Despite the treaty, Rome did not directly militarily intervene in the
Maccabean Revolt or the various wars of the early
Hasmonean kingdom, nor were they obligated to by the rather flexible terms. Rather, the treaty was more a matter of proving legitimacy: that the premier power of the world recognized the nascent Jewish movement as a people worthy of their own autonomy and support. Rome's policy of generally endorsing breakaways such as the Hasmoneans or
Timarchus helped weaken the authority of Demetrius I, a gamble that would eventually pay off with the movement of
Alexander Balas, who challenged Demetrius I for leadership backed by mercenaries paid for by Rome and
Pergamon. Rome's indirect pressure thus indeed weakened the Seleucid Empire, which benefited both the Hasmoneans and Rome to the detriment of the Seleucids. According to 1 Maccabees 12,
Jonathan Apphus, in his role as High Priest, sent an embassy with a letter to Rome renewing friendly relations. (It also records a letter sent to Sparta, which is unexpected as Sparta was a weak and unimportant polity in this period.) It is unclear what impact it had, if any, nor is it clear if there was a special occasion for it; it may well have been another attempt to demonstrate the legitimacy of Hasmonean rule to would-be internal opponents. Based on the date of the events it is described near, it seems this embassy was around 143 BCE, but historians express caution about assuming this too much as the embassy is not directly dated and might be being described where it is for literary reasons instead. Jonathan's successor, his brother
Simon Thassi, is also recorded by 1 Maccabees as sending "a great golden shield weighing 1,000 minas" to maintain relations, and Rome sending a letter in reply. That said, aspects of the story are dubious and likely fictitious, exaggerated, or a figure of speech; 1,000 minas would be perhaps half a ton of gold, an unlikely and exorbitant hoard. It also includes a sweeping
extradition request seemingly to King
Ptolemy VIII Euergetes II of Egypt that he should send anti-Hasmonean troublemakers who fled to Egypt back to Judea to be punished; however, extradition was rare in antiquity, and the passage reads more like wishful thinking or an addendum added by the Judean writer to a much smaller proposal by the Roman envoy. One mysterious incident that may or may not have happened involves Josephus recording a complaint from the Hasmoneans about Seleucid depredations around
Joppa. Josephus records an appeal from the Hasmoneans to the Romans to ask them to demand the Seleucids restore Hasmonean control of the coastal region, as well as the end of a Seleucid embargo on Judean exports. The incident is undated and the resolution unclear, although the Hasmoneans would eventually control the coastal region. Historian Chris Seeman suggests that this most likely happened during the reign of
John Hyrcanus, and that the Jewish appeal was apparently successful in getting the Seleucids under King
Antiochus IX to back down. The treaty's relevance came to an end with the
Hasmonean civil war between
Aristobulus II and
Hyrcanus II. Both feuding brothers appealed to Roman general
Pompey. Pompey was then in the region after participating in the
Third Mithridatic War, defeating King Tigranes of Armenia, and subjugating the remnant Seleucids in Antioch. Pompey seems to have been informed about the long-standing alliance, and even allowed some of its provision to influence the eventual settlement. Regardless, the outcome surely soured most Jews on Rome, previously a distant if powerful friend, but now overlord. The Hasmoneans were reduced to
client king status. They still managed internal Judean affairs, but their political independence was shattered. ==References==