The figure of Pontius Pilate is at the intersection between memory and history. On the one hand, the Gospels, great laboratories of Christian religious memory, which inaugurate a new model of literary communication that combines written composition and oral tradition. It is about the death of Jesus, the axis of his narrative strategy, as reported by Pilate, especially the Gospel of John. On the other hand, two first century intellectuals, Flavius Josephus and Philo of Alexandria, who wrote about Pilate in the context of the events that occurred in Roman Judea during the principalities of Tiberius and Caligula.
From these sources, Aldo Schiavone draws up the portrait of the prefect of Judea, painstakingly reconstructing the events that led to the death of Jesus. Of the historical figures linked to this culminating event in Christian narration, the point of contact between evang...read more