Galilee campaign (67)

The Galilee campaign, also known as the Northern Revolt, took place in the year 67, when Roman general Vespasian invaded Galilee under the orders of Emperor Nero in order to crush the Great Revolt of Judea. Many Galilean towns gave up without a fight, although others had to be taken by force. By the year 68, Jewish resistance in the north had been crushed, and Vespasian made Caesarea Maritima his headquarters and methodically proceeded to cleanse the coastline of the country, avoiding direct confrontation with the rebels at Jerusalem.

Galilee Campaign
Part of the First Jewish–Roman War
DateApril–December 67 CE
Location
Result Roman victory
Belligerents
Roman Empire

Judean provisional government

  • Northern Command
Zealot factions
Commanders and leaders
Vespasian
Titus
Agrippa II (WIA)
Josephus  (POW)
John of Giscala
Justus of Tiberias  
Units involved

X Fretensis
V Macedonica
Legio XV Apollinaris

Several cohorts of auxiliaries
Agrippa II's forces
Judean command in Galilee
Zealot rebel factions
Strength
60,000 soldiers and auxiliaries 20,000 Jewish militias
Casualties and losses
100,000 Judean rebels and civilians dead

The Galilee campaign is unusually well-recorded for the era. One of the Jewish rebel leaders in Galilee, Josephus, was captured. Josephus struck up a friendship with Vespasian, who would later ascend to become Roman Emperor. Josephus was eventually freed and given a place of honor in the Flavian dynasty, taking the name Flavius, and worked as a court historian with the backing of the Imperial family. In his work The Jewish War, the chief source on the Great Revolt, he provides detailed accounts of the sieges of Gamla and Yodfat, and of internal Jewish politics during the Galilee campaign.

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