Agrippa II

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For other with this name, see Agrippa (disambiguation).

Agrippa II (b. AD 27/28), son of Agrippa I, and like him originally named Marcus Julius Agrippa, was the seventh and last king of the family of Herod the Great, thus last of the Herodians. He was the brother of Berenice and Drusilla (second wife of the Roman procurator Antonius Felix). He is sometimes also called Herod Agrippa II.[1]

Life

Agrippa was educated at the court of the emperor Claudius, and at the time of his father's death was only seventeen years old. Claudius therefore kept him at Rome, and sent Cuspius Fadus as procurator of the kingdom, which thus again became a Roman province. While at Rome, he voiced his support for the Jews to Claudius, and against the Samaritans and the procurator of Iudaea Province, Ventidius Cumanus, who was lately thought to have been the cause of some disturbances there.[2] On the death of Herod of Chalcis (in 48), his small principality, with the right of superintending the Temple and appointing the high priest, was given to Agrippa. In 53, he was deprived of that kingdom by Claudius, who made him governor over the tetrarchy of Philip and Lysanias.[3] Agrippa celebrated by marrying off his two sisters Mariamne and Drusilla.

In 55, Nero added the cities of Tiberias and Taricheae in Galilee, and Julias, with fourteen villages near it, in Peraea. Agrippa expended large sums in beautifying Jerusalem and other cities, especially Berytus. His partiality for the latter rendered him unpopular amongst his own subjects, and the capricious manner in which he appointed and deposed the high priests made him an object of dislike to the Jews. Agrippa attempted in vain to dissuade his subjects from rebelling, and to tolerate the behavior of the Roman procurator Gessius Florus, but in 66 the Jews expelled him and Berenice from the city. During the First Jewish-Roman War of 66–73, he sent 2,000 men, archers and cavalry, to support Vespasian, by which it appears that, although a Jew in religion, he was yet entirely devoted to the Romans. He accompanied Titus on some campaigns, and was wounded at the siege of Gamala. After the capture of Jerusalem, he went with his sister Berenice to Rome, where he was invested with the dignity of praetor and rewarded with additional territory.

According to Photius, Agrippa died, childless, at the age of seventy, in the third year of the reign of Trajan, that is, 100,[4] but statements of Josephus in addition to the contemporary epigraphy from his kingdom cast this date into serious doubt. The modern scholarly consensus holds that he died before 93/94. He was the last prince of the house of the Herods.

Events in the Life of Paul according to "Acts of the Apostles"


It was before him and his sister Berenice that, according to the New Testament, Paul the Apostle pleaded his cause at Caesarea Maritima, in 59.[5]

He lived on terms of intimacy with the historian Josephus, having supplied him with information for his history, Antiquities of the Jews. Josephus preserved two of the letters he received from him.[6][7][8]


House of Herod
Preceded by:
Herod
Tetrarch of Chalcis
48 – 53
Vacant
Title next held by
Aristobulus


Notes

  1. Mason, Charles Peter (1867), "Agrippa, Herodes II", in Smith, William, Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology, vol. 1, Boston: Little, Brown and Company, at 78 
  2. Rajak, Tessa. "Iulius Agrippa (2) II, Marcus," from Hornblower, Simon, ed. Oxford Classical Dictionary, Oxford University Press 1996.
  3. Acts of the Apostles 25:13; 26:2, 7.
  4. Photius cod. 33.
  5. Acts of the Apostles 26.
  6. Josephus, Antiquitates Judaicae xvii. 5. § 4, xix. 9. §2, xx. 1. § 3,5. §2, 7. §1,8. §4&11,9. § 4.
  7. Josephus, The Wars of the Jews ii. 11. § 6, 12. § 1,16, 17. § 1, iv. 1. § 3.
  8. Vit. s. 54.

References
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  • This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.
  • This article incorporates text from the public domain Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology by William Smith (1870).
  • This entry incorporates text from the public domain Easton's Bible Dictionary, originally published in 1897.
  • Aharoni, Yohanan & Michael Avi-Yonah, The MacMillan Bible Atlas, Revised Edition, p. 156 (1968 & 1977 by Carta Ltd.).

External links

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