Mariamne
- ANCIENT SOURCES: see Mariamne (sources)
- SCHOLARLY AND FICTIONAL WORKS: see Mariamne (works)
Mariamne (1st century BCE) was a member of the Hasmonean dinasty.
History
Mariamne was the daughter of Alexander of Judea and Alexandra the Hasmonean. As her parents were cousins, Mariamne was the granddaughter of both John Hyrcanus II and his brother Aristobulus II, and a descendant of the Hasmonean kings and queens.
Mariamne married Herod the Great in an attempt to merge the Hasmonean and the Herodian family. The alliance did not last. First Herod had her brother Aristobulus III and grandfather John Hyrcanus II killed. Ultimately Mariamne also was executed in 29 BCE. In 7 BCE the same fate came to her mother Alexandra and her two sons, Aristobulus IV and Alexandros. However, Mariamne's grandchildren, (Herod of Chalcis, Herod Agrippa, Herodias) and great-grandchildren (Berenice, Herod Agrippa II, Drusilla, Salome) would play an important role in Jewish history.
Mariamne in ancient sources
Mariamne the Hasmonean
"Mariamne [was] the daughter of Alexander son of Aristobulos, and the grandaughter of Hyrcanus" (Bel I 241.344; passim).
Her betrothal and marriage with Herod
By betrothing Mariamne, Herod gained the favor of the people, as "he was become a relative of the king [Hyrcanus]" (Bel I 240-241). At the beginning Mariamne, who was "the shrewdest woman in the world" helped Herod with her advise in the fight against the Parthians. (Bel I 262). They married "in Samaria," while Herod was still besieging Jerusalem (Bel I 344)
The relation with Herod
Josephus claims that "the love that [Herod] bare to Mariamne... inflamed him every day to a great degree... but Mariamne's hatred to him was not inferior to his love to her" (Bel I 437). Mariamne's hated Herod as he executed her grandfather Hyrcanus and her brother Aristobulos (Bel I 431-437).
Her execution
Mariamne's hatred extended to Herod's sister and mother. They in turn (falsely) accused Mariamne of adultery, until Herod, "out of his ungovernable jealousy and rage" put her to death. He then "repented of what he had done" but it was too late. "His grief and trouble, now she was dead, appeared as great as his affection had been for her while she was living" (Bel I 438-444)
Mariamne in Scholarship
Mariamne was an instrument (and a victim) of the complicated relations between the Hasmoneans and the Herodians. Her public role and influence however were quite limited, which makes her, from the historical point of view, little more than a name in the genealogies of the two families.
Mariamne in Fiction
Mariamne is one of the most celebrated fictional characters from Second Temple Judaism. Her relationship with Herod and the jealously of which she was victim, inspired a flow of tragedies from the Renaissance to the early XX century. Unlike other characters, however, who have had in recent years a revival of fortune, Mariamne appears today outdated, almost forgotten. The last work of which she was protagonist by Langkvist, goes back to the 1960s, and already came after a silence of more than 30 years.
References
- M.J. Valency, The Tragedies of Herod and Mariamne (New York 1940).