The Herods: Murder, Politics, and the Art of Succession

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Until his death in 4 BCE, Herod the Great's monarchy included territories that once made up the kingdoms of Judah and Israel. Although he ruled over a rich, strategically crucial land, his royal title did not derive from heredity. His family came from the people of Idumea, ancient antagonists of the Israelites.

Yet Herod did not rule as an outsider, but from a family committed to Judaism going back to his grandfather and father. They had served the priestly dynasty of the Maccabees that had subjected Idumea to their rule, including the Maccabean version of what loyalty to the Torah required. Herod's father, Antipater, rose not only to manage affairs on behalf of his priestly masters, but to become a pivotal military leader. He inaugurated a new alignment of power: an alliance with Rome negotiated with Pompey and Julius Caesar. In the crucible of civil war among Romans as the Triumvirate broke up, and of war between Rome and Parthia, Antipater managed to leave his sons with the prospect of a dynasty.

Herod inherited the twin pillars of loyalty to Judaism and loyalty to Rome that became the basis of Herodian rule. He elevated Antipater's opportunism to a political art. During Herod's time, Roman power took its imperial form, and Octavian was responsible for making Herod king of Judea. As Octavian ruled, he took the title Augustus, in keeping with his devotion to his adoptive father's cult of "the divine Julius." Imperial power was a theocratic assertion as well as a dominant military, economic, and political force.

Herod framed a version of theocratic ambition all his own, deliberately crafting a dynastic claim grounded in Roman might and Israelite theocracy. That unlikely hybrid was the key to the Herodians' surprising longevity in power during the most chaotic century in the political history of Judaism.

Author(s): Bruce Chilton
Publisher: Fortress Press
Year: 2021

Language: English
Pages: 365
City: Minneapolis

Cover Page
Title Page
Copyright Page
Contents
Preface
Introduction
1. Antipater
Setting
The Maccabees
The Essenes
Antipater in the Maccabean Hegemony
2. Herod’s Debut
Caesar and Antipater in the Conquest of Egypt
Caesar’s Man in Judea
Jerusalem, Religious Politics, and the Sanhedrin
Herod’s Campaign in Galilee
Hybris
3. King Herod
Death, Revenge, and the Parthian Threat
Theoretical Monarch
King of the Jews
4. Mariamme
Marital and Priestly Strategies
Cleopatra
Octavian and the Imperial Transition
A Time to Build and a Time to Tear Down
5. Archelaus
Introduction
Archelaus’s Play for Power
Imperial Intervention
The End of Archelaus and the Sadducees’ Opportunity
6. Antipas, Herodias, and Philip
Salvaging the Dynasty: Antipas and Philip
Antipas’s Tiberian Breakout
Executing John the Baptist
Pontius Pilate, Jesus, and Antipas’s Ambitions
7. Agrippa I
Agrippa’s Revenge
The Edict of Caligula
The Claudian Settlement and Agrippa’s Glory
After Agrippa
8. Bereniké and Agrippa II
The Queen
The Neronian Opportunity, Confrontations in Jerusalem
Open War
Defeat and the Last Herodian Meteorite
Epilogue
Chronology
Dramatis personae
Notes
Bibliography of Sources
Index of Historical Figures
Index of Scholars