73 BCE in Jericho
St. James was stabbed with a sword by King Herod Agrippa I in 44 AD at Jerusalem.
Saint James the Greater died by being stabbed with a sword by King Herod Agrippa I in the year 44 at Jerusalem.
Agrippa was the grandson of King Herod the Great, who had been king of Judea prior to 4 BCE. Agrippa was made king of all his grandfather's domains in 41 CE and ruled until the year 44. As king, he was careful to observe Jewish customs and performed a number of services for which he is recognised with gratitude by Jewish sources.
73 BCE in Jericho
King Herod the Great .
A:The simple answer would be that Herod the Great was king when Jesus was born, as the Gospels of Matthew and Luke both agree on this. However, the Gospel of Luke also says that Jesus was born during the census of Qurinius, governor of Syria. The problem here is that Herod died in 4 BCE, while Qurinius was appointed in 6 CE, ten year later, with instructions to conduct a census in Judea. This was the only census under Qurinius, and the first to be conducted by Rome in the Levant, but it also took place at a time when there was no longer a king in Judea. The explanation is, as John Shelby Spong (Born of a Woman: A Bishop Rethinks the Birth of Jesus) informs us, that the nativity stories do not contain any historical truth.
In the year 37 BCE.
On the death of Herod the Great in the year of our Lord's birth, his son Herod Antipas became tetrarch of Galilee, and reigned until A.D. 39, when he was banished by the Emperor Caligula. Galilee then came under the rule of Herod Agrippa I, who died in A.D. 44.
AnswerHerod the Great ruled as king in Jerusalem from 37 to 4 BCE.
There were several Herod's. The first was Herod the Great, who rebuilt the temple in Jerusalem and who ordered the slaughter of children in an attempt to destroy Jesus. (Mt 2:16; Lu 1:5) Obviously not a good person. Then there was Herod Archelaus and Herod Antipas, sons of Herod the Great, who were appointed over sections of their father's domain. (Mt 2:22) Antipas was a tetrarch, popularly referred to as "king," who ruled during Christ's three-and-a-half-year ministry and through the period up to Acts chapter 12. (Mr 6:14-17; Lu 3:1, 19, 20; 13:31, 32; 23:6-15; Ac 4:27; 13:1) After that, Herod Agrippa I, grandson of Herod the Great, was executed by God's angel after ruling for a short time. (Ac 12:1-6,18-23) His son, Herod Agrippa II, became ruler and reigned up to the time of the Jewish revolt against Rome.-Ac 23:35;25:13, 22-27; 26:1, 2, 19-32. Since these were politically involved, Christians who were politically neutral, were not popular among them, so generally they persecuted Christians. Also, the Romans were known for living immoral and deceitful lives. So, generally, "good"? No.
year 22 was known as the YEAR OF THE CONSULSHIP OF AGRIPPA AND GALBA
When did king Abdullah born