Before
CHRIST
,cir. i6j.
fch. x. 5.
IOr,so
that be cut
them in
slices.
AOr, in
Judea.
|| Acid out
of Jose
ph us, and
theyyielded
tUemfelvei.
made there
mounts jor
Jhot.
=U Or, the
Jew.
spread upon the high mountains, and part
on the valleys below, they marched on
safely and in order.
41 Wherefore all that heard the noise of
- their multitude, and the marching of the
company, and the rattling of the harness, were moved : for the army was very great and mighty.
42 Then Judas and his host drew near, and entered into battle, and there were flain of the king's army six hundred men.
43 1 Eleazar also, surnamed Savaran, perceiving that one of the beasts, armed with royal harness, was higher than all the rest, and supposing that the king was upon him,
44 Put himself in jeopardy, to the end he might deliver his people, and get him a perpetual name :
45 Wherefore he ran upon him coura geously through the midst of the battle, flaying on the right hand and on the left, H so that they were divided from him on both sides.
46 Which done, he crept under the ele phant, and thrust him under, and flew him : whereupon the elephant fell down upon him, and there he died.
47 Howbeit the rest of the Jews seeing the strength of the king, and the violence of his forces, turned away from them. 48 Then the king's army went up to Jerusalem to meet them, and the king pitched his tents I against Judea, and against mount Sion.
49 But with them that were in Bethsura he made peace : || for they came out of the city, because they had no victuals there to endure the siege, it being a year of rest to the land.
50 So the king took Bethsura, and set a garrison there to keep it.
51 As for the sanctuary, he besieged it many days : and || set there artillery with engines and instruments to cast fire and stones, and pieces to cast darts and flings.
52 Whereupon | they also made engines against their engines, and held them battle a long season.
53 Yet at the last, their vessels being without victuals, (for that it was the seventh year, and they in Judea, that were deliver ed from the Gentiles, had eaten up the re sidue of the store ; )
54 There were but a few left in the sanc tuary, because the famine did so prevail against them, that they were fain to dis perse themselves, every man to his own place.
55 At that time Lysias heard fay, that Philip, whom Antiochus the king, whiles Before CHRIST cir. 16}. he lived, had appointed to bring up his son Antiochus, that he might be king,
56 Was returned out of Persia and Me dia, and the king's host also that went with him, and that he sought to take unto him the ruling of the affairs.
57 Wherefore he went in all haste, and said to the king and the captains of the host and the company, We decay daily, and our victuals are but small, and the place we lay siege unto is strong, and the affairs of the kingdom lie upon us :
58 Now therefore let us t be friends with t Gr. give these men, and make peace with them, and dl' with all their nation ;
59 And covenant with them, that they shall live after their laws, as they did be fore : for they are therefore displeased, and have done all these things, because we abolished their laws.
60 So the king and the princes were content : wherefore he sent unto them to make peace ; and they accepted thereof.
61 Also the king and the princes made an oath unto them : whereupon they went out of the strong hold.
62 Then the king entered into mount Sion ; but when he saw the strength of the place, he brake his oath that he had made, and gave commandment to pull down the wall round about.
63 Afterward departed he in all haste, and returned unto Antiochia, where he sound Philip to be master of the city : so he fought against him, and took the city by force.
CHAP. VII.
IN the hundred and one and fiftieth year «r. Demetrius theson of Seleucus departed »*Mac. from Rome, and came up with a few men unto || a city of the sea coast, and reigned there.
2 And as he entered into the -f- palace of cap. 16. his ancestors, so it was, that his forces had taken Antiochus and Lysias, to bring them dm of hi, unto him.