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The Jewish Historian Flavius Josephus: A Biographical Investigation

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was not familiar with Judaism, has misunderstood the legal status of the Sanhedrin since<br />

during his own lifetime Herod had unlawfully dismissed this [very] Sanhedrin all but<br />

completely when it came to capital matters. [182] What is correct here is the fact that, in<br />

truth, according to a great number of passages collected by Juster (pages 128 to 129), Herod<br />

and other kings passed a death sentence; but the legality of these sentences has never been<br />

questioned either. Among the many very well-known gravamina of the Jews against Herod (Ant.<br />

16.151; 17.304 ff.), the accusation that he had arrogated the right of the Sanhedrin to impose<br />

the death penalty is not to be found; it corresponds to this that <strong>Josephus</strong> (Ant. 17.209), in one<br />

of his own additions (cf. War 2.8), designates a conviction pronounced by Herod as “lawful”,<br />

and finally, in order to justify himself, Herod recounted in his commentarii that he had<br />

Hyrcanus put to death after he had presented the evidence of his guilt to the Sanhedrin. With<br />

respect to the accusation of “persecution” that had been raised against him (Ant. 15.174),<br />

Herod [himself] therefore considers it as a moral defence that he exhibited the evidence of<br />

guilt to the Sanhedrin (loc. cit. 173), 62 but thereupon pronounced the death sentence himself.<br />

He therefore did not deem it necessary to substantiate its legitimacy in law; he wishes only to<br />

defend its correctness as regards content against attacks, which he felt were unjustified. So<br />

there is no doubt that in Herod’s time the Sanhedrin was not [allowed] to decide upon capital<br />

matters judicially either. Of course, it does also lie within the nature of the matter that the<br />

Sanhedrin could not acquire its standing as a judiciary authority until the time after the<br />

downfall of the Herodians when “the constitution was reorganized into an aristocracy and the<br />

leadership of the people was entrusted to the priests” (Ant. 20.251).<br />

Admittedly, it is not impossible that the entire status of previous periods has been<br />

attached onto this; for example, one may not refer to the division of the land into five synedria<br />

as reported by <strong>Josephus</strong> (Ant. 14.91) as evidence for this; because instead of this, they are<br />

named σύνοδοι in the source (War 170) and taxation areas are intended. Nicolaus, however,<br />

probably reported in this very passage that when Gabinius appointed Hyrcanus as high priest<br />

he “entrusted the rest of the administration of the state to the best [people]” so that from then<br />

onwards there existed an “aristocratic [183] constitution”. <strong>The</strong>refore even if the name of the<br />

been merged into one inseparable whole.<br />

62 As a result, the frequently discussed question of whether the Sanhedrin or a family council of<br />

Herod is meant in this passage loses its real significance; their opinion had no judicial value.<br />

160

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