As to the phrase "end of the indignation" or "end of the wrath?" You can find it here:
{70} Whereof when Jonathan had knowledge, he sent ambassadors unto him [Bacchides], to the end he should make peace with him, and deliver them the prisoners.
{71} Which thing he accepted, and did according to his demands, and sware unto him that he would never do him harm all the days of his life.
{72} When therefore he had restored unto him the prisoners that he had taken aforetime out of the land of Judea, he returned and went his way into his own land, neither came he any more into their borders.
{73} Thus the sword ceased from Israel: but Jonathan dwelt at Machmas, and began to govern the people; and he destroyed the ungodly men out of Israel. 1 Maccabees 9:70-73 (KJVApocrypha)
The Jewish war with the Seleucids ended in 157 BC. Israel enjoyed relative peace and safety for almost 100 years, until 63 BC, when the city was taken by Pompey.
There is no "second fulfillment" of this passage. The "end of the indignation" came in 157 BC.
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