Pontius Pilate
Pontius Pilate | |
---|---|
Ecce Homo ("Behold the Man"), Antonio Ciseri's depiction of Pilate presenting a scourged Jesus to the people of Jerusalem | |
5th Prefect of Judaea | |
In office c. 26 – 36 CE | |
Appointed by | Tiberius |
Preceded by | Valerius Gratus |
Succeeded by | Marcellus |
Personal details | |
Nationality | Roman |
Spouse(s) | Unknown[a] |
Pontius Pilate[b] (Latin: Pontius Pīlātus [ˈpɔntɪ.ʊs piːˈlaːtʊs]; Ancient Greek: Πόντιος Πιλάτος, Póntios Pilátos) was the fifth governor of the Roman province of Judaea, serving under Emperor Tiberius from 26/27 to 36/37 CE. He is best known today for being the official who presided over the trial of Jesus and ordered his crucifixion. Pilate's importance in modern Christianity is underscored by his prominent place in both the Apostles and Nicene Creeds. Due to the Gospels' portrayal of Pilate as reluctant to execute Jesus, the Coptic and Ethiopian Churches believe that Pilate became a Christian and have venerated him as a martyr and saint.[7]
Although Pilate is the best-attested governor of Judaea, few sources on his rule have survived. He appears to have belonged to the well-attested Pontii family of Samnite origin, but nothing is known for certain about his life before he became governor of Judaea, nor of the circumstances that led to his appointment to the governorship.[8] A single inscription from Pilate's governorship has survived, the so-called Pilate stone, as have coins that he minted. The Jewish historian Josephus and philosopher Philo of Alexandria both mention incidents of tension and violence between the Jewish population and Pilate's administration. Many of these involve Pilate acting in ways that offended the religious sensibilities of the Jews. The Christian Gospels record that Pilate ordered the crucifixion of Jesus at some point during his time in office; Josephus and the Roman historian Tacitus also appear to have recorded this information. According to Josephus, Pilate's removal from office occurred because he violently suppressed an armed Samaritan movement at Mount Gerizim. He was sent back to Rome by the legate of Syria to answer for this before Tiberius, who, however, had died before he arrived. Nothing is known for certain about what happened to him after this. On the basis of a mention in the second-century pagan philosopher Celsus and Christian apologist Origen, most modern historians believe that Pilate simply retired after his dismissal.[9] Modern historians have differing assessments of Pilate as an effective ruler; while some believe he was a particularly brutal and ineffective governor, others argue that his long time in office means he must have been reasonably competent. According to one prominent post-war theory, Pilate was motivated by antisemitism in his treatment of the Jews, but this theory has been mostly abandoned.[10]
In Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages, Pilate became the focus of a large group of New Testament apocrypha expanding on his role in the Gospels. In many of these, particularly the earlier texts from the Eastern Roman Empire, Pilate was portrayed as a positive figure. In some, he became a Christian martyr. In later, particularly Western Christian texts, he was instead portrayed as a negative figure and villain, with traditions surrounding his death by suicide featuring prominently. Pilate was also the focus of numerous medieval legends, which invented a complete biography for him and portrayed him as villainous and cowardly. Many of these legends connected Pilate's place of birth or death to particular locations around Western Europe.
Pilate has frequently been a subject of artistic representation. Medieval art frequently portrayed scenes of Pilate and Jesus, often in the scene where he washes his hands of guilt for Jesus's death. In the art of the Late Middle Ages and the Renaissance, Pilate is often depicted as a Jew. The nineteenth century saw a renewed interest in depicting Pilate, with numerous images made. He plays an important role in medieval passion plays, where he is often a more prominent character than Jesus. His characterization in these plays varies greatly, from weak-willed and coerced into crucifying Jesus to being an evil person who demands Jesus's crucifixion. Modern authors who feature Pilate prominently in their works include Anatole France, Mikhail Bulgakov, and Chingiz Aitmatov, with a majority of modern treatments of Pilate dating to after the Second World War. Pilate has also frequently been portrayed in film.
Life[edit]
Sources[edit]
Sources on Pontius Pilate are limited, although modern scholars know more about him than about other Roman governors of Judaea.[11] The most important sources are the Embassy to Gaius (after 41 CE) by contemporary Jewish writer Philo of Alexandria,[12] the Jewish Wars (c. 74 CE) and Antiquities of the Jews (c. 94 CE) by the Jewish historian Josephus, as well as the four canonical Christian Gospels, Mark (composed between 66 and 70 CE), Luke (composed between 85 and 90 CE), Matthew (composed between 85 and 90 CE), and John (composed between 90 and 110 CE).[11] Ignatius of Antioch mentions him in his epistles to the Trallians, Magnesians, and Smyrnaeans[13] (composed between 105 and 110 CE).[14] He is also briefly mentioned in Annals of the Roman historian Tacitus (early 2nd c. CE), who simply says that he put Jesus to death.[11] Two additional chapters of Tacitus's Annals that might have mentioned Pilate have been lost.[15] Besides these texts, coins minted by Pilate have survived, as well as a fragmentary short inscription that names Pilate, known as the Pilate Stone, the only inscription about a Roman governor of Judaea predating the Roman-Jewish Wars to survive.[16][17] The written sources provide only limited information and each has its own biases, with the gospels in particular providing a theological rather than historical perspective on Pilate.[18]
Early life[edit]
The sources give no indication of Pilate's life prior to his becoming governor of Judaea.[19] His praenomen (first name) is unknown;[20] his cognomen Pilatus might mean "skilled with the javelin (pilum)," but it could also refer to the pileus or Phrygian cap, possibly indicating that one of Pilate's ancestors was a freedman.[21] If it means "skilled with the javelin," it is possible that Pilate won the cognomen for himself while serving in the Roman military;[19] it is also possible that his father acquired the cognomen through military skill.[22] In the Gospels of Mark and John, Pilate is only called by his cognomen, which Marie-Joseph Ollivier takes to mean that this was the name by which he was generally known in common speech.[23] The name Pontius indicates that he belonged to the Pontii family,[20] a well-known family of Samnite origin which produced a number of important individuals in the late Republic and early Empire.[24] Like all but one other governor of Judaea, Pilate was of the equestrian order, a middle rank of the Roman nobility.[25] As one of the attested Pontii, Pontius Aquila, an assassin of Julius Caesar, was a Tribune of the Plebs, the family must have originally been of Plebeian origin. They became ennobled as equestrians.[24]
Pilate was likely educated, somewhat wealthy, and well-connected politically and socially.[26] He was probably married, but the only extant reference to his wife, in which she tells him not to interact with Jesus after she has had a disturbing dream (Matthew 27:19), is generally dismissed as legendary.[27] According to the cursus honorum established by Augustus for office holders of equestrian rank, Pilate would have had a military command before becoming prefect of Judaea; Alexander Demandt speculates that this could have been with a legion stationed at the Rhine or Danube.[28] Although it is therefore likely Pilate served in the military, it is nevertheless not certain.[29]
Role as governor of Judaea[edit]
Pilate was the fifth governor of the Roman province of Judaea, during the reign of the emperor Tiberius. The post of governor of Judaea was of relatively low prestige and nothing is known of how Pilate obtained the office.[30] Josephus states that Pilate governed for 10 years (Antiquities of the Jews 18.4.2), and these are traditionally dated from 26 to 36/37 CE, making him one of the two longest-serving governors of the province.[31] As Tiberius had retired to the island of Capri in 26 CE, scholars such as E. Stauffer have argued that Pilate may have actually been appointed by the powerful Praetorian Prefect Sejanus, who was executed for treason in 31 CE.[32] Other scholars have cast doubt on any link between Pilate and Sejanus.[33] Daniel R. Schwartz and Kenneth Lönnqvist both argue that the traditional dating of the beginning of Pilate's governorship is based on an error in Josephus; Schwartz argues that he was appointed instead in 19 CE, while Lönnqvist argues for 17/18 CE.[34][35] This redating has not been widely accepted by other scholars.[36]
Pilate's title of prefect[c] implies that his duties were primarily military;[39] however, Pilate's troops were meant more as a police than a military force, and Pilate's duties extended beyond military matters.[40] As Roman governor, he was head of the judicial system. He had the power to inflict capital punishment, and was responsible for collecting tributes and taxes, and for disbursing funds, including the minting of coins.[40] Because the Romans allowed a certain degree of local control, Pilate shared a limited amount of civil and religious power with the Jewish Sanhedrin.[41]
Pilate was subordinate to the legate of Syria; however, for the first six years in which he held office, Syria lacked a legate, something which Helen Bond believes may have presented difficulties to Pilate.[42] He seems to have been free to govern the province as he wished, with intervention by the legate of Syria only coming at the end of his tenure.[30] Like other Roman governors of Judaea, Pilate made his primary residence in Caesarea, going to Jerusalem mainly for major feasts in order to maintain order.[43] He also would have toured around the province in order to hear cases and administer justice.[44]
As governor, Pilate had the right to appoint the Jewish High Priest and also officially controlled the vestiments of the High Priest in the Antonia Fortress.[45] Unlike his predecessor, Valerius Gratus, Pilate retained the same high priest, Caiaphas, for his entire tenure. Caiaphas would be removed following Pilate's own removal from the governorship.[46] This indicates that Caiaphas and the priests of the Sadducee sect were reliable allies to Pilate.[47] Moreover, Maier argues that Pilate could not have used the temple treasury to construct an aqueduct, as recorded by Josephus, without the cooperation of the priests.[48] Similarly, Helen Bond argues that Pilate is depicted working closely with the Jewish authorities in the execution of Jesus.[49] Jean-Pierre Lémonon argues that official cooperation with Pilate was limited to the Sadducees, noting that the Pharisees are absent from the gospel accounts of Jesus's arrest and trial.[50]
Daniel Schwartz takes the note in the Gospel of Luke (Luke 23:12) that Pilate had a difficult relationship with the Galilean Jewish king Herod Antipas as potentially historical. He also finds historical the information that their relationship mended following the execution of Jesus.[51] Based on John 19:12, it is possible that Pilate held the title "friend of Caesar" (Latin: amicus Caesaris, Ancient Greek: φίλος τοῦ Kαίσαρος), a title also held by the Jewish kings Herod Agrippa I and Herod Agrippa II and by close advisors to the emperor. Both Daniel Schwartz and Alexander Demandt do not think this information especially likely.[30][52]
Incidents with the Jews[edit]
Various disturbances during Pilate's governship are recorded in the sources. In some cases, it is unclear if they may be referring to the same event,[53] and it is difficult to establish a chronology of events for Pilate's rule.[54] Joan Taylor argues that Pilate had a policy of promoting the imperial cult, which may have caused some of the friction with his Jewish subjects.[55] Schwartz suggests that Pilate's entire tenure was characterized by "continued underlying tension between governor and governed, now and again breaking out in brief incidents."[53]
According to Josephus in his The Jewish War (2.9.2) and Antiquities of the Jews (18.3.1), Pilate offended the Jews by moving imperial standards with the image of Caesar into Jerusalem. This resulted in a crowd of Jews surrounding Pilate's house in Caesarea for five days. Pilate then summoned them to an arena, where the Roman soldiers drew their swords. But the Jews showed so little fear of death, that Pilate relented and removed the standards.[56] Bond argues that the fact that Josephus says that Pilate brought in the standards by night, shows that he knew that the images of the emperor would be offensive.[57] She dates this incident to early in Pilate's tenure as governor.[58] Daniel Schwartz and Alexander Demandt both suggest that this incident is in fact identical with "the incident with the shields" reported in Philo's Embassy to Gaius, an identification first made by the early church historian Eusebius.[59][53] Lémonon, however, argues against this identification.[60]
According to Philo's Embassy to Gaius (Embassy to Gaius 38), Pilate offended against Jewish law by bringing golden shields into Jerusalem, and placing them on Herod's Palace. The sons of Herod the Great petitioned him to remove the shields, but Pilate refused. Herod's sons then threatened to petition the emperor, an action which Pilate feared that would expose the crimes he had committed in office. He did not prevent their petition. Tiberius received the petition and angrily reprimanded Pilate, ordering him to remove the shields.[61] Helen Bond, Daniel Schwartz, and Warren Carter argue that Philo's portrayal is largely stereotyped and rhetorical, portraying Pilate with the same words as other opponents of Jewish law, while portraying Tiberius as just and supportive of Jewish law.[62] It is unclear why the shields offended against Jewish law: it is likely that they contained an inscription referring to Tiberius as divi Augusti filius (son of divine Augustus).[63][64] Bond dates the incident to 31 CE, sometime after Sejanus's death in October 17.[65]
In another incident recorded in both the Jewish Wars (2.9.4) and the Antiquities of the Jews (18.3.2), Josephus relates that Pilate offended the Jews by using up the temple treasury (korbanos) to pay for a new aqueduct to Jerusalem. When a mob formed while Pilate was visiting Jerusalem, Pilate ordered his troops to beat them with clubs; many perished from the blows or from being trampled by horses, and the mob was dispersed.[66] The dating of the incident is unknown, but Bond argues that it must have occurred between 26 and 30 or 33 CE, based on Josephus's chronology.[49]
The Gospel of Luke mentions in passing Galileans "whose blood Pilate had mingled with their sacrifices" (Luke 13:1). This reference has been variously interpreted as referring to one of the incidents recorded by Josephus, or to an entirely unknown incident.[67] Bond argues that the number of Galileans killed does not seem to have been particularly high. In Bond's view, the reference to "sacrifices" likely means that this incident occurred at Passover at some unknown date.[68] She argues that "[i]t is not only possible but quite likely that Pilate's governorship contained many such brief outbreaks of trouble about which we know nothing. The insurrection in which Barabbas was caught up, if historical, may well be another example."[69]
Trial and execution of Jesus[edit]
Events in the |
Life of Jesus according to the canonical gospels |
---|
In rest of the NT |
Portals: Christianity Bible Book:Life of Jesus |
At the Passover of most likely 30 or 33 CE, Pontius Pilate condemned Jesus of Nazareth to death by crucifixion in Jerusalem.[70] The main sources on the crucifixion are the four canonical Christian Gospels, the accounts of which vary.[71] Helen Bond argues that
the evangelists' portrayals of Pilate have been shaped to a great extent by their own particular theological and apologetic concerns. [...] Legendary or theological additions have also been made to the narrative [...] Despite extensive differences, however, there is a certain agreement amongst the evangelists regarding the basic facts, an agreement which may well go beyond literary dependency and reflect actual historical events.[72]
Pilate's role in condemning Jesus to death is also attested by the Roman historian Tacitus, who, when explaining Nero's persecution of the Christians, explains: "Christus, the founder of the name, had undergone the death penalty in the reign of Tiberius, by sentence of the procurator Pontius Pilate, and the pernicious superstition was checked for a moment..." (Tacitus, Annals 15.44).[11][73] The authenticity of this passage has been disputed, and it is possible that Tacitus received this information from Christian informants.[74] Josephus appears also to have mentioned Jesus's execution by Pilate at the request of prominent Jews (Antiquities of the Jews 18.3.3). However, the original text has been greatly altered by later Christian interpolation, so that it is impossible to know what Josephus may have originally said.[75] Discussing the paucity of extra-biblical mentions of the crucifixion, Alexander Demandt argues that the execution of Jesus was probably not seen as a particularly important event by the Romans, as many other people were crucified at the time and forgotten.[76]
Bond argues that Jesus's arrest was made with Pilate's prior knowledge and involvement, based on the presence of a 500-strong Roman cohort among the party that arrests Jesus in John 18.3.[77] Demandt dismisses the notion that Pilate was involved.[78] It is generally assumed, based on the unanimous testimony of the gospels, that the crime for which Jesus was brought to Pilate and executed was sedition, founded on his claim to be king of the Jews.[79] Pilate may have judged Jesus according to the cognitio extra ordinem, a form of trial for capital punishment used in the Roman provinces and applied to non-Roman citizens that provided the prefect with greater flexibility in handling the case.[80][81] All four gospels also mention that Pilate had the custom of releasing one captive in honor of the Passover festival; this custom is not attested in any other source. Historians disagree on whether or not such a custom is a fictional element of the gospels, reflects historical reality, or perhaps represents a single amnesty in the year of Jesus's crucifixion.[82]
The Gospels' portrayal of Pilate is "widely assumed" to diverge greatly from that found in Josephus and Philo,[83] as Pilate is portrayed as reluctant to execute Jesus and pressured to do so by the crowd and Jewish authorities. John P. Meier notes that in Josephus, by contrast, "Pilate alone [...] is said to condemn Jesus to the cross."[84] Some scholars believe that the Gospel accounts are completely untrustworthy: S. G. F. Brandon argued that in reality, rather than vacillating on condemning Jesus, Pilate unhesitatingly executed him as a rebel.[85] Paul Winter explained the discrepancy between Pilate in other sources and Pilate in the gospels by arguing that Christians became more and more eager to portray Pontius Pilate as a witness to Jesus' innocence, as persecution of Christians by the Roman authorities increased.[86] Bart Ehrman argues that the earliest Gospel, Mark, shows the Jews and Pilate to be in agreement about executing Jesus (Mark 15:15), while the later gospels progressively reduce Pilate's culpability, culminating in Pilate allowing the Jews to crucify Jesus in John (John 18:16). He connects this change to increased "anti-Judaism."[87] Others have tried to explain Pilate's behavior in the Gospels as motivated by a change of circumstances from that shown in Josephus and Philo, usually presupposing a connection between Pilate's caution and the death of Sejanus.[83] Yet other scholars, such as Brian McGing and Bond, have argued that there is no real discrepancy between Pilate's behavior in Josephus and Philo and that in the Gospels.[70][88] Warren Carter argues that Pilate is portrayed as skillful, competent, and manipulative of the crowd in Mark, Matthew, and John, only finding Jesus innocent and executing him under pressure in Luke.[89]
Removal and later life[edit]
According to Josephus' Antiquities of the Jews (18.4.1-2), Pilate's removal as governor occurred after Pilate slaughtered a group of armed Samaritans at a village called Tirathana near Mount Gerizim, where they hoped to find artifacts that had been buried there by Moses. Alexander Demandt suggests that the leader of this movement may have been Dositheos, a messiah-like figure among the Samaritans who was known to have been active around this time.[90] The Samaritans, claiming not to have been armed, complained to Lucius Vitellius the Elder, the governor of Syria (term 35-39), who had Pilate recalled to Rome to be judged by Tiberius. Tiberius however, had died before his arrival.[91] This dates the end of Pilate's governorship to 36/37 CE. Tiberius died in Misenum on 16 March AD 37, in his seventy-eighth year (Tacitus, Annals VI.50, VI.51).[92]
Following Tiberius's death, Pilate's hearing would have been handled by the new emperor Gaius Caligula: it is unclear whether any hearing took place, as new emperors often dismissed outstanding legal matters from previous reigns.[93] The only sure outcome of Pilate's return to Rome is that he was not reinstated as governor of Judaea, either because the hearing went badly, or because Pilate did not wish to return.[94] J. P. Lémonon argues that the fact that Pilate was not reinstated by Caligula does not mean that his trial went badly, but may simply have been because after ten years in the position it was time for him to take a new posting.[95] Joan Taylor, on the other hand, argues that Pilate seems to have ended his career in disgrace, using his unflattering portrayal in Philo, written only a few years after his dismissal, as proof.[96]
The church historian Eusebius (Church History 2.7.1), writing in the early fourth century, claims that "tradition relates that" Pilate committed suicide after he was recalled to Rome due to the disgrace he was in.[97] Eusebius dates this to 39 CE.[98] Paul Maier notes that no other surviving records corroborate Pilate's suicide, which is meant to document God's wrath for Pilate's role in the crucifixion, and that Eusebius explicitly states that "tradition" is his source, "indicating that he had trouble documenting Pilate's presumed suicide".[97] Daniel Schwartz, however, argues that Eusebius's claims "should not lightly be dismissed."[51] More information on the potential fate of Pontius Pilate can be gleaned from other sources. The second-century pagan philosopher Celsus polemically asked why, if Jesus was God, God had not punished Pilate, indicating that he did not believe that Pilate shamefully committed suicide. Responding to Celsus, the Christian apologist Origen, writing c. 248 CE, argued that nothing bad happened to Pilate, because the Jews and not Pilate were responsible for Jesus' death; he therefore also assumed that Pilate did not die a shameful death.[99][100] Pilate's supposed suicide is also left unmentioned in Josephus, Philo, or Tacitus.[99] Maier argues that "[i]n all probability, then, the fate of Pontius Pilate lay clearly in the direction of a retired government official, a pensioned Roman ex-magistrate, than in anything more disastrous."[101] Taylor notes that Philo discusses Pilate as though he were already dead in the Embassy to Gaius, although he is writing only a few years after Pilate's tenure as governor.[102]
Archaeology and minted coins[edit]
A single inscription by Pilate has survived in Caesarea, on the so-called "Pilate Stone". The (partially reconstructed) inscription is as follows:[103]
- . .]STIBERIÉVM
- ...PON]TIVSPILATVS
- ..PRAEF]ECTVSIVDA[EA]E
Vardaman "freely" translates it as follows: "Tiberium [?of the Caesareans?] Pontius Pilate, Prefect of Judea [ .. has given?]".[103] The fragmentary nature of the inscription has led to some disagreement about the correct reconstruction, so that "apart from Pilate’s name and title the inscription is unclear."[104] Originally, the inscription would have included an abbreviated letter for Pilate's praenomen (e.g., T. for Titus or M. for Marcus).[105] The stone attests Pilate's title of prefect and the inscription appears to refer to some kind of building called a Tiberieum, a word otherwise unattested[106] but following a pattern of naming buildings about Roman emperors.[107] Bond argues that we cannot be sure what kind of building this referred to.[108] G. Alföldy argued that it was some sort of secular building, namely a lighthouse, while Joan Taylor and Jerry Vardaman argue that it was a temple dedicated to Tiberius.[109][110]
A second inscription, which has since been lost,[111] has historically been associated with Pontius Pilate. It was a fragmentary, undated inscription on a large piece of marble recorded in Ameria, a village in Umbria, Italy.[112] The inscription read as follows:
- PILATVS
- IIII VIR
- QVINQ
The only clear items of text are the names "Pilate" and the title quattuorvir ("IIII VIR"), a type of local city official responsible for conducting a census every five years.[113] The inscription was formerly found outside the church of St. Secundus, where it had been copied from a presumed original.[113] At the turn of the twentieth century, it was generally held to be fake, a forgery in support of a local legend that Pontius Pilate died in exile in Ameria.[112] The more recent scholars Alexander Demandt and Henry MacAdam both believe that the inscription is genuine, but attests to a person who simply had the same cognomen as Pontius Pilate.[114][113] MacAdam argues that "[i]t is far easier to believe that this very fragmentary inscription prompted the legend of Pontius Pilate’s association with the Italian village of Ameria [...] than it is to posit someone forging the inscription two centuries ago—quite creatively, it would seem—to provide substance for the legend."[111]
As governor, Pilate was responsible for minting coins in the province: he appears to have struck them in 29/30, 30/31, and 31/32 CE, thus the fourth, fifth, and sixth years of his governorship.[115] The coins belong to a type called a "perutah", measured between 13.5 and 17mm, were minted in Jerusalem,[116] and are fairly crudely made.[117] Earlier coins read ΙΟΥΛΙΑ ΚΑΙΣΑΡΟΣ on the obverse and ΤΙΒΕΡΙΟΥ ΚΑΙΣΑΡΟΣ on the reverse, referring to the emperor Tiberius and his mother Livia (Julia Augusta). Following Livia's death, the coins only read ΤΙΒΕΡΙΟΥ ΚΑΙΣΑΡΟΣ.[118] As was typical of Roman coins struck in Judaea, they did not have a portrait of the emperor, though they included some pagan designs.[115]
Attempts to identify the aqueduct that is attributed to Pilate in Josephus date to the nineteenth century.[119] In the mid twentieth century, A. Mazar tentatively identified the aqueduct as the Arrub aqueduct that brought water from Solomon's Pools to Jerusalem, an identification supported in 2000 by Kenneth Lönnqvist.[120] Lönnqvist notes that the Talmud (Lamentations Rabbah 4.4) records the destruction of an aqueduct from Solomon's Pools by the Sicarii, a group of fanatical religious Zealots, during the First Jewish-Roman War (66-73 CE); he suggests that if the aqueduct had been funded by the temple treasury as recorded in Josephus, this might explain the Sicarii's targeting of this particular aqueduct.[121]
In 2018, an inscription on a thin copper-alloy sealing ring that had been discovered at Herodium was uncovered using modern scanning techniques. The inscription reads ΠΙΛΑΤΟ(Υ) (Pilato(u)), meaning "of Pilate".[122] The name Pilatus is rare, so the ring could be associated with Pontius Pilate; however, given the cheap material, it is unlikely that he would have owned it. It is possible that the ring belonged to another individual named Pilate,[123] or that it belonged to someone who worked for Pontius Pilate.[124]
Apocryphal texts and legends[edit]
Due to his role in Jesus' trial, Pilate became an important figure in both pagan and Christian propaganda in late antiquity. Perhaps the earliest apocryphal texts attributed to Pilate are denunciations of Christianity and of Jesus that claim to be Pilate's report on the crucifixion. According to Eusebius (Church History 9.2.5), these texts were distributed during the persecution of Christians conducted by the emperor Maximinus II (reigned 308–313 CE). None of these texts survive, but Tibor Grüll argues that their contents can be reconstructed from Christian apologetic texts.[125]
Positive traditions about Pilate are frequent in Eastern Christianity, particularly in Egypt and Ethiopia, whereas negative traditions predominate in Western and Byzantine Christianity.[126][127] Additionally, earlier Christian traditions portray Pilate more positively than later ones,[128] a change which Ann Wroe suggests reflects the fact that, following the legalization of Christianity in the Roman Empire by the Edict of Milan (312 CE), it was no longer necessary to deflect criticism of Pilate (and by extension of the Roman Empire) for his role in Jesus's crucifixion onto the Jews.[129] Bart Ehrman, on the other hand, argues that the tendency in the Early Church to exonerate Pilate and blame the Jews prior to this time reflects an increasing "anti-Judaism" among Early Christians.[130] The earliest attestation of a positive tradition about Pilate comes from the late first-, early second-century Christian author Tertullian, who, claiming to have seen Pilate's report to Tiberius, states Pilate had "become already a Christian in his conscience."[131] An earlier reference to Pilate's records of Jesus's trial is given by Christian apologist Justin Martyr around 160 CE.[132] Tibor Grüll believes that this could be a reference to Pilate's actual records,[131] but other scholars argue that Justin has simply invented the records as a source on the assumption that they existed without ever having verified their existence.[133][134]
New Testament Apocrypha[edit]
Beginning in the fourth century, a large body of Christian apocryphal texts developed concerning Pilate, making up one of the largest groups of surviving New Testament Apocrypha.[135] Originally, these texts served both to unburden Pilate of guilt for the death of Jesus as well as to provide more complete records of Jesus's trial.[136] The apocryphal Gospel of Peter completely exonerates Pilate for the crucifixion, which is instead performed by Herod.[137] Moreover, the text makes explicit that while Pilate washes his hands of guilt, neither the Jews nor Herod do so.[138] The Gospel includes a scene in which the centurions who had been guarding Jesus' tomb report to Pilate that Jesus has been resurrected.[139]
The fragmentary third-century Manichaean Gospel of Mani has Pilate refer to Jesus as "the Son of God" and telling his centurions to "[k]eep this secret".[140]
In the most common version of the passion narrative in the apocryphal Gospel of Nicodemus (also called the Acts of Pilate), Pilate is portrayed as forced to execute Jesus by the Jews and as distraught at having done so.[141] One version claims to have been discovered and translated by a Jewish convert named Ananias, portraying itself as the official Jewish records of the crucifixion.[142] Another claims that the records were made by Pilate himself, relying on reports made to him by Nicodemus and Joseph of Arimathea.[143] Some Eastern versions of the Gospel of Nicodemus claim that Pilate was born in Egypt, which likely aided his popularity there.[2] The Christian Pilate literature surrounding the Gospel of Nicodemus includes at least fifteen late antique and early medieval texts, called the "Pilate cycle", written and preserved in various languages and versions and dealing largely with Pontius Pilate.[144] Two of these include purported reports made by Pilate to the emperor (either unnamed or named as Tiberius or Claudius) on the crucifixion, in which Pilate recounts Jesus' death and resurrection, blaming the Jews.[145] Another purports to be an angry reply by Tiberius, condemning Pilate for his role in Jesus' death.[145] Another early text is an apocryphal letter attributed to "Herod" (a composite character of the various Herods in the Bible), which claims to respond to a letter from Pilate in which Pilate spoke of his remorse for Jesus' crucifixion and of having had a vision of the risen Christ; "Herod" asks Pilate to pray for him.[146]
In the so-called Book of the Cock, a late-antique apocryphal passion Gospel only preserved in Ge'ez (Ethiopic) but translated from Arabic,[147] Pilate attempts to avoid Jesus's execution by sending him to Herod and writing further letters arguing with Herod not to execute Jesus. Pilate's family become Christians after Jesus miraculously cures Pilate's daughters of their deaf-muteness. Pilate is nevertheless forced to execute Jesus by the increasingly angry crowd, but Jesus tells Pilate that he does not hold him responsible.[148] This book enjoys "a quasi-canonical status" among Ethiopian Christians to this day and continues to be read beside the canonical gospels during Holy Week.[149]
Pilate's death in the apocrypha[edit]
Seven of the Pilate texts mention Pilate's fate after the crucifixion: in three, he becomes a very positive figure, while in four he is presented as diabolically evil.[150] A fifth-century Syriac version of the Acts of Pilate explains Pilate's conversion as occurring after he has blamed the Jews for Jesus' death in front of Tiberius; prior to his execution, Pilate prays to God and converts, thereby becoming a Christian martyr.[151] In the Greek Paradosis Pilati (5th c.),[145] Pilate is arrested and martyred as a follower of Christ.[152] His beheading is accompanied by a voice from heaven calling him blessed and saying he will be with Jesus at the Second Coming.[153] The Evangelium Gamalielis, possibly of medieval origin and preserved in Arabic, Coptic, and Ge'ez,[154] says Jesus was crucified by Herod, whereas Pilate was a true believer in Christ who was martyred for his faith; similarly, the Martyrium Pilati, possibly medieval and preserved in Arabic, Coptic, and Ge'ez,[154] portrays Pilate, as well as his wife and two children, as being crucified twice, once by the Jews and once by Tiberius, for his faith.[152]
In addition to the report on Pilate's suicide in Eusebius, Grüll notes three Western apocryphal traditions about Pilate's suicide. In the Cura sanitatis Tiberii (dated variously 5th to 7th c.),[155] the emperor Tiberius is healed by an image of Jesus brought by Saint Veronica, Saint Peter then confirms Pilate's report on Jesus's miracles, and Pilate is exiled by the emperor Nero, after which he commits suicide.[156] A similar narrative plays out in the Vindicta Salvatoris (8th c.).[156][157] In the Mors Pilati (perhaps originally 6th c., but recorded c. 1300),[158] Pilate was forced to commit suicide and his body thrown in the Tiber. However, the body is surrounded by demons and storms, so that it is removed from the Tiber and instead cast into the Rhone, where the same thing happens. Finally, the corpse is taken to Lausanne in modern Switzerland and buried in an isolated pit, where demonic visitations continue to occur.[159]
Later legends[edit]
Beginning in the eleventh century, more extensive legendary biographies of Pilate were written in Western Europe, adding details to information provided by the bible and apocrypha.[161] The legend exists in many different versions and was extremely widespread in both Latin and the vernacular, and each version contains significant variation, often relating to local traditions.[162] The earliest extant legendary biography is the De Pilato of c. 1050, with three further Latin versions appearing in the mid-twelfth century, followed by many vernacular translations.[163] Howard Martin summarizes the general content of these legendary biographies as follows: a king who was skilled in astrology and named Atus lived in Mainz. The king reads in the stars that he will bear a son who will rule over many lands, so he has a miller's daughter named Pila brought to him whom he impregnates; Pilate's name thus results from the combination of the names Pila with Atus. A few years later, Pilate is brought to his father's court where he kills his half-brother. As a result, he is sent as a hostage to Rome, where he kills another hostage. As punishment he is sent to the island of Pontius, whose inhabitants he subjugates, thus acquiring the name Pontius Pilate. King Herod hears of this accomplishment and asks him to come to Palestine to aid his rule there; Pilate comes but soon usurps Herod's power.[164] The trial and judgment of Jesus then happens as in the gospels. The emperor in Rome is suffering from a terrible disease at this time, and hearing of Christ's healing powers, sends for him only to learn from Saint Veronica that Christ has been crucified, but she possesses a cloth with the image of his face. Pilate is taken as a prisoner with her to Rome to be judged, but every time the emperor sees Pilate to condemn him, his anger dissipates. This is revealed to be because Pilate is wearing Jesus's coat; when the coat is removed, the Emperor condemns him to death, but Pilate commits suicide first. The body is first thrown in the Tiber, but because it causes storms it is then moved to Vienne, and then thrown in a lake in the high Alps.[165]
One important version of the Pilate legend is found in the Golden Legend by Jacobus de Voragine (1263–1273), one of the most popular books of the later Middle Ages.[166] In the Golden Legend, Pilate is portrayed as closely associated with Judas, first coveting the fruit in the orchard of Judas's father Ruben, then granting Judas Ruben's property after Judas has killed his own father.[167]
Several places in Western Europe have traditions associated with Pilate. The cities of Lyon and Vienne in modern France claim to be Pilate's birthplace: Vienne has a Maison de Pilate, a Prétoire de Pilate and a Tour de Pilate.[168] One tradition states the Pilate was banished to Vienne where a Roman ruin is associated with his tomb; according to another, Pilate took refuge in a mountain (now called Mount Pilatus) in modern Switzerland, before eventually committing suicide in a lake on its summit.[160] This connection to Mount Pilatus is attested from 1273 onwards, while Lake Lucerne has been called "Pilatus-See" (Pilate Lake) beginning in the fourteenth century.[169] A number of traditions also connected Pilate to Germany. In addition to Mainz, Bamberg, Hausen, Upper Franconia were also claimed to be his place of birth, while some traditions place his death in the Saarland.[170] The town of Tarragona in modern Spain possesses a first-century Roman tower, which, since the eighteenth-century, has been called the "Torre del Pilatos," in which Pilate is claimed to have spent his last years.[160] The tradition may go back to a misread Latin inscription on the tower.[171] The cities of Huesca and Seville are other cities in Spain associated with Pilate.[168] Per a local legend,[172] the village of Fortingall in Scotland claims to be Pilate's birthplace, but this is almost certainly a 19th-century invention – particularly as the Romans did not invade the British Isles until 43 CE.[173]
Pilate also continued to be the subject of legends in Eastern Christianity. The Byzantine chronicler George Kedrenos (c. 1100) wrote that Pilate was condemned by Caligula to die by being left in the sun closed inside the skin of a freshly slaughtered cow together with a chicken, a snake, and a monkey.[174] In a legend from medieval Rus', Pilate attempts in vain to save Saint Stephen from being executed; Pilate, his wife and children have themselves baptized and bury Stephen in a gilded silver coffin. He then builds a church in the honor of Stephen, Gamaliel, and Nicodemus, who were martyred with Stephen, before he dies seven months later.[175] In the medieval Slavonic Josephus, an Old Church Slavonic translation of Josephus with legendary additions, Pilate kills many of Jesus's followers but finds Jesus innocent. After Jesus heals Pilate's wife of a fatal illness, the Jews bribe Pilate with 30 talents to crucify Jesus.[176]
Art, literature, and film[edit]
Visual art[edit]
Late antique and early medieval art[edit]
Pilate is one of the most important figures in early Christian art; he is often given greater prominence than Jesus himself.[177] He is, however, entirely absent from the earliest Christian art; all images postdate the emperor Constantine and can be classified as early Byzantine art.[178] Pilate first appears in art on a Christian sarcophagus in 330 CE; in the earliest depictions he is shown washing his hands without Jesus being present.[179] In later images he is typically shown washing his hands of guilt in Jesus' presence.[180] 44 depictions of Pilate predate the sixth century and are found on ivory, in mosaics, in manuscripts as well as on sarcophagi.[181] Pilate's iconography as a seated Roman judge derives from depictions of the Roman emperor, causing him to take on various attributes of an emperor or king, including the raised seat and clothing.[182]
The older Byzantine model of depicting Pilate washing his hands continues to appear on artwork into the tenth century;[183] beginning in the seventh century, however, a new iconography of Pilate also emerges, which does not always show him washing his hands, includes him in additional scenes, and is based on contemporary medieval rather than Roman models.[183] The majority of depictions from this time period come from France or Germany, belonging to Carolingian or later Ottonian art,[184] and are mostly on ivory, with some in frescoes, but no longer on sculpture except in Ireland.[185] New images of Pilate that appear in this period include depictions of the Ecce homo, Pilate's presentation of the scourged Jesus to the crowd in John 19:5,[186] as well as scenes deriving from the apocryphal Acts of Pilate.[187] Pilate also comes to feature in scenes such as the Flagellation of Christ, where he is not mentioned in the Bible.[188]
The eleventh century sees Pilate iconography spread from France and Germany to Great Britain and further into the eastern Mediterranean.[184] Images of Pilate are found on new materials such as metal, while he appeared less frequently on ivory, and continues to be a frequent subject of gospel and psalter manuscript illuminations.[184] Depictions continue to be greatly influenced by the Acts of Pilate, and the number of situations in which Pilate is depicted also increases.[184] From the eleventh century onward, Pilate is frequently represented as a Jewish king, wearing a beard and a Jewish hat.[189] In many depictions he is no longer depicted washing his hands, or is depicted washing his hands but not in the presence of Jesus, or else he is depicted in passion scenes in which the Bible does not mention him.[190]
Despite being venerated as a saint by the Coptic and Ethiopian Churches, very few images of Pilate exist in these traditions from any time period.[3]
High and late medieval and renaissance art[edit]
In the thirteenth century, depictions of the events of Christ's passion came to dominate all visual art forms—these depictions of the "Passion cycle" do not always include Pilate, but they often do so; when he is included, he is often given stereotyped Jewish features.[191] One of the earliest examples of Pilate rendered as a Jew is from the eleventh century on the Hildesheim cathedral doors (see image, above right). This is the first known usage of the motif of Pilate being influenced and corrupted by the Devil in Medieval Art. While some believe that the Devil on the doors is rendered as the Jew in disguise, other scholars hold that the Devil's connection to the Jews here is a little less direct, as the motif of the Jew as the Devil was not well-established at that point. Rather, increased tensions between Christians and Jews initiated the association of Jews as friends of the Devil, and the art alludes to this alliance.[192] Pilate is typically represented in fourteen different scenes from his life;[193] however, more than half of all thirteenth-century representations of Pilate show the trial of Jesus.[194] Pilate also comes to be frequently depicted as present at the crucifixion, by the fifteenth century being a standard element of crucifixion artwork.[195] While many images still draw from the Acts of Pilate, the Golden Legend of Jacobus de Voragine is the primary source for depictions of Pilate from the second half of the thirteenth century onward.[196] Pilate now frequently appears in illuminations for books of hours,[197] as well as in the richly illuminated Bibles moralisées, which include many biographical scenes adopted from the legendary material, although Pilate's washing of hands remains the most frequently depicted scene.[198] In the Bible moralisée, Pilate is generally depicted as a Jew.[199] In many other images, however, he is depicted as a king or with a mixture of attributes of a Jew and a king.[200]
The fourteenth and fifteenth centuries see fewer depictions of Pilate, although he generally appears in cycles of artwork on the passion. He is sometimes replaced by Herod, Annas, and Caiaphas in the trial scene.[201] Depictions of Pilate in this period are mostly found in private devotional settings such as on ivory or in books; he is also a major subject in a number of panel-paintings, mostly German, and frescoes, mostly Scandinavian.[202] The most frequent scene to include Pilate is his washing of his hands; Pilate is typically portrayed similarly to the high priests as an old, bearded man, often wearing a Jewish hat but sometimes a crown, and typically carrying a scepter.[203] Images of Pilate were especially popular in Italy, where, however, he was almost always portrayed as a Roman,[204] and often appears in the new medium of large-scale church paintings.[205] Pilate continued to be represented in various manuscript picture bibles and devotional works as well, often with innovative iconography, sometimes depicting scenes from the Pilate legends.[206] Many, mostly German, engravings and woodcuts of Pilate were created in the fifteenth century.[207] Images of Pilate were printed in the Biblia pauperum ("Bibles of the Poor"), picture bibles focusing on the life of Christ, as well as the Speculum Humanae Salvationis ("Mirror of Human Salvation"), which continued to be printed into the sixteenth century.[208]
Post-medieval art[edit]
In the modern period, depictions of Pilate become less frequent, though occasional depictions are still made of his encounter with Jesus.[209] In the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, Pilate was frequently dressed as an Arab, wearing a turban, long robes, and a long beard, given the same characteristics as the Jews. Notable paintings of this era include Tintoretto's Christ before Pilate (1566/67), in which Pilate is given the forehead of a philosopher, and Gerrit van Honthorst's 1617 Christ before Pilate, which was later recatalogued as Christ before the High Priest due to Pilate's Jewish appearance.[210]
Following this longer period in which few depictions of Pilate were made, the increased religiosity of the mid-nineteenth century caused a slew of new depictions of Pontius Pilate to be created, now depicted as a Roman.[210] In 1830, J. M. W. Turner painted Pilate Washing His Hands, in which the governor himself is not visible, but rather only the back of his chair,[211] with lamenting women in the foreground. One famous nineteenth-century painting of Pilate is Christ before Pilate (1881) by Hungarian painter Mihály Munkácsy: the work brought Munkácsy great fame and celebrity in his lifetime, making his reputation and being popular in the United States in particular, where the painting was purchased.[212] In 1896, Munkácsy painted a second painting featuring Christ and Pilate, Ecce homo, which however was never exhibited in the United States; both paintings portray Jesus's fate as in the hands of the crowd rather than Pilate.[213] The "most famous of nineteenth-century pictures"[214] of Pilate is What is truth? ("Что есть истина?") by the Russian painter Nikolai Ge, which was completed in 1890; the painting was banned from exhibition in Russia in part because the figure of Pilate was identified as representing the tsarist authorities.[215] In 1893, Ge painted another another painting, Golgotha, in which Pilate is represented only by his commanding hand, sentencing Jesus to death.[211] The Scala sancta, supposedly the staircase from Pilate's praetorium, now located in Rome, is flanked by a life-sized sculpture of Christ and Pilate in the Ecce homo scene made in the nineteenth century by the Italian sculptor Ignazio Jacometti.[216]
The image of Pilate condemning Jesus to death is commonly encountered today as the first scene of the Stations of the Cross, first found in Franciscan Catholic churches in the seventeenth century and found in almost all Catholic churches since the nineteenth century.[217][218][219]
Medieval plays[edit]
Pilate plays a major role in the medieval passion play. He is frequently depicted as a more important character to the narrative than even Jesus,[220] and became one of the most important figures of medieval drama in the fifteenth century.[221] The three most popular scenes in the plays to include Pilate are his washing of hands, the warning of his wife Procula not to harm Jesus, and the writing of the titulus on Jesus' cross.[203] Pilate's characterization varies greatly from play to play, but later plays frequently portray Pilate somewhat ambiguously, though he is usually a negative character, and sometimes an evil villain.[222] While in some plays Pilate is opposed to the Jews and condemns them, in others he describes himself as a Jew or supports their wish to kill Christ.[223]
In the passion plays from the continental Western Europe, Pilate's characterization varies from good to evil, but he is mostly a benign figure.[224] The earliest surviving passion play, the thirteenth-century Ludus de Passione from Klosterneuburg, portrays Pilate as a weak administrator who succumbs to the whims of the Jews in having Christ crucified.[225] Pilate goes on to play an important role in the increasingly long and elaborate passion plays performed in the German-speaking countries and in France.[226] In Arnoul Gréban's fifteenth-century Passion, Pilate instructs the flagellators on how best to whip Jesus.[227] The 1517 Alsfelder Passionsspiel portrays Pilate as condemning Christ to death out of fear of losing Herod's friendship and to earn the Jews' good will, despite his long dialogues with the Jews in which he professes Christ's innocence. He eventually becomes a Christian himself.[228] In the 1493 Frankfurter Passionsspiel, on the other hand, Pilate himself accuses Christ.[229] The fifteenth-century German Benediktbeuern passion play depicts Pilate as a good friend of Herod's, kissing him in a reminiscence of the kiss of Judas.[199] Colum Hourihane argues that all of these plays supported antisemitic tropes and were written at times when persecution of Jews on the continent were high.[230]
The fifteenth-century Roman Passione depicts Pilate as trying to save Jesus against the wishes of the Jews.[223] In the Italian passion plays, Pilate never identifies himself as a Jew, condemning them in the fifteenth-century Resurrezione and stressing the Jews' fear of the "new law" of Christ.[231]
Hourihane argues that in England, where the Jews had been expelled in 1290, Pilate's characterization may have been used primarily to satyrize corrupt officials and judges rather than to stoke antisemitism.[232] In several English plays, Pilate is portrayed speaking French or Latin, the languages of the ruling classes and the law.[233] In the Wakefield plays, Pilate is portrayed as wickedly evil, describing himself as Satan's agent (mali actoris) while plotting Christ's torture so as to extract the most pain. He nonetheless washes his hands of guilt after the tortures have been administered.[234] Yet many scholars believe the motif of the conniving devil and the Jews to be inextricably linked. By the thirteenth century, medieval arts and literature had a well-established tradition of the Jew as the Devil in disguise.[192] Thus, some scholars believe that Anti-Judaism still lies near the heart of the matter.[192] In the fifteenth-century English Townley Cycle, Pilate is portrayed as a pompous lord and prince of the Jews, but also as forcing Christ's torturer to give him Christ's clothes at the foot of the cross.[235] It is he alone who wishes to kill Christ rather than the high priests, conspiring together with Judas.[236] In the fifteenth-century English York passion play, Pilate judges Jesus together with Annas and Caiaphas, becoming a central character of the passion narrative who converses with and instructs other characters.[237] In this play, when Judas comes back to Pilate and the priests to tell them he no longer wishes to betray Jesus, Pilate browbeats Judas into going through with the plan.[238] Not only does Pilate force Judas to betray Christ, he double-crosses him and refuses to take him on as a servant once Judas has done so. Moreover, Pilate also swindles his way into possession of the Potter's field, thus owning the land on which Judas commits suicide.[239] In the York passion cycle, Pilate describes himself as a courtier, but in most English passion plays he proclaims his royal ancestry.[203] The actor who portrayed Pilate in the English plays would typically speak loudly and authoritatively, a fact which was parodied in Geoffrey Chaucer's Canterbury Tales.[240]
The fifteenth century also sees Pilate as a character in plays based on legendary material: one, La Vengeance de Nostre-Seigneur, exists in two dramatic treatments focusing on the horrible fates that befell Christ's tormenters: it portrays Pilate being tied to a pillar, covered with oil and honey, and then slowly dismembered over 21 days; he is carefully tended to so that he does not die until the end.[241] Another play focusing on Pilate's death is Cornish and based on the Mors Pilati.[242] The Mystère de la Passion d'Angers by Jean Michel includes legendary scenes of Pilate's life before the passion.[224]
Modern literature[edit]
Pontius Pilate appears as a character in a large number of literary works, typically as a character in the judgment of Christ.[217] One of the earliest literary works in which he plays a large role is French writer Anatole France's 1892 short story "Le Procurateur de Judée" ("The Procurator of Judaea"), which portrays an elderly Pilate who has been banished to Sicily. There he lives happily as a farmer and is looked after by his daughter, but suffers from gout and obesity and broods over his time as governor of Judaea.[243] Spending his time at the baths of Baiae, Pilate is unable to remember Jesus at all.[244]
Pilate makes a brief appearance in the preface to George Bernard Shaw's 1933 play On the Rocks where he argues against Jesus about the dangers of revolution and of new ideas.[245] Shortly afterwards, French writer Roger Caillois wrote a novel Pontius Pilate (1936), in which Pilate acquits Jesus.[246]
Pilate features prominently in Russian author Mikhail Bulgakov's novel The Master and Margarita, which was written in the 1930s but only published in 1966, twenty six years after the author's death.[247] Henry I. MacAdam describes it as "the 'cult classic' of Pilate-related fiction."[246] The work features a novel within the novel about Pontius Pilate and his encounter with Jesus by an author only called the Master. Because of this subject matter, the Master has been attacked for "Pilatism" by the Soviet literary establishment. Five chapters of the novel are featured as chapters of The Master and Margarita. In them, Pilate is portrayed as wishing to save Jesus, being affected by his charisma, but as too cowardly to do so. Russian critics in the 1960s interpreted this Pilate as "a model of the spineless provincial bureaucrats of Stalinist Russia."[248] Pilate becomes obsessed with his guilt for having killed Jesus.[249] Because he betrayed his desire to follow his morality and free Jesus, Pilate must suffer for eternity.[250] Pilate's burden of guilt is finally lifted by the Master when he encounters him at the end of Bulgakov's novel.[251]
The majority of literary texts about Pilate come from the time after the Second World War, a fact which Alexander Demandt suggests shows a cultural dissatisfaction with Pilate having washed his hands of guilt.[244] One of Swiss writer Friedrich Dürrenmatt's earliest stories ("Pilatus," 1949) portrays Pilate as aware that he is torturing God in the trial of Jesus.[252] Swiss playwright Max Frisch's comedy Die chinesische Mauer portrays Pilate as a skeptical intellectual who refuses to take responsibility for the suffering he has caused.[253] The German Catholic novelist Gertrud von Le Fort's Die Frau des Pilatus portrays Pilate's wife as converting to Christianity after attempting to save Jesus and assuming Pilate's guilt for herself; Pilate executes her as well.[252]
In 1986, Soviet-Kyrgiz writer Chingiz Aitmatov published a novel in Russian featuring Pilate titled Placha (The Place of the Skull). The novel centers on an extended dialogue between Pilate and Jesus witnessed in a vision by the narrator Avdii Kallistratov, a former seminarian. Pilate is presented as an materialist pessimist who believes mankind will soon destroy itself, whereas Jesus offers a message of hope.[247] Among other topics, the two anachronistically discuss the meaning of the last judgment and the second coming; Pilate fails to comprehend Jesus's teachings and is complacent as he sends him to his death.[254]
Film[edit]
Pilate has been depicted in a number of films, being included in portrayals of Christ's passion already in some of the earliest films produced.[255] In the 1927 silent film The King of Kings, Pilate is played by Hungarian-American actor Victor Varconi, who is introduced seated under an enormous 37 feet high Roman eagle, which Christopher McDonough argues symbolizes "not power that he possesses but power that possesses him".[256] During the Ecce homo scene, the eagle stands in the background between Jesus and Pilate, with a wing above each figure; after hesitantly condemning Jesus, Pilate passes back to the eagle, which is now framed beside him, showing his isolation in his decision and, McDonough suggests, causing the audience to question how well he has served the emperor.[257]
The film The Last Days of Pompeii (1935) portrays Pilate as "a representative of the gross materialism of the Roman empire", with the actor Basil Rathbone giving him long fingers and a long nose.[258] Following the Second World War, Pilate and the Romans often take on a villainous role in American film.[259] The 1953 film The Robe portrays Pilate as completely covered with gold and rings as a sign of Roman decadence.[260] The 1959 film Ben-Hur shows Pilate presiding over a chariot race, in a scene that Ann Wroe says "seemed closely modeled on the Hitler footage of the 1936 Olympics," with Pilate bored and sneering.[261] Martin Winkler, however, argues that Ben-Hur provides a more nuanced and less condemnatory portrayal of Pilate and the Roman Empire than most American films of the period.[262]
Only one film has been made entirely in Pilate's perspective, the 1962 French-Italian Ponzio Pilato, where Pilate was played by Jean Marais.[260] In the 1973 film Jesus Christ Superstar, the trial of Jesus takes place in the ruins of a Roman theater, suggesting the collapse of Roman authority and "the collapse of all authority, political or otherwise".[263] The Pilate in the film, played by Barry Dennen, expands on John 18:38 to question Jesus on the truth and appears, in McDonough's view, as "an anxious representative of [...] moral relativism".[263] Speaking of Dennen's portrayal in the trial scene, McDonough describes him as a "cornered animal."[264] Wroe argues that later Pilates took on a sort of effeminancy,[260] illustrated by the Pilate in Monty Python's Life of Brian, where Pilate lisps and mispronounces his r's as w's. In Martin Scorsese's The Last Temptation of Christ (1988), Pilate is played by David Bowie, who appears as "gaunt and eerily hermaphrodite."[260] Bowie's Pilate speaks with a British accent, contrasting with the American accent of Jesus (Willem Dafoe).[265] The trial takes place in Pilate's private stables, implying that Pilate does not think the judgment of Jesus very important, and no attempt is made to take any responsibility from Pilate for Jesus's death, which he orders without any qualms.[266]
Mel Gibson's 2004 film The Passion of the Christ portrays Pilate, played by Hristo Shopov, as a sympathetic, noble-minded character,[267] fearful that the Jewish priest Caiaphas will start an uprising if he does not give in to his demands. He expresses disgust at the Jewish authorities' treatment of Jesus when Jesus is brought before him and offers Jesus a drink of water.[267] McDonough argues that "Shopov gives US a very subtle Pilate, one who manages to appear alarmed though not panicked before the crowd, but who betrays far greater misgivings in private conversation with his wife."[268]
Legacy[edit]
Pontius Pilate is mentioned as having been involved in the crucifixion in both the Nicene Creed and the Apostles Creed. The Apostles Creed states that Jesus "suffered under Pontius Pilate, was crucified, died, and was buried."[269] The Nicene Creed states "For our sake [Jesus] was crucified under Pontius Pilate; he suffered death and was buried."[270] These creeds are recited weekly by many Christians.[271] Pilate is the only person besides Jesus and Mary mentioned by name in the creeds.[272] The mention of Pilate in the creeds serves to mark the passion as a historical event.[273]
He is venerated as a saint by the Ethiopian Church with a feast day on June 19,[152][274] and by the Coptic Church, with a feast day of June 25.[275]
Pilate's washing his hands of responsibility for Jesus's death in Matthew 27:24 is a commonly encountered image in the popular imagination,[73] and is the origin of the English phrase "to wash one's hands of (the matter)", meaning to refuse further involvement with or responsibility for something.[276] Parts of the dialogue attributed to Pilate in the Gospel of John have become particularly famous sayings, especially quoted in the Latin version of the Vulgate.[277] These include John 18:35 (numquid ego Iudaeus sum? "Am I a Jew?"), John 18:38 (Quid est veritas?; "what is truth?"), John 19:5 (Ecce homo, "Behold the man!"), John 19:14 (Ecce rex vester, "Behold your king!"), and John 19:22 (Quod scripsi, scripsi, "What I have written, I have written").[277]
The Gospels' deflection of responsibility for Jesus's crucifixion from Pilate to the Jews has been blamed for fomenting antisemitism from the Middle Ages through the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.[278]
Scholarly assessments[edit]
The main ancient sources on Pilate offer very different views on his governorship and personality. Philo is hostile, Josephus mostly neutral, and the Gospels "comparatively friendly."[279] This, combined with the general lack of information on Pilate's long time in office, has resulted in a wide range of assessments by modern scholars.[18]
On the basis of the many offenses that Pilate caused to the Judaean populace, some scholars find Pilate to have been a particularly bad governor. M. P. Charlesworth argues that Pilate was "a man whose character and capacity fell below those of the ordinary provincial official [...] in ten years he had piled blunder on blunder in his scorn for and misunderstanding of the people he was sent to rule."[280] However, Paul Maier argues that Pilate's long term as governor of Judaea indicates he must have been a reasonably competent administrator,[281] while Henry MacAdam argues that "[a]mong the Judaean governors prior to the Jewish War, Pilate must be ranked as more capable than most."[282] Other scholars have argued that Pilate was simply culturally insensitive in his interactions with the Jews and in this way a typical Roman official.[283]
Beginning with E. Stauffer in 1948, scholars have argued, on the basis of his possible appointment by Sejanus, that Pilate's offenses against the Jews were directed by Sejanus out of hatred of the Jews and a desire to destroy their nation, a theory supported by the pagan imagery on Pilate's coins.[284] According to this theory, following Sejanus's execution in 31 CE and Tiberius's purges of his supporters, Pilate, fearful of being removed himself, became far more cautious, explaining his apparently weak and vaciliating attitude at the trial of Jesus.[285] Helen Bond argues that "[g]iven the history of pagan designs throughout Judaean coinage, particularly from Herod and Gratus, Pilate's coins do not seem to be deliberately offensive,"[286] and that the coins offer little evidence of any connection between Pilate and Sejanus.[287] Carter notes this theory arose in the context of the aftermath of the Holocaust, that the evidence that Sejanus was anti-Semitic depends entirely on Philo, and that "[m]ost scholars have not been convinced that it is an accurate or a fair picture of Pilate."[288]
See also[edit]
Notes[edit]
- ^ Later Christian tradition gives Pilate's wife the names Procula (Latin: Procula) or Procla (Ancient Greek: Πρόκλα),[1] as well as Claudia Procula[2] and sometimes other names such as Livia or Pilatessa.[3]
- ^ /ˈpɒn(t)ʃəs ˈpaɪlət, -tiəs -/ PON-shəs PY-lət, -chəs -, -tee-əs -;[4][5][6]
- ^ Pilate's title as governor, as attested on the Pilate stone, is "prefect of Judaea" (praefectus Iudaeae). His title is given as procurator in Tacitus, and with the Greek equivalent epitropos (ἐπίτροπος) in Josephus and Philo.[37] The title prefect was later changed to "procurator" under the emperor Claudius, explaining why later sources give Pilate this title.[38] The New Testament uses the generic Greek term hegemon (ἡγεμών), a term also applied to Pilate in Josephus.[37]
Citations[edit]
- ^ Demandt 1999, p. 162.
- ^ a b Grüll 2010, p. 168.
- ^ a b Hourihane 2009, p. 415.
- ^ Olausson & Sangster 2006.
- ^ Milinovich 2010.
- ^ Jones 2006.
- ^ Carter 2003, p. 11; Grüll 2010, p. 167.
- ^ Schwartz 1992, p. 398; Lémonon 2007, p. 121.
- ^ Maier 1971, p. 371; Demandt 2012, pp. 92–93.
- ^ Bond 1998, p. 22; Carter 2003.
- ^ a b c d Carter 2003, p. 12.
- ^ Demandt 2012, p. 34. "Nach dem Tod des Caligula, unter Claudius, schrieb Philo seine 'Legatio'."
- ^ Bayes 2010, p. 79.
- ^ Trebilco 2007, p. 631.
- ^ Wroe 1999, p. xii.
- ^ Carter 2003, pp. 12–13.
- ^ MacAdam 2001, p. 75.
- ^ a b Carter 2003, pp. 12–19.
- ^ a b Lémonon 2007, p. 121.
- ^ a b Lémonon 2007, p. 16.
- ^ Demandt 2012, p. 47–48.
- ^ Wroe 1999, p. 16.
- ^ Ollivier 1896, p. 252.
- ^ a b Demandt 2012, pp. 46–47.
- ^ Bond 1998, p. 9.
- ^ Carter 2003, p. 15.
- ^ Bond 1998, p. 197; Demandt 2012, pp. 76-77; Lémonon 2007, p. 167.
- ^ Demandt 2012, p. 48.
- ^ Lémonon 2007, pp. 121–122.
- ^ a b c Schwartz 1992, p. 398.
- ^ Bond 1998, p. 8.
- ^ Maier 1968, pp. 8–9.
- ^ McGing 1991, p. 427; Carter 2003, p. 4; Schwartz 1992, p. 398.
- ^ Schwartz 1992, pp. 396–397.
- ^ Lönnqvist 2000, p. 67.
- ^ Lémonon 2007, p. 122.
- ^ a b Schwartz 1992, p. 397.
- ^ Bond 1998, pp. 11–12.
- ^ Bond 1998, p. 11.
- ^ a b Schwartz 1992, p. 197.
- ^ Lémonon 2007, p. 70.
- ^ Bond 1998, pp. 5, 14–15.
- ^ Bond 1998, pp. 7–8.
- ^ Carter 2003, p. 46.
- ^ Lémonon 2007, pp. 86–88.
- ^ Bond 1998, p. 19.
- ^ Carter 2003, p. 48.
- ^ Maier 1971, p. 364.
- ^ a b Bond 1998, p. 89.
- ^ Lémonon 2007, p. 172.
- ^ a b Schwartz 1992, p. 400.
- ^ Demandt 2012, pp. 60–61.
- ^ a b c Schwartz 1992, p. 399.
- ^ MacAdam 2001, p. 78.
- ^ Taylor 2006.
- ^ Bond 1998, pp. 52–53.
- ^ Bond 1998, p. 57.
- ^ Bond 1998, p. 79.
- ^ Demandt 2012, pp. 53–55.
- ^ Lémonon 2007, p. 206.
- ^ Yonge 1855, pp. 165–166.
- ^ Bond 1998, pp. 36–37; Carter 2003, pp. 15–16; Schwartz 1992, p. 399.
- ^ Bond 1998, p. 39.
- ^ Demandt 2012, pp. 51–52.
- ^ Bond 1998, p. 46.
- ^ Bond 1998, p. 53.
- ^ Bond 1998, pp. 194–195.
- ^ Bond 1998, pp. 195–196.
- ^ Bond 1998, p. 196.
- ^ a b Bond 1998, p. 201.
- ^ Hourihane 2009, pp. 22–23.
- ^ Bond 1998, pp. 196–167.
- ^ a b Bond 1998, p. xi.
- ^ Ash 2018, p. 194.
- ^ Bond 1998, p. 67, 71.
- ^ Demandt 2012, pp. 44–45.
- ^ Bond 1998, p. 197.
- ^ Demandt 2012, pp. 70-71.
- ^ Bond 1998, pp. 197–198; Lémonon 2007, p. 172; Demandt 2012, p. 74.
- ^ Bond 1998, p. 198.
- ^ Lémonon 2007, pp. 172–173.
- ^ Bond 1998, pp. 199; Lémonon 2007, pp. 173–176; Demandt 2012, pp. 75–76.
- ^ a b McGing 1991, p. 417.
- ^ Meier 1990, p. 95.
- ^ McGing 1991, pp. 417–418.
- ^ Winter 1974, pp. 85–86.
- ^ Ehrman 2003, pp. 20-21.
- ^ McGing 1991, pp. 435–436.
- ^ Carter 2003, pp. 153–154.
- ^ Demandt 2012, p. 63.
- ^ Bond 1998, p. 67.
- ^ Karen Cokayne, Experiencing Old Age In Ancient Rome, p.100
- ^ Maier 1971, pp. 366–367.
- ^ Maier 1971, p. 367.
- ^ Bond 1998, pp. 92–93.
- ^ Taylor 2006, p. 577.
- ^ a b Maier 1971, p. 369.
- ^ Demandt 2012, p. 92.
- ^ a b Maier 1971, p. 370.
- ^ Grüll 2010, p. 154–155.
- ^ Maier 1971, p. 371.
- ^ Taylor 2006, p. 578.
- ^ a b Vardaman 1962, p. 70.
- ^ Taylor 2006, pp. 565–566.
- ^ Demandt 2012, p. 40.
- ^ Taylor 2006, p. 566.
- ^ Demandt 2012, pp. 41–42.
- ^ Bond 1998, p. 12.
- ^ Taylor 2006, pp. 566–567.
- ^ Vardaman 1962.
- ^ a b MacAdam 2017, p. 134.
- ^ a b Bormann 1901, p. 647.
- ^ a b c MacAdam 2001, p. 73.
- ^ Demandt 1999, p. 82.
- ^ a b Bond 1998, pp. 20–21.
- ^ Taylor 2006, pp. 556–557.
- ^ Bond 1996, p. 243.
- ^ Bond 1996, p. 250.
- ^ Lémonon 2007, p. 155.
- ^ Lönnqvist 2000, p. 64.
- ^ Lönnqvist 2000, p. 473.
- ^ Amora-Stark 2018, p. 212.
- ^ Amora-Stark 2018, pp. 216–217.
- ^ Amora-Stark 2018, p. 218.
- ^ Grüll 2010, pp. 156–157.
- ^ Grüll 2010, pp. 170–171.
- ^ Demandt 2012, p. 102.
- ^ Hourihane 2009, p. 37.
- ^ Wroe 1999, p. 329.
- ^ Ehrman 2003, pp. 20-22.
- ^ a b Grüll 2010, p. 166.
- ^ Demandt 2012, p. 94.
- ^ Lémonon 2007, pp. 232–233.
- ^ Izydorczyk 1997, p. 22.
- ^ Hourihane 2009, p. 25.
- ^ Demandt 2012, pp. 93–94.
- ^ Koester 1980, p. 126.
- ^ Hourihane 2009, p. 26.
- ^ Koester 1980, pp. 128–129.
- ^ Hourihane 2009, p. 27.
- ^ Izydorczyk 1997, p. 4.
- ^ Dilley 2010, pp. 592–594.
- ^ Izydorczyk 1997, p. 6.
- ^ Izydorczyk 1997, pp. 9–11, 419–519.
- ^ a b c Izydorczyk 1997, p. 7.
- ^ Carter 2003, pp. 10–11.
- ^ Piovanelli 2003, pp. 427-428.
- ^ Piovanelli 2003, p. 430.
- ^ Piovanelli 2003, pp. 433-434.
- ^ Grüll 2010, pp. 159–160.
- ^ Grüll 2010, pp. 166–167.
- ^ a b c Grüll 2010, p. 167.
- ^ Burke 2018, p. 266.
- ^ a b Grüll 2010, p. 160.
- ^ Gounelle 2011, p. 233.
- ^ a b Grüll 2010, p. 162.
- ^ Gounelle 2011, pp. 243-244.
- ^ Hourihane 2009, p. 36.
- ^ Grüll 2010, pp. 162–163.
- ^ a b c Grüll 2010, p. 164.
- ^ Martin 1973, p. 99.
- ^ Martin 1973, p. 102.
- ^ Martin 1973, pp. 102–103, 106.
- ^ Martin 1973, pp. 101–102.
- ^ Martin 1973, pp. 102–103.
- ^ Martin 1973, p. 109.
- ^ Hourihane 2009, p. 234.
- ^ a b Demandt 2012, p. 104.
- ^ Demandt 2012, pp. 104–105.
- ^ Demandt 2012, pp. 105–106.
- ^ Grüll 2010, p. 165.
- ^ Macaskill, Mark (3 January 2010). "Pontius Pilate's Scottish roots 'a joke'". The Times. Retrieved 17 January 2020.
- ^ Campsie, Alison (17 November 2016). "Mystery of the '5,000-year-old' yew of Fortingall". The Scotsman. Retrieved 17 January 2020.
- ^ Demandt 2012, pp. 102–103.
- ^ Demandt 2012, p. 106.
- ^ Demandt 1999, pp. 69–70.
- ^ Hourihane 2009, p. 2.
- ^ Hourihane 2009, p. 67.
- ^ Kirschbaum 1971, p. 436.
- ^ Hourihane 2009, p. 52.
- ^ Hourihane 2009, p. 53.
- ^ Hourihane 2009, pp. 57–60.
- ^ a b Hourihane 2009, p. 85.
- ^ a b c d Hourihane 2009, p. 144.
- ^ Hourihane 2009, p. 86, 93–95, 111–116.
- ^ Hourihane 2009, pp. 98–100.
- ^ Hourihane 2009, p. 86.
- ^ Hourihane 2009, p. 92.
- ^ Hourihane 2009, pp. 146–151.
- ^ Hourihane 2009, pp. 151–153.
- ^ Hourihane 2009, pp. 227–228.
- ^ a b c "Pontius Pilate, anti-Semitism, and the Passion in medieval art". Choice Reviews Online. 47 (04): 47-1822–47-1822. 1 December 2009. doi:10.5860/choice.47-1822. ISSN 0009-4978.
- ^ Hourihane 2009, p. 238.
- ^ Hourihane 2009, p. 255.
- ^ Hourihane 2009, pp. 240–243.
- ^ Hourihane 2009, pp. 234–235.
- ^ Hourihane 2009, pp. 228–232, 238.
- ^ Hourihane 2009, pp. 245–249.
- ^ a b Hourihane 2009, p. 252.
- ^ Hourihane 2009, p. 293.
- ^ Hourihane 2009, pp. 296–297.
- ^ Hourihane 2009, p. 303.
- ^ a b c Hourihane 2009, p. 297.
- ^ Hourihane 2009, pp. 303–304.
- ^ Hourihane 2009, p. 305.
- ^ Hourihane 2009, pp. 312–321.
- ^ Hourihane 2009, pp. 321–323.
- ^ Hourihane 2009, pp. 308–311.
- ^ Kirschbaum 1971, p. 438.
- ^ a b Wroe 1999, p. 38.
- ^ a b Wroe 1999, p. 185.
- ^ Morowitz 2009, pp. 184–186.
- ^ Morowitz 2009, p. 191.
- ^ Wroe 1999, p. 182.
- ^ Wroe 1999, pp. 182–185.
- ^ Hourihane 2009, p. 392.
- ^ a b MacAdam 2001, p. 90.
- ^ MacAdam 2017, pp. 138-139.
- ^ The Catholic Encyclopedia (1907). s.v. "The Way of the Cross" Archived 27 March 2019 at the Wayback Machine.
- ^ Hourihane 2009, p. 363.
- ^ Hourihane 2009, p. 296.
- ^ Hourihane 2009, pp. 363–364.
- ^ a b Hourihane 2009, p. 364.
- ^ a b Hourihane 2009, p. 365.
- ^ Hourihane 2009, p. 237.
- ^ Hourihane 2009, pp. 365–366.
- ^ Hourihane 2009, pp. 283–284.
- ^ Hourihane 2009, pp. 366–367.
- ^ Hourihane 2009, pp. 367–368.
- ^ Hourihane 2009, pp. 368–369.
- ^ Hourihane 2009, pp. 364–365.
- ^ Hourihane 2009, p. 265.
- ^ Wroe 1999, pp. 177–178.
- ^ Hourihane 2009, p. 286.
- ^ Hourihane 2009, p. 243.
- ^ Hourihane 2009, p. 297, 328.
- ^ Hourihane 2009, pp. 243–245.
- ^ Wroe 1999, pp. 213–214.
- ^ Hourihane 2009, p. 328.
- ^ Hourihane 2009, p. 352.
- ^ Hourihane 2009, p. 317.
- ^ Hourihane 2009, p. 318.
- ^ Wroe 1999, p. 358.
- ^ a b Demandt 2012, p. 107.
- ^ Wroe 1999, p. 195.
- ^ a b MacAdam 2017, p. 133.
- ^ a b Langenhorst 1995, p. 90.
- ^ Wroe 1999, p. 273.
- ^ Ziolkowski 1992, p. 165.
- ^ Bond 1998, p. xiii.
- ^ Wroe 1999, p. 371.
- ^ a b Demandt 2012, p. 108.
- ^ Demandt 2012, pp. 107–109.
- ^ Ziolkowski 1992, pp. 167–168.
- ^ McDonough 2009, p. 278-2280.
- ^ McDonough 2009, p. 283.
- ^ McDonough 2009, pp. 284-285.
- ^ Wroe 1999, pp. 38–39.
- ^ Winkler 1998, p. 167.
- ^ a b c d Wroe 1999, p. 39.
- ^ Wroe 1999, p. 186.
- ^ Winkler 1998, p. 192.
- ^ a b McDonough 2009, p. 287.
- ^ McDonough 2009, p. 290.
- ^ McDonough 2009, pp. 290-291.
- ^ McDonough 2009, pp. 291-293.
- ^ a b Grace 2004, p. 16.
- ^ McDonough 2009, p. 295.
- ^ "The Apostles' Creed" (PDF). Cardinal Newman Catechist Consultants. 2008. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2 March 2019. Retrieved 15 July 2019.
- ^ Nicene Creed in English
- ^ Carter 2003, p. 1.
- ^ Hourihane 2009, p. 391.
- ^ Bayes 2010, p. 78.
- ^ Carter 2003, p. 11.
- ^ Hourihane 2009, p. 4.
- ^ Martin 2019.
- ^ a b MacAdam 2017, p. 139.
- ^ Wroe 1999, pp. 331–332.
- ^ McGing 1991, pp. 415–416.
- ^ Maier 1971, p. 363.
- ^ Maier 1971, p. 365.
- ^ MacAdam 2001, p. 77.
- ^ Carter 2003, pp. 5–6.
- ^ Maier 1968, pp. 9–10.
- ^ Maier 1968, pp. 10–11.
- ^ Bond 1998, p. 21.
- ^ Bond 1998, p. 22.
- ^ Carter 2003, p. 4.
References[edit]
- Amora-Stark, Shua; et al. (2018). "An Inscribed Copper-Alloy Finger Ring from Herodium Depicting a Krater". Israel Exploration Journal. 68 (2): 208–220.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Ash, Rhiannon, ed. (2018). Tacitus Annals. Book XV. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-107-00978-3.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Bayes, Jonathan F. (2010). The Apostles' Creed: Truth with Passion. Wipf and Stock Publishers. ISBN 978-1-60899-539-4.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Bond, Helen K. (1996). "The Coins of Pontius Pilate: Part of an Attempt to Provoke the People or to Integrate them into the Empire?". Journal for the Study of Judaism in the Persian, Hellenistic, and Roman Period. 27 (3): 241–262. doi:10.1163/157006396X00076. JSTOR 24660068.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Bond, Helen K. (1998). Pontius Pilate in History and Interpretation. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-63114-9.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Bormann, Eugen, ed. (1901). Corpus Inscriptionum Latinarum XI.2.1: Inscriptiones Aemiliae, Etruriae, Umbriae, Latinae. Berlin: G. Reimer.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Burke, Paul F. (2018). "Saint Pilate and the Conversion of Tiberius". In English, Mary C.; Fratantuono, Lee (eds.). Pushing the boundaries of Historia. London and New York: Routledge. pp. 264–268. ISBN 978-1-138-04632-0.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Carter, Carter (2003). Pontius Pilate: Portraits of a Roman Governor. Collegeville, Mn.: Liturgical Press. ISBN 0-8146-5113-5.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Demandt, Alexander (1999). Hände in Unschuld: Pontius Pilatus in der Geschichte. Cologne, Weimar, Vienna: Böhlau. ISBN 3-412-01799-X.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Demandt, Alexander (2012). Pontius Pilatus. Munich: C. H. Beck. ISBN 978-3-406-63362-1.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Dilley, Paul C. (2010). "The Invention of Christian Tradition: "Apocrypha," Imperial Policy, and Anti-Jewish Propaganda". Greek, Roman, and Byzantine Studies. 50 (4): 586–615.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Ehrman, Bart D. (2003). Lost Christianities: The Battles for Scripture and the Faiths We Never Knew. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-518249-1.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Gounelle, Remi (2011). "Les origines littéraires de la légende de Véronique et de la Sainte Face: la Cura sanitatis Tiberii et la Vindicta Saluatoris". In Castagno, Adele Monaci (ed.). Sacre impronte e oggetti "non fatii da mano d'uomo" nelle religioni : atti del Convegno Internazionale, Torino, 18-20 maggio 2010. Alessandria: Edizioni dell'Orso. pp. 231–251. ISBN 9788862742993.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Grace, Pamela (2004). "Sacred Savagery: The Passion of the Christ". Cinéaste. 29 (3): 13–17. JSTOR 41690249.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Grüll, Tibor (2010). "The Legendary Fate of Pontius Pilate". Classica et Mediaevalia. 61: 151–176.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Hourihane, Colum (2009). Pontius Pilate, Anti-Semitism, and the Passion in Medieval Art. Princeton and Oxford: Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-13956-2.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Izydorczyk, Zbigniew, ed. (1997). The Medieval Gospel of Nicodemus: texts, intertexts, and contexts in Western Europe. Tempe, AZ: Medieval & Renaissance Texts and Studies. ISBN 0-86698-198-5.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Kirschbaum, Engelbert; et al., eds. (1971). "Pilatus". Lexikon der christlichen Ikonographie. 3. Rome, Freiburg, Basel, Vienna: Herder. pp. 436–439.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Koester, Helmut (1980). "Apocryphal and Canonical Gospels". The Harvard Theological Review. 73 (1/2): 105–130. doi:10.1017/S0017816000002066. JSTOR 1509481.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Langenhorst, Georg (1995). "The Rediscovery of Jesus as a Literary Figure". Literature and Theology. 9 (1): 85–98. doi:10.1093/litthe/9.1.85. JSTOR 23926700.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Lémonon, Jean-Pierre (2007). Ponce Pilate. Paris: Atelier. ISBN 9782708239180.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Lönnqvist, Kenneth (2000). "Pontius Pilate — An Aqueduct Builder? — Recent Findings and New Suggestions". Klio: Beiträge zur Alten Geschichte. 82 (2): 52–67. doi:10.1524/klio.2000.82.2.459.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- MacAdam, Henry I. (2001). "Quid Est Veritas? Pontius Pilate in Fact, Fiction, Film, and Fantasy". Irish Biblical Studies. 23 (1): 66–99.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- MacAdam, Henry I. (2017). "Quod scripsi, scripsi: Pontius Pilatus Redivivus". The Polish Journal of Biblical Research. 17 (1–2): 129–140.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Maier, Paul L. (1968). "Sejanus, Pilate, and the Date of the Crucifixion". Church History. 37 (1): 3–13. doi:10.2307/3163182. JSTOR 3163182.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Maier, Paul L. (1971). "The Fate of Pontius Pilate". Hermes. 99 (H. 3): 362–371. JSTOR 4475698.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Martin, Gary (2019). "Phrases and Expressions that originated in the Bible". phrases.org.uk. Retrieved 15 August 2019.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Martin, Howard (1973). "The Legend of Pontius Pilate". Amsterdamer Beiträge zur älteren Germanistik. 4 (1): 95–118. doi:10.1163/18756719-005-01-90000007.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- McDonough, Christopher M. (2009). "Quid est Veritas? Pontius Pilate, the Passion, and the Pax Romana in Film". Sewanee Theological Review. 52 (2): 276–301.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- McGing, Brian C. (1991). "Pontius Pilate and the Sources". The Catholic Biblical Quarterly. 53 (3): 416–438. JSTOR 43718282.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Meier, John P. (1990). "Jesus in Josephus: A Modest Proposal". The Catholic Biblical Quarterly. 52 (1): 76–103. JSTOR 43718026.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Milinovich, Timothy M., ed. (2010). Pronunciation Guide for the Lectionary. Liturgy Training Publications.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Morowitz, Laura (2009). "A Passion for Business: Wanamaker's, Munkácsy, and the Depiction of Christ". The Art Bulletin. 91 (2): 184–206. doi:10.1080/00043079.2009.10786164. JSTOR 40645479.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Olausson, Lena; Sangster, Catherine, eds. (2006). Oxford BBC Guide to Pronunciation. Oxford University Press.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Ollivier, Marie-Joseph (1896). "Ponce Pilate et les Pontii". Revue Biblique. 5 (2 and 4): 247–254, 594–600. JSTOR 44100212.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Piovanelli, Pierluigi (2003). "Exploring the Ethiopic "Book of the Cock", An Apocryphal Passion Gospel from Late Antiquity". The Harvard Theological Review. 96 (4): 427–454. doi:10.1017/S0017816003000518. JSTOR 4151866.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Jones, Daniel (2006). Roach, Peter; Hartman, James; Setter, Jane (eds.). Cambridge Pronouncing Dictionary. Cambridge University Press.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Schwartz, Daniel R. (1992). "Pontius Pilate". In Freedman, David Noel; Herion, Gary A.; Graf, David F.; Pleins, John David; Beck, Astrid B. (eds.). The Anchor Bible Dictionary. 5. New York: Doubleday. pp. 395–401. ISBN 0-385-19360-2.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Taylor, Joan E. (2006). "Pontius Pilate and the Imperial Cult in Roman Judaea". New Testament Studies. 52 (4): 555–582. doi:10.1017/S0028688506000300. hdl:10289/960.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Trebilco, Paul (2007). The Early Christians in Ephesus from Paul to Ignatius (Reprint ed.). Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing. ISBN 978-0-8028-0769-4.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Vardaman, Jerry (1962). "A New Inscription Which Mentions Pilate as "Prefect"". Journal of Biblical Literature. 81 (1): 70–71. doi:10.2307/3264829. JSTOR 3264829.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Whiston, William (1737). The Genuine Works of Flavius Josephus the Jewish Historian. London.
- Winkler, Martin M. (1998). "The Roman Empire in American Cinema after 1945". The Classical Journal. 93 (2): 167–196. JSTOR 3298137.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Winter, Paul (1974). On the Trial of Jesus. Berlin/New York: de Gruyter. ISBN 3-11-002283-4.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Wroe, Ann (1999). Pontius Pilate. New York: Random House. ISBN 0-375-50305-6.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Yonge, Charles Duke (1855). The Works of Philo Judaeus, The contemporary of Josephus, translated from the Greek. 4. London: H. G. Bohn.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Ziolkowski, Margaret (1992). "Pilate and Pilatism in Recent Russian Literature". In Graham, Sheelagh Duffin (ed.). New Directions in Soviet Literature: Selected Papers from the Fourth World Congress for Soviet and East European Studies, Harrogate, 1990. New York: St. Martin's Press in association with the International Council for Soviet and East European Studies. pp. 164–181. ISBN 0-312-07990-7.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
External links[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Pontius Pilate. |
Wikiquote has quotations related to: Pontius Pilate |
- Texts on Wikisource:
- Barnes, Arthur Stapylton (1911). "Pontius Pilate". Catholic Encyclopedia. 12.
- Innes, Alexander Taylor (1911). "Pilate, Pontius". Encyclopædia Britannica. 21 (11th ed.). pp. 602–603.
- Singer, Isidore; Broydé, Isaac (1905). "Pilate, Pontius". The Jewish Encyclopedia. 10. pp. 23–35.
Pontius Pilate
| ||
Preceded by Valerius Gratus |
Prefect of Iudaea 26–36 |
Succeeded by Marcellus |
- 1st-century BC births
- 39 deaths
- 1st-century Christian saints
- 1st-century Christianity
- 1st-century Roman governors of Judea
- 1st-century Romans
- Ancient Roman saints
- Ancient Romans who committed suicide
- Coptic Orthodox saints
- Ethiopian saints
- Jesus and history
- Jews and Judaism in the Roman Empire
- People from the Province of Teramo
- People in the canonical gospels
- Pontii
- Pontius Pilate
- Roman governors of Judea