Pilate in Smiths Bible Dictionary
(armed with a spear), Pontius. Pontius Pilate was the sixth
Roman procurator of Judea, and under him our Lord worked,
suffered and died, as we learn not only from Scripture, but
from Tacitus (Ann. xv. 44). was appointed A.D. 25-6, in the
twelfth year of Tiberius. His arbitrary administration
nearly drove the Jews to insurrection on two or three
occasions. One of his first acts was to remove the
headquarters of the army from Caesarea to Jerusalem. The
soldiers of course took with them their standards, bearing
the image of the emperor, into the holy city. No previous
governor had ventured on such an outrage. The people poured
down in crowds to Caesarea, where the procurator was then
residing, and besought him to remove the images. After five
days of discussion he gave the signal to some concealed
soldiers to surround the petitioners and put them to death
unless they ceased to trouble him; but this only
strengthened their determination, and they declared
themselves ready rather to submit to death than forego their
resistance to aa idolatrous innovation. Pilate then yielded,
and the standards were by his orders brought down to
Caesarea. His slaughter of certain Galileans, Lu 13:1 led to
some remarks from our Lord on the connection between sin and
calamity. It must have occurred at some feast at Jerusalem,
in the outer court of the temple. It was the custom for the
procurators to reside at Jerusalem during the great feasts,
to preserve order, and accordingly, at the time of our
Lord's last Passover, Pilate was occupying his official
residence in Herod's palace. The history of his condemnation
of our Lord is familiar to all. We learn from Josephus that
Pilate's anxiety to avoid giving offence to Caesar did not
save him from political disaster. The Samaritans were
unquiet and rebellious Pilate led his troops against them,
and defeated them enough. The Samaritans complained to
Vitellius, then president of Syria, and he sent Pilate to
Rome to answer their accusations before the emperor. When he
reached it he found Tiberius dead and Caius (Caligula) on
the throne A,D, 36. Eusebius adds that soon afterward
"wearied with misfortunes," he killed himself. As to the
scene of his death there are various traditions. One is that
he was banished to Vienna Allobrogum (Vienne on the Rhone),
where a singular monument--a pyramid on a quadrangular base,
52 feet high--is called Pontius Pilate"s tomb, An other is
that he sought to hide his sorrows on the mountain by the
lake of Lucerne, now called Mount Pilatus; and there) after
spending years in its recesses, in remorse and despair
rather than penitence, plunged into the dismal lake which
occupies its summit.
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