Category:Philo (subject)
Philo of Alexandria (c.15 BCE - c.45 CE) was a Jewish Hellenistic philosopher.
Overview
Philo was born between 20 and 10 BCE in Alexandria of Egypt, which at that time was one of wealthiest and most populated cities in the Roman Empire and home of the largest Jewish community outside the land of Israel.
According to Josephus, Philo came from a wealthy, aristocratic Jewish family. Philo's ancestors had moved from Palestine to Egypt probably in the Ptolomaic Period and had been granted Roman citizenship from Julius Caesar. Philo's brother, Alexander the Alabarch, was a Roman government official, a custom agent responsible for collecting taxes on all goods imported into Egypt from the East. This position made him one of the richest and most influential men in the entire Roman Empire, and a personal friend of Emperor Claudius. Alexander’s two sons (and Philo's nephews), Marcus Julius Alexander and Tiberius Julius Alexander were also involved in Roman affairs and played an important role in Jewish politics. Marcus Julius Alexander was the first husband of Berenice, the daughter of Herod Agrippa I; Tiberius Julius Alexander was governor of Judea (46-48 C.E.), prefect of Egypt under Nero (66-69 CE), and a supported of the Flavii Emperors during the Jewish War (69-70).
Philo received in Alexandria the best Hellenistic education and was well acquainted in Greek culture, literature and philosophy. Like the cultured Greeks of his day, he attended the theater as well as sport and social events. Like the Hellenistic Jews of his days, he maintained a strong sense of his Jewish identity, once visited Jerusalem and the temple (Prov 2:64), and played an active role in Jewish political and religious affairs. He was critical both of those who took Jewish scriptures too literally and those who went to excesses in their allegorical interpretation of the laws.
Philo was a respected leader of the Jewish community of Alexandria. During the crisis relating to the pogrom which was initiated in 38 CE by the prefect Flaccus, he was elected to head the Jewish delegation, which apparently included his brother Alexander the Alabarch and nephew Tiberius Julius Alexander, and was sent to Rome in 39-40 CE to see the emperor Caligula. He reported the events in his writings Against Flaccus and The Embassy to Gaius.
Philo of Alexandria in ancient sources
- See Philo (sources)
References
- Philo / Gregory E. Sterling / In: The Eerdmans Dictionary of Early Judaism (2010 Collins / Harlow), dictionary, 1063-1070
- / [[]] / In: The Anchor Bible Dictionary (1992 Freedman), dictionary,
External links
Pages in category "Philo (subject)"
The following 9 pages are in this category, out of 9 total.
1
- Caligula (1698 Crowne), play
- Philon (1907 Martin), book
- Philon le Juif (Philo Judaeus / 1911 Louis), book
- Filone Alessandrino (1970 Maddalena), book
- 유대의 종교철학자 알렉산드리아의 필로 = Philo of Alexandria: An Introduction (1989 Sandmel / Bak), book (Korean ed.)
- アレクサンドリアのフィロン入門 = An Introduction to Philo Judaeus, 2nd ed. (1994 @1962 Goodenough / Nomachi), book (Japanese ed.)
Media in category "Philo (subject)"
The following 6 files are in this category, out of 6 total.
- 1910 * Bentwich.jpg 333 × 499; 24 KB
- 1940 * Goodenough.jpg 333 × 499; 25 KB
- 1958 * Danielou.jpg 324 × 500; 26 KB
- 1962 * Goodenough.jpg 360 × 579; 52 KB
- 1979 * Sandmel.jpg 324 × 499; 45 KB
- 2009-E * Kamesar.jpg 333 × 499; 30 KB