Against Apion
| By: | Flavius Josephus |
| Publisher: | Simon & Schuster |
| Print ISBN: | 9781482398212.0 |
| eText ISBN: | 9781627933902 |
| Edition: | 0 |
| Copyright: | 2012 |
| Format: | Reflowable |
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Written in the first century CE, Against Apion is one of the earliest and most deliberate works of communal defense in Jewish literary history. The historian Flavius Josephus - soldier, statesman, Pharisee, and eyewitness to the siege of Jerusalem - constructs a point-by-point rebuttal of hostile Greek and Egyptian claims about Jewish origins, customs, and character. The treatise argues systematically for the antiquity and coherence of Jewish life, meeting slander not with silence but with evidence, chronology, and reasoned appeal to the historical record. The context surrounding the work is as important as its arguments. Josephus composed Against Apion during the Roman imperial period, shortly after the destruction of the Second Temple - a moment when the survival of Jewish communal identity was genuinely uncertain. Rather than withdraw, he chose articulation: laying out who his people were, where they came from, and why the accusations leveled against them were baseless. The result is a document that helps clarify how long Jewish communities have faced organized campaigns of delegitimization, and how consistently they have responded with intellectual discipline and an insistence on continuity and dignity. What makes the treatise endure beyond its ancient setting is the structural pattern it reveals. Each generation's hostility toward Jewish life recycles recognizable distortions - about loyalty, about separateness, about origins - and each generation's defense draws on the same core commitment to documented history and collective memory. Josephus's method of answering prejudice through careful argumentation rather than polemic remains a reference point for understanding how communities sustain themselves against recurring threat. This edition places Against Apion alongside Josephus's larger body of work, including his History of the Jewish War and Jewish Antiquities, providing access to the full arc of his writing on Jewish-Roman relations and the pressures that shaped Jewish self-understanding in the ancient Mediterranean world.