Few figures in history have had such a controversial reputation as King Herod I of Judaea. In the Christian tradition, Herod is the villain in the Christmas story. The Gospel of Matthew recounts ...
Known both as the Finger of Og and as Herod’s Pillar ... grandson of king Jeconiah, the penultimate king of Judah. The Second Temple began functioning circa 515 BCE and was known as ...
(page 1) In Biblical history, Herod “the Great,” Rome’s client king of Judaea (ruled 40 - 4 BCE) was an evil tyrant. There is no actual evidence for the atrocity he is most remembered for, the ...
Here is a historical example. Herod was the Roman-appointed King of Judea when a baby boy named Jesus was born to Mary and Joseph in a manger. This poor couple lived in a foreign land. The child ...
King Herod was partly of Jewish descent. The Romans allowed him to rule for them as Judea’s king instead of a Roman governor. For many people, Herod was not an acceptable ruler because he did ...
King Herod was perhaps the most evil of all ... He feared rivals to his rule of the Herodian Kingdom, which included the provinces of Judea, Samaria, Idumaea and Galilee, all allowed by the ...