- Source: Marullus (prefect of Judea)
Marullus was the 7th Roman Prefect of the Roman province of Judea 38-41 under Caligula, 37–41.
Biography
He was appointed by the emperor following the recall of Pontius Pilate and the temporary oversight of Marcellus. The period of his prefecture was a stirring and dangerous time due to Caligula's determination to turn the Second Temple into an imperial shrine with an enormous statue of himself in the guise of Jupiter, and the Jews' equal determination to accept no such thing. Nothing is recorded of Marullus's part in the dispute, because the important decisions and negotiations were necessarily taken over by the Syrian Governor (Legate) Publius Petronius.
With the statue being constructed in Sidon and two legions of Roman troops waiting on the border of Galilee to enforce the imperial order, war was eventually avoided by the intervention of Herod Agrippa who dissuaded his friend from such provocation. Soon afterwards Caligula was assassinated and Herod Agrippa was appointed to take Marullus' place, but with the appellation of "king" as Agrippa I.
See also
Prefects, Procurators and Legates of Roman Judaea
References
Peter Schäfer: Geschichte der Juden in der Antike. Neukirchener Verlag, Neukirchen-Vluyn, 1983.
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Marullus (prefect of Judea)
- Marullus
- Marcellus (prefect of Judea)
- Judaea (Roman province)
- Herod Agrippa
- Roman administration of Judaea (AD 6–135)
- Herodian tetrarchy
- Second Temple period
- List of ancient Romans