Titus, unable to sail to Italy during …
Years: 71 - 71
Titus, unable to sail to Italy during the winter, celebrates elaborate games at Caesarea Maritima and Berytus, then travels to Zeugma on the Euphrates, where he is presented with a crown by Vologases I of Parthia.
While visiting Antioch he confirms the traditional rights of the Jews in that city.
Ben-Matityahu adopts the name Flavius Josephus after the emperor’s family name, accompanies his patron to Alexandria, and there marries for the third time. (Josephus' first wife had been lost at the siege of Jotapata, and his second had deserted him in Judaea.)
Titus on his way to Alexandria had stopped in Memphis to consecrate the sacred bull Apis.
According to Suetonius, this caused consternation; the ceremony required Titus to wear a diadem, which the Romans associated with kingship, and the partisanship of Titus's legions had already led to fears that he might rebel against his father.
Titus returns quickly to Rome—hoping, says Suetonius, to allay any suspicions about his conduct.
Locations
People
Groups
- Jews
- Greeks, Hellenistic
- Galilee, Roman province of
- Egypt (Roman province)
- Judea (Roman province)
- Roman Empire (Rome): Julio-Claudian dynasty
- Roman Empire (Rome): Flavian dynasty
Topics
- Classical antiquity
- Roman colonization
- Portraits, Classical
- Roman art
- Pax Romana
- First Jewish-Roman War, or Jewish Revolt of 66-73
