The title first appeared in the
Hellenistic Middle East, possibly in
Judea. In the
First book of Maccabees the word is used three times (1 Maccabees 14:47 and 15:1-2), where
Simon Thassi is referred to as the
high priest and ethnarch of the Judeans. It was used in the region even after it fell under the dominion of Rome, and into the early
Roman Empire, to refer to rulers of vassal kingdoms who did not rise to the level of
kings. The Romans used the terms
natio and
gens for a people as a genetic and cultural entity, regardless of political statehood. The best-known is probably
Herod Archelaus, son of
Herod the Great, who was ethnarch of
Samaria,
Judea (Biblical
Judah), and Idumea (Biblical
Edom), from the death of his father in 4 BC to AD 6. This region is known as the
Tetrarchy of Judea. His brother Philip received the north-east of the realm and was styled
Tetrarch (circa 'ruler of a quarter'); and
Galilee was given to
Herod Antipas, who bore the same title. Consequently, Archelaus' title singled him out as the senior ruler, higher in rank than the tetrarchs and the chief of the Jewish nation; these three sovereignties were in a sense reunited under
Herod Agrippa from AD 41 to 44. Previously,
Hyrcanus II, one of the later
Hasmonean rulers of Judea, had also held the title of ethnarch, as well as that of
High Priest. In the
New Testament the word is used only once by the
Apostle Paul in his
Second Epistle to the Corinthians (2 Corinthians 11:32). However the definition of the word in terms of the actual jurisdiction and public office of the ethnarch may not be accurately determined. ==Byzantine Empire==