According to
Josephus, Simeon the Righteous is
Simon I (310–291 or 300–273 BCE), son of
Onias I, and grandson of
Jaddua. Many statements concerning him are variously ascribed by scholars, ancient and modern, to four different persons who bore the same name: Simeon I (by Fränkel and
Heinrich Graetz);
Simeon II (by
Nachman Krochmal in the 18th century,
Nehemiah Brüll in the 19th, and
George Foot Moore and
Solomon Zeitlin in the 20th);
Simon Maccabeus (by Löw); or
Simeon the son of Gamaliel (by Weiss). The scholarly consensus of the late 20th century has fallen on Simon II. 's printed
Babylonian Talmud (1520–1523), open to the extract covering Simeon's meeting with Alexander the Great According to the Talmud, when
Alexander the Great marched through the
Land of Israel in the year 332 BCE, Simeon the Just, dressed in his priestly garments went to
Antipatris to meet him, though Josephus stated that Alexander himself came to Jerusalem. As soon as Alexander saw him, he descended from his chariot and bowed respectfully before him. When Alexander's courtiers criticized this act, he replied that it had been intentional, since he had had a vision in which he had seen the high priest, who had predicted his victory. Alexander demanded that a statue of himself be placed in the Temple, but the high priest explained that this was impossible. He promised instead that all the sons born of priests in that year would be named Alexander. Josephus relates the same story, but identifies the high priest in the story as Jaddua rather than Simon. This story appears to be identical with
3 Maccabees 2, where Seleucus (Kasgalgas) is mentioned. This account is almost certainly apocryphal. He was an opponent of the
Nazirites and ate of the
sacrifice offered by that sect only on a single occasion. Once a youth with flowing hair came to him and wished to have his head shorn. When asked his motive, the youth replied that he had seen his own face reflected in a spring and it had pleased him so that he feared his beauty might become an idol to him. He therefore wished to offer up his hair to God, and Simeon then partook of the
sin-offering which he brought. According to the
Mishnah,
Antigonus of Sokho was a disciple of Simeon. ==Priesthood==