Pilate in Easton's Bible Dictionary
probably connected with the Roman family of the Pontii, and
called "Pilate" from the Latin pileatus, i.e.,
"wearing the
pileus", which was the "cap or badge of a manumitted
slave," as
indicating that he was a "freedman," or the
descendant of one.
He was the sixth in the order of the Roman
procurators of Judea
(A.D. 26-36). His headquarters were at Caesarea, but
he
frequently went up to Jerusalem. His reign extended
over the
period of the ministry of John the Baptist and of
Jesus Christ,
in connection with whose trial his name comes into
prominent
notice. Pilate was a "typical Roman, not of the
antique, simple
stamp, but of the imperial period, a man not without
some
remains of the ancient Roman justice in his soul,
yet
pleasure-loving, imperious, and corrupt. He hated
the Jews whom
he ruled, and in times of irritation freely shed
their blood.
They returned his hatred with cordiality, and
accused him of
every crime, maladministration, cruelty, and
robbery. He visited
Jerusalem as seldom as possible; for, indeed, to one
accustomed
to the pleasures of Rome, with its theatres, baths,
games, and
gay society, Jerusalem, with its religiousness and
ever-smouldering revolt, was a dreary residence.
When he did
visit it he stayed in the palace of Herod the Great,
it being
common for the officers sent by Rome into conquered
countries to
occupy the palaces of the displaced sovereigns."...
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