Masada

Masada (Hebrew for fortress) is a flat plateau measuring roughly 1,000
by 2,000 feet, situated atop an isolated rock cliff at the western end
of the Judean Desert. At the eastern end, the rock falls in a sheer
dropof nearly 1,500 feet to the Dead Sea and, on the western side, it
stands about 300 feet above the surrounding terrain.
Herod the Great built the fortress as a refuge. At the beginning of the Great Revolt of the Jews against the Romans in 66 CE, a group of Jewish rebels overcame the Roman garrison of Masada. After the fall of Jerusalem, and the destruction of the Second Temple (70 CE), they were joined by Zealots and their families who had fled from Jerusalem.
This
small band of 960 Jews held out against the mightiest army inthe world
for three years. In 74 CE, the Roman army completed a rampart of
thousands of tons of stones and beaten earth against the western
approaches of the fortress and moved a battering ram up the ramp and
breached the wall of the fortress.
Once the fall of Masada became
imminent, Elazar ben Yair, the Zealots' leader, decided that all the
Jewish defenders - men, women andchildren - should burn the fortress and
commit suicide. According to Josephus, two women and five children
managed to hide themselves during the mass suicide, and it was from one
of these women that he heard an account of Elazar ben Yair's final speech in which he said the Zealots "preferred death before slavery."
It
is traditional to climb Masada before dawn to watch the sunrise over
the Dead Sea. You can either hike up the snake path (about a45-minute
walk) or take a short cable car ride to the summit.
Learn more about Masada.
Israel Tour content provided by the American-Israeli Cooperative
Enterprise(AICE). To find more information about the sites on our trip
and general facts about Israel visit the Virtual Israel Experience at AICE's Web site.