Philo's "Against Flaccus" (§83) records a Roman governor in Egypt allowing crucified persons to be taken down and given to relatives for burial during a festival — showing there were documented exceptions to any general policy of leaving bodies on crosses, and that burial was sometimes permitted on special occasions across the Roman world.
Why Skeptics Don't Think Jesus Was Buried But I Do: The Mark Series pt 67 (15_42-46)
00:03:40 – 00:06:50
Philo's "Flaccus" as evidence of Roman burial exceptions for crucified persons
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Why Skeptics Don't Think Jesus Was Buried But I Do: The Mark Series pt 67 (15_42-46) @ 00:03:402021-08-02