Which Zealots do you have in mind?
Zealots
The Zealots (see the Talmud, Gittin 56a).
It was the Zealots
The Zealots were a party among the Jews (so called from their zeal for the law) who were determined to resist Roman or any foreign authority in Palestine.
The Zealots were a political movement in the first century. They sought to incite the people of Judea to rebel against the Romans and force them out of the Holy Land
The Zealots didn't attack the Romans. The Romans were going to attack but all the Zealots killed themselves. Over 960 children, men and woman died. Now, that's a different story. They believe the Romans attacked, or were going to attack, because the Zealots would, in a way, pull pranks on the Romans. The Romans got tired of living over 1,000 feet below the Zealots because it also gave the Zealots a advantage at numerous things.Hoped this helped!:)
Which Zealots do you have in mind?
The beliefs of the zealots was that in order to succeed from rome you would need a violent rebellion and they killed several Jews who opposed this theory some scholars even believe that the zealots set fire to an abondent amount of grain Jerusalem had in order to withstand the longest of sieges but when the grain was burned some citizens turned to cannabalism they burned the grain in order to make citizens come to the zealots that's all I really know I cant find much other answers either
Zealots
Of course NOT, this is just some foolish idea that some religious zealots have decided and (believe) will happen.
The Zealots called for the violent overthrow of Roman rule.
Zealots were a first-century Jewish sect that believed in strict adherence to Jewish law and the rejection of Roman authority. They were extremely passionate about the liberation of Israel from Roman rule and were willing to use violence and armed resistance to achieve their goals.
Ancient Hebrew tribe or group of people who were zealous, that is fanatical or uncompromising.
Sometimes
There were none. The Zealots rebelled against Rome during the reign of Nero.
The Zealots (see the Talmud, Gittin 56a).