He condemned the most famous man in history.
For two thousand years, Pontius Pilate has been remembered as the Roman governor who sentenced Jesus of Nazareth to death. His name is spoken every Sunday in churches around the world. Yet the man himself remains one of history's greatest mysteries.
Was Pilate a ruthless tyrant? A reluctant judge? A coward? Or simply a Roman official trapped between political survival and personal conscience?
Drawing on ancient sources, archaeology, Roman history, Jewish history, and early Christian traditions, Pontius Pilate: The Reluctant Hand reconstructs the life of the man behind the legend. From the halls of imperial Rome to the streets of Jerusalem, from the court of Tiberius to the trial that changed the world, this book follows Pilate's rise, his fateful decision, and the centuries of myth that followed his death.
Blending rigorous historical research with compelling narrative storytelling, Vasileios G. N. explores the political pressures, religious tensions, and human weaknesses that shaped one of the most consequential moments in history.
This is not merely the story of Pontius Pilate.
It is the story of power, responsibility, fear, and the price of choosing survival over conviction.
For readers of Roman history, biblical history, and historical nonfiction, Pontius Pilate: The Reluctant Hand offers a fresh and thought-provoking portrait of the man whose question-"What is truth?"-still echoes through history.