Idumean are decendants of the Edomites which go back to Esau, , Jacobs elder brother sons of Issac
No, Herod the Tetrarch was not Jewish. He was an Idumean, which is a people group with Edomite ancestry.
King Herod the Great was an Idumean. Idumea was located just to the south of Judea.
No, Herod Antipas was not Jewish. He was an Idumean, which was a people group in the region of Judea that converted to Judaism.
He was nominally Jewish; a descendant of Idumean converts and in actual practice pretty anti-Semitic.
No. Herod was Semitic, so he had brown skin and looked much like the Arabs of today. His father was an Idumean and his mother a Nabatean.
A:No. Herod Antipas, ruler of Galilee during New Testament times, was the son of King Herod the Great. Herod's father was an Idumean and his mother was a Nabatean Arab.
King Herod the Great of Judea was supported by the Romans. Strictly speaking, he was not a Jew, but an Idumean. He is said to have followed the Jewish faith while in Jerusalem and the pagan religion while in Caesaria.
A:Herod the Great's father was an Idumean and his mother was a Nabatean. Both ethnic groups were Semitic, as were the Jews and Arabs. The Nabateans were considered to be an Arab tribe before they forged their own nation.
AnswerHerod Antipas was the son of King Herod the Great. Herod the Great's father was an Idumean and his mother was a Nabataean. So, Antipas could best be described as a Palestinian of mixed ethnic origins.
King Herod's father was an Idumean and his mother was a Nabatean Arab. The Idumeans and Nabateans were both semitic races, so Herod was semitic. His physical appearance would have been similar to the Arabs or Sephardic Jews of today.
The main reason King Herod was disliked by the Jews is that he was not really a Jew: his father was an Idumean and his mother a Nabatean. Moreover, he was imposed on Judea by the Roman authorities. When in Jerusalem, he worshipped as a Jew and he even built a magnificent new Temple, but he was unable to win the respect of the Jews.
The Edomites, descendants of Esau, eventually merged with other groups and were largely absorbed into the Nabateans around the 4th century BCE. By the 1st century CE, they were referred to as Idumeans, a term used for Edomites living in Judea. The Idumeans are notably represented in the New Testament, as King Herod the Great was an Idumean. Over time, their distinct identity faded, and they were assimilated into surrounding cultures.