Herod Antipas in Smiths Bible Dictionary
II. HEROD ANTIPAS was the son of Herod the Great by
Malthake, a Samaritan. He first married a daughter of
Aretas, "king of Arabia Petraea," but afterward Herodias,
the wife of his half-brother, Herod Philip. Aretas,
indignant at the insult offered to his daughter, found a
pretext for invading the territory of Herod, and defeated
him with great loss. This defeat, according to the famous
passage in Josephus, was attributed by many to the murder of
John the Baptist, which had been committed by Antipas
shortly before, under the influence of Herodias.
Mt 14:4 ff.; Mark 6:17 ff.; Luke 3:19
At a later time the ambition of Herodias proved the
cause of her husband's ruin. She urged him to go to Rome to
gain the title of king, cf. Mr 6:14 but he was opposed at
the court of Caligula by the emissaries of Agrippa, and
condemned to perpetual banishment at Lugdunum, A.D. 39.
Herodias voluntarily shared his punishment, and he died in
exile. Pilate took occasion from our Lord's residence in
Galilee to bend him for examination, Lu 23:6 ff., to Herod
Antipas, who came up to Jerusalem to celebrate the Passover.
The city of Tiberias, which Antipas founded and named in
honor of the emperor, was the most conspicuous monument of
his long reign.
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