
The Pilate Stone.
The 'Pilate Stone' is the name of a block of
limestone with a carved inscription attributed to
Pontius Pilate, a prefect of the Roman-controlled province of
Judaea (Iudaea) from
26-
36. Pilate is infamous as being the man who condemned
Jesus Christ to a painful
scourging and death by
crucifixion c. 33.
The partial inscription reads (conjectural letters in brackets):
:[''DIS AUGUSTI'']S TIBERIEUM
:[''PO'']NTIUS PILATUS
:[''PRAEF'']ECTUS IUDA[''EA'']E
:[''FECIT D'']E[''DICAVIT'']
The 2'.7" x 2'.1" (82 cm) x (65 cm) limestone block, which was found in
1961 in an excavation of an ancient
amphitheater (built by decree of
Herod the Great c.
30 BC), called
Caesarea Maritima in the present city of
Caesarea-on-the-Sea (also called Maritima). On the partially damaged block is a dedication to
Tiberius Caesar Augustus. It has been deemed as an authentic
archaeological find due to the area in which it was discovered: the coastal town of Caesarea, which was the seat of power of
Judaea during the
government of
Pontius Pilate. Pilate also maintained a residence at
Antonia Fortress in
Jerusalem, but, outside of his annual trek to oversee the
Passover celebration, he seldom visited
Jerusalem. During Passover,
Jerusalem's population swelled and the possibility of outbreaks of violence increased. Pilate's presence was to quell a rebellion before it started. Keeping the peace was of vital importance not only to Pontius Pilate, but to
Yhosef Bar Kayafa (Joseph Caiaphas), the high priest of Jerusalem's
Jewish ruling council, the
Sanhedrin.
Caiaphas had been appointed high priest by Pilate's predecessor,
Valerius Gratus c.
18, and Pilate retained him.
[1] The two men likely despised each other, but a rebellion would have done neither man any good. Thus, they shared a tenuous peace.
This is the only archaeological find with an inscription mentioning the name "Pontius Pilatus".
The Pilate Stone is currently located at the
Israel Museum in Jerusalem.
Reference
★
Sacred Connections.co.uk
★ Vardaman, Jerry. "A New Inscription Which Mentions Pilate as 'Prefect'." ''
Journal of Biblical Literature'' 81 (1962) 70-71.
External links
★
A photo and overview of the "Pilate Stone"
★
Web page about Caesarea, the amphitheater, and the Pilate Stone.