Through his close analysis of the war, making extensive critical use of Josephus's works, [Rogers] raises and resolves important questions about the nature of a revolt whose ripples can still be felt in our own time. -David Abulafia, Catholic Herald In his excellent new book...Guy MacLean Rogers tries to figure out precisely what compelled the Jews of the first century to rebel against the Roman Empire. -Simeon Cohen, The Times of Israel A remarkable achievement. Guy Rogers provides a powerful, moving reconstruction of the scale, scope, and consequences of the great Jewish war against Rome. Thoughtful, careful, and thorough, this is a major contribution to scholarship. Rogers' lively and engaging style makes it eminently accessible to a broad audience. -Erich S. Gruen, University of California at Berkeley Guy Rogers brings a profound grasp of the Roman world, historical flair, and fine judgment to this new, in-depth political and military study of the Great Jewish Revolt against Rome. This is an important and exciting book about an event that changed the course of history and that has a perennial hold on our emotions and imagination. -Tessa Rajak, University of Oxford Written with passion and wit, this patient and remarkably detailed reconstruction offers fresh interpretations of matters large and small, leading persuasively to the view of the war as a profound crisis with far-reaching and lasting consequences, whose meaning has been urgently debated to this very day. -Jonathan Price, Tel Aviv University Rogers provides a sweeping and detailed overview. This important work, written by a leading authority, will immediately become the standard reference on the First Jewish Revolt against Rome. -Jodi Magness, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Guy Rogers provides a lucid yet terrifying account of the 'Jewish War'-the uprising of the Jews in 66 CE, and the Roman empire's savage response, in a story that stretches from Rome to Jerusalem. It is characterized by inter- and intra-communal violence, desperate acts of resistance and bravery, and imperial repression, culminating in the destruction of the Temple, the execution of the brilliant Jewish military commander Simon bar Giora, and the capture of Masada. But Rogers is also a great historian: his narrative is a clinical, forensic examination of context, background, political culture, causality, contingency, and sources-especially the extraordinarily intimate view of events provided by the figure of the Jewish aristocrat, leader and turncoat Josephus. -John Ma, Columbia University