THE WARS OF THE JEWS
OR
THE HISTORY OF THE DESTRUCTION OF JERUSALEM
Book I: Chapter 28
HOW ANTIPATER IS HATED OF ALL MEN; AND HOW THE KING
ESPOUSES THE SONS OF THOSE THAT HAD BEEN SLAIN TO HIS
KINDRED;BUT THAT ANTIPATER MADE HIM CHANGE THEM FOR
OTHER WOMEN. OF HEROD’S MARRIAGES, AND CHILDREN. 1.
BUT an intolerable hatred fell upon Antipater from the
nation, though he had now an indisputable title to the
succession, because they all knew that he was the
person who contrived all the calumnies against his
brethren. However, he began to be in a terrible fear,
as he saw the posterity of those that had been slain
growing up; for Alexander had two sons by Glaphyra,
Tigranes and Alexander; and Aristobulus had Herod, and
Agrippa, and Aristobulus, his sons, with Herodias and
Mariamne, his daughters, and all by Bernice, Salome’s
daughter. As for Glaphyra, Herod, as soon as he had
killed Alexander, sent her back, together with her
portion, to Cappadocia. He married Bernice,
Aristobulus’s daughter, to Antipater’s uncle by his
mother, and it was Antipater who, in order to
reconcile her to him, when she had been at variance
with him, contrived this match; he also got into
Pheroras’s favor, and into the favor of Caesar’s
friends, by presents, and other ways of
obsequiousness, and sent no small sums of money to
Rome; Saturninus also, and his friends in Syria, were
all well replenished with the presents he made them;
yet the more he gave, the more he was hated, as not
making these presents out of generosity, but spending
his money out of fear. Accordingly, it so fell out
that the receivers bore him no more good-will than
before, but that those to whom he gave nothing were
his more bitter enemies. However, he bestowed his
money every day more and more profusely, on observing
that, contrary to his expectations, the king was
taking care about the orphans, and discovering at the
same time his repentance for killing their fathers, by
his commiseration of those that sprang from them.
2. Accordingly, Herod got together his kindred and
friends, and set beforethem the children, and, with
his eyes full of tears, said thus to them: “It was an
unlucky fate that took away from me these children’s
fathers,
which children are recommended to me by that
natural commiseration which their orphan condition
requires; however, I will endeavor, though I have been
a most unfortunate father, to appear a better
grandfather, and to leave these children such curators
after myself as are dearest to me. I therefore betroth
thy daughter, Pheroras, to the elder of these
brethren, the children of Alexander, that thou mayst
be obliged to take care of them. I also betroth to thy
son, Antipater, the daughter of Aristobulus; be thou
therefore a father to that orphan; and my son Herod
[Philip] shall have her sister, whose grandfather, by
the mother’s side, was high priest. And let every one
that loves me be of my sentiments in these
dispositions, which none that hath an affection for me
will abrogate. And I pray God that he will join these
children together in marriage, to the advantage of my
kingdom, and of my posterity; and may he look down
with eyes more serene upon them than he looked upon
their fathers.”
3. While he spake these words he wept, and joined
the children’s fighthands together; after which he
embraced them every one after an affectionate manner,
and dismissed the assembly. Upon this, Antipater was
in great disorder immediately, and lamented publicly
at what was done; for he supposed that this dignity
which was conferred on these orphans was for his own
destruction, even in his father’s lifetime, and that
he should run another risk of losing the government,
if Alexander’s sons should have both Archelaus [a
king], and Pheroras a tetrarch, to support them. He
also considered how he was himself hated by the
nation, and how they pitied these orphans; how great
affection the Jews bare to those brethren of his when
they were alive, and how gladly they remembered them
now they had perished by his means. So he resolved by
all the ways possible to get these espousals
dissolved.
4. Now he was afraid of going subtlely about this
matter with his father,who was hard to be pleased, and
was presently moved upon the least suspicion: so he
ventured to go to him directly, and to beg of him
before his face not to deprive him of that dignity
which he had been pleased to bestow upon him; and that
he might not have the bare name of a king, while the
power was in other persons; for that he should never
be able to keep the government, if Alexander’s son was
to have both his grandfather Archelaus and Pheroras
for his curators; and he besought him earnestly, since
there were so many of the royal family alive, that he
would change
those [intended] marriages. Now the king had nine
wives, 42 and children by seven of them; Antipater was
himself born of Doris, and Herod Philip of Mariamne,
the high priest’s daughter; Antipas also and Archelaus
were by Malthace, the Samaritan, as was his daughter
Olympias, which hisbrother Joseph’s 43 son had
married. By Cleopatra of Jerusalem he had Herod and
Philip; and by Pallas, Phasaelus; he had also two
daughters, Roxana and Salome, the one by Phedra, and
the other by Elpis; he had also two wives that had no
children, the one his first cousin, and the other his
niece; and besides these he had two daughters, the
sisters of Alexander and Aristobulus, by Mariamne.
Since, therefore, the royal family was so numerous,
Antipater prayed him to change these intended
marriages.
5. When the king perceived what disposition he was
in towards theseorphans, he was angry at it, and a
suspicion came into his mind as to those sons whom he
had put to death, whether that had not been brought
about by the false tales of Antipater; so that at that
time he made Antipater a long and a peevish answer,
and bid him begone. Yet was he afterwards prevailed
upon cunningly by his flatteries, and changed the
marriages; he married Aristobulus’s daughter to him,
and his son to Pheroras’s daughter.
6. Now one may learn, in this instance, how very
much this flatteringAntipater could do, — even what
Salome in the like circumstances could not do; for
when she, who was his sister, and who, by the means of
Julia, Caesar’s wife, earnestly desired leave to be
married to Sylleus the Arabian, Herod swore he would
esteem her his bitter enemy, unless she would leave
off that project: he also caused her, against her own
consent, to be married to Alexas, a friend of his, and
that one of her daughters should be married to
Alexas’s son, and the other to Antipater’s uncle by
the mother’s side. And for the daughters the king had
by Mariamne, the one was married to Antipater, his
sister’s son, and the other to his brother’s son,
Phasaelus.
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