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The Biblical Holy Land: JUDEA 12 Coin Collection From The Time Of Jesus,Boxed

$ 406.12

Availability: 12 in stock
  • Certification: seller
  • The Biblical Holy Land: JUDEA: 12 Coin Collection,Boxed
  • Year: 30
  • Condition: The Biblical Holy Land: JUDEA 12 Coin Collection From The Time Of Jesus,Boxed.
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Seller
  • Denomination: Judea
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • Item must be returned within: 30 Days
  • Refund will be given as: Money Back

    Description

    The Biblical Holy Land: JUDEA 12 Coin Collection From The Time Of Jesus,Boxed.
    Therefore the Lord himself will give you a sign: The virgin will conceive and give birth to a son, and will call him Immanuel.—Isaiah 7:14 For centuries, Jewish prophets spoke of a Messiah—a Savior who would unite the Jews and lead them to triumph. Isaiah, Hosea, Hagai, Ezekiel, Daniel: all spoke of the coming King of the Jews, Whose title, in Greek, was Christ. The story of the Holy Land in the time of Jesus begins almost a century and a half before His birth, when the defeat of Ptolemy VI by the Seleucids in Palestine threatened the Jews in Judea. To save Jerusalem from certain destruction, the Hasmodean king John Hyrcanus opened the sepulcher of King David, withdrew 3,000 talents, and thus bribed the Syrian ruler to leave the city be. When John died in 104 BC, he was succeeded by Alexander Jannaeus, who ruled as King for a peaceful quarter century. The “widow’s mites” mentioned in both Mark 12:41-44 and Luke 21:1-4, on Jesus’ preaching of humility and charity, are thought to be his coins. Home rule came to an end in 63 BC, when Pompey the Great sacked Jerusalem, claiming the city for Rome. The next 20 years were tumultuous, during which many prophets emerged, each claiming to be the promised Messiah. It was during this time that the Essenes wrote the Dead Sea Scrolls. In 40 BC, Herod the Great, the son of one of John II’s courtiers, was crowned “King of the Jews” by the Roman Senate. A great builder, Herod expanded the Second Temple in Jerusalem, of which only the famed Western Wall remains. When Herod was in his 70s, he was visited by “wise men from the East” who came in search of the Messiah—the King of the Jews. Fearful of a coup, Herod divined from his priests that this Messiah would be born in Bethlehem, as prophesized in Micah 5:2. As a precautionary measure, he ordered the so-called “Massacre of the Innocents,” in which all male children in the Bethlehem area under the age of two were put to death. This was both brutal and unsuccessful. Herod’s son Herod Archelaus, who took the throne in 6 BC, when Jesus was still an infant, was so incompetent that he was removed by Caesar Augustus, who replaced him with a series of governors, known as prefects. One of the prefects, Valerius Gratus, appointed Caiaphas as high priest of Herod’s Temple, in AD 18. It was Caiaphas who brought Jesus to trial, condemning him as a blasphemer. Fearful that this rabblerousing carpenter-turned-preacher would inspire a revolution, and thus lead to the destruction of Jerusalem by the Romans, Caiaphas sent Jesus to Pontius Pilate, demanding that He be executed. Herod Agrippa I was the ruler of the Roman province of Judæa during the crucifixion, which modern astronomers have calculated took place on Friday, 3 April AD 33. A confederate of the deranged Roman Emperor Caligula—who believed himself to be the Jewish Messiah—Agrippa vigorously persecuted followers of Jesus, imprisoning the Apostle Peter. Many of the displaced Christians found safe haven with the Nabataea’s—ancient Arab traders then living across the River Jordan. Antonius Felix was imperial prefect when St. Paul was arrested in Jerusalem in 59 CE, and it was Porcius Festus who sent him to Rome to stand trial. Paul would spend two years in prison in the city that would become synonymous with the Christian faith. Peter and Paul were both executed in Rome circa AD 64 , two years before the First Jewish Revolt that led to the destruction of Jerusalem in AD 70. By then, there was no question, at least to the rapidly expanding number of Christians in the Roman Empire, which the true Messiah was indeed Jesus Christ.
    By the time Jesus was born coins had already been in use in the Holy Land for more than 400 years. The sophistication and variation shows in the coinage available. There were many different types of bronze coins circulating together in Judea during the time Jesus lived. Judea was a Selucid possession in the years preceding the Hasmonean revolt in the mid 2nd CBC. Small Selucid bronzes from that era circulated widely. Later, the bronze coinage of the Hasmonaean Jewish Kings and the Herodian dynasties added numerous types to the mix, which served as the local small change for Judea for over a century prior to the birth of Christ.
    The bronze coin designs of the Hasmonians were borrowed from the earlier coins of the Ptolemys and the Seleucids: olive wreath, cornucopia, flower, anchor, star and palm branch. The legends on these coins were inscribed in Aramaic and Greek. As Roman influence gained strength, the later Rome-appointed Herodian Tetrarchs carried over some design elements and introduced others on coins struck in their names. Concurrent with the life of Jesus and the Herod Dynasty there were other coins struck by the Roman governors of Judaea. These do not bear their names, but rather indicate in their inscriptions the reigning Roman emperor or members of his family, and are dated by the regnal years of the governor. Although weights of these various coins varied considerably, there were two common types of Judea bronzes during this period: the smaller leptons and the larger prutahs. Bronze petra coins minted by neighboring nomadic merchants of Nabatea were also accepted freely in trade in the bazaars of Judea.
    TYPICAL ASSEMBLAGE OF COINS -
    LIST MAY  VARY
    Actual box size 10 6/8 X 5 5/8 X 1 3/8
    T
    he Biblical Holy Land: Judea 12 Coin Collection from the time of Jesus
    1. John Hyrcanus I Bronze Prutah
    134- 104 BC
    7. Pontius Pilatus Bronze Prutah
    26 - 36 AD
    2. Alex. Jannaeus Bronze Lepton
    103 - 76 BC
    8. Herod Agrippa I Bronze Prutah
    37 - 44 AD
    3. John Hyrcanus II Bronze Prutah
    63 - 40 BC
    9. Malichus II Nabatean Bronze Petra
    40 - 70 AD
    4. Herod the Great Bronze Prutah
    40 - 4 BC
    10. Antonius Felix Bronze Prutah
    52 - 59 AD
    5. Augustus Prefect Bronze Prutah
    6 - 12 AD
    11. First Jewish Revolt Bronze Prutah
    60 - 70 AD
    6. Valerius Gratus Bronze Prutah
    15 - 26 AD
    12. Vespasian Silver Denarius
    69 - 79 AD
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