Rabbi Yossi ben Kisma
70 CE–135 CE · CE · Yavneh
Rabbi Yossi ben Kisma (early 2nd c. CE) was a prominent Tanna of the Yavneh-Usha generation, remembered primarily for two iconic narratives in Pirkei Avot and the Bavli. His famous Pirkei Avot 6:9 story — refusing a million gold dinars to relocate from a Torah town to a wealthier non-Torah town, citing 'When a person passes from this world, neither silver nor gold goes with him, only Torah and good deeds' — is among the most-quoted rabbinic ethical narratives. His Bavli deathbed scene (Sanhedrin 98a) discussing the timing of the messianic era with R. Akiva established a central rabbinic-eschatological text.
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YavnehיבנהLand of Israel, Roman period
What they did here
Active in the Yavneh-era Tannaitic circle.
Yavneh in this era
Yavneh in the Tannaitic era was a small coastal town that became the intellectual heartland of Jewish survival after Rome's legions destroyed the Second Temple in 70 CE. When Rabban Yochanan ben Zakkai secured Roman permission to establish an academy there, the town transformed into a refuge for Jewish learning at a moment of national catastrophe. Under Roman rule—initially lenient toward this inland settlement—Yavneh's scholars rebuilt Jewish practice without a temple, debating the laws of purity, prayer, and festivals with fierce intensity. The bet midrash (study hall) hummed with argument; decisions made in its courtyards rippled across the diaspora. Though the Bar Kochba revolt brought renewed Roman pressure in the 130s, Yavneh's academy had already anchored Rabbinic Judaism for a generation, creating the interpretive traditions that would sustain Jewish life for centuries. The town itself was modest—olive groves and fishing boats were its livelihood—but within its walls, texts were being written and oral traditions shaped into the foundations of the Talmud.
About Yavneh
Yavneh lay along the coastal plain of Roman-controlled Judea, a modest town whose significance belied its humble size and location between the Mediterranean and the Judean hills. Under Roman imperial rule—particularly after the catastrophic siege of Jerusalem in 70 CE—this small port settlement became unexpectedly vital to Jewish survival and learning. When the Temple fell and pilgrimage worship ended, Yavneh transformed into a beacon of scholarly refuge: the great sage Rabban Yochanan ben Zakkai established an academy there where Torah study, legal reasoning, and rabbinic authority could flourish beyond Rome's direct surveillance. The town's Jewish community, though numerically small, punched far above its weight, attracting scholars and students who gathered to debate Halakha and preserve oral tradition when the Jewish world seemed to be collapsing. The wind-swept streets and modest buildings of Yavneh hosted what amounted to an intellectual revolution—the very idea that Jewish civilization could survive and even thrive without the Temple, sustained instead by devoted study and argument in a humble schoolhouse. For nearly a century, this unassuming Judean town held the future of rabbinic Judaism in its hands.
Works
No works attributed in the corpus yet.