13
Onias the high priest, induced by these words, although for other reasons anxious that king Seleucus should not suppose that Apollonius was slain by human device and not by Divine punishment, prayed for him;
14
and he being thus unexpectedly saved, departed to manifest to the king what had happened to him.
15
But on the death of Seleucus the king, his son Antiochus Epiphanes succeeds to the kingdom: a man of haughty pride and terrible.
16
Who having deposed Onias from the high priesthood, appointed his brother Jason to be high priest:
17
who had made a covenant, if he would give him this authority, to pay yearly three thousand six hundred and sixty talents.
The Brenton translation of the Septuagint is in the public domain.