FACTBOX-Masada: desert palace, rebel redoubt and Zionist symbol

Wed May 14, 2008 11:29pm BST
 
Email | Print | | Single Page
[-] Text [+]

(Reuters) - U.S. President George W. Bush, on a tour of Israel marking its 60th anniversary, will visit the Roman-era fortress of Masada overlooking the Dead Sea on Thursday.

The site has acquired great significance for Israelis as a symbol of self-sacrifice and resistance, although the widely told story of how nearly 1,000 Jewish men, women and children committed suicide rather than surrender to the Romans is based on a single written source, Jewish historian Josephus Flavius.

* King Herod, sovereign of Judea in the 1st century BC, built Masada as a winter palace where he could enjoy its desert locale and commanding views of the Dead Sea, Josephus wrote.

* During a Jewish revolt against Roman rule that erupted in 67 AD, hundreds of insurgents and their families took refuge in the hilltop fortress. When Roman legionnaires broke through the ramparts in 70 AD, the Jews slit each others' throats rather than fall captive -- again, according to Josephus.

* Josephus, a Jew who defected to the Romans, chronicled the tale of Masada in his book "The Jewish War". Israel launched major archaeological digs at the site in the 1960s which provided support for his historical account.

* The Jewish National Fund, which acquired land in Ottoman- and then British-ruled Palestine before the founding of the state of Israel, bought Masada from its bedouin owners in 1932. The site and its narratives of resistance and self-sacrifice became integral to modern Zionist teachings.

"To Israelis, Masada symbolises the determination of the Jewish people to be free in its own land," the Israeli Foreign Ministry says on a page devoted to Masada on its website.

* In 1981 the siege was dramatised in an American television mini-series called "Masada". The site joined UNESCO's list of protected heritage sites in 2002.

(Writing by Dan Williams, Editing by Alastair Macdonald)

 
Chancellor of the Exchequer Alistair Darling speaks at a Thomson Reuters newsmaker event in London October 21, 2009. REUTERS/Andrew Winning
Darling says stimulus stays

G20 policymakers are agreed that it is too early to pull the plug on economic life-support packages, Chancellor Alistair Darling tells Reuters.  Full Article 

Most Popular General News on Reuters UK

  • Articles
  • Videos
 A demonstrator pounds away the Berlin Wall as East Berlin border guards look on from above the Brandenburg Gate in this November 11, 1989 file photo. REUTERS/David Brauchli/File Photo
Berlin Wall anniversary

Twenty years after the Berlin Wall's fall, Reuters provides an in-depth, multimedia look at one of the 20th Century's defining moments.   Full Coverage