Judas of Galilee
Judas of Galilee or
Judas of Gamala led a violent resistance to a census imposed for
Roman tax purposes by
Quirinius in
Iudaea Province around 6 CE. The revolt was crushed brutally by the Romans. These events are discussed by
Josephus in
Jewish Wars, (Book 2, Chapter 8, Section 1 and Chapter 17, Section 8), and in
Jewish Antiquities Book 18. Judas is also mentioned by
Gamaliel, a member of the
Sanhedrin, in a speech related in . Gamaliel offers him as an example of a failed Messianic leader.
Josephus in Antiquities Book 18 states that Judas, along with
Zadok the Pharisee, founded the
Zealots, which he calls the "fourth sect" of first century Judaism (the first 3 are the
Sadducees,
Pharisees,
Essenes). Josephus blames the Zealots for the
Great Jewish Revolt and destruction of
Herod's Temple. They preached that
God alone was the ruler of
Israel and later urged that no taxes should be paid to Rome.
Judas led an assault on a Roman
garrison at the kings armory in
Sepphoris, then the capital of
Galilee (7 km from
Nazareth). Josephus does not relate the death of Judas, although he does report (Antiquities 20.5.2 102) that Judas' sons James and Simon were executed by procurator Alexander in about 46 AD, several years after R. Gamaliel's statement.