A star which resembled a broadsword hung over the city, as well as a comet which stayed there for a whole year. Before the revolt and the turmoil of war, when the people had gathered for the feast of unleavened bread on the eighth of the month Xanthicus, a light emanated from the altar and the sanctuary at the ninth hour of the night and shone so brightly for half an hour that it seemed like daytime.
(BJ 6.289–90)By means of these and other signs and portents, related just before his account of the destruction of the Temple, Josephus indicates both the importance of the events he is describing and the fact that the hand of a higher power was directing affairs. The passage comes from the
Jewish War, his earliest extant work, produced (at least for the most part) less than a decade after the calamitous event which it commemorates. Despite being his earliest surviving text, it could be considered his most mature historical work: a brilliantly structured, tightly focused, and grippingly written narrative of national trauma, characterized by both Thucydidean political realism and Deuteronomistic grandeur of vision. It engages in
apologia on several fronts: justifying Rome to the Jews, justifying Judaism to Rome, justifying the Flavians to their critics, and justifying Josephus to everybody. However, none of these apologetic tendencies impair the working out, by Josephus, of a distinctive and developed understanding of events. Despite its reputation in some quarters, the
Jewish War is not propaganda. The vision which it articulates is always and entirely Josephus’ own.