'Marcus Antonius Felix' ('Felix' in 'Greek': 'ο Φηλιξ', born between
5/
10-?) was the
ancient Rome procurator of
Iudaea Province 52-
60, in succession to
Ventidius Cumanus. The squabbling created by the Roman practice of generating the equality of the
Jews by insuring
civic privileges bedeviled his time of service.
Life
Felix was the younger brother of the Greek freedman Marcus Antonius
Pallas (freedman). Felix was a
Greek freedman either of the Emperor
Claudius, according to which theory
Josephus (''Antiq.'' xx. 7) calls him Claudius Felix, or his mother
Antonia Minor, a daughter of Triumvir
Mark Antony to
Octavia Minor and niece of Emperor
Augustus. According to
Tacitus, Pallas and Felix descended from the Greek Kings of
Arcadia.
Felix’s cruelty and licentiousness, coupled with his accessibility to bribes, led to a great increase of crime in Judaea. To put down the
Zealots he favored an even more violent sect, the
Sicarii ("Dagger-men"), by whose aid he contrived the murder of the high-priest
Jonathan. The period of his rule was marked by internal feuds and disturbances, which he put down with severity.
Paul the Apostle, after being apprehended in
Jerusalem, was sent to be judged before Felix at
Caesarea, and kept in custody for two years (Acts xxiv.). On returning to Rome, Felix was accused of having taken advantage of a dispute between the Jews and Syrians of Caesarea to slay and plunder the inhabitants, but through the intercession of his brother, the freedman Pallas who had great influence with the Emperor
Nero, he escaped unpunished.
Porcius Festus succeeded him as procurator of Judea.
Marriages and issue
Felix married three times. His first wife was princess
Drusilla of Mauretania, a maternal second cousin of Emperor
Claudius. Drusilla was an only child to Claudius’ late maternal cousin King
Ptolemy of Mauretania and his wife Queen of Mauretania
Julia Urania. Claudius arranged for Felix and Drusilla to marry around
53 in Rome. Like Felix, Drusilla was partly of Greek descent. Felix and Drusilla had no children. Felix between
54-
56, divorced Drusilla and to marry a Judean Princess.
Felix’s second wife was a Judean princess
Drusilla, daughter of King of
Judea Herod
Agrippa I, from his wife and cousin Cypros. Felix and the Judean Drusilla, had a very happy marriage. Felix with the Judean Drusilla, had a son called Marcus Antonius Agrippa (he died along with his wife in the eruption of
Mount Vesuvius in 24 August
79) and a daughter Antonia Clementiana. Antonia Agrippina could be a daughter from their son‘s marriage (this name was graffiti in a Royal Tomb in
Egypt). Clementiana became a grandmother to a Lucius Anneius Domitius Proculus. Two possible descendants from this marriage are Marcus Antonius Fronto Salvianus (a
quaestor) and his son Marcus Antonius Felix Magnus a high priest in
225. Felix married for a third time, it is not known whether Felix divorced the Judean Drusilla or she died. Nothing is known on his third wife.
External link
★ Roman coinage of Felix can be seen under 'Roman Procurators' at
[1]
See also
★
Roman Prefects and Procurators of Iudaea Province, 6-132 AD
References
★
Tacitus, ''
Annals'', xii. 54, ''
Histories'' v. 9
★
Suetonius, ''Claudius'', 28
★
Emil Schürer, ''History of the Jewish People'' (1890-1891)
★ article in Hastings' Diet, of the Bible (A. Robertson)
★ commentaries on the Acts of the Apostles
★ Sir
W. M. Ramsay, ''St Paul the Traveller''
★ Carl von Weizsacker, ''Apostolic Age'' (Eng. trans., 1894)
★
Jewish Encyclopedia: FELIX (ANTONIUS FELIX)
★ http://www.tyndale.cam.ac.uk/Egypt/ptolemies/ptolemies_selene_ii.htm