There was none. At the time of the death of Jesus, the area was ruled by the governor of Syria. Judaea had a procurator, who acted as the governor's assistant, and at the time of Jesus he was Pontius Pilate.
There was none. At the time of the death of Jesus, the area was ruled by the governor of Syria. Judaea had a procurator, who acted as the governor's assistant, and at the time of Jesus he was Pontius Pilate.
There was none. At the time of the death of Jesus, the area was ruled by the governor of Syria. Judaea had a procurator, who acted as the governor's assistant, and at the time of Jesus he was Pontius Pilate.
There was none. At the time of the death of Jesus, the area was ruled by the governor of Syria. Judaea had a procurator, who acted as the governor's assistant, and at the time of Jesus he was Pontius Pilate.
There was none. At the time of the death of Jesus, the area was ruled by the governor of Syria. Judaea had a procurator, who acted as the governor's assistant, and at the time of Jesus he was Pontius Pilate.
There was none. At the time of the death of Jesus, the area was ruled by the governor of Syria. Judaea had a procurator, who acted as the governor's assistant, and at the time of Jesus he was Pontius Pilate.
There was none. At the time of the death of Jesus, the area was ruled by the governor of Syria. Judaea had a procurator, who acted as the governor's assistant, and at the time of Jesus he was Pontius Pilate.
There was none. At the time of the death of Jesus, the area was ruled by the governor of Syria. Judaea had a procurator, who acted as the governor's assistant, and at the time of Jesus he was Pontius Pilate.
There was none. At the time of the death of Jesus, the area was ruled by the governor of Syria. Judaea had a procurator, who acted as the governor's assistant, and at the time of Jesus he was Pontius Pilate.
The Romans appointed quasi-Jewish and Jewish overseers to Palestine in that time; Christ was given over to the Romans, but they are not considered complicit in His death, except peripherally. The name of the actual executioners of Christ's sentence are lost to time.
In the king James version* Mat 27:2 And when they had bound him, they led him away, and delivered him to Pontius Pilate the governor. * Luk 3:1 Now in the fifteenth year of the reign of Tiberius Caesar, Pontius Pilate being governor of Judaea, and Herod being tetrarch of Galilee, and his brother Philip tetrarch of Ituraea and of the region of Trachonitis, and Lysanias the tetrarch of Abilene,The Roman Governor who tried Jesus on Pontious Pilot. Jesus was later crucified even though he did absolutely nothing wrong.The Roman official who tried Jesus was Pontius Pilate.Pontius Pilate was the Procurator of Judea. During his tenure there, he was faced with the problem of Jesus. The Jewish leaders in Jerusalem believed that Jesus was a false "God" and a danger to the Jewish establishment. They wanted him executed. In Judea, only a Roman governor or Procurator had the authority to pass a death sentence. Rather than having problems with Jewish leaders, Pilate relented and ordered that Jesus be crucified.
Roman governor Pilate ordered the cruciffication of Jesus.
After Jesus' death, Pontius Pilate continued to serve as the Roman governor of Judea for a few more years before being removed from his position by the Roman Emperor. He was eventually exiled to Gaul, where he is believed to have died by suicide.
After Jesus' death, Pontius Pilate continued to serve as the Roman governor of Judea for a few more years. He faced criticism for his handling of Jesus' trial and crucifixion. Eventually, he was removed from his position and sent into exile in Gaul, where he is believed to have died.
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Because Jesus was a tree hugging hippie.
That would be Pilate, the Roman governor.
Jesus was not a ruler or governor of any territory. Although he lived the majority of his life in the Roman Provinces of Syria-Palaestina in what is today Israel and Palestine.
At the time Jesus is said to have been born, Herod was king of Judea and all Palestine. After his death in 4 BCE, Rome split the kingdom among his 3 sons, with Archelaus getting Judea, Samaria, Idumaea. Rome deposed Archelaus in 6 CE and made Judea a direct Roman province. At the time attributed to the crucifixion, Pontius Pilate was governor of Judea.
The Romans appointed quasi-Jewish and Jewish overseers to Palestine in that time; Christ was given over to the Romans, but they are not considered complicit in His death, except peripherally. The name of the actual executioners of Christ's sentence are lost to time.
Roman governor Pilate ordered the cruciffication of Jesus.
In the king James version* Mat 27:2 And when they had bound him, they led him away, and delivered him to Pontius Pilate the governor. * Luk 3:1 Now in the fifteenth year of the reign of Tiberius Caesar, Pontius Pilate being governor of Judaea, and Herod being tetrarch of Galilee, and his brother Philip tetrarch of Ituraea and of the region of Trachonitis, and Lysanias the tetrarch of Abilene,The Roman Governor who tried Jesus on Pontious Pilot. Jesus was later crucified even though he did absolutely nothing wrong.The Roman official who tried Jesus was Pontius Pilate.Pontius Pilate was the Procurator of Judea. During his tenure there, he was faced with the problem of Jesus. The Jewish leaders in Jerusalem believed that Jesus was a false "God" and a danger to the Jewish establishment. They wanted him executed. In Judea, only a Roman governor or Procurator had the authority to pass a death sentence. Rather than having problems with Jewish leaders, Pilate relented and ordered that Jesus be crucified.
Christ had to be condemned to death by Pilate, the Roman governor, because the Jewish leaders did not have legal authority under Roman law to condemn a criminal to death.
Jesus would not have been put to death except there were a death warrant issued by the Roman Governor, Pontius Pilate. There was. He was. And Pilate gave sentence that it should be as they required. (Luke 23:24)
After Jesus' death, Pontius Pilate continued to serve as the Roman governor of Judea for a few more years before being removed from his position by the Roman Emperor. He was eventually exiled to Gaul, where he is believed to have died by suicide.