Ah, ok, I see. So it sounds like you guys aren’t kidding when you say there were kind of a lot of Jesus-ish figures around that chunk of history. To the point where there’s some that surface-read like OH HEY! And then you’re like ‘oh, no, not really.’
Oh, let me illustrate how far down THAT rabbit hole goes.
So have a seat and let me tell you the story of a man. A handsome and educated man, and, as some believed, a holy man. Many expected him to be (in a valid sense at the time) the mashiach (messiah), i.e., an anointed king by divine right from the line of David.
For, you see, the divinely-sanctioned line of David had failed when Herod was put on the throne, but our hero was of the seed of David through his mother, Mary. (Mariamne in Aramaic, a form of the biblical Miriam in Hebrew.) And thus pretty much the last hope at a fulfilment of God's promise to put someone from David's line at the top until the end times.
His mom's partner, btw, was called Joseph.
He had a younger brother too, who was held in similarly high regard by the people.
But some were against him, and accused him of plotting to overthrow the king. (Which most definitely would have been one way to fulfil that prophecy.)
When he was somewhere around 30 years old (rounded to the nearest 1 significant digit), the Jewish authorities brought his case before the highest Roman authorities (the Emperor, in fact, not just some local procurator) who, if I'm allowed to use a figure of speech, washed their hands of it all and sent it back to the Jewish king.
He was tried by a collusion of the Jewish and local Roman authorities, where they bore false witness against him, and they sentenced him to death although he was innocent.
And even after his death many did not forsake him, and were persecuted for it. They executed about 300 people who were not very happy with it, in fact.
Oh, and Herod The Great was dead set to kill him.
And, oh, he's mentioned in Josephus too.
And if you thought I'm talking about the gospel Jesus, you'd be wrong. I'm talking about Alexander, the son of Herod The Great. (And yeah, funny coincidence, the guy his mom was accused of boning was called Joseph.)
The lesser problem with it is that he was executed in 7 BC, and not by crucifixion, but by strangling.
The bigger problem is that as far as we know, he never was a wandering rabbi (though he sure travelled a bit), and never preached turning the other cheek. In fact, he was a vain and vindictive ass hole.
But you can see why I'm
wondering if that story is one of the many mashed up into what became the gospel Jesus. Basically when the gospel authors were collecting oral rumours about the messiah, some decades afterwards, different people
might have been actually telling them about entirely different messiahs.