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| The Calamity which befell the Jews in Jerusalem on the Day of the Passover. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter XIX.—The Calamity
which befell the Jews in Jerusalem on the Day of the
Passover.
1. While Claudius was still emperor, it happened that so
great a tumult and disturbance took place in Jerusalem at the feast of
the Passover, that thirty thousand of those Jews alone who were
forcibly crowded together at the gate of the temple perished,454
454 This
disturbance (described by Jos. B. J. II. 12. 1, and Ant.
XX. 5. 3) took place in 48 a.d. while Cumanus
was procurator of Judea. During the Passover feast the procurator, as
was the custom, brought extra troops to Jerusalem to guard against any
uproar which might arise among the great mass of people. One of the
soldiers, with the view of insulting the Jews, conducted himself
indecently in their presence, whereupon so great an uproar arose that
the procurator felt obliged to collect his troops upon the temple hill,
but the appearance of the soldiers so greatly alarmed the multitude
assembled there that they fled in all directions and crushed each other
to death in their eagerness to escape. Josephus, in his Jewish
War, gives the number of the slain as ten thousand, and in the
Antiquities as twenty thousand. The latter work was written
last, but knowing Josephus’ fondness for exaggerating numbers, we
shall perhaps not accept the correction as any nearer the truth. That
Eusebius gives thirty thousand need not arouse suspicion as to his
honesty,—he could have had no object for changing
“twenty” to “thirty,” when the former was
certainly great enough,—we need simply remember how easily
numbers become altered in transcription. Valesius says that this
disturbance took place under Quadratus in 52 a.d. (quoting Pearson’s Ann. Paull. p. 11
sqq., and Tacitus, Ann. XII. 54). But Eusebius, in his
Chron., gives the eighth year of Claudius (48 a.d.), and Orosius, VII. 4, gives the seventh year. Jost
and Ewald agree with Eusebius in regard to the date. | being trampled under foot by one another.
Thus the festival became a season of mourning for all the nation, and
there was weeping in every house. These things are related literally455
455 Eusebius simply sums up in the one sentence what fills half a page
in Josephus. | by Josephus.
2. But Claudius appointed
Agrippa,456
456 Herod
Agrippa II., son of Herod Agrippa I. At the time of his father’s
death (44 a.d.) he was but seventeen years of
age, and his youth deterred Claudius from giving him the kingdom of his
father, which was therefore again converted into a Roman province, and
Fadus was sent as procurator. In 49 a.d.
Agrippa was given the kingdom of Chalcis which had belonged to his
uncle Herod (a brother of Agrippa I.), and in 53 a.d. he was transferred to the tetrarchies of Philip and
Lysanias with the title of King. He was never king of the Jews in the
same sense in which his father was, as Judea remained a Roman province
throughout his reign, while his dominion comprised only the
northeastern part of Palestine. He enjoyed, however, the right of
appointing and removing the high priests, and under Nero his domain was
somewhat increased by the addition of several cities of Galilee, and
Perea. He sided with the Romans in the Jewish war, and afterwards went
to Rome, where he died in 100 a.d., the last
prince of the Herodian line. It was before this Agrippa that Paul made
his defense recorded in Acts xxvi. | son of Agrippa, king of the Jews,
having sent Felix457
457 Felix, a freedman of Claudius, succeeded Cumanus as procurator of
Judea in 52 (or, according to Wieseler, 53) a.d. The territory over which he ruled included Samaria
and the greater part of Galilee and Perea, to which Judea was added by
Nero, according to Josephus, B. J. II. 13. 2. Ewald, in the
attempt to reconcile Tacitus, Ann. XII. 54, and Josephus,
Ant. XX. 5. 2–7. 1,—the former of whom makes Cumanus
and Felix contemporary procurators, each over a part of the province,
while the latter makes Felix the successor of Cumanus,—concludes
that Felix was sent to Judea as the assistant of Cumanus, and became
procurator upon the banishment of the latter. This is not impossible,
though we have no testimony to support it. Compare Wieseler, p. 67,
note. Between 59 and 61 (according to Wieseler, in 60; see chap. 22,
note 1, below) he was succeeded by Porcius Festus. For the relations of
these two procurators to the apostle Paul, see Acts xx. sqq. Eusebius,
in his Chron., puts the accession of Felix in the eleventh year
of Claudius (51 a.d.), and the accession of
Festus in the fourteenth year (54 a.d.), but
both of these dates are clearly incorrect (cf. Wieseler, p. 68,
note). | as procurator of
the whole country of Samaria and Galilee, and of the land called
Perea.458
458 Eusebius evidently supposed the Roman province at this time to
have been limited to Samaria, Galilee, and Perea; but in this he was
wrong, for it included also Judea (see preceding note), Agrippa II.
having under him only the tetrarchies mentioned above (note 3) and a
few cities of Galilee and Perea. He had, however, the authority over
the temple and the power of appointing the high priests (see Jos.
Ant. XX. 8. 11 and 9. 1, 4, 6, 7), which had been given by
Claudius to his uncle, the king of Chalcis (Jos. Ant. XX. 1.
3). | And after he had reigned thirteen years
and eight months459
459 Claudius ruled from Jan. 24, 41 a.d., to
Oct. 13, 54. | he died, and left
Nero as his successor in the empire.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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