For it? Singular? Are you sure the Romans have a word for each and everything they've ever done at one time or another?JWintjes wrote:Not true. There is in fact a host of words for it,chuck wrote:
Onto their enemies even the Romans didn't always have words for what they sometimes do.
Jorit
Josephus claimed that 3 Romans Legions killed 1.1 million Jews during the year 68. We might assume whatever the difference in ideology, the Romans were competitive with Pol pot in the percentage of country population they extirpated. One only need to extirpate 25% of the population in a country before one outshines, so to speak, Pol Pot. I think it is quite likely that there were fewer than 4 million people in Judea when the Romans killed 1.1 million of them. I don't know about Romans being lenient to the Jews. The Romans were not in the habit of extirpating everyone who came from a rebellious territory, only a high percentage of those who are actually in the rebellious territory. The fact that some Jews were left alive is no indication of excessive leniency.JWintjes wrote: Admittedly, something is decidedly off with the Romans and the Jews.
Under standard Roman policy there should be noone left after the 66 Jewish war to take up arms ever again. Yet already under Trajan there are massive disturbances in Alexandria, Cyprus and even in the Western part of the empire, and less than a generation later there is Bar Kochba, and one gets the impression of 66 all over again. For some reason unknown to us the Romans were very lenient towards the Jews.
If 3 Roman legions killed 1.1 million in 1 year alone, then how many Jews could have been wiped out during the the Bar Kochba rebellion when no fewer than 13 Roman legions operated in Judea for at least 2 years?
