| This is
the second part of the Biblical History shoot in Israel.
Although we have provided some suggestions of where
to shoot, there are many more. We can arrange all
permissions and suggest more locations based upon
the requirements of your script.
The Return to Zion:
Persian and Hellenistic Periods
(538-142 BCE)
In 538 BCE, Persian King Cyrus, conquered the Babylonian
empire and because of his conquest and wishes some
50,000 Jews were freed from their captivity to return
to the Land of Israel. Their leader was Zerubbabel,
whose descent from the House of David, empowered him
to lead them. Within a century the remnant of Babylon’s
Jews made a Second return under the guidance of Ezra
the Scribe.
Where to shoot:
The City of David, Mount Zion
Cedar tree forest from which the Temple was built
Model of the First Temple
Temple artifact from the "Institute of the Temple"
in Jerusalem
Kidron valley, Jerusalem
Tel Arad ruins from the First Temple period
During the next four centuries that followed under
Persian rule (538-333 BCE) and then Hellenistic (Ptolemaic
and Seleucid) rule (332-142 BCE), the Jews knew varying
degrees of autonomy. The Second Temple period was
marked by the repatriation of the Jews (under the
guidance of Ezra), construction of the Second Temple
on the site of the First Temple, refortification of
the walls of Jerusalem and the establishment of the
Knesset Hagedolah (Great Assembly) as the supreme
religious and judicial body of the Jewish people.
Although the Syrian-based Seleucid rulers were the
ultimate authorities, the high priest and Council
of Elders in Jerusalem ruled Judah and the Land remained
a Jewish theocracy.
Where to shoot:
The house of Caiaphas who was the highest priest of
the great assembly
There were Temple guards at the Antonia fortress
on Via Dolorosa.
Bethesda archeological remains and a pool from the
Second Temple period
The Jews only revolted when they were prohibited from
practicing their religion and their Temple was desecrated
(166 BCE).
Hasmonean Dynasty
(142-63 BCE)
With the inspiration of his father Mattathias (of
the priestly Hasmonean family) Judah the Maccabee
directed the capture of Jerusalem and purification
of the Temple (164 BCE). Each year the festival of
Hanukkah commemorates these events.
Autonomy to Judea, as the Land of Israel was now
called, was restored by the Seleucids after further
Hasmonean victories (147 BCE). The Seleucid kingdom
collapsed (129 BCE) and the Jewish state achieved
its independence. The Hasmonean dynasty lasted about
80 years, and Jewish rule and political consolidation
flourished. Moreover, boundaries close in size to
those of Solomon's realm were regained.
Where to shoot:
Tombs of the Hasmonean in Modiin, northwest of Jerusalem
Neot Kedumim, a Biblical landscape park
Roman Rule
(63 BCE-313 CE)
Neot Kedumim
When the Seleucids were replaced by the Romans as
the great power in the region the Hasmonean king Hyrcanus
II was given limited authority by the Roman governor
of Damascus. Unfortunately, during the following years
the Jewish population was hostile towards the new
regime and frequent insurrections took place.
Mattathias Antigonus made a final attempt to restore
the former glory of the Hasmonean dynasty. Hasmonean
rule ended in 40 BCE with his defeat and death and
the Land returned to its status as a province of the
Roman Empire.
In 37 BCE, Herod (a son-in-law of Hyrcanus II) was
appointed King of Judea by the Romans. Almost unlimited
autonomy was granted to him to control the country's
internal affairs, allowing him to become one of the
most powerful monarchs in the Roman Empire, particularly
in its eastern part. Herod was a great admirer of
Greco-Roman culture and his massive construction program
included the cities of Caesarea and Sebaste and the
fortresses at Herodium and Masada. Under his reign
the Temple was remodeled into one of the most magnificent
buildings of its time. However, although Herod achieved
many things during his reign, he never succeeded in
winning the trust and support of his Jewish subjects.
Where to shoot:
Herodium,
Cesaria port
Museum painting of Jews in Italy during the Roman
period
Masada:
King Herod's mountaintop palace complex of Masada
near the Dead Sea was occupied and fortified by nearly
1,000 Jewish men, women and children, who had survived
the destruction of Jerusalem; Roman forces then made
numerous attempts to dislodge them. When Masada was
finally scaled and the walls breached it was discovered
that the defenders and their families preferred suicide
to enslavement.
After Shimon Bar Kochba’s revolt (132 CE) there
was one brief period when Jerusalem and Judea were
once again Jewish. The Roman power, however, was overwhelming
and it was inevitable that the Jewish forces would
be conquered. In accordance with the Roman custom,
Jerusalem was "plowed up with a yoke of oxen."
Palaestina became Judea’s new name and Aelia
Capitolina, that of Jerusalem.
Nevertheless, Jews and Judaism continued in spite
of the fact that the Temple no longer existed and
Jerusalem had been burned to the ground. The Sanhedrin
(successor of the Knesset Hagedolah) reconvened in
Yavneh (70 CE) and later in Tiberias. Returning exiles
renewed institutional and communal life and rabbis
replaced priests. The synagogue now became the focus
of Jewish communities as is shown by excavations of
synagogues at Capernaum, Korazin, Bar'am, Gamala and
elsewhere. And Jews continued to share the Jewish
religious law (the Halakhah), regardless of where
they were in the world.
Where to shoot:
Massada
Bar Chochva Letters at the Rockefeller Museum, Jerusalem
Qumran
Betar, site of the revolt against the Romans
The Arab village of Batir provides an example of the
old days
The Halakhah
Since post-biblical times, Religious Jewish life has
been guided by the Halakhah, the body of Jewish law
that deals with the religious obligations of Jews
in both interpersonal relations and ritual observances.
Practically all aspects of human behavior - birth
and marriage, joy and grief, agriculture and commerce,
ethics and theology are dealt with in Halakhic Law.
Halakhic Law is based on the Talmud and rooted in
the Bible. The Talmud is a body of Jewish law and
lore (completed c. 400) that includes the Mishnah,
the first written compilation of the Oral Law (codified
c. 210), and the Gemarah, that in turn, is an elaboration
of the Mishnah.
In the first and second centuries, religious scholars
began to provide practical guidance in the form of
concise, systematic digests or Halakhah. The Shulhan
Arukh that Joseph Caro wrote in Safed (Tzfat) in the
16th century is one of the most authoritative of these
codifications.

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