Pilate in the Bible Encyclopedia - ISBE
1. Name and Office:
The nomen Pontius indicates the stock from which Pilate was
descended. It was one of the most famous of Samnite names;
it was a Pontius who inflicted on a Roman army the disgrace
of the Caudine Forks. The name is often met with in Roman
history after the Samnites were conquered and absorbed.
Lucius Pontius Aquila was a friend of Cicero and one of the
assassins of Julius Caesar. The cognomen Pilatus indicates
the familia, or branch of the gens Pontius, to which Pilate
belonged. It has been derived from pileus, the cap worn by
freedmen; this is improbable, as Pilate was of equestrian
rank. It has also been derived from pilum, a spear. Probably
the name was one that had descended to Pilate from his
ancestors, and had long lost its meaning. The praenomen is
nowhere mentioned. Pilate was 5th procurator of Judea. The
province of Judea had formerly been the kingdom of
Archclaus, and was formed when he was deposed (6 AD)
Speaking roughly, it took in the southern half of Israel,
including Samaria. Being an imperial province (i.e. under
the direct control of the emperor), it was governed by a
procurator (see PROCURATOR; PROVINCE). The procurator was
the personal servant of the emperor, directly responsible to
him, and was primarily concerned with finance. But the
powers of procurators varied according to the appointment of
the emperor. Pilate was a procurator cum porestate, i.e. he
possessed civil, military, and criminal jurisdiction. The
procurator of Judea was in some way subordinate to the
legate of Syria, but the exact character of the
subordination is not known. As a rule a procurator must be
of equestrian rank and a man of certain military experience.
Under his rule, the Jews were allowed as much self-
government as was consistent with the maintenance of
imperial authority. The Sanhedrin was allowed to exercise
judicial functions, but if they desired to inflict the
penalty of death, the sentence had to be confirmed by the
procurator...
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