9 Now certainly Antiochus, who was called illustrious, held himself to be so at the passing of his life.
10 But next we will describe what happened with Eupator, the son of the impious Antiochus, abridging the evils which happened in the wars.
11 For when he assumed the kingdom, he appointed, over the affairs of the kingdom, a certain Lysias, leader of the Phoenician and Syrian military.
12 For Ptolemy, who was called Macer, decided to be strict in justice toward the Jews, especially because of the iniquity that had been done to them, and to deal with them peacefully.
13 But, for this reason, he was accused before Eupator by his friends, and was frequently called a traitor. For he had deserted Cyprus, which Philometor had entrusted to him. And so, transferring to Antiochus the illustrious, he even withdrew from him. And he ended his life by poison.
14 But Gorgias, when he was the leader of the places, taking to him new arrivals, frequently made war against the Jews.
15 In truth, the Jews, who held the strategic fortresses, took in those who were fleeing from Jerusalem, and they attempted to make war.