Read Apprentice Online

Authors: Maggie Anton

Apprentice (2 page)

BOOK: Apprentice
10.62Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

ALWAYS LEARNING

PEARSON

To my children, Emily and Ari,
who both chose to walk in their mother's footsteps—
albeit on different paths

CONTENTS

Preface

Acknowledgments

Time Line

Map of Middle East ca. 300
CE

Cast of Characters

Prologue

Part One—King Bahram's Reign (283–292
CE
)

Part Two—King Narseh's Reign (293–299
CE
)

Afterword

Glossary

PREFACE

B
abylonia, the fabled region between the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers, is now located in Iraq. During its lengthy history it has been known as Mesopotamia, the Fertile Crescent, the Cradle of Civilization, and even the Garden of Eden. Land of Magi and Chaldeans, Babylonia has so long been associated with magic that even today it conjures images of flying carpets and genies in lamps.

Yet Babylonia was the cradle of monotheism, birthplace of Zoroastrianism and Judaism. Indeed, the two religions coexisted peacefully there since Nebuchadnezzar destroyed Israel's first Temple and made captives of its population in 586
BCE
. Enjoying autonomy under the tolerant Zoroastrians, many Jews remained in Babylonia even after they were permitted to return to Judea and rebuild the Temple with the prophet Ezra.

Unfortunately for their coreligionists in Judea, only the Jews of Babylonia continued to live in peace and prosperity. By the year 6
CE
(not that anyone at that time would have known a new calendrical system was starting) Judea had become a Roman province. The Jews rebelled against their foreign masters sixty years later, but Rome crushed the revolt and, to the horror of Jews everywhere, destroyed the rebuilt Holy Temple.

In the power vacuum that resulted, the next hundred years saw a fierce competition between Judean sects—Pharisees, Sadducees, Essenes, Samaritans, Gnostics, Zealots, Nazarenes, among others—for supremacy in a Judaism that struggled for life without its Temple-based few rituals. The majority of Jews, however, joined none of these groups. They prayed at local synagogues and followed the Torah as best they could.

With no Temple, the priests in Judea relinquished their leadership role to the Rabbis, heirs to the Pharisaic tradition. Torah study was the
highest value for these men, and 150 years after the Temple's destruction, when the Oral Law was codified as the Mishna, rabbinic scholars had set up schools in the cities of Caesarea, Sepphoris, and Tiberias. Shortly thereafter, similar schools were established in the Babylonian cities of Sura and Nehardea. Thus when Rome converted to a Christian empire in the fourth century and extinguished Jewish political power in the land renamed Palestina, Babylonia became the great center of Torah study. Historians have long believed, and many still do, that the Rabbis quickly established their hegemony, with the majority of Jews readily accepting the Mishna's authority. But recent scholarship suggests that for generations, if not centuries, the Rabbis were a beleaguered minority whose teachings were either rejected or ignored by most Jews.

Yet it was this tiny group of men, perhaps a few hundred out of over a million Jews who resided between the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers during the third to fifth centuries, whose discussions, debates, and stories were collected and redacted along with the Mishna into what is known as the Babylonian Talmud. Today, fifteen hundred years later, this sacred text continues to serve as the basis of Jewish Law, with the ironic result that the rules and traditions of Jews throughout the world were formed by a community of which little is known prior to the third centurty.

It is this small Babylonian community of learned men and their families whose names populate the Talmud. While not so well known as Sages from the Mishna, like Hillel and Shammai, some names appear more prominently than others: Hisda, Nachman, Sheshet, Yosef, Rami bar Chama, Abaye, and Rava.

There are even a few women who appear in the Talmud: Em, Yalta, Beruriah, Choma, and more often than almost any other of her gender, Rav Hisda's daughter.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

T
wenty years ago, when I first joined a women's Talmud class being taught by Rachel Adler, it would never have crossed my mind that one day I'd be any kind of historical novelist, let alone one who writes about women and the Talmud. But I was intrigued enough by the subject to delve into it, and when my research turned up some amazing Jewish female historical figures, something possessed me to write about them.

But I couldn't have done it alone. Henry Wudl, my research assistant and study partner, found all sorts of Hebrew and Aramaic texts I could never have accessed. My dear friend Rabbi Aaron Katz, who helped me so much on
Rashi's Daughters
, was always available to answer even my most bizarre questions. Eager to reply to my e-mails about Babylonian Jewry were scholars: Richard Kalmin, Shai Secunda, Tal Ilan, Geoffrey Herman, Catharine Hezser, Michael Satlow, and Judith Hauptman.

I want to thank my editor at Plume, Denise Roy, for her support, and for her encouragement in making
Rav Hisda's Daughter
the best it could be. Many thanks to Beth Lieberman for editing guidance that forced me to take this book to the higher level she knew I was capable of, and to my literary agent, Susanna Einstein, who has been negotiating for me since the early days of my career. My daughter Emily, a voracious reader of historical novels, spent countless hours critiquing my early drafts and never hesitated to lambast any scenes that didn't measure up to her exacting standards.

Last but not least, I offer my thanks and love to my husband, Dave, who designed the map and Aramaic cover art. He could always think of the right word when I couldn't, and without his support I would still be working in Kaiser's metabolic lab.

TIME LINE

450
BCE
Ezra and some Jews return to Zion from Babylonia but many remain there.
332
BCE
Alexander the Great defeats Persian king Darius; Judea and Babylonia become Greek provinces.
167
BCE
Hasmonean/Maccabean revolt in Judea (basis of Hanukah); Judea again ruled by Jewish kings.
130
BCE
Parthians conquer Babylonia; Jewish communities given autonomy under exilarch's rule.
63
BCE
Pompey conquers Hasmonean state; Judea now ruled by Rome.
ca. 40
BCE
Hillel comes to Jerusalem from Babylonia and founds school to teach Torah.
37
BCE
Herod becomes client king of Judea, dies in 4
BCE
.
6
CE
Judea becomes Roman province.
35
Jesus crucified.
66
Judean Jews rebel against Rome.
70
Judean rebellion fails; Temple in Jerusalem destroyed.
132
Bar Kokhba revolt in Judea against Rome.
135
Bar Kokhba revolt is crushed; Judea renamed Palestina.
200           
Mishna (Oral Law) redacted by patriarch Rabbi Judah haNasi in Sepphoris.
220
Rav (Abba Arikha) returns to Babylonia from Eretz Israel; he and Shmuel establish Torah schools in Sura and Pumbedita, respectively.
226
Sasanian Persians conquer Parthia.
230
Hisda born in Babylonia.
241
Shapur I becomes king of Persia.
250
Jews agree to accept Persian law in Jewish courts; Jews receive autonomy within that limitation.
260
Shapur I defeats Rome, captures the emperor Valerian.
270
Rava (Abba bar Joseph) born in Babylonia. Rav's grandson Nehemiah becomes exilarch (through 313).
274
Bahram II becomes king of Persia; Zoroastrian Kartir becomes high priest.
283
Roman emperor Carus captures Persian capital Ctesiphon and dies the same year; King Bahram is busy fighting in Afghanistan.
284
Diocletian becomes Roman emperor (through 305).
286
Diocletian resumes war with Bahram, invades Armenia.
292
Bahram dies; his brother Narseh deposes Bahram's son to become king of Persia.
295
Rav Huna dies; Rav Hisda to head school in Sura; Roman general Galerius begins persecuting Christians.
296
Narseh declares war on Rome.
297
Narseh regains Mesopotamia from Rome, Galerius blamed.
298
Galerius defeats Narseh; Persia loses Armenia and upper Euphrates in fall; Ctesiphon sacked in winter.
299
Narseh makes Peace of Nisibis with Rome; Galerius orders Roman army purged of Christians.
301
Narseh abdicates in favor of son Hormizd.
307
Constantine, a Christian, becomes emperor of Rome.
309
Hormizd dies; Persian crown placed on pregnant wife's belly; Rav Hisda dies with no replacement for Sura school.
310
Shapur II born and declared king of Persia.
313
Mar Ukva becomes exilarch (through 337); Constantine issues Edict of Milan, makes Christianity an official religion in Rome; Persia begins persecution of Christians.
323
Rav Joseph dies; Abaye heads Pumbedita school while Rava moves to Machoza.
325
Shapur II crowned king of Persia; Roman Palestina becomes Christian and its Torah schools are closed.
339
Abaye dies; Rava remains at Machoza school to become senior Sage of all Israel.
350
Jerusalem Talmud complete.
361
Julian the Apostate becomes emperor of Rome, declares war against Persia, and begins to rebuild Temple in Jerusalem.
363
Earthquake in Israel destroys Sepphoris and partially built Temple in Jerusalem; Rome defeated at Samara, death of the emperor Julian.
380
Christianity established as Rome's official religion.
400
Yazdgerd becomes king of Persia, marries Jewish princess, and inaugurates golden age of Sasanian kingdom.
424
Rav Ashi dies; redacting of Babylonian Talmud begins.
425
Rome abolishes office of Nasi (patriarch).
500
Death of Ravina, head of Sura school and last Sage named in Babylonian Talmud.
570
Birth of Mohammed.
630
Rise of Islam.
638
Omar captures Jerusalem; Jews allowed to live there for first time in nearly five hundred years.
642
Palestina, Syria, Egypt, and Babylonia fall to Muslim Arabs.
650/700
Stammaim (anonymous editors) produce the final form of Babylonian Talmud.
BOOK: Apprentice
10.62Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

More Than a Mission by Caridad Pineiro
Beyond Your Touch by Pat Esden
The Devil's Puzzle by O'Donohue, Clare
Nothing on Earth by Rachel Clark
Pattern of Shadows by Judith Barrow
A Twisted Bard's Tale by Selena Kitt