Though historians understand that Antipater's family had
converted to Judaism in the second century BCE, different stories circulated in the wake of his sons coming to power. They demonstrate the tensions that existed between the Jewish people and the powerful Edomites who appear at this time.
Nicolaus of Damascus, the court historian for
Herod the Great, wrote that Herod's ancestors were among the historical elite in Jerusalem who had been taken by King
Nebuchadnezzar into
Babylonian captivity in the sixth century BCE. This account serves two purposes; when the Persian
King Cyrus sent the captives in Babylon back to Judea, it is likely that some chose to settle elsewhere. A legitimate dispersion such as this would shroud the fact that Herod's ancestry is undocumented in the meticulous records of returned Jewish families. Claiming a heritage among the Jews from as early as the Babylonian captivity provides credibility for a pro-Roman and
Hellenized Herod as a king over the
Jews, for they were highly contemptuous of him.
Josephus explains this rendering by critiquing its author: Nicolaus wrote to please Herod and would do so at the cost of truthfulness. Instead Josephus explains that Antipater's family converted to Judaism during the
forced conversions by the
Sadducee-influenced
Hasmonean leader
John Hyrcanus. Hyrcanus threatened that any Idumaean who wished to maintain their land would need to be
circumcised and enter into the traditions of the Jews. Josephus acknowledges Herod as being "by birth a Jew" and Antipater as being "of the same people" with the Jews. Nevertheless, this influential family came to be resented by many Jews for their Edomite ancestry, a fact used by the Hasmoneans and their supporters against them. As such, in a polemic against Herod to discredit him in the eyes of the Romans as unfit to become king of the Jews,
Antigonus the Hasmonean is quoted by Josephus as referring to Herod as "no more than a private man, and an Idumean, i.e. a half Jew". Their marriage helped bring about a close friendship between him and King
Aretas to whom Cypros was related. The two men had such a relationship that Antipater entrusted his children to his friend when he went to war with the Hasmonean
Aristobulus II. They had four sons:
Phasael,
Herod,
Joseph, and
Pheroras, and a daughter,
Salome, one of several Salomes among the Herodians. Antipater also had a brother named Phalion, who was killed in battle against Aristobulus at Papyron. Antipater served as a governor of Idumea under King
Alexander Jannaeus and Queen
Salome Alexandra, the parents of the feuding heirs. Indeed, it is clear in the various forms of assistance that Antipater provides to both
Hyrcanus II, brother of Aristobulus, and the Romans, that he possessed great resources and brilliant military and political capabilities. ==The end of the Hasmonean dynasty==