Hellenistic and Hasmonean periods •
Andronicus son of Meshullam,
Egyptian Jewish scholar of the 2nd century BCE. One of the first known advocates of early
Pharisaic (proto-
Rabbinical) orthodoxy against the
Samaritans. •
Antigonus of Sokho, also known as Antigonos of Socho, was the first scholar of whom
Pharisaic tradition has preserved not only the name but also an important theological doctrine. He flourished about the first half of the third century BCE. According to the
Mishnah, he was the disciple and successor of
Simon the Just. Antigonus is also the first noted Jew to have a
Greek name, a fact commonly discussed by scholars regarding the extent of Hellenic influence on Judaism following the conquest of Judaea by
Alexander the Great. •
Antigonus II Mattathias (known in Hebrew as Matityahu) was the last
Hasmonean king of
Judea. Antigonus was executed in 37 BCE, after a reign of three years during which he led the national struggle of the
Jews for independence from the Romans. •
Alexander of Judaea, or Alexander Maccabeus, was the eldest son of
Aristobulus II, king of
Judaea •
Aristobulus of Alexandria (), philosopher of the Peripatetic school who attempted to fuse ideas in the Hebrew Scriptures with those in Greek thought •
Artapanus of Alexandria ( 3rd century BC), Alexandrian Jewish writer who wrote a history
Concerning the Jews, quoted by Polyhistor and Eusebius •
Cleodemus Malchus, Jewish historian referenced by Alexander Polyhistor and Josephus •
Eupolemus, an early Hellenic Jewish historian whose writings are known from
Alexander Polyhistor and
Eusebius Pamphili •
Ezekiel the Tragedian,
Alexandrian Jewish poet who wrote a play
Exagōgē, a paraphrase of the Exodus in
iambic trimeter • Jason of the
Oniad family,
High Priest in the
Temple in Jerusalem from 175 to 172 BCE •
Menelaus,
High Priest in Jerusalem from 171 BCE to about 161 BCE •
Mariamne I, Jewish princess of the
Hasmonean dynasty, was the second wife of
Herod the Great. •
Onias I (Hellenized form of Hebrew name () from (
Hebrew:
Honiyya) was the son of
Jaddua mentioned in
Nehemiah. According to
Josephus, this Jaddua is said to have been a contemporary of
Alexander the Great.
I Maccabees regards Onias as a contemporary of the
Spartan king
Areus I (309–265 BCE). Onias I is thought to be the father or grandfather of
Simon the Just. •
Ben Sira, also known as Yesu'a son of Sirach, leading 2nd century BCE Jewish scholar and theologian who lived in Jerusalem and Alexandria, author of the
Wisdom of Sirach, or "Book of Ecclesiasticus". •
Simon Thassi (died 135 BCE) was the second son of king
Mattathias and the first prince of the Jewish
Hasmonean Dynasty. He was also a general (
Doric Greek: στραταγός,
stratagos; literally meaning "army leader") in the Greco-Syrian
Seleucid army of
Antiochus VI Herodian and Roman periods •
Philo of Alexandria (, ; c. 20 BCE – c. 50 CE), also called Philo Judaeus, of
Alexandria, in the
Roman province of Egypt •
Flavius Josephus was the first Jewish historian. Initially a Jewish military leader during the
First Jewish-Roman War, he famously switched sides and became a Roman citizen and acclaimed
Romano-Jewish academic. He popularized the idea that Judaism was similar in many ways to Greek philosophy •
Justus of Tiberias, Jewish historian born in
Tiberias, "a highly
Hellenistic Galilean city", he was a secretary to governor
Herod Agrippa II and rival of Flavius Josephus •
Julianos (Hellenized form of the Latin name Julianus) and
Pappos (from
Koine Greek or 'patriarch' or 'elder') born c. 80 CE in the city of
Lod (; Greco-Latin:
Lydda,
Diospolis, / – city of
Zeus), one of the main centers of Hellenistic culture in central Israel. It is possible that Julian and Pappus led the Jewish resistance movement against the Roman army in Israel during the
Kitos War, 115–117 CE (their Hebrew names were Shemaiah and Ahijah respectively) •
Lukuas, also called Andreas,
Libyan Jew born c. 70 CE, was one of the main leaders the Jewish resistance movement against the Roman army in North Africa and Egypt during the
Diaspora Revolt, 115–117 CE • Trypho the Jew, thought to be a 2nd-century CE rabbi opposed to Christian apologist
Justin Martyr, whose
Dialogue with Trypho is paradoxically "equally influenced by Greek and Rabbinic thought." He is most likely the same as
Rabbi Tarfon.
Late antiquity and early medieval periods • The
Radhanites: an influential group of Jewish
merchants and
financiers active in France, Germany, Central Europe, Central Asia and China in the
Early Middle Ages – thought to have revolutionized the world economy and contributed to the creation of the 'Medieval Silk Road' long before Italian and Byzantine merchants.
Cecil Roth and
Claude Cahen, among others, claim their name may have come originally from the
Rhône River valley in
France, which is in
Latin and () in
Greek, as the center of Radhanite activity was probably in France where their trade routes began. • During Late Antiquity and the early medieval period, pre-Ashkenazi Jewish communities in the Balkans and the eastern Mediterranean continued to evolve under shifting Roman, Byzantine, and early Islamic rule. Frontier Jewish groups, including those in
Illyricum and
Thrace, often maintained Greek-speaking, Jerusalem-aligned traditions distinct from
Babylonian rabbinism. Archaeological finds from this era—such as synagogue mosaics, inscriptions, and burial sites—indicate an active communal life and integration into regional trade networks. With the migration of Jews into the
Carpathian Basin during and after the
Avars (Caucasus) and
Magyar periods (~6th–10th centuries), some of these communities contributed to the foundation of Eastern
Ashkenazi Jewry, bringing with them pre-rabbinic liturgical elements and
Hellenized customs. == See also ==