For the general reader whose Greek and Latin might be a tad rusty, Barry Strauss’s Jews vs. Rome: Two Centuries of Rebellion against the World's Mightiest Empire provides a very useful bridge across the deep valley that divides the history of the Roman empire from the few Roman centuries in the millennial history of the Jews.
The reason for that great divide has nothing to do with what Jews and Romans did, nor the way they wrote their histories, but is the result of Germany’s historical scholarship of the 19th century, led by Theodor Mommsen (1817–1903). The greatest European historian of his day, and arguably the greatest historian of the modern era, Mommsen brought the ancient world out of darkness with a single brilliant intuition. It was a Roman practice to record events in the lives of individuals, and especially of civil and military officials, with inscriptions: so-and-so was promoted to this or that office in the nth year of the rule of this or that emperor.
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