R. Yose ben Yehuda
140 CE–210 CE · Tanna Gen 4 · Tiberias
Rabbi Yose ben Yehuda was a fourth-generation Tanna active in Tiberias during the latter second century CE. A student of Rabbi Meir, he was known for his careful reasoning and precise formulations of halakha. He participated in the scholarly circles of his time and contributed to the development of Jewish law across multiple areas of practice. His teachings appear frequently in the Mishnah and Tosefta, where he often presents minority or nuanced positions on matters of ritual and civil law. He was respected for his methodical approach to legal analysis.
Life journeyclick any stop, or use ←/→Trace on the orchard map →
TiberiasLand of Israel
We know they were here, but the specifics of what they did at this stop aren’t recorded yet in our corpus.
Tiberias in this era
Under the Roman Empire, specifically during the reigns of Antoninus Pius and Marcus Aurelius in the second century, Tiberias flourished as a center of Jewish learning and religious life. The city, founded by Herod Antipas centuries earlier on the Sea of Galilee, had become a refuge for the rabbinic academies after the catastrophe of the Bar Kokhba Revolt (132–135 CE), which had devastated much of Judea and brought Roman repression down hard upon Jewish communities. By Yose ben Yehuda's era, Tiberias was home to some of the greatest tannaitic sages, who gathered to interpret Torah and establish halakha in an atmosphere of relative stability, though always under Roman military oversight. The Jewish community here was prosperous in learning if not always in material wealth; the city became the intellectual heart of rabbinic Judaism precisely because the Romans, once they had crushed the rebellion, were willing to tolerate religious study as long as it posed no political threat. Yose ben Yehuda was part of this remarkable flowering of legal reasoning and textual tradition that would eventually crystallize in the Mishnah.
About Tiberias
Galilee center; home of Menachem Mendel of Vitebsk and his Hasidic disciples after aliyah.
Works
No works attributed in the corpus yet.