Agrippa, Herod

AGRIPPA, HEROD, I. (c. 10 B.C.-AD. 44), king of Judea, the son
of Aristobulus and Berenice, and grandson of Herod the Great, was born
about 10 B.C. His original name was Marcus Julius Agrippa. Josephus
informs us that, after the murder of his father, Herod the Great sent
him to Rome to the court of Tiberius, who conceived a great affection
for him, and placed him near his son Drusus, whose favor he very soon
won. On the death of Drusus, Agrippa, who had been recklessly
extravagant, was obliged to leave Rome, overwhelmed with debt. After a
brief seclusion, Herod the Tetrarch, his uncle, who had married
Herodias, his sister, made him Agoranomos (Overseer of Markets) of
Tiberias, and presented him with a large sum of money; but his uncle
being unwilling to continue his support, Agrippa left Judea for Antioch
and soon after returned to Rome, where he was welcomed by Tiberius and
became the constant companion of the emperor Gaius (Caligula), then a
popular favorite. Agrippa being one day overheard by Eutyches, a slave
whom he had made free, to express a wish for Tiberius’ death and the
advancement of Gaius, was betrayed to the emperor and cast into prison.
In A.D. 37 Caligula, having ascended the throne, heaped wealth and
favors upon Agrippa, set a royal diadem upon his head and gave him the
tetrarchy of Batanaea and Trachonitis, which Philip, the son of Herod
the Great, had formerly possessed. To this he added that held by
Lysanias; and Agrippa returned very soon into Judea to take possession
of his new kingdom. In A.D. 39 he returned to Rome and brought about
the banishment of Herod Antipas, to whose tetrarchy he succeeded. On
the assassination of Caligula (A.D. 41) Agrippa contributed much by his
advice to maintain Claudius in possession of the imperial dignity, while
he made a show of being in the interest of the senate. The emperor, in
acknowledgment, gave him the government of Judea, while the kingdom of
Chalcis in Lebanon was at his request given to his brother Herod. Thus
Agrippa became one of the greatest princes of the east, the territory he
possessed equaling in extent that held by Herod the Great. He returned
to Judea and governed it to the great satisfaction of the Jews. His
zeal, private and public, for Judaism is celebrated by Josephus and the
rabbis; and the narrative of Acts xii. gives a typical example of it.
About the feast of the Passover A.D. 44, James the elder, the son of
Zebedee and brother of John the evangelist, was seized by his order and
put to death. He proceeded also to lay hands on Peter and imprisoned
him. After the Passover he went to Caesarea, where he had games
performed in honor of Claudius, and the inhabitants of Tyre and Sidon
waited on him to sue for peace.. According to the story in Acts xii.,
Agrippa, gorgeously arrayed, received them in the theatre, and addressed
them from a throne, while the audience cried out that his was the voice
of a god. But “the angel of the Lord smote him,” and shortly afterwards
he died “eaten of worms.” The story in Acts differs slightly from that
in Josephus, who describes how in the midst of his elation he saw an owl
perched over his head. During his confinement by Tiberius a like omen
had been interpreted as portending his speedy release, with the warning
that should he behold the same sight again he would die within’ five
days. He was immediately smitten with violent pains, and after a few
days died. Josephus says nothing of his being “eaten of worms,” but the
discrepancies between the two stories are of slight moment. A third
account omits all the apocryphal elements in the story and says that
Agrippa was assassinated by the Romans, who objected to his growing
power.
See articles in Ency, Bibl. (W. J. Woodhouse), Jewish Ency. (M.
Brann), with further references; N. S. Libowitz, Herod and Agrippa (New
York, 2nd ed., 1898); Gratz, Geschchte d. Juden, iii.
318-361.
AGRIPPA, HEROD, II. (27-100), son of the preceding, and like him
originally Marcus Julius Agrippa, was born about A.D. 27, and received
the tetrarchy of Chalcis and the oversight of the Temple on the death of
his uncle Herod, A.D. 48. In A.D. 53 he was deprived of that kingdom by
Claudius, who gave him other provinces instead of it. In the war which
Vespasian carried on against the Jews Herod sent him 2000 men, by which
it appears that, though a Jew in religion, he was yet entirely devoted
to the Romans, whose assistance indeed he required to secure the peace
of his own kingdom. He died at Rome in the third year of . Trajan, A.D.
100. He was the seventh and last king of the family of Herod the Great.
It was before him and his sister Berenice (q.v., B.2) that St Paul
pleaded his cause at Caesarea (Acts xxvi.). He supplied Josephus with
information for his history.
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