fallingblood
Agnostic Theist
You will have to be more specific so I can find details
but more importantly, instead of dismissing them outright, you could try and refute what you dont believe
I'm not dismissing them outright. I'm dismissing them simply because you can't show evidence for all of this taxation. And I thought I was quite specific with this: I would just like a source where you got your information about Roman taxation and how it applied to Jerusalem and in particular to the Temple.
The taxes I'm talking about are the ones you listed:
temple tax
poll tax
livestock cost, for lunch/sacrifice
tithe's
money changing tables charded for conversion as well.
road tax
bridge tax
transport of goods taxed
I want information to show that the Temple tax was mandatory, as well as collected when Jews went to the Temple for Passover (or to Jerusalem in general, either one).
I want to see how poll tax actually has anything to do with this event.
I want to see how there was a livestock cost that was a must. As in, why couldn't people bring their own animals from home? Also, as for lunch, why they couldn't buy food else where.
For the tithes, I want to see how it went into the hands of the Romans, and whether they even tithed at that time.
I also want to see how the money from the money changers ended up in Roman coffers at all.
As for the road, bridge, and transportation tax, I want you to show that they exist. The only tax on transportation that I am familiar with, and have ever seen, is one to do with imports and exports. Most would not be effected by that.
Finally, I want to see how this taxation would have been collected in Jerusalem, and why, instead of the general way taxes were collected, as in at one's home area, this taxation was all now collected in Jerusalem.