- Herodias
Herodias (c. 15 BC-after 39 AD) was a
Jew ish princess of theHerodian Dynasty .Relationships
*Daughter of
Aristobulus IV (one of the two sons ofHerod the Great and the Hasmonean princess Mariamne I)
*Daughter of Berenice (a daughter ofHerod 's sisterSalome I , and ofCostabarus , governor ofIdumea )
*Full sister to Herod III (king of Chalkis), Herod Agrippa (king of Judea),Aristobulus V , andMariamne III (possibly the first wife of her uncle,Herod Archelaus , ethnarch ofJudea ).Marriages
Herod II
Around the year AD 1 or 2, she married her uncle,
Herod II , also called "Herod Boethus", son ofHerod the Great and Mariamne II, daughter of the high priest Simon Boethus. Although seen for a while as the successor ofHerod the Great , he fell from grace after his mother's implication in a plot to kill the king. After his marriage with Herodias, he and his wife lived as upper-class private citizens in or near a harbor city, possiblyAzotus ,Ascalon orCaesarea Maritima . With him, Herodias had a daughter (born circa 14), whom she namedSalome after Herodias's maternal grandmother.Herod Antipas
However, around 23, she divorced her husband and married another uncle,
Herod Antipas , tetrarch ofGalilee andPeraea . Although Herod Antipas and Herodias may really have loved each other, political considerations were probably of more importance to them in this marriage - Herodias' Hasmonean descent was a very good asset for Antipas' ambitions to the royal crown and gave a sort of legitimacy to his claim; for Herodias, her marriage with Antipas improved her social status very significantly and she was close to being a queen, a position she might have dreamed of since her betrothal to her first husband, the former sole legatee of Herod the Great. However this union was not well received by Antipas' subjects and offended the religious sensibilities of manyJews . Indeed, Antipas' and Herodias' union was considered a violation of Jewish Law of marriage and was openly criticized byJohn the Baptist . This may have enraged the Hellenistically educated Herodian couple who probably wanted to pose for observant Jews over the population. In the Jewish law of the time, her sin was in marrying her living ex-husband's brother, and not her uncle (marriage to an uncle was only later outlawed).In 37, Herodias' brother
Herod Agrippa was made king over the territories ofBatanaea andTrachonitis and the tetrarchy of the lateLysanias . This roused Herodias' jealousy and she prodded Antipas to sail forRome and ask the title of king from the emperor GaiusCaligula . They embarked forItaly in late 39. However, they were outsmarted by Agrippa, who had sent letters to Caligula denouncing Antipas' alliance withParthia and other of his misdeeds. When Caligula deposed Antipas and sentenced him to exile in what is nowLyon (Gaul ), he offered Herodias the possibility to return in Judea and live at the court of her brother. But she proudly refused and accompanied her husband in his banishment. They probably died in their exile, shortly afterwards.In the Gospels
In the Gospels of Mark and Matthew, Herodias plays a major role in
John the Baptist 's execution, using her daughter's dance before Antipas and his party guests to ask for the head of the Baptist as a reward. Antipas did not want to put John the Baptist to death, for Antipas liked to listen to John the Baptist preach (Mark 6:20). Furthermore, Antipas probably feared by putting John the Baptist to death that his followers would riot.Modern Speculation of Herodias in the Gospels
The historicity of the retelling of the Gospel's account of the execution of John the Baptist has seriously been put to question by biblical scholars [Meier, "A Marginal Jew: Rethinking the Historical Jesus", Volume Two: "Mentor, Message and Miracles". Anchor Bible Reference Library, New York: Doubleday, 1994, pp. 171-176.] . According to the ancient historian
Josephus , John the Baptist was put to death by Antipas for political reasons, for Antipas feared the prophet's seditious influence. Some exegetes believe that Antipas' and Herodias' struggle with John the Baptist as told in the Gospels was some kind of a remembrance of the political and religious fight opposing the Israeli monarchsAchab and Jezebel to the prophetElijah .In medieval literature
In medieval
Europe a widespread belief held Herodias to be the supernatural leader of a supposed cult of witches, synonymous with Diana,Holda andAbundia . [cite book |last=Ginzburg |first=Carlo |authorlink=Carlo Ginzburg |year=1990 |title=Ecstasies: Deciphering the witches' sabbath |publisher=Hutchinson Radius |location=London |id=ISBN 0-09-174024-X] SeeCult of Herodias .References
Further reading
* Gillman, Florence Morgan. "Herodias: At Home in the Fox's Den". Interfaces. Collegeville, Minn.: Liturgical Press, 2003.
* Meier, John P. , Volume Two: "Mentor, Message and Miracles". Anchor Bible Reference Library, New York: Doubleday, 1994.
* Theissen, Gerd. "The Shadow of the Galilean: The Quest of the Historical Jesus in Narrative Form". Philadelphia: Fortress, 1987.Herodias in fiction
*"
Hérodiade ", opera byJules Massenet .
*"Hérodias", story byGustave Flaubert , one of the "Three Tales" ("Trois contes"), published in 1877.
*"Salomé ", play byOscar Wilde , French (1894), translated into English byLord Alfred Douglas , 1895.
*"Salome ", opera byRichard Strauss , based on a German translation (by Hedwig Lachmann, grandmother ofMike Nichols ) of the play byOscar Wilde .
*Herodias is the name of an outcast devil in the "Dungeons & Dragons "roleplaying game .
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