Jewish characterization in Roman annals reflects the type of stereotypy employed against, for example, "brahmins". When viewed against the background of Roman authorship of the Gospels (which must have been a major imperialist project), these characterizations seem less "descriptive" and more "propaganda-motivated". (In contrast, Dharmic "texts" also notice black and white colorations, but these are always descriptive and non-normative observations). Manetho's (Alexandrian) anti-semitic text is not descriptive but intricately devised propaganda, as vaguely suggested by the author Russell Gmirkin. In the gospels, the Roman authors built upon this Greek anti-semitic strand in Manetho.
Phoenician ships were used in the Persian attacks against the mainland. Hannibal retreated to Persian provinces straddling the Black Sea - Bithynia, pontus and the like. Archaeology suggests polytheism in Judea and Israel; the histories of these regions were erased by the two (Greco-Roman) Empires and replaced by martial race, AIT-type narratives against the Phoenican/Pharisees.
Phoenician ships were used in the Persian attacks against the mainland. Hannibal retreated to Persian provinces straddling the Black Sea - Bithynia, pontus and the like. Archaeology suggests polytheism in Judea and Israel; the histories of these regions were erased by the two (Greco-Roman) Empires and replaced by martial race, AIT-type narratives against the Phoenican/Pharisees.