"The Wars of the Jews
or The History of the Destruction of Jerusalem"
by Flavius Josephus
"The Wars of the Jews
or The History of the Destruction of Jerusalem"
by Flavius Josephus
Book I, Chapter XXXII
ANTIPATER IS ACCUSED BEFORE VARUS, AND IS
CONVICTED OF LAYING A PLOT [AGAINST HIS FATHER] BY THE STRONGEST
EVIDENCE. HEROD PUTS OFF HIS PUNISHMENT TILL HE SHOULD BE
RECOVERED, AND IN THE MEAN TIME ALTERS HIS TESTAMENT.
1. Now the day following the king assembled a court of his
kinsmen and friends, and called in Antipater's friends also.
Herod himself, with Varus, were the presidents; and Herod called
for all the witnesses, and ordered them to be brought in; among
whom some of the domestic servants of Antipater's mother were
brought in also, who had but a little while before been caught,
as they were carrying the following letter from her to her son:
"Since all those things have been already discovered to thy
father, do not thou come to him, unless thou canst procure some
assistance from Caesar." When this and the other witnesses were
introduced, Antipater came in, and falling on his face before
his father's feet, he said, "Father, I beseech thee, do not
condemn me beforehand, but let thy ears be unbiassed, and attend
to my defense; for if thou wilt give me leave, I will
demonstrate that I am innocent."
2. Hereupon Herod cried out to him to hold his peace, and spake
thus to Varus: "I cannot but think that thou, Varus, and every
other upright judge, will determine that Antipater is a vile
wretch. I am also afraid that thou wilt abhor my ill fortune,
and judge me also myself worthy of all sorts of calamity for
begetting such children; while yet I ought rather to be pitied,
who have been so affectionate a father to such wretched sons;
for when I had settled the kingdom on my former sons, even when
they were young, and when, besides the charges of their
education at Rome, I had made them the friends of Caesar, and
made them envied by other kings, I found them plotting against
me. These have been put to death, and that, in great measure,
for the sake of Antipater; for as he was then young, and
appointed to be my successor, I took care chiefly to secure him
from danger: but this profligate wild beast, when he had been
over and above satiated with that patience which I showed him,
he made use of that abundance I had given him against myself;
for I seemed to him to live too long, and he was very uneasy at
the old age I was arrived at; nor could he stay any longer, but
would be a king by parricide. And justly I am served by him for
bringing him back out of the country to court, when he was of no
esteem before, and for thrusting out those sons of mine that
were born of the queen, and for making him a successor to my
dominions. I confess to thee, O Varus, the great folly I was
guilty for I provoked those sons of mine to act against me, and
cut off their just expectations for the sake of Antipater; and
indeed what kindness did I do them; that could equal what I have
done to Antipater? to I have, in a manner, yielded up my royal
while I am alive, and whom I have openly named for the successor
to my dominions in my testament, and given him a yearly revenue
of his own of fifty talents, and supplied him with money to an
extravagant degree out of my own revenue; and' when he was about
to sail to Rome, I gave him three talents, and recommended him,
and him alone of all my children, to Caesar, as his father's
deliverer. Now what crimes were those other sons of mine guilty
of like these of Antipater? and what evidence was there brought
against them so strong as there is to demonstrate this son to
have plotted against me? Yet does this parricide presume to
speak for himself, and hopes to obscure the truth by his cunning
tricks. Thou, O Varus, must guard thyself against him; for I
know the wild beast, and I foresee how plausibly he will talk,
and his counterfeit lamentation. This was he who exhorted me to
have a care of Alexander when he was alive, and not to intrust
my body with all men! This was he who came to my very bed, and
looked about lest any one should lay snares for me! This was he
who took care of my sleep, and secured me from fear of danger,
who comforted me under the trouble I was in upon the slaughter
of my sons, and looked to see what affection my surviving
brethren bore me! This was my protector, and the guardian of my
body! And when I call to mind, O Varus, his craftiness upon
every occasion, and his art of dissembling, I can hardly believe
that I am still alive, and I wonder how I have escaped such a
deep plotter of mischief. However, since some fate or other
makes my house desolate, and perpetually raises up those that
are dearest to me against me, I will, with tears, lament my hard
fortune, and privately groan under my lonesome condition; yet am
I resolved that no one who thirsts after my blood shall escape
punishment, although the evidence should extend itself to all my
sons."
3. Upon Herod's saying this, he was interrupted by the confusion
he was in; but ordered Nicolaus, one of his friends, to produce
the evidence against Antipater. But in the mean time Antipater
lifted up his head, (for he lay on the ground before his
father's feet,) and cried out aloud, "Thou, O father, hast made
my apology for me; for how can I be a parricide, whom thou
thyself confessest to have always had for thy guardian? Thou
callest my filial affection prodigious lies and hypocrisy! how
then could it be that I, who was so subtle in other matters,
should here be so mad as not to understand that it was not easy
that he who committed so horrid a crime should be concealed from
men, but impossible that he should be concealed from the Judge
of heaven, who sees all things, and is present every where? or
did not I know what end my brethren came to, on whom God
inflicted so great a punishment for their evil designs against
thee? And indeed what was there that could possibly provoke me
against thee? Could the hope of being king do it? I was a king
already. Could I suspect hatred from thee? No. Was not I beloved
by thee? And what other fear could I have? Nay, by preserving
thee safe, I was a terror to others. Did I want money? No; for
who was able to expend so much as myself? Indeed, father, had I
been the most execrable of all mankind, and had I had the soul
of the most cruel wild beast, must I not have been overcome with
the benefits thou hadst bestowed upon me? whom, as thou thyself
sayest, thou broughtest [into the palace]; whom thou didst
prefer before so many of thy sons; whom thou madest a king in
thine own lifetime, and, by the vast magnitude of the other
advantages thou bestowedst on me, thou madest me an object of
envy. O miserable man! that thou shouldst undergo this bitter
absence, and thereby afford a great opportunity for envy to
arise against thee, and a long space for such as were laying
designs against thee! Yet was I absent, father, on thy affairs,
that Sylleus might not treat thee with contempt in thine old
age. Rome is a witness to my filial affection, and so is Caesar,
the ruler of the habitable earth, who oftentimes called me
Philopater. Take here the letters he hath sent thee, they are
more to be believed than the calumnies raised here; these
letters are my only apology; these I use as the demonstration of
that natural affection I have to thee. Remember that it was
against my own choice that I sailed [to Rome], as knowing the
latent hatred that was in the kingdom against me. It was thou, O
father, however unwillingly, who hast been my ruin, by forcing
me to allow time for calumnies against me, and envy at me.
However, I am come hither, and am ready to hear the evidence
there is against me. If I be a parricide, I have passed by land
and by sea, without suffering any misfortune on either of them:
but this method of trial is no advantage to me; for it seems, O
father, that I am already condemned, both before God and before
thee; and as I am already condemned, I beg that thou wilt not
believe the others that have been tortured, but let fire be
brought to torment me; let the racks march through my bowels;
have no regard to any lamentations that this polluted body can
make; for if I be a parricide, I ought not to die without
torture." Thus did Antipater cry out with lamentation and
weeping, and moved all the rest, and Varus in particular, to
commiserate his case. Herod was the only person whose passion
was too strong to permit him to weep, as knowing that the
testimonies against him were true.
4. And now it was that, at the king's command, Nicolaus, when he
had premised a great deal about the craftiness of Antipater, and
had prevented the effects of their commiseration to him,
afterwards brought in a bitter and large accusation against him,
ascribing all the wickedness that had been in the kingdom to
him, and especially the murder of his brethren; and demonstrated
that they had perished by the calumnies he had raised against
them. He also said that he had laid designs against them that
were still alive, as if they were laying plots for the
succession; and (said he) how can it be supposed that he who
prepared poison for his father should abstain from mischief as
to his brethren? He then proceeded to convict him of the attempt
to poison Herod, and gave an account in order of the several
discoveries that had been made; and had great indignation as to
the affair of Pheroras, because Antipater had been for making
him murder his brother, and had corrupted those that were
dearest to the king, and filled the whole palace with
wickedness; and when he had insisted on many other accusations,
and the proofs for them, he left off.
5. Then Varus bid Antipater make his defense; but he lay along
in silence, and said no more but this, "God is my witness that I
am entirely innocent." So Varus asked for the potion, and gave
it to be drunk by a condemned malefactor, who was then in
prison, who died upon the spot. So Varus, when he had had a very
private discourse with Herod, and had written an account of this
assembly to Caesar, went away, after a day's stay. The king also
bound Antipater, and sent away to inform Caesar of his
misfortunes.
6. Now after this it was discovered that Antipater had laid a
plot against Salome also; for one of Antiphilus's domestic
servants came, and brought letters from Rome, from a
maid-servant of Julia, [Caesar's wife,] whose name was Acme. By
her a message was sent to the king, that she had found a letter
written by Salome, among Julia's papers, and had sent it to him
privately, out of her good-will to him. This letter of Salome
contained the most bitter reproaches of the king, and the
highest accusations against him. Antipater had forged this
letter, and had corrupted Acme, and persuaded her to send it to
Herod. This was proved by her letter to Antipater, for thus did
this woman write to him: "As thou desirest, I have written a
letter to thy father, and have sent that letter, and am
persuaded that the king will not spare his sister when he reads
it. Thou wilt do well to remember what thou hast promised when
all is accomplished."
7. When this epistle was discovered, and what the epistle forged
against Salome contained, a suspicion came into the king's mind,
that perhaps the letters against Alexander were also forged: he
was moreover greatly disturbed, and in a passion, because he had
almost slain his sister on Antipater's account. He did no longer
delay therefore to bring him to punishment for all his crimes;
yet when he was eagerly pursuing Antipater, he was restrained by
a severe distemper he fell into. However, he sent all account to
Caesar about Acme, and the contrivances against Salome; he sent
also for his testament, and altered it, and therein made Antipas
king, as taking no care of Archclaus and Philip, because
Antipater had blasted their reputations with him; but he
bequeathed to Caesar, besides other presents that he gave him, a
thousand talents; as also to his wife, and children, and
friends, and freed-men about five hundred: he also bequeathed to
all others a great quantity of land, and of money, and showed
his respects to Salome his sister, by giving her most splendid
gifts. And this was what was contained in his testament, as it
was now altered.
Proceed directly to
"The Wars of the Jews or
The History of the Destruction of Jerusalem", Book I, Chapter
XXXIII
Proceed to
"The Wars of the Jews or The
History of the Destruction of Jerusalem" - Table of Contents
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