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International Standard Bible Encyclopedia
3. Herod Antipas:
Herod Antipas was the son of Herod the Great and Malthace, a Samaritan woman.
Half Idumean, half Samaritan, he had therefore not a drop of Jewish blood in
his veins, and "Galilee of the Gentiles" seemed a fit dominion for such a prince.
He ruled as "tetrarch" of Galilee and Peraea (Luke 3:1) from 4 BC till 39 AD.
The gospel picture we have of him is far from prepossessing. He is
superstitious (Matthew 14:1), foxlike in his cunning (Luke 13:31) and wholly immoral. John
the Baptist was brought into his life through an open rebuke of his gross
immorality and defiance of the laws of Moses (Leviticus 18:16), and paid for his
courage with his life (Matthew 14:10; Ant, XVIII, v, 2).
On the death of his father, although he was younger than his brother Archelaus
(Ant., XVII, ix, 4; BJ, II, ii, 3), he contested the will of Herod, who had
given to the other the major part of the dominion. Rome, however, sustained the
will and assigned to him the "tetrarchy" of Galilee and Peraea, as it had been
set apart for him by Herod (Ant., XVII, xi, 4). Educated at Rome with Archelaus
and Philip, his half-brother, son of Mariamne, daughter of Simon, he imbibed
many of the tastes and graces and far more of the vices of the Romans. His first
wife was a daughter of Aretas, king of Arabia. But he sent her back to her
father at Petra, for the sake of Herodias, the wife of his brother Philip, whom he
had met and seduced at Rome. Since the latter was the daughter of Aristobulus,
his half-brother, and therefore his niece, and at the same time the wife of
another half-brother, the union between her and Antipas was doubly sinful. Aretas
repaid this insult to his daughter by a destructive war (Ant., XVIII, v, 1).
Herodias had a baneful influence over him and wholly dominated his life (Matthew
14:3-10). He emulated the example of his father in a mania for erecting
buildings and beautifying cities. Thus, he built the wall of Sepphoris and made the
place his capital. He elevated Bethsaida to the rank of a city and gave it the
name "Julia," after the daughter of Tiberius. Another example of this inherited
or cultivated building-mania was the work he did at Betharamphtha, which he
called "Julias" (Ant., XVIII, ii, 1). His influence on his subjects was morally bad
(Mark 8:15). If his life was less marked by enormities than his father's, it
was only so by reason of its inevitable restrictions. The last glimpse the
Gospels afford of him shows him to us in the final tragedy of the life of Christ. He
is then at Jerusalem. Pilate in his perplexity had sent the Saviour bound to
Herod, and the utter inefficiency and flippancy of the man is revealed in the
account the Gospels give us of the incident (Luke 23:7-12; Acts 4:27). It served,
however, to bridge the chasm of the enmity between Herod and Pilate (Luke
23:12), both of whom were to be stripped of their power and to die in shameful
exile. When Caius Caligula had become emperor and when his scheming favorite Herod
Agrippa I, the bitter enemy of Antipas, had been made king in 37 AD, Herodias
prevailed on Herod Antipas to accompany her to Rome to demand a similar favor.
The machinations of Agrippa and the accusation of high treason preferred against
him, however, proved his undoing, and he was banished to Lyons in Gaul, where
he died in great misery (Ant., XVIII, vii, 2; BJ, II, ix, 6).
LITERATURE.
Josephus, Josephus, Antiquities and BJ; Strabo; Dio Cassius. Among all modern
works on the subject, Schurer, The Jewish People in the Time of Jesus Christ (5
vols) is perhaps still the best.
Henry E. Dosker
Copyright Statement
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Bibliography Information
Orr, James, M.A., D.D. General Editor. "Entry for 'HEROD'". "International
Standard Bible Encyclopedia".
<http://www.studylight.org/enc/isb/view.cgi?number=T4306>. 1915.