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Whereas The
Urantia Book places Tarichea at a location where the Jordan River
flows out from the Sea of Galilee (p.1561), many authorities now
assert that Tarichea was the Greco-Roman name for Magdala, a town
that was situated about 4 miles to the north of Tiberias and,
reputedly, the hometown of Mary Magdelene.
Tarichea achieved
notoriety during the Jewish wars with Rome in 67 AD, a so-called
naval battle that was fought there ending in a bloody massacre of
the town's defenders and the selling into slavery of more than
30,000 of its former inhabitants. Almost all of the evidence bearing
on the location of Tarichea in the first century derives from the
writings of the Jewish-Roman historian, Josephus. Unfortunately
there are inconsistencies in his account that make it difficult to
reach a definitive conclusion.
Josephus was born
in Palestine in 37 AD. While still in his early twenties he became
one of five of the regional commanders in Palestine, with authority
assigned to him in Galilee. However his position there the city's
inhabitants really wanted a fight with the Romans. A fierce argument
broke out in the city within earshot of Titus and his men who then
decided to take advantage of the situation by continuing their
attack. Titus leapt into his saddle and, "Riding through the
water he entered the town at the head of his men. His audacity
filled the defenders with terror, and not a man stayed to offer the
least resistance. Abandoning their posts, Jeshua and his supporters
fled across country while the rest rushed down to the lake where
they ran into the enemy advancing to meet them. Some were killed as
they got into their boats, others tried to swim to those who had put
out before."
Titus mopped up
the rebels in Tarichea and accepted the surrender of its residents.
Josephus relates: "Those who had taken refuge on the lake, when
they saw the town had fallen, put out as far from the enemy as
they could." On receiving news of the surrender, Vespasian
entered the city to take charge. "The next day he (Vespasian)
went down to the lake and ordered rafts to be put together for the
pursuit of the fugitives. They were soon ready, as there was an
abundance of wood and no lack of carpenters."
Josephus
continues, "Preparations completed, Titus put on board as much
of his force as he thought adequate to deal with their opponents in
the boats, and the pursuit began. Thus encircled, the Jews
could neither escape to land where the enemy was in full possession,
nor fight it out on the water with any hope of success. Their
boats were small and built for piracy, and the men on board each
one were so few that they dared not come to grips with the
Romans."
None got
away...."the entire lake was stained with blood and crammed
with corpses...the beaches were thick with wrecks and swollen
bodies." The dead, including those who perished earlier in the
town totaled 6,700.
Now if the boats
were small and built for piracy they were also fast and maneuverable
relative to the heavy Roman rafts. The Romans were said to be in
full possession of any escape route by land. However the Sea of
Galilee is egg-shaped, about 13 miles long and 6 to 7 miles wide at
its widest point. The perimeter is not less than 30 miles.
Yet the small, fast boats could not escape even during the night! It
seems as if the boats must have been trapped in some very much
smaller enclosure than the Sea of Galilee.
A map published
with the Penguin Classics' version of Josephus' "The Jewish
Wars" places Tarichea at the southern end of the Sea of
Galilee. So also does a map published in vol.1 of Hasting's
"Dictionary of Christ and the Gospels," (1906) and other
maps published in George Adam Smith's "Historical Geography of
the Holy Land." (1894) from The Palestine Exploration Survey.
The latter map is interesting as it shows Tarichea as situated on
a peninsular or perhaps a breakwater that protrudes into the Sea
of Galilee to form a small sheltered bay. The Jordan is
shown as flowing out from this bay.
Without too much
imagination it is possible to construct a possible site for Tarichea
on or at the start of a peninsular/breakwater that would enclose a
portion of the Sea of Galilee, thereby matching the description of
the disastrous naval battle of Tarichea. To match the description to
the Magdala site is more difficult.
A site where the
Jordan leaves the Sea of Galilee known as Kerak is a possible site
for Tarichea. It was said to be located on a peninsular and is the
only position on the coast which suits Josephus' description of
Tarichea being washed on more than one side by the sea.4
Other evidence is
provided in the literature that favors the southern site. H.V.
Morton3 in his book "In the Steps of the
Master" states that Magdala was the site of a dyeing industry
while Tarichea in the south had an industry for the salting of fish.
Apparently salt from the Dead Sea was brought to a site south of
Tiberias. The word "tarichea" means "pickling
place." The Urantia Book states that there was a fish drying
industry at Tarichea. (1566)
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