History of Pontius Pilate
<p>The family name, <strong>Pontius</strong>, was that of a prominent clan among the Samnites, hill cousins of the Latin Romans. They had almost conquered Rome in several fierce wars. The <strong>Pontii</strong> were of noble blood, but when Rome finally absorbed the Samnites, their aristocracy was demoted to the Roman <em>equestrian</em> or middle-class order rather than the higher <em>senatorial</em> order.</p>
<p>Pilate’s <em>praenomen</em>, his personal name <em>Pilatus, </em>proves almost conclusively that he was of Samnite origin. Pilatus means “armed-with-a-javelin.” The <em>pilum</em> or javelin was six feet long, half wooden and half pointed iron shaft, which the Samnite mountaineers hurled at their enemies with devastating results. Its hardened iron tip could pierce shields and body armor. The Romans quickly copied it, and it was this pilum, in fact, during the Late Republican period that made the Roman Empire possible.</p>
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