CHAPTER VII.
The Tribunal of Caiphas.
To enter Caiphas’s tribunal persons had to pass through
a large court, which maybe called the exterior court;
from thence they entered into an inner court, which
extended all round the building. The building itself
was of far greater length than breadth, and in the front
there was a kind of open vestibule surrounded on three
sides by columns of no great height. On the fourth side
the columns were higher, and behind them was a room
almost as large as the vestibule itself, where the seats
of the members of the Council were placed on a species
of round platform raised, above the level of the floor.
That assigned to the High Priest was elevated above
the others; the criminal to be tried stood in the centre
of the half-circle formed by the seats. The witnesses
and accusers stood either by the side or behind the
prisoner. There were three doors at the back of the
judges` seats which led into another apartment, filled
likewise with seats. This room was used for secret consultation.
Entrances placed on the right and left hand sides of
this room opened into the interior court, which was
round, like the back of the building. Those who left
the room by the door on the right-hand side saw on the
left-hand side of the court the gate which led to a
subterranean prison excavated under the room. There
were many underground prisons there, and it was in one
of these that Peter and John were confined a whole night,
when they had cured the lame man in the Temple after
Pentecost. Both the house and the courts were filled
with torches and lamps, which made them as light as
day. There was a large fire lighted in the middle of
the porch, on each side of which were hollow pipes to
serve as chimneys for the smoke, and round this fire
were standing soldiers, menial servants, and witnesses
of the lowest class who had received bribes for giving
their false testimony. A few women were there likewise,
whose employment was to pour out a species of red beverage
for the
150soldiers, and to bake cakes, for which services they
received a small compensation. The majority of the judges
were already seated around Caiphas, the others came
in shortly afterwards, and the porch was almost filled,
between true and false witnesses, while many other persons
likewise endeavoured to come in to gratify their curiosity,
but were prevented. Peter and John entered the outer
court, in the dress of travellers, a short time before
Jesus was led through, and John succeeded in penetrating
into the inner court, by means of a servant with whom
he was acquainted. The door was instantly closed after
him, therefore Peter, who was a little behind, was shut
out. He begged the maid-servant to open the door for
him, but she refused both his entreaties and those of
John, and he must have remained on the outside had not
Nicodemus and Joseph of Arimathea, who came up at this
moment, taken him with them. The two Apostles then returned
the cloaks which they had borrowed, and stationed themselves
in a place from whence they could see the judges, and
hear everything that was going on. Caiphas was seated
in the centre of the raised platform, and seventy of
the members of the Sanhedrim were placed around him,
while the public officers, the Scribes, and the ancients
were standing on either side, and the false witnesses
behind them. Soldiers were posted from the base of the
platform to the door of the vestibule through which
Jesus was to enter. The countenance of Caiphas was solemn
in the extreme, but the gravity was accompanied by unmistakable
signs of suppressed rage and sinister intentions. He
wore a long mantle of a dull red colour, embroidered
in flowers and trimmed with golden fringe; it was fastened
at the shoulders and on the chest, besides being ornamented
in the front with gold clasps. His head-attire was high,
and adorned with hanging ribbons, the sides were open,
and it rather resembled a bishop’s mitre. Caiphas had
been waiting with his adherents belonging to the Great
Council for some time, and so impatient was he that
he arose several times, went into the outer court in
his magnificent dress, and asked angrily whether Jesus
of Nazareth was come. When
151he saw the procession drawing near he returned to
his seat.