Toward the end of the reign of the emperor Trajan, in 116, the Jews of CYRENE rebelled, their leader being Lucuas according to Eusebius ("Hist. Eccl." 4:2), Andreias according to Dio Cassius (68:32). These two statements can not be harmonized, as some historians have attempted to do, by supposing that either of the two names was a symbolic one (Lucuas = "the bright or shining one,"Andreias = "the brave"); for the authors would not have passed over such an explanation in silence. Moreover, Eusebius and Dio Cassius refer to different phases of the rebellion. According to a later source, Abu al-Faraj, Lucuas sought refuge in Palestine, where he was defeated by Marcius Turbo. According to Eusebius he was proclaimed king; and the Papyrus Parisiensis No. 68 (published by Wilcken in "Hermes," 27:464 et seq.) refers perhaps to him.