Revolt and removal of Herod Archelaus Following the death of
Herod the Great, the
Herodian Kingdom of Judea was divided into the
Herodian Tetrarchy, jointly ruled by Herod's sons and sister:
Herod Archelaus (who ruled
Judea,
Samaria and
Idumea),
Herod Philip (who ruled
Batanea,
Trachonitis as well as
Auranitis),
Herod Antipas (who ruled
Galilee and
Peraea) and
Salome I (who briefly ruled
Jamnia). A messianic revolt erupted in Judea in 4 BCE because of Archelaus's incompetence; the revolt was brutally crushed by the
Legate of
Syria,
Publius Quinctilius Varus, who occupied
Jerusalem and crucified 2,000 Jewish rebels. Because of his failure to properly rule Judea, Archelaus was removed from his post by Emperor
Augustus in 6 CE, while Judea, Samaria, and Idumea came under direct Roman administration. This event had significant and ever-lasting effects on
Jewish history, and the
development of Christianity.
Under a prefect (6–41 CE) The Judean province did not initially include
Galilee,
Gaulanitis (today's Golan), nor Peraea or the
Decapolis. Its revenue was of little importance to the Roman treasury; however, it controlled the land and coastal sea routes to the "bread basket" of
Egypt and was a buffer against the
Parthian Empire. The capital was moved from Jerusalem to
Caesarea Maritima. Augustus appointed
Publius Sulpicius Quirinius to the post of
Legate of
Syria and he conducted
a tax census of Syria and Judea in 6 CE, which triggered the revolt of
Judas of Galilee; the revolt was quickly crushed by Quirinius. Judea was not a
senatorial province, nor an
imperial province, but instead was a "satellite of Syria" governed by a
prefect who was a
knight of the Equestrian Order (as was that of
Roman Egypt), not a former consul or
praetor of
senatorial rank. Quirinius appointed
Coponius as first prefect of Judea. The prefect inherited the Herodian military forces, consisting of one cavalry unit and five infantry cohorts. Still, Jews living in the province maintained some form of independence and could judge offenders by their own laws, including capital offenses, until . Judea in the early
Roman period was divided into five administrative districts with centers in Jerusalem,
Gadara,
Amathus,
Jericho, and
Sepphoris. In 30–33 CE, Roman prefect
Pontius Pilate had
Jesus of Nazareth crucified on the charge of
sedition, an act that led to the birth of
Christianity. In 36 CE another messianic revolt erupted near
Mount Gerizim, under the lead of a
Samaritan, and was quickly crushed by Pilate; the Samaritans complained against Pilate's brutality to the Legate of Syria
Lucius Vitellius the Elder, who removed Pilate from his post and sent him to Rome to account, replacing him with an acting prefect called
Marcellus. In 37 CE, Emperor Caligula ordered the erection of a statue of himself in the
Temple in Jerusalem, a demand in conflict with Jewish monotheism. The
Legate of Syria,
Publius Petronius, fearing civil war if the order was carried out, delayed implementing it for nearly a year. King
Herod Agrippa I finally convinced Caligula to reverse the order. Caligula later issued a second order to have his statue erected in the Temple of Jerusalem, but he was murdered before the statue reached Jerusalem and his successor
Claudius rescinded the order. The "Crisis under Caligula" has been proposed as the first open break between Rome and
Jews.
Autonomy under Herod Agrippa (41–44) Between 41 and 44 AD, Judea regained its nominal
autonomy, when
Herod Agrippa was made
King of the Jews by the emperor
Claudius, thus in a sense restoring the Herodian dynasty. Claudius had allowed
procurators, who served as personal agents to the Emperor and often as provincial tax and finance ministers, to be elevated to governing magistrates with full state authority to keep the peace. He may have elevated Judea's procurator to imperial governing status because the imperial legate of Syria was not sympathetic to the Judeans.
Under a procurator (44–66) Following Agrippa's death in 44, the province returned to direct Roman control, incorporating Agrippa's personal territories of Galilee and Peraea, under a row of procurators. Nevertheless, Agrippa's son,
Agrippa II was designated
King of the Jews in 48. He was the seventh and last of the
Herodians. Jerusalem was plagued by famine between 44 and 48. According to
Josephus,
Helena of Adiabene"...went down to the city Jerusalem, her son conducting her on her journey a great way. Now her coming was of very great advantage to the people of Jerusalem; for whereas a famine did oppress them at that time, and many people died for want of what was necessary to procure food withal, queen Helena sent some of her servants to Alexandria with money to buy a great quantity of corn, and others of them to Cyprus, to bring a cargo of dried figs. And as soon as they were come back, and had brought those provisions, which was done very quickly, she distributed food to those that were in want of it, and left a most excellent memorial behind her of this benefaction, which she bestowed on our whole nation. And when her son
Izates was informed of this famine, he sent great sums of money to the principal men in Jerusalem.
First Jewish–Roman War (66–70) In 66 CE, tensions in Judaea escalated into an open revolt following clashes between Jews and Greeks in Caesarea. These were followed by the Roman procurator Florus' seizure of Temple funds in Jerusalem and his subsequent massacres of its population. A Temple captain halted sacrifices for the emperor, and the Roman garrison in the city was massacred. In response,
Cestius Gallus, the Roman governor of Syria, led a 30,000-strong army into Judaea and besieged Jerusalem. However, after withdrawing from the city for unclear reasons, his forces suffered a
devastating ambush at the
Bethoron Pass. , as depicted on the
Arch of Titus After Gallus' defeat, a
provisional government was formed in Jerusalem, appointing military commanders across the country. Soon Emperor Nero tasked
Vespasian with suppressing the revolt, and in 67 CE, he launched a campaign in Galilee, besieging and destroying rebel strongholds such as
Yodfat,
Tarichaea, and
Gamla. Meanwhile, Jerusalem became overcrowded with refugees and rebels. Inside the city, internal Jewish factions clashed as
Zealots seized power, overthrew the moderate government, and invited the
Idumeans, who massacred opposition leaders and consolidated their control. By 68 CE, Vespasian had secured Galilee and parts of Judea, aiming to isolate Jerusalem. However, Nero's suicide in 68 CE plunged Rome into civil war (the "
Year of the Four Emperors"). In 69 CE, Vespasian was proclaimed emperor and left for Rome, entrusting command to his son
Titus, who prepared to crush the remaining Jewish resistance. In 70 CE, the Roman army under Titus laid a
five-month siege to Jerusalem. Titus's forces comprised legions, along with detachments (vexillationes) from two other legions, twenty infantry cohorts, eight mounted alae, and thousands of troops provided by client kings, totaling around 50,000 soldiers. Jerusalem population had swollen with
Passover pilgrims and refugees, while three-way factional strife among Jewish groups further weakened its defense. As supplies dwindled, the inhabitants suffered from starvation and disease. The Romans breached the city walls one by one, and, in the summer, stormed the
Temple Mount, destroying the Second Temple. The following month, the Romans completed their conquest of Jerusalem, slaughtering, enslaving, or executing many of its inhabitants and reducing the city to ruins. In the years that followed, Roman forces launched a final campaign against isolated rebel-held fortresses, which concluded with the
fall of Masada in 73/74 CE.
Interwar period (70–132) The Jewish defeat in the First Jewish–Roman War left a lasting impact on Judaea. Jerusalem, the spiritual and national center of the Jewish people, was destroyed, and large numbers of Jews were killed through war, famine, disease, and massacres, while many others were captured or displaced. Nevertheless, communal life gradually recovered, and Jews continued to make up a relative majority of the population. In the aftermath, the province underwent administrative reorganization. A senatorial-rank legate was appointed as governor, and
Legio X Fretensis, which had taken part in the conquest of Jerusalem, was permanently stationed in the city's ruins. To strengthen Roman control, the regions of Judea and Idumaea were designated a military zone under legionary officers, and veterans as well as other Roman citizens settled in the province. In 115 CE, widespread Jewish uprisings, known as the
Diaspora Revolt, erupted almost simultaneously across several eastern provinces, including
Cyprus, Egypt,
Libya, and
Mesopotamia. Suppression of the revolt took about two years and led to the near-total destruction of Jewish communities in Cyprus, Egypt, and Libya. Judaea's involvement remains disputed: no fully reliable source confirms its direct participation, and archaeologically it is difficult to distinguish any destruction dating to 117 CE from that of the Bar Kokhba revolt a decade and a half later. Rabbinic tradition, however, preserves a memory of the "
Kitos War," placing it fifty-two years after the destruction of the Second Temple and sixteen years before the Bar Kokhba revolt, and associating it with restrictive decrees and a ban on teaching Greek. Late
Syriac sources also speak of unrest in Judaea, describing Roman defeats of Jews from Egypt and Libya there, while an inscription from
Sardinia refers to an
expeditio Judaeae among
Trajan's campaigns. Hostilities may have been stoked by Roman cult acts in Jerusalem:
Hippolytus reports that a legion under Trajan set up an idol called
Kore, while an inscription records soldiers of
Legio III Cyrenaica dedicating an altar or statue to
Serapis in the city during Trajan's final year. Following his role in suppressing Jewish unrest in the eastern provinces,
Lusius Quietus (namesake of the Kitos War) briefly governed Judaea with consular authority. After Hadrian succeeded Trajan in 117, Quietus was dismissed and replaced by
Marcus Titius Lustricus Bruttianus. Judaea's status was upgraded from a praetorian to a consular province, and a second permanent legion,
Legio II Traiana Fortis, was stationed there before 120 CE. The legion's soldiers constructed a new road linking
Caparcotna, Sepphoris and Acre, turning Caparcotna into a northern base and securing the corridor between Judaea, Galilee, Egypt, and Syria. To strengthen control, Rome settled veterans and other loyal colonists in Judaea, a policy that aimed to secure the province but intensified alienation from the Jewish population. in the time of
Hadrian (ruled 117–138 CE), showing, in western Asia, the Roman province of Judea
Bar Kokhba revolt (132–136) In 132 CE, the
Bar Kokhba revolt—the final major Jewish revolt and last organized effort to regain national independence—erupted in Judaea. It was primarily concentrated in Judea proper'''''' and was led by
Simon bar Kokhba. The revolt was directly precipitated by the establishment of
Aelia Capitolina, a pagan
Roman colony, atop the ruins of Jerusalem,—an act Goodman described as the "final solution for Jewish rebelliousness." The many
hiding complexes built before the revolt show that the Jews had been preparing for conflict in advance. With early victories over the Romans, Bar Kokhba secured control over a Jewish state and
minted coins bearing symbols and slogans proclaiming Jewish independence, similar to those issued during the revolt. However, Roman forces under Emperor Hadrian eventually crushed the revolt, resulting in widespread destruction and mass slaughter, which some historians describe as
genocidal. The fall of
Betar and the death of Bar Kokhba in 135 marked the final collapse of the revolt. Judea proper was heavily depopulated, with many Jews sold into slavery and transported to distant regions. While Hadrian's death in 137 eased some of the restrictions and persecution, the Jewish population in the region was severely reduced. The remaining Jews were largely concentrated in the Galilee, the
Golan, and coastal plain cities, with smaller communities along the fringes of Judea proper and a few other areas.
Aftermath After the revolt, Hadrian imposed laws targeting Jewish practices with the goal of dismantling Jewish nationalism. The revolt also sealed the fate of the Jerusalem Temple, preventing its rebuilding for the foreseeable future. Hadrian's punishment also included banning Jews from Jerusalem and its surrounding areas, and renaming the province from Judaea to
Syria Palaestina. The creation of Syria Palaestina from the ruins of Judaea, the former of which
had not been an officially used name until then, did not prevent the Jewish people from referring to the land in their writings as either "Yehudah" () or "The Land of Israel" (). == Economy ==