but for the purification of the body, when the soul had been already thoroughly cleansed by righteousness.
Now when all men[1] listened to his words with the greatest delight and flocked to him, Herod feared that the powerful influence which he exercised over men's minds—for they seemed ready for any action which he advised—might lead to some form of revolt. He therefore decided to put him to death before any revolution arose through him. To forestall events appeared far better policy than a belated repentance when plunged in the turmoil of an insurrection. And so, through Herod's suspicions, John was sent as a prisoner to Machærus, the fortress already mentioned, and there put to death. The Jews supposed that the destruction of Herod's army was the penalty expressly inflicted upon him by God to avenge John. . . .
The following extract supplies the name of "the daughter of
Herodias" who appears in Mark vi. 22 ff.
Now Herodias their sister married Herod, the son of
Herod the Great by Mariamne the daughter of Simon
the high priest. They had a daughter Salome, after
whose birth Herodias, in defiance of our country's laws,
married Herod, the Tetrarch of Galilee and half-brother
of her husband, during the lifetime of her husband, whom
she divorced. Her daughter Salome married Philip, the
Tetrarch of Trachonitis and son of Herod.—Ant. XVIII. 5. 1 f., 4 (109-119, 136 f.). (30) How Herod Agrippa became King and Herod the Tetrarch lost his Tetrarchy
The story of Herod Agrippa's rise to power is dramatic. Brought
up at Rome with Drusus, the son of Tiberius, he squandered his
money in extravagant living. Returning a penniless prodigal to
Palestine and on the verge of suicide, he was patronized by Herod
- ↑ Text uncertain; MSS "the rest."