Chronological Table.
| B.C.E. | B.C.E. | ||
| Death of Alexander | 323 | Onias I, High Priest | 332 |
| Division of Alexander's | |||
| Empire into four Kingdoms | 323 | Judea part of Greco-Egyptian | |
| realm (Ptolemaic) | 301 | ||
| Simon the Just, High | |||
| Ptolemy II, Philadelphus | 285 | Priest | 300 |
| The Septuagint (translation | |||
| of the Bible into | |||
| Greek) begun at Alexandria | |||
| about | 250 | ||
| Ptolemy III Euergetes | 247 | Joseph, Governor of Palestine | 230 |
| Ptolemy IV Philopator | 222 | Judea part of Greco-Syrian real | 203 |
| Ptolemy VI Philometor | 181 | Onias IV, builds a Temple | |
| at Leontopolis, Egypt | 160 | ||
| Ben Sirach visits Egypt | 132 |
CHAPTER II.
GREEK AND JEW.
Alexander the Great.
The Greeks and the Jews have been the greatest contributors toward the higher civilization of mankind, the Greek in the intellectual and artistic realm, the Jew in the religious and moral. Therefore we discern the hand of Providence in bringing them together for they influenced each other. The meeting of Greek and Jew is one of the great events of history, greater than many of the battles that have decided the fates of empires. Greece had already lived her most thrilling epoch when the meeting began, but Plato, disciple of the moral philosopher, Socrates, had but recently passed away and Aristotle, profoundest philosopher of antiquity, still lived.
Macedonia had absorbed other Greek principalities and Alexander, now sole master, carried his army eastward in the hope of founding a universal empire. Whenever he conquered a land, he colonized it with Greeks and thus spread Greek civilization. Egypt, Asia Minor, Syria, Phoenicia, and ultimately Ethiopia and India fell successively before his triumphant approach.
The Persian empire that had been fast decaying, was included in the great array of conquests. Tired of the intriguing adventurer placed over them in the last years, the Jews gladly welcomed the conqueror. Legend weaves a pretty story of the Jewish High Priest, Onias, going forth with a company clad in white to meet Alexander, and that in this picture Alexander saw the fulfilment of a dream. It is certain that the Jews hailed this change of masters and many settled in several of the new Greek colonies he founded. In this rise and fall of empires a new grouping of the countries took place. The rebellious Samaritans were quelled and Alexander gave their land to the Judeans, to whom he further showed his favor by freeing them from taxation during the Sabbatic year. (see Lev. xxv.)