Neha Patil (Editor)

Pillage of Ein Gedi

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Date
  
Passover, 67 CE

Deaths
  
700

Location
  
Ein Gedi, Israel

Attack type
  
Mass Killings

Motive
  
Pillage

Target
  
Jewish residents of Ein Gedi

Perpetrators
  
Sicarii rebels, coming from Masada

The Pillage of Ein Gedi refers to the Sicarii raid of Ein Gedi during the Great Jewish Revolt. According to Josephus, on Passover, the Sicarii of Masada raided Ein-Gedi, a nearby Jewish settlement, and killed 700 of its inhabitants. Josephus' account is the only known record of the pillage and its perpetrators. Pliny the Elder however described the destruction of Ein Gedi after the end of the war:

Below the settlement of the Essenes was once the village of Ein Gedi, second only to Jerusalem (Carei Jericho) in fertility of soil and groves of palm trees. But now it, like Jerusalem (Jericho), is but a heap of ashes

(Naturalis Historia 5: 73).

The excavation of a miqve in Ein Gedi revealed a large concentration of pottery sherds and stone tools on the floor, which had been covered by a layer of collapsed debris showing evidence of a heavy conflagration. It is possible that this represents the destruction inflicted by the Sicarii during the Great Revolt.

References

Pillage of Ein Gedi Wikipedia