Caesar Augustus, he wasn't the king but in fact the emperor.
Jesus was born during the rule of king Herod.and the roman empire.
Biblically, the "King" or ruler of this world is the devil. (1 John 5:19) It also is implied at Matthew 4:8-10, where the devil tempted Jesus by offering him "all the kingdoms of the world". Jesus never denied that the devil had control or the authority over these kingdoms.Caesar Augustus was the Roman Emperor at the time.
The Roman Empire ruled the part of the world that Jesus lived in, however it did not control (or even known about) large areas of the world.
No, He was always much more as God. He will come again as King of kings and Lord of lords.
During the time of Jesus, Nazareth was part of the Roman Empire, which was ruled by Emperor Caesar Augustus. Rome had conquered the region and appointed local rulers, such as King Herod the Great in Judea, to govern on their behalf.
no, he was born in 1788 and he died from lung cancer in 1890
They crucified him. They were told (by the Jews) that he was a leader of an anti-Roman rebellion. He was called "The King of Jews" - and in the Roman empire, kings were not allowed.
Israel did not have a king at that time (unless you count Jesus, whose crime displayed on His cross when He was executed was "Rex Iudaeorum", Latin for King of the Jews). The area had been taken over by the Roman Empire. It was governed by Pontius Pilate, who served as prefect of the Roman region of Judea from A.D. 26 until 36.
Augustus Caesar.AnswerThe question is unclear. Augustus Caesar was the ruler of the Roman Empire when Jesus was born. Tiberius Caesar was the ruler of the Roman Empire when Jesus died. Herod the Great, although not rightfully the Jewish king of Judea, was appointed as such by Augustus Caesar and served in this capacity when Jesus was born. After Herod the Great died he was replaced by Herod Antipas who was the Roman puppet king of Judea when Jesus died. If the question is about the Roman procurator (governor) of Judea when Jesus died, he was Pontius Pilate who had twice been reprimanded by Tiberius Caesar for going too harshly on the Jews, and then he did everything within the limits of his office to spare Jesus from execution.
The emperor
i remember the roman king was jealous of Jesus and he (Jesus) was taking his followers so the king got mad and jealous
In the times of the Roman Empire, in the period of the reign of Emperor Ausustus.