Philip

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Philip [1]

fil´ip ( Φίλιππος , Phı́lippos , "lover of horses"):

(1) The father of Alexander the Great ( 1 Maccabees 1:1;  6:2 ), king of Macedonia in 359-336 BC. His influence for Greece and for mankind in general lay in hastening the decadence of the Greek city-state and in the preparations he left to Alexander for the diffusion throughout the world of the varied phases of Greek intellectual life.

(2) A P hrygian left by Antiochus Epiphanes as governor at Jerusalem (circa 170 BC) and described in  2 Maccabees 5:22 as "more barbarous" than Antiochus himself, burning fugitive Jews who had assembled in caves near by "to keep the sabbath day secretly" (  2 Maccabees 6:11 ) and taking special measures to check the opposition of Judas Maccabeus ( 2 Maccabees 8:8 ). There is some ground for identifying him with -

(3) A friend or foster-brother of Antiochus ( 2 Maccabees 9:29 ), appointed by Antiochus on his deathbed as regent. Lysias already held the office of regent, having brought up the son of Antiochus from his youth, and on the death of his father set him up as king under the name of Eupator. The accounts of the rivalries of the regents and of the fate of Philip as recorded in  1 Maccabees 6:56;  2 Maccabees 9:29; Josephus, Ant. , Xii , ix, 7, are not easily reconciled.

(4) Philip V, king of Macedonia in 220-179 BC. He is mentioned in  1 Maccabees 8:5 as an example of the great power of the Romans with whom Judas Maccabeus made a league on conditions described (op. cit.). The conflict of Philip with the Romans coincided in time with that of Hannibal, after whose defeat at Zama the Romans were able to give undivided attention to the affairs of Macedonia. Philip was defeated by the Romans under Flaminius, at Cynoscephalae (197 BC), and compelled to accept the terms of the conquerors. He died in 179, and was succeeded by his son Perseus, last king of Macedonia, who lost his crown in his contest with the Romans. See Perseus .

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