Stelle ...; (De bello Iudaico (70 - 80), Flavius Josephus, The Wars of the Jews VII, 244; translated by William Whiston, A.M. Auburn and Buffalo. John E. Beardsley. 1895.) [5630]

Basic Information
Keywords
ID 5630
Text De bello Iudaico (70 - 80) Flavius Josephus
Quotation
Translation [244] Now there was a nation of the Alans, which we have formerly mentioned some where as being Scythians and inhabiting at the lake Meotis. This nation about this time laid a design of falling upon Media, and the parts beyond it, in order to plunder them; with which intention they treated with the king of Hyrcania; for he was master of that passage which king Alexander [the Great] shut up with iron gates. This king gave them leave to come through them; so they came in great multitudes, and fell upon the Medes unexpectedly, and plundered their country, which they found full of people, and replenished with abundance of cattle, while nobody durst make any resistance against them; for Paeorus, the king of the country, had fled away for fear into places where they could not easily come at him, and had yielded up every thing he had to them, and had only saved his wife and his concubines from them, and that with difficulty also, after they had been made captives, by giving them a hundred talents for their ransom. These Alans therefore plundered the country without opposition, and with great ease, and proceeded as far as Armenia, laying all waste before them. Now Tiridates was king of that country, who met them, and fought them, but had like to have been taken alive in the battle; for a certain man threw a net over him from a great distance, and had soon drawn him to him, unless he had immediately cut the cord with his sword, and ran away, and prevented it. So the Alans, being still more provoked by this sight, laid waste the country, and drove a great multitude of the men, and a great quantity of the other prey they had gotten out of both kingdoms, along with them, and then retreated back to their own country.
Quotation source Flavius Josephus, The Wars of the Jews VII, 244; translated by William Whiston, A.M. Auburn and Buffalo. John E. Beardsley. 1895.
Temporal Coverage 37 - 50
Associated use case(s)
Comment Hyrcania was a historical region south-east of the Caspian Sea in modern-day Iran and Turkmenistan; Media was a region of north-western Iran; probably in this passage the roots of mingling Gog and Magog with Alexander the Great can be found (Georges Tamer, Introduction, 3)