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  1. Matthew 2:22-23. New Life Version. 22 Joseph heard that Archelaus was the king of the country of Judea. Herod, the father of Archelaus, had died. Joseph was afraid to go there. God told him in a dream to go to the country of Galilee and he went. 23 Joseph stayed in a town called Nazareth. It happened as the early preachers said it would happen.

  2. Nov 2, 2023 · Salome danced for Herod Antipas and, at Herodias’s direction, requested the beheading of John the Baptist. Later she married her great-uncle Philip the Tetrarch. Herod Antipas, Tetrarch of Galilee &: Perea (r. 4 B.C.E.–39 C.E.), was Herodias’s uncle and second husband. After Salome’s dance and his rash promise, he executed John the Baptist.

  3. academia-lab.com › encyclopedia › herod-archelausHerod Archelaus _ AcademiaLab

    In the Gospel of Matthew 2:13-23, Archelaus is mentioned when referring to the return of Joseph from Nazareth, Mary and the child Jesus from Egypt. According to Matthew, Joseph and Mary had fled to Egypt with the child Jesus, thus preventing him from being the victim of the slaughter of the innocents. When Herod the Great died, Joseph was ...

  4. Dec 22, 2022 · Herod was succeeded by his sons, Herod Archelaus (briefly appointed ruler of Judaea, Samaria, and Idumaea by the Romans) and the longer-reigning Herod Antipas, ruler of Galilee.

  5. Jun 6, 2016 · Herodian Empire after Herod the Great – A Land Divided. The Herodian Empire after Herod the Great included Archaelaus, Antipas, and Philip. Archaelaus received Judaea, which also included the regions of Idumea to the south and Samaria to the north. Archaelaus was called an “ethnarch,” or ruler of a people.

  6. Pilate definition: Resembling hair ; minutely clavate . Dictionary Thesaurus ... Archelaus, Herod's successor, had far less authority than Herod, ...

  7. By contrast, the coins of Herod’s Judaea and Archelaus’ Cappadocia drew their motifs almost exclusively from Greek themes (Herod’s coins: Jacobson 1986; Meshorer 1982, 5–30; Archelaus’ coins: Sydenham 1978, 27–30; Simonetta 1977, 46). the client kings as traditional hellenistic monarchs The client kings of Rome felt duty-bound to ...

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