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GREEK: 3079 lusiav Lusias
NAVE: Lysias
SMITH: LYSIAS
ISBE: LYSIAS
Lydda | Lydia | Lydian | Lye | Lysanias | Lysias | Lysias Claudius | Lysias, Claudius | Lysimachus | Lystra | Maa

Lysias

In Bible versions:

Lysias: NET AVS NIV NRSV NASB TEV
a Roman army captain or tribune who helped Paul escape from the Jews

dissolving

Greek

Strongs #3079: lusiav Lusias

Lysias = "releaser"

1) a tribune or chiliarch of the Roman cohort

3079 Lusias loo-see'-as

of uncertain affinity; Lysias, a Roman:-Lysias.

Lysias [NAVE]

LYSIAS, chief captain of Roman troops in Jerusalem, Acts 24:7, 22.
See: Claudius Lysias.

LYSIAS [SMITH]

(dissolving), a nobleman of the blood-royal, 1Macc 3:32; 2Macc 11:1, who was entrusted he Antiochus Epiphanes (cir. B.C. 166) with the government of southern Syria and the guardianship of his son Antiochus Eupator. 1Macc 3:32; 2Macc. 10:11. After the death of Antiochus Epiphanes, B.C. 184, Lysias assumed the government as guardian of his son, who was pet a child. 1Macc 6:17. In B.C. 164 he, together with his ward, fell into the hands of Demetrius Soter, who put them both to death. 1Macc 7:2-4; 2Macc 14:2.

LYSIAS [ISBE]

LYSIAS - lis'-i-as (Lusias):

(1) "A noble man, and one of the blood royal" whom Antiochus Epiphanes (circa 166 BC) left with the government of Southern Syria and the guardianship of his son, while he went in person into Persia to collect the revenues which were. not coming in satisfactorily (1 Macc 3:32; 2 Macc 10:11). According to Josephus (Ant., XII, vii, 2), the instructions of Lysias were' "to conquer Judea, enslave its inhabitants, utterly destroy Jerusalem and abolish the whole nation." Lysias, accordingly, armed against Judas Maccabeus a large force under Ptolemy, son of Dorymenes, Nicanor and Gorgias. Of this force Judas defeated the two divisions under Nicanor and Gorgias near Emmaus (166 BC), and in the following year Lysias himself at Bethsura (1 Macc 4), after which he proceeded to the purification of the temple. In the narration of these campaigns there are considerable differences between the writers of 1 Maccabees and 2 Maccabees which scholars have not found easy to explain. Antiochus died at Babylon on his Persian expedition (164 BC), and Lysias assumed the office of regent during the minority of his son, who was yet a child (1 Macc 6:17). He collected another army at Antioch, and after the recapture of Bethsura was besieging Jerusalem when he learned of the approach of Philip to whom Antiochus, on his deathbed, had entrusted the guardianship of the prince (1 Macc 6:15; 2 Macc 13). He defeated Philip in 163 BC and was supported at Rome, but in the following year he fell with his ward Antiochus into the hands of Demetrius I (Soter), who put both of them to death (1 Macc 7:1-23).

(2) See CLAUDIUS LYSIAS (Acts 23:26).

J. Hutchison




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