Herod the Great was the King of Judea who is said to have preserved the body of his dead wife in honey for seven years.
Scholar and editor, Deborah G. Plant, shares with NPR the process of rescuing Zora Neale Hurston's posthumous novel, "The Life of Herod the Great." ...
My husband and I had the unfortunate need to drive through all the storms a few days after Christmas. As we came around a ...
The Massacre of the Innocents is a biblical event in which King Herod orders the execution of all male children in Bethlehem.
L ike a shoddy police procedural with an easily-recognizable bad guy—the unshaven one with the heavy accent—the Christmas ...
Zora Neale Hurston’s unfinished and yet still stylish novel, The Life of Herod the Great, flips history’s script for the ...
Matthew 2:14-15 The story of the newborn Jesus’ family fleeing their homeland into Egypt to escape the wrath of monstrous King Herod the Great is an integral part of the Christian narrative I gr ...
After 14 years of research, Hurston concluded that his most heinous act – the Massacre of the Innocents, as recorded in Matthew’s Gospel – did not actually take place, and that Herod ...
Maybe you received a book store gift card over the holiday season? Maybe you’re looking for ideas on how to spend it?
Modern scholars know quite a lot about Herod the Great, mostly because of the Judaean historian Flavius Josephus, who had access to court records. The Roman Emperor Augustus had given Herod the ...