Patriarch (Nasi), title assumed by Gamaliel, [334].
Patriarchate, attitude of the Roman government to it, [360] f., [597] f., [613], [616] f.
authority and functions, [360]–[3].
decay of, [535], [560].
extinction of, [612].
influence of, impaired by Christianity, [612] f.
tax of, [486] f.
titles and privileges of, [560] f., [612], [617] f.
Patriarchs, enumeration and names of, [618].
Paul (Saul of Tarsus), [219] ff.
Paul (Saul of Tarsus), abrogates the Law, [226] f., [229].
character, [223].
conception of Christianity as the very opposite to Judaism, [230].
conversion to Christianity, and its psychological process, [224]–[6].
Christianity, his, different from that of Peter, [230].
at Damascus, [226] f.
doctrines, [225] ff.
energy, [365].
fanaticism against the Nazarenes, [221] f., [224].
hated by the Jewish Christians, [367] f.
hereditary sin, his doctrine of, [229].
new direction and stability to Christianity, given by him, [223].
missionary travels, [227] f.
quarrel between him and the Judaic-Christian apostles, [231].
resurrection of Christ, his belief in, [225].
teachings, his, gain the victory, [373].
what favored his success among the heathen, [228].
Paul, bishop of Constantinople, intolerance of, [562].
Paul of Samosata, [529].
Persecutions, religious, of the Jews, [136] f., [568] ff., [616] f., [622].
Perso-Roman war, [601] f.
Pescennius, Niger, emperor, harshness of, against the Jews, [463] f.