Add parallel Print Page Options

33 who opposed them with three thousand foot soldiers and four hundred cavalry. 34 In the ensuing battle, a few of the Jews were slain. 35 A man called Dositheus, a powerful horseman and one of Bacenor’s men,[a] caught hold of Gorgias, grasped his military cloak and dragged him along by brute strength, intending to capture the vile wretch alive, when a Thracian horseman attacked Dositheus and cut off his arm at the shoulder. Then Gorgias fled to Marisa.

Read full chapter

Footnotes

  1. 12:35 One of Bacenor’s men: certain ancient witnesses to the text have “one of the Toubians”; cf. v. 17.