- Anilai and Asinai
Anilai and Asinai were two
Babylonian -Jewish robber chieftains whose exploits were reported byJosephus .They were apprenticed by their
widow ed mother to a weaver. Having been punished for laziness by their master, they ran away and became freebooters in themarsh lands of theEuphrates . There they gathered about them a large number of discontented Jews, organizing troops, and levying forced contributions on the shepherds, and finally established a little robber-state at the forks of the Euphrates.One Sabbath they were surprised by the
Parthia n ruler ofBabylonia , but they determined to fight regardless of the day of rest, and defeated their assailant so completely that theParthia n kingArtabanus II (10-40 CE), who was just then engaged in putting down a rebellion, resolved to make use of such brave Jews to keep thesatrap s in check. He concluded an alliance with them, entrusting them with the control of that portion of Babylonia which they already occupied.They then built
fortifications , and the little state lasted for fifteen years (c. 18-33). Its downfall was brought about by the marriage of Anilai with the widow of a Parthian general, whom he had attacked and killed in battle. He tolerated theidolatry of his foreign wife, and met the religious objections of his people with violence, thus estranging his followers and sowing dissension among them.After Asinai had been poisoned by his brother's wife for his too frank utterances, Anilai assumed the leadership of his troops. He sought to divert them with wars, and succeeded in capturing
Mithridates , governor of Parthyene, and son-in-law of the king. He soon, however, released Mithridates, fearing that Artaban might take vengeance on the Babylonian Jews for his death. Being signally defeated by Mithridates in a subsequent engagement, he was forced to withdraw to the forests, where he lived by plundering the Babylonian villages aboutNehardea , until his resources were exhausted and the little robber-state disappeared.Babylonian hatred of the Jews, long restrained from fear of Anilai, now broke forth afresh, and the Jews fled from the persecutions to Seleucia without finding there the desired peace.
The name Anilai is identical with "Ḥanilai" in
Talmud ic literature. This was, for example, the name of the father of the well-known haggadistTanḥum b. Ḥamilas (Bacher, "Ag. Pal. Amor." iii.627).ources
*
Josephus , "Antiquities ," xviii.9.References
*JewishEncyclopedia
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.