AN EXCELLENT SURVEY OF JEWISH HISTORY
Cecil Roth (1899-1970) was a British Jewish historian, as well as visiting professor at Bar-Ilan University in Israel (1964-1965) and the City University of New York (1966-1969). He also wrote books such as 'A History of the Marranos,' 'The Spanish Inquisition,' 'Jews in the Renaissance,' etc.
He begins this revised 1970 edition by describing "numbers of Aramean immigrants from the crowded plains of Mesopotamia... Ibrim, or Hebrews, they were called... from the fact that they came 'Beyond the Great River,' the Euphrates." (Pg. 3-4) He later observes, "At the beginning of the twelfth century B.C.E., some local upheaval... seems to have caused a wholesale migration ... The strangers, repulsed from Egypt in 1194, fell back upon the rich coastal plain to the north... Here they had little difficulty in establishing themselves... Such was the impression which they made upon the ancient world that ultimately their name was given to the whole of the country, which is still known after them, as Palestine..." (Pg. 15-16)
He notes, "The modern critical school ascribes to Ezra... the redaction and even the authorship of a substantial portion of what subsequently became known as the Torah---the Law of Moses. Whether or not this is the case, it remains an indisputable fact that, with Ezra, the reign of the Torah over the Jewish people began." (Pg. 67)
Of Josephus, he records, "After a defense of two months, the city was captured and Josephus, saving his life by a strategem, went over brazenly to the Romans, an act of treachery to which the Jewish people is indebted for its one-sided though minute knowledge of this period." (Pg. 107) Later, he adds, "The revolt of the Maccabees, essentially a reaction against Hellenism, actually resulted in bringing the Jews into touch, for the first time, with their ultimate enemy, Rome." (Pg. 135)
About the First Crusade, he said, "This was the direct occasion of the succession of Crusades which, throughout the next two centuries, attempted... to win back Palestine for the Cross, initiating incidentally an era of martyrdom for the Jewish people which is without precedent in history." (Pg. 180) But he later notes, the Jewish people "might be massacred, exterminated, or expelled in one state; but there was always another in the immediate neighborhood which was momentarily prepared to receive them." (Pg. 235)
About the establishment of ghettos, he observes, "In most cases... they fought fiercely against its establishment. But it soon became apparent that the Ghetto walls, though originally intended to keep the victims in, were no less useful in keeping their enemies out... (it also) tended to act as a powerful preservative of ... solidarity and culture." (Pg. 274) Of the Warsaw Ghetto revolt in WWII, he states, "The three thousand years of Jewish history know of no episode more heroic." (Pg. 405)
This is a balanced "popular" overview of the entire spectrum of Jewish history (it ends with the 1967 Six-Day War).