<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0023" id="link2HCH0023"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER 23. </h2>
<p>Calumnies Against The Sons Of Mariamne. Antipateris<br/>
Preferred Before Them. They Are Accused Before Caesar, And<br/>
Herod Is Reconciled To Them.<br/></p>
<p>1. Now Mariamne's sons were heirs to that hatred which had been borne
their mother; and when they considered the greatness of Herod's crime
towards her, they were suspicious of him as of an enemy of theirs; and
this first while they were educated at Rome, but still more when they were
returned to Judea. This temper of theirs increased upon them as they grew
up to be men; and when they were Come to an age fit for marriage, the one
of them married their aunt Salome's daughter, which Salome had been the
accuser of their mother; the other married the daughter of Archelaus, king
of Cappadocia. And now they used boldness in speaking, as well as bore
hatred in their minds. Now those that calumniated them took a handle from
such their boldness, and certain of them spake now more plainly to the
king that there were treacherous designs laid against him by both his
sons; and he that was son-in-law to Archelaus, relying upon his
father-in-law, was preparing to fly away, in order to accuse Herod before
Caesar; and when Herod's head had been long enough filled with these
calumnies, he brought Antipater, whom he had by Doris, into favor again,
as a defense to him against his other sons, and began all the ways he
possibly could to prefer him before them.</p>
<p>2. But these sons were not able to bear this change in their affairs; but
when they saw him that was born of a mother of no family, the nobility of
their birth made them unable to contain their indignation; but whensoever
they were uneasy, they showed the anger they had at it. And as these sons
did day after day improve in that their anger, Antipater already exercised
all his own abilities, which were very great, in flattering his father,
and in contriving many sorts of calumnies against his brethren, while he
told some stories of them himself, and put it upon other proper persons to
raise other stories against them, till at length he entirely cut his
brethren off from all hopes of succeeding to the kingdom; for he was
already publicly put into his father's will as his successor. Accordingly,
he was sent with royal ornaments, and other marks of royalty, to Caesar,
excepting the diadem. He was also able in time to introduce his mother
again into Mariamne's bed. The two sorts of weapons he made use of against
his brethren were flattery and calumny, whereby he brought matters
privately to such a pass, that the king had thoughts of putting his sons
to death.</p>
<p>3. So the father drew Alexander as far as Rome, and charged him with an
attempt of poisoning him before Caesar. Alexander could hardly speak for
lamentation; but having a judge that was more skillful than Antipater, and
more wise than Herod, he modestly avoided laying any imputation upon his
father, but with great strength of reason confuted the calumnies laid
against him; and when he had demonstrated the innocency of his brother,
who was in the like danger with himself, he at last bewailed the
craftiness of Antipater, and the disgrace they were under. He was enabled
also to justify himself, not only by a clear conscience, which he carried
within him, but by his eloquence; for he was a shrewd man in making
speeches. And upon his saying at last, that if his father objected this
crime to them, it was in his power to put them to death, he made all the
audience weep; and he brought Caesar to that pass, as to reject the
accusations, and to reconcile their father to them immediately. But the
conditions of this reconciliation were these, that they should in all
things be obedient to their father, and that he should have power to leave
the kingdom to which of them he pleased.</p>
<p>4. After this the king came back from Rome, and seemed to have forgiven
his sons upon these accusations; but still so that he was not without his
suspicions of them. They were followed by Antipater, who was the
fountain-head of those accusations; yet did not he openly discover his
hatred to them, as revering him that had reconciled them. But as Herod
sailed by Cilicia, he touched at Eleusa, <SPAN href="#linknote-38"
name="linknoteref-38" id="linknoteref-38">38</SPAN> where Archelaus treated
them in the most obliging manner, and gave him thanks for the deliverance
of his son-in-law, and was much pleased at their reconciliation; and this
the more, because he had formerly written to his friends at Rome that they
should be assisting to Alexander at his trial. So he conducted Herod as
far as Zephyrium, and made him presents to the value of thirty talents.</p>
<p>5. Now when Herod was come to Jerusalem, he gathered the people together,
and presented to them his three sons, and gave them an apologetic account
of his absence, and thanked God greatly, and thanked Caesar greatly also,
for settling his house when it was under disturbances, and had procured
concord among his sons, which was of greater consequence than the kingdom
itself,—"and which I will render still more firm; for Caesar hath
put into my power to dispose of the government, and to appoint my
successor. Accordingly, in way of requital for his kindness, and in order
to provide for mine own advantage, I do declare that these three sons of
mine shall be kings. And, in the first place, I pray for the approbation
of God to what I am about; and, in the next place, I desire your
approbation also. The age of one of them, and the nobility of the other
two, shall procure them the succession. Nay, indeed, my kingdom is so
large that it may be sufficient for more kings. Now do you keep those in
their places whom Caesar hath joined, and their father hath appointed; and
do not you pay undue or unequal respects to them, but to every one
according to the prerogative of their births; for he that pays such
respects unduly, will thereby not make him that is honored beyond what his
age requires so joyful, as he will make him that is dishonored sorrowful.
As for the kindred and friends that are to converse with them, I will
appoint them to each of them, and will so constitute them, that they may
be securities for their concord; as well knowing that the ill tempers of
those with whom they converse will produce quarrels and contentions among
them; but that if these with whom they converse be of good tempers, they
will preserve their natural affections for one another. But still I desire
that not these only, but all the captains of my army, have for the present
their hopes placed on me alone; for I do not give away my kingdom to these
my sons, but give them royal honors only; whereby it will come to pass
that they will enjoy the sweet parts of government as rulers themselves,
but that the burden of administration will rest upon myself whether I will
or not. And let every one consider what age I am of, how I have conducted
my life, and what piety I have exercised; for my age is not so great that
men may soon expect the end of my life; nor have I indulged such a
luxurious way of living as cuts men off when they are young; and we have
been so religious towards God, that we [have reason to hope we] may arrive
at a very great age. But for such as cultivate a friendship with my sons,
so as to aim at my destruction, they shall be punished by me on their
account. I am not one who envy my own children, and therefore forbid men
to pay them great respect; but I know that such [extravagant] respects are
the way to make them insolent. And if every one that comes near them does
but revolve this in his mind, that if he prove a good man, he shall
receive a reward from me, but that if he prove seditious, his ill-intended
complaisance shall get him nothing from him to whom it is shown, I suppose
they will all be of my side, that is, of my sons' side; for it will be for
their advantage that I reign, and that I be at concord with them. But do
you, O my good children, reflect upon the holiness of nature itself, by
whose means natural affection is preserved, even among wild beasts; in the
next place, reflect upon Caesar, who hath made this reconciliation among
us; and in the third place, reflect upon me, who entreat you to do what I
have power to command you,—continue brethren. I give you royal
garments, and royal honors; and I pray to God to preserve what I have
determined, in case you be at concord one with another." When the king had
thus spoken, and had saluted every one of his sons after an obliging
manner, he dismissed the multitude; some of which gave their assent to
what he had said, and wished it might take effect accordingly; but for
those who wished for a change of affairs, they pretended they did not so
much as hear what he said.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0024" id="link2HCH0024"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER 24. </h2>
<p>The Malice Of Antipater And Doris. Alexander Is Very Uneasy<br/>
On Glaphyras Account. Herod Pardons Pheroras, Whom He<br/>
Suspected, And Salome Whom He Knew To Make Mischief Among<br/>
Them. Herod's Eunuchs Are Tortured And Alexander Is Bound.<br/></p>
<p>1. But now the quarrel that was between them still accompanied these
brethren when they parted, and the suspicions they had one of the other
grew worse. Alexander and Aristobulus were much grieved that the privilege
of the first-born was confirmed to Antipater; as was Antipater very angry
at his brethren that they were to succeed him. But then this last being of
a disposition that was mutable and politic, he knew how to hold his
tongue, and used a great deal of cunning, and thereby concealed the hatred
he bore to them; while the former, depending on the nobility of their
births, had every thing upon their tongues which was in their minds. Many
also there were who provoked them further, and many of their [seeming]
friends insinuated themselves into their acquaintance, to spy out what
they did. Now every thing that was said by Alexander was presently brought
to Antipater, and from Antipater it was brought to Herod with additions.
Nor could the young man say any thing in the simplicity of his heart,
without giving offense, but what he said was still turned to calumny
against him. And if he had been at any time a little free in his
conversation, great imputations were forged from the smallest occasions.
Antipater also was perpetually setting some to provoke him to speak, that
the lies he raised of him might seem to have some foundation of truth; and
if, among the many stories that were given out, but one of them could be
proved true, that was supposed to imply the rest to be true also. And as
to Antipater's friends, they were all either naturally so cautious in
speaking, or had been so far bribed to conceal their thoughts, that
nothing of these grand secrets got abroad by their means. Nor should one
be mistaken if he called the life of Antipater a mystery of wickedness;
for he either corrupted Alexander's acquaintance with money, or got into
their favor by flatteries; by which two means he gained all his designs,
and brought them to betray their master, and to steal away, and reveal
what he either did or said. Thus did he act a part very cunningly in all
points, and wrought himself a passage by his calumnies with the greatest
shrewdness; while he put on a face as if he were a kind brother to
Alexander and Aristobulus, but suborned other men to inform of what they
did to Herod. And when any thing was told against Alexander, he would come
in, and pretend [to be of his side], and would begin to contradict what
was said; but would afterward contrive matters so privately, that the king
should have an indignation at him. His general aim was this,—to lay
a plot, and to make it believed that Alexander lay in wait to kill his
father; for nothing afforded so great a confirmation to these calumnies as
did Antipater's apologies for him.</p>
<p>2. By these methods Herod was inflamed, and as much as his natural
affection to the young men did every day diminish, so much did it increase
towards Antipater. The courtiers also inclined to the same conduct, some
of their own accord, and others by the king's injunction, as particularly
did Ptolemy, the king's dearest friend, as also the king's brethren, and
all his children; for Antipater was all in all; and what was the bitterest
part of all to Alexander, Antipater's mother was also all in all; she was
one that gave counsel against them, and was more harsh than a step-mother,
and one that hated the queen's sons more than is usual to hate
sons-in-law. All men did therefore already pay their respects to
Antipater, in hopes of advantage; and it was the king's command which
alienated every body [from the brethren], he having given this charge to
his most intimate friends, that they should not come near, nor pay any
regard, to Alexander, or to his friends. Herod was also become terrible,
not only to his domestics about the court, but to his friends abroad; for
Caesar had given such a privilege to no other king as he had given to him,
which was this,—that he might fetch back any one that fled from him,
even out of a city that was not under his own jurisdiction. Now the young
men were not acquainted with the calumnies raised against them; for which
reason they could not guard themselves against them, but fell under them;
for their father did not make any public complaints against either of
them; though in a little time they perceived how things were by his
coldness to them, and by the great uneasiness he showed upon any thing
that troubled him. Antipater had also made their uncle Pheroras to be
their enemy, as well as their aunt Salome, while he was always talking
with her, as with a wife, and irritating her against them. Moreover,
Alexander's wife, Glaphyra, augmented this hatred against them, by
deriving her nobility and genealogy [from great persons], and pretending
that she was a lady superior to all others in that kingdom, as being
derived by her father's side from Temenus, and by her mother's side from
Darius, the son of Hystaspes. She also frequently reproached Herod's
sister and wives with the ignobility of their descent; and that they were
every one chosen by him for their beauty, but not for their family. Now
those wives of his were not a few; it being of old permitted to the Jews
to marry many wives, <SPAN href="#linknote-39" name="linknoteref-39" id="linknoteref-39">39</SPAN> and this king delighting in many; all which
hated Alexander, on account of Glaphyra's boasting and reproaches.</p>
<p>3. Nay, Aristobulus had raised a quarrel between himself and Salome, who
was his mother-in-law, besides the anger he had conceived at Glaphyra's
reproaches; for he perpetually upbraided his wife with the meanness of her
family, and complained, that as he had married a woman of a low family, so
had his brother Alexander married one of royal blood. At this Salome's
daughter wept, and told it her with this addition, that Alexander
threatened the mothers of his other brethren, that when he should come to
the crown, he would make them weave with their maidens, and would make
those brothers of his country schoolmasters; and brake this jest upon
them, that they had been very carefully instructed, to fit them for such
an employment. Hereupon Salome could not contain her anger, but told all
to Herod; nor could her testimony be suspected, since it was against her
own son-in-law There was also another calumny that ran abroad and inflamed
the king's mind; for he heard that these sons of his were perpetually
speaking of their mother, and, among their lamentations for her, did not
abstain from cursing him; and that when he made presents of any of
Mariamne's garments to his later wives, these threatened that in a little
time, instead of royal garments, they would clothe theft in no better than
hair-cloth.</p>
<p>4. Now upon these accounts, though Herod was somewhat afraid of the young
men's high spirit, yet did he not despair of reducing them to a better
mind; but before he went to Rome, whither he was now going by sea, he
called them to him, and partly threatened them a little, as a king; but
for the main, he admonished them as a father, and exhorted them to love
their brethren, and told them that he would pardon their former offenses,
if they would amend for the time to come. But they refuted the calumnies
that had been raised of them, and said they were false, and alleged that
their actions were sufficient for their vindication; and said withal, that
he himself ought to shut his ears against such tales, and not be too easy
in believing them, for that there would never be wanting those that would
tell lies to their disadvantage, as long as any would give ear to them.</p>
<p>5. When they had thus soon pacified him, as being their father, they got
clear of the present fear they were in. Yet did they see occasion for
sorrow in some time afterward; for they knew that Salome, as well as their
uncle Pheroras, were their enemies; who were both of them heavy and severe
persons, and especially Pheroras, who was a partner with Herod in all the
affairs of the kingdom, excepting his diadem. He had also a hundred
talents of his own revenue, and enjoyed the advantage of all the land
beyond Jordan, which he had received as a gift from his brother, who had
asked of Caesar to make him a tetrarch, as he was made accordingly. Herod
had also given him a wife out of the royal family, who was no other than
his own wife's sister, and after her death had solemnly espoused to him
his own eldest daughter, with a dowry of three hundred talents; but
Pheroras refused to consummate this royal marriage, out of his affection
to a maidservant of his. Upon which account Herod was very angry, and gave
that daughter in marriage to a brother's son of his, [Joseph,] who was
slain afterward by the Parthians; but in some time he laid aside his anger
against Pheroras, and pardoned him, as one not able to overcome his
foolish passion for the maid-servant.</p>
<p>6. Nay, Pheroras had been accused long before, while the queen [Mariamne]
was alive, as if he were in a plot to poison Herod; and there came then so
great a number of informers, that Herod himself, though he was an
exceeding lover of his brethren, was brought to believe what was said, and
to be afraid of it also. And when he had brought many of those that were
under suspicion to the torture, he came at last to Pheroras's own friends;
none of which did openly confess the crime, but they owned that he had
made preparation to take her whom he loved, and run away to the Parthians.
Costobarus also, the husband of Salome, to whom the king had given her in
marriage, after her former husband had been put to death for adultery, was
instrumental in bringing about this contrivance and flight of his. Nor did
Salome escape all calumny upon herself; for her brother Pheroras accused
her that she had made an agreement to marry Silleus, the procurator of
Obodas, king of Arabia, who was at bitter enmity with Herod; but when she
was convicted of this, and of all that Pheroras had accused her of, she
obtained her pardon. The king also pardoned Pheroras himself the crimes he
had been accused of.</p>
<p>7. But the storm of the whole family was removed to Alexander, and all of
it rested upon his head. There were three eunuchs who were in the highest
esteem with the king, as was plain by the offices they were in about him;
for one of them was appointed to be his butler, another of them got his
supper ready for him, and the third put him into bed, and lay down by him.
Now Alexander had prevailed with these men, by large gifts, to let him use
them after an obscene manner; which, when it was told to the king, they
were tortured, and found guilty, and presently confessed the criminal
conversation he had with them. They also discovered the promises by which
they were induced so to do, and how they were deluded by Alexander, who
had told them that they ought not to fix their hopes upon Herod, an old
man, and one so shameless as to color his hair, unless they thought that
would make him young again; but that they ought to fix their attention to
him who was to be his successor in the kingdom, whether he would or not;
and who in no long time would avenge himself on his enemies, and make his
friends happy and blessed, and themselves in the first place; that the men
of power did already pay respects to Alexander privately, and that the
captains of the soldiery, and the officers, did secretly come to him.</p>
<p>8. These confessions did so terrify Herod, that he durst not immediately
publish them; but he sent spies abroad privately, by night and by day, who
should make a close inquiry after all that was done and said; and when any
were but suspected [of treason], he put them to death, insomuch that the
palace was full of horribly unjust proceedings; for every body forged
calumnies, as they were themselves in a state of enmity or hatred against
others; and many there were who abused the king's bloody passion to the
disadvantage of those with whom they had quarrels, and lies were easily
believed, and punishments were inflicted sooner than the calumnies were
forged. He who had just then been accusing another was accused himself,
and was led away to execution together with him whom he had convicted; for
the danger the king was in of his life made examinations be very short. He
also proceeded to such a degree of bitterness, that he could not look on
any of those that were not accused with a pleasant countenance, but was in
the most barbarous disposition towards his own friends. Accordingly, he
forbade a great many of them to come to court, and to those whom he had
not power to punish actually he spake harshly. But for Antipater, he
insulted Alexander, now he was under his misfortunes, and got a stout
company of his kindred together, and raised all sorts of calumny against
him; and for the king, he was brought to such a degree of terror by those
prodigious slanders and contrivances, that he fancied he saw Alexander
coming to him with a drawn sword in his hand. So he caused him to be
seized upon immediately, and bound, and fell to examining his friends by
torture, many of whom died [under the torture], but would discover
nothing, nor say any thing against their consciences; but some of them,
being forced to speak falsely by the pains they endured, said that
Alexander, and his brother Aristobulus, plotted against him, and waited
for an opportunity to kill him as he was hunting, and then fly away to
Rome. These accusations though they were of an incredible nature, and only
framed upon the great distress they were in, were readily believed by the
king, who thought it some comfort to him, after he had bound his son, that
it might appear he had not done it unjustly.</p>
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