HERODIANS, a sect among the Jews at the time of our Saviour; mentioned Math. xxii. 16. Mark iii. 6.
The critics and commentators are very much divided
with regard to the Herodians. St. Jerom, in his Dialogue against the Luciferians, takes the name to have been given to such as owned Herod for the Messiah; and Tertullian and Epiphanius are of the same opinion. But the same Jerom, in his Comment on St. Matthew, treats this opinion as ridiculous; and maintains, that the Pharisees gave this appellation by way of ridicule to Herod's soldiers who paid tribute to the Romans; agreeable to which the Syrian interpreters render the word by the domestics of Herod, i. e. "his courtiers." M. Simon, in his notes on the 22d chapter of Matthew, advances a more probable opinion. The name Herodian he imagines to have been given to such as adhered to Herod's party and interest; and were for preserving the government in his family, about which were great divisions among the Jews.—F. Hardouin will have the Herodians and Sadducees to have been the same.