Herod the Great
Also known as Builder of the Second Temple's expansion
73 BCE–4 BCE · Zugot · Tzippori (Sepphoris)
Herod the Great (c. 73–4 BCE) was the Roman client king of Judea. Son of the Idumean statesman Antipater, he was made governor of the Galilee as a young man. When the Parthians overran the land in 40 BCE he fled to Rome, where the Senate — backed by Mark Antony and Octavian — proclaimed him King of Judea; he then fought his way to take Jerusalem in 37 BCE. A loyal ally of Antony, he shrewdly shifted his allegiance to Octavian (Augustus) after the Battle of Actium, winning confirmation of his throne at their meeting on Rhodes (30 BCE). Over a 33-year reign he became one of history's great builders — rebuilding and vastly expanding the Second Temple in Jerusalem and raising Caesarea Maritima, Masada and the Herodium — even as his later years were darkened by paranoia and the execution of his wife Mariamne and several sons. He died at Jericho in 4 BCE.
Did you know?
Cleopatra and Herod the Great knew each other
The most famous queen of Egypt and the king who rebuilt the Second Beis HaMikdash weren't just alive at the same time — they dealt with each other directly, sparring over land through Mark Antony.
Meet Cleopatra VII →How we know
Cleopatra VII 69–30 BCE (reigned 51–30 BCE); Herod the Great c. 73–4 BCE (reigned from 37 BCE). Antony transferred Judean territory (the Jericho balsam groves) to Cleopatra, which Herod then leased back.
The gentle Hillel taught under the fearsome Herod
The patient sage of "if I am not for myself, who will be for me?" and the paranoid king who rebuilt the Temple shared one city and one lifetime in Jerusalem.
Meet Hillel the Elder →How we know
Herod the Great reigned 37–4 BCE; Hillel the Elder (c. 110 BCE–10 CE) led the Sanhedrin in that same era, both in Herodian Jerusalem.
Life journeyclick any stop, or use ←/→Trace on the orchard map →
Tzippori (Sepphoris)ציפוריGalilee, Roman period
What they did here
Born into an Idumean family of power, he was appointed governor of the Galilee (47 BCE), ruling from Sepphoris (Tzippori) and suppressing unrest in the region.
About Tzippori (Sepphoris)
# Tzippori Beneath Roman rule and perched on a commanding hill in lower Galilee, Tzippori thrived as one of the wealthiest and most Hellenized cities in the Jewish homeland during the second century. The city's Mediterranean climate and fertile surroundings supported olive groves and vineyards that fed both local markets and distant trade routes; its position on major roads made it a natural crossroads for merchants and travelers. The Jewish community here was prosperous and numerous, with a reputation for Greek sophistication that sometimes troubled more conservative sages—the city's intellectual culture blended Torah learning with Greco-Roman arts in ways that sparked ongoing debate about authenticity and continuity. Tzippori became increasingly important as a center of Jewish scholarship and communal authority, particularly as the Temple lay in ruins and the Sanhedrin sought to preserve halakhic tradition through oral transmission and debate. The city's grand Roman theater, with its tiered stone seats overlooking the valley, stood as an enduring symbol of the cultural tensions that defined Jewish life here: a place where sages wrestled with how to keep Torah alive in a world of marble colonnades and pagan spectacle, all while maintaining the bonds of a tight-knit, learning-focused Jewish society amid the bustle of cosmopolitan urban life.
In the same place & time
Sages whose lives overlapped with Herod the Great’s in the same cities, drawn from their recorded journeys.
Across the traditions
In the same tradition
Hillel HaZaken, Bava ben Buta, Yonatan ben Uziel, Shammai HaZaken, Akavya ben Mahalalel, Rabban Shimon ben Hillel, Rabban Gamliel HaZaken
The world in their lifetime
Thinkers and teachers of other traditions whose lives overlapped with Herod the Great’s — a glimpse of the wider world they lived in. Drawn purely from recorded birth and death years.
Works
No works attributed in the corpus yet.