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Pilate Tickets
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For Pilate Parking Schedule or Pilate Parking tickets availability click above link
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Tickets--Tickets.Com is one stop online shop to buy Pilate Tickets. Find detailed information to Buy Pilate tickets or to Buy Pilate CONCERTS tickets at our online store.
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Pilate Parking can sometimes be Tedious. There are many
Parking options. There is free parking around the event. Sometimes this may
be of some distance. A fan could walk any where from a block to 5 blocks to
get to any of the Pilate events. There is a drop off point and
fans maybe dropped off and picked up accordingly.
Another option for Pilate Parking may be the paid Parking.
Paid Parking is generally very close to the entrance of the Venue. You can
obtain Paid parking from our website generally at the bottom of the list of
ticket availability. When ordering Pilate Parking be sure arrive
a little early for the best Parking Spots.
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Pontius Pilate (Latin: Pontius Pilatus) was the governor of the Roman province of Judea from AD 26 until around AD 36. In modern times he is best known as the man who, according to the canonical Christian Gospels, presided over the trial of Jesus and ordered his crucifixion, instigating the Passion. Pilate's biographical details before and after his appointment to Judea are unknown, but have been supplied by tradition, which included the detail that his wife's name was Procula (she is canonized as a saint in Orthodox Christianity) and competing legends of his birthplace [1].//The famous Pilate Inscription found at Caesarea Palaestina refers to Pilate as prefect, while Tacitus speaks of him as procurator of the province. The explanation of the differences in title is fairly straightforward. In the first historical period in which the setting of the New Testament became the Roman provice of Judea, from roughly 4 BC to the outbreak of the First Revolt in 66 AD, officials of the equestrian order (the lower rank of governors) governed Palestine. They held the Roman title of prefect until King Agrippa I assumed rule over Judaea. After his death in 44, when Judaea reverted back to direct Roman rule, the governor, once again, held the title procurator. So both before Pilate's time and again after 44, the governor held the title procurator. It was really only roughly during Pilate's time in office, that the governor was a prefect. When applied to governors, this term procurator, otherwise used for financial officers, connotes no difference in rank or function from the title known as prefect. Contemporary archeological finds and documents such as the Pilate Inscription from Caesarea attest to the governor's more accurate official title only for the period 4 BCE thru 44, prefect. The logical conclusion is that texts that identify Pilate as procurator are more likely following Tacitus.The procurators' and prefects' primary functions were military, but as representatives of the empire they also exercised both financial and limited judicial functions. Civil administration, however, lay in the hands of local government: the municipal councils or ethnic governments such as--in the district of Judaea--the Sanhedrin and its president the High Priest. But the power of appointment of the High Priest resided in the Roman legate of Syria or the prefect of Judaea in Pilate's day and until AD 41. After that time, and until 66 the Jewish client kings exercised this privilege. Pilate resided normally in Caesarea but traveled throughout the province, especially to Jerusalem, in the course of performing his duties. During the Passover, a festival of deep national as well as religious significace for the Jews, Pilate, as govenor or prefect, would have been expected to be in Jerusalem to keep order. He would not ordinarily be visible to the throngs of worshippers because of the Jewish people's deep sensitivity to their status as a Roman province.Equestrians such as Pilate could not command legionary forces and so in military situations he would have to yield to his superior, the legate of Syria, who would descend into Palestine with his legions as necessary. As governor of Judaea, Pilate would have small auxiliary forces of locally recruited soldiers stationed regularly in Caesarea and Jerusalem and temporarily anywhere else that might require a military presence. The total number of soldiers at his disposal numbered in the range of 3000. [2
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