- Judah ben Bathyra
Judah ben Bathyra or simply Judah Bathyra (also Beseira,
Hebrew : יהודה בן בתירא) was an eminent tanna. He must have lived before the destruction of the Temple, since he prevented apagan inJerusalem from partaking of thePaschal offering . Thereupon he received the message: "Hail to thee, Rabbi Judah ben Bathyra! Thou livest in Nisibis, but thy net is spread in Jerusalem" (Pes. 3b). Since R. Judah was not present himself at the Passover in Jerusalem, it may be concluded that he was far advanced in years, although as a citizen of a foreign land he was not bound by the law which demanded the celebration of the Passover at Jerusalem (Tosefot toPes. l.c.). AtNisibis inMesopotamia he had a famous college, which is expressly recommended together with other famous schools (Sanh. 32b).Personal interactions
* R.
Eleazer ben Shammua and R.Johanan the sandal-maker started on a journey toNisibis in order to study under Judah ben Bathyra, but turned back when they reflected that they were giving preference to an alien country over Israel (Sifre , Deut. 80).
* R. Judah b. Bathyra himself undertook a journey toRome with some colleagues. No sooner had they landed atPuteoli than they returned home weeping (ib.).
* R. Judah once arrived at Nisibis just before the beginning of the fast of theNinth of Ab , and although he had already eaten, he was obliged to partake of a sumptuous banquet at the house of the chief of the synagogue (Lam. R. iii. 17, ed.S. Buber ; "Exilarchs" in other editions is incorrect).Ambiguity of identity
The
Mishnah quotes 17, theBaraita about 40,Halakot by R. Judah, and he was also a prolifichaggadist . Since controversies between him and R.Akiba are frequently mentioned, these being chronologically impossible, the existence of a second R. Judah b. Bathyra must be assumed (Tosefot toMen. 65b; "Seder ha-Dorot," ed. Warsaw, ii. 110), who was probably a grandson of the former, and therefore Akiba's contemporary; it is possible that there existed even a third R. Judah b. Bathyra, who was a contemporary ofR. Josiah (Sifre , Num. 123) or of R.Judah I (Ḥul. 54a;Shab. ) 130a; see alsoMidr. Sam. x.); he also seems to have lived at Nisibis (Sanh. 96a; but the version "R. Judah ben Bathyra" is doubtful; see Rabbinowicz, "Diḳduḳe Soferim," ad loc., note 10).It is evident from the cases quoted in
Tosef. , Yeb. xii. 11 (compareYeb. 102a), and Tosef.,Ket. v. 1 (Yer. Ket. v. 29d;Bab. Ket. 58a; compare Weiss l.c., 158, andḲid. 10b), that R. Judah b. Bathyra (probably the earliest one by that name) did not quite keep pace with theHalakah as it was formulated in Israel, and represented rather the earlier standpoint. This R. Judah is probably also the one who now and again is mentioned simply as "Ben Bathyra"; compareTosef. ,Pes. iii. (iv.) 8, whereR. Judah andR. Joshua dispute with Ben Bathyra. Here again the first and last names, "R. Judah" and "Ben Bathyra," probably belong together, making one name, so that R. Joshua was the only other person concerned (compareZeb. 12a). In Mishnah, Pes. iii. 3, the editions have "R. Judah ben Bathyra," while theYerushalmi has only "ben Bathyra." There is one passage, however, where R. Judah b. Bathyra and b. Bathyra are reported as entertaining different opinions (Ta'anit 3a); henceMaimonides takes "ben Bathyra" to be identical with "R.Joshua ben Bathyra ."References
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External links
* [http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/view.jsp?artid=429&letter=B&search=Judah%20ben%20Bathyra#1325 Jewish Encyclopedia article for Judah ben Bathyra] , by
Marcus Jastrow andSamuel Krauss .
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