Greek Judah (Alexander Takes the East)

You probably wanted to know what happened after Alexander invaded the Persian empire.

Dramatic Changes in Judah
Alexander arrived in Persian territory in 380 B.C. As Alexander came to Jerusalem without a fight, he recognized that these people weren't his enemies, so instead, he greeted to the Jews and kneel down to the high priests. Soon, without a war, Alexander made Judah part of his empire. However, on his death, his Latin son, Emperor Italliaus went on the throne and changed Judah, forever.

Immigration Around the Empire
Emperor Italliaus accepted Judaism and Christianity, and built orthodox churches and synagogues for the Jews to worship at. As Alexandrian culture grew so strong, the Jews had to make a translation of the Torah and Bible to Greek, Latin, or Macedonian. This next diaspora forced Jews to preserve their religion. Emperor Italliaus decided to let the Alexandrians to worship these religions as well if they were interested. Soon, 2/3 population worship gods, 1/3 of the population was monotheists.

Rabbi Yohann Ben Zaccrai
This rabbi was one of the monotheist rabbis who helped preserve Judaism. He was the high priest of the orthodox church in Rome and was responsible for taking part in disputes and discussions. Zaccrai also led reforms about God and trusting his laws. Soon, he was the oldest rabbi in history.

Jewish and Christian Faith Banned
When emperor Caligula became emperor, he banned all of jewish and Christian faith because the Jews were not loyal to their gods. Alexandrian soldiers burned every Torah, every Bible, they could find in their empire. Revolt leaders were pushed off the city walls to their death, finally, the Jews had it.