Christmas 1 (3)
In stark contrast, Herod’s domestic life was filled with turmoil, fostering his natural tendency toward cruelty and instability. He married ten wives, many for political reasons, including Mariamne, the granddaughter of the Hasmonean Hyrcanus II, and another Mariamne, daughter of the high priest Simon. Palace intrigue was rampant, spurred largely by Herod’s sister Salome and Alexandra, mother of the Hasmonean Mariamne, and scores of assassinations and executions ensued, including those of Hyrcanus II, Mariamne, her brother the high priest Aristobulus, and three of Herod’s own sons. Herod’s shifting favor, complicated by the assassinations, necessitated numerous revisions of his choice as successor; the sixth version of Herod’s final will, although disputed, named Archelaus as king of Judea and Samaria and Philip and Antipas as tetrarchs of the remaining territory. Herod died of arteriosclerosis in 4 B.C., shortly after executing his son Antipater and (unsuccessfully) ordering his sister Salome and her husband Alexas to murder several leading Jews in the hippodrome at Jericho, ostensibly to guarantee a period of national mourning at the time of Herod’s death.
It was toward the end of Herod’s reign that Jesus was born (Matt. 2:1). Matthew reports that Herod viewed the birth as a threat to his own power (v. 3). Not only did he seek to destroy Jesus (v. 13), he also ordered the massacre of all male children at Bethlehem under the age of two (v. 16), a deed which, although otherwise unattested, was typical of Herod’s cruelty.