Chapter
XXIII.
At that time Judah besieged
the Syrians who were posted in the citadel. They, being sore pressed with
famine and want of all things, sent messengers to the king to implore
assistance. Accordingly, Eupator came to their aid with a hundred thousand
infantry and twenty thousand cavalry, while elephants marched in front of his
line, causing immense terror to the onlookers. Then Judah, abandoning the
siege, went to meet the king, and routed the Syrians in the first battle. The
king begged for peace, which, because19 he, with his
treacherous disposition, made a bad use of, vengeance followed his treachery.
For Demetrius, the son of Seleucus, who, we have said above, was handed over as
a hostage to the Romans, when he heard that Antiochus had departed, begged that
they would send him to take possession of the kingdom. And when this was
refused to him, he secretly fled from Rome, came into Syria, and seized the
supreme power, having slain the son of Antiochus, who had reigned one year and six
months. It was during his reign that the Jews first begged the friendship of
the Roman people, and alliance with them; and the embassy to this effect having
been kindly received, they were, by a decree of the senate, styled allies and
friends. In the meantime Demetrius was, by means of his generals, carrying on
war against Judah. And first the army was led by a certain man named Bacchides,
and by Alcimus, a Jew; Nicanor, being afterwards placed at the head of the war,
fell in battle. Then Bacchides and Alcimus, recovering power, and having
increased their forces, fought against Judah. The Syrians, turning out
victorious in that battle, cruelly abused their victory. The Hebrews elect
Jonathan, the brother of Judah, in his place. In the meantime, Alcimus, after
he had fearfully desolated Jerusalem, dies; Bacchides, being thus deprived of
his ally, returns to the king. Then, after an interval of two years, Bacchides
again made war upon the Jews, and being beaten, he begged for peace. This was
granted him certain conditions, to the effect that he should give up the
deserters and prisoners, along with all that he had taken in war.
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