Felix in Smiths Bible Dictionary
(happy), a Roman procurator of Judea appointed by the emperor
Claudius in A.D. 53. He ruled the province in a mean, cruel
and profligate manner. His period of office was full of
troubles and seditions. St. Paul was brought before Felix in
Caesarea. He was remanded to prison, and kept there two years
in hopes of extorting money from him. Ac 24:26,27 At the end
of that time Porcius Festus [FESTUS] was appointed to
supersede Felix, who, on his return to Rome, was accused by
the Jews in Caesarea, and would have suffered the penalty due
to his atrocities had not his brother Pallas prevailed with
the emperor Nero to spare him. This was probably about A.D.
60. The wife of Felix was Drusilla, daughter of Herod Agrippa
I., who was his third wife and whom he persuaded to leave her
husband and marry him.
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