At least nine thousand of the enemy took refuge in two exceedingly strong towers that were fully equipped to withstand a siege. Maccabeus left behind Simon and Joseph, as well as Zacchaeus and his troops, comprising a force sufficient to besiege them, while he himself set out for zones where he was more urgently needed. However, Simon's men were avaricious, and they allowed themselves to be bribed by some of those who were in the towers. After receiving seventy thousand drachmas, they permitted a number of them to slip away. When Maccabeus was told what had happened, he assembled the leaders of the people and denounced those men for having sold their kindred for money by freeing their enemies to fight against them. Then he executed them as traitors and immediately captured both towers. Since he was successful in everything he undertook by force of arms, he slaughtered more than twenty thousand men in the two strongholds.
2 MACCABEUS: chapter 10, verses 18 - 23
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