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Quintus Tineius Rufus (consul 127)

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Name
  
Quintus Rufus


Role
  
Consul 127

Similar
  
Akiva ben Joseph, Simon bar Kokhba, Hadrian, Judah the Prince, Berenice

Quintus Tineius Rufus , also known as Turnusrufus the Evil in Jewish sources (c. AD 90 – after 131) was a senator and provincial governor under the Roman Empire. He is known for his role unsuccessfully combating the early uprising of the Jews under Simon bar Kokhba and Elasar. The Church Fathers and rabbinic literature emphasize his role in provoking the revolt. Rufus is last recorded in 132; whether he died or was replaced is uncertain. He left a son, Quintus Tineius Sacerdos Clemens, who became Consul in 158 and later one of the pontifices.

His memory varies; in Jewish tradition, Rufus conducted the war against the Jewish people. There is an inscription in his honor in Scythopolis. He was the first of his family to attain high office in Rome; that his son also did implies that he was not blamed for the unsuccessful start of the Roman war against Bar Kochba.

Life

According to the Jewish historian Josephus, a certain Terentius Rufus (sic) was left to command the Roman army in Jerusalem after the Romans had sacked the city in 68 CE, during the First Jewish Revolt. When the arch-enemy Simon bar Giora was eventually caught and brought to him after hiding in an underground cavern in Jerusalem's Temple Mount, Terentius Rufus ordered that the Temple Mount be ploughed up in hopes of discovering other hideaways from the war. Whether this Terentius Rufus refers to the same Quintus Tineius Rufus who was made Consul suffectus some 59 years later is reasonably doubted.

O. Salomies identifies Quintus Tineius Rufus' place of origin as the Etruscan town of Volterra, despite an inscription mentioning Q.Tineius Q.f. Sab. Her[mes] in Nicomedia. Rufus was Legatus Augusti pro praetore of Thracia from 123 to 126, after which he was made Consul suffectus for the nundinium May to September 127.

A few years after he held the fasces, Rufus was appointed consular legate of Judaea, during which time he is said to have ordered the execution of the Jewish Rabbi and leader, Rabbi Akiva, in Caesarea. Rufus' tenure ended a period of 10 years following Lusius Quietus where until recently little was known of the provincial governors; an Aquila is recorded as governor during those years, but when he governed or his full identity is not clear. In November 2016, an inscription in Greek was recovered off the coast of Dor in Israel by Haifa University underwater archaeologists, which attests that Antiquus was governor of the province of Judea sometime between 120 and 130, prior to the Bar Kokhba revolt. Rufus' tenure began in 130 and continued to 133.

Quintus Tineius Rufus is known for his role unsuccessfully combating the early uprising of the Jews under Simon bar Kokhba and Elasar. The Church Fathers and rabbinic literature emphasize his role in provoking the revolt. Rufus is last recorded in 132; whether he died or was replaced is uncertain. He left a son, Quintus Tineius Sacerdos Clemens, who became Consul in 158 and later one of the pontifices.

References

Quintus Tineius Rufus (consul 127) Wikipedia