The Jews were never able to regain control over the Romans because they never had control in the first place. You can't regain something that you never had.
The Jews were never able to regain control over the Romans because they never had control in the first place. You can't regain something that you never had.
The Jews were never able to regain control over the Romans because they never had control in the first place. You can't regain something that you never had.
The Jews were never able to regain control over the Romans because they never had control in the first place. You can't regain something that you never had.
The Jews were never able to regain control over the Romans because they never had control in the first place. You can't regain something that you never had.
The Jews were never able to regain control over the Romans because they never had control in the first place. You can't regain something that you never had.
The Jews were never able to regain control over the Romans because they never had control in the first place. You can't regain something that you never had.
The Jews were never able to regain control over the Romans because they never had control in the first place. You can't regain something that you never had.
The Jews were never able to regain control over the Romans because they never had control in the first place. You can't regain something that you never had.
The Jews were never able to regain control over the Romans because they never had control in the first place. You can't regain something that you never had.
Roman Empire says it all. They had money, numbers, armies, technology.
Roman Empire says it all. They had money, numbers, armies, technology.
The Jews were never able to regain control over their Roman rulers because they never had the control in the first place. Judaea was an allied kingdom of Rome during the time of Herod the Great and his successors. This meant that Rome called the shots such as approving the High Priests and rulers, even though the kingdom was nominally independent. When the Jews were foolish enough to try to revolt, Rome came down hard on them.
The Romans first entered Jewish territory at the request of the jews.
This seems unlikely: The Romans never managed to control the Jews despite attempted genocide while Christianity ended up conquering the Roman Empire. If Jesus was a hoax made up by the Romans, it sure backfired on them.
.Catholic AnswerOur Blessed Lord claimed to be a King. The Jews were a subject nation, under a Roman governer, a king would look like they were threatening rebellion to regain their indepence.
the jews hated the romans
After the Romans banished the Jews from Jerusalem, the Romans renamed the city Palestine.
All they wanted was payment of taxes and lack of rebellion. They did sometimes suppress Judaism, but often did not.
No the Romans did not force the Jews to worship their gods.
Actually, there were times when the Romans outlawed Judaism, such as during the time of Hadrian. During those times that the Romans didn't interfere with the internal life of the Jews, the reason was because the Romans wanted to receive their taxes. That, and making sure none of their colonies planned rebellions, was usually the only thing that the Romans were really concerned about.
Hyrcanus and Aristobulus, the two sons of the Jewish Queen Salome Alexandria and King Yannai (Johanan Hyrcanus, 1st century BCE), got the Romans involved in Judea when they asked the Romans to settle an internecine dispute. At first the Romans were cordial; and they actually became party to a military treaty with Judea (Talmud, Avodah Zara 9a). A couple of decades later, however, they unilaterally abrogated the treaty, and placed Roman governors over the land who afflicted the Jews with crushing taxation (Talmud, Yoma 9a). In the first two centuries CE, things got worse, with the Romans destroying the Second Temple, killing and enslaving over one million Jews, and temporarily outlawing Torah-observances; and the Jews attempting to revolt. The Romans destroyed large numbers of Jewish communities in the Holy Land.