- Rabbi Nathan
Rabbi Nathan (
Hebrew : רבי נתן הבבלי) was a Palestinian tanna of the third generation (2nd century), the son of a Babylonian exilarch. For unknown reasons he leftBabylonia , and his bright prospects there, to settle in theland of Israel , where he was made chief of the school at Usha (Hor. 13b;H. Grätz , "Gesch." iv.185). Later he was entrusted by the patriarchR. Simon ben Gamaliel III to secure a reconciliation withR. Hananiah ofBabylon , who had declared himself independent of theSanhedrin of Judea and had established one in Babylon—a mission which Nathan, in company with R. Isaac, successfully executed (Grätz, l.c. pp. 188 et seq.). According toI. Halevy (in "Dorot ha-Rishonim," p. 185), however, both Nathan and Isaac were still residents of Babylon.Controversy
Soon afterward dissensions occurred between Nathan and
R. Meïr , on the one side, and the president, R. Simon , on the other, owing to an attempt by the latter to abolish the equality hitherto existing among all members of the school, by restricting the tokens of esteem shown by the community to other members of the school lower in distinction than the president. Nathan and Meïr conspired to depose Simon and to usurp his authority themselves, but the plot came to his knowledge, and he caused the conspirators to be expelled from the school. The two knew, however, how to make their absence felt. They sent in slips on which were written puzzlinghalakic questions, so that a member of the school once exclaimed: "We are inside, and the learning is outside!" Both Nathan and Meir were ultimately readmitted on condition that the name of neither should thenceforth be mentioned in connection with his halakic decisions, but that a pseudonym should be used instead. In the case of Nathan this pseudonym was "some say"; in that of Meïr, "others say" (Hor. 13b). Rabbi Nathan was a Tanna from the land of Israel (often referred to as Palestine in ancient times), as contrasted with other authorities who emanated from Babylonia.Nathan was a high
Talmudic authority. Numeroushalakic decisions andhaggadic sayings of his are recorded. To him is attributed also the authorship of the treatise entitled "Abot de-Rabbi Natan ", a kind oftosefta to thePirḳe Abot . He is said also to have been the author of thebaraita "Mem Ṭet Middot," no longer extant, on Haggadah and mathematics (Z. Frankel , "Darke ha-Mishnah," p. 191, Leipzig, 1859).Nathan's chief opponent in halakic decisions was the patriarch R.
Judah I , whom, however, he is said to have assisted in the collaboration of theMishnah (B. M. 86a, andRashi ad loc.) and who held him in high esteem (B. B. 131a).Jewish Encyclopedia bibliography
*
Grätz, Gesch. ed. Leipzig, 1893, iv. 173, 185, 187;
*Heilprin, Seder ha-Dorot , ii. 290, Warsaw, 1882;
*I. Halevy , Dorot ha-Rishonim, ii. 97, 185, Frankfort-on-the-Main, 1901;
*Abot de-Rabbi Natan , ed. Schechter, Vienna, 1887;External links
* [http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/view.jsp?artid=91&letter=N Jewish Encyclopedia article for Rabbi Nathan] , by
Wilhelm Bacher andA. S. Waldstein
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.