During the first century AD, Roman rule in Judaea was often clumsy and unsuccessful. Due to chronic insolvency, raids on the Temple were frequent and led to outrage, there were numerous bands of brigands and the mixed Greek-Jewish populations in the towns often led to tensions. There were at least three uprisings: one led by
Judas of Gamala in 6 AD, another one in 44 AD led by
Theudas, and one in the time of
Procurator Felix (52-60 AD). With the slow adoption of
emperor worship, relations deteriorated swiftly between the once allies and Jewish refusal to participate in the formalities of state worship was seen as disloyalty. Roman hostility was enthusiastically supported by Greek intellectuals and especially Alexandria, a large Jewish center, was a center of anti-Semitic propaganda. These included slanders that the Jews had no claim on Israel, that the Jews worshipped asses and had an ass's head in the temple or that they conducted secret human sacrifices in the temple. Feldman suggests that the many messianic movements in Judaea around the first and second century AD were likely a source of anxiety to the Romans. The
efforts of Caligula to install a statue of himself in the Temple (37–41 AD), which required the intervention of
Philo of Alexandria and
Herod Agrippa to prevent, has been proposed as the "first open break between Rome and the Jews"; although problems were already evident during the
Census of Quirinius in 6 AD and under
Sejanus (before 31 AD). The emperor
Tiberius had rectified the latter by intervening and ultimately recalling
Pontius Pilate to Rome. During the time of Emperor
Nero the Jews seem to have had some influence at the court, possibly through the Jewish actor Alityros and even the emperor's wife, who might have been a symphathiser with the Jews. In the Greek cities in the east of the Roman empire, tensions often arose between the Greek and Jewish populations. One major point of contention were the privileges granted by certain Roman rulers to the Jews. Writing around 90 AD, the Jewish author Josephus cited decrees by Julius Caesar, Mark Antony, Augustus and Claudius, endowing Jewish communities with a number of rights. Central privileges included the right to be exempted from
polis religious rituals and the permission "to follow their ancestral laws, customs and religion". Jews were also exempted from military service and the provision of Roman troops. Contrary to what Josephus wants his readers to believe, the Jews did not have the status of
religio licita (permitted religion) as this status did not exist in the Roman empire, nor were all Roman decrees concerning the Jews positive. Instead, the regulations were made as a response to individual requests to the emperor. The decrees were deployed by Josephus "as instruments in an ongoing political struggle for status". Because of their one-sided viewpoint, the authenticity of the decrees has been questioned many times, but they are now thought to be largely authentic. Still, Josephus gave only one side of the story by leaving out negative decisions and pretending that the rulings were universal. This way, he carried out an ideological message showing that the Romans allowed the Jews to carry out their own customs and rituals; the Jews were protected in the past and were still protected by these decisions in his own time. However, Romans seem to have been opposed in general to Jewish missionary activities. Though Jews seem to have been numerous in the Roman Empire, there is no consensus on the number of Jews in the Roman Empire. Some authors have suggested as high as 7 million people. but this estimation has been questioned. Speficially, the number seems to be based on the misreading of a medieval text of the 13th-century author Bar Hebraeus.
Jewish–Roman wars from the
Arch of Titus in Rome depicting a menorah and other objects looted from the Temple of Jerusalem carried in a
Roman triumph In 66 AD, the
First Jewish–Roman War began after a Graeco-Jewish lawsuit in which the Greek party won. Violence escalated when the Roman governor
Gessius Florus plundered the Temple treasury, followed by the suspension of sacrifices at the temple in honour of the people and the emperor of Rome and the massacre of several civilians as well as the Roman garrison. The revolt was both a civil war between the Greek and the Jews as well as between various Jewish factions, specifically the
Hellenised Jews and more traditional Jews. The revolt was ultimately crushed by the future Roman emperors
Vespasian and
Titus. During the
siege of Jerusalem in 70 AD, the Romans destroyed the Temple and plundered its artifacts, including the
menorah, and its inhabitants killed or enslaved. In the aftermath of the anti-semitic sentiment continued to spread and the fall of Jerusalem was taken as evidence that God hated the Jews, such as by the author
Philostratus or
Tacitus who repeated also previous Greek anti-semitic smears. Nevertheless, the Romans did not reverse their policy of toleration of the Jews and did not diminish the privileges granted to Jewish communities across the empire, with the only retribution being the conversion of the
Temple tax into a humiliating poll tax called the
Fiscus Judaicus for the upkeep of
temple of Jupiter Capitolinus. According to rabbinic sources,
Yohanan ben Zakkai, a prominent
Pharisaic leader who had opposed the revolt, was smuggled out of Jerusalem in a coffin and was able to obtain permission from the Roman authorities to set up a center for regulation of the Jewish religion at
Jamnia. Both Yohanan and the synagogue of Jamnia became normative institutions in Judaism and established many Jewish rules while also completing the canonization of the
Tanakh. Yohanan's pupil
Joshua ben Hananiah urged the Jews to accept Roman suzerainty and it is likely that many rabbis were reconciled with Roman rule. The Jewish leaders of Alexandria even handed over 600
Sicarii, who had fled after the defeat to Egypt, to the Roman authorities in order to prove their loyalty and restore the relation. Under Emperor Domitian the
fiscus iudaicus was collected strictly and converts to Judaism punished, but this seems to have ended under Emperor Nerva and also the
Diaspora Revolt in 115-117 did not change Roman policy. Jews continued to live in their land in significant numbers, until
Sextus Julius Severus devastated the region while crushing the
Bar Kokhba revolt of 132–136. Hadrian had been initially friendly to Judaism, but he became increasingly hostile towards Eastern religion and Judaism (possibly due to the influence of Tacitus), with a particular dislike of circumcision.
Hadrian's plan to establish a
Roman colony on the ruins of Jerusalem, and a possible ban on
circumcision, sparked this Jewish rebellion—the last major attempt at regaining independence. Under
Simon bar Kokhba, the rebels established a short-lived state, but the Romans soon amassed a large force and brutally crushed the revolt. 985 villages were destroyed and most of the Jewish population of central Judaea was essentially wiped out—either killed, sold into slavery, or forced to flee. Survivors were banished from Jerusalem and its surroundings, and the Jewish population shifted to
Galilee. After the suppression of the Bar Kokhba revolt in 135, Hadrian rebuild Jerusalem under the name
Aelia Capitolina, repopulated it with Greek-speakers and forbid Jews to enter it on pain of death. This law might not have been enforced very strictly and the Jews were able to get permission to visit the
Wailing Wall on the anniversary of its destruction (
Tisha B'Av). Hadrian also renamed the
province of Judaea to
Syria Palaestina, maybe in an attempt to erase the
historical ties of the Jewish people to the region. Other explanations have also been proposed, and
Ronald Syme suggested that the renaming efforts preceded and helped precipitate the rebellion. The unsuccessful revolt was followed by several draconian measures against many Jewish observances, but these were alleviated by Hadrian's successor
Antoninus Pius. The official policy seems to have been to tolerate and protect Judaism so long as it posed no threat, through attempts at proselytising, to the state cult or social order. ==Late Roman period==