Malthace (died c. 4 BCE) was a Samaritan woman who served as one of the wives of Herod the Great, king of Judea from 37 to 4 BCE, and the mother of two of his sons: Herod Archelaus, who briefly ruled as ethnarch over Judea, Samaria, and Idumea, and Herod Antipas, who later became tetrarch of Galilee and Perea.[1] Little is known of her early life or the circumstances of her marriage to Herod, which occurred amid his polygamous unions with at least nine wives, though her Samaritan origin—a group historically viewed with suspicion by Jews—likely carried political implications in Herod's efforts to consolidate power across diverse territories.[1] She predeceased Herod, succumbing to illness shortly before his death and during the period when her son Archelaus traveled to Rome to petition for confirmation of his inheritance under Herod's testament, an event chronicled by the primary ancient historian Flavius Josephus as occurring amid familial and regional unrest.[1][2] Malthace's legacy is thus primarily defined through her progeny, whose divisions of Herod's realm reflected the ethnic and geographic tensions inherent in his rule, with no recorded independent achievements or controversies attributed directly to her in surviving sources.[1]
Origins and Background
Samaritan Heritage and Early Life
Malthace was a Samaritan, as attested by the first-century Jewish historian Flavius Josephus, who identifies her explicitly as such in his accounts of Herod the Great's family.[1] Beyond this ethnic designation, no verifiable details exist regarding her birth date, precise place of origin within Samaria, or familial lineage, reflecting the scarcity of contemporary records on non-elite women in the region during the late Hellenistic and early Roman periods.[1] Inferences about her early life must therefore rely on broader contextual evidence from her sons' later biographies and the socio-religious environment of Samaria.The Samaritans, inhabitants of the central hill country of ancient Israel corresponding to modern Samaria, maintained a distinct religious identity rooted in adherence to the Torah but centered on Mount Gerizim as the sacred site of worship rather than Jerusalem's Temple Mount.[3] This divergence stemmed from schisms dating back to the Assyrian conquest of the northern kingdom in the 8th century BCE, resulting in a population viewed by many Jews as ethnically mixed and religiously heterodox, with practices incorporating elements of local paganism alongside Yahwism.[4] By the 1st century BCE, these differences had solidified into mutual antagonism, intensified by the Hasmonean ruler John Hyrcanus's destruction of the Samaritan temple on Mount Gerizim around 128 BCE, an act that eliminated their central cultic institution and deepened perceptions of Samaritans as outsiders to normative Judaism.In the era preceding Herod's rule, Samaritans often aligned politically against Jewish interests, siding with Seleucid or Roman forces during conflicts, which further entrenched ethnic and religious prejudices.[3] Malthace's Samaritan heritage thus placed her within a community marginalized by Judean authorities, whose non-Jerusalemite piety and historical rivalries shaped external views of Samaritan individuals entering broader Judean or Herodian spheres.[3] The absence of additional biographical data underscores the limitations of ancient historiography, which prioritized royal and priestly figures over provincial women like Malthace prior to their association with power.
Marriage to Herod the Great
Circumstances and Timing
Malthace, a Samaritan woman, married Herod the Great in the late 20s BCE, subsequent to his marriage to Mariamne II around 26 BCE, establishing her as one of his later consorts in a sequence that included Doris, Mariamne I, and Mariamne II.[5] The precise date of the union remains unrecorded in primary sources such as Josephus' Antiquities of the Jews, with scholarly estimates varying between 28 BCE and 24 BCE based on the chronological order of Herod's marriages and associated events like his recovery from illness and renovations in Samaria.[6][5][1]This marriage occurred within Herod's polygamous practices, as he maintained up to nine wives concurrently, encompassing women of Jewish, Samaritan, and other backgrounds to consolidate alliances and personal preferences.[1] Josephus notes Malthace's Samaritan heritage explicitly in describing her offspring, positioning her distinctly among Herod's diverse marital connections during his reign from 37 BCE onward.[1]The timing is further corroborated by the births of Malthace's children with Herod: her son Archelaus around 23 BCE and Herod Antipas around 20 BCE, necessitating that the marriage preceded these dates and aligned with Herod's later familial expansions before his death in 4 BCE.[5][6]
Political and Personal Motivations
Herod's decision to marry Malthace, a Samaritan, formed part of his calculated approach to forging alliances across the ethnic mosaic of his kingdom, which encompassed Jewish, Idumean, and Samaritan populations. As ruler over Samaria—a region historically antagonistic to Judean Jews—Herod employed matrimony to secure loyalty from Samaritan subjects, integrating their interests into the Herodian power structure and mitigating potential unrest in northern territories. This strategy mirrored his use of marriages to bind disparate groups, as evidenced by his polygamous unions with women from varied backgrounds, which Josephus records as numbering nine at the time of Herod's death.[1][7]By selecting a non-Jewish spouse like Malthace, Herod aimed to offset the lingering influence of Hasmonean descendants and Jewish priestly factions, whose claims to legitimacy rested on strict adherence to Judean lineage and law. His Idumean heritage already rendered him suspect among orthodox Jews, and allying with Samaritans—long rivals to Jerusalem—served to diversify his familial base, preventing any single ethnic or religious bloc from dominating succession prospects or court dynamics. Josephus's accounts of Herod's marital practices underscore this pragmatic consolidation of authority over a fractious realm under Roman oversight.[1]Such a union, however, exacerbated tensions with Jewish elites, who dismissed Samaritans as ethnically and religiously impure due to their schismatic practices and syncretistic temple on Mount Gerizim. Herod's defiance of Pharisaic norms in this regard prioritized governance stability over theological conformity, reflecting his reliance on Romanpatronage rather than indigenous religious approval to sustain rule. This approach, while politically astute for multi-ethnic control, fueled perceptions of Herod as an outsider king, alienating traditionalists who favored endogamous Jewish ties.[1]
Family and Offspring
Children with Herod
Malthace, a Samaritan, bore Herod the Great two sons, Herod Archelaus and Herod Antipas, as well as a daughter named Olympias.[1] Archelaus, the elder son, was born around 23 BCE, while Antipas followed sometime before 20 BCE; precise birth dates remain uncertain due to limited contemporary records beyond Josephus.[8] These siblings shared full brotherhood through their mother, distinguishing them from Herod's other offspring by different wives.[9]Their Samaritan maternal heritage, tracing to the region of Samaria rather than traditional Jewish priestly or Davidic lines, inherently complicated assertions of full Jewish legitimacy in a kingdom where religious and ethnic purity influenced dynastic claims.[10]Josephus, the primary ancient historian documenting the Herodian family, attributes no additional children exclusively to Malthace, emphasizing her role primarily through these offspring.[1] This limited progeny contrasted with Herod's broader marital alliances, yet underscored Malthace's position among his later wives.[10]
Dynamics with Herodian Family
Malthace occupied a subordinate position within Herod the Great's extensive polygamous household, which encompassed ten wives and at least fourteen sons, fostering inherent competition for favor and succession among the offspring.[1] As a later consort, married after the executions of earlier rivals like the Hasmonean Mariamne I and her sons Alexander and Aristobulus, Malthace avoided the lethal intrigues that plagued prior unions, with historical accounts portraying her as uninvolved in plots against Herod.[11] Her loyalty reportedly secured preferential treatment for her sons Archelaus and Antipas in Herod's repeated testament revisions, which ultimately designated Archelaus as ethnarch of Judea, Samaria, and Idumea, and Antipas as tetrarch of Galilee and Perea, superseding the claims of Antipater, the eldest son of Herod's first wife Doris.[1]Direct evidence of personal conflicts between Malthace and other family members remains scarce in primary sources, though Josephus implies underlying tensions through the broader familial discord exacerbated by Herod's shifting wills—initially elevating Antipater, then Antipas, and finally Archelaus—which Antipater contested amid accusations of calumny against his half-brothers.[1]Antipater's execution for poisoning attempts on Herod further highlighted rivalries pitting Malthace's lineage against Doris's, as the former's sons inherited the core territories despite Antipater's seniority.[1] Post-Herod, Archelaus and Antipas themselves vied in Rome for expanded rule, with Antipas invoking an earlier will to challenge his brother's primacy, underscoring persistent fraternal competition traceable to maternal divisions.[1]Malthace's Samaritan ethnicity introduced additional friction in the Herodian blend of Idumean, Jewish, and extraneous elements, as Herod's marriage to her—possibly motivated by resentment toward Hasmonean Jews following Mariamne I's death—clashed with Jewish prejudices against Samaritans, potentially marginalizing her sons' legitimacy in Pharisaic and popular eyes despite Herod's favoritism.[11]Josephus notes no overt ethnic-based clashes involving Malthace directly, but the Samaritan maternal line for key heirs amplified succession disputes, contributing to Archelaus's later deposition by Rome amid complaints of tyranny.[1] This origin likely intensified perceptions of foreign influence in a dynasty already strained by Herod's Idumean roots and Roman dependencies.[12]
Position in the Herodian Court
Status as Queen
Malthace functioned as a royal consort to Herod the Great, identified by the historian Flavius Josephus as his Samaritan wife among nine total spouses, without the formal designation of queen that Josephus attributes to Herod's Hasmonean consort Mariamne I.[1] Her non-Jewish Samaritan heritage did not bar her from court privileges typical of Herodian wives, such as integration into the royal household and the bearing of heirs positioned for succession.[1] These included Archelaus, bequeathed an ethnarchy encompassing Judea, Samaria, and Idumea with an annual revenue of 600 talents; Herod Antipas, granted tetrarchy over Galilee and Perea yielding 200 talents annually; and daughter Olympias.[1]Lacking independent political titles or documented administrative roles, Malthace's standing emphasized her supportive function in bolstering Herod's dynastic stability through progeny tied to diverse regional interests, including Samaritan-adjacent areas reflected in her sons' allotments.[1] Scholarly analyses of Josephus underscore this as emblematic of Herod's strategy to balance ethnic factions via marital alliances, with Malthace's lineage potentially facilitating ties to Samaritan populations without elevating her to sovereign status.[9] Her privileges thus derived from Herod's favor rather than inherent regal authority, aligning with norms for secondary consorts in the polygamous Herodian court.[12]
Influence During Herod's Reign
Malthace's role in the Herodian court during Herod the Great's reign (37–4 BCE) is minimally detailed in surviving ancient accounts, with Flavius Josephus providing the primary references but no explicit records of her direct political interventions or public actions. As a Samaritan wife married later in Herod's life, around the 20s BCE, she navigated the king's intensifying paranoia, which led to the execution of rivals such as his Hasmonean wife Mariamne I in 29 BCE on charges of adultery and conspiracy, as well as the later deaths of sons from those unions, including Alexander and Aristobulus in 7 BCE.[13][14] Malthace herself evaded such purges, maintaining her status amid a court rife with familial executions and exiles, which Josephus attributes to Herod's suspicions fueled by courtiers and informants.[1]The allocation of territories to her sons in Herod's final testament, revised in early 4 BCE just before his death, offers indirect evidence of potential behind-the-scenes sway. In this will, Archelaus, her elder son, was named ethnarch over Judea, Samaria, and Idumea—core regions including Jerusalem—with authority to rule as king pending Roman approval, while Antipas received Galilee and Perea as tetrarch, each with specified revenues of 600 and 200 talents annually, respectively.[1]Josephus notes these bequests followed the elimination of the eldest son Antipater for plotting, elevating Malthace's lineage over Hasmonean-descended heirs, though he records no advocacy by Malthace herself in influencing these changes across Herod's multiple revisions.[1]Given the limited agency afforded women in Judean and Roman-influenced elite circles, where influence typically operated through private counsel to the king rather than formal decrees, Malthace's apparent favor may stem from loyalty or strategic discretion, particularly leveraging her Samaritan origins for counsel on northern provincial matters like those in her homeland. However, no primary sources confirm such involvement, and Josephus's silence underscores the scarcity of attested actions beyond her survival and the testamentary outcomes for her offspring.[1][9]
Death and Immediate Aftermath
Circumstances of Death
Malthace died in Rome in 4 BCE, following the death of her husband Herod the Great earlier that year.[1] According to the historian Flavius Josephus, her demise occurred amid the appeals of her sons Archelaus and Herod Antipas to Emperor Augustus for confirmation of their inheritances under Herod's will.[15] Josephus records that she "fell into a distemper and died of it" before Augustus reached any resolution on the succession matters.[16]The circumstances indicate a natural death from illness, with no contemporary accounts suggesting execution, poisoning, or exile—outcomes that befell some of Herod's other wives amid court intrigues.[1] This event took place in the context of post-Herodian instability in Judea, as evidenced by contemporaneous letters from the Syrian governor Varus reporting riots, though Malthace's illness itself is not linked to these disturbances.[17] Her presence in Rome aligns with the family's efforts to secure Roman approval during Herod's final testament's implementation.[2]
Implications for Succession
Malthace died in Rome in 4 BCE from illness, shortly after Herod's death and during the period when her sons Archelaus and Antipas were contesting aspects of his final will before Augustus Caesar.[1][2] This timing meant her death preceded Augustus's adjudication of the succession claims, depriving Archelaus of her potential advocacy in the imperial court.[1]Josephus notes that her passing occurred before any settlement was reached, amid ongoing disputes where Antipas challenged Archelaus's designation as primary heir to Judea, Samaria, and Idumea.[1]Despite the family intrigues that led Herod to execute his eldest son Antipater five days before his own death—thus elevating Archelaus in the revised will—Malthace's sons retained their favored status.[9]Herod's final testament, confirmed by the reading of seals and witnesses post-execution, allocated Judea to Archelaus as ethnarch (with kingship title deferred), Galilee and Perea to Antipas as tetrarch, and other territories to Philip, reflecting Malthace's lineage's precedence over Doris's executed son.[1] No evidence indicates Malthace's direct involvement in these terminal revisions, which were driven by Herod's suspicions of Antipater's plots, but her established loyalty to Herod—contrasting with the treasonous actions of rivals like Antipater, Alexander, and Aristobulus—likely contributed to the enduring preference for her offspring.[9]The Samaritan heritage of Malthace and her sons introduced a layer of Roman scrutiny over the succession, as Samaritans were viewed as ethnically distinct from Judeans, potentially complicating full Jewish monarchical legitimacy under Roman oversight.[9] Archelaus, leveraging Herod's will, appealed directly to Augustus in Rome for confirmation of his inheritance, emphasizing familial rights amid these heritage concerns; Augustus ultimately granted him ethnarchy rather than kingship, subject to probation, signaling cautious endorsement influenced by such factors.[1] This arrangement preserved immediate Herodian control without immediate partition, though it sowed seeds for later instability.[1]
Historical Depictions and Sources
Accounts in Josephus
Flavius Josephus mentions Malthace primarily in the context of her role as Herod the Great's wife and mother to his sons Archelaus and Antipas, emphasizing her Samaritan origin in lists of Herod's marital alliances. In Antiquities of the Jews (17.1.3 §19), Josephus notes that Herod bequeathed the bulk of his kingdom to Archelaus, identifying him explicitly as the son of Malthace, the Samaritan, alongside provisions for Antipas as tetrarch of Galilee and Perea.[1] Similarly, in The Jewish War (1.28.4 §561), Josephus catalogs Herod's wives, describing Malthace as "of the Samaritan race" and crediting her with bearing Archelaus and Antipas, underscoring Herod's strategy of forging ties beyond traditional Jewish boundaries through such unions.[18]Josephus provides scant details on Malthace's personal life or agency, focusing instead on her indirect involvement in succession disputes following Herod's death in 4 BCE. Both Antiquities (17.9.5 §250) and The Jewish War (2.2.1 §25) recount her death by illness shortly before Augustus Caesar resolved Archelaus's claim to the throne, portraying it as a complicating factor amid family rivalries and Roman adjudication, with her passing occurring before any final settlement on the Herodian partitions.[19] These accounts derive from Josephus's access to Herodian court records and chronicles like those of Nikolas of Damascus, Herod's court historian, lending them evidentiary weight for dynastic events, though Josephus's narrative prioritizes political outcomes over domestic intricacies.[1]The Samaritan designation of Malthace in Josephus's works highlights Herod's eclectic matrimonial politics, aimed at consolidating power across ethnic divides in a region marked by Judaean-Samaritan tensions, yet Josephus offers no anecdotes of her influence or conflicts within the court, unlike his more detailed treatments of figures like Mariamne I. This selective emphasis reflects Josephus's pro-Roman orientation, composed under Flavian patronage after 70 CE, which favors Herod's administrative legacy while potentially omitting intra-family Samaritan perspectives or lesser intrigues not impacting Roman interests.[18] Such omissions suggest a focus on verifiable public records over oral traditions, rendering Josephus the principal, if streamlined, ancient authority on her amid sparse contemporary attestations.[1]
References in Other Ancient Texts
Malthace receives no explicit mention in surviving non-Josephan ancient texts, underscoring the reliance on Flavius Josephus for primary details about her life and role.[9]Nicolaus of Damascus, Herod's contemporary court historian whose universal history survives only in fragments, addressed succession claims by Archelaus—Malthace's son—before Augustus around 4 BCE, yet extant portions do not reference Malthace by name or detail her influence.[20]Indirect allusions appear through her son Herod Antipas in the New Testament, where he is identified as tetrarch of Galilee and Perea (Luke 3:1). Antipas figures in accounts of John the Baptist's execution, prompted by a rash oath to Herodias' daughter (Mark 6:14–29; cf. Matthew 14:1–12), and in Jesus' trial, to whom Pilate sent the prisoner for questioning (Luke 23:6–12). These narratives highlight Antipas' authority but omit any reference to his mother or Samaritan heritage.[21]Rabbinic literature, including the Talmud and Midrash, contains no references to Malthace, consistent with the sparse treatment of Herodian women of non-Jewish descent. Similarly, ancient Samaritan chronicles, such as the Kitab al-Tarikh, make no attestation to her despite her reported Samaritan origin.[10]
Legacy and Interpretations
Impact on Her Sons' Rules
Archelaus governed as ethnarch over Judea, Samaria, Idumea, and associated coastal regions from 4 BCE to 6 CE, a period marked by violent clashes with subjects that hastened his downfall. Immediately after assuming power, he ordered the massacre of roughly 3,000 unarmed Jewish pilgrims at the Temple during Passover in 4 BCE to quell protests against his legitimacy, an act Josephus attributes to Archelaus' insecurity and harsh temperament.[1] This brutality, combined with ongoing temple desecrations and arbitrary executions, provoked joint embassies from Jewish and Samaritan leaders to Emperor Augustus, who deposed Archelaus, exiled him to Vienne in Gaul, and reorganized the territory under direct Roman prefectural rule via the province of Judea. Malthace's Samaritan ethnicity positioned Archelaus as doubly marginal—Idumean paternally and Samaritan maternally—in the eyes of Jewish purists who rejected Samaritan claims to Israelite heritage due to schismatic practices like worship at Mount Gerizim, thereby fueling early revolts and eroding the loyalty essential for stable Herodian governance.[1][10]Herod Antipas, tetrarch of Galilee and Perea from 4 BCE to 39 CE, encountered parallel legitimacy strains from his maternal Samaritan ties, which Josephus highlights as distinguishing him from more "priestly" Herodian lines and aligning him typologically with flawed rulers in Jewish narrative traditions.[1] His ambitious projects, such as founding Tiberias circa 18–20 CE on ritually impure graveyard land and populating it with forced settlers including non-Jews, provoked ritual purity objections and economic grievances among Galilean Jews, while his divorce from Nabataean princess Phasaelis to wed Herodias incited border skirmishes and prophetic condemnation from John the Baptist, executed around 28–29 CE. These tensions culminated in Antipas' exile to Gaul in 39 CE under Caligula, accused of amassing arms for a Parthian alliance and royal pretensions, after which his tetrarchy passed to Agrippa I. The Samaritan heritage amplified perceptions of cultural alienation, as evidenced in Josephus' framing, making Antipas' Hellenistic-leaning policies—like theater construction and coinage avoiding divine imagery—susceptible to charges of insufficient Jewish fidelity, thus weakening defenses against Roman suspicions of disloyalty during empire-wide purges.[22][10]
Scholarly Views on Her Role
Scholars widely acknowledge Malthace's obscurity in the historical record, attributing it to sparse references in primary sources and her lack of involvement in documented intrigues compared to Herod's Hasmonean wives. Her elevation to queen consort is interpreted not as evidence of romantic favoritism but as a calculated political maneuver by Herod to forge alliances with Samaritan elites, particularly following his refounding of Sebaste (ancient Samaria) as a loyalist stronghold around 25–20 BCE.[23]Historian Nikolaos Kokkinos frames this union as pragmatic power-balancing, leveraging Malthace's regional ties to stabilize Herod's rule amid ethnic divisions, rather than personal affection akin to his bond with Mariamne I.[23]Debates on Malthace's ethnic background center on whether her Samaritan origins exacerbated Herodian instability through cultural clashes with Judean elites. Some earlier views invoked "foreign influence" tropes to explain succession conflicts involving her sons Archelaus and Antipas, positing Samaritansyncretism as a causal factor in perceived irreligiosity or administrative failures.[10] However, this perspective is critiqued in modern analyses for oversimplification, as Herod's own Idumean ancestry—stemming from Antipater's forced Judaization under the Hasmoneans—introduced the core "alien" element, fostering broader resentment against the dynasty's non-native legitimacy irrespective of Malthace's role.[10] Empirical review of Josephus' genealogical emphases reveals no direct attribution of instability to her personally, undermining causal claims tied to maternal ethnicity alone.Post-2000 studies shift focus to Malthace's indirect agency, emphasizing how Herodian women wielded influence via progeny placement in dynastic hierarchies, a pattern paralleled in contemporaneous Near Eastern polities where queens navigated patrilineal systems through maternal advocacy. For instance, examinations of Josephus' typological portrayals link negative assessments of Archelaus and Antipas to Malthace's Samaritan lineage, suggesting historiographical bias amplified maternal origins to critique their rules rather than reflecting her active scheming.[10] This view aligns with broader reassessments of royal women's roles, where verifiable impact derives from enabling heirs' viability amid Herod's final wills (ca. 7–4 BCE), not overt political maneuvering.