Romans destroyed the Second Temple and crushed the uprising.
The Jewish Revolt commences aginst the Roman Empire in AD 66
Boudicca's Rebellion started at AD 46 And ended at AD 52
Yes, 66 A.D. comes befor 212 A.D.
There was not any connection between Augustus and the Zealots. The Zealots were a radical Jewish group which led to the rebellion which historians call the Great Revolt or the First Jewish-Roman War (66-73 AD) which occurred under the reigns of Nero and Vespasian. The Zealots had been around longer than that. There are divergent opinions about their origins. Josephus (the Jewish-Roman writer) said that they emerged in 6 AD. According to other scholars, they originally were bandits who resisted Herod the Great (reigned 37-4 BC). However, according to one historian, the first open break between Jews and Romans occurred during the Reign of Caligula when he ordered a statue of himself to be erected in the Temple In Jerusalem. Caligula's assassination prevented a violent Jewish rebellion.
At the time of Jesus' death, about 30 AD, Rome was not engaged in outright war. The Roman conquest of Britian was in 43 AD, thirteen years after Christ's crucifixion. The Jewish uprising was 66-73 AD, at which time Roman soldiers destroyed the Temple (70 AD), and there was civil war in 68-69 AD, which kept the Romans busy.
sparticus
The Zealots. In 66 CE, against the advice of the Jewish Torah-sages, the Zealots led a rebellion in Judea against Roman authority in the province. Roman leaders responded by sending General Vespasian to crush the uprising. Vespasian put his son Titus in charge of the Roman troops in Judea. In AD 71, Titus put down the rebellion, burning the second Temple of Jerusalem and taking Jerusalem. Some Zealots fought on at Masada, a fortress overlooking the Dead Sea, but it was taken.
Those countries did not exist or have kings in 66-73 AD.
Lady Trieu was a Vietnamese warrior who led a rebellion against China in 248 AD. She was able to resist the Eastern Wu Dynasty for some time.
The Hagia Sophia Church
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