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Philip the Tetrarch

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Son of Herod the Great and ruler of part of his father's kingdom
Tiberius featured on acoin struck by Philip the Tetrarch
Philip received thetetrarchy ofIturea,Trachonitis,Gaulanitis,Batanea, andAuranitis following the death of his father.

Philip the Tetrarch (c. 26 BCE – 34 CE), was the son ofHerod the Great and his fifth wife,Cleopatra of Jerusalem. As aTetrarch, he ruled over the northeast part of his father's kingdom between 4 BCE and 34 CE after Herod's death. He was a half-brother ofHerod Antipas andHerod Archelaus. He is not the same person asHerod the Younger, whom some writers call Herod Philip I. To distinguish the two, he is calledHerod Philip II by some writers (see"Naming convention").

Territory

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Philip ruled territories which theGospel of Luke lists asIturea andTrachonitis[1] andFlavius Josephus lists asGaulanitis, Trachonitis andPaneas[2] as well asBatanea, Trachonitis,Auranitis, and "a certain part of what is called theHouse of Zenodorus".[3]

As the capital of his tetrarchy, Philip rebuilt the city ofCaesarea Philippi, calling it by his own name to distinguish it from theCaesarea on the sea-coast.

Marriage and dynasty

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Philip marriedSalome, also a member of theHerodian dynasty. This Salome is usually identified as the daughter of Philip's nieceHerodias and his brotherHerod the Younger. This Salome appears in the Bible in connection with thebeheading of John the Baptist.

However, there would have great difference in their ages: Salome was born ca. 14 CE, at which time Herod Philip was 39 years old. Hence, some scholars[who?] supposed that Philip was married to another Salome,his own half-sister by that same name, a daughter of Herod the Great and his 8th wifeElpis.[citation needed] This Salome was bornc. 14 BCE, and so only twelve years younger than Herod Philip (a more realistic age gap)[according to whom?]. But this would also be the only known occurrence of the children of Herod the Great intermarrying, even if from different mothers. Marriages to first cousins and uncles, however, were relatively common in the Herodian dynasty.

Kokkinos, on the other hand, argues that Philip never married any Salome but ratherHerodias (who had earlier divorced her first husband, Herod the Younger, and supposedly only later went on to marryHerod Antipas) and that the traditional reading of these marriages were due to a mistake by Josephus.[4][p. 266-267]

Naming convention

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There is no contemporary evidence for Philip the Tetrarch's use of the name "Herod Philip" (Greek:Ἡρώδης Φίλιππος,Hērōdēs Philippos) as a dynastic title, as did occur with his brothers Herod Antipas and Herod Archelaus.[5][4][p. 222-223]; [266][6][page needed][clarification needed] Neither Josephus nor the gospels (Matthew 14:3,Mark 6:17,Luke 3:1) preface Philip's name by the dynastic name "Herod".

This conventional naming ultimately derives from references to the first husband ofHerodias (whom she later divorced to marry his brother,Herod Antipas). While Josephus calls him "Herod", the gospels ofMatthew andMark call him "Philip".[7][8] Some authors combined the names "Herod" and "Philip" to form the conventional name "Herod Philip (I)". While this was intended to distinguish him from Philip the Tetrarch, the latter subsequently was also called "Herod Philip (II)", with numerals again distinguishing the two.[9][4] Kokkinos calls the convention a "stubborn insistence" and "without any value".[4][p. 222-223]; [266]

Years of reign

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There are various problems in determining the beginning and ending years of the reign of Philip. The first problem is whether he reigned 32, 36, or 37 years, all of which variants appear in different copies of the relevant passage inJosephus (Antiquities 18.106/18.4.6).[10] This issue has now been settled by the coins that Philip issued during his reign. The dated coins are from his years 5, 12, 16, 19, 30, 34, and 37, thus determining that 37 was the original figure in Josephus.[11]

The second problem is matching Philip's 37th and last year with the reign of Tiberius, so that an absolute date (AD/CE) can be assigned. Here again there are variants in the passage just cited in Josephus (Ant. 18.106): Some texts of Josephus say Philip's death was in the twentieth year of Tiberius, as appears in modern versions, or in Tiberius’s twenty-second year, "as given in the many Latin manuscripts issued before AD 1455. Adding to the ambiguity is whether Josephus was using 'factual' years for the reign of Tiberius (dating his years from the exact date he was declared emperor by the Senate) or by calendar years starting on January 1".[12] Steinmann and Young conclude (p. 451) that Josephus used the factual method for Roman emperors, as is suggested by his giving their reign lengths in the exact terms of years, months, and days rather than just years as he does for Judean rulers.

Philip issued a coin that gives to which he assigns year 19 of reign. This coin honors Tiberius as the new emperor after Tiberius took the throne of Rome on the death of Augustus in August of 14 CE. Philip’s coin commemorating Tiberius's emperorship could only have been issued after the news of the death of Augustus reached Judea, which would have been after the start of the Judean regnal year that began in Tishri of 14 CE. Since this places Philip's coin of year 19 as the year beginning in Tishri of 14 CE, his year 37, in which he died, would have eighteen years later, in the Judean regnal year that began in Tishri of 32 CE. This rules out the variants of Josephus that have Philip dying in the 22nd year of Tiberius, which would have begun by factual reckoning in August of 35 (21 years later than August 14 CE), but it is consistent with the twentieth factual year, which began in August of 33. The overlap of these two counting systems, the Judean with Tishri-based years and the Roman with years from the start of emperorship, thereby narrows the death of Philip to the period from September 18 to October 14 of 33 CE.[13]

In order to ensure accuracy, the foregoing discussion used, for Judean rulers such as Philip, the Judean method of starting the regnal year in the lunar month of Tishri. The first day of Tishri occurs in either September or October of the Roman-based calendar that we use to this day. That Judeans in the first century BCE and the first century CE used a Tishri-based calendar for governmental affairs, which would include the reigns of Judean kings and tetrarchs, is made explicit by Josephus inAntiquities 1.81/1.3.3:

After relating that Moses instituted Nisan as the first month for festivals and "everything related to divine worship“, he [Josephus] continues: ... "concerning, however, buying (praseis) and selling (onas) and the other financial administration [or tax administration] (dioikasin) he [Moses] preserved the earlier arrangement". The lexicons give the meaning ofdioikasin as "administration, management“, or "control, government, administration, treasury department". There is no meaning of "ordinary affairs" as rendered by Whiston and later Thackeray. By using the worddioikasis, Josephus clearly meant that the affairs of government (administration) were according to a Tishri-based calendar, and it is unfortunate that Thackeray apparently followed Whiston in rendering this Greek word in English. Josephus was stating that all activities other than those related to divinely mandated religious observances would be reckoned by a fall calendar that started with the first day of Tishri.[12]

Since the evidence of the coins is that Philip reigned 37 years, and his final year began in Tishri of 32 CE, he must have reckoned the start of his reign, 37 years earlier, in the year that began in Tishri of 5 BCE. This is the yearHerod the Great died in the old Schürer chronology, 4 BC,[14] It contradicts the newer chronology of Filmer,[15] Finegan,[16] and Steinmann[17] that dates Herod's death to the spring of 1 BCE. The conclusion must be that Philip counted the year his father died in as the first year of his own reign.

Family tree of the Herodian dynasty

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Main article:Herodian dynasty

There are three princes by the name Phasael in the Herodian dynasty, all three mentioned by Josephus in "War" (BJ) and "Antiquities" (AJ):[18]

  • Phasael I, son of Antipater and Cypros (BJ 1.181; AJ 14.121)[18]
  • Phasael II, son of Phasael I (BJ 1.266; AJ 17.196)[18]
  • Phasael III, son of Herod the Great (BJ 1.181; AJ 14.121)[18] and father ofCypros/Kypros, wife ofAgrippa I[19]


Antipater the Idumaean
procurator of Judea
1.Doris
2.Mariamne I
3.Mariamne II
4.Malthace
Herod I the Great
king of Judea
5.Cleopatra of Jerusalem
6.Pallas
7.Phaidra
8.Elpis
Phasael
governor of Jerusalem
(1)Antipater
co-regent of Judaea
(2)Alexander I(2)Aristobulus IV(3)Herod II
(Herod Philip)
(4)Herod Archelaus
ethnarch of Judea, Idumea
(4)Herod Antipas
tetrarch of Galilea & Perea
(5)Philip the Tetrarch
of Iturea & Trachonitis
Tigranes V of ArmeniaAlexander IIHerod Agrippa I
king of Judea
Herod V
ruler of Chalcis
Aristobulus Minor
Tigranes VI of ArmeniaHerod Agrippa II
king of Judea
Aristobulus
ruler of Chalcis
Gaius Julius Alexander
ruler of Cilicia
Gaius Julius Agrippa
quaestor of Asia
Gaius Julius Alexander Berenicianus
proconsul of Asia
Lucius Julius Gainius Fabius Agrippa
gymnasiarch

See also

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References

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  1. ^Luke 3:1
  2. ^"Flavius Josephus,Anitquities XVII., 8 : 1".
  3. ^"Flavius Josephus,Anitquities XVII., 11 : 4".
  4. ^abcdKokkinos (1998).
  5. ^Bowman & al., eds. (2001 [1996])
  6. ^Bury & al., eds. (1965 or before)
  7. ^Matthew 14:3
  8. ^Mark 6:17
  9. ^Note: It is an example of the great difficulty in establishing the relationships of various holders of the same name in the same area or family - especially in the Herodian dynasty.
  10. ^Jack Finegan,Handbook of Biblical Chronology, rev. ed. (Peabody, MA: Hendrickson, 1968), 301. Also Andrew Steinmann, "When Did Herod the Great Reign“,Novum Testamentum 51 (2009) 23-24.
  11. ^Andrew E. Steinmann and Rodger C. Young,"Dating the Death of Herod and the Reigns of His Sons“,Bibliotheca Sacra 178 (Oct.-Dec. 2021): 450. Retrieved 2024-12-09.
  12. ^abSteinmann and Young (2021, p. 450) harvtxt error: no target: CITEREFSteinmann_and_Young2021 (help)
  13. ^Steinmann and Young (2021, p. 451) harvtxt error: no target: CITEREFSteinmann_and_Young2021 (help)
  14. ^Emil Schürer,A History of the Jewish People in the Time of Jesus Christ,’’ 5 vols., trans. John Macpherson (reprint: Peabody, MA: Hendrickson, 2009), 1.465. On the same page, Schürer cites theMishnah, a source much later than Josephus, which says that the regnal year for kings began on Nisan 1, a statement that not only contradicts the citation in Josephus, but also the meticulous works of Thiele and Coucke that showed that Judah always used a Tishri-based year in reckoning the reigns of its kings. Edwin R. Thiele,The Mysterious Numbers of the Hebrew Kings,’’ rev. ed. (Grand Rapids: Kregel, 1983), 51–53. Valerius Coucke, "Chronologie biblique“, inSupplément au Dictionnaire de la Bible, vol. 1, ed. Louis Pirot (Paris: Libraire Letouzey et Ané, 1928), cols. 1264–65.
  15. ^Filmer, W. E. (1966). "The Chronology of the Reign of Herod the Great".Journal of Theological Studies.17 (2): 283–298 [293].doi:10.1093/jts/XVII.2.283.
  16. ^Finegan (1998, pp. 299–300) harvtxt error: no target: CITEREFFinegan1998 (help).
  17. ^Andrew E. Steinmann,From Abraham to Paul: A Biblical Chronology, 2nd edition (St. Louis: Concordia, 2024), 196–200.
  18. ^abcdNorris, Jérôme (26 April 2017)."A woman's Hismaic inscription from the Wādī Ramm desert: AMJ 2/J.14202 (Amman Museum)".Arabian Archaeology and Epigraphy.28 (1):90–109.doi:10.1111/aae.12086. Retrieved24 April 2024.
  19. ^"Phasaelus".The Zondervan Pictorial Encyclopedia of the Bible. 26 April 2017. pp. 90–109. Retrieved24 April 2024 – via BibleGateway.com.

Bibliography

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External links

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Philip the Tetrarch
 Died: 34 AD
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4 BC – 34 AD
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